US2441219A - Eel trap - Google Patents

Eel trap Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2441219A
US2441219A US556609A US55660944A US2441219A US 2441219 A US2441219 A US 2441219A US 556609 A US556609 A US 556609A US 55660944 A US55660944 A US 55660944A US 2441219 A US2441219 A US 2441219A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
smooth
wall
water
rough
trap
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US556609A
Inventor
Leo T Critchlow
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US556609A priority Critical patent/US2441219A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2441219A publication Critical patent/US2441219A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01KANIMAL HUSBANDRY; CARE OF BIRDS, FISHES, INSECTS; FISHING; REARING OR BREEDING ANIMALS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NEW BREEDS OF ANIMALS
    • A01K69/00Stationary catching devices
    • A01K69/06Traps
    • A01K69/08Rigid traps, e.g. lobster pots

Definitions

  • the lamprey more commonly known as the lamprey eel, has in recent time achieved some commercial importance because of the oil and meal obtained therefrom when duly processed.
  • Lampreys are found in almost all waters and travel up and over obstacles by use of the sucker mouth with which they are equipped on the end of the head.
  • the eel can travel over any surface that is sufficiently smooth and has water flowing thereover, and they collect in numbers sufficient for gathering in many artificial waterways, as fishways or fish ladders, and in various types of hydraulic installations which receive water flowing from its natural course. In the latter case they sometimes collect in such large numbers as to interfere materially with, or actually prevent closing of a gate valve or other operation of the plant.
  • the object of the present invention to utilize the peculiar mode of transportation of the lamprey to lure it into a receptacle from which there is no escape.
  • Figure 1 is a vertical transverse sectional view through a portion of a fishway embodying my invention.
  • Figure 2 is an inside elevation of the structure shown in Figure 1, with parts broken away.
  • Figure 3 is an elevation of a portion of the outside of the structure shown in Figure l with parts broken away and in section.
  • the entire inwardly directed surface 4 of memher 3 is smooth and its lower edge coincides with the top edge of the wall I, which also is smooth as at 5.
  • the top portion 6 of member 3 is also smooth.
  • the outwardly directed surface I of portion 3 may be left unsurfaced and rough and is extended downwardly on the outer side of wall I to form wall 8, thence outwardly in a horizontal plane to form wall 9, thence upwardly to form wall In and provide a trough I2 in which water flows at l3.
  • the top edge of surface I is smooth as at I4 to enable the eels to travel thereover, the entire remaining part of surface 1 and the en; tire inner surfaces of walls 8, 9 and Ill may be given a definitely rough surfacing 'by applying thereto a covering of screen as H.
  • brackets I5 Supported in spaced relation to the top portion 6 and longitudinally thereof on brackets I5 is a water conduit l6 provided with holes I! along its lower portion so that water flowing through the conduit will discharge downwardly over the smooth surfaces 4, 5 and 6 for the purpose hereinafter described.
  • Lampreys moving up the fishway through the water 2 are attracted to the wall I by the water flowing thereover as at l8, and obeying their natural instincts they proceed to travel up the wall surface 5 and surface 4 of the crown member 3. This is accomplished by use of the suction mouth with which they are equipped, attaching it to the smooth wall each time they throw themselves forward, usually a distance of from a quarter to a half inch. But when the lampreys have successfully reached the top of the wall and crown 3 and move over the top 6 and. move forwardly to place their suction mouths on the new places on the rough surface of wall 1, they are unable to make suction contact with the rough surface, and being sufficiently far over the top to be unbalanced they fall into the trough ii. The trough [2 being rough as described the lampreys are unable to get a grasp on its surface and are carried to a suitable point for removal.
  • a lamprey eel trap comprising a structure having a smooth surface leading upwardly from a body of water and having water flowing thereover, and a roughened surface leading downwardly from the smooth surface, and means disposed to receive eels falling from the said roughened surface.
  • a lamprey eel trap comprising a structure having a smooth surface leading angularly upward from a. body of water and terminating in a narrow smooth surface extending laterally therefrom and having water flowing downwardly thereover, and a rough surface leading angularly downwardly from the smooth surface, and a receptacle disposed to receive eels falling from the said rough surface.
  • a lamprey eels trap comprising a structure having a smooth surface leading angularly upward from a body of Water and terminating in a narrow smooth surface extending laterally therefrom, a water pipe disposed thereover having perforations along its under side to direct a flow 15 of water over said smooth surface, and a rough I surface leading angularly downward from the smooth surface, and a receptacle disposed to receive eels falling from the said rough surface.

