SALM0NID2S. 85 



Turton, Brit. Fauna, p. 103 ; Risso, Ich. Nice, p. 323 ; Flem. Brit. An. p. 180 ; 

 Nilss. Skand. Fauna, p. 406 ; Jenyns, Manual, p. 423 ; Kroyer, Dan. Fiske, ii, 

 p. 582 ; Jardinc, Salmonidss, pi. iii (half grown) ix, x, and xi, and Edin. New 

 Phil. Journ. xviii, p. 49 ; Yarrell, Brit. Fish. (ed. 1) ii, p. 36, c. fig. (ed. 2) ii, 

 p. 77 ; Parnell, Fish. Firth of Forth, p. 133, pi. xxxiv, and Wern. Mem. vii, p. 293, 

 pi. xxxiv, f. 11 ; Thompson, Nat. Hist. Ireland, iv, p. 151 ; White, Catal. p. 75 ; 

 Gronov. ed. Gray, p. 151 ; Giinther, Catal. vi, p. 22 ; Steind. Sitz. Ak. Wiss. 

 Wien. 1866, liv, p, 22 ; Houghton, British Freshwater Fishes, p. 93, c. fig. ; Malm, 

 Fauna, p. 538. 



Salmo goedenii, Block, p. 135, t. eii {young'). 



Salmo hiccho, Flem. Brit. An. p. 179 (not Linn.). 



Salmo argenteus, Bonn, Ency, Ich. p. 160, pi. lxvii, no. 269 ; Bl. pi. ciii. 



Fario argenteus, Cuv. and Val. xxi, p. 294, pi. 616 ; Yarrell, Brit. Fish. 

 (ed. 3) i, p. 250, c. fig. ; Lacepede, v, p. 187 ; Kroyer, Dan. Fisk. ii, p. 602. 



Salmo eriox, Nilss. Skan. Faun. p. 395 ; Collett, Norges Fiske, p. 157 ; 

 Feddersen, Danske Ferskvansfiske, p. 77. 



Salmo truttula, Nilss. Prod. p. 5 (young). 



Salmo micro})*, Hardm. Ofvers. Vet. Ak. Forh. 1861, p. 383. 



TnUta variabilis, Gerv. BouL p. 137. 



Salmon-trout, Richards. Faun, Nor. Amer, Fishes, p, 140, pi. xcii, f. i, A and 

 B. I'eal, seiven, sea-trout, salnwn-troiti, blue-poll, Couch, Fish. Brit. Isles, iv, 

 pp. 214-22], pi. ccxiii-ccxv (see page 88). 



Salmo venemensis, Giinther, Catal. vi, p. 110. 



Trutta lacustris and T. trutta,, Siebold, Siisswasserfische, pp. 301, 314. 



Trutta marina, Moreau, Poiss. France, iii, p. 537. 



Variety <?.— Salmo albus, Plate CXII, fig. 2. 



White salmon, Pennant, Brit. Zool. (Ed. 1776) iii, p. 302, and (Ed, 1812) iii, 

 p. 396. 



Salmo alhus, Walb. Artedi, iii, p. 75 ; Bonnaterre, Enc. Ich. p. 161 ; BL Schn. 

 p. 409 ; Lacep. v, p. 219 ; Fleming, Brit. An, p. 180 ; Jardine, Edin. New Phil. 

 Journal, xviii, p. 50, and Salmonida?, plate no. iii ; Cuv. and Val. xxi, p. 206 ; 

 Jenyns, Manual, p. 421. 



Salmo phi nvc, Turton, Brit. Fauna, p. 103. 



Herlitig, Jardine, Berwick. Nat. Club, ii, p. 103. 



Salmo eriox, Jenyns, Brit. Vert. An. p. 422 ; Parnell, Wern. Mem. vii, p. 288, 

 pi. xxxi-xxxiv, and Fish. Firth of Forth, p. 128, pi. xxxi-xxxiv ; Flem. Manual, 

 p. 180. 



Salmo trutta, Thompson, Nat. Hist. Ireland, iv, p. 151. 



Siilmu hrarJnjjioma, Giinther, Catal. vi, p. 87 ; Houghton, British Fishes, 

 p, 107, c. fig. 



This form has been deemed a distinct species, principally due to its com- 

 paratively small head and rather elongated body : while its preopercle has hardly 

 any lower limb. Among four examples in the British Museum from Dr. Parnell's 

 collection, that ichthyologist considered the lai'gest as S. eriox, and the remaining 

 three as 8. fario. It is the short-headed race of salmon-trout, mostly found on 

 the east coast of Scotland and in the Ouse : Jardine states also, in the Solway 

 Firth. The example figured was 14 inches long. 



This variety was known as the White salmon. (Pennant), Salmo albus (Artedi), 

 iS'. /'hilar; (Turton), S. brachypoma (Giinther) ; but by the majority of recent 

 authors is placed as a synonym to S. trutta. Pennant described his white salmon 

 from the Esk in Cumberland, where he observed that it was found from July 

 until September, that it never exceeded a foot in length, and that "this is the 

 fish called by the Scots Phinoc." Fleming also termed it the " Whitling, Hirling, 

 common in the sea and rivers of Scotland and the north of England," and that it 

 spawned in August and September. Jardine figured it, pi. iii, as Salmo albas, 

 Fleming, the young of a migratory trout, but not identical with the bull-trout of 

 the Tweed. It is locally known as herling or hirling, whiting, phinoch, moudie- 

 trout, silverwhite, and blachtail, in different Scotch districts. It was about this 



