...^OF^.TY_OP^_^ LIBRARY OF 1685- IQ56 TIW ^^ _ i^oun^atvm^ tot ibc jCtft/ai^/c^fi ■ /,;>yr..u/r/- ^r'r/in:>.. Ur<„^u/,/f/u-. rr,'/r, .\./lri/,l/. /rnW'rj r/ . "-' -" _. ^ ' — the- ^^ ^ ^^ -. -- 'nr6ijS( e/'//i<- !/)^t>^) /ici^^rii r/c'/Li /<'<}iiur'/-^'<'J ni (.^ui'fffir.. fiiifUc^.f-f ^rausUttfb h^^wx tbr Jatcst ifrntrb O'^^t^0l^. i :l. '.C'///r,,JrK,.n. ?/ I/. yf.n/r,^._ 0./.>/. X'//. ANIMAT. KINGDOM, ARRANGKD ACCORDINO 1 O IIS ORGA NIZA irOX, Sr.RVING AS A FOUNDATION FOR THE NATURAL HISTORY OF ANIMALS, AND AX INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE ANATOMY. BARON CUVIER, Offitfr of the Lfginn of Honour, Counsellnr of Seate, nnd Member of ihe Koy»l Council of 1 lusttuction ; One of the Forty of fhff French Academy ; Perpetual Secretary to the Academy of Seirncei ; Member of the AcaHemies and Royal Societies of I,ondon, Berlin, Petersbur^h, Stockholm, Turin, Kdiuburgh, Topenhaijen, Oottingen, Bavaria, Modena the Netherlands, and Calrulta : and of the I.innnan Society of London. WITH FIGURES DESIGNED FROM NATURE : THE M. LATREILLE, Chevtlier of the I.fgion of Honour, Member of tJie Institute, (Royal Academr of ^fienrei), ntui nl portion of other lenrned Societies in Kiirope and Aniprtci CraitStatptt fvDm tiye lattit .fvriid) etfitton. WITH ADDITIONAL NOTES, AND ILLUSTRATED BY NEARLY 50(1 ADDITIONAL NOTES, IN FOUR VOLUMES. VOL. n. LONDON. G. HENDERSON. 2, OLD BAILEY, LUDGATE-HILL, AND SOLD BY ALL BOOKSELLERS. 1834. LONDON: PRINTED BY J. HENDERSON, ,21, WATER-LANK, FI-EKT STREET. ♦ :f. Jf ^^ r/.{B.i:u- Z!uf.'.ifrm::.:,f:i-r MEMOIR OF LINN^US. Carl Linn^us, the subject of this Memoir, was born 24th May, 1707, at Rashult, in the province of Smaland, while his father was still comminster. With an inheritance of his father's love for plants, and thsir cultivation, he is thus recorded by one of his pupils : " From the very time that he first left the cradle, he almost lived in his fg,ther's garden, which was planted with some of the rarer shrubs and flowers; and thns were kindled, before he was out of his mother's arms, those sparks which shone so vividly all his lifetime, and latter- ly burst into such a flame," The elder Linnasus wished, and intended, that his first-born should succeed him in the office of pastor; and he endeavoured to regulate the clerical education of his son, as far as his means would permit. At the age of seven, Linnaeus was placed under the private charge of John Ziliander ; and two years afterwards was entered to the school of Wenid ; but in both these places the discipline is said to have been severe, and not Avell fitted for the advancement of a young man of his mild temper, and he was soon after placed imder another private tutor, who possessed a more conciliating disposition. His distaste for ordi- nary studies could not be so easily overcome ; and it was not till three years after that he received promotion to a higher form in the school, called the circle. In this rank he was allowed more leisure, which was invariably devoted to his favourite pursuits, and chiefly his earliest — that of plants. " According to the systen of education at this time employed in Sweden, it was necessary that young men should pass from the schools, or from private teachers, to what is called the gymnasium, where the higher branches of literature was taught ; and at the age of sixteen, Linnpeus was placed at this seminary. Here he still continued his dislike for those studies particularly necessary for a divine : and be- gan to show a more decided tast^ for botany, by forming a small library of such bnoks as lie could procure upon this science, and from iv MKMOIR OF L1NNA;US. his studious jjerusal of them, acquired the college name of the ' Little Botanist.' Nearly two years after, the elder Linnaeus came to Wenid, to as- certain the progress of his son's studies ; and the disappointment of the sanguine hopes of a parent may be conceived, when the recom- mendations of his preceptors extended only to his ability for some manual employment ; and tlic farther exjjense, in forcing a learned education, would ihe conipajatively thrown away. The old clergy- man, having for some time laboured under a complaint which might have now increased from his anxiety, was obliged to consult Dr. Roth- man, a provincial physician; and grieving at the seemingly wayward and careless xlisposition of hie son, he opened his mind to the doctor, who kindly iJi-cscribed for botli Lis mental and bodily sufferings. Jle remarked, that aJtliough the boy might be iinfit to follow thatprofea- sion ifi which his father wouid l>ave wished to have seen him his sup- ce^or, thexe was the greater hojje that some other study would be naore ardently pursued ; that he might yet arrive at eminenpe in me- dicine, a seeing more intimately connected with th^t branch of his a\yn choosing ; and he offered to give young Linnseju? board and in- struction during the year, which it was still necessary he shovjild make up at the Gymnasium. Tjic oifer of D;i-. Rothman was gratefully accepted : and that gen- tleman faithfully redeemed his promises. He gave his no\v willipg^ pupil instructi<.)ni< in physiology and botany, pointing out tlie advan- tages of studying the latter science according to the system of Tour- uefort. In both Linnijeus made considerable proficiency, had already coflamcftced to arrang,e every plant in its proper place, and even to doubt the sitiiations of many whose characters had not been properly ascertained. Next year it was thought necessary that Lirmaeus shoidd com- plete his education at some university ; and, upon applying at the Gymnasium, he received the following metaphorical testimonial, which will show the little esteem in which his qualifications as a scho- lar were held ; and is a curious example of the manner in which the professors worded their certiiicates : ' Youth, at school, might be com- pared to shrubs in a garden, which will sometimes, though rarely, elude all the care of the gardener : but, if transplanted into a different soil, may become fruitful trees.' With this view, therefore, and no other, the hearer was sent to the \miversity, when it was possible that he miglit meet with a climate ptopitious to his progress. Witli this certificate he proceeded to the university of Lund ; and f'lily jjiocured admittance by the interest of his old precejitor Hok, MEMOIR OK XlNNiKUS. w'Im) withheld tlie iestiiiaonial, «id intiWuoed him as his ijirivate pupil. '^ Looking at this apparentLy bo unfavouo'able a JbegiMuma^ of life, fit seaiBS almost incredible .that rtJiis backward scholar, who (could not Ik ifflduced to leajrn any thing, should have, in after-life, stood m so higii arauk as a man of science, that his fame attracfted to the out-of-waiy kingdom of Sweden, jjupils from all. quarters of the world, in the sa;Eoe wa-y as his diatinguisJiod countryBaan Berzelius, tlie .cliemist, is doing at the present itiwe. One od" ithe first ewtorprises of anoment under- taken by the youn^ JLiumseue, was an .exjpeditioB to explore Laplaaad, under the patronage, and at the expense, of the Royal Academy. On account f the :season the journey could not be commenced foe- foix; tlxe*j4'ing; aad JUinnseus did not set out before the i3th May, 1 732. He commenced the journey in high spii'its, and in love with nature ; ti-avelled pears to have been fondly attached to his parent. He entered the army, and rose to the rank of major in the regiment of Angoumois. He Avas destined, however, to live in a more unsettled period, and during the revolution was condemned to death, and perished on the scaffold. The abilities of the father were no safeguard for the son ; nor was the utility of his own works, or his kindness during life to his retainers, a greater protection afterwards to his own remains, against the nithless hands of popular fury. The hatred to the noblesse and aristocracy of France was borne by so violent a tide, that the re- mains of this illustrious naturalist were torn up and left unburied, the leaden coffin carried off, and his monument razed to the ground. The personal appearance of Buffon is said to have been command- ing, while his countenance was intelligent. Our engraving represents his forehead high and ample, but we should scarcely say that his coun- tenance was very pi'epossessing. The study of a subject, so as to acquire its mastery, must however cost considerable labour ; and he was always inclined to be led away by beauties or defects, which a lively power of imagination presented. This we can every where trace in his writings; liy the best judges they have been pronounced elegant, but more attention is always given to the style and detail as it were, of the story, than to that rigid adherence to truth which is .so essentially required by the naturalist. This may be preserved without dry and weary detail, and at the same time without wandering theoretically from the subject. Nature pre- sents innumerable instances, where there is no need of any embellish- ment, beyond the garb in which she has already dressed them, and where the gaudy trickery of language is unnecessary, to give addi- tional lustre to her beautiful but chaste productions. M. De Buffon's conversation was unadorned, rarely animated, but sometimes very cheerful. The power of communicating information MEMOIR OF BUFKOX. was either wanting, or reserved for his particular friends in private, and he considered that a discusion upon the Sciences should be con- fined to books alone. These opinions may have influenced his wish for comparative privacy, and it is certain that he did not mingle with his contemporaries in literary and scientific fame. Vanity has been generally allowed to be the greatest failing in the mind of Buffon, and the pains which he took to work up his writings, and his severe study, have perhaps been too often invidiously referred *' to the consideration of what after generations would think regard- ing him." He delighted in reading aloud his own works to his visiters, and chiefly those which he considered his finest pieces. Parts of the Natural Histoiy of Man, and that of the Swan, &c., were his favourites. It is but justice to say, however, that a more laudable inducement to recite them, than the mere love of hearing them praised, has been assigned by some of his biographers. "They were read with the view of hearing opinions and receiving correc- tions ;" he willingly received any hint of improprieties of style, and was open to imperfections when pointed out to him. He delighted also in what was luxurious or magnificent, and was devoted to his dress almost to the extreme of foppery. He spent much time at his toilet, and even in his latest years had his hair dressed and powdered twice, or three times daily. In the private character of Buff"on, there is not much to praise. In early youth he had entered into the pleasures and dissipations of life, and licentious habits seem to have been retained to the last. But the great blemish in such a mind was his declared infidelity . it presents one of those exceptions among the persons who have been devoted to the study of Nature ; and it is not easy to imagine a mind apparently with such powers, scarcely acknowledging a Creator, and Avhen noticed, only by an arraignment for what ap- peared wanting or defective in his great works. So openly, indeed, Wc^s the freedom of his religious opinions expressed, that the indig- nation of Sorbonne was provoked. Painful as a detail of such opinions must be, it is the duty of every biographer to mention them : and our readers may compare the splen- did talents and humble piety of the subject of our first memoir, with the highly cultivated mind, the bright abilities of the present, where they but coupled with the disavowment of the Being from whom all these precious gifts were derived. The works by which Buff"on is now best known, are those upon Natural History. The first of these, " Natural History, General and Particular," amounted to fifteen volumes quarto ; in the anatomical Xvi MKMOIR OK BUFKON. department he was assisted by M. D'Aubenton, and a supplementary volume afterwards appeared. This contained only the Natural His- tory of Quadrupeds. On account of his illness, the first volumes of the History of Birds did not appear till 1771 ; in which he was assisted be M. Gucnea\i de Montbeillard, and in the three last he received help from the Abl e Beron. They form nine volumes. He afterwards published a volume containing the " Natural History of Minerals," and several supplementary additions, and he intended to have added the History of Vegetables. The whole of these have been published in thirty-eight volumes 4to., of which several translated editions have appeared in this country. His other works, some of which we men- tioned before, were the translation of " Newton's Fluxions," a " Treatise on Accidental Colours," with various papers in the " Memoirs of the Royal Academy of Science at Paris, from the year 1737 to 1742." THIRD GREAT DIVISION THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. CLASS III.-VERTEBRATA. REPTILES. Reptiles have the heart so contrived as that, at each of its contractions, it transmits to the lungs a portion only of the blood which returns to it from the various parts of the body, and the remainder of this fluid goes back to circulate again, without having passed into the lungs, and conse- quently without having been subjected to respiration. Hence it is, that the action of the oxygen on their blood is less than in the Mammalia, and that if the amount of respiration in the latter, in which all the blood is obliged to pass into the lungs before its return to the body, be represented by unity, then the amount of the respiration of the Reptiles may be expressed by a fraction of that unity, as small as the proportion of the blood sent into the lungs at each contraction of the heart. As respiration is the source of the heat of the blood, and of the sus- ceptibility of fibrous structure to nervous irritability, the reptiles having cold blood, and having a muscular power on the whole much inferior to that of the Quadrupeds, and a fortiori, than the Birds, they are incapa- ble almost of other motions than those of crawling and swimming: and although several of them jump and run very fast at certain moments, yet their habits are slothful, their digestion excessively tedious, their sensa- tions blunt, and in cold or temperate countries they pass the winter in a state of lethargy. Their brain, which is proportionally very small, is not so necessary to the exercise of their animal and vital faculties, as to the members of the two first classes ; their sensations seem to be less referred to a common centre ; they continue to live and to exhibit voluntary motions long after losing their brain, and even after their head has been cut off. VOL. n. B The connexion with the nervous system is also much less necessary to the contraction of their fibres, and their muscles preserve their irritabi- lity after being severed from the body much longer than those of the pre- ceding classes; their heart continues to pulsate for hours after it has been torn away, nor does its loss prevent the body from moving for a long time. The cerebellum of several has been observed to be extremely small, a fact which tallies with their slight propensity to motion. The smallness of the pulmonary vessels permits Reptiles to suspend the process of respiration without arresting the course of the blood; thus they dive with more facility, and remain longer under water than either the Mammalia or Birds. The cells of their lungs, being less numerous, because they have fewer vessels to lodge on their parietes, are much wider, and the organs themselves sometimes have the form of simple and scarcely cellular sacs. Although some of them are incapable of producing audible sounds, they are all provided with a trachea and larynx. Their blood not being warm, there was no necessity for teguments capa- ble of retaining heat, so that they are covered with scales or simply with a naked skin. The females have a double ovary and two oviducts ; the males of seve- ral genera have a forked or double penis, those of the last order, the Batrachians, have none. No Reptile hatches its eggs, and in several genera of the Batrachians, they are fecundated after their exclusion from the female, in which case the egg is enveloped by a membrane only. The young of this latter order, on quitting the egg, have the form and branchis of Fishes, and some of its genera preserve these organs even after the development of their lungs. In several oviparous Reptiles, the Colubers particularly, the young animal in the egg is formed and considerably advanced at the mo- ment of its exit from the mother ; and there are even some species which may be rendered viviparous by simply retarding that epoch*. The quantity of respiration in Reptiles is not fixed like that of the Mammalia and Birds, but varies with the proportion of the diameter of the pulmonary artery compared to that of the aorta. Thus Tortoises and Lizards respire much more than Frogs, &c. ; and hence results a much greater difference of sensibility and energy than can exist between one of the Mammalia and another, or between Birds. Reptiles accordingly present an infinitely greater variety of forms, mo- tions, and properties than is to be found in the two preceding classes; * The Colubers, for instance, when deprived of water, as proved by the experi- ments of M. Geoflroy. TORTOISES. S and it is in an especial manner in their production that Nature seems to have amused herself by imagining the most fantastic shapes, and by mo- difying in every possible way the general plan she has followed in the construction of the Vertebrated animals, and in the Oviparous classes especially. The comparison, however, of their quantity of respiration and of their organs of motion, has enabled M. Brogniart to divide them into four orders*, viz. The Chelonia, or Tortoises, whose heart has two auricles, and whose body, supported by four feet, is enveloped by two plates or bucklers form- ed by t1ie ribs and sternum. The Sauria, or Lizards, whose heart has two auricles, and whose body, supported by four or two feet, is covered with scales. The Ophidia, or Serpents, whose heart has two auricles, and whose body always remains deprived of feet. The Batrachia, whose heart has but one auricle, and whose body is naked; most of these pass, with age, from the form of a fish breathing by branchiae, to that of a quadruped breathing by lungs. Some of them, however, always retain their branchi^, and a few have never more than two feetf. ORDER I. CHELONIA.— THE TORTOISES. The Chelonia, better known by the name of Tortoises, have a heart cora- posed of two auricles, and of a ventricle divided in two unequal cavities, which communicate with each other. The blood from the body is poured into the right auricle, that from the lungs into the left, but the two streams become more or less mingled in passing through the ventricle. These animals are distinguished at the first glance by the double shield in which the body is enveloped, and which allows no part to project ex- cept their head, neck, tail, and four feet. The upper shield, called cara- • Al. Brogniart, Essai d'une Classification Naturelle des Reptiles, Paris, 1805, and in the Mem. des Sawints Efrang., torn. 1, p. 587. t The Sauria and Ophidia are differently arranged by some others, Merrem, for instance. They detach the crocodiles, to form a separate order, and unite the first family of the Ophidia or Anguis to the remainder of the Sauria, a distribution which is founded on some peculiarities in the organization of crocodiles, and on a certain resemblance of Anguis to the Lizards. We merely indicate these affinities, which are almost wholly internal, preferring a division more easily applied. b2 4 REPTILES. pace, is formed by the ribs, of which there are eight pair, widened and reunited by denticulated sutures, and with plates adhering to the annular portion of the dorsal vertebrae, so that all these parts are rendered fixed and immoveable. The inferior shell, called plastron, is formed of pieces, usually nine in number, analogous to a sternum*. A frame, composed of bony pieces, which have been considered as possessing some analogy with the sternal or cartilaginous portion of the ribs, and which in one subgenus always remains in a cartilaginous state, surrounds the shell, uniting and binding together all the ribs which compose it. The vertebrae of the neck and tail are consequently the only ones which are moveable. These two bony envelopes being immediately covered by the skin or by plates, the scapulse and all the muscles of the arm and neck, instead of being connected with the ribs and spine, as in other animals, are attachcil beneath: the same arrangement is found in the bones of the pelvis and all the muscles of the thigh, so that in this respect the Tortoise may be Kaid to be an inverted animal. The vertebral extremity of the scapula is articulated with the shell ; and the opposite limit, which may be considered analogous to a clavicle, is joined to the sternum ; so that the two shoulders form a ring, through which pass the oesophagus and trachea. A third bony branch, larger than either of the others, and directed downwards and backwards, represents, as in Birds, the coracoid apophysis, but its posterior extremity is free. The lungs have considerable extent, and are situated in the same cavity with the other viscera f. The thorax, in most of them, being im- moveable, it is by the play of its mouth that the Tortoise respires, the process being effected by keeping the jaws closed, and alternately raising and depressing the os hyoides. The former of these motions permits air to enter through the nostrils, the tongue then closes the internal orifice of those apertures, when the latter forces the air into the lungs [J. Tortoises have no teeth; their jaws are invested with horn, like those of Birds, — the Chelydes, where they are covered with skin only, excepted. Their tympanum and palatine arches are fixed to the cranium, and are immoveable ; their tongue is short and bristled with fleshy filaments ; their * See Geoff. An. du Mus. t. XIV, p. 5; and on the entire osteology of the tor- toises, my Rech. sur les Oss. Foss. torn. V, 2e partie («). t Observe that in all those reptiles in which the lung penetrates into the abdo- men (and the Crocodile is the only one in which it does not), it is enveloped like the intestines by a fold of the peritoneum, which separates it from the abdominal cavity. X With respect to this mechanism, which is common to Tortoises and to the Ba- trachians, see the Mem. of Robert Townson, Lond. 1779. {^" (a) In future, the upper shell will be called " shell," and the inferior shell, sternum." — Eng. Ed. TORTOISES. O Stomach simple and strong; their intestines of a moderate length, and destitute of a CiKCum. Their bladder is very large. The penis of the male is simple and large, and the eggs laid by the female are invested with a hard shell. The former is frequently known by its exterior from the concavity of its sternum. They possess great tenacity of life, — and instances are on record, in which they have been seen to move for several weeks after losing their head. They require but little nourishment, and can pass whole months, and even years, without eating. The Chelonia, which were all united by Linnaeus in the genus Testudo, Lin. J Have since been divided into five subgenera, chiefly from the forms and teguments of their shell, and of their feet. 1. Land Tortoises. — Testudo*, Brog. The land Tortoises have the shell arched and supported by a solid, bony frame, most of its lateral edges being soldered to the sternum ; the legs, as if truncated, with very short toes, which are closely joined as far as the nails, all susceptible of being withdrawn between the bucklers; there are five nails to the fore-feet, the hind ones have four, all stout and conical. Several species live on vegetable food. T. grceca, L. ; Schoepf. pi. viii, ix, is the species most common in Europe ; it is found in Greece, Italy, Sardinia, and apparently all round the ilediterranean. It is distinguished by its wide and equally arched shell ; by its raised scales or plates, which are gra- nulate in the centre, striated on the edges, and marbled with large yellow and black spots ; and by its posterior edge in the middle, of which there is a prominence slightly bent over the tail. It rarely attains the length of a foot, lives on leaves, fruit, insects, and worms, excavates a hole in which it passes the winter, and breeds in the spring, laying four or five eggs similar to those of a Pigeon. Among the species foreign to Europe, there are several from the East Indies, of an enormous size, and three feet, and upwards, in length. One of them in particular has been called the Test, indica, Vosm. ; Schcepf. Tort. pi. xxii. (The Indian Tor- toise). Its shell is compressed in front, and its anterior edge is turned up above the head. Its colour is a deep brown. Some of them are remarkable for the beautiful distribution of their colours; such are T. geometrica, L. ; Lacep. I, ix ; Schoepf. x. (The Geometrica). A small tortoise, each plate of whose shell is regularly ornamented with yellow lines, radiating from a disk of the same colour. T. radlata, Shaw, Gen. Zool. Ill, pi. ii; and Dauxl. II, xxvi. Merrcm lias changed this name into Chersine. (The Coui). A New Holland species, ornamented with nearly as much regularity as the Geometrica, but which attains a much larger size*. In some species, the Pyxis, Bell., the anterior part of the ster- num is moveable like that of the Box Tortoises ; others again, the KiNiXYS, Id., can move the posterior portion f. 2. Fresh-water Tortoises. — Emys;]:, Brongn. The fresh-water Tortoises have no other constant characters by which they can be distinguished from the preceding ones, than tlie greater sepa- ration of the toes, which are terminated by longer nails, and the intervals occupied by membranes; even in this respect there are shades of differ- ence. They likewise have five nails before and four behind. The form of their feet renders their habits more aquatic. Most of them feed on in- sects, small fishes, &c. Their envelope is generally more flattened than that of the land tortoises. Test, eurojjcea, Schn. ; T. orhicularis, L. ; Schoepf. pi. 1 §, (The Fresh-water Tortoise of Europe), is the most universally diffused species; it is found in all the south and east of Europe and as far as Prussia. Its shell is oval, but slightly convex, tolerably smooth, blackish, and every where dotted with yellowish points arranged in radii. It attains the length of ten inches ; its flesh is used as food, and it is reared for that purpose with bread, young vegetables, in- sects, &c. Marsigli says its eggs are a year in being hatched. Test, picta, Schoepf. pi. iv, (The Painted Tortoise), is one of the most beautiful species; it is smooth and brown, each plate being surrounded with a yellow band, which is very broad on the anterior edge. It is found in Nortli America along the shores of brooks, on rocks or trunks of trees, whence it plunges into the water on the first alarm ||. • Add, T. stellata, Schcepf. XXV;— 7". avgitlata, Schweig;— 7. areolata, Sch. XXUli—T.marginata, Sell. XII, 1, 2;—T. cknticulata, Sch. XXVIII, \;—T.cufra, Schweig;—T. sigiiaia, Schw.; — T. carbunariu, Spix, XVI; — T. Hercules, Id. XIV; — T. cagacio, Id. XVII;— r. tahiilata, Sch. XIII;— 7". sculpta, Spix, XV;— 7". nigra, Quoy and Gaym. Voy. de Freycin. Zool. XXXVII ; — T. depressa, Cuv.; — T. biguttata. Id.; — T. Carolina, Le Conte, &:c. («). •f See the paper of M. Bell., in the Lin. Trans. Vol. XV, part 2, p. 392; in two of these Kinixys which we have seen living, the edges of the joint in the shield were worn away, or as if carious, and to such a degree as to induce a suspicion that there was something morbid in this conformation. X From emus, tortoise. § It is the same as the verte et jaune, Lacep. pi. vi, and his ronde, pi. v; see the Monog. of this species by M. Bojanus, Vilna, 1819, fol. II Add, Em. lulariu, Lacep. IV; — Em. Adausunii, Schweig; — Em. senegalensis, Dumer.; — Em. subrufa, Lacep. XIII; — Em. conlracta, Schweig; — Em. punctata, Schcepf V ; — Em. reticulata, Daiid. ; — Em. rubriveniris, Le Conte; — Etn.serrala, Daud. II, xxi; — Em. cmicinna, Le Conte, or geometrica, Lesueur; — Em. gengruphica, Le- sueur; — Ent. scripta, Schoepf. Ill, 4; — Em. cinerea, Id. 11,3; — Em.centrata, Daud. or terrapen, Lin. Schcepf. XV; — £»//. coucentrica, Le Conte; — Em. vduruta, Id.; — Em. fj^° (o) This is really the T, Carolina, Gniel., the T.polyphemus of otlicrs. — Eng. £o. ToinoiSKS. 7 Among the fresh-water tortoises we should remark The Box Tortoises*, The sternum of which is divided by a moveable articulation into two lids, which, when the head and limbs are withdrawn, completely encase the animal in its shell. In some the anterior lid only is moveable "j". In others both are equally so;|;. There are some fresh-water Tortoises, on the contrary, whose long tail and voluminous members cannot be completely retracted within the shell. These approximate, in this respect, to the following subgenera, and parti- cularly to the Chelydes, and render them consequently worthy of dis- tinction §. Such is, Test, serpentina, L. ; Schoepf, pi. vi, (The Snapper), which may be easily recognised by its tail, nearly as long as its shell, and bris- tled with sharp and dentated crests, and by its pyramidically elevated plates. It is found in the warm parts of North America, where it destroys numbers of fishes and aquatic birds, wanders far from rivers, and sometimes weighs upwards of twenty pounds. 3. The Sea-Tortoises. — Chelonia]], Brongn. The envelope of the Sea Tortoises is too small to receive their head, and particularly their feet, which are very long (the anterior ones most so), and flattened into fins, whilst their toes are all closely united in the same membrane. The two first ones of each foot being alone furnished with pointed nails, one or other of which at a certain age is very often lost. The pieces of their sternum do not form a continuous plate, but are va- riously notched, leaving considerable intervals, which are filled with car- tilage only. The ribs are narrowed and separated from each other at their external extremities; the circumference of the shell, however, is surrounded with a circle of pieces corresponding to the ribs of the ster- num. The temporal fossa is covered above by an arch formed by the pa- rietal and other bones, so that the whole head is furnished with an unin- terrupted osseous helmet. The internal surface of the oesophagus is fusra, Lesueur; — Em Irpro.ia, Schw.; — Em. nnsuta, \A.;^Em. dorsata, Schoepf; — Em. pulrhelhi, Schoepf. XXVI, or insculpta, Le Conte; — Em. lutescens, Schw.; — Em. expansn, Id.; — Em. Macquaria, Cuv. M. Fitzinger seiJarates under the name of Chelodina, and M Bell under that of HvDRASPis, those species whicli have a m ^e elongated neck, such as the Em. longi- collis, Shaw, Gen. Zool. Ill, part I, pi. xvi; — Em. plaiiiceps, Schcepf. XXVII, or ca- tialiculiitn, Spix, VIII;— £». phuicephala, Merrem; — Em. depressa, Spix, III, 2; — Em. carunculala, Aug. St. Hil.; — Em. tritentaculata, Id. * This subdivision gave Merrem his genus Terrapene, Spix his Kinosternon, and Fleming his Cistuda. The Fairopean species, and others, already part.ke of this moveability, which renders the task of limiting the genus a difficult matter. t Test, subiiigra, I, vii, 2,— T. clausa, Schoepf. VII. I La Tortue a boite d'Amboine, Darud. II, 309; — Test, tricarinata, Schnepf. II; — Test, pennsylvaiiica, I, d. xxiv. [To wliich may be added T. odorata, Daud.] § This subdivision has furnished M. Fitzinger with his genus Chelydra, and M. Fleming with that of Chelonui>.\. II Chelonia, from chelone. Merrem has preferred the barbarous name of Caretta. »• REPTILF.S. every where armed with sharp cartilaginous points directed towards the- stomach. Test, mydas, L.*; T. viridis, Schn. ; Lacep. 