Evermann and Goldsborough Freshwater Fishes of Canada. 99 



1894) ; Eiver St. Lawrence; Lake St. Peter and in the Ottawa (Montpetit 

 1897); Winnipeg and Brandon (Thompson 1898). 



FAMILY CLUPEID^. 



65. Alosa sapidissima (Wilson). Common Shad. 



"Miramichi River shad and those ascending the St. John, resort for 

 spawning to Darlings Lake (Kennebecasis), Douglas Lake (Nerepis), the 

 Washademore, Ocnabag and Grand Lakes and Oromocto River" (Perley 

 1852); River St. Lawrence (Fortin 1862, as Clupea alosa); St. Lawrence 

 River (Goode 1884, as Clupea sapidissima) ; and River St. Lawrence to 

 Montreal (Montpetit 1897, as Clupea sapidissima) ; Bay of Fundy and 

 Miramichi Bay and occasionally in Bai des Chaleurs (Cox 1895a). 



66. Clupea harengus Linnaeus. Common Herring. 



South shore of River St. Lawrence (Fortin 1862, as Clupea sardina). 



67. Pomolobus pseudoharengus (Wilson). Alewife; "Gaspereau." 

 St. Lawrence River below Ogdensburg (Evermann and Kendall 1902). 



FAMILY SALMONIDJE. 



68. Coregonus coulter! Eigenmann & Eigenmann. Coulter's Whitefish. 

 Kicking Horse River at Field (type locality) and Golden (Eigenmann 



and Eigenmann, 1892, type). 



69. Coregonus \\iJIiamsoni Girard. Williamson's Whitefish. 

 Columbia River at Golden and Revelstoke, Bow River at Calgary and 



Banff, and Shush wap Lake at Sicamous (Eigenmann 1894) ; and Kootenay 

 Lake at Nelson, B. C. (Evermann, coll., 1898). 



70. Coregonus kennicotti Milner. Kennicott's Whitefish. 



Hudson Bay (Pennant 1788, as salmo lavaretus); Fort Good Hope 

 (Milner 1883, type), and Delta of the Mackenzie (Gilbert 1894); Barter 

 Island near mouth of Mackenzie River (Scofield 1899); Lake Bennett 

 (Evermann and Goldsborough 1907). 



71. Coregonus richardsoni Gunther. Richardson's Whitefish. 

 Arctic North America (Gunther 1866, type) ; Mackenzie River basin 



(Preble, coll., 1903-4). 



72. Coregonus quadrilateralis Richardson. Round Whitefish. 



Fort Enterprise (type locality) and in the Arctic Sea, also Hudson Bay 

 and about Fort Churchill (Richardson 1823) ; Bathurst Inlet and Great 

 Bear Lake (Richardson 1836, as Salmo (Coregonus) quadrilateralis); St. 

 John above the Grand Falls and in many of the lakes drained by its 

 tributaries (Cox 1895); Madawaska and Upper St. John rivers, N. B. 

 (Cox 1895a) ; Glasier Lake, New Brunswick (Kendall, coll., 1901) ; Lake 

 Bennett, Lake Atlin, and Caribou Crossing (Evermann and Goldsborough 

 1907). 



