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  1. Salmon and Trout
Coho Salmon   Ontario Fish Species

Salmon, of the family Salmonidae, are valuable Northern Hemisphere food and game fish. Most belong to five species that live in rivers and off coasts of the North Pacific, from California to Alaska and Siberia. A sixth species inhabits the North Atlantic. Salmonids also include trout, graylings, and whitefish. They eat small fish, insects, and crustaceans. Salmon and some trout are anadromous, living in oceans and migrating to freshwater to breed. The five Pacific salmon species belong to the genus Oncorhynchus. Different species spawn in the rivers and streams of western North America during the spring (spring run), summer (summer run), and fall (fall run).

Physical Characteristics and Habitats
Salmonids have elongated bodies, small, round, smooth-edged scales, well-developed swimming fins, and a fleshy fin between the dorsal and tail fins. There are five Pacific salmon species: chinook (king), sockeye (red), humpbacked (pink), dog (calico), and coho salmon. Spring-run chinook salmon swim upstream to spawn. The species has red, oily flesh, and average weights of twenty-three pounds. They live from California to the Bering Strait. Sockeye (red) salmon, also spring run, weigh five to eight pounds, have deep red flesh, and their fins redden during breeding. Like chinooks, they run up to one thousand miles to spawn. Prior to spawning runs, sockeye and chinook salmon store huge quantities of oil for energy to swim upstream. During migration, nest-building, and mating they do not eat. The other Pacific species are fall run. Spawning closer to the ocean, they do not require a huge oil energy reserve. Pink salmon weigh three to six pounds and are most abundant in Alaska. Dog salmon are not eaten much because their flesh is not tasty. Coho salmon, six to nine pounds, have pink flesh and live fromSan Francisco to the Puget Sound. Atlantic (true) salmon, the largest salmonids, have orange-red flesh. Most other fish of their genus (Salmo) are trout. Atlantic salmon weights average twenty pounds. They migrate fromocean to freshwater to spawn in spring or summer. Nonmigrant Atlantic salmon subspecies inhabit lakes in the northern United States. These "landlocked" salmon are smaller than salmon that migrate. Trout are also salmonids. Sea trout are anadromous, but most species inhabit only freshwater lakes and streams. They eat smaller fishes, crustaceans, and insects. The most important true trout (genus Salmo) is the rainbow trout of the western United States. Chars, of the trout genus Salvelinus, have smaller scales than true trout and inhabit colder North American, Asian, and European waters. The largest char species, lake trout, often weigh twenty-five pounds and have dark gray bodies with yellow-red spots. They inhabit the Great Lakes, Alaska, Labrador, New Brunswick, Vermont, and Maine.

Lives of Salmonids
Chinook salmon are typical anadromous salmonids. In autumn, adults spawn in Pacific Northwest streams, a few feet deep, where females place eggs in nests where fast-running water is rich in oxygen. Then the males squirt milt on them, and the females stir up the stream bottom so that earth and stones cover and protect the eggs, which hatch in two weeks to two months. This start of a new generation precedes the death of the adults by only a few days. After spawning, the dull-colored adults have slimy bodies and ragged fins from their treks to spawning grounds. For a few days they float downstream, tail-first and torpid, until they die. Their bodies wash ashore and become scavenger feed. Yolk sacs nourish hatchlings for three months and they then become free-swimming. In one or two years, when they are three to five inches long, they swim to the ocean. Predators kill myriad migrants over the six-month trip, but some make it. In the ocean, salmon spend four years eating and growing. Then they swim back to their hatch sites. During salmonid runs, large numbers are caught for canning, but enough get through to restart the cycle. During their runs they leap rapids, waterfalls, and, increasingly, dams. Atlantic salmon survive spawning, return to the ocean, and later reuse the same spawning site several times. The most widely distributed North American trout species is the brook (speckled) trout, found from Georgia to the Arctic Ocean. They spawn fromSeptember to December in holes that females scrape in gravel. Trout eggs take two to three months to hatch, and young develop asdosalmon.

Catching and Disseminating Salmonids
In the United States, 4,500,000 pounds of salmon are caught yearly with nets and traps. Fishermen sell them to companies that supply consumers with fresh, frozen, smoked, or canned salmon. When salmon are caught before spawning, their eggs and milt can be removed. To maintain salmon numbers, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service yearly collects billions of eggs, fertilizes them and puts the eggs and young in breeding grounds. Trout caught by game and commercial fishermen are sold as food less often than salmon, though they are frequently eaten by their catchers. Their eggs are collected, fertilized, and disseminated by the Fish and Wildlife Service, too. Freshwater and ocean fish farms also produce salmonids.

Salmon and Trout Facts

Classification:
Kingdom: Animalia
Subkingdom: Bilateria
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Class: Osteichthyes
Order: Saliminiformes (salmonlike fishes)
Family: Salmonidae (salmon)
Genus and species: Includes Oncorhynchus kisutch (coho salmon), O. gorbuscha (pink salmon), O. nerka (sockeye salmon), O. tschawytscha (chinook salmon); Salmo gairdneri (brook trout), S. salar (Atlantic salmon), S. trutta (brown trout); Salvelinus fontinalis (speckled trout), S. namaycush (lake trout)
Geographical location: United States, Canada, Europe, and Asia
Habitat: Freshwater lakes, streams and rivers; oceans of the Northern Hemisphere
Gestational period: Two weeks to two months
Life span: Six to fifteen years, depending on species
Special anatomy: Bony skeletons; toothed mouths; caudal, dorsal, pectoral, and ventral fins developed for long swims; a fleshy fin midway between dorsal and tail fins

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