FURTHER NOTES ON NEW JERSEY FISHES. 173 
county in Ross’s mill pond tributary to Fishing Creek, the head 
of Dias Creek and Green Creek Run. Mr. Henry Warrington 
secured young in the Rancocas near Medford, Burlington county, 
in January of 1899. 
Color in life very dark deep dusky, inclining to blackish or with 
general tint blackish-olive. Sides with vertical dusky-edged ocelli, 
centers of which are of deep dull crimson or blood-stained tint, 
and those intervening over obsolete transverse bands more red 
than others, which are tinged with warm olive. Sides of head 
with pale streaks, metallic colored, and tinged with dilute coppery, 
pale bluish and greenish. Intervening wavy dark spaces on side 
of head tinged with beautiful copper and saffron. Belly and 
lower surface of abdomen dirty saffron, or with dusky tinge. 
Lower surface of head livid dusky-grayish, and also with a dilute 
bluish or greenish tinge. Opercular blotch jet black, margined 
posteriorly with deep carmine. Iris dusky-olive. About 9 under- 
laid transverse obsolete bands of blackish, and rather indistinctly 
defined. First band on occiput, second from middle of predorsal 
region, third from bases of third and fourth dorsal spines, fourth 
from bases of fifth to seventh dorsal spines, fifth at bases of last 3 
dorsal spines and origin of rayed dorsal, sixth from middle of 
base of rayed dorsal, seventh from last dorsal rays, and eighth 
and ninth on caudal peduncle above. Fins all dusky-olive, mem- 
branes largely with blackish. Pectoral, ventral and anal deep 
dusky, tinted with deep saffron or a dark shade of belly. Length 
5 inches. I captured this example in a hole, in cold running water, 
at Ross’s mill pond, Cape May county, on May 5th, 1907. 
One taken in the west branch of Big Timber Creek in the pond 
at Grenloch, Gloucester county, May 19th, 1907, was rather pale. 
Mr. S. H. Hamilton reports it as abundant in Lake Hopatcong. 
Small sun fish were abundant in New England Creek at Hig- 
bee’s Beach, on October 5th, 1907. They were usually under 
banks and in weeds. Not bluish, though otherwise brightly col- 
ored, with reddish fins, and dark vertical bars not pronounced. 
Found in Teal’s branch, associated with Gambusia, on October 
15th. They were then abundant in the weeds. A rather light 
colored example about 4 inches long was taken. 
