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National

Zebra mussels, scourge of the Great Lakes, invade Texas

Bill Hanna - Fort Worth Star-Telegram

December 29, 2010 05:44 PM

LAKE TEXOMA — In a cove on this massive lake on the Texas-Oklahoma border, it doesn't take long to find zebra mussels.

Just a few feet from shore, a large rock is covered with them. A quick scan of the shoreline turns up many more.

This invasive species, an import from Eastern Europe, has long been spreading across the United States. The Great Lakes have been dealing with it for years, and now it has reached Texas.

So far, it has been found only in Lake Texoma and Sister Grove Creek, a tributary that the North Texas Municipal Water District uses to send water from Texoma downstream to Lake Lavon.

"The best way to avoid introduction is to prevent it from ever getting there in the first place — of course, the consequences once it gets established are pretty great," said Robert McMahon, professor emeritus in the University of Texas at Arlington department of biology who has studied zebra mussels since 1990.

The fear is the resilient mollusks and their larvae will be washed downstream into Lake Lavon, where they could spread throughout the Trinity River basin, creating havoc with pipelines and intake valves and threatening native species.

While scientists have tried to kill them off in Sister Grove Creek, the North Texas water district has stopped pumping for the last 18 months from Lake Texoma. Biologists were successful in killing off most of them.

What makes the task more daunting is there is another, perhaps more likely way for them to spread. Zebra mussels can be spread via boats that are hauled from infested lakes. That is what is believed to have happened at Lake Texoma.

"My feeling is it's inevitable we're going to see them here," said David Marshall, engineering services director of the Tarrant Regional Water District. "The only question is, Will it be in two years or 10 years?"

Read more of this story at Star-Telegram.com

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