Description

L. T. CRITCHLOW EEL TRAP Filed Sept. 30,1944
INVENTOR Patented May 11, 1948 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
Continuation of application Serial No. 515,043,
This application September 30, 1944, Serial N0. 556,609
December 20, 1943.
3 Claims. 1 .The present application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 515,043, filed Dec. 20, 1943, now abandoned.
The lamprey, more commonly known as the lamprey eel, has in recent time achieved some commercial importance because of the oil and meal obtained therefrom when duly processed.
Lampreys are found in almost all waters and travel up and over obstacles by use of the sucker mouth with which they are equipped on the end of the head.
By the use of this sucker mouth the eel can travel over any surface that is sufficiently smooth and has water flowing thereover, and they collect in numbers sufficient for gathering in many artificial waterways, as fishways or fish ladders, and in various types of hydraulic installations which receive water flowing from its natural course. In the latter case they sometimes collect in such large numbers as to interfere materially with, or actually prevent closing of a gate valve or other operation of the plant.
When lampreys collect in such numbers it has heretofore been the practice to scoop them out by hand labor, which of course, means that it has been a slow and costly procedure.
It is, therefore, the object of the present invention to utilize the peculiar mode of transportation of the lamprey to lure it into a receptacle from which there is no escape.
It is also an object of the invention to provide means for the purpose indicated that will be extremely simple in form and construction, economical to manufacture, and highly efficient in its practical application.
In the drawing:
Figure 1 is a vertical transverse sectional view through a portion of a fishway embodying my invention.
Figure 2 is an inside elevation of the structure shown in Figure 1, with parts broken away.
Figure 3 is an elevation of a portion of the outside of the structure shown in Figure l with parts broken away and in section.
Numberless ways might be conceived for carrying out my invention, but one way in which it may be applied to a fishway l in which water flows at 2, is to crown the fishway side wall with a structure 3 that is in the form of a truncated cone in transverse cross-section.
The entire inwardly directed surface 4 of memher 3 is smooth and its lower edge coincides with the top edge of the wall I, which also is smooth as at 5.
The top portion 6 of member 3 is also smooth.
.2 The outwardly directed surface I of portion 3 may be left unsurfaced and rough and is extended downwardly on the outer side of wall I to form wall 8, thence outwardly in a horizontal plane to form wall 9, thence upwardly to form wall In and provide a trough I2 in which water flows at l3. The top edge of surface I is smooth as at I4 to enable the eels to travel thereover, the entire remaining part of surface 1 and the en; tire inner surfaces of walls 8, 9 and Ill may be given a definitely rough surfacing 'by applying thereto a covering of screen as H.
Supported in spaced relation to the top portion 6 and longitudinally thereof on brackets I5 is a water conduit l6 provided with holes I! along its lower portion so that water flowing through the conduit will discharge downwardly over the smooth surfaces 4, 5 and 6 for the purpose hereinafter described.
Lampreys moving up the fishway through the water 2 are attracted to the wall I by the water flowing thereover as at l8, and obeying their natural instincts they proceed to travel up the wall surface 5 and surface 4 of the crown member 3. This is accomplished by use of the suction mouth with which they are equipped, attaching it to the smooth wall each time they throw themselves forward, usually a distance of from a quarter to a half inch. But when the lampreys have successfully reached the top of the wall and crown 3 and move over the top 6 and. move forwardly to place their suction mouths on the new places on the rough surface of wall 1, they are unable to make suction contact with the rough surface, and being sufficiently far over the top to be unbalanced they fall into the trough ii. The trough [2 being rough as described the lampreys are unable to get a grasp on its surface and are carried to a suitable point for removal.
Clearly the invention is not confined to the specific form shown and described, since the principle involved can be used to trap lampreys in a natural stream or wherever they may be found; and various changes and modifications may be made within the scope of the claims attached hereto without departing from the spirit of the invention.
I claim:
1. A lamprey eel trap comprising a structure having a smooth surface leading upwardly from a body of water and having water flowing thereover, and a roughened surface leading downwardly from the smooth surface, and means disposed to receive eels falling from the said roughened surface.
2. A lamprey eel trap comprising a structure having a smooth surface leading angularly upward from a. body of water and terminating in a narrow smooth surface extending laterally therefrom and having water flowing downwardly thereover, and a rough surface leading angularly downwardly from the smooth surface, and a receptacle disposed to receive eels falling from the said rough surface.
3. A lamprey eels trap comprising a structure having a smooth surface leading angularly upward from a body of Water and terminating in a narrow smooth surface extending laterally therefrom, a water pipe disposed thereover having perforations along its under side to direct a flow 15 of water over said smooth surface, and a rough I surface leading angularly downward from the smooth surface, and a receptacle disposed to receive eels falling from the said rough surface.
LEG T. CRITCHLOW. 20
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS
US556609A 1944-09-30 1944-09-30 Eel trap Expired - Lifetime US2441219A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US556609A US2441219A (en) 1944-09-30 1944-09-30 Eel trap

