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Ó Springer 2006 Biological Invasions (2006) 8: 947–963 DOI 10.1007/s10530-005-5107-z Dispersion and ecological impact of the invasive freshwater bivalve Limnoperna fortunei in the Rı́o de la Plata watershed and beyond Demetrio Boltovskoy1,2,3,*, Nancy Correa4, Daniel Cataldo1,2,3 & Francisco Sylvester1,3 1 Departamento de Ecologı´a, Gene´tica y Evolución, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, 1428, Buenos Aires, Argentina; 2Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientı´ficas y Te´cnicas, Argentina; 3Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales ‘Bernardino Rivadavia’, Argentina; 4Servicio de Hidrografı´a Naval, Argentina; *Author for correspondence (e-mail: [email protected]) Received 29 June 2004; accepted in revised form 14 November 2005 Key words: bivalvia, colonization, ecological impact, freshwater molluscs, invasive species Abstract Limnoperna fortunei is a freshwater bivalve that invaded South America through Rı́o de la Plata estuary in 1989 and has since become a major macrofouling pest. Along the Paraná-Paraguay waterway, which hosts intense boat traffic, L. fortunei has moved upstream at an average rate of of 250 km per year. In contrast, along the Uruguay river, where boat traffic is restricted to the lowermost 200 km section, upstream colonization is almost 10-times slower. This suggests that attachment to vessels is by far the most important dispersion mechanism. It is suggested that the Amazon, Orinoco and Magdalena basins are under high risk of invasion by this mussel, especially through their estuarine gateways. All South American basins host innumerable water bodies with favorable conditions for L. fortunei’s colonization. Known ecological tolerance limits of the mussel also suggest that it may colonize much of the area from Central America to Canada, including waters that due to their low calcium contents, high temperature and pollution levels, and low oxygen are inadequate for the survival of Dreissena polymorpha. Despite it’s remarkable geographic expansion and its extremely high population densities, L. fortunei’s ecological effects have received very little attention so far. It is suggested that the 2.4-fold increase in Argentine landings of freshwater fish between 1992–1993 and 2000–2001 may be associated with the introduction of this prey species. Introduction Limnoperna fortunei (Dunker 1857) is a freshwater bivalve mollusc native to the rivers and estuaries of Southeast Asia (China, Thailand, Korea, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, Indonesia) (Ricciardi 1998). Between 1965 and 1990 it was unintentionally introduced in Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Japan (Ricciardi 1998), and around 1989 it invaded Argentina, most probably via ships’ ballast water. In South America it was first dicovered on the right hand margin of the Rı́o de la Plata estuary, ca. 70 km southeast of the city of Buenos Aires (Pastorino et al. 1993). In 2003, thirteen years after entry, L. fortunei has colonized practically all the Rı́o de la Plata basin extending its range north as far as the Pantanal (along the Paraguay river), and the States of São Paulo and Minas Gerais (both in Brazil). Beds of L. fortunei with up to 150,000 ind. m)2 dominate hard substrates from the Rı́o de la Plata estuary to at least Asunción (Paraguay) and Itaipú reservoir (Darrigran 2002; Avelar et al., 2004; Figure 1). L. fortunei shares several salient biological and ecological features with the North American invasive pest mollusc, the Zebra Mussel, Dreissena polymorpha, which entered the US 948 through the Great Lakes area around 1986 and is now present as far south as the Gulf of Mexico. Both are dioecious and have similar sizes, grow rapidly, attach to hard substrata by means of a strong byssus, and are rapidly dispersed by their planktonic larvae (Morton 1979; Ricciardi 1998). These similarities suggest that assessment of the ecological impact of L. fortunei in South America may benefit from comparisons with that of D. polymorpha in Europe and North America. Extensive research has demonstrated that Zebra Mussels are very effective ecosystem engineers, altering both structure and function of the ecosystems invaded. They change existing and provide new habitat for other organisms. They affect trophic interactions and the availability of food for both pelagic and benthic species, and they influence the rates of other processes including mineralization of nutrients, oxygen availability, sedimentation rates, and dynamics of pollutants (Karatayev et al. 1997). It is therefore highly probable that ecological shifts as important as those that occurred in the European and North American areas colonized by the Zebra Mussel Figure 1. Range expansion of Limnoperna fortunei in South America, locales and years when the mollusc was first detetected. Inset map: Salto Grande reservoir and results of a survey carried out in September 2003. 949 are underway in Rı́o de la Plata basin rivers, lakes and reservoirs. As opposed to research on the ecological impacts of L. fortunei, which so far is practically null, information on its harmful effects on human activities is abundant. Shortly after invasion, L. fortunei has become a major nuisance for industrial and power plants, most of which have had to undertake additional maintenance tasks in order to cope with the problem. Clogging of water intake sieves and filters, pipes, heat exchangers, condensers, etc., became a common difficulty in industrial and power plants that use raw water, chiefly for cooling purposes (Cataldo et al. 2003). In Argentina, Uruguay, Bolivia, Paraguay, and Brazil many plants (including two nuclear and several hydroelectric power stations, water treatment facilities, distilleries, and refineries, etc.) located along the Rı́o de la Plata estuary and the Paraná-Paraguay and Uruguay rivers and their tributaries started experiencing clogging and pressure loss problems associated with fouling by