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Dr. David L. Strayer

Freshwater Ecologist | PhD, 1984, Cornell University

Expertise
Hudson River, invasive species, streams

Dave Strayer is a freshwater ecologist whose current work focuses on measuring the long-term effects of zebra mussels on the Hudson River ecosystem, and understanding the roles of suspension-feeding animals in ecosystems. Strayer also works on broader issues in freshwater conservation ecology and invasion biology.

Species introductions are one of the most important ways by which humans affect the Earth’s ecosystems. Strayer has been involved in much research in this area, particularly regarding the zebra mussel. This tiny bivalve arrived in North America from Europe in the 1980s and has caused hundreds of millions of dollars in economic damage and widespread ecological change.

Water clarity, water chemistry, food webs, and populations of native species, including fish, in the Hudson River all changed after zebra mussels arrived. Now, decades after their first appearance, Strayer and Cary scientists see evidence of fundamental long-term changes in the relationship between the river and the invader. The Cary group has been tracking this changing relationship for almost 30 years, providing one of the longest and most detailed case studies in invasion ecology.

Strayer also works on the ecology and conservation of native pearly mussels, a highly diverse and imperiled group of animals. He wrote Freshwater Mussel Ecology: A Multifactor Approach to Distribution and Abundance.

Zebra mussels and pearly mussels are examples of suspension-feeders – animals that feed by removing tiny particles from the water. These animals can have large, pervasive effects on aquatic ecosystems.  Strayer is currently working to synthesize information and understanding of freshwater suspension-feeders across a wide range of species and ecosystems.

In addition to his scientific publications, Strayer has written several dozen essays for the general public, which are collected in The Lost Snail of the Yangtze and Other Essays.

Tartowski, S.L., E.B. Allen, N.E. Barrett, Alan R. Berkowitz, R.K. Colwell, Peter M. Groffman, J. Harte, et al. 1997. “Integration of Species and Ecosystem Approaches to Conservation”. In S. T. A. Pickett, R. S. Ostfeld, M. Shachak, and G. E. Likens (eds.). The Ecological Basis of Conservation: Heterogeneity, Ecosystems, and Biodiversity, 187-92. Chapman & Hall, Inc., New York.
Strayer, David L., J. Powell, P. Ambrose, L. C. Smith, Michael L. Pace, and David T. Fischer. 1996. “Arrival, Spread, and Early Dynamics of a Zebra Mussel (Dreissena Polymorpha) Population in the Hudson River Estuary”. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 53: 1143-49.
Mills, E. L., David L. Strayer, M.D. Scheuerell, and J.T. Carlton. 1996. “Exotic Species in the Hudson River Basin: A History of Invasions and Introductions”. Estuaries 19: 814-23. http://sgnis.org/publicat/est814.htm.
Strayer, David L., and L. C. Smith. 1996. “Zebra Mussels May Kill Unionids Without Fouling Them”. Triannu. Unionid Rep.
Palmer, M. A., and David L. Strayer. 1996. “Meiofauna”. In F. R. Hauer and G. A. Lamberti (eds.). Stream Ecology: Field and Laboratory Exercises, 315-37. Academic Press, Inc.
Roditi, H. A., Nina F. Caraco, Jonathan J. Cole, and David L. Strayer. 1996. “Filtration of Hudson River Water by the Zebra Mussel (Dreissena Polymorpha)”. Estuaries 19: 824-32. http://www.sgnis.org/publicat/est824.htm.
Strayer, David L., S.J. Sprague, and S. Claypool. 1996. “A Range-Wide Assessment of Populations of Alasmidonta Heterodon, an Endangered Freshwater Mussel (Bivalvia:Unionidae)”. J. N. Am. Benthol. Soc. 15: 308-17.
Strayer, David L., and L. C. Smith. 1996. “Relationships Between Zebra Mussels (Dreissena Polymorpha) and Unionid Clams During the Early Stages of the Zebra Mussel Invasion of the Hudson River”. Freshwater Biol. 36: 771-79. http://www.sgnis.org/publicat/papers/fb36_771.pdf.
Strayer, David L., S.E. May, P. Nielsen, W. Wollheim, and S. Hausam. 1995. “An Endemic Groundwater Fauna in Unglaciated Eastern North America”. Can. J. Zool. 73: 502-8.
Roditi, H. A., and David L. Strayer. 1995. “The Impact of the Zebra Mussel (Dreissena Polymorpha) on the Availability of Organic Carbon and Nutrients at the Sediment Surface of the Hudson River”. W. C. Nieder, J. R. Waldman, and E. A. Blair (eds.). Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program for 1994.. Hudson River Foundation, New York, New York.

Articles by David Strayer