Shell Form Variation of a Freshwater Mussel Velesunio ambiguus Philippi from the Ross River, Australia

Based on mussels collected from the Ross River, Australia, within 13 months, I studied the variation of their shell forms since the Ross River has changed from a flowing-water to a relatively still-water. At least four different shell forms were found including shells with characters of flowing-wate...

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Main Author: TRI HERU WIDARTO
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bogor Agricultural University 2007-09-01
Series:Hayati Journal of Biosciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1978301916303588
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spelling doaj-f53d852ff2c74ec39fbfa94e055f3e3b2020-11-25T01:05:34ZengBogor Agricultural UniversityHayati Journal of Biosciences1978-30192007-09-011439810410.4308/hjb.14.3.98Shell Form Variation of a Freshwater Mussel Velesunio ambiguus Philippi from the Ross River, AustraliaTRI HERU WIDARTOBased on mussels collected from the Ross River, Australia, within 13 months, I studied the variation of their shell forms since the Ross River has changed from a flowing-water to a relatively still-water. At least four different shell forms were found including shells with characters of flowing-water species. Young mussels had distinctive “wings” at dorso-posterior part of the shells and in most cases, as the shells grew bigger, the wing development was less obvious. No significant differences were observed in obesity and relative height among mussels living in three different microhabitats (i.e. solid mud and plant litter, soft silt, soft silt and sand). The shells from Mt. Margaret Dam (a temporary dam) were thinner and their growth lines were easier to discriminate than those from the Ross River. Comparing with those living in temperate regions of Australia, the obesity and the relative height of mussels from the Ross River were smaller. Only few abnormal shells were found which usually appeared only as external deformations, such as: a light deflection on ventral margin and scars on the surface of shells. Seven age classes were found ranging between 6 and 12 years and it was estimated that the lifespan of the mussel in the Ross River was about 15 years.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1978301916303588Velesunio ambiguusvariationmusseltropical waterobesityrelative height
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author TRI HERU WIDARTO
spellingShingle TRI HERU WIDARTO
Shell Form Variation of a Freshwater Mussel Velesunio ambiguus Philippi from the Ross River, Australia
Hayati Journal of Biosciences
Velesunio ambiguus
variation
mussel
tropical water
obesity
relative height
author_facet TRI HERU WIDARTO
author_sort TRI HERU WIDARTO
title Shell Form Variation of a Freshwater Mussel Velesunio ambiguus Philippi from the Ross River, Australia
title_short Shell Form Variation of a Freshwater Mussel Velesunio ambiguus Philippi from the Ross River, Australia
title_full Shell Form Variation of a Freshwater Mussel Velesunio ambiguus Philippi from the Ross River, Australia
title_fullStr Shell Form Variation of a Freshwater Mussel Velesunio ambiguus Philippi from the Ross River, Australia
title_full_unstemmed Shell Form Variation of a Freshwater Mussel Velesunio ambiguus Philippi from the Ross River, Australia
title_sort shell form variation of a freshwater mussel velesunio ambiguus philippi from the ross river, australia
publisher Bogor Agricultural University
series Hayati Journal of Biosciences
issn 1978-3019
publishDate 2007-09-01
description Based on mussels collected from the Ross River, Australia, within 13 months, I studied the variation of their shell forms since the Ross River has changed from a flowing-water to a relatively still-water. At least four different shell forms were found including shells with characters of flowing-water species. Young mussels had distinctive “wings” at dorso-posterior part of the shells and in most cases, as the shells grew bigger, the wing development was less obvious. No significant differences were observed in obesity and relative height among mussels living in three different microhabitats (i.e. solid mud and plant litter, soft silt, soft silt and sand). The shells from Mt. Margaret Dam (a temporary dam) were thinner and their growth lines were easier to discriminate than those from the Ross River. Comparing with those living in temperate regions of Australia, the obesity and the relative height of mussels from the Ross River were smaller. Only few abnormal shells were found which usually appeared only as external deformations, such as: a light deflection on ventral margin and scars on the surface of shells. Seven age classes were found ranging between 6 and 12 years and it was estimated that the lifespan of the mussel in the Ross River was about 15 years.
topic Velesunio ambiguus
variation
mussel
tropical water
obesity
relative height
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1978301916303588
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