ABSTRACT 



Karluk River red salmon migrate to the ocean in their first to their fifth year. The majority 

 migrate during their third or fourth year. They mature, and return to fresh water to spawn in 

 their third to eighth year. The 5-year age group is dominant, with the 6-year age group next in 

 importance. In the period from 1921 to 1936, the spawning escapements have fluctuated from 400,000 

 to 2,533,402 with an average escapement of 1,113,594. The fluctuations in the ratio of return to 

 escapement have been considerable, and no correlation has been found to exist between escapement 

 and return. 



Certain adverse environmental conditions in the lake and tributary streams appear to have a 

 deleteriou effect upon the young red salmon. Insufficient amounts of phosphorus and silica present 

 in the lake waters is one such condition. This shortage of essential chemicals indirectly affects the 

 production of zooplankton of the lake, and thus appears to indirectly affect the growth and survival 

 of young salmon which depend upon zooplankton for food. A marked change is occurring in the 

 percentage of fish of a given fresh-water history in the escapement, in relation to the percentage 

 of fish of the same fresh-water history in the return. A higher percentage of fish spend 3 years in 

 fresh water in the escapement than in the return, and a higher percentage of fish spend 4 years in 

 fresh water in the return than in the escapement. Unless this relationship changes, the majority 

 of salmon in the Karluk River runs will be fish that have spent 4 yearsin fresh water, whereas, 

 formerly, the dominant age group was composed of fish that had spent 3 years in fresh water. 



Seaward migration takes place during the last week of May and the first 2 weeks in June. The 

 percentage of 4-year fingerlings decreased, and the percentage of 3-year fingerlings increased during 

 the period of migration. Growth rate affects the time of migration, as the fastest growing individuals 

 migrate first. Marking experiments at Karluk River have shown the amputation of the adipose 

 and right, left, or both ventral fins to be better methods of marking than those which included the 

 pectoral fins. The fresh-water mortality of Karluk River red salmon was found to be in excess of 

 99 percent. The average ocean mortality was 79 percent. The older and larger 4-year seaward 

 migrants experienced a lower ocean mortality than the 3-year migrants; the average mortality of the 

 former was 76 percent as compared to 83 percent for the younger age-group. Returns from marking 

 experiments on the red salmon of Karluk River have been consistently greater than returns from 

 similar experiments in other areas. 



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