scholarly journals Foreword: Control and Conservation of Lampreys Beyond 2020 - Proceedings from the 3rd Sea Lamprey International Symposium (SLIS III)

Author(s):  
Robert McLaughlin ◽  
Jean V. Adams ◽  
Pedro R. Almeida ◽  
Jessica Barber ◽  
Dale P. Burkett ◽  
...  
1980 ◽  
Vol 37 (11) ◽  
pp. 2202-2208 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl J. Walters ◽  
George Spangler ◽  
W. J. Christie ◽  
Patrick J. Manion ◽  
James F. Kitchell

The Sea Lamprey International Symposium (SLIS) has provided a broad spectrum of facts and speculations for consideration in future research and management programs. Many aspects of the laboratory biology and field life history of the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) are now well understood. There is little question that it can now be controlled by chemical larvicides, and perhaps in the future by more efficient integrated control programs. There is correlative evidence (wounds, scars, catch curves) that lamprey caused major mortalities in some fish species, and that control in conjunction with stocking has lead to remarkable recoveries of salmonid stocks in the Great Lakes. However, there are great gaps in understanding about just what the lamprey does under field conditions, and it is not yet possible to reject several hypotheses that assign lamprey a minimum or transient role in fish stock changes. Further studies on details of lamprey biology are, in themselves, unlikely to fill the gaps; one alternative is to conduct a large-scale field experiment involving cessation of lamprey control while holding other factors (fishing, stocking) as steady as possible. If it is decided to proceed with management on the assumption that lamprey are important, without the major field experiments to confirm it, then at least the following steps should be taken: (1) the chemical treatment program should be reviewed in detail, with a view to finding treatment schedules that will minimize frequency and dose rates for lampricide applications; (2) pilot studies on alternative control schemes (sterile male, attractants, barriers) should only be funded if they are statistically well designed (several replicate and control streams), and involve quantitative monitoring of lamprey spawning success and subsequent total production of transforming larvae; (3) the lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) stocking program should be maintained at its present level, and should involve diverse genotypes rather than a few hatchery strains; (4) growth in the sport fisheries for lake trout should be curtailed, and commercial fisheries should not yet be permitted; (5) a multispecies harvesting policy should be designed that takes into account the buffering effect of each species on lamprey mortality suffered by others (i.e. should some species not be harvested at all, and viewed instead as buffers for more valuable species?); and (6) a program should be developed for restoring, by culture if necessary, native forage species in case the introduced smelt and alewife should collapse under pressure from fishing and prédation by the growing salmonid community.Key words: sea lamprey, proposed research, fishery management, mathematical models, population dynamics


1980 ◽  
Vol 37 (11) ◽  
pp. 2193-2196 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. H. Lawrie

A task force of participants convened during the course of the Sea Lamprey International Symposium considered the implications, for management of Great Lakes fisheries, of information provided about known interactions between feeding sea lampreys and the stocks of fish on which they prey. A weighted series of recommendations identified the need for more information or for changes in management practice.Key words: sea lamprey, Great Lakes, Finger Lakes, fishery management, stock concept


1980 ◽  
Vol 37 (11) ◽  
pp. 1588-1593 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos M. Fetterolf Jr.

Efforts to establish international fishery commissions and/or effective, complementary regulations and management programs for Great Lakes fisheries failed repeatedly from 1893 to 1952. By 1946 the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus), a parasitic predator native to the Atlantic Ocean, was established in the upper Great Lakes and recognized as an impending international catastrophe for the fisheries. This threat provided an added incentive to recast and complete earlier negotiations, and the Convention on Great Lakes Fisheries was entered into force in 1955. The Convention established the Great Lakes Fishery Commission to develop and coordinate fishery research programs, to advise governments on measures to improve the fisheries, and to develop measures and implement programs to control sea lamprey. Sea lamprey populations are currently at levels in all of the Great Lakes to allow acceptable survival and growth of desirable fish species. The commercial and recreational fisheries have revived to the point that their 1979 total economic impact is estimated at $1.16 billion. In 23 yr of operation the Commission has spent $54.5 million for sea lamprey control and research and feels a strong obligation to continue seeking more efficient and cost-effective management techniques. To produce a synthesis of opinion and recommendations for consideration in its future plans the Commission sponsored the Sea Lamprey International Symposium.Key words: sea lamprey, Great Lakes, Great Lakes Fishery Commission, Sea Lamprey International Symposium, international agreements, international organizations


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