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Trout in the Classroom - Life Cycle

 

The Life Cycle of a Tasmanian Rainbow Trout

1. Egg

Trout eggs have black eyes and a central line that show healthy development. Egg hatching depends on the water temperature in an aquarium or in a natural habitat.

2. Alevin

Once hatched, the trout have a large yolk sac used as a food source. Each alevin slowly begins to develop adult trout characteristics. An alevin lives close to the gravel until it “buttons up.”

3. Fry

Buttoning-up occurs when alevin absorb the yolk sac and begin to feed on aquatic insects. Fry swim close to the water surface, allowing the swim bladder to fill with air and help the fry float through water.

4. Fingerling and Parr

When a fry grows to 2-5 inches, it becomes a fingerling. When it develops large dark markings, it then becomes a parr. Many schools that participate in the Trout in the Classroom program in Nevada will release the Tasmanian Rainbow Trout into its natural habitat at the fingerling stage.

5. Juvenile

In the natural habitat, a trout avoids predators, including wading birds and larger fish, by hiding in underwater roots and brush. As a juvenile, a trout resembles an adult but is not yet old or large enough to spawn.

6. Adult

In the adult stage, female and male Tasmanian Rainbow Trout spawn in autumn. Trout turn vibrant in color during spawning and then lay eggs in fish nests, or redds, in the gravel. The life cycle of the Rainbow Trout continues into the egg stage again

View our Trout in the Classroom Poster PDF to learn more!

 

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