L. fortunei (Figure 2). This paper offers an analysis of the northward range expansion of this bivalve in South America emphasizing some salient features of interest for interpreting the mechanims involved and for anticipating its future spread in South America and beyond. Prospective northward range extensions of L. fortunei are validated comparing its Figure 2. Steel grate protecting the raw water intake at the nuclear power plant Atucha I, clean (left), and heavily fouled by L. fortunei approximately 9 months later (right). known and inferred biological traits with those of D. polymorpha. Potential impacts of the mussel on South American freshwater communities are discussed. L. fortunei dispersion rates: Paraná vs. Uruguay rivers In the 12 years elapsed since its first sighting in the Rı́o de la Plata estuary (Pastorino et al. 1993), L. fortunei steadily expanded northwards upstream the Paraná-Paraguay and Uruguay rivers. Along the Paraná-Paraguay, the mollusc appeared in Atucha (ca. 130 km from Buenos Aires) in 1996, and almost simultaneously 1240 km farther north, in Corrientes (Figure 1). In 2000 it had already reached the Pantanal along the Paraguay river (ca. 2000 km upstream, Figure 1). Along the upper Paraná and its tributaries adult mussels were recorded in São Paulo state (Brazil) in 2002 (Avelar et al. 2004), and larvae at the San Simão dam on the Paranaı́ba river, a tributary of the Paraná, in 2003 (ca. 3000 km upstream from the Rı́o de la Plata estuary). This represents an average upstream movement of ca. 250 km per year. In contrast to the above pattern, along the Uruguay river, which also feeds into the Rı́o de la Plata, recent data indicate that upstream colonization is almost 10 times slower. In the Negro and Yı́ rivers the mollusc was first recorded only in 1999 (Clemente and Brugnoli 2000), and in Salto Grande dam in August 2001 (A. Otaegui, pers. communication; see Figure 1). The size of the animals recorded in Salto Grande indicates that the species reached the area about an year earlier (Boltovskoy and Cataldo 1999). Salto Grande is located 350 km north of the Rı́o de la Plata; thus, the mollusc’s upstream movement along the Uruguay river averaged only 30 km per year. Two basic modes of geographic expansion of invasive species have been described: a gradual dispersion from a localized epicenter (the ‘reaction-diffusion’ model), and a wave-like dispersion punctuated by long distance transport events or ‘jump dispersal’ (the ‘stratified diffusion’ model) (MacIsaac et al. 2001). Gradual expansion is characterized by initial establishment and local 950 population growth, followed by progressive spreading to adjacent areas; in this case dispersion speed is assumed to be proportional to population growth rates, as well as to time since initial colonization. Jump dispersal, on the other hand, is more dependent on the availability of long-distance dispersal agents, both natural (storms and strong winds, flooding events) and man-mediated (shipping, fishing, tourism, boating, etc.). Contrasting dispersion patterns in the Paraná and the Uruguay rivers seem to respond to these two different modes of invasion. The Paraná river hosts intense commercial boat traffic all year round. The yearly volume of cargo (chiefly grain) transported between the Atlantic Ocean and Santa Fé (lowermost 580 km of the waterway; Figure 1) by ocean-going vessels is around 70 million metric tons. Between Santa Fé and the Brazilian port of Corumbá (Figure 1), in the Pantanal (total distance: 2200 km), where cargo (chiefly iron ore) is transported by tug-pushed barges, the yearly volume is around 7 million metric tons. In addition, both major rivers and tributaries are regularly used by smaller commercial, tourist, fishing and leisure boats, especially during the summer. Thus, L. fortunei’s upstream colonization along this waterway was most probably characterized by jump dispersal mediated by human activities (Figure 3). This type of range extension depends less on distance between source and recipient site and allows very long-range invasions over short time intervals (MacIsaac et al. 2001). It is quite probable that adult animals adhering to ships’ hulls are transported upstream, spawn, and their larvae drift with the current (usually around 3–4 km h)1) settling a few hundred kilometers downstream. The distance covered between the area of spawning and settlement depends on larval development rates, which vary between 10 and 20 days, depending on water temperature (Cataldo et al. 2005). Most of the area is therefore colonized by downstream larval dispersal, rather than upstream. The fact that L. fortunei was recorded the same year (1996) in Atucha and in Corrientes, which are over 1100 km apart (Figure 1), supports the above conclusions. As opposed to the Paraná, along the Uruguay commercial ocean-going vessels have access only to the port of Nueva Palmira, located about 5 km upstream from the confluence of the latter with the Rı́o de la Plata. Between Nueva Palmira and Concepción del Uruguay (200 km) commercial and fishing boat traffic is very limited, whereas in the following 150 km stretch, between Concepción del Uruguay and Salto Grande dam (Figure 1, inset), navigation is essentially restricted to coastal fishing activities on small (<10 m) craft and some short-range leisure sail and motor boating. In September 2003 we thoroughly surveyed both margins of Salto Grande reservoir in order to pinpoint the northernmost records of L. fortunei along the Uruguay river (Figure 1, inset map). L. fortunei was present at very high densities (over 50,000 individuals m)2) from the dam to the local- Figure 3. Schematic representation of the ‘‘jump dispersal’’ mechanism used by L. fortunei in the Paraná system. Numbers indicate potential chronological sequence of records of the species along the waterway (see text for detailed explanation). 