Page 6 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon December 6, 2017 Tourney entry by Friday The Fifty-Fourth Annual Warm Springs All-Indian Holi- day Men’s Basketball Tourna- ment is coming up Wednesday through Saturday, December 27-30 at the Community Cen- ter gym. The deadline to enter is this Friday, December 8. For in- formation contact Austin Greene, tournament director, at 541-553-3243. Or email: austin.greene@wstribes.org Awards for this tourney in- clude first-place Pendleton jack- ets; second-place solid wool jackets; third-place jackets; fourth-place hoodies; and fifth- place crew neck sweaters. Plus the MVP, Mr. Hustle and All tourney awards. Coming up in youth sports Jayson Smith photos/Spilyay The White Buffalo boys varsity basketball team plays in Madras Invitational tournament this Friday and Saturday, Dec. 8-9. Games are at 7 p.m. The team opened their season on Tuesday of this week away at Scappoose. War m Springs Academy boys basketball is at Sisters this Thursday, December 7. Both sev- enth- and eighth-grade games start at 3:30 p.m. Madras High School wrestlers have a meet at Culver High School on Friday, December 8. War m Springs Academy boys basketball hosts Elton Gre- gory on Monday, December 11. Seventh-grade is at 4 and the eighth- grade at 5. In Madras High School sports: Boys and girls, freshman and JV basketball teams play at La Pine High School on Monday evening, December 11. The 2017-18 Madras White Buffalos girls varsity basketball team was at Kah-Nee-Ta recently. Here are Alesha Freeman, Vanessa Culps, Jayden Davis, Jiana Smith Francis, Monika Stacona, Chloe Smith, Jackie Zamora Heath, Kaliyah Iverson, Jalaney Suppah, Lynden Harry, Ellise David, Annalise Whipple (from back). The team got off to a 2-0 start this season. Their next home game is Dec. 17. CRITFC launches lamprey project The Columbia River Inter- Tribal Fish Commission is explor- ing the historical range and abun- dance of Pacific lamprey through- out the Columbia River basin. The project will compile histori- cal photographs, written accounts, newspaper articles, and other his- torical documents that show or reference Pacific lamprey in Or- egon, Washington, Idaho and Brit- ish Columbia. The hope is that this informa- tion will allow scientists to recon- struct the range and abundance of the species in the interior Co- lumbia basin. For the project to succeed, CRITFC is asking the public to dive deep into their family photo albums for pictures of lamprey, also called eels, and share them with CRITFC. Anyone wanting to participate can send CRITFC an electronic copy of photos or documents to the project’s website or email ad- dress. Or send a physical copy to CRITFC via mail. If there is any additional infor- mation about the photo—for ex- ample the location, date, photog- rapher, where the original is stored, whether the information is consid- ered sensitive, or any other relevant information— send it along too. This provides valuable context that can help increase our understand- ing of this little studied fish. The website is: http://bit.ly/lamprey-photos Email address: lamprey@critfc.org Mailing address: 700 NE Multnomah St., suite 1200, Port- land, OR 97232 Phone number 503-238-0667. Shrinking population Pacific lamprey are one of the oldest creatures in the Columbia River basin. Like salmon, they are anadromous, spending time in the ocean and returning to spawn in freshwater tributaries. Unfortunately, Pacific lamprey numbers have seen a severe de- cline throughout the Columbia ba- sin. “The Creator told the people that the eels would always return as long as the people took care of them,” said Tribal Councilman Ron Suppah said. “But if the people failed to care of them, they would disappear.” The development of the Co- lumbia River hydropower system posed a significant challenge to the potentially millions of adult Pacific Lamprey that migrated up the Co- lumbia, Snake, and Willamette riv- ers to spawn. This challenge was further com- plicated by intermittent, inaccurate, or non-existent adult lamprey counts-creating a large knowledge gap for the region. To help fill in this gap, CRITFC is hoping that this project will allow scientists to reconstruct the range and abundance of the species in the interior Columbia basin. Courtesy CRITFC Decades ago, lamprey at the base of Willamette Falls. Photo from the Oregon Historical Society. Jayson Smith/Spilyay Warm Springs Academy eighth-grader Jyden Beck drives past a much taller (6’3”) Jefferson County Middle School player, as the Eagles went on to win 50-39. The Madras Aquatic Center Recreation District will have 30 and over, and 18-29 adult basketball leagues from January 14-March 11. The registra- tion deadline is January 5. See macrecdistrict.com