Swimming With the Eels

Tess Johnson was paddling in Maine last weekend when she saw and photographed a natural phenomenon that few of us witness: the mass migration of young eels, known as glass eels or elvers.

Photo of elvers by Tess Johnson in Maine.

The baby eels hatch in the Sargasso Sea, a part of the Atlantic Ocean where floating mats of a seaweed called sargassum provide habitat for a variety of ocean life. They then drift and swim 1,000 miles or more to reach the rivers, streams, lakes and ponds where they mature and live virtually their entire life (10 to 25 years) before returning to the Sargasso Sea to spawn and die.

Photo by Tess Johnson

Maine is one of only two U.S. states (along with South Carolina) to permit commercial elver fishing, a questionable practice given the steep decline in eel populations in recent decades because of dams and other factors. A small number of fishermen with elver licenses string fine nets across waterways in Maine each spring to catch the young eels, which fetch $1,000 to $2,000 a pound depending on the year. The elvers are transported alive to Asia and raised there as a delicacy, primarily eaten as sushi.

Many thanks to Tess for given us a wonderful photographic look at this fascinating species—and the terns that were happily dining on them as she paddled. If you're interested in learning more (eels are an under-appreciated part of the ecosystem), we highly recommend the book "Eels," by our friend James Prosek, the great artist, writer and naturalist, or the PBS series based on it. —Craig Neff and Pamelia Markwood

Tern feeding on elvers in Maine (photo by Tess Johnson)

Photo by Tess Johnson

Great Photos of 17-Year Cicadas Emerging

Greg Adams, one of our Facebook page followers, just shared with us a remarkable sequence of photos he took of 17-year cicadas (don't call them locusts; those are different insects) emerging last year in Kansas. The same type of cicada is coming out this year in vast numbers in portions of Ohio, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virgina and New York after being in the ground in the nymph phase living off fluid from tree roots since 1999. (How amazing is that?) In these photos the cicadas are shedding their nymph exoskeletons and emerging in the adult phase. Please look through all the photos to watch the progression and see the final product, winged cicadas that are ready to begin their four to six weeks—that's it—of adult life.

If they come out near you, you'll hear that familiar cicada sound—but it will be REALLY LOUD, perhaps exceeding 100 decibels (listen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=drxqiXaWNCw). By flexing drum-like organs on their abdomens called tymbals (creating a mating call that is tremendously amplified because their abdomens are mostly hollow), as many as a million male 17-year cicadas per acre make "the quiet woodlands a deafening environment," as Greg puts it. Scientists believe that the 17-year cycle is a survival mechanism; so many emerge at once that plenty can survive the hungry predators that cicadas face. "I was fortunate to witness the emergence of Brood IV [one of many different U.S. regional groups of these cicadas] on the Konza Prairie while living in my homestate of Kansas last year," says Greg. "It's an amazing natural metamorphosis. I'm really fascinated by their appearance. Love the black and orange color."

Many thanks, Greg! —Craig Neff and Pamelia Markwood