7° 



AMERICAN FISHES. 



its merits, I hesitate not to pronounce it the lish for the million. It is a 

 native of our Western rivers and lakes, where it usually resorts to deep 

 and sluggish waters; yet in several instances, where it has found its way 

 into cold and rapid streams, and even small-sized brooks, by means of the 

 constructing of canals or by the hand of man, it has adapted itself to the 

 change, and in two or three years stocked to overflowing these new loca- 

 tions. As a pan-fish, for the table, it is surpassed by few other fresh- 

 Avater species. For endurance and rapidity of increase it is unequaled. 

 * * * -j-j-^g Grass Bass is perfectly adapted to stocking ponds. It 

 will thrive without care in very small ponds of sufficient depth. * * * 

 It will in nowise interfere with the cultivation of any number of species, 

 large or small, in the same waters. It will live harmoniously with all 

 others, and while its structure and disposition restrain it from attacking 

 any other but very small fry, its formidable armature of spinous rays in 

 the dorsal and abdominal fins will guard it against attacks of even the 

 voracious pike." 



^\' 



THE CRAPPIE. 



Closely related to the Strawberry Bass is the Crappie, Fomoxys anmilaris. 

 It is the form almost universally called Crappie in the Mississippi Valley. 

 Dr. Henshall has proposed that it shall be called the "Southern Crappie," 

 reserving the name "Northern Crappie " for the Fomoxys sparo/des.^ It 

 is not such an easy matter to change the popular names of fishes, however 

 flexible may be the terminology of the ichthyologist. Strawberry Bass 



''■ American Angler , III, 167 



