Monitoring of white-clawed crayfish (
A mass mortality was detected in the downstream section of one of the most extensive
French populations of the endangered white-clawed crayfish, Austropotamobius
pallipes, on June 26, 2013. This population occupied a 12 km stretch of the La
Lucelle brook, with an estimated size of around 150 000 individuals. The presence of the
crayfish plague pathogen was quickly diagnosed as the cause of the mortality, and
monitoring was carried out to follow the spread of the disease from 15 July 2013 for one
year. Results showed that after a fast spread between 15 and 25 July 2013 (upstream
progression of mortality for about 4 km), the mortality front was limited to a stretch of
a few hundred meters from August until December 2013. During winter, mortality was always
observed, confirming that disease remained active. In April 2014, the mortality front was
halted by a large dam in the brook (2 m high), 0.56 km from brook source. Two months
later, 30 live crayfish were observed above the dam. On the 30 August 2014, no crayfish
were found above the dam. Infected individuals analysed for microsatellite markers
confirmed the Pacifastacus leniusculus strain of Aphanomyces
astaci at the origin of this outbreak. Before the crayfish plague spread
upstream of the large dam, a sample of 576 individuals was collected from upstream of the
dam and translocated to another stream in the same French department. In July 2014,
observations by night confirmed the presence of translocated white-clawed crayfish in the
receiving brook.
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