• First record of invasive shell-boring wo

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Thu Aug 6 21:30:28 2020
    First record of invasive shell-boring worm in the Wadden Sea means
    trouble for oyster

    Date:
    August 6, 2020
    Source:
    Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research
    Summary:
    n October 2014, the suspicion arose that the parasite worm Polydora
    websteri had found its way to the Wadden Sea. Researchers now
    confirm that they have found the shell-borer in oysters near Sylt
    and Texel and that it has arrived in European waters.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    In October 2014, the suspicion arose that the parasite worm Polydora
    websteri had found its way to the Wadden Sea. Following years of research,
    that suspicion has now been confirmed: the worm, that likely originates
    from the Asian Pacific, has arrived in European waters. Researchers from
    the German Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI) and the Royal Netherlands
    Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ), confirm in a publication in Marine Biodiversity, that they have found the shell-borer in oysters near Sylt
    and Texel and speculate that it is likely to have spread much further.


    ========================================================================== 'Trouble maker' leaves oyster unsellable The worm Polydora websteri is
    a known 'trouble maker' that causes mud blisters as it bores its way
    through an oyster's shell, leaving the oyster vulnerable for predators in
    the wild, and unsellable on the market. Thieltges: 'The worm manoeuvres
    between the inner and outer world of the oyster. It isn't strictly
    speaking a parasite as it leaves the oyster's body in peace, but by
    attacking its shell, it drains the energy of the oyster that now needs
    to focus on its repair.' Wild populations of Pacific oysters, exotic
    species that were themselves introduced to the Wadden Sea ecosystem in
    the 1970s and '80s, have till now been rather safe from predators. The
    worm might change this. The oysters might be weakened and their shell
    softened, making them easier prey for crabs and birds. On the long-term,
    this could mean a shift in the ecosystem.

    While the worm might form a big threat to aquaculture farming, it is
    also likely that aquaculture itself acted as the primary vector of introduction.

    NIOZ researcher and co-author David Thieltges: 'A large part of
    the invasive species in the marine ecosystem arrive with the import
    of commercial species and the transfer of farmed specimens between
    aquaculture sites.' The worm's favourite host, the Pacific oyster, is
    traded and cultured globally. By moving the oyster, the worm, though not -intended, becomes an international traveller as well. The researchers, including Thieltges and AWI-scientist Andreas Waser, found the first
    Polydora websteri in the direct vicinity of an oyster farm that imports juvenile oysters from a nursery in southern Ireland. Their travel path illustrates the global character of the trade. Thieltges and Waser:
    'This site of the first record was also the site with the highest
    infestation. We suspect that the arrival of the worm in the northern
    Wadden Sea may be related to the oyster imports.' Here to stay and to be reckoned with Once introduced, the further spread of invasive species can continue either via dispersal of larval stages or human-aided secondary
    vectors such as fouling on ship hulls. This may explain that the worm was
    also found during sampling at the Mokbaai on Texel, an island without
    oyster farms. Thieltges underlines, that it is unlikely that the worms
    found near Texel came from Sylt. 'That they made their way from Sylt to
    Texel, along almost 500 kilometres of coastline, seems rather unlikely. We think there might be a different origin.' An option would be that larval stages of the worms found in the Dutch Wadden Sea came from Zeeland
    where there is commercial oyster aquaculture. However, the team still
    needs to investigate whether the worm is already present in Zeeland
    as well.' Thieltges: 'Sampling at other places in the Netherlands and
    in Europe together with genetic research is now needed to establish the
    origin and distribution of the worm. We don't know its exact origins yet,
    but we know that it's here and that it is very likely to keep extending
    its range.'

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Royal_Netherlands_Institute_for_Sea_Research. Note: Content may be edited
    for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Andreas M. Waser, Dagmar Lackschewitz, Jeffrey Knol, Karsten
    Reise, K.

    Mathias Wegner, David W. Thieltges. Spread of the invasive
    shell-boring annelid Polydora websteri (Polychaeta, Spionidae)
    into naturalised oyster reefs in the European Wadden Sea. Marine
    Biodiversity, 2020; 50 (5) DOI: 10.1007/s12526-020-01092-6 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/08/200806122822.htm

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