Currently, there are believed to be more than 175 aquatic invasive
species (AIS) resident with self-sustaining populations in the Great
Lakes Basin. These range from phytoplankton and zooplankton to various
molluscs and fish, floating and rooted aquatic vegetation, and shrubs
and trees.
In the spotlight ...
- New York State Watercraft Inspection Steward Program Handbook | Click Here
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- "Stop Aquatic Hitchhikers!" brochure (pdf) / "Clean Boats, Clean Waters" rack card (pdf)
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Currently, there are believed to be more than 175 aquatic invasive
species (AIS) resident with self-sustaining populations in the Great
Lakes Basin. These range from phytoplankton and zooplankton to various
molluscs and fish, floating and rooted aquatic vegetation, and shrubs
and trees.
Below are some general AIS publications. In addition, here are links to other fact sheets and other publications on New York Sea Grant-supported invasive species research and extension efforts ...
General AIS Publications ...
Biological Pollution of the Great Lakes: The Nonindigenous Aquatic
Species Invasion of North America’s Freshwater Seas. CR O'Neill. 2005.
NY Sea Grant Information Bulletin. 66 pp. (pdf)
This detailed 66 page information bulletin contains background
information on what makes some non-native organisms invasive and others
not; the history of Great Lakes AIS introductions; vectors of AIS
introduction; geographic source regions for Great Lakes AIS; profiles of
165+ Great Lakes introduced species; and all species broken down by
species type (pdf), species name (pdf), and common name (pdf). Contains photographs and distribution maps of many important species.
Biological Pollution of the Great Lakes: The Nonindigenous Aquatic
Species Issue. CR O'Neill. 2005. NY Sea Grant Factsheet. 8 pp. (pdf)
This 8 page factsheet is based on the 66 page information bulletin
"Biological Pollution of the Great Lakes: The Nonindigenous Aquatic
Species Invasion of North America’s Freshwater Seas." It does not
present detailed information on the species themselves, but rather
addresses characteristics of invasive species versus non-native species,
the history of Great Lakes AIS introductions, vectors of AIS
introduction and geographic source regions for Great Lakes AIS.
Invasive Species of Lakes Erie and Ontario. H Domske and CR O'Neill. 2004. NY Sea Grant Factsheet. 8 pp. (pdf)
This 8 page factsheet addresses in a general way the Great Lakes
invasive species issue and then presents information on several
important Great Lakes AIS, including: zebra mussels, spiny and fishhook
waterfleas, sea lamprey, alewife, common carp, round gobies, purple
loosestrife, water chestnut and Eurasian watermilfoil.