Michael Durham Photography

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  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-131.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-118.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-136.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-134.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-113.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-135.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-133.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-130.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-123.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-122.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-116.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-115.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-110.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-108.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-105.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-104.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-142.jpg
  • Olympic mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi), Washington state's only endemic fish. Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    Olympic_Mudminnow-71216OM-138.jpg
  • A juvenile northern pikeminnow, or Columbia River dace (Ptychocheilus oregonensis). Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    northern_pikeminnow_71216-101.jpg
  • A juvenile northern pikeminnow, or Columbia River dace (Ptychocheilus oregonensis). Photographed near the Chehalis River in Washington.
    northern_pikeminnow_71216-100.jpg
  • African cichlid (Aulonocara spp.) detail image. Captive - Vancouver BC. Native to Lake Victoria in Central Africa.
    blue_lips-MDurham289_7.jpg
  • An juvenile Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata). These fish have an ancient lineage, appearing in the fossil record nearly 450 million years ago – well before the age of the dinosaurs. Pacific lamprey are an important ceremonial food for Native American tribes in the Columbia River basin. Little is known about the life history or habits of this fish except that their numbers in the Columbia River have greatly declined over several decades. Photographed at the USGS Columbia River Research Lab in Willard, Washington.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • The eye of a juvenile Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata). These fish have an ancient lineage, appearing in the fossil record nearly 450 million years ago – well before the age of the dinosaurs. Pacific lamprey are an important ceremonial food for Native American tribes in the Columbia River basin. Little is known about the life history or habits of this fish except that their numbers in the Columbia River have greatly declined over several decades. Photographed at the USGS Columbia River Research Lab in Willard, Washington.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • An juvenile Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata) uses its sucker-like mouth parts to attach itself to a river rock . These fish have an ancient lineage, appearing in the fossil record nearly 450 million years ago – well before the age of the dinosaurs. Pacific lamprey are an important ceremonial food for Native American tribes in the Columbia River basin. Little is known about the life history or habits of this fish except that their numbers in the Columbia River have greatly declined over several decades. Photographed at the USGS Columbia River Research Lab in Willard, Washington.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • An juvenile Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata). These fish have an ancient lineage, appearing in the fossil record nearly 450 million years ago – well before the age of the dinosaurs. Pacific lamprey are an important ceremonial food for Native American tribes in the Columbia River basin. Little is known about the life history or habits of this fish except that their numbers in the Columbia River have greatly declined over several decades. Photographed at the USGS Columbia River Research Lab in Willard, Washington.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • An juvenile Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata) with an experimental rfid tag (under the skin). These fish have an ancient lineage, appearing in the fossil record nearly 450 million years ago – well before the age of the dinosaurs. Pacific lamprey are an important ceremonial food for Native American tribes in the Columbia River basin. Little is known about the life history or habits of this fish except that their numbers in the Columbia River have greatly declined over several decades. Photographed at the USGS Columbia River Research Lab in Willard, Washington.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • An juvenile Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata). These fish have an ancient lineage, appearing in the fossil record nearly 450 million years ago – well before the age of the dinosaurs. Pacific lamprey are an important ceremonial food for Native American tribes in the Columbia River basin. Little is known about the life history or habits of this fish except that their numbers in the Columbia River have greatly declined over several decades. Photographed at the USGS Columbia River Research Lab in Willard, Washington.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • An juvenile Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata) uses its sucker-like mouth parts to attach itself to the glass of an aquarium . These fish have an ancient lineage, appearing in the fossil record nearly 450 million years ago – well before the age of the dinosaurs. Pacific lamprey are an important ceremonial food for Native American tribes in the Columbia River basin. Little is known about the life history or habits of this fish except that their numbers in the Columbia River have greatly declined over several decades. Photographed at the USGS Columbia River Research Lab in Willard, Washington.