Glochidia, Gills and Galentine’s – Mussel Moms Have All the Moves

Today is February 13th, otherwise known as Galentine’s Day. And it’s a great day to show appreciation for all the women in your life. At ORF, we’re extending that to some of our favorite freshwater females. 

There’s a complex and amazing love story just below the surface of our local waterways but this love story is all about mussel moms and their unique reproductive cycle. If you’ve waded around in rivers and streams you’ve probably seen fish busily darting around hunting for their next meal amongst mossy rocks. If you stopped and observed long enough you might see a fish stalking a smaller fish for lunch. This smaller fish has a pair of eyes, fins, and is wiggling in the flowing waters near a rock, apparently unaware it’s about to be snatched up. But as the larger fish goes in for the kill and snaps at the small fish… blamo! The little fish disappears and out of what looks like a “rock” bursts a cloud of baby freshwater mussels right in the big fish’s face. What just happened?

Nature’s Best Disguise

Plain pocketbook mussel displaying lure, fish mimic with eye spot. Credit: Ryan Hagerty/USFWS

The large fish has just experienced the sneaky mimicry antics of a female freshwater mussel. Some species of freshwater mussels play dress up and put on a tantalizing show using a part of their body evolved to look like fish prey called a lure. They do this because mussels need a safe place for their baby mussels, or glochidia, to grow up. Mussels can’t get around very well with their false foot, or pseudopod, and they can’t provide a protective nursery space for their microscopic babies so they outsource the job — essentially they fool a fish into doing this for them.

When the fish is lured in close enough the female mussel releases a cloud of baby mussels which the fish sucks up into its gills, where those baby mussels clamp down and hold on for several months while they enjoy the oxygen, nutrients, and safety the fish unwittingly provides. Eventually, the baby mussels let go of the fish’s gills and fall to the bottom of the stream or river where they carry out the rest of their lives. Let’s hear it for these resourceful mothers! Happy Galentine’s Day to all of the mommas out there beating the odds through creativity and hard work!

Check out this video of a female mussel exhibiting its lure and successfully tricking a bass.

Saving our Biodiversity

Here in the Midwest, we live in a mussel biodiversity hotspot for North America. Of the 297 species of mussels found in North America 127 were once found in the Ohio River Basin. Sadly today 70% of these species are extinct or endangered making freshwater mussels the most threatened organisms in North America. This is due to many factors but primarily habitat loss, pollution, invasive species (like the Zebra mussel and Asian clam), and overharvesting in the early 20th century for button production (freshwater mussels produce pearls just like their marine cousins, and their shells were prized for pearl buttons). 

So what is to become of our favorite mussel mommas? The threats are real and daunting but there is a passionate community of biologists, hobbyists, volunteers, and organizations like the Ohio River Foundation (ORF) determined to pull the remaining species back from the brink. ORF educates more than 5,000 students per year on watershed ecology and mussel conservation. ORF launched Mussels in the Classroom, the first program of its kind, in 2017. Through this program, students get the chance to play host to and learn about freshwater mussels and their importance to river ecosystems.

>>>Learn more about MIC here.

In addition to education programs, ORF dedicates countless hours to the restoration of Ohio River tributaries where mussels reside. ORF spearheads the removal of unnecessary dams that stop the critical flow of water, fish, and mussel gametes. We also partner with organizations like the Center for Mollusk Conservation in Kentucky, which is responsible for the propagation and release of thousands of critically endangered mussel species back into Kentucky streams and rivers as well as important research and field surveys. Supporting organizations like ORF makes a difference for mussels!

>>>Support ORF by adopting a mussel!

Share This