Dictionary Definition
diadromous adj : (used of fish) migratory between
fresh and salt waters [ant: anadromous, catadromous]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- In the context of "of a migratory|_|fish": a fish that travels between salt water and fresh water
Extensive Definition
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 fishes are classified according to
the following scheme:
- diadromous fishes travel between salt and fresh water.
(Greek:
'Dia' is between) There are three types of diadromous fish:
- anadromous fishes live in the sea mostly, breed in fresh water (Greek: 'Ana' is up; The noun is "anadromy")
- catadromous fishes live in fresh water, breed in the sea (Greek: 'Cata' is down)
- amphidromous fishes move between fresh and salt water during some part of life cycle, but not for breeding (Greek: 'Amphi' is both)
- potamodromous fishes migrate within fresh water only. (Greek: 'Potamos' is river)
- oceanodromous fishes migrate within salt water only. (Greek: 'Oceanos' is ocean)
One of the best-known anadromous fish are the
five species of Pacific
salmon, which are Chinook (King), Coho (Silver), Sockeye (Red),
Chum (Dog) and Pink (Humpback). They hatch in small freshwater
streams, go down to the sea and live there for two to six years,
most staying in the ocean for around four years, then return to the
same streams where they were hatched, spawn, and die shortly
thereafter to feed fauna and replenish the earth. Salmon are
capable of going hundreds of kilometers upriver, and humans must
install fish ladders
in dams to enable the salmon
to get past. Other examples of anadromous fishes are sea trout,
three-spined
stickleback, and shad.
The most remarkable catadromous fishes are
freshwater eels of genus
Anguilla,
whose larvae drift on the open ocean, sometimes for months or
years, before travelling thousands of kilometres back to their
original streams (see eel life
history).
An example of an amphidromous species included
the Bull
sharks living in Lake Nicaragua of Central America and in the
Zambezi river of Africa. Both the aforementioned lake and river are
fresh water, yet Bull sharks (a known man eater, and very
aggressive shark) will live and feed in these waters as well as
migrating to and from the sea (the Indian Ocean in the case of the
Zambezi Bull shark and the Altantic Ocean in the case of the Lake
Nicaragua Bull shark).
Diel
vertical migration is a common behavior; many marine species
move to the surface at night to feed, then return to the depths
during daytime.
A number of large marine 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.
See also
References
- Carl E. Bond, Biology of Fishes, 2nd ed. (Saunders, 1996), pp. 599-605.
- Michael Blumm, J.D., Sacrificing the Salmon: A Legal and Policy History of the Decline of Columbia Basin Salmon, Bookworld Publications, 2002.
diadromous in Czech: Migrace ryb
diadromous in German: Wanderfisch
diadromous in French: Migration des
poissons
diadromous in Italian: Migrazione ittica
diadromous in Dutch: Anadroom
diadromous in Japanese: 回遊
diadromous in Norwegian: Anadromi
diadromous in Norwegian Nynorsk: Anadromi
diadromous in Swedish: Fiskvandring
diadromous in Turkish: Göçmen balıklar
diadromous in Vietnamese: Di cư của
cá