Salmon Life Cycle: Early Stages

The eggs lie in the gravel through the winter as the embryos within develop. IN early spring, yolk-sac fry, or alevins, hatch. The tiny fish carry a food supply(a sac of egg yolk) attached to their bellies. They will now leave the protection of the gravel until the yolk is used up, 12 weeks or more. At that time, the young salmon, now called fry, swim up to the surface, gulp air to fill their swim bladders, and begin to feed.

Fry spend a year or more in their home stream in the case of some species, feeding on insects and other tiny animals. For these species, high quality stream habitat is particularly important. Streambed vegetation created shade and supports many of the insects the young fish will eat. Snags, roots, and boulders provide hiding places and act as "breaks" that keep flood waters from sweeping the fry downstream. Chinook salmon head for the sea soon after they emerge from the gravel.

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