Anguilla anguilla (Linnaeus, 1758)
Family:
The only eel found in fresh water, this species is still of commercial importance to Northern Ireland despite major international decline.
In brief
Species description
An elongated fish, growing to 0.5 metres (males) and 1 metre (females) in Irish waters. Un-mistakable in fresh water, it can be distinguished from juvenile lamprey, conger or moray eel by its protruding lower jaw, small blunt teeth, rounded pectoral fins, a long single dorsal fin starting closer to the vent than the gill openings, and minute scales embedded in the skin.
The European eel is of commercial importance as a high value food species, being harvested in the wild and also reared in aquaculture. The life cycle has never been completed in captivity. (adapted from Wheeler, 1978)
Life cycle
Spawning has never been definitively observed. The concensus is that there is effectively a single spawning stock or the breeding area in or near the Sargasso Sea, north of the Caribbean. Flattened “leptocephalus” (leaf-like) larvae drift or migrate using transatlantic currents to North Eastern Atlantic coasts, where they metamorphose to the familiar elongated form and move into fresh water and reduced salinity coastal waters as transparent “glass eel” and “elvers”. Maturing “yellow” or “brown” eels are found in fresh water from North Africa to Northern Norway. After 6 to 40 years in Irish waters yellow eels metamorphose to “silver” eels and make the return migration to their spawning grounds.
Similar species
The European eel is the only European representative of the genus Anguilla, family Anguillidae, found in Irish waters. The genus has about 12 species world-wide. The similar A. rostrata occurs in North America
How to see this species
Determined observers may still see the 7 cm long “Glass eel” entering estuaries at night on rising tides from January to March. From April to July these transparent glass eel become black or brown “elvers” and will enter rivers, climbing wet surfaces out of water where progress is impeded. The mass influxes of glass eel and elver once seen annually are much reduced since the 1980s. Despite declining recruitment, the “yellow” phase of the eel is still common in Irish lakes and rivers where they have access from the sea. Eels are commercially fished in Lough Neagh, county Antrim, the last remaining large single source eel fishery in Europe. Approximately 3 tonnes are exported daily from the Fishermens’ co-operative at Toomebridge, from May to September. Silver eels are fished at specialized weirs on the River Bann as they leave Lough Neagh. Silver eel are caught, transported and released live downstream of Hydroelectric turbines on the Erne and Shannon rivers. Eels are readily caught at night on hooks baited lines with fish or earth worm, but may now no longer be legally retained by rod and line anglers.
Current status
The eel is currently listed in the Ireland Red list (King et al 2009) as “Critically endangered”. This listing reflects its global IUCN status. Taken over Europe as a whole (ICES, 2011) it has suffered recruitment decline, measured as numbers of glass eel entering coastal waters, of 95% to 99% over a period of 30 years since the 1980s. It has been listed as a CITES appendix 2 species since March 2009.
Why is this species a priority in Northern Ireland?
Commercial Eel fishing is still of commercial importance to Northern Ireland, The Lough Neagh fishery maintains 150 to 200 mixed seasonal and full time jobs and is the largest remaining single site fishery in Europe. Fishing is carried out under a management plan drawn up to meet the requirements of the 2009 EU eel regulation aimed at recovery of the internationally depleted stock. The regulation permits exploitation only where it can be shown that spawning emigration is maintained at 40% or more of pristine levels. The Lough Neagh fishery is maintained by importation of glass eel, also permitted under the regulation, from estuarine fisheries where these are still able to be fished.
Threats/Causes of decline
The pan-European decline in recruitment of glass eel from the Atlantic ocean to estuaries and freshwater cannot be ascribed to any particular cause, and is probably multi-factorial. Possible contributing causes listed with some evidence in the literature are:
Conservation of this species
Current action
The Eel management plans drawn up under the EU eel regulation were incorporated into Northern Ireland law with the enactment of the Eel Fishing Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2010. (Statutory Rules of Northern Ireland 2010 no 166). Under these regulations, which came into operation on 1st June 2010, all commercial eel fishing is prohibited in Northern Ireland with the exception of Lough Neagh and the existing eel weirs on the Lower River Bann. Anglers my no longer retain eel caught on rod and line anywhere in Northern Ireland.
Fishing for trap-and transport of silver eel past the River Erne hydro-electric stations is permitted under section 14 of the NI fisheries act (1966), as can be any fishery activity for the purposes of research or monitoring of stocks.
Legal provisions exist in the 1966 fisheries act to enforce fitting of eel passes to weirs or other man made barriers built after 1842. For weirs built before that date, construction of a pass can be legally enforced where the weir is modified, repaired or water abstracted for a changed use (e.g. hydropower generation).
CITES Annex 2 listing of the eel in 2009 requires any movement of glass eel to aquaculture outside Europe to be accompanied by a “non-detriment” finding. Trade within Europe is regulated by the 2009 EU eel regulations
Proposed objectives/actions
The current objectives in NI are compliant with the EU eel regulation on stock recovery. Actions include fishery restrictions to ensure compliance with biomass escapement targets, and where fisheries have been closed, actions to allow recruits access to freshwater and ensure free passage to sea of silver eels.
What you can do
Anglers and Commercial Fishermen should be aware of and comply with regulations. Riparian and waterway owners should be aware where eels are present and ensure free passage in and out of ponds, past weirs and abstractions.
Further information
Links
EU eel regulation
Literature
Ireland red list:
King, J.L, , Marnell, F., Kingston, N., Rosell, R., Boylan,P., Caffrey, J., Fitzpatrick, U., Gargan, P., Kelly, F., O’Grady, M., Poole, R., Roche, W., & Cassidy, D., 2009. Ireland Red List No 5, Amphibians, reptiles and Freshwater Fish. National Parks and Wildlife Service, Department of Arts, heritage and the Gaeltacht, Ireland. ISSN 2009-2016.
2011 joint EIFAAC/ICES Working Group on eels
Identification:
See Wheeler, A. 1978, Key to the Fishes of Northern Europe. Warne. London ISBN 0 7232 2064 6.
Text written by:
Robert Rossell
iNaturalist: Species account : iNaturalist World Species Observations database