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1993 Zebra Mussel Distribution Update

ZEBRA MUSSEL DISTRIBUTION UPDATE

August 1993


INTRODUCTION:

Since our initial report on the distribution of zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha) in August, 1992, we have continued to receive reports of their rapid spread through the country's waterways. Many of the new populations were found during incidental activities such as facility inspections by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Others discoveries come from specific monitoring and detection efforts. Contributors include individuals from nearly all sectors, public and private. This and future updates are intended as a brief description of new zebra mussels reports organized by major hydrologic region. You can obtain more specific information regarding zebra mussels as well as other nonindigenous aquatic nuisance species by contacting us by email.

UPPER MISSISSIPPI:

In the past year zebra mussels have spread to locations that span the entire length of the Upper Mississippi River. They have been reported from every lock and dam on the upper Mississippi River from St. Paul to Dubuque, Iowa. The Illinois River is the only secondary river within this region containing known populations.

LOWER MISSISSIPPI:

In the lower Mississippi River, they are know known from Greenville and Vicksburg, Mississippi, and Lettsworth, St. Francisville, New Orleans, and Berwick, Louisiana. The numbers of mussels at these locations in the lower Mississippi were not large, but possibly enough to establish populations in the river.

ARKANSAS-WHITE-RED:

During the later part of 1992 more zebra mussel were found in the Arkansas River, this time at Lock and Dams 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7. Farther upriver on the Arkansas, mussels were found at Lock and Dams 15 and 16 near Cowlington and Gore, Oklahoma, respectively.

OHIO:

To the east, zebra mussels were sighted in numerous places along the Ohio River as far up as Pike Island Lock and Dam, just above Wheeling, West Virginia. In West Virginia, three lock and dams on the Kanawha River were found to have zebra mussels present.

MID ATLANTIC:

The Hudson River in New York now has zebra mussels from Albany to as far south as West Haverstraw (Strayer et al. 1992). In upstate New York zebra mussels populate the St. Lawrence River from Kingston down to the city of Quebec, Canada (Wormington et al. 1993). Lake Champlain, on the New York and Vermont border, has a population reported from the southern end of the lake near Benson, Vermont.

GREAT LAKES:

There have been new sightings along the shores of northwest Michigan in the Grand Traverse Bay area. Other new sightings came from U.S. Coast Guard inspection of navigational buoys as they were being decommissioned for the winter in Lake Superior.

TENNESSEE:

During the summer of 1993 zebra mussels were discovered above Chattanooga in the Tennessee River. They have also now been found at Chickamauga, Watts Bar, and Lenoir City, Tennessee. In the Cumberland River, zebra mussels are reported from the mouth to as far upriver as Nashville.

COMMENTARY:

Nearly all of the recent rapid spread by zebra mussels have been in navigable waters. In April of 1992, a barge was dry-docked for repairs at Hartford, Illinois where over 1000 zebra mussel were attached to the hull (Keevin et al. 1992). The barge's log book showed that it had traveled 12,777 miles up and down the Mississippi River from Minnesota to Louisiana before dry-docking. This documented long-distance transportation of live mussels plus the known dispersal pattern give credibility to the assumption that barge traffic has been the primary cause of dispersal in navigable waters.

REFERENCES

[1]
Keevin, T., R. Yarbrough, and A. Miller. 1992. Inadvertent transport of live zebra mussels on barges - experiences in the St. Louis District, Spring 1992. Zebra Mussel Research Technical Notes ZMR-1-07, November 1992, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Waterways Experiment Station. 4p.
[2]
Strayer, D., J. Powell, B. Walton, and E. Mellina. 1993. Spread of zebra mussels in the Hudson River estuary in 1992. Dreissena polymorpha Information Review 4(2):5.
[3]
Wormington, A., C.A. Timmins, and R.M. Dermott. 1993. Distribution of zebra mussels on Canadian navigation buoys on the Great Lakes and upper St. Lawrence River, December 1992. Canadian Manuscript Report of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences No. 2186. Fisheries and Oceans, Burlington, Ontario. 34 p.

FOR YOUR INFORMATION

This is by no means all the information on confirmed zebra mussel sightings, but we feel we have received accurate information through a network of contacts to sufficiently represent the distribution. We welcome your input with information about new sightings.

For further information contact:

Amy Benson
U.S. Geological Survey
Center for Aquatic Resource Studies
7920 NW 71st Street
Gainesville, FL 32653
Comm.: 352-264-3477
Fax: 352-378-4956

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