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Eastern Brook Trout, Brookie, Speckled Trout, Native Trout, Squaretail
5 pounds 14 ounces
Brook trout have a dark olive body with a brownish to greenish back and light worm-like markings. The sides are pale with several small blue-bordered red spots. The lower fins have dark and light edges.
Length: Up to 18 inches (sometimes
up to 34 inches)
Brook trout inhabit clear and cold streams, lakes, and ponds, often with access to sea, but are mostly found in the headwaters of spring-fed streams. The preferred water temperature is 53-56 °F.
Brook trout feed on tiny larval insects, small fish, and occasionally, field mice and snakes.
When: Late summer and fall
Prime brook trout habitat has been lost to stream channelization, dam building, pollution, and streambank erosion caused by overgrazing and deforestation. A sea-run brook trout is known as a "salter" or "sea trout." A brook trout in the Great Lakes that migrates up its tributaries to spawn is known as a "coaster." * Connecticut does not have an official state fish.
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