52 Proceedings Port. Soc. Nat. Hist. 
ward on both sides of the mountains to South Carolina and 
Arkansas in cool waters. 
M AINE.—Cochnewagan Pond, Cobbosseecontee Pond, Duck 
Pond, Trip Pond, Gardner’s Pond, Gun Point Ice Company’s 
Pond, Hosmer Pond, Keazer’s, Cushman and Little Pushaw 
Ponds, lakes in Newport and Glenburn, Snow and Bel- 
grade Lakes, Lake Maranacook and Pushaw Pond (Page, 
1884); Boyden and Pennamaquan Lakes (Kendall, 1894) ; 
Chickawaka Lake (Kendall coll., 1895a) ; mouth Songo River, 
Presumpscot River and Little Sebago Lake (Kendall coll., 
1898, 1899, 1900a, 1901, 1902 and 1903); outlet of Thomas 
Pond, in South Casco, and Cobbosseecontee Lake and inlets 
(Kendall coll., 1899a); Sebago Lake (Smith, 1900); Gun 
Point Ice Company’s Pond (Kendall & Gould coll., 1900) ; 
Cobbosseecontee Lake (Smith, 1901); Little Sebago Lake 
(Kendall coll., 1901a) ; Wissataquoik Deadwater (Kendall & 
Gould coll., 1902); Presumpscot River, Sebago and Little 
Sebago Lakes, Green Lake and Branch Pond (Kendall coll., 
1903); “introduced, common” (Atkins coll., 1903); Moose 
and Indian Ponds (Bowman coll., 1904); Maine (Me. F. C. 
Report, 1870, 1872a, 1875, 1876, 1877, 1878, 1882, 1883, 
1886, 1888, 18964 and 1899, and Kendall, 1904 and 1908).* 
PERCIDA. THE PERCHES. 
91. Perea flavesecens (Mitchill). YELLOW PERCH: 
“PrRCH”’; “BRINDLE PERCH”. 
Range.—Abundant in the Great Lakes and in coastwise 
streams from Nova Scotia to North Carolina; upper Missis- 
sippi and St. Lawrence waters. 
MAINnE.—Maine (Williamson, 1832, Storer, 1853 and 
1867a, Holmes, 1862, and Kendall, 1904 and 1908); Auburn 
(U. S. N. M., 1883); Thompson’s Pond (Bowdoin Col- 
*Introduced and now widely distributed in southern half of the state. 
