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Site condition monitoring of freshwater pearl mussel in the River Dee 2022–2023

NatureScot Research Report 1353 – Site Con­di­tion Mon­it­or­ing of fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sel in the River Dee 2022 – 2023

Year of pub­lic­a­tion: 2024

Authors: Cos­grove P (Alba Eco­logy Ltd), Mas­sey K (Alba Eco­logy Ltd), Shields D (Alba Eco­logy Ltd), Pic­ton J (Alba Eco­logy Ltd), Cos­grove C (Alba Eco­logy Ltd), Towers M (NatureScot), Tree A (NatureScot).

Cite as: Cos­grove P, Mas­sey K, Shields D, Pic­ton J, Cos­grove C, Towers M, Tree A. 2024. Site Con­di­tion Mon­it­or­ing of fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sel in the River Dee 2022 – 2023. NatureScot/​CNPA Research Report No. 1353.

Keywords: Fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sel; Mar­gar­i­ti­fera mar­gar­i­ti­fera; pop­u­la­tion col­lapse; flood; cli­mate change; Storm Frank; Scot­land; River Dee

Con­fid­en­tial reports NatureScot and the Cairngorms Nation­al Park Author­ity are com­mit­ted to mak­ing the find­ings of all of their research pub­licly avail­able whenev­er pos­sible. How­ever, some anim­als and plants are threatened by or vul­ner­able to human activ­it­ies and there­fore require pro­tec­tion. Mak­ing some of our research con­fid­en­tial is a way of pro­tect­ing these spe­cies and may help their sur­viv­al. To be trans­par­ent about our work on pro­tec­ted spe­cies we have pub­lished a short, redac­ted ver­sion of the full con­fid­en­tial report. If you would like a copy of the full report please email [email protected].

Back­ground The River Dee, Aber­deen­shire is des­ig­nated a Spe­cial Area of Con­ser­va­tion (SAC) under the European Uni­on Hab­it­ats Dir­ect­ive. The crit­ic­ally endangered fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sel (Mar­gar­i­ti­fera mar­gar­i­ti­fera) is one of the spe­cies covered by this des­ig­na­tion. In accord­ance with the Dir­ect­ive, routine Site Con­di­tion Mon­it­or­ing (SCM) is under­taken to assess the state of the spe­cies. This report cov­ers the mon­it­or­ing sur­vey com­mis­sioned by NatureScot and the Cairngorms Nation­al Park Author­ity and included the Dee Catch­ment Partnership’s deliv­ery plan. The sur­vey was con­duc­ted between August 2022 and April 2023 and was the first to be done since the Decem­ber 2015 chan­nel-chan­ging flood caused by Storm Frank. To under­stand the cur­rent status of the fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sel pop­u­la­tion and to illus­trate any changes in it, the meth­ods used in the 2002 baseline sur­vey were repeated.

Main find­ings

  • The River Dee between the Bridge of Dee, Aber­deen and the Quoi­ch Water, Brae­mar was sur­veyed under licence for fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sels. The sur­vey meth­ods described in the Joint Nature Con­ser­va­tion Committee’s Com­mon Standard’s Mon­it­or­ing Guid­ance for Fresh­wa­ter fauna were applied.
  • 985 5m x 1m spot-checks were con­duc­ted. A total of 172 live fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sels was found. No fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sels were recor­ded in the vast major­ity (c.95%) of these spot-checks.
  • 27 50 m x 1 m tran­sects were sur­veyed, which held 771 vis­ible fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sels. Where live pearl mus­sels were found in a tran­sect, the rel­at­ive abund­ance code was gen­er­ally D (Rare).
  • All fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sels were recor­ded close to, i.e. less than 5 m from, the bank edge. In 28 spot-checks they were recor­ded with­in 0 – 3 m of the bank edge, and in 20 spot-checks they were recor­ded with­in 3 – 5 m of the bank edge. In all circumstances,
  • fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sels were highly loc­al­ised and with­in a nar­row c.2 – 3 m wide cor­ridor close and par­al­lel to one bank edge. In 2002 the width of suit­able hab­it­at was estim­ated to be c.20 m.
  • There has been a c.90% decline in over­all fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sel abund­ance in the River Dee SAC between the 2002 and 2022 – 2023 SCM surveys.
  • The cata­stroph­ic decrease in the num­ber of fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sels is unpre­ced­en­ted. The ≥ 90% decrease is attrib­uted primar­ily to the effects of Storm Frank; no evid­ence was recor­ded of any oth­er imme­di­ate sig­ni­fic­ant threat or pres­sure that could have caused a rap­id pop­u­la­tion loss of such mag­nitude. How­ever, it is recog­nised that oth­er cli­mate change-related factors, not just an increase in extreme spates such as that caused by Storm Frank, are also likely to be con­trib­ut­ing to the fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sel pop­u­la­tion col­lapse. These include land man­age­ment in the middle to upper catch­ment, droughts, warm­er water tem­per­at­ures, and declin­ing num­bers of host fish.
  • Storm Frank caused large changes to fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sel hab­it­at and is thought to be the most likely cause of the unpre­ced­en­ted fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sel pop­u­la­tion decline. The sub­strate of most of the River Dee now appears to be highly unstable and so unsuit­able for fresh­wa­ter pearl mussels.
  • No evid­ence of oth­er dir­ect threats was recor­ded, such as illeg­al pearl fish­ing which was pre­vi­ously con­sidered to be a sig­ni­fic­ant and pre­vent­able cause of mortality.
  • Catch­ment-wide res­tor­a­tion is needed, to mit­ig­ate the effects of cli­mate change, and to halt the decline and ensure the recov­ery of the River Dee SAC’s fresh­wa­ter pearl mus­sel population.
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