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The rainbow trout lives in cool ponds and rivers sometimes lakes they live in forests and the countryside!
An invasive species called the sea lamprey entered the Great Lakes .The lamprey preyed on the trout and had no natural predators.
They live in cold freshwater lakes and streams, as in mountain areas.
Brook trout live in small streams, lakes, creeks, and spring ponds. They are native to a wide area of eastern North America.
The brook trout is native to small strems,creeks, lakes and spring ponds. It's native to wide areas of Eastern North America but more live in the Appalachian Mountains to Northern Georgia, Canada from Hudson Bay, Great Lakes in Saint Lawrence and the upper Mississippi River.
Absolutely. As an invasive species, the lamprey has no natural enemies, and the fish of the Great Lakes have no defenses against them.
A young salmon (or a trout of the salmon family) is called smolt.
The rainbow trout body and tail shape are adapted to slow and fast moving water. Some species of rainbow trout can change their color to adapt to different underwater environments, water depths, and rock structure.
It depends on the type of trout. some only go in shallows to spawn and some stay all year round.
they swam
stillwater lakes
The trout was adopted as the State fish in 1975. Once plentiful in most of NY waterways the brook trouts habitat has shrunk considerably for various reasons including acid rains, habitat destruction, and introduction of other fish species. Found in hundeds of lakes and ponds in the Adirondack Mountains and scattered in cool, clear streams throughout the State, the native brook trout, called brookies or speckles, provide fine angling and the best of eating.