People driving in Washington state captured salmon swimming across a road on video this week.
She said that salmon come from the Skokomish River and head to its creeks in order to spawn, or have babies.
“If they’re lucky, it'll meet up with the creek on the other side of the road, if they’re not they’re stranded,” Leonard said of the flooding.
She said that due to heavy rain, the fish population generally explodes.
“You can go from a few fish to a few thousand fish overnight,” she said.
Shelton is located about 20 miles northwest of Olympia, the state capital.
Meanwhile, the fish “come back to the stream where they were ‘born’ because they ‘know’ it is a good place to spawn; they won’t waste time looking for a stream with good habitat and other salmon,” said the agency. “Scientists believe that salmon navigate by using the earth’s magnetic field like a compass. When they find the river they came from, they start using smell to find their way back to their home stream. They build their ’smell memory-bank' when they start migrating to the ocean as young fish.”