Molluscan fauna of the lower reaches of the Syoyakha River (Yamal Peninsula)

The molluscan fauna of the Syoyakha (Zelenaya) River remain poorly explored even though the Syoyakha is one of the biggest rivers on the Yamal Peninsula. The Syoyakha River is remarkable for its high fish stocking capacity and it plays an important role in the seasonal distribution and migration of commercial fish species. Freshwater mollusks are known to be a major component of freshwater ecosystems and they make up a part of the diet of many commercially important fish species. The species composition of the mollusks inhabiting the lower reaches of the Syoyakha River has been studied. Five bivalve species of the family Sphaeriidae were found, namelySphaeriumcorneum(Linnaeus, 1758),Pisidiumcasertanum(Poli, 1791),P.globulare(Clessin in Westerlund, 1873),P.lilljeborgi(Clessin in Esmark et Hoyer, 1886) andP.dilatatum(Westerlund, 1897). In general, the molluscan fauna of the lower reaches of the Syoyakha River are taxonomically poor, which can be considered typical of freshwater invertebrate communities living at high latitudes. Another reason for the decline in species diversity may lie in the absence of any large transit watercourse in the basin in question allowing northward dispersion of the mollusks. The average density of mollusks in the watercourse stretch under study varied from 98.9 ind./m2to 620.5 ind./m2.P.globularesettlements had the highest recorded density of 1,442.9 ind./m2. The mollusks are confined to clayey, silty and sandy substrates with remnants of vegetation. The fauna is basically formed by widespread Palearctic and Holarctic mollusk species that have adapted to the extreme conditions of the Arctic. The findings may be used for hydrobiological and fishery characterization of the watercourse given that the recorded species ofS.corneum,P.globulare,P.lilljeborgi, andP.dilatatumare a major food item for important fish species, such as cisco, vendace, char, muksun, etc.

[1]  C. Clewing,et al.  Exploring high-mountain limnic faunas: discovery of a novel endemic bivalve species (Sphaeriidae : Pisidium) in the Nepal Himalayas , 2016, Invertebrate Systematics.

[2]  Y. Bespalaya Molluscan fauna of an Arctic lake is dominated by a cosmopolitan Pisidium species , 2015 .

[3]  I. Bolotov,et al.  Mollusks in the zoobenthos of relict lakes with abnormally high biological production in the eastern European subarctic , 2014, Inland Water Biology.

[4]  C. Clewing,et al.  Molecular Phylogeny and Biogeography of a High Mountain Bivalve Fauna: The Sphaeriidae of the Tibetan Plateau , 2013 .

[5]  D. Palatov,et al.  The rheophilic fauna and invertebrate communities of the tundra zone: A case study of the Southern Yamal , 2012, Inland Water Biology.

[6]  I. Laurion,et al.  Shallow Freshwater Ecosystems of the Circumpolar Arctic , 2011 .

[7]  L. Guilhermino,et al.  Rapid decline of the greater European peaclam at the periphery of its distribution , 2011 .

[8]  L. Hansson,et al.  Patterns in the distribution of Arctic freshwater zooplankton related to glaciation history , 2008, Polar Biology.

[9]  R. Guralnick Combined molecular and morphological approaches to documenting regional biodiversity and ecological patterns in problematic taxa: a case study in the bivalve group Cyclocalyx (Sphaeriidae, Bivalvia) from western North America , 2005 .

[10]  Taehwan Lee,et al.  Phylogenetic structure of the Sphaeriinae, a global clade of freshwater bivalve molluscs, inferred from nuclear (ITS-1) and mitochondrial (16S) ribosomal gene sequences , 2003 .

[11]  A. Ashworth,et al.  The first freshwater molluscs from Antarctica , 2003 .

[12]  A. Korniushin Taxonomic revision of the genus Sphaerium sensu lato in the Palaearctic Region, with some notes on the North American species (Bivalvia: Spbaeriidae) , 2001 .

[13]  V. Bogdanov,et al.  Problems of the protection of bioresources development ofthe Bovanenkovo gas condensate field , 2012 .

[14]  Olivier Gargominy,et al.  Liste de référence annotée des mollusques continentaux de France Annotated checklist of the continental molluscs from France , 2011 .

[15]  I. V. Czernyadjeva Moss flora of Yamal Peninsula (West Siberian Arctic) , 2001 .