|
RoadEco Papers
RoadEco Website
Policies
Search RoadEco
Submit a Paper
Notify me of new papers
|
 |

Habitat restoration plan and programmatic biological assessment for Potamilus capax (green 1832) in Arkansas
Andrew Peck, Environmental Sciences Program, Arkansas State University
Heidi , McIntyre, Department of Biological Sciences, Arkansas State University,
Jerry Farris, Department of Biological Sciences, Arkansas State University,
Alan D. Christian, Department of Biological Sciences, Arkansas State University,
John Harris, Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department, Environmental Division
Randal Looney, Federal Highway Administration, Arkansas Division
Peck A, McIntyre H, Farris J, Christian AD, Harris J and Looney R. 2006. Habitat restoration plan and programmatic biological assessment for Potamilus capax (green 1832) in Arkansas. IN: Proceedings of the 2005 International Conference on Ecology and Transportation, Eds. Irwin CL, Garrett P, McDermott KP. Center for Transportation and the Environment, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC: p. 586. (Abstract)
ABSTRACT: The fat pocketbook, Potamilus capax (Mollusca: Unionidae), was designated as “Endangered” in June 1976 by the
USFWS in the entire range of the species. The present general distribution of P. capax has been reported from the
upper Mississippi River on the boarders of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Illinois, and Missouri, the Ohio River System on
the borders of Indiana, Illinois, and Kentucky, especially its tributary the Wabash River in Indiana and Illinois, the White
River of Missouri and Arkansas, and the St. Francis River system in Arkansas. Relocation of freshwater mussels prior to
large-scale bridge construction, repair, or replacement has been broadly utilized for conventional management of construction
impact. The success of that practice related to long-term viability of relocated specimens, however, has not
been fully validated. This research was jointly funded by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and the Arkansas
State Highway and Transportation Department (AHTD) in 2003 as an Environmental Streamlining Initiative to provide
more information regarding the likelihood of specific impacts to mussels attributed to sediment plumes downstream
of highway construction activities. The research proposes to support a programmatic Biological Opinion for P. capax,
which will provide a protocol for highway projects that may impact the species. Relocation can then be assessed for its
ability to minimize loss of endangered freshwater mussel species, and in particular, P. capax.
The objectives of this project are: 1) to determine the success of relocation efforts for P. capax associated with
highway construction projects by investigating survival, movements, mortality, fitness (as indicated by condition factor),
and fecundity of relocated and non-relocated adults and sub-adults, 2) to determine the success of propagation efforts
resulting from highway construction projects by investigating the survival of juveniles returned to identified habitats
and used for population enhancement (recruitment), and 3) to determine relative impacts at highway construction sites
to P. capax and associated mussel assemblage by comparing pre- and post-construction abundance and composition,
sediment deposition downstream of the construction, and individual mussel fitness. Data acquired will be submitted
to the Fish and Wildlife Service as documentation of the likelihood of impacts for the programmatic Biological
Assessment. These data will be utilized by the Fish and Wildlife Service in crafting the programmatic Biological Opinion.
Initial observations have indicated relocated P. capax and Quadrula quadrula exhibit very different movement patterns
post-relocation. For example, many resident and relocated P. capax are capable of moving 10 miles or more over a
12-hour period, while resident and relocated Q. quadrula have remained stationary up to four months after relocation.
A continuation of this pattern may reveal that species-specific life history characteristics potentially influence movement
patterns following relocation. Fatalities have occurred in the resident, relocated, and propagation animals of both
species, though time to and cause of fatality are not known.
CITATION: Peck A, McIntyre H, Farris J, Christian AD, Harris J and Looney R. 2006. Habitat restoration plan and programmatic biological assessment for Potamilus capax (green 1832) in Arkansas. IN: Proceedings of the 2005 International Conference on Ecology and Transportation, Eds. Irwin CL, Garrett P, McDermott KP. Center for Transportation and the Environment, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC: p. 586. (Abstract)
Road Ecology Center.
Paper Peck2005a.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/jmie/roadeco/Peck2005a
|