1042 REPORT OF COMMISSIONER OF FISH AND FISHERIES. [4] 



13. Salvelinus namaycush (Walb.) Goode. Lakk tkout. 



Salmo namayciu^h Walbaum, Artcdi Gen. Pi^c, 1792, ]>. 68; Richardson, F. 



B.-A., 183<i, p. 179, pi. 79, uud ])1. 85, li-r. 1 (head); Kirtland, Bost. 



Journ. Nat. Hist., iv, 1842, p. 25, pl.iii, fig.2(bad); Guntiikk, Cat. Fish. 



Brit. Mus., vi, 18G6, p. 123. 

 Salmo amethysius Mitchill, Jouru. Acad. Nat. Sci., PbiLi., I, 1818, p. 410; De 



Kay, Nat. Hist. N. Y., Fi.sh. 1842, p. 240, pi. 76, tig. 241; Stoker, Syu. 



Fish. N. A.. 1846, p. 193. 

 Salar Naniagciish Valenciennes in C. & V., Hist. Nat. Poiss, XXI, 1848, p. 348. 

 Ciistivomer namaycush Goode, Game Fishes U. S., 1879, part eight, p. 33, with 



colored plate. 

 Salvelinus namaycush Jordan &. Gilbert, Syn. Fish. N. A., 1883, p. 317. 



Great Lakes, lakes of Northern New York, New Hampshire, Maine, and north 

 eastward. 



14. Salvelinus salvelinus (L.). SAlbling; Bavarian char. 



Salmo salvelinus LinniS, Syst. Nat., I, 1766, p. 511 ; CuviEU & Valenciennes, 

 Hist. Nat. Poiss., XXI, 1848, p. 246 ; GDnther, Cat. Fish. Brit. Mils., VI, 

 1866, p. 126. 

 Salmo umhla Agassiz, Poiss. d'eau douce, pi. 9. 



Alpine lakes of Bavaria and Austria (Giinther). Introduced into Plymouth, 

 Massachusetts, by the U. S. Fish Commission. 



15. Salmo irideus Gibbous. Rainbow trout. 



Salmo iridea GiBBONS, Proc. Cal. Acad. Nat. Sci., I, 1855, pp. 36,37. 



Salmo irideus GtJNTHER, Cat. Fish, Brit. Mus., VI, 1866, p. 119 ; Suckley, Rep. 

 U. S. Com'r Fish and Fisheries, Part II, 1874, p. 129 ; Jordan &. Gil- 

 bert, Syn. Fish. N. A., 1883, p. 312. 



Salar iridea Girard, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phihi., 1856, p. 220; and U.S. Pacif. 

 R. R. Exped., Fish, 1858, p. 321, pi. 73, fig. 5, and pi. 74. 

 Streams west of the Sierra Nevad:t, from near the Mexican line (Rio San Luis 



Rey) to Oregon (Jor. & Gilb.). Reared artificially m large numbers by the U. 



S. Fish Commission on the McCloud River in California, and thence distributed 



eastward and across the Pacific. 



16. Salmo salar Linn^. Atlantic salmon. 



Salmo salar Linne, Syst. Nat., i, 1766, p. 509: Mitchill, Trans. Lit. and Phil. 



Soc. N. Y., 1815, p. 434; Richardson, F. B.-A., 1836, p. 145; Storer, Rep. 



Fish., &c., Mass., 1839, p. 104 ; De Kay, Nat. Hist. N. Y., Fish, 1842, p. 



241, pi. 38, fig. 122; GtJNTHER, Cat, Fish. Brit. Mus., VI, 1866, p. 11; 



Storer, Hist. Fish. Mass., 1867, p. 142, pi. xxv, fig. 2; Suckley, Rep. U. 



S. Com'r Fish and Fisheries, Part II, 1874, p. 104; Goode, Game Fishes 



U. S. 1879, part first, p. 5, with colored plate ; Jordan & Gilbert, Syn. 



Fish. N. A., 1883, p. 312. 

 North Atlantic, asceudiug rivers in Northern Europe and America. In the 

 eastern United States the range of the species has been extended, by the elforts 

 of the U. S. Fish Commission, southward to the Susquehanna River. 



17. Salmo salar snbsp. sebago Girard. Land-locked-salmon. 



Salmo sebago Girard, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., 1853, p. 380 ; Suckley, Rep. 



U. S. Com'r Fish and Fisheries, Part II, 1874, p. 143 ; GIjnther, Cat. Fish. 



Brit. Mus., VI, 1866, p. 153. 

 Salmo gloveri Girard, Proc. Acad Nat. Sci., Phila., 1854, p. 85; Gunther, Cat. 



Fish. Brit. Mus., VI, 1866, p. 153. 

 Saint Croix River and lakes of Maine. Extensively introduced into other 

 lakes and into streams southward. The young have been found in abundance 

 in North Carolina, where the Commission introduced the species. 



