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Effler, S.W. and C. Siegfried, 1998. Tributary Water Quality Feedback from the
Spread of Zebra Mussels: Oswego River, New York, Upstate Freshwater Institute.
Reprinted from Journal of Great Lakes Research (1998) 24(2):
453-463
Tributary Water Quality Feedback from the Spread of Zebra Mussels:
Oswego River, New York
Abstract
Dramatic changes in the water quality of the Oswego River system, including Oswego
Harbor, since the early 1990s brought about by zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha)
infestation are documented. The analysis is based on summertime (June to September) water
quality monitoring of the Oswego Harbor (1981 and 1993), the mouth of the Oswego River
(1983 to 1993), and three upstream sites in the Oswego River system (1990, 1991, and
1994), and two benthic surveys conducted along a 70 km reach of the system to the mouth of
the Oswego River in 1994. It is estimated that water in the Oswego River was filtered more
than twice over this length by the mussels in 1994 (at median flow) before it reached
Oswego Harbor. The zebra mussel infestation converted the Oswego River and the harbor from
a turbid (low clarity), phytoplankton-rich, nutrient-depleted system, to a system with
distinctly greater clarity, reduced phytoplankton concentrations, enriched in soluble
reactive phosphorus. Most of this impact was attributable to dense zebra mussel
populations (e.g., ~ 30,000 indiv/m2) in a 5 km river section, located > 60 km upstream
of Oswego Harbor. These changes in tributary water quality represent a form of feedback
associated with the spread of the zebra mussel from the Laurentain Great Lakes. Increased
attached algae growth in the Great Lakes proximate to the inflow of infested tributaries
is a reasonable expectation in response to the more available form of the
phosphorous load.
Entire Paper
Contact: Stephen Effler, Upstate
Freshwater Institute, P.O. Box 506, Syracuse, NY 13214
Keywords: Zebra_mussel, Environmental_impacts, Basic_biology
Product Type: Research,
Impact
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