no
no. it is a fish
well, first of all, you can not buy rainbow trout. i know i know rainbow trouts are popular fish but buying a pet rainbow trout is impossible. if you really want to get a pet rainbow trout, then get a hunters purmit and go catch one
I've fished Rainbow Trout all my life in Utah and I have never seen nor experienced Rainbow shoaling. In fact, I have never witnessed any of the other trout species shoaling.
All fish breath will gills so gills
A recipe for rainbow trout can be found on Food Network, Taste of Home, Smitten Kitchen, Grandma's Kitchen, Eating Well, All Recipes and Southern Cooking.
Walleye, Northern Pike, Freshwater Drum, Yellow Perch, Rainbow Trout, Lake Trout, Arctic Grayling and Whitefish can all be taken in Manitoba.
The baby trout is with its mother up until its fifteenth birthday, when the mother asks it to move out and take all of its crap with it.
The nouns salmon and trout are the same in the singular and the plural; for example: A salmon and a trout swam safely away. All of the salmon and all of the trout swam safely away.
Trout. I had the same question on a test, and when I said trout I got it right.
Brook trout live in small streams, lakes, creeks, and spring ponds. They are native to a wide area of eastern North America.
There are many trout species. All are similar, except coloration. Other trouts are the brook, Dolly Varden, lake, brown, cutthroat, golden, bull trouts. Some saltwater species are called "trout", such as the speckled seatrout and its cousin the gray seatrout, but these fish are related to drums.
Honeybees, rainbow trout, and homing pigeons all utilize Earth's magnetic field for navigation and orientation. Honeybees have magnetite-based receptors that help them detect magnetic fields, aiding in foraging and hive location. Rainbow trout can sense magnetic fields through specialized cells, which assists them in migrating and finding their spawning grounds. Homing pigeons possess magnetoreceptors in their beaks, allowing them to navigate accurately over long distances using the Earth's magnetic cues.