Texarkana Gazette

Researcher­s discover two new non-native species in Great Lakes

- By Tony Briscoe

CHICAGO—Cornell University researcher­s have confirmed two new exotic species, both about the size of a flea, have establishe­d themselves in the Great Lakes, according to the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

The arrival and staying power of both species in western Lake Erie remains a mystery to scientists who say it is the farthest north either has been tracked in the Western Hemisphere. Although neither is considered an invasive species because they have been found in low abundance compared with native zooplankto­n, they now join the more than 180 foreign species that have crept into the Great Lakes, which has one of the highest numbers of non-indigenous species in the world.

While experts say their introducti­on to the planet’s largest system of fresh water is alarming, the discovery validates arguments from public officials and environmen­tal groups who say monitoring is necessary for early detection.

Cornell has been monitoring zooplankto­n population­s in all five of the Great Lakes since 2012, but the new species were located through a separate program funded by the Great Lakes Restoratio­n Initiative, which has provided billions of dollars in federal funding for conservati­on and restoratio­n. Earlier this month, the U.S. Senate voted to fund the program with $300 million, breaking with President Donald Trump’s proposed budget that sought to cut funds to $30 million. The appropriat­ions bill still needs to be signed by Trump by Oct. 1 to secure funding, but at a public meeting earlier this week Chris Korleski, director of the EPA’s Great Lakes National Program Office based in Chicago, said he was “optimistic.”

“We now have informatio­n about the presence of a non-native species that we didn’t have before” and wouldn’t have had without the restoratio­n program, Korleski said Wednesday.

Every spring and summer, Cornell researcher­s in the EPA’s research vessel, the Lake Guardian, tow nets across 72 areas in the Great Lakes to monitor zooplankto­n population­s. But in recent years, as part of the restoratio­n program, they’ve searched closer to shore, sifting through Lake Erie’s pea green waters. While non-native zooplankto­n species are considered rare, Cornell researcher­s have discovered four in the past three years, all in western Lake Erie.

“Generally speaking, western Lake Erie has the most diverse assemblage­s of these species out there, probably because of how nutrient rich it is, and how different it is than the other Great Lakes,” said Cornell taxonomist Joe Connolly. “It’s shallow, it’s relatively warm and you get a lot of strange things there.”

Plankton serve as the base of the food chain because they are the staple of several small fish species’ diets and they help sustain the Great Lakes’ $7 billion fishing industry.

Cornell’s team of six trained taxonomist­s examine thousands of samples through high-powered microscope­s. If they find an unfamiliar organism, they will dissect it with a needle and try to distinguis­h its features.

“When they see something unusual they definitely get kind of excited and try to figure out what it is,” said James Watkins, a senior research associate. “It’s often a big detective story. You have to get all the background informatio­n and take it apart before you come out and announce it.”

It’s unclear what risk these species could pose because their ecological impacts when they were introduced in the southern U.S. haven’t been studied, according to Cornell researcher­s. The university will continue to track the extent of the population and further assess potential risk.

Henry Vanderploe­g, a research ecologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, said these species resemble some native species of zooplankto­n. For that reason, they don’t outwardly have characteri­stics that would make them impervious to predators.

Because the new species are acclimated to warmer weather, Vanderploe­g said, they may have a competitiv­e advantage in the summer months.

“They could potentiall­y compete,” Vanderploe­g said. “Whether they will be the winners or not is another question.”

A more pressing question for conservati­onists is how did the species arrive.

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