Date of the first record

The date of the first documented record of the species occurrence in a country/country region.
Date fields usage example:

Date to be specifiedDate FromDate To
Exact 198519851985
18th century17011800
before 1700 1700
after 20012001 

Environmental position

Environment(s) occupied by a species throughout its life cycle.

OPTIONS:

Biofouling. Assemblage of organisms on wetted artificial substrates.

Commensal. An organism in a symbiotic relationship, in which one benefits while the other is not adversely affected.

Demersal. Synonyms: hyperbenthic, benthopelagic, nektobenthic. An organism living at, in or near the bottom of the sea, but having the ability to swim.

Ectoparasite. A parasite living on the surface of its host.

Endoparasite. A parasite living within the organs or tissues of its host.

Epifaunal. Synonym: epibenthic. An animal inhabiting the surface of the seabed, submerged plants and animals.

Epilithic. An organism living on the surface of rock or other hard inorganic substrata.

Epiphytic. An organism living on the surface of a plant, non-parasitic.

Epizoic. An organism living on the surface of an animal, non-parasitic.

Infaunal. Synonym: endobenthic. An animal living within the seabed sediments.

Interstitial. An organism (< 1 mm) living in the spaces between sediment particles.

Lithotomous. An organism burrowing into rock.

Neustonic. An organism living on (epineuston) or under (hyponeuston) the surface film of water bodies.

Pelagic. An organism inhabiting the water column.

Pleustonic. An organism inhabiting the water surface due to their own buoyancy, normally positioned partly in the water and partly in the air.

Habitat type

Estuary. River mouth, transition zone between riverine and marine environments, subject to influences from both.

Lagoon. Shallow, enclosed water body separated from the sea by barrier islands, narrow spit or reefs.

Offshore. Areas located at least 50 nautical miles from the shore.

Open coast. A coast not sheltered from the sea.

Strait/Sound. Channels between the mainland and an island or between two islands which are open at both ends to the open coast (it does not refer to similar features or narrows within marine inlets).

Sheltered coastal area. Coastal area partly surrounded by land (e.g., bay, inlet, fjord).

Ports. A location on a coast or shore containing one or more harbours where ships can dock and transfer people or cargo to or from land.

Port vicinity. The area near a port where ballast water operations may occur, including areas where vessels may conduct ballast water discharge or uptake operations when approaching a port or leaving it, e.g., port approaches, anchorage areas and designated ballast water exchange areas. The dimension is port specific.

Marina. A specially designed harbour for pleasure craft and small boats.

Aquaculture sites. Areas set out for the purpose of farming aquatic organisms.

Marine Protected Area (MPA). Defined marine area where natural resources are given greater protection than the surrounding waters. Different categories exist depending on the level of protection afforded by legislation.

Migration pattern

Diurnal. Movements between alternative habitats over day and night, e.g. vertical migration.

Life-time. One time migration between different habitats during the life cycle, e.g. anadromus migration.

Not relevant. No evidence of any life history cycle stages to migrate.

Seasonal. Movements between alternative habitats during a specific time of a year (e.g., spawning and feeding migrations).

Pathway / Vector

Pathway

A pathway is the route a NIS takes to enter or spread through a non-native ecosystem e.g. vessels. Each pathway may have a number of vectors.

Vector

A vector is a transfer mechanism and is the physical means by which species are transported from one geographic region to another. More than one vector within a pathway may be involved in a transfer of species.

Pathways and vectors included:
PathwayVector
Aquarium tradeIntentional organism release
Transported water
Waste discharge
Culture activitiesAquaculture equipment
Associated water & packaging material
Intercontinental stock movement
Regional stock movement
Unintentional release & escapees
Leisure activitiesAngling catch
Cultural releases
Live bait
Live souvenirs
Sport equipment
Stocking for angling
Waste discharge
Live food tradeIntentional organism release
Transported water
Waste discharge
ManagementBiological habitat management
Construction equipment
Construction materials
Release for biological control
Natural spread from neighboring countriesOther natural vectors
Water currents
Other canalsCanal de Midi (linking the Bay of Biscay with the Mediterranean Sea)
Kiel Canal (linking the North Sea with the Baltic)
Northern waterway (linking the Baltic with the Ponto-Caspian region through Volga river canal system)
Rhone waterway (linking the North Sea with the Mediterranean)
Southern waterway (linking the North Sea with the Black Sea through Danube river canal system)
Central waterway (linking the Baltic Sea with the Black Sea through the Dnieper river canal system)
Other waterways
Irrigation canals
Research and educationGear movement
Intentional releases
Unintentional release & escapees
Waste discharge
Suez Canal 
VesselsAnchor and anchor chain
Ballast tank sediments
Ballast water
Ship’s hull
Sea chest
Others
Wild fisheriesDiscard of by-catch
Fishing gear
Live bait release
Live packaging material
Processed live material
Stock movements
Transported water

