Wandering Bivalves INTRO: Sometimes scientific exploration involves high-tech equipment and sophisticated techniques. Occasionally, it starts with a simple walk on the beach. Sonya Senkowsky has more in this week's Arctic Science Journeys Radio. STORY: In the 1990s, David Norton was teaching at Ilisagvik College in Barrow, a mostly Eskimo community on Alaska's Arctic Ocean coast. There, he picked up a new hobby, Arctic beachcombing. Norton says the pickings were especially good after a storm. NORTON: "Every time there was a storm, particularly in the fall, we'd set out to replenish what had become scarce in the aquarium. We got fairly adept at predicting where the kelp and the mussels and other things would show up." One common find was blue mussels, bivalve mollusks that look something like dark-shelled, narrow clams. After storms, it wasn't unusual to find hundreds of them strewn along the beaches, clinging to plants ripped from the ocean floor. Just one problem, these mussels, part of a group known by the Latin name Mytilus, weren't supposed to be there, as Norton found when he contacted Howard Feder, the last living biologist from a team that had surveyed the beaches in the late 1940s and early 1950s. NORTON: "It wasn't until we really got to picking Howard's brain and getting him to pull out his field notebooks from forty years earlier that we realized this was quite different—now we've got a mystery on our hands." Howard Feder and the team of biologists never did find live mussels along the Arctic coast, but it wasn't for lack trying. Now a retired professor emeritus of marine science at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, Feder remembers what it was like taking samples from beneath the Arctic ice in 1949.
FEDER: "Everything we pulled up would freeze almost instantly. In fact, we had to use boiling water to put on the surface of the water of the hole to prevent it freezing right in front of us. And then as soon as we took the samples out we had to wrap it up and prevent it from freezing." Why were the mussels present in the 1990s, but not in the 1940s? The scientists set out to investigate. Their first suspect was climate change, explains Feder. FEDER: "There are a number of papers where Mytilus is considered thermophalous, or one that needs relatively warm temperatures. There is even a major project in Europe using Mytilus as an indicator of global warming, so if they occur further North, this implies that the water is warming up." But fossil studies in the Canadian Arctic, as well as Feder's own studies of living mussels in Prince William Sound, suggested mussels did not, in fact, avoid the cold. FEDER: "Mytilus does really well in the Arctic, and in fact, in the subarctic in Prince William Sound where they live intertidally, they're developing their reproductive structures in midwinter." So why were they disappearing and reappearing? NORTON: "We looked at various hypotheses. Were they coming from a great long distance? Could they be coming on the bottoms of ships like tour ships or Coast Guard icebreakers, just hitchhiking? It took us a while to notice that there was a possibility that they were living up in freshwater refuges like estuaries, lagoons, river mouths, just sort of scraping by, and then they'd recolonize the high salinity oceanic waters or the seafloor." The researchers began to piece together this story. The mussels were like weeds. They'd be wiped out of saltwater areas when conditions favored other plants or saltwater predators and they'd reestablish later from lower-salt estuaries where predators were absent. The mussels likely did come and go, but not necessarily because of climate changes. NORTON: "The story becomes much more interesting and probably more accurate than just thinking of mussels as needing warm water." The researchers published their theory recently in the journal Arctic. But for all the two learned about mussels, says Norton, his favorite lesson from the investigation was this. NORTON: "It tickles me that here's probably one of the world's most widespread bivalves, and yet we're still learning a lot of interesting, quirky, stuff about its fossil record and its relation to climate change." OUTRO: Arctic Science Journeys Radio is a production of the Alaska Sea Grant Program at the University of Alaska Fairbanks School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences. I'm Sonya Senkowsky. Audio version (above right) Thanks to the following individuals for help preparing this script: David Norton, Ph.D. Arctic Science Journeys is a radio service highlighting science, culture, and the environment of the circumpolar north. Produced by the Alaska Sea Grant College Program and the University of Alaska Fairbanks. The shortcut to our ASJ news home page is www.asjnews.org. 2004 ASJ Radio Stories|| ASJ
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