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LAS VEGAS Invasive quagga mussels are adapting well to life in the desert, especially in Lake Havasu, where scientists have determined their reproduction rate is three times faster than when the pesky mollusks infested the Great Lakes years ago.
Leonard Willett, the Bureau of Reclamations quagga mussel coordinator for the lower Colorado River dams, said the effort to deal with quaggas, which were discovered last year first in Lake Mead and later downstream of Hoover Dam, still is in the monitoring phase, the first part of what he called the reactive approach.
Reactive approach means youre going to live with the mussels. Youre going to control them, but youre going to live with them, he said in a recent presentation to the Lake Mead Water Quality Forum.
He projected that as the infestation sets in and begins to clog hydroelectric power cooling pipes and other hardware in Hoover Dams operations, the maintenance-and-control bill could reach $1 million a year, especially if pipes get plugged with quagga colonies.
That could cause turbines to overheat and shut down until cooling pipes can be reamed of the invasive species.
This is an evil critter, not good, Willett said.
It is going to cause a lot of problems when were going to have to install control measures, he said.
Among the options for controlling the invasion is to use a bacteria product that targets the quagga mussels.
While that method still is being developed, Willett said it looked promising.
Other choices are mechanical filters and using chemicals like chlorine to kill them, or a combination of filters and ultraviolet light.
At the end of the day, though, there would be shells from dead quaggas to dispose of and discharge permits to obtain.
So far, conditions for quaggas to thrive appear to be more than adequate at Davis Dam at the south end of Lake Mohave, north of Laughlin.
In October, a colony coated the dams exterior penstock gate like carpeting.
A month later, downstream at Parker Dam on Lake Havasu, quaggas covered sampling plates used to monitor them.
At Parker Dam, there is a lot of colonization. At Parker, there is no hope. They colonize repeatedly, Willett said.
With warmer year-round temperatures than bodies of water in the Great Lakes, quaggas are able to reproduce six times a year instead of two.
In addition, Havasu has the right mix of food, calcium and dissolved oxygen to sustain colonization.
With that, Willett said, Youre going to get mussels. Im not surprised.
Near Hoover Dam, quaggas have been found more than 200 feet deep in Lake Mead.
Not only do they pose a threat to the cooling pipe system for hydroelectric turbines, but also to the network that supplies domestic water for workers and visitors at the dam.
They prefer to cling to flat, stainless steel structures where water flows slower than 6 feet per second.
Mussels really like stainless steel. They dont like copper or brass, Willett said.
A cousin of the quagga, zebra mussels, has turned up in Colorados Lake Pueblo State Park and in Californias San Justo Reservoir in San Benito County, off the California Aqueduct system.
According to the 100th Meridian Initiative, an organization that tracks the spread of aquatic nuisance species, quagga mussels are native to Ukraines Dneiper River drainage.
Like the zebra mussel, they were transported to the Great Lakes in the ballast water of ships in the mid-1980s.
Quagga mussels were discovered Jan. 6, 2007, in Lake Meads Boulder Basin.
Biologists believe they hitchhiked on a boat that was launched in the lake.
In a statement posted Jan. 16 on the California Department of Fish and Games Web site, Resources Secretary Mike Chrisman said:
The discovery of zebra mussels in a central California waterway has us very concerned. Like its relative the quagga mussel, this species can cause significant environmental, recreational and economic impacts once established in a body of water. It is important that boaters do everything they can to help stop their spread.
Jon Sjoberg, supervising fisheries biologist for the Nevada Department of Wildlife in Las Vegas, said his colleagues in California are puzzled how zebra mussels, instead of quaggas, arrived in central California first after existing previously in the Great Lakes and Midwest regions.
The source is unknown, he said, although theres speculation that anglers or bait buckets could have transported them, even ducks or waterfowl.
Its like they dropped out of the sky, Sjoberg said.
On the Net: Bureau of Reclamation: http://www.usbr.gov/main/water/
Leonard Willett, the Bureau of Reclamations quagga mussel coordinator for the lower Colorado River dams, said the effort to deal with quaggas, which were discovered last year first in Lake Mead and later downstream of Hoover Dam, still is in the monitoring phase, the first part of what he called the reactive approach.
Reactive approach means youre going to live with the mussels. Youre going to control them, but youre going to live with them, he said in a recent presentation to the Lake Mead Water Quality Forum.
He projected that as the infestation sets in and begins to clog hydroelectric power cooling pipes and other hardware in Hoover Dams operations, the maintenance-and-control bill could reach $1 million a year, especially if pipes get plugged with quagga colonies.
That could cause turbines to overheat and shut down until cooling pipes can be reamed of the invasive species.
This is an evil critter, not good, Willett said.
It is going to cause a lot of problems when were going to have to install control measures, he said.
Among the options for controlling the invasion is to use a bacteria product that targets the quagga mussels.
While that method still is being developed, Willett said it looked promising.
Other choices are mechanical filters and using chemicals like chlorine to kill them, or a combination of filters and ultraviolet light.
At the end of the day, though, there would be shells from dead quaggas to dispose of and discharge permits to obtain.
So far, conditions for quaggas to thrive appear to be more than adequate at Davis Dam at the south end of Lake Mohave, north of Laughlin.
In October, a colony coated the dams exterior penstock gate like carpeting.
A month later, downstream at Parker Dam on Lake Havasu, quaggas covered sampling plates used to monitor them.
At Parker Dam, there is a lot of colonization. At Parker, there is no hope. They colonize repeatedly, Willett said.
With warmer year-round temperatures than bodies of water in the Great Lakes, quaggas are able to reproduce six times a year instead of two.
In addition, Havasu has the right mix of food, calcium and dissolved oxygen to sustain colonization.
With that, Willett said, Youre going to get mussels. Im not surprised.
Near Hoover Dam, quaggas have been found more than 200 feet deep in Lake Mead.
Not only do they pose a threat to the cooling pipe system for hydroelectric turbines, but also to the network that supplies domestic water for workers and visitors at the dam.
They prefer to cling to flat, stainless steel structures where water flows slower than 6 feet per second.
Mussels really like stainless steel. They dont like copper or brass, Willett said.
A cousin of the quagga, zebra mussels, has turned up in Colorados Lake Pueblo State Park and in Californias San Justo Reservoir in San Benito County, off the California Aqueduct system.
According to the 100th Meridian Initiative, an organization that tracks the spread of aquatic nuisance species, quagga mussels are native to Ukraines Dneiper River drainage.
Like the zebra mussel, they were transported to the Great Lakes in the ballast water of ships in the mid-1980s.
Quagga mussels were discovered Jan. 6, 2007, in Lake Meads Boulder Basin.
Biologists believe they hitchhiked on a boat that was launched in the lake.
In a statement posted Jan. 16 on the California Department of Fish and Games Web site, Resources Secretary Mike Chrisman said:
The discovery of zebra mussels in a central California waterway has us very concerned. Like its relative the quagga mussel, this species can cause significant environmental, recreational and economic impacts once established in a body of water. It is important that boaters do everything they can to help stop their spread.
Jon Sjoberg, supervising fisheries biologist for the Nevada Department of Wildlife in Las Vegas, said his colleagues in California are puzzled how zebra mussels, instead of quaggas, arrived in central California first after existing previously in the Great Lakes and Midwest regions.
The source is unknown, he said, although theres speculation that anglers or bait buckets could have transported them, even ducks or waterfowl.
Its like they dropped out of the sky, Sjoberg said.
On the Net: Bureau of Reclamation: http://www.usbr.gov/main/water/


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