This week, numerous reports across the country confirmed that some aquarium and pet stores nationwide have been offering for sale an aquarium product that may contain zebra mussels, a highly invasive species that can cause severe damage to the food chain and infrastructure in native lakes and rivers.
The product, the “Betta Buddy Marimo Ball,” is a type of algae used in aquariums that helps absorb ammonia and other waste from aquarium fish and provide oxygen while preventing the growth of other algae. It is shipped from a company in California which imports the plant from Ukraine, where zebra mussels are native. The mussels were first detected in Seattle by a pet store employee who notified the authorities.
Upon hearing about the problem, Wildlife agents in California, Washington, Arkansas, Alabama, Montana, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Oregon, Idaho, and North Carolina found the product being sold. Further investigation of those moss balls confirmed zebra mussels in them as well. All states in the U.S. have now launched investigations of their own.
“Some pet stores have already voluntarily pulled the product once they were informed of the issue, and we urge any others to follow suit,” said Bill Posey, Arkansas Game and Fish Commission assistant chief of fisheries. “The company that produces the product has closed any further importation of the infected moss.”
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service asks anyone who purchased any moss in past 6 weeks for their aquariums or purchased fish with the moss included in the bag to discard the vegetation properly.
“The best thing to do is lay it somewhere where it can dry out, then dispose of it in a trash can,” Posey said. “Please do not discard it anywhere near water or flush it down a toilet.”
Aquariums that may have contained the zebra mussels can be drained and disinfected with a household bleach solution at 1 cup of bleach per gallon of water. Filters, pumps and gravel should be treated with the bleach solution or allowed to dry completely for at least seven days to reduce the threat of zebra mussels contaminating the aquarium. Follow U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) guidance on how to properly disinfect moss balls and clean aquarium systems, which can be found on the USFWS website: https://www.fws.gov/fisheries/ANS/zebra-mussel-disposal.html
“We don’t want to alarm anyone, but we do need everyone’s help to make sure these mussels don’t further infect waters,” Posey said.
Zebra mussels have a hatchet-shaped shell, commonly the size of a fingernail. They multiply so rapidly and cling tightly together in such masses that they can clog intake pipes of water supply systems and power generating plants as well as cooling lines of boat motors. They also pose a threat to native mussels, often growing on the shells of those mussels and smothering them. Zebra mussels filter plankton from the water that native species depend upon, reducing nutrients available to sport fish. Each female zebra mussel can spawn up to 50,000 microscopic eggs which can mature quickly, creating clusters of mussels as dense as 40,000 per square foot.