Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) exhibit anadromy and semelparity, two life-history traits that result in the massive transfer of marine-derived nutrients from the ocean to their natal stream ecosystems. These nutrients – released by living salmon through excretion, and leached from salmon carcass as they decompose – can increase the abundance of stream organisms as they are transferred through food webs. Conversely, extensive nest digging in stream sediments by spawning salmon can markedly reduce stream organism abundance. We conducted manipulative and observational field studies in Maybeso Creek, Prince of Wales Island, Results/Conclusions Concentrations of ammonium, soluble reactive phosphorus, and nitrate increased more than 15-fold with the arrival of migrating salmon. Algal biomass in exclosure plots increased by a factor of 11 relative to pre-run values. In plots that experienced spawning disturbance, algal biomass increased by only a factor of five. Later in the salmon run, retention devices resulted in an approximately five-fold increase in carcass abundance. Despite this significant increase in carcass abundance, dissolved nutrients and benthic algal biomass increased only slightly in the carcass-retention reach relative to the reach where carcasses were not experimentally retained. Our results illustrate that nutrients excreted by migrating and spawning salmon can have an immediate and strong positive influence on algal biomass. However, these effects are largely offset by salmon spawning disturbance. From this study we conclude that (1) the ecological effects of salmon are primarily through nutrient excretion and salmon spawning disturbance, while (2) those of salmon carcasses are relatively modest. These results illustrate that the diverse behavior and life-history traits of salmon can have a complex influence on stream ecosystems.