lamprey
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- Frontiers - Lampreys and spinal cord regeneration: “a very special claim on the interest of zoologists,” 1830s-present
- The Canadian Encyclopedia - Lamprey
- Department of Conservation - Lamprey
- Canadian Museum of Nature - Lampreys
- A-Z Animals - Lamprey Fish
- University of California, Berkeley: Museum of Paleontology - Lampreys
- New Hampshire Public Television - Wildlife Journal Junior - Agnatha
- Indiana State Government - Indiana Division of Fish and Wildlife’s Animal Information Series - Lampreys
- National Center for Biotechnology Information - PubMed Central - Lamprey: a model for vertebrate evolutionary research
- National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research - Lamprey
- Related Topics:
- fish
- sea lamprey
- brook lamprey
lamprey, any of about 43 species of primitive fishlike jawless vertebrates placed with hagfishes in the class Agnatha. Lampreys belong to the family Petromyzonidae. They live in coastal and fresh waters and are found in temperate regions around the world, except Africa. The eel-like, scaleless animals range from about 15 to 100 cm (6 to 40 inches) long. They have well-developed eyes, one or two dorsal fins, a tail fin, a single nostril on top of the head, and seven gill openings on each side of the body. Like the hagfishes, they lack bones, jaws, and paired fins. The skeleton of a lamprey consists of cartilage; the mouth is a round sucking aperture provided with horny teeth.
Lampreys begin life as burrowing freshwater larvae (ammocoetes). At this stage, they are toothless, have rudimentary eyes, and feed on microorganisms. After several years, they transform into adults and typically move into the sea to begin a parasitic life, attaching to a fish by their mouths and feeding on the blood and tissues of the host. To reproduce, lampreys return to freshwater, build a nest, then spawn (lay their eggs) and die.
Not all lampreys spend time in the sea. Some are landlocked and remain in fresh water. A notable example is a landlocked race of the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus). This form entered the Great Lakes of North America and, because of its parasitic habits, had a disastrous killing influence on lake trout and other commercially valuable fishes before control measures were devised. Other lampreys, such as the brook lamprey (Lampetra planeri), also spend their entire lives in fresh water. They are nonparasitic, however, and do not feed after becoming adults; instead, they reproduce and die.
Lampreys have long been used to some extent as food. They are, however, of no great economic value.