B2 SPORTS East Oregonian Lamprey: Continued from Page B1 mothlike caddisfl ies from the water’s surface. The honey-sweet odor of wispy cottonwood bloom fl oods the air. Water cascad- ing from upstream rapids masks the sound of nearby freeway traffi c. I stand still as a post where a patch of loose gravel has collected atop ancient lava fl ow and watch a pair of Pacifi c lamprey wriggle in gentle current. Named the “night eel” because of their noctur- nal behavior and serpen- tine shape, lamprey lack the backbone of true eels that spawn in the Sargasso Sea. Without paired fi ns to maneuver and an air blad- der to stay buoyant, they are more challenged than a ’49 Ford on a Los Angeles freeway. What lamprey do possess, though, is the abil- ity to navigate rock-faced falls using their sucking mouth to grab hold and fl ex- ible tail to corkscrew up and over. Adult lampreys migrate from the Pacifi c Ocean from May to September and “hold over” in mainstem reservoirs of the Columbia and Snake Rivers before spawning the following year. Their appearance in Blue Mountain streams coincides with the spring migration of chinook salmon, welcome bloom of arrowleaf balsamroot and the joyful song of meadow- lark. Both sexes of Pacifi c lamprey build a nest in sandy gravel via body vibrations and by moving small rocks with their mouth. After eggs hatch, Major Lee Moorhouse/Contributed Photo, File Billy Barnhart’s camp on a bluff above the lower Umatilla River, around 1903, showing “eels” drying on wooden poles. the larvae or ammoco- ete burrow into the river bottom to feed on micro- scopic algae for 5 to 7 years. cover of spring freshets. Only after they transform to the young adult stage do they attach to other fi sh and the spent carcasses of sea-going lamprey contrib- ute ocean-derived nutrients to tributary streams. “LAMPREYS THE SIZE OF A SMALL GARTER SNAKE EMERGE FROM THEIR BURROW AND BEGIN A LENGTHY, DANGER-FRAUGHT JOURNEY TO THE PACIFIC OCEAN UNDER THE COVER OF SPRING FRESHETS.” During this time, the juve- nile form has an oral hood, lack teeth and eyes are underdeveloped. Lampreys the size of a small garter snake emerge from their burrow and begin a lengthy, danger- fraught journey to the Pacifi c Ocean under the suck body fl uid and blood for nourishment. Adult Pacifi c lamprey have no value to sport anglers (except for use as sturgeon bait). However, they are part of the food web for sea lion, white stur- geon and fi sh-eating birds. Similar to Pacifi c salmon, diet and dedication to your craft can eat up a lot of your time. Continued from Page B1 Vassey has been wres- tling since the eighth grade. could make wrestling a real When he got to high school, deal after high school. He he realized he needed to could wrestle with anyone. work on his strength, and He was phenomenal for us has spent a good amount of from Rollie Lane on.” time in the weight room, in Vassey’s third-place addition to time on the mat. “I have to work out finish at state helped the Bulldogs secure second several hours a day to place in the team stand- manage my strength,” the ings. He fi nished the 6-foot-2, 215-pound season with a 33-8 Va s s e y said. record. “Usually there are “When I went a variety of huge there, I was expect- guys, and when you ing something not as are in the middle, P I H t u o b a g n i k l a t y B . you n o i t have a c i d to e m f o up p l e h big as it was,” V Vassey make said of the state tour- that diff erence with nament. “The oppo- Vassey strength.” nents I went up Vassey typically against were tougher than wrestled 5 pounds under- I thought they would be. I weight during the season. thought it was an honor to With fellow senior Sam work my way up and get Cadenas moving from 220 there. I was pretty upset to 285, it allowed Vassey to about losing that one match, slide into the 220 slot. “I couldn’t have gone but it was motivation to win the consolation bracket. You to 285, so my only option have to go against guys more would have been to go motivated than you. I made down,” he said. “Being it to the top three, that was at 220 is better than 195. pretty awesome.” Instead of cutting weight, Larson said Vassey really I was able to maintain my excelled his senior year. weight and that made it “He did ever y thing easier to wrestle. Sam is my he had to do to be a state No. 1 training partner. We placer,” Larson said. “Top spar