Tracking Invasive Zebra Mussels In Town Lakes
Tracking Invasive Zebra Mussels In Town Lakes
By Kendra Bobowick
A dive team went hunting for zebra mussels in Lake Zoar last month as part of an ongoing effort in area lakes to detect the invasive species first discovered in 2010. Newtown Underwater Search and Rescue (NUSAR) members searched the water on June 20.
âThe hard part is finding where theyâre coming from,â said Lake Zoar Authority Chairman Ray Hoesten. He believes the mussels may be moving through Newtownâs waterways via estuaries. Experts such as Candlewood Lake Authority (CLA) Executive Director Larry Marsicano have warned that most often they hitch a ride on vessels as boaters move from one lake to another.
The invasive species has made a new home in Newtownâs and surrounding townsâ water bodies in past years â specifically in Lakes Zoar and Lillinonah. The mussels larval veligers, for which authorities and volunteers are regularly monitoring, have not been found this summer in tested areas of Candlewood Lake, but are showing in Newtownâs lakes.
Regarding the initial invasive discovery in local waters in 2010, Greg Bollard, Friends of The Lake (Lillinonah) (FOTL) executive board member who also heads water quality issues, said, âIt was alarming because it was the first major find in Connecticut lakes.â The discovery âsparked regional concern,â he said.
According to the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP), zebra mussels were first discovered in Connecticut in 1998 in East and West Twin Lakes in Salisbury. It is uncertain if the mussels found in Lakes Lillinonah and Zoar are the result of downstream migration from upstream sources or the result of a separate introduction.
Managing The Intrusion
Mr Marsicano said that in past years âWe researched and developed expertise to sample sites on [Lakes Zoar, Lillinonah, and Candlewood] and upstream to sample water for veligers.â He described the musselâs early life stage as âplanktonic, microscopic, and larval when the adults spawn.â Continued sampling has been successful. âWe were finding the veligers in Zoar and Lillinonah,â this summer, he said.
This summer the lake authorities took divers to sites on Zoar and Lillinonah to search areas where adult mussels were spotted several years ago. âThe only thing we found with our resources were three large adults in about 15 feet of water [in Zoar],â Mr Marsicano said.
They found that the mussels were âbig enough to be several years old.â The dive team found no one-year-old adults.
âIf there was a population of mussels in either of those lakes and they were reproducing successfully, we would probably find different age classes,â Mr Marsicano mused. âIt makes you wonder where the veligers are coming from. One possibility is they are coming from sources upstream in Housatonic River.â Are there other possibilities? âWe just donât know.â Divers found no adults in sites searched in Lillinonah, he said.
Mr Bollard noted that testing is finding âvery few larvae stage in veligers in Lillinonah, but large masses in Lake Zoar.â The detection only confirms presence or absence, not quantity, he explained. Lake Zoar may have larger colonization, âperhaps,â he said.
Further considering the finds, Mr Marsicano said, âIf we can confirm that we donât have a sustaining population in Lillinonah and Zoar then itâs important to find where the veligers are coming from and try to stop that.â He said, âIf there is not a sustaining population, then this [invasive species] could go away before it starts.â
Mr Marsicano said the mussels may not reach a critical number where the reproducing adults are successfully fertilizing. He is left wondering, âSo, where are veligers coming from?â He would then need to worry about stopping them. âThatâs a whole new chapter,â he said.
Mr Marsicano has worked with Dr Kevin Kelly with the federal Department of the Interior Bureau of Reclamation. He described Dr Kellyâs working theory of stopping veligers from moving from one body of water to another by first looking for bottlenecks â smaller volumes of water that are manageable. By introducing carbon dioxide gas, âItâs like a narcotic to [the mussels],â Mr Marsicano said, âThey suffocate.â Learn more at www.usbr.gov/mussels/research/current.html.
He is currently working to test Dr Kellyâs theory locally, âto prove if itâs right.â
            Friends Of The Lake
Mr Bollard added his thoughts to the current known zebra mussel population. âThe scientific community feels they wonât colonize too much further east,â saying that the water chemistry there âdoes not support them.â
The mussels âdonât seem to be colonizing as prolifically in Lillinonah as Zoar,â he said. While Zoar is ânot infested,â the mussels show âmore of a presence there, while Candlewood still shows an absence.â Reasons for these conclusions would be âjust speculation,â he said, adding, âThe dynamics of each lake is different.â
He said, âLillinonah is larger than Zoar, so maybe locating them is more of a challenge, and Lillinonah has more frequent water level fluctuation via the power company.â
Like Mr Marsicano, Mr Bollard also wants to know where the mussels are coming from. He looks forward to anticipated DNA testing on mussel samples âto help prove the origins.â Are they coming from Massachusetts, somehow surviving the trip? Collected DNA samples could help researchers pinpoint local musselsâ origins to the twin lakes in Connecticut where the species was first found in this state long before showing up locally. Mussels could be following down from lakes in Massachusetts, âor someplace else,â he said.
Considering the long journey down the Housatonic River into Connecticut, Mr Bollard added, âThey are fairly fragile.â An adult could lay one million eggs per season, but in the larvae stage âthey canât take turbulence/various chemistries.â He said the eggs âtend to do well on hard surfaces, but not so well on silty river bottoms.â
Considering what may happen locally in the coming three to five years, Mr Bollard said, âWe could have a major colonization because theyâre so prolific.â
The mussels could potentially harm the lakesâ environmental health. âColonization could be devastating and could change the ecobalance and spill over to socioeconomic concerns,â Mr Bollard said.
âThe bottom line is, if you are a boat owner or lake user, there is added responsibility that if youâve been in the water with known mussels, you have to decontaminate before entering another water body. They donât fly or walk across shore, so they transport on boats.â
He said, âIf you frequent Lillinonah today and tomorrow you go to Candlewood, thatâs how the zebra mussels can spread.â
Dive teams in Lillinonah and Zoar âhave not found where they may be coming in other than boats,â he said.
According to the DEEP website, the zebra mussel is a black and white striped bivalve mollusk, which was introduced into North American waters through the discharge of ship ballast water. Since its discovery in Lake St Clair (between Michigan and Ontario) in 1988, the zebra mussel has spread throughout the Great Lakes, the Mississippi River system and most of New York State.
Zebra mussels were first found in the Housatonic River in 2009 when they were discovered in Laurel Lake in Lee, Mass., and subsequent sampling found them in the lakeâs outflow into the mainstem river.