Moontanman;2856525; said:First of all i would like to state categorically that i am not suggesting anyone keep zebra mussels but if you live in an area where they are already thick as fleas on a stray dog how could keeping them cause a problem? How would escaping back to where they are already established cause a problem?
I am well aware of the problems of preventing escape into the wild, I have an aquaculture license and and I know the importance of not spreading exotics into the wild. I question the possibility of zebra mussels actually causing a problem in a small closed aquarium, i see no way for them to obtain food so the old "they will stop up your filter tubes" is BS in my opinion.
I keep clams and mussels in my aquariums and feeding them is a problem, there simply is not enough food in an aquarium to keep mussels alive much less support a reproducing population. Taking zebra mussels out of thier already established range would indeed be a bad move. No one should do it.
I read you loud and clear Moon. I wish you would believe others about the ease of zebra mussels to spread. My customers that use natural water for cooling (primary metals companies) spend millions each year removing them from 36" pipes (and bigger) that carry process water. Keep in mind this water is nasty in the fact that it cools hot/molten metals. I would suspect the water is nutritionally deficient for most creatures but the zebra mussels thrive. Zebra mussels have been clogging huge pipes and small pipes around here for a long time. They will escape and thrive in many places we're not used to native mussels even making it a day.
The big problem soon to face waste water treatment plants are obvious... mussels that thrive in industrial process water would ruin city sewer pipes in no time and I can't even imagine what they would do to septic system.
http://www.clr.pdx.edu/projects/volunteer/images/zm_pipe.jpg