Salmon Cam 2024

Delivered 1/26/24

100 days old

ATUs 381.5

March 12, 2024

We had our first swimmer on March 4 then 2 days later as we watched him swimming around the tank carefree, he got sucked up!  We calmly (on the outside but frantically on the inside) started taking apart the filter.  Once all of the pieces were apart we found a couple dozen fishes trapped inside.  We put them back in the main tank, but they all just floated to the bottom not moving.  It was very frustrating because the students were all upset and we've had numerous problems with this filter.  The next morning we came back and they were all gone, but we had lots of new swimmers.  Thankfully we made it through the catastrophe with just a few casualties.  On March 8, we put the filter back together and Amanda from CRWP brought us a few add-ons to hopefully correct these problems we've had.  While putting it back together, we found a little guy who had gotten overlooked in the many layers of this filter.  He only had a couple tablespoons of water, but he was a fighter!  We put him back in and he started swimming around--happy to be out of there! Our tank is currently at around 5 degrees Celsius.  When Spring Break is over, we should be able to take off the foam around the tank and begin feeding them!

January 26, 2024

Our salmon eggs were delivered today!  They are very close to the next stage in development-the alevin stage which will be the earliest that we have ever had salmon at that stage.  Right now their ATU is 381.5 and the alevin stage begins around 400-500.  Our tank is around 4.5 Celsius.  This means that by next Friday we will have accumulated around 30 temperature units (4.5 x 7 = 31.5)  to add to the current 381.5 making their ATU past 400.  There could be little alevins within the week!  

Keep watch with our salmon cam (linked above) as we begin a new salmon adventure.

Salmon Release 2023- Thank you to Copper River Watershed Project and their Salmon in the Classroom program! Mrs. Hodges would also like to personally thank Kate Morse for all her hard work and dedication to our class. 

Salmon Life Cycle - Thank you Chris from Copper River Watershed Project for taking us through the salmon life cycle! Great job by Styrling, one of our Salmon in the Classroom stars, for her participation in this activity! 

Salmon Management Bean Activity - Kate from Copper River Watershed Project talked with our class about the different types of fishing and what happens with overfishing. Kate did a bean activity with the kids that showed the different types of fishing in our watershed and how we must balance them to make sure the salmon keep coming back in healthy numbers. Thank you Copper River Watershed Project for the Salmon in the Classroom learning experience! 

Our class was featured on NPR!  

We are so excited to share what is happening in our classroom with people all around the nation and the world.  A special thanks to Kate Morse from the Copper River Watershed Project for all she does to connect us with these amazing opportunities and for the work she does with Salmon in the Classroom.


 Feb 15, 2023

Our classroom  eyed egg salmon are already Rock n Rollin'!

We've got some Jumpers so "Might as well jump (JUMP)!"



The Adopt-a-Fry video our class created to help support the "Salmon in the Classroom" educational program. The Copper River Watershed Project helps to fund our classroom salmon tank, salmon eggs, salmon release day activities, watershed educational programs, scholarships and so much more!!!



NEW EGGS!

Delivered 2/13/2023

109 days old

ATUs 267


Nov 14, 2022

Salmon Update: Today the eggs are 27 days old and just above 100 atus. We are keeping our fingers crossed that we will start seeing eyes in the eggs. 

The kids are keeping journals  to keep track of the life cycle of our salmon.  Each day they write down the temperature, the ATUs, the age, and notes. The egg on the right had turned white so we knew it had not fertilized.  We pulled it out, used a solution to clarify it, then used a magnifying glass to look at it closer.

Nov 5, 2022

Solomon Gulch Hatchery Virtual Tour: Salmon raceway round up, egg take, milt take, kidney sampling, and helicopter pick up! We were able to pickup 200 Coho eggs and milt to fertilize for our classroom salmon tank. 

Thank you Hatchery Manager, Rob Unger for making this all possible.  Thank you Program Director Kate Morse from Copper River Watershed Project for helping to coordinate this event and for our "Salmon In The Classroom"!

October 27, 2022 

Our salmon are here!  I received a call from the hatchery that it was time for the egg take. Unfortunately, the kids were out of school, so I went to Valdez, took lots of pictures and video to create a virtual fieldtrip.  When I came back to school. I brought back 200 green eggs. I watched as these eggs were taken from the fish. At school, I mixed them with the gamete mix to fertilize them and placed them carefully in the tank.  They are extremely fragile.  Right now I have them hanging in the tank in a makeshift redd (I hung them in a net) so that the kids will be able to see them easier.  We will also take a few eggs and use a solution that will clear them and allow us to look under a microscope to see if fertilization was successful.  

I know that the kids will be disappointed that they were not able to go, but this will still be a new learning experience as they will be starting from day one of the life cyle!

From the Copper River Watershed Project:

CRWP is representing the Copper River at an international conference!

