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Waller, D. L., J. J. Rach, W. G. Cope, L. L. Marking, S. W.
Fisher, and H. Dabrowski, 1993. Toxicity of Candidate
Molluscicides to Zebra Mussels (Dreissena polymorpha) and Selected Nontarget
Organisms, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service-LaCrosse, WI and The Ohio
State University
Reprinted from J. Great Lakes Res 19(4):695-702 with
permission from the International Association for Great Lakes Research (IAGLR)
Toxicity of Candidate Molluscicides to Zebra Mussels (Dreissena
polymorpha) and Selected Nontarget Organisms
ABSTRACT:
Many compounds have been marketed for control of zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha),
but most compounds lack comparable toxicity data and have not been tested on nontarget
organisms. We tested the toxicity of 18 chemicals to two sizes of zebra mussels, two
nontarget fish (rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss and channel catfish, Ictalurus
punctatus), and a unionid mussel (threehorn wartyback, Obliquaria reflexa)
under standard conditions. Organisms were exposed to the chemicals for 48 h in
"soft" reference water (pH 7.7, alkalinity 6 x 10-4 m/L (30 mg/L) as CaC03
and total hardness 40 mg/L as CaCO3) at 17°C. Zebra mussels and unionid
mussels were held in untreated reference water for another 48 h after exposure to measure
delayed mortality. The LC50 values and 95% confidence intervals were compared
among test organisms. Potassium chloride, Bayluscide (a registered molluscicide), and
Clamtrol CT-1 (a polyquaternary ammonium compound) were the most selective chemicals
tested against zebra mussels. They were two to three times more toxic to zebra mussels
than to the nontarget species. Most of the remaining chemicals lacked the desired toxicity
or were more toxic to fish than to zebra mussels.
Entire Paper
Contact: S. Warwick Fisher, Ohio State University, 1735 Neil Avenue, Columbus, OH
43210 or fisher.14@postbox.acs.ohio-state.edu
Keywords: Chemical_control, Industry, Zebra_mussel
Product Type: Control , Research
User Type: Industrial_and_municipal
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