 Salmon (click image for a larger version) © Erling Svenson
 Salmon swimming upriver © The Environment Agency
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Like the eel the salmon travels great distances to spawn,
up to 4830km (3000 miles). The adult salmon leave their home in the
sea, and travel back to the very river where they were born - even if this river is thousands of miles away. We don't fully understand
how the adult salmon find their way across such great distances - they may navigate like birds, using the sun or stars. We do know that,
as they get closer to the coastline, they use scent to find the right river - smelling for the special cocktail of soil, vegetation and
bedrock.
The journey upriver is also very difficult for the salmon. They swim against the current, often as much as 1,125km (700 miles),
sometimes covering 48km (30 miles) a day. They may often leap waterfalls several metres high and fight their way up numerous shallow
rapids.
Once they reach the place of their birth, in the upper reaches of the river, the salmon breed. The female salmon scoops out a shallow
nest, called a redd, in the gravel on the riverbed, into which she lays her eggs. The male salmon fertilises the eggs at the same time.
The eggs are sticky, and will attach themselves to the gravel at the bottom of the nest. The eggs are gently covered with gravel to keep
them safe, then the parent salmon (now called spent kelts) leave to try to return to the sea. Many will die on the way, weakened by
their efforts to spawn. Those that survive, called mended kelts, often spend up to 18 months feeding before fully recovering.
There are eleven different species of salmon. The Atlantic salmon will normally spawn two or three times in its life, returning to the
same spot each time. However, the Pacific salmon only breeds once, dying in huge numbers shortly after the eggs are laid, and providing
a seasonal feast for wildlife such as bears and birds.
The newly hatched baby salmon stay in the river, feeding on insect
larvae, until they reach about 13cm (5") long, when they become
known as parr. At this point they have special black, oval markings. If there is plenty of food available, they can lose those markings
in their second year but sometimes this can take up to four years. They then become known as smolts and the dark oval markings are then
replaced with a silvery, shiny skin. After a further year or two they are ready to
migrate to the sea for the first time, where they
feed and grow rapidly into adults, before the whole cycle is begun again.
Fish such as salmon are anadromous, that is, they spend most of their lives in the ocean but migrate into freshwater to spawn.
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