Pathway / Vector – Levels of certainty:
LevelCriteriaExamples
Direct evidenceThe species was actually found associated with the specific vector(s) of a pathway at the time of introduction to a particular locality within a country/country region.Documented evidence of an introduction: release to the wild for stocking or biological control; escape/release of live food; import of cultured species and documented findings of their associate organisms, parasites and diseases on transmission; appearance of organisms by hull fouling, ballast water discharge sampling or other ship vectors documented upon an arrival with appropriate scientific methods.
Very likelyThe species appears for the first time in a locality where a single pathway/vector(s) is known to operate and where there is no other explanation that can be argued for its presence except by this likely pathway/vector(s).A highly localized distribution of a species in an area adjacent to an isolated port or other locality where the only pathway is vessels and its vector(s) (ballast water, hull fouling, etc). This often involves geographically discontinuous distributions. It may be a continuous spread as in case of introduction by canals or by natural means. The conclusion is deduced from the analysis of the invasion event and species distribution patterns.
PossibleThe species cannot be convincingly ascribed to a single pathway, but is known to be introduced by this pathway(s) elsewhere.There may be more than one pathway involved in the introduction within a country/country region. Arrival of a species known to have taken place elsewhere by the same pathway(s) which operates in an area. A conclusion is made by expert judgment based on pathways currently or historically present.
UnknownInvasion of a given alien species cannot be clearly explained.Where no rational explanation for the appearance of a species in a given country/region.

Population status

Population status (the lowest level of certainty):

Unknown. There is no reliable information on population status of a species.
Established. A species is known to form a reproducing population in a wild.
Not established. There is no evidence of a species’ reproducing population in a wild.

Population status (the moderate level of certainty):
Extinct/no recent record. There are old records where a species was recorded but have not been seen in the same region since.
Rare/single record. There are only casual observations or a single record of a species'presence available.
Common. A species with successfully reproducing populations in an open ecosystem, which are unlikely to be eliminated by man or natural causes. Not dominating native communities.
Abundant. A species with successfully reproducing populations in an open ecosystem, which are unlikely to be eliminated by man or natural causes. Locally dominating native communities.
Very abundant. A species with successfully reproducing populations in an open ecosystem, which are unlikely to be eliminated by man or natural causes. Largely dominating native communities.
Outbreak. A species undergoing pulse-like, short-term (days to few months) exponential population growth during which they have an adverse effect on one or more of the following: biological diversity, ecosystem functioning, socio-economic values and human health.

Recipient region

The country/region for which introduction is recorded.

References.



References should follow the standard of Biological invasions:


Journal article
Gamelin FX, Baquet G, Berthoin S, Thevenet D, Nourry C, Nottin S, Bosquet L (2009) Effect of high intensity intermittent training on heart rate variability in prepubescent children. Eur J Appl Physiol 105:731-738. doi: 10.1007/s00421-008-0955-8
Ideally, the names of all authors should be provided, but the usage of “et al” in long author lists will also be accepted:
Smith J, Jones M Jr, Houghton L et al (1999) Future of health insurance. N Engl J Med 965:325–329


Article by DOI


Slifka MK, Whitton JL (2000) Clinical implications of dysregulated cytokine production. J Mol Med. doi:10.1007/s001090000086


Book
South J, Blass B (2001) The future of modern genomics. Blackwell, London


Book chapter
Brown B, Aaron M (2001) The politics of nature. In: Smith J (ed) The rise of modern genomics, 3rd edn. Wiley, New York, pp 230-257


Online document
Cartwright J (2007) Big stars have weather too. IOP Publishing PhysicsWeb. http://physicsweb.org/articles/news/11/6/16/1. Accessed 26 June 2007


Dissertation
Trent JW (1975) Experimental acute renal failure. Dissertation, University of California

Reproductive duration

Long. Breeds in one or more discrete periods, each longer than three months.

