Science Takes On a Silent Invader
By ROBERT H. BOYLE
The New York Times
Since they arrived in the Great Lakes in the 1980s, two species of mussels the size of pistachios have spread to hundreds of lakes and rivers in 34 states and have done vast economic and ecological damage.
These silent invaders, the quagga and zebra mussels, have disrupted ecosystems by devouring phytoplankton,
the foundation of the aquatic food web, and have clogged the water
intakes and pipes of cities and towns, power plants, factories and even
irrigated golf courses.
Now the mussels may have met their match: Daniel P. Molloy, an emeritus biologist at the New York State Museum in Albany and a self-described “Bronx boy who became fascinated by things living in water.”...
Leading a team at the museum’s Cambridge Field Research Laboratory in upstate New York, he discovered a bacterium, Pseudomonas fluorescens strain CL145A, that kills the mussels but appears to have little or no effect on other organisms.
As a result, New York State has awarded a license to Marrone Bio Innovations,
a company in Davis, Calif., to develop a commercial formulation of the
bacterium. The product, Zequanox, has been undergoing tests for several
years, with promising results. (Dr. Molloy has no financial ties to the
company.)
Zequanox
killed more than 90 percent of the mussels in a test using tanks of
water from Lake Carlos in Minnesota, said James A. Luoma, a research
biologist with the United States Geological Survey in La Crosse, Wis. A
control group of freshwater mussels, unionids from the Black River in
Wisconsin, were unharmed. ...
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