Human vectors Human activities are the chief reason for the wide dispersal of
C. fluminea as an invasive aquatic organism. Furthermore, the species is common in the aquarium trade and can be intentionally or unintentionally released in the wild by aquarists.
Corbicula fluminea is a self-fertilizing, simultaneous hermaphrodite which can asexually produce internally-brooded, semi-buoyant planktonic larvae when
spermiogenesis is induced at temperatures above . Other studies have shown abiotic habitat characteristics such as water redox potential, inorganic nutrient content, hardness, and organic matter content in tandem with the amount of very coarse sand combine to explain 59.3% of
Corbicula population habitat association via statistical tests. Asian clam invasions seem to be limited by elevation (88% of the invaded range is below 500m elevation
Impacts on invaded ecosystems Corbicula fluminea reworks the sediments it resides on through the process of
bioturbation. Asian clams are considered biodiffusors similar to marine clam species due to their observed bioturbation activity which may negatively affect other members of the
benthic community in invaded areas.
Corbicula has been shown to remove as much as 70% of phytoplankton biomass in reaches of invaded rivers with a robust clam population. The primary economic and social impact of the invasion of
C. fluminea has been billions of dollars in costs associated with clogged plumbing and, heat exchangers, or other human-created infrastructure. Ecologically,
C. fluminea contributes to declines and replacement of highly vulnerable, already threatened native clams.
Global invasion pattern The first recorded instance of
Corbicula presence in the scientific literature in the Western Hemisphere was of its introduction into British Columbia circa 1924, followed by a spread throughout the Pacific Northwest and across the American south through South America. Invasions in Europe and Central America were more recent, first appearing in Caribbean countries in 1998.
Mitigation They have been blamed for algal blooms and concerns exist they will outcompete and displace native species such as the montane pea clam (
Pisidium spp.) and the ramshorn snail (
Planorbidae). Efforts are underway at
Lake Tahoe to smother the clams on the bottom with rubber mats. In August 2020 routine inspections in
Wyoming found several watercraft to be heavily infested including one with
C. fluminea. On October 16, 2020, the
Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks recommended that
Lake Elmo — in
Billings — be drained to dry out and freeze to death the
C. fluminea there. ==See also==