About Scotland

Fish and fly

Brief notes about Seatrout

Sea Trout

Salmo trutta trutta

Brief Description and life cycle
  • Migratory fish similar in looks to the brown trout (Salmo trutta fario ), sea trout, like Atlantic Salmon, hatch from eggs deposited in fresh water.
  • Hatching time is from one to three months depending on availability of food consequent to water temperature.
  • The hatchling, known as an alvelin, has a yolk sac which has a store of food which can last for about a month.
  • When the yolksac is exhausted, the fish, now known as a fry, begins to search for food. Often found in shoals it begins to acquire camouflage and looks almost indistinguishable from similar sized brown trout. At this stage it is known as a parr.
  • As a parr it lives in the river on a diet of small insects, nymphs, caddis fly lavae, etc. until after about three years it begins to become more silvery than a brown trout.
  • Now known as a smolt, it develops changes to the gills to enable it to cope with salt water.
  • Its first migration usually takes place in early summer, and once at sea it feeds voraciously putting on weight in direct relationship to the amount of food available.
  • Sometimes at the end of that summer, on reaching a size of about 1lb. or more, it will return to fresh water.
  • In Scotland it is now known as a "Finnoch" or sometimes a "Herling".
  • Often it will spend longer at sea, perhaps three or four years, before returning for the first time.
  • On returning it may spawn, or sometimes go back down to the sea without spawning.
  • A Sea Trout can live up to about twenty years (most live a lot less longer) during which time it may return to spawn almost every year.

Below; Watercolor (14" x 4") by John Boyd-Brent. ©

Seatrout watercolour by john boyd-Brent

Seatrout introduction
Some sizes, catches and statistics