Just across the Blue Ridge, where the high meadows lay,
And the galax spreads through the new mown hay,
There's a rusty iron bridge, 'cross a shady ravine
Where the hard road ends and turns to clay [1].
The New
River is the second-oldest river in the world, just a bit younger than the
Nile. I have heard that assertion stated
so often and so forcefully that it must be so.
Born on the slopes of North Carolina’s Grandfather Mountain (G, down
below), the New River first flows rather improbably to the northeast, through
high meadows parallel to the Blue Ridge, into the Commonwealth of
Virginia. Then, quite astoundingly, the
river shifts its course northwest, orthogonal to the Appalachian Mountains,
near the little city of Blacksburg (B), and cuts a deep notch through the
Allegheny Plateau, diagonally across West Virginia to The Ohio. The earliest explorers of the American
interior named its lower half the Kanawha River, never imagining that the New
River and the Kanawha River might connect through those hundreds of miles of
rugged terrain.
![]() |
New River at Grandview |
My mother was born and raised in the little town of Floyd, Virginia, perched on the New River plateau, looking down over the Blue Ridge (M). And my father was born and raised in Rock Castle Gorge, deep in the Blue Ridge down below (F). Many were the sparkling summers I spent rocking on my grandmother’s porch, many were the spring times I fished the chilly creeks for trout, many the falls I hunted the dark forests for squirrels.
With a
suitcase in his hand
There
the lonesome boy stands
Gazing
at the river sliding by beneath his feet,
But the
dark water springs from the black rocks and flows
Out of
sight where the twisted laurel grows.
So, I
matriculated at Virginia Tech, the University of Blacksburg, in the fall of
1973. And I have shared with this
readership quite a few anecdotes about my education in those hallowed halls
[2], especially highlighting the impact of my mentor, Dr. E. F. (Fred)
Benfield. Longtime readers might
remember that, even as I was finding a seat in my freshman biology class, plans
were well advanced to construct a double-dam pump-storage facility on the upper
New River at the Virginia / North Carolina border, which would have sunk 100
miles of the world’s second-oldest river into inky blackness and inundated
thousands of square miles of lovely farmland.
And the Virginia Tech Center for Environmental Studies had been contracted
to prepare the Environmental Impact Statement [3].
And so
it was that I, a mere sophomore of age 19, found myself checking out boots,
buckets and nets from the storeroom of the Virginia Tech Center for
Environmental Studies, pulling the keys to a pickup truck from the pegboard,
and driving off into the high meadows of the upper New River for my first
systematic survey of a freshwater molluscan fauna [4]. And in my undergraduate research thesis,
defended in May of 1977, I reported a modest 6 species of unionid mussels, 4
species of pisiidid clams, 4 species of prosobranch snails, and 6 species of
pulmonate snails from 87 sites sampled across the drainage in ten counties of
southern Virginia and northwestern North Carolina [5].
It
materialized that those 20 species of freshwater mollusks were not all evenly
distributed across my ten-county study area.
Even to my young and untrained eye, patterns manifest themselves. And the most striking pattern was closely
correlated with the underlying geology of the upper New River basin. Which sent me to the library, looking for
clues.
![]() |
The geology of the New River Valley of Virginia |
I do not remember the day or the hour I first discovered the wonderful 1936 work of A. E. Boycott [6], but I do remember the impact. Boycott’s 70-page review was a thing of beauty; so complete, so rigorous, so bubbling over with cheerful facts about the biology of the creatures we both obviously loved that 20 years later, I patterned an entire book after it [7]. And in retrospect, may have produced but a pale imitation.
So
Boycott, after reviewing the general biology and local habitats of the 62
species of freshwater mollusks inhabiting the Island of Great Britain, turned
to “The relevant qualities of the habitats.”
Item (b) in his list of eight relevant qualities was “lime,” and item (c) was “reaction,” by which he meant pH,
which (he hastened to point out) was essentially the same thing as lime [8].
Boycott
went on to classify (and map) the 62 British species as 25 “soft-water” species
(“all those which we can find in soft water without surprise”) and 30 species
“calciphile or calcicole in the sense that they are habitually found in hard
water [9].” He could not identify any
British species as “calcifuge,” i.e., restricted to soft water. Thus, overall molluscan diversity increased
in the hard waters, as the 30 calciphiles were added to the 25 softwater
species in the richer environments.
Well,
that explains a lot right here in the good old USA, I thought to myself. From its North Carolina origin through the
first (roughly) hundred miles of its journey, the New River runs through
ancient metamorphic rocks such as gneiss and schist, remaining quite soft. But about halfway to its hard left turn at
Blacksburg, the New enters a region of limestone and dolomite, and the water
hardens up. The distribution of most of
the unionids and a couple of the gastropods (Pleurocera shenandoa, Physa gyrina) seemed to
be restricted below that invisible barrier, as though they were, in Boycott’s
terminology, “calciphile.”
