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A real-life game of Clue

A real-life game of Clue

Alum investigates what’s killing freshwater mussels

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Posted 10:42 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2021

Eric Leis is slowly but surely unraveling a mystery.

The parasitologist and fish biologist at the La Crosse Fish Health Center is part of a small team investigating disturbingly high mortality rates among freshwater mussels in the rivers of North America and beyond.

The team has associated some of these deaths with viral infections, but questions remain about these novel viruses and why exactly they are correlated with the dying mussels.

“Mussels are extremely important to the ecosystem — they’re like nature’s Brita filter,” explains Leis, ’04 & ’07. “They filter and purify the water, stabilize riverbeds and indicate a healthy ecosystem overall. So if they’re dying in mass numbers, and they are, it’s something we should be talking about.”

Mussels are extremely important to the ecosystem — they’re like nature’s Brita filter,
Eric Leis, ’04 & ’07, a parasitologist and fish biologist at the La Crosse Fish Health Center, collects mussel samples from Lake Onalaska. Leis and his team are investigating high mortality rates among freshwater mussels locally and around the world.

Leis divides his time evenly among field work, lab work and writing papers related to the declining mussel populations.

He and the rest of the team have established themselves as leading authorities on the subject. They’ve received questions and samples from all over the world — from Oregon to Virginia to Spain. Earlier this year, Leis lent his expertise to a New York Times story.

According to Leis, one virus in particular was statistically linked to moribund mussels. More work is needed to determine if this virus is pathogenic, as well as whether there are environmental conditions that influence viral expression and, ultimately, disease progression. In addition to the virus, there may be other culprits.

“I love my job in that it’s like a real-life game of Clue,” Leis says. “But instead of Col. Mustard with a lead pipe, you have things like viruses, bacteria and changing environmental conditions. We’re starting to get some answers, but there’s a lot we don’t know.”

Leis, who was raised near Cashton, about 30 miles east of La Crosse, has always had a passion for science and an eye for granular details.



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