Strong body mass decrease of the invasive clam Corbicula fluminea during summer

被引:48
作者
Vohmann, Andreas [1 ]
Borcherding, Jost [1 ]
Kureck, Armin [1 ]
bij de Vaate, Abraham [2 ]
Arndt, Hartmut [1 ]
Weitere, Markus [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cologne, Inst Zool, Dept Gen Ecol & Limnol, D-50931 Cologne, Germany
[2] Rijkswaterstaat RIZA, NL-8224 AD Lelystad, Netherlands
关键词
Alien species; Bivalvia; Clams; Food limitation; Invasive species; Starvation stress; MUSSEL DREISSENA-POLYMORPHA; FRESH-WATER BIVALVES; ASIAN CLAM; POPULATION-DYNAMICS; ZEBRA MUSSEL; RIVER RHINE; FILTRATION-RATE; POTOMAC RIVER; LIFE-CYCLE; TEMPERATURE;
D O I
10.1007/s10530-009-9429-0
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
The filter-feeding clam Corbicula fluminea has widely spread from its Asiatic origin into freshwater habitats on several continents, where it often has a considerable impact on ecosystem processes. The present study was stimulated by the observation that C. fluminea can experience mass mortality during warm summers, even when temperatures are still far below the lethal level. We hypothesized that starvation due to low food quantities during summer is a main factor in this context. In order to test nutritional conditions in an environment where summer mortality occurred, the clams' body mass was tracked in river bypass systems installed at the Lower River Rhine (Germany and The Netherlands). Two food levels were adjusted in the bypass channels: one corresponding to the original chlorophyll level in the river (ambient food) and one with a chlorophyll a level reduced by about 50% (low food). The clams kept at the ambient food level increased their shell length during summer, although growth rates decreased at low food levels in the River Rhine in late summer. In contrast to shell length, body mass decrease in late summer cumulated in 94% reduction from August until October. This trend was enhanced by the experimental food reduction, i.e., clams kept in the low food level treatments weighed 60% less than the clams in the ambient food treatment at the end of summer. However, mortality was low in both treatments. The data demonstrate a high plasticity in the body mass of C. fluminea. The corresponding possibility to respire body mass can be seen as one strategy to survive longer starvation periods.
引用
收藏
页码:53 / 64
页数:12
相关论文
共 47 条
[1]   Caloric variability of Corbicula fluminea (Mollusca, Bivalvia) in Rosana Reservoir, Brazil [J].
Bagatini, Yara Moretto ;
Benedito-Cecilio, Evanilde ;
Higuti, Janet .
BRAZILIAN ARCHIVES OF BIOLOGY AND TECHNOLOGY, 2007, 50 (01) :85-90
[2]  
BIELEFELD U, 1991, MALACOLOGIA, V33, P31
[3]  
Bij de Vaate A, 1991, B ZOOLOGISCH MUSEUM, V13, P13
[4]  
BORCHERDING J, 1995, MALACOLOGIA, V36, P15
[5]   Top-down control from the bottom: Regulation of eutrophication in a large river by benthic grazing [J].
Caraco, N. F. ;
Cole, J. J. ;
Strayer, D. L. .
LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY, 2006, 51 (01) :664-670
[6]   Population dynamics of Corbicula fluminea (Bivalvia) in the Parana River Delta (Argentina) [J].
Cataldo, D ;
Boltovskoy, D .
HYDROBIOLOGIA, 1998, 380 (1-3) :153-163
[7]   Effects of temperature on growth rate and body size in the Mediterranean Sea anemone Actinia equina [J].
Chomsky, O ;
Kamenir, Y ;
Hyams, M ;
Dubinsky, Z ;
Chadwick-Furman, NE .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY, 2004, 313 (01) :63-73
[8]   THE EFFECT OF THE ASIATIC CLAM, CORBICULA-FLUMINEA, ON PHYTOPLANKTON OF THE POTOMAC RIVER, MARYLAND [J].
COHEN, RRH ;
DRESLER, PV ;
PHILLIPS, EJP ;
CORY, RL .
LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY, 1984, 29 (01) :170-180
[9]   Potential effects of Asian clam (Corbicula fluminea) die-offs on native freshwater mussels (Unionidae) II:: porewater ammonia [J].
Cooper, NL ;
Bidwell, JR ;
Cherry, DS .
JOURNAL OF THE NORTH AMERICAN BENTHOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2005, 24 (02) :381-394
[10]   Potential impact of filter-feeding invaders on temperate inland freshwater environments [J].
Darrigran G. .
Biological Invasions, 2002, 4 (1-2) :145-156