Medium. Breeds in one or more discrete periods, each longer than a week and less than three months.

Short. Breeds in one or more discrete periods within a week.

Reproductive seasonality

Months for a species known to reproduce in the invaded site.

Salinity range

The exact salinity range if known (psu), else salinity zone(s) according to the Venice system:
1. Limnetic [<0.5psu]
2. β-Oligohaline [0.5-3psu]
3. α-Oligohaline [3-5psu]
4. β-Mesohaline [5-10psu]
5. α-Mesohaline [10-18psu]
6. Polymixohaline [18-30psu]
7. Euhaline [30-40psu]
8. Hypersaline [>40psu]

Source region

The area the species was introduced from to the recipient country/country region. Depending on the information availability may be ascribed to a particular locality (e.g. port), a country, a LME or a larger Ocean region.
CAUTION: in many cases the source area will be not the same as the area of native origin which is defined in the SPECIES block of the database.

Species status

Non-indigenous species. Non-indigenous species (synonyms: alien, exotic, non-native, allochthonous, introduced) are species, subspecies or lower taxa (such as a variety, form) introduced outside of their natural range (past or present) and outside of their natural dispersal potential. This includes any propagule of a NIS, such as a gamete, seed or resting spore, a gravid female or a pair of individuals of different sexes (in sexual reproduction), or a vegetative reproductive organ and section of tissue (in asexual reproduction), which might survive, reproduce and subsequently form a population. It also includes hybrids between an alien species and an indigenous species, fertile polyploid organisms and artificially hybridized species irrespective of their natural range or dispersal potential.

Cryptogenic. Cryptogenic species are such species which cannot be reliably demonstrated as being either introduced or native. In some cases the true origin of a species remains obscure because of either insufficient taxonomic knowledge or due to a lack of records from the time they became introduced, or for other reasons.

Temperature range

Indicate min. and max. annual temperature range in the area where a species is known to maintain an established (reproducing) population.

Wave exposure

Exposed. Open coastline facing prevailing wind and receiving both wind-driven waves and swell.

Semi exposed. Generally open coasts facing away from prevailing winds or sheltered by offshore reefs/structures.

Sheltered. Coasts with a restricted fetch (<20 km) and lacking persistent swell.

Zonation

Ecological zone(s) occupied by a species throughout its life cycle.

Benthic - Bathyal. Synonym: continental slope. The seafloor between the edge of the continental shelf and abyssal plain (200-4000 m).

Benthic - Littoral. Synonym: intertidal. The shore between the high and low water marks.

Benthic - Sublittoral beyond photic zone. Synonym: lower circalittoral. The lower part of the continental shelf, where photosynthesis cannot take place.

Benthic - Sublittoral within photic zone. Synonyms: subtidal, infralittoral. The shallow part of sublittoral where photosynthesis can occur.

Benthic - Supralittoral. Synonyms: splash zone, spray zone, supratidal zone. The area above the spring high tide line, subject spray or splash.

Pelagic - Littoral. Water mass within littoral zone.

Pelagic - Neritic. Water mass above the continental shelf.

Pelagic - Offshore. Synonym: oceanic. Water mass beyond the continental shelf.

Public domain: Introduction event account

Species Corbicula fluminea  
Date of the first record (?) To 2010

References (not structured):
Sweeney P (2010) First record of Asian clam Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) in Ireland. Irish Naturalists’ Journal 30(2): 147-148.

Comments:
The first finding was in the tidal region of the Barrow River in April 2010. In the following months the population was examined and was found to be made-up of at least two year classes representing an existence since 2008 or earlier.
Recipient region (?) Country: Ireland
LME: 24. Celtic-Biscay Shelf
LME sub-region: Celtic seas


References (not structured):
Caffrey JM, Evers S, Millane M, Moran H (2011) Current status of Ireland’s newest invasive species – the Asian clam Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774). Aquatic Invasions 6(3): 291-299.

Hayden B, Caffrey JM (2013) First recording of the Asian clam (Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) from the
River Shannon, with preliminary notes on population size and size class distribution. Irish Naturalists’ Journal 32(1): 29-31.

Minchin D (2014) Corbicula fluminea (Muller) (Mollusca: Bivalvia) arrives in Lough Derg. Irish Naturalists’ Journal 33(1): 63-64.

