FISHES OF OKEFINOKEE SWAMP 
357 
bers of the Cyprinidae and Siluridae, These two families with 
Percidae (darters) furnish most of the hypothetical species which 
follow in a later list. 
In the same publication Bollman’s collections from Ogeechee 
river are reported. These are from a more remote locality yet 
might suggest some of the forms which might make a hypothetical 
list. The forms secured in this river and not recorded in our 
Okefinokee area by us or by others are : 
Ameiurus platycephalus 
Notropis chalybaeus 
Notemigonus c. bosci. 
Opsopoedus emiliae 
Opsopoedus bollmanni 
Chologaster cornutus 
Eepomis auritus 
Etheostoma nigrum olmstedi 
Etheostoma nigrofasciatum 
Etheostoma squamiceps 
In the Altamaha river basin (Ockmulgee and Oconee rivers) 
far to the north of the swamp Jordan and Brayton and Jordan 
report the following species not found in the swamp : 
Ameiurus brunniens (platyceph- 
alus) 
Eepomis auritus 
Hadropterus nigrofasciatus 
Boleosoma maculaticeps 
Nothonotus inscriptus 
Alburnops amarus 
Hydrophlox lutipinnis 
Codoma xaenura 
Strictly speaking we suppose tl 
to the hypothetical list, namely : 
Jordanella floridae 
Fundulus seminolis 
Ameiurus erebennus 
Codoma callisema 
Ceratichthys rubrifrons 
Ceratichthys biguttatus 
Semotilus corporalis 
Myxostoma cervinum 
Myxostoma papillosum 
Ichthaelurus punctatus 
Ameiurus marmoratus 
Florida group should be added 
Eucania goodei 
Fundulus henshalli 
Ameiurus okeechobensis 
Possibly a few of the coastal species might enter the swamp, 
to wit: 
Fundulus ocellaris Heterandria formosa 
Molliensia latipinna 
The following freshwater species have also been recorded from 
Florida, namely : 
Ameiurus catus Eupomotis holbrooki 
Moxostoma aureolum Eepisosteus tristoechus 
Pomoxis sparoides Eepisosteus osseus 
Cliola vigilax 
Thus, we have a list of thirty-eight species of which several 
darters and minnows are least likely to occur in the swamp be- 
cause they require different conditions, and are taken in rapid 
clear waters. Furthermore, if all these thirty-eight with our 
present twenty-eight species occurred in the swamp it would give 
sixty-six species or fifteen more freshwater forms than are re- 
corded from Florida. Our Okefinokee list including the records 
