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What do ants taste like?

by Bruce Auchly
| July 31, 2014 11:26 AM

A recent conversation with a friend brought about one of those questions that periodically shake the foundations of Western civilization: What does an ant taste like to a trout?

No, really. We were talking about fly fishing for trout on the Missouri River, and he was describing his use of trico spinners.

Tricos, short for tricorythodes, are tiny mayflies that hatch in midsummer. They tend to hatch and emerge from the river in the morning, fly away, mate, then fall back to the water. When they fall back to the water they are called spinners.

If you know how to fly-fish a spinner trico imitation, you can do really well. My friend does really well.

But after the spinner fall ends each day, the fishing gets tougher. So my friend said he switches to ants. Because there are ants everywhere in nature, ant imitations catch fish.

Why? What’s so tasty about an ant?

Decades ago I asked a similar question to a professional fly-tyer concerning a Royal Coachman fly pattern, which imitates nothing in nature and so is called an attractor pattern.

His response? A Royal Coachman probably looks like strawberry shortcake to a trout. In other words, nobody knows, but it works.

Ants, however, are different. They are real. They exist. And they contain formic acid.

Ants, especially red ones, produce formic acid to sting predators, capture food and defend themselves. They have a poison gland in their abdomen that contracts and releases the acid.

Formic acid, I’m told, is bitter. Although one Internet expert (yeah, let that sink in) says the formic acid in ants makes them taste citrusy, like a lemon.

So does an ant taste like a bitter, or lemony, crunchy morsel to a rainbow trout? Nobody knows, and the trout I’ve talked to don’t answer.

It’s known that fish taste things. They have taste buds, which are commonly located inside and outside of the mouth. Ours, of course, are restricted to the tongue.

Bottom fish, like catfish, have taste buds on their skin, fins and barbels. The barbels in particular allow the fish to taste food from a reasonable distance in murky water — they don’t actually have to touch it.

Think of the advantages if we could do that. You would have the ability to wake up at 3 a.m. and from your bed taste the leftover pizza in the refrigerator, then decide if you wanted to get up and eat. Wait, that could be lethal.

While rainbow trout presumably have taste buds, too, they rely a lot on their vision to locate food. This time of year, there are plenty of terrestrials (bugs) about — flying, hopping, falling into the water.

All a trout has to do is find a secure hiding spot and watch for a tasty looking bug to hit the surface. If it doesn’t look like something that hooked them recently, and they’re not spooked by a telltale fishing line, they probably will try to swallow it.

While an ant imitation would have no flavor, a trout’s memory or instinct, I assume, would remind it that the last ant it ate tasted pretty good.

And if an ant is not available, then maybe that grasshopper floating by will do. I wonder what a grasshopper tastes like to a trout.

Bruce Auchly is the Montana Fish, Wildlife and Park Region 4 information officer.