You are not logged in or registered. Please login or register to use the full functionality of this board...

Post Reply 
Another invasive species, thanks alot Europe
03-08-2013, 12:27 PM (This post was last modified: 03-08-2013 01:14 PM by MuskieBait.)
Post: #2
RE: Another invasive species, thanks alot Europe
It's been here for a while actually.

"The quagga mussel was first sighted in the Great Lakes in September 1989, when one was found near Port Colborne, Lake Erie, though the recognition of the quagga type as a distinct species was not until 1991 (Mills et al. 1996). In August 1991, a mussel with a different genotype was found in a random zebra mussel sample from the Erie Canal near Palmyra, New York, and after confirmation that this mussel was not a variety of Dreissena polymorpha, the new species was named "quagga mussel" after the "quagga", an extinct African relative of the zebra (May and Marsden 1992). The quagga mussel has since been found in Lake Michigan, Lake Huron, Lake Erie, Lake Ontario, Lake St. Clair, Saginaw Bay, and throughout the St. Lawrence River north to Quebec City. A 2002 survey of Lake Superior did not detect quagga mussel specimens (Grigorovich et al. 2003), but by 2005 the first quagga mussel was confirmed from Lake Superior in Duluth Superior Harbor (Grigorovich et al. 2008b)."

We have no one to blame by ourselves for not forcing the government to tighten and enforce ballast water release regulations...

And the exchange is mutual actually...Look at the number of North American species that made it to Europe, intentionally and unintentionally...that is causing a problem.

Look up some of the entries here...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_inv..._in_Europe

Note:

Amorpha fruticosa (Desert false indigo)
Ambrosia artemisiifolia (Amrosia artemisifolia)
Elodea canadensis (Canadian pondweed)
Gleditsia triacanthos (Honey locust)
Hydrocotyle ranunculoides (Floating pennywort)
Robinia pseudoacacia (Black locust)

Balanus improvisus (bay barnacle)

Orconectes limosus (also carried over crayfish plague with it)
Pacifastacus leniusculus (Signal crayfish)
Procambarus clarkii (Louisiana crawfish)

Branta canadensis (Canada goose)
Oxyura jamaicensis (Ruddy duck)

Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Colorado beetle)

Mustela vison (American mink)
Ondatra zibethicus (Muskrat)
Sciurus carolinensis (Grey squirrel)

Trachemys scripta elegans (Red-eared slider)

Ensis directus (American jack-knife clam)
Crepidula fornicata (Common slipper shell)

This is not even an exhaustive list...

There are no mention of the number of unknown bacteria, fungi, yeast, parasitic and other plankton species that are being spread but not under the microscope (pun intended...you can groan Tongue).

I'm not familiar with the issue, but there are grumbling that invasive bacteria and yeast species affects both Canadian cheese...as well as cheeses worldwide.

And then look at this...

http://www.necis.net/intro-to-invasive-s...-exported/

Diabrotica virgifera (Western corn rootworm)
Rana catesbeiana (North American bullfrog)
Mnemiopsis leidyi (Leidy’s comb jelly)
Micropterus salmoides (Largemouth bass)
Bonamia osteae (European oyster parasite)
Bursaphelenchus xylophilus (Pinewood nematode)
Euglandina rosea (Rosy wolfsnail)
Bidens frondosa (Devil’s beggartick)
Procambarus clarkii (Red swamp crayfish)

* The bullfrog, Eastern gray squirrel, Leidy’s comb jelly, and largemouth bass have all been nominated among 100 of the “World’s Worst” invaders by IUCN’s Invasive Species Specialist Group.

Who are we to point fingers? For every Asian Carp we fear about here in North America, there is equally a Largemouth Bass anglers fear about in Europe, Japan and Africa! Dodgy

Also note...

"It is a voracious, carnivorous, solitary ambush predator that feeds both day and night. Its diet includes other fish, amphibians, insects, and any small living animal or bird that falls into the water. Largely because of the male’s care in building and guarding nests, many eggs survive, and a few adult can quickly populate new waters."

Sounds like the snakehead?

No...that's the description for Largemouth Bass under the above link! Rolleyes

And let's not forget...

Brown Trout - native to Europe...now spread intentionally worldwide by human...but invasive in many native habitat and displacing native species (Brook trout for example in Ontario streams...Galaxias in Australia and New Zealand...read about it here a little... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galaxias)

Rainbow Trout - native to Western North America...now spread intentionally worldwide by human...but invasive in many native habitat and displacing native species by competition for habitat or hybridization (Gala trout for example)


Those without sins can cast the first stone...Rolleyes

Malama o ke kai

Caution - Objects in picture are smaller than they appear. I am genetically predisposed to make fish look bigger.

Life List: 577 species and counting (2016: 91 new species)
http://muskiebaitadventures.blogspot.ca/...-list.html
Visit this user's website Find all posts by this user
Add Thank You Quote this message in a reply
[-] The following 1 user says Thank You to MuskieBait for this post:
Giuga10 (03-08-2013)
Post Reply 


Messages In This Thread
RE: Another invasive species, thanks alot Europe - MuskieBait - 03-08-2013 12:27 PM

Related Threads
Thread: Author Replies: Views: Last Post
Wink Year of lifers so far... 16 new species Adamthedeertracker 10 2,400 12-02-2018 10:24 AM
Last Post: Adamthedeertracker
  What species can I target late winter/early spring Roxy 9 1,913 03-12-2018 10:34 AM
Last Post: rich_ace_G
  2018 MULTI SPECIES CHALLENGE OldTimer 2 1,072 01-06-2018 06:45 AM
Last Post: OldTimer
  Species roady info? Adamthedeertracker 2 1,334 05-20-2017 02:08 PM
Last Post: Adamthedeertracker
  Big Otter Creek: Catfish 101, and other species? tweedwolfscream 14 9,694 06-18-2016 06:52 AM
Last Post: OldTimer
  2016 Multi Species Challenge start/end dates OldTimer 10 4,649 01-11-2016 04:00 PM
Last Post: OldTimer
  Multi Species Competition zippyFX 6 2,636 01-08-2016 06:08 PM
Last Post: Eli
  Targeting species OldTimer 17 6,516 10-22-2015 08:46 AM
Last Post: dfog
  favorite species Eli 14 5,928 10-21-2015 09:14 PM
Last Post: Eli
  HELP.....Exotic species ID MikeH 3 2,254 07-16-2014 02:33 PM
Last Post: OldTimer

Forum Jump:


User(s) browsing this thread:
1 Guest(s)

[-]
Shout: -
Options
Loading...
Smilies
Popup Shoutbox

Return to TopReturn to Content