Fish migration is important and spectacular. Migratory fish gather
energy in one portion of the environment and transport it to other
areas, where it often becomes available to humans or to other elements
in the ecosystem. Migration brings fish into situations that allow easy
harvest as they concentrate along migration routes. Their journeys also
make them vulnerable to human intereference at critical points along
their route. Salmon, for example, may harvest plankton in the open ocean
and transport that food energy to coastal and inland regions, where it
is captured by fisheries or deposited in inland streams and utilized by
the flora and fauna of the region. These salmon are able to complete
journeys of thousands of kilometers from their natal streams to oceanic
feeding grounds and back to the same home streams, an accomplishment
that strains our credi bili ty . We now understand some of the timing
and guiding stimuli used in these migrations, and mechanisms can be
logically proposed, on the basis of the established abilities of fishes,
to account for the unexplained portions of the migrations. There is no
single factor guiding these fish. Instead, they are dependent on the
presence in their environment of a great variety of appropriate
orienting and timing stimuli. These stimuli are vulnerable to human
interference. The more widespread and easily available the information
on these requirements, the more readily fish can be protected from such
interference.