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FREE ESSAY ON SALMON

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Alaska Wild Salmon
This paper is a complete research project that determines the factors influencing the market problems facing the Alaska wild salmon industry and explores the superiority of Alaska salmon over farm-raised salmon. -- 10,255 words; APA

Alaska Salmon
A research proposal to determine the superiority of Alaska wild salmon over farm-raised salmon. -- 15,725 words; MLA

Salmon Migration
An overview of the salmon's life cycle and the adaptations which allow it to adapt to salt water and fresh water. -- 985 words; MLA

Pacific Coast Salmon Fisheries
An insight into the Pacific Coast salmon fisheries including the salmon lifecycle and the human threat to their habitat. -- 1,400 words;

Salmon Concerns
This paper considers the worries about salmon farms and discusses those who claim the worries are baseless. -- 1,575 words;

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SALMON

What species would travel over 2000 miles just to have young and then die? It has been
said that anyone who has not seen a wild salmon has not seen what a fish should be.
Salmon was the common name applied to fish characterized by an elongated body covered
with small, rounded scales and a fleshy fin between the dorsal fin and tail. In this
paper I will be discussing history of studying salmon, the life cycle, spawning and
mating behaviors; which has much to do with the total reproduction of salmon.
Salmon were studied earlier than some may think. Experiments were done by men that date
back to the mid-1600s. These experiments involved catching salmon in fresh water, tagging
them, and then catching them again when they return to the same place, around six months
later. These experiments were doubtful and it was not until the beginning of the 1900's
that proof was available that the salmon returned home. (Shearer) 
Although usually drab in color before the breeding season, which varies with the species,
members of the salmon family develop bright hues at spawning time. The male, during this
mating season, usually develops a hooked snout and a humped back. In many diverse taxa,
males of the same species often exhibit multiple mating strategies. One well-documented
alternative male reproductive pattern is 'female mimicry,' whereby males assume a
female-like morphology or mimic female behavior patterns. In some species males mimic
both female morphology and behavior. We report here female mimicry in a reptile, the
red-sided garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis). This form of mimicry is unique
in that it is expressed as a physiological feminization. Courting male red-sided garter
snakes detect a female-specific pheromone and normally avoid courting other males.
However, a small proportion of males release a pheromone that attracts other males, as
though they were females. In the field, mating aggregations of 5-17 males were observed
formed around these individual attractive males, which we have termed 'she-males.' In
competitive mating trials, she-males mated with females significantly more often than did
normal males, demonstrating not only reproductive competence but also a possible
selective advantage to males with this female-like pheromone.
In the competitive mating trials, the she-males were successful in 29 out of 42 trials.
The normal males won out in only 13! The authors ask the question: Why aren't all males
she-males given such an advantage? 
(Mason, Robert T., and Crews, David; Female Mimicry in Garter Snakes, Nature, 316:59,
1985.) 
Comment. Among the fishes, bluegills and salmon (and probably many others) have
female-appearing males competing with normal males. 
Abstract: The influence of sperm competition and individual mating behaviour in an
externally fertilizing species of fish, the Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar), is estimated
from video observations of multiple-male spawnings and subsequent paternity analyses. One
male dominated the paternity during polygamous spawnings, fathering more than 80% of the
progeny in a single nest. Behavioural analyses of the spawnings showed that the
first-mating male had sperm precedence in 6 out of 10 cases. In three of the other
spawnings, sperm limitation likely influenced individual success, as the first-mating
male had participated in a large number of spawnings. In the final, nearly simultaneous
spawning, male size was more important than the 0.6-s difference in spawning times. Thus,
male fertilization success can be influenced by a variety of factors, including sperm
precedence, male size, and spawning history. Back to Table of Contents 
Before mating, one parent excavates a nest for the eggs; after the eggs are deposited and
fertilized, the female stirs up the stream bottom so that earth and stones cover the 
eggs and protect them. The eggs hatch in two weeks to six months, depending on the
species and the water temperature. During the migrations and nest-building activity that
precede mating, neither the females nor the males consume food.
In the life cycle of the pacific salmon, nature recycles the parents to feed the babies.
Mature salmon leave the Pacific Ocean as saltwater fish, never again to eat as they
battle their way up the Columbia River to spawn in the home stream where they were born.
Those born in the upper reaches of the Columbia River's tributary stream, the Snake
River, travel more than 1,000 miles inland to lay their eggs and fertilize them, roughly
one fourth of the distance across the United States. Without enough reserves
in their bodies to get back to the Pacific, the adult salmon spawn and die. To spawn, a
female salmon scoops a nest in stream-bottom gravel by waving her tail and deposits her
eggs in the hole. The male releases milt (sperm) into the water that covers the eggs and
fertilizes them. Then the female brushes gravel over the eggs, and both parents lie
exhausted in the stream until they die.
Micro-organisms in the water decompose their bodies during the winter, and this process
increases the population of micro-organisms in the stream. Come spring, the salmon eggs
hatch into the tiny fish called fry. The first food is the microorganisms in the stream.
The Pacific salmon never see their parents, but are actually nourished by their
