Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment
June 25, 2009
3. Watersheds –
Quaggas in
Invasive mussels finding favorable temperatures, nutrients, water
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Quaggas in
Invasive mussels finding favorable temperatures, nutrients, water
By Keith Rogers
The number is 3 trillion and counting.
That's how many quagga mussels scientists think have invaded Lake Mead's
A UNLV expert on quaggas said Wednesday that the population explosion is occurring at an alarming rate at various depths down to 355 feet. They thrive best on hard surfaces based on observations in hard and soft sediments, said David Wong, an expert on the pesky mollusks who was recruited from
Abundant calcium in the water and relatively warm temperatures also help fuel the population growth, he said.
That's why government agencies including the National Park Service are teaming with the university and its research arm, Desert Research Institute, to launch a plan to track and reduce impacts from massive colonies of the fingernail-size mussels.
A goal of the effort is to establish more than 50 sampling sites in the lake with results of the first studies expected in about a year, he said.
"We are going to focus on two issues: the quagga mussels themselves and their impact," Wong said.
Based on the damage quaggas along with zebra mussels caused in the Great Lakes region,
Their discovery in
Since then, population numbers jumped from 47.8 billion in 2007 to 2.9 trillion in
"You see there is a huge difference between these two years," Wong wrote in an e-mail Wednesday. "The key reason is because there are a lot of new juveniles in 2008 because of the explosive reproduction and growth."
Using raw data from various depths, he calculated how many live in hard and soft sediments. Most, 86 percent, are found in hard sediments and surfaces.
What the figures don't show is how many more mussel larvae are living in the lake's water that are soon to join the ranks of adults and juveniles.
With the right mix of food, calcium, dissolved oxygen and water temperature, quaggas can reproduce six times a year in lakes on the
Biologists think quaggas arrived at Lake Mead by hitchhiking in bilge water or equipment of a boat from the
Quagga mussels are native to
http://www.lvrj.com/news/49081251.html
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