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Freshwater Mussels Tennessee (Hardcover, 1st ed)
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Freshwater Mussels Tennessee (Hardcover, 1st ed)
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"The Freshwater Mussels of Tennessee . . . is indispensable to
anyone, anywhere, working on this group. Parmalee and Bogan have
written a work that sets the standard for future regional
guides."--G. Thomas Watters, Ohio Biological Survey
"The Freshwater Mussels of Tennessee documents a tremendously
diverse and unique mussel fauna that is rapidly being destroyed by
modern development. Parmalee and Bogan set a new standard for state
mussel surveys in their authoritative, thorough, and and highly
readable account. The book will be of interest to biologists and
conservationists worldwide and will appeal to anyone who cares
about the preservation of natural resources in the southeastern
United States."--Robert E. Warren, Illinois State Museum
With more than 150 species and subspecies recorded in the state,
Tennessee has one of the most diverse freshwater mussel faunas in
North America. Valuable as indicators of water quality, these
mollusks have themselves become threatened as development
encroaches on habitat--twenty-three are currently listed as
endangered species and at least twelve have become extinct.
This is the first book for Tennessee to deal with this biologically
and commercially significant group of mollusks. Its authors have
been studying and writing about the mussels of Tennessee for more
than twenty years and have undertaken a systematic organization of
a large and complex body of information to bring order to a
difficult field.
The book traces the long history of human exploitation of mussels,
from aboriginal food gathering to the growth of the cultured pearl
industry. It provides an interpretive context for its exhaustive
species accounts with background material on biology, distribution,
economic utilization, taxonomy, and conservation issues. The
authors also review the life cycle of the mussel and describe its
many remarkable traits, such as its shell formation and the
strategies it employs during the larval stage in parasitizing fish.
The species accounts comprise 128 members of Family Unionidae--from
pigtoes and pocketbooks to lilliputs and spikes--plus four
additional species. The authors cover classification and synonymy,
range and distribution, life history and ecology, and survival
status. Particular attention is paid to shell description and
structure to assist the reader in identification. Each species
account includes a distribution map and color photos of two
specimens.
The Freshwater Mussels of Tennessee is a major reference that
encompasses historical and modern mussel collections and draws on
conservation studies that span two centuries. It will stand as an
authoritative guide to understanding Tennessee mollusks and as a
benchmark in the study of these species worldwide.
The Authors: Paul W. Parmalee is professor emeritus of
zooarchaeology and director emeritus of the McClung Museum at the
University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
Arthur E. Bogan is curator of aquatic invertebrates at the
North
Carolina State Museum of Natural Sciences, Raleigh.
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