North Cascades


Salmon and Their Life Cycle


The life of the salmon is a cycle.

The length of each stage of this cycle varies with each species of salmon.

Salmon begin their lives as reddish, pea-sized eggs in the gravel of a fresh water creek, river, or stream. It is in this same stream that their parents were born. Many eggs share the same nest or redd.

Salmon eggs stay in the redd for one to four months. The tiny, newly hatched fish, known as alevins, remain in the gravel layer for several weeks. During this stage they are nutritionally dependent on the yolk sac that is attached to their bellies. Once the yolk sac is absorbed, the alevins enter the fry stage.

In the fry stage, salmon eat zooplankton until they grow large enough to eat crustaceans and insects. Fry will feed in the area of the redd for up to several years. Fry grow into fingerlings.

Fingerlings are four to five inches long. They eat snails, worms, freshwater shrimp, amphibian larvae, fish eggs, and young fish.

Fingerlings of pink and chum salmon species, as soon as they move from the fry stage, will migrate downstream to coastal estuaries, where the fresh water meets the ocean. Fingerlings of other species remain in fresh water for two months to three years before migrating to the estuary.

  • Salmon are anadromous fish. This means that they spend part of their lives in fresh water, some in salt water, and then mate and produce offspring in fresh water. This strategy of using different habitats at different times of the fishes' lives has evolved in a way that lets the salmon overcome the food and spatial limits of the freshwater environments.

  • Salmon require cold, clear, gravel-bedded mountain waters. These waters must be high in dissolved oxygen and low in sediments.

  • Salmon are the largest and most important predators in the freshwater environment and they are important indicators of the health of water systems.

  • In some species, the male and female salmon will pair up before they reach their natal stream; in others pairing will happen close to the end of their journey.

  • Once the female reaches the area where she was hatched she will dig a nest, or a redd, in the gravel. She uses her tail to swish some gravel away to create a shallow depression in the remaining gravel.

  • Several males will gather around her, although there will be a dominant male that keeps the others at bay. The female will lay her eggs and the dominant male will fertilize them. She will cover the eggs with a layer of gravel to protect them from predators and to keep them in place.

Once the fingerlings reach the estuary they are called smolt. These small fish spend time in the estuary while their bodies undergo changes to help them adjust to salt water living.

For the next two to five years the salmon will swim hundreds of miles in the Pacific Ocean in search of food and trying to stay out of the mouths of predators.

Timing of Life Histories of Skagit River Salmon
(From The Mountains to the Sea, Saul Weisberg and Jon Riedel)
SpeciesLife Stage JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
Chinook Spawning























Incubation























Fry























Pink Spawning























Incubation























Fry























Chum Spawning























Incubation























Fry























Coho Spawning























Incubation























Fry























Junveniles























Steelhead Spawning























Incubation























Fry























Junveniles























Adults























Mature salmon return to the same estuary they visited as a smolt. The mature salmon will be guided by the chemical blueprint smell of the water of its natal stream and find its way back home.

In the estuary, the salmon's habits change; it will no longer feed, but will derive energy from stored fats The appearance of the fish changes as well; the males change radically. Turning from silvery to various shades and combinations of red, green, and brown, the male salmon develops a hooked jaw and, in some cases, a humped back. The female's changes are more subtle, usually involving only a slight change in color and pattern.

The female constructs several redds. The adults may guard the redds once they have finished spawning, but, eventually, their exhausted bodies will wash downstream. The carcasses of the adult fish feed scavengers. The nutrients of their decaying bodies feed stream organisms which will, in turn, feed the young salmon.

A female salmon will lay several thousand eggs. Less than 1 percent of those eggs will survive to become spawning adults.

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http://www.nps.gov/noca/salmn1.htm
Last Updated: 30-Mar-2004