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Thematic Issue: Invasive exotic species

A case study on the Louisiana red swamp crayfish

Introduced invasive species, such as the Red-eared Slider (Trachemys scripta elegans), the Baccharis hamilifolia, and the water primrose (Ludwigia sp), are one of the principal causes of erosion of biodiversity.

Before an exotic species becomes invasive, it goes through a difficult process of establishment during which it has little chance of succeeding. We first speak of an ‘acclimated’ species when one or several individuals survive in a natural environment, but are unable to reproduce. It becomes ‘naturalised’ when it reproduces enough to maintain a population there. Among the naturalised species, a small number of species will experience demographic success, to such an extent that they will become ‘invasive’ or dominant in ecosystems, and occupy great surface areas. 

This is true for the Louisiana red swamp crayfish (Procamabrus clarkii), which originated in north-eastern Mexico and the southern United States. Today, it can be found on every continent, except for Australia and Antarctica. The Louisiana red swamp crayfish was introduced in Spain in 1973 by two crayfish farmers (in the provinces of Badajoz and Seville). The aim of this introduction was to develop a new economic resource for one of the poorest areas in Spain. Those who promoted this introduction thought that this new species would not have any negative impacts on the ecosystems, based on the hypothesis that there were no indigenous species. Thirty eight years later, the Louisiana red swamp crayfish can now be found in ten continental European countries (Germany, Austria, Belgium, Spain, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, the UK, and Switzerland), and on six European islands or archipelagos.

P. clarkii arrived in the Camargue relatively recently (beginning of the 1980s). First observed in the Petite Camargue (western part of the delta), then in the Plan du Bourg (eastern part), it was not observed in the Ile de Camargue (between the two branches of the Rhone) until the 1990s. 

Important ecological, health, and socio-economic impacts

The Louisiana red swamp crayfish is a species with a high potential to be invasive due to the following characteristics:

The presence of this species has had ecological, health, and socio-economic impacts. In a recent classification of 27 species introduced into Europe by aquaculture, this species is considered to be the one that has had the most impact.

For example, it can modify the structure of the ecosystem by causing a decrease in submerged plant populations (macrophytes), preying on animals, as well as by modifying the physico-chemical factors. Some plant and animal populations have declined in sites where the Louisiana red swamp crayfish is present today. For example, in southern Europe, it has been identified as the cause of declining aquatic plant populations in different lakes, such as El Portil (Huelva, Spain), and Chozas (León, Spain), and also for the disappearance of water snails (Lymnaea peregra and L. stagnalis) in the Doñana National Park (Huelva and Seville, Spain), and the drop in some populations of amphibians in southern Portugal (Alentejo and Algarve).

Conversely, the proliferation of this crayfish in wetlands has favoured certain vertebrate predators, which consume it abundantly (particularly herons).

The Louisiana red swamp crayfish also causes health-related problems that undermine the conservation of biological diversity. First, as is the case for other American species of crayfish, it is a carrier of crayfish plague (a mycosis due to Aphanomyces astaci), which has been decimating native European populations.

The Louisiana red swamp crayfish is also a carrier of the tularemia bacteria (Francisella tularensis). Meanwhile, appreciated for its good flavour, it bioaccumulates heavy metals and toxins, such as cyanotoxins.

Finally, socio-economically speaking, it has positive effects as a species that can be caught, and negative ones such as the damage it causes to the hydraulic infrastructure and rice fields.   

 

Tour du Valat research

To better understand the role of Procambarus clarkii and its potential impact in the Camargue, the Tour du Valat has been running a project that attempts to assess:

 

In particular, the following questions must be addressed:

 

According to the results, paths of action will be proposed for the management of P. clarkii.

Initial results have provided some interesting responses :

  • Crayfish prefer semi-permanent marshes, and few crayfish live in rice fields in the Camargue (Figure 1).