#218229 - 11/10/03 12:20 PM
lampreys everywhere
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Three Time Spawner
Registered: 09/16/02
Posts: 1501
Loc: seattle wa
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was fishing the green the other day in the lower river. almost every square foot of grass that has been recently exposed by receeding water had a little lamprey about 4 inches. there was a little kid collecting dozens of them and putting them in a plastic jar. he and his dad thought that they were fresh water eels. so did i until i saw one start sucking on the side of the jar with a big round mouth and circular jaw. I have never seen anything like it. have any of you seen such numbers of little lampreys? do they swim up river to spawn there? i have never even cought a fish with a lamprey still on it but i have caught many with lamprey marks. the other thing i was thinking is that it may be a good reason to leave mergansers alone (other than the fact that it is stoupid to shoot them)on the rivers because they probably eat millions of these as they are so easy to catch. and that probably has an effect on the fish stocks that helps negate when they eat fish fry! does anyone know anything about this like maybe salmo g or someone with some biological knowledge on the subject??
and to think, i almost threw one into my golfish pond
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"time is but the stream I go a-fishing in"- Henry David Thoreau
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#218231 - 11/10/03 12:26 PM
Re: lampreys everywhere
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Spawner
Registered: 05/03/01
Posts: 972
Loc: Moses Lake
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Didn't think the local lampreys were fish sucking lampreys. They're "brook lampreys" and should be a lot smaller than the ones in the Great Lakes.
Years ago when I lived on the east coast some people used to dig these little lampreys and use them for bass bait.
Just food for thought. I also bet if people could get these in a little bigger size they could be brined and used for sturgeon bait.
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zen leecher
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#218232 - 11/10/03 12:29 PM
Re: lampreys everywhere
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River Nutrients
Registered: 10/10/03
Posts: 4756
Loc: The right side of the line
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I found the same thing on the Snoqualmie two summers ago. I asked the biologist . He said they spawn in the mud/silt of the slow parts of the rivers. I had never seen one as a kid and I grew up on the Snohomish and Sky. They are good food for several spiecies. The favorite food fo the Sturgeon in the Columbia and Snake systems. Seems like a pop boom the last few years however. Maybe just a cycle or the primary predator is in decline.
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Liberalism is a mental illness!
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#218233 - 11/10/03 12:31 PM
Re: lampreys everywhere
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Three Time Spawner
Registered: 09/16/02
Posts: 1501
Loc: seattle wa
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now there is an idea. they do look like the perfect bait. maybe i should collect some. some rocket red pro cure and you have the perfect live chum bait....
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"time is but the stream I go a-fishing in"- Henry David Thoreau
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#218234 - 11/10/03 01:48 PM
Re: lampreys everywhere
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Parr
Registered: 10/19/03
Posts: 43
Loc: Too far south for Steellhead
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The larger Lampreys were the "HOT" bait for sturgeon in Yaqina bay, Newport Oregon. Could be the same anywhere. I would see quite few at night under the lights on the boat docks. A good sized dip net and quick wrist would do the trick.
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#218238 - 11/10/03 08:12 PM
Re: lampreys everywhere
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River Nutrients
Registered: 11/25/01
Posts: 2834
Loc: Marysville
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Lupo - What you found was probably the larval from (called an ammocoete). The adult lamprey spawn in the spring much like steelhead. The construct redds (moving the gravel by sucking on the rock and dragging it out of the way) that look much like steelhead redds. The adults die after spawning like salmon.
We have 3 species here in the PNW - the brook, the river and the Pacific. The larval upon hatching move into the slow water areas and bury in the muck were the feed on the detritus, diatoms, algae and other small items. The ammocoetes spend several years in this stage before metamorphosing into the adult stage. It is likely that this is the stage of critter that you found and were probably washed out their muck home.
The adult brook lamprey is the smallest, typically about 6 inches or so. They spend their entire life in the small creeks and do not feed as adults -spawning and dying short after they become adults. Both the river and Pacific lamprey are anadromous fish which migrate to the ocean upon metamorphosing into an adult. In both cases the adults are parasitic and attach themselves to fish and feed on their fluids. The river lamprey adults are typically 12 inches or so long and the Pacific reach 18 inches or so. Historically they were quite numerous and migrated great distances up the rivers (include the upper Columbia). The numbers of river and Pacific lampreys have declined dramatically over the last couple of decades and may become a cnadidate for an ESA listing. While they can't jump they climb over falls and dams by attaching to the obstacle and pulling themselves up.
Probably more than you want to know!
Tight lines Smalma
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#218239 - 11/10/03 09:39 PM
Re: lampreys everywhere
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Spawner
Registered: 01/03/01
Posts: 797
Loc: Post Falls, ID
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Don't all lamreys spawn in fresh water? I know some get pretty big, we caught a sockeye up in the Alberni Inlet several years back that had about a 12" lamprey stuck on it.
