Watzins crew, using a sophisticated underwater, remote-controlled vehicle, witnessed sheepshead fish using their powerful jaws to crush the mollusks. Most revealing was the sighting of a massive pile of crushed zebra mussel shells.
The researchers also saw yellow perch dining on the zebra mussels, but unlike the sheepshead, the perch were seen eating the mussels whole. The observations are prompting Watzin to look at other impacts of zebra mussels.
"We need to know what eating zebra mussels means to the overall nutrition of these fish," she said. Watzin previously has documented a slow growth rate in yellow perch in Lake Champlain. The increasing abundance of zebra mussels might exacerbate that problem, causing yellow perch to grow even slower, she said. Thats not good news if youre an angler.
Further research is also underway to determine if both fish (sheepshead and yellow perch) are eating enough zebra mussels to serve as some kind of population control against the pesky mollusks.
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