Minchin D (2017) The Asian clam (Corbicula fluminea (O.F. Müller))(Cyrenidae) arrives in the Erne River. Irish Naturalists’ Journal 35(2): 99-104.

Caffrey J, Millane M (2014) Status of Asian clam in the mid-River Shannon and recommendations for its management. Inland Fisheries Ireland Report, October 2014. 32pp

Caffrey JM, Dick JTA, Lucy FE, Davis E, Niven A, Coughlan NE (2016) First record of the Asian clam Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774) (Bivalvia, Cyrenidae) in Northern Ireland. BioInvasion Records 5(4): 239-244.

Comments:
In 2010 the Asian clam was found in the Barrow River in south-east Ireland (Sweeney, 2010). It was studied by Caffrey et al., (2011) who found it both widely distributed and abundant in the upper tidal areas of the Barrow River. It was also found in the tidal area of the confluent Nore River at lower densities. The highest densities recorded in the Barrow were ~17,000/m2. Subsequently there were records from The Upper Shannon River, 2010; LOugh Derg, 2011; Lanesborough, 2012; The Foyle River, 2016 and the Upper Erne River, 2016.
Source region (?) Unknown

References (not structured):
Aldridge DC, Müller SJ (2001) The Asiatic clam, Corbicula fluminea, in Britain: current status and potential impacts. Journal of Concholology 37: 177-183.

Comments:
The source region is unknown but since it appeared in Britain in 1998 and since spread. It is possible it might have been introduced from Britain.
Pathway / Vector (?) Level of certainty: Highly likely

Pathway: Leisure activities
Vector: (Highly likely) Sport equipment

References (not structured):
Karatayev AY, Padilla DK, Minchin D, Boltovskoy D, Burlakova LE (2006) Changes in global economies and trade: the potential spread of exotic freshwater bivalves. Biological Invasions 9, 161-180.

Minchin D (2014) The distribution of the Asian clam Corbicula fluminea and its potential to spread in Ireland. Management of Aquatic Invasions, 5(2): 165-177.

Minchin D, Boelens R (2018) Natural dispersal of the introduced Asian clam Corbicula fluminea (Muller, 1774) (Cyrenidae) within two temperate lakes. BioInvasion Records 7 (

Comments:
How it arrived in Ireland is not clear. It might have been a deliberate introduction or perhaps with anglers who use keep-nets. The nets may have attaching young clams that might then subsequently become carried elsewhere. Most sites are associated with angling. The site at Dromineer Bay in Lough Derg is probably due to a separate transmission process. Most sites where the clam is encountered are on an interconnected navigation, so small craft could also be implicated in some transmissions. The species following an arrival to a site may spread by natural drifting by means of a byssal thread following brood release (the species does not have a pelagic veliger phase).
Habitat type (?) Estuary

References (not structured):
Karatayev AY, Padilla DK, Minchin D, Boltovskoy D, Burlakova LE (2006) Changes in global economies and trade: the potential spread of exotic freshwater bivalves. Biological Invasions 9, 161-180.

Lucy FE, Karatayev AY, Burlakova LE (2012) Predictions for the spread, population density, and impacts of Corbicula fluminea in Ireland. Aquatic Invasions 7: 465–474.

Comments:
It occurs in Ireland in the upper level of estuaries and in rivers and lakes. It occurs on soft silt, crumb peat, clay and with aggregates.
Wave exposure (?) Sheltered

Comments:
All of the sites are in sheltered regions in shallow bays or where in mid lake are in deeper water. It is known presently to 24m depth in Lough Derg.
Salinity range (?) Venice system:
1. Limnetic [<0.5psu]
2. β-Oligohaline [0.5-3psu]
3. α-Oligohaline [3-5psu]
4. β-Mesohaline [5-10psu]
5. α-Mesohaline [10-18psu]

References (not structured):
Evans LP Jr, Murphy CE, Britton JC, Newland LW (1979) Salinity relationships in Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774). In: Britton JC (ed), Proceedings, First International Corbicula Symposium, October 13-15, 1977, Fort Worth, Texas, USA, pp 193–214.

McMahon RF (1999) Invasive characteristics of the freshwater bivalve Corbicula fluminea. In: Claudi R, Leach JH (eds), Nonindigenous Freshwater Organisms. Vectors, Biology, and Impacts, Lewis Publishers, pp 315–343.

