Windsor

Strategy offered for fixing damage from invasive mussels

A coalition of agencies and groups in the Great Lakes region has released a plan for developing solutions to problems caused by invasive mussels.

Zebra and quagga mussels have caused billions of dollars in damage

Zebra mussels first arrived in Canada in 1986. They were found in a harbour in Lake Erie, most likely transported from Europe via transatlantic shipping. (CBC)

A coalition of agencies and groups in the Great Lakes region has released a plan for developing solutions to problems caused by invasive mussels.

The strategy is intended to guide investments, policies and research into zebra and quagga mussels. The mussels arrived in the lakes in the 1980s and have spread across much of the nation.

They've done billions of dollars' worth of damage by disrupting aquatic food webs, degrading fish habitat and clogging water intake pipes.

Zebra mussels are found throughout all the Great Lakes, Lake St. Clair and the Mississippi river watershed. (CBC)

The strategy sets goals to guide development of methods to restore damaged ecosystems.

Members of the Invasive Mussel Collaborative include federal, state, provincial and tribal agencies as well as private stakeholder groups and research institutions.