Researcher Nick Johnson, 27, of Rogers City said in cold water, he is lucky to catch one lamprey, but when the river temperature warms into the 60s, the traps might hold as many as 500. BY TINA LAM As the sun begins to sink along the Little Manistee River in northern Michigan, researcher Nick Johnson is excited and a little nervous. There’s a lot riding on what he’s about to do. It’s spawning season for the sea lamprey, a prehistoric creature that invaded the Great Lakes 80 years ago, and Johnson is injecting a love potion into the river to lure female sea lampreys into traps. The eel-like lampreys are one of the Great Lakes’ most destructive invasive species, devouring native fish by sucking out their innards. They invaded the lakes in the 1920s, wiping out lake trout in some lakes by the 1950s. A chemical developed to kill lampreys has helped lower their numbers to about half a million in the lakes, but it is expensive and there still are too many lampreys. …

Lampreys are sucking the life out of Michigan’s waterways

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