1, 1, (Tlie Common Turtle), is distinguished by its greenish plates, thirteen in number,- which are not arranged like tiles; those of the middle range are al- most regular hexagons. It is found from six to seven feet long, and weighing from seven to eight hundred pounds. Its flesh furnishes an agreeable and wholesome food to the mariner in every latitude of the torrid zone. It feeds in large troops on the sea-weed at the bottom of the ocean, and approaches the mouths of rivers to respire. The eggs, which it exposes on the sand to the sun, are very nume- rous, and excellent for eating ; its shell is not employed in any useful purpose. A neighbouring species', Chel. maculosa. Nob., the middle plates are twice as long as they are broad, and of a fawn colour, marked with large black spots. In a second, Chel. lachryniata, Nob., whose middle plates are similar to those of the maculosa, the last is so raised as to form a knob, and the fawn colour is marked with black streaks. The shell is employed in useful purposes. Test, imbricata, (the Hawk-bill or Imbricated Turtle), L. ; Le Caret, Lac. I, 11; Schoepf. XVIII, A. Smaller than the viridis, has a longer muzzle and denticulated jaws ; there are thirteen fawn- coloured and brown plates, which overlap each other like tiles ; its flesh is disagreeable and unwholesome, but the eggs are delicious, and it furnishes the finest kind of tortoiseshell employed in the arts. It inhabits the seas of hot climates. There are also two species which approximate to the imbricata, Chel. virgata, Nob.; Bruce, Abyss,, pi. xlii ; whose plates are less elevated, the middle ones equal, but with more acute lateral angles, and marked in radii with black specks ; and Chel. radiata, Schoepf, xvi, B, which only differs from the preceding in the increased breadth of the last middle plate ; it is perhaps a mere variety. Test, caretta, Gm. ; La Caouane, Schoepf. pi. xvi; is more or less brown or red, and has fifteen plates, the middle ones of which are ridged, particularly towards their extremities; the point of the upper mandible is hooked, and the anterior feet are longer and narrower than in the neighbouring species, having two better marked nails. It is found in different seas, and even in the Mediterranean; it feeds on shell-fish; the flesh is not eaten, and its shell is of little value, but it yields good lamp-oil. Merrem has recently distinguished, by the name of Sphargis, those Cheloniae whose shell is destitute of plates, and merely covered with a Sort of leatherf. Such is Test, coriacea, h.; Ze Zw//?, Lacep. I, iii; Schoepf. xxviii. (The « This name of Mi/ilr..i was taken by Linn:eur; from Nipltus. Schneider considers it :is a corruption of emus. t Fieniiiig calls them CoRiuDo; Lesueur, Djcumociielis. TORTOISES. 9 Coriaceous Turtle). A very large species of the Mediterranean (a). Its shell is oval and pointed behind, exhibiting three projecting lon- gitudinal ridges *. 4. The Chelys, or Large-mouthed Tortoises. — CiiELYsf, Dumeril. The Chelys resemble fresh-water Tortoises in their feet and nails; their envelope is much too small to contain their head and feet, which are very large, and their nose is lengthened out into a small snout; their most marked character, however, consists in their mouth, which opens crosswise, being unarmed with the liorny beak common to the other Che- Ionia;, and similar to that of certain Batrachians, the Pipa in particular. Test, fimbria, Gm. ; La Matamata, Bruguiere's Journ. d'Hist. Nat. I, xiii; Schapf. xxi. Tlie shell studded with pyramidal eleva- tions, and the body edged all round with a pinked fringe. It is found in Guiana. 5. The Soft-shelled Tortoises. — Trionyx, Geoff. The Soft-shelled Tortoises have no scales, the shell and sternum being simply enveloped by a soft skin ; neither of those shells is completely sup- ported by bones, the ribs not extending to the edges of the sternal one, and united with each other only for a portion of their length, the parts analogous to the sternal ribs being replaced by simple cartilage, and the sternal pieces partially notched as in the sea-tortoises, not covering the whole lower surface. After death, we can see through the dried skin that the surface of the ribs is very rough. Their feet, like those of the fresh-water Tortoises, are palmated without being lengthened, but only three of their toes are possessed of nails. The horn of their beak is in- vested externally with fleshy lips, and their nose is prolonged into a little snout. Their tail is very short, and the anal opening is pierced under its -extremity. They live in fresh water, and the flexible edges of their shell ■aid them in swimming. Trionyx ccgyptiacus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. XIV, 1; Test, tri- vnguis, Forsk and Grael. (The Tyrse, or Soft shelled Tortoise of the Nile), is sometimes three feet in length, and of a green colour spotted with white ; its shell is but slightly convex. It devours the young Crocodiles the moment they leave the egg, and is thus of more utility to Egypt than the Ichneumon;;};. Test, ferox, Gm. ; Penn. Phil. Trans. LXI, x, 1 — 3 ; cop. Lacep. I, vii; Schoepf. xix. (The Soft-shelled Tortoise of Ame- rica), inhabits the rivers of Carolina, Georgia, the Floridas, and of Guiana. It remains in ambush under roots of reeds, &c. whence * Add, Dermochelis atlantica, Lesueur. t Merrem prefers calling this genus by the barbarous name of Matamata. X Souuini, Voy. en Egypte, torn. II, p. 333. 1^" (a) A Lirge specimen of this species, caiiglit on the coast of Devonshire, is to be seen in the i'lritish Museum. — Eno. Ed. 10 REPTILES. it seizes birds, reptiles, &c., devours tlie young Alligators, and devoured in turn by the old ones. Its flesh is good food* (a). * Add, Trioni/x javanicus, Geoff. Ann. du Mus. XIV;— 7V. c«ri»n/MS, Id.; — Tr. stelUitiis, Id.;— yy. euphrutiais, Olivier, Voy. en Turqiiie, &c. pi. xlii;— Zr. ^ange- ticiis, Du\imce];~Tr. grmiosiis, Leach, or Test graiwsa, Sclioepf. xxx, A and B. N. B. The TortHc de Bnrlrnm, Voy. Am. Sept. tr. fr. I, pi. 2, appears to me to be the T. fervx, to which, through a niistAe, two nails too many have been udded to each foot. ^f° (a) The Turtles form a very interesting feature in the verj' curious branch of Zoolo<;y connected with fossil animals. Tlie remains which .-ire found of them in the fossil state are, in general, portions of the bony skeleton. In the Tilgate Forest strata, remains have been found consisting altogether of bones, such as ribs, completely separated from the stenium and vertebrae, vertcbriE isolated, por- tions of the sternum, pelvis, and of the femur, with the tibia, libula, &c., and also of the humerus, with the radius, ulna, &c. These bones are of a dark brown colour, ■whicli n)ay be accounted for by the iron with which they are strongly ini.prcgnati d; and their specific gravity, which is considera"ble, is also a proof of the presence of iron; they are very brittle. The cellular nature of their structure, as seen in some specimens in the magnificent muse im of Mr. Mantell, in Lewes, is displayed in a most interesting manner by the white substance (as carbonate of lime) which is injected, and which is in many specimens seen completely to occupy the medullary cavities of the long bones, such as the femur, humerus, &c. No considerable portion of the shell has been found. Remains of a species of the soft-shelled Turtles, (Trionyx), have been also found in Tilgate Forest. Mr. Mantel], as a tribute of respect to Mr. Bakewell, the author of one of the most popular elementary works on Geology in the English language, gives it the name of Trionyx Bakewelli. Though the remains are undoubtedly traceable to this subgenus, yet it differs in some respects from the modern Trionices. Thus, the latter have the intervals between the ribs not ossified; their extremities are not articulated to an osseous border; their surface is shagreened — is marked with minute pits for attaching their only integument, the soft skin. They are without scales (see the early part of the description of Trionyx above), and on the bones accordingly, we find no marks of the margins of those scales which, in other sub- genera, produce depressions and furrows. Now the fossil species, the Triony.x Bakewelli, has a shagreen surface like the modern soft-shelled Turtles, but it difiers from them in having on several of its bones, as the rib and sternum, the impressions of a scaly covering. Bones of a species of fresh-water Turtles were found by this justly celebrated geologist, (Mr. Mantell, of Lewes), in the beds of Tilgate Forest. This gentleman sent, a few years ago, some Sussex fossils of this species to Cuvier, which turned o'lt to be portions of the sternum (carapace). Cuvier described them as portions of a flat but unknown species of the genus. Specimens very closely resembling it have been discovered in the Jura limestone near Soleure, and it corresponds with a specimen figured in the 5th vol. of Cuvier's grand work on the " Fossil Bones." But the species with plates and ribs are the most abundant in the Tilgate strata. Other bones have been likewise discovered, which are believed by Mr. Mantell to have be- longed to the Marine Tortoises. The ribs in his Museum, which are supposed to be remains of these marine animals, have a smo ith surface, are equal in width throughout their length, with extremities pointed, striated and marked with impres- sions of scales. There are also found in the strata of this forest, portions of a smooth osseous border, and sternal jilates with margins either radiated or dentated. Mr. Mantell has recently received from Tilgate, a fine .ipecimen of the third sternal plate of a Turtle, which bears a striking resemblance to that of Testudo Imbricata. I'rom the numerous fragments of turtle bones preserved in the Museum of this meritorious naturalist, but which are too imperfect to form the foundation of any very decided conclusions, Mr. Mantell s.ays, that this inference can, however, be drawn, that the strata of Tilgate contains the remains of at least three distinct kinds of Turtle, riamely, a fresh- water species, Tri(.nyx; an unknown .species of Emys; and a marine species of the subgenus Chelonia. The whole of the above remains have been found in the upper strata of the chalk formations, which constitute a portion of those called the Secondary Formations. — Eng. Ed. 11 ORDER 11. SAURIA*.— THE SAURIANS. The Saurian Reptiles have a heart like that of the Tortoises, composed of two auricles and one ventricle, which is sometimes divided by imperfect partitions. Their ribs are moveable, are partially connected with the sternum, and can be raised or depressed in respiration. Their lung extends more or less towards the posterior extremity of the body; it frequently penetrates very far into the lower part of the abdo- men, the transverse muscles of which pass under the ribs, and even towards the neck, to clasp it. Those in which this organ is very large, possess the singular faculty of changing the colours of their skin accord- ing to the excitement produced in them by their wants or passions. Their eggs are enveloped by a covering more or less hard, and the young emerge from them with the form which they permanently keep. Their mouth is always armed with teeth, and their toes, with very few exceptions, are furnished with nails; their skin is covered with scales, more or less compact, or at least with scaly granules. They couple, either with two male organs or with one, according to their genera. They all have a tail more or less long, and generally very thick at its base : most of them have four legs, a few only having but two. Linnaeus included them all in two genera, the Dragons and the Lizards: but it has been found necessary to divide the latter into seve- ral, which so far differ in the number of feet, &c., the shape of the tongue, tail and scales, that we are even compelled to distribute them into several families. FAMILY I. CROCODILIDA.— THE CROCODILES, Which contains only a single genus, Ckocodilus, Br. They have a considerable stature; their tail is flattened on the sides, five toes before and four behind, of which only the three internal ones on From the Gr. sauros, (lizard), animals analogous to Lizards. ^'^ REPTILES. each foot are armed with nails, all more or less united by membranes; a single range of pomted teeth in each jaw; the tongue fleshy, flat, and adhering close to its edges, a circumstance which induced the antieuts to believe that they had none ; a single male organ, the anal opening longi- tudinal ; the back and tail covered with very stout, large, square scales or plates, relieved by a ridge along their middle; a deeply notched crest on the tail, which is double at its base. The plates on the belly are smooth, thin, and square. Their nostrils, which open on the end of the muzzle by two small crescent-shaped fissures closed by valves, communicate with the extremity of the hind part of the mouth, by a narrow canal which traverses the palatine and sphenoidal bones. The lower jaw being continued behind the cranium, the upper one ap- pears to be moveable, and has been so described by the antients; it only moves, however, with the entire head. Their external ear is closed by means of two fleshy lips, and there are three lids to their eyes. Under the throat are two small holes, the ori- fices of glands, from which a musk-scented pomatum issues. The vertebra of the neck rest on each other through the medium of small false ribs, which renders all lateral motion difficult, and does not allow these animals to deviate suddenly from their course; and it is easy to escape them by turning round them. They are the only Saurians that are destitute of clavicles, but their coracoid apophyses are attached to the sternum, as in all the others. In addition to the common and false ribs, there are others which protect the abdomen, without reaching to the spine, and which appear to be produced by the ossification of the tendinous in- sertions of the recti muscles. Their lungs do not dip into the abdomen like those of other reptiles ; and some musQular fibres, adhering to that part of the peritoneum which covers the liver, give them the appearance of a diaphragm, whioh, in con- junction with the division of their heart into three chambers, where the blood from the lungs does not mingle so perfectly with that from the body as in other reptiles, approximate them somewhat nearer to the hot- blooded quadrupeds. The tympanum and pterygoid apophyses are fixed to the cranium as in the Tortoises. Their eggs are as large and hard as those of a Goose ; and the Crocodiles are considered, of all animals, those which present the greatest difference in size. The females keep careful watch over their eggs, and when hatched, tenderly protect their young for some months. They inhabit fresh water, are extremely carnivorous, cannot swallow un- der water, but drown their prey, and place it in some submerged crevice of a rock, where they allow it to putrify before they eat it*. The species, which are more numerous than they were thought to be previous to my observations, are referable to three distinct subgenera. The Gavials, Cuv., Have the muzzle slender and very long; the teeth nearly equal; the * Crocodiles differ so much from Lizards, tliat several authors have recently thciught it proper to form tlit m into a separate order. They are the Loricata, Merrtni and Fitzingerj tlie Emydosairia, Blaiiiv. S/.tJRIAXS. T3 fourth ones below passing, when the jaws are closed, into notches, and not into holes in the upper one; the external edges of the hind feet are notched, and the feet themselves palmated to the very ends of the toes ; two large holes in the bones of the cranium behind the eyes may be felt through the skin. They have as yet been found only in the antient con- tinent. The most common is Lac. gangetica, Gm. ; Gavial du Gauge, Faujas. Hist, de la Mont, de St. Pierre, pi. xlvi; Lacep. I, xv. A species which at- tains a great size, and which, besides the length of its muzzle, is remarkable for a stout cartilaginous prominence which encircles its nostrils, and then inclines backwards*. CROCODiLEsf , properly so called, Have an oblong and depressed muzzle, unequal teeth, the fourth ones be- low passing into notches, and not into holes of the upper jaw, and all the remaining characters of the preceding subgenus. They are found in both continents. Lac. crocodilus, L. ; Crocodile du Nil., Geoffr. Descr. de TEgypte, Rep. II, 1; Ann. Mus. X, iii, 1; Cuv. lb. X, pi. 1, f. 5 and 11, f. 7, and Oss. Foss. V, part 2, same plate and figure, (The Common Crocodile, or Crocodile of the Nile), so celebrated among the an- tients, has six rows of square and nearly equal plates along the whole length of the back;];. * This prominence is the foxmdation of jElian's remark (Hist. an. LXII, c. 41), that the Ganges produces Crocodiles which have a horn on the end of tlie muzzle. See its figure and description by Geoff. St. Hilaire, Mem. du Mus. XII, p. 97. Add, the Fctit Gavial {Croc, tenuirostris, Cuv.), Faujas. loc. cit. pi. xlviii, should it prove to be a distinct species. N.B. The calcareous schist of Bavaria has produced a small fossil Gavial of a peculiar species, described by Soemmering in the Mem. of the Acad, of Munich, of 1814. I have described the crania and other parts of fossil Crocodiles allied to the Ga- vials found at Caen, Honfleur, and other places, and marked those points in which the osteology of their cranium differs from that of the Gavial now in existence. See Oss. Foss. V, part 2. Similar observations have also been made in England, by M. Conybeare. In consequence of these differences, which all relate to the hind part of the palate, M. Geoffroy has thought proper to form two genera of these lost animals, which he calls Theleosaurus and Steneosaurus, notwithstanding which, he ap- pears to think that the living Gavials may have descended from them, and that the differences between them may have resulted from atmospheric changes. Mem. du Mus. XII. t Krokodellos, which fears the shore, a n«ime given by the Greeks to a common Lizard of their country; they afterwards, in their travels through Egypt, applied it to the Crocodile from the mutual resemblance. Herodot. Lib. II. Merrem has changed the name of this subgenus to that of Champses, which, according to Hero- dotus, was the Egyptian name of this animal. X From the Senegal to the Ganges, and beyond it, we find Crocodiles very similar to the common one, some of which have a rather longer and narrower muzzle, and others, a diflerence in the plates or scales which cover the top of their neck; but it is very difficult to arrange them as distinct species, on account of their intennediate gradations. The small insulated scales which form a transverse row immediately behind the cranium, vary from two, to four and six; the approximated scales which compose the shield of the neck are generally six in number, but sometimes there is a smaller one at but little distance from each of the anterior ano;les of this shield, and at others it is contiguous to it, in which case it (the shiel<^ Consists of eight 14 REPTILES. Croc, biporcatus, Cuv. ; Le Crocodile a deux aretes, Ann. Mus. X, 1, 4 and 11, 8, and Oss. Foss. V, 2d part, same plates and fig., has eight rows of oval plates along the back, and two projecting crests on the upper part of the muzzle. It is found in several islands of the Indian Ocean, and most probably exists in the two peninsulas. Croc, acutus, Cuv. ; Crocodile a museau effile, Geoff. Ann. Mus. II, xxxvii, has a longer muzzle, arched at base; the dorsal plates arranged in four lines; the external ones disposed irregularly, and with more salient ridges. From St. Domingo and the other great Antilles. The female places her eggs under ground, and uncovers them at the moment they are about to be hatched*. Alligator f, Cuv. Alligators have a broad obtuse muzzle and unequal teeth, the fourth plates or scales. M. Geoffrey calls those which have a longer and narrower muzzle, Croc, suchus ; those whose row of scales behind the cranium consists of six pieces. Croc, mar gin at us, among which some have six plates in the shield, and others eight; Croc, lacunosits, an individual specimen which only presented two scales behind the cranium, and six plates in the shield; and, finally, another specimen whose charac- ters are referable to some proportions of the head, Croc complanatus. These various Crocodiles also differ in some of the details of the form of the muzzle, and in the lateral scales of the back, but as regards this, and the muzzle particularly, the varieties ai'e still more numerous, and M. Geoffroy acknowledges that notlivig is more fugitive than the forms of Crocodiles. This is so much the case, that I dare not elevate the Crocodiles sent from Bengal by M. Duvaucel to the rank of species, although they have a more convex head than any of the others. There is another point in which I am compelled to diller from the learned natu- ralist I have just quoted. He supposes that the variety or species with the narrow muzzle remains smaller, is gentle and inoffensive, and that the smallness of its size causes it to be soonest thrown upon the shores by inundations, of which it is thus the precursor, and, from these ideas, is of opinion that it was the object of the religious honours of the Egyptians, and that Suchus, or Suchis, was its specific sppellation. On the contrary, I think I have proved, both by Aristotle and Cicern, that the Cro- codiles venerated by the Egyptians were not less ferocious than the others; it is also very certain, that the species with the narrow muzzle was not the exclusive object of priestly care, for, from the very exact researches of M. Geoffroy himself, it appears that the three embalmed Crocodiles now in Paris are not the Suchus, but the compla- natus, the viaiginatus, and the lacunosus ; in fine, I am forced to believe that Souc, or. Souchis, which, according to M. Champollion, was the Egyptian name of Saturn, was also the specific name of the Crocodile fed at Arsinoe, just as Apis was the name of the sacred bull at Memphis, and Mnevis that of the bull of Hermopolis. With re- spect to this point of antient history, see the various writings of M. Geoffroy, and particularly in the great work on Egypt, as well as my Oss. Foss. tom. V. part 2, p. 45. This last article having been written previous to that of the great work on Egypt, I could not profit by the argument drawn from the difference of the embalmed Crocodiles, an argument furnished me by M. Geoffroy, and one which seems to me strongly to corroborate my view of the matter. • The Croc, acutus has been particularly observed by M. Descourtils. — Add, the Crcc. rhombifer, Cuv. Ann. Mus. XII, pi. 1, 1 ;— the Croc, a casque {C. galeatus), Perrault, Mem. pour servir a I'Hist. des An. pi. ixiv, if it should prove (being only known by this figure) a constant species; — the Croc, bisqutatus, Cuv. Ann. Mus. X, 11, 6, and Oss. Foss. t. V, part 2, pi. 11, f. 6. of which only one or two specimens have ever been seen; — the Croc, cataphractus, Cuv. Oss. Foss. V, part 1, pi. v, f. 1 and 2. f Or Caiman, the name given to Crocodiles by the negroes of Guinea. The Freixh colonists employ it to designate the species of Crocodile most common about SAUIUANS. 15 lower ones entering into holes in the upper jaw, and not into notches; their feet are only semi-palmate and without eraargination. They have hitherto only been certainly found in America. Croc, sclerops, Schn. ; Seb. I, civ, 10; Cuv. Ann. Mus. X, 1, 7, and IG and 11, 3, (The Spectacle Alligator), so named from a transverse ridge, which unites in front the salient borders of its orbits, is the most common species in Guiana and Brazil. Its neck is defended by four transverse bands of strong plates. The female lays in the sand, covers her eggs with straw or leaves, and defends them courageously*. Croc, lucius, Cuv. ; Caiman a museau de brocket, Ann. Mus. X, 1, 8, and 15, and II, 4, (The Pike Alligator), so called from the shape of its muzzle, is also distinguished by four principal plates on its neck. It inhabits the southern parts of North America, forces itself into the mud, and remains torpid in severe winters. The fe- male deposits her eggs in alternate layers with beds of earth f (a). their plantations. The word Allimtor is used by the Enghsh and Dutch colonists in the same sense. It is a corruption of the Portuguese word Lagartu, which is itself derived from Lwerta. * There are also several sorts of Caimans or Alligators, which have this trans- verse ridge front of the orbits, and which, like the Crocodiles, allied to the common one, perliaps form distinct species, bnt difficult to characterize. Some of them have a shorter and more rounded muzzle; the transverse ridge con- cave before, and extending to the cheek on each side. They have thirteen teeth on each side above; their cranium is not widened behind; their body is green dotted, and spotted with black, with black bands on the tail. Others have the same kind of iiead, and the same teeth, but their body is black, with narrow bands that are yellowish, as in the Jacare noir, Spix, pi. iv. Others, again, have a muzzle less broad, and the concave ridge does not extend so fur; they have fifteen teeth, and their neck is more completely defended by plates; I should willingly consider them as the Cr.fis.iipes of Spix, pi. iii. Finally, there are some with a still narrower muzzle, and the cranium somewhat widened behind, wliose transverse ridge is convex in front, and does not extend on tlie cheek; the ridge of their dorsal plates is less salient, and the bands on their tail are more faintly marked: can they be the Cr. punctulatus of Spix, pi. ii? That gen- tleman, unfortunately, has not insisted upon the characters di-awn from the trans- verse ridge. t See, on this species, the paper of Dr. Harlan, Ac. of Nat. Sc. of Philad. IV, 242. — Add, the Caiman a paupieres osseutses {Croc, palbebrosus, Cuv.), Ann. Mus. X, pi. 1, 6 and 7, and 11, 2; and the Croc, trigcmatus, Schn., Seb. I, cv, 3; or the Jacare- tinga moschifer, Spix, pi. i. The whole thickness of the eye-lid, in this species, is occupied by three osseous lamellae, of which, in other Crocodiles, there is scarcely a vestige. ^^ (a) Fossil remains of Crocodiles are found in the Secondary formations of the south-east of Sussex, and in each of the series composing these formations, from the Oolite to the Chalk, both included. The Tertiary deposits likewise contain them. Some teeth found in Tilgate Forest, by Mr. Mantel), have all the essential charac- ters of those of living Crocodiles, and they are calculated by that experienced g^-olo- gist to have belonged to animals between twenty and thirty feet long. The fragments of the bones of Crocodiles, in the possession of Mr. Mantell, are those of at least two species, if not of four. They consist of teeth, scales, vertebrae, ribs, and other bones. Teeth of fossil Crocodiles are also abundant in the Wealden formation, re- sembling those of the Jura limestone, and those of the Gavials. — Eng. Ed. IG RErTfLES. FAMILY II. LACERTIXIDA*.— THE LIZARDS. This family is distinguished by its thin extensible tongue, which ter- minates in two threads, like that of the Coluber and Viper; their body is elongated; their walk rapid; each foot has five toes armed with nails, separate and unequal, the hind ones particularly so; the scales beneath the belly and round the tail are arranged in transverse and parallel bands ; the tympanum is level with the head, or but slightly sunk, and membran- ous. A production of the skin with a longitudinal slit which is closed by a sphincter, protects the eye, under whose anterior angle is the vestige of a third eye-lid; the false ribs do not form a complete circle; the male organs of generation are double, and the anus is a transverse slit. The species being very numerous and various, we subdivide them into two great genera. The Monitors, recently denominated, by a singular error, TupiNAMBisf , Are those in which the species are of the largest size; they have two teeth in both jaws, but none in the palate ; the greater number are recog- nized by their laterally compressed tail, which renders them more aquatic. The vicinity of water sometimes brings them in the neighbourhood of Crocodiles and Alligators, and it is said that by hissing they give notice of the approach of these dangerous reptiles. This assertion is most probably the origin of the term Safeguard or Mordtor, applied to some of their species, but the fact is not the less certain. They are divided into two very distinct groups. The first, or that of the Monitors, properly so called, Is known by numerous and small scales on the head and limbs, under the belly and round the tail; on the top of the latter is a carina formed by a double row of projecting scales. The range of pores observed on the thighs of several other Saurians is not found in these. They are all from the eastern continent;}:. Two species are found in Egypt, which may be considered as the types of two subdivisions. • Lacerta, a Lizard. t Marcgrave, speaking of the Sauvegarde of America, says that it is called Teyu- gauqu, and among the Tupinambous, Temapara {Temapara ttipinamhis). Seba has mistaken the latter name for that of the animal, and all other naturalists have copied it from him. X Seba, and from him Daudin, describe some true Monitors as American; it is a mistake. SAURIANS. 17 Lac. nilotiea, L. ; Monitor dti Nil; Ouaran of the Arabs; Mus. _ Worm. 313; Geoff. St. Hil. great work on Egypt, Kep. pi. 1,' f. 1, (The Monitor of tlie Nile). Strong conical teeth, the poste- rior of which become rounded by age; brown, with pale and deeper coloured dots, forming various compartments, among which we ob- serve transverse rows of large ocelluted spots that become rings on the tail. The latter, round at the base, is transversed above by a carina, which extends almost from root to tip. It attains a length of five and six feet. The Egyptians pretend it is a young Crocodile hatched in a dry place. It was engraved upon the monuments of that coun- try by its antient inhabitants, and, possibly, because it devours the eggs of the Crocodile*. The other species, Lac. scincus, Merr. ; Le Monitor terrestre d'Egypte; Ouaran el hard of the Arabs, Geoff. Egypt. Kept. Ill, f. 2, (The Great Ouran), has compressed, trenchant, and pointed teeth; the tail almost without a keel, and round much farther from the root; its habits are more terrestrial, and it is common in the deserts in the vicinity of Egypt. The jugglers of Cairo, after extracting its teeth, employ it in their exhibitions. It is the Land Crocodile of Hero- dotus, and, as Prosper Albin remarks, the true Scincus of the antients f. India and Africa produce a great number of Monitors with trenchant teeth like those of the })receding species, but whose tail is more compressed than even that of the Monitor of the Nile. The one most common in the Indian Archipelago, is the Lac. bivittata, Kuhl. (The Two-banded Monitoi-), which is white above, black beneath, with five transverse rows of white spots or rings. A wdiite band extends along the neck, and there is an angle formed by the white on the breast, which reaches obliquely over the shoulder. Specimens have been found three feet in length ;|;. The other group of Monitors possesses angular plates on the head, * To this species, both by the form of the teeth aud the arrangement of the spots, which, by the bye, are similar in almost all the Monitors, must be referred the M. orne {M. ornatus, Daud.), Ann. Mus. II, xlviii, Lac. capensis, Sparm., and the M. al- hogularis, Daud. Rept. 1 1 1 , pi. xxxii. It is from this subdivision that M. Fitzingerhas made his genus Varanus, under which name Merreni comprised all the Monitors. f This species constitutes the genus Psammosaurus of M. Fitzinger. X To this species, from the fonii of the teeth and the distribution of colours, must be attached the T. bigare, Daud. {Lac. varia, Shaw, Nat. Misc. 83, J. White, 253);— a neighbouring species of Manilla {M. marmoratus, C.);— the T. elegant and the T. etoUe, Daud. Ill, xxxi, and Seb. I, xciv, 1, 2, 3, xcviii, xcix, 2; II, xxx, 2, xc, cv, 1, &c., all of which are but one species, originally from Africa. We must add, the T. cepe- di II, Daud. Ill, xxiv, or Lac. exanthematica, Bosc. Act. Soc. Nat. Par. pi. v, f. 3, ocellated throughout; — the M. dotted with brown of Bengal (J/, bengalensis, Daud.); the black M. spotted with green of the Jloluccas {M. iridicus, Daud.); — a species of a uniform black from Java (ilf. nigricans, Cuv.), &c. All things considered, I have now reason to believe that the fig. of Seba, I, pi. ci, f. 1, of which LinniEus made his Lacerta draca-na, but which is very different from the Diagonne of Lacep., is the M. bengalensis. Seba's original is in the Museum. To these species with a compressed tail, M. Fitzinger applies the generic name of TUI'INAMEIS. 