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Effler, S.W. and C. Siegfried, 1994. Zebra Mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) Populations in the Seneca River, New York: Impact on Oxygen Resources, Upstate Freshwater Institute. Abstracted with permission from Environmental Science & Technology (1994) 28(12): 2216-2221. Copyright 1994 American Chemical Society. The full text of this article is available at the American Chemical Society. Zebra Mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) Populations in the Seneca River, New York: Impact on Oxygen ResourcesThe character and cause of a major depletion in dissolved oxygen (DO) observed in a 16-km reach of the Seneca River, New York, in the summer of 1993 was evaluated. The decline in oxygen concentrations was attributed to a recent severe infestation by the invading zebra mussel. Zebra mussel densities of 33 000-61 000 individuals m(-2) were found in a 1.4-km section, across which an average (n = 3) depletion in DO concentration of about 1.7 mg L(-1) was observed. The estimated areal respiration rate for the zebra mussel population in this section (34 g m(-2) d(-1)) nearly matched the areal sink calculated independently from DO budget calculations (44 g m(-2) d(-1)). The zebra mussels also caused substantial decreases in phytoplankton biomass and increases in water clarity over the study reach. Loss in waste assimilative capacity is expected to occur in other alkaline hardwater rivers and streams with rock substrate in North America as the zebra mussel invasion spreads. Contact: Stephen Effler, Upstate Freshwater Institute, P.O. Box 506,
Syracuse, NY 13214, USA |