Eurytemora affinis Poppe, 1880

Common Name: A calanoid copepod

Synonyms and Other Names:

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Identification: Eurytemora affinis is around 1.2–1.3 mm in length (Torke 2001); females 1.1–1.5 mm, males 1.0–1.5 mm. This copepod exhibits a caudal ramus that is more than 3 times as long as wide and has 5 obvious setae. When viewed laterally, the maxillipeds are shorter than the width of the body. Females have a 5th leg and the 5th leg has no endopods. Adult females exhibit lateral processes, one on each side of the genital region and the metasomal wings. This species passes through 6 naupliar stages and 5 copepodite stages before it is considered mature (Czaika 1982; Williamson 1991; Souissi and Ban 2001).

See Czaika (1982) for a key to naupliar stages.


Size: 1.0 to 1.5 mm


Native Range: Eurytemora affinis is native to Ponto-Caspian region, the North American Atlantic coast including the Gulf of Mexico, the North American Pacific coast, the western European coast, and parts of Asia, generally in brackish and saltwater regions (Mills et al. 1993; Torke 2001).


Great Lakes Nonindigenous Occurrences:  E. affinis was most likely first recorded in 1958 from Lake Ontario when copepod samples in the genus Eurytemora were sampled but not identified to species. There are also records from Lake Erie (1961), Lake Michigan (1964), Lake Huron (1966), and Lake Superior (1972) (Engel 1962; Faber and Jermolajev 1966; Mills et al. 1993).


Table 1. Great Lakes region nonindigenous occurrences, the earliest and latest observations in each state/province, and the tally and names of HUCs with observations†. Names and dates are hyperlinked to their relevant specimen records. The list of references for all nonindigenous occurrences of Eurytemora affinis are found here.

Full list of USGS occurrences

State/ProvinceFirst ObservedLast ObservedTotal HUCs with observations†HUCs with observations†
IL197219951Lake Michigan
MI196619993Lake Huron; Lake Michigan; Lake Superior
MN197219721Lake Superior
NY195820042Lake Erie; Lake Ontario
OH199820061Lake Erie
WI199919991Lake Michigan

Table last updated 4/18/2024

† Populations may not be currently present.


Ecology: Eurytemora affinis can live for up to 73 days, and the juvenile stage lasts around 11–37 days. Females can lay around 2–34 sexual eggs per day, which develop in 1–14 days (taking the longest at temperatures of 5ºC and developing most quickly at temperatures around 22ºC). This species carries sexual eggs until they hatch. Diapausing eggs are usually produced in the fall and then stay in the sediments, remaining viable up to 10–18 years, even in anoxic conditions. Eggs have the ability to survive passage through the digestive tracts of various fish species. Diapausing egg production is related to short day length, low temperature, and high copepod population density (Ban 1992; Flinkman et al. 1994; Katajisto 1996; Andersen and Nielsen 1997; Katajisto et al. 1998; Roman et al. 2001; Wonham et al. 2005).

Population peaks are present at different times of year in different regions of the world. In the Milwaukee Harbor, it is present from July to November but absent in winter and spring, while in the northern Baltic Sea it is known to overwinter at low population density. In the Atchafalaya River system in Louisiana it occurs at its highest abundance in early summer, while in two European estuaries, the Gironde and the Westerschelde, it is dominant in winter and spring. In a Scottish estuary, the Forth, it is dominant in winter and summer (Roddie et al. 1984; Tackx et al. 1995; Davidson et al. 1998; Katajisto et al. 1998; Torke 2001).

Eurytemora affinis is epibenthic, inhabiting both the sediments and the water column in Lake Michigan, where it is often particularly abundant in the first 10 m of water. In this lake, abundance in the water column is significantly higher in the day than at night in June, and then evens out later in the summer. In Lake Michigan, the presence of E. affinis in sediments increases in late summer. It spends winter and spring as eggs (Wells 1970; Nalepa and Quigley 1985).

Eurytemora affinis can tolerate salinities of 0–40%. In Chesapeake Bay, it is most abundant in waters of 5–10ºC and salinities of 3–8% but can tolerate higher salinities at lower temperatures. High salinities at high temperatures are stressful. Experiments indicate that optimum temperature and salinity ranges for this species are 10–15ºC and 5–15% respectively. Interestingly, one Japanese experiment showed that individuals introduced to freshwater from a brackish water source are still best adapted to salinities of 5–15%, and that eggs from this population hatch well at salinities of 0–20%. Eurytemora affinis can tolerate high turbidity, although production may decrease due to low food availability from lack of light and difficulty in selecting edible particles. In some European estuaries, this species is considered limited by high turbidity and anoxia (Sautour and Castel 1995; Burdloff et al. 2000; Kimmel and Bradley 2001; Roman et al. 2001; Seuront 2006).

