Don't move a mussel? Parasite and disease risk in conservation action

Abstract Freshwater mussels are one of the most endangered animal groups globally, making them a high conservation priority. Conservationists increasingly employ translocation or captive breeding procedures to support ailing populations, and the ecosystem engineering capabilities of mussels are bein...

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Main Authors: Joshua I. Brian, Isobel S. Ollard, David C. Aldridge
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-07-01
Series:Conservation Letters
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12799
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spelling doaj-e78f976d878a4d82893b7f6c2d0425f22021-08-23T21:21:41ZengWileyConservation Letters1755-263X2021-07-01144n/an/a10.1111/conl.12799Don't move a mussel? Parasite and disease risk in conservation actionJoshua I. Brian0Isobel S. Ollard1David C. Aldridge2Aquatic Ecology Group, The David Attenborough Building, Department of Zoology University of Cambridge Cambridge UKAquatic Ecology Group, The David Attenborough Building, Department of Zoology University of Cambridge Cambridge UKAquatic Ecology Group, The David Attenborough Building, Department of Zoology University of Cambridge Cambridge UKAbstract Freshwater mussels are one of the most endangered animal groups globally, making them a high conservation priority. Conservationists increasingly employ translocation or captive breeding procedures to support ailing populations, and the ecosystem engineering capabilities of mussels are being increasingly harnessed in bioremediation projects. However, there is little consideration of the risk of pathogen transmission when moving mussels from hatcheries or wild donor populations into new habitats. This is of significant concern as recent developments suggest parasites and diseases are highly prevalent and have contributed to several mass population‐level die‐offs. Here, we explicitly highlight the risks of pathogen spread in mussel translocations, explore how these risks are mediated, and provide recommendations for both research and action to avoid the inadvertent spread of virulent pathogens when conserving vulnerable mussel populations. While targeted at freshwater conservationists, this perspective has relevance for considering translocation‐mediated disease and parasite spread in any study system.https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12799captive breedingfreshwaterpathogenprevalencetranslocationtransmission
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joshua I. Brian
Isobel S. Ollard
David C. Aldridge
spellingShingle Joshua I. Brian
Isobel S. Ollard
David C. Aldridge
Don't move a mussel? Parasite and disease risk in conservation action
Conservation Letters
captive breeding
freshwater
pathogen
prevalence
translocation
transmission
author_facet Joshua I. Brian
Isobel S. Ollard
David C. Aldridge
author_sort Joshua I. Brian
title Don't move a mussel? Parasite and disease risk in conservation action
title_short Don't move a mussel? Parasite and disease risk in conservation action
title_full Don't move a mussel? Parasite and disease risk in conservation action
title_fullStr Don't move a mussel? Parasite and disease risk in conservation action
title_full_unstemmed Don't move a mussel? Parasite and disease risk in conservation action
title_sort don't move a mussel? parasite and disease risk in conservation action
publisher Wiley
series Conservation Letters
issn 1755-263X
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Freshwater mussels are one of the most endangered animal groups globally, making them a high conservation priority. Conservationists increasingly employ translocation or captive breeding procedures to support ailing populations, and the ecosystem engineering capabilities of mussels are being increasingly harnessed in bioremediation projects. However, there is little consideration of the risk of pathogen transmission when moving mussels from hatcheries or wild donor populations into new habitats. This is of significant concern as recent developments suggest parasites and diseases are highly prevalent and have contributed to several mass population‐level die‐offs. Here, we explicitly highlight the risks of pathogen spread in mussel translocations, explore how these risks are mediated, and provide recommendations for both research and action to avoid the inadvertent spread of virulent pathogens when conserving vulnerable mussel populations. While targeted at freshwater conservationists, this perspective has relevance for considering translocation‐mediated disease and parasite spread in any study system.
topic captive breeding
freshwater
pathogen
prevalence
translocation
transmission
url https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12799
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