I50 REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 



lateral band very distinct. Those we secured were a little larger 

 than N. cJialybcuus. 



Family SILURID^. 



Ameiurus catus (Linnaeus). 



White Cat Fish. 



Small forked tailed cats, reported as "white cats," were said to 

 occur in the larger pond at Dennisville, in Cape May county, on 

 September i6th, 1906. 



Mr. J. B. Vanderveer describes a cat fish as formerly, at least, 

 very abundant in the Delaware about Trenton, where they would 

 ascend in May to feed on the little oval shells, though appearing 

 again late in the summer. They were called "silver tails." Some- 

 times schools would be found floating down stream, the fishes 

 well inclined, with just the tips of their noses out of water and 

 producing a constant bubbling, or sibilant noise, when quantities 

 were captured by sweeping around them with nets. 



Ameiurus natalis prosthistius (Cope). 



Pine Barrens Cat Fish. 



Small black cat-fish, with truncated tails were said to differ 

 from the "yellow cat" and the "white cat" by the fishermen at 

 Dennisville, in Cape May county. They occur in the larger pond 

 and may possibly be this species. They are taken at night, or in 

 the evening, with earth-worm bait, as they rarely take the hook 

 during the day. During the week of September 19th, 1906. 3 

 were taken. 



Ameiurus nebulosus (Le Sueur). 



Yellow Cat Fish. 



Mr. H. Walker Hand reports that cat fish occur in Green 

 Creek Run, at White Reach in the head of Dias Creek and 

 Ross's mill pond, tributary to Fishing Creek. Cape JMay county. 