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • An juvenile Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata). These fish have an ancient lineage, appearing in the fossil record nearly 450 million years ago – well before the age of the dinosaurs. Pacific lamprey are an important ceremonial food for Native American tribes in the Columbia River basin. Little is known about the life history or habits of this fish except that their numbers in the Columbia River have greatly declined over several decades. Photographed at the USGS Columbia River Research Lab in Willard, Washington.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • An juvenile Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata). These fish have an ancient lineage, appearing in the fossil record nearly 450 million years ago – well before the age of the dinosaurs. Pacific lamprey are an important ceremonial food for Native American tribes in the Columbia River basin. Little is known about the life history or habits of this fish except that their numbers in the Columbia River have greatly declined over several decades. Photographed at the USGS Columbia River Research Lab in Willard, Washington.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • A pair of juvenile Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata). These fish have an ancient lineage, appearing in the fossil record nearly 450 million years ago – well before the age of the dinosaurs. Pacific lamprey are an important ceremonial food for Native American tribes in the Columbia River basin. Little is known about the life history or habits of this fish except that their numbers in the Columbia River have greatly declined over several decades. Photographed at the USGS Columbia River Research Lab in Willard, Washington.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • An juvenile Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata). These fish have an ancient lineage, appearing in the fossil record nearly 450 million years ago – well before the age of the dinosaurs. Pacific lamprey are an important ceremonial food for Native American tribes in the Columbia River basin. Little is known about the life history or habits of this fish except that their numbers in the Columbia River have greatly declined over several decades. Photographed at the USGS Columbia River Research Lab in Willard, Washington.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • An juvenile Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata). These fish have an ancient lineage, appearing in the fossil record nearly 450 million years ago – well before the age of the dinosaurs. Pacific lamprey are an important ceremonial food for Native American tribes in the Columbia River basin. Little is known about the life history or habits of this fish except that their numbers in the Columbia River have greatly declined over several decades. Photographed at the USGS Columbia River Research Lab in Willard, Washington.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • An juvenile Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata). These fish have an ancient lineage, appearing in the fossil record nearly 450 million years ago – well before the age of the dinosaurs. Pacific lamprey are an important ceremonial food for Native American tribes in the Columbia River basin. Little is known about the life history or habits of this fish except that their numbers in the Columbia River have greatly declined over several decades. Photographed at the USGS Columbia River Research Lab in Willard, Washington.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • Decorated warbonnet (Chirolophis decoratus), a bottom dwelling fish native to the Pacific Coast of North America. Photographed in captivity on the Pacific Coast of Oregon. July 1996.
    Decorated_warbonnet-MDurham308.jpg
  • Decorated warbonnet (Chirolophis decoratus), a bottom dwelling fish native to the Pacific Coast of North America. Photographed in captivity on the Pacific Coast of Oregon. July 1996.
    Decorated_warbonnet-MDurham309.jpg
  • Alligator gar (Atractosteus spatula). captive. Native range:  Sluggish pools and brackish water in SE United States and Mexico. This aggresive fish can grow up to 12 feet in length, and wait to ambush fish, and other prey, that wander with in range.
    Alligator_gar_Atractosteus_spatula90...jpg
  • A pacific spiny lumpsucker (Eumicrotremus orbis) attached to a rock. Native to the Pacific Ocean, mostly inshore attached to rocks in tidepools at low tide. Photographed in captivity on the Oregon Coast, July 1996
    spiny_lumpsucker-MDurham310.jpg
  • The late Elmer Crow Jr., a Nez Perce Elder and technical supervisor for the Nez Perce Department Of Fisheries Resources Management, holds an adult Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata) before placing it in a holding tank. The Columbia River and the John Day Dam are in the background. Pacific Lamprey, often described as a trash fish, are in significant decline and are important to the tribes of the Columbia River Basin icnluding the Nez Perce. They are also important to the ecology of the river and tributary ecosystem.
    nez_perce_elder_Elmer_Crow_111609JDm...jpg
  • The late Elmer Crow Jr., a Nez Perce Elder and technical supervisor for the Nez Perce Department Of Fisheries Resources Management, holds an adult Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata) before placing it in a holding tank. The Columbia River and the John Day Dam are in the background. Pacific Lamprey, often described as a trash fish, are in significant decline and are important to the tribes of the Columbia River Basin icnluding the Nez Perce. They are also important to the ecology of the river and tributary ecosystem.
