Brook Floater restoration: identifying locations to reintroduce or augment populations with propagated mussels

    

In February 2020, we held a workshop where we sought to identify where states should reintroduce or augment brook floater to minimize the probability of extinction within a state. We focused on Massachusetts and Connecticut, two states with only a few, small populations still extant, that likely need population restoration to prevent statewide extirpation. We identified that restoration actions aimed at redundancy (number of populations), representation (number of occupied basins), and resiliency (population size) were constrained by resource availability such as limited broodstock broodstock
The reproductively mature adults in a population that breed (or spawn) and produce more individuals (offspring or progeny).

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, staff time, and budgets. Optimal restoration locations depended on habitat conditions, the status (viability) of nearby mussel populations, population size (number of individuals), and the location within watersheds; all important considerations in addressing population persistence. Restoration actions also accounted for the risk of disease transmission among mussels and fish, and the genetic health and diversity of mussel populations. The workshop identified the multiple, compounding uncertainties related to population restoration, identified information gaps critical to decision making, and charted a path forward to make decisions given uncertainties. The optimization approach developed can be used to select specific watersheds for restoration in any state, province, or region and can easily be adapted as new information becomes available.

Author(s)
Emily Bjerre
Jason Carmignani
Christy C. Coghlan
Jonathan Cummings
Peter Hazelton
Kevin Kalasz
Rachel Katz
Morgan Kern
David Perkins
Allison H. Roy
Laura Saucier
Ayla Skorupa
Publication date
Type of document
Report
Species
Subject tags
Mollusks
Freshwater mussels