Based on the number of velar tentacles and the form of longitudinal
lingual laminae found in Lampetra (Entosphenus) t. tridentata
and its closely related forms, the taxon Entosphenus should not be
considered as a genus as commonly adopted, but, along with the taxa
Lethenteron and Lampetra, should be regarded as...
Native lamprey species in the Central Valley of California serve important ecological roles in rivers and tributaries and face similar conservation challenges as salmonids. Concerns of declining lamprey populations have led to collaboration of tribes, local, state, and federal agencies to increase understanding of ecology and life history. Pacific Lamprey...
Pacific lamprey is an important cultural and ecological species to freshwater ecosystems of the Pacific Northwest. Lamprey often rear in low gradient portions of watersheds that have high exposure to climate warming, yet very little is known about their thermal physiology in comparison with other anadromous fishes such as Pacific...
The epidermis of the brook lamprey, Lampetra planers
(Bloch), has been examined with histological and histochemical
techniques and the fine structure of the fibrillar
club cells has been studied with electron microscopy.
In histological structure the epidermis was found to
correspond to the observations of earlier workers. The
stratified epidermis...
The cultural and ecological values of Pacific lamprey (Lampetra tridentata) have not been understood by Euro-Americans and thus their great decline has almost gone unnoticed except by Native Americans, who elevated the issue and initiated research to restore its populations, at least in the Columbia Basin. They regard Pacific lamprey...
Rotary screw traps were used to estimate Pacific lamprey smolt yield,
outmigration timing, age structure and sex ratio for Tenmile Creek basin, Lane County,
Oregon. Traps were fished March to June and August to December 1994 and March to
June and October to December 1995. Lamprey smolts caught in the...
Based on oral interviews with tribal informants, current and former state and federal fisheries personnel, review of records and literature, and presence/absence sampling, it is apparent that Pacific lamprey were once abundant in ceded area streams of the Umatilla Indian Reservation (John Day, Umatilla, Walla Walla, Tucannon, and Grande Ronde...
Pacific lamprey (Entosphenus tridentatus) are experiencing population declines throughout their range. Xenobiotics could be an important risk factor for lamprey populations. Our goal was to establish if common herbicides, as used in forest management, could affect reproductive fitness. We determined that atrazine was a likely compound of greatest concern to...
It can be reasonably assumed that lamprey eel harvesting has systematically and periodically occurred along the Siletz River and its tributaries for as many hundreds, or thousands, or tens of thousands of years that human families and lamprey eel populations have coexisted in the Siletz Valley ecosystem. This report is...
The Lamprey Eel Decline project conducted by the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians (CTSI) combined traditional ecological knowledge, scientific research and geographic information science. CTSI wanted to learn why the Pacific lamprey (Lampetra tridentata), a culturally and ecologically important species, was declining in the streams within their native land area....