Difference between revisions of "Brown Trout"
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+ | [[File:BrownTroutModel.JPG|thumbnail|center|500px| [https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/ofr20181069 Brown trout in the Lees Ferry reach of the Colorado River—Evaluation of causal hypotheses and potential interventions] ]] | ||
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[[File:RBT BT piscivory.jpg|thumbnail|center|650px|Brown trout are much more likely to eat other fish (piscivory) but since there are many more rainbow trout in the Colorado River between Glen and Marble Canyons, rainbow trout probably eat more fish numerically than brown trout.[https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/70003950 https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/70003950] ]] | [[File:RBT BT piscivory.jpg|thumbnail|center|650px|Brown trout are much more likely to eat other fish (piscivory) but since there are many more rainbow trout in the Colorado River between Glen and Marble Canyons, rainbow trout probably eat more fish numerically than brown trout.[https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/70003950 https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/70003950] ]] | ||
+ | [[File:BrownTrout LCR NO 2013.JPG|thumbnail|center|650px| Brown trout caught at the LCR during the [https://goo.gl/photos/zRQzx2eLdFB6ZsWp8 2013 summer Natal Origins trip ] ]] | ||
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[[File:BrownTrout FGD2016.jpg|thumbnail|center|650px| An increasing brown trout population in Glen Canyon could pose a problem for both the Lees Ferry rainbow trout fishery and native fish in Grand Canyon because brown trout eat both rainbow trout and native fish alike. Above is a photo of a brown trout collected during 2016 trout monitoring below Flaming Gorge dam that had just eaten a 10" stocked rainbow trout. ]] | [[File:BrownTrout FGD2016.jpg|thumbnail|center|650px| An increasing brown trout population in Glen Canyon could pose a problem for both the Lees Ferry rainbow trout fishery and native fish in Grand Canyon because brown trout eat both rainbow trout and native fish alike. Above is a photo of a brown trout collected during 2016 trout monitoring below Flaming Gorge dam that had just eaten a 10" stocked rainbow trout. ]] | ||
Revision as of 15:19, 26 September 2019
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Brown TroutBrown trout are native to Europe and were introduced to tributaries in the Grand Canyon in the 1920s. They are capable of withstanding slightly higher temperature than rainbow trout. Unlike most other trout species, brown trout spawn in the late fall. Their spawning behavior, however, is similar to other trout species. Like rainbow trout, young brown trout feed on aquatic and terrestrial insects and invertebrates but brown trout are more apt to switch to eating other fish as they get bigger. The rainbow trout found in Grand Canyon are more likely to continue to eat mostly insects and invertebrates even as adults. [1] [1] Studies have shown that rainbow trout and native fish like humpback chub often have a difficult time persisting in the presence of a large population of brown trout. [2] [3] [4] Desired Future Condition for the Lees Ferry Trout FisheryA high quality trout fishery in GCNRA, as further described in the Recreation DFC that does not adversely affect the native aquatic community in GCNP. |
Rainbow Trout | Brown Trout |
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