94 EEPOET OF COMMISSIONER OF FISH AND FISHEEIES. 



t Black-spotted. 



31. Salnio gibhsii, SuCKLEY. — Columbia salmon trout. 

 (Columbia Eiver.) 



32. Salmo sebago, Girae.d. — Sebago trout. (Sebago Lake, 

 Maine.) 



33. Salmo kennerlyi, Suckley. — Kennerly's trout. (Chi- 

 loweyuck Lake ; Fraser's River.) 



34. Salmo warrenu Suokley. — Warren's trout. (Fraser's 

 River.) 



tt Red-spotted. 



35. Salmo bairdii, Suckley. — Baird's trout. (Clark's Fork 

 of the Columbia.) 



36. Salmo parM^iiiiGKLWs:. — Parker's River trout. (Koote- 

 nay River, Rocky Mountains.) 



37. Salmo oquassa, GiRARD. — Blue-back trout ; Oquassa. 

 (Raugeley Lake, Maine.) 



e. Lake trout, passing their lives in deep, fresh water lakes, ap- 

 proaching the shores annually to spawn in shallow water ; never 

 entering running brooks or repairing to the sea. 



38. Salmo »iam«2/cws/t, Pennant. — Mackinaw trout. (Great 

 Lakes.) 



39. Salmo confinis, DeKay. — Lake trout. (Lakes of New 

 York.) 



40. Salmo siscoicet, Agassiz. — Siscowet. (Lake Superior.) 



41. Salmo symmetrica, Prescott. — Winuipiseogee trout. 



42. Salmo hoodii, Richardson. — Hood's salmon. (Lakes of 

 Atlantic slope, north of Canada.) 



43. Salmo netcberryiy Girard. — Newberry's salmon. (Kla- 

 math River.) 



1. SALMO SCOULERI, Richardson. 



SKOWITZ; HOOKED-NOSED SALMON; FALL SALMON. 



Syn. — Salmo scouleri, Rich. Faun. Bor. Amer. iii, 1836, pp. 158 and 223, PI. 93 ; 

 DeKay, N. Y., Fauna iii, 1842 ; Girard, Gen, Rep. Fishes, p. 305 ; Her- 

 bert, Fish and Fishing, &c., SiippL, p. 37, 1850 ; Suckley, Nat. Hist. Wash- 

 ington Territory, p. 335. 



Salar scouleri, Valenc. in Cuv. and Val. Hist. Nat. Poiss. ssi, pp. 242, 345, 

 1848; Storer, Syuops,p. 194, 1846; Ged. in Proc.Acad. Nat. Sc, Philad. 

 viii, p. 217, 1856. 



? Salmo comuetus, Rich. Zool. Voy. Herald, Plate sxxiii, 1854. 



? Salmo lycaodon, Pallas, Zoogr. Eos. Asiat. 



Oncorlijjncluts scouleri, Suckley, "Notices of a Species Salmon," &c., N. Y. 

 June, 1861. 



Sp. Ch. — Male. — Profile much arched, the convexity rising from nape 

 to dorsal fin. The body at that point is thick, tapering from thence to 



