To the FWGNA group:
Every year about this time I deliver a lecture to my Biology 111
students entitled, "The Scientific Method." I always emphasize
that this may be the most important lecture of their careers as
scientists. And I begin by defining "science" as the construction
of testable models about the natural world, accenting the word testable. A model need not be
correct - in fact, it is commonly argued that no model of the natural
world can ever be proven correct. But I always try to drive home
to the freshmen that any hypothesis, theory or model of nature that is
testable, verifiable, or falsifiable can make a contribution to
science. Anything else is screwing around with a lab coat on.
Judging from subsequent examinations, however, I've been forced to
conclude that the minds of college freshmen are generally focused
elsewhere on the first day of class. And to judge from the
quality of the typical paper published in the literature of
evolutionary biology today, there are precious few opportunities to
make up the missed material between the freshman year and the
Ph.D. I suspect there's something about DNA sequence data in
particular that promotes clueless data-dredging, but I digress.
Earlier this summer my faith in the scientific method was refreshed by
an email from Ms. Laura Kirk, Park Interpreter at Lee State Natural
Area near Bishopville, SC. She reported collecting a snail from
the nearby Lynches River unidentifiable through the dichotomous key I
published on my brand new Freshwater Gastropods of
South Carolina web site, not matching any of the photos or
descriptions I had posted. She attached a photo of the beast,
which after some correspondence I came to realize was Lioplax subcarinata (Say
1816). Hers was the first modern record of the species in this
state.
The March 9 Version of my FWGSC web site, which is still up (as of
August 24, 2004) but badly in need of revision, constituted a testable
model of the natural world. I stated that there are 24 freshwater
gastropod species in South Carolina. And in a matter of two
months, a scientist with whom I had no prior contact disproved that
hypothesis, bringing the total to 25. (There may now be a 26th
species as well, but that's another story.)
This Saturday just past I traveled to Lee State Natural Area and was
able to collect a large sample of Lioplax
from the Lynches River (Figure 1).
The river is perhaps 10 meters across in this region of the state,
rather steeply incised into its banks. Fallen trees and woody
debris constitute the only solid substrate. The water is
generally turbid but has fairly good flow, over a bottom of sand and
mud. There's more info at the EPA "surf your
watershed" site.
The Lioplax were burrowing in
extremely flocculent mud in backwater eddies. "Burrowing" is a
poor word for it, because the mud was very loosely aggregated in these
pools, and would seem to require almost no extra expenditure of energy
to penetrate. The snails seemed more "suspended in" than
"burrowing through" the substrate. I made my collection by wading
knee-deep into 4 cm of water and feeling with my hands.
The animals looked much like Campeloma,
with very pale body coloration (Figure 2).
They were unusually small for viviparids, none larger than 16 mm in
shell length. But my examination of four individuals ranging from
12 mm to 15 mm showed all to be mature, one male and three females
bearing early-stage embryos. Their shells bore spiral cords of
varying strength, some quite fine (Figure
3).
The relevant paragraph on the "Recommendations" page of the present
(9Mar04) version of my FWGSC site reads as follows: "There may be
cause for some conservation concern regarding Lioplax subcarinata. This
fairly large and conspicuous species is restricted to Atlantic
drainages, nominally ranging from New York to South Carolina (Clench
1962). But Lioplax
seems to have been extirpated from New York (Jokinen 1992), and we have
been unable to confirm its presence here at the southern terminus of
its range as well. Lioplax
does seem at least locally common in North Carolina and Virginia,
however, so the situation may not as yet be critical."
Although the penultimate sentence of that paragraph will obviously
require some modification, I think the other sentences remain okay as
they currently read, at least for the present. I still suspect
that there may be some cause for conservation concern regarding Lioplax, depending on its abundance
through the meat of its range to the north. Stay tuned!
Cheers,
Rob
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