FISHES OF KENTUCKY AND TENNESSEE. 

 CUMBERLAND BASIN— Continued. 



319 



1878. David Starr Jordan. 



Manual of the Vertebrates of the Northern United States, Including the District East of the 

 Mississippi River and North of North Carolina and Tennessee, Exclusive of Marine Species, 

 second edition. Chicago, Jansen, McClurg & Co., 1878, pp. 1-407. 



In this volume the following species are recorded from Kentucky and Tennessee: 



Diplesium simoierum, Tennessee and Cumberland Rivers; Ulocentra airipinnis, Cumberland River; 

 Noihonotus vulneratus, French Broad River; Noihonoius rufilineaius , French Broad River; PcEcilichthys 

 jessim Jordan and Brayton, new species, Tennessee River (Chickamauga Creek at Ringgold, Ga.); Lepi- 

 opotnus bombifrons, Tennessee River; Lepiopomus obscurus, Cumberland and Tennessee Rivers; 

 Amblyopsis spelcBus, subterranean streams of Kentucky and Indiana, Mammoth Cave, etc.; Typhlichlhys 

 subtenaneus, subterranean streams of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Alabama; Chologasler agassizi, sub- 

 terranean streams in Tennessee and Kentucky; Hyodon selanops, Cumberland River; Hybopsis lacer- 

 tosus, Tennessee River; Hybopsis rubricroceus , Teimessee River; Luxilus coccogenis, Tennessee River; 

 Luxilus galaciurus, Cumberland River; Lythrurus ardens, Cumberland River; Notropis micropteryx, 

 Tennessee and Cumberland Rivers; Notropis tekscopus, Tennessee River; Cliola leucioda, Tennessee 

 River; PAenacofiiui- «rano/'.f, Tennessee River; GjTo CT<or, Cumberland and Tennessee Rivers; Phoxinus 

 flammeus Jordan and Gilbert, new species. Elk River, Tennessee; Hemitremia vittata, Tennessee and 

 Cumberland Rivers; Ceratichthys monachus, Tennessee River; Noturus eleutherus, French Broad River. 



1878a. David S. Jordan. 



A Synopsis of the Family Catostomidae. 



Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., no. 12, pp. 97-230, 1878. 



In this paper are a few references to species from Tennessee and Kentucky, as 

 follows : 



Quassilabia lacera {=Lagochila lacera), two specimens from Chickamauga Creek at Ringgold, Ga., 

 and one from Elk River near Estill Springs, Tenn.; Placopharynx carinatus {=Placopharynx duquesnii), 

 numerous specimens from the French Broad River at Wolf Creek and other localities in North Carolina; 

 Myxostoma macrolepidotum duquesnii {=Moxostoma aureolum), Cumberland River, Tenn.; Myxostoma 

 velatum (=Moxostoma anisurum), Chickamauga Creek and Clinch River; Erimyzon sucetta, Cumberland 

 River; Carpiodes cutisanserinus {=Carpiodes difformis), Cumberland River. 