18 REPTILES. and large rectangular scales on the belly and round the tail. The skin of the throat, covered with small scales, is doubled into two transverse folds. There is a row of pores on the under part of their thighs*. This group is also susceptible of subdivisions : the first forms CROCODILURUsf, Spix, Which have, for their distinguishing character, scales relieved by ridges, as in the Crocodiles, forming crests on the tail, which is compressed. Mon. crocodilimts, Merr. ; La Grande Dragonne, Lacep. Quadr, Ovip. pi. ix, (The Great Dragon), has ridged scales scattered also along the back. Its back teeth become rounded with age. It attains a length of six feet, and lives in Guiana, in burrows near marshes : its flesh is eaten. Lac. hicarinata, L. ; Le Lezardet, Daud. ; Crocodilurus ama- zonicus, Spix, pi. xxi, is smaller, and has none of the aforesaid kind of scales on the back. It is found in several parts of South America. The second, the Safeguards — Sauveoardes, Cuv., Have all the scales of the back and tail carinate : the teeth are notched, but with age the back ones also become rounded J. Some of them, more particularly termed Safeguards, have a tail that is more or less compressed; the scales on the belly are longer than they are broad. They live on the banks of rivers, &c. Such in particular is Lac. teguixin, Lin. and Shaw, (the Great Safeguard of America); the Teyu-g-uazu; Temapara, &c. ; Seb. I, xcvi, 1, 2, 3, xcvii, 5, xcix, 1, has yellow dots and spots disposed in transverse bands, on a black ground above, and a yellowish one beneath; yellow and black bands on the tail§. In Brazil and Guiana it attains the length of six feet. It moves rapidly on shore, and when pursued hastens to the water for refuge, where it dives, but does not swim. It feeds on all sorts of insects, reptiles, eggs, &c., and lays in holes which it excavates in the sand. Both flesh and eggs are edible ||. Others, called Ameivas% only differ from the preceding in the tail. • Merrem has made his genus Teius from this second group. t M. Gray has changed this name into Ada. X It is to such that M. Fitzinger particularly applies the name of Monitor. § Dried specimens, or those preserved in spirits, assimie a greenish or bluish tint in those parts where the colours are light, and it is thus that they are represented by Seba; but while alive, aad as we have seen it, the light parts are more or less yellow. Pr. Max. de Wied has given a good picture of it in his eleventh No. II Add the Tiipin. a tacJies vertes of Daud., if it be not a simple variety of Sauve- garde. Spix calls it Tup. monitor, pi. xix; it is his. T. nigropunctatus, which is the true Sauvegarde. ^ According to Marcgrave, the term Ameiva designates a Lizard with a forked tail, a circumstance which can only be the result of accident; Edwards having had in his possession an individual of the above division, in which this accident was observed, applied that term to the whole species. Marcgrave compares his individual to his Taraguira, which, from his description, is rather a Pulychrus. SAURIANS. ' 19 wliicli is rouncl, and nowise compressed, furnished, as well as the helly, with transverse rows of square scales; those on the helly are more broad than long. They are American Lizards, tolerably similar, externally, to those which represent them in Europe ; but besides the want of molars, most of them have no collar, and all the scales of the throat are small; their head also is more pyramidal than that of the European Lizards, and they have not, like the latter, a bony plate on the orbit. Several species have been confounded under the name of Laccrta ameiva, some of which it is still very difficult to distinguish. The most common, Tcyus ameiva, Spix, XXIII; Pr. Max. de Wied. liv. V, is a foot long or more ; green ; the back more or less dotted and spotted with black, and vertical rows of white ocellated spots bordered with black, on the flanks. There is another, Teyus cyaneus, Merr. ; Lacep. I, xxxi, Seb. II, cv, 2, about the same size, of a bluish colour, with round white spots scattered over the flanks and sometimes on the body. The young of these animals, and of some others of the same subdivision, have blackish stripes on the sides of the back, a fact worth remem- bering to avoid an undue multiplication of species*. We may separate from the Ameivas certain species, all the scales of whose belly, legs, and tail, are carinated'j-, and others in which even those on the back are similarly relieved, so that the flanks only are granu- lated J. A collar under the neck also approximates these species to the lizards §. The Lizards, properly so called. Form the second genus of the Lizards. They have the bottom of their palate armed with two rows of teeth, and they are otherwise distinguished * Such, it appears to me, is the Teyus ocelli fer, Spix, xxv. Add the Am. litterata, Daud. Seb. I, Ixxxiii; — Am. coeruleocepJiala, Id. Seb. T, xci, 3; — Am. lateristriga, Cuv. Seb. I, xe, 7; — Am. lemniscata {Lacert. lemnis, Gm.), Seb. I, xeii, 4; — Teius tritaniatus, Spix, xxi, 2; — T. cyanomelas, Pr. Max. Liv. v. [Add, Am. sex-lineata, Catesb. 68. — Eng. Ed.] It is impossible to say from what confusion of synonymes Daud. has placed the Am. litterata in Germany; like all the others, it is from America. The Avi. gra- phique, Daud. Seb. I, Ixxxv, 2, 4, is the Dotted Monitor; his Am. argns, Seb. I, Ixxxv. 3, is the Mon. cepedien ; his goitretix, Seb. 11, ciii, 3, 4, does not differ from the litterata; finally, his tete rouge, Seb. I, xci, 1, 2, is a common Green Lizard. He was probably led into error by the coloured plates of Seba. The Lac. b-Uneata appears to me to be a L. cocruleocephala, a part of whose broken tail had grown again with sm.all scales, as is always the case when that accident happens; the axis of this new portion of the tail is always, also, a cartilaginous stem without vertebrae. It is impossible to characterize species by similar accidental circumstances, as Merrem has done in his Teyus monitor and cyaneus. f In one sex of one of these species, there are two small spines on each side of the anus, which circumstance gave rise to the genus Centropyx of Spix, XXII, 2. J The Lizard strie of Surinam, Daud. Ill, p. 347, of which Fitzinger makes his genus Pseudo-Ameiva. § It appears to me that even the Centropyx has palatine teeth: these two sorts of Lizards, however, have the head of an Ameiva, no bone on the orbit. &c. N. B. Fitz- inger makes a genus (Teyus) of the Lezard teyou, Daud., which should have but four toes to the hind feet; its only foundation, however, is an imperfect description of Azzara, and it does not seem to me sufficiently authentic. c 2 go REPTILES. from the Ameivas and Safeguards by a collar under the neck, formed of a transverse row of large scales, separated from those on the belly by a space covered with small ones only, like those under the throat; and by the circumstance that a part- of the cranium projects over their temples and orbits, so as to furnish the whole top of the head with a bony buckler. They are very numerous, and our counti-y produces several species confounded by Linnteus under the name of Lacerta agilis. The most beautiful is the Grand Lezard vert ocelle, — Lac. oeellata, Daud. ; Lacep. I, xx; Daud. Ill, xxxiii; from the south of France, Spain, and Italy. (The Ocellated Lizard). It is more than a foot long, of a beautiful green, with lines of black dots, forming rings or eyes and a kind of embroidery; the young, according to IMilne Edwards, is the Lezard gentil, Daud. Ill, xxxi. The Lac. viridis, (The Green Lizard), Daud. Ill, xxxiv, of which the Lac. bilineata. Id. xxxvi, 1, according to the same gentleman, is a variety; — the Lae. sepium, Id. lb. 2, of which the Lae. arenicola, Id. xxxviii, 2, is a variety; — and the Lac. agilis, Id. xxxviii, 1, are found in the environs of Paris. The south of France produces the Veloce, Pall., to which must be referred the Bosquien, Daud. xxxvi, 2, and some new species*. The Algyres — Algyra, Ctiv. Have the tongue, teeth, and femoral pores of the Lizards, but the scales of the back and tail are carinated, those of the belly smooth and imbri- cated. The collar is wanting "I- . The Taciiydromes, or Swift Lizards — Tachydromus ]:, Daud. Have square and carinated scales on the back, under the belly, and on the tail; neither collar nor femoral pores, but on each side of the anus is a small vesicle opening by one pore. The tongue is still like that of the Lizards, and the body and tail are very much elongated. FAMILY IIL THE IGUANAS.— IGUANIDA§. All the family of Saurians possess the general form, long tail, and free and unequal toes of the Lizards; their eye, ear, penis, anus, are simi- * I add, but with hesitation, the Lac.cericea, Laur. 11, 5; nrgtis. Id. 5; tcrresfris, Id. Ill, 5. The tUigucrin of Daudin is made up of an American Ameiva and the green Lizard of Sardinia, from a bad description by Cetti. The ccenile-cephal'.i, the lemniscata, the quijiqiielineaia, are Ameiv.ts. The sexUneata, Catesb. XLVIII, is a Seps. N.B. With due submission to our author, this appears to be a mistake, the sexlineata, Catesb., is most certainly an Ameiva. — Eng. Ed. f Lan. alegyra, Lin. ;!: Tiichus and dromon, (Gr.), Qtiick-runner. § Iguane, a name according to Hernandez, Scaliger, Sec. originating in St, Domingo, SAUllIANS. 21 ]ar, but their tongue is fleshy, thick, non-extensible, and only emarginated at the tip. We may divide them into two sections ; the first, or that of the Aga- MiANS, have no palatine teeth. In this section we place the following genera, The Stellions— Stellio, Caw. AVhich have, with the general characters of the family of the Iguanida the tail encircled by rings composed of large and fretjuently spiny scales The subgenera are as follows : CoRDYLUs*, Gronov. The tail, belly, and back covered with large scales arranged in trans- verse rows. The head, like that of the common lizards, is protected by a continuous bony buckler, and covered with plates. In several species the points of the scales on the tail form spiny circles; there are small spines also to those on the sides of the back, on the shoulders, and out- sides of the thighs, on which latter there is a line of very large pores. The Cape of Good Hope produces several species long confounded under the name of Lacerta cordylus, L. These Saurians, whose armour so completely defends them, are a little larger than the com- mon Green Lizards of Europe, and feed on insects f. The Stellios have the spines of the tail moderate : the head enlarged behind by the muscles of the jaws; the back and thighs bristled here and ■whose inhabitants must have pronounced it H'mana, or Igoana. According to Bon- tius it originated in Java, where tlie natives call it Leguan. In this case the Por- tuguese and Spaniards carried it to America transformed to Iguana. They apply it there now to a Sauvegarde, as a true Iguana. This name, as well as that of Guano, lias occasionally been given to Monitors of the eastern continent. The reader of travels should bear this in mind; I even consider the Leguan of Bontius as a Monitor. * According to Aristotle, " the Cordylus is the only animal possessing feet and branchiae. It swims with its feet and tail, the latter of which, as far as large things can be compared with small, is similar to that of a Silurus. This tail is soft and broad. It has no fins: it lives in marshes, like the Frog: it is a quadruped, and leaves the water: sometimes it is dried up and dies." )t is evident that these characters can only belong to the larva of the aquatic Salamander, as M. Schneider has very justly observed. Belon has described this Salamander by the name of Cordyle, but his printer, by mistake, annexed to it the figure of the Lac. nihUica, L. Rondelet has applied this name to the great Stellio of Egypt, or Caudiverhera of Belon, mistaking the ear, in the figure, for a gill opening. Between Rondelet and Linna-us, then, Cordylus has passed for the synonymes of the Cuuduerhcra. Its special application to the above subgenus is altogether arbitrary. Merrem has clianged it to Zondrus. t Daudin lias referred several synonymes of Stellio to Cordylus, just as he has referred to Stellio several synonymes of the Geckotle. There are four species in France: Cord, griseus, Nob. Seb. I, Ixxxiv, 4;— the C. niger, the ridges of whose scales are more blunt, Seb. II, Ixii, 5; — the C.dvrsalis; — the C.microlepidolns. There are also some Cordyles at the C;ape of G. Ilfcpe, whose scales (even those on the tail) are almost destitute of spines (C. lavigatus. Nob.) t The Stellio of the Latins was a spotted Lizard that lived in holes of walls. It was considered the enemy of man, venomous and cunning. Hence the term stelUo- 22 REPTILES. there with scales larger than the others, and sometimes spiny; small groups of spines surrounding the ear; no pores on the thighs; the tail long, and terminating in a point. But one species is known. Lac. stellio, L. ; the Stellio of the Levant; Seb. I, cvi, f. 1, 2; and better Tournef. Voy. au Lev. I, 120; and Geoff. Descr. de I'Egypte, Rept. II, 3 ; Koscordylos, of the modern Greeks ; Har- dun of the Arabs. (The Common Stellio). A foot long; of an olive colour shaded with black; very common throughout the Levant, and particularly so in Egypt. According to Eelon, it is the faeces of this animal which are collected for the druggists under the names of cordylea, crocodilea or stercus lacerti, which were formerly in vogue as a cosmetic ; but it would rather appear that the antients attributed this name and quality to those of the Monitor. The Mahometans kill the present Stellio wherever they see it, because, as they say, it mocks them by bowing the head, as they do when at prayer. DORYPHORUS, CuV. The pores wanting as in the Stellios, but the body is not bristled with ismall groups of spines*. UROMASTixf, Cuv. — Stellions Batards, Daud. Mere Stellios, whose head is not enlarged, all the scales of their body being small, smooth, and uniform, and those of the tail still larger and more spiny than in the common Stellio; but there are none beneath. There is a series of pores under their thighs. Stellio spinipes, Daud. ; Fouetfe-queue d'Egt/pte, Geoff. Rept. d'Egyp. pi. II, f. 2. (The Common Uromastyx). Two or three feet long; the body inflated; altogether of a fine grass green; small spines on the thighs; the tail only spiny above. Found in the deserts which surround Egypt ; it was formerly described by Belon, who says, but without adducing proof, that it is the terrestrial Cro- codile of the antients;];. Agama §, Daud. The Agamse bear a great resemblance to the cammon Stellios, parti- cularly in their inflated head ; but the scales of their tail, which are im- nate, or Fraud in the contract. It was probably the Tarentole, or the Gecko tubercuteux of the south of Europe, Gecl-otte of Lacep., as conjectured by various authors, and lately by M. Schneider. There is nothing to justify its application to the present species; Belon, if I am not mistaken, was the first who abused it thus. * Stellio brecicaudatus, Seb. IJ, Ixxii, 6; Daud. IV, pi. 47. St. aztireiis, Daud., id. 46. f Caudirerbera and the Greek ouromastix, are not ancient names. They were coined by Ambrosinus for the great Egyptian species, of which Belon had said '" Cauda atrocissinie diterbcrare creditur." Linnaeus was the first who applied it to a Gecko, and other autliors have given it to different Sauvians. Add, Urom. griseu.s of New Holland; — Ur. reliculatus of Bengal; — Ur. acantinurus, Bell, Zool. Jour. I, -iS?, if it be a distinct species. N.B. The flat- tailed Stellio of New Holland, Daud., is a Phyllurus. X It is a Uromastix that is described by M. de Lacep. Rept. II, 497, under the iianie of Quetzpaleo, which is that of anotlier Saurian, to be spoken of hereafter. — ■ Add, Ur. ornalus, liuppel. § Jgama<, from the Greek agamos, (bachelor). Why Linnaeus gave this name to SAURIANS. ^^ bricate and not verticillate, distinguish them from that genus. Their maxiUary teeth are nearly simihn-, and there are none m the palate. In the Common Agam^, The scales are raised in points or tubercles; spines either singly or in .roups bristle on various parts of the body, the vicinity of the ear espe- cially A row of them is sometimes seen on the neck, but witliout iorm- ing that palisado-like crest which characterizes the Calotes. The skin of the throat is lax, plaited transversely, and capable of being inflated. In some species are found femoral pores. The Aq. barbata, N., (The Ocellated Agama), is very remarkable for its size and extraordinary figure; a suite of large spiny scales extends along its back and tail in transverse bands, and approximate it to the Stellios. The throat, which can be greatly inflated, is covered with elongated and pointed scales, which make for it a sort of beard. Similar scales bristle on the flanks, and form two oblique crests behind the ears; yellowish spots edged with black under the belly. We must not confound with it the Lac. muricata, Sh. ; the Muricated Agama of the same country, Gen. Zool. Vol. Ill, part 1, pi. Ixv, f. 11; White, p. 244, in this the raised scales are disposed in longitudinal bands, between which are two series of spots paler than the ground, which is a blackish brown. It usually attains a large size. Other species have no femoral pores. Aq.colonorum,Tym^.', Seb. I, cvii, 3*. (The Colonial Agama). Brownish, with a long tail; a small row of short spmes on the neck; from Africa, and not, as is asserted, from Guiana. There is a smaller Agama at the Cape, with a moderate tail, varied with brown and yellowish, bristled above with raised and pointed scales, the Ay. aculeata, Merr.f; Seb. I, viii, 6, Ixxxui, one of these Lizards, it is impossible to conjecture; Daudin has extended it to the whole of the subgenus to which this species belongs, and tlunka that Agama is the name given to it in the country of which it is a native. A new species called iorquata has lately been described by Messrs Peale and Green, Jour. Acad. Nat. Sc. Philad. Vol. VI, p. 231, from Mexico, which they con- sider as approaching the mgricollis, Spix.— Eng. Ed. * Nothing can equal the confusion of the synonymes quoted by authors with respect to the difterent species of Lizards, and chiefly under divers ^ga^/^, Calotes and Slellios. The Agama, for instance, Daudin quotes from Ginelm, Seb. 1, cvii, 1 and 2, which are Stellios; Sloane, Jam. II, cclxxiii, 2, which is &n Anohs, Ldw ccxlv 2 which is also an Anolis; and the same fig. is again quoted by him and Gmel for the Polycluus. Shaw even copies it to represent that same animal, witli which it has nothing in common. Seb. I, cvii, 3, which is the true Ag colonorum, Daud., is cited by Merrem as Ag. superciliosa ; and Seb. I, cix, 6, which is his aculeata. is quoted as orbicularis, &c. + The Agame a pierreries, Daud. IV, 410; Seb. I, viii, 6, is merely the young of this spiny Agama of the Cape, whose colours are more various than those ot the adult. MdthcAg.sombreiAs.atra),Daud.lU,U9, rough, blackish ; a yellowish line along the backi-tlie Ag. ombre (Lac. umbra) Daud. which is not the Lac. umbra, Lin., but distinguished from it by five lines of very small spines, which extend along the back, &c. 2i 1 and 2, cix, 6; its belly sometimes assumes an inflated form, wliicli leads to the Tapayes — Agames Orbiculaires, Daud. in part, Whicli are mere Agamse, with an inflated abdomen and a short and thire tail. Such is Lae. orbicularis, L. ; Tapayaxin of Mexico, Hern, 327. The' hack is spinous, and the belly sprinkled with blackish points*. Trapelus, Cuv. The Trapeli or ^Mutable Agama= have the form and teeth of tlie Ag-aniK'r but the scales are small and without spines; no pores on the thighs. Trap. jEgyptius; Le Changeant d'Egypte, Geoff, Rep. d'Eg. pi. V, f. 3, 4. (The IMutable Agama). The adult, Daud. Ill, xlv, 1, under the name of Orbicular, is a little animal whose body is also sometimes inflated, and remarkable for changing its colours even more suddenly than the Chameleon. When young, it is en- tirely smooth ; there are some scales a little larger scattered among- the others on the body of the adult f. Leiolepis, Cuv. Have the teeth of the Agamas, the head less inflated, and are completely covered with very small, smooth, and compact scales. Pores on the thighs J. The Tropidolepis, Cuv. Are similar to the Agams in teeth and form, but regularly covered with imbricated and carinated scales. The series of pores are strongly marked §, The Leposoma, Spix. — Tropidosaurus, Boie, Only differ from Tropidolepis, by having no pores |[. Calotes**, Cuv. The Calotes differ from the Agamse in being regularly covered with scales, arranged like tiles, frequently carinated and terminating in a point * I do not (hir-.ik the subgeiuis of the Tapayes can be preserved: the species of Hernandez {Lac. orbicularis, L.), Hem., p. 327, does not appear to difter from the Agama cormtta of Harlan, Phil. Ac' Nat. 8c. IV, pi. xlv, or, if at all, only from the sex. Daudin has put in its place, torn. Ill, pi. xlv, f 1, the adult of the Tap. tegJiptius. \ It is difficult to establish precise limits between this subgenus and certain short, thick Agamne, that bave but few spines. X There is a species in Cochin China that is blue, with white stripes and spots, and a long tail {Leil. gnttalus, Cuv.) § A^j. ruidulata, Daud., a species that is found throughout America, remarkable for a white cross under the throat, on a black-blue gi-ound. The Ag. nigricollaris, Spix, XVI, 2, and cyclnrw, XVIII, f. 1, are at least closely allied to it II Spix has not expressed himself with precision in saying that the scales of his hposoma are verticillate, and this it is which has deceived M. Fitzinger. The genus Tropidosaurus was made by Boie from a small species from Cochin China, which is in the Cabinet du Roi. ** Piiuy says that the StcUio of the Latins wa« called by the Greeks Gakotes, SAURI/VNS. 25 on the body as well as the limbs and tail, which is very long; those on the middle of the back are more or less turned up, and compressed into st)ines, formuio- a crest of variable extent. Tiiey have no dewlaps or visible pores on the thighs, which, added to their teeth, distinguish them from the Iguana?. The most common species, Lac. calotes, L. ; Seb. I, Ixxxix, 2; xciii, 2; xcv, 3 and 4; Daud. Ill, xliii; J (jama ophiomachus, Merr., is of a pretty light blue, with transverse white streaks on the sides; there are two rows of spines behind the ear. From the East Indies. It is called a Chameleon in the Moluccas, although it does not change its colours. Its eggs are fusiform*. The LopiiYRUS, Dumeril, Have the scales of the body similar to those of the Agamae; there is also a crest of palisado-like scales still higher than that of the Calotes. The tail is compressed, and the femoral pores are wanting. A remark- able species is, Agama gioanteaj-, Kuhl. ; Seb. I, c. 2, whose dorsal crest is placed very high on the neek, and is formed of several rows of ver- tical scales ; two bony ridges, one on each side, extend from the muzzle to the eye, where they terminate in a point, and join on the temple. This singular Saurian appears to belong to India. The GONOCEPHALUS, Katljp., Are closely allied to Lophyrus; their cranium also forms a sort of disk, by means of a ridge, which terminates in a notch above each eye. There is a dewlap and a crest on the neck. The tympanum is visible \. Colotes, and Jskalabotes. It was, as we have seen, the Gcchotfe of Lacep. Its ap- plication, by Liniueus, to I.ac. calotes, is arbitrary, and was suggested to bini by tseba. Spix comprises our Calotes in his genus Lophyrus, which is not the same as that of Dunieril. * Add, the ^u-. guflurosa, Merr., or cristatella, Kuhl.; blue, without bands, and small scales on the back; Seb. I, Ixxxix, 1; — the Ag. ciistata, JMerr., Seb. I, xciii, 4, and II, Ixxvi, 5, a reddish brown, with blackish brown scattered spots, of which the Agame arlequiiie, Daud. Ill, xliv, is the young; — the Ag. vultuosa, Harl. Phil. Ac. Nat. Sc. IV, xix («). All these species are from the East Indies; the Lophyrus ochrocollaris and margnritacetis, Spix, XII, 2, are American Calotes; the first is the same as the Aguma picla, Pr. Max.; the Lop)i. pantheia, Spix, pi. xxiii, f. 1, is the young of the same. Add to these American Calotes, Loph. rhombifvr, Spix, xi, of which the Loph. abontdxillaris, Id. XXIII, f. 2, is the young; — Ijoph. auronitens, Spix, pi. xiii. We might separate from the other Calotes a species from Cochin China, with a smooth back, without any visible scales; the bellj-, limbs, and tail co- vered with cariiiated scales {Cul. lepidogaster, Nob.); the Ag. catenata, Pr. Max. liv. V, may belong to this group. N.L). The designer of Seba's plates has given to most of his Iguana, Agamae, Calotes, &c., extensible and forked tongues, drawn from imagination. t It is difficult to imagine the reason that induced Kuhl to call this Saurian gigantic, as it is not larger than its most closely allied Agamae and Calotes. X Isis, 1825, 1, p. 590, pi. iii. g^ («) Major Le Comte seems to have ascertained that the Ag. vultuosa is the young of another species. — Eng. Ed. 26 Lyriocephalus, Men., Unite with tlie characters of Lophyrus; a tympanum concealed under the skin and muscles, like that of the Chameleon : they also have a dorsal crest and a carinated tail. In the species kno\ra, Lyrio marcjaritaceus, Merr. ; Laeerta scu- tata, L. ; Seb. cix, c, the bony crest of the eye-brows is still larger than in the Ag. gigantea, and terminates behind, on each side, in a sharp point. Large scales are scattered among the small ones on the body and limbs ; imbricated and carinated scales on the tail ; a soft, though scaly enlargement on the end of the muzzle. This truly singular species is found in Bengal and other parts of India*. It feeds on grain. Brachylophus, Cuv. Have small scales ; the tail somewhat compressed : a slightly salient crest on the neck and back; a small dewlap, a series of pores on each thigh, and, in a word, a strong resemblance to the Iguanse ; but they have no palatine teeth; those of the jaws are denticulate. Such is L'Iguane a bandes, Brong., Essai et Mem. des Sav. Etr. I, pi. X, f. 5. (The Banded Iguana). From India. It is a deep blue, with light blue bands. Physignathus, Cuv. Have, with the same teeth, the same scales and pores; the head very ttiuch enlarged behind, and without the dewlap ; a crest of large pointed scales on the back and tail, which is strongly compressed. Ph. cocincinus, Nob., is a large species from Cochin China; blue, with stout scales, and some spines on tlie enlargements of the sides of the head. It lives on fruit, nuts, &c. IsTiURUS, Cuv. — LoPHURAf, Groj/. The distinguishing character of this genus consists in an elevated and trenchant crest, which extends along a part of the tail, and which is sup- ported by the high spinous apophyses of the vertebra; ; this crest is scaly like the rest of the body ; the scales on the belly and tail are small, and * From this Lyriocephalus, the Pneustes of Merrem, and the Purynocephalus ■of Kaup, Fitzinger forms a family called Pneustoidea, which he approximates to that of the Chameleons. The Pneusles depend altogether on a vague and imperfect description of Azzara, II, 401, on which, also, Daudin had established his Jginne a queue pre iiante. III, 440; Azzar. says that its ear is not visible, probably because it is very small. The Phuvnocepualus is composed of the Luc. guttata and the Lac. uralemis, Lepechin. Voy. I, p. 317, pi. xxii, f. 1 and 2, which form but one species. Kaup asserts that it has no external tympanum (Isis of 1825, I, 591). Not having seen these animals, I hesitate as to their classification. Another subgenus vnW probably have to be made of the Lezard a oreilles, {Lac. aurita, Pall.), Daud. Ill, xlv, remarkable for the faculty it possesses of inflating the two sides of the head under the ears: I have not, however, been able to examine it. I have changed tliis name of Lopfmra, which is too much like that of Lopliyrus. SAURIANS. 27 approacii somewhat to a square form ; the teeth are strong, compressed, and without denticulations : there are none in the palate : there is a series of femoral pores. The skin of the throat is smooth and lax, but without forming a dewlap. Lac^ amboinensis, Gm. ; the Amhoina Lophura, Le Porte- Crcte, Lacep. ; Schlosser, Monog. cop. Bonnat. Erpet. pi. v, f. 2. The crest confined to the origin of the tail; some spines on the front of the back; lives in water, or on the shrubs about its shores; feeds on seeds and worms. We have discovered in its stomach both leaves and insects. It is sometimes found four feet in length. Its flesh is edible. Draco*, L, The Dragons are distinguished at the first glance, from all other Sau- rians, by their first six false ribs, which, instead of encircling the abdo- men, extend outwards in a straight line, and support a production of the skin, forming a kind of wing that may be compared to that of a Bat, but which is not connected with the four feet; it acts like a parachute in sup- porting tliem when they leap from one branch to another, but has not suffi- cient power to resist the air and raise them like a bird. Besides, the Dragons are small animals, completely invested with little imbricated scales, of which those on the tail and limbs are carinated. Their tongue is fleshy, and somewhat extensible. A long pointed dewlap hangs under their throat, supported by the tail of the os hyoides ; there are also two smaller ones on the sides attached to the horns of the same bone. The tail is long; there are no porous granules on the thighs, and there is a little notch on the nape of the neck. Four small incisors are found in each jaw, and on each side a long and pointed canine, and twelve triangu- lar and trilobate grinders. They consequently have the scales and dewlap of the Iguanse, with the head and teeth of the Stellio. All the known species are from the East Indies ; they were con- founded for a great length of time, but Daudin has accurately deter- mined their specific difFerencesf . Sitana:J:, Cuv. Teeth of the Agamas, and four canini; body and limbs covered with imbricated and carinated scales ; no pores on the thighs ; but their ribs are not extended outwards. They are distinguished by an enormous dew- lap which reaches to the middle of the belly, and which is twice the height of the animal. Sit. ponticeriana, Cuv., is the only known species, and is from • The term drakon^ Gr.> draco, Lat, generally designated a large Serpent; Dragons, with a crest or beard, are spoken of by antient writers, a description which can only apply to the Iguana; Lucian is the first who mentions /'V)//«^Z)ra^o«*, alluding, no doubt, to the pretended Flying Serpents treated of by Herodotus; St. Augustine, and other subsequent authors, ever after described Dragons as having wings. t The Dragon ruye; — the Drag, vert, Daud. Ill, xli; — the Drag, bnuu X aUan is the name of the species on the Coast of Coromandel. 28 REPTILFS. the East Indies. It is small, fawn-coloured, and has a series of broad, brown, rhomboidal spots along the back. It is perhaps to this tribe of the Agamte that we should approximate a very extraordinary reptile, which is only to be found among the fossils of the old Jura limestone formation ; Pterodactylus*, Cuv. It had a short tail, an extremely long neck, and a very large head ; the jaws armed with equal and pointed teeth ; but its cliief character consisted in the excessive elongation of the second toe of the fore-foot, which was more than double the length of the trunk, and most probably served to support some membrane which enabled the animal to fly, like that upheld by the ribs of the Dragon. The second section of the Iguanian family, that of the Iguanians proper, is distinguished from the first by having teeth in the palate. Iguana, Cfw. The Iguanas, or Guanas, properly so called, have the body and tail covered with small imbricated scales; along the entire length of the back, they have a range of spines, or rather of recurved, compressed, and pointed scales; beneath the throat a pendent, compressed dewlap, the edge of which is supported by a cartilaginous process of the hyoid bone ; a series of porous tubercles on their thighs, as in the true Lizards; and their head covered with plates. Each jaw is surrounded with a row of compressed, triangular teeth, whose cutting edge is denticulate ; there are also two small rows of the same on the posterior edge of the palate. Ig. tuherculafa, Laur. ; Lac. Igvana, L. ; Seb. 1, xcv, 1, xcvii, 3, xcviii, 1. (The Common American Iguana-j-). Yellowish green above, marbled with pure green; the tail annulated with brown; preserved in spirits it appears blue, changing to green and violet, and dotted with black ; paler beneath ; a crest of large spiniform dorsal scales; a large round plate under the tympanum at the angle of the jaws; sides of the neck furnished with pyramidical scales scattered among the others; anterior edge of the dewlap denticulate like the back; from four to five feet in length: common in every part of South America, where its flesh is esteemed delicious, although un- wholesome, particularly for those who have contracted syphilis, the suff'erings peculiar to which it revives. It lives mostly on trees, oc- casionally visits the water, and feeds on fruit, grain, and leaves; the female lays in the sand eggs the size of those of a Pigeon, agreeable to the taste, and almost without white. Lhjuane ardoise, Dand. ; Seb. I, xcv, 2, xcvi, 4. (The Slate- coloured Iguana). A uniform violet blue, paler beneath; the dorsal * See my Oss. Foss. 2d ed. Vol. V, p. 2, pi. xxiii. f The JMexicaiis call it Aquaqiietzpallia, Hernand. ; the Brazilians, Senemhi, Marcgr. SAURIAXS. 