40 CONTRIBUTIONS 1O -SOUTH AMERICAN ICHTHYOLOGY III. 



Four of tbe species here mentioned were collected several years 

 ago by Dr. Hugh M. Neisler at some point in Georgia, the record of the 

 locality not certainly preserved, but supposed to be Flint River, and are 

 now in the Museum of the Smithsonian Institution. These are Campo- 

 stoma anomalunt, Semotiius thoreauianus, Codoma formosa (" grandipin* 

 is"), and Aphododerus sayanus (" Aster notremia msotrema "). 



ETHEOSTOMATIM]. 



Genus HADROPTERUS Agassiz. 

 1. HADROPTERUS NIGROFASCIATUS Agassiz. 



Abundant at the Shallow Ford of the Chattahoochee near Gaines- 

 ville, Ga. 



CENTRARCHnm 



Genus MICROPTERUS Laccpede. 



2. MICROPTERUS PALLIDUS (Raf.} G. & J. 

 Not very abundant. 



3. MICROPTERUS SALMOIDES (Lac.) Gill. 

 Very common. 



Genus AMBLOPLITES Eafinesque. 



4. AMBLOPLITES RUPESTRIS (Raf.) Gill. 

 Abundant. 



Genus LEPIOPOMUS Eafinesgue. 



5. LEPIOPOMUS PALLIDUS (Hit.) G. & J. 



(Ichthelis incisor Holbrook.) 



A few specimens taken in Peach Tree Creek near Atlanta. 

 6. LEPIOPOMUS AURITUS (L.) Raf. 



Abundant at the Shallow Ford of the Chattahoochee. My specimens 

 are more elongate than those from the Saluda, and they differ some- 

 what in coloration and squamation. The dark blotches' at the base 

 of the dorsal are wanting. I am not, however, disposed to consider 

 them as specifically distinct. 



