Abstract

Adrenal cortical tissue taken from Atlantic salmon netted in the estuary of the Miramichi River, New Brunswick, at three stages of gonadal activity showed increasing hyperplasia from July to October, with varying degrees of regression or degeneration by the following April. Adrenal cortical cells in April fish contained a characteristic paranuclear dense body, the light and electron microscopic appearances of which are described and discussed. Levels of 17-hydroxycorticosteroids in the plasma almost doubled from July to October and returned to July values by the following April. The presence of these cyclic changes in Atlantic salmon and their absence in Pacific salmon are discussed. Data indicate that genetic factors may be important in determination of the capacity for multiple spawning journeys by some Atlantic salmon.

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