Cercopagis, known in North America as the
“fishhook water flea,” is an aggressive, predatory zooplankton that preys on
smaller zooplankton. It belongs to the same family as Bythotrephes
(Cercopagididae), and, like Bythotrephes, has a long caudal process
(“tail”) with up to three pairs of barbs near its end. Also like Bythotrephes,
Cercopagis is a native of the Ponto-Caspian region of eastern
Europe/western Asia (the area of the Caspian, Azov, and Aral seas). As with the
spiny water flea, the fishhook water flea is believed to be an international
shipping ballast water introduction.
Since its first discovery in
Lake Ontario in August 1998, copagis spread inland to six of New York’s
Finger Lakes (Seneca, Cayuga, Otisco, Canandaigua, Owasco and Keuka) within a
year, possibly on fishery sampling gear, in bait buckets, or on recreational
angling equipment. In these inland lakes, Cercopagis now dominates the
offshore zooplankton community during the summer and fall. This species has also
been found in Grand Traverse Bay and southern Lake Michigan and in western Lake
Erie and the Detroit River. It is expected to spread throughout the Great Lakes
by means of currents, inter- and intra-lake ballast transfers and recreational
boating and angling. The fishhook water flea, like the spiny water flea, fouls
fishing lines, down rigger cables and fish nets, in many cases to an extent that
anglers have had to cut their lines and lose fish because of reel clogging. The
species’ length, including body and spine, can exceed 1 cm.

The species has been observed at
densities of 170 to 600 individuals per square meter. In addition to sexual
reproduction, Cercopagis most commonly reproduce parthenogenically
(asexually), which allows them to quickly establish new populations with a
relatively small seed population without the need for a large number of the
smaller males along with females. Eggs produced in the early part of the season
are delicate and very susceptible to damage, with low recruitment rates. Later
in the season, as surface water temperatures decline, Cercopagis females
produce over-wintering or resting eggs (the species is also known to produce
resting eggs anytime during the year when environmental conditions become
inhospitable). Such resting eggs can successfully overwinter in an inactive
state and replenish the population after hatching in the spring. Resting eggs
are also resistant to desiccation, freeze-drying and ingestion by predators
(such as other fish). They can be easily transported to other drainage basins by
various vectors, particularly if they are still in the female’s body (the barbed
caudal spine allows attachment to ropes, fishing lines, waterfowl feathers,
aquatic gear, vegetation and mud). Resting eggs can hatch regardless of whether
the carrier female is alive or dead.
It is unknown what the future
impacts of Cercopagis are going to be. It is possible that the high
population densities of the species will create significant predation pressure
on smaller cladocerans to impact the size and composition of native
phytoplankton communities. Furthermore, Cercopagis may compete with
native young- of-the-year fish populations for small prey. It is also possible
that the species may become prey itself for larger fish. It is not known,
therefore, whether Cercopagis will ultimately be an energetic source or
sink in the Great Lakes.
GRAPHIC: Igor Grigorovich, University of Windsor
MAP: Meghan O'Neill