112 CHECK LIST OF FISHES OF THE DOMINION. 



532. Lumpenus fabricii Cuvier and Valenciennes. 

 Marine. 



Recorded from Gulf of St. Lawrence, Labrador (Schmitt, 1904), and Hudson Bay region 

 (Preble, 1900): also from Greenland, Bering Sea, and Spitzbergen. 



533. Lumpenus lampetraeformis Walbaum. 

 Serpent Blenny. 



Marine. 



Both sides of north Atlantic and in the Arctic Ocean: recorded from Labrador, and extend- 

 ing southward to Cape Cod "if L. serpentinus is the same" (Jordan and Evermann): 

 also recorded from Spitzbergen, Norway and Sweden, and Iceland under several syno- 

 nyms. 



534. Stichaeus punctatus Fabricius. 

 Marine. 



Arctic Seas: ranging from Greenland westward to Siberia: on the Atlantic side extending 

 southward to Hudson Bay, Labrador, Newfoundland, and Nova Scotia; and on the 

 Pacific side to Bristol Bay and Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, close to the British 

 Columbian border: in all probability extends southward to waters of British Columbia. 



535. Ulvaria subbifurcata Storer. 

 Radiated Shanny. 

 Marine. 



North Atlantic Ocean: Maritime Provinces, extending southward to Cape Cod. 



536. Eumesogrammus praecisus Krfiyer. 

 Marine. 



Coasts of Greenland: "a specimen was forwarded by Mr. Whiteaves from the vicinity of 

 Anticosti to the Smithsonian Institution" (Jones, 1879, as E. unimaculatus) . 



537. Delolepis virgatus Bean. 

 Wry mouth. 



Marine. 



British Columbia and Puget Sound extending northward to southern Alaska. 



538. Cryptacanthodes maculatus Storer. 

 Wrymouth: Ghost-fish.* 

 Marine. 



Maritime Provinces and Gaspe Bay: ranging from coast of Labrador southward to Long 

 Island Sound. 



539. Anarhichas latifrons Steenstrup and Hallgrimsson. 

 Wolf-fish. 



Marine. 



Ranges from beyond the Arctic Circle southward on both sides of the Atlantic: on the 

 American side to Banquereau: recorded from Canso,f Nova Scotia, and from the "fish- 

 ing banks of the coast" of that Province (Jones, 1879). 



*"The ghost-fish form (inornatus) occasionally seen, is doubtless an albino." Jordan and Evermann. 



■(■"One very large specimen of the -wolf-fish was taken on the trawl of the steamer Active in about 50 fathoms. 

 I learned that not more than one or two specimens are secured in a season, so that it is not a common fish." Cornish. 



