CHECK LIST OF FISHES OF THE DOMINION. 61 



152. Chrosomus erythrogaster Rafinesque. 

 Red-bellied Dace. 



Fluviatile. 



Provinces of Ontario, Quebec, and New Brunswick: in the United States extending from 

 Maine westward to Iowa and southward to northern Alabama. 



153. Hybognathus nuchalis Agassiz. 



Silver Minnow. 



Fluviatile. , 



Lake Ontario region: tributary streams of the United States from the Delaware and Neuse 



rivers westward to the upper Missouri and southward to Texas and Georgia: embraced 



under a number of sub-species and varieties. 



154. Hybognathus argyritis Girard. 

 White Minnow. 

 Fluviatile. 



Manitoba and upper Missouri region. 



155. Pimephales promelas Rafinesque. 

 Blackhead Minnow: Bull Minnow. 

 Lacustrine and fluviatile. 



Extends from Lake Champlain to the Prairie Provinces, ranging southward to Kentucky 

 and the Rio Grande. 



156. Pimephales notatus Rafinesque. 

 Blunt-nosed Minnow. 

 Fluviatile. 



Province of Quebec to Delaware: St. Lawrence River and presumably Ontario: "generally 

 very abundant in small streams west of the Alleghanies" (Jordan and Evermann); 

 extending westward to the Dakotas and southward to Alabama and Arkansas: may 

 be found in Manitoba. 



157. Mylocheilus caurinus Richardson. 

 Columbia River Chub. 



Fluviatile, and marine in that it enters the sea. 



British Columbia, including Vancouver Island: extends south to Oregon. 



158. Semotilus corporalis Mitchill. (Plate VIII, figures 74 and 75). 

 Silver Chub: Fall-fish. 



Lacustrine and fluviatile. 



Widely distributed in the rivers and streams of the Maritime Provinces: St. Lawrence 



River system and streams and ponds of Ontario: abundant also in northern United 



States east of the Alleghanies. 



159. Semotilus atromaculatus Mitchill. 

 Creek Chub: Horned Dace. 

 Fluviatile. 



Maritime Provinces and Provinces of Ontario and Quebec: St. Lawrence River and its 

 tributaries: in the United States extending from Maine westward to Wyoming and 

 southward to Alabama and Georgia. 



