More
than $8.3 million has been spent in the past
10 years on lamprey research and restoration
-- the subject next week at the first Columbia
River Basin Pacific Lamprey Summit at Portland
State University.
Meanwhile, the harvest of lamprey, a migratory
fish often referred to as an eel, is an agenda
item at today's meeting of the Oregon Fish and
Wildlife Commission.
Nearly
20 projects -- more than a dozen ongoing --
have been initiated since 1994 when the
Bonneville Power Administration funded a
lamprey research and restoration project on
the Umatilla Indian Reservation, according to
the 2004 update to the Columbia River Lamprey
Program Summary prepared in July by the
Columbia River Basin Lamprey Technical
Workgroup. Project sponsors include tribes,
state and federal agencies, and universities.
BPA has
been the chief funding source, providing
nearly $6 million since 1994.
Meeting
today in Bend, the Oregon Fish and Wildlife
Commission will hear a report on this year's
Willamette Falls lamprey harvest, which took
place in June and July following adoption in
April of permanent regulations for harvesting
the fish at the falls near Oregon City.
The
summit -- a forum for tribal, state and
federal resource managers to "explore
opportunities to work collaboratively" on
lamprey restoration -- will take place Oct. 22
in the Native American Student Community
Center at PSU in Portland.
The
Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission's rule
making in April was the most recent in a
series of conservation measures, which
included the elimination of all commercial
harvest in 2002. Among other things, the new
rules set a harvest limit of 100 lamprey per
permit holder during the 2004 season.
The
Commission authorizes lamprey harvest in
Oregon only at Willamette Falls. The 11-year
average harvest for the period of 1991-2001
was 30,534 lamprey, which pales in comparison
to a four-year period in the 1940s when the
average catch was 400,000 lamprey. Over the
last three years, the average harvest was
4,314, including this year's estimated catch
of 1,753 lamprey.
The
Commission report, which revisits the
regulations adopted in April, shows that the
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife issued
64 personal-use permits to non-tribal fishers,
up from 43 permits issued in 2003 and 58
permits issued in 2002. The Commission this
year also authorized 11 tribal governments to
issue personal use permits to their members.
According to the report, non-tribal permit
holders harvested 416 lamprey while the
reported tribal harvest was 1,337. The total
reported catch this year was down
significantly from the 7,074 lamprey harvested
in 2003 and the 4,116 lamprey harvested in
2002.
Water
flow over Willamette Falls during the entire
summer was much greater than has occurred in
previous years, making lamprey much less
accessible and contributed to reduced angler
success, according to the report to be
presented to the Oregon Fish and Wildlife
Commission. Many lamprey permit holders did
not participate due to what they considered
unsafe conditions, the report noted.
Next
week at the Columbia River Basin Pacific
Lamprey Summit, several federal officials are
expected to participate in a "3 Sovereigns"
panel to discuss "opportunities to promote
conservation and passage of lamprey,"
according to a draft agenda. The event is
sponsored by the Columbia River Inter-Tribal
Fish Commission.
The
federal officials scheduled to attend include
Gen. William Grisoli, U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers; Dave Allen, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service; Bob Lohn, National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration; and Bill McDonald,
Bureau of Reclamation.
Former
Congresswoman Elizabeth Furse is the luncheon
speaker with a presentation titled "Moving
Toward Lamprey Conservation: A New Vision for
the Columbia Basin." Bernice Mitchell of the
Warm Springs Tribe will offer a tribal
perspective on the Pacific lamprey, including
history of use, legends and traditions,
harvest locations and ecological significance.
Several technical presentations are also
scheduled.
That
first project on the Umatilla Indian
Reservation, with funding to date of more than
$3.7 million, aims to restore natural
production of Pacific lamprey in the Umatilla
River to self-sustaining and harvestable
levels.
One of
the objectives in the Umatilla project is to
evaluate the role of pheromones, or bile
salts, which are released by larval lampreys
as a migratory cue to upstream migrating
lampreys. Researchers are measuring the fish's
response to bile salts during the adult
spawning migration in freshwater at the
Columbia River Research Laboratory.
Since
2000, the project has outplanted adult
lampreys in the Umatilla River, monitoring
life stages to determine if the technique will
help restore the fish. Initial results show
adults spawning and producing larval lampreys,
which have been found from the headwaters to
the lower reaches of the river.
Other
lamprey projects, listing the first year
funded and status, the sponsor, funding and
funding source, and objectives, include:
-- 1996,
ongoing -- NOAA, $1.5 million from U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers, to assess passage
efficiency of adult lamprey at lower Columbia
River dams; identify obstacles to lamprey
passage via radiotelemetry and PIT tagging;
modify fishways to improve lamprey passage and
test their efficacy; design and test a
lamprey-specific bypass device.
-- 1999,
complete -- Pacific Northwest National
Laboratories, unstated amount from Corps of
Engineers, for laboratory flume swim
performance; laboratory screen configuration
tests; field assessment of juvenile lamprey
impingement and injury during
screening/bypass.
-- 1999,
ongoing -- University of Idaho, $200,000 from
Corps of Engineers, to document lamprey
behavior and test fishway alterations in the
laboratory.
-- 2000,
ongoing -- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
$908,787 from BPA to estimate abundance,
examine biological characteristics, and
determine migration timing of adult Pacific
lampreys; determine larval lamprey
distribution and habitat use; determine
emigration timing and estimate the abundance
of recently metamorphosed lampreys; and
evaluate spawning habitat requirements of
adult lampreys.
