Artificial habitats provide refuge for a threatened freshwater mussel in south-west Australia: DATA

Published: 27 January 2026| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/rtddhb9ng6.1
Contributor:
Jake Daviot

Description

Context: Worldwide modifications of river systems, closely tied to human development, has led to a proliferation of artificial waterbodies. Their associated artificial habitats can support various aquatic taxa, including freshwater mussels, one of the most threatened animal groups worldwide. An endemic threatened species of freshwater mussel, Westralunio carteri has been sporadically observed in artificial habitats across south-western Australia. However, the viability of these populations remains understudied. Aims: This study aimed to compare the abundance and demographic structure of W. carteri across artificial and natural habitats to determine how artificial habitats may support viable populations of W. carteri. Methods: Data from twelve habitats, consisting of six artificial and six natural, were analysed to determine density and demographic structure. Conclusions: Four of the six artificial habitats supported large populations with varied demography and evidence of recruitment, while some habitats, both artificial and natural, showed impaired, non-recruiting populations at risk of extirpation. Mussel demographics differed between artificial and natural habitats overall, with a broader size range observed in populations from natural habitats (8.0 – 92.0 mm) than from artificial habitats (23.1 – 84.7 mm). Implications: This study provides evidence that W. carteri can successfully colonise and persist in artificial habitats, particularly when conditions are representative of analogous natural refuges. Artificial habitats likely provide a supplementary tool for the conservation of mussel populations experiencing habitat degradation and loss. This contains two data sets, "data_novel_refuge" provides distributional and abundance data for W. carteri across all habitats surveyed, along with metadata on shading, substrate and depth at each quadrat. "data_size" provides the Lmax measurements of W. carteri specimens collected during these surveys, with all measurements in mm. DOI:10.1071/PC25073

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Freshwater Ecology, Aquatic Biology, Freshwater Habitat

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