322 



BULLETIN OF THE BUREAU OF FISHERIES. 



In that volume the following species are mentioned from definite streams of the 

 region covered by this paper : 



1888a. David Starr Jordan. 



Descriptions of fourteen species of fresh-water fishes collected by the United States Fish 

 O^minission in the summer of 1888. <Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. xi, 1888 (July 5, 1889), 



pp. 351-362, pis. XLOI-XLV. 



A large part of the summer of 1888 was spent by Dr. Jordan in an exploration of 

 the streams of Virginia and North Carolina, under the auspices of the United States 

 Fish Commission. In this work he was assisted by Prof. Oliver P. Jenkins, then of 

 DePauw University; Barton W. Evermann, then of the Indiana State Normal School; 

 and Seth E. Meek, then of Coe College, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. 



The exploration included the headwaters of the Holston and French Broad Rivers, 

 from which the following new species were described in the paper cited above: 



Hybopsis watauga from North Fork of the Holston at Saltville, Va., and Watauga River near EHz- 

 abethton, Term.; Etheostoma verecundu-m ( = Ulocenira veracundum) from Middle Fork of the Holston, 

 5 miles south of Glade Spring, Va.; Etheostoma swannanoa from South Fork of the Swannanoa at Black 

 Mountain, N. C, South Fork of the Holston at Holstein Mills, Va., and Middle Fork of the Holston 

 at Marion, Va. 



1889. James A. Henshall. 



On a Collection of Fishes from East Tennessee. 

 History, vol. xii, 1S89 (read June 4, 1889), pp. 



■<Joum. Cincinnati Society of Natural 

 31-33- 



In that paper Dr. Henshall recorded five species of fishes, all from a "small tribu- 

 tary of the Tennessee at Whiteside, Term.," where they were collected by Charles Dury, 

 of Cincirmati. 



