Kendall: Fishes of Maine. 23 
1899); East Branch of Penobscot and Matagamonsis Lake 
(Kendall & Gould coll., 1900); inlet Hurd Pond, Telos and 
Chamberlain Lakes, and St. Johns River (Kendall & Gould 
coll., 1901); Sand Bank Brook (Kendall & Gould coll., 
1902); outlet Chaffin Pond, South Fork of East Branch 
of Royals River, Mann Brook, Rainbow Lake and Cross 
Lake Thoroughfare (Kendall coll., 1903); Rainbow Lake 
(Garland coll., 1905, and Evermann, 1905); common 
(Atkins coll., 1903); Dixmont (Lee coll., 1903); Cambridge 
River (Kendall coll., 1905). 
34. Couesius plumbeus (Agassiz). GRAY CHUB- 
Minnow; “Dacr”; “Dusky CHUB”. 
Range.—New Brunswick to Lake Superior. 
MAINE.—Metallac Brook and Richardson Lake(B.S. N. H., 
Putnam coll. [1866 ?]); Freeport (Kendall & Smith, 1894, 
and Kendall coll., 1898, 1899, 1900, 19014, 1902, 1903 and 
1904); Varnum Pond (Merrill coll., 1898 and 1899); Pre- 
sumpscot River (Kendall coll., 1899); Sebago Lake (Kendall 
coll., 1908); Telos, Chamberlain, Churchill, Round and Beau 
Lakes, and Cross Lake Thoroughfare (Kendall & Gould 
coll., 1901); Moosehead and Lunkasoos Lakes (Kendall & 
Gould coll., 1902); Wild River and Square Lake (Kendall 
1903a); northern Maine (Smith, 1903); Square Lake and 
Cross Lake, and Cross Lake Thoroughfare (Kendall coll., 
1903); Oquossoc Lake (Kendall coll., 1904); Umbagog 
Lake (Kendall coll., 1905); Maine (Kendall, 1904 and 1908) 
ANGUILLIDZ. THE EELs. 
35. Anguilla rostrata (LeSueur). ‘EEL’; ComMMon 
EEL; “SILVER EEL”. 
Range.—Salt and fresh water, St. Lawrence River to Gulf 
of Mexico and West Indies; abundant throughout Missis- 
sippi Valley. 
