52 CHECK LIST OF FISHES OF THE DOMINION. 



91. Salmo salar sebego Girard. 

 Landlocked Salmon. 

 Landlocked in lakes. 



Certain lakes in New Brunswick, such as Loch Lomond and Sciff and Musquash Lakes; and 

 of the States of Maine and New Hampshire: now more widely distributed by having 

 been introduced into lakes of other localities. 



92. Salmo salar ouananiche McCarthy. 

 Ouananiche. 



Landlocked in lakes. 



Saguenay River and Lake St. John regions, and lakes and rivers northward to the Ungava 

 region, and eastward to Labrador: occurs also in lakes of Newfoundland — such as Red 

 Indian and Terra Nova Lakes, and lakes at the head of Gambo River. 



93. Salmo clarkii Richardson. (Plate VII, figures 42 and 43). 

 Cutthroat Trout. 



Lacustrine and fluviatile, and coastwise: possibly entering the sea. 



Southern Alberta and British Columbia: ranging from California perhaps as far north as 

 Alaska. 



94. Salmo rivularis Ayres. (Plate VI, figures 39 and 40). 

 Steelhead. 



Anadromous. 



British Columbia to California and eastward to the Mountains: extending as far north as 



Skagway, Alaska: introduced into Lake Superior by the United States Fish Commission, 



and since found in waters of Ontario. 



95. Salmo rivularis kamloops Jordan. 

 Kamloops Trout. 



Lacustrine. 



Kamloops, Kootenay, Okanagan, and other lakes in British Columbia: certain lakes tribu- 

 tary to the Fraser and upper Columbia Rivers. 



96. Salmo irideus* Gibbons. (Plate VII, figures 44 and 45) . 

 Rainbow Trout. 



Fluviatile, and perhaps in a measure anadromous. 



Ranges, under a number of varieties, from State of Washington to California: introduced 



into certain eastern waters, including Lake Superior, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland:! 



records for British Columbia do not appear to be authentically supported. 



*It is affirmed by some that the rainbow trout is only an earlier stage, in the course of development, of the 

 steelhead, but as this matter appears to others open to question it is given provisionally in the check-list as con- 

 stituting in itself a valid species. 



I "The California Rainbow Trout has proved fts great adaptability to the environment of Newfoundland waters." 

 Report of the Game and Inland Fisheries Board, Newfoundland, for. the year 1910 



