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Invasive Mussel Monitoring at Glen Canyon National Recreation Area Water Laboratory. Jamie Pejza and Sasha Rohde Glen Canyon National Recreation Area. Mussel Background:. Introduced to N. America in the late 1980s through the St. Lawrence Seaway in ballast tanks in cargo ships
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Invasive Mussel Monitoring at Glen Canyon National Recreation Area Water Laboratory Jamie Pejza and Sasha Rohde Glen Canyon National Recreation Area
Mussel Background: • Introduced to N. America in the late 1980s through the St. Lawrence Seaway in ballast tanks in cargo ships • Rapidly spread through waterbodies in the Great Lakes region, Mississippi drainage
Infestation has a detrimental affect to: • Environment: • Dead smelly shells on shore • Mussel mats on the slick rock walls • Recreational opportunities • Fishing, boating, recreating on the beach • Economy • Local businesses, costs to taxpayers to keep infrastructure clear (dams, cooling pipes), boat engine damage
Once you get mussels, it is almost impossible to get rid of them! • No natural predators in N. America • Human control efforts have only been effective on small scale treatments • Use of poison in very small reservoirs, or draining of reservoir • Lake Powell is so big, that it would take the world’s 1 year supply of potassium permanganate (poison that binds to the gills of aquatic life) to treat an area the size of Wahweap Bay, and it would take almost ¾ of a year to get it all transported here.
What we do at Glen Canyon NRA to prevent Lake Powell from mussel infestation • Mussel Interdiction Program • Vessel inspections • Decontaminations • Quarantine • Mussel Monitoring Program • Sampling for early detection of mussels Lake Powell does not have invasive mussels, so why are we monitoring for them?
Glen Canyon National Recreation Area Mussel Monitoring: • Monitor high use areas monthly for early mussel detection • Look for the juvenile form of mussels (Veligers)– free floating, likely found earlier than attached adults • Lake Mead mussel population found by a diver in 2007; based on the size of the population, it is thought mussels were introduced in 2005. • Increase chances of early detection, providing opportunity for eradication of possible small-scale infestation
Glen Canyon National Recreation Area Mussel Monitoring: Methods Microscopy & FlowCAM DNA analysis Plankton and substrate sampling http://www.aslo.org/photopost/data/509/medium/8Zooplankton_sampling_Lake_Powell.jpg
Cross-Polarized Light Microscopy (CPLM) • Mussel veligers exhibit unique characteristics under CPLM • Care is necessary in order to discern between veligers and other organisms
Imaging Flow Cytometry - FlowCAM • Takes pictures of particles (sample) as they move through the flow cell • Selects images of particles that show birefringence under cross-polarized light and displays them in a collage
DNA Analysis Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)