BC-CNS-Quagga-SRP,375

Quagga mussels reach CAP-SRP junction; likely in Phoenix-area canals

With BC-CNS-Quagga-Box

Photos 1 | 2 (thumbnails, captions below)

By MEGAN THOMAS
Cronkite News Service

PHOENIX (Thursday, Oct. 16) _ Quagga mussels have reached the connection between the Central Arizona Project and Salt River Project and likely have gotten into the system that carries irrigation and drinking water through the Phoenix area, officials said Thursday.

The invasive species poses no threat to the public, but the quagga mussel and its cousin the zebra mussel wreaked havoc on drinking water and power plant intakes in the Great Lakes region before the quagga infested lakes along the Colorado River in early 2007.

“We know it will be a cost to our maintenance costs; we just don’t know what the effect of the mussel will be,” said Jeff Lane, an SRP spokesman.

The mussel is thought to have made it into central Arizona via the CAP canal and has infested Lake Pleasant north of Phoenix.

Eleven of the mussels were found by SRP employees on concrete blocks the utility company put in the canal connection to detect the quagga. No mussels have been found SRP canals yet, according to a joint news release from SRP and the Arizona Game and Fish Department.

“We assume the mussels are now in our canal system,” Lane said.

“It’s going to cost time, energy and manpower, and we’re all going to see that in our bill,” said Rory Aikens, a public information officer for Game and Fish. “That’s why it’s important to stop the spread of quagga mussels. It’s going to cost all of us.”

Game and Fish encourages boaters to avoid transporting the quagga by cleaning, draining and drying boat hulls and intakes.

The CAP offers quagga mussels a route to continue spreading south toward Tucson, Aikens said.

“There’s a likelihood, a very good possibility, that the quagga mussel will continue spreading,” Aikens said.

Quagga mussels, which are native to Eastern Europe, breed rapidly and build colonies that can block water flow, requiring expensive efforts to scrape them from water intakes, boat docks and other places they favor. They also are voracious eaters, draining ecosystems of nutrients low in the food chain and endangering fish.

In 2007, SRP introduced the redear sunfish, known for its ability to crunch mussel shells, in hopes that it would help control quagga mussels if they reached the Phoenix area. But Lane said the utility has since determined the fish wouldn’t be as effective as hoped.

^___=

Web Link:
_ Salt River Project: www.srpnet.com
_Arizona Game and Fish Department: www.azgfd.gov

^___=

PHOTOS:

Click thumbnails to see full-resolution images and download; caption information is in the file under File>File Info.

101608-quagga-several.jpg
CAPTION WITH BC-CNS-QUAGGA-SRP: Quagga mussels discovered in Lake Mead are seen in this Jan. 9, 2007, handout photo from the National Park Service. The quagga mussel, along with its cousin the zebra mussel, has caused widespread and expensive problems in the Midwest and Northeast. On Thursday, Oct. 16, 2008, officials reported that the mussel had been found at the junction of the Central Arizona Project and Salt River Project and that the quagga likely had gotten into canals that carry drinking and irrigation water through Phoenix. (Cronkite News Service Photo/National Park Service)

101608-quaggaruler.jpg
CAPTION WITH BC-CNS-QUAGGA-SRP: A quagga mussel discovered in Lake Mead is seen in this Jan. 9, 2007, handout photo from the National Park Service, with a ruler providing scale. The quagga mussel, along with its cousin the zebra mussel, has caused widespread and expensive problems in the Midwest and Northeast. On Thursday, Oct. 16, 2008, officials reported that the mussel had been found at the junction of the Central Arizona Project and Salt River Project and that the quagga likely had gotten into canals that carry drinking and irrigation water through Phoenix. (Cronkite News Service Photo/National Park Service)