. British and Irish Salmonidæ. e of Hirliug, Suluioalbelhis. (2) Sewin, which he considered a distinct species from the peal, which he restrictedto Wales : he referred it to .S. cambricus of Donovan. (3) Trujf, sea trout, gray trout, bull trout,or pug trout, which he referred to Yarrells round-tail or S. eriox, and said to be irregularlydistributed throughout the United Kingdom, but only abundant in the rivers of the north ofEngland, Scotland and Ireland. (4) Salmon-trout, which he again referred to ,S. trutta ofLinnieus and Yarrell, as he had the peal: he considered it more a fish of the nort
. British and Irish Salmonidæ. e of Hirliug, Suluioalbelhis. (2) Sewin, which he considered a distinct species from the peal, which he restrictedto Wales : he referred it to .S. cambricus of Donovan. (3) Trujf, sea trout, gray trout, bull trout,or pug trout, which he referred to Yarrells round-tail or S. eriox, and said to be irregularlydistributed throughout the United Kingdom, but only abundant in the rivers of the north ofEngland, Scotland and Ireland. (4) Salmon-trout, which he again referred to ,S. trutta ofLinnieus and Yarrell, as he had the peal: he considered it more a fish of the north, althoughoccasionally captured in the south and west of the kingdom and also in Ireland. Day (18>S0-84)referred the sea trout to a single variable species, and considered that (1) the sea trout, ,S. trutta,was generally a northern form, and the (2) sewin, S. cambricus (which has hkewise beentermed S. erioz) a more southern race, but that they are by no means strictly confined to theselocalities. 164 SALMONIDiE OF
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookidbritishirish, bookyear1887