A3 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 2022 Tribal scientists snorkel rivers to help save freshwater mussels Threats from climate change, habitat destruction climate change that warms the water, habitat destruction, and non native fi sh species. By COURTNEY FLATT Northwest News Network At the second survey site on the Middle Fork of the John Day River, the research- ers spot a non native small- mouth bass. “Bass!” Maine yelled across the river. “Uh uh. No!” O’Brien moaned through her snorkel. Invasive fi sh, such as smallmouth bass, feed on young mussels and native fi sh, such as sculpin, which mussels need to reproduce. In addition, O’Brien said, inva- sive fi sh aren’t good host fi sh to help mussels reproduce. “As the rivers warm with climate change, we’re see- ing bass move farther and far- ther upstream, so we’re really getting worried that they’re going to displace the native fi sh population. And then, the mussels will go soon after that,” O’Brien said. It’s not just smallmouth bass that are making mussel habitat less hospitable. Peo- ple have trampled stream- beds, even as they try to help the environment with habitat restoration projects, O’Brien said. Most projects are aimed at helping threatened or endan- gered salmon. Often, mus- sels aren’t taken into consid- eration, Maine said. “We work really hard to protect the very few mussels that are around, and then res- toration projects, which gen- erally are good, in the short term have really negative impacts on mussels,” Maine said. Heavy machinery rolls over sensitive mussel habitat, and mussels can’t just pick up and move to another better location, like fi sh can, Maine said. However, that’s changing, as the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reserva- tion spread the word about the importance of mussels. Threats When someone talks through a snorkel, it can sound a lot like talking through dental apparatus – all the words mumbled together. But, Alexa Maine is an expert mumbler. “There’s a Gonidea. There’s another one,” Maine said as she pointed out mus- sels while she snorkeled. These freshwater mussels are commonly known as western ridged mussels. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is considering add- ing the western ridged mus- sel to the e ndangered s pecies l ist, a potential designation that has brought more atten- tion to mussels in the West, where freshwater mussels are imperiled, Maine said. On the Middle Fork of the John Day River in Oregon, where Maine surveys, she continued talking through her snorkel, scanning the river- bed for freshwater mussels as she slowly moved upstream. “I could spend all day here. The light is so good right now,” Maine said . As the lead biologist for the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reser- vation’s Freshwater Mus- sel Research and Resto- ration Project, Maine has spent many hours snorkel- ing rivers, searching every square inch for healthy mus- sel populations. In the last few years, the job has gotten much harder. “We don’t know if we’re watching them blink out or just watching them decline to a lower level of existence in these rivers at this point. It’s hard to tell,” said Christine O’Brien, who has worked with the tribe for 18 years on its mussel project. The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reser- vation is the only group in the West that’s actively survey- ing mussels and working to protect them, she said. “There’s nobody else beating a drum for them,” O’Brien said. “Nope,” Maine agreed. O’Brien added, “They’re overlooked a lot of times. They’re not fl ashy. They’re not cute and cuddly. You’ll donate to save a panda. But the mussels, you know?” “Until you really know them,” Maine said, of the creatures she’s quickly come to love. Courtney Flatt/Northwest News Network Alexa Maine surveys the Middle Fork of the John Day River, searching for freshwater mussels. Mussels can fi lter up to 10 gallons of water in 30 min- utes. Most of what they fi l- ter isn’t digested. That pseu- do-feces, as Maine called it, ends up on the streambed, where invertebrates and fi sh can eat it. In addition to helping clean river water, mussels stabilize streambeds, Maine said. “Mussels act like little boulders for the tiny pebbles and sand around them, sta- bilizing them,” Maine said. “They can go really deep, especially Gonidea, which have a really big foot and can really anchor themselves down and anchor everything around them.” On the Middle Fork of the John Day River, Maine, O’Brien and three colleagues surveyed several sites where they knew freshwater mus- sels once lived. The snorkeling surveys help the scientists immerse themselves in the mussels’ world, Maine said. “You kind of lose the external sound. You have a better focus with your eyes,” Maine said. The fi rst diff erent world the scientists immersed them- selves in was the Cotton- woods survey site. The site was the farthest upstream, with the coolest water of the day, roughly 66 degrees Fahrenheit. The water was cool enough to need wetsuits, even on a recent blistering hot day. “Let me lock you in,” Maine said, as she helped O’Brien velcro her wetsuit. After snorkeling for around 40 minutes, the researchers had found the largest number of mussels they’d see on this day of surveying. The researchers counted three genera of mus- sels: 383 Margaritifera, 51 Anadonta, and 27 Gonidea. Maine said the Cotton- woods site is her favorite place to survey mussels in the entire world. “It’s kind of like a nursery. One year we saw juveniles of all three genera, which is very unusual. Those guys have grown up now, and they’re making their own babies,” Maine said. Mussels can live 60 to 100 years, which means when they’re not doing well, some- thing is likely wrong with the river, Maine said. “They are the granddad- dies of the river,” Maine said. “They’re very resilient. It gives you a better appreci- ation for how hard of a time they’re having and how much it matters to care about them and help them when you see this whole little connected world when you’re snorkel- ing underwater.” In the Northwest, there are only a handful of freshwa- ter mussel types. Whereas, across the Continental Harvest Historically, I ndigenous people ate mussels as a part of their food roundtable, said Donna Nez, a fi sheries tech- nician and member of the tribe. Now, mussels are often full of toxins, so people don’t eat them as much, Nez said. However, the tribe would like to be able to harvest mussels at some point, she said. “They’re part of the river ecosystem. We need clean water. Water is the main com- ponent in our life cycle,” Nez said. THANK YOU to everyone who helped our mother live at home until her peaceful death. Special thanks to: • Clatsop Care In-Home Services & Lou’s caregivers • The caring and compassionate team of Lower Columbia Hospice • Knappa Fire District staff & volun- teers • Lou’s neighbors & everyone who helped The Burke family CONCEALED CARRY PERMIT CLASS Divide, around 300 species can be found in the Eastern United States. When surveying for mus- sels, there are certain things you shouldn’t do, Maine said. For one, don’t swim upstream of someone who’s counting mussels. Sediment will kick up, making it hard for them to see. “Don’t be kicking around in there,” Maine joked with her colleagues. As Maine snorkeled upstream, her hand clutched large rocks so that she could stay in place and count each mussel she saw. “You have to get your head up in this bank here because there were a lot of Anadonta in the fi ne sediment in the bank,” Maine said. It’s a lot to track while in the water. To do so, Maine uses both her hands to count two genera of mussels. “For this site, I keep Mar- garitifera in my head. I keep Gonidea on one hand and Anadonta on the other. So then I only have to remember one number, and I’m count- ing here,” she said, pointing to her hands. Maine also noted a few sculpin, which are small bottom-feeding fi sh that freshwater mussels need to reproduce. It’s a para- sitic relationship that’s very dependent on timing. To reproduce, female mussels release larvae called glochidia, which then attach to the sculpin. Female mus- sels can produce up to 4 mil- lion larvae, with one mak- ing it to adulthood in the best-case scenario, Maine said. It’s a slow and intricate process. The glochidia are around the size of a grain of sand and don’t aff ect the fi sh, Maine said. “Then they drop off ran- domly and fl oat to an area of low velocity and fi ne sed- iment, and then they burrow and become an adult,” Maine said. However, if the fi sh aren’t there at the correct time, or if the mussels don’t release the glochidia when the fi sh are present, those mussels lose a chance to reproduce. And, time may be the one thing these mussels don’t have. 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