394 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [DeC, 



Enmyzon sucetta (Lacepede). One. 



Esox ameyicanus (Gniehn) . One. 



Fundulus nottii (Agassiz). Four. 



Lepomis megalotis (Rafinesque) . Ten. Also one on March 30. 



Florida. 



Mr. Morgan Hebard obtained a fine lot of small fishes from the 

 Everglades about Miami in March, 1920. Mr. Howard R. Hill 

 sent a number of specimens and notes, on the fishes noticed during 

 the fall of 1920, in Pensacola Bay near Pensacola. These are all 

 indicated by the letter P. 



Scoliodon terrce-novce (Richardson). P. 



Dasyatis sahina (Le Sueur). Three young from Allenhurst, Julj^, 

 1917. H. W. Aitken. These show the front margins of the disk 

 slightly concave opposite the nostrils. 



Elops saurus Linne. P. 



Harengula pensacolce Goode and Bean. Young from Useppa 

 Island, Lee County, obtained by Mr. Hebard in 1919. 



Brevoortia tyrannus patronus Goode. P. 



Anchovia mitchilli Valenciennes. P. 



Gymnothorax funehris Ranzani. P. 



Fundulus similis (Baird and Girard). Two smaller ones from 

 Useppa Island, Charlotte Harbor, in May, 1919, obtained by Mr. 

 Hebard. 



Fundidus grandis Baird and Girard. Abundant and all of moder- 

 erate size and variable. In alcohol many males with orange caudal, 

 ventral and anal borders. In other specimens these fins gray. 

 Tamiami Canal, Everglades. March 8 to 12. 1920. 



Fundulus confluentus Goode and Bean. Large series from the 

 Tamiami Canal. The species is more abundant than the preceding, 

 which it greatly resembles. It may be distinguished at a glance 

 by at least one blackish or dusky vertical line, or bar, on the caudal 

 basally, also the presence of a black blotch ocellated with white on 

 the last dorsal rays, which occurs in both sexes. It is very variable, 

 the back mostly finely spotted with black or dusky, which usually 

 assumes a greatly mottled appearance. In one example approaching 

 melanism the ground-color in alcohol is pale warm brown above, 

 greatly specked or spotted with blackish, the spots completely 

 covering dorsal and caudal fins and extending well down side. Dark 

 lateral bars very variable in intensity, mostly distinct or pronounced 