But
there was a second obvious factor in the distribution of the upper New River
mollusk fauna, and Boycott had that one covered as well. Item (d) of Boycott’s eight “relevant
qualities” was “Size and Volume. The
larger units of water are liable to contain the more Mollusca.” And indeed, most of the unionid mussel
species were confined to the main New River, apparently unable to inhabit the
smaller tributaries. That also seemed
true for Campeloma decisum.
![]() |
Dillon & Benfield [16] |
That’s pretty much where I dropped the shovel for my 1977 undergraduate thesis and sat down in front of the typewriter. Each of my four subheadings under Results and Discussion – Unionidae, Sphaeriidae, Prosobranch Gastropods, and Pulmonate Gastropods – had a section entitled “Effect of Hardness” and a section entitled “Effect of Stream Size.” All four subheadings also had a section entitled “Effect of perturbation” or “Effect of (artificial) enrichment.” This was the 1970s, after all, I had to get pollution in there somehow. I defended in May, got married in June, and moved to Philadelphia in July.
Ah,
but. Hidden deep inside my thesis was
the germ of an idea. Under the
“Unionidae” subheading was also a brief section entitled “Interaction of
factors.” And there I speculated, at the
age of 21, “Perhaps hardness and stream size interact in some manner so that a
large stream can support Elliptio dilatata even though its hardness may be low,
and a small stream can support mussels if it has high hardness.” That hardness x stream size interaction was
also obvious in the pulmonate snails.
About the origin of the phenomenon, at my young age, I would not hazard
a guess.
Past the
coal-tipple towns in the cold December rain
Into
Charleston runs the New River train,
Where
the hillsides are brown, and the broad valleys stained
By a
hundred thousand lives of work and pain.
Ecology
at The University of Pennsylvania and ecology at Virginia Tech are as different
as Philadelphia and Blacksburg. At Penn,
I found the intellectual focus entirely upon the interactions among organisms,
not the interactions between organisms and their environment. Density dependence was the key,
density-independence a quaint anachronism.
I remember vividly the argument made by the chairman of my graduate
committee, Bob Ricklefs. “A population
without density-dependent control will either go extinct, or cover the world
ass-deep.” Since freshwater gastropods
exist [10], and we are not ass-deep in them, they must be under
density-dependent control. Food
availability or predation might certainly qualify as potential controls for
their distribution, perhaps, certainly not the availability of calcium to build
their shells.
Robert
MacArthur’s theory of island biogeography was also still very much en vogue at
Penn in the late 1970s, with its focus on island size. And somewhere during my first year of
graduate training, it dawned on me that both the size of a stream and the
hardness of its water might affect its productivity. And that the quantity of food might be
controlling freshwater mollusk distributions in the upper New River, neither
the calcium nor the stream size directly.
And so,
at age 22, I hazarded a guess. In July
of 1978 I drove back down I-95/I-81 south from Philadelphia into those high
meadows of the Upper New River where I had spent the summers of my youth, with
beakers, cylinders, burettes, bottles of indicators and a 0.02 N sulfuric acid
titrant carefully stowed behind the hatch of my 1973 Pinto. I revisited and re-sampled every one of those
87 sites I had collected in the years previous, this time taking a streamside
measurement of alkalinity, more reliable than pH, much easier to measure than
calcium or overall hardness. And this
time I estimated a rank abundance for each of the five New River pulmonate
snails (excluding limpets, which were omnipresent): Physa acuta, Physa gyrina,
Lymnaea humilis, Lymnaea columella, and Helisoma anceps [11].
![]() |
Dillon & Benfield [16] |
I found pulmonate snails at 26 of the 87 sites, marked letters A – Z in the map above. Confirming and deepening my undergraduate results, pulmonates were common and widespread in the main New River and most of its tributaries downstream from where the river entered the limestone/dolomite zone. Above that zone, however, pulmonates were generally found only in the main river itself.
I summed
the rank abundances of the five species into an overall measure of pulmonate
abundance for each site. And I
calculated the Kendall rank correlation between pulmonate abundance,
alkalinity, stream drainage area and (here’s the key!) the alkalinity x
drainage area interaction. The
correlation with interaction (0.35**) was greater than either alkalinity or
drainage area alone.
OK, one
last thing. Notice in the table above
that alkalinity and drainage area were negatively correlated. I guess that’s not too surprising – a little
creek running through a limestone valley can get much harder than a big river,
buffered as it is by its large catchment.
