A brown bear in katmai national park in Alaska heads to the beach to eat the large male sockeye salmon he has just caught.

Brown Bear with Sockeye Salmon

Alaska, USA

Each summer in Katmai National Park and Preserve in Alaska, Sockeye salmon (also known as reds) return from the northern Pacific Ocean where they have spent the last two or three years. They travel up into the freshwater rivers and streams, attempting to return to the headwaters of their birth to spawn.

Once entering the freshwater, the salmon stop feeding and undergo a physical transformation, changing both shape and color. The head turns green and the body bright red, as the orange-red pigments from the fish's flesh concentrate in the skin. Sockeye males undergo the most radical changes, developing humps on their backs and forming a kype - a curved mouth with large teeth. Spawning is the last act of their life cycle.

The journey is arduous, as the salmon must overcome many obstacles. They must adapt to the freshwater environment, navigate through natural impediments such as waterfalls, and avoid predators such as the many brown bears that congregate along their way.

Photo © copyright by Dr. Edward Mikol.

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