108 CHECK LIST OF FISHES OF THE DOMINION. 



501. Neoliparis greeni Jordan and St arks. 

 Green's Sucker. 



Marine. 



Only the type* apparently known: from Esquimalt Harbour, near Victoria, Vancouver 

 Island (in Leland Stanford Junior University Museum). 



502. Liparis liparis Linnaeus. 

 Sea Snail. 



Marine. 



Both shores of North Atlantic: on the American side ranges from Davis Straits to Con- 

 necticut, and recorded from Labrador: abundant in northern Europe, ranging from 

 Spitzbergen and Nova Zembla southward to France: "more common in the northern 

 parts of the British Islands than in the southern "f (Yarrell, 1859). 



503. Liparis cyclopus Giinther. 

 Marine. 



Recorded from Esquimalt Harbour, Vancouver Island (Giinther, 1861): probably ranges 

 from Puget Sound to Bering Sea. 



504. Liparis fucensis Gilbert. 

 Marine. 



Type specimens from Port Angeles, Straits of Juan de Fuca, State of Washington (Gilbert, 

 1893): given here as likely to occur in British Columbian waters: thought to have 

 been found near San Francisco (Garman, 1892, as L. calliodon, and was if such is re- 

 ferable to the same species).} 



505. Liparis tunicatus Reinhardt. 

 Marine. 



Recorded from coasts of Labrador and Greenland. 



506. Liparis herschelinus Scofield. 

 Marine. 



Arctic Ocean, having been recorded from Herschel Island, Beauford Sea, and should occur, 

 presumably, elsewhere in the North West Passage. 



507. Liparis dennyi Jordan and Starks. 

 Marine. 



Ranges from Puget Sound northward, and recorded from near Unalaska: evidently occurs 

 in British Columbian waters. 



*This specimen is figured, in Drs. Jordan and Evermann's 'Fishes of North and Middle America,' vol. IV, pi. 

 CCCXVI. 



•(•"This species is found on the Berwickshire coast, and Dr. Parnell has obtained specimens in the Frith of Forth. 

 Mr. Low says, 'The Sea Snail is found under stones at many places in Orkney; but in no place more frequently than 

 that at the point of the Ness of Stromness, where they may be picked up by dozens." Yarrell. 



}"Mr. Garman identifies this species with the callyodon of Pallas, but according to Pallas his species had the 

 gill opening reduced to a lunate spiracle which is not the case in Liparis fucensis." Jordan and Evermann. 



