Impact ID |
Scientific Name
|
Impact Type
|
Study Type
|
Study Location
|
Impact Description
|
Geographic Location
|
Reference
|
2324
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Observational
|
Field
|
Study found larval helminths of Acanthocephalus dims, Diplostomum sp., and Eustrongylides sp. in Neogobius melanostomus in southern Lake Michigan indicating they have the potential to harbor native parasites.
|
southern Lake Michigan
|
22991
|
2347
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Anecdotal
|
Field
|
Neogobius melanostomus introductions may also be a vector for the spread of avian botulism. At Lake Erie, botulism infected birds had been feeding more on Round Goby compared to uninfected birds.
|
Lake Erie
|
19653
|
2348
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Experimental
|
Laboratory
|
Neogobius melanostomus may provide an entry point for polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) into trophic webs.
|
|
27503
|
2360
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Experimental
|
Laboratory
|
Neogobius melanostomus may have lower lead (Pb) concentrations than traditional prey due to their consumption of zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha) which efficiently excrete metals such as Pb.
|
|
24186
|
2361
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Experimental
|
Laboratory
|
As Smallmouth Bass (Micropterus dolomieu) continue to consume Neogobius melanostomus and their growth rates continue to increase, their Mercury (Hg) concentrations also may continue to increase, potentially increasing Hg contamination to humans consuming this important sport fish.
|
Lake Erie
|
24186
|
2362
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Experimental
|
Laboratory
|
Before the invasion of round gobies, few dreissenid predators occurred in Lake Erie, keeping contaminants confined to the benthos. The invasion of the round goby has produced a new pathway through which these contaminants enter the food web. Our key finding was that Pb biodiminished whereas Hg biomagnified through the food web to top predators.
|
|
24186
|
2365
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Observational
|
Field
|
The Neogobius melanostomus was found to be a newly described host for the trematode Neoehasmus umbellus.
|
Lake Erie
|
18625
|
2366
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Observational
|
Field
|
The Neogobius melanostomus is host to a number of metazoan parasites in the Great Lakes.
|
|
18398
|
2368
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Observational
|
Laboratory
|
Neogobius melanostomus is a primary vector for botulism neurotoxin to fish-eating birds.
|
|
24877
|
3632
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Anecdotal
|
N/A
|
Consumption of zebra mussels may also provide a conduit for the bioaccumulation of toxic substances, especially PCBS, which have been
shown to accumulate in zebra mussels because of their extensive filtering activities (Secor et al., 1993; de Kock et al., 1993). Top predators which feed on round gobies
would therefore be expected to accumulate increased quantities of PCBS over previous accumulation patterns.
|
|
22782
|
3688
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Observational
|
Field
|
No specific parasites were registered. Only the acanthocephalan Pomphorhynchus tereticollis was found in high numbers and occurred in both seasons,
all other parasites occurring sporadically. ... complies with the predictions of the ‘enemy release hypothesis’.
All parasite species were probably acquired in the upper Elbe itself. According to the ‘parasite spillback’
concept, round goby could potentially play an important role in P. tereticollis distribution in the Elbe.
|
River Elbe
|
34322
|
3694
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Observational
|
Field
|
parasites include Nicolla skrjabini, Phyllodistomum folium, Holostephanous cobitidis, Diplostomum spp., Tylodelphys clavata, Paracoenogonimus ovatus, Apatemon gracilis, Apharhyngostrigea cornu
|
Saratov Reservoir
|
34333
|
3698
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Experimental
|
Laboratory
|
high natural infection parameters of B. polymorphus in native cyprinids and non-native gobies compared to data from the period prior to goby establishment. However, development in the definitive host of flukes recovered from gobies was reduced, showing higher mortality, delayed maturity and lower egg production, in comparison with parasites from native hosts.
|
River Morova
|
34340
|
3699
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Observational
|
Field
|
Neogobius melanostomus was parasitized by 8 species, , half of which were in all 4 of the examined host species. Number of parasite species corresponded with the length of time the species had been present in the system, advantage gained from parasite release is mainly in the early stages of invasion and diminishes over a relatively short period
|
River Rhine
|
34341
|
3702
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Observational
|
Laboratory
|
description of a new parasite - Loma acerinae - in round and tubenose goby in Dnieper River and Black Sea
|
Dnieper River and Black Sea
|
34344
|
3819
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Observational
|
Field
|
the presence of the Ponto-Caspian monogenean Gyrodactylus proterorhini shows that the invasive gobiids did not lose all parasites, but introduced
this new component to the fauna of the Baltic basin.
|
Dnieper Estuary to the Vistula River delta
|
34926
|
3913
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Experimental
|
Laboratory
|
the present study demonstrates that PCB elimination in round and tubenose goby exhibited broadly similar PCB toxicokinetics as has been measured in other small fish species under limited growth and constant temperature
conditions, although species differences in the rate of PCB
elimination was evident
|
Great Lakes, Detroit River
|
35034
|
3924
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Anecdotal
|
Field
|
author speculates shift from alewife to round goby may result in biomagnification of toxins via dreissenids->round goby -> lake trout
|
Great Lakes, Lake Michigan
|
35109
|
3927
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Anecdotal
|
N/A
|
authors speculate biomagnification of toxins up the food chain from mussels to humans are a risk if round gobies are consumed by commercial fishes
|
Gulf of Gdansk, Baltic Sea
|
35111
|
5505
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Experimental
|
Laboratory
|
Neogobius melanostomus is a transport vector for type E botulism to fish-eating birds.
|
|
19652
|
5568
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Anecdotal
|
Laboratory
|
Round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) presents a new intermediate host for parasites and provides a vector toward new final hosts at higher trophic levels. May facilitate the transfer of Acanthocephala (Pomphorhynchus sp.) to trout (Salmo trutta) and catfish (Silurus glanis) and Nematoda (Raphidascaris acus) to European perch (Perca fluviatilis) and pikeperch (Sander lucioperca).
|
Rhine River and Main River, Germany
|
39671
|
5670
|
Neogobius melanostomus
|
Disease/Parasite/Toxicity
|
Observational
|
Laboratory
|
One round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) tested culture positive for toxin-producing C. botulinum type E.
|
Lake Erie
|
33968
|