Friday, February 21, 2014

Pacific Salmon Migration

Pacific salmon species vary in terms of their life cycles. Some spend hardly any time in natal streams; some spend years. Some mature at two years of age; some mature at five. Some live for only a couple of years; others live for ten. And some, like Steelhead and Cutthroat, can even spawn more than once.
Despite all this variation, we can still make some general observations about the life stages of salmon.
The full Pacific salmon lifecycle from egg to adult.
All Pacific salmon are anadromous, which means they start in freshwater (streams, lakes, rivers, etc.), migrate to the ocean, then return “home” to spawn and die.
Adult spawners often journey for hundreds of miles to return to the waters their parents spawned in, and where they themselves were born.
If they make it back, eluding all sorts of obstacles, the males and females court, and ultimately breed. At the crucial moment, the male releases sperm and the female releases eggs ... at precisely the same time!
The eggs and sperm float in a fog of milt to the bottom of the stream or lake bed where the female has painstakingly prepared a “redd” (aka nest), which, covered with gravel, will hopefully protect the eggs until they are ready to hatch.
While new salmon are preparing to enter the world, their parents die (usually only days after spawning). Their bodies remain in the water or along the shore to decay and/or be eaten by other species. In this way they continue to nourish the environment around them.
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This salmon has spawned and died in the Adams River. It will continue to contribute to the ecosystem around it.Photo: Adams River Salmon Society
Egg
Some of the thousands of eggs that the female has released will be successfully fertilized by the male’s sperm. The eggs begin their chance of life as salmon, though they are very fragile and many eggs will be destroyed. This is why habitat protection is so important to salmon stocks.
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Chinook alevins hatching.
Inside the egg is an embryo and a yolk which feeds it. For a while, the embryo has enough oxygen inside the egg, but as it grows, it needs more. Finally it reaches the breaking point and struggles free of its egg shell, though not yet discarding its yolk. It is now an alevin.
Alevin
Alevins’ yolk sac contains sufficient nutrition for their early development. They remain under the gravel for protection against predators until their yolk sac is fully absorbed. It is virtually impossible to see alevin in the wild!
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Salmon fry are little guys, and they’re favourite snacks for many predators. Photo: Adams River Salmon Society
Fry
Once it has absorbed its yolk, the alevin becomes afry. Small and vulnerable, fry spend a lot of their time avoiding predators. They head for dark pools in protected spots (e.g., behind logs) and dart out only to catch and eat any organic matter that comes their way. When they feel the urge, they begin their migration toward the ocean (see Species for the different migratory patterns that characterize each species).
Smolts
To manage the transition between freshwater and saltwater, salmon fry must go through a physical change known as smolting. Smolting begins in freshwater and sees the young salmon through the estuaries and into the ocean when it is time. Smolts have a silvery coating over their scales to camouflage them from predators and shield their bodies from fresh to saltwater.
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This Adams River couple has achieved salmon’s life purpose: to come together to spawn. Photo: Adams River Salmon Society
Adults
Salmon enter the ocean as young, or juvenile, adults and leave it as mature adults, ready to spawn. The length of time salmon spend in saltwater depends on how old they were when they entered, their species, marine conditions, and other factors. Their travels in the ocean are similarly variable, and one of the least understood parts of their lives.
When they are sexually mature (see Species  for maturity patterns of different species), salmon obey their homing instinct and travel back to their natal streams to spawn. It is an arduous journey, and only the toughest and luckiest salmon complete it.

Posted by Kiley Turner on 9/18


And this is the life cycle of salmon itself




Courtesy of (http://www.thinksalmon.com/learn/life_cycle/salmon_life_cycle/)

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