8 ' University of Michigan 



second dorsal and five on each caudal lobe. This species has 

 not been secured since Poey described it.^ 



U. phillipsi differs from the next species in the much larger 

 maxillary, and the dark bars on the soft dorsal and caudal. 



(For Dr. Richard J. Phillips of Philadelphia, who collected 

 the type.) 



U pencils maculatus (Bloch). — On July 12, 1903, I seined 

 an example about 82 mm. long at Stone Harbor, which I 

 wrongly referred- to Mulliis aiiratus (Jordan and Gilbert). 

 Though now in ver}- poor preservation it seems to belong to the 

 present species. A row of small short teeth are seen along 

 the upper jaw edge, not noticed originally. This record, there- 

 fore, adds another species to the New Jersey fish fauna. 



Cynoscion regalis (Schneider). — ^^Nlanasquan. 



Bairdiella chrysura (Lacepede). — ]\Ianasquan. 



Prionotus evoians strigatMs (Cuvier). — Manasquan. 



Merluccius bilinearis (Mitchill). — During early June many 

 were washed ashore, usually at night, at Seaside Heights. 



Pennsylvania 



About thirty-five localities are included below, represented 

 by twelve in Indiana County, where material was gathered by 

 Mr. R. W. Wehrle (North Branch of Brush Run, Little Ma- 

 honing Creek, Penn, McKee, Smith, Shafer, Stephen, Laurel, 

 Miller, ]^IcDonnell, Brush and Graff Runs). Thirteen lots were 

 sent by ^Messrs. E. S. and W. L Mattern, from extended trips 

 in the Delaware River basin in Berks County (stream near 

 Lime Kiln Run in Oley Township and Manatawney Creek), 

 and along the middle Susquehanna River basin in Berks 

 County (Little Swatara Creek and its tributary Stone Creek, 



1 Mem. Hist. Nat. Cuba, T. 1851, p. 226. 



^ Rept. N. J. State Museum, 1905 (1906), p. 327. 