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#218240 - 11/11/03 09:26 AM
Re: lampreys everywhere
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Reverend Tarpones
Registered: 10/09/02
Posts: 8379
Loc: West Duvall
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Salma:
I recently did a Hell's Canyon tour, and the tour operator said that the indians all the way up the Snake relied on huge runs of lampreys. Apparently few if any make it up that far now. pretty interesting. Anyone try eating them?
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No huevos no pollo.
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#218241 - 11/11/03 09:03 PM
Re: lampreys everywhere
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River Nutrients
Registered: 11/25/01
Posts: 2834
Loc: Marysville
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Surecatch - A number of the upper Columbia tribes also relied on lampreys for food. They are amadromous fish the bring with them good amount of fats. As spring spawners they were available to local tribes after a hard winter thus would have been looked forward to as a good change in their diet. Runs to some of those rivers were reported to have number in the 10,000s with few seen today.
Tight lines Smalma
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#218243 - 11/11/03 09:22 PM
Re: lampreys everywhere
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Dick Nipples
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 27838
Loc: Seattle, Washington USA
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I remember as a kid seeing thousands of them in the fish ladder at Kalama Falls, stuck all over the walls. I remember catching a few every summer, too, when fishing with eggs.
I haven't seen them like that for years, though.
I did see a few in the Green River (Cowlitz Co.) over the last few years, but only a few.
At the Kalama they were bigger than being described...more like 16" to 24". The ones at the Green were a bit smaller, but pretty big, too.
I also remember seeing little ones, perhaps the larvae, in the Sammamish River and Bear Creek, too.
Fish on...
Todd.
P.S. I never saw one on a fish.
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Team Flying Super Ditch Pickle
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#218246 - 11/13/03 10:38 AM
Re: lampreys everywhere
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River Nutrients
Registered: 11/25/01
Posts: 2834
Loc: Marysville
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Fair Hooker - Interesting question - while there probably is not a clear answer to the lamprey declines I think we can rule out several of the usual suspects.
In spite of Spawnout's early efforts I see or heard of little interest in a bonk season for them. By default we have Wild Lamprey Release (WLR) management. As many lamprey as want to or can are allowed to spawn so they aren't limited by MSY management. So the bios must have the fishery management thing right for them.
Lamprey are one of a handful of native anadromous species where there has not been a hatchery program or basin relocation program. Without a hatchery program hard to blame mis-guided hatchery practices for the decline. While it would be tempting to blame predators the fact is that they evolved with them and man has not stepped in an attempted to use some of the lamprey's natural productivity for our own use so over the long haul hard too imagine predation being higher today than say 200 years ago.
That leaves us with the last 2 of the usual suspects as the probable cuase(s)-
Poor marine survival - there is some indication that their survival varies much the same as the various salmonid species. On the Oregon they took an accerlated nose-dive in abundance at the same time as the cutthroat coho, etc did.
The other of course is degraded freshwater habitats. They may be even more sensitive to freshwater habitat conditions then steelhead. They are spring/early summer spawners making shallow nests (redds ) in the gravel and have eggs that are not buried but rather fall into the spaces between the rocks. As such they are more vulnerable to high waters. Their young spend a number of years in the freshwater. In British Columbia the Pacific ammocoetes were found to be 5 or 6 year old when they left the river - spending twice as long in the freshwater than steelhead so they are exposed longer to any freshwater survival impacts. The ammocoetes spend their freshwater time buried in the muck found in slow areas so may be vulunerable to flooding and channel changes (both more common in our altered watersheds than historically).
In short their plight seems to indicate the problem is habitat and habitat. In fact as stated in other posts if we are serious about having abundant anadromous fish the focus needs to be on habitat. While hatcheries and harvest play roles the information at hand indicates in the majority of cases habitat issues over shadow them.
For you record seekers - while the average Pacific lamprey may be 18 inches or so long as pointed out by others they do get larger. The biggest one I could find a record of was 30 incher that weight a full pound - fish on! Tight lines Smalma
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#218248 - 11/13/03 10:46 PM
Re: lampreys everywhere
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Three Time Spawner
Registered: 06/14/00
Posts: 1828
Loc: Toledo, Washington
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Smalma
In all the years that I have fished, and guided on the Cowlitz River (18 plus years), I have only seen one lamprey ell in the Cowlitz River. Yet when I have fished in the Green River, (Lewis/Cowlitz County) I have seen lots of ells in that river during the same time period. Since the Green and the Toutle both were heavily affected by the eruption of Mt. Saint Helens, and much of the habitat in both rivers were complexly destroyed. Yet there have been plenty of ells continuing to come back into that river system. So what the heck is going on if habitat is the key that affects their survival?
Why are they not coming back to the Cowlitz?
Cowlitzfisherman
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Cowlitzfisherman
Is the taste of the bait worth the sting of the hook????
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