

Capture and Culture Species
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Photo |
Names |

Image courtesy of:
Regulatory
Fish Encyclopedia, Office of Seafood and Office
of Regulatory Affairs, US Food and Drug Administration. |
Latin: Oncorbynchus tshawytscha
French: Saumon royal
German: Konigslachs
Spanish: Salmon "chinook"
Russian: Chavycha
Japanese: Masunosuke |
Description |
| Also known as king salmon, chinooks contain a higher fat content than any
other pacfic salmon. Chinooks are also the largest of the salmons growing
as large as 57 kg (126 lbs). They are usually marketed between 7 to 18 kg
(15 to 40 lbs). Chinooks are born in high mountain streams. During the first
stage of their life, they migrate downstream to the pacific ocean where
they live for 4 to 5 years and develop large fat reserves. When the chinook
migrates back to the mountain streams to spawn, it stops feeding and lives
off of its fat reserves. |
Markets |
Commercial Aspects |
Exporting Countries
Culture:
Chile, United States, Canada, New Zealand
Capture:
United States
Primary Consumers
United States, Canada, Europe |
Between 10,000 and 18,000 tons of chinook salmon are landed annually. |
Production Trends |
Diet/Health Info |
| Wild chinook stocks are stressed due to habitat destruction, dams, and fishing.
If these problems are addressed the chinook population can recover. If they
are not addressed the population could continue its decline. Cultured stocks
are expected to remain steady at 12,000 to 16,000 tons per year. |
Chinooks have a high fat content |
The Global Supply |
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