﻿58 CHECK LIST OF FISHES OF THE DOMINION. 



131. Schilbeodes gyrinus Mitchill. 



Tadpole Stone Cat: Mad Tom. 

 Fluviatile. 



Great Lakes region, extending from the Hudson River westward to the Mississippi vaUey; 

 and probabl}' to be found in Ontario. 



132. Ictiobus cyprinella Cuvier and Valenciennes. 

 Common Buffalo Fish. 



Lacustrine and fluviatile. 



Manitoba: Qu'Appelle valley, Saskatchewan, at the head of the chain of lakes; and Missis- 

 sippi valley. 



133. Ictiobus bubalus Rafinesque. 

 Small-mouth Buffalo Fish. 

 Fluviatile and lacustrine. 



Manitoba, and Mississippi valley and basin. 



134. Carpiodes thompsoni Agassiz. 

 Lake Carp Sucker. 

 Lacustrine and fluviatile. 



Lake Champlain, upper St. Lawrence River, and Great Lakes region, including Lake of the 

 Woods. 



135. Carpiodes velifer l^afinesque. 

 Quillback. 



Fluviatile. 



Prairie Provinces, Mississippi valley, and upper Missouri River, extending southward to 

 the Rio Grande. 



136. Pantosteus jordani Evermann. 

 Mountain Sucker. 

 Frequents clear streams. 



Upper JMissouri valley, streams of the Black Hills, South Dakota, localities in Montana and 

 Idaho, and Columbia River liasin: may be found in southern Alberta or perhaps in 

 British Columbia. 



137. Catostomus griseus Girard. 

 Gray Sucker. 

 Fluviatile. 



Alberta and Saskatchewan: upper Missouri basin and Platte and Yellowstone Rivers. 



138. Catostomus catostomus Forster. 

 Northern Sucker. 

 Lacustrine and fluviatile. 



Nearly cosmopolitan in the Dominion: ranging from Labrador and New Brunswick to 

 British Columbia, and from the eastern to the western United States, extending southward 

 at least to Latitude 40° N., but has been obtained in West Virginia; and occurs also in 

 Alaska: recorded from Hudson Bay (Forster, 1773, and Pennant, 1788, as Ci/pnnus 

 catostomus), and from "stream near Great Bear Lake and stream near Fort Good Hope" 

 (Preble, 1903-4.) 



