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Caraco, N.F., J.J. Cole, P.A. Raymond, D.L. Strayer, M.L. Pace, S.E.G.
Findlay, and D.T. Fischer, 1997. Zebra Mussel Invasion in a Large, Turbid
River: Phytoplankton Response to Increased Grazing, Institute of Ecosystem
Studies.
Reprinted from Ecology (1997) 78(2):
588-602
Zebra Mussel Invasion in a Large, Turbid
River: Phytoplankton Response to Increased Grazing
Abstract
Changes in the biomass of benthic bivalves can cause dramatic changes in
total grazing pressure in aquatic systems, but few studies document
ecosystem-level impacts of these changes. This study documents a massive decline
in phytoplankton biomass concurrent with the invasion of an exotic benthic
bivalve, the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha), and demonstrates that the
zebra mussel actually caused this decline. In the fall of 1992 the zebra mussel
became established at high biomass in the Hudson River Estuary, and biomass of
mussels remained high during 1993 and 1994. During these 2 yr, grazing pressure
on phytoplankton was over 10-fold greater than it had been prior to the zebra
mussel invasion. This increased grazing was associated with an 85% decline in
phytoplankton biomass. Between 1987 and 1991 (pre-invasion), summertime
chlorophyll averaged 30 mg/m3; during 1993 and 1994 summertime concentrations
were <5 mg/m3. Over this same period, light availability increased,
phosphate concentrations doubled, some planktonic grazers declined, and average
flow was not different from the pre-invasion period, Thus, changes in these
other factors were not responsible for phytoplankton declines.
We developed a
mechanistic model that reproduces the spatial and temporal dynamics of
phytoplankton prior to the invasion of the zebra mussel (1987-1991). The model
accurately predicts extreme declines in phytoplankton biomass after the invasion
(1993-1994). The model demonstrates that zebra mussel grazing was sufficient to
cause the observed phytoplankton decline. The model also allows us to test which
features make the Hudson River sensitive to the impact of benthic grazers. The
model suggests that the fate of lightscattering inorganic particles (turbidity)
is a key feature determining the impact of benthic grazers in aquatic systems.
Entire Paper
Contact: Nina Caraco, Institute of Ecosystem Studies,
Box AB, Route #44AMillbrook, NY
12545
Keywords: Ecological_interactions, Basic_biology,
Bivalve
Product Type: Research, Basic_biology
User Type: Resource Management
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