282 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



season is about the same as for the brook trout. The colors of 

 the male in the breeding season are gorgeous, and the sight of 

 a host of spawning fish in the water is one to be remembered. 

 Many large and small trout of this kind have been deposited 

 in Lake George and other suitable waters of the state. 



Family 



Smelts 

 Genus OSMERIS (Artedi) Linnaeus 



Body elongate, compressed; head long, pointed; mouth wide, 

 the slender maxillary extending to past the middle of the eye, 

 lower jaw projecting, preorbital and suborbital bones narrow; 

 maxillaries and premaxillaries with fine teeth, lower jaw with 

 small teeth, which are larger posteriorly, tongue with a few 

 strong, fang-like teeth, largest at the tip, hyoid bone, vomer, pala- 

 tines and pterygoids with wide set teeth; gill rakers long and 

 slender; branchiostegals 8; scales large, loose, 60 to 70 in the 

 course of the lateral line; dorsal small, about midway of the 

 body, over the veutrals; anal rather long; vertebrae about 40; 

 pyloric caeca small, few. Small fishes of the coasts of Europe 

 and northern America, sometimes ascending rivers; delicate in 

 flesh and considerably valued as food. (After Jordan and Ever- 

 manu) 



143 Osmerus mordax (Mitchill) 



t; Ice Fish 



Atln-rina mordax MITCHILL, Trans. Lit. & Phil. Soc. N. Y. I, 446, 1815, New 

 York. 



Oxtiirnis viridescens LE SUEUR, Jour. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila. I, 230, May, 1818, 

 Boston to Newport; DE KAY, N. Y. Fauna, Fishes, 243, pi. 39, fig. 124, 

 1842, streams flowing into Long Island Sound, Hackeusack & Passaic 

 rivers; STOKER, Syii. Fish. N. A. 197, 1846; GUNTHER, Cat. Fish. Brit. 

 Mus. VI, 167, 1866. 



Oswcnts mordax JORDAN & GILBERT, Bull. 16, IT. S. Nat. Mus. 203, 1883; 

 BEAN, Fishes Penna. 64, pi. 26, fig. 46, 1893; JORDAN & EVERMANN, 

 Bull. 47, U. S. Nat. Mus. 523, 1896, pi. LXXXVI, fig. 228, 1900; EVER- 

 MANN KENDALL, Kept. U. S. Commr. Fish & Fisheries for 1804, 

 593, 1896, Lake Meniphremagog & Lake Champlain. 



The smelt has an elongate and somewhat compressed body and 

 a long, pointed head, with the lower jaw projecting. The mouth 



