igoS.] Records of the Indian Museum. 341 



4. Sars, G. O. On Freshwater Entomostraca of Sydney, 

 Kristiania, 1896, tab. 1-8. 



5 ,, '^ The Cladocera, Copepoda and Ostracoda 



of the Jana Expedition/' Annuaire du 

 Musee Zool. de I' Acad. imp. des Scienc. 

 deSt.Petersbourg, 1898, p. 324, tab. 6-11. 



6. „ " On the Crustacean Fauna of Central 



Asia/' Part 2, Cladocera, ibid., 1903, 

 torn. 8, p. 157, tab. 1-8. 



7. „ ''On the Crustacean Fauna of Central 



Asia/' Part 3, Copepoda and Ostracoda, 

 ibid., torn. 8, 1903, p. 195, tab. 9-16. 



8. ,, ''On the Crustacean Fauna of Central 



Asia/' Appendix, ibid., p. 233. 



9. Schmeil, O, Deutschlands freilebende Silsswasser-Cope- 



poden, I, CyclopidcB, Cassel, 1893, tab. 

 1-8. 



REPORT ON THE FISH COIvIvECTED IN TIBET 

 BY CAPT. F. H. STEWART, I.M.S. 



By R. E. Ivi^OYD, M.B., DSc, Capt., I.M.S. 



Acting Professor of Biology, Medical College, Calcutta, formerly 

 Surgeon Naturalist, Marine Survey of India. 



This collection includes eight species, all of which were taken 

 from the Nyang Chu, a stream of some magnitude, which flows by 

 Gyantse and Shigatse to meet the Tsang-po. Of these species three 

 are new to science. During the expedition of 1904 Captain H. J. 

 Walton collected seven species of fish, of which no less than 

 six were found by Mr. Tate Regan to be new species. As only two 

 species, Nemachilus stoliczkcs and Schizothorax macropogon, are 

 present in both collections, we may conclude that the waters of 

 Tibet contain a considerable variety of fish. 



Nemachilus stoliczkce, Day. 

 Numerous specimens. 



Pfychobarbus conirostris, Steindachner, 

 One specimen 175 mm. in length. 



