54 CHECS LIST OF FISHES OF THE DOMINION. 



103. Salvelinus alpinus stagnalis Fabricius. 

 Greenland Charr. 



Lacustrine and fluviatile. 



Arctic regions: Regent's Inlet and rivers of Boothia Felix (Richardson, 1836, as Salmo 



rossii): Coppermine River (Richardson, 1823 and 1836 as Salmo hearnii): streams 



and ponds of Greenland: also recorded from Labrador.* 



104. Salvelinus alpinus arcturus Giinther. 

 Arctic Charr. 



Lacustrine. 



Victoria Lake, Flceberg Beach, Arctic America, Lat. 82°, 34' (Giinther, 1877, as Salmo 

 arcturus) . 



105. Salvelinus oquassa naresi Giinther. 

 Nares Charr. 



Lacustrine. 



Arctic America: Discovery Bay and Cumberland Gulf. 



106. Salvelinus marstonit Garman. (Plate VII, figures 51 and 52). 

 Marston Trout: Red Canadian Trout. 



Lacustrine. 



Recorded from the following lakes, among others in the Province of Quebec: Lac de Marbre, 

 near Ottawa; lakes of the Laurentides Club in the Lake St. John region; Lac a Cassette, 

 Rimouski County; and Lake Saccacomi and the Red Lakes, Maskinonge County: the 

 above records probably right at the southern limits of its distribution, and that the 

 centre of its distribution is much further north. 



107. Thymallus signifer Richardson. 

 Arctic Grayling. 

 Lacustrine and fluviatile. 



Occurs in Lakes Bennett and Atkins, Forty-mile Creek, and other waters of the northern 

 part of British Columbia: recorded from Great Slave Lake, Great Bear Lake, and Winter 

 River regions (Richardson, 1823 and 1836) : Mackenzie River and Alaska to the Arctic 

 Ocean: Churchill River and tributaries, Hudson Bay. 



# 



108. Thymallus tricolor Cope. 

 Michigan Grayling. 

 Fluviatile. 



Streams of the State of Michigan, and possibly to be found on the Ontario side of the St. 

 Marys River: said to have been brought by Milbert from Lake Ontario (Cuvier and 

 Valenciennes, 1848, as T. ontariensis) . 



♦"Specimens from Greenland and Labrador in the U.S. National Museum have been identified and recorded 

 as Salmo stagnalis. It is doubtfulif this is a correct identification." Kendall. Various other records from Labrador. 



fHere assigned specific instead of sub-specific rank. "A specimen of Salmo [Salvelinus] marstoni sent me some 



days ago indicates a more distinct species than was at first supposed Though quite distinct, the species 



is nearer S. oquassa than any other." Garman. As a sub-species it would stand as: — Salvelinus oquassa marstoni. 



