40 CONTRIBUTIONS TO NOKTIL AMEKICAN ICHTHYOLOGY III. 



I'Vtur 1)1' the* specii's Iieie iiKMitioiaMl were collected several years 

 jigo by Dr. lliigb M. Neisler at .some point in Georgia, the record of the 

 locality not certainly preserved, but supposed to be Flint River, and are 

 now in the Museum of the Smithsonian In.stitution. These are Compo- 

 stoma anoniuliDii, tScmodius ihoreauianiis, Codoma J'onnosa {"■(jraniUpin- 

 nis^'), and Aphudoderua sayanus {'■'• Astcrnotremia mesotrema "). 



ETIIEOSTOxAIATIDiE. 

 Genus HADROPTERUS Ayassiz. 



1. IlADROPTERUS NIGROFASCIATUS Ayassiz. 



Abundant at the Shallow Ford of the Chattahoochee near Gaiue.s- 

 yjlle, Ga. 



CENTRARCHID^. 

 Genus xAIICROPTERUS Laccpede. 



2. MiCROPTERUS PALLTDUS {Raf.) G. & J. 



Not very abundant. 



3. MiCROPTERUS SALMOIDES (LflC.) GUL 



Very common. 



Genus AMBLOPLITES Bafinesque. 



4. AMBLOPLITES RUPESTRIS {Raf.) GUI. 



Abundant. 



Genus LEPIOPOMUS Bafinesque. 



5. LEPIOPOMUS PALLIDUS [Mit.) G. & J. 



{IchtheUa invisur llitlbnjok.) 



A few specimens taken in Peach Tree Creek near Atlanta. 



6. LEPIOPOMUS AURITUS (L.) Raf. 



Abundant at the Shallow Ford of the Chattahoochee. ]\Iy speriinens 

 are more elongate tiian those from the Saluda, and they ditler .some- 

 what in coloration and sijuaination. The darU Idotches at the ba.se 

 of the dor.sal are wanting. 1 am not, however, disposed to consider 

 them as specitically distinct. 