Comments:
The upper salinity range tolerated is 14-17 psu, according to studies in North America.
Temperature range (?) Unknown

References (not structured):
Janech MG, Hunter RD (1995) Corbicula fluminea in a Michigan river: implications for low temperature tolerance. Malacological Review, 28: 119–124.

Rodgers JH Jr, Cherry DS, Dickson KL, Cairns JJr (1979) Invasion, population dynamics and elemental accumulation of Corbicula fluminea in the new river at Glen Lyn, Virginia. In: Britton JC (ed), Proceedings, First International Corbicula Symposium, October 13–15, 1977, Fort Worth, Texas, USA, pp 99–110.

Comments:
The temperature range the clam can tolerate ranges from 1 to 36 C. In Lough Derg at temperatures of less than 1C were during January 2010 beneath ice. A study of this area subsequently did not reveal significant shell material but many living individuals.
Zonation / Substratum (?) Benthic:
Sublittoral beyond photic zone
Sublittoral within photic zone
Substratum:
Soft (mud to pebbles)

References (not structured):
Belanger SE, Farris JL, Cherry DS, Cairns J (1985) Sediment preference of the fresh-water Asiatic clam, Corbicula fluminea. Nautilus 99:66–73.

Comments:
The clam occurs in oligotrophic to eutrophic flowing streams, rivers and lakes on oxygenated muddy to sandy sediments, but also occuring among gravels and cobbles in areas of moderate to strong currents. It can also be found to bury into clay.
Reproductive duration (?)Long

References (not structured):
Doherty FG, Cherry DS, Cairns J (1987) Spawning periodicity of the Asiatic clam Corbicula fluminea in the New River, Virginia. American Midland Naturalist 117, 71–82.
Rajagopal S, van der Velde G, bij de Vaate A (2000) Reproductive biology of the Asiatic clams Corbicula fluminalis and Corbicula fluminea in the River Rhine. Archiv fur Hydrobiologie 149: 403–420.

Comments:
A hemaphrodite (cross- and self-fertilizing) releasing a brooded non-swimming pediveliger stage at 200μm
length. Reproduces at ~15 °C from about 6-10mm from three months of age with more than one brood a year with releases from late spring to autumn.
Reproductive seasonality (?) Unknown

Comments:
Reproduction takes place during the summer.
Migration pattern (?) Not entered
Population status (?) Abundant (Moderate level of certainty)

References (not structured):
Lucy FE, Karatayev AY, Burlakova LE (2012) Predictions for the spread, population density and impacts of Corbicula fluminea in Ireland Aquatic Invasions 7(4): 465-474.
Caffrey JM, Evers S, Millane M, Moran H (2011) Current status of Ireland’s newest invasive species – the Asian clam Corbicula fluminea (Müller, 1774). Aquatic Invasions 6(3): 291-299.
Hayden B, Caffrey JM (2013) First recording of the Asian clam (Corbicula fluminea (Muller, 1774)) from the River Shannon, with preliminary notes on population size and size class distribution. Irish Naturalists' Journal 32(1): 29-31.

Comments:
A large concentration exists in the Barrow and Nore tidal regions and four concentrations exist in the Shannon River at Carrick-on-Shannon, Lanesborough, the north of Lough Derg and Dromineer Bay in Lough Derg. There is evidence of downstream current spread along the main axis of one lake. It is very likely that the species will be spread elsewhere. The risk of being spread elsewhere is high as the majority of Irish lakes are suitable for colonisation, based on their water quality properties.
Species status (?) Non-indigenous species

References (not structured):
Žadin V I (1952) Moljuski presnych i solonovatych vod SSSR. Moskva, Leningrad: Izd. AN SSSR, 376 pp.
McMahon RF (1983) Ecology of an invasive pest bivalve, Corbicula. In: Russel-Hunter WD (ed), The Mollusca. Vol. 6.
Ecology, Academic Press, Inc., pp 505–561.

Comments:
The clam is considered native to southern and eastern Asia, Australia, northern Africa and south-east Russia. C. fluminea has rapidly spread during the last century to the Americas and more recently will have appeared in Europe.
Created byDan Minchin, 2013-10-21
Last update byDan Minchin, 2018-08-29
Contributors
Added by Dan Minchin, 2013-10-21
Edited by Dan Minchin, 2013-11-04
Edited by Dan Minchin, 2013-11-05
Edited by Dan Minchin, 2018-08-29