
Secretary Gale Norton
United States Department of the Interior
1849 C Street, NW
Washington, D.C. 20240
Secretary Donald Evans
United States Department of Commerce
1401 Constitution Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20230
Mr. Steven A. Williams, Director
United States Fish and Wildlife Service
Dr. William T. Hogarth, Director
NOAA Fisheries
November 12, 2004
Dear Secretaries Norton and Evans
and Directors Williams and Hogarth,
Pursuant to the United States Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C. §§
1531-1544, petitioners Timothy Allan Watts of South Middleborough, Massachusetts
and Douglas Harold Watts of Augusta, Maine submit the following Petition
and Appendices to the Departments of Interior and Commerce to list the American
eel (Anguilla rostrata) as endangered under the U.S. Endangered Species
Act. This petition is filed under 5 U.S.C. § 553(3) and 50 C.F.R. part
424.14.
Sincerely,
Timothy Allan Watts
633 Wareham Street
South Middleborough, Massachusetts 02346
Douglas Harold Watts
Post Office Box 2473
Augusta, Maine 04338
Petition to List the American Eel as an Endangered Species
Pursuant to the United States Endangered Species Act
16 U.S.C. §§ 1531 - 1544.
PETITIONERS:
Timothy Allan Watts
633 Wareham Street
South Middleborough, MA 02346
Douglas Harold Watts
P.O. Box 2473
Augusta, ME 04338
Petitioners request the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS)
and the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) list the American eel (Anguilla
rostrata) as endangered under the United States Endangered Species Act,
16 U.S.C. §§ 1531 - 1544. This petition is filed under 5 U.S.C.
§ 553(e) and 50 C.F.R. part 424.14.
I. STATUS OF THE AMERICAN EEL
The American eel is in steep decline across its range in the United States
of America. This petition summarizes the natural history of the American
eel and their cultural use; population information on the American eel;
a description of existing threats to the American eel and their habitat.
Petitioners are seeking listing of the American eel as endangered under
the United States Endangered Species Act.
A. Life History of the American Eel
Morgan (1930) states:
"American eel are snake-like fishes which live in fresh water from
their early youth to breeding time and then migrate into salt water, never
to return again. The eels which come up the streams are the young ones of
another generation which have traveled the long and unknown way from the
sea.
"Full grown eels are about three feet long, plain colored, greenish
brown above and pale greenish gray beneath. Every inch of their bodies is
sinuous and flexible, well earning the phrase 'squirms like an eel.'
"During their freshwater sojourn eels usually live on the muddy bottoms
of streams or in stream fed ponds. Although they generally seek deep streams
they often work their way up brooks along the coast. It is a surprising
but not a unique experience to catch an eel on the hook which is meant for
a brook trout. Sometimes eels come out of the water and hide under muddy
stones in swampy ground a few feet from the shores and they have been seen
foraging on the sand along the stream sides. Eels eat almost any animals
dead or alive -- insect, fishes, frogs and water-rats -- as well as aquatic
plants.
"The life history of eels was not completely known until 1925 when
Schmidt published his studies of both American and European species. The
breeding place of American eels appears to be north of the West Indies,
west and south of the regions where European eels breed. Eels spawn in deep
waters and their eggs hatch into transparent floating larvae. American eels
keep their larval form for about a year during which they drift near the
surface. Then they are caught in the current of the Gulf Stream and carried
toward the American coasts. Only when they near the coastal waters, at a
depth of 3,000 feet or less, do they begin to take on the shape of adult
eels. Finally small eels but two or three inches long begin to come up the
rivers in great numbers. In Rhode Island young eels go up the Taunton River
through April and May; in some other rivers they appear later; in many of
them, thousands can be seen on the mud flats at river mouths when the tide
is out. Like lampreys they rest by day and travel by night, with unbroken
persistence working their way up toward the regions forsaken by their parents.
Only the females persevere to the headwaters; the males stay in the lower
parts of the stream. They live in these places for a number of years and
then another change comes over them. They cease eating, their skins turn
white and shimmering and they begin their long journey to the sea. These
are the 'silver eels' which are caught in traps, as they journey downstream,
resting by day and moving by night. Size -- three to four feet."
American eel are among the longest-living animals in North America and one
of longest-living fishes of North America. Female American eel in northern
latitudes reach ages of 20-50 years old before their sole spawning migration
to the Sargasso Sea. A record exists of an American eel living 88 years
in captivity (Gail Wippelhauser, Maine Department of Marine Resources, personal
communication to Douglas Watts, 1996).
