AquaNISInformation system on aquatic non-indigenous and cryptogenic species |
Species | Chelicorophium curvispinum [WoRMS] | |
Authority | (G.O. Sars, 1895) | |
Family | Corophiidae | |
Order | Amphipoda | |
Class | Malacostraca | |
Phylum | Arthropoda | |
Synonym (?) | Corophium curvispinum (Sars, 1895) (basionym) | |
Sub-species level (?) | Not entered |
Native origin (?) | Not entered Comments: Ponto-Caspian |
Life form / Life stage (?) |
References (not structured): Mastitsky SE, Makarevich OA (2007) Distribution and abundance of Ponto-Caspian amphipods in the Belarusian section of the Dnieper River. Aquatic Invasions, 2(1):39-44 Comments: Corophium curvispinum builds tubes on firm surfaces such as rocks,wood, submerged vegetation or bivalve shells on otherwise sandy or muddy substrata. It prefers rivers, estuaries and other areas with brackish water, but tolerates both entirely freshwater and more marine conditions, at least up to a salinity of about 6 psu. |
Sociability / Life stage (?) |
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Reproductive frequency (?) | Iteroparous |
Reproductive type (?) | Sexual References: Bortkevich LV (1987) Ecology and production of Corophium curvispinum G. Sars in the estuary areas of rivers in the northwestern Black Sea area. Gidrobiologicheskiy Zhurnal, 23:91-93. Comments: C. curvispinum is a dioecious species |
Developmental trait (?) | Brooding References: Bortkevich LV (1987) Ecology and production of Corophium curvispinum G. Sars in the estuary areas of rivers in the northwestern Black Sea area. Gidrobiologicheskiy Zhurnal, 23:91-93 |
Characteristic feeding method / Life stage (?) |
References (not structured): Baltic Sea Alien Species Database, 2009. Available at: http://www.corpi.ku.lt/nemo/alien_species_directory.html Comments: The species is a filter feeder, living on detritus, plankton and the algae to be found around its tubes. |
Mobility / Life stage (?) |
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Salinity tolerance range (?) | Exact range: 0.5 - 8.8 References: Olenin, S., & Daunys, D. (2004). Coastal typology based on benthic biotope and community data: the Lithuanian case study. Coastline Reports, 4, 65-84. References: Paavola M, Olenin S, Leppäkoski E (2005) Are invasive species most successful in habitats of low native species richness across European brackish water seas? Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 64 (2005) 738-750 |
Habitat modifying ability potential (?) | Keystone species OLD VALUE References: Haas G, Brunke M, Strei B (2002) Fast turnover in dominance of exotic species in the Rhine River determines biodiversity and ecosystem function: an affair between amphipods and mussels. In: Invasive Aquatic Species of Europe: Distribution, Impacts and Management [ed. by Leppakoski E, Gollasch S, Olenin] Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 426-432. Grabowski M, Jazdzewski K, Konopacka A (2007) Alien Crustacea in Polish waters - Amphipoda. Aquatic Invasions, 2:25-38 Comments: --/OLD VALUE/-- Ecosystem engineer C. curvispinum is one of the most successful invaders of European fresh and brackish waters. Rapid growth rate, early maturation, ability to produce up to three generations per year, and high fecundity allowed this species to form extremely high densities in a number of invaded waterbodies. C. curvispinum is also known as an ecological engineer due to its ability to build mud tubes on hard substrates. For example, in 1989, the population density of this amphipod in the middle and lower sections of the River Rhine was so high that its silty tubes covered all available hard surfaces. In addition, these surfaces became totally covered by fine matter removed by the animals from the water column as a result of their filtering activity. This chain of events affected other epilithic species, which became devoid of a substrate to colonize. The zebra mussel, Dreissena polymorpha, was one of the most affected species as the mud tubes of C. curvispinum impaired larval settlement of this mollusc. |
Toxicity / Life stage (?) | Not relevant |
Bioaccumulation association (?) | Unknown Comments: Not available. |
Known human health impact? | Known Comments: Harmless. |
Known economic impact? | Known Comments: C. curvispinum does not possess any economic value or social benefits. |
Known measurable environmental impact? | Known References: Chauvel, N., Raoux, A., Dauvin, J. C., Pezy, J. P. 2023. Recent expansion of the non-indigenous amphipod Chelicorophium curvispinum (GO Sars, 1895) in the Seine estuary. BioInvasions Record, 12(3). Comments: C. curvispinum is known to build mud tubes on stony substrates, often resulting in change of the physical structure of bottom relief (so called “corophiid grounds”). This may promote some epifaunal species (other amphipods, chironomids, oligochaetes, leeches, etc.), and also inhibit lithophilic organisms. |
Included in the Target Species list? | No References: HELCOM, 2009. Alien Species and Ballast Water [PDF] Available at: https://archive.iwlearn.net/helcom.fi/stc/files/shipping/Table_2_Alienspecies_%20lists_2009.pdf [Accessed 1 July 2024]. |
Association with vessel vectors (?) | Ballast waters References: Lucy, F., Minchin, D., Holmes, J. M. C., Sullivan, M. 2004. First records of the Ponto-Caspian amphipod Chelicorophium curvispinum (Sars, 1895) in Ireland. The Irish Naturalists' Journal, 27(12), pp. 461-464. |
Last update by | Sandra Gečaitė, 2024-08-05 |