Title: Salmon Life History and Ecology
1Salmon Life History and Ecology
- Generalized life history
- Overview Anadromy, Homing, Semelparity
- Niches streams to oceans
- II. Salmon diversity
- Species
- Genetic diversity (Ch. 6)
- III. Ecology
- Streams food, predators, reproduction, nutrient
cycling - Oceans food, mortality
2I. Generalized Life History
Reprod. Potential (eggs/adult)
of successful offspring
Factors affecting sustainability
Mortality ( of returning adults)
Salmon Life Cycle
3Slightly more detailed life history
4Scale of salmon home range
Pacific Northwest
5Scale of salmon home range
Pacific Northwest
63 Unique Aspects of Salmon Life Histories
- Anadromy start in fresh water, migrate to salt
water, return to fresh water. (contrast
catadromy) - 2. Homing return to natal stream to spawn
- 3. Semelparity reproduce once before dying
(contrast iteroparity e.g., cutthroat
steelhead)
7Cool biology anadromy and physiological
alteration
- - Body fluids are saltier than surrounding water
- - Gain too much water and loss critical salts.
- Solutions
- Specialized cells in gills transport Cl-
- Kidneys
8Cool biology anadromy and biochemical alteration
- Need right physical conditions for physiological
changes. - Timing of migration coincides with physiological
changes - Fry ? Smoltification ? smolts (migrating) ?
adaptation in brackish water (mixed salt and
fresh). - River flow rates matter (dams affect this
greatly). - - Estuaries are very important as rearing and
acclimation habitat.
9Human modification of estuaries
Squalicum Harbor Marina
Padilla Bay
http//apps.ecy.wa.gov/shorephotos/scripts/bigphot
o.asp?idSKA0323
10Tradeoffs in anadromy
- Benefits
- i. freshwater sites are relatively safe for eggs
and juveniles - ii. large ocean pasture, greater populations
- 2. Costs/risks
- i. Dependent on conditions across a wide range
of ecosystems - ii. multiple migrations expose individuals to
multiple risks
11Cool biology - homing
- How do salmon find their home stream from the
ocean? - Mechanism olfactory imprinting - different
smells of home stream. - As migrating smolts waypoints
Olfactory rosette
Homing behavior olfactory cues to swim up or
downstream
Quinn 2005
Quinn 2005
12Cool biology - homing
- Population consequences
- - Leads to reproductive isolation of different
subpopulations. - - Reproductive isolation allows for adaptation
to local conditions - - Salmon tend to have high genetic diversity
within species.
13Cool biology - homing
- How many salmon stray vs. home (degree of
fidelity)? - Straying happens (1-10 of individuals)
- Important for recolonizing streams after
disturbances (or for restoring streams). - Recolonization is most likely to be successful if
individuals are from similar streams/habitats
14Semelparity Salmon reproduction
Sockeye males competing for a mate
Chum pair spawning
Female chum digging nest (redd)
Quinn 2005
15Better enjoy it, cause then you die
Quinn 2005
16Semelparity Tradeoffs
- Benefit/selection High growth low probability
of survival for multiple migrations ? do it while
you can - 2. Costs/risks all eggs in one basket,
literally. Disturbance (natural or human-caused)
could destroy an individuals chance of passing
on genes. - 3. Interacts with straying
-
17Semelparity consequences with Salmon
- Net transfer of nutrients from ocean to stream
- Important food source for
- - many terrestrial animals (bears, eagles,
scavengers) - - aquatic organisms (including those that salmon
eat) - May contribute significant fertilization to
riparian vegetation - Positive feedback? Are more salmon necessary for
more salmon?
Quinn 2005
18Niche concept, as applied to salmon
- Stream -
- Temperature
- Water flow
- Reproduction (gravel size)
- Ocean
- Temp PDO
19II. Salmon Diversity
- Species
- 1. The different species
Plus Masu salmon (O. masu) in Japan
202. Life history variation among species
Quinn 2005
212. Life history variation among species
- b. Time, location in oceans
For example Chum 2 years, open ocean Chinook
4-5 years, open ocean Sockey continental shelves
22B. Genetic diversity with species
- Species reproductively isolated
- Metapopulations local breeding populations
linked by occassional immigration (genetic
mixing) - Demes local breeding populations
- Stocks units of fisheries management
23Chinook metapopulation
Klamath river
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