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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Invasive New Zealand Mud Snail Found in Lake Michigan URBANA - Earlier this summer, researchers at the Lake
Michigan Biological Station (LMBS), a field station of the Illinois Natural
History Survey (INHS), discovered a population of New Zealand mud snails
while processing a sample from Lake Michigan--one of the first reported
sighting of this species in the lake.
Native to New Zealand, these mud snails are an invasive
species in North America, Europe, and Australia. They were first spotted in
the United States in 1987, and were found established in Lake Ontario in
1991--the first occurrence of the species in the Great Lakes. Aquatic ecologists from LMBS identified the species while
processing samples that had been taken from the waters one mile south
of Waukegan Harbor in September of 2007. Another discovery of New Zealand
mud snails in Lake Michigan was announced in June. The sample had been
collected in deeper water--20 m in depth--off the coast of Waukegan in 2006. According to Kevin Cummings, INHS malacologist, this
discovery is significant because of the species ability to reproduce
asexually, which allows them to spread at a rapid rate. “It’s hard enough to
contain a species once it makes its way into non-native waters,” said
Cummings. “When each mud snail has the ability to produce large quantities
of embryos without a partner, you’ve really got a problem.” “If the New Zealand mud snail becomes widely distributed
at high densities, it could further disrupt the system by outcompeting
native mollusks and other invertebrates for habitat and food,” said Sara
Creque, a LMBS aquatic ecologist. “Many of the native invertebrates are
already declining throughout the lake. If the New Zealand mud snail out
competes these species, it could have detrimental effects on upper levels of
the food chain.”
Irene Miles |