Species Regional Summary
Rangia cuneata
Cape Cod to Cape Hatteras ( NA-ET3 )

Invasion History Vectors Impacts References

Invasion

Invasion Description

1st record: NC/North River, Currituck Sound (1957, Museum of Comparative Zoology 2009); 2 mi. S. of Coinjock/NC/North River, Currituck Sound (1957, Museum of Comparative Zoology 2009); Munden/VA/Currituck Sound (1957, Museum of Comparative Zoology 2009); Omitted- VA/James River (FLMNH 196061, 7/30/1933, Florida Museum of Natural History 2009, collected by Foltz, 1980s-90s, possibly a misprint or a fossil shell collected by somebody else)

Geographic Extent

Haverstraw/NY/Hudson River (1988, Carlton 1992; Mills et al. 1997); Newburgh/NY/Hudson River (Strayer 2006); NY/Tappan Zee, Hudson River (Strayer 2006; 2006,-2009, New York State Department of Transportation 2012)); Oakwood Beach/NJ/Delaware Bay (1971, Maurer et al. 1974); NJ/Appoquiniminck Creek (1972, Maurer et al. 1974); Delaware City/DE/Chesapeake-Delaware Canal (Counts 1980, fouling the fire water system of an oil refinery); south of New Castle/DE/Delaware River (1985, Fritz et al. 1990); Havre de Grace/MD/Susquehanna Flats (Posey et al. 1993); Cecil County/MD/Sassafras River (Lippson 1979); Cecil County/MD/Northeast River (1967, Gallagher and Wells 1969); Thackeray Point/MD/Elk River (1968, Gallagher and Wells 1969); Kent County/MD/northernmost edge of mouth of Chester River (Lippson et al. 1979); Crane Power Plant (Baltimore County)/MD/Seneca and Saltpeter Creeks (1978, Jordan and Sutton 1984); Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Edgewater/MD/Rhode River (Lippson 1973, Hines, Ruiz, Fofonoff, personal observations - scarce, prone to winter die-offs); Stafford County/VA/Potomac Creek, Potomac River tributary (1964, Pfitzenmeyer and Drobeck 1964); Riverside to Swan Point/MD/Potomac River (1964, Pfitzenmeyer and Drobeck 1964); Charles County/MD/Nanajemoy Creek (1964, Pfitzenmeyer and Drobeck 1964); Charles County/MD/Port Tobacco River (1964, Pfitzenmeyer and Drobeck 1964); VA/Rappahannock River (1964, Wass 1972, abundant by 1966-69 in the lower tidal-fresh oligohaline zone, between 30 and 40 mi. from the river mouth Davies 1972); VA/York River (established in the 1960s; Its range expanded downriver from river mile 20 to 10 and 15 after tropical storm 'Agnes' (Boesch et al. 1976); VA/James River (1963, Pfitzenmeyer and Drobeck 1964); Point of Shoals-Horsehead Shoal/James River (1971, Larsen 1985); Hog Island/VA/James River (1972, Jordan and sutton 1984); Virginia Beach/VA/Back Bay (1960, Hopkins and Andrews 1970)

Vectors

Level Vector
Alternate Oyster Accidental
Alternate Ballast Water
Alternate Canal

Regional Impacts

Ecological ImpactFood/Prey
Rangia cuneata is important as a food resource for commercially important species [Callinectes sapidus (Blue Crab); Leiostomus xanthurus (Spot); Pogonias cromis (Black Drum)] and for waterfowl (Cain 1972; Ebersole and Kennedy 1994).
 
Ecological ImpactHerbivory
The invasion of Rangia cuneata into oligohaline parts of the Bay has resulted in large biomasses of suspension feeding bivalves where previously they were scarce. This has probably affected phytoplankton distribution and planktonic and benthic food webs in these regions, possibly in ways similar to those discussed by Phelps (1994) for Corbicula fluminea (Asian Freshwater Clam) in tidal fresh regions. However, the effects of R. cuneata filtration, pseudofeces deposition, and other possible effects have not been well documented (R. Everett personal communication). Cerco and Noel (2010) estimated filtering rates for bivalves (Corbicula + Rangia) in the oligohaline waters of Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries. Rangia comprised ~40-100% of the filter-feeding biomass in the major tributaries, being most abundant in the Potomac. The two species together removed 14% to 40% of the carbon load, 11% to 23% of the nitrogen load, and 37% to 84% of the phosphorus load from the water column (Cerco and Noel 2010).
 
Economic ImpactIndustry
Rangia cuneata fouled pipes of the Getty oil refinery in Delaware City, Delaware, clogging fire hoses. This was the first report of industrial fouling associated with this species (Counts 1980).
 

References

Full Reference List for Rangia cuneata

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