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sockeye salmon

 
Dictionary: sock·eye salmon   (sŏk'ī') pronunciation
n.
A salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) of northern Pacific coastal waters that is a commercially valuable food fish. Also called blueback salmon, red salmon.

[By folk etymology from Halkomelem (Salishan language of southwest British Columbia) sthəqə'y.]


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Male sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) in spawning phase
(click to enlarge)
Male sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) in spawning phase (credit: Jeff Foott — Bruce Coleman Inc.)
Food fish (Oncorhynchus nerka) of the North Pacific that constitutes almost 20% of the commercial fishery of Pacific salmon. It weighs about 6 lbs (3 kg) and lacks distinct spots on the body. It ranges from the northern Bering Sea to Japan and from Alaska to California. Sockeyes may migrate more than 1,000 miles (1,600 km) upriver to spawn in lakes or tributary streams. The young remain in freshwater one to five years. The kokanee is a small, nonmigratory, freshwater subspecies.

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

Animal Encyclopedia: Sockeye salmon
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Oncorhynchus nerka

FAMILY

Salmonidae

TAXONOMY

Salmo nerka Walbaum, 1792, rivers and seas of Kamchatka, Russia.

OTHER COMMON NAMES

English: Blueback salmon, land-locked sockeye, red salmon; French: Saumon rouge; German: Blaurücken; Spanish: Salmon rojo.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS

Length 33 in (84 cm) in males, 28 in (71 cm) in females; weight 17 lb (7.7 kg). Like most salmoniforms, has a streamlined, fusiform body that is laterally compressed, but unlike other species, the body depth is moderate, slightly deeper among breeding males. Head is conical, very pointed, with small eyes. Lateral line is straight. Has long, fine, serrated, and closely spaced gill rakers on the first arch. Coloration varies with sex and reproductive stage. Pre-spawning individuals are dark steel blue to greenish blue on the head and back, silvery on the sides, and white to silvery on the belly. Spawning individuals (particularly males) have a bright to olive green head with black on the snout and upper jaw; the adipose and anal fins turn red and the paired fins and tail generally become grayish to green or dark. Females are less brightly colored than males.

DISTRIBUTION

North Pacific, from northern Japan to Bering Sea and to Los Angeles, California, United States, with landlocked populations in Alaska, Yukon Territory, and British Columbia in Canada, and Washington and Oregon, United States. Successfully introduced in New Zealand.

HABITAT

There are two forms of this species: the sockeye, an anadromous form (a marine form that migrates to fresh water for spawning), and the kokanee, a landlocked form (with a much smaller maximum size).

BEHAVIOR

Age structure and morphology differ among populations. Sexual selection and reproductive capacity (fecundity and egg size) generally favor large (old), deep-bodied fish, thus the sizes and shapes of salmon vary among spawning habitats. Stream width is positively correlated with age at maturity and negatively correlated with the level of predation by bears. Therefore, sexual maturity can be reached as early as at one year of age or as late as five. Adults show a great inclination for homing, which takes place during summer and fall, as late as December.

FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET

Young in lakes feed largely on crustaceans and insect larvae; adults in lakes become pelagic and feed on plankton in the upper 60 ft (20 m) or so of the water column. As they grow, their diet starts to include other fishes. The landlocked form feeds mainly on plankton, insects, and benthic organisms. Ocean-going populations are preyed upon by larger fishes, including sharks, as well as by pinnipeds and killer whales. Freshwater populations are vulnerable to larger fishes, otters, bears, and fish-eating birds.

REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY

Like other salmoniforms, the female selects a site to dig a nest, where she is attended by a dominant male along with a few subordinate males. Both females and males protect their site by aggressively shoving off individuals of the same sex. After courtship by the dominant male, the female enters the nest, followed immediately by the dominant male, which comes close beside her. After the ritual of mouth gaping, the pair vibrates to release eggs and sperm, and one or more subordinate males comes to the other side of the female and joins in the spawning. The female then moves to the upstream edge of the nest and digs again, covering the old nest, while at the same time creating a new one just upstream. After three to five days of depositing eggs, the female is exhausted and, along with the male, dies. The fry emerging from the gravel is very photophobic, and becomes mostly nocturnal.

CONSERVATION STATUS

Not listed by the IUCN.

SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS

One of the most commercially important Pacific salmons. The kokanee form is much sought after as a sport fish and is valued as food.

WordNet: blueback salmon
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: small salmon with red flesh; found in rivers and tributaries of the north Pacific and valued as food; adults die after spawning
  Synonyms: sockeye, sockeye salmon, red salmon, Onchorynchus nerka


Wikipedia: Sockeye salmon
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Sockeye salmon
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Salmoniformes
Family: Salmonidae
Genus: Oncorhynchus
Species: O. nerka


Binomial name
Oncorhynchus nerka
(Walbaum, 1792)

Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka), also called red salmon or blueback salmon, is an anadromous species of salmon found in the Pacific Ocean. In landlocked water bodies this species is called the Kokanee. It is the third most common Pacific salmon species, after Pink and Chum salmon.[2] The name "sockeye" is believed to be a folk adaptation of the anglicization of sθə́qəy̓, , its name in Halkomelem, the language of the indigenous people along the lower reaches of the Fraser River.

