72 FISHES OF WESTERN SOUTH AMERICA 
Cocuas: hacienda of Don Mario Durand, fifteen miles below Hudnuco.* 
Cotorabo, R1o: numerous streams. For the present report, a small stream, 
elevation 12500 feet, near Viacha, on the Bolivian pampas, Titicaca basin; a flat, 
winding, turbid stream with numerous bayoux, some of them permanent.* 
CoMBERCIATO, Rio: a small tributary of the middle Urubamba, elevation 1800 
feet, entering from the west, thirty miles above the Pongo de Mainique. Visited 
by Heller on the Yale-National Geographic expedition. (Bowman.)*** 
CoNTAMANA and CocHA DE CONTAMANA: small city on the right bank of 
the Rio Ucayali, provincial capital. The lake large, irregular, not clearly of the 
ox-bow type, being much larger than the nearby river in all dimensions; bluffy 
at its eastern extremity; the water clear, deep, rushy-bordered, triangular in out- 
line; developing waves of considerable size and some wave-terracing.* 
CopacaBANA: village and peninsula, the latter almost dividing Lake Titicaca. 
except for the straits of Tiquina; the village a good fishing center, site of the famous 
church and shrine of Nuestra Senora de Copacabana.* 
CRISNEJAS, R1Io: arises near Cajamarca and enters the Maranon above Balsas. 
(Pearson, 1937.)*** 
CrucreRO ALTO: a pass in the western cordillera of southern Peru, traversed by 
the Southern railway enroute to Cuzco and Puno; elevation 14666 feet, the highest 
point except one where fishes were found, that is the ditches along the railroad 
track produced numerous small Orestias.* 
CurEvas: one of several rock shelters at the foot of cliffs below the Cascada de 
Cayumba, on the Huallaga, elevation 1800 feet; Juan Mesa volunteered informa- 
tion on one which contains water and blind fishes.* 
Cuucut: collections made by J. T. Zimmer, 1922. Location unknown. 
CULPANI: above Santa Ana on the upper Urubamba.** 
Cuzco: city and department, southern Peru, 307 km. from Juliaca by rail; 
ancient capital, and headquarters of the Eigenmanns for the exploration of the 
Urubamba and valley of Cuzco; elevation 11700 feet.** 
DESAGUADERO, Rio: outlet of Lago Titicaca into Lake Poopd, Bol. Volume 
of water extremely variable with season; elevation 12500—12200.* 
Dos bE Mayo: third tambo, or shelter house, on the Via Central, at Km 71, 
on the shoulder of a mountain of the Cadena de la Sal, overlooking great valleys of 
the tropical forest.* 
Duck House: flag-stop on eastern shore of Lake Chinchaycocha; small club- 
house maintained mostly by Anglo-american employes of the Cerro de Pasco com- 
pany.* 
ENENAS: second government tambo, or shelter-house on the Via Central, 
over the summit of the Cadena de la Sal, in a small valley cleared of tropical forest 
and planted to cane.* 
Evcatyprtus and Rio pr Eucaryprus: village and small river, on the pampa 
of the Titicaca-Poopé basin and on the La Paz railway near Oruro, Bolivia, the 
river flowing to the Desaguadero; a flat, winding creek. Also point of departure 
of the Mulford expedition (Pearson, 1924.)* 
Funpicion, LA: see Smelter. 
