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A Fish in Stone

A Fish in Stone. I have been in that stone for over a million years. What a journey to finally come out and tell my story. Excuse me, my name is Coho

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A Fish in Stone

I have been in that stone for over a million years. What a journey to finally come out and tell my story. Excuse me, my name is Coho Salmon. I was fossilized over a million years ago when I got trapped in a mud layer during a large storm.

We all belong to the salmonids, a group of fish that can live in fresh and salt water. This is a difficult task for any vertebrate, because of how bodies handle fluids and salt. Our body changes when we migrate from fresh water to marine. Some people cannot recognize the change.

The salmonid body uses chemistry to get rid of salt when it moves to the ocean. They are able to “poop” it out. This helps to maintain a balance. When it returns to fresh water it can easily adjust.

Salmonids are born in fresh water and live in the creek, river, or lake for about one to three years. They will then go to the ocean and spend another one to eight years before they return to the same stream. They are anadromous or migrating from salt to fresh water to spawn.

In fresh water salmonids prefer clean, cold running streams with gravel bottoms. Warm water has too many dissolved chemicals and disturbs their life cycle. The body is equipped to get rid of salts, but not other toxins.

“I have wanted to jump into the creek I was born in for a long time,” Coho exclaimed. Coho jumped into the river, but was surprised by the warm temperature and muddy bottom. The river is not flowing like it used to. He can barely swim in this creek. He looked around to find some other salmonids, but instead he saw these unknown creatures swimming.

They introduced non-native fish including large and small mouth bass, bluegill, brown bullhead, black crappie, and sunfish They could survive in warm, slow moving waters that the humans had created. These fish were familiar to the people that moved from back east.

Storm drains can concentrate pollution from the surrounding watershed. Water pours into wetlands, unless there is a system to help clean the pollution, the toxins remain in the water. The fish are affected by the chemicals, as they filter water through their gills.

The turtle told him of several “fish kills” when pollution from the land was carried by storm water. A plume of the toxins surrounded a school of largemouth bass and caused over 1000 fish to die.

It was a different world and Coho did not know if he could survive. He started to realize that maybe he should have stayed in the stone. Coho slowly moved back to his stone and laid down, to have a place forever in history that would tell the story of a land that once was, but would never be again.

funding provided byAlameda County Sheriff's Department