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Alien alert: shrimpy invader raises big concerns.


In November, an unusual swarm of tiny critters caught the attention of a crew-member on a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Noun 1. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration - an agency in the Department of Commerce that maps the oceans and conserves their living resources; predicts changes to the earth's environment; provides weather reports and forecasts floods and hurricanes and  boat docked in a Lake Michigan channel Michigan Channel is a cable television educational, governmental and public affairs channel based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, owned and operated by the University of Michigan, as part of the "Michigan Public Media" unit. . He asked Steven Pothoven of NOAA NOAA
abbr.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Noun 1. NOAA - an agency in the Department of Commerce that maps the oceans and conserves their living resources; predicts changes to the earth's environment;
2's Great Lakes Great Lakes, group of five freshwater lakes, central North America, creating a natural border between the United States and Canada and forming the largest body of freshwater in the world, with a combined surface area of c.95,000 sq mi (246,050 sq km).  environmental field station at Muskegon, Mich., what the critters were.

"I could see they weren't fish, so I netted some," the biologist recalls. Under magnification, the half-inch-long animals appeared to be crustaceans known as mysid shrimp mysid shrimp: see shrimp. . But "they couldn't be the native mysid my·sid  
n.
Any of various small, shrimplike, chiefly marine crustaceans of the order Mysidacea, the females of which carry their eggs in a pouch beneath the thorax. Also called opossum shrimp.
," Pothoven realized, because those are cold- and deepwater denizens, not shoreline dwellers.

Within about a week, scientists at another federal lab identified the shoreline crustacean crustacean (krŭstā`shən), primarily aquatic arthropod of the subphylum Crustacea. Most of the 44,000 crustacean species are marine, but there are many freshwater forms.  as a new invader, the warm-water species Hemimysis anomala. It's native to rivers in Eastern Europe's Ponto-Caspian region, also the home of zebra mussels.

This week, NOAA received a report of "large concentrations" of Hemimysis that appeared to be reproducing in southeastern Lake Ontario.

From the 1970s through the 1990s, waves of notorious Ponto-Caspian species entered the Great Lakes in ships' ballast waters. In 1998, Anthony Ricciardi and Joseph B. Rasmussen of McGill University in Montreal predicted 17 additional Ponto-Caspian species that they worried were poised to invade North America via the Great Lakes. Hemimysis is the first animal on that list to show up.

"I predict it will be a highly disruptive species,' says Ricciardi. He points out that the mysid voraciously consumes microscopic animals at the bottom of the food chain, which are dietary staples for many young fish.

David Reid, director of NOAA's National Center for Research on Aquatic Invasive Species in Ann Arbor, Mich., says that he's virtually certain that transatlantic cargo ships picked up Hemimysis in ballast water in Europe. Ironically, he adds, the species probably arrived on ships that had dumped ballast water before leaving Europe. However, those ships--called NOBOBs, for"no ballast on board'--still carry dozens of gallons of water at the bottom of their ballast tanks.

Since the mid-1980s, roughly 90 percent of saltwater ships entering the Great Lakes have been NOBOBs, Reid says.

Guidelines now recommend that NOBOBs flush their ballast tanks with salt water to kill freshwater stowaways Stowaways are a Portuguese band from Matosinhos, who formed in 2001. They are made up of Nuno Sousa (vocals and guitar); Pedro Gonçalves (guitar); João Carujo, (drums)and Sérgio Seabra (bass). Fred on keyboards and João Covita on the accordion are more recent additions.  before entering the Great Lakes. If they don't "swish and spit," Reid says, they can release European invaders as the ships pick up and release ballast water while off-loading and taking on cargo in the Great Lakes.

Although Hemimysis deprives some young fish of food, it could be a new menu item for larger Great Lakes fish, Ricciardi says. However, as a new link in the Great Lakes food chain, Ricciardi worries, the fatty crustacean could boost concentrations of pollutants such as polychlorinated biphenyls polychlorinated biphenyls, (pol´ēklôr´nā´tid bīfē´n  in the larger fish.

Ricciardi says that H. anomala's small size and innocent look shouldn't fool anyone. "This is not a species to ignore."
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Raloff, J.
Publication:Science News
Date:Jan 13, 2007
Words:460
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