951 ities of Santa Ana (right-hand margin, 40 km upstream from the dam) and Constitución (left-hand margin, 30 km upstream). A few kilometers north of Constitución, at Espinillar, densities dropped to less than 1 mollusc m)2, and about 5 km north of Santa Ana the animal was absent altogether (Figure 1, inset map). Considering that adult L. fortunei were first detected in installations of the Salto Grande hydroelectric station in 2001 (which means that larvae or juveniles arrived there about an year earlier), and that in September 2003 the farthest point with L. fortunei was located 40 km upstream from the dam, colonization of the reservoir has occurred at an average rate of about 10–20 km per year. Very high-population densities in the areas so far colonized (Figure 4), as well as the fact that hard substrata adequate for the mollusc’s settlement (pebbles, boulders and rock outcrops) are much more abundant in the Uruguay river than along the Paraná-Paraguay, indicate that constraints associated with upstream transport, rather than environmental suitability, are responsible for such dissimilar colonization rates. These evidences suggest that, of the over 20 dispersal mechanisms described for freshwater, invasive, byssate molluscs (Carlton 1993), for L. fortunei attachment to and upstream transport by commercial vessels is by far the most important. Transport by birds, fishes and aquatic mammals cannot be ruled out, but is improbable because molluscs are normally destroyed and/or digested before egestion, at least by fishes (Penchaszadeh et al. 2000; Cataldo et al. 2002). Strong and persistent southern winds, especially during periods of low discharge, could temporarily reverse the normally southward water flow in the reservoir, thus advecting entrained larvae northwards. Human-aided dispersion cannot be ruled out either: a few dozen sailing boats stationed at marinas located in the vicinity of the dam use regularly the lower third of the reservoir for leisure and sports actvities, and Coast Guard vessels are ocassionally deployed as well. Fishing activities are probably of minor importance because the very small and few boats involved are mostly kept on land when not in use (which keeps their hulls free from fouling by L. fortunei), and their north–south displacements are minimal. Figure 4. Limnoperna fortunei in Salto Grande reservoir. Top: living organisms in a shallow costal area at Santa Ana (inset shows detail of shells). Middle: same area, mussels attached to wood debris. Bottom: empty shells along the waterline in Federación after a prolongued low water period (see Figure 1, inset). All photographs taken on 16 September 1993. The density–occurrence pattern recorded in the Uruguay river, where over an ecologically homogeneous area sites inhabited by L. fortunei in extremely high densities are only a few kilometers 952 away from locales where the animal is not present at all, indicate that once established L. fortunei reaches extremely high densities rapidly. In addition to these records along the two major Rı́o de la Plata basin waterways (ParanáParaguay and Uruguay rivers), L. fortunei is also present in Rı́o Tercero, and in the Guaiba river basin (Figure 1). Rı́o Tercero is a medium-sized (54 km2) reservoir whose waters are used by a nuclear power plant for cooling purposes. L. fortunei was first discovered in this plant in 1998. The reservoir drains into the Paraná through the Tercero-Carcarañá rivers (Figure 1), neither of which is navigable. Rı́o Tercero is a popular tourist destination, with boating and fishing on the reservoir being its main attractions. It therefore is conceivable that L. fortunei was introduced inadvertently, attached to the hull of a boat trailered overland from some location on the Paraná or Uruguay rivers. In the Guaiba lake L. fortunei was first recorded in 1998 (Mansur et al. 1999). This basin is separated from the Rı́o de la Plata watershed, which suggests the possibility of L. fortunei having been introduced here via ballast water as well (the ports of Rio Grande and Porto Alegre, located in this basin, serve oceanic-going ships). Prospective expansion of L. fortunei in South America and beyond Because of its major impacts on human activities and on the environment, prediction of the future behavior of L. fortunei in and beyond South America is of much interest. We are not yet in the position to attempt the use of numerical modeling techniques like, for example, those used in North America in the early stages of the invasion of the Zebra Mussel (e.g., Ramcharan et al. 1992; Padilla et al. 1996). Constraints due to the virtual absence of information on the ecological preferences of L. fortunei, associated with a generally modest to poor knowledge of the limnologic and biologic traits of the enormous and very complex South American river system, only allow outlining a series of general observations. These considerations, however, may serve to identify promising investigation avenues thus contributing towards our understanding of the mechanisms that govern the spread of aquatic invasive species in general, and of L. fortunei in particular. The vulnerability of new areas to biological invasions are basically dependent on two aspects: (1) likelihood of introduction (naturally or human-mediated, such as by shipping and boating activities), and (2) environmental suitability. We will first assess the potential exposure of South American waterways to biological invasions from outside and within the subcontinent, and then comment on the suitability of these waters for the establishment of L. fortunei. Likelihood of introduction The South American river system is characterized by five major drainage basins and several minor ones; the major rivers are (from north to south): Magdalena, Orinoco, Amazon, São Francisco, and Rı́o de la Plata (Paraná-Uruguay) (Figure 5). As outlined above, the Rı́o de la Plata basin has already been almost totally colonized (Figure 1). Due to their size and proximity with the infested area, the Amazon and the Orinoco rivers are the most likely candidates to receive the bivalve in the future. The Amazon river is the largest in the world in terms