decomposed bodies. The next step in growth is fingerlings, then young salmon make the
dangerous trip downstream, past dams and waterfalls to the ocean. There they grow into
adults, averaging six pounds in weight. In its life cycle, the pacific salmon takes
five forms and sizes: a pea-sized egg, one-half-inch embryo, one- to three-inch fry,
four- to five-inch fingerling, and fully grown, six-pound adult one to two feet long.
Nature fully recycles pacific salmon. (Atlantic Salmon, in contrast, travel up rivers
only
150 to 250 miles long and can return to the sea after spawning.)
The males of many fish fight for the possession of the females. When a fish is conquered,
his colors fade away and he hides his disgrace among his peaceable companions, but is for
some time the constant object of his conqueror's persecution. Mr. Shaw saw a violeny
contest between two male salmon that lasted for a days. The males are constantly teare
In many diverse taxa, males of the same species often exhibit multiple mating strategies.
One well-documented alternative male reproductive pattern is 'female mimicry,' whereby
males assume a female-like morphology or mimic female behavior patterns. In some species
males mimic both female morphology and behavior. We report here female mimicry in a
reptile, the red-sided garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis). This form of
mimicry is unique in that it is expressed as a physiological feminization. Courting male
red-sided garter snakes detect a female-specific pheromone and normally avoid courting
other males. However, a small proportion of males release a pheromone that attracts other
males, as though they were females. In the field, mating aggregations of 5-17 males were
observed formed around these individual attractive males, which we have termed
'she-males.' In competitive mating trials, she-males mated with females significantly
more often than did normal males, demonstrating not only reproductive competence but also
a possible selective advantage to males with this female-like pheromone.
In the competitive mating trials, the she-males were successful in 29 out of 42 trials.
The normal males won out in only 13! The authors ask the question: Why aren't all males
she-males given such an advantage? 
(Mason, Robert T., and Crews, David; Female Mimicry in Garter Snakes, Nature, 316:59,
1985.) 
Comment. Among the fishes, bluegills and salmon (and probably many others) have
female-appearing males competing with normal males. 
Abstract: The influence of sperm competition and individual mating behaviour in an
externally fertilizing species of fish, the Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar), is estimated
from video observations of multiple-male spawnings and subsequent paternity analyses. One
male dominated the paternity during polygamous spawnings, fathering more than 80% of the
progeny in a single nest. Behavioural analyses of the spawnings showed that the
first-mating male had sperm precedence in 6 out of 10 cases. In three of the other
spawnings, sperm limitation likely influenced individual success, as the first-mating
male had participated in a large number of spawnings. In the final, nearly simultaneous
spawning, male size was more important than the 0.6-s difference in spawning times. Thus,
male fertilization success can be influenced by a variety of factors, including sperm
precedence, male size, and spawning history. Back to Table of Contents 
An adult female salmon can lay upto 15,000 eggs, depending upon her size.
The female fish (hen) creates a depression in the gravel bed of the river by an energetic
flapping of her large tail. The male (cock) fish swims up beside her and begins to
quiver, stimulating the female to release her eggs, at the same time the male releases
his milt which fertilises the eggs. Once the mating has been completed the female again
starts to beat the river bed with her tail, this time just above the site where she laid
her eggs, this causes gravel to wash downstream with the current and cover the eggs. 
This covering of gravel offers the eggs protection from predators such as eels, ducks and
other fish.
After spawning, the male fish, now called a kelt, rapidly loses the hooked jaw and bright
colouration that it had developed just prior to the mating season. The male may remain at
the breeding site for days or weeks, guarding the newly-layed eggs.
Salmon eggs deposited in the autumn hatch the following spring
The Atlantic and Pacific salmon demonstrate distinctly different reproductive strategies.
The Atlantic salmon may return to fresh
water to spawn several times while the Pacific salmon concentrates its reproductive
efforts into one large spawning event and
then dies (Ward, 1939).
The reproductive cells of the Pacific salmon all mature simultaneously and as a result,
these fish have only one chance to breed.
With the completion of spawning, their lives soon come to an end. Although the Atlantic
salmon has the physiological potential
to reproduce numerous times, the long journey to the spawning grounds, as well as the
stress of the reproductive act itself takes
its toll. Typically, fewer than 10 per cent of spawning Atlantic salmon return to the
ocean, with most of these being females.
These fish belong to the salmon family. Most members of this family are valuable food and
a source of excellent game. They are found in both fresh and salt water in the colder
regions of the Northern Hemisphere. Many return from salt water to freshwater to breed,
and the young migrate to salt water from freshwater after they reach maturity. The
migratory instinct of members of the salmon family is remarkably specific, each
generation returning to spawn in exactly the same breeding places as the generation
before it. Even those species that do not migrate from freshwater to salt water spawn in
the same freshwater streams, as did their ancestors. The spawning ground of these fish is
usually a rapidly flowing, clear stream with gravel and rocks on the bottom.
Bibliography
References
1. Mills, Derek. (1989). Ecology and Management of Atlantic Salmon. New England, 
New York: Chapman and Hall.
2. Shearer. (1978). The Atlantic Salmon. New York: Halsted Press form
3. Cone, J., & Ridlington, S. (Eds.). (1996) The Northwest Salmon Crisis: A documentary
History. Corvallis, Oregon: Oregon State University Press.

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