    nez_perce_elder_Elmer_Crow_111609JDm...jpg
  • The late Elmer Crow Jr., a Nez Perce Elder and technical supervisor for the Nez Perce Department Of Fisheries Resources Management, holds an adult Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata) before placing it in a holding tank. The Columbia River and the John Day Dam are in the background. Pacific Lamprey, often described as a trash fish, are in significant decline and are important to the tribes of the Columbia River Basin icnluding the Nez Perce. They are also important to the ecology of the river and tributary ecosystem.
    nez_perce_elder_Elmer_Crow_111609JDm...jpg
  • The late Elmer Crow Jr., a Nez Perce Elder and technical supervisor for the Nez Perce Department Of Fisheries Resources Management, holds an adult Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata) before placing it in a holding tank. The Columbia River and the John Day Dam are in the background. Pacific Lamprey, often described as a trash fish, are in significant decline and are important to the tribes of the Columbia River Basin icnluding the Nez Perce. They are also important to the ecology of the river and tributary ecosystem.
    nez_perce_elder_Elmer_Crow_111609JDm...jpg
  • The late Elmer Crow Jr., a Nez Perce Elder and technical supervisor for the Nez Perce Department Of Fisheries Resources Management, holds an adult Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata) before placing it in a holding tank. The Columbia River and the John Day Dam are in the background. Pacific Lamprey, often described as a trash fish, are in significant decline and are important to the tribes of the Columbia River Basin icnluding the Nez Perce. They are also important to the ecology of the river and tributary ecosystem.
    nez_perce_elder_Elmer_Crow_111609JDm...jpg
  • The late Elmer Crow Jr., a Nez Perce Elder and technical supervisor for the Nez Perce Department Of Fisheries Resources Management, holds an adult Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata) before placing it in a holding tank. The Columbia River and the John Day Dam are in the background. Pacific Lamprey, often described as a trash fish, are in significant decline and are important to the tribes of the Columbia River Basin icnluding the Nez Perce. They are also important to the ecology of the river and tributary ecosystem.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • The late Elmer Crow Jr., a Nez Perce Elder and technical supervisor for the Nez Perce Department Of Fisheries Resources Management, holds an adult Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata) before placing it in a holding tank. The Columbia River and the John Day Dam are in the background. Pacific Lamprey, often described as a trash fish, are in significant decline and are important to the tribes of the Columbia River Basin icnluding the Nez Perce. They are also important to the ecology of the river and tributary ecosystem.
    Pacific_Lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
  • The Oregon spotted frog (Rana pretiosa) has been lost from at least 78 percent of its former range. Precise historic data is lacking, but this species has been documented in British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, and California. It is believed to have been extirpated from California. It is currently known to occur from extreme southwestern British Columbia, south through the eastern side of the Puget/Willamette Valley Trough and the Columbia River Gorge in south-central Washington, to the Cascades Range, to at least the Klamath Valley in Oregon. In 1993, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service determined that the Oregon spotted frog warranted listing under the Endangered Species Act, but doing so was precluded by higher priority listing actions. The frog then became a candidate for listing in the future. Photographed in the Conboy Lake National Wildlife Refuge, Washington. © Michael Durham / www.DurmPhoto.com
    Rana_pretiosa_71812-112.jpg
  • The Oregon spotted frog (Rana pretiosa) has been lost from at least 78 percent of its former range. Precise historic data is lacking, but this species has been documented in British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, and California. It is believed to have been extirpated from California. It is currently known to occur from extreme southwestern British Columbia, south through the eastern side of the Puget/Willamette Valley Trough and the Columbia River Gorge in south-central Washington, to the Cascades Range, to at least the Klamath Valley in Oregon. In 1993, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service determined that the Oregon spotted frog warranted listing under the Endangered Species Act, but doing so was precluded by higher priority listing actions. The frog then became a candidate for listing in the future. Photographed in the Conboy Lake National Wildlife Refuge, Washington. © Michael Durham / www.DurmPhoto.com
    Rana_pretiosa_71812-110.jpg
  • Umatilla tribe member Kanim Moses harvests Pacific Lamprey (Lampetra tridentata) at Willamette Falls, in the Willamette River near Oregon City. Tribes of the Columbia River Basin have treaty rights to harvest at the falls, and other places in the Northwest.
    pacific_lamprey_Lampetra_tridentata_...jpg
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