I am sharing this information that I found on the internet that explains the 'salmon run' that unfortunately Deb and I didn't understand. Mainly....that the salmon DIE when this occurs!!!
Are we the only ones who didn't know that?
We saw a sign that indicated that the salmon run was occurring in a stream along the highway on our way to Duncan, BC.
We were so excited....pictures...seeing that actually happening....
But we were so shocked to see all the dead salmon.
The salmon run is the time when salmon, which have migrated from the ocean, swim to the upper reaches of rivers where theyspawn on gravel beds. After spawning, most Pacific salmon and Atlantic salmon die, and the salmon life cycle starts over again. The annual run can be a major event for grizzly bears, bald eagles and sport fishermen.
Salmon spend their early life in rivers, and then swim out to sea where they live their adult lives and gain most of their body mass. When they have matured, they return to the rivers to spawn. Usually they return with uncanny precision to the natal river where they were born, and even to the very spawning ground of their birth. It is thought that, when they are in the ocean, they usemagnetoception to locate the general position of their natal river, and once close to the river, that they use their sense of smell tohome in on the river entrance and even their natal spawning ground.
In northwest America, salmon is a keystone species, which means the impact they have on other life is greater than would be expected in relation to their biomass. The death of the salmon has important consequences, since it means significant nutrients in their carcasses, rich in nitrogen, sulfur, carbon and phosphorus, are transferred from the ocean to terrestrial wildlife such as bears and riparian woodlands adjacent to the rivers. This has knock-on effects not only for the next generation of salmon, but to every species living in the riparian zones the salmon reach.[1] The nutrients can also be washed downstream into estuaries where they accumulate and provide further support for estuarine breeding birds.
Here are again pictures of the eerie moss covered trees that can be found everywhere.
"Come on little fishy's...you can do it...."
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