I'm not sure I understand how you can have a 28 month cradle to grave life cycle. I would have thought it should go in yearly increments or else the run times would vary from cycle to cycle.
The 28 month cycle is from hatch to spawning like Rodney said. Coho spend the first few months (6 or so months) in the river and/or off channel habitat, sloughs, swamps, lakes, etc and then head to the ocean. Adult coho only spend 24 months or less in salt water with no variation (ever discovered any ways). Jacks only spend 4-6 months in salt water.
It'd be interesting to see and understand the genetic mechanism of this natural occurrence. Is it as simple as a dominant-recessive relationship? Maybe there already are studies that touch on the subject.
Rodney, from what I learned at VIU the mechanism for jacking is somewhat genetics but also food availability, etc. As I said before, jacks are the FASTEST growing fish of that year or age class. This means that they grew faster and more efficiently than other fish in their year class, and were at a larger size heading to freshwater. This is why hatchery raised fish tend to have a higher % of jacking than wilds, due to their larger size going out to the salt. That is why hatcheries use jacks in spawning. Not only because it is a natural occurrence, but also because these were the fastest growing fish in their age class (also allows for genetic variation since they are a different age class/year than returning adults - nature's backup plan).
It would be interesting to hear from anyone that really knows if the oportunistic jack spawners(as they must be) create more runts/jacks in the following cycle of spawning fish. When you clean a jack the milt looks mature so I guess the question is does it create more fish likely to come back a year early and mess up the future stocks.
In short, no they do not create more jacks. The fastest growing individuals of that jacks offspring may jack, but its (the jacks) offspring would have the same jacking ratio as an adult + adult spawning pair.
All of these males are coming back a year early but they are sexually mature. Small fish, no such thing as a female jack in all my years fishing. My thinking with the jacks is that they beak in on the big mature bucks and Does when they are spawning and do there thing as well.
Correct, ALL jacks are males. Egg fecundity is based purely on size, therefore it is not beneficial for a female fish to come back a year early as a smaller fish. Males however can produce the same amount of milt if they are small or large. That is why males are the only jacking fish in a population.
You are correct in your second statement as well. Jacks do indeed sit behind spawning pairs of fish and rush in when the female lays eggs, fertilizes what he can and gets out of there fast. The big males don't like it and you'll see big males chasing around small fish all the time.
Eggs can only live for a few seconds in the water and become fetilized. After about 5 seconds they are duds.
One last point I thought I'd chip in on... definitely not only 5 seconds. Average is about 40 seconds before the egg swells too much from water and the micropyle gets blocked (meaning they can no longer be fertilized).
The purpose of jacks is to fertilize eggs that would not otherwise be fertilized.
Ok maybe one more last point.
Jacks fertilize a lot of eggs that would have otherwise been fertilized by other males.
They use the "sneak" method and wait till a female releases her eggs, rush in, fertilize and get out.
It's a way of spreading around genetics, as jacks will also move from female to female and not stick with one mate like larger males will.
Should also mention, a large female fish will have sometimes 3 or 4 jacks sneaking in while spawning, therefore there is a lot of genetic diversity.
Cheers,
Dan