The invasion of the Laurentian Great Lakes of North America by sea lampreys (Petromyzon
marinus) in the early 20th century contributed to the depletion of commercial, recreational
and culturally important fish populations, devastating the economies of communities
that relied on the fishery. Sea lamprey populations were subsequently controlled using
an aggressive integrated pest-management program which employed barriers and traps
to prevent sea lamprey from migrating to their spawning grounds and the use of the
piscicides (lampricides) 3-trifluoromethyl-4-nitrophenol (TFM) and niclosamide to
eliminate larval sea lampreys from their nursery streams. Although sea lampreys have
not been eradicated from the Great Lakes, populations have been suppressed to less
than 10% of their peak numbers in the mid-1900s. The ongoing use of lampricides provides
the foundation for sea lamprey control in the Great Lakes, one of the most successful
invasive species control programs in the world. Yet, significant gaps remain in our
understanding of how lampricides are taken-up and handled by sea lampreys, how lampricides
exert their toxic effects, and how they adversely affect non-target invertebrate and
vertebrates species. In this review we examine what has been learned about the uptake,
handling and elimination, and the mode of TFM and niclosamide toxicity in lampreys
and in non-target animals, particularly in the last 10 years. It is now clear that
the mode of TFM toxicity is the same in non-target fishes and lampreys, in which TFM
interferes with oxidative phosphorylation by the mitochondria leading to decreased
ATP production. Vulnerability to TFM is related to abiotic factors such as water pH
and alkalinity, which we propose changes the relative amounts of the bioavailable
un-ionized form of TFM in the gill microenvironment. Niclosamide, which is also a
molluscicide used to control snails in areas prone to schistosomiasis infections of
humans, also likely works by uncoupling oxidative phosphorylation, but less is known
about other aspects of its toxicology. The effects of TFM include reductions in energy
stores, particularly glycogen and high energy phosphagens. However, non-target fishes
readily recover from sub-lethal TFM exposure as demonstrated by the rapid restoration
of energy stores and clearance of TFM. Although both TFM and niclosamide are non-persistent
in the environment and critical for sea lamprey control, increasing public and institutional
concerns about pesticides in the environment makes it imperative to explore other
means of sea lamprey control. Accordingly, we also address possible "next-generation"
strategies of sea lamprey control including genetic tools such as RNA interference
and CRISPR-Cas9 to impair critical physiological processes (e.g. reproduction, digestion,
metamorphosis) in lamprey, and the use of green chemistry to develop more environmentally
benign chemical methods of sea lamprey control.