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Botts, P.S., B.A Patterson, and D.W. Schloesser, 1996. Zebra Mussel Effects on
Benthic Invertebrates: Physical or Biotic?, The Pennsylvania State University-Erie
Reprinted from Journal of North American Benthological Society (1996) 15(2): 179-184
Zebra Mussel Effects on Benthic Invertebrates: Physical or
Biotic?
Abstract
In soft sediments, Dreissena spp. create firm substrate in the form of aggregates
of living mussels (druses) that roll free on the sediments. Druses provide physical
structure which increases habitat heterogeneity, and the mussels increase benthic organic
matter through the production of pseudofeces and feces. Descriptive and experimental
studies were used to determine: 1) whether the density of benthic invertebrates in soft
sediments increased in the presence of druses, and 2) whether the invertebrate assemblage
responded to the physical structure provided by a druse or to some biotic effect
associated with the presence of living mussels. In core samples collected biweekly during
summer in Presque Isle Bay, Erie, Pennsylvania, amphipods, chironomids, oligochaetes,
turbellarians, and hydrozoans were significantly more abundant in sand with druses than in
bare sand. When mesh bags containing either a living druse, non-living druse, or no druse
were incubated in the bay for 33 d, we found that chironomids were significantly more
abundant in treatments with living druses than with non-living druses, and in treatments
with non-living druses than with no druse; turbellarians, amphipods, and hydrozoans were
significantly more abundant in treatments with living or non-living druses than with no
druse; oligochaetes showed no significant differences among treatments. This study
demonstrates that most taxa of benthic invertebrates in soft substrate respond
specifically to the physical structure associated with aggregates of mussel shells, but
further study is needed to examine chironomid responses to some biotic effect dependent on
the presence of living mussels.
Entire Paper
Contact: P.S. Botts, Division of Science, The Pensylvania State
University-Erie, Erie, Pennsylvania 16563
Keywords: Zebra_mussel, Ecological_interactions, Colonization
Product Type: Research, Basic_biology
User Type: General
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