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![]() Yuji Sakuma wrote: Chas, I don't know it for a fact but in presentations by biologists my is impression that winter is indeed stressful for resident brown and brook trout in my local streams. How stressful probably varies from year to year and from stream to stream. For example, intuitively I would think that trout in spring creeks might withstand winter better than trout in freestone rivers because of the availability of food and more constant temperatures. I believe that very severe winters that result in anchor ice formation are deadly. A report that sticks in my mind was a radio-tracking experiment on brown trout in a local stream. The loss in body mass from fall to spring was very high, double digit percentages - don't quote me on this but it might have been of the order of 20-30%. I am not sure of the significance of the result because the sample size was very small and it was only for one winter in one stream. I am not sure how fishing regulations were developed over the years but it seems to me that closed trout seasons, while probably intended primarily to protect spawning fish, probably also serve to protect them during a period when they are most highly vulnerable. I'm pretty sure that catching fish at low water temps is less stressful than at high ones. (I'll see if I have any info on that) However, like you state, Winter can be tough on the fish. In streams and rivers, if anchor ice forms, there can be significant loss. Overall, although there is weight loss during the Winter, trout deal just fine with low water temps. The trout have evolved to be able to handle it. Shallow lakes do often fish kill during the Winter, but this is do to oxygen depletion and not temperatures that are too low. There are some sections of tailwaters where the temps "never" get out of the forties and the fish populations are high and the trout prosper. Higher water temps are generally the limiting factor in where trout can survive. As a river flows downstream, average temps generally rise until they reach the point where the trout can't survive. Today, most of the trout water that has been lost has been due to increased water temps caused by changes that man has made. Some of these things a removing water for for irrigation so water temps rise more easily, the removal of tree cover, etc. Willi |
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