﻿62 CHECK LIST OF FISHES OF THE DOMINION. 



160. Ftychocheilus oregonensis Richardson. 

 Sqiiawfish. 



Fluviatile. 



British t'olurahia, iufluding Vancouver Island: States of Washington and Oregon west- 

 ward to Montana. 



161. Leuciscus balteatus Richardson. 

 Colum1)ia River Minnow. 

 Fluviatile. 



British Columbia: Columbia river and streams of Puget Sound: presumably westward to 

 Montana (Evermann, 1891, us L. gilli).* 



162. Leuciscus elongatus Kirtland. 

 Red-sided Shiner. 

 Lacustrine and fluviatile. 



"Very abundant in most streams in southern and central Ontario" (Nash, 1908): in the 

 United States "Great Lakes and upper Mississippi Valley, chiefly from Pennsylvania 

 to Minnesota" (Jordan and Evermann). 



163. Leuciscus nachtriebi Cox 

 Nachtrieb Dace. 

 Lacustrine. 



Certain lakes of northern Minnesota: given here as likely to occur in Lake of the Woods 

 region. 



164. Leuciscus neogseus Cope. 

 Lacustrine and fluviatile. 



Provinces of New Brunswick and Quebec, and presumably Ontario: also locally known 

 from Michigan to South Dakota. 



165. Opsopoeodus emiliae Hay. 



Fluviatile. 



Streams tributary to Lake Erie: also tlistributed from southern Indiana southward to 

 Georgia: given liere owing to its occurrence in Lake Erie waters. 



166. Abramis crysoleucas Mitchill. (Plate VIII, Figures 78 and 79). 

 Bream: Roach: Golden Shinei'. 



Lacustrine and fluviatile — abounding in bayous and weedy ponds. 



Maritime Provinces, including Prince Edward Island: in the United States from the eastern 

 States westward to Dakota and southward to Texas. 



167. Cliola vigilax Baird and Girard. 

 Bullhead Minnow. 

 Fluviatile. 



Detroit, Michigan (Cope, 1866, as Hi/hopsis tudilanus), and therefore given here owing to 

 its occurrence so close to our border: extends from Ohio westward to Iowa and south- 

 ward to Texas and Georgia. 



*"Apparently not distinct from L. biiUcutus." Jordan and Evermann. 



