A review of the scientific literature and an analysis of unpublished material identified ~ 50 possible alien molluscs from Greece, four of which were newly reported here. Records of ~ 100 additional taxa, which would strongly inflate the alien species numbers, were excluded. Among the ~ 50 candidate species, 43 were confirmed as alien and 12 as cryptogenic. Twenty-nine alien species were considered established, and four deemed invasive. Our results are consistent with the position of Greece in the east-west Mediterranean gradient, as well as the Aegean marine environment. The contribution of well-informed citizen scientists appears to be crucial to our overall knowledge of alien molluscan biotas because only 12 alien taxa were detected during formal research projects, while 31 were first found by amateurs. No molluscan introductions were confirmed from Greece pre-1960s, and subsequent periods had variable numbers of introductions, ranging from 0 (1976-1980) to 9.5 (2006-2010). The areas with the highest alien species concentrations were the Saronikos Gulf, near the Piraeus port area, and the Dodekanisa, near the Levantine coastline. Despite a general decline in taxonomic expertise and in local knowledge, we show that these are still needed when compiling and analyzing alien species inventories that subsequently influence policy and management decisions.
Predatory, non‐native fauna can influence biodiversity and trophic dynamics in invaded ecosystems. Signal crayfish (Pacifastacus leniusculus) are a highly successful invader, which have altered freshwater benthic communities, including bivalve populations. Bivalves are a keystone freshwater group in global in decline, partly due to invasion by alien bivalve and crayfish species. However, little is known about the predatory impacts of invasive crayfish within co‐occurring native and invasive bivalve populations. Mesocosm predation choice experiments considered relative signal crayfish predation rates between paired native (Anodonta anatina and Unio tumidus) and invasive (Dreissena polymorpha, D. bugensis, and Corbicula fluminea) bivalves, and between paired invasive bivalves. All bivalves were actively predated, but there was no consistent difference in the biomass of invasive versus native bivalves consumed. However, the effects of consumption were consistently different; 18.2% of invasive bivalves were lethally predated, with 100% of surviving individuals remaining undamaged, whereas 1.1% of native bivalves were lethally predated, but 100% of surviving individuals received nonlethal damage in the form of shell chipping, which could reduce long‐term bivalve fitness in natural environments. In experiments considering paired invasive species, D. polymorpha was more resistant to predation when compared to other invasive taxa tested. The majority of field research considering aquatic invasions considers purely lethal predation effects inferred from invertebrate presence/absence. These experiments demonstrate the need to better understand both the processes and impacts of predation by invasive species, which may include substantial nonlethal effects on the fitness and life history of endangered taxa.
River gravel mobility is an important control on river behaviour, morphology, and ecosystem processes. Gravel stability is dependent on abiotic flow and sediment properties, alongside less widely acknowledged biotic processes. The quagga mussel (Dreissena bugensis), a highly invasive bivalve, frequently occurs at high population densities in rivers and lakes. Quagga mussels attach to benthic sediments using byssal threads, which might affect sediment stability and thereby broader river geomorphology. We aimed to (1) characterize controls of quagga mussel sediment attachment by conducting a field survey in an invaded river, (2) investigate resultant changes in the critical shear stress needed to entrain fluvial bed materials via an ex situ flume experiment, for measured average (135 m À2 ) and potential future (270 m À2 ) mussel densities, and (3) model how this may affect sediment transport rates. From field surveys, mean quagga mussel density was 122 m À2 , attaching to an average of 591 g m À2 of mineral bed sediments. Across the survey reach, mussels attached to all grain sizes available, with attachment driven by grain availability, rather than active selection of particular grain sizes. In the ex situ flume experiment, densities of 135 mussels m À2 did not significantly increase the critical shear stress of fluvial bed materials, but a density of 270 mussels m À2 significantly increased critical shear stress by 40%. Estimates of the proportion of time these critical stresses are exceeded at the field site indicated high densities of quagga mussels may reduce the occurrence of a geomorphically active flood event from Q 30 to Q 2 . These results present feasible invasion scenarios, as quagga mussels frequently reach benthic densities orders of magnitude greater than observed here. This study indicates that substantial alterations to bedload sediment transport may occur following quagga mussel invasion. Future geomorphic modelling should include biology to better understand rates and processes of landscape development.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.