Brown Trout
Salmo trutta
Brown trout (Salmo trutta) are a highly variable salmonid native to Europe and western Asia, now established in many cool waters worldwide. They occupy streams, rivers, lakes, and some coastal marine waters, and often become wary in heavily fished systems.

Identification points
- Golden-brown to olive body with many black and red/orange spots, the red spots usually ringed by pale halos.
- Often shows a square, lightly spotted tail rather than the more deeply forked tail of many similar salmonids.
- Short maxilla typically extends only to about the back of the eye, and adults usually lack the pink lateral stripe of rainbow trout.
Habitat
Cold, well-oxygenated streams and rivers with cover such as undercut banks, boulders, woody debris, and deep runs; also lakes, reservoirs, and occasionally estuaries or nearshore coastal waters where the species is established.
Bait notes
Effective baits include earthworms, salmon eggs, mealworms, minnows, and single cured eggs where legal. Lures include small spoons, spinners, crankbaits, soft-plastic minnows, and dry flies/nymphs matched to local forage and hatch.
Behavior
Opportunistic feeders that eat aquatic insects, terrestrial insects, crustaceans, minnows, and fish eggs; larger fish often shift to piscivory. They feed most actively at dawn, dusk, in low light, and during hatches or food drifts, and quickly become selective under pressure.
Caution
Check local regulations before fishing or moving fish—brown trout are stocked or protected in some waters, and some populations are managed by special rules. As with many predatory freshwater fish, follow local consumption advisories for contaminants where applicable.
Fishing notes
Present baits and flies naturally with light leaders; drift nymphs and eggs along seams, tailouts, and pocket water. For larger fish, work deeper slots, undercut banks, and lake drop-offs; in clear water, stealth and long casts matter.