29 spines smaller; in other respects similar to the preceding. Both of them have an oblique whitish line on the shoulder. The latter is from the same country as the former, and is probably a mere variety of age 6r sex*. Ig. nudicollis, Cuv. ; Mus, Besler. tab. XIII, f. 3; Ig. delicatis- sima, Laur. (The naked Iguana), resembles the common one, parti- cularly in its dorsal crest, but has no infra-tympanal plate, nor the scattered tubercles on the sides of the neck. The upper part of the cranium is furnished witli arched plates; the occiput is tuberculous; the dewlap is moderate, and has but few indentations, and those only in the anterior part. Laurenti says its habitat is India, but he is mistaken ; we have received it from the Brazils, and from Guade- loupe! . Ig. cornuta, Cuv. ; Ig. cornu de St. Dominigue, Lacep. Bonnat. Encycl. Method. Erpetolog. Lezards, pi. iv, f. 4. (The Horned Iguana). Very similar to the Common iguana, and still more so to the preceding species, but is distinguished by a conical osseous point between the eyes, and by two scales raised up over the nostrils; the infra-tympanal plate is deficient as well as the tubercles on the neck, but the scales on the jaws are embossed. Ig. cychlura, Cuv. (The Carolina Iguana). Destitute, like the . two preceding species, of infra-tympanal plate or small spines on the ueck, but carinated scales, rather larger than the rest, form cinc- tures on the tail at intervals;];. Ophryessa, Bote, Have small imbricated scales ; a slightly salient dorsal crest, extending on the tail, which is compressed; denticulated maxillary teeth, and teeth in the palate: all these circumstances approximate them to the Iguang, ; but they have neither dewlap nor femoral pores. Lac. superciliosa, L. ; Seb. I, cix, 4 ; Lophyrus xiphurus, Spix, X, so called from a membranous carina, which forms its eye-brow, is an American species, of a fawn-colour, with a festooned brown band along each flank. Basiliscus, Dau'J. The Basilisks have no pores, but have palatine teeth, like the Ophry- essa; the body is covered with small scales; on the back and tail a con- tinuous and elevated crest supported by the spinous apophyses of the vertebras, like that on the tail of the Istiuri. • I have every reason to think that tliis same conclusion should be extended to the Iguanas of Spix, pi. v, vi, vii, viii, and ix: they seem to me to be nothing more than various ages of the common species. f I suspect the Amblyrhynclitts cristafiis, Bell. Zool Journ. 1, Supp. p. xii, is a badly prepared specimen of my Ig. nudkoUis. X It also appears to me that this Tgiinnn is the same which Dr. Harlan (Journ. Acad. Nat. Sc. of Phil. IV, pi. xv,) calls Cijchhira carbmla; but in this case there must be some mistake, as in the Amblyrhynchus, relative to the palatine teeth. These teeth exist in all my Iguanas. so REPTILES. The species known, Laeerta basiliscus, L. ; Seb. I, c. 1 ; Daud. Ill, xlii, (Basilisk), is recognized byjthe hood-like membranous pro- minence of its occiput, that is supported by cartilage. It attains a large size, is bluish, with two white bands, one behind the eye, the other the back of the jaws, which are lost towards the shoulder*. It is from Guiana, and feeds on grain. POLYCHRUS, CuV. Tlie Marbled Lizards have the teeth in the palate as in the Iguana, and femoral pores, though the latter are not strongly marked; but the body is covered with small scales, and is destitute of a crest. The head is co- vered with plates ; tail long and slender ; throat very extensible, so that a dewlap is formed at the will of the animal, which, like the Chameleon, possesses the faculty of changing colour; the lungs, consequently, are very voluminous, occupy nearly the whole trunk, and are divided into several branches : the false ribs, like those of the chameleon, surround the abdomen by uniting so as to form perfect circles. Lac. marmorata, L.; Marhre de la Guiane, Lacep. I, xxvi; Seb. II, Ixxvi, 4; Spix, XIV. Reddish-grey, marbled with irregular transverse bands of a brown red, sometimes mixed with blue ; the tail very long. Common in Guianaf. EcPHiMOTUS, Fitzinger. The Marbled Lizards of Guiana have the teeth and pores of a Poly- chrus, but small scales on the body only ; on the tail, which is very thick, they are large, pointed, and carinate; the head is covered with plates. Their form is somewhat short, and flattened, more like that of certain Agamae than of a Polychrus. The most common species, jlgama tuberculata, Spix, XV, 1, or Tropidurus torquatus, Pr. Max. J, is ash-coloured, sprinkled with whitish drops, and has a black semi-collar on each side of the neck. It inhabits Brazil. Oplurus, Cuv. Teeth of a Polychrus, and the form of an Agama, but no pores on the thighs, and the pointed and carinated scales of the tail ally it to that of a Stellio; the dorsal scales also are pointed and carinate, but very small. One species only is known. Opl. torquatus, Cuv. (The Black-collared Grey Quetzpaleo §). A black half- collar on each side of the neck. From Brazil. • It is a mistake to believe, on the authority of Seba, that tbis species is tbe Basi- lisk of the Indies. f Add, Pol. acutirosfris, Spix, XIV. X The Tropidurus of Pr. Max. de Wied. is not, as he imagined, the Quetxpaleo of Seba, although it is also marked with black semi-collars. § The name of Quetzpaleo, given by Seba to the above species, seems to be a cor- ruption of the Mexican Aqua quetz pallia, which appears to be a name of the Iguana; the Quetzpaleo of I;acep., Rept. 4to. II, 497, is a Uromastix; but the figure quoted is that of Seba's animal. SAUR1AN.S. SI Anolius*, Cuv. The Anolis, together with the whole of the forms of the Iguanas, par- ticularly of the marhled genus, have a very peculiar distinguishing cha- racter: the skin of their toes is spread beneath the last phalanx but two into an oval disk, which is striated transversely on the under part; this disk assists them in adhering to various surfaces, to which they can also very effectually cling, by means of their very hooked nails. Further, they have the body and tail uniformly shagreened with small scales, and the greater proportion of them have a dewlap or goitre under the throat, which they can inflate and vary in colour when excited either by anger or desire. Several of them enjoy the faculty of changing the colour of their skin to an equal degree with the chameleon. Their ribs form entire cir- cles like those of the Polychrus and Cameleon. Their teeth are trench- ant and denticulate, as in Polychrus and Iguana, and they are even found in the palate. The skin of their tail is doubled into slight folds or de- pressions, each of which contains some circular rows of scales. This genus appears to be peculiar to America. The tail of some is ornamented with a crest supported by the spinous apophyses of the vertebras, as in Istiurus and Basiliscusf. An. velifer, Cuv. (The Great-Crested Anolis). A foot long; a crest on the tail occupying half its length, supported by from twelve to fifteen rays ; the dewlap extends under the belly. Its colour is a blackish ash-blue. From Jamaica and the other Antilles. We have found berries in its stomach. Lac. bimaculatra, Sparm. (The Little-Crested Anolis). Half the size of the preceding; the same crest; greenish, dotted with brown about the muzzle and on the flanks. From North America and several of the Antilles. An. equestris, Merr. Fawn-colour, shaded with an ashy lilac; a white band on the shoulder ; tail so fleshy that the apophyses of its crest cannot be perceived; a foot long. Others again have a round tail, or one that is merely a little com- pressed. Their species are numerous, and have been partly con- founded under the names of Roquet, Goitreux, Romje-gorge, and Anolis, — Lac. strumosa and buHaris, L. They inhabit the hot parts of America and the Antilles, and change colour with astonishing fa- cility, particularly in hot weather. When angry their dewlap be- comes inflated and as red as a cherry. These animals are not so large as the Grey Lizard of Europe, and feed most commonly on in- * Anoli, Anoalli, the name of these Saurians in the Antilles; Gronovius, very gra- tuitously, has applied it to the Ameiva. Rochefort, from whose work it was taken, only gives a copy of the Teyuaguaqit of Marcgrave, or the Great Sauvegarde of Guiana. Nicholson seems to assert that this name is applied to several species, and the one he describes appeirs to be the An. roquet, which, in fact, was sent to the Mu- seum from Martinique under the name of /InoUs. M. M. de Jonnes has even ascer- tained that it is the only one by which it is now known. t They have been confounded with each other, and with some of the following ones, under the names of Luc. principalis and bimaculata. sects, which they actively pursue ; it is said that whenever two of them meet, a furious combat inevitably ensues. The species of the Antilles, or the Roquet of Lacep. I, pi. xxvii, which is more particularly the Lac. hullaris, Gni., has a short muz- zle speckled v.-ith brown, and salient eye-lids; its usual colour is greenish. Its round tail excepted, it closely resembles the Lac. bi- maculata. The Anolis raye, Daud. IV, xlviii, 1, only differs from it in a series of black lines on the flank. It seems to be identical with the L^ac. strumosa, L. Seb. II, xx, 4, and is somewhat longer than the preceding species. The Carolina Anolis, Iguane goitreux, Brongn. Catesb. I, lx.vi, is of a fine golden green; a black band on the temple and a long and flattened muzzle give it a peculiar physiognomy, and render it a very distinct species*. It is to this family of the Iguanae with palatine teeth, that belongs an enormous fossil reptile, known by the name of the Maestricht Animal, and for which the new name of Mosasaurus has recently been coinedf . * Add the Anolis a points hlancs, Daud. IV, xlviii, 2; — An. viridis, Pr. Max. lib. VI; — An. gracilis, Id., and several other species, of which, unfortunately, I have no figures to cite. f See, upon this animal, my Oss. Foss. 5th vol. part 2. Amongst the fossiles, large reptiles have been discovered in a fossil state, which it appears should be ap- proximated to this family, but their characters are not sufficiently known to enable us to class them with precision. Such are the Geosaurus discovered by Scfemmer- ing, the Megalosauuus (a) of M. Buckland, the Iguanodon (/;) of M. Mantell, &c. I have treated of them more at length in the volume referred to. |^° (a) Megalosaurus is the name of a genus first established by Dr. Buckland, who found various bony remains of what he considers to be the animal of the large dimensions, described by him under that title. Teeth, vertebrae, a coracoid bone, ribs, and a supposed pelvis, described as belonging to an animal of this genus by Mr. Mantell, have been found in Tilgate Forest. The doubts which are entertained by Cuvier as to the correctness of the opinions expressed by Dr. Buckland and Mr. Mantell, concerning the existence of such an animal, are founded on the circum- stance of these fragments having been found promiscuously intermingled with those of crocodiles and other oviparous reptiles. Cuvier is of opinion that this circum- stance does not necessarily imply that the bones in question belong to animals of the same kind as those amongst which they had been found. The Megalosaurus, ac- cording to Dr. Buckland, was a gigantic Saurian reptile, entirely distinct from the crocodiles, but approximated very closely to the Monitors and Iguanas. ^f° (h) The Iguiinodon is the name of a fossil animal, which has been described, in its complete state, by Mr. Mantell, from the evidences aflbrded by the mateiials of its osseous structure, which were found in the Tilgate Forest strata. Some of the teeth of this animal were first discovered in the year 1822, by Mrs. Mantell, a lady who forms, with two or three others of her sex, in this country, a .small but liighly distinguished group of laborious and successful female geologists, whose assistance in promoting science has become a subject of just pride to every Englishman. Sub- sequently, a series of these teeth was found, shewing every gradation of form, from the most perfect state of the tooth in the young aninral, to the last stage in which it appears— a bony stump worn away by long employment in mastication. The struc- ture of these teeth was so very remarkable, that Mr. JIantell was induced to send them to Paris, by the hands of Mr. Lyall, for the purpose of having them submitted to Cuvier's inspection. In the private communication made by that illustrious natu- ralist, after he had examined them, to Mr. Mantell, he acknowledged that he was al- tOgetLtr unactjuainted with the teeth; that they could not have belonged to a carni- SAURIANS. 33 FAMILY IV. THE GECKOS. This family is composed of nocturnal lizards, which are so similar that they may be left in one genus. Gecko*, Daud. — Ascalobotes, Cuv, — Stellio, Schi. The Geckos are Saurians which do not possess the elongated graceful form of those of which we have hitherto spoken, but, on the contrary, are flattened, the head particularly, and have their feet moderate, and the toes almost equal ; their gait is a heavy kind of crawling ; their very large eyes, the pupil of which contracts at the approach of light, like that of a cat, render them nocturnal animals, which secrete themselves during the day in dark places. Their very short eyelids are completely withdrawn be- tween the eye and the orbit, which gives them a different aspect from other Saurians. Their tongue is fleshy and non-extensible; their tym- • Gecko, a name given to a species in India, in imitation of its cry, just as another one is termed Tockaie at Siam, and a third Geitje, at the Capej atkalagotes, the Greek name of the Geckotte, Lacep. vorous animal, but, from the small degree of complication about them, the dentations of their edges, and the thin laminae of enamel which invested them, he concluded that they belonged to reptiles. From tlieir external appearance, Cuvier would have taken them for the teeth of fishes, analogous to the Tctrodons, or Diodons; but the inter- nal structure was altogether different. " Have we not in these teeth," writes Cuvier, " an herbivorous reptile; and, as now we find the species of largest dimensions amongst the herbivorous tribes of the land mammalia, may it not have been also the case, that, amongst the reptiles of former times, the largest were also sustained upon ve- getable food? A portion of the large bones in your possession belongs to this animal, A^hich is, up to the present time, the only species of its genus. Time alone will con- firm or contradict this suggestion; for, it is not impossible, that a portion of the ske- leton, joined to pieces of the jaws, may be found with teeth. If you could obtain only a very small portion of the jaw with adherent teeth, I think you would be able to resolve the problem." Mr. Mantell's account of the Iguanoion represents it to have been a horned animal of very large size. "The gigantic Megalosaurus, and yet more gigantic Iguanodon," observes Mr. Mantell, " to whom the groves of palms and arborescent ferns would be mere beds of reeds, must have been of such prodi- gious magnitude, that the existing animal creation presents us with no fit objects of comparison. Imagine an animal of the lizard tribe, three or four times as large as the largest crocodile; having jaws, with teeth equal in size to the incisors of the rhi- noceros; and crested with horn: such a creature must have been the Iguanodon!" The enormous size of the anunal is thus given from a scientific calculation by Mr. Mantell :— " Length of the animal, from the snout to the tip of the tail . . 70 feet, head ......... 4^ feet. body 13 feet. tail 52i feet. Height from the ground to the top of the head 9 feet. Circumference of the body ........ 14 J feet. Length of the thigh and leg 8 ft. 2 in. Circumference of the thigh ........ 7i feet. Length of the hind foot, from the heel to the point of the long toe . 6$ feet." VOL. 11. b 34 REPTILES. panum somewhat sunk ; their jaws every where furnished with a range of very small closely-joined teeth; their palate without teeth; their skin, which is studded above with very small granular scales, among which are often found larger tubercles, has beneath scales somewhat smaller, which are flat and imbricated. Some species have the femoral pores. There are circular plaits on the tail as on that of an Anolis, but, when broken, it grows without these folds, and even without tubercles where these might be natural to them — circumstances which have led to an undue multipli- cation of species. This genus is numerous and disseminated throughout the warm portions of both continents. The melancholy and heavy air of the Gecko, and a certain resemblance it bears to the Salamander and the Toad, have ren- dered it the object of hatred, and caused it to be considered as venomous, but of this there is no real proof. The toes of most of them are widened along the whole or part of their length, and furnished beneath with regular plaits of skin, which enable them to adhere so closely, that they are sometimes seen crawling along ceilings. Their nails are variously retractile, and preserve their point and edge, which, conjointly with their eyes, authorize us to say, that the Gecko, as compared to other Saurians, is what the Cats are to the Carni- vorous Mammalia; but these nails vary, according to the species, and in some are entirely wanting. The first and most numerous division of the Geckos, which I will call the PLATYDACTYLI. The Platydactyles have the toes widened throughout their whole length, and covered beneath with transverse scales. Some of these Platydactyle Geckos have no vestige of a nail, and their thumbs are very small. They are beautiful species, completely covered with tubercles, and painted with the most lively colours. Those known are from the Isle of France. In some the femoral pores are deficient*. One of them, G. inumjtds, Cuv., is violet above, white beneath, with a black line on the flank. Another, G. ocellatns, Oppel., is grey, completely covered with ocellated brown spots with a white centre. In some again these pores are very strongly marked f. Such is the Gecho cepedien, Peron, of the Isle of France ; pale yellow, mar- bled with blue ; a white line along each flank. I am not sure, however, that the pores in this first subgenus are not indications of the sex of the animals. Other Platydactyli have no nail to their thumb, or to the second and fifth toes of all the feet; the femoral pores are also deficient J. * M. Gray appropriates the name of Platydactylus to this division. + It is from this division that M. Gray has made liis genus Phehuma; the Laceria gietje of Sparm. should belong to it. They are considered very venomous at the Cape. X This division forms the genus Tarentola of Gray. SAURIANS. 3^ Such is, Gecko fasciculariSj'Da.ud., Lacert. facetanus, Aldrov. 654, Tarente of Provence ; Tarentola, or rather Terrentola of the Italians ; Stellio of the ancient Latins; GeeJcotte, Lacep.'; (The Wall Gecko); of a dark grey ; rough head ; the whole upper surface of the body studded with tubercles, each of which consists of three or four smaller ones; the scales on the under part of the tail similar to those on the belly. It is a hideous animal, which hides in holes of walls, heaps of stones, &c., covering its body with dust and filth. The same species ap- pears to exist every where about the Mediterranean, and in Provence and Languedoc. There is a neighbouring species in Egypt and in Barbary, with simple round tubercles, which are more salient on the flanks, — G. cegypUacus, Nob. Egypt. Rept., pi. v, f. 7*. The nails are only deficient in the four thumbs of the greater number of the platydactyle Geckos. They have a range of pores before the anusf. Such are, Gecko, Lacep. I, xxix ; Stellio Gecko, Schneid. ; Le Gecko a gouttelettes, Daud. ; Seb. cviii, the whole plate. Rounded, slightly salient tubercles over the upper surface of the body, whose red ground is sprinkled with round white spots; tail furnished beneath with square and imbricated scales. Seba says it is from Ceylon, and pre- tends that it is to this identical species that the name of Gecko is applied in imitation of its cry ; but long before him it was attributed by Bontius to a species of Java. It is probable that the cry and the name are common to several species. We have ascertained that this one is found throughout the Archipelago of India. Lac. vittata, Gm. ; Le Gecko a handes; Lezard de Pandang, at Amboiile; Daud. IV, 1. Brown; a white band on the back, which bifurcates on the head and on the root of the tail; tail annulated with white. From the East Indies; found at Amboine on the branches of the shrub called the short Pandang J. There are some of these four-nailed Platydactyli whose body is edged with a horizontal membrane, and which have palmated feet. One of the most remarkable is LacJiomalocephala, Crevelt., Soc.of Nat. of Berlin, 1809, pi. viii; the sides of whose head and body are augmented by a broad mem- brane, which is scalloped into festoons on the sides of the tail. Its feet are palmated. Found in Java and Bengal §. There is another species in India with a bordered head and body, and palmated feet, but in which the festoons on the tail, and the pores near the anus, are deficient, — Pxeropleura, Horsfieldii, Gray, Zool. Jour. No. X, p. 222. Finally, some Platydactyli have no nails to all their toes. * This fig., intitled Var. du Gecko annulaire, has too many nails. t This division is the Gecko proper of M. Gray. X N. B. Daudin erroneously gives nails to the thumbs of these two Geckos. § This bordered Platydactylus forms the genus Phjchozoon of Fitzinger. M. Gray also separates his Pterofleura from them on account of the absence of the pores. 99 urttile?* There is a smooth species with palmated feet in France, — A. Leaehianus, Cuv. A second subdivision of the Geckos, which I call the Hemidactyli. The Hemidactyles have the base of the toes furnislied witli an oval disk formed beneath by a double row of scales, en chevron: from the middle of this disk rises the second phalanx, which is slender, and has the third or the nail at its extremity. The species knowTi have five nails, and a series of pores on each side of the anus. The sub-caudal scales form broad bands like those on the belly of serpents. There is one species in the south of Europe, G. verruculatus, Cuv., of a reddish-grey; the back covered with little conical tuber- cles, somewhat rounded; circles of similar tubercles round the tail; found in Italy, Sicily, and Provence, like the G. fascieularis. A very similar species, G. mabuia, Cuv., with still smaller tuber- cles, those of the tail more pointed; grey, clouded with brown; brown rings on the tail, abounds throughout the hot portions of Ame- rica, where it enters the houses. It is known in the French colonies by the name oi Mahouia des murailles*. There are others at Pondicherry and Bengal so very similar, that we are almost induced to believe that they have been carried there in vesselsf. A Hemidactylus with a bordered body, G. marginatiis, Cuv., is also found in India; its feet are not palmated; the tail is horizontally flattened, and its edges are trenchant and somewhat fringed. It was sent from Bengal by M. Duvaucel. The third division of the Geckos, which I shall call Th ECADACTYLI. The Thecadactyles have the toes widened throughout their length, and furnished beneath with transverse scales ; but these scales are divided by a deep longitudinal furrow, in which the nail can be completely concealed. In the species known to me the nails are deficient on the thumbs only; the femoral pores are wanting, and their tail is covered above and beneath with small scales. G. Icevis, D. ; StelUo perfoliatus, Schn. ; Lac. rapicauda, Gm. ; Le Gecko lisse, Daud. IV, li, (The Smooth Gecko), known in the French colonies as the Mabouia des hananiers. Grey, marbled with brown; finely granulated, but without tubercles above; small scales beneath ; its naturally long tail, which is encircled with plaits as usual, • So far as we can judge from the figure, the Thecadactylus policaris and the Gecko aculeatus, Spix, XVIII, 2 and 3, seem to be diiferent ages of this Mabouia des mu- railles. M. M. de Jonn^s has given a monograph of them, but he confounds it with different species. f To this division also belong the G. d. tubercules triedres and the G. a queue epi- ntuse of Daud.; the first is identical with the Slell. maHrilanicus ai Schn, The Slell. platyurus, Schn., is also closely allied to it. SAURIANS. 8*r is easily broken, and the new one that succeeds is sometimes consi- derably enlarged, resembling in its figure a small radish. It is from these accidental monstrosities that it has received the name of G. rapicauda*. The fourth division of the Geckos, or PxYODACTYIlf. Ptyodactyles have the ends of the toes only dilated into plates, the un- der surface of which is striated so as to resemble a fan. The middle of the plate is split, and the nail placed in the fissure. Each toe has a strongly hooked nail. The toes of some are free, and their tail round. Lac. gecko, Hasselq. ; Gecko lobatus, GeoiF. Rept. Egyp, III, 5; Stellio Hasselquistii, Schn. (The House Gecko); smooth; reddish- grey, dotted with brown; the scales and tubercles very small; com- mon in houses on the south and east of the Mediterranean. At Cairo it is called Ahou burs (the father of the leprosy), because they say that it does mischief by poisoning with its feet the food, but parti- cularly the corned provisions, to which it is exceedingly partial. In passing over the skin it occasions a redness, but this is perhaps solely owing to the fineness of its nails. Its cry somewhat resem- bles that of a frog. In others, each side of the tail is edged with a membrane, and the feet are semi-palmate ; they are probably aquatic, and are the Uroplates of Dumeril. Stellio Jimhriatus, Schn.; Le Gecko f range; Tete plate, Lac, or Famo-Cantraca of Madagascar, Brug. ; Lacep. I, xxx; Daud. IV, lii. The membrane on the sides of the tail extending along the flanks, where it is slashed and fringed. Found in Madagascar upon trees, where it leaps from branch to branch. The natives, though without any reason, hold it in great fear;|;. Lac. caudiverbera, L. ; Gecko du Perou, Feuillee, I, 319. No fringe on the sides of the body, it being confined to those of the tail, on which there is also a vertical membranous crest. Feuillee foand it in a spring in the Cordilleras. It is blackish, and more than a foot long. We may make a fifth division, — the Spheriodactyli Are certain small Geckos, the ends of whose toes terminate in a little pellet without folds, but always with retractile nails. When this pellet is double or emarginated in front, they are closely * The G. squalidiia, Herm., if not the same as the lavis, belongs to this division. The Gecko de Surinam, Daud., is only a younger and better-coloured specimeii of the lifvis. t From the Greek word pluon, fan. t According to Brugiere's description, the Sarrouhe of Madagascar has all the characters of the Famo-cantraca, except the fringe and a deficiency of the thumb in the fore feet. M. Fitzinger has taken it for his genus Sarruba. 38 REPTILES. allied to the simple Ptyodactyli. The species known are from the Cape or from India : such is the G, porphyre, Daud. Reddish-grey, marbled and dotted with brown*. Most generally the pellet is simple and round. The species are all American : such is the G. sputateur a handes, Lacep. Rept. I, pi. xxviii, f. 1. A small species, prettily marked with transverse brown bands laid on a red ground: common in the houses of St. Domingo, where it is also called the Mabouia. There is a neighbouring species in the same island, but which is of a uniform ash-colour. Id. lb. f. 2. Finally, there are some Saurians which, possessing all the characters of Geckos, have no enlargement of the toes. Their five nails, however, are retractile. Some of them have a round tail, and the toes striate beneath and in- dented along the sides, constituting the Stenodactyli. There is one in Egypt, Sten. guttatus, Egyp. Rept. pi. V. f. 2 f. Smooth, grey, sprinkled with whitish spots. Others have naked and slender toes : those which have a round tail form the Gymnodactyli of Spix. Some of these are found in America, with regular suites of small tu- bercles. The Gymnodactylus geckoides, Spix, X, viii, 1, also appears to be one of them. Others again having their tail flattened horizontally, so as to resemble the shape of a leaf, I have given the name of Phyllurus. Only one species is yet known, and that is from New HoUand, Stellio phyllurus, Schn. ; Lacerta platura, White, New South Wales, p. 246, f. 2 \. Grey, marbled with brown above ; completely covered with small pointed tubercles. We are compelled to establish a fifth Family, FAMILY V. CHAM^LEONIANS, For the single genus, Cham^leo §. Or the Chameleons, which is very distinct from all other Saurian genera, and is not even easily introduced into their series. * Daudin was mistaken in considering this Gecko as an American species, and synonymous with mabouia. t Under the improper name of Agame ponctue. It is reprodnced in the Supp. pi. 1, f. 2; and a neighbouring ^ecies, f. 4, X Referred, for some unknown reason, by Daudin to Stellio. § From Chamaileon, (Little Lion), the Grecian name of this animal. Aristotle, who uses it, has also given a perfect description of it. Hist. Ann. Lib. II, cap. xi. SAURIANS. 39 Their skin is roughened by scaly granules, their body compressed, and the back — if we may so express it — trenchant ; tail round and prehensile ; five toes to each foot, but divided into two bundles, one containing two, the other three, each bundle being united by the skin down to the nails ; the tongue fleshy, cylindrical, and extremely extensible ; teeth trilobate ; eyes large, but nearly covered by the skin, except a small hole opposite to the pupil, and possessing the faculty of moving independently of each other; no visible external ear, and the occiput pyramidically elevated. Their first ribs are joined to the sternum; the following ones are ex- tended each to its fellow on the opposite side, so as to enclose the ab- domen by an entire circle. Their lungs are so enormous, that when inflated, their body seems to be transparent, a circumstance which induced the antients to believe that they fed on air. They live on insects, which they capture with the viscid extremity of their tongue ; this is the only part of their body which has rapidity of motion, as in every thing else they are remarkable for their excessive slowness. The dimensions of their lungs probably is the source of the property of changing colour, which takes place, not, as is thought, in conformity with the hue of the bodies on which they rest, but according to their ,wants and passions. Their lungs, in fact, render them more or less transparent, compel the blood in a greater or less degree to return to the skin, and even colour that fluid more or less vividly in proportion to the quantity of air they contain. They always remain on trees. Lac. africana, Gm. ; Cameleon ordinaire, Lacep. I, xxii ; Seb. I, Ixxxii, 1, Ixxxiii, 4*. (The Common Chameleon). The hood pointed and relieved by a ridge in front ; the granules on th? skin equal and close ; the superior crest indented as far as half the length of the back, the inferior to the anus. The hood of the female does not project so much, and the denticulations of her crests are smaller. From Egypt, Barbary, and even the south of Spain, and India. Cham, tigris, Cuv. (The Tiger Chameleon). Another similar species from the Sechelle Islands, with a hood resembling that on • the female of the preceding ; the granules on the skin minute and equal; it is distinguished by a denticulated and compressed ap- pendage under the extremity of its lower jaw. The body is sprinkled with black points. Cham, verrucosus, Cuv. (The Warty Chameleon). A third neighbouring species from the island of Bourbon, marked by gra- nules larger than the others which are scattered among them, and by a series of warts, parallel to the back at about two-thirds of its height. The hood is like that on the female of the common one ; the notches on the back are deeper, those on the belly more shal- low. Cham, pumilus, Daud. IV, liii ; Lacerta pumila, Gm. ; Cham. margaritaceus, Merr. ; Seb. Ixxxii, 4, 5. (The Dwarf Chameleon). The hood directed backwards ; warts scattered on the flanks, limbs • The Cam. trapu, Egyp. Rept. IV, 3; Ch. carinatus, Merr.; Ch. subcroceus, Id.? 40 REPTILES. and tail; numerous, compressed, finely notched appendages (lara- beaiix) under the throat, which vary in each individual. Found at the Cape, Isle of France, and the Sechelles*. Ch. planiceps, Men. Seb. I, Ixxxiii, 2; Lacerta chamcelion, Gm. (The Chameleon of Senegal). The hood flattened, and almost des- titute of a ridge ; its figure is a horizontal parabola. Found in Se- negal, Barbary, and even in Georgia. Ch. pardalis, Cuv. The hood flat like that of the Senegal spe- cies ; but there is a little prominent edge to its muzzle, in front of the mouth ; larger granules scattered among the smaller ones, and the body irregularly marked with round black spots, edged with white. From the Isle of France. Ch. Parsonii, Cuv. Phil. Trans. LVIII. Another species, with a flat hood, which is slightly truncated behind; crest of the eye- brow prolonged and turned up, on each side of the end of the muzzle, into an almost vertical lobe. The granules are equal, and there is no emargination either above or beneath f. Finally, the Ch. bifurcus, Brongfi.; Cameleon des Moluques a nez fourchu, Daud. IV, liv, has a semicircular flat hood ; two large compressed, salient prominences in front of the muzzle, which varies in length ; probably a sexual difference. The granules are equal, the body is sprinkled with closely set blue spots, and at the bottom of each flank, is a double series of white ones. The Sixth and last Family of the Saurians is, FAMILY VI. SCINCOIDEA. Known by their short feet, non-extensible tongue, and the equal scales which cover the body and tail, like tiles. SciNcus, Daud. The Seines have four short feet; the body and tail almost one con- tinued and uniform piece ; no enlargement of the occiput; without crest or dewlap, and covered with uniform, shining scales, arranged like tiles, or those of a Carp. Some of them are fusiform ; others, more or less elongated, resemble Serpents, the Angnis particularly, to which they are related by several internal affinities, and which they connect with the family of the Iguanida, by an uninterrupted series of transitions. Their tongue is fleshy, but slightly extensible and emarginate ; the jaws every where furnished with small, closely set teeth. In the anus, eye, ear, &c., they bear a greater or less resemblance to the Iguana and Lizards; the feet are furnished with free and unguiculated toes. • 1 believe the Cham, seuhellensis of Kiihl to be a female of the jmmilus. f I do not know the Cham, dilepis, Leach, or bilohus, Kuhl. SAURIANS. 