of watershed area, number of tributaries, and volume of water discharged (mean: 212,000 m3 s)1). It measures 6400 km from source to mouth, has hundreds of tributaries, and drains a territory of over 5.7 million km2 (about half of them in Brazil, the rest in Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, and Venezuela). The Amazon enters the Atlantic through a broad estuary, roughly estimated at 240 km in width; the mouth of the main stream, the Pará, is 80 km wide. The Amazon is navigable to ocean liners of virtually any tonnage for two-thirds of its course. Transoceanic ships call regularly at Manaus, nearly 1600 km upstream; and smaller ships can reach Iquitos, Peru, 3700 km from the river’s mouth (the farthest point from sea of any port serving ocean traffic). Due to the scarcity of roads, river navigation has an essential role in this area and is naturally facilitated by the generally favorable hydrographic conditions; in total, the system is estimated to host over 19,000 km of navigable waterways. Small and medium-sized 953 river steamers can navigate on more than 100 of the larger tributaries (Solimões, Negro, Branco, Madeira, Purus, Juruá, Trombetas, Jari, Tapajós, Xingu, Guama, Capim, etc.). The Orinoco river is the third largest river in the world in terms of water discharged to the ocean (mean discharge: 36,000 m3 s)1), draining an area of 870,000 km2 in Venezuela, Colombia and Brazil. Large river steamers travel upriver for about 700 miles from the delta to the Atures rapids. Dredging has allowed large ocean going vessels to navigate the Orinoco from its mouth Figure 5. Main watersheds of South America. 954 to its confluence with the Caronı́ river, a distance of about 400 km. The São Francisco river has a mean discharge of 2800 m3 s)1, and a drainage area of 665,000 km2 (entirely in Brazil). Its main navigable tract of 1300 km is a middle section that flows between the towns of Pirapora and Juazeiro, which is regularly used by commercial traffic (tourist ships, tugboats, freight barges, etc.). Navigation in the lowermost section is restricted by the Paulo Afonso falls (with a drop of 80 meters), located 200 km from the river mouth, and by the low bottom depths in the estuary; this section does not have regular commercial traffic. The Magdalena river (mean discharge: 7500 m3 s)1; drainage area: 257,000 km2) has a length of 1550 km, of which 1092 are permanently navigable, and 887 are navigable by large ocean-going steamers (the access channel has an authorized depth of 10 m). The city of Barranquilla, located on the river mouth, connects maritime with fluvial transport. Thus, of the four major South American hydrographic basins (excluding the Rı́o de la Plata), three are readily accesible through their mouths by ocean-going vessels, which makes them highly vulnerable to invasions via ships ballast water. Invasion of the basins through their estuaries via ballast water, as assumed for the original colonization of L. fortunei in the Rı́o de la Plata (Pastorino et al. 1993), is but one of the potential routes of entrance. Freshwater molluscs can also be dispersed by a number of other mechanisms, both natural and human-mediated (e.g. Carlton 1993; Padilla et al. 1996), some of which have most probably been of importance for the colonization of remote areas of the Rı́o de la Plata watershed, away from the Paraná-Paraguay mainstream (e.g., Rı́o Tercero, see above). Although most of the mayor South American watersheds involved are effectively separated, some are not. For example, the Orinoco and the Amazon basins are permanently connected by the rivers Casiquiare-Negro, which greatly facilitates interchange of fauna and flora. South American tropics and subtropics are characterized by a sharp alternation of a dry period with a rainy season (July to September for the Orinoco basin, December to April for the central Amazon basin); during the latter phase enormous areas around the river and creek channels are flooded increasing the total water-covered surface by up to 900% (Junk 1997). Although these periodically flooded wetlands would not be able to offer permanent refuge to L. fortunei, because they dry out during the dry season, they can greatly facilitate connection between and invasion of neighboring waterways. In addition to these natural means of dispersion, several human-mediated ones can also be envisioned. As seen above, all five major South American watersheds have significant commercial shipping activity; in addition, in all cases projects are underway to improve navigation conditions through the construction of locks, dredging, signalization, etc., which will further enhance river traffic. Moreover, for several decades politicians, administrators and engineers have contemplated the possibility of linking the river systems of South America to open up navigation across the entire continent. The Hidrovia project, a megaundertaking designed to expand commercial shipping along the Paraná-Paraguay waterway (3400 km) by deep dredging and excavation, removal of rock outcrops and river curves, realignment of channels and other heavy engineering works, which has recently completed its first phase, is very probably largely responsible for the fast upstream dispersal of L. fortunei in this system (see above). The likelihood of transport and re-seeding of adults and larvae due to fishing activities is more difficult to assess because quantitative data on fishing-related displacements are unavailable. Much of the area of influence of the Amazon and the Orinoco has very low population densities (<10 inhabitants km)2), but many of these depend on fishing for survival. FAO statistics indicate that the summed freshwater fish landings of Brazil, Paraguay, Venezuela and Colombia for 2001 was 275,000 tonnes (60% more than, for example, all of North and Central America for the same period), which suggests intense activity and, concomitantly, at least some risk level. It should be noticed that colonization of any one of these northern basins significantly