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Dreissenid phosphorus excretion can sustain C. glomerata growth along a portion of Lake Ontario shoreline
Authors:Ted Ozersky  Sairah Y. Malkin  David R. Barton  Robert E. Hecky
Affiliation:1. University of Waterloo, Biology Department, 200 University Ave. W., Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 3G1;2. Department of Biology and Large Lakes Observatory, University of Minnesota Duluth, 2205 E. 5th St., Duluth, MN 55812, USA
Abstract:One of the effects of the dreissenid invasion into the Laurentian Great Lakes appears to be a resurgence in the abundance of the nuisance alga Cladophora glomerata which experienced a marked decline following phosphorus abatement in the late 1970s and early 1980s. A subsidy of bioavailable phosphorus excreted by dreissenid mussels could be an important mechanism facilitating the growth of C. glomerata. To assess the importance of phosphorus released by mussels to C. glomerata growth in the nearshore, we conducted a survey of mussel distribution and abundance followed by in situ experiments designed to measure dreissenid phosphorus excretion rates. Average dreissenid mussel abundance in our study area was 3674 individuals/m2, with an average biomass of 52.2 g of shell free dry mass/m2. The mussels excreted bioavailable soluble reactive phosphorus at an average rate of 7.02 μg SRP/g shell free dry mass/hour, contributing about 11 t of soluble reactive phosphorus to our study area over the C. glomerata growing season. Dreissenids appear to be an important source of recycled bioavailable phosphorus to the nearshore, supplying more soluble reactive phosphorus to our study area than local watercourses and WWTPs, and more phosphorus than is required to sustain local C. glomerata growth.
Keywords:Dreissenid mussels   Phosphorus cycling   Nuisance algae
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