Urban salmon return to Metro Vancouver streams to spawn and inspire recovery efforts
BURNABY, B.C. — The metallic screech of a train rolling by. The constant hum of traffic on the nearby Trans-Canada Highway.
These are the sounds of the Brunette River in the fall, as it cuts through the suburbs of Burnaby, B.C.
And rising above the din of Metro Vancouver, the splashing of chum salmon as they push upstream to spawn.
The salmon in the river are looking haggard by mid-November, their skin patchy and worn as they near the end of their lives. But they continue the timeless cycle to produce the next generation of their keystone species.