[quote author=AuSableTrophyhunter link=topic=4734.msg36886#msg36886 date=1282242205]
I have only fished the Great Lakes for steelhead and salmon. I wonder whether my fish which cannot go out to the ocean still have a genetic memory of food their ocean going ancestors eat? I read that UK fly fishers use salmon flies that imitate red squid or shrimp that ocean going Atlantic Salmon eat. I wonder if my Atlantics possess an imprint of squid and shrimp as prey even though such prey does not exist in Lake Michigan,for example?
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Here’s a quick synopsis of the life cycle of a potter wasp:
“After mating has occurred, the female wasp builds what looks like a hollow igloo made out of mud, and sticks it on a wall or the underside of a roof. The mud is made of her own spittle, dust, and small stones. It’s quite a structure, about 1 cm in diameter, and 1 cm deep. At the top, she creates an opening, and curves the lip of the opening backwards, much like the lip of a round ornamental vase. She decorates the nest with shiny pebbles. She then catches and stings small green grubs. She stings them - but does not kill them, merely inducing partial paralysis. This keeps the game fresh and not putrefying. Somehow, the wasp knows what sex her offspring is going to be. If male, she catches fewer grubs, and if female she catches more. But the egg is laid only after these same provisions are stored; and this egg has a determined sex, though even the most minute examination is not able to discover the differences which will decide the hatching of a female or a male but somehow the mother knows beforehand the sex of the egg which she is about to lay; and this knowledge allows her to fill the larder according to the appetite of the future grub. The next question is where is the mother to lay her extremely fragile eggs? If she lays them in the mass of grubs, then they might squash it as they wriggle around so instead the mother suspends the egg by a silken thread from the ceiling, out of reach of the grubs. When it hatches, it is suspended by its hindquarters, and can raise itself out of danger if a grub becomes too frisky. She has also built an escape route for it, a protecting sheath that is almost undetectable to us because it is so well hidden. Now wasps have a brain the size of a mustard seed. And yet, the mother is able to do all this - without having been taught - after all, she never sees her own mother, who dies after all the above is done.” That being said…How can she possibly know how to make mud? know how to construct an igloo? know which grubs to catch? know exactly how much venom to inject, and where to inject it so it will paralyze, but not kill? Know the sex of her eggs before they hatch and the corresponding variance in food quantity they need etc….answer is all this information is all simply passed on from generation to generation of wasp through their genetic code so it is very easily conceivable the same type of knowledge in regard to food could be passed on from generation to generation of Salmon through their chromosomes as well regardless of whether or not they have actually ever encountered it beforehand