Fowler — A List of the Fishes of Pennsylvania. 69 



Clearfield, Crawford, Erie, Fayette, Forest, Indiana, Lawrence, McKean, 

 Mercer, Somerset, Venango and Warren Counties. 



Erie basin in Crawford and Erie Counties. Introduced in Delaware, 

 Susquehanna and Potomac basins. 



Micropterus salmoides (Lac^pede). Large-mouth Bass. 



Ohio basin in Crawford, Indiana, McKean and Warren Counties. 



Erie basin in Erie County. Introduced in Delaware and Potomac basins. 



PERCID.E. 

 Stizostedion vitreum (Mitchill). Pike Perch. 



Genesee basin in Potter County. 



Ohio basin in Allegheny, Beaver, Butler, Cambria, Clarion, Crawford, 

 Forest, Indiana, Lawrence, McKean, Warren and Westmoreland Counties. 



Erie basin in Erie County. Introduced in the Delaware and Susque- 

 hanna basins. 



Stizostedion canadense (Griffiths). Sauger. 

 Ohio basin in Indiana and Warren Counties, and Beaver and Youghio- 

 gheny Rivers. 



Erie basin at Erie. 



Perca flavescens (Mitchill). Yellow Perch. 



Delaware basin in Bucks, Carbon, Delaware, Lehigh, Monroe, Mont- 

 gomery, Pike, Philadelphia and Wayne Counties. 



Susquehanna basin in Bradford, Lackawanna, Lancaster, Luzerne, 

 Mifflin, Wyoming and York Counties. 



Erie basin in Erie County. Introduced in Ohio basin of Crawford 

 County. 



Percina caprodes (Rafinesque). Log Perch. 



Susquehanna basin in Lancaster County. 



Ohio basin in Crawford County. Reported from the Allegheny and 

 Monongahela and I have Cope's Kiskiminitas and Youghiogheny River 

 material. 



Erie basin in Erie County. 



Haldeman described it as Perca nebulosa from the Susquehanna. 1 At the 

 same time he also described Perca minima from the same stream, though 

 not the young as he suggests, but simply a tessellated darter. He also 

 gave the manuscript name Percina bimaculata to Storer for still another 

 example from the Susquehanna several years later, 2 this insuring the 

 generic name for the log perches. The types of the first two nominal 

 forms I have examined. Cope overlooks 3 the occurrence of the log perch 

 in the Susquehanna, as he only mentions it from Lake Erie and the Alle- 

 gheny River. 



iJourn. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1842, p. 330. 

 2Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., 1844, p. 157. 

 3Rep. Com. Fisher. Pa., 1879-80 (1881), p. 124. 



