CHECK LIST OF FISHES 283 



2185 Percina caprodes (Rafinesque). Log perch; Rockfish; Hogmolly; Hogfish 

 Great Lakes and streams of the South and West from Quebec to Lake 



Superior, and Iowa. 

 Sciasna caprodes Rafinesque, Amer. Month. Mag., Vol. II, 1818, 354, 



Ohio River. 

 Perca (Percina) nebulosa Haldeman, Jour. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., VIII, 



1842, 330, Susquehanna River. 

 Pileoma semifasciatum DeKav, New York Fauna: Fishes, 1842, 16, 



pi. 50, fig. 162, Lake Champlain, Westport, N. Y. 

 Percina himaculata Haldeman, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., 1844, 157, 



Susquehanna River. 



2186. Percina carbonaria (Baird and Girard). 



Streams of Mississippi to the Rio Grande. 



Pileoma carbonaria Baird and Girard, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 

 VI, 1853, 387, Rio Salada; Rio Medina; San Pedro Creek, Tex. 



2187. Percina zebra (Agassiz). Manitou darter. 



Lakes of Michigan, northern Indiana, Wisconsin, and northward to 

 Lake Superior; Cayuga Lake Basin. Probably varying into P. 

 caprodes. 



Pileoma zebra Agassiz, Lake Superior, 1850, 308, Lake Superior. 



Percina manitou Jordan, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., XXIX, 1877, 53, 

 Lake Manitou, Ind. 



2188. Percina rex (Jordan and Evermann). 



Roanoke River, Va. One of the largest and most imposing of the 



darters. 

 Etheostoma rex Jordan and Evermann, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XI, 1888, 



357, Pi. XLV, fig. 9, Roanoke River near Roanoke, Va. 



Genus 752. HADROPTERUS Agassiz. Black-sided darters. 



Hadropterus Agassiz, Anicr. Jour. Sci. Arts, XVII, 1854, 305 (H. nigro- 

 fasciatus Agassiz). 



2189. Hadropterus nigrofasciatus Agassiz. Craui-a-bottom. 



South Carolina to Louisiana. 



Hadropterus nigrofasciatus Agassiz, Amer. Jour. Sci. Arts, XVII, 1854, 



305, Mobile, Ala. 

 Alvordius spillmani Hay, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., Ill, 1880, 491, Chicka- 



sawha River, Miss. 



Genus 753. ALVORDIUS Girard. 



Alvordius Girard, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., XI, 1859, 68 (A. macu- 

 latus Girard). 



2190. Alvordius maculatus Girard. Black-sided darter. 



Great Lakes region to the middle Missouri and north to Minnesota, 

 southward through Missouri, Indiana, and Kentucky to Arkansas; 

 especially common in the Ohio Valley. 



Alvordius maculatus Girard, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., XI, 1859, 68, 

 Fort Gratiot, Mich. 



Alvordius aspro Cope and Jordan, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., XXIX, 



1877, 51, White River, Indianapolis, Ind.; substitute for Etheostoma 

 blennioides of Kirtland, not of Rafinesque; perhaps distinct from A. 

 maculatus which, if correctly described, has not been found later. 



2191. Alvordius guntheri (Eigenmann and Eigenmann). Giinther's darter. 



Winnipeg south to Iowa. 



Etheostoma guntheri Eigenmann and Eigenmann, Amer. Nat., November, 

 1S92, 962, Souris River, Winnipeg. 



2192. Alvordius peltatus (StaufTcr). Shielded darter. 



SoMtlica.stcrn Pennsylvania, southward to South Carolina in coastwise 



.streams. 

 Hadropterus maculatus Girard, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., XI, 1859, 



100, tributary of Potomac River, Md.; name preoccupied. 

 Etheostoma peltatum StaulFor, in Cope, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 



XVI, 1864, 233, Conestoga Creek, near Lancaster, Pa. 

 Etheostoma nevisense Cope, Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc, XI, 1870, 261, falls 



of Neuse River, N. C. 

 Alvordius crassus Jordan and Brayton, Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., XII, 



1878, 12, near Greenville, S. C. 