increases the chances of infestation of the others. On one hand, geographic spread of the species carries it closer to areas free of the mussel, thus 955 making overland transport more likely. On the other, geographic expansion involves a growing number of estuarine ports whose waters are contaminated, and therefore greater chances of further disseminating the invader through ballast water. This is particularly important because many of the freighters and passenger liners leaving the port of Buenos Aires stop at Brazilian and Venezuelan ports on their way north. As a matter of fact, it is very likely that the source of the 1998 invasion in the Guaı́ba basin (Figure 1) was the Rı́o de la Plata area, rather than Asia. As opposed to much of the early spread of D. polymorpha in the Great Lakes area, most of which may have occurred by passive downstream larval dispersal (Griffiths et al. 1991), from the very start in the Rı́o de la Plata L. fortunei could only disperse upstream, since downstream expansion was precluded by the nearby brackish waters of the Rı́o de la Plata estuary. In spite of this difference, the average upstream dispersal rate of L. fortunei (ca. 250 km per year, see above) is very closely comparable to that of D. polymorpha downstream (Claudi and Mackie 1994). Downstream dispersal, for which L. fortunei’s planktonic larvae are particularly well adapted, would therefore occur much faster. Thus, if the headwaters, rather than the estuaries, of any one of the tropical South American watersheds are invaded, complete basin colonization is expected to take significantly less time than in the case of the Rı́o de la Plata. The fact that many freshwater ports serving ocean-going ships are located in estuarine areas, in the vicinity of and upstream from brackish and saline waters, is probably one of the reasons that keeps species like L. fortunei from invading alien regions worldwide more often. It is conceivable that the succesful 1989 colonization of the Rı́o de la Plata was but one of many previous attempts when juveniles were seeded in the area, and even grew to reproductive size, but whose offspring was entirely swept into the ocean. L. fortunei’s larvae take 10–20 days to reach the settling stage (Cataldo et al. 2005), which is comparable to the time it takes a cargo ship to steam across the ocean; thus, most of the seeding individuals are very early juveniles ready for attachment, rather than free-drifting larvae. This enhances the invader’s chances of survival. Environmental suitability Amazon and Orinoco waters have been classified into two main categories according to their loadings of silt-sand and organic matter: ‘white waters’ are turbid from a high content of suspended mineral solids (fine silt-sand and loam), with high conductivity values (60–80 s cm)1), nearly neutral pH and high content of major cations, including calcium. ‘Black waters’ on the other hand, are transparent red-brown from high loadings of humic substances, their condunctance (typically 9–10 s cm)1) and pH (ca. 5) are lower, and major cations, including calcium, are scarce (e.g. Furch and Junk 1997). The Paraná-Paraguay and Uruguay systems, where L. fortunei dwells, are dominated by white-water rivers. Dispersion of the mussel into Amazon and Orinoco white waters would most probably not involve major ecological challenges, but black-water floodplain lentic habitats may prove harder to colonize due to their acidity, low levels of dissolved oxygen and scarce calcium. As a matter of fact, the absence of bivalves in black-water lakes of the central Amazon floodplain has been noticed as one of the major faunal differences between these and the white-waters associated with this river (Junk and Robertson 1997). Many of the benthic invertebrates found in these areas avoid the critical low-water period when oxygen depletion is at its peak by migrating elsewhere; thus, L. fortunei’s sessile, attached habit would further hamper its chances of spreading through black-water environments. Nevertheless, some of the most critical conditions, like dissolved oxygen, do not undergo such drastic fluctuations in the turbulent conditions of the permanent river channels. Furthermore, river waters may seasonally shift from black to white, thus reducing the overall amount of time when colonization by L. fortunei is particularly challenging. Calcium loadings have often been found to restrict the distribution of freshwater molluscs (e.g., Sprung 1987; Ramcharan et al. 1992). Concentrations of this ion are generally low in Amazon (7–10 mg l)1; Furch and Junk 1997) and Orinoco (2–5 mg l)1) (Hamilton and Lewis 1990) white waters, but not significantly different from those in the Rı́o de la Plata-Paraná-Paraguay 956 system, where L. fortunei dwells (3–9 mg l)1; Maglianesi 1973; Bonetto et al. 1998). We therefore conclude that the Amazon, Orinoco, and Magdalena watersheds are under high risk of biological invasion through their estuarine gateways (by means of ballast water or other mechanisms), while for the São Francisco basin this risk is lower. All four basins are also likely to receive the invader through either natural or human-mediated mechanisms overland, and host innumerable water bodies with adequate conditions for L. fortunei’s colonization. Beyond South America Even before it was discovered far beyond its native range, researchers were concerned about the possibilities of L. fortunei spreading into other countries (Morton 1979), and after its discovery in Japan and Argentina Canadian and US researchers forecasted its potential expansion to North America (Ricciardi 1998; McNeill 2001). While this has not yet happened, the more L. fortunei expands its range in South America and elsewhere, the higher are its chances of reaching the fresh waters of North America as a ballast water hitchhiker, either from South American ports to ports along the Gulf of Mexico, or from Asia to ports on the West Coast. Known ecological tolerance limits of L. fortunei suggest that it may colonize much of the area from