Lake Crescent cutthroat trout
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Lake Crescent cutthroat trout | ||||||||||||||||
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||||
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Form | ||||||||||||||||
Oncorhynchus clarki clarki f. crescentii |
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Synonyms | ||||||||||||||||
Oncorhynchus clarki crescentii (but see text) |
Crescenti trout (a hypercorrection) or Lake Crescent cutthroat trout (a more literal translation of the scientific name Oncorhynchus clarki clarki f. crescentii) is a local form (f. loc.) of Coastal cutthroat trout isolated in Lake Crescent in Washington and is not currently recognized as an official subspecies (Behnke 1992). However the cutthroat trout of Lake Crescent do remain distinct, with the highest known gill raker and vertebrae counts of any coastal cutthroat population. The cutthroat are believed to have been isolated in Lake Crescent after a landslide blocked the eastern outflow of the lake.
Before the introduction of non-native trout to the lake, these fish co-existed with the lake's population of Coastal Rainbow Trout known as Beardslee trout. The cutthroat mostly used the lake's inlet stream Barnes Creek for spawning, while the rainbow trout used the Lyre River for spawning. However in the early 1980's a small cutthroat population was found in the Lyre River that spawns further downstream than the native rainbow trout. Today the cutthroat of Barnes Creek have been hybridized with introduced rainbow, but these trout persist in the Lyre River as a genetically pure population(Behnke 1992). (Pi. A Crescenti caught in 1961 set the state record for Cutthroats at 32 inches and 12 pounds.[1][2]