![[Image]: Part of the page design.](../images/corner13.jpg) |
|
Salmon/Steelhead
Facts
![[Image]: Part of the page design.](../images/blackline.jpg)
Did You Know?
- Coho and Sockeye are found
in freshwater year-round; Coho
in small coastal streams and
Sockeye in lakes. These fish
are very susceptible to poor
water quality, such as high temperatures
and pollution.
- Salmon species have adapted
to use virtually every part of
every stream in the northwest.
- Big rivers are used by Pink
salmon in the lower reaches,
Chinook in the mainstem and larger
tributaries, Coho in small tribs,
and Steelhead in the uppermost
tributaries.
- Small streams are used by Chum
in the lower reaches, Coho next,
and Cutthroat in the headwaters.
- A moving fry is much easier
to see than a motionless one.
This is why salmon tend to spawn
in parts of the stream that their
offspring use for rearing; the
emerging fry do not have to travel
far to find rearing areas.
- The size of a salmon is usually
related to its age. Pink salmon
are the smallest fall-spawning
salmon and are also the youngest,
at two years. Chinook can live
up to nine years, the longest,
which is why some Chinook can
grow to over 100 pounds. Cutthroat,
which live longer than Pinks,
are smaller because they live
in less productive areas of the
watershed.
- There is a sixth fall-spawning
salmon, the Masu, or Cherry salmon,
which is found only in Asia.
This fish occupies the same niche
that the Sea-run Cutthroat trout
occupies in North America.
- Steelhead and Rainbow trout
are the same species of fish;
Rainbow are the freshwater form,
and Steelhead the anadromous
form.
- Steelhead and Cutthroat trout
were recently added to the salmon
genus, Oncorhynchus, from the
trout genus, Salmo. Also, the
scientific name of Steelhead
changed from Salmo gairdneri
to Oncorhynchus mykiss.
|
![[Image]: Saying 'Back to the Top' with a link that returns you to the top of the page.](../images/back.gif)
|
|