Our Program Director, Kate Morse, is attending the International Year of the Salmon Symposium with Tommy Sheridan , Alaska’s commissioner on the North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission. He was a participant on an April 2022 research cruise as part of the IYS Conference, and at his urging Kate reached out to all the teachers she works with on salmon education to see if anyone wanted to connect with him from the research vessel.

Jennifer Hodges, awesome Kenny Lake 3-5 grade teacher jumped at the opportunity. She helped her students connect with Tommy while on the research vessel, and set-up a zoom with ADFG Salmon Shark researcher Sabrina Garcia to learn more about the salmon shark aspect of the research. During this conference, and on recent trip to her class, Tommy gave a 20 minute zoom presentation that summarized the research trip and some of the preliminary findings.

Jennifer and her husband  Brian Hodges helped to produce a short video presentation that explained these education programs and demonstrated the impact it had on her students in hopes of inspiring the other researchers to connect with youth. The presentation was shown at the conference and received some wonderful feedback!!

"As an educator, I am also learning a lot about the global state of salmon, in particular stresses they face in the marine phase of their life cycle. It’s heavy stuff, and our presentation on youth engagement is a bright spot for sure!" –Kate Morse


https://yearofthesalmon.org/synthesis_symposium/

copperriver.org

October 1, 2022

Last Spring, our class connected with Tommy Sheridan, a researcher participating in the International Year of the Salmon as he was in the middle of the ocean collecting data along with other scientists.  It was a very unique and exciting experience!  We were also preparing to release our salmon which we do each year as part of Salmon in the Classroom with Kate Morse,  Program Director of Copper River Watershed Project.  Our class is being showcased at the International Year of the Salmon Synthesis Symposium held in Vancouver, BC on October 4-6 as an example of students connecting and learning.  This is an incredible opportunity and I am so proud of my students for  being a part of this.

Feedback Kate, Tommy and I have received from the video that was submitted:

"I have to say that is one of the best  examples of connecting kids to science that I have ever seen in presentation form." 

 - Ed Farley with NOAA Fisheries and  IYS Synthesis Symposium Organizer

May 18  

Kenny Lake School Salmon Release 2022! 


There is so much more to Salmon Release Day- We learn about the Copper River Watershed, how water quality affects life, we find insects and other organisms living in the water and we all learn to take better care of our watershed!


Thank you, Copper River Watershed Project - Salmon in the Classroom!


Special Thank you to Kate Morse for organizing this event.

May 16

Video from our salmon tank ---they will be released into Strelna Lake in 2 days!

April 9, 2022

We have reached 700 ATUs.  Our salmon fry have started eating every few days.  The kids are helping with water changes and managing the water quality, temperature and filtration.  The fry are very active.  In years past they have tried to hide or stayed at the bottom.  These guys speed around and swim to the top frequently.  We've noticed the temperature fluctuates throughout the day from 4.9 to 6.3.  We switched to a different chiller due to problems with the pump,  but the fish don't seem to mind the fluctuations and we haven't lost any of them since the change.

March 20, 2022

There hasn't been much happening in the salmon tank.  The little alevin like to hide together in the corners of the tank.  They look like wiggling noodles! They are starting to  lose their yolk-sacs. So far we have only had 2 losses.  One was an egg and another an alevin.  When they turn completely white, it is usually a sign that they are not going to survive. 

Feb 27, 2022  

Most of the eggs hatched over the weekend!

Feb 19, 2022      

First alevin caught on video! 

Kai, Raiden and Brandon all predicted that the first hatcher would be today.  Although we had evidence that the first hatcher was several days ago, this is the first one we have actually seen!

Feb 11, 2022

The eggs are moving and jumping!  We at 390 ATU and our tank continues to stay around 3.8-4.0.  We should reach 400 on Valentine's Day.  I anticipate our first hatchers at the end of the week and all of them should be out by the end of February. We do have evidence of a hatcher-there is an egg sac floating around, but no alevin found.  

Feb 4, 2022

Nothing to report on our salmon eggs.  We check on them each day and have made guesses as to when they will hatch .  We know it will happen in February! Right now their ATUs are 364.2 and they continue to accumulate about 3.9-4.1 each day.  When they get to 400-500 they will start breaking out of their egg and entering the alevin stage.  (Note:  Life cycle stages of salmon are determined by their accumulated temperature and not time/days.  Each day we continue adding the daily temperature in Celsius.)  We have noticed that the eggs are starting to move around!  I have included links under the videos that will allow you to go full screen since the videos are not always cooperating.  Thank you , Raiden for noticing this!

Jan 20, 2022

Our salmon eggs have arrived!  Due to weather and other unforeseen circumstances,  the eggs were delivered around 7pm instead of during the school day.  We currently have 800 eggs--600 will soon be transferred to other tanks in the district which meant we had to do a little problem solving to keep each batch of 200 eggs separated.  We are excited to start a new cycle of Salmon in the Classroom! 

