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American eel not threatened or endangered
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service today announced the completion of an extensive status review of the American eel, concluding that protecting the eel as an endangered or threatened species under the Endangered Species Act is not warranted.
In completing the review, the Service examined all available information about the American eel population from Greenland south along the North American coast to Brazil in South America and as far inland as the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River drainage. While the eel population has declined in some areas, the species' overall population is not in danger of extinction or likely to become so in the foreseeable future, the Service decided. "The eel population as a whole shows significant resiliency. If we look at eels over time, we see fluctuations in the population numbers, so a decreasing number of eels right now does not necessarily forecast an irreversible trend," according to Heather Bell, Service fishery biologist. "Overfishing and hydropower turbines continue to impact eels in some regions, such as Lake Ontario and Chesapeake Bay, although these factors do not fully explain the reduced number of eels migrating up the St. Lawrence Seaway and into Lake Ontario," Bell said. Several actions have been taken in an effort to conserve eel populations including installation of eel ladders for upstream passage at hydropower projects, implementation of state harvest restrictions, and dam removals that open historic eel habitat. In addition, Canadian resource agencies have closed the harvest of eels in the Canadian portion of Lake Ontario. The Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada is considering designating the American eel a "species of special concern." During the next few months, the Service will prepare suggestions for managing to allow for eel fishery sustainability while ensuring adequate conservation measures for the species. The Service initiated the status review in 2004 at the request of the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission, representing 15 states from Maine to Florida. Following that request, Douglas Harold Watts of Augusta, Maine, and Timothy Allan Watts of South Middleborough, Mass., requested by petition that Endangered Species Act protection be extended to the eel. The Service determined in 2005 that substantial biological information existed to warrant a more thorough examination and began a comprehensive review of all the available scientific and commercial information. The Service hosted two workshops to discuss threats and vulnerabilities with eel experts from federal and state agencies, nonprofit organizations, private industry, Native American tribes, academia, the ASMFC, the Great Lakes Fishery Commission, Canada, England and Japan. American eels begin life in the Atlantic Ocean's Sargasso Sea near Bermuda. The larvae ride the Gulf Stream for several months until they make their way to Continental Shelf waters. Some eels grow to adulthood in the marine environment; some go into freshwater/saltwater estuaries; some migrate up rivers and streams; and some eels move from one habitat to another as they develop. Biologists believe this adaptability among various environments enhances the species' ability to survive despite threats in one or more environments. Eels in the marine environment grow faster and mature earlier than those in freshwater. Eels in large freshwater systems may grow slowly for as long as 40 years, becoming much larger than eels in salt water before beginning their downstream migration en route to the Sargasso Sea where they spawn. The "Federal Register" notice with the status review on American eels will be published Feb. 2. See http://www.archives.gov/federal-register/index.html For additional information about American eels, see http://www.fws.gov/northeast/ameel |
The Gulf Stream, the Blue God, the Great North American gyre. Hats off. Below 5000 meters, underneath the Gulf Stream, the current actually flows south. This is how the North Atlantic ocean drains back down to the equator. I think the eels ride this undercurrent down into the sargasso and then the fry catch a ride in the warm Gulf Stream on their way north--But how do they know when to get off?
Hands down the single most incredible life history of an animal on the planet. Pass the 4/0 please. Good reading, Chef. |
awesome!
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I was just out on the Tobin Bridge getting ready to jump when a friend called me with the news of this post.Sounds like my lack of fishing skill will be compensated for indefinitely.:happy:
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Just beat me to it! Anyway, now I get to brag that my prediction was correct :)
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Seriously though, its good to have scientific data for stuff like this to debunk the "sky is falling" crowd. I honestly had no idea what the outcome would be, but hoped for a good explanation either way that was backed by good science and research.
People try to sell you uninformed,subjective b.s. with regard to the bass populations too, and it bothers me. If you look at the scientific data sometimes before opining, you'll see there's plenty of them too.:uhuh: |
This is great news for all us less skilled fisherman.
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I hope #^^^^^^& doesn't read your comments about how eels are for less skilled fisherman... let's not get that started again.
