No, trout are vertebrates. They have a backbone.
No it is a vertebrate. Fish have a backbone. Invertebrates do not have a backbone.
No, trout do not live in coral reefs. Trout are freshwater fish that prefer cold, clean rivers and lakes. Coral reefs are marine ecosystems found in warm, tropical waters where species such as coral, fish, and invertebrates thrive.
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.
Rainbow trout
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.
The noun "trout" is both singular and plural.For example: "I caught a bunch of trout" and "I caught one trout".
In the Saddle Mountains, there are 43 species of fish, (including threatened and endangered salmon and trout) 40 mammals; 246 birds; 4 amphibians; 9 reptiles and over 1500 invertebrates.
They are insects, therefore they are invertebrates.
young trout
because a trout is a fish! s
The plural of trout IS trout.
A baby trout is still called a trout