Jordan and Evermann. Fishes of North America. 279 



irliipplii, GIRARD, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila., 185G, 198, Sugar Loaf Creek, tributary 



Poteau River, Arkansas. (Type, No. 137. Coll. Mollhausen.) 

 Photogt-nis npilopterus, COPE, Cypr. Penn., 378, 1866, St. Joseph River, Southwestern 



Michigan. 

 Litjcilns kentnckiensix, KIRTLAND, Boet. Jouru. Nat. Hist., v, 27, pi. vm, fig. 3, 1847, (not of Rafi- 



nesque). 



]lnpsil<-]ii* fa-ntufkii'iisis, COPE, Cypr. Penn., 371, 1866. 

 Lemcisnw spilopterus, GUNTHER, Cat., vn, 254, 1868. 

 Cliola whipplei and analoslana, JORDAN & GILBERT, Synopsis, 178 and 179, 1883. 



449. NOTROPIS ANALOSTANUS (Girard). 



The eastern representative of N. wliipplii. Entirely similar to ivhipplii 

 except that the body is less elongate, the adult male 3| in length instead of 

 4, and the scales larger, 34 or 35 in the lateral line instead of 38 to 40. Prob- 

 ably to be regarded as a different species, but possibly intergrading with 

 whipplii on the westward and perhaps with niveus southward. Streams 

 about Delaware and Chesapeake bays; abundant in the Potomac and 

 James ; recorded from the Susquehauna and Delaware. (From Analostan 

 Island, in the Potomac.) 



Cyprinella analoslana, GIRARD, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1859, 59, Rock Creek, Analostan 



Island, Potomac River; JORDAN & GILBERT, Synopsis, 179, 1883, (in part). 

 Leuciscus analostanus, G(JNTHER, Cat., vu, 256, 1868. 



450. NOTROPIS GALACTURUS (Cope). 



Head 4; depth 4. D. 8; A. 8; scales 6-41-3; teeth 1, 4-4, 1, usually 

 with entire edges. Body fusiform, moderately elongate, not greatly 

 compressed. Mouth rather large, jaws nearly horizontal, the upper pro- 

 jecting. Larger than N. whipplii, more elongate and less compressed, the 

 scales less closely imbricated, the lateral line less decurved. Eye small. 

 Steel-blue above, silvery below ; dorsal with a black blotch on its pos- 

 terior rays ; caudal fin conspicuously creamy yellow at base, then dusky; 

 males with the belly, paired fins, and especially tips of vertical fins 

 charged with milk-white pigment in spring, the head and front then 

 covered with small tubercles ; in high coloration the anal and caudal are 

 sometimes pale reddish ; females olivaceous, obscurely marked. Length 

 5 to 6 inches. Ozark region to Cumberland, Tennessee, and Savannah 

 rivers ; abundant in the mountain streams. Known by its large size and 

 the peculiar yellowish band across the caudal. (ydAa, milk; avpd, tail.) 



Hysilepis galacturus. COPE, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1867, 160, Holston River, Virginia. 



(Type, No. 14981. Coll. Cope.) 



Leuciscus kentuckiensis, GUNTHER, Cat., vn, 251, 1868, not of Rafinesque. 

 Cliola galactura, JORDAN & GILBERT, Synopsis, 179, 1883. 



451. NOTROPIS CAMURUS (Jordan & Meek). 



Head 4; depth 3. D. 8; A. 9; scales 6-38-4. More robust than N. 

 galacturus, the back elevated; anterior profile steep, the snout bluntly 

 decurved ; mouth small, oblique ; teeth crenate. Bluish silvery ; dorsal 

 fin in adult with a large dark blotch as in N. whipplU ; males with silvery 

 pigment. Length 4 inches. Arkansas River and tributaries, not rare in 

 Kansas and southwestern Missouri, (camurus, blunt-faced.) 



