120 KANSAS UNIVERSITY SCIENCE BULLETIN. \ 



\ 



14. Iowa. j 



1. Des Moines river, Ottumwa, Wapello county. (F., '85.) ■. 



2. [Mississippi R.], Davenport, Scott county. (F., '85.) ] 



21. Micliigau. 



1. St. Clair river [St. Clair county]. (F., '85.) 



2. Detroit river [Wayne county]. (F., '85.) \ 



3. [Trib. Detroit R.], Northville [Wayne county]. (F., '85.) ' 

 i. Huron river, Ann Arbor [Washtenaw county]. (F., '85.) , ! 



5. Saginaw river, (F., '98.) 1 



6. Lake Douglas [Cheboygan county]. (F., '98.) ] 



7. [Lake St. Clair], Ecorse [Wayne county]. (F., '85.) 



8. Kalamazoo river, Otsego [Allegan county]. (F., '85 and '90.) i 



9. [Kalamazoo R.], Marshall [Calhoun county]. (F., '90.) ' \ 

 10. St. Mary's lake, mouth of Battle creek [Calhoun county]. (F. '90.) I 



;}1. New Yorli, 



1. [Niagara R.], Niagara [Niagara county]. (F., '85.) 



2. Grass river, St. Lawrence county. (F., '85.) 



3. [Grass R.], Canton, St. Lawrence county. (F,,'85.) 



4. Black lake, St. Lawrence county. (F., '85.) 



5. [St. Lawrence R.], Ogdensburg [St. Lawrence county]. (F., '85.) 



6. Lake Ontario. (F., '85.) \ 



7. Garrison creek, Sackett's Harbor [Jefferson county]. (F., '85.) | 



8. Four Mile creek, Oswego [Oswego county]. (F., '85.) ! 



9. Oneida lake. (F., '85.) i 



10. Cayuga lake. (F., '85.) 



11. [Lake Ontario], Rochester [Monroe county]. (F., '85.) j 



12. [Lake Erie], Forestville, Chautauqua county, (F., '85.) 



3-t. Ohio. : 



1. Portage river, at Oak Harbor, Ottawa county. (F., '98,) \ 



37. Pennsylvania. 



1. Alleghany and Monongahela rivers, and in many of the small streams '■ 



throughout the county, Allegheny county. (Williamson, '01.) I 



48. Wisconsin. 



1. Tributaries of Pecan tonica river, Green county, (F,, '85.) I 



2. [Trib. Rock R.], Madison [Dane county]. (F,, '85.) ' 



Cambarus propinquus sanbornii Fax, ; 



16. Kentucky. I 



1, Smoky creek, Carter county. (F.,'85.)  j 



34. Oliio. I 



1. [Trib. Black R,], Oberlin [Lorain county], (F,,'85.) j 



( 

 Hay ('96) says : "This is probably the most abundant species 



in our state. It is usually found in large numbers in the j 



smaller streams hiding under stones, concealed in short bur- | 



rows along the banks, or resting quietly on the bottom." Ac- , 