-- 2000,
ongoing -- Idaho Fish and Game, $346,524 from
BPA to determine life history characteristics,
habitat requirements and distribution of adult
and juvenile/larval lamprey; develop and
implement strategies to protect adult and
juvenile/larval habitat; and assess population
structural characteristics of juvenile/larval
lamprey.
-- 2000,
complete -- U.S. Geological Survey, $373,144
from BPA to spawn three species in captivity
and determine diagnostic characteristics of
each; collect ammocoetes (larval lamprey) and
hold through metamorphosis to verify
identification techniques; and evaluate
temperature effects on the survival and early
development of three species.
-- 2000,
ongoing -- U.S. Geological Survey, unstated
amount as subcontract to Umatilla Tribes under
its 1994 BPA project, to measure the temporal
variations in the responses of upstream
migrating Pacific lampreys using electro-olfactogram
recording techniques.
-- 2002,
complete -- U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
$90,000 from the same agency to assess steel
floor plates installed on diffuser gratings to
facilitate passage of adult lamprey through
fish ladders.
-- 2002,
complete -- U.S. Geological Survey, unstated
amount from Corps of Engineers to evaluate
adult maturation and physiology of adult
lamprey collected at Bonneville Dam.
-- 2002,
ongoing -- Confederated Tribes of the Warm
Springs Reservation of Oregon, $312,632 from
BPA to determine species composition, larval
distribution and associated habitat in lower
Deschutes River subbasin; estimate the number
of lamprey emigrants from Warm Springs River
and Shitike Creek; evaluate the feasibility of
estimating the escapement of adult lamprey in
the Deschutes River upstream of Sherar's Falls
and estimate lamprey harvest at Sherar's
Falls.
-- 2003,
ongoing -- Oregon Department of Fish and
Wildlife, $65,796 from ODFW, Portland General
Electric, City of Portland and the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service, to monitor migration and
distribution of adult lamprey in the
Willamette River; summarize and analyze
existing data to map distribution of Pacific
and brook lamprey in Portland area streams.
-- 2003,
ongoing -- Oregon State University, $83,164
from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to
investigate the function of spawning behavior
in relations to early-life mortality; monitor
the seasonal timing of reproduction and larval
drift in relation to potentially important
biotic and abiotic variables; document sources
of predation and explore the ecological role
of Pacific lamprey in the Coquille Basin.
-- 2003,
complete -- U.S. Geological Survey, $199,494
from BPA to trap adults and use radio
telemetry to determine lamprey movement to
spawning areas; and describe over wintering
and spawning habitat of radio tagged fish.
-- 2002,
complete -- U.S. Geological Survey, $180,000
from Army Corps of Engineers to evaluate
swimming performance, metabolic condition, and
exhaustive stress to assess efficacy of
current upstream fish passage facilities at
Bonneville Dam.
-- 2002,
complete -- U.S. Geological Survey, unstated
amount from same agency to validate aging
techniques in laboratory and compare results
to wild lamprey samples.
-- 2003,
ongoing -- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
$27,223 from same agency to evaluate whether
existing NOAA salmonid screening criteria will
preclude lamprey macropthalmia (second
juvenile life stage) from impingement or
entrainment by screened water intake
structures.
-- 2003,
ongoing -- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
$13,661 from U.S. Geological Survey (Science
Support Program) to determine the effects of
coded wire tags on survival of lamprey larvae
and macropthalmia; and determine retention
rates of coded wire tags.
-- 2003,
ongoing -- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
$30,000 from same agency to examine geographic
patterns of genetic variability and
distinctiveness in the Pacific lamprey
throughout its North American range from
British Columbia to Southern California.
-- 2004,
ongoing -- Warm Springs Tribes, $239,237 from
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Tribal
Wildlife Grant Program to study lamprey in the
Deschutes River.
Tribal
peoples of the Pacific Coast and interior
Columbia Basin have harvested lamprey for
subsistence, ceremonial and medicinal purposes
for generations, according to a Status Report
of the Pacific lamprey in the Columbia River
Basin prepared for BPA in 1995.
In
addition to Native Americans, fur trappers
used lamprey as bait for coyotes and, at the
turn of the century, fish culturists used
ground raw lamprey to feed young salmon. In
1913, some 27 tons were harvested for fish
food, the BPA report states.
In the
following years, lamprey were harvested
commercially. From 1943 to 1949, some 816 tons
of lamprey were harvested, primarily for
vitamin oil, protein food for livestock and
poultry, and fishmeal.
Today,
Pacific lamprey are used in scientific
research as a source for medicinal
anticoagulants, for teaching specimens (North
Carolina Biological Supply House regularly
collected at Willamette Falls) and for food
(in 1994, approximately 1,800 kilograms were
exported to Europe), according to the report
for BPA.
The 1995
status report also suggests lamprey served as
an important buffer for upstream migrating
adult salmon from predation by marine animals.
From the
perspective of a predatory sea mammal, the
lamprey has at least three virtues -- it is
easier to capture than adult salmon, it is
higher in caloric value per unit weight than
salmonids and they migrate in schools, the
report states.
Referencing 1984 research, the status report
said the most abundant dietary item in seals
and sea lions are Pacific lamprey. As a
result, the report concluded, marine mammal
predation on salmonids may be more severe
because lamprey populations have declined.
The
report says several factors may account for
the decline of lamprey, including passage
problems for adult and juvenile lamprey
migrating through dams; declining conditions
of spawning and rearing habitat in freshwater;
decline of the marine prey base including
ground fishes, walleye pollock and salmonids
due to fishing and other factors; and chemical
"rehabilitation" (extermination by rotenone)
of streams.