Canada to Central America, including waters inadequate for the survival of D. polymorpha. L. fortunei tolerates higher temperatures, lower pH values and lower oxygen levels than the zebra mussel (Ricciardi 1998; Karatayev et al. Submitted). As opposed to the North American subspecies of Dreissena polymorpha, which can withstand salinities <6& (Karatayev et al. 1998), L. fortunei has been recorded in the Rı́o de la Plata estuary at salinities around 14& (D Giberto, pers. comm.). It also is very resistant to high pollutant loadings: very dense L. fortunei beds are present along the Luján river, in the lower delta of the Paraná, in the vicinity of urbanized and industrialized areas which discharge high volumes of untreated domiciliary and industrial wastes. The waters and sediments of this river contain many pollutants at levels several times above those considered hazardous for aquatic life (e.g. Zn, Cr, Cu, benzo (a) pyrene, PCBs, etc.) (Cataldo et al. 2001a). Bioassays with juveniles of Corbicula fluminea indicate that waters, porewaters and sediments of this area are unfit for the survival of this bivalve (up to over 75% mortalities in 144 h exposures; Cataldo et al. 2001a, b). Of particular significance may be the fact that, as opposed to D. polymorpha, L. fortunei does not require high calcium concentrations for larval and adult survival. Sprung (1987) found in laboratory experiments that survival of D. polymorpha larvae required at least 12 mg Ca l)1 and pH values above 7.4 for survival; critical calcium concentrations were defined at 12–20 mg l)1, whereas fertilization success and survivorship were strongly enhanced by concentrations above 47 mg l)1. Vinogradov et al. (1993) concluded that D. polymorpha’s requirements of calcium are considerably higher that those of most other freshwater bivalves: in order to maintain a metabolic balance between calcium loss and uptake, concentrations of this element in the water must not drop below 12–14 mg l)1. These results were confirmed by a survey of 278 European lakes, where occurrence and density of the Zebra Mussel were found to be highly correlated with water chemistry: D. polymorpha is absent in lakes with average pH values below 7.3 and concentrations of calcium below 28.3 mg l)1 (Ramcharan et al. 1992). South American inland waters are characterized by rather low concentrations of calcium, usually around 7 mg l)1 (Wetzel 1975), and values as low as 3–4 mg l)1 are not uncommon in areas densely populated by L. fortunei (e.g. the middle Paraná river, cf. Maglianesi 1973). In contrast, many North American and most European freshwaters have calcium loadings in excess of 20–30 mg l)1 (Wetzel 1975; Payne 1986). Thus, L. fortunei may colonize areas unfit for D. polymorpha due to their low calcium contents, like New England, the Canadian Shield, and much of the Pacific Northwest (Strayer 1991). Conversely, South American low calcium concentrations (in addition to the high water temperatures) may represent a major obstacle for invasion by D. polymorpha. The fact that L. fortunei has continuous reproduction for 8–9 months of the year (Boltovskoy and Cataldo 1999; Cataldo and Boltovskoy 2000), 957 while D. polymorpha spawns over a period of 1–3 months (Garton and Haag 1993), may also constitute a competitive advantage for the former. As anticipated above, our predictive considerations are based on but a fraction of the conditions that are thought to govern biological invasions in freshwater systems. Selection of the ones reviewed was based as much on their perceived importance, as on the body of knowledge behind them. There are many other causal mechanisms that may be involved (e.g. the degrees of pre-invasion ecosystem disturbance, overall biological diversity, synergistic and antagonistic effects between invaders, etc.; Elton 1958; Stachowicz et al. 1999) and have not been taken in to consideration, primarily because of gaps in our understanding of their relevance (e.g. MacIsaac et al. 2001). Impacts There is no doubt at this point that L. fortunei has negatively affected practically all installations that use raw ‘contaminated’ water. Industry and utility plants have experienced clogged or blocked intakes and distribution piping, fouled pumps, forbays, holding tanks, trashracks, and condenser units, an increase in the corrosion of iron and steel piping and riveting, etc. We have had personal first hand experience and/or discussions with personnel involved with fouling problems in nuclear and thermal power plants, distilleries and refineries, steel mills, food plants, commercial and leisure boats, drinking water treatment facilities, etc. (e.g. Cataldo et al. 2003). No estimates of the economic losses involved have been made in South America. Impacts on the ecosystem, on the other hand, have not been investigated yet beyond a couple of marginal observations (see below). Freshwaters of the Rı́o de la Plata basin have few filtering organisms, of which only Corbicula fluminea can occasionally be abundant; thus, L. fortunei has occupied a previously vacant niche, which would partially explain its outstanding success. The Rı́o de la Plata estuary flushes between 1,000,000 and 2,000,000 tn of particulated organic carbon per year into the sea (Depetris and Kempe 1993; Guerrero et al. 1997). With the invasion of L. fortunei part of this organic matter is intercepted and modified into a form available to organisms that cannot feed on small particles, like fishes. In order to assess how much of this drifting carbon is now channelled through L. fortunei we are still missing some key pieces of the puzzle involved, in particular a reasonable estimate of the densities of the mollusc in the water bodies colonized. Assessment of average densities of the mussel over large areas is complicated by the fact that beds of L. fortunei have an extremely patchy distribution. This seems to be associated not only with the uneven distribution of available substrate, but also with some other traits whose influence we do not understand yet. For