The executive summary of the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission's
Interstate Fishery Management Plan for American Eel (2000) states:
"The American eel occupies and is exploited in fresh, brackish and
coastal waters along the Atlantic from the southern tip of Greenland to
northeastern South America. The species has a catadromous life cycle, reproducing
only in the Sargasso Sea and spending the majority of its life in freshwater.
After hatching and ocean drift, initially in the pre-larval state and then
in the leptocephalus phase, metamorphosis occurs. In most areas, glass eel
enter the nearshore area, although there have been reports of leptocephalus
found in freshwater. Glass eel, elvers, yellow and silver eel are found
in the marine environment during part of their life cycle. Elvers, yellow
eels and silver eel also make extensive use of freshwater systems."
The full text of the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission's Interstate
Fishery Management Plan for American Eel (2000) provides a detailed description
of what is currently known of the life history, habits and habitat requirements
of the American eel. This Plan is included with this petition as Appendix
A and its contents are incorporated into this petition by reference.
B. Use of American Eel by Humans
Humans have watched, caught and eaten American eel living in the waters
of United States of America since the last Ice Age.
In 1991, a prehistoric wooden-stake fish weir was discovered at the mouth
of Alder Stream on Sebasticook Lake in Newport, Maine. Radio-carbon dating
of the wooden stakes by archaeologists with the University of Maine at Farmington
revealed the sharpened wooden stakes of the fish weir range in age from
5,800 to 1,700 years old. The Sebasticook Lake fish weir is the oldest known
fish weir in North America (Bruce Bourque, Chief Archaeologist, Maine State
Museum, personal communication to Douglas Watts, October 2004).
The location of the Sebasticook Lake fish weir, at the mouth of Alder Stream,
suggests it was used to capture female American eels during their fall migration
to the Sebasticook River, the Kennebec River and the Atlantic Ocean. Since
the 18th century, a rapids at the end of a long deadwater on the Sebasticook
River in Burnham, Maine is called "Eel Weir Rips" due to long-term
use of the site to catch female American eels during their migration to
the Atlantic Ocean.
The downstream "V" orientation of a prehistoric stone fish weir
on the Satucket River in East Bridgewater, Massachusetts suggests it was
used by Native Americans to capture female American eels moving downstream
from Monponsett and Robbins Ponds during their fall migration to Narragansett
Bay and the Atlantic Ocean. Lithic artifacts found at the weir by archaeologists
with Bridgewater State College date the Satucket River stone fish weir to
2,500 B.P.
Dohne (2004) states of the Susquehanna River:
"Long before the rivers were dammed and polluted by the white man,
the American Indians were well-acquainted with the autumn migration of the
eel. Swatara, as in Swatara Twp. and Swatara Creek, is the anglicized word
for a Susquehannock Indian term meaning "where we eat eels." With
a caloric value six times that of any other freshwater fish, the eel was
a prized catch, tasting somewhat like chicken, though quite bony. It was
smoked for winter and "travel" rations. Weirs, or V-shaped rock
formations pointing downriver, were fashioned to funnel migrating adult
eels into basketlike traps. In some stretches of the lower Susquehanna,
remnants of weirs can be spotted during low-water
conditions."
Eckstorm (1938) states that Kenduskeag Stream, a tributary of the Penobscot
River entering tidal waters at Bangor, Maine receives its name as an "eel
spearing place" in the Penobscot Indian language. Eckstorm states the
name of tidal stream on the Kennebec River in Pittston, Maine -- Nehumkeag
Brook -- has a similar derivation and meaning.
ASMFC (2000) states: "Since the early 17th century, Native Americans
have harvested eel for food and cultural sustenance. Today, commercial and
recreational fisheries for American eel are seasonal, but remain economically
important by providing both direct and indirect employment ... Since the
fishery's peak in the mid 1970s at 3.5 million pounds, commercial landings
have declined significantly to a near record low of 868,215 pounds in 2001.
Recreational data concerning eel harvest appears to indicate a decline in
abundance. According to the NMFS Marine Recreational Fisheries Statistics
Survey, recreational harvest in 2001 was 10,805 eel, a significant decrease
from the peak of 106,968 eel in 1982."
ASMFC (2000) further states: "Harvest pressure and habitat loss are
listed as the primary causes of any possible historic and recent decline
in abundance of American eel (Castonguay et al. 1994a and 1994b). Several
factors contribute to the risk that heavy harvest may adversely affect eel
populations: (1) American eel mature slowly, requiring 7 to 30+ years to
attain sexual maturity; (2) glass eel aggregate seasonally to migrate; (3)
yellow eel harvest is cumulative stress, over multiple years, on the same
year class; and (4) all eel mortality is pre-spawning mortality."
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