4.3 Article

Emerging conservation initiatives for lampreys: Research challenges and opportunities

Journal

JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH
Volume 47, Issue -, Pages S690-S703

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jglr.2020.06.004

Keywords

Damming; River restoration; Conservation targets; Climate change; Telemetry; eDNA

Funding

  1. Great Lakes Fishery Commission
  2. Portuguese funds through the FCT (Foundation for Science and Technology) strategic plan for MARE (Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre) [UID/MAR/04292/2019]

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Lampreys worldwide are facing various anthropogenic stressors, with urgent conservation priorities including quantifying population trends, improving water quality and habitat, and removing barriers. Extensive irrigation and damming activities in regions like Chile are impacting lamprey habitats, while water-stressed areas may face further challenges from climate change-induced flow alterations and rising temperatures.
Lampreys worldwide face multiple anthropogenic stressors. Several species are 'at-risk' listed, yet abundance data for most remain insufficient to adequately assess conservation status. Lamprey population declines are largely due to habitat degradation and fragmentation, pollution, and exploitation. Conservation priorities include: quantification of population trends and distribution; identification of Evolutionarily Significant Units; improved water quality and habitat; barrier removal or effective mitigation; ecologically-sensitive river flow management and hydropower planning; and mitigation of climate change impacts. There is urgent need for ecological and population demographics data for multiple species, particularly those in the Southern Hemisphere, Caspian Sea region, and Mexico. Irrigation and damming are already extensive, or rapidly expanding (e.g. Chile), while water-stressed regions (Mexico, California, Chile, Australia, Iberia) may be further impacted by climate change-induced flow alteration and increased temperatures. Barrier removal should benefit lampreys by increasing available habitat. However, fishways vary in effectiveness and are often inadequate, but present research opportunities encompassing ecohydraulics, biotelemetry and engineering. Environmental DNA permits rapid assessment of lamprey distribution within catchments, especially if improvements to distinguishing genetically similar groups are possible. Marine environments may play a critical role in population dynamics yet remain a black box in anadromous lamprey biology. Studying juvenile lamprey ecology is a substantial challenge but should be a priority. Some examples are monitoring of parasitic feeding-phase lamprey through trawl surveys and fisheries bycatch, telemetry of movements, or examining chemical tracers of marine habitat use. Knowledge transfer between the sea lamprey control programme and native-lamprey biologists worldwide remains crucial to developing effective lamprey management. (C) 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of International Association for Great Lakes Research. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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