﻿CHECK LIST OF FISHES OF THE DOMINION. 103 



460. Myoxocephalus graenlandicus*('uvier and Valenciennes. (Plato XII, figures 140 and 141). 

 Daddy Sfulpin. 



Marine. 



Ranges from Greenland, and emiiraring Labrador, doulitless Newfoundland, and the Mari- 

 time Provinces, southward to the State of New York. 



461. Myoxocephalus octodecimspinosus Mitchill. (Plate XII, figures 1.38 and 1.39). 

 Common .Sculpin: Long-spined S<-ulpin. 



Marine. 



Atlantic coast of North America, ranging from Labrador to \'irginia, and emijracing the 

 (julf of St. Lawrence, Maritime Provinces, and New iMigland States. 



462. Myoxocephalus polyacanthocephalus Pallas. 

 Great l~;cul])in. 



Marine. 



British Columbia and Paget Sound: extentling northward to .\laska, Bering Sea, and Kam- 

 chatka. 



463. Dasycottus setiger Bean. 

 Jhirine. 



North Pacific: specimens obtained at various stations of the United States s.s. Albatross, 

 off Sitkalidak Island, and at localities north and south of the Alaskan Peninsula, and 

 north of Unalaska Island; also recorded from Puget Sound: given here as it ought 

 in all probability to occur in British Columbian waters. 



464. Oncocottus hexacornisf Richardson. 

 Long-horned Sculpin. 



Marine, lacustrine, and at mouths of rivers. 



Circumpolar: recorded from mouth of Tree River near Copper Mine River (Richardson, 

 1836, as Cottus Iwxacornis— the type): Hudson Bay region and coast of Labrador: New 

 Brunswick (Cox, 1895, as Cottus labradoricus) : Greenland: Point Barrow, Port Clar- 

 ence, Herschel Island, and Bering Straits: Siberia, White Sea, Nova Zembla, Baltic 

 Sea, England, and dwarfed in Ladoga and Onega Lakes.J 



465. Triglopsis thompsoni (iirard. 

 Lake Sculpin: Deep-water Blop. 

 Lacustrine, and in tide pools. 



Recorded from tide pools 75 miles north of York Factory, Hudson Bay region (Preble, 1900) : 

 previously known only from Lakes Ontario and Michigan. 



*''According to Lutken the Greenland Sculpin (grcenlamlicus) is not separated from scorpitis by any character 

 trenchant or constant." "Lilljiberg regards the 2 as identical a view not unlikely correct." Jordan and 

 Evermann. "This fonn is considered in euiTent ichthyological literature as a sub-species of M. scorpivs. The 

 differences are few but well marked and seem to be constant in such specimens as the writer has been able to 

 examine." Kendall. 



fO. hciacornis, 0. qiiadriconiis, and 0. lahradorkus provisionally treated here as one and the same species. 



t"These dwarf specimens may not be separable from Triglopsis which genus is evidently derived from the 

 lacustrine degradation of Oncocottus." Jordan and Evermann. 



