"The local Value Village store found a live lamprey in
their parking lot," ADF&G reported on its Facebook page. "Another
resident called and said he found one on his lawn!"
It was surely a scary surprise. Looking more like eels or
snakes than regular fish, lampreys don't have scales or fins and can grow to 15
inches long. Instead of jaws, an adult lamprey has a disk-like mouth filled
with small, sharp teeth.
Adults clamp their mouths onto other fish, then use their
teeth and tongues to rasp through its scales and skin to feed on its blood and
fluids. The lamprey releases and drops off after the meal. Some fish die from
the attacks, but in many cases they survive, according to the Fish and Game
department.
"Commercial and subsistence fishers throughout Alaska
are quite familiar with the tell-tale, dime-sized circular scars on salmon and
trout that have been fed upon by lampreys." Reportedly, lampreys are a tasty
catch in their own right.
Needless to say, the fish is not usually found on land. In
fact, most people have never seen the elusive fish up close. Lampreys are born
in fresh water, then move to the ocean as adults. They return to their rivers
of birth to spawn, including the Chena River, which runs along the south side
of Fairbanks.
Wildlife officials believe sea gulls are picking up the
squirmy fish there, only to drop them later in surprising and unlikely places.
So far, four lamprey have been found on land.
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