Abstract

Crayfish plague, caused by the parasitic oomycete Aphanomyces astaci, has driven indigenous European crayfish species to regional extinction in many parts of Europe and is among the leading threats to the remaining populations. A. astaci is known to be carried by longestablished invasive crayfish species of North American origin, which are also the main vectors of the plague pathogen. In this study, we examined whether a new invasive crayfish of North American origin, the calico crayfish (Orconectes immunis), also carries A. astaci. Orconectes immunis is a recent invader of the Upper Rhine plain, where it seems to displace its invasive predecessor Orconectes limosus, which is a known carrier of the agent of the crayfish plague. Using real-time PCR, we identified the calico crayfish as the fourth invasive crayfish species to be a carrier of the crayfish plague pathogen in Europe and we confirmed the infection with A. astaci in O. limosus. These findings support the concern that all North American crayfish species in European waters are carriers of the crayfish plague pathogen. Such knowledge should prove useful for conservation efforts, management, legislation, and public education about the spread of crayfish plague and non-indigenous crayfish species.

Highlights

  • Invasive non-indigenous species are one of the leading threats to freshwater biodiversity, besides habitat deterioration (Sala et al 2000; Gherardi 2007)

  • We examined whether a new invasive crayfish of North American origin, the calico crayfish (Orconectes immunis), carries A. astaci

  • Using real-time PCR, we identified the calico crayfish as the fourth invasive crayfish species to be a carrier of the crayfish plague pathogen in Europe and we confirmed the infection with A. astaci in O. limosus

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Summary

Introduction

Invasive non-indigenous species are one of the leading threats to freshwater biodiversity, besides habitat deterioration (Sala et al 2000; Gherardi 2007). All North American crayfish species are suspected to be carriers of A. astaci (OIE 2009), only three of the North American crayfish species present in the wild in Europe have been shown to be a carrier of the pathogen so far: the signal crayfish [Pacifastacus leniusculus (Dana, 1852)] (Unestam and Weiss 1970), the spinycheek crayfish [Orconectes limosus (Rafinesque, 1817)] (Vey et al 1983), and the red swamp crayfish [Procambarus clarkii (Girard, 1852)] (Diéguez-Uribeondo and Söderhäll 1993) These three species belong to the “Old” non-indigenous crayfish species in Europe, i.e. have been introduced into European waters before 1975 (summarized by Holdich et al 2009)

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