The pink salmon (Oncorhynchus
gorbuscha) is also known as the "humpback"
or "humpy" because of its very pronounced,
laterally flattened hump which develops on the
backs
of adult males before spawning. It is called the
"bread and butter" fish in many Alaskan coastal
fishing communities because of its importance to
commercial fisheries and thus to local
economies. Pink salmon also contribute
substantially to the catch of sport anglers and
subsistence users in Alaska. It is native to
Pacific and arctic coastal waters from northern
California to the Mackenzie River, Canada, and
to the west from the Lena River in Siberia to
Korea.
General description: The pink salmon
is the smallest of the Pacific salmon found in
North America with an average weight of about
3.5 to 4 pounds and average length of 20-25
inches. An adult fish returning to coastal
waters is bright steely blue on top and silvery
on the sides with many large black spots on the
back and entire tail fin.
Its scales are very
small and the flesh is pink. As the fish
approaches the spawning streams the bright
appearance of the male is replaced by brown to
black above with a white belly; females become
olive green with dusky bars or patches above and
a light-colored belly. By the time the male
enters the spawning stream, it has developed the
characteristic hump and hooked jaws. Juvenile
pink salmon are entirely silvery, without the
dark vertical bars, or parr marks, of the young
of other salmon species.
Life history: Adult pink salmon enter
Alaska spawning streams between late June and
mid-October. Different races or runs with
differing spawning times frequently occur in
adjacent streams or even within the same stream.
Most pink salmon spawn within a few miles of the
coast and spawning within the intertidal zone or
the mouth of streams is very common. Shallow
riffles where flowing water breaks over coarse
gravel or cobble-size rock and the downstream
ends of pools are favored spawning areas. The
female pink salmon carries 1,500 to 2,000 eggs
depending on her size. She digs a nest, or redd,
with her tail and releases the eggs into the
nest. They are immediately fertilized by one or
more males and then covered by further digging
action of the female. The process is commonly
repeated several times until all the female's
eggs have been released. After spawning, both
males and females soon die, usually within two
weeks.
Sometime during early to mid-winter, eggs
hatch. The alevins, or young fry, feed on the
attached yolk sac material continuing to grow
and develop. In late winter or spring, the fry
swim up out of the gravel and migrate downstream
into salt water. The emergence and outmigration
of fry is heaviest during hours of darkness and
usually lasts for several weeks before all the
fry have emerged.
Following entry into salt water, the juvenile
pink salmon move along the beaches in dense
schools near the surface, feeding on plankton,
larval fishes, and occasional insects. Predation
is heavy on the very small, newly emerged fry,
but growth is rapid. By fall, at an age of about
1 year, the juvenile pink salmon are 4 to 6
inches long and are moving into the ocean
feeding grounds in the Gulf of Alaska and
Aleutian Islands areas. High seas
tag-and-recapture experiments have revealed that
pink salmon originating from specific coastal
areas have characteristic distributions at sea
which are overlapping, nonrandom, and nearly
identical from year to year. The ranges of
Alaska pink salmon at sea and pink salmon from
Asia, British Columbia, and Washington overlap
each other.
Pink salmon mature in two years which means
that odd-year and even-year populations are
essentially unrelated. Frequently in a
particular stream the other odd-year or
even-year cycle will predominate, although in
some streams both odd- and even-year pink salmon
are about equally abundant. Occasionally cycle
dominance will shift, and the previously weak
cycle will become most abundant.
Commercial fishing: In the early
years, fixed and floating fish traps were
employed extensively to catch pink salmon; such
traps were prohibited following statehood in
1959. Now most pink salmon are taken with purse
seines and drift or set gillnets. Lesser numbers
are taken with troll gear or beach seines. The
average annual Alaska harvest since 1959 is 45.1
million pink salmon. The ten-year average
harvest (1983-1992) is 77.4 million pink salmon.
In 1991 the Alaska harvest represented about 96
percent of the total North American harvest.
Pink salmon fisheries are important in all
coastal regions of Alaska south of Kotzebue
Sound. Commercial canning and salting of pink
salmon began in the late 1800s and expanded
steadily until about 1920. Runs declined
markedly during the 1940s and 1950s; however,
intensive effort is being made to rebuild and
enhance those runs through hatcheries, fish
ladders, and improved fisheries management.
Text: Alan Kingsbury
Illustration: Detlef Buettner
Revised and reprinted 1994
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