49 8 Memoir Sears Foundation for Marine Research 



Salmo sebago Girard, Proc. Acad. nat. Sci. Philad., 6, 1854: 380 (Sebago Lake, Maine); Jordan and Ever- 

 mann, Amer. Food Game Fish., 1902: 168-170, i pi. (orig. distr., size, habits); Kendall, Occ. Pap. 

 Boston Soc. nat. Hist., 7(8), 1908: 44 (distr., New England); Mem. Boston Soc. nat. Hist., 9(1), 

 1935: 104—157, pis. 5— II (cf. lake and sea salmon, color, ills., distr., habits, size. New England; 

 S. ouananiche consid. ident. to 5. sebago). 



Salmo gloveri Girard, Proc. Acad. nat. Sci. Philad., 7, 1856: 85 (in trib. of Union R., e. Maine); Norris, 

 Amer. Angler's Book, 1864: 248 (angling); Gilpin, Trans. N.S. Inst. Sci., I (4), 1866: 86 (lakes, around 

 Halifax); Adams, Field Forest Rambles, 1873: 214, 3 figs, (descr., N.Brunswick); Jones, Trans. N.S. 

 Inst. Sci., 5, 1879: 93 (distr.). 



Trutta salar von Siebold, Amtl. Ber. 55, Vers. Dtsch. Naturf (i860), 1861 : 74-77^" (relations discus.); Siiss- 

 wasserfische Mittel Europa, 1863: 292 (genl., good ills, of vomerine teeth); Malmgren, Finlands Fisk- 

 fauna, 1863: 58—60 (refs., Finland, name T.relicta proposed for salmon of Lake Ladoga; Sweden; 

 also German transl. by C. F. von Frisch); Steindachner, S.B. Akad. Wiss. Berl., ^4 (7), 1866: 19; Brito- 

 Capello, Cat. Peix. Portugal, Mem. Acad. Sci., Lisboa, 1880: 35 (n. Portugal). 



Salmo gracilis Couch, Rep. roy. Cornwall Polytec. Soc, 1859: 1-29 (genl.); Fish. Brit. Isles, 4, 1867: 216, 

 pi. 216, fig. I (genl.). 



Trutta relicta Malmgren, Finlands Fiskfauna, 1863: 59 (name proposed for salmon of Lake Ladoga). 



Salmo argenteus Giinther, Cat. Fish. Brit. Mus., 6, 1866: 86 (kelt). 



Salmo hardinii Giinther, Cat. Fish. Brit. Mus., 6, 1866: 107 (Lake Vener, Sweden). 



Salmo ouananiche McCarthy, Forest and Stream, 42 (10), 1894: 206 (Lake St. John [Quebec], trib., and Sague- 

 nay R.; name commonly given to lake salmon of n. Quebec, Labrador, Newfoundld.) ; Jordan and 

 Evermann, Amer. Food Game Fish., 1902: 170—174 (genl.). 



Salmon, Pennant, Brit. Zool., J, 1776: 284, pi. 58 (Greenland, Newfoundld., n. N. Amer.); Arctic Zool., 2, 

 1792: 392 (n. Amer., none beyond New York); DeWitt Clinton, Trans. Lit. philos. Soc. N.Y., j, 

 1 81 5: 147 (Lake Ontario, trib. rivers); Russell, The Salmon, 1864: 234 (genl.); Couch, Fish. Brit. Isles, 

 4, 1865: 163, pi. 211 (genl., Gt. Brit.); Prince, 31st Ann. Rep. Canad. Dep. Mar. Fish. (1898), Ap- 

 pend., 1899: Ixxi-Ixxi (early abund. Lake Ontario, later decrease; artif. propag. L.Ontario, n. shore 

 Gulf of St. Lawrence); Comeau, Life and Sport ... Lower St. Lawrence R. and Gulf, 1909: 175— igo 

 (movements, food, salt water, and rivers), 359-367 (local salmon rivers), 308—316 (recs.. Gulf of 

 St. Lawrence rivers); Griswold, Fish Facts and Fancies, 1926: 29-77 (genl.); Huntsman, J. Fish. Res. 

 Bd. Canad., 5, 1942: 485-501; 6, 1946: 476-479 (death from high temp.). 



Salmo trutta Linnaeus 1758 



Brown Trout (North America); the Trout, Lochleven Trout (British Isles); 

 European Trout (Continental Europe) 



Figure 3 



The Brown Trout, introduced from Europe to North America, is similar in general 

 appearance to the Atlantic Salmon (iS". salar) but is distinguished from it by the characters 

 given on pp. 459—461. It is easily separable from the brook trout {Salvelinus fontinalis) 

 and from the Arctic charr {Salvelinus alfinus) by its much larger scales, its black- 

 spotted sides, and the presence of one zig-zag row (or two alternating rows) of sharp, 

 well-defined teeth (easily felt) along the shaft of the vomer in the midline of the roof 

 of the mouth. As in other salmonids, the Brown Trout in the sea is silvery in color. 

 In Europe, where this species is indigenous, anadromous populations were formerly 



20. The reference in Neaves Nomenclator to Geoffrey, 1764, is erroneous, based on a mistake of Sherborn's. The 

 work was in fact by Garsault, and is not binomial; this information is contributed by Dr. E.Trewavas of the 

 British Museum (Natural History), who is preparing a note about it for Bull. Zool. Nomencl. 



