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American Eel May Get Federal Protection

ELKCHSR

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American Eel May Get Federal Protection

By ADAM GORLICK, Associated Press Writer

HADLEY, Mass. - It is one of the creepier creatures on Earth — a squirming, snakelike fish bound for no real glory beyond its role in sushi or as bait dangling from a fisherman's hook. But it is largely for that reason — not despite it — that Tim Watts is taking a stand to protect the American eel, a species he says is in dangerous decline.

"The eel is one of those species that seems to fall through the cracks because it isn't so pretty," Watts said. "They don't have a voice. They don't have anyone to speak for them."


For now, the eels have Watts, a graveyard-shift janitor from Middleboro.


Along with his brother Doug — who lives in Augusta, Maine — Watts has filed a petition with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Marine Fisheries Service to get the American eel, the Western Hemisphere's only freshwater eel, protected as an endangered species.


The brothers grew up fishing Massachusetts rivers and streams, and for decades, Tim Watts pretty much took eels for granted. They were always easily available to catch and use as bait for striped bass. But a few years ago, he took his children fishing on the Weweantic River near his house and saw a gaggle of eels stuck at the bottom of a dam.


"For every one that gets over a dam, thousands aren't making it," Watts said. "And if they don't make it, they're not getting back to the Sargasso."


Eels spawn in just one place — the Sargasso Sea, an expanse of warm, algae-filled water in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. After hatching in those still waters east of Bermuda, they are carried by currents that deposit them at the mouths of rivers from South America to Greenland. They swim upstream into fresh water, making their way as far inland as Wisconsin.


When they mature, the eels swim back to the Sargasso Sea to spawn and end their lives. The entire journey can take seven to 30 years.


The Watts brothers researched everything they could find about the American eel on the Internet, and drafted their petition, which reads as both a history of man's interaction with the fish ("Humans have watched, caught and eaten American eel living in the waters of the United States since the last Ice Age.") and as an urgent plea for its protection ("The American eel is now in danger of extinction throughout its range in the United States of America.")


What they have come up with is not so far off the mark, experts say.


According to a 2000 report by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission, the amount of eel caught for bait dropped 76 percent between 1985 and 1995, to less than 50,000 pounds.


Most of the commercially caught American eels are sold to Asia, where they are predominantly used as sushi.


"It's definitely not a warm, fuzzy species that people might instantly get excited about," said Heather Bell, a U.S. Fish and Wildlife fisheries biologist in Hadley. "But there is a big economic interest in eels because the Asian markets don't have enough Asian eel to support their demand."


Although Watts, Chase and Bell suspect dams are interfering with the American eel's travel plans, the question of why their numbers are dropping is one they say has not been fully answered.


By Feb. 18, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will have reviewed the Watts brothers' petition to determine if there is enough evidence to warrant an investigation. If so, a nine-month study will be conducted so the agency can decide whether the American eel deserves protection.


In the meantime, Tim Watts said, "I don't eat them. I used to fish them and use them as bass bait, but I don't do that anymore. You have to ask yourself: Should I be concerned just about catching striped bass? Or should I be worrying about these other species living in the rivers?"
 
When I was a kid in the '50s one of my main sources of income was freshwater eels I'd sell for 10 cents apiece to the lady at the local bait shop. She'd rig them up and sell them to the striped bass fishermen.
 
Ithaca finally admits he exploted the resource for personal profit. Just think how many eels there would be today if you weren't such a greedy capitalist back then!
 
I wonder if they are actually good eatin?
I have only seen the ones that were about 4" long.
 
Yup, when I was eight or nine years old I was a big tycoon in the eel business. :D Once in awhile we'd catch an eel at our local fishin' hole for bluegills and bass. If we caught two in a day it was a big deal. Nobody would give us anything for a bluegill or a bass but ten cents for an eel was a lot of money, so there was a lot of celebrating when we hauled one in. They were usually about eight or ten inches long and about twice as thick as a pencil. The lady at the bait shop would sell them, rigged up for stripers, for 75 cents and could never get enough of them. We didn't feel like we were taken advantage of though, because she'd give us a good deal on fish hooks and bobbers. Besides, we were gonna go fishing anyway, so if we made any money at it that was a bonus. :D
 
Ithaca,

Ah the good old days as a young capitalist. My brothers and I used to raise mice and sell the offspring to the pet shop for 10 cents a piece. The shop owner said he'd give us 25 cents for the newborn pink babies, because he had a hard time getting them to feed the snakes. At first we had a delema sacraficing the mice for such a cause, but after a while the economics of it all kicked in and changed our thinking.
 
I dug worms for fire cracker money...
We got two bits a dozen in Darby from the local sporting goods shop.
 
Ahhhhhhh, another wormlord. Yep, caught nightcrawlers and housed them in 3 huge boxes. Each box about the size of a refrigerator layin down. Sold them for 25 cents a dozen. Would make about $125 a summer. Now that is a lot of worms.
 
That is really a lot of worms...
We would dig them out of the flower beds and even the smallest counted, the old man paid us for them.
We would end up with five or six bucks worth of worms, but when you could buy a hundred pack for a quarter, or two packs when the 4th was over. That is a lot of noise around the neighbor hood....
:D
 

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