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pink salmon

 
Dictionary: pink salmon

n.
A small salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) of Pacific waters, the male of which has a pink color and a conspicuous dorsal hump during the spawning season. Also called humpback salmon.


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Food fish (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha, family Salmonidae) of the North Pacific that constitutes half of the commercial fishery of Pacific salmon. It weighs about 4.5 lbs (2 kg) and is marked with large, irregular spots. Pink salmon often spawn on tidal flats. The young enter the sea immediately after hatching.

For more information on pink salmon, visit Britannica.com.

Animal Encyclopedia: Pink salmon
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Oncorhynchus gorbuscha

FAMILY

Salmonidae

TAXONOMY

Salmo gorbuscha Walbaum, 1792, rivers of Kamchatka, Russia.

OTHER COMMON NAMES

English: Humpback salmon; French: Saumon rose; German: Buckelkopflachs; Spanish: Salmón rosado.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS

Length 30 in (76 cm); weight 15 lb (6.8 kg). The smallest of the true salmon species. Like most salmoniforms, has a streamlined, fusiform body, somewhat laterally compressed. The mouth is terminal, and among breeding males is greatly deformed by being very oblique, with the lower jaw enlarged and turned up at the tip, preventing the mouth from closing. Another characteristic is the presence of large black spots on the back and on both lobes of the caudal fin. The general coloration varies. Individuals at sea are steel blue to blue-green on the back, silver on the sides, and white on the belly, with large oval spots present on the back, the adipose fin, and on both lobes of the caudal fin. Breeding males are dark on the back, and red with brownish green blotches on the sides. Breeding females are similar to males, although less distinctly colored.

DISTRIBUTION

Arctic and Eastern Pacific, from eastern Korea and Hokkaido, Japan, to the Bering and Okhotsk Seas, to Alaska and the Aleutian Islands, to southern California, United States. Successfully introduced in Canada, Ireland, Norway, Greenland, Poland, Finland, and the United Kingdom.

HABITAT

Spends 18 months at sea before returning either to its native river or some other river to spawn. Unique because the homing behavior is not as strong as that of other salmoniform species. After emerging from the gravel, fry move downstream, remaining inshore for a few months before going out to sea.

BEHAVIOR

Reaches sexual maturity at two years of age. Both male and female die up to a few weeks after spawning.

FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET

The diet varies with age. Fry feed on nymphal and larval insects while in fresh water, but once at sea may not feed at all until they become juveniles, when they eat copepods and other zooplankton. As they continue to grow the food items shift toward larger crustaceans and fishes. They are preyed upon by other salmonids as fry, and by larger fishes (including sharks), fish-eating birds, and mammals as they grow.

REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY

Upstream migration takes place from June to late September, triggered by high water. The female builds the redd or spawning trench by lying on one side and using her tail to displace silt and light gravel. The accompanying male spends most of the time defending its territory. When the nest is complete, the female drops into it, followed immediately by the male. As for other salmoniforms, both male and female open their mouths, vibrate, and release eggs (1,200–1,800) and sperm. Then the eggs are covered by the female digging a new redd at the upstream edge of the previous one.

CONSERVATION STATUS

Not listed by the IUCN.

SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS

The flesh is highly prized; eggs are highly valued as caviar, particularly in Japan.

Wikipedia: Pink salmon
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Pink salmon
Male pink salmon
Conservation status
Secure
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Salmoniformes
Family: Salmonidae
Genus: Oncorhynchus
Species: O. gorbuscha
Binomial name
Oncorhynchus gorbuscha
(Walbaum, 1792)

Pink salmon or humpback salmon, Oncorhynchus gorbuscha, (from a Russian name for this species gorbuša, горбуша) is a species of anadromous fish in the salmon family. It is the smallest and most abundant of the Pacific salmon.