example, concrete revetments along the Luján river (lower delta of the Paraná) located a few hundred meters apart host very different population densities (Figure 6). Nevertheless, overall abundances are most probably very high in the areas colonized. On hard substrates, the mollusc has been recorded at densities of up to 150,000 ind. m)2 (Darrigran 2002). Colonization is not restricted to man-made structures, such as revetments, piers, rock armors, gabions, boat hulls, etc., as the animal settles on debris, driftwood (Figure 4), reed roots, etc. While rivers in this region are typically soft bottom, large areas, especially along the coasts of Uruguay, are dominated by rock outcrops and hardpan formations (Figure 4) where the mollusc thrives. Furthermore, clusters are common even on soft bottom, especially when the mud is covered by a thin hardened crust (Figure 7). Widespread occurrence of L. fortunei in the gut contents of fish (see below) also points at its abundance in the area. Observations of the negative impacts of L. fortunei include reports from southern Brazil and Japan. In the area of Guaı́ba lake (southern Brazil), Mansur et al. (2003) reported that the mussel attaches to at least 6 species of molluscs, including 2 unionids, in numbers of up to ca. 300 L. fortunei per host. In several cases this overgrowth may hinder the host’s normal displacement and valve mobility. The same authors also suggested that L. fortunei’s settlements on the roots of the reed Scirpus californicus, an emergent helophyte, may be ‘suffocating’ the plants 958 and be responsible for the thinning of reed populations. Howewer, this effect is unlikely because the roots of Scirpus must be adapted to the very low oxygen environment characteristic of shallow areas with very abundant organic debris. Furthermore, filtering bivalves are known to enhance water oxygenation, rather than the opposite (e.g. Karatayev et al. 1997). Another potential threat posed by this invader was reported by Ogawa et al. (2004). The authors identified widespread parasitic infections by bucephalid trematodes in several cyprinid fishes from the Uji river, suggesting that the infections started with the accidental introduction of infested first intermediate hosts – Limnoperna fortunei. Among the potentially positive impacts, enhancement of the diversity and abundance of most other benthic organisms (Darrigran et al. 1998), and consumption by fish have been mentioned. Trophic interactions with fish are of Figure 6. Concrete revetments along the Luján river, in the lower delta of the Paraná, with different degrees of fouling by L. fortunei; general view and detail (insets). The two sites illustrated are approximately 500 m apart. particular interest because the mussel represents a novel resource available at an unprecedented scale. At least 16 species have been recorded in the Paraná and Rı́o de la Plata rivers that actively consume L. fortunei (Montalto et al. 1999; Ferriz et al. 2000; Penchaszadeh et al. 2000; Cataldo et al. 2002). Some of the commercially most valuable species, like Pterodoras granulosus and Leporinus obtusidens, have been observed to feed preferentially on L. fortunei: up to 100% of the specimens retrieved in the summer have their guts filled predominantly or exclusively with remains of this mollusc (Ferriz et al. 2000; Penchaszadeh et al. 2000; Cataldo et al. 2002). In situ experiments with L. fortunei-colonized panels with and without a protective screen against fish predation showed that exposed colonies are swiftly eliminated by predators (Cataldo et al. 2002). Sylvester et al. (submitted) carried out a 1 year in situ experiment in order to assess the colonization of PVC panels protected against predation by screens of different pore-size (0.5, 1.5 and 4 cm). Densities of the resulting settlements of L. fortunei were inversely proportional to the pore-size used, indicating that different fish sizes, including animals as small as 1.5 cm in thickness, feed on the mollusc. Predators were estimated to harvest ca. 6 kg of whole mussel mass per square meter of substrate per year, eliminating over 80% of Limnoperna’s production. The positive effects of L. fortunei on these fish communities are not restricted to species that consume the mollusc directly, in particular Figure 7. Cluster of L. fortunei on soft sediment in the Luján river (lower delta of the Paraná). 959 those that can detach and crush the shells with their frontal teeth, like Leporinus obtusidens (Penchaszadeh et al. 2000), but also extends to species that may benefit from this new food resource indirectly, including many of the larger (and commercially most valuable) species that feed on other fishes (e.g. Pseudoplatystoma fasciatum, Pseudoplatystoma coruscans, Salminus maxillosus, Hoplias malabaricus, Paulicea luetkeni, Luciopimelodus pati, etc.). Furthermore, L. fortunei’s functional similarities with D. polymorpha strongly suggest that it may actively transfer large amounts of organic matter from the pelagic to the benthic domains, through filtration and the formation of feces and pseudofeces (Karatayev et al. 1997), which in turn boosts invertebrate densities (Botts et al. 1996). This may be of particular importance in the Rı́o de la Plata basin where over 60% of the overall fish biomass is represented by a single deposit feeding detritivorous species: the sábalo, Prochilodus lineatus (Sverlij et al. 1993). Enrichment of the sediments with organic matter would therefore enhance the densities of sábalo in the system (as observed with other fish species in the presence of D. polymorpha, e.g. Thayer et al. 1997), which in turn represents the main food item of most ichtyophagous species (Sverlij et al. 1993; Iwaskiw 2001). The positive impact of L. fortunei on fish populations is not restricted to enhanced food availability, but also to better food quality. With the invasion of Corbicula fluminea (around 1976), and L. fortunei, dietary changes have been noted in omnivorous fishes, which switched from a lower quality