One-band juga (Juga sp. 8)

Category: Molluscs
Vulnerability to climate change (More details)

Low-
Moderate

If you see this species, please share your observation using the WDFW wildlife reporting form. Providing detailed information such as a photo and exact coordinates will improve the confidence and value of this observation to WDFW species conservation and management.

The one-banded juga is a freshwater aquatic gastropod. Their population size is considered low and the trend is unknown. Juga species generally require cold, clear, well-oxygenated water; they are sensitive to pollution, and intolerant of warm waters, low dissolved oxygen, or major seasonal fluctuations. Destruction of springs by grazing, logging, and water diversion, for such things as for water supply and fish hatcheries, has already caused extensive extinction of Juga species throughout western North America

Description and Range

Physical description

Juga species are medium-sized, aquatic, gilled snails with tall conical shells. This genus (Juga) is part of the family Semisulcospiridae. The taxonomy of the Semisulcospiridae, like most freshwater gastropods, has been based largely on shell morphology, and the tremendous variation makes the current taxonomy problematic and species identification difficult. Current work using reproductive anatomy and DNA to help resolve some of the taxonomic problems will likely result in changes in taxonomy in the future.

 

Ecology and life history

Juga species are native to the streams and springs of the Pacific Northwest, California, and the Great Basin. The one-banded juga occurs in low to mid-elevation spring-fed streams and large springs with, cold, fast flowing, highly oxygenated water and a level bottom; if in streams, only in low gradient streams, generally spring-fed.

Image
Dozens of tiny, dark Juga species snails underwater clinging onto rocks in a stream.
Photo by Bonnie Besijn - USGS Western Fisheries Research Center
​Dozens of tiny Juga species snails clinging onto rocks in a stream. ​

Juga snails are characterized as rasper-grazers, feeding on both algae and detritus on rock surfaces and deciduous leaf litter.

The egg masses of Juga are most often found in loose (non-cemented) but stable cobble substrate, with free and fairly vigorous flow through at least the upper substrate layers. Most Juga species appear to breed and lay eggs once a year as adults. Egg masses are located under rocks in the spring, and eggs hatch in one month. Juga species live from five to seven years, reaching sexual maturity in three years, and can continue to grow.

Geographic range

Where found, Juga species can comprise over 90 percent of the invertebrate biomass in some streams.

One-band jugas are known from a few of the central and eastern Columbia Gorge tributaries in Skamania and Klickitat Counties, Washington. Substantive range extensions are unlikely as most of the Columbia Gorge streams, as well as tributaries of the Klickitat and White Salmon rivers in recent years were surveyed.

Climate vulnerability

Sensitivity to climate change

Low-
Moderate

There is limited information on the sensitivity of this species to climate change. Its habitat includes low- to mid-elevation streams and springs with cold, highly oxygenated water, and therefore may be sensitive to changes in flow regimes and increases in water temperature that negatively impact dissolved oxygen levels and chemical and biological processes.

Confidence: Low

Exposure to climate change

Moderate

  • Altered flow regimes
  • Reduced oxygen
  • Increased water temperatures
Confidence: Low

Conservation

This species is identified as a Species of Greatest Conservation Need (SGCN) under the State Wildlife Action Plan (SWAP). SGCN-classified species include both those with and without legal protection status under the Federal or State Endangered Species programs, as well as game species with low populations. The WDFW SWAP is part of a nationwide effort by all 50 states and five U.S. territories to develop conservation action plans for fish, wildlife and their natural habitats—identifying opportunities for species' recovery before they are imperiled and more limited.

Conservation Threats and Actions Needed

  • Fish and wildlife habitat loss or degradation
    • Threat: Water diversion; habitat loss to development.
    • Action Needed: Taxonomic clarification.
  • Resource information collection needs
    • Threat: Taxonomic uncertainty may mean one or more taxa are in greater decline.
    • Action Needed: Formal species description, taxonomic clarification.

This species' climate vulnerability is assessed as "moderate to high." Climate vulnerability (PDF) is a way to assess the degree to which a habitat or species is susceptible to and unable to cope with adverse impacts of climate change.

Resources

References

Frest, T. J. and E. J. Johannes. 1995. Interior Columbia Basin mollusk species of special concern. Final report to the Interior Columbia Basin Ecosystem Management Project, Walla Walla, WA. Contract #43-0E00-4-9112. 274 pp. plus appendices.

Lee, T., J. J. Kim, H. C. Hong, J. B. Burch and D. O´Foighil. 2006. Crossing the Continental Divide: the Columbia drainage species Juga hemphilli (Henderson, 1935) is a cryptic member of the eastern North American genus Elimia (Cerithioidea: Pleuroceridae). Journal of Molluscan Studies 72:314-317.

O’Foighil, D. O., T. Lee, D. C. Campbell, and S. A. Clark. 2009. All voucher specimens are not created equal: A cautionary tale involving North American pleurocerid gastropods. Journal of Molluscan Studies 75:305-306.

USFWS. 2011. Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants: 90-day finding on a petition to list 29 mollusk species as threatened or endangered with critical habitat: proposed rule. Federal Register 76 (No. 193, October 5, 2011): 61826-61853

Other resources