392 Mr YarrelPs History of British Fishes. 



" During the early part of the season, the salmon appear to ascend 

 only as far as the river is influenced by the tide, advancing with 

 the flood, and generally retiring with the ebb." — Many salmon as- 

 cend during spring ; in the Tweed, for instance, thirty or thirty- 

 five miles, and are taken at that distance from the sea clear and 

 silvery, and in full condition, in the months of February and March- 

 There is, also, undoubtedly, a species omitted, which, though mi- 

 gratory, ascends but little way up the fresh water, and which, with 

 its provincial name of salmon trout, has done much towards confu- 

 sion.* S. trntta and this have to be separated, and we would re- 

 commend, to determine the characters, and then fix the synonyms; 

 the reverse has hitherto been the common course pursued. Mr Yar- 

 rell has, we think, satisfactorily made out two species of Char ; the 

 one from the lakes of northern England and Scotland, the other 

 from Wales. Of the Coregoni no figure of Mr Thompson's Pollan, 

 C. pollan, is given, and we refer to our own page, 247, fc> r its more 

 detailed description. We strongly suspect that this fish is identical 

 with the powan of Lochlomond and some others of our Scotch lochs. 

 Have we any authenticated instance of the gwiniad occurring in 

 Scotland ? Clupeadce. The scaling of the herring is surely re- 

 presented much too large. This fish takes the artificial fly readily, 

 and is thus caught in the Western Highlands in considerable num- 

 bers. The account of the Pilchard from the Couch MSS. will be 



found very interesting. Rduiceps irifurcatus is now found to be 



not so rare as it was formerly accounted ; many instances of its oc- 

 currence in various seas having been lately noticed.t A tolerable 

 figure of this fish occurs in Muller's Zoologica Danica, under the 

 name of Blennius raninus, which seems to have been overlooked by 

 both Yarrell and Jenyns. — Among the Pleuroneclidce it may be re- 

 marked, that many species select some particular shell-fish for food ; 

 thus the Dab was noticed long ago by Peter Colin son to feed on 

 the Pecten obsoletus, a fact since confirmed by Dr Johnston, who 

 informs us, " that he has rarely opened a specimen without finding 

 the stomach full of this pretty shell," The Platessa microcephala 

 again feeds much on Chitons, while the clam is seldom found in it. 

 Mr Yarrell describes four species of eels, three of them very dis- 

 tinctly marked ; and we can only account for their remaining so 



* The Salmon Trout at Berwick is the young of S. eriox, quite a different 

 fish from that now alluded to. 



f See a paper in the present number on R. trifurcatus, page 344. 



