CHAPTER XVI. 

 NATURAL BAITS. 



There is not much to be added to the Chapter on Na- 

 tural Baits. There have been some changes in the scien- 

 tific nomenclature of the cyprinoid fishes, or minnows, men- 

 tioned on page 318 of " The Book of the Black Bass," 

 owing to a better understanding of the ichthyology of North 

 America^ 



The common shiner is now known as Notropis megalofs ; 

 the creek chub as Semotilus atromaculatus ; and the horned, 

 or river chub as Hyhopsis kentuckiensis. ■ To these may be 

 added the steel-backed minnow, Campostoma anoinalum, 

 which is a very common minnow, brassy in coloration, and 

 much mottled with dark blotches ; it has thick, tough lips, 

 almost sucker-like, and is a favorite bait on Kentucky and 

 Ohio, streams. 



There are a dozen or more species of minnows used for 



bait, in Black Bass fishing, and which are indiscriminately 



called by anglers "chubs" and "shiners;" but it would 



only cause confusion to allude to their scientific names. 



(129) 



