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Differences in Thermal Tolerance Among Sockeye Salmon Populations

Science, 2011
Environmental conditions encountered during migration shape cardiorespiratory physiology in sockeye salmon.
Erika J, Eliason   +9 more
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Phosphoglucomutase polymorphism in sockeye salmon

Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, 1970
Abstract 1. 1. Phosphoglucomutase phenotypes of all but one of 633 sockeye salmon ( Oncorhynchus nerka ) consisted of one or both of two zones of activity resolved by starch gel electrophoresis. 2. 2. The common phenotypes could be explained by a hypothesis of two alleles at a single locus; the excpetional phenotype could be explained by ...
F M, Utter, H O, Hodgins
openaire   +2 more sources

Evolution of Sockeye Salmon Ecotypes

Science, 2001
Rapid evolution of reproductive isolation is proposed by A. Hendry and colleagues to be the cause of the genetic differences between two adjacent populations of Washington State sockeye salmon (Reports, 20 Oct., p. [516][1]). These two populations or “ecotypes,” one living in a tributary (Cedar River) and the other along a beach (Pleasure Point) of ...
Richard G. Gustafson   +3 more
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Magnetic field detection in sockeye salmon

Journal of Experimental Zoology, 1981
AbstractPrevious research has indicated that lake‐migrating sockeye salmon fry have compass directional preferences, cued in part by magnetic fields. This paper reports the results of experiments designed to compare the magnetosensory system of salmon with those of other organisms.
Thomas P. Quinn   +2 more
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Examining Evidence of Reproductive Isolation in Sockeye Salmon

Science, 2001
The study of speciation has recently undergone a revival, with much controversy centering on whether new species can originate quickly and within the geographic range of their ancestor. Hendry et al .
D J, Howard   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Retinal projections in sockeye salmon smolts (Oncorhynchus nerka)

Cell and Tissue Research, 1988
The retinal projections in 2-year-old salmon smolt (Oncorhynchus nerka) are significantly different from those observed in other teleosts examined to date in that the projections are more extensive. Very noticeable are extensive projections to most of the dorsal thalamus, to all layers of the optic tectum, and into the periaqueductal gray of the torus ...
S O, Ebbesson   +3 more
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The Rivers Inlet Sockeye Salmon

Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1958
The Rivers Inlet sockeye catch has averaged about 1 million fish per year, over 45 years. These are from smolts produced in a cold, deep lake, only 30 square miles in extent, and most of it heavily silted by glacial tributaries. The water has only a moderate lime content and its reaction is neutral or very slightly acid.
openaire   +1 more source

Harvesting wellness with Okanagan sockeye salmon

2020
Prior to colonization the Syilx Okanagan people were healthy and strong, by honouring reciprocal relationships with salmon and all living things. Colonization contributed to a loss of salmon abundance that is now being restored by the Syilx Okanagan Nation.
openaire   +1 more source

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