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Also (JohnE), I do not think that round gobies eat zebra mussles. In fact, I don't know of a single predator that does (carp?) - that is why they have spread with so little resistance. Correct me if I'm wrong.
I didn't know it either, but gobies do eat zebra mussels as do fresh water drum and I believe sturgeon are sucking up a few here and there. So the mussel does have some enemies, but not enough.
I just finished reading the "State of the Great Lakes 2003" portion of Lake Erie and the round goby has created a new path for contaminant and energy transfer to the top food chain. The gobies have become "
a major prey item for many bottom dwelling fish predators, including smallmouth bass, yellow perch, walleye, and freshwater drum" (emphasis mine). I find it disappointing that this new path has been established because those clean perch, walleye, and other fish everyone is catching in Lake Erie will eventually change.
Capt. Hank,
I'm confused as to how the goby is eating the zebra mussel. It must be either when it is very young and small (and PCB consumption must be small as a result) or it is someone eating open zebra mussels, like if they die. I haven't found any documentation indicating how they actually eat them.