DNA of rare mussels found in River Seine raises hopes Paris clean-up is working

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Traces of rare mussels sensitive to pollution and thought to be on the point of extinction in France have been discovered in the Seine in Paris, raising hopes that efforts to clean up the river that bisects the French capital might be succeeding.

The findings were made after Olympic swimming events were held in the Seine last year – the first time swimming in the river has been deemed safe in a century.

Scientists looking at large water samples from eight points on the river in the city centre said they uncovered the DNA of 23 different types of mussels – including three classified as near extinct – and 36 species of fish, 10 times more than in the river in the 1960s.

Researchers were looking at the effect of artificial urban lighting on biodiversity when they made the discovery.

“All organisms lose skin cells all the time and we recover the DNA of these cells from the environment,” said Vincent Prié, a hydrobiologist specialising in freshwater mussels at the Sygen laboratory that carried out the research.

“We filter the water and sequence it. This potentially gives us a list of everything that lives. And that’s what’s so interesting, because we didn’t expect to find them in Paris at all, because they’re under threat.”

The groundbreaking study of environmental DNA (known as eDNA) consists of identifying the presence of species in an environment based on the traces they leave.

The scientific team found traces of thick shelled river mussel, the black river mussel and the depressed river mussel, three species classified as almost extinct.

The depressed river mussel, also known as the compressed anodont, which can grow up to 8cm in length, had disappeared from almost all the country except the north-east. “It’s really surprising to find it in an environment like Paris,” Prié told Le Monde.

The mussels, which are sensitive to water quality, would improve the aquatic environment as each mollusc can filter up to 40 litres of water a day, he said. “It contributes to the natural purification of the river,” Prié said.

Prié said it was too early to link the presence of the molluscs to any specific clean-up measures carried out by the city’s authorities, suggesting it could be the down to warmer water or artificial lighting.

“It’s a bit of a shortcut. Honestly scientifically we don’t know. It is quite possible that it has ‘reappeared’ in Paris from populations we don’t know about elsewhere in the Seine basin.”

Vincent Vignon, an ecologist who took part in the study, said the rare mussels were “very demanding and only settle in water that is not too polluted”. He added: “There’s clearly something special going on in Paris that we don’t yet fully understand.”

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