No. And one tends to doubt the sincerity of such a question.
No..The steelhead is a rainbow trout that spends most of its adult life in the sea.
The mountains of east Tennessee have one native species, the brook trout. Introduced species are the rainbow and brown trouts.
Some common fish species found in Montana include rainbow trout, brown trout, cutthroat trout, brook trout, lake trout, walleye, northern pike, smallmouth bass, and whitefish. Montana also has native species such as the westslope cutthroat trout and mountain whitefish.
Uhh..... No.
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Salmo trutta.
Yes, trout belong to the Osteichthyes, or bony fishes.
No, amoebas and trout are not in the same genus. Amoebas belong to the protists, primarily classified in the genus Amoeba, while trout are fish and belong to the genus Oncorhynchus or Salmo, depending on the species. These two organisms are from entirely different biological classifications and are not closely related.
Probably no word for this species in Apache, because it is a European species, transplanted to many US rivers.
Sharks or big trout?
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.
Trout are not originally native to Lake Michigan; however, several species have been introduced over the years. The most notable include lake trout, which were once native but became extirpated in the mid-20th century due to overfishing and invasive species. Efforts to restore lake trout populations through stocking programs have been ongoing since the 1980s. Other trout species, such as rainbow trout and brown trout, have also been introduced and have established populations in the lake.
Salmoids..Trout and salmon.