About the Area
With more than 196 inches (500 cm) of rain each year, this ecoregion is particularly important for its high concentrations of anadromous fish (those that migrate from freshwater to the ocean and back to freshwater).
These species serve as keystone elements by transferring marine-derived nutrients to the freshwater realm on an annual basis.
The
Gulf of Alaska is in constant motion. Water circulates in and out of fjords and inlets. Glaciers cast off huge icebergs, which are carried out to sea by ocean currents. Many of the islands in the Gulf of Alaska are actually the tops of mountains that were submerged when glaciers melted thousands of years ago.
Parts of this ecoregion escaped glaciation and harbour localised endemics, particularly among cave-dwelling invertebrates.