| ▲ | Dansvidania 2 hours ago | |||||||
Silly question but if I remember correctly salmon go back to reproduce where they spawned. This suggests that once access is cut up a river, that location loses its salmon (can’t get there, so they don’t reproduce?) Do they artificially reintroduce the salmon once access is restored or does that “neighbourhood” of salmon somehow survives and keeps trying every year ? | ||||||||
| ▲ | burner420042 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
IANAS but my understanding is they keep going upstream - while there's current to push against them - as an instinctual response. I believe water temperature also plays a role. Salmon hatcheries also artificially boost the quantity of salmon in the stream. If a salmon hatchery released salmon at the base of a dam, when the fish return and the dam was now gone, they'd just keep going. However, there's more to it than this, because dammed rivers lacking salmon hatcheries have seen salmon runs start once the dams are removed. I don't think the old adage that salmon will only return to their original spawning grounds is the whole story. | ||||||||
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| ▲ | jimnotgym 10 minutes ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
Some get lost or stray. It is natures back-up plan. Stocking can give it a faster kickstart though | ||||||||