Contents

Range and habitat

It ranges as far south as the Columbia River in the eastern Pacific (though individuals have been spotted as far south as the 10 Mile River on the Mendocino Coast of California) and northern Hokkaidō Island in Japan in the western Pacific, and as far north as Bathurst Inlet in the Canadian Arctic in the east and the Anadyr River in Siberia in the west.[3] Landlocked populations occur in the Yukon Territory and British Columbia in Canada, and in Alaska, Washington, Oregon, California,New York, Utah, Idaho, Montana, Colorado,New Mexico, and Wyoming in the United States.

Physical description

Photo of two fish with long red bodies and large mouths
Male and female sockeye salmon

A sockeye can be as long as 840 millimetres (33 in)and weigh 4 to 14 pounds (1.8 to 6.4 kg). It has an elongated, torpedo-shaped body, with an adipose fin, and a bluntly-pointed snout. The gill rakers are located just behind the head and are long and closely spaced. Its coloration changes as it migrates from saltwater to freshwater in preparation for spawning. In freshwater, its color is bright red with a pale green head; females may have green and yellow marks or stains. Its color in saltwater is bluish-green on top, silvery on the bottom, with uniform, shiny skin.

Reproduction

Sockeye are blue tinged with silver in color while living in the ocean. Just prior to spawning both sexes turn red with green heads and sport a dark stripe on their sides. Males develop a hump on their back and the jaws and teeth become hooked during their move from salt to fresh water.

Sockeye spawn mostly in streams having lakes in their watershed. The young fish, known as fry, spend up to three years in the freshwater lake before migrating to the ocean. Some stay in the lake and do not migrate. Migratory fish spend from one to four years in salt water, and thus are four to six years old when they return to spawn one summer (July-August). Navigation to the home river is thought to be done using the characteristic smell of the stream, and possibly the sun.

Some fish spend as long as four years in fresh water lakes before migrating. In rivers without lakes, many of the young move to the ocean soon after hatching. These salmon mature after one to four years in the ocean. Some sockeye live and reproduce in lakes and are called "kokanee." They are much smaller than the ones that go to the ocean and are rarely over 350 millimetres (14 in) long. In Okanagan Lake and possibly in other locations there are two populations of Kokanee. One spawns in streams and one spawns in the lake near the shore.

Diet

Sockeye Salmon, unlike other species of Pacific Salmon feed extensively on zooplankton during both freshwater and saltwater life stages.[4] Their many gill rakers strain the plankton from the water. This diet may be the reason for the striking hue of their flesh, as well as their very low concentration of methyl mercury. They also tend to feed on small aquatic organisms such as shrimp.

Population status

Sockeye salmon are currently listed under the U.S.Endangered Species Act[5] by the National Marine Fisheries Service as an endangered species in the Snake River (Idaho, Oregon and Washington area) and as a threatened species in Lake Ozette, Washington. Other sockeye populations in the upper Columbia River and in Puget Sound (Washington) are not listed under the Act.

For reasons currently unknown, but speculated to be overfishing and pollution, Fraser River-bound sockeye have all but disappeared. Both native and commercial fisheries based and situated around the Columbia River, Washington have reported between a 30 and 90 percent decrease in the amount of mature salmon returning to the Fraser River, British Columbia to spawn. Several wildlife organizations and nature preservation groups have urged a moratorium if not a cessation of capture until an extensive environmental impact study can be completed.

In 2009, only 1.7 million of the forecasted 10.4 million sockeye returned to the Fraser River, a 50-year low.[6]

Causes of the decline include overfishing, spawning habitat destruction, climate change and unauthorised fishing by First Nations people, along with disease and parasites spread from open-pen salmon farms, although the latter two remain controversial. Warming waters invite salmon predators such as squid and mackerel from further south. The Broughton Archipelago hosts some two dozen farms, past which many sockeye swim.[6]

Stocks of coho and chinook are down by a similar proportion.[6]

Commerce

This species is netted commercially using seines and gillnets for fresh or frozen fillet sales and canning, especially in Bristol Bay, Alaska, site of the largest harvest of sockeye salmon, according to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. The species is preferred for canning due to the rich orange-red flesh. More than half of the sockeye salmon caught today are sold frozen.

Fresh sockeye also tends to fetch a higher price than other salmon, as they are considered the most flavorful and flexible of the family.[citation needed]

When smoked, Sockeye has a stronger flavour and firmer texture than Coho salmon. Sockeye is popular for fly fishing, when it returns to freshwater to spawn and is an acrobatic and powerful fighter.

Notes

  1. ^ Rand, P.S. (2008). Oncorhynchus nerka. In: IUCN 2008. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 2009-10-16.
  2. ^ "Sockeye Salmon". NOAA Fisheries Office of Protected Resources. http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/species/fish/sockeye.htm. Retrieved 2006-11-19. 
  3. ^ "Sockeye Salmon". Alaska Department of Fish and Game. http://www.adfg.state.ak.us/pubs/notebook/fish/sockeye.php. Retrieved 2006-11-17. 
  4. ^ http://www.adfg.state.ak.us/pubs/notebook/fish/sockeye.php
  5. ^ http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/laws/esa/ U.S. Endangered Species Act
  6. ^ a b c "Socked". November 19, 2009. http://www.economist.com/world/americas/displaystory.cfm?story_id=14917782. Retrieved November 2009. 

References

Technical Reports

External links


 
 

 

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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
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Animal Encyclopedia. Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Copyright © 2005 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. 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 "Sockeye salmon" Read more