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The Soča trout is a freshwater fish species that lives in the Soča River and its affluents, as well as in the Adriatic basin. In Slovenia, it inhabits the Soča along with its affluents, Reka and Rižana. It has a large head and a characteristic marbled pattern, which can be dark gray, brown, olive green, copper-red, or even yellow-brown. Different types of marble trout may have varying numbers of red spots and flecks in the marbled pattern. It typically grows to a size between 50 and 70 centimeters.
Trouts are predators. Adult fish feed on other fish and hunt in twilight, while juveniles consume vegetation, plankton, and insects.
They spawn from November to January on gravel riverbeds.
It is threatened by water pollution, the destruction of its natural habitat, and especially by hybridization with the brown trout, which was introduced into its environment in the early 20th century.