The Freshwater Gastropods of South Carolina
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> Introduction
Like most of the United States, at no time in its history has South Carolina seen a comprehensive survey of freshwater gastropods. The state’s molluscan fauna was first catalogued by Gibbes (1848) and then by Mazyck (1913), the latter contributing his own scattered observations (primarily from the Charleston area) to a thorough survey of the literature. Mazyck compiled a list of 43 freshwater gastropod species, citing an example locality if one was known to him or a published reference if he himself had made no confirming collection. Subsequent taxonomic revisions would reduce Mazyck’s list to 28 species by synonymy, and many of his remaining entries are dubious. Much more recently, The Nature Conservancy has established NatureServe, an organization that maintains an on-line catalogue of biotic diversity. A query to the NatureServe "Explorer" database in February 2005 returned a list of 32 freshwater gastropod species in South Carolina, although no locality data (nor references of any sort) are available.
Although perhaps not as environmentally heterogeneous as neighboring states, South Carolina does include some land form diversity. The state has traditionally been divided into three physiographic provinces, corresponding closely with US Forest Service “Ecoregions” as well as with USDA plant hardiness zones. The (rather low) fall line runs diagonally across the middle of the state, from Cheraw in the northeast, through the capital city of Columbia, to Augusta (GA) in the southwest. Thus the state may be divided into its Atlantic Coastal Plain Province in the southeast and its Piedmont Province through most of the northwest. The three most northwestern counties of the state contact a third physiographic province, the Blue Ridge. In South Carolina the Blue Ridge Province is equivalent to the “Central Appalachian Broadleaf Forest” ecoregion, and to USDA plant hardiness zone 7a (average annual minimum temperature 0 – 5°C). The Piedmont is equivalent to the “Southeastern Mixed Forest” ecoregion, or USDA zone 7b (5 – 10°C ). The Coastal Plain is equivalent to the “Outer Coastal Plain Mixed Forest” ecoregion and primarily zone 8a (10 – 15°C.) There is a small strip of USDA plant hardiness zone 8b (average annual minimum temperature 15 – 20°C) along the southern coast.
The surface geology of South Carolina is almost entirely sedimentary and quite sandy, with small regions of Paleozoic granite in the extreme northwest. There are three major river systems, all of which originate in the mountains of western North Carolina and flow southeast to the Atlantic: the Pee Dee, the Broad/Catawba/Santee, and the Savannah. The state also contains several smaller coastal plain drainages: the Black, the Ashley/Cooper, the Ashepoo/Combahee/Edisto and the Coosawhatchie.
The state was
deforested by timber interests beginning in the early eighteenth
century, and intensive row crop agriculture through the ensuing 200
years led to severe erosion. Although today’s land use practices are
much improved, most South Carolina rivers now carry heavy burdens of
sediment, and solid substrate is rare (Harding et al. 1998). The first
half of the twentieth century saw most of the major rivers impounded
for hydroelectric power. The “Santee-Cooper Project” created Lakes
Marion and Moultrie, diverting most of the flow of the Santee River
down the (previously minor) Cooper River into Charleston Harbor. Other
large impoundments in the Santee system include Lakes Greenwood and
Murray on the Saluda River west of Columbia and Lake Wateree north of
Columbia. The Savannah River was dammed at four points upstream from
Augusta, creating a series of lakes from its headwaters to the fall
line. Although the Pee Dee River has escaped impoundment in South
Carolina, several large dams in North Carolina have doubtless impacted
its habitat quality.
The freshwater
environment of South Carolina has unquestionably seen tremendous change
since Mazyck’s 1913 catalogue. Meanwhile, modern improvements in
transportation have made comprehensive field surveys of large scope
feasible, and modern methods of information processing have made data
retrieval convenient. The purpose of this web site, and of a larger
publication expected to follow in several years (Dillon et al., in
prep.), is to document the freshwater gastropod fauna of South Carolina
as it has come to us today, with an eye toward conservation efforts in
the future.
> Methods
Recently the US Environmental Protection Agency has coordinated a joint effort involving the USGS, the US Forest Service, state natural resource agencies, and conservation groups aimed at producing a uniform system of ecoregions. This system features four tiers. At Level I, the entire state of South Carolina is classified as "Eastern Temperate Forest." The three Level II ecoregions recognized in South Carolina correspond to the the USFS ecoregions outlined in the introduction above. At Level III, the USEPA recognizes five ecoregions in this state: Blue Ridge, Piedmont, Southeastern Plains, Middle Atlantic Coastal Plain, and Southern Coastal Plain. This most recent, USEPA System of Ecoregions has been adopted for the present survey.
The database in its present form contains 623 records. A nucleus of 104 records dates from 1988, when I was awarded a small grant by the SC Heritage Trust to survey the state for Goniobasis catenaria (Dillon 1988). I visited 233 sites in connection with the work, which I combined with data from 447 sites visited by my colleague E. P. Keferl and ultimately published in the proceedings of the Freshwater Mollusk Conservation Society (Dillon & Keferl 2000). Although only 44 of these sites were positive for pleurocerids, I used the opportunity to collect freshwater gastropods of all species, and the present survey was born.A major contribution to the effort was made by Mr. Jim Glover, who made available the extensive macrobenthos collections of the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control. DHEC personnel annually take semi-quantitative macrobenthos samples at hundreds of sites throughout the state in connection with their water quality monitoring responsibilities. I was given access to sorted voucher-type freshwater gastropod collections dating into the 1970s, plus entire (unsorted) macrobenthos samples taken 1989 – 1994, from which I extracted 220 records.
My colleague Will Reeves made available to me the Entomology Collection at Clemson University, which included 31 freshwater snail records among the aquatic insect samples, and contributed numerous personally-collected samples from the upstate. My student and colleague Tom Smith was an especially enthusiastic field worker in 2002-03, making many productive field trips in the general vicinity of Charleston. Also making notable contributions in the field were Amy Wethington and Arnie Eversole. To all of these I offer my thanks.
For help with the
mapping effort I thank Norm Levine and especially Doug Florian, without
whose GIS skills this project would have remained an ugly heap of
data. Ms. Jasmine Wu designed the version of this site on line
2003 - 2005, and Mr. Steve Bleezarde has overseen its subsequent expansion and refinement.
> References
Robert T. Dillon, Jr.
Department of Biology, College of
Charleston
Charleston, SC 29424
P: 843.953.8087
F: 843.953.5453