﻿CHECK LIST OF FISHES OF THE DOMINION. 51 



84. Oncorhynchus gorbuscha Walhaum. (Plate II, fioures 8-13). 

 Humpback Salmon. 



Anadromous. 



British Columbia: both coa.sts of the Pacific and their slopes, ranging from California to 

 Kamchatka, and extending northward. 



85. Oncorhynchus keta AValbauin. (Plate III. figures 14-19). 

 Dog Salmon. 



Anadromous. 



British Columbia: both coasts of the Pacific and their slopes, ranging from California to 



Bering Straits, Kamchatka, and Japan— being "by far the most abundant species of 



salmon" in .Japan (Jordan). 



86. Oncorhynchus tschawytscha Walbaum. (Plates IV and V, figures 20-24 and 31). 

 Spring Salmon: Quinnat; King Salmon. 



Anadromous. 



British Columbia: both coasts of the Pacific and their slopes, ranging from California to 

 Bering Straits and China. 



87. Oncorhynchus kisutch Walbaum. (Plate V, figures 25-30). 

 (.'oho: Silver Salmon. 



Anadromou.?. 



British Columbia: both coasts of the Pacific and their slopes, ranging on the .\merican side 

 from California to Alaska, and on the Asiatic side southward to Japan. 



88. Oncorhynchus nerka Walbaum. (Plate VI, figures 32-38). 

 Sockeye Salmon: Blue-back Salmon. 



Anadromous. 



British Columbia: both coasts of the Pacific and their slopes, ranging on the American side 



from Oregon to Alaska; and on the Asiatic side southward to Japan, being landlocked in 



Lake Akan in northern Hokkaido (Jordan). 



89. Oncorhynchus kenneriyi Suckley. 

 Kennerly's Salmon: Little Redfish. 



Lacustrine and fluviatile, and perhaps 'anadromous. 



Certain lakes of British Columbia, and the States of \\'ashiiigton, Oregon, and Idaho. 



90. Sahno salar Linmeus. (Plate VII, figure 41). 

 Atlantic Salmon. 



Anadromous. 



Both coasts of the Atlantic and its afl^uents: Maritime Provinces, Gaspe Bay, St. Lawrence 

 River and Gulf with their tributary waters, including La Riviere Jupiter, Anticosti 

 Island (Schmitt, 1904): formerly Lake Ontario: recently (1905) one specimen found 

 near South Bay, Manitoulin Island, Lake Huron: Newfoundland and Labrador: re- 

 corded from Hudson Bay (Pennant, 1788): northea.stern States of North America, and 

 the Delaware River: lakes and rivers of Greenland (Fabricius, 1780): seas and rivers 

 of Europe, including Iceland, and entering the Baltic: southern limit of distribution 

 in Europe, Galicia, Spain. 



