You are here: Home

Who's Online




Fish-On! - 5 - Lake Trout PDF Print E-mail
Tag it:
Delicious
Furl it!
Spurl
NewsVine
Reddit
YahooMyWeb
Digg
blogmarks
User Rating: / 1
PoorBest 
Written by TV Ontario   
Thursday, 01 February 1996
Article Index
Fish-On! - 5 - Lake Trout
The Fish - Size, Shape and Color
The Fish - Requirements
Habitat - Distribution
Habitat - Distribution
Habitat - Water Types
Habitat - Management
Seasonal Changes - Spawning
Seasonal Changes - Movements
Equipment - Casting Rigs
Equipment - Trolling Rigs
Equipment - Planer Boards
Equipment - Planer Boards
Equipment - Planer Boards
Equipment - Jigging Rigs
Equipment - Ice Fishing Rigs
Technique - General
Technique - Trolling
Technique - Casting
Technique - Wire Line Fishing
Technique - Downrigging
Technique - Vertical Jigging
Technique - Ice Fishing
Sportsmanship

Thermal Stratification

Most lake trout seem to have a preference for water of 50° F. (10° C), however some subspecies tolerate colder temperatures. Although lake trout occasionally venture into waters of higher temperature, they do so for only short periods of time.

Figure 5.1

Water has the remarkable ability to become most dense at a temperature of 39.2° F. (4° C). Water of different densities has difficulty mixing, setting up barriers or layers of water instead. Temperature moderation takes place over a long period of time, protecting fish in the southern limits from excessively high temperatures. This same feature also protects the fish in the northern shallow lakes from freezing into a block of ice. As you can see from the diagram, the most dense mass of water remains at the bottom of the lake while the colder, less dense water floats above, followed by a layer of ice. If it were not for this unique feature, freezing would take place from bottom to top, probably killing off the lake's inhabitants. This layering of water into definite temperature zones is called thermal stratification. (Figure 5-1.)

Figure 5.2

In the southern limits of their range, lake trout inhabit deep cold lakes with a generous supply of oxygen and the ability to stratify. In these lakes water segregates into three distinct zones: the epilimnion -- a highly oxygenated warm-water zone found at the surface; the hypolimnion -- a very cold and poorly oxygenated zone found at the bottom; and the thermocline -- the zone which lies in between. This middle zone is an area of rapid temperature change, in most cases over half a degree Fahrenheit per foot of water depth. It is adequately supplied with oxygen, and of the three stratas offers more of the necessary requirements for the survival of the lake trout. During the warm summer months, lake trout are found in abundance either at, or near, this thermal layer of water.



 
< Prev   Next >