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Anadromous

Many types of fish undertake migrations on a regular basis, on time scales ranging from daily to annual, and with distances ranging from a few meters to thousands of kilometers. The purpose usually relates to either feeding or breeding; in some cases the reason for migration is still unknown.

Migratory fish are classified according to the following scheme:

  • diadromous fish travel between salt and fresh water
    • anadromous fish live in the sea mostly, breed in fresh water
    • catadromous fish live in fresh water, breed in sea
    • amphidromous fish move between fresh and salt water during some part of life cycle, but not for breeding
  • potamdromous fish migrate within fresh water only
  • oceanodromous fish migrate within salt water only

The best-known anadromous fish are the salmons, which hatch in small freshwater streams, go down to the sea and live there for several years, then return to the same streams where they were hatched, spawn, and die shortly thereafter. Salmon are capable of going hundreds of kilometers upriver, and human dams must install fish ladders to enable the salmon to get past.

The most remarkable catadromous fish are freshwater eels of genus Anguilla, whose larvae drift in the Sargasso Sea, sometimes for months or years, before recrossing the Atlantic on the way to their original streams. (See eel story for further detail.)

Vertical migration is a common daily behavior; many marine types move to the surface at night to feed, then return to the depths.

A number of large marines fishes, such as the tuna, migrate north and south annually, following temperature variations in the ocean. These are of great importance to fisheries.

Freshwater fish migrations are usually shorter, typically from lake to stream or vice versa, for spawning purposes.

Reference

  • Carl E. Bonds, Biology of Fishes, 2nd ed. (Saunders, 1996), pp. 599-605.


License

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Anadromous".

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