Product Code Database
Example Keywords: coat -android $54-198
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Salmonidae
Tag Wiki 'Salmonidae'.
Tag

Salmonidae (, ) is a family of , the only extant member of the Salmonoidei, consisting of 11 extant and over 200 collectively known as " salmonids" or " salmonoids". The family includes (both Atlantic and Pacific species), (both ocean-going and landlocked), , , freshwater whitefishes, and , all mid- that inhabit the and cool waters of the Northern Hemisphere. The ( Salmo salar), whose name became that of its , is also the of the family and order names.

Salmonids have a relatively primitive appearance among fish, with the being placed far back, and an towards the rear of the back. They have slender bodies with rounded and forked , and their contain a single row of sharp .

(1998). 9780125476652, .
Although the smallest salmonid species is just long for adults, most salmonids are much larger, with the largest reaching .

All salmonids are that spawn in the shallow of , spend the growing years in , creeks, small and , but migrate downstream upon maturity and spend most of their lives at much larger waterbodies. Many salmonid species are and migrate to the or as soon as they approach adulthood, returning to the upper streams only to reproduce. Such sea-run life cycle is described as , and other freshwater salmonids that migrate purely between lakes and rivers are considered . Salmonids are of the middle , feeding on smaller fish, , and , and sometimes (even those of their own kind), and in turn being preyed upon by larger predators. Many species of salmonids are thus considered important for both freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems due to the biomass transfer provided by their mass migration from oceanic to inland waterbodies.


Evolution
Current salmonids comprise three main taxonomically treated as : (freshwater whitefishes), (), and (, , , and ). Generally, all three lineages are accepted to allocate a suite of derived traits indicating a group.

The suborder Salmonoidei, containing only Salmonidae, is one of two extant clades within the order Salmoniformes, which first appeared during the and stages of the .

(2026). 9780253008961, Indiana University Press.
The other is the , which contains the pikes and . Formerly, many more families were included within this group, but all have since been reclassified into their own orders. During the early 21st century, Salmoniformes was redefined to include only Salmonidae as a order.
(2026). 9781118342336, Wiley. .
However, as recent phylogenetic studies have affirmed the relationship between the Salmonoidei and Esocoidei, the latter have returned to being considered a suborder of Salmoniformes. fossil
Klondike Mountain Formation]]It is thought that salmon and pike diverged from one another during the , but until 2025, there was no evidence of salmonids occurring during this time period. In 2025, the earliest known fossil salmonid,
, was described from the early -aged Prince Creek Formation of , with indeterminate remains of this genus also being identified from the older -aged Dinosaur Park Formation of . The occurrence of Sivulliusalmo'' in these northern habitats suggests that the modern salmonid preference for cool, high-latitude waters is an ancient, conserved trait.

Prior to the description of Sivulliusalmo, the earliest record of salmonids was the -aged , a stem-, which was first described from fossils found at Driftwood Creek, central , and has been recovered from most sites in the Eocene Okanagan Highlands.Wilson, M.V.H. 2009. McAbee Fossil Site Assessment Report. 60 pp. Online PDF. Accessed 17 May 2021. This genus shares traits found in all three subfamily lineages. Hence, E. driftwoodensis is an archaic salmonid, representing an important stage in salmonid evolution. Fossil scales of coregonines are known from the Late Eocene or Early Oligocene of California.

A gap appears in the salmonine fossil record after E. driftwoodensis until about 7 million years ago (), in the , when trout-like fossils appear in , in the Clarkia Lake beds. Several of these species appear to be — the current genus for Pacific salmon and Pacific trout. The presence of these species so far inland established that Oncorhynchus was not only present in the Pacific drainages before the beginning of the (~5–6 mya), but also that and , and Pacific salmon lineages had diverged before the beginning of the Pliocene. Consequently, the split between Oncorhynchus and (Atlantic salmon and European trout) must have occurred well before the Pliocene. Suggestions have gone back as far as the (about 20 mya).


Genetics
Based on the most current evidence, salmonids diverged from the rest of no later than 88 million years ago, during the late . This divergence was marked by a in the ancestral salmonid, where the diploid ancestor became .
(1984). 9781468446548
This duplication is the fourth of its kind to happen in the evolutionary lineage of the salmonids, with two having occurred commonly to all bony vertebrates, and another specifically in the teleost fishes.

Extant salmonids all show evidence of partial tetraploidy, as studies show the genome has undergone selection to regain a diploid state. Work done in the ( Onchorhynchus mykiss) has shown that the genome is still partially-tetraploid. Around half of the duplicated protein-coding genes have been deleted, but all apparent still show full duplication, with potential to influence regulation of the rainbow trout's genome. This pattern of partial tetraploidy is thought to be reflected in the rest of extant salmonids.

The earliest presumed salmonid fish ( ) does not appear until the middle Eocene. This fossil already displays traits associated with extant salmonids, but as the genome of E. driftwoodensis cannot be sequenced, it cannot be confirmed if polyploidy was present in this animal at this point in time.

Given a lack of earlier transition fossils, and the inability to extract genomic data from specimens other than extant species, the dating of the whole-genome duplication event in salmonids was historically a very broad categorization of times, ranging from 25 to 100 million years in age. New advances in have allowed for a closer examination of the salmonid genome, and has allowed for a more precise dating of the whole-genome duplication of the group, that places the latest possible date for the event at 88 million years ago.

This more precise dating and examination of the salmonid whole-genome duplication event has allowed more speculation on the radiation of species within the group. Historically, the whole-genome duplication event was thought to be the reason for the variation within Salmonidae. Current evidence done with molecular clock analyses revealed that much of the speciation of the group occurred during periods of intense climate change associated with the last ice ages, with especially high speciation rates being observed in salmonids that developed an anadromous lifestyle.


Classification
Together with the closely related orders (pikes and ), (true smelts) and ( and ), Salmoniformes comprise the Protacanthopterygii.

The only extant family within Salmoniformes, Salmonidae, is divided into three and around 10 containing about 220 . The concepts of the number of species recognised vary among researchers and authorities; the numbers presented below represent the higher estimates of diversity:

Order Salmoniformes


Hybrid crossbreeding
The following table shows results of hybrid crossbreeding combination in Salmonidae.
salar
(Atlantic Salmon)
note :- : The identical kind, O : (survivability), X : (Fatality)


Further reading
  • Behnke, Robert J. Trout and Salmon of North America, Illustrated by Joseph R. Tomelleri. 1st Chanticleer Press ed. New York: The Free Press, 2002.

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
1s Time