Eurytemora affinis grazes on algae, bacteria, organic detritus and protozoans, including ciliates and dinoflagellates. It can increase feeding on heterotrophic plankton rather than autotrophic plankton when suspended particulate matter increases in concentration. Feeding on microplankton ciliates is most efficient due to better perception, handling, and relative nutritional quality of these larger food particles in comparison to phytoplankton (Gasparini and Castel 1997; Merrell and Stoecker 1998; Torke 2001; David et al. 2006).


Means of Introduction: Llikely introduced in ballast water from the Atlantic Coast or from western European ports in ships arriving in the Great Lakes basin. It does have a diapause stage that can be found in aquatic sediments, but it is most ubiquitous in ballast water samples (Mills et al. 1993; Wonham et al. 2005). Possibly introduced with fish stocking.


Status: Considered established in all the Great Lakes with high populations. Established inland.


Great Lakes Impacts:
Summary of species impacts derived from literature review. Click on an icon to find out more...

Environmental

Current research on the environmental impact of Eurytemora affinis in the Great Lakes is inadequate to support proper assessment.

Potential:
Eurytemora affinis has the ability to feed on toxic cyanobacteria and dinoflagellates (Dinophysis spp.) (Engström et al. 2000, Setälä et al. 2009). While these do not appear to be their preferred food source, consumption of toxic phytoplankton results in the buildup of toxins in zooplankton tissue and feces, which consequently can accumulate in benthic organisms, fish, and organisms further up the food chain (Engström et al. 2000, Lehtiniemi et al. 2002, Setälä et al. 2009). Copepods are also common hosts for fish parasites (Piasecki et al. 2004). In particular, E. affinis is a probable host and vector for plerocercoids that can infect striped bass in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Estuary (Arnold and Yue 1997).

Mesocosm experiments indicate that E. affinis has the potential to control some populations of protozoan ciliates and rotifers when these prey items are found at high densities (Feike and Heerkloss 2009, Merrell and Stoecker 1998). Because E. affinis has become an abundant grazer in parts of the Great Lakes, it is possible that it has had important impacts on the food web—both adverse and beneficial (see below) (Lee et al. 2007).

Current research on the socio-economic impact of Eurytemora affinis in the Great Lakes is inadequate to support proper assessment.

Potential:
Outbreaks of cholera are sometimes correlated with copepods, which are common hosts of Vibrio cholerae (Colwell 2004, Lee et al. 2007, Piasecki et al. 2004). Cholera outbreaks tend to be associated with algal blooms and the rapid increase in copepods that follows (Piasecki et al. 2004). Eurytemora spp. are known to host V. cholerae and are the most common of known copepod hosts in the Chesapeake Bay, where this has been studied (Colwell 2004).

Eurytemora affinis has the ability to consume cyanobacteria and other toxic algal blooms; studies in the Baltic Sea indicate that this is likely an important mechanism of the biomagnification of toxins in organisms of economic importance, such as shrimp and fish (Engström et al. 2000, Karjalainen et al. 2008, Setälä et al. 2009).

There is little or no evidence to support that Eurytemora affinis has significant beneficial effects in the Great Lakes.

Potential:
Eurytemora affinis could be a significant prey item for fish and other planktivores. Thorp and Casper (2003) demonstrated such potential in an enclosure experiment with yellow perch (Perca flavescens) in the St. Lawrence River; 99% of E. affinis disappeared from fish enclosures, presumably due to predation.


Management: Regulations (pertaining to the Great Lakes)
There are no known regulations for this species.

Note: Check federal, state/provincial, and local regulations for the most up-to-date information.

Control
Biological
Maes et al. (2005) found that juvenile herring (Clupea harengus) and sprat (Sprattus sprattus) exhibit top down control of Eurytemora affinis through predation pressure in the Scheldt estuary in Belgium.

Physical
There are no known physical control methods for this species.

Chemical
The Great Lakes and Mississippi River Interbasin Study (GLMRIS 2012) suggests that alteration of water quality using carbon dioxide, ozone, nitrogen, and/or sodium thiosulfate could be effective in preventing upstream and downstream movement of copepods. It should be noted that the effectiveness of these methods is likely significantly diminished against copepod ephippia.

