Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumQuagga Mussels "Everywhere" In Lake Mead - 80 To 160 Mussels For Every Gallon Of Water
EDIT
Each mussel is usually no bigger than a man's thumbnail, but their dense and fast-growing colonies have caused billions of dollars in damage and preventive maintenance costs in the Great Lakes region and elsewhere in the eastern half of the country. Wong says quaggas are native to the Ukraine, but have spread across Europe. They arrived in the Great Lakes in the early 1980s, most likely in the ballast water of a ship.
Left unchecked, they can clog water pipelines, power plant cooling systems and marine equipment. Wong believes the mussels likely arrived in Lake Mead sometime before the summer of 2005, at least 18 months before anyone noticed them.
Until then, the bivalve mollusk with the striped shell had never been found west of the Mississippi River. They have since spread to lakes Mohave and Havasu downstream from Hoover Dam and into water systems in California and Arizona.
Wong says two dozen reservoirs in the San Diego area now have quaggas in them. They were likely delivered there as babies in water released from Lake Mead and diverted to Southern California.
EDIT
http://www.lvrj.com/news/quagga-mussels-spread-creates-quandary-154984825.html
The Wielding Truth
(11,415 posts)AtheistCrusader
(33,982 posts)Maybe fertilizer, if you grind them up, but I doubt it.
Useless for food.
joshcryer
(62,287 posts)Shame it's not viable for a human food source.
safeinOhio
(32,763 posts)asian carp in the Great Lakes. These mussels will even choke the carp out of the lakes.
OnlinePoker
(5,730 posts)When I lived in Ontario during the late '90s and early 00's, Zebras were causing massive problems at water intakes along Lake Ontario and Erie. If this is a different species, that doubles the problems that could be caused.
safeinOhio
(32,763 posts)zebra mussel, they present a much greater problem for the Great Lakes.
phantom power
(25,966 posts)May as well start figuring out how to mitigate them and adapt to them.
I have figured out a way to determine if there were ever any intelligent tool-monkey-like species before us. It would show up in the fossil record like a sore thumb, due to massive, widespread species migrations that were unsupported by geographical changes.
Submariner
(12,516 posts)will push that Mussel out of the headlines soon enough when they get established in the Great Lakes over the next decade, or so. A couple of years ago fish managed to penetrate an underwater electric fence that connects Lake Michigan to the Mississippi River by a canal. When enough breeders get through, it will be curtains for the native fishes.
But on the bright side, Carp Sushi restaurants will probably ring the Lakes.
Viking12
(6,012 posts)pscot
(21,024 posts)less actual water is needed to fill the reservoir.