Lac de Marbre Trout ; Marston Trout 



to take the fly readily, and must be classed among the most 

 beautiful and active of American game-fishes. 



It is regarded by Professor Garman as allied to the Oquassa 

 trout, from which it differs in the longer maxillary, stronger den- 

 tition, deeply notched caudal fin, larger size and different colouration. 

 It seems even more closely related to specimens which have been 

 identified by Dr. Bean with Salvelinus rossi of Richardson, which 

 may be identical with the Greenland charr. 



Little or nothing has been recorded regarding its game qualities, 

 but its trim appearance and rich colouration, together with the cold 

 water in which it lives, would indicate a fish well worthy the 

 attention of anglers. 



Head 5; depth 6; eye about 5; snout 3I; interorbital 3|-; D. 13; 

 A. 13; V. 9; P. 14; Br. 11 + 12; vertebrse 60; gillrakers 8+14. 

 Body subfusiform, compressed, pointed at the snout, slender at 

 the tail; mouth large; maxillary straight, extending almost to pos- 

 terior edge of eye, bearing strong teeth nearly its whole length; 

 teeth on intermaxillary and mandible stronger; a series of 4 strong 

 hooked teeth on each side of tongue; operclethin, with few striae; scales 

 very small, apparently about 230 in the series immediately above 

 lateral line, and more than 250 in a row 5 or 6 scales above 

 this; dorsal and anal slightly emarginate; pectoral and ventral 

 small, base of the latter slightly behind the middle of that of 

 dorsal; caudal peduncle very slender; caudal lobes pointed, the 

 notch very deep. Colour, back dark brown, unspotted, with an 

 iridescent bluish tint; dorsal dark, clouded, without spots or 

 bands; pectoral, ventrals and anal orange in the middle, yellowish, 

 or whitish toward bases and at their margins; dark colour of back 

 shading into whitish tinged with pink below lateral line; ventral 

 surface white, no doubt reddish in breeding season; head black 

 on top; cheeks silvery, whitish beneath; caudal fin yellowish toward 

 base, brown distally; faint areas of lighter tint suggest a few 

 spots of red in life along lateral line; flesh pink. It reaches a 

 length of a foot or more. 



21Q 



