A trout intakes the dissolved oxygen in the water through it's gills - just like any other fish.
Minks can catch trout with ease, and have been known to catch a trout up to 1 foot in length
A baby trout is still called a trout
A trout is a fish, and as such is a complex organism. And yes, the trout is multicellular.
What?? Plants don't take in oxygen. They take in carbon dioxide and make oxygen. Reread your textbook and you will be just fine.
Yes organisms take oxygen from the air and aquatic organisms take oxygen from the water using their gills. Some do. Most only from one or the other. For example a tuna fish gets pretty much all its oxygen from oxygen dissolved in water. Humans get all our oxygen from the air. Mudskippers get oxygen from both. Yes. Land animals take in oxygen that plants release using their noses. On the other hand, aquatic or marine animals take in oxygen using their gills.
Robert N. Mullen has written: 'The effects of a low oxygen concentration on the growth, oxygen consumption, and lethal oxygen resistance of Salmo Gairdneri (Rainbow Trout) and Salvelinus Fontinalis (Eastern Brook Trout)' -- subject(s): Physiological effect, Temperature, Oxygen, Trout
i think trout (even if oxygen may not be able to dissolve!) because catfish are able to extract more oxygen because they are larger!
Trout are fresh, cold water fish that need high oxygen levels.
Catfish and carp require lower levels of oxygen than trout. Since the mouth of a river typically has lower levels of oxygen and the area near the source has higher levels of oxygen, catfish and carp can thrive at the mouth and trout, which require higher levels of oxygen, thrive at the source.
yes
I am the next mike trout I will be in the major league and call me when I get there
No. in Tennessee, Brook trout inhabit only cold, oxygen-rich high-elevation streams. The Emory and Clinch River at Kingston, Tennessee, are not cold enough to support native brook trout populations. Also, because the Clinch River is impounded by Watts Bar Lake, the oxygen levels are too low to sustain brook trout.
it is because catfish can survive in low-oxygen levels. Trout survives at higher oxygen levels
Noo. Rainbow trout can not live in pond water. That depends on the temp., oxygen level, and some type of fresh water. like a water change, or a small stream. a fountain, waterfall, and the stream will help with oxygen levels.
not usually
Wild trout have more vivid coloration than their hatchery cousins, and are more difficult to catch. Hatchery raised trout will take many odd baits, such as small marshmellows and corn kernels.
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.