Contents

Appearance

In the ocean, pink salmon are bright silver fish. After returning to their spawning stream, their coloring changes to pale grey on the butt with yellowish white belly (although some turn an overall dull green color). As with all salmon, in addition to the dorsal fin they also have an adipose fin. The fish is characterized by a white mouth with black gums, no teeth on the tongue, large oval-shaped black spots on the back and v-shaped tail, and an anal fin with 13-17 soft rays. During their spawning migration, males develop a pronounced humped back, hence their nickname "humpies". Pink salmon average 4.8 pounds (2.2 kg) in weight.[1] The maximum recorded size was 30 inches (76 cm) and 15 pounds (6.8 kg).[2]

Reproduction

Male at spawning time

Pink salmon in their native range have a strict two year life cycle, thus odd and even-year populations do not interbreed. Adult pink salmon enter spawning streams from the ocean, usually returning to the water course, or race, where they originated. Spawning occurs between late June and mid-October. Pink salmon spawn in coastal streams and some longer rivers, and may spawn in the intertidal zone or at the mouth of streams if hyporheic freshwater is available. Using her tail, the female digs a trough-shaped nest, called a redd (Scandinavian word for "nest"), in the gravel of the stream bed, wherein she deposits her eggs. As she expresses the eggs, she is approached by one or more males who fertilize them as they fall into the redd. Subsequently, the female covers the newly-deposited zygotes, again with thrusts of her tail against the gravel at the top of the redd. The female lays from 1000 to 2000 eggs in several clutches within the redd, often fertilized by different males. Females guard their redds until death, which comes within days of spawning. In dense populations, a major source of mortality for embryos is superposition of redds by later-spawning fish. The eggs hatch from December to February, depending on water temperature, and the juveniles emerge from the gravel during March and April and quickly migrate downstream to estuaries at about one-quarter gram. The fish achieve sexual maturity in their second year of life. They return to freshwater in the summer or autumn as two year old adults. Pink and chum salmon sometimes interbreed in nature to form the hybrid known as the miko salmon; the hybrids are reproductively sterile.

Habitat

Pink salmon are coldwater fish with a preferred temperature range of 5.6 to 14.6°C, an optimal temperature of 10.1°C, and an upper incipient lethal temperature of 25.8°C. The species is native to Pacific and Arctic coastal waters from the Sacramento River in northern California to the Mackenzie River in Canada; and in the west from the Lena River in Siberia to Korea. Populations in Asia occur as far south as Hondo Island in Japan. Pink salmon were introduced into the Great Lakes; this is the only location where they have been successfully introduced into an entirely fresh water environment. In the Great Lakes, they are most common in Lake Superior but are rare in Lake Michigan is where their os clean water.[citation needed]

Conservation status

The pink salmon is critically imperiled in California, and imperiled in Washington. In Alaska and British Columbia they are secure.[3] They have been introduced in the Great Lakes.

Commerce

The commercial harvest of pink salmon is a mainstay of fisheries of both the eastern and western North Pacific; over 100 million have been taken in recent annual harvests in Alaska alone.[4] More than 20 million harvested pink salmon are produced by fishery-enhancement hatcheries, particularly in the northern Gulf of Alaska.[5] Pink salmon are not grown in significant numbers in fish farms. The fish are often canned, smoked or salted. Pink salmon roe is also produced commercially for caviar, a particularly valuable product in Asia.

Beginning in the late nineteenth century, fish traps were used to supply fish for commercial canning and salting. The industry expanded steadily until 1920. During the 1940s and 1950s, Pink Salmon populations declined drastically. Fish traps were prohibited in Alaska in 1959. Now most pink salmon are taken with purse seines, drift nets or gillnets. Populations and harvests increased rapidly after the mid 1970s and have been at record high numbers since the 1980s.

"Salmon pink" is a color named for the typically pink color of this fish's flesh. The color derives from their diet, which includes shrimp and krill.

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Fisheries and Oceans Canada species account Retrieved 2007 October 16
  2. ^ Fishbase species account Retrieved 2007 October 16
  3. ^ Oncorhynchus gorbuscha NatureServe conservation status
  4. ^ excerpts from Woodby et al. Commercial Fisheries in Alaska June 2005. Retrieved 2007 October 16
  5. ^ Salmon Enhancement and Hatcheries Retrieved 2007 October 16

 
 

 

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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Animal Encyclopedia. Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Copyright © 2005 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Veterinary Dictionary. Saunders Comprehensive Veterinary Dictionary 3rd Edition. Copyright © 2007 by D.C. Blood, V.P. Studdert and C.C. Gay, Elsevier. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Pink salmon" Read more