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Strayer David L., Lane C. Smith, and Dean C. Hunter, 1997. Effects of the Zebra
Mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) Invasion on the Macrobenthos of the Freshwater Tidal
Hudson River, Institute of Ecosystem Studies
Reprinted from Canadian Journal of Zoology 76: 419-425 (1997)
Effects of the Zebra Mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) Invasion on
the Macrobenthos of the Freshwater Tidal Hudson River
Abstract:
To assess the effect of the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) invasion on
benthic animal communities, we monitored the macrozoobenthos at eight sites in the
freshwater tidal Hudson River in 1990-1995. Zebra mussels were absent or scarce in the
Hudson River before September 1992, but abundant (mean 17 000/m2) on hard
substrata in 1993- 1995 and responsible for large declines in phytoplankton biomass. All
of our monitoring stations had soft sediments, and so had low local densities of zebra
mussels (mean 78/m2). Nevertheless, we observed marked changes in the
macrozoobenthos at these stations. Sphaeriid clams declined by 67% between 1990-1992 and
1993-1995, but no other group of macrobenthos showed a simple change in density between
1990-1992 and 1993-1995 across all eight monitoring sites. Instead, most taxa showed a
strong interaction between zebra mussel impacts and water depth. At deep-water sites,
macrozoobenthic density declined by 33% between 1990-1992 and 1993-1995, while at
shallow-water sites, density rose by 25%. We suggest that these changes were probably
caused by reduced sedimentation of edible particles at deep-water sites combined with
increased biomass of macrophytes and attached algae at shallow-water sites.
Entire Paper
Contact: D. Strayer, Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Millbrook, NY 12545
Keywords: Zebra_mussel, Environmental_impacts, Ecological_interactions
Product Type: Research,
Impact
User Type: General
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