The approximately 40 species of eel-like fishes that comprise the family Petromyzontidae lack the jaws, scales, paired fins, and bone that are present in most of the vertebrates we know as "fishes". This is one of the two extant groups of jawless vertebrates (the other being the hagfishes, Myxini) (Janvier 2010 and references therein). Nearly all species are found outside the tropics in the northern hemisphere, but a few are in the southern hemisphere.
Most lampreys excavate pits in stream riffles (more rarely in wave-swept areas of lakes) to be used as spawning sites by moving stones with their suction-disc mouths and fanning out fine particles with body vibrations. Eggs hatch into blind larvae known as ammocoetes. Lampreys may live for 3 to 8 years (or even longer) as larvae, filtering microorganisms from the water in mud- or sand-bottomed pools, before metamorphosing into the radically different adult form. Adults of some parasitic species are anadramous, migrating to the ocean to feed, but returning to freshwater to spawn. Some other parasitic species are restricted to freshwater. Around half of the lamprey species are non-parasitic, feeding only as larvae and spawning the spring following metamorphosis. Parasitic lampreys typically feed by attaching to a large fish and rasping a hole in its side (ome species feed predominantly on the blood of their hosts, whereas others ingest mainly flesh, and yet others feed on a combination of blood and flesh).
Adult lampreys have a skeleton made of cartilage rather than bone and an oral disc with rasping teeth on the tongue. The type and arrangement of teeth are important characters in distinguishing adult lampreys of different species (distinguishing ammocoetes of different species is often more difficult).
(Potter and Hilliard 1987, as cited in Gill et al. 2003; Page and Burr 2011)
Most lamprey genera include some closely related forms (sometimes treated as distinct species) with differing life history traits (e.g, parasitic and anadramous versus nonparasitic and freshwater resident, with the nonparasitic forms often reproducing at an earlier age and not feeding or growing after metamorphosis) (Espanhol et al. 2007)
According to Renaud (1997), among the 34 nominal lamprey species in the Northern Hemisphere, ten are endangered; nine are vulnerable at least in part of their range, and one is extinct. The major cause is habitat degradation through pollution and stream regulation.
www.fao.org/docrep/015/i2335e/i2335e00.htmRenaud (2011) provides identification keys and reviews the biology of all 39 species that he recognizes.
- Espanhol, R., P.R. Almeida, and M.J. Alves. 2007. Evolutionary history of lamprey paired species Lampetra fluviatilis (L.) and Lampetra planeri (Bloch) as inferred from mitochondrial DNA variation. Molecular Ecology 16:1909-1924.
- Page, L.M. and B.M. Burr 2011. Peterson Field Guide to Freshwater Fishes, 2nd edition. Houghton Mifflin, New York.
- Janvier, P. 2010. microRNAs revive old views about jawless vertebrate divergence and evolution. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (U.S.A.) 107(45): 19137-19138.
- Potter, I.C. and R.W. Hilliard.1987. A proposal for the functional and phylogenetic significance of differences in the dentition of lampreys (Agnatha: Petromyzontiformes).
- Journal of Zoology 212: 713-737.
- Renaud, C.B. Lampreys of the world. An annotated and illustrated catalogue of lamprey species known to date. FAO Species Catalogue for Fishery Purposes. No. 5. Rome, FAO. 2011. 109 pp.
- Accessible from: http://www.fao.org/docrep/015/i2335e/i2335e00.htm
- Gill, H.S., C.B. Renaud, F. Chapleau, R.L. Mayden, and I.C. Potter. 2003. Phylogeny of Living Parasitic Lampreys (Petromyzontiformes) Based on Morphological Data. Copeia 2003(4): 687-703.
