Well, the answer is no actually eat plants and meat so are omnivores.
Trout are carnivores.
Trout are carnivores. They eat worms, insects, crayfish and smaller fish.
Lake trout are carnivores - piscivores when prey are available and shifting to planktivore when they are not. They do not eat plant matter like moss.
No, they are basically carnivores, eating insects and small fish.
The noun doesn't change in possessive form. A trout is still a trout regardless of whether it's a dead trout, a delicious trout, your trout, my trout, or his trout.
Yes Brown trout are carnivore . I catch them with small fish bait .
Brook trout primarily feed on aquatic insects, such as mayflies, stoneflies, and caddisflies. They also consume small fish, crustaceans, and occasionally terrestrial insects that fall into the water. Their diet can vary based on the availability of food in their habitat.
The form 'trouts' is the plural for types of trout. The noun for trout is both singular and plural for the fish. For example: The fish: Look at all those trout! The types: The trouts we serve are river trout and brown trout.
Rainbow trout
The noun "trout" is both singular and plural.For example: "I caught a bunch of trout" and "I caught one trout".
The plural of trout IS trout.
young trout