Title: Value of species datasets as baselines nonmarine Mollusca
1Value of species datasets as baselines
(non-marine Mollusca)
2History of National Recording Schemes
- Mapping schemes for animals, including
invertebrates have been very popular in Britain - Until recently this type of environmental data
gathering was not encouraged in RoI - Ireland therefore lags behind Britain and parts
of Europe in this respect - It is catch-up time and great progress is
currently being made - But why do it at all?
3Biodiversity conservation mapping
- We are arguably in the eye of a storm which will
disrupt ecosystems worldwide - Uncontrolled expansion of the human population
- Uncontrolled development and use of resources
- Pollution and ecosystem damage
- Population size X affluence X technological
development - We cannot protect ecosystems (and ourselves) if
we do not know their - Faunal composition
- Dynamics strengths/weaknesses
- Knowledge is power
- But it should be gathered in a cost-effective way
4Involving Joe Public
- Mapping schemes in Britain have worked because
- They captured the public imagination
- There was a body of dedicated people driving and
co-ordinating schemes - Regular updates were maintained (nowadays by the
internet NBN etc.) - Atlases were published
- Without public involvement the whole idea of
mapping large faunas is probably too expensive
for the public purse
5In Ireland?
- We now have the Data Centre to motivate and
co-ordinate and a body of interested people to
drive schemes with - Introductory courses for new recorders
- Internet arrays of data which can be updated
- Scheme organisers with the skills to uphold -
- Courses/workshops
- Validation of records
- Presentation of results in the scientific
literature
6Mapping Irish non-marine Mollusca
- Within the last two years 80,000 records of 150
species have been collated and validated - Of these 10 have populations of international
importance - 7 are on the IUCN Red List
- 6 are protected under European legislation
- A Red List for Ireland is proposed and will be
published shortly - Within this
- 2 regionally extinct (RE)
- 5 critically endangered (CR)
- 14 endangered (EN)
- 26 vulnerable (VU)
7Reasons for decline
- Terrestrial species
- Categories are 1 RE 2 CR 7 EN 17 VU (total 27
out of 100) - Causes
- Habitat destruction 7
- Edge of natural range 5
- Eutrophication 3
- Interplanting woods with conifers 3
- Climate change 1
- Other 8
8Reasons for decline
- Freshwater species
- Categories are 1 RE 3 CR 7 EN 9 VU (total 20
out of 50) - Causes
- Eutrophication 6
- Edge of natural range 5
- Habitat destruction 5
- Climate change 1
- Other 3
9Detecting species and habitats where declining
water quality is a factor
10Species mapping as indicators of eutrophication
- Advantages
- Covers a broad range of habitats
- Historical records can be brought into play
- Data highly specific and sensitive
- Can detect overall decline in sensitive species
- With this, decline in water quality, from both
point source and diffuse pollution - Disadvantages
- Slow, labour intensive
- Expertise not widely available
- Not well funded relies on volunteer
recorders
11Compare biological indices BMWP/ASPT/ RIVPACS
- Advantages
- Fast, reproducible
- Simple, expertise widely available
- Good at detecting Point Source Pollution
- Disadvantages
- Limited range of aquatic habitats covered
- Seems to overestimate quality compared with
chemical indices (NI stats) - Therefore less effective in detecting Diffuse
Pollution - Probably lacks sensitivity due to use of higher
taxonomic categories
12Case study 1 Myxas glutinosa, the glutinous
snail
Pre-1980
Post-1980
- Historically widespread but with few records
- Range much diminished since the early twentieth
century - Rare and disappearing across Europe
- Habitats where it still exists are low in
agricultural nutrients, N P - Requirements gently flowing water with high
mineral content but low - N/P content
13Case study 2 Omphiscola glabra, the mud snail
Pre-1980
Post-1980
- As per the previous example
- The mud pond snail is disappearing across Europe
because of drainage and enrichment of small,
oligotrophic mires - In Ireland it is only found in the south-east
- Recently re-discovered at one site in Co
Waterford (Anderson 2009) but considered extinct
in the molluscan Red List (2009)
14Detecting declining species and habitats
sensitive to disturbance
15Case study 1 Aplexa hypnorum, the moss bladder
snail
Pre-1980
Post-1980
- A species of temporary still waters or of slowly
moving waters, usually of small size - Adapted to periods of drying out but with poor
competitive abilities - Declining due to drainage and infilling of
habitats
16Case study 2 Hydrobia acuta neglecta, an
amphi-saline spire snail
- A rare species of amphi-saline coastal lagoons
declining because of habitat destruction - Post 2006 Co Down sites are now untenanted, so
now very rare and declining - Requires periods of low salinity to remove a
marine competitor (Peringia ulvae) plus periods
of high salinity to remove low-salinity
competitors (Potamopyrgus antipodarum and
Ventrosia ventrosa)
Pre-1980
Post-1980
17Following the spread of invasive aliens
18Case study 1 Physella gyrina, bladder tadpole
snail
- Common in eastern N. America margins of large
lakes, swamps - Introduced with 19th century cotton trade to
Lancashire 1850s - Arrived in L. Neagh pre 1994
- Now spreading rapidly, courtesy of
fish stocking (The Cutts, Coleraine) - Pollution tolerant, large, aggressive
19Case study 2 Physella acuta, acute or pewter
bladder snail
- Abundant in coastal and inland habitats, eastern
N. America very variable morphology now
cosmopolitan - Introduced with cotton to France pre-Napoleonic
Wars - Thereafter spread across Europe
- First Irish record Glastry Clay
Pits 2000 (source -
aquaria) - Now widespread in eutrophic habitats
and becoming
abundant - Highly adaptable (even saline waters)
20Case study 3 Dreissena polymorpha, zebra mussel
- Ponto-Caspian relict
- Re-investing former European range but now almost
cosmopolitan - First recorded Britain 1824
- In Ireland 1997
- L. Derg ? Shannon System ? Erne (1998) ? L.
Neagh (2006) - Remarkable coincidence three invasive
freshwater species in Ireland within a decade
after nearly two hundred years in Britain
catalyst climate warming?
21Case study 4 Bithynia leachii, Leachs Bithynia
- A number of freshwater snails now widespread in
Ireland are non-indigenous - Examples include Leachs Bithynia which was
recorded in Upper Lough Erne last year, probably
immigrant from the Shannon via the Ballyconnell
Canal - Planorbarius corneus, Viviparus viviparus,
Assiminea grayana, Ferrissia wautieri (
?fragilis) are other relatively recent immigrants - Irish waters and their ecology, are changing fast
- The pleasure craft industry is clearly one of the
strongest drivers of change
Bithynia leachii
Assiminea
22Do we just let it happen?
- Waiting in the wings..
- Ponto-Caspian species Dreissena bugensis
- N. American Ferrissia fragilis
- Asian Corbicula fluminea
- Plus a host of Ponto-caspian amphipods and
ghost shrimps - Mapping schemes and amateur recorders are often
the first to raise the alarm - Hence the importance of base-line recording
through CEDaR (Belfast) and the Biodiversity Data
Centre