Wednesday 17 August 2016

River Dee's pearl mussels get a helping hand – or gill


They were hunted to near-extinction. Now a £3.5m project aims to let the Scottish molluscs flourish again

Saturday 13 August 201622.48 BST

The sun shines on clear river water running through a valley in the Cairngorms, bringing the stones on the river bed into colourful focus. Here and there are dark shadows, half-buried clusters of dull black shells, lined and gouged by decades of shifting water and gravel: the pearl mussels of the river Dee.

The pearl mussel is one of the most ancient invertebrates on the planet, a freshwater shellfish that has helped to shape the history of Britain. One pearl mussel in every 1,000 or 5,000 – no one can be sure – lives up to its name and contains a lustred treasure. Julius Caesar’s biographer, Suetonius, cites a desire for pearls as one of the reasons why the Romans invaded Britain in 55BC.

But pearl hunting, pollution and habitat destruction have almost led to the mussel’s extinction. It has been illegal to pearl fish and to sell or buy a Scottish pearl since 1998, but their numbers remain perilously low. This week or the next, some of the remaining female mussels along all 86 miles of the Dee will spawn – all at once. On just one day a year, they release millions of tiny larvae, or glochidia, into the water.

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