NIWA Media Release - Summer Series- Lamprey – the vampire of the sea
Lamprey - the vampire of the sea. A shy, slimy, ancient fish, that looks like an eel but isn’t. It has a circular sucker
for a mouth, and feeds by rasping a hole in its victim’s fishy-flesh. It starts life in freshwater, spends most of its
life at sea, but returns to freshwater to breed. It can be found all around New Zealand, in southern Australia, and
South America.
“Lampreys are very widespread and more common than people realise. It’s just that they are very secretive and seldom
seen,” says NIWA Principal Scientist Dr Don Jellyman.
Adult lampreys have large eyes, one nostril on top of the head, and gill pores on each side of their head for
breathing. They range in size from 45–75 centimetres.
They are characterised by a large, toothed, funnel-like, sucking mouth. They feed on prey as adults by attaching their
mouthparts to the animal's body. They don’t have a jaw, so they use an oral sucking disk, or tongue; they bore into the
flesh of their prey to suck their blood and body fluids.
They are excellent climbers, and they use the suckers to climb. Surprisingly, they can climb at least 20 metres up over
waterfalls.
This fish lives in both rivers and streams, and the sea. The native lamprey can also travel long distances in the open
ocean.
A few things distinguish them from eels: the sucker disk for a mouth, and the seven gill pores behind the head. Male
adult lampreys also develop a large pouch just behind their mouths.
Lampreys migrate into rivers in late winter and spring. When they journey from the sea, lampreys are bright silver with
two–blue racing stripes along the length of their body, but soon change to a drab dark grey colour in freshwater.
Lampreys stay in freshwater for about 18 months, from the time they arrive to when they spawn. The adults do not feed
while in freshwater. Scientists think that juvenile lampreys spend up to four years in freshwater, before migrating to
the sea.
The juveniles are a muddy brown colour, and look like small eels. However, they are different from eels by having seven
gill openings and no eyes. As they approach migration, juvenile lampreys develop eyes, and change to a bright silver
with two–blue racing stripes on them, just like the adults, but are miniature versions, at 100 mm long.
Relatively little is known about the biology of our indigenous lamprey species, Geotria australis, even though they
comprise an important traditional fishery for Māori communities.
Although adult lampreys spend an extended period of time in freshwater during their upstream migration to spawning
grounds, they are rarely seen. “They probably burrow into streambeds,” says Dr Jellyman, “and they hang out in debris
areas under logs”.
NIWA fisheries scientists are currently evaluating whether ‘pheromones’ (a chemical compound), can be used to identify
lamprey populations and spawning streams, and the ability of pheromones to attract lamprey to areas with depleted
populations.
About Dr Don Jellyman:
NIWA Principal Scientist Dr Don Jellyman has been studying lamprey for ten years and eels for upwards of forty years.
Currently he is looking at improving methods for assessing shortfin eel populations in lowland lakes in New Zealand. Dr
Jellyman is also involved in studying the behaviour of migrating eels in Lake Manapouri, with a view to maximising their
opportunity to escape to sea.
To illustrate this story:
Download photos from http://ftpmedia.niwa.co.nz/summer_series/Lamprey/
Common names: Lamprey
Māori name: Piharau (North Island) , kanakana (South Island)
Scientific name: Geotria australis
Type: Fish
Family: Geotriidae
Size: 45–75 cm
Lifespan: 4 years in freshwater: could be up to 10 years.
Diet: Blood and host’s juices
Reproduction: The young are born in rivers, live in coastal ocean as adults, and return to the rivers to breed.
Things you need to know: They are a very ancient fish that surprisingly don’t have any bones
Something strange: The sucker-like mouth