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Gill | Perch
Brown Trout Salmo trutta
Identifying
characteristics: (Non-Native Fish) Two dorsal fins including one
adipose fin, broad square tongue with 11-12 large teeth, light pectoral
fins, squire tail, 9-10 rays in the anal fin.
Brown trout is something of a misnomer for many Great
Lakes members of this species, since lake-run browns are predominately
silver in color. In addition, the body spots, so characteristic
of their stream-dwelling cousins, are often obscured in lake-dwellers.
Brown trout are close relative of the Atlantic salmon,
and also were brought to North American waters as exotics. These
natives of Europe and western Asia were introduced into New York
and Michigan waters in 1883. Brown trout have thrived in their new
home, and have become firmly established in all of our upper Great
Lakes waters.
Lake dwelling brown trout are a wary lot. They hide
in shallow water weed beds and rocky, boulder-strewn areas, and
prefer a water temperature of 65-75 degrees F. Since brown trout
spawn in tributary streams in September and October, they begin
to take up residence near stream outlets in spring and early summer.
After ascending a particular stream, brown trout spawners choose
shallow, gravelly or rocky areas. The female creates a shallow depression
(redd) in the gravel, in which the spawning fish deposit the eggs
and sperm. When the process is completed, the female covers the
redd with gravel. The average lake run adult weighs 8 pounds, although
individuals can grow to be much larger. Young browns are preyed
upon by larger fish and by predatory birds such as mergansers. The
diet of adult brown trout includes insects and their larvae, crustaceans,
mollusks, amphibians, small rodents and other fish. They enjoy a
rather long life-span, it appears, since researchers have observed
them at up to 13 years of age.
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Reference: State
of Michigan, DNR web site |