Here's an article that might be of interest to mussel enthusiasts and for those of you along the Cedar River. Jane Clark [log in to unmask] DNR ATTEMPTS TO REINTRODUCE ENDANGERED MUSSEL INTO CEDAR RIVER By Joe Wilkinson DNR Information Specialist Right about now, thousands of bio-hitchhikers are bailing out. Tiny glochidia - larval mussels no larger than grains of sand - are releasing holds on host fish and settling to the bottom of the Cedar River. With ideal conditions - and a whole lot of luck - a tiny fraction will survive. Over the next decade biologists will return, searching for growing Higgins eye clams. Their work here, and on tributaries of the Mississippi River, is a long shot, but perhaps the last shot for the endangered Higgins eye. The effort mixes tradition with experiment. Studies pointed researchers to the gravelly riverbed below the limestone bluffs, the palisades that give Palisades-Kepler State Park its name. "It gets down to why save any species. There is untold genetic makeup that might be lost," said Scott Gritters, fisheries biologist with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. "Mussels are valuable biofilters. This stretch of the Cedar River has a history of Higgins eye and related species. We are conducting different experiments now to see what works." The we includes the Iowa and Wisconsin DNR, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service and the Army Corps of Engineers. At two locations around Palisades-Kepler State Park this month, crews released 793 smallmouth bass and 405 walleyes. Attached to the inner gills of each fish were 150 to 200 glochidia, not quite ½ a millimeter wide. In nature, a female mussel will expel larvae into the face of the host fish as it approaches. After four to six weeks, they drop from their hosts, hopefully into suitable locations where they will anchor themselves to the bottom and grow. To help that process along, biologists have cultured the endangered mussels and actually inoculated them into the gills of the fish in the Fish & Wildlife Service Hatchery at Genoa, Wis. "We duplicate water conditions. We learn, for instance, how many larvae each fish can tolerate," said Wisconsin DNR biologist Kurt Welke. If they inject too many of the pinpoint sized larvae, they could irritate or stress the fish. Too few and it would be a waste of the time consuming effort that goes into this laboratory hitchhiking routine. Researchers use a variety of delivery methods, too. In the fall, wild fish from the Iowa River below Iowa City will be inoculated. On the Wisconsin River, inoculated fish are kept in cages over prime mussel beds. As the glochidia drop off, they stay close to home. "It's like finding a needle in a haystack," said Welke. "This way, at least we reduce the size of the haystack; the area we search for mussels." They are experimenting with different species of fish, different sizes of fish, raising mussels in raceways, monitoring water temperature and conditions. "Fish culture has been around for centuries. But mussel culture? Some work was done 100 years ago at Fairport (when Iowa mussels supported a robust button industry), but other than that, there has been little," said Welke. Much of their culture work now is with a similar mussel, the pocketbook clam. "It is a surrogate. We can experiment, learn from mistakes and we aren't affecting the Higgins eye. When we learn, we might someday duplicate it." All this, so Lampsilis higginsi doesn't disappear. On the endangered species list since the 1980s due to siltation and loss of rocky habitat, the infamous zebra mussel has pushed it to the eco-brink and the dire "in jeopardy" status. Those zebras, accidentally introduced in the last decade by the shipping industry, literally smother other mussels by attaching to them and overpopulating mussel beds. Because of that, the Corps of Engineers, with transportation responsibility on the Great Lakes and Mississippi River system, is paying for the Higgins eye recovery effort. Under ideal conditions, the young mussels could be the size of quarters by next fall. In the meantime, a 2002 stocking is planned. Results? They will be several years away. Optimistically, Gritters looks for a colony in five years. He realizes, though, it could be a decade. And as a biologist he looks beyond the obvious benefit. "Mussels are strong in traditional walleye and smallmouth bass spawning areas. I can't help but think there's a symbiotic relationship there; that they help each other survive." In the meantime, the race for survival heats up*not just for the jeopardized Higgins eye, but for other mussels that - quite literally - face a murky future on Iowa rivers. ### - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - For SC email list T-and-C, send: GET TERMS-AND-CONDITIONS.CURRENT to [log in to unmask]