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Chase, M.E. and R.C. Bailey, 1999. The Ecology of the Zebra Mussel (Dreissena
polymorpha) in the Lower Great Lakes of North America: II. Total Production, Energy
Allocation, and Reproductive Effort, Miami University.
Reprinted from Journal of Great Lakes Research (1999) 25 (1999) 25(1):
122-134
The Ecology of the Zebra Mussel (Dreissena
polymorpha) in the Lower Great Lakes of North America: II. Total Production, Energy
Allocation, and Reproductive Effort
Abstract
Five populations of Dreissena polymorpha from three lakes (Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, and
Lake Ontario) in the lower Great Lakes Region were examined from 1992 to 1994 to determine
the population dynamics, reproductive cycle, secondary production, and allocation of
resources to somatic tissue, shell, and gamete production. Secondary production, resource
allocation, and reproductive effort are reported in this paper. Considerable temporal and
spatial variation in secondary production was evident at both the population and the
individual level. Differences in population production were attributed to population
density, whereas variation in individual production was attributed to temperature, food
supply, and the age structure of the population. Total production was broken down into its
three components; somatic production, shell production, and gamete production. Analyses of
the components showed that production depended on variation in somatic and shell
production as gamete production was relatively constant in the populations examined. In
response to poor environmental conditions, D. polymorpha shifts the allocation of
resources from growth (somatic and shell) to reproduction. As individuals have no means of
predicting how long adverse conditions will persist, investment in growth may be
unprofitable.
Entire Paper
Contact: Margo Chase, Miami University,
Department of Zoology, Oxford, OH 45056
Keywords: Zebra_mussel, Basic_biology, Population_dynamics
Product Type: Research, Basic_biology
User Type: General
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