Ungreen Green Mussels

Ungreen Green Mussels

NOTE – New nominal posting day for this column to be Thursday (see

below). Probable actual posting day will be Tuesday or Wednesday.

I”m happy to report no more incidents of syncope down here on

Marco Island (see last week”s column in the archives). My car”s

air conditioning is now fixed, no longer flooding the interior with

its exhaust water. To round out the trilogy, my inability to get

online to file my column was found to be due to a faulty modem

connection, requiring a reconfiguration by Chris, my newfound

computer guru. Chris and his partner, Chris, both from Germany

and in business here for only 4 months, managed to accomplish

this in just a couple hours at a cost of $75. This computer

problem caused me to miss my nominal filing day, Tuesday, for

the first time since I started this column. The good thing is that it

provided an excuse for me to switch my filing day to Thursday

for this and future columns.

Last week, I noted that I saw no evidence of red tide down here.

However, the local news featured a piece on the definite presence

of red tide just across the water in nearby Naples. The Mote

Marine Laboratory has a web site that gives a daily report on the

red tide situation in the Gulf Coast waters. As usual when I”m

on Marco, the environment puts me into a “marine” frame of

mind. For example, I just finished watching the CBS Wink

News originating in Fort Myers and there was considerable

concern about the Asian green mussel.

It seems that restaurants sometimes serve this delicacy to mussel

lovers. Generally, the creature is harvested in New Zealand

waters and airlifted to the U.S. Speculation is that some

enterprising individual decided to see if New Zealand could be

bypassed and dumped some specimens of Asian green in the

waters of Tampa Bay. Unfortunately, if true, the experiment was

a rousing success for the Asian green mussel. It seems to love

Florida and is reproducing like crazy. One might suppose that

mussel lovers would enjoy the local abundance of the delectable

food item. However, the reporter noted that the eating of

mussels taken from unapproved waters in the area could be

dangerous to one”s health.

But that”s not the real problem. It turns out that Asian greens are

very sociable critters and they like to get together in big clusters

or sheets. These Asian green communities can become so heavy

that they can sink navigational aids such as buoys or even sink

small boats! We discussed some time ago the plugging of water

pipes by similar unwanted marine life in the Great Lakes region.

A power company in the Tampa area is reporting the same

problem in its water pipes thanks to the Asian green mussel.

When it comes to the environment, Asian greens are definitely

ungreen!

China has its problems with marine life as well. A letter to the

editor in the November 2001 issue of Science illustrates one of

those problems. Ping Xie and Yiyu Chen commented in their

letter on a previous letter in Science titled “Invasive carp in the

Mississippi River Basin”. The villains in this story are the

bighead carp and the silver carp. The victim in China is the

barbless carp. Let”s call the victim Barby and B&S will be the

bighead and silver carps. Barby was getting along just fine in

Lake Xingyun in China and half of the fish caught in the lake

were Barbys. Barby is a filter feeder. That is, it feeds by

filtering the plankton and other small critters out of the water

flowing through its filtering apparatus. The amount of food it

gets depends on the “power” of its filter, that is, the amount of

water forced through the filter. The more water it filters, the

more food it gets.

Barby got along fine over the millennia, even though its filtering

apparatus never evolved to become very powerful. However,

there was plenty of plankton in the lake and Barby thrived.

Then, some 50 years ago, it was decided to “farm” B&S in Lake

Xingyun. In contrast to Barby, B&S are powerful filter feeders,

sucking up that water and filtering out the goodies much faster

than Barby. As a result, once B&S were firmly established in the

lake, they gobbled up more than their share of the plankton and

other good stuff. The concentration of plankton in the lake

diminished. Now Barby was pumping the same amount of water

as before but there wasn”t as much plankton in the water. Over

the past 50 years the number of Barbys declined steadily until,

instead of half the catch from the lake being Barbys, today less

than one percent are Barbys. Barby is on the verge of extinction

if the trend continues.

This destroying of the native environment by B&S is not limited

to Lake Xingyun. Other lakes in China have also been seeded

with B&S. Because all types of fish dine on plankton in their

early stages of life and because some, like Barby, are filter

feeders as adults, B&S are competitors for virtually every fish

species. And B&S aren”t small, especially the bighead, which

can grow to 75-90 pounds and each female has a couple million

eggs to help propagate the species. I haven”t read the letter about

the Mississippi that prompted the Chinese letter but from its title

it”s clear that the B&S effect is one to worry about here in the

U.S., as well as in the 33 other countries where either B and/or S

species have been introduced.

As if B&S aren”t enough to worry about, what about the decline

in caviar production? When we were in the USSR in 1973, one

of the joys of our visit was the caviar spread on that dark brown

bread – delicious! The most sought after caviar is the roe from

certain species of sturgeon. I”ve seen a number of articles over

the past couple of years lamenting the overfishing of sturgeon in

Russia or the former Soviet republics. Here in Florida, another

item on the local news program last week was about the caviar

crisis. Mote Marine Laboratory was mentioned in connection

with its research on sturgeon aquaculture. As in Russia, the

sturgeon population in the Gulf and in the rivers of this area has

been in serious decline.

The Mote Marine Laboratory has a joint program with the

University of Florida to bring back the populations of sturgeon,

in particular, the Gulf sturgeon and the shortnose sturgeon. The

Gulf sturgeon is an impressive animal. After its first year it

weighs about 6 pounds. As an adult it”s typically about 6 feet

long but can grow to 15 feet and a weight of up to about 800

pounds! Speculation is that the Gulf sturgeon can also live to

perhaps a hundred years. Not only does it yield good caviar but

it is reputedly an excellent tasting fish. However, with the

overfishing of the Gulf, one isn”t likely to encounter one that”s

survived long enough to achieve the impressive figures cited

above. Let”s hope that the program to reestablish the sturgeon is

successful so “we Floridians” can once again enjoy our caviar.

OK, to tell the truth I haven”t had real caviar since our trip to the

USSR and, actually, I”m not sure we were eating the good stuff

there.

Finally, I have only been fishing once in my life, in a small

stream near Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania. Accordingly, I was

quite interested when yesterday, we watched a fellow from our

condo unit cleaning his catch of yellowish snappers. He neatly

cut the fish near the head, sliced off the skin with a stroke to the

tail and then slit out the “filet” for his dinner. The head and

attached skeleton were saved, to be recycled as bait, and the skin

was recycled by throwing it to the group of appreciative pelicans

that apparently show up every day around the time the fishermen

come to the cleaning station. This morning, on my walk, I came

across another approach to treating a captured fish. A gull was

on the shore, beginning to dig into a foot-long silvery fish that

the gull seemed to have caught and dragged onshore. The gull

was much less fastidious than our fisherman in his approach to

his catch. On my return a half hour later, I was surprised to see

that the same gull had maintained his catch in spite of other gulls

in the area and was still working hard for his meal. I was

tempted to get a sharp knife and teach the gull my newly learned

tricks of how to skin a fish but figured the gull would probably

not appreciate my efforts.

Well, so much for my marine mode. Next week, I”ll get back to

something not related to the environment, fish or anything

aqueous. I don”t know what the subject will be but now I”m

committed!

CORRECTION – I”ve just finished my early morning walk the

day after finishing this column. I decided I was definitely wrong

in concluding that the above mentioned seagull had pulled that

silvery fish onto the beach. Today, the beach was littered with

the same type of dead fish, to me a sign that the red tide has

reached Marco Island. Yesterday”s fish was probably a

harbinger of the carnage to come.

Allen F. Bortrum