predominantly plant-based diet, to an energetically richer one dominated by these molluscs (Ferriz et al. 2000). Ancillary data on Argentine freshwater fish yields support the above conclusions suggesting that L. fortunei may have had a positive effect on fish biomass in the Rı́o de la Plata system. Figure 8 illustrates the trend in fish landings in Argentina and other South American countries during the last 50 years. The upper panel shows freshwater fish catches as reported by FAO for the six major South American producers (these countries account for 97% of the overall total for the entire subcontinent). The only country where catches increased consistently after 1990 is Argentina, whose figures grew from 11,277 tn in 1992, to 30,416 tn in 2000 (dropping to 23,860 tn in 2001). When comparing the periods 1992–1993 vs. 2000–2001, Argentina’s catches show a net 2.4-fold increase; Paraguay and Brazil had slight gains (35% and 8%, respectively), whereas Perú, Venezuela and Colombia produced 1–20% less in 2000–2001 than in 1992–1993. It should be emphasized that for Argentina these numbers reflect almost exclusively catches in the area colonized by L. fortunei: over 90% of the freshwater fish production is originated from the Rı́o de la Plata basin, including the Paraná, Paraguay, Uruguay and their tributaries (Iwaskiw 2001). The numbers for Argentina are generally supported by other sources of information, such as data from the INDEC (Instituto Nacional de Estadı́sticas y Censos, Argentina, http://www. indec.mecon.ar/), as well as various regional and provincial agencies (e.g. Iwaskiw 2001). For example, in the province of Santa Fé, whose freshwater fish catches originate almost exclusively from the Paraná river and its tributaries, in the 1995–2001 period landings increased almost ten fold (from ca. 500–5376 tn), whereas fishing effort, as measured by the number of commercial fishing licences issued, only doubled (from 660 to 1214 licences; probably as a result of the better fishing yields in the 3–4 preceding years) (Iwaskiw 2001). Export statistics confirm these trends as well: Argentine exports of sábalo (Prochilodus lineatus) to Bolivia and Brazil increased from 1467 tn in 1990 to 19,699 tn in 2000 (INDEC). On the other hand, Argentine marine fisheries increased steadily during the last five decades, dropping sharply after 1996 (chiefly as a result of the collapse of the Argentine hake – Merluccius hubbsi – fishery due to overfishing; e.g. Renzi 2002) (Figure 8). Thus, the trend in freshwater fisheries is most probably not a nation-wide phenomenon governed solely by social or economic factors, but seems to reflect regional differences in the availability of fish resources. A similar effect has been observed in European fresh waters where the invasion of D. polymorpha has been associated with strong changes in fish populations (Poddubny 1966). It may be argued that these positive effects could be offset by L. fortunei’s impact on filterfeeding organisms, including fishes. However, 960 Figure 8. Freshwater and marine fish catches by selected South American countries between 1950 and 2001. Landings of the countries included in the graphs account for over 95% of the overall catches of South America. Based on FAO statistics (http:// www.fao.org/). because the highly turbid waters of the Rı́o de la Plata system are poor in plankton (Secchi disk depths around 20 cm, phytoplankton densities usually below 500 cells ml)1; zooplankton, including Rotifera, Cladocera and Copepoda, usually below 30 ind. l)1; O’Farrell 1994; Boltovskoy et al. 1995), filtering organisms are relatively scarce in this system. As mentioned above, the only occasionally abundant filterer is the invasive Asian clam Corbicula fluminea (Boltovskoy et al. 1995; Cataldo and Boltovskoy 1998), whereas representatives of the ca. 60 native clam species (20 of them unionids of the genera Diplodon and Castalia) are recorded only ocassionally and in very low densities (Bonetto and Di Persia, 1975). Planktophagous fishes are restricted to a few species, some of which prey on plankton during their juvenile phases only (e.g. Odontesthes bonariensis; Iwaskiw 2001). Concluding remarks The introduction of non-indigenous species is widely recognized as a serious problem involving major economic losses and one of the leading 961 global threats to native biodiversity and ecosystem function (Pimentel et al. 2000). The long history of negative unexpected results of the intentional introduction of plants and animals, as well as the impacts of accidental invasions, clearly show that such range expansions involve much more losses than benefits. However, despite growing concern and interest in this problem, biological invasions are likely to continue as international trade increases and as climate and land use continue to change (Byers et al. 2002). Because economic resources are always a major limiting factor, managers must decide which populations and species to control immediately, which to control if time and money permit, and which to leave alone. Such decisions are based on the known or expected effects of the organisms in question, which in turn must balance their detrimental impacts and their beneficial influences. However, once an invasion has occurred, research efforts are usually oriented towards the assessment of damage, whereas positive effects, which are sometimes significant, often receive little attention. Just as not all non indigenous species have large effects (Byers et al. 2002), very similar invaders can have different net effects in different areas. In the case of L. fortunei, data on the ecologically very similar D. polymorpha have proven very useful for defining potential relationships with other components of the ecosystem and identifying fruitful lines of research. However, these similarities may be misleading when attempting to extrapolate D. polymorpha’s known impacts on European and North American waterbodies to L. fortunei in South America. 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