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Not all salmon do die after spawning. Those that do have evolved over millions of years to do this in order to ensure the survival of the species.
Lake Michigan :)
Lake Michigan, all the others are bordered by Canada.
Lake Superior, Lake Huron, and Lake Erie all touch Michigan.
Lakes Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie, and Ontario
Michigan touches Lake Michigan, Lake Huron, Lake Superior, Lake Erie.The only lake it does not border is Lake Ontario, farther to the east.
A potential fate which salmon could meet whilst on their epic journey to the spawning grounds are bears. But the most dangerous hunter is Rob Jefferson, he is very quick and wreckless in his technique to hunting salmon. This sin't jsut a fact its a warning to all salmon.
Lake Huron, Lake Michigan, Lake Erie(all Lower Peninsula), and Lake Superior (Upper Peninsula).
No. Lake Michigan, like all of the Great Lakes, is fresh water only.
Lake Michigan is the only one of the Great Lakes completely within the US.
Almost all Salmon swim back to the place they were born themselves to spawn. This requires them to undertake extremely long journey, right up to the stream source where they were born. For reaching there the salmon have to swim upstream ( against the flow of stream), which is quite exhausting for them. Additionally when the salmon swim back for spawning they are hunted enthusiastically by many carnivores like Bears etc. This results in death of many salmon during the journey. When the salmon leave ocean ( where they habit after becoming adults) to go back to freshwater streams to spawn the fish undergoes physical transformation to adapt itself from the saltwater to fresh water conditions. All Pacific ocean salmon die after spawning. Whereas the Atlantic Ocean salmon might return back to ocean after spawning to continue its lifecycle.
they are all in Ontario