
The life cycle
of the salmo salar, the wild Atlantic salmon is extraordinary with
the fish enduring great extremes throughout their lives.
It is in late autumn that the cycle begins with the cock fish (male
parent) fertilising the thousands of eggs which the female has laid
in a "REDD" or hollow of fine gravel at the top of the
river near its source. The parent fish, now called 'kelts', cover
up the eggs and drift back down- stream and back out to sea.
The eggs or OVA remain in the gravel for about five months, before
hatching out into alevins. Having survived on the yolk sacs of their
eggs, the baby fish (now called fry) start their lives by moving
into the river, feeding on the tiny organisms that live in the river.
With the constant threat of predatory fish and birds as well as
flooding, about a quarter of the original hatch will not survive.
The fry that have survived grow to become three or four inch long
parr and then continue to live in the river for two to three years,
feeding on the tiny organisms that live in the river, before becoming
Smolts and going out to sea in spring. Some Smolts stay close to
the shore, living on the many sprats and sand eel and then return
to the river as grilse after about a year, weighing several pounds.
Other Smolts will travel further from the river, traveling thousands
of miles across the Atlantic to the feeding grounds of south east
Greenland and Iceland.
Having spent two or more winters at sea the adult salmon, of which
only a small percentage will have survived, start their return journey
home to the Sixmile water to spawn for the first time. The urge
for the salmon to return to the precise place of its birth is instinctive.
During this journey they will encounter otters, seals, sea birds,
wild mink and predatory birds. Another major threat posed to them
is man, as many are caught by the deep sea fishing nets or killed
by pollution. If they surpass all these threats they now face their
final challenge.
Salmon can be seen hurling themselves up the weirs of Six Mile Water
in a bid to reach their home.
The salmon require tremendous power to leap and they develop what
scientists call "burst speed". This requires using anaerobic
muscles rather than aerobic which is used for swimming, which can
contract quickly and generate intense bursts of power, lasting only
a few seconds and propelling themselves forward at incredible speeds,
which can be up to eight meters per second.
Only about one per
cent of the original ova will survive to become young or adult salmon.
• No salmon to be killed during October. Catch and Release
permitted.
• Daily bag limit on Club waters is 2 fish, only one of which
may be a Salmon
For reporting all
environmental incidents relating to water pollution in Northern
Ireland phone - POLLUTION HOTLINE 0800 807060
Bailiff -
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