This gave me the idea of a nonparametric partial correlation
coefficient, analogous to (parametric) partial correlation – a correlation
between two variables holding a third variable constant.
![]() |
Dillon & Benfield [16] |
So, I invented nonparametric partial correlation [14]. The table above shows that the Kendall rank correlation between abundance and interaction remains high, even if alkalinity is partialled out (0.31) or if drainage area is partialled out (0.27). The primary phenomenon is the interaction – the increased productivity that both water hardness and stream size promote – not the calcium nor the stream size directly.
When the
paper by Dillon & Benfield [16] finally reached publication in 1982, I
honestly thought I would become famous.
Brilliant young scientist invents novel statistical technique to answer
a fundamental question of freshwater biology!
Alas, no.
In a
tar-paper shack out of town across the track
Stands
an old used-up man trying to call something back
But his
old memories fade like the city in the haze
And his
days have flowed together like the rain
And the
dark water springs from the black rocks and flows
Out of
sight where the twisted laurel grows
Notes:
[1] The
lovely and haunting lyrics interleaved with this month’s essay come from a song
entitled “Twisted Laurel” by The Red Clay Ramblers, one of the greatest bands
of the postmodern era. Some good music
is still being made today, but for mysterious reasons has fallen out of fashion
with the popular multitude. Exactly the
same could be said for science.
[2] A
small sample of previous essays in which I have reminisced about my
undergraduate experiences at Virginia Tech and traced their subsequent
influence on my scientific career:
- To Identify a Physa, 1975 [6May14]
- Pleurocera shenandoa n.sp. [11Mar19]
- Interpopulation gene flow: King Arthur’s lesson [7Sept21]
- Growing up with periwinkles [6Apr23]
[3] For more about APCO’s Blue Ridge Project and its ultimate fate, see:
- Woodard, R. S., Jr. (2006) The Appalachian Power Company along the New River: The defeat of the Blue Ridge Project in historical perspective. M.A. Thesis, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg. 139 pp. [pdf]
[5] Dillon, R.T., Jr (1977) Factors in the distributional ecology of upper New River mollusks (Va/NC). Undergraduate research thesis, Virginia Tech. [pdf]
[6]
Boycott, A.E. (1936) The habitats of freshwater molluscs in Britain. Journal of Animal Ecology 5: 118 – 186.
[7]
Dillon, R.T., Jr. (2000) The Ecology of Freshwater Molluscs. Cambridge
University Press. 509 pp.
[8]
Boycott verbatim: “Broadly speaking, for the natural waters of this country the
reactions run parallel with the quantities of calcium.”
[9]
Boycott did not categorize 7 of the 62 British species because he felt that his
data were insufficient.
[10] OK,
I realize that I have touched a controversial point. The vast majority of my colleagues today,
including (quite likely) most of the handful of you who will ever read this
footnote, believe, as an article of faith, that freshwater gastropod
populations are indeed going extinct.
Possibly that every living creature on this earth, except cockroaches,
mosquitos, thee and me, is going extinct?
And I will grant you all that the vast majority of all species that have
ever lived have, indeed, gone extinct.
That is evolution. That is not a
crisis; that is not even bad. That is
normal.
[11]
Back in 1978, I was still using George Te’s [12] identifications for the Physa,
so Physa acuta = “hendersoni” and Physa gyrina = “pomilia.” I identified the Lymnaea humilis as “Fossaria
obrussa” [13] and used “Pseudosuccinea” as the genus for columella. Science advances.
[12] For
the complete story, see:
- To identify a Physa, 1971 [8Apr14]
- To identify a Physa, 1975 [6May14]
- To identify a Physa, 1978 [12June14]
- To identify a Physa, 1989 [3Oct18]
- To identify a Physa, 2000 [6Dec18]
[13] For the complete story, see:
- The American Galba and The French Connection [7June21]
- The American Galba: Sex, Wrecks, and Multiplex [22June21]
- Exactly 3ish American Galba [6July21]
[14] I was unable, however, to offer any statistical inference on my newly-invented Kendall partial rank correlation coefficients. I was experimenting with Monte Carlo techniques at the time [15], and (in retrospect) should have done so. Then I would have become famous. Surely.
[15] Dillon, R.T., Jr. (1981) Patterns in the morphology and distribution of gastropods in Oneida Lake, New York, detected using computer-generated null hypotheses. American Naturalist 118: 83-101. [pdf]
[16] Dillon, R.T. and E. F. Benfield (1982) Distribution of pulmonate snails in the New River of Virginia and North Carolina, U.S.A.: Interaction between alkalinity and stream drainage area. Freshwater Biology 12: 179-186. [pdf]