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The image illustrates the life cycle of a large fish called the salmon. The cycle begins with the salmon's spawning season in the upper river's slow-moving water, where eggs are laid and hatch into small stones. The young salmon then move to the lower river, where the fast-flowing water is ideal for growth over three to six months. The next stage involves the salmon migrating to the open sea and maturing over the course of a year. The cycle concludes with the adult salmon returning to the upper river to spawn, completing the cycle.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The pictures depict the circular stages in the life of the salmon in nature.
As a quick glance of the diagram, there are three stages in the life cycle of the salmon from fry to adult salmon.
Initially, in the upper river, eggs are laid together with small stones on the stump of reeds and remain there for between five to six months. After this, fries emerge from the eggs in the length of three to eight centimetres and continue moving to the lower river. At the end of the four years, with the fast moving of the river, fries become molts at twelve to fifteen centimetres in length.
Subsequently, before being adult salmons with the length between seventy and seventy-six centimetres, molts go to the open sea and this lasts for five years. At the end of this stage, an adult salmon emerges and the life cycle starts again.
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