ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 



I have been associated with the Great Lakes Fishery Commission since 

 July 1975. As a recent executive secretary I take no credit for the pro- 

 gress and programs reported above. The credit is deserved by the pioneer 

 sea lamprey control workers in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the 

 Canadian Department of the Environment, the Great Lakes Fishery Commission, 

 all cooperators, and the administrations that supported them. 



REFERENCES 



Applegate, V.C., J.H. Howell, A.E. Hall, Jr., and M.A. Smith. 1957. Toxi- 

 city of 4,346 chemicals to larval lampreys and fishes. U.S. Fish, and 

 Wild!. Serv., Spec. Sci . Rep. Fish. 207. 157 p. 



Crowe, W.R. 1975. Great Lakes fishery commission: history, program, and 

 progress. Great Lakes Fish. Comm., Ann Arbor, Mich. 23 p. 



Kanayama, R.K. 1963. The use of alkalinity and conductivity measurements 

 to estimate concentrations of 3-trif luoromethyl-4-nitrophenol required 

 for treating lamprey streams. Great Lakes Fish. Comm. Tech. Rep. Ser. 



7, 



Ann Arbor, Mich. 10 p. 



Leim, A.H., and W.B. Scott. 1966. Fishes of the Atlantic coast of Canada, 

 Fish. Res. Board Can., Bull. 155. 485 p. 



Smith, B.R. 1971. Sea lampreys in the Great Lakes of North America, p. 

 In_ M.W. Hardisty and I.C. Potter (ed.) The biology of lampreys, Vol. 1. 

 Academic Press, New York. 



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