

An interesting article by Jules Silverman and Brad W. Taylor in Fly Fisherman seems at why and when trout react to sure bugs on the water. Two journeys to the Missouri River to fish the Trico hatch left Silverman perplexed about why trout would eat the spinners one week and never at one other. Moderately than simply chalking it up as one of many mysteries of the game, he determined to do some scientific experiments, and the outcomes are fascinating:
In conclusion, trout develop a search picture for a sure (energetically favorable) prey sort and potential prey occurring exterior this search picture are usually not detected. Nevertheless, this search picture could be expanded over time to incorporate the initially rejected prey by publicity to intermediate-sized prey. Within the case of Missouri River trout and their PMD and Trico prey, drastically enhanced steady publicity to Tricos (greater than the small prey we might ship in our experiments), in addition to attainable publicity to fewer, smaller, later rising PMDs could have triggered the feeding shift to Tricos.
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