PISCES. ' 45 



TELEOSTOMI. ISOSPONDYLI. 



SALMONIDAE. 



Salmo solar sebago Jordan & Evermann, Bull. 47, U. S. nat. 

 mus., 1896, pt. 1, p. 487. 



Me. — Originally in St. Croix Lakes, Grand Lake and Grand 

 Lake Stream; Green Lake (Reeds Pond) in Union River basin; 

 Sebec Lake, Penobscot basin; Sebago Lake, Presumpseot basin; 

 now widely distributed by fish cultural operations. " Sebago 

 pond"? (Storer 1839); (Girard 1853). 



95. Cristivomer namaycush Walbaum. 



Great Lakes trout; Mackinaw trout; Namaycush; Lunge; 

 Togue; Laker; Lake trout. 



Jordan & Evermann, Bull. 47, U. S. nat. mus., 1896, pt. 1, p. 

 504; 1900, pt. 4, pi. 82, fig. 217. 



Samo namaycush Walbaum, Artedi Pise, 1792, p. 68. "Hud- 

 son Bay." 



Me. — Most deep lakes in eastern and northern Maine. Thomp- 

 son Pond in Poland; Tunk Lakes in Hancock county; Lakes of 

 the Upper Kennebec, Penobscot and St. Johns rivers and the St. 

 Croix system, Wilton Pond (Me. Fish comm. 1867); Moosehead 

 Lake (Goode 1879 and B. S. N. H., Davidson coll.); Hurd pond; 

 Matagamon Lake; Webster, Telos, Chamberlain, Eagle, Church- 

 ill, Beau, Glasier lakes; Eagle Lakes, Aroostook County, Moose- 

 head Lake (Kendall coll. 1901 and 1902). 



N. H. — Winnepesaukee Lake; Squam Lake; East Pond in 

 Enfield; Newfound Lake and First and Second Connecticut 

 lakes (N. H. Fish comm. 1892); First and Second Connecticut 

 lakes (Kendall & Goldsborough coll. 1904). 



Vt. — Lake Champlain; ponds in Orleans County; Bellwater 

 pond in Barton and several ponds in Glover and Charleston 

 (Thompson 1842); Lake Champlain; Lake Memphremagog ; Cas- 

 pian Lake; Dunmore; Willoughby; Maidstone (Evermann & 

 Kendall 1894). 



