The scientific name of the Dolly Varden is
Salvelinus malma. The species was originally named by
German naturalist and
taxonomist Johann Julius Walbaum in 1792 based on
type specimens from the
Kamchatka Peninsula in Siberia. The name
malma was based on
Russian , the local colloquial name for the fish. The Dolly Varden trout is considered part of the
S. alpinus or Arctic char complex. For most of the 19th and 20th centuries, the Dolly Varden trout (
S. malma) and the
bull trout (
S. confluentus) were considered the same species. Additionally, the
Arctic char (
S. alpinus) along with the bull trout have ranges that overlap and are remarkably similar in appearance, thus complicating identification. In 1978, inland forms of the Dolly Varden trout were reclassified as
Salvelinus confluentus, retaining the common name bull trout. It appears that the first recorded use of the Dolly Varden name for fish referred to
S. confluentus, now commonly known as the bull trout. This was likely due to overlapping ranges and similar appearances among members of the two species.
Subspecies In North America, two subspecies of Dolly Varden are distinguished, the Northern Dolly Varden (
S. m. malma) of the Arctic drainages and the Southern Dolly Varden (
S. m. lordi) of the Pacific drainages. •
S. m. malma (Walbaum, 1792) (Northern Dolly Varden) •
S. m. lordi (Günther, 1866) (Southern Dolly Varden) •
S. m. krascheninnikova (Taranez, 1933) =
Salvelinus curilus (Southern Dolly Varden or Asian Dolly Varden) •
S. m. miyabei (Oshima, 1938) (Miyabe char) The
angayukaksurak char (formerly
Salvelinus anaktuvukensis) of northern Alaska was described as a distinct species on morphological grounds by
Morrow in 1973, but the concept of a separate species status was soon refuted, even by Morrow himself.
Origin of common name "Dolly Varden" The first recorded use of the name "Dolly Varden" was applied to members of
S. confluentus caught in the
McCloud River in
northern California in the early 1870s. In his book
Inland Fishes of California,
Peter B. Moyle recounts a letter sent to him on March 24, 1974, from Valerie Masson Gomez: In 1874, Livingston Stone, a naturalist working for the U.S. government, wrote of this fish: Although the name "Dolly Varden" was originally given to the bull trout of the McCloud River, bull trout (
S. confluentus) and Dolly Varden trout (
S. malma) were considered the same species (
S. malma) until 1978. Thus the common name "Dolly Varden" gained acceptance for
S. malma for over 100 years. Additionally, the Arctic char (
S. alpinus) and Russian subspecies have been referred to as Dolly Varden. It is known as in
Russian. ==Description==