Check out our past Salmon in the classroom tanks below! 

May 10, 2021 Swim Free little Salmon!!!  

The salmon have left the classroom and the classroom moved outdoors for the day! Students did habitat assessments including water quality and looking at food sources.  We set out fish traps, collected insects, measured the temperature, PH and oxygen levels and of course, said good-bye to our fry.  Thank you so much to Kate Morse from Copper River Watershed Project for everything you do to make days like this possible for our students!

Strelna Lake Salmon Release Pictures--Round 1!

May 1, 2021

Shortly after our last update 6 weeks ago, our tank became a catastrophic mystery. Each week we experienced salmon dying off.  Water tests showed that everything was mostly normal--nitrates were slightly elevated and the water was mid-level in hardness.  We did water changes more frequently and added more softener to the water as we did the changes.  Still, fish were stressed and dying.  We learned from Rob, the Hatchery Manager, that the lighter colored fish were stressed.  Water tests showed everything was good, so we had a mystery on our hands!

Then disaster struck,  in one weekend we lost nearly all of our remaining fish.    

We decided to set up our camera to show a different view.  Instead of observing the fish, we started observing the tank (and people around it).  We solved the mystery and the students learned a valuable and costly lesson about the fragility of an ecosystem.  

On our hands we carry a variety of germs and bacteria that can be harmful to young fry.  Even deadlier--ammonia from soap and hand sanitizer.  Students learned that there are always people who ignore warnings and signs for whatever reason.  (Such as "Keep Your Hands out of the Tank"). The consequences for our salmon were deadly. 

As of April 30, we have 9 little salmon left out of 200.  This is extremely sad and disappointing, but we still have had a good year.  We got to watch the little fish break out of their eyed-eggs and become little alevin.  We got to see them begin swimming for the first time.  We learned how to "read" the health of our tank by observing the coloring of the fish.  MOSTLY, we learned how important it is to listen to and follow signs that are displayed and rules that are given to us not because people don't want us to have any fun, but because they are there to protect someone or something.  Rules are important.  

May 10th was supposed to be our salmon release day.  At this point, it may be our salmon burial day.  Our last few fishes--the strongest ones that have survived--as they have died, we are naming them and preparing a little fish-box for them.  The kids will paint rocks and create a Memory Garden.  A lesson that will never be forgotten.

March 19, 2021

ATUS: 653

Our little fry are eating and the tank cover has come off!  We lost a few in the filter, but the rest are strong and swimming free !

Salmon at the Disco

Welcome to our 

Salmon Circus!

March 5, 2021--ATUS 569

Our babies are swimming!  As their sacs disappear, our little fry begin swimming to the top of the tank in search of food.  We've counted about a dozen so far!  Soon we will be able to take the outside cover off  of the tank, let the light in and begin feeding.  Of course, it also means water changes!  

Feb 12, 2021---ATUS 451

Almost all of the eggs have hatched!  Everyday has been exciting to watch as the tank is ever-changing.  The little alevins (baby salmon) are constantly on the move looking for places to hide or groups with which to gather with as they bury their heads into the gravel.  It's amazing to think that just a few weeks ago they were little tiny eggs and in a few more weeks will be looking more like fish and begin swimming around looking for food! They grow up so quickly!

Here are some fun videos from our Salmon Nest cam...we will post an update tomorrow about how our salmon are doing and their current development!

Feb 5, 2021

ATUS 407---This week the salmon eggs have been very active!  Each day we watch the eggs through our  live feed camera and can see them bouncing and dancing around.  When we uncovered our tank on Friday (Feb 5) we found 1 little egg that hatched!  We can't wait to watch more and more salmon make their way from the eyed-egg stage into the alevin  stage.  

Jan. 29, 2021

ATUS 371---The salmon are still in the eyed-egg stage and remain in the dark except during brief moments for observation.  You can start to see more than just eyes in those little eggs!  The tank temperature is at 5 degrees Celsius.  We should start seeing the next stage of development beginning the first or second week of February!

Jan. 20, 2021

Our salmon are here!  Today, 200 Coho salmon were delivered into our tank!  They are currently 99 days old and their ATUS is 320.  This number is what determines how quickly or slowly they move from one life developmental stage to the next.  Right now they are in the eyed egg stage and will not hatch into the alevin stage until around 400-500.  Our tank temperature is 4 degrees Celsius.  Their ATUS will go up 4 each day.  We are excited to be involved and care for our little salmon.  Thank you to Kate Morse from the  Copper River Watershed Project for helping get this set up!

Solomon Gulch Hatchery-----Valdez, Alaska

Watch the salmon run as they make their way up the fish ladder and into their spawning grounds (hatchery).  This video was taken Aug. 15, 2020.