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The divers found no clams beyond the 2 1/2-acre area they first were found. The next step, Nierzwicki-Bauer said, is to develop a management plan. Most likely, that will involve placing the mats, called benthic barriers, on the sandy lake bottom to smother the clams. Organizations on Lake George have had success battling other invasive species. Eurasian watermilfoil, a fast-growing aquatic plant that crowds out native species and snarls motorboat propellers, has been held at bay with benthic barriers. And an infestation of zebra mussels has been virtually eradicated by volunteer scuba divers who hand-picked 25,000 of them from rocks. "Public awareness is a key element in early detection of invasive species and prevention of their spread," Nierzwicki-Bauer said. "Lots of times, new locations are found when an individual sees something that doesn't belong and sends us a picture." Asian clams don't spread quite as readily as zebra mussels, which swim in the water as larvae and fasten themselves tightly to surfaces such as boats. The clams, which are sometimes used by fishermen as bait, are transported in bait pails and in water remaining inside of boats. They also may be dumped into a waterway by someone cleaning out an aquarium. Asian clams were first documented in the U.S. on the West Coast in 1938 and have spread to more than 40 states. While the cold Northeast was long considered inhospitable to the clam, German scientists on the Rhine River reported last year that moderate winter warming had a strong positive effect on the species. "It's just like what happened with zebra mussels but reversed," Nierzwicki-Bauer said. "People said zebra mussels would never get established in the Mississippi River because it was too warm. The next year, they were there. These species are adaptable."
[Associated
Press;
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