and make each other three gets eyeballs looking better.” at you.” Vassey’s time in the Vassey plans on major- weight room has benefi tted ing in nursing at EOU. It’s a him greatly, according to profession that is important Larson. to him. “Our weight training “My mom (Tiffany program has been pretty Hodge) is a nursing instruc- consistent for a few years,” tor at Good Shepherd,” he Larson said. “Emilee Strot said. “She works hard and and David Faaeteete have is my inspiration. She’s my really pushed it. Our weight No. 1 supporter. She has training program is a result always been there for me.” of all these kids signing and opportunities. It’s It’s a grind every day having phenomenal. It’s making Wrestling is not for the women and men in our faint of heart. Workouts, school much better athletes.” Coincident with hydro- electric dam development in the Columbia River, numbers of adult lampreys migrating over Bonneville Dam declined from 350,000 in the 1960s to 22,000 in 1997. A similar pattern of decline was observed in the Snake River after comple- Saturday, June 4, 2022 tion of the Hells Canyon complex and the four lower Snake River dams in the 1960s. Loss of criti- cal tributary habitat from poor irrigation practices, deforestation, grazing and treatment with rotenone to poison “trash fi sh” added to the toll. That juvenile lamprey are poor swimmers and have a bottom-dwelling lifestyle make them particu- larly vulnerable to intro- duced bass, walleye and channel catfi sh. Regional Indian tribes and the U.S. Fish and Wild- life Service lead conserva- tion eff orts to restore runs of Pacifi c lamprey popula- tions. Lampreys dried in the sun or roasted over wood coals are considered a deli- cacy by tribal elders. Trans- location, or placing adult lamprey in Columbia Basin streams where populations were formerly present, has produced promising results in several streams, includ- ing the Umatilla, Yakima, Methow, Wenatchee and Clearwater rivers. In some cases, numbers of returning fi sh have been large enough to support a modest subsis- tence fi shery for tribal members. The anthropologist Eugene Hunn wrote how Sahaptin-speaking peoples from the mid-Columbia intercepted a spawning run of “eels” during a 19th century spring root-gather- ing excursion up the John Day River. At large falls such as Celilo and Kettle, migrating lampreys were collected off rocks where they attached to rest. A tradition of tribal harvest continues today at Oregon’s Willamette Falls. The Wanapum Tribe tells of an important fi shery near Pasco, Washington, a loca- tion referred to as Kosith or “at the point of land.” Adult lamprey congregated there, perhaps confused by fl ow from three adjacent rivers, and were caught at night from canoes by Indian fi sh- ers who used dip nets made of hemp. The fl ooded back- water of McNary Dam put a stop to that practice. The Snake River near Asotin, Washington, was another traditional harvest location for Indian fi sh- ers. An 1892 report of the United States Fish Commission described the occurrence of this revered “three-toothed” lamprey as far upriver as Lower Salmon Falls. Nez Perce elders still share stories of catching “eels” as young children in the Clearwater River. Dark clouds loom over- head. Behind me, on a shoreline lined with brush willow, a redwing black- bird struggles to balance on a branch that sways with each gust of wind. A thun- derstorm is in the works. Three lamprey as long as my arm swim into the shal- low riffl e at my feet and join the party. One male grasps a female with his sucking mouth. Their bodies twist and intertwine. Eggs and milt mix their life energy with the river. The ancient night eel has survived against all odds for thousands of years. Bearing witness to their return assures the circle of life is not broken. ——— Dennis Dauble is a retired fishery scientist, outdoor writer, presenter and educator who lives in Richland, Washington. For more stories about fi sh and fi shing in area waters, see DennisDaubleBooks.com. Vassey: VISIT US ON THE WEB AT: www.EastOregonian.com LeeAnnOttosen@UmpquaBank.com UmpquaBank.com/Lee-Ann-Ottosen People with HIV are our neighbors. More than half of Oregonians with HIV live outside Portland, often in suburbs or small towns like this one. But with today’s advances, HIV isn’t what it used to be. 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