24 THE GAME FISH OF NORTH AMERICA. 



2. Family SiLuiuDiE, 



Contaiuiog many species, Cat-Fisli, Bull-Heads, &c., unwortliy of 

 notice, except. 

 Genus Silurus : 



The Great Cat-Fish, Pimelodes Huron. 



3. Family CYPRiNioiE, 



Containing many varieties. The Chub, Sucker, Shiner, Roach, 

 Dace, Bream, &c., of no account except for bait, unless it be 

 two imported species. 



The Common Carp, Cyprinus Carpio, and 



The Golden Carp, Cyprinus Auratus. 



5. Family Clupeid^s:. 

 Genus Alosa : 



The Shad,* Alosa Pra;stabilis. 

 Genus Clupea : 



The Herring, Clupea Harengus. 



6. Family Esocid.e. 

 Genus Estor : 



The Mascalonge, Esox Estor. 



The Northern Pickerel, Esox Lucioides. 



The Common Pickerel, Esox Reticulatus. 



The Long Island Pickerel, Esox Fasciatus. 



The Garpike, Esox Osscus. 



Beside two or three other species, found in the Pennsylvanian 

 and Western waters. 

 This brings us to the end of our fresh-water, soft-finned fishes ; or 

 of such, at least, as are in any wise worthy to be accounted Game 

 Fishes; and we come to the second division, Acanthopterygii, or spiny- 

 named by the ignorant early settlers, still go by those stnpid misnomers — as in the 

 present instance, where a fish having no possible analogy to a Bass, and, indeed, 

 belonging to a different cla.ss offish, "soft-finned," is termed Bass. The analogous 

 fish in England are known a."* Gwyniad, Vendace and Pollan. I would suggest 

 " Otsego Lavaret" as a very suitable name for this unnamed species. 



* I somewhat doubt this distinction. I have drawings, made from life, of two 

 varieties of Shad taken in New York bay, agreeing precisely with Alosa Firita and 

 Alosa Communis, of Yarrel — the Twaite and AUice Shad of England — to the lat- 

 ter of which 1 would refer this fish. 