Either way, this is great news and supports my plan of doing a lot of eel fishing this coming season. |
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good thing you have friends and a cell . I wish I did ! Im on my way to the roof now . |
I think George Calin said it best,
"Save the whales...save those snails!" |
all I can say is thank you!cuase I love eels.:claps:
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:cheers: :cheers: :cheers: :cheers:
Told Ya so........Sorry, there shall be many more eel caught bass in the future:laugha: :laugha: :laugha: This is great news for all fisherman.....And its what I knew all along from Reliable sources.....I love it! |
this is going to destroy the fishing in narragansett-
just kidding. Im glad the eels are doin alright :D |
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This could be good news.
However, as part of the sky is falling group :doh: :poke: ... I will add that, as of last spring there was not enough data for a decision to be made. If you go find the literature on it, it was repeated again and again that there isn't enough data. For anyone who knows the way it works, from july to february is not enough time to collect data, analyze it, have it reviewed, meet about it, etc. Hopefully the science behind this decision is sound, it just doesn't make sense that it would come now from everything I have heard and read from procedings, including word of mouth from people who sit in on them. Endangered/threatend status is a drastic qualification and very difficult to get for many reasons. Again, this sounds good... |
Some interesting quotes from the minutes of the meting. I haven't gotten all the way through it yet, but wanted to share some of what I found so far on the relationship btw. eels and freshwater.
From the American Eel Status Review Workshop 1: Atlantic Coast/Islands Threats U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Cooperation with National Marine Fisheries Service National Conservation Training Center Shepherdstown, West Virginia November 29 – December 1, 2005 "Rob indicated the US Endangered Species Act (ESA) seems to be driven by extinction. He asked if the question was, if we loose the freshwater habitat, will the American eel go extinct? Heather stated that was really the question, but the lawyer won’t let us ask the question. She said what she can ask, is whether the freshwater habitats are important for sustainability?" "Steve Gephard noted that some of the discussion reflects researchers that want to quantify and define very precisely. For the big picture, he thought that this missed the point. He noted the animal forces itself upstream into freshwater habitat, and in Connecticut, it is the most widespread and abundant animal present in such habitats. It seemed arrogant to him to even question the importance of this habitat to them. It would be similar to him to questioning the value of tropical habitat for scarlet tanagers wintering, for example. If we question the value of freshwater habitat, we’re questioning the catadromous nature of the species." "John Casselman noted that at one time, eels were half the inshore biomass in the Great Lakes, and they aren’t today. He viewed the freshwater habitat as really critical." "Alastair noted that it was clear that freshwater was important to eel life history, and clearly was threatened." "John Casselman noted that there were advantageous factors in freshwater. He critically important. The eels would survive, but not at a productive level." "Heather noted that “sustainable” here didn’t relate to fishery use. She noted that she didn’t add enough eels to provide for fishery use, in a Status Review, only those necessary to sustain the population viability and keep it from going extinct." "Heather noted that a decline is not a reason for listing. The issue is whether it will remain on the planet at a level which is sustainable for the population. But, it can’t be on some downward trend that will continue. That would mean we list it as threatened. Paul noted we don’t know what the true trend is at all. " |
I guess nows a good time to dump my sluggo stock...
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Key point is they aren't addressing the use of eels commercially or trapping for rec.fishing. It may not be too far down the road that we can't use em for fishing. Any bait shop people know where most of the eels are coming from in the shops? I thought a good percent came fromCanada, but I could be wrong... |
The identity of Heather, as indicated above...
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The scientists started to write poems in the middle of their meeting...
More eels
Eels in the ocean Eels in the stream Eels in the turbines, I could just scream! More eels for sushi More eels for bass This eel decline Is quite a morass! We all want more eels Don’t know who’s the worst But more eels for elvers Have got to come first! -Paul Angermeier |
Yes, a large part of the eels we use around here come from Canada, but that's not true up and down the coast. Most of the eels used in NY come from NY, most of the eels used further south come from the Chesapeak.
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think prices will come down a bit?
i was hoping this would be the case... i hadnt done any eel fishing until last year.... I will be doing more this year :) |
Finished reading the minutes from the first workshop and thought I would post some clips from the conversation of the scientists trying to make the decision on the eels- pretty interesting reading, hope these are of interest in broadening the discussion. Seems like there could be some room for anglers to get together to promote measures to improve conditions for eels- such as pushing for ladders so that they can get around dams and turbines- turbine mortality and barriers to previous freshwater habitats is one factor that comes up over and over again.
Also noteworthy was that they didn't feel that use of eels as bait was much of a factor at all in the perceived decline in the overall eel population. Right, just putting it out there for the record... Quote:
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I was going into winter mode for a while now I am excited again bring on the cows!!!!! |
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