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Identifying Sockeye Salmon JUVENILE SOCKEYE IDENTIFICATION During their first year of life, young salmon can often be difficult to identify, particularly after they lose their parr marks. The following simple guide to juvenile salmon identification, is from The Stream Scene - Watersheds, Wildlife and People (1990), by Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, Portland, Oregon. For more definitive identification information, two more comprehensive field guides are listed below. Additional Reading
ADULT SOCKEYE IDENTIFICATION Maturing sockeye salmon return to Washington waters in the typical silvery ocean coloration. As the fish near their spawning streams, they begin to undergo changes in both color and physical form. The color gradually changes from silver with a dark back, to spawning colors dominated by a typical sockeye color pattern of a bright red body with green on the head and tail. Ocean Phase
Distinguishing characteristics -
Spawning Phase Typical Coloration - Body color typically various shades of red , and the head and tail will be a greenish color. Males may display a vertical pattern of bars along the sides, and spawning females will usually display a dark vertical stripe. The striped pattern is a signal to other fish that is used to reduce aggression. See Chum Salmon Colors for a discussion of the varying colors displayed by spawning salmon.
Distinguishing characteristics - Identified by the bright red to dark red body color, and the greenish color on the head and tail. Sockeye are the only salmon species that displays different spawning colors on the body and head.
SEXING SOCKEYE SPAWNERS The identification of male and female sockeye salmon can be difficult when the fish are in marine waters and have not yet begun to develop the sexual characteristics associated with maturation and spawning. Sockeye spawners, however, are easily sexed and the following guide illustrates the different male and female characteristics. Body Shape
Head and Jaws
Adipose Fins An often over-looked sexual characteristic in Pacific salmon is the enlarged adipose fin on mature males, typically 2-3 time larger than on female fish. |