654 The American Naturalist. [August, 
most common number in the Indiana streams is ten, the num- 
ber increasing to eleven and twelve in the most southern 
specimens. 
TABLE IX. : 
, lapleplet 
| 28/5/25) ES 
35 | E8 |w8 s3|t*8 
LOCALITY. ef | of | BEI BEI BE 
E $8 |Zal2Za 2m 
HENETMEHEHEE 
A 4 aA ZAZA 
Torch Lake 7-| 10i 8| 1 
Cedar Rapids, Ia 1 12 1 
dee River, at Indianapolis ] 10 I 
, In Ə | 10 5 
Bean Tiho, Ind 17 10,5; 8| 9 1 
Rushville, Ind : 10 1 d 
Wild Cat Creek, Ind 1] 1 7 
Pike Creek, Ind * Hg 2 * 
MARK E E A E diae eee deseo» scaususoesvysbevetiones! a ebd : 10 1 = 
Nipisink Lake, I 2 I0. 1... 
Monongahela Rives 0 tj 
LC HAUS iia p e Med: e. 4 ld 3171 
Green River, Greensburg, Ky 3 1 bius 
Little Barren River, Osceola, Ky. B Liz 4 
Little South Fork "Cumberland R,WayneCo,Ky.| 1 | dH 1 
le lympus, 2 11 2 
ade pi Elizabethtown, Tenn 13 115). 1). 8. 7 
S xU 2 TAI 
North Fork Holston River, Saltillo Mb ETE j 12 1 
Ckocolk “reek, Orford Ala 4 114 24 41 
San Marcos Springs, T 2 11 2 
Synonymy, BIBLIOGRAPHY AND DISTRIBUTION OF ETHEOSTOMA 
CAPRODES RAFINESQUE. 
Scixna caprodes Rafinesque, “Amer. Month. Mag. 1818, 
534." 
Etheostoma caprodes Raf., “Ich. Oh., 1820, 88.” Kirtland, 
Zool, Ohio, 1838, 168, 192; Bost. Jour, Nat. Hist., III, 346, 
1841. (Ohio); Storer, “Synop. Fish. N. A., 1847, 270-272.” 
Evermann, Bull. No. 2. Brookville Soc. Nat. Hist., 1886, 8. 
(Little Cedar Cr., Ind.); Evermann & Bollman, Notes on Coll. 