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US556609A US2441219A (en) 1944-09-30 1944-09-30 Eel trap

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2441219A true US2441219A (en) 1948-05-11

Family

ID=24222072

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US556609A Expired - Lifetime US2441219A (en) 1944-09-30 1944-09-30 Eel trap

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2441219A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN108967371A (en) * 2018-07-26 2018-12-11 范立军 A kind of separating and treating apparatus for river field fishing loach anti-slip type

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE60197C (en) * P. GERHARDT, Meliorationsbauinspector und Oberfischmeister, in Berlin W., Bayreutherstrafse 1 Eel pafs
US78952A (en) * 1868-06-16 William h
US972227A (en) * 1909-09-11 1910-10-11 Charles F Pike Trap for catching porpoises.
US1573785A (en) * 1925-08-13 1926-02-16 John F Albright Fish ladder
US1591450A (en) * 1924-12-16 1926-07-06 James R Wheeler Fish elevator
US1730005A (en) * 1926-07-16 1929-10-01 Ellsworth T Grether Hydrostep for fish streams
US2193072A (en) * 1937-05-12 1940-03-12 Neumann Friedrich Eel basket

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE60197C (en) * P. GERHARDT, Meliorationsbauinspector und Oberfischmeister, in Berlin W., Bayreutherstrafse 1 Eel pafs
US78952A (en) * 1868-06-16 William h
US972227A (en) * 1909-09-11 1910-10-11 Charles F Pike Trap for catching porpoises.
US1591450A (en) * 1924-12-16 1926-07-06 James R Wheeler Fish elevator
US1573785A (en) * 1925-08-13 1926-02-16 John F Albright Fish ladder
US1730005A (en) * 1926-07-16 1929-10-01 Ellsworth T Grether Hydrostep for fish streams
US2193072A (en) * 1937-05-12 1940-03-12 Neumann Friedrich Eel basket

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN108967371A (en) * 2018-07-26 2018-12-11 范立军 A kind of separating and treating apparatus for river field fishing loach anti-slip type
CN108967371B (en) * 2018-07-26 2021-03-02 范立军 A separation processing apparatus that is used for loach antiskid formula of catching in river field

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2249020A (en) Strainer
US2441219A (en) Eel trap
US2259128A (en) Sewer construction
ES473672A1 (en) Fish holding pan on traveling water screen and method of flushing same
US3323536A (en) Siphon tube trash guard
US1629208A (en) Soil fitting
CN208844706U (en) A kind of energy dissipating well of the pressure pipeline with automatic coupling device
US1083995A (en) Siphon-spillway.
US2435049A (en) Siphon pipe
US1555841A (en) Culvert pipe
US4797028A (en) Beaver control siphon apparatus
US2746772A (en) Pipe guiding ribbed apron for irrigation pipe
US2280066A (en) Draghead for dredging apparatus
US3892257A (en) Vertical sanitary trap assembly for drain pipes
US1899400A (en) Easy lift sanitary flower container
US2269919A (en) Lawn sprinkler body
US1710888A (en) Apparatus for irrigating golf greens
US3750954A (en) Sprinkler system and adapter valve therefor
US1523833A (en) Precious-metal trap
US1569419A (en) Fishway
GB1347925A (en) Urinal
US1241003A (en) Well or subterranean reservoir for use in irrigation and other purposes.
US2025678A (en) Load-retaining attachment for shovel blades
US2981283A (en) Automatic dump drain valve
US1131823A (en) Irrigating-siphon.