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Search results for Teleostei
1
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Two male sockeye salmon, swimming together against the current of the Adams River. After four years of life and two migrations of the Fraser and Adams Rivers, they will soon fertilize a female's eggs and then die.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26179
Two male sockeye salmon, swimming together against the current of the Adams River. After four years of life and two migrations of the Fraser and Adams Rivers, they will soon fertilize a female's eggs and then die.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26180
A male sockeye salmon, showing injuries sustained as it migrated hundreds of miles from the ocean up the Fraser River, swims upstream in the Adams River to reach the place where it will fertilize eggs laid by a female in the rocks. It will die so after spawning.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26174
Adams River sockeye salmon. A female sockeye salmon swims upstream in the Adams River to spawn, having traveled hundreds of miles upstream from the ocean.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26175
A school of sockeye salmon, swimming up the Adams River to spawn, where they will lay eggs and die.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26176
Adams River sockeye salmon. A female sockeye salmon swims upstream in the Adams River to spawn, having traveled hundreds of miles upstream from the ocean.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26178
Sockeye salmon, migrating upstream in the Adams River to return to the spot where they were hatched four years earlier, where they will spawn, lay eggs and die.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26392
Sockeye salmon, migrating upstream in the Adams River to return to the spot where they were hatched four years earlier, where they will spawn, lay eggs and die.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26393
Sockeye salmon, migrating upstream in the Adams River to return to the spot where they were hatched four years earlier, where they will spawn, lay eggs and die.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26394
Sockeye salmon, migrating upstream in the Adams River to return to the spot where they were hatched four years earlier, where they will spawn, lay eggs and die.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26395
A school of sockeye salmon, swimming up the Adams River to spawn, where they will lay eggs and die.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26414
A school of sockeye salmon, swimming up the Adams River to spawn, where they will lay eggs and die.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26415
Sockeye salmon, migrating upstream in the Adams River to return to the spot where they were hatched four years earlier, where they will spawn, lay eggs and die.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26184
Sockeye salmon, swim upstream in the Adams River, traveling to reach the place where they hatched four years earlier in order to spawn a new generation of salmon eggs.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26181
A sockeye salmon, a male sockeye dying on the edge of the Adams River, has completed its journey of hundreds of miles upstream inthe Fraser and Adams Rivers just to reach this spot, so that it can fertilize a females nest of eggs before dying.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26182
Carcasses of dead sockeye salmon, line the edge of the Adams River. These salmon have already completed their spawning and have died, while other salmon are still swimming upstream and have yet to lay their eggs.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26183
Fall colors along Little Shuswap Lake, near the Adams River.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26185
The Adams River, at the Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park, British Columbia, Canada.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26188
Sockeye salmon, swim upstream in the Adams River, traveling to reach the place where they hatched four years earlier in order to spawn a new generation of salmon eggs.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26189
Sockeye salmon, swim upstream in the Adams River, traveling to reach the place where they hatched four years earlier in order to spawn a new generation of salmon eggs.
Species:
Sockeye salmon
,
Oncorhynchus nerka
Location:
Adams River
,
Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
,
British Columbia
,
Canada
Image ID:
26190
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Teleostei photos
All photographs copyright © Phillip Colla / Oceanlight.com, all rights reserved worldwide.