Reviews in Fisheries Science, 5(1): 27-97 (1997)
Natural Enemies of Zebra Mussels: Predators,
Parasites, and Ecological Competitors
Daniel P. Molloy1, Alexander Karatayev2, Lyubov E. Burlakova2,
Dina P. Kurandina3, and Franck Laruelle1
1 Biological Survey, New York State
Museum, The State Education Department, Cultural Education Center Albany, NY
12230, 2Lakes Research Laboratory, Belarussian State University, F.
Skoryna Ave. 4, Minsk,
220050 Belarus; 3Institute of Hydrobiology, Ukrainian Academy of
Sciences. 12 Prospect Geroyev Stalingrada, Kiev-210 254655 Ukraine
ABSTRACT: This paper reviews the international literature on the natural enemies of Dreissena
spp. and discusses the biology and ecology of organisms known to be
involved in their predation (176 species), parasitism (34 species), and
competitive exclusion (10 species). Research on natural enemies, both in Europe
and North America, has focused on predators, particularly birds (36 species)
and fish (15 and 38 species eating veligers and attached mussels,
respectively). Other field-documented predation includes consumption of pelagic
larvae by cope pods and coelenterates, and consumption of attached mussels by
leeches, crabs, crayfish, and rodents. Cannibalism of veligers by adult zebra
mussels has also been reported. Ciliates and trematodes are the most commonly
reported obligate parasites, with occasional records of suspected bacterial or
ascetosporan infection, Mites, nematodes, leeches, chironomids, and
oligochaetes have been observed to be associated symbiotically within the mantle
cavity, but with few to no adverse effects. Organisms capable of competitively
displacing zebra mussels from hard substrates include sponges, amphipods,
algae, bryozoans, hydrozoan coelenterates, and other bivalve species (including
interspecific competition among Dreissena spp.).
Although the vast majority of the organisms that
are natural enemies in Europe are not present in North America, ecologically
similar species do exist on this continent, ,and zebra mussels represent a
novel and abundant organism for these native predators, parasites, and
ecological competitors - the new natural enemies of Dreissena. However,
the idea that these organisms could eliminate zebra mussel populations, even in
limited areas of North America, is far more hopeful than realistic. As in
Europe, there will likely be isolated reports of major impacts by natural
enemies, and on the whole we will likely see a cumulative effect of a suite of
enemies having a constant, but limited, role in suppressing zebra mussel
populations.
KEY WORDS: Dreissena, birds, fish, trematodes, ciliates, sponges.