[quote author=NJFred link=topic=3253.msg24415#msg24415 date=1245512111]
Wanted to chat about trout as opportunists.
First what they eat (and have been conditioned to.. which is a great word someone above has used) dramatically depends upon their system. In a rich system like the Delaware trout can grow and prosper by only eating one "pattern" (over a period of time) that they recognize as food ignoring other "patterns" which are food. The Pattern they see and recognize is plentiful enough for them to feed exclusively on this. They don't need waste energy rising to something which looks different and may not be food. They don't risk getting picked off by a predator for no reason. Now take a trout in an insect poor system. This fish has to be much more opportunistic. They must rise to all sorts of stuff to be able to maintain body mass. They have to take more risk and waste more energy rising to something that doesn't look like food. In fact they may have an extended view of what is food which does rule out some things that aren't food and rules in things which look kind of like food (attractor flies).
So for me... rich systems naturally bring on selectivity neccessitating match the hatch for the fisherman to be most successful.
[/quote]I tend to agree with you here but I do not believe a trout that is feeding exclusively on a certain mayfly is going to pass up something like a fat juicy cranefly larva that drifts past its nose or even within a few feet of it.