Lindley et. al (1999) found that exposure to the organochlorine compounds pentachlorophenol (PCP) and 1, 2-dichlorobenzene (DCB), (both common industrial pollutants) accumulated in sediment significantly reduced hatching success and nauplii viability of E. affinis eggs. In a study of the effect of salinity on toxicity of cadmium to Chesapeake Bay organisms, Hall Jr. et al. (1995) found that E. affinis is very sensitive to cadmium compared to other estuarine aquatic biota. The study documents 96 h LC50 (lethal concentration to 50% of organisms tested) values of 51.6, 213.2, and 82.9 µg L-1 at 5, 15, and 25 ppt (parts per thousand) salinities, respectively (Hall Jr. et al. 1995). Sullivan et al. observed a 96 h LC50 of >120 µg L-1 for cadmium and ~30 µg L-1 for copper on E. affinis at 10 ppt salinity (1983). Sullivan et al. (1983) also noted that reduced growth rates of E. affinis occur at Cu and Cd doses below the 96 h LC50, which has been documented as extending generation length and eventually reducing population size in previous studies. The negative effects of the insecticide diflubenzuron (Dimilin®) on E. affinis nauplii were documented by Savitz and Wright, who noted a 48 h LC50 of 2.2 µg L-1. The insecticide is approved for use against the gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar) and other insect pests by the US EPA, and enters E. affinis habitat through runoff or by direct spraying (Savitz and Wright 1994). Diflubenzuron specifically targets the arthropod molting process, so the most explicit effects are expected in sub-adult crustaceans. E. affinis was lethally affected at levels as low as 0.78 µg L-1 (Savitz and Wright 1994).

Note: Check state/provincial and local regulations for the most up-to-date information regarding permits for control methods. Follow all label instructions.


Remarks: Eurytemora affinis is considered to be a species complex. Over the past 200 years or so, it has had a history of repeatedly invading freshwater systems from adjacent brackish or marine water bodies in many different regions of the world. In such situations, E. affinis can undergo relatively rapid evolution, exhibiting heritable shifts in tolerance and performance with respect to survival in freshwater habitats. Different populations can become reproductively isolated and incompatible. This species has also probably evolved a certain amount of tolerance to toxins of some cyanobacteria in the Baltic Sea (Lee 1999; Lee 2000; Lee and Petersen 2002; Kozlowsky-Suzuki et al. 2003; Lee et al. 2003).

Euryhaline species, found in estuaries, saltmarshes, brackish waters and freshwater lakes, ponds and reservoirs. Planktonic or epibenthic grazer, feeding on plankton and organic detritus; females can produce multiple clutches of eggs; overwinters as eggs, juveniles and adult stages found between April and January.

Frequently exhibits both vertical and horizontal migrations. Vertical migrations may occur in response to fluctuations in salinity, over day-night cycles, and over tidal cycles. They often occur more frequently in lakes than swamps or channels. Horizontal migrations between nearshore and open water areas may occur over day-night cycles and migrations from one habitat type to another may occur in response to oxygen regimes. In tidal areas, E. affinis is most active during the flood of spring tides and the ebb of neap tides (Hough and Naylor 1992; Morgan et al. 1997; Appeltans et al. 2003; Kelso et al. 2003; Jack et al. 2006; Seuront 2006).


References (click for full reference list)


Author: Kipp, R.M., A.J. Benson, J. Larson, T.H. Makled, and A. Fusaro


Contributing Agencies:
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Revision Date: 9/12/2019


Citation for this information:
Kipp, R.M., A.J. Benson, J. Larson, T.H. Makled, and A. Fusaro, 2024, Eurytemora affinis Poppe, 1880: U.S. Geological Survey, Nonindigenous Aquatic Species Database, Gainesville, FL, and NOAA Great Lakes Aquatic Nonindigenous Species Information System, Ann Arbor, MI, https://nas.er.usgs.gov/queries/greatlakes/FactSheet.aspx?Species_ID=178&Potential=N&Type=0&HUCNumber=DHuron, Revision Date: 9/12/2019, Access Date: 4/18/2024

This information is preliminary or provisional and is subject to revision. It is being provided to meet the need for timely best science. The information has not received final approval by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and is provided on the condition that neither the USGS nor the U.S. Government shall be held liable for any damages resulting from the authorized or unauthorized use of the information.