Least brook lamprey

Least brook lamprey
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Agnatha
Order: Petromyzontiformes
Family: Petromyzontidae
Genus: Lampetra
Species: L. aepyptera
Binomial name
Lampetra aepyptera
(C. C. Abbott, 1860)

The least brook lamprey (Lampetra aepyptera) is a common, non-parasitic lamprey distributed in the Mississippi River watershed, and a limited range along the Atlantic coast.

Description

As with all lamprey species, the least brook lamprey spends the majority of its life as a worm-like ammocoete. The ammocoete (5 mm-20 cm) is clear with a pigmented head when small (<5 cm), but becomes a dark/golden brown as it matures. Ammocoetes have pigmented eye spots located in the head that can detect light and dark. After metamorphosis from the ammocoete into the juvenile stage, the lamprey becomes a golden color with yellow-tinged fins. Teeth (often used to identify lamprey to species) develop on the oral disk, and the eyes develop from the eye spots at metamorphosis. least brook lampreys do not have a juvenile period (see lifecycle), and maturation continues directly into the adult, at which point the body swells as the gonads are developed. They are likely physically distinct depending on the locality where they are captured, therefore this physical description is an only a general description. Tooth arrangements do not vary as much and should be used in adults to identify this species positively.

Lifecycle

Juveniles lack eyes

Adults spawn in the spring in the headwaters of streams. The males (aided by females) construct small nests by picking up pebbles with their oral disks and moving them to form the rims of shallow depressions. The sticky eggs are deposited in the nest and adhere to the sand and gravel. Multiple adults may spawn in the same nest, and multiple males may spawn with the same female. As with all lamprey species, adults die after spawning.

When they first hatch, embryos remain in the nest for up to one month before they mature into ammocoetes. Ammocoetes leave the nest and seek out slow-flowing water in sandy areas, where they burrow and begin feeding. Ammocoetes live burrowed for 3–7 yr, feeding on microscopic plant and animal life and detritus (decaying matter). Mature ammocoetes will begin metamorphosis in the late summer through the fall in preparation for spawning the following year. Metamorphosing and adult brook lampreys cannot eat, since they have nonfunctional intestines, and only live for four to six months.

References

http://www.naturalheritage.state.pa.us/factsheets/11250.pdf

http://www.dnr.state.oh.us/dnap/rivfish/leastbrook/tabid/1706/Default.aspx

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lampetra aepyptera.

"Lampetra aepyptera". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 23 September 2010.