41 Certain species have palatine teetli, and an emargination on the anterior edge of the tympanum. Among this number, on account of its trenchant and somewhat raised muzzle*, we should distinguish the Seine, officinalis, Schn.; Lac. scincus, Lin.; El Adda of the Arabs; Le scinque des pharmacies, Lacep. I, xxiii; Bruce, Abyss, pi. 39; Egypt. Rep. Suppl. pi. 2, f. 8. (The Officinal Seine). Six or eight inches long; the tail shorter than the body; the latter of a silvery yellow ; transverse blackish bands ; inhabits Nubia, Abys- sinia, and Arabia, whence it is sent to Alexandria, and from thence distributed throughout Europe. It possesses a surprising facility of burying itself in the sand when pursued "[•. Among those which have blunt muzzles we may observe a species diffused throughout India; the Sc. rufescens, which is greenish, with a yellowish line along the flanks ; each scale has three small raised ridges. There is one from the south of Africa, very common in the vicinity of the Cape — the Sc. trivittatus ; brown ; three paler lines along the back and tail; black spots between the lines J. We should especially notice the great Levant species, Sc. cyprius, Cuv., Lac. cyprius sincoides, Aldrov. Quadr. Dig. 666; Geoft". Desc. de I'Egypt, Kept. pi. iii, f. 3, under the name oi Anolis (jigantesque, which is greenish, with smooth scales ; the tail longer than the body, and a pale line along each flank. In other Seines, the Tiliqua of Gray, the palatine teeth are wanting. There is one of these very common in the south of Europe, Sar- dinia, Sicily, and Egypt; Sc. variegatus, Sc. ocellatus, Schn. ; Daud. IV, Ivi; Geoff. Eg. Rept. pi. v, f. 1, under th^ name of Jnolis marhre; and better, Savigny, lb., Supp. pi. ii, f. 7, which has small, round black spots, each marked with a white streak on the back, flanks, and tail. There is most commonly a pale line along each side of the back. * This species alone composes the genus Scincus of Fitzinger, the others con- stitute his genus Mabouia. f The Greeks and Latins called the Terrestrial Crocodile, Scincus; it was conse- quently a Monitor to which they attributed so many virtues; hut since the middle ages, the above species is usually sold under this name, and for the same pui-poses. Eastern nations, in particular, consider it as a powerful aphrodisiac X Add, Sc. erythrocephalus, Gilliams, Ac. Nat. Sc. Phil. I, xviii, (or the Scorpion Lizard, Penn.); — Sc. biculor, Harlan, lb. IV, xviii, 1; — Sc. mulliseriatiis. Nob.; Geoff. Eg. Rep. IV, f. 4, under the name of Anolis pave. — We also think it proper to refer to this subdivision, although we have not been able to procure the animal, the great Scincus, called in Jamaica the Galleij Wasp; Sloane, II, pi. 273, f. 9, {Lac. occidua, Sh.) (n). ^^ (a) Messrs. Peale and Green in the Oth vol. of the " Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia," describe a new species, which they call S. ventralis. It is fifteen inches long, with a long tail, the body being above olivaceous with some black spots, and white beneath; scales on the back carinated and imbri- cate; folds spotted on each side of the body. These gentlemen propose to make this species the foundation of a genus to be called Pterogasterus. It is a native of Mexico, where it is known as an extremely venomous creature under the name of Escorpion. — Eng. Ed. Tlie French Antilles produce several species, one of which is im- properly called there the Anolis de terre, and Mabouia; Lacep. pi. xxiv; it is smooth; of a greenish brown, and has blackish points scattered along the back ; a brown band imperfectly terminated, reaching from the temple over the shoulder, and beyond it*. The Moluccas and New Holland produce some species of this division, which are remarkable for their thickness -j-. SepsJ, Daud. The Seps only differ from the Seines in their more elongated body, which is exactly similar to that of an Anguis, and in the still smaller feet, the two pairs of which are further apart. Their lungs begin to exhibit some inequality. There is one species, S. scincoides, Cuv., with five toes, of which the posterior are unequal. One with five nearly equal and short toes, Anguis qtiadntpes, L, ; Lacerta serpens, Gm.; Bloch, Soc. of Nat. of Berl. vol. II, pi. 2§. From the East Indies. One with four toes, the posterior of which are unequal ; ( Tetra- dactylus decresiensis, Per. \\ ; and one with three, very similar other- wise to the preceding, the Tridaetylus decresiensis, Per. Both are from the island of Cres, and are viviparous. A fifth, with three short toes, and very small feet, called in Italy, Cecelia or Cicigna, — Lac. chalcides, L., is grey, with four longi- tudinal brown stripes, two on each side of the back. It is viviparous also, and moves with rapidity without the aid of its feet; lives in meadows, and feeds on spiders, small snails, &c.** The southern provinces of France produce a sixth, very similar to the preceding, but with eight or nine brown stripes placed at equal distances apart, — Zygnis striata, Fitz. We might separate from the rest a species whose carinated and * The fig. of Lacep. is exact, the tail excepted, which is too short, it having been broken in the original, an accident which frequently occurs to all Lizards. — Add the Sc. aflancs noirs, Quoy and Gaym. Voy. de Freyc, pi. 42; — Sc. bistriatus, Spix, XXVI, 1. t Lac. scincoides, White, 242; — Sc. nigroluteus, Quoy et Ga3'm. Freyc. 41; — Sc. crotaphomelas. Per. and Lacep., &c. N. B. I have given but few species of Scincus, because they are so badly characterized by authors, that it is almost impossible to indicate their synonymes with any certainty. There is no genus which stands more in need of a monograph than this. X Seps and Chalets were the antient names of an animal which some consider as a Lizard, and others a Serpent. It is very probable that they designated the three- toed Seps of Greece and Italy. Seps is derived from the Greek sepein, (to corrupt). § It forms the genus Lygosoma of Gray; Fitzinger leaves it araoug his Mabuia, or Seines without palatine teetli. II It is to this species that Fitzinger appropriates the generic name of Seps — he calls it Seps Peronii. ** Merrem, on the contrai-y, had made his genus Seps from this single species. Fitzinger now calls it Zygnis, in imitation of Oken, and adds to it the Tridaetylus decresiensis, from the island of Cres, of Per,, which is nuich more nearly allied to the Telradactylus of the same island. SAURIANS. ' 43 pointed scales are nearly verticillate*; Lac. anguina, L. ; Lac. mo- nodactyla, Lacep. Ann. Mus. II, lix, 2, and Vosmaer, Monog. 1774, f. 1, under the name of Serpent-Lizard. Its feet are merely small undivided spurs. Inhabits the environs of the Cape of Good Hope. BiPEs, Lacep. The Bipeds are a small genus, only differing from Seps in the entire absence of fore feet, having the scapulae and clavicles concealed beneath the skin, the hind feet alone being visible. There is only a step from it to Anguis. Some of them have a series of pores before the anus f. I dissected one of them brought from New Holland by the late M. Peron, the Bipede lepidopode, Lacep. Ann. du Mus. tom. IV, pi. Iv, vk^hich has carinated scales on the back, and a tail twice the length of the body|;. Of its feet, nothing is externally visible but two small oblong and scaly plates; but by dissection we find a femur, a tibia, a fibula, and four metatarsal bones forming toes, but without phalanges. One of its lungs is half the size of the other. It lives in the mud. This series of pores is wanting in others. A small species, described a long time ago, is found at the Cape, Anguis bipes, L. ; Lacerta hipes, Gm. ; Seb. I, Ixxxvi, 3, each of whose feet is terminated by two unequal toes§. Brazil produces another, Pygopus cariococca, Spix, xxviii, 2; larger, with undivided feet like those of the lepidopode, Lacep., but more pointed, and with entirely smooth scales. It is greenish, with four longitudinal blackish lines 1|. Cpialcides, Daud. The Chalcides are elongated Lizards, like Seps, resembling Serpents; but the scales, instead of being arranged like tiles, are rectangular, form- ing transverse bands, which do not encroach on each other like those on the tails of ordinary lizards. Some of them have a furrow on each side of the trunk, and a still very apparent tympanum. They are allied to Cordylus just as Seps is con- nected with Scincus, and lead in many points to Pseudopus and Ophi- saurus. A five-toed species is known, Lac. seps, L., which inhabits the • It is the genus Monodactylus, Merr., or CnAMiESAURA, Fitz. t They form the genus Pygopus of Merrem. X The fig. of Lacep. is drawn from an individual, the tail of which had been broken off and reproduced; we are very liable, generally speaking, to be mistaken in the proportionate length of the tail in all this class. § It is the genus Bipes, Merr., or Scelotes, Fitz. The Seps gronovien, or mono- dactrjle of Daudin, of which Merrem has made his genus Pygodactylus, was merely a badly preserved specimen of the same, so that this genus must be stricken out, as Merrem suspected would be the case. The Seps sexlineata, Harl., &c. Nat. Sc. Phil. IV, pi. xviii, f. 2, is a mere variety of it. II The Pyg. slriatus, Spix, XXVIII, 1, appears to me to be the young of the same species. ^ g. luwhr'icaUs, Lacep. TI, pi. xx, Brown, Jam. XLIV, 1, Seb. I, Ixxxvi, 2; — T. alhifrons, 0pp. In tliis genus, as in all others where the species are very similar, the Litter have not been well determined; it is well worthy of a monograph. We are acquainted with at least twenty species. II Typhlops philipphiiis, Cuv. Eight inches long, all blackish. The T. oxyrhyn- chiis, ischn., must be closely allied to it. VOL. II. B .OO REPTILES. former are subdivided into the venomous with several maxillary teeth, and the venomous with insulated fangs. In the non-venomous, the branches of the upper jaw as well as those of the lower one, and the palatine arches, are every where furnished with fixed and solid teeth ; there are then four equal rows of these teeth in the upper part of the mouth, and two below *. Those of the non- venomous, which have the mastoid processes com- prised in the cranium, the orbit incomplete behind, and a thick, short tongue, still retain much similitude to the Double-walkers, AtnjMshcencP, in the cylindrical form of their head and body; they were formerly united with the Anguis, on account of their small scales. They constitute the Rollers. ToRTRixf, Oppel. They are otherwise distinguished from the Anguina, even externally, inasmuch as the scales which form the range along the belly and under part of the tail are a little larger than the others, and the tail itseK is ex- tremely short. They have but one lung. The species known are from America, the most common must be Jncjuis scytale, L., Seb. II, xx, 3. (The Ribbon). Two feet long, irregularly annulated, white and black \. The Uropeltis, Cuv., Is a new genus allied to Tortrix, in which the tail is still shorter, and obliquely truncated above, the truncated surface flat, and studded with granules. The head is very small, the muzzle pointed; there is a range of scales along the belly somewhat larger than the others, and a double range of them under their stump of a tail§. In those non-venomous Serpents, on the contrary, in which the mastoid bones are detached, and the jaws are susceptible of great dilatation, the occiput is more or less enlarged, and the tongue forked and very ex- tensible. * The common opinion respecting them is, tliat those which are destitute of the pierced fangs in front of the jaws are not venomous, but I have some reason to doubt its correctness. They all have a maxillarj^ gland, which is frequently very large, and their back molars exhibit a groove which may serve to convey some fluid. It is very certain that several of the species in which the back molars are very large, are ac- counted extremely venomous in the countries they inhabit, and that the experiments of Lalande and Leschenault have served to confirm that opinion; the repetition of these experiments is much to be desired. t They are the Anilius, Oken, the Torquatrix, Gray, and the Ilysia, Hemp- rich and Fitzinger. :J: Add, Ang. coraUinus, Seb. II, Ixxiii, 2, 1, 3, which is perhaps a mere variety of the scytale; — Ang. ater, Id. XXV, 1, and VII, 3; — Tortr. rtifa, Merr., which seems to me a variety of the atra; — Aug. maculaius and tcssellaius, Seb. II, c. 2; — F. latta, N. Seba, II, xxx, 3; Russel, XhW ;— Tort, punctata, Nob., Seb. II, 11, 1, 2, 3, 4, and VI, 1, 4. § Uropeltis ceylan'icus, Nob. ; Urop. phillppinus ; two new species, similar to the Tortrices even in colour. SERPENTS. 51 They heave long been divided into principal genera, Boa and Coluber, distinguished by the simple or double plates on the under part of the tail. The genus Boas*, Lin., Formerly comprised all those Serpents, venomous or not, the under part of whose body and tail is furnished with uninterrupted, transverse scaly bands, and which have neither spur nor rattle at the end of the tail. As they are rather numerous, even after deducting from them the venomous Serpents, they are again subdivided. The Boas, properly so called, have a hook on each side of the anus, a compressed body, thickest in the middle, a prehensile tail, and small scales on the head, at least on its posterior portion. It is in this genus that are found the largest of all serpents; certain species attain a length of thirty or forty feet, and are able to swallow dogs, deer, and even, as some tra- vellers state, oxen, after having crushed them between their folds, covered them with saliva, and enormously dilated their jaws and throat. This operation is very protracted. One remarkable peculiarity of their anatomy is, that their small lung is but half the length of the other. The integuments of the head and jaws of these serpents furnish ma- terials for a still further subdivision. 1. In some the head down to the tip of the muzzle is covered with small scales, similar to those on the body, and the plates on the jaws are not pitted. Such is the Boa constrictor, L. ; Ls Devin, Lacep. II, xvi, 1 ; Seb. I, xxxvi, 5, liii, 11, Ixxxviii, 5, xcix, 1, ci; Devin or Boa empereur of Daudinf. Known by a broad chain, which extends along the back, formed alternately by large, blackish, irregularly hexagonal spots, and by pale oval ones, the two ends of which are emarginate, consti- tuting a very elegant object. 2. In others there are scaly plates from the eyes to the end of the muzzle, but no fossulee on the jaws. Boa scytale and miirina, L. ; Anacondo, Seb. II, xxiii, 1, and xxix, 1 ; B. aquatica, Pr. Max. liv. II. Brown ; a double suite of round black spots along the back ; ocellated spots on the flanks. 3. Others have scaly plates on the muzzle, and little pits of fossulte on the lateral plates of the jaws. * Boa, the name of certain Italian Serpents of great size, most probably the four striped Coluber, or Serpent of Epidaurus of the Latins. Pliny says they were thus named, because they sucked the teats of Cows. The Boa, 120 feet long, which it is pretended was killed in Africa by the army of Regulus, was probably a Python. See Pliny, lib. VIII, cap. xiv. t Daudin thinks that the Devin is to be found in the eastern continent, but it is certainly from Guiana. A'aillant and Humboldt have procured it there. Pr. Max. has found it in Brazil. The two succeedino: species were also brought from Surinam by M. Le Vaillant, and it is well known that the Bojobi inhabits Brazil. I do not think there is any large Boa, properly so styled, in the eastern world. The great Serpents of Africa and India are Pythons. The name Devin arises from the circum- stance of having improperly applied to tiiis Serpent what is stated respecting certain large Colubers, which constitute the Fetiches of some uegro tribes. E 2 52 RKPTILES. Boa cenchrls, L, : Ahoma and Porte Anneau, Daud. ; Seb. I, 1\ i, 4, II, xxviii, 2, and xcviii; Boa cenchrya, Pr. Max. liv. VI. Fawn-coloured, with a suite of large brown rings along the back, and variable spots on the flanks. These three species, which attain a nearly equal size, inhabit the marshy grounds of the hot parts of America; attaching themselves by their tail round some aquatic tree, they dart their floating body upon the quadrupeds which come there to drink. 4. Some have plates on the muzzle, the side of the jaw being grooved so as to resemble a slit beneath the eye, and further back*. 5. Finally, there are others in which the fossulas are wanting, but whose muzzle is furnished with slightly prominent plates, cut obliquely from behind forwards, and truncated at the end, so that they terminate in a wedge. Their body is greatly compressed, and their back carinated. Tliese inhabit the East Indies, and may con- stitute a distinct subgenus t. Schneider has separated from the Boas his PsEUDO-BOAS SCYTALE, MerV. AVhich have plates like the Coluber, not only on the muzzle, but also on the cranium ; no fossul^, a round body, and the head and trunk one uni- form piece, as in Tortrix+. Daudin also has separated it from the Erices, or Erix§, DaiicL, Which differ from the Pseudo-boas in their tail being very short and ob- tuse, and in the ventral scales being narrower. Their head is short, and nearly of one uniform piece with the body; these characters would ap- proximate them to Tortrix if the conformation of their jaws did not forbid it ; besides, the head is only covered with small scales. There is no hook near the anus. We may approximate to these the Eupeton|1, Lacep. Erpetons, which are very remarkable for two soft prominences covered w-ith scales borne by them on the end of the muzzle. The head is fur- nished with large plates, those on the belly have but little breadth, and the • The Boa broderie (B. Uortulana, L.), Seb. II, Ixxxiv, 1, and the elegaii(, Daud. V, Ixiii, 1, which is the same;— the Bojobi {B. canina, L.), Seb. II, Ixxxi and xcvi, 2, or Xiphusovia araramboja, Spix, VI. The B. hipnale, Seb. II, xxxiv, 1, 2, and Lacep. II, xvi, 11, appears to be nothing more than a young Bojobi; — the B. Merremmii, Schn., Merr. Beytr. II, ii, or Xiphosoma dorsuale, Spix, XV, of which Daud. has made liis genus Coralle, from the probably accidental and mdividual character of tlic two fust plates under the neck being double. t The B. carinata, Schn., or the ocellata, Opp. ; — the B. viperina, Sh. Russel, pi. iv.— N. B. These two subdivisions form the genus Xiphosoma, Fitz., the Cenchris of Gray. : Sr,/lale coronata, Merr. Seb. II, xli, 1, Pr. M. liv. VII. N. B. The Scytale of Merrem must not be confounded with that of Daudin, which is the Echis of Menem. § Eri.T (hair), a name applied by Linnaeus ta a species of Anguis. II From the Greek, Erpetos, Serpent. SERPENTS. 53 sub-caudal ones hardly differ from the rest; the tail itself, however, is long and pointed*. CoLUBEiif, Lin. The Snakes comprise all those Serpents, venomous or non-venomous, whose sub-caudal plates are divided in two, that is, which are arranged by pairs. Independently of the svibtraction of the venomous species, their num- ber is so enormously great, that naturalists have had recourse to all sorts of characters to subdivide them. ^Ve may separate, in the first place, Python, Daud. The Pythons, which have hooks near the anus, and narrow ventral plates, as in the Boas, from which these serpents only diifer in the double sub-caudal plates on the under part of the tail. The end of the muzzle is furnished with plates, and their lips are pitted. Some species are as large as any Boa: such is the Ular-Sawa or Great Coluber of the Sunda Islands, Col. jav aniens, Sch., which has been found more than thirty feet in length. Seb. I, Ixii; II, xix, 1 ; xxviii, 1 ; xcix, 2;J;. The last caudal plates in some of these Pythons, and the first in others, are simple §. This may sometimes be an accidental difference. Cerberus, Cuv. Nearly the whole of the head, as in the Pythons, covered with small scales, and no plates but what are found between and before the eyes ; but the hooks at the anus are wanting. Sometimes there are simple plates at the base of tlie tail|l. Xenopeltis, Reinwardt, Have large triangular and imbricated plates behind the eyes, becoming confounded with the succeeding ones, which merely decrease in size^. Heterodon, Beauv., Have the usual plates of a Coluber, but the end of the muzzle is one * Erpcton tentacule, Lacep. Ann. Mus. II, 1, a name given to this genus by Lacep., who first described it; Merrem has substituted Rhinopiuus. f Coluber, the Latin generic name for Serpents. X This Ular-sawa, or Pytlion amethiste, Daud., Boa amethystina, Schn., of which we possess one great skeleton and several skins, brought from JaA'a by M. Lesche- nault, is at least closely allied to the Pedda-poda of Bengal {Python tigre, Daud.), Russel, XXII, XXIli, XXIV, Col. boaforviis, Sh., Boa castanca and albicans, Sehn.; and it appears to us that all the pretended species of Boa of the eastern continent are in fact Pythons. Ular-sawa, in the Malay language, signifies the River- Serpent. The B. irticitlata, ordlnttta, rhombeata, Schn., are all Pythons. § The Bora, Russ. XXXIX {Boa orbiculata, Schn.). II We have seen these plates simple in one individual, and double in others of the same species, a proof of the little importance of this character. To this group be- long the Col. rerberii.s, Daud., Russel, pi. xxii; — Homolopsis obtusatu.t, Reinw., and the neighbouring species. ^ Xenopellis concolor, Reinw. 51' REPTILES. single piece, short, and resembling in form a slightly elevated triedral pyramid, one ridge being above; from which circumstance they have been called Hog-noses* HuRRiA, Daud. These are small Colubers of India, in which the plates on the base of the tail are always simple, and those on the point double ; these anoma- lies, however, merit but little attention f. DiPSAS, Laurent. — Bungarus, Oppel, Have the body compressed, much narrower than the head; scales of the spinal range larger than the others, a circumstance which we shall find again in Bungarus. Such is the D. indica, Cuv. ; Colub. bucephalus, Sh. ; Seb. I, xliii;^;. Black, ringed with white. Dendrophis, Fitz. — Ahcetulla, Gray, Have the scales of the spinal range larger, as in Dipsas, and those along the flanks narrower; but their head is not broader than the body, which is very long and slender: the muzzle obtuse §. Drynius, Merr. — Passerita, Gray, Have the body as long and slender as in the preceding subdivision; but there is a little slender and pointed appendage to the end of the muzzle]]. Dryophis, Fitz., Have the same thread-like form, the muzzle pointed, but no appendage ; their scales are equal ^. * The Heterodon -noirutrc, Beauv., hcterodnn, Daud., and the heterodon tachete (Cenchris mokeson, Daiul.), belong to this genus; but Beaiivois has established it on a character which is found in a great many Colubers, viz., that of the posterior max- illary teeth being the largest; and Daudin appears to have known his Mofieson by a drawing onlj', we mean the Hng-jwse of Catesby, II, pi. Ivi, which Daud. himself lias cited. A part of its tail-plates is sometimes entire; but at the base, and not near the point, as Daud. describes it. Linnaeus had correctly indicated this Serpent in his tenth edition, under the name of Coluber constrictor; why he changed it in the twelfth to Boa concortrix, is not known (a). f Hurriah, a barbarous name, taken from that which designates the species, Russ. XL, copied Daud. V. xlvi, 2. Another, Merr. II, iv. X Dipsas, the Greek name of a Serpent whose bite was thought to cause a fatal thirst, from the Greek word dipsa, thirst. The fig. of Conrad Gesner, at the word dipsas, is precisely of this subgenus. The Dip. indica is altogether different from the Fipera atrax, Mus. Ad. Fred. XXII, 2, with which Linnaeus, Laurentini, and Daudin have confounded it. § Col. aheetuUa; — Col. decortis, Shaw; — Col. caracaras, Id. (Bungarus filijormis, Oppel.), to which I add the Sibons, Fitz.; at least in the Col. caienulatus, Russ. pi. XV, the dorsal scales are rhomboidal and larger, as in the ahcetulla. II Col. nasHius, Russ. Serp. pi. xii and xiii. ^ Col. fulgidus, Daud. VI, Ixxx; Seb. II, liii, 9; — Dryinus eencus, Spix, III. ^^ (a) The author in this note has confoimded three species of Serpents which are not distinct — the Heterodon, the Trigonocephnlus tisiphone or Movkason Snake, and the Coluber constrictor or Blnck Snake. The Heterodon is a harmless animal, and has the plates on the top of the head arranged, 3, 2, 3, 2. — Eng. Ed. SERPENTS. ^f.. Oligodon, Boie. Small Colubers, with a short, narrow, obtuse head, in which the pala- tine teeth are wanting. The various remaining sul)geiiera which have been separated from that of Coluber, appear to us less worthy of being retained ; they are founded upon slight variations in ihe proportions of the head, thickness of the trunk, &c.* After all these divisions, the Colubers are more numerous in species than any other genus of Serpents. Several are found in France. Such as Col. natrix, L. ; Coukuvre a collier, Lac. II, vi, 2. (The Ringed Snake). Cinereous, with black spots along the flanks, and three white ones on the neck, fornung a collar; scales carinate, that is to say, raised into a ridge. Very common in meadows and stagnant waters; it feeds on frogs, insects, &c., and is eaten in several of the provinces. There is a closely allied species in Sicily, which is much larger, and has a black collar, the Col. siculus, Nob. Col. viferinus, Latr. ; La Fiperine. Grey-brown* a suite of black spots forming a zigzag along the back, and another of smaller ocellated ones along the sides, a kind of colouring which gives it a resemblance to the Viper ; beneath chequered with grey and black ; scales carinated. Col. austriacus, Gm. ; La iJsse, Lacep. II, ii, 2. Brown-red; marbled beneath with steel-colour; two ranges of small blackish spots along the back ; scales smooth, each with a small brown dot near the point. Col. atro-virens ; La verte et jaune, Lacep. II, vi, 1. Spotted with black and yellow above ; beneath of a greenish yellow ; scales smooth. The south of France and Italy produce. Col. cjirondicus, Daud. ; La Cotdeuvre Bordelaise, which has nearly the same colours as the viperiniis, but the scales are smooth, and the dorsal spots smaller and more apart. Col. elaphis, Sh. ; La Quatre-Raies, Lacep. II, vii, 1. Fawn- colour, with four brown or black lines on the back. It is the largest of the European serpents, and sometimes exceeds six feet. We have reason to think it is the Boa of Pliny. Col. jEsciilapii-f, Sh. (The Serpent of iEsculapius). Stouter • By this I particularly mean the Tyria, Malpolon, Psammophis, Coro- NELLA, Xenodon, and Pseudoelafs of Fitzinger. At most, we could only adopt his Duberria, where the head is short, obtuse, and on one uniform line with the body, as in Elaps; and his Homalopsis, in which the eyes are rather more vertical than in the other Colubers. Observe that I have separated Cerberus from them. Laurentini had previously endeavoured to divide the Colubers into Coluber and Coronella; the latter were those in which the scales on the sides of the temporal plates are large enough to be counted as so many plates more; but the transitions from one group to another are almost insensible. t X. B. The CoL Msculaim, Lin., is a very diiFerent, and an American species. 56 REPTILES. than til e elapliis, but not so long; brown above; straw colour be- neath and on the flanks; dorsal scales nearly smooth. Found in Italy, Hungary, and Illyria. It is represented by the antients in their statues of ^sculapius, and the Serpent of Epidaurus was probably of this species. The Colubers, foreign to Europe, are innumerable ; some are remark- able for the vividness of their colours, others for the regularity of their distributions; the tints of several are tolerably uniform. But few of them attain a very large size*. AcRociiORDUS, Hornstedt, Are easily distinguished by the little uniform scales which cover the head and body, both above and beneath. In the species known, A. javensis, Lac. II, xi, 2; Avgnis (jranulatus, Schn.; Oular caron of Java; each of the scales is relieved with three small ridges, which, when the skin is well stuffed, resemble insulated tubercles. It attains a large size. Hornstedt erroneously states it to be fru- givorous— which would be a very singular habit for a serpent']". Venomous Serpents, par excellence, or those with isolated fangs, have a very peculiar structure in their organs of manducation. Their superior maxillary bones are very small, borne on a long pedicle, analogous to the external pterygoid process of the sphenoid bone, and are very moveable; in them is fixed a sharp pointed tooth, pierced by a canal, through which flows a liquor secreted by a large gland, situated under the eye. It is this liquor which, pouredinto the wound made by the tooth, carries the destructive influence into the bodies of animals, and there produces effects which are more or less violent, according to the species of the reptile in which it is secreted. This tooth, when the animal does not ■wish to use it, is concealed in a fold of the gum, and behind it are several germs destined to replace it, in the event of its being broken in a wound. * The Colubers presenting but few variations of structure that are interesting', I have not thought it necessary to give in this place the long catalogue. It will be found in the works of Merreni, Gmelin, Daudin, and Shaw. It is neces- sary, however, to consult them with much caution and critical nicety: they ab( ur.d in transpositions of synonymes, &c. For instance, the Ccl. nriiJissivtus and the Co/. janthinns, Merr. I, xii, only differ from the effects of the spirit of wine; — the Cnl. Jwrridus, Daud. Men-. II, x, (Col. ripcriniis, Shaw), is the same as tlie demi-collii'i; Lac. II, viii, 2; — the Coul. vinlette, Lacep. II, viii, 1, and the Col. iri^iiia; Mus. Ad. fr. XIII, 2, only differ by the action of the spirit. Such, also, shoidd ])e considered the Col. linealus, Seb. Xil, 3; Mus. Ad. fr. XII, 1, xx, 1 ;— the Col. jaculalrix, Seb. I, 9, Scheuchz., DCCXV, 2;— the Col. atratus, Seb. I, 9, ix, 2, and even the terli- neatiis, Lacep. II, xiii, 1; — the Col. sibilans, Seb. I, ix, 1, II, Ivi, 4; and the Coul. chapelet, Lacep. II, xii, 1, appear equally alike, as well as the Col. JEsculapH, .Tacq. and i\\c flavesceus, Scopol., &c. Src. &c. As to the transposition of synonjnies, they are innumerable. N. B. The Enhydrus of Daud. would be non-venomous Colu- bers, with a compressed tail, but the only species he cites, Anguis xt/plaira, Hern. aif. an p. 269, and Obs. Zool. p. 288, is evidently a Hydrophis or a Pelamis. t We have never been able to discover the particular bone Oi-jjel. says he ob- served in the .Acrochordus, as taking the place of the poison-fangs, and M. Lesche- nault assiacs us tiiat tl.t' Acrochordus is harmless. SERPENTS. 