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  2. Sockeye salmon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sockeye_salmon

    Sockeye salmon do not feed during reproduction. [22] Feeding ends once they enter into freshwater, which can be several months before spawning. [23] Embryos are maintained with only endogenous food supplies for about 3–8 months. [30] Reproduction in the sockeye salmon has to be accomplished with the energy stores brought to the spawning grounds.

  3. This is the healthiest seafood, according to experts - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/healthiest-seafood...

    Wild sockeye salmon provides the highest vitamin D content of all salmon species, Largeman-Roth adds, and it's more sustainable than the farmed types. ... "Look for wild-caught sablefish from ...

  4. Salmon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salmon

    Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) is also known as red salmon in the US (especially Alaska). [52] This lake-rearing species is found in the eastern Pacific from Bathurst Inlet in the Canadian Arctic to Klamath River in California, and in the western Pacific from the Anadyr River in Siberia to northern Hokkaidō island in Japan.

  5. Iliamna Lake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iliamna_Lake

    Sockeye (red) and Chinook (king) salmon are consistently found in the lake and are open to harvest under Alaska Department of Fish and Game Regulations. Lake Iliamna also has one of few populations of freshwater seals in the world. [6] It also serves as a nursery for the largest red salmon run in the world.

  6. Copper River (Alaska) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper_River_(Alaska)

    The river's commercial salmon season is very brief, beginning in May for chinook salmon, and sockeye salmon for periods lasting mere hours or several days at a time. [22] Sport fishing by contrast is open all year-long, [23] but peak season on the Copper River lasts from August to September, when the coho salmon runs.

  7. Yes, salmon is good for you. But here's why you want to ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/yes-salmon-good-heres-why...

    These five are chum, sockeye, Chinook, Coho, and pink - with pink being the smallest and most abundant species and Chinook being the largest and least abundant, per the Pacific Salmon Foundation ...