资料来源 : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Note: The salmons ascend rivers and penetrate to their head
streams to spawn. They are remarkably strong fishes,
and will even leap over considerable falls which lie in
the way of their progress. The common salmon has been
known to grow to the weight of seventy-five pounds;
more generally it is from fifteen to twenty-five
pounds. Young salmon are called parr, peal, smolt, and
grilse. Among the true salmons are:
{Black salmon}, or {Lake salmon}, the namaycush.
{Dog salmon}, a salmon of Western North America
({Oncorhynchus keta}).
{Humpbacked salmon}, a Pacific-coast salmon ({Oncorhynchus
gorbuscha}).
{King salmon}, the quinnat.
{Landlocked salmon}, a variety of the common salmon (var.
{Sebago}), long confined in certain lakes in consequence
of obstructions that prevented it from returning to the
sea. This last is called also {dwarf salmon}.
Note: Among fishes of other families which are locally and
erroneously called salmon are: the pike perch, called
{jack salmon}; the spotted, or southern, squeteague;
the cabrilla, called {kelp salmon}; young pollock,
called {sea salmon}; and the California yellowtail.
2. A reddish yellow or orange color, like the flesh of the
salmon.
{Salmon berry} (Bot.), a large red raspberry growing from
Alaska to California, the fruit of the {Rubus Nutkanus}.
{Salmon killer} (Zo["o]l.), a stickleback ({Gasterosteus
cataphractus}) of Western North America and Northern Asia.
{Salmon ladder}, {Salmon stair}. See {Fish ladder}, under
{Fish}.
{Salmon peel}, a young salmon.
{Salmon pipe}, a certain device for catching salmon. --Crabb.
{Salmon trout}. (Zo["o]l.)
(a) The European sea trout ({Salmo trutta}). It resembles
the salmon, but is smaller, and has smaller and more
numerous scales.
(b) The American namaycush.
(c) A name that is also applied locally to the adult black
spotted trout ({Salmo purpuratus}), and to the steel
head and other large trout of the Pacific coast.
Keta \Ke"ta\, n. [Perh. of Amer. Indian origin.] (Zo["o]l.)
A small salmon ({Oncorhynchus keta}) of inferior value, which
in the autumn runs up all the larger rivers between San
Francisco and Kamchatka.