07 These venomous teeth have been termed by naturalists moveable fangs, but in fact it is the maxillary bone which moves ; there are no other teeth in it, so that in this kind of dangerous serpents only the two rows of palatine teeth are to be seen in the upper part of the mouth. All the venomous species, whose mode of production has been accu- rately determined, bring forth living young ones, as their eggs are hatched without being laid, from which circumstance is derived their com- mon name of Jlpers, a contraction of viviparous. Venomous serpents with insulated fangs have external characters very similar to those of the preceding ones, but in the greater number the jaws are very dilatable, and the tongue very extensible. The posterior portion of their head being broad, generally gives them a ferocious aspect, which is a partial indication of their disposition. They form two great genera, Ckotalus and Viper a, the second of which has been variously sub- divided, and some smaller ones group around them. Crotalus ■*, Lin. Rattlesnakes are celebrated above all other Serpents for the intensity of their poison. Like the Boas, they have transverse simple plates under the body and tail; but their most distinguishing character is the rattle which they carry at the end of the tail, and which is formed by several scaly cornets loosely fitted into each other, and which move and produce the peculiar noise or rattle v/henever they crawl or shake their tail. The number of these cornets increase with age, an additional one being always found after each moult. There is a little round indentation or pit behind each nostrilf. All these species whose habitat is well ascertained are from America. The danger resulting from the bite of these noxious reptiles is in proportion to the warmth of the climate or of the season; their natural disposition, however, is in general tranquil, and sufriciently dull, and they are rather slow and heavy in their motions, never biting unless provoked, or to kill the prey on which they feed. Altliough the Rattlesnake never ascends trees, its principal food con- sists of birds, squirrels, &c. It has long been supposed that it possesses the faculty of rendering them powerless by its breath, or even of charming them, that is to say, to force them by a single glance to drop into their mouths ; this, however, is not so, and the reptile in question seizes its prey while under the agitation and terror produced by its appearance J. In most of the species there are scales on the head similar to those on the back. Crot. horridiis, L. ; Catesb. II, xli, (The Diamond Rattlesnake), is the species most common in the United States; brown, with irre- * Crotalus, from the Greek word crotnlon. t See Russell and Home, Phil. Trans. 1804, pi. iii, p. 76. \ See Barton, " ^lenioir on the Power of Fascination attributed to the Piattle- snake," Philad. 179G. 58 REPTILES. gular blackish transverse bands. That of Guiana, Crot. durissus*, Lacep. II, xiii, 2, (The Banded Rattlesnake), has lozenge shaped spots edged with black, and four black lines along the top of the neck ; both species are equally to be dreaded, as death speedily fol- lows a wound from their fangs. They are sometimes found six feet in length (a). The head of some species is furnished with large plates f. We should approximate to the Rattlesnakes the Trigonocephalus, Oppel. — Bothrops, Spix. — Copiiias, Merr. Which, however, are distinguished from them by the want of a rattle, but having the same pits behind the nostrils, and being at least equally as venomous. The sub-caudal plates in some of them are simple, as in the Rattle- snake, their head being covered with plates to behind the eyes ; their tail terminates in a small horny spur]];. Such is the Coluh. tisiphone, Shaw; Catesb. II, xliii and xliv. (The Brown Viper of Carolina). Brown, clouded with spots of deeper brown. In others the sub-caudal scales are double, and the head is covered with scales similar to those on the back§. Such among others is Trig, lanceolatus, 0pp. ||; Serpent jaiine des /Antilles, Lacep. II, V, 1. (The Lance-headed Viper). The most dangerous reptile of the French Sugar islands ; it is yellowish or greyish, more or less varied with brownish, and attains the length of six and seven feet; it lives among the sugar-canes, where it feeds on rats, and occasions the death of many of the negroes**. The head of some of these Trigonocephali with double sub-caudal scales is furnished with plates f-j-. Others, along with the small scales on the head, have double plates be- * These names of durissus and horridus have been variously applied to these two species. f It is this subdivision which furnished M. Gray with his genus Crotalophorus, and M. Fitzinger with that of Caudisona. The Crot. miliaris, L., Catesb. II, xlii, belongs to it. X They are the Tisiphone of Fitzinger. § In the work of M. Fitzinger, this division is called Craspedocephalus; all tlie Bothrops, Spix, pi. xix — xxiii, belong to it. II This species inhabits Brazil, and most probably other parts of South America; I am even inclined to think it is the Souroucou of Spix, pi. xxiii, which he considers the Cnt. inutus or lachesis. ** Here conies the Trimeresure vert, Lacep. An. Mus. IV, Ivi, 2, or Boodropnm, Russel, Serp. Corom. IX, which sometimes has two or three entire plates under the root of the tail; this, however, is but an individual accident. Add, Cophias bilineatus, Pr. Max. No. V; — C. atrox; — C. jacaraca. \\ Fitzinger appropriates the name of Trigonocephalus to this subdivision. g^° (a) These two Rattlesnakes are common to the United States. There is a third, the H. miliaris, in that country, though the most dangerous, it can make no noise with the cornets, which are furnished equally as in the other Snakes. Eng. Ed. SERPENTS. 59 neatli the tail, with the exception of the very extremity, which is merely furnished ahove and beneath with small imbricated scales, and terminates in a little spur*. Of this number is the C'r ot. mutus, 1j.; Col. alecto,'Sh.; Seb. II, Ixxvi, 1; Lachesis rhombeafa, Pr. Max. No. V. Yellowish; the back marked with large black or brown lozenges ; scales raised in the middle. It is found six and seven feet long, and is quite as formidable as the Rattlesnakes. ViPERA, Daud. The Vipers, most of which were confounded with the Colubers by Lin- naeus, on account of their having also the double sub-caudal plates, require to be separated from them from the circumstance of their having poisonous fangs. There are also some serpents which naturally belong to this divi- sion, whose sub-caudal plates are either wholly or partially simple. They are all distinguished from the Rattlesnakes and the Trigonocephali by the absence of the pits behind the nostrils. In some the head is only furnished with imbricated and carinated scales like those on the backf. Such is Vip. hrachyura, C\xv.; Seb. II, xxx, 1. (The Minute Viper). The intensity and activity of its poison render it one of the most terrible of the genus J. In the Adders the head is covered with small granulated scales, as for instance. Col. bents, L. (The Common Viper). Brown ; a double row of transverse spots on the back ; a range of black or blackish spots on each flank. Sometimes the dorsal spots coalesce in transverse bands, and at others they all form one zig-zag longitudinal band, in which state it is the Colub. aspis, L.§, which is sometimes called Aspic in the neighbourhood of Paris. Individuals are found perfectly black 1|. Ftp. iUyrica, Aldrov. 1(59; Col. ammodytes; La Vipere a museau cornu, Jacquin. Collect. IV, pi. xxiv and xxv. Very nearly similar * It is the genus Lachesis, Daud., adopted by Fitzinger, but badly characterized ; the sub- caudal plates are certainly double, almost to the very end, where there is nothing but very small scales. Pr. Max. gives a con-ect view of it. t This, with the following division, forms the subgenus Echidna of Merrem, which, with his Edits, of which we shall speak hereafter, composes his genus ViPERA. Fitzinger arranges our three first divisions in three genera, which he names Vipera, Cobra, and Aspis. X Add the Jspic, Lacep. II, ii, I, (Vip. ocellaia. Lath.), a large species allied to the atropos, Lin. Mus. Ad. Fred. XIII; but very different from the aspis of Lin- naeus, which is a mere variety of the common species; — Vip. Clolho, Seb. IF, xciii, 1; — lip. lachesis, Id. XCIV, 2; — the Daboie, Lacep, II, xiii, 2, or the brasilienne, Id. IV, 1;— the Vip. elegante, Daud. Russel, VII, &c. § Aspis, a Serpent of Egypt, of which there were several species. One of them, from the dilatabiiity of its neck, must have been the Huje. II Btrus is the name of a serpent only used by the authors of the middle century, such as Albert, Vincent de Beauvais, &c., and then for an aquatic species, probably the Col. natrix. The Vipi>re de Churns, of which Laurenti endeavoured to make a species, and which is the Col. aspis, Gmel., is the same as this common Viper, which, in my opinion, is the true beriis of Linna?us, who on this point only cites Aldrov, 115, which is this species. 60 REPTILES. to the common species, but particularly distinguished from it by a small soft horn covered with scales that projects from the end of its muzzle. It is found in Dalmatia, Hungary, &c. Col. cerastes, L. ; Le Cerasie, Lacep. II, 1, 2. Remarkable for a small pointed horn on each eye-brow; it is greyish, and hides itself in the sand, in Egypt, Lybia, &c. It is often mentioned in the writings of the antients. Vip. lophophris, Nob.; Vipere a panache, Voy. de Patterson, pi. XV. A little bundle of short horny threads on each eye-brow in- stead of the horn. From the environs of the Cape. Other Vipers, similar in general to the preceding ones, have three plates, somewhat larger than those which surround them, on the middle of the top of the head*. Col. chersea, L. ; Col. bei'iis, Laurent, and Daud. Very similar to the common Viper, and distinguished from it by the aforesaid three plates. It is a rarer and smaller species, and said to be more ve- nomous f. Some individuals are almost entirely black, called Black Vipers — Cohb.prester, Laurent, pi. iv, f. 1 ];. Next come those Vipers in which the head is furnished with plates al- most like that of the Colubers. Of this n'imber some are so exactly similar to the most common Vipers, that there is nothing but these plates to distinguish them§. Such is, Col. hcemachates, L. ; Seb. II, Iviii, 1, 3.^ A Cape Serpent. Reddish-brown, marbled with white; muzzle obliquely truncated beneath. The Naias Are Vipers with the head furnished with plates, and the anterior ribs sus- ceptible of being raised up and drawn forwards, so as to dilate that part of the trunk into a disk more or less broad. The most celebrated species is the Col. naia, L. ; Naia tripudians, Merr. ; Serpent a lunettes, or Cobra capello of the Portuguese in India; Seb. II, 85, 1, 89, 1 — 4, &c. ; Lacep. II, iii, 1, (The Cobra de Cabello, or Spectacled Viper), so called from a black line resembling the figure of a pair of specta- * This subdivision has furnished Merrcm with his genus Pelias. f It is the JEfip'nig of the Swedes {cBspuig, corruption of aspic), undoubtedly figured in the Stockhol. Mem. 1749, pi. vi. Laiirenti, however, Spec. Medic, p. 97, and pi. ii, f. 1 , has applied it to the name of berus. It is also the Pelias berus, Merr. ; Fi/t. berus, Fitzinger. X Presther, the Greek name of a serpent, considered by several authors as identical with the dlpsas, from Prethein, to burn. § Merrem lias formed his genus Sepedon from this subdivision. Add, Cul. V. niisnim, Scheuchz. Phys. Sacr. IV, DCCXVIi "N. B. The Opliis, Spix, Serp XVII, nmst be a venomous serpent, similar to these Sepedons, but one whose poison fangs are preceded by some small simple teeth. Not having seen his species, I fear it is one of those ("olubers with large posterior maxil- lary teeth before mentioned, several of which are at least liable to the suspicion of be- ing poisonous. SERPENTS. 61 des traced on the widened portion of its disk. It is extremely poi- sonous, but it is said tliat the root of the Ophiorhyza mungos is a sure antidote against tlie effects of its bite. The jugglers of India tame and teach it to dance, having previously extracted the fangs. The same use is made of another species in Egypt, the Col. haje, L. ; VHaje, Geoffr., Egypt. Rept. pi. vii; and Savign. Id. Suppl. pi. iii, whose neck is not so wide, and which is greenish bordered with brownish. The jugglers of that country, by pressing on the nape of the neck with their linger, throw it into a kind of ca- talepsy, which renders it stiff and immoveable, {this is the turning of it into a rod). Its habit of raising itself up when approached, in- duced the antient Egyptians to believe that it was the guardian of the fields it inhabited. They made it the emblem of the protecting divinity of the world, and sculptured it on each side of a globe upon the gates of their temples. There is no doubt that it is the serpent described by the antients under the name of the Jsp of Egypt, Asp of Cleopatra, &c. Elaps*, Schn. (part of), Are Vipers with a head furnished with plates, very differently organized from the Naice. They are not only deprived of the power of dilating their ribs, but they cannot even dilate their jaws, on account of the shortness of the tympanal bone, and particularly of the mastoid ones, the result of which is, that their head, like that of the Tortrices and Amphisbasnae, is of one uniform piece with the body. The most common species is Col. lemniscatus, L. ; Seb. I, x, ult. and II, Ixxvi, 3. A white ground marked with triple black rings; tip of the muzzle black. It inhabits Guiana, where it is greatly dreaded, and where it causes an equal degree of fear to the Tortrix scytale, and the Coluber jEscu- lapii, although they are harmless, in consequence of their resem- blance to it in form, size, and colours. There are several species of Elaps in the two continents with a nearly similar distribution of colours f. MicRURUs, Wagl. Are Elaps with a very short tail. Platurus, Lat. Have the head enveloped with plates, and double ones under the tail; the latter, however, is compressed in the form of an oar, which renders them aquatic |;. ' " Schneider comprised among his ELip« all the serpents he supposed to be deficient in a separated mastoid bone, but of this he judged from external appearances, or the small degree of enlargement in the occiput; this character, therefore, is only true in the Tortrices of Oppel or llysia. He paid no attention either to their scales or their venom. Elaps, Elaps, are the Greek names of a non-venomous serpent. f Such are E. a'iguifiDmis, Schn.; — the Up. Psyche, Daud. VIII, c. 1; — Col. lac- teus, Lin. Mus. Ad. Fr. XVII, 1, and better, Seb. II, xxxv, 2; — El. nob. surinamensis, Seb. II, vi, 2, and Ixxxvi, 1; — Cut. latoniiis, Merr. I, 2. and Seb. II, xxxiv, 4, and xliii, 3, the same as the Col. lubrkus; — Cul.flai-ius, &c. * Le Plature a bandcs {Col. laticaudalus, L., or Hydrtis colubrinus, Sh.), Daud. VIl.lxxxv. 63 REPTILES. Finally, there are some serpents which should be placed next to the vipers, only differing from thera in their sub-caudal plates, some or all of which are simple. They are distinguished from the Tisiphones by having no pits behind the nostrils. Sometimes the plates on the base of the tail are entire. Trimeresurus, Lacep. Large plates on the head ; part of their plates double, the others simple *. Oplocephalus, Ciiv. Large plates on the head; all the sub-caudals simple f. AcANTHOPHis, Dmid. — Opiirias, Merr. Plates on the fore-part of the cranium and head ; tail terminated by a hook ; almost all its scales simple, the extreme sub-caudal ones sometimes double |. EcHis, 71/err.— ScYTALE, Daud. The head covered with small scales; all the sub-caudal plates simple §. Langaha, Brug. Head covered with plates; muzzle salient and pointed; anterior half of the tail completely encircled with entire rings, and the posterior covered above and beneath with small imbricated scales y. In addition to these two tribes of Serpents, properly so styled, a third has lately been recognized, in which the organization and armature of the jaws are nearly the same as in the non-venomous serpents, but in which the first maxillary tooth is larger than the others, and is perforated for the transmission of the poison, as in the venomous serpents with isolated fangs. These serpents form two genera, distinguished, like those of the two neighbouring families, by the covering of the belly and the under part of the tail. Bungarus^, Dcnid.jxirtim, — Pseudoboa, Oppel. The Bongares have, like the Boas, Crotalus, and Echus, subventral and subcaudal plates, simple head, short, and covered with large plates ; * The Tfimeresure u petite tete, Lacep. Am. Mus. IV, Ivi, 1. f The species are new. ;J: Acanthopliis cerastinus, Daud. V, Ixxvii; and Merr. Beytr. II, ix, or Boa palbe- h-osa, Sh.; — Ac. Brownii, Leach, Zool. Miscell. I, iii, the most venomous reptile that is found in the environs of Port Jackson. § Honifta pam., Russel, II, pi. 2, or Boa horatta, Sh., or Pseudoboa cariuata, Schn., or Scytale bizonata, Daud. V, Ixx; — Pseudoboa fcrait, Schn., or Scytale krail, Daud. I! The Latigaha of Madagascar, Lacep. I, xxii, a serpent only known by the figure of Bruguiere. 11 Bur.garus, a barbarous term drawn from that of Bungarum-pamma, the name by which the largest species is known in Bengal. SERPENTS. 63 occiput but slightly enlarged. Their most distinguishing character is a longitudinal range of scales on the back, which is strongly carinate, broader than the lateral ones, as in Dipsas. These serpents are all from India, where they are termed Rock Snakes. One species attains a length of seven or eight feet*. liYDRUsf , Schn., parthn. — Hydrophis and Pelamis, Daiid. Have the posterior part of the body and tail strongly compressed, and much raised vertically; a circumstance which, by enabling them to swim, renders them aquatic. They are very common in certain latitudes of the Indian Ocean. On account of their (nearly all) small scales, Linnajus classed such of them as he knew with the Anguines. Daudiu has subdi- vided them as follows : Hydrophis j. Have a range of scales on the belly somewhat larger than the others, as in Tortrix ; head small, not inflated, obtuse, and furnished with large plates. Several species have been found in the salt-water canals of Ben- gal, and others in the Indian Ocean §. Pelamis. The PelamiJes have large plates on the head, but their occiput is in- flated on account of the lengtli of the pedicles of the lower jaw, which is extremely dilatable ; all the scales on the body are equal, small, and ar- ranged in compact hexagons. The species most known, Anguis platurus, L.; Hydrus hicolor, Schn.; Seb. II, Ixxvii, 2; Russel, xli, is black above, yellow be- neath. Although excessively venomous, it is eaten at Otaheite. To these two subgenera I have added, Chersydrus||, Cuv. Whose body and head are covered with small scales. Such is Acrochordus fasciatus, Shaw; the Oular-limpe, Rept. pi. cxxx. A very venomous serpent, found on the bottom of rivers in Java^. * The Bongare a anneaux, Daud. V, Ixv, Boa fasciata, Schn., copied from Russel, III. — Add, the Bong, bleu, Boa linenfa, Sh. Russ. I. f Hi/driis, the Greek name of an aqnatic serpent, perhaps of our conimon Coluber; but the Hi/drus marinus of ."Elian is precisely of this genus, X Hijdrnphis, Water Serpent. § See the Hydrophis of Russel, Serp. Corom. pi. xliv, and part II, pi. vi — x. Add, the //. curtiis, Sh., the //. spiralis, Id. pi. 125; — the Leyoselasme and the Disteyre, Lacep. An. Mus. IV, also belong to the subgenus Hydrophis; I even think the latter is the Hydrus mnjor, Sh. pi. 124. They also are Serpents of the Indian Ocean, ve- nomous, and possessed of several maxillary teeth. N. B. I cannot agree witli M. Fitzinger as to the harmlessness of the Pelamides and the Disteyres ; on tlie contrary, I have fully ascertained their poison gland and fangs to be organized like those of a Hydra or a Bungarus. As to the Aixpysure, Lacep. An. Mus. IV, I have not been able to procure it. II Cliersitdrof!, the Greek name of the Col. natrix. '\ The Hydrus granulatus, Schn., must be closely allied to it. N. 35. The II. caspius, cnhydris, rhynchops, piscaior and paluslris, Schn., are mere common ^'ipers and Colubers. His Hydrus colubrinus is the Banded Platurus. 64 REPTILES. FAMILY III. NAKED SERPENTS. Our third and last family of the Serpents or Ophidians, that of the Naked Serpents, consists of but one very singular genus, which several naturalists have thought fit to refer to the Batrachians, although we are ignorant as to the fact of its undergoing any metamorphosis. It is the CECILIA*, Lin. So called because its eyes, excessively small, are nearly hidden beneath the skin, and sometimes are wanting. The skin is smooth, viscous and furrowed by annular plaits or wrinkles ; it is apparently naked, but on dissection we find, in its thickness, perfectly formed though delicate scales, regularly arranged in several transverse rows between the folds of the skin'i". The head is depressed; the anus round and nearly at the end of the body; the ribs mucli too short to surround the trunk: the articu- lation of the bodies of their vertebrae is effected by liollow conical facets filled with a gelatinous cartilage, as in Fishes and in some of the last of the Batrachians ; the cranium is united to the first vertebra by two tuber- cles, as is the case in the Batrachians, which are approximated in this re- spect only by the Amphisbfenas among the serpents; their maxillary bones cover the orbit, which resembles a very small hole, and those of the tem- ples the temporal depression, so that the head above presents one conti- nuous bony buckler ; the hyoid bone, composed of three pairs of arches, might induce us to suppose that at an early period it is furnished with branchiae. The maxillary and palatine teeth are arranged on two concen- tric lines, as in Proteus ; but they are frequently sharp, and curved back- wards, like those of serpents, properly so styled. The nostrils open be- hind the palate, and as the tympanal bone is fixed along with those that compose the cranial shield, there is no moveable pedicle to the lower jaw. The auricle of the heart of these animals is not so deeply divided to in- duce us to consider it as double, but their second lung is as small as in other serpents ; the liver is divided into a great number of transverse la- mella. Vegetable matters, earth and sand, are found in their intestines. The only small bone contained in the ear is a little plate on the fenestra ovalis, as in the Salamanders. Some of them have an obtuse muzzle, relaxed skin, deep wrinkles, and two small ciliar near the nostrils. Such is Ccecilia annulata, Spix, xxvii, 1. Blackish, with eighty and odd plicifi marked with white circles; teeth conical. Found in Brazil, where it lives in marshes several feet beneath the surface. * Cacilia, the Latin for the Greek tuphlos, is the name of the Slow-worm (Orvet), which in several parts of Europe is still called Mind, although it has very fine eyes. f A fact I have ascertained in the C. glutinosa, the yVhite-beUkd Cacilia, &c. BATRACFITANS. (55 C. tentacnlata, L. ; Amen. Acad. I, xvii, 1. One hundred and thirty and odd plicae, every other pair of whicl), particularly near the tail, does not completely encircle the body. It is black, marbled with white on the belly*. Others have a much greater number of plica?, or rather of close, trans- verse stria?. Ccec. glutinosa, L. ; Seb. XXV, 2; and Mus. Ad. Fred. IV, 1, is of that number, having three hundred and fifty plicas, which unite beneath at an acute angle. It is blackish, with a longitudinal yel- lowish band along each flank. Found in Ceylon f. Finally, there are some in which the plicfe are almost effiiced ; their body is very long and slender, and their muzzle salient. One species is completely blind, the Ccec. lumbricoides, Daud. VIII, xcii, 2; it is blackish ; two feet in length, and about the thickness of a goose-quill J. ORDER IV THE BATRACHIANS§. The Batrachians have a heart composed of but one auricle and one ventricle. They all have two equal lungs, to which are joined in the ear- liest age branchias, that have some affinity with those of Fishes, and which have cartilaginous arches on each side of the neck attached to the hyoid bone. Most of them lose these branchiae, and the apparatus which sup- ports them, when they attain their perfect state. Three genera only, Siren, Proteus, and Menobranchus, retain them for life. As long as these branchi^ remain, the aorta is divided at its origin into as many branches on each side as there are branchis. The branchial blood is brought back by veins which unite near the back in one arterial trunk, as in Fishes. It is Irom this trunk, or immediately from the veins * This Cfficilia is not more tentnculated than others of its subdivision. Add, C. alhiventris, Daud. VII, xcii, 1: if it is not the same as the tentaculuta ; — C. inter- rupta, Cuv., in which the white lines of the rings do not correspond with each other beneath; — C. rostrata, Cuv., with a more pointed muzzle, and no white edges to the rings. It is hard to say why Spix attributes upwards of two hvmdred plicce to liis annulata; his figure shews but about eighty. t It is certainly from Ceylon, although Daudin places its habitat in America; as we have received it from the former country through the politeness of M. Lesche- nault; a closely allied species, it is triie, inhabits the latter — Ccec. bivitlata, Cuv. X Linnaeus mentions it, Mus. Ad. Fred. V, 2, but confounds it with the tentacnlata. We have the skeleton of a Caecilia more than six feet long, and ha\ing t\vo hun- dred and twenty-five vertebrae, but of whose external characters we are ignorant. § From the Greek word Batrachos (Frog), animals analogous to Frogs. VOL, II. F GO UEPTILKS. which form it, that arise most of the arteries which nourish the body, and even those which conduct the blood to be respired in the lungs. In those species, however, which lose their branchice, the arterial branches distributed through them become obliterated, with the exception of two, which, by their union, form a dorsal artery, giving each a small branch to the lungs. It is the circulation of a fish metamorphosed into that of a reptile. Batrachians have neither scales nor shell ; a naked skin invests their body*, and, one genus excepted, they have no nails to their toes. The envelope of the eggs is simply membranous; the female is im- pelled by the male to lay them, and, in many species, they are only fe- cundated at the moment of their expulsion. These eggs become greatly enlarged in the water after being laid. The young do not only differ from the adult in the presence of the branchiae; their feet are developed by degrees, and in several species there are a beak and tail, which they subsequently lose, and intestines of a different form. Some species are viviparous. Ran A, Lin. Frogs have four legs in their perfect state, but no tail. Their head is flat, muzzle rounded, and the opening of their jaws large; the tongue in most of them is soft, and not attached to the bottom of the gullet, but to the edges of the jaw, and folds inwards. There are but four toes to the anterior feet; the hind ones frequently exhibit the rudiment of a sixth. There are no ribs to their skeleton, and a prominent cartilaginous plate supplies the place of a tympanum, and renders the ear visible externally. The eye is furnished with two fleshy lids, and a third, which is transparent and horizontal, concealed under the lower one. Inspiration is solely effected by the muscles of the throat, which, by di- lating, receive air from the nostrils, and by contracting while the nostrils are closed by the tongue, compel that air to enter the lungs. Expiration, on the contrary, is produced by the muscles of the lower i)art of the ab- domen : thus, if we open the belly of one of these animals while alive, the lungs dilate without being able to contract, and if we force another to keep its mouth open, asphyxia is the consequence, as it is no longer able to renew the air in its lungs. The embraces of the male are long continued. His thumbs are fur- nished with a spongy enlargement, which increases during the nuptial season, and assists in attaching him to the female. He fecundates the ovum at the moment of its expulsion. The little animal that is produced from it is called a Tadpole; it is at first furnished with a long fleshy tail, and a small horny beak, having no other apparent limbs than little fringes on the sides of the neck. In a few days these disappear, and Swammer- dam assures us that this is owing to their withdrawing under the skin, to * M. Schneider has proved that the Scaly Frog of Walbaiim only appeared so from accident, a few scales from some Lizards that were kept in the same jar having ad- hered to its back. Schn. Hist. Amphib. Fasc. I, p. 168. UATRACHIANS. 67 form there tlie brancliise. These hitter are numerous small tufts attached to four cartilaginous arches, placed on each side of the neck, adhering to the hyoid bone, and enveloped in a membranous tunic, which is covered by the general skin. The water which enters the mouth, passing through the intervals of the cartilaginous arches, makes its exit, sometimes by two openings, and at others by one, situated either in the middle or left side of the external skin, according to the species. The hind feet of the Tad- pole are very gradually and visibly developed ; the fore feet are also deve- loped, but under the skin, through which they subsequently penetrate. The tail is gradually absorbed. The beak falls and discloses the true jaws, which at first were soft, and concealed beneath the skin ; and the branchias are annihilated, leaving to the lungs alone the function of re- spiration in which they participated with those lungs. The eye which at first could only be discerned through a transparent spot in the skin of the Tadpole, is now visible with its three lids. The intestines, which, in the beginning were very long, slender, and spirally arranged, become short- ened, and acquire the enlargements requisite for the stomach and colon; for the Tadpole feeds solely on aquatic plants, and the adult animal upon insects and other animal matters. Tadpoles reproduce their limbs almost like Salamanders. The period at which each of these changes takes place varies with the species. In cold and temperate climates, the perfect animal passes the winter under ground, or in mud under water, without eating or breathing, though if we prevent it from respiring during the summer for a few minutes by keeping its mouth open, it dies. Rana, Laur. Frogs, properly so called, have a long tapering body; the hind feet ex- tremely long, strong, and more or less perfectly palmated ; the skin smooth ; upper jaw furnished all round with a row of small fine teeth and an inter- rupted transverse range of them in the middle of the palate. On each side of the head of the male and below the ear is a thin membrane, which becomes distended with air when he croaks. These animals leap and swim well. R. esculenta, L. ; Rcesel. Ran. pi. xiii, xiv. (The Green Frog). A fine green spotted with black ; three yellow streaks on the back ; belly yellowish. A common species in Europe in all stagnant wa- ters, and very annoying by its ceaseless nocturnal clamour. Its flesh is a wholesome and agreeable food (a). The female exudes her ova in bundles in the marshes, &c. R. temforaria, L. ; Rcesel. Ran. pi. i, ii, iii. (The Common Frog). Reddish-brown spotted with black; a black band com- mencing at the eye and reaching across the ear. This species is the first that appears in the spring; it visits the land less frequently than the preceding, and is not so noisy. Its Tadpole is not so large at the epoch of its metamorphosis. The South of France produces a Frog, g*J° (rt) At Last for tlie French; but these reptiles are never used for food in England. — Eng. Ed. f2 ()8 REPTILES. R. cultripes, Cuv., which is every where sprinkled with black spots ; feet amply palmate ; particularly remarkable for a horny and trench- ant scale which invests the vestige of the sixth toe. Among the Frogs foreign to Europe we may remark, R. paradoxa, L. ; Seb. I, Ixxviii; Merrian, Surin. LXXI; Daud., Gren. XXII, XXIII, (The Jakie), whose Tadpole acquires a size previous to its complete metamorphosis greater than that of any other species of the genus. The loss of an enormous tail and of the en- velopes of the body causes the adult animal to be of smaller dimen- sions than the Tadpole, a circumstance which induced the earlier ob- servers to believe that it was the Frog which was metamorphosed into a Tadpole, or, as they expressed it, into a Fish. This error is now completely refuted. The Jakie is greenish, spotted with brown, and is particularly dis- tinguished by irregular brown lines along its thighs and legs. From Guiana. There are several other Frogs foreign to Europe, some of which are very large and very ill-determined*. Such is R. pipiens, L. ; Catesb. II, Ixxii. (The Bull-Frog). Green above, yellowish beneath, spotted and marbled with black f. The hind toes of certain species are almost without a web, but still very elongated;};. Ceratophris, Boie, Are frogs with a large head ; skin granulated, either wholly or in part ; a membranous prominence to each eye-lid resembling a horn§. In some * A closer examination and a review of the numerous Batrachians received at the Museum within a few years, compel me to recal my approbation of the work of Daudin. It is imperfect, and half the figures are taken from altered specimens, and can never serve as guides to the precise determination of species. His Hyla, how- ever, must be excepted; they are much better than his Frogs and Toads. t I am convinced that several species are confounded under this name in the United States, species which are similar as to size and colour, but which, among other characters, differ in the relative size of the tympanum. The one in which it is the largest is the mugiens of Merrem, but we cannot depend upon his synonymes. The fig. of Daud. XVIII, with a yellow stripe along the back, is a species from India. Add, R. palmvpes, Spix, V, 1; — R. tigrina, Daud. XX; — R. virginica, Gmel. Seb. I, Ixxv, 4, or halecina, Daud., or pipiens, Merr., Catesb. LXX {a). X Ratia ocellata, L., Seb. I, Ixxv, 1, Lacep. I, xxxviii, Daud. XIX; — R. gigas, Spix, I; — R. pachypus, Id. II.; — R. coriacea, Id. V, 2; — R. sibilatri,v, Fr. Max.; — R. macu- lata, Daud. XVII, 2; — R. rubella, lb. I; — R. ti/pkotiia, lb. 4, which is not, as Merrem thinks, the virginica, Gm.;—R. punctata, lb. XVI, \;—R. mtjstacea, Spix, III, 2 — 3; — R. militaris and R. pygmcea. Id. VI; — R. labyrinthica, Id. VII (6). § Ceratophris varius, B, or Rana cornuta, Seb. I, Ixxii, 1, 2; — Tiles., Mag. de Berl. 1809, 2nd Trim. pi. iii, and Krusenst. Voy. pi. vi, or Ceratophris dorsala, Pr. Max. 2me \ivr.;—Cerat. Spixii, Cuv., or R. megas/oma, Spix, IV, 1;—R. scutata, lb. 2; — Cerat. Daudini, Cuv., Daud. xxxviii; — Cerat. clypeata, Cuv. Ig^ (a) R. clamilans, Daud. XVI, is also cited as a species, but it is the yomig of R. pipiens. — Eng. Ed. ^^ {b) In the annals of the Lyceum, America, the following species are enume- rated: — R.fontanalis. L. C; — R. palustris, Id.; — R, sylvatica, Id.; — R. pumila, Id.; — R. gry litis, Id.; — R. nigrita, Id.: Ann. of the Lyceum. —Eng. Ed. BATRACHIANS. 