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What you can do about
New Zealand Mud Snails

Last Updated 11/05/06
Attention Anglers!
The New Zealand Mud Snail (Potamopygrus antipodarum) is an
exceptionally hardy invasive species that colonizes damaged streams and
competes with native species like mayflies, caddisflies, and trout. The
snails can pass through the digestive tracts of fish unharmed, and can
live out of water for nearly a month in damp or shady environments.
Because the snails can reproduce without fertilization, it only takes one
individual snail to create a colony that can heavily impact a stream.
While the snails had been found in the Upper Owens River
in 1999, until recently they had not spread to the Mono Basin. However, in
the spring of 2005, a California Department of Fish and Game survey team
reportedly
found New Zealand Mud Snails in Rush Creek upstream from Highway 395.
On September 8, 2006, Dr. David Herbst
of the Sierra Nevada Aquatic Research Lab was unable to find the snails in
the same Rush Creek location--he only found native snails. Based on his
survey effort and the type of habitat and water quality that the NZMS
prefer in the Upper Owens River, he thinks it is unlikely that the snails
are in Rush Creek!
The snails spread to new streams mainly by hitchhiking on
humans, so it is important to be vigilant about cleaning gear that has
been in a snail-inhabited stream like the Upper Owens
River.
Cleaning boats with hot water and bleach effectively
removes snails from surfaces (but does not kill
them!), while
boots, shoes, waders, and equipment should be frozen overnight to
eliminate the chance of contaminating other waters. When you visit
the Upper Owens River, or any other stream in the Eastern
Sierra, please do your part to stop the spread of New Zealand Mud Snails!
For more information online, please visit

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