释义 |
kokanee|ˈkəʊkænɪ| Also kickininee. [ad. Interior Salish kikinee.] A landlocked dwarf subspecies, Oncorhynchus nerka kennerlyi, of the sockeye salmon.
1875in Okanagan Hist. Soc. Rep. (1953) 17 There we would fill our basket with the shining kik-e-ninnies. 1937Kootenay & City of Nelson, B.C. 62 The Kokanee or ‘Silver Trout’, which is in reality a landlocked Sockeye salmon abounds in the larger lakes of the districts. 1940Nature 3 Aug. 172/1 Attempts to explain the origin of kokanee (a variety of sockeye salmon) were made. 1963New Scientist 31 Jan. 228/2 The kokanee, Oncorhynchus nerka kennerlyi, might increase overall production when cultured with trout. 1963Globe & Mail (Toronto) 2 Mar. 8/6 The kokanee (or kickininee) is a sockeye salmon that does not migrate to the ocean. Its life span is similar to that of the sockeye in that it returns to the nursery stream after three or four years, at which time it weighs about a pound. 1965A. J. McClane Standard Fishing Encycl. 457/2 The kokanee was originally found in Oregon, Idaho, Washington, British Columbia, and northward into Alaska... In Japan it is found in Lake Akan in northern Hokkaido... Morphologically the kokanee and sockeye are identical. 1970D. Waterfield Continental Waterboy i. 2 Enabling the silver trout to kokanee..to reach the formerly inaccessible river. |