Impact ID |
Scientific Name
|
Impact Type
|
Study Type
|
Study Location
|
Impact Description
|
Geographic Location
|
Reference
|
3589
|
Proterorhinus semilunaris
|
Other Ecological Benefits
|
Anecdotal
|
N/A
|
Like round gobies, tubenose gobies may eventually become part of the forage base for predators, such as benthic-foraging yellow perch,
white perch, smallmouth bass, burbot, white bass, and walleye, which all consume round gobies (Bunnell et al. 2005; Kocovsky et al. 2009).
|
|
19664
|
3669
|
Proterorhinus semilunaris
|
Other Ecological Benefits
|
Observational
|
Field
|
Tubenose goby hosted glochidia of multiple unionid species.
|
River Dyje
|
34284
|
3674
|
Proterorhinus semilunaris
|
Other Ecological Benefits
|
Anecdotal
|
N/A
|
Risk to Mississippi Basin - this species is predicted to have moderate environmental consequences and low economic/sociopolitical consequences.
|
Mississippi Basin
|
29117
|
6745
|
Proterorhinus semilunaris
|
Other Ecological Benefits
|
Observational
|
Field
|
In the Musov Reservoir tubenose gobies quickly became the dominant species along the reservoir bankside, making them an attractive prey for =1 + perch. There was a clear increasing trend in the numbers of larger perch caught along the rip-rap, with the largest fish clearly specializing on gobies.
|
Musov Resevoir, Czech Republic
|
34323
|