69 the tympanum is concealed under the skin*. They are all from South America. Southern Africa produces Batrachians resembling Frogs in their teeth and smooth skin; their toes are pointed, the hind ones broadly palmated, and the extremities of the three internal ones enveloped in a black, conical, horny nail; their head is small and their mouth moderate; the tongue, at- tached to the lower part of the gullet, is oblong, fleshy, and very large ; their tympanum is not visible. These numerous characters have induced us to form a genus for them by the name of DACTYLETHRAf . Hyla, Laur. — Calamita, Schn. and Merr. Tree-Frogs only differ from the true Frogs in the extremities of their toes, each of which is expanded into a rounded viscous pellet, that enables them to adhere to the surface of bodies and to climb trees, where in fact they remain all the summer living upon insects. They spawn, however, in water, and enter the mud in winter like other Frogs. There is a pouch under the throat of the male, which dilates whenever he cries. Rana arhorea, L. ; E-ces. Ran. pi. ix, x, xi. (The Common Tree- Frog). Green above, pale beneath ; a black and yellow line along each side of the body. They are adult in four years, and couple to- wards the end of April. The Tadpole completes its metamorphosis in the month of August. The Hylffi foreign to Europe are numerous, and some of them beauti- ful. One of the largest and handsomest is H. hicolor, Daud. VIII; and Spix, XIII. Sky-blue above, rose colour beneath. From South America. A still larger species, H. palmata, Daud. XX; Rana maxima, L., is transversely and irregularly striped with red and fawn-colour. From North Ame- . ricaj. On account of the singular property attributed to it we may mention the Rana tinctoria, L. (The Stained Tree Frog). It is said, that, if some of the feathers of a Parrot be plucked out and the skin be im- bued with the blood of this animal, it causes a reproduction of red or yellow feathers, and forms that peculiar appearance which is termed * Ceralophris granosa, Cuv., one of those Frogs with a concealed tymijanum, of which Gravenhorst has made his genus Stombus; but they have teeth like the others, and should not be approximated to the Toads, where Fitzinger has placed them. f From the Greek word daktalethra (thimble): such is the form of their nails. The Crapaud Usse, Daud. pi. xxx, f. 1, is a bad figure, the hind feet being altogether wrong; it forms the Pipa Icevis, Merr. The Pipa bufonia, Merr., or pretended male Pipa, Enl. No. 21, f. 2, is also the same species, but di-awn without nails. These spe^ cies of Merrem constitute the Engystom.\ of Fitzinger, but the true EngystomtB or the Breviceps, Merr., have neither teeth nor nails. X Add, of palmated species, Hyl. venulosa, Daud. XIX, or Cal. loans, Merr., Seb. 1, Ixxii; — //. tibicen, Seb. lb. 1, 2, 3; — H. viarmorala, Seb. I, Ixxi, 4, 5; Daud. XVIII;— /f. lateralis, Catesb. II, Ix-xi, Daud. II;— 77. bilineata, Daud. Ill;— F. verrucosa; — //. oculata; — H. frontalis. Id., and in Spix; Hyl. bufonia, XII; — //. geo- grafica, XI, 1; — H. albomarginata, VIII, 2; — II. papilLii is, 2; — H. pardalis, .3; — H. linerascens, \;^H. affinis, VII, 3. 70 REPTILES. by the Frencli tapire (a). AVe are assured it is a brown species, with two whitish bands transversely united in two places (Daud. pi. viii); the toes of the hind feet are almost free*. BuFo, Laur. Toads have a bulky body covered with warts or papilla; ; a thick lump behind the ears pierced with pores, from which issues a milky and fetid humour; no teeth whatever; the hind feet but slightly elongated. They leap badly, and generally avoid the water. They are hideous and dis- gusting animals, whose bite, saliva, urine, and even perspiration, are con- sidered, though erroneously, as poisonous. Rana bufo, L. ; Roes. Ran. XX. (The Common Toad). Red- dish-grey, or grey brown; sometimes olive or blackish; the back covered with rounded tubercles as large as lentils ; smaller and more closely set tubercles on the belly ; the hind feet semi-palmate. It remains in dark places, and passes the winter in a hole which it ex- cavates. It couples in the water in March and April; when this takes place on shore, the female drags herself to some ditch, &c., carrying the male with her: she produces innumerable small ova, united by a transparent kind of jelly in two strings, that are often twenty or thirty feet long, in the extraction of which the male assists with his hind feet. The Tadpole is blackish, and is the smallest of the European species, at the period when it acquires legs and loses its tail. The Common Toad lives upwards of fifteen years, and has young at four. Its cry has some resemblance to the barking of a dog. R. hufo calamita, Gm. ; Roes. XXIV; Daud. XXVII, 1. (The Bush Frog). Olive-colour; tubercles, as in the preceding; but not such large swellings behind the ears ; a yellow longitudinal line on the spine, and a dentated reddish one on the flank : no membrane to the hind feet. It diffuses a disagreeable odour, like that of gun- powder, lives on land, and never leaps, but runs tolerably fast; climbs up walls, to seek a shelter in their crevices, and for that pur- pose has two little osseous tubercles under the palm of the hands. It never visits the water except to couple, in the month of June ; the female lays two strings of eggs, like the Common Toad; the voice of the male, w^hich has also a sac under the throat, resembles that of the Stained Tree Frog. Bufo fuscus, Laurent. ; Rana hombina, . musicus, Id. XXXIII, 2;—B. cinctus, Pr. Max. fasc. 3: tlie B. agua, Id. fasc. 7, does not appear to be tlie same as that of Spix. 72 REPTILES. BOMBINATOR, MeiT., Only differs from the others in the tympanum being concealed under the skin ; such in France is the Rana hombina, Gm. ; Crapaud a ventre jaune; Roes. XXII; Daud. XXVI. The smallest and most aquatic of all the Toads of that country. It is greyish or brown above; a black-blue with orange spots beneath ; the hind feet completely palmate and almost as long as those of Frogs, so that it leaps nearly as well. It lives in marshes, and couples in June ; the eggs are produced in little balls, and are larger than those of the preceding species*. The Rhinellus, Fitzing. — Oxyrynchus, Spix, Has a muzzle pointed anteriorly f. We should approximate to it the Otilophis, Cuv. In which the muzzle is also angular, and where there is a crest on each side of the head which extends over the parotid. The Crapaud perle, {Ran. margaritifera, Gm.) Daud. XXXIII, is its type. Breviceps, Merr. — Engystoma, Fitzing. part of. Toads without a visible tympanum or parotid, in which the body is oval, head and mouth very small, and the feet but slightly palmatedt. A more essential difference is that which has separated the Pipae of Laurenti from all the great genus Rana. PiPA, Laur. This subdivision is distinguished by a horizontally flattened body ; a broad and triangular head; by the absence of a tongue; by a tympanum concealed under the skin; by small eyes placed near the edge of the upper jaw; by anterior toes, each of which is divided at the extremity into four small points ; and, finally, by the enormous larynx of the male, formed like a triangular osseous box, inside of which are two moveable bones, which can be made to close the entrance to the branchia3§. * Add, Bzifo venlricosus, Daud. XXX, 2, the turgidity of which is exaggerated. f Biifo proboscideus, Spix, XXI, 4;— the neighbouring species figured on the same plate, B. semilineatus, B. granulosus, B. acutiroslris, and those of pi. xiv, naricus and nasuius, connect this subgenus too closely with the common Toads to be easily re- tained. X Engystoma dorsattim, Cuw., or Bufo gibbosus, Auct. Seb. II, xxxvii, No. 3, Daud. XXIX, 2; — Eng. marmoratum ; Eiig. graiiosum, Cuv.: new species, one from India, the other from the Cape. The mouth of the Eng. siirinamense, Daud. XXXIII, 2, is already larger, as well as in the B. globulosus and albifrons, Spix, XIX. N.B. The Erig. ovalis, Fitz., is a Dactylethra; his Eng. ventricosa, Daud. XXX, 2, is a Bonihi- nator. N. B. The Bufo ephippium, Spix, XX, 2, of which Fitzinger makes his genus Bra- CHYCEPHALUS, on account of there being but three toes to all the feet, may be a young specimen badly preserved or incorrectly figured. § Described by Schneider under the name of Cisia siernalis. BATRACHIANS. 73 The species formerly known, Rana pipa, L. ; Seb. I, Ixxvii; Daud. xxxi, xxxii, is found at Cayenne and Surinam, in dark places about the houses. Its back is granulated, with three longitudinal ranges of larger granules. When the ova are expelled, the male places them on the back of the female, and there fecundates them; the latter then proceeds to the water, the skin of her back swells and forms cells, in which the eggs are hatched. The life of the Tad- pole is passed in the water, and it does not leave it until it has lost its tail, and acquired feet. It is at this time also that the mother re- turns to land. Spix figures one of them pi. xxii, at least a closely allied spe- cies, — P/po curururu, Spix, — from the bottom of the Brazilian lakes, and asserts that the female does not carry her young; he does not inform us, however, that he observed her during the whole year*. Salamandra, Brungn. The Salamanders have an elongated body, four feet and a long tail, which give them the general form of Lizards, so that Linnaus left them in that genus: but they have all the characters of Batrachians. Their head is flattened ; the ear completely hidden under the muscles, without any tympanum, having nothing but a small cartilaginous plate on the fenestra ovalis ; the two jaws furnished with numerous and small teeth ; two longitudinal rows of similar teeth in the palate, but attached to bones analogous to the vomer; the tongue as in the Frogs; no third eye-lid; a skeleton with very small rudiments of ribs, but without a bony sternum; a pelvis suspended from the spine by ligaments ; four toes before, and almost always five behind. In their adult state, respiration is performed as in Frogs and Tortoises. Their Tadpoles at first breathe by means of bran- chiffi resembling tufts, three on each side of the neck, which are sub- sequently obliterated ; they are suspended to cartilaginous arches, vestiges of which remain in the hyoid bone of the adult. A membranous oper- culum covers these openings, but the tufts are never enclosed by a tunic, and always float externally. The fore feet are developed before the hind ones ; and the toes in both feet appear successively. Salamandra, Laiir. The Terrestrial Salamanders have in their perfect state the round tail ; they inhabit the water only during their tadpole condition, which is but a short period, or when the female is ready to bring forth. The eggs are hatched in the oviduct. The terrestrial species of France have a gland analogous to that of the Toad, on each side of the occiput. Salam. maculosa, Laur. ; Lac. II, pi. xxx; Laeert. salamandra, L. (The common Salamander.) Black, with large spots of a bright yellow ; rows of tubercles on the sides, from which, when the animal * There is a true Pipa in the King's Cabinet, from Rio Negro, which is entirely smooth, and with an unusually narrow head. It will be my Pipa lavis, very differ- ent from that of Merrcm, which is a Dactylethra. 74 REPTILES. is agitated by fear, oozes a milky, bitter liquid, that has a strong odour, and is poisonous to very weak animals. It is, perhaps, this circum- stance which has given rise to the fable of the incombustibility of the Salamander. It lives in wet places and hides itself in holes, feeds on lumbrici, insects and earth, brings forth its young living, and deposits them in pools ; at first they have branchiae, and their tail is vertically compressed*. A Salamander resembling the common one, but entirely black and entirely without spots, is found in the Alps, it is the Sal. atra (the black Salamander), Laurent, pi. 1, f. 2. Sal. perspicillata, Savi. (The spectacled Salamander). Only four toes to all the feet; black above; yellow, spotted with black be- neath: a yellow line across the eyes. A small species from the Appenninesf . North America, which produces many more Salamanders than Europe, has several that are terrestrial, with a round tail, but deficient in the glands on the occiput;J;. Triton, Laurenti. The aquatic Salamanders always retain the vertically compressed tail, and pass nearly the whole of their existence in the water. The experi- ments of Spallanzani on their astonishing power of reproduction, have ren- dered them celebrated. If a limb be amputated, another is reproduced in its stead with all its bones, muscles, vessels, &c. and this takes place se- veral times in succession. Another not less singular faculty, discovered by Dufay, is the power they possess of remaining enclosed in ice for a con- siderable time without perishing. Their eggs are fecundated by the seminal fluid diffused in the water, and both enter the oviduct together ; they are expelled in long chaplets ; the young are not hatched until the fifteenth day, and retain their branchiae for a longer or shorter time according to the species. Modern observers have recognized several of them in France, but as the colour of these animals changes according to the age, sex, and season of the year, and as the crests and other ornaments of the males are only well developed in the spring, the species have not been determined with certainty. When winter sur- prises them with their branchis, they retain them till the following year, always increasing in size§. * See Ad. Fred. Funck. ele Saluin. terrest. vita, evolutione, formatione, Berlin, fol. 1827. t We have ascertained that the Sal. a trots doigts, Lacep. II, pi. 36, is merely a dried and somewhat mutilated specimen of the Sal. perspicillata. Add, S. Savi, Gosse. X Sal. venenosa, Daud., or sttbviolacea, Barton; — Sal. fasciata. Green; — Sal. tigrina, \<\.;—Sal. erijihrouota, IA.;—Sal. bilineala, Id. ;Sal. rubra, Daud. VI J I, pi. Dl, f. 2; — S. variolata, Gilliam. Sc. Nat. Phil., 1, pi. xviii, f. 1, and several new species. The Sal. japonica, Houituin, Bechst. trans, of Lacep., II, pi. 18,f. l,is closely allied to the eryihronota. § It was from an individual which had thus retained its hranchiaj that Laurenti made his Proteus Iritonius. BATIIACIIIANS. 75 S. marmorata, Latr. ; Triton Gesneri, Laur. (The Marbled Sa- lamander). Skin granulated; pale green above, with large irregular brown spots; brown, dotted with white, beneath; a red line along the back, which, in the male, is slightly crested and marked with black spots. But slightly aquatic. aS*. alpestris; Salam. a fiancs tachetes, Bechst. tr. Lac. pi. xx. (The Flank Spotted Salamander). Skin granulated; slate coloured and brown above ; orange or red belly ; a band of numerous small black spots on each flank. ^S". cristata, Latr. (The Crested Salamander). Skin granulated ; brown above, with round blackish spots ; orange beneath, similarly spotted; sides dotted with white; crest of the male elevated, acutely denticulate, and in the nuptial season edged with violet. S. punctata, Latr. (The Pointed Salamander). Skin smooth ; a light brown above ; pale or red beneath ; round black spots every where; black streaks on the head; crest of the male festooned; the toes somewhat widened, but not palmate. S. palmata, Latr. (The Web-footed Salamander). Back, brown ; top of the head vermiculated with brown and blackish ; paler on the flanks, with round blackish spots; belly without spots. The male has three small dorsal crests ; toes dilated and united by membranes, and the tail terminated by a small filament*. Several aquatic Salamanders are also found in North Americaf . Skeletons of a Salamander three feet in length have been discovered among the schist of CEningen. One of them is the pretended Fossil Man of Scheuchzer. Immediately after the Salamanders come several very similar animals, some of which are considered as never having had branchiae, that is, they probably lose them at as early a period as our terrestrial Salamanders; the others, on the contrary, retain them for life, a circumstance which by no means prevents their having lungs like the Batrachians, so that they may be considered as the only vertebrate animals which are truly amphibious;];. * The characters of the European species appear to me to be such as are most con- formable to nature; to add the synonymes of authors would be a difficult task, so little do their figures and descriptions agree with the animals before me. f Sal. symmetrica, Harl. which appears to me previous >. icpresented in Bechstein's Lacep. II. pi. xviii, f. 2, under the name of Sal. punctata, and several species whose descriptions I could not recognize, and which richly merit a monograph, accompanied by good figures. X The simultaneous existence and action of the branchial tufts and of the lungs in these animals, are as incontestable as any one of the most certain facts in natural history; there are now before me the lungs of a Siren three feet long, in which the vascular apparatus is as well developed and as complex as in any reptile whatever, notwithstanding which, the branchiae of this same animal were as complete as those of others. 76 KEPTJLl.S. The former (those in which no branclii;£ are visible) constitute two genera. Menopoma, Harlan*. Form of a Salamander; eyes apparent, the feet well developed, and an orifice on each side of the neck. Besides the range of small maxillary teeth, there is a parallel row of them on the front of the palate. Such is the reptile termed Sal. gigantea, Barton; Great Salamander of North America; Ann. of the New York Lye. I, pi. 17. (The Hellbender of the United States). From fifteen to eighteen inches long; a blackish blue ; inhabits the great lakes and the rivers of the interior. AiMPUiuMA, Garden. Have an orifice on each side of the neck, but their body excessively elongated ; the legs and feet, on the contrary, but very slightly developed ; the palatine teeth form two longitudinal ranges. In one species there are but three toes to each foot; Amph. tri- dactylum, Cuv. ; and in another, Amph. means, Gard. and Harl. but two — Mem. du Mus. XI Y, pi. If. Among those which always retain their branchite, the AXOLOTUS. The Axolots in every respect are similar to the larv^ of an aquatic Sa- lamander, having four toes before, five behind, three long tufted bran- chiae, &c. The maxillary teeth are like velvet, and those on the vo- mer in two bands. Such is the Siren pisciformis, Shaw; the Axolotl of the Mexicans; Gen. Zool. vol. III., part ii. pi. 140; Humb. Zool. Obs. I, pi. 12. From eight to ten inches long; grey, spotted with black. It inha- bits the lake that surrounds Mexico^. JMenobkanchus, //rtr/r/w.— Nectukus, Raffin. Have but four toes to all the feet ; a range of teeth in the intermaxillaries, and another, parallel, but more extended, in the maxillaries. * Dr. Harlan fiist called them Abranchus; Leukard and Fitzinger called them Ckyptobkanchus, and others Protonopsis. f The yhnphiuma was known to Linnaeus, but at too late a period to allow him to insert it in any of the editiv,,.js of his system which appeared during his life. It has been described since by Dr. Mitcliell, under the name of Chrijsodonta larvrrformis, and by Dr. Harlan under that of Amphiuma. I have described tlie Amph. tridacti/litm of Louisiana, which attains the length of three feet. See Mem. du Mus. tome XIV, 1. I suspect this is the species spoken of by Barton in his letter upon the Siren, as a Siren with four feet. :|: It is -sv-ith some hesitation that I place the Axolotl among the genera with per- manent branchiae, but so many witnesses assure us that it does not lose them that I am compelled to do so. BATRACFilANS. 77 The species most known, Menobranchus lateralis, Harl. ; Trilon lateralis. Say; Ann. of the New York Lye. 1, pi. xvi, inhabits the great lakes of North America, attaining, as it is said, the length of two and three feet. It was first obtained from Lake Champlain. Proteus, Laurent. — Hypochton, Merr. But three toes before and only two behind. Hitherto but a single species has been discovered, Proteus ancjui- nus, Laur. pi. IV. f. 3 ; Daud. VIII. xcix. 1 ; Siren anguina, Schn. More than a foot long, about the thickness of a finger, with a vertically compressed tail and four small legs. Its muzzle is elon- gated and depressed; its two jaws furnished with teeth; its tongue but slightly moveable and free before ; its eyes extremely small and hidden by the skin, like those of the Zemni (il/ws typhus. Pall.); the ear covered by the muscles as in the Salamanders, and the skin smooth and whitish. It is only found in some subterraneous streams, by which certain lakes in Carniola communicate with each other. The skeleton resembles that of the Salamander, except that it has many more vertebra, and fewer rudiments of ribs; the bony head, however, differs altogether in its general conformation. Finally, there are some which are possessed of fore feet only, the hind ones being entirely deficient. They are Siren, Linn. The Sirens are elongated animals, almost of the form of eels, with three branchial tufts ; they have no hind feet, nor is there even a vestige of a pelvis. Their head is depressed, the opening of their mouth small, their muzzle obtuse, eye very small and ear concealed; the lower jaw is armed with teeth all round, and there are none in the upper one, but there are several rows of them adhering to two plates fixed under each side of the palate*. S. lacertina, L. (The Lizard Siren). Blackish, and attains the length of three feet ; four toes to each foot ; tail compressed into an obtuse fin. It inhabits the marshes of Carolina, the rice swamps particularly, where it lives in the mud, occasionally going on shore or into the water. It feeds on lumbrici, insects, &c.f . There are two much smaller species, S. intermedia, Le Conte, Ann. New York Lye, II. Dec. 1826, * It is in vain that some authors have recently endeavoured to re\T[ve the antient idea, that the Siren is the tadpole of the Salamander. We possess, specimens of them much larger than any known Salamander, whose bones have acquired their perfect hardness without the smallest vestige of hind feet; their osteology also differs widely from that of the Salamanders; they have more and differently shaped vertebrae (90), and fewer ribs (eight pairs); the conformation of the head, and the connexion of the bones which compose it, are altogether different See Oss. foss. tome v. part ii. t Barton denies that it feeds on serpents, and that its voice resembles that of a young duck, as affirmed by Garden. Barton, " Some account of S. Lacert. &c." 78 PEPTILES. pi. 1. Blackish; four toes like the large one, but the branchial tufts are less fringed ; its length does not exceed one foot. S. striata, Le Conte, lb. I, pi. 4. Blackish; two longitudinal yellow streaks on each side ; only three toes ; the branchial tufts but slightly fringed ; length nine inches*. * The branchiae of these two species have been considered as taking no part in the process of respiration, in consequence of which M. Gray has formed a genus for them, which he calls PsEUDOBRANCHUs; it is easy, however, on their inferior surface, to see folds and a vascular apparatus, whose use is, to us, verj' plain ; besides this, the observations of Major Le Conte demonstrate the fact, that these sirens, like the li- zard sirens, are perfect animals. CLASS IV.-OF VERTEBRATA. FISHES. THE class of Fishes is composed of oviparous vertebrata with a double circulation, but in which respiration is altogether effected through the me- dium of water. For this purpose, on each side of the neck, they have an apparatus called branchiae, which consist of laminae suspended on arches that are attached to the hyoid bone, each composed of numerous laminae placed in a row, and covered with a tissue of innumerable blood-vessels. The water which the fish swallows, penetrates between these lamime, through the openings, called gills, and, by means of the air it contains, acts upon the blood that is continually sent to the branchiae from the heart, which only represents the right auricle and ventricle of warm- blooded animals. This blood, having undergone respiration, is poured into an artei-ial trunk situated under the spine, which, exercising the functions of a left ventricle, distributes it to every part of the body, whence it returns to the heart by the veins. The entire structure of the Fish is as evidently adapted for swimming as that of the Bird for flight. Suspended in a liquid of nearly the same specific gravity as its own body, there was no necessity for large wings to support it. In a great number of species, immediately under the spine, there is a bladder filled with air, which, by compression or dilatation, va- ries the specific gravity of the fish, and assists it to rise or descend. Pro- gression is effected by the motions of the tail, which, by striking the water alternately right and left, forces them forward; the branchiae, by impelling the water backwards, may also contribute to this effect. The limbs being thus of but little use, are greatly reduced ; the parts analo- gous to the bones of the arms and legs are extremely short, or even com- pletely concealed ; rays, more or less numerous, which support membra- nous fins, form a rude representation of the fingers and toes. The fins which correspond to the anterior extremities are termed pectoral, and those which answer to the posterior ones, ventral. Other rays attached to particular bones placed on or between the extremities of the spinous apophyses support vertical fins on the back, under the tail, aud at its ex- tremity, which, by being raised or lowered, increase or diminish the sur- fnce that strikes against the water. The superior fins are called dorsal, 80 Fisiirs. the inferior anal, and the fin at tlie end of tlie tail caudal. The rays are of two kinds ; the one consists of a single bony piece, usually hard and pointed, sometimes flexible and elastic, divided longitudinally — these are called spinous rays ; the others are composed of a great number of small articulations, and are generally divided into branches at their extremity — they are the soft, articulated, or branched rays. There is as much variety among Fishes, with respect to the number of limbs, as among Reptiles. Most generally there are four; some have but two, and in others they are totally wanting. The bone which is ana- logous to the scapula, is sometimes held among the muscles as in the higher animals, and at another time it is attached to the spine, but most commonly it is suspended on the cranium. The pelvis rarely adheres to the spine, and very frequently, instead of being behind the abdomen, is before it, and connected with the humeral apparatus. The vertebrae of Fishes are united by concave surfaces filled with car- tilage, which most generally communicate by a canal excavated in the axis of the vertebrae. In most of them there are long spinous processes which maintain the vertical form of the body. The ribs are frequently soldered to the transverse processes. The head of Fishes varies more as to form than that of any other class, notwithstanding which it almost always consists of the same number of bones as is found in other oviparous animals. The frontal bone is com- posed of six pieces ; the parietal of three ; the occipital of five ; five pieces of the sphenoid, and two of each temporal bone, remain in the composition of the cranium. Besides the usual parts of the brain which are arranged as in reptiles in a row, fishes have also knots or ganglions at the base of their olfactory nerves. Their nostrils are simple cavities at the end of the muzzle, almost always perforated by two holes, and regularly lined by a plaited pituitary mem- brane. The cornea of their eye is very flat, and there is but little of the aqueous humour; the chrystalline lens, however, is very hard, and almost globular. Their ear consists of a sac representing the vestibule, in which are sus- pended small bodies most commonly of a stony hardness, and of three membranous semi-circular canals, situated in the cavity of the cranium rather than in the substance of its parietes, the Chondropterygii excepted, in which they are entirely contained in them. The eustachian tube and tympanal bones are always deficient, and the Selachians alone have a fe- nestra ovalis, which is level with the head. The sense of taste in fishes can have but litlle energy, as a great por- FISHES. 81 tiou of the tongue is osseous, and frequently furnished with teeth and other hard parts. The body in most of them is covered with scales, and none possess or- gans of prehension ; the fleshy cirri of some may supply the imperfection of the other organs of touch. In the greater number, the intermaxillary bone forms the edge of the upper jaw, having behind it the maxillary, termed the labial bone {mystacc). A palatine arch, composed of the palatine bones, of the two pterygoid processes, the zygomatic process, the tympanum and squamous |K)rtion, forms, as in Birds and Serpents, a sort of interior jaw, and furnishes be- hind an articulation for the lower jaw, which generally has two bones on each side ; the number of these pieces, however, is reduced in the Chon- dropterygii. Teeth are found in their intermaxillary, maxillary, and lower jaws, in the vomer, the bones of the palate, on the tongue, on the arches of the branchiae, and even on the bones situated behind these arches, attached like them to the hyoides, and called pharyngeal bones. The varieties of these combinations, as well as those of the form of the teeth placed at each point, are innumerable. Besides the apparatus of the branchial arches, the liyoid bone is fur- nished on each side with rays which support the branchial membrane. A sort of lid, composed of three bony pieces, the operculum, the subopercu- lum, and the interoperculum, unites with this membrane in closing the great opening of the gills ; it is articulated with the tympanal bone, and plays on one called the preoperculum. In many of the Chondropterygii this apparatus is wanting. The stomach and intestines differ in size, figure, thickness, and convo- lutions, as greatly as in the other classes. The pancreas, except in the Chondropterygii, is replaced either by c»ca of a peculiar tissue situated round the pylorus, or by the tissue itself applied to the origin of the in- testine. The kidneys are situated along the sides of the spine, but the bladder is above the rectum, and opens behind the anus and behind the orifice of generation; exactly the inverse of what we find in the Mammalia. The testes are two enormous glands commonly termed milts; and the ovaries, or roe, two sacs about the same form and size, in whose internal folds are deposited the eggs. Some of the ordinary fishes copulate and are viviparous ; the young fry are hatched in the ovary and issue through a very short canal. The Selachians alone, besides the ovary, have long oviducts which frequently open into a true uterus, and they produce either living ones or eggs enveloped with a horny substance. In most Fishes, however, copulation does not take place ; when the female has laid, the male VOL. II. G passes over the egg, difTusiug the secretion from the niilts, and fecun- dating the eggs (a). Of all the classes of animals, that of fishes is the most difficult to sub- divide into orders from fixed and sensible characters. After many at- tempts I have decided upon adopting the following arrangement, which, though it militates in some instances against precision, does not separate natural families. Fishes form two distinct series, that of Fishes, properly so called, and that of the Chondropterygii, otherwise called Cartilaginous Fishes. The general character of the latter consists in the absence of the bones fS^° (a) In the great work on Icthyology, by Cuvier, now in the course of publi- cation, he dwells at much greater length on the general characters of the Fishes. The following passage, which we translate from that work, will be read with much interest: — " Being aquatic, that is to say, living in a liquid which is heavier, and offers greater resistance than air, their power of motion has been necessarily disposed and calculated for progression as well as for elevation, which is also accomplished by them with ease. Hence arisi;s that form of body which offers least resistance, the chief seat of muscular force residing in the tail, the shortness and expansibility of their limbs, the membranes which support them, the smooth or scaly teguments, and the total absence of hairs or feathers. Breathing only through the medium of water, that is, for the purpose of giving an arterial nature to their blood, profiting by the small quantity of oxygen contained in the air, which is mingled with the water, their blood is necessarily cold, and their vitality, the energy of their senses and movements, are consequently less than in Mammalia and Birds. Their brain, therefore, or rather a composition similar to it, is proportionably much smaller, and the external organs of their senses are not of a nature to admit of powerful impi-essions. Fishes, in fact, are, of all vertebrated animals, those which have the least apparent signs of sensibi • lity. Having no elastic air at their disposal, they remain mute, or nearly so, and all those sensations awakened or sustained by the voice remain unknown to them. Their eyes almost immoveable, their bony and rigid countenance, their limbs de- prived of the power of inflexion, and every part moving at the same time, deprive them of the faculty of varying their physiognomy, or expressing their emotions. Their ear, inclosed on every side by the bones of the skull, without external conch or internal labyrynth, and composed only of a sac and membranous canals, scarcely allows them to distinguish the most striking sounds; and, in fact, an exquisite sense of hearing would be of very little use to those destined to live in the empire of silence, and around whom all are mute. Their sight, in the depths of their abode, would be little exercised, if the greater number of the species had not, by the size of their eyes, been enabled to supply the deficiency of light; but, even in these species, the eye scarcely changes its direction; still less can it change its dimensions, and accom- modate itself to the distance of objects; its iris neither dilates nor contracts, and its pupil remains the same in every degree of light. No tear bathes this eye, no eyelid soothes or protects it; and, in this class, it nuist be regarded as only a feeble rej^re- sentation of that beautiful, brilliant, and animated organ of the higher classes of animals. Procuring food by swimming after a prey which itself swims with greater or less rapidity, having no means of seizing this prey but by swallowing it, a delicate sense of taste would have been useless to fishes had nature bestowed it on them. But their tongue, almost imaioveable, often bonj', or amied mth dentated plates, and only receiving a few slender nerves, demonstrates that this organ is as little sensible as it is little necessary. Smell even cannot be as continually exercised by fishes as by animals which breathe air in a direct manner, and whose nostiils are unceasingly traversed by odoriferous vapours. Lastly, we come to the touch, which, on account of the surface of their bodies being encircled by scales, by the inflexibihty of therays of their limbs, and by the dryness of the membranes enveloping them, has bee n obliged as it were to seek refuge at the end of their lips; and even these, in some sjiecies, are reduced to a dry and insensible hardness." — Eng. Ed. FISHES. 83 of the upper jaw, whose place is supplied by those of the palate : their whole structure also exhibits evident analogies which we will describe : it is divided into three orders. The Cyclostomi, whose jaws are soldered in an immoveable ring, with branchiaa containing numerous openings. The Selachii, which have the branchiee of the Cyclostomi, but not tlieir jaws. The Sturiones, whose branchiffi are opened by the usual fissure fur- nished with an operculum. The other series, or that of the Ordinary Fishes, presents a primary division in those where the maxillary bone and the palatine arch are fixed to the cranium: they constitute an order which 1 call that of the Plec- TOGNATHi, and are divided into two families: the Gymnodontes and the SCLERODERMI. I next find fishes with perfect jaws, but whose branchiee, instead of being pectiniforra, as is the case in all the others, resemble a series of small tufts; they also constitute an order which I call Lophobranciiii, that comprises but a single family. There then remains an immense number of fishes, to which no other characters can be applied than those of the external organs of motion. After an extensive research, I have found that the least objectionable of these characters is the one employed by Ray and Artedi, drawn from the nature of the first rays of the dorsal and anal fins. Thus the ordinary fishes are divided into Malacopterygii, in which all the rays are soft, with the occasional exception of the first of the dorsal or of the pectorals ; and into Acanthopterygii, in which the first portion of the dorsal, or of the first dorsal where there are two, is always supported by spinous rays, and in which some of the same are always found in the anal fin, and at least one in each of the ventral ones. The first may be conveniently divided by a reference to the position of their ventral fins, which are sometimes situated behind the abdomen, sometimes suspended to the apparatus of the shoulder, or are totally wanting. We thus arrive at the three orders of the Malacopterygii abdomi- nales, the Subbrachiati and the Apodes, each of which comprises certain natural families to be described. The first is particularly nu- merous. It is impossible, however, to apply this mode of division to the Acan- thopterygii ; and their subdivision in any other way than by that of natural families is a problem that I have hitherto vainly endeavoured to solve. Fortunately, many of these families are possessed of characters nearly as exact as those which could be given to true orders. 84 FISHES. It is, besides, impossible to assign to the families of tishes the same marked gradation that is visible among those of the Mammalia. Thus, the Chondropterygians are connected with Serpents on the one hand by the organs of the senses, and some of them even by those of generation ; while the imperfection of the skeleton in others allies them to the Mol- lusca and Worms, As to the Ordinary Fishes, if any one system is found more developed in some than in others, it is not sufficiently pre-eminent, nor does it exer- cise a sufficient influence over the whole to compel us to pay any regard to it in a methodical arrangement. We will successively treat of these two series, commencing with the most numerous, that of Ordinary Fishes, and placing at its head the order richest in genera and species. ORDER I. ACANTHOPTERYGIANS. The Acanthopterygians form the first and by far the most numerous di- vision of Ordinary Fishes. They are recognized by the spines which occupy the place of the first rays of their dorsal, or which alone support the first fin of the back, where there are two ; sometimes, instead of a first dorsal, there are only a few free spines. The first rays of their anal are also spines, and there is generally one to each ventral. The relations between the Acanthopterygii are so multiplied, and their different natural families present so much variety in the apparent cha- racters which we might suppose would indicate orders or other subdivi- sions, that it has been found impossible to divide them otherwise than by these same natural families, which we are compelled to leave together. FAMILY I. THE PERCH TRIBE.— PERCOIDES*. This family, thus called because its type is the Common Perch, com- prehends fishes with oblong bodies, covered with scales that are gene- * In my first edition this family also comprehended the Bucca Luricala; the Scieno'ides, and the Sparoidts. It was necessary to detach these three new families ACANTHOPTERYGIANS. 8S rally hard or rough, and whose operculum or preoperculum, and fre- quently both, have dentated or spinous edges, and whose jaws, the fore- part of the vomer, and almost always the palatine bones, are furnished with teeth. The species are extremely numerous, particularly in the seas of hot climates; their flesh is generally wholesome and agreeable. In a vast proportion of these Perches, the ventral fins are inserted under the pectorals: they form a first division, which may be called Per- coiPES Thoracici, or Thoracic Perches. They were nearly all comprised by Linnaeus in his genus Perca, but we have been compelled to divide them as follows, from the number of the branchial rays, that of the dorsal fin, and the nature of the teeth. The first subdivision has seven rays in the branchiae, two fins on the back, and all the teeth small and dense as the pile on velvet. Perca, Cttv. The true Perches have the preoperculum dentated: the bony opercu- lum terminated by two or three sharp points and a smooth tongue. Some- times the sub-orbital and the humeral are slightly dentated. P. fiuviaUs, L, ; Bl. 52. (The Common Perch). Greenish ; broad, vertical, blackish bands; ventral and anal fins red; one of the most beautiful and best of the European fresh-water fishes. It in- habits pure and running streams; its eggs are united by a viscid matter into long strings, which form a kind of net-work. North America produces several neighbouring species*. Labrax, Cuv. The Bars are distinguished from the Perches by scaly opercula termi- nating in two spines, and by a rough tongue. L. lupus, Cuv. ; Perca labrax, L. ; Sc. diacantha, Bloch, 305 ; Bars Commun ; Spicjola of the Italians; Cuv. and Val. JI, xi. (The Basse Perch). A large fish found on the coast of Europe ; it is highly flavoured, and of a silvery hue. It is particularly common in the IMediterranean, and is the Lupus of the Romans, and the Labrax of the Greeks. The young ones are usually spotted witli brown. The United States produce a large and beautiful species, Labr. lineatus, Cuv., Sciena lineata, Bloch, 304, and Perca saxatilis, from it, and I think I have been fortunate enough to iliscover sufficient characters for that purpose. * Perc. flavescens, Cuv. and Val. II, p. 46; — P. serrato-granulata, lb. 47; — P. gra- nulata, lb. 48, and pi. ix; — P. acuta, lb. 49, and pi. x; — P. gracilis, lb. 50. Add, P. Plumieri, or Scimna Plumieri, Bl. 306, or Centropome Plumier and Cheilo- diptiire chnjsoptere, Lacep. Ill, xxxiii; — P. ciliata, Kubl; — P. marginatu, Cuv. aud Val. 53. 86 FISHES. Blocli, Schn. pi. 20, (the Rock-fish), with longitudinal blackish stripes*. We might also separate from Labrax a species of the United States, whose scales extend to the maxillary bone — Labrax mucro- naius, Cuv. and Val. II, xii. The Lates, Cuv., Tlie Varioles, hardly differ from the Perches, except in having deep notches and even a small spine at the angle of the preoperculum, and also deeper notches in the sub-orbital and humeral bones. Lates niloticus, Cuv. ; Perca nilotica, L. ; Keschr of the Arabs, Geoff. Egyp. Poiss. pi. ix, f. 1. A very large and excellent fish of a silver colour, known to the antieuts by the name of Lotus or Lates. Other species are found in the rivers of Indiaf . Centropomus, Lacep. The Centropomes have the preoperculum dentated, but the operculum obtuse and unarmed. Only one species is knowii]};. Centrop. undecimalis, Cuv. ; Scicena undecimalis, Bloch, 305 ; Cuv. and Val. II, xiv. A large and excellent fish, known through- out the hot parts of America by the name of Pike, whose muzzle, in fact, is depressed like that of our true Pike; but its teeth are small and crowded, and all its remaining characters are those of Perches with two dorsal fins ; it is of a silver colour tinged with greenish ; a blackish lateral line §. Grammistes, CllV.y Have the preoperculum and operculum armed with spines, but without notches ; the dorsals approximated ; scales small, and as if buried in the epidermis ; no sensible spine to the anal fin. The species are small, with longitudinal white streaks on a black- ish ground. They inhabit the Indian Ocean [j. AspRo, Cuv., Plave the body elongated; the two dorsals separate; ventrals broad; * It is also the Perca MitcMlli, New York Trans, v. I, 413. Add, Perca elongata, Geoff. Eg. pi. xix, 1; — Labr. waigiensis, Less, and Garn., Cuv. and Val. II, 33; — Labr. japonicus, Cuv. II, 85. t 'Ihe Piche naire of Pondicherry, or Cockvp of the English at Calcutta (Latis nobilis, Cuv.), Russ. II, cxxxi, Cuv. and Val. II, xiii, which is also the Holocentre heptadactyle, Lacep.; — Holoc. calcarijer, Bl. 244. X Lacep. in his genus Centropomus, comprehends several Fishes which have not its characters, such as tlie Labrax lupus, tlie lutes, &c. § Bl. pi. 305, has improperly given it a red tinge; the Sphyrene orvert, Lacep. V, pi. iv, f. 2, is nothing else than a bad figure of this fish; it is also the Camuri of Marcgrave. II Gram, orienlalis, Bl., Cuv. and Val. II, pi. xxvii. La Sci&ne rayee, Lacep. IV, 323 ; his Ptrseque triacavthe, lb. 424; his Per. pentacanthe, lb.; his Bvdinn six raies, lb. 302; his Ceiiiropome six raies, lb. 690; the Perca bilineala, Thunb. Nov. Act. Stokh. XIII, pi. v, p. 142, appear to be varieties of it. ACANTHOPTERYGIANS. 87 teeth small and dense as the pile on velvet; head depressed; the muzzle extending heyond the mouth, and terminating in a rounded point. Two species inhabit the fresh waters of Europe ; their flesh is delicate and agreeable. Aspro vulgaris, Cuv. ; Perca asper, L. ; Bl. 107, 1 and 2; Cuv. and Val. II, xxvi. From the Rhone and its tributaries ; greenish ; three or four blackish vertical bands; eight spines in the first dorsal. A. Zingcl; Perca Zingel, L. ; Bl. 105. From the Danube; larger than the vulgaris, but similar as to colours ; thirteen spines in the first dorsal. This division also comprises some fishes whose singularity of con- formation gives rise to several subgenera. HuRO, Cuv. and Val. The Hurons have all the characters of a true Perch, except that the preoperculum is not dentated*. Etelis, Cuv. and Val. All the characters of a true Perch : hooked teeth in the jaws, but not as in the Lucio-Perca, in the palate f. NiPHON, Cuv. and Val. Teeth as in the Perch, and strong spines at the lower part of the pre- operculum, and on the operculum;};. Enoplosus, Lacep., Have the characters of the Perches; angle of the preoperculum more deeply dentate ; the body much compressed, and, together with the two dorsals, of great vertical height §. DiPLOPRioN, Kuhl and Van Hasselt, Have all the characters of a Perch; body compressed; a double den- tated border on the lower part of the preoperculum, and two spines on the operculum 1|. Apogon, Lacep. The Surmullets have the body short, furnished, as well as the opercula, with large scales that are easily dislodged; the two dorsals very separate, and a double dentated border on the preoperculum. They are small fishes, and generally red. One of them, Ap. rex mullorum, Cuv.; Mullus imherbis, L. ; commonly called * Iluro nigricans, Cuv. and Val. II, pi. xvii. t Etelis carbunculus, lb. pi. xviii. X Niplion spinosus, lb. XfX. § Enoplosus armatus, lb. .XX, or Chcutodon armntus, J. White. II Diploprion bifascialum, Cuv. and Val. II, xxi. 88 FISHES. Roi des Rovr/ets, Cuv., Mem. du Mus. I, 336, and pi. xi, f. 2; three inches long; red; a black spot on each side of the tail; is found in the Mediterranean*. Cheilodipterus, Lacep., Combine all the characters of the Surmullet, dilFering only in the fangs or long and pointed teeth, with which the jaws are armed. They inhabit the Indian seas, are small, and generally marked with longitudinal streaks ■!■. POMATOMUS, Riss., Have two separate dorsals like the Surmullet, and the scales dislodged with the same facility ; but the preoperculum is simply striate, the oper- culum emarginate, and the eye enormous ; very small teeth, dense as the pile on smooth velvet. Pomat. telescope, Risso; Cuv. and Val. II, xxiv. The only spe- cies known ; it inhabits the Mediterranean, and is excessively rare. A second subdivision comprises the Percoides with two dorsal fins, and long and pointed teeth mingled with those that are small and dense as the pile on velvet. Ambassis, Commers., Have nearly the same form as that of the Surmullet; a double notch towards the lower part of the preoperculum; the operculum terminating in a point. They are distinguished from the Surmullet by tlie contiguity of their two dorsals, and by a spine before the first. They do not perhaps strictly belong to this family, for there are no ap- pendages to the pylorus. These are small fresh-water fishes of the East Indies, which swarm in the pools and rivulets ; several of them are transparent j. One of them is common in a pond in the Island of Bourbon where they are prepared as anchovies — Ambassis Commersonii, Cuv. and Val. II, xxv§. To this division belongs the Lucio-Perca, Cuv., The Sandres, called by the French Brochets-PercJies, or Perch-Pike, * This is the Apogon rouge, Lacep.; the Corvulus, Gesuer, p. 1273; the Amia of Gronovius, Zooph. IX, 2; the Centropomus ruhens, Spinol. An. Mus. X, XXVIII, 2; the Dipterodon ruber, Rafin. Caratt. No. 715, &c. 1\\e Dipterodon hexacantlie, Lacep. Ill, pi. iv, f. 2, and the Ostorinque fteurieu, Id. Ill, xxxii, 2, also belong to this genus. For the numerous species of this genus foreign to Europe, see Cuv. and Val. II, 151, et seq. t Cheilod. fi-vittalus, Cuv., Lacep. Ill, xxxv, 1; which is his Cheilod. raye. III, p. 543, and his Cenlropome macrodon, IV, 273; — Cheilod. arabicus {Perca lineata, Forsk,), Cuv. and Val. II, pi. xxiii; — Ch. 5-lineatus, lb. p. 167. + Several of them are comprised by M. Ham. Buchanan among his Chandae. § It is the Centropome ambasse, Lacep. IV, 273, and his Lutjan gymnocephale , IV, 216, and III, pi. xxiii, f. 3. For the other species, see Cuv. and Val. II, 181, et seq. ACANTHOPTERYGIANS. ;89 because to the characters of a Perch, they add teeth somewhat resembling those of the Pike. The edge of their preoperculum has but one simple emargination ; their dorsal fins are separate ; some of the maxiUary and palatine teeth are long and pointed. Lue. Sandra, Cviv.\ Perca lucio-perca, h. ; Sandre d' Europe ; Bl. pi. li; Cuv. and Val. II, pi. xv. Is an excellent fish, of the lakes and rivers of Germany, and of Eastern Europe. Longer than the Perch ; greenish, with vertical brown bands ; from three to four feet in length*. A second division comprises the Perches with seven branchial rays and one dorsal. They are subdivided on grounds nearly analogous to those which have led to the subdivision of the preceding ones; their teeth are either hooked, or are all dense like the pile on velvet ; notches and spines on the opercula, &c. In the subdivision, furnished with hooked teeth, we find, Serranus, Cuv. The Serrans have the preoperculum dentate ; the bony operculum ter- minating in one or several points. This genus contains a vast number of species, and may be subdivided as follows : Serranus, properly so called, Or the Sea-Perch. No apparent scales on either of the jaws. Several beautiful species inhabit the Mediterranean, such as, Perca scriba, L. ; Cuv. and Val. II, xxviii, so named from having some irregular blue lines on the head-i". Perca cahrilla, L. ; Cuv. and Val. II, xxix. Three oblique bands on the cheek J. It is also found in the ocean. This species, and perhaps the preceding one, were known to the Greeks by the name of Chane, and were thought to consist exclusively of females. Ca- volini assures us, that, in every specimen he examined, he found a roe, at the lower end of which was a whitish part, which might be considered as the milt. He believes them to be hermaphroditical. The Anthias, bl, partini, Are Serrani, in which both jaws and the end of the muzzle are armed with very obvious scales §. The most remarkable species is, * Add, the Bcrschik, or Sandre bdtard {Perca volgensis, Gni.) ; — the Lucio-perca americana, Cuv. and Val. II, pi. xvi, p. 122. f It is also the Perca marina, Brunnich; the Holocentrits maibms oi haxoche; the IIol. argus of Spinola, and the Hoi. maroccanus of Bloch. The Hoi. fasciatus, Bl. 240, appears to us nothing more than the same species somewhat changed. X It is also the Hoi. virescens, Bl. ; the Serranus flavus and cabrilla of Rip.; the Lttbrus chanus of Gniel., or Holocentre chani, Lacep. ; the Bodian hiatule, Id. &c. Add the Sacchetto, Labriis hepattis, L.; and Lab. adriaticus, Gm., or Holocentrus siagonotus, Laroche, &c.; — Serranus vitia, Quoy et Gaym., Voy. de Freycin., Zool. LVIII, 2; Hoi. nrgentinus, Bl. 235; — Serr. radialis, Q. et G. 316; — Serr. fascicularis, Cuv. et Val. II, XXX, and the other species described, Id. II, p. 239 — 249. § Most of our Merrffi are placed by Bloch among his Anthias, but we restrict this genus to the species answering to our definition of the same. So little regard has 90 FISHES. Anth. sacer, Bl.*, pi. cccxv ; Barhier de la Mediterrance, Cuv. and Val. II, xxxi. A most beautiful fish, of a fine ruby red, chang- ing to gold and silver, with yellow bands on the cheek. The third dorsal ray is more than double the height of the others; the ventral fins are very long, and the lobes of the caudal fin terminate in fila- ments, the lower of which is the longestf. Merra, Serrani, whose maxillary is destitute of scales, but whose lower jaw is covered with small ones. There is one of them found in the Mediterra- nean ; the Perca gigas, Gm. Of a clouded brown ; three feet and more in length ; it is also taken in the ocean. The Merrffi, foreign to Europe, are extremely numerous ; the dentation of the preoperculum in several becomes almost insensible]};; but, gene- rally, they can only be distinguished by their colours. There are many in which the body is dotted with colours more or less vivid §, and others, in which it is marked with crowded spots ||. Some in which it is longitudinally striped^, or transversely**, or mar- bled in large patches f-j-, or divided into two colours J|;, or, finally, of a Bloch had to exactness, that his Anthias sacer does not even possess the character attributed to the genus Anthias of a spineless opercuhim. * This term Sacer was applied by the antients to their Anthias, a large Fish very different from the one here described. See Cuv. et Val. II, p. 255 et seq. f Add, Serranus oculatus, Cuv. et Val. II, xxxii, and the other species described, lb. p. 262—270. X These, when the muzzle is naked, constitute the Bodi anus, Bloch; they only differ from most of the Holocentri of the same author in this iliminished dentation. The Holocentri, when the muzzle is scaly, are called Epinepheli, and where lliis is the case with the Bodiani, they are called Cephalopholes. The Lutjani and Anthias of Bloch differ from the Holocentri, in the absence of the spines on their operculum; in the first ones the muzzle is naked; it is scaly in the others; but all these characters, of but litde importance in tliemselves, are very badly applied to tlie species, § They are tlie Jacob Evertsen of the Dutch, such as, Bodianus guttaius, Bl. 224 ; — Cephalopholis argus, Bl., Schn., pi. 61; — Bodianus idcnaA-, Bl. 226; — Holoc. aiiralus, lb. 236; — IIol. ca-ruleo-punctatus, Id. 242, 2;—Labrus punctulatus, Laccp. Ill, xvii, 2, &c. ; and in America, Perca guttata, Bl. 312, or Spare sanguinolent, Lacep. IV, iv, 1; — P. macidata, Bl. 313, or Spare atlantique, Lac. IV, v, 1; — Johnius guttatus, Bl. Schn., or Bonaci-arara, Parra, XVI, 2; — Lutjmius lumdatits, Bl. Schn., or Cabrilta, PaiTa, XXXVI, 1; — Bodianus gtialivcre, Parra,y; — Holoc. pttnctatus, Bl. 241, or P//ra pixanga, Marcg. 152; Gtjmnocephalus ruber, Bl. Schn. 67, or Caranna, Marcg. 147; — Bodianus apua, Bl. 229. II Epinephclus merra, Bl. 329; — Holoc. pantherin, Lacep. Ill, xxvii, 3; — Serranus bontoo, Cuv., Russel, 128; — Serr. suillus, Russ. 127; — Labrus leopardus, Lacep. Ill, XXX, 1; — Holoc. salmondides, lb. XXXIV, 3; — Bodianus melanurus, Geoiir. Egypt., XXI, 1. ^ Sciana formosa, Shaw, Russel, 129. ** Holoc. tigrinus, Bl. 237; Seb. Ill, xxvii;— //o^. lanceolatus, Bl. 242, 1 ;— Anthias aricntalis. Id. 326; — Anth. striatus. Id. 324, which is also the Anth. cherna, BL, Schn^ Parra, XXIV; and the Spare chrysomelane, Laccp. ft Serranus geographicus, Kuhl, Cuv. et Val. II, p. 322. XX Serranus fluvo-cceruhus, Cuv., which is the Holoc. gymnose, Lacep. Ill, xxvii, 2; liis Bndiaii grosse tete, III, xx, 2, and his Holocentre jaune et bleu, IV, p. 369. It is also the Serran bourignon, Quoy et Gaym., V'oy. Freyciii., Zool., pi. Ivii, 2. ACANTHOPTEUYGIANS. 91 more or less uniform tint*. Very few of them possess characters drawn from very apparent varieties of form. We will cite, however, the Serr. altivelis, Cuv. ; Cuv. et Val. II, xxxv. Which has a higher dorsal than the others ; it is sprinkled with round and black spots, on a ground of light brown ; and Sen: phaeton, lb. pi. xxxiv, whose two middle caudal rays unite in a filament as long as the body. We have separated from the Serrani, the PlECTUOPOMA, Old'., Which only differ from them in the more or less numerous teeth of the lower edge of the preoperculum, which incline obliquely forwards -j-, and the DiAcopE, Cuv., Whose character consists of an emargination near the lower edge of the preoperculum, which receives a tuber of the interoperculum. The Indian Ocean produces some large and splendid species;};. Mesoprion, Ctiv. These have, with the dental characters and fins of the Serrani and their dentated preoperculum, an operculum terminating in an obtuse angle, not spinous §. Numerous and beautiful species inhabit the two oceans j]. Several of them are very large, and excellent for eating. * Ilolocentrus ongus, Bl. 234; — Epinephcliis ■marglnaUs, Bl. 328, or IIoloc. rosmnre, Lacep. IV, vii, 2; — Hoi. occanique, Lacep. IV, vii. S;—Epiiiephelus ruber, Bl. 331. For various other species of which there are no figures, see descriptions in the second vohime of our History of Fishes. •)■ Fl. melanoleucum, Cuv.; or Bodian melanoleuque, Lacep ; or Lnbre li.ise, Id. Ill, xxiii, 2; or Bodian cyclostome, lb. XX, 1; — I/oloc. leopard, Lacep. IV, p. 337; Cuv. et Val. II, xxxvi; — Bodianus maculalus, Bl. 228, or Plectrcpome ponctue, Freycin. Zool. XLV, 1; — Holocentrus unkolor, BL, Schn., jSeb. Ill, Ixxvi, 10; Fleet. puella, Cuv. et Val. II, xxxvii, and the other species described in the second Vol. of our His- tory of Fishes. X Diac. Seba, Cuv., Seb. Ill, xxvii, 2, and Russel, 99;— Z). rivtilata, Cuv.; Cuv. et Val. II, xxxviii; — D.macolor, Cuv., Renard, I, ix, 60; — D. octulirieafa, Cuv., or IIoloc. bcngalensis, Bl. 246, the same as the Labrus 8-lineaius, Lactp. Ill, xxii, 1, and as the Sciana kasmira, Forsk.; Hoi. 5-lhieatus, Bl. 239, is a variety of it; — D. notatn, Cuv., Russel, 98; D. quadriguttata, Cuv., or Spare lepisure, Lacep. Ill, xv, 2; — D. calvett, Quoy et Gaym. Voy. Freycin. Zool. LVII, 1, and several other species de- scribed in the second Vol. of our History of Fishes. § Most of them were comprised in the genus Lutjanus of Bloch, but were there mingled with species of other families, either Scienoides or Labroides, of which we have made other genera. II Mesopr. unimaculatus, Russel, 97; — Anthias, Johnii, Bl. 318; — Coins catus, Bu- chan, 38, f. 30; — M. b-llneattis, Russel, 110; — M.monostygma, Cuv., Lacep. Ill, xvii, 1 ; — M. uninotatus, Cuv., Cuv. et Val. II, xxix, Duham. part II, sect. IV, pi. iii, f. 2, and probably Sparus syiingris, L., Catesb. II, xvii, 1 ; — M. bitccanella, Cuv., the figure of which was taken by Bloch from Plumier, and, with some alteration, given as the Sparus erylhrinvs, pi. 274; — Bod. aia, Bl. 227, or Acara aia, Marcgr. 167;— ^/es. chry- i«;Ms, Cuv. et Val. II, xl, which is also the Sparus cUrysurus, B\. 202, or Acara pi- 92 FISHES. We now pass to the Perches with seven hrancliial rays, and a single dorsal, which have the teeth dense as the pile on velvet. ACERINA, CuV. The Gremilles are characterized by cavities or depressions on the bones of the head, and by their preoperculum and operculum having only small spines, but not dentated. Two fresh-water species are found in Europe : j4. cermia; Perca cernua, L. ; Perche (joujonnicre, Bl. 53, 2; Cuv. et Val, III, pi. xli. (The Common Gremille). A small fish of an agreeable flavour, very common in all the fresh-water streams of Europe ; it is of an olive colour, spotted with brown. A. schraitzer; Perca schraitzer, L. ; the Schrcetz, Bl. 332. Larger, and has interrupted blackish lines on the sides: it inhabits the Danube*. Rypticus, Cuv. The Savonniers, or Soap-worts, also have only small spines on the opercular pieces; the scales, like those of the Gramraistes, are small, and concealed in a thick epidermis; particularly distinguished from the Grammistes by the single dorsal. There is one of these in America of a violet black, Anthias saponaceus, Bloch., Schn., Parra, xxiv, 2, (The Sa- ponaceous Anthias), which owes its name to its soft skin and the layer upon it of a frothy viscosity f. PoLYPRION, Cuv. The Cerniers have not only dentations on the preoperculum and spines, or the operculum, but there is on this last bone a bifurcated and very rough crest, and the bones of the head are generally covered with asperities. The Mediterranean possesses a species wliich becomes enormous, Polyp, cernium, Valenc. ; Mem. du Mus. tom. XI, p. 265 ; and Cuv. and Val. Ill, pi. xlii;};. It is clouded with brown on a lighter ground. Centropristis, Cuv., Possess all the characters of the Serrans, except that they want the canines, and that all the teeth are small and dense as the pile on velvet ; preoperculum dentated and operculum spinous. Centrop. nigricans, Cuv.; Coryphcena nigrescens, BL, Schn.; tamba o{ Marcgr. 155;— the ^n^ftias rabirruhia, Bl., Schn., Parra, XXII, 1 ;— the Spare demi-lune, Lacep. IV, iii, 1; and the Cdas of Guadeloupe, Duham. Sect. IV, pl_ xii, 1 ; M. cyuodon, Cuv., or Anthias caballerote, Bl., Sclin., Parra, XXV, 1 ; — Anth. jocu, B\.', Schn., Parra, XXV, 2; — Sp. tetracanthus, Bl. 279, which is also the Vivanet ffris,' Lacep. IV, iv, 3; and the Lu/janus acutiroslris, Desmar.; — M. sillao, Russel, 1 00; M. lunulatus, Cuv., Mungo Park, Lin. Trans. Ill, xxxv, 6 ; — Lutj. erylhropterus, 21249; Luij. lutjanits, Id. 245; — Sparus malabaricus, BL, Schn.; — M. rangus, Cuv., Russel,' 94; — M. rapilli, Id. 95; — Alphesles gembra, Bl.,Schn., pi. 51, 2, and the other species described in our second volume of the History of Fishes. * Add, Perca acerina, Guldenst, Nov. Comment. Petrop. XIX, 455. t Add, Rijpticus arenatus, Cuv. et Val. Ill, pi. xlvi. + The Amphiprion australis, Bl. Schn. pi. 47, or americamis, lb. p. 205 ; and the Amph. oxytieneios, lb., or Perca progmUhus, Forst., do not appear to us to be distin- guishable from tlie cernium. ACANTHOPTERYGIANS. 98 Cuv. and Val. Ill, pi. xliv. (The Black Perch). Blackish brown ; the caudal fins trilobate when young. It becomes large, and is found in the United States*. Gristes, Cuv. The Growlers only differ from Centropristis in the margin of the preo- perculum, which is entire and without dentations -f. Here the genus Perca, such as it was defined by Artedi and Linnaus, terminates; but there remain many fishes which approach it, although peculiar characters compel us to arrange them in separate genera. We begin with those Perches which have less than seven branchial rays. We may also subdivide them according to the number of their dorsal fins, and the nature of their teeth. Of those with a single dorsal fin, some have hooked teeth among the others : they are the CiRRHiTES, Commers. The Cirrhites, which have the preoperculum, as in Mesoprion, dentated, and the operculum terminating in an obtuse angle ; distinguished by the inferior rays of their pectoral fin, which are stouter and not branched, ex- tending a little beyond the membrane. They have six rays to the branchiae. They all inhabit the Indian Ocean J. Others of the Perches, with less than seven branchial rays, have only the teeth dense as the pile on velvet, or, at least, have no hooked ones. Chironemus, Cuv. The Chironemes have the inferior part of the pectoral fins with the same simple rays as the Cirrhites §. POMOTIS, Cuv. The Pomotis are fishes with a compressed and oval body, characterized by a membranous prolongation at the angle of the operculum. They in- habit the rivers of Americaj|. * This is also the Lutjan trilohe, Lacep. II, xvi, 3, and the Perca varia, Mitchill, Trans. New York, I. — Add, Perca trijurca, L.; — La Scorpene de Waigiou, Quoy and Gayni. Freyciu. Zool. LVIII, 1 ; and the other species described in the third vol. of our History of Fishes. t The Labre salvidide, Lacep. IV, v, 2, or Cychla variabilis, Lesueur, Ac. Nat. Sc. Phil., Cuv. and Val. Ill, pi. xlv; — Gr. macquariensis, lb. p. 58. X The Cirrhite tachete, Lacep. V, 3, which is also his Labre marbre, III, v, 3, and p. 492; — the Cirrhite