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A fish map
still learning---how does a trout find it"s spot beside the streamside log
after it has been chased out to midstream? eye ? nose ? [seems current would deny this }? brain memory ? nothing else to think about when you wake up at 4am and paper does not arrive till 6 Joe |
A fish map
On Mar 27, 6:18 pm, "Joe McIntosh" wrote:
still learning---how does a trout find it"s spot beside the streamside log after it has been chased out to midstream? eye ? nose ? [seems current would deny this }? brain memory ? nothing else to think about when you wake up at 4am and paper does not arrive till 6 Joe Hmm, I doubt if anyone actually knows, and the trout ain't telling. But I suspect that it is by nose/lateral line. Even though the moving water washes away scents, I suspect that the substrate continually recharges the water with things that can be sensed by the fish. I once lived downwind from a pulp and paper plant. Even though the wind continually moved the odor away, it was always being recharged, and was always there. I think the 'scents' in the water might be the same. --riverman |
A fish map
"Joe McIntosh" wrote in message ... still learning---how does a trout find it"s spot beside the streamside log after it has been chased out to midstream? eye ? nose ? [seems current would deny this }? brain memory ? nothing else to think about when you wake up at 4am and paper does not arrive till 6 Joe Hey Joe, Maybe, kinda like me when the dog pushes me out of bed in the morning dark, just walk around crahing into stuff until i stumble onto the coffee maker. Maybe its the smell. Guy |
A fish map
On Tue, 27 Mar 2007 06:18:09 -0400, "Joe McIntosh"
wrote: still learning---how does a trout find it"s spot beside the streamside log after it has been chased out to midstream? eye ? nose ? [seems current would deny this }? brain memory ? nothing else to think about when you wake up at 4am and paper does not arrive till 6 Joe They probably don't worry about the current conditions on ROFF, so there's lots of excess brainpower... Seriously, I'd offer it is probably using some of the same "clues" salmon use to find their way back to "their" river tributaries area: clues that the "traveler" probably isn't even aware of - sight, chemical triggers, smell, "memory," even magnetic field clues in long-distance travels, etc. AFAIK, it isn't known absolutely how fish "know" where to go, but there are theories on what's likely. Hey, humans generally find their way back home after a trip to the grocery...or even the neighborhood bar...so how hard could it be...? TC, R |
A fish map
Mapquest
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A fish map
On Mar 27, 6:18 am, "Joe McIntosh" wrote:
still learning---how does a trout find it"s spot beside the streamside log after it has been chased out to midstream? Interesting question. Not being a fish scientist, I can only guess; but I'd say that they don't find their way *back* to that spot, they simply find the same spot again, the same way they found it in the first place, current, cover, food supply. If it's the best available spot in the pool, it makes sense the fish would eventually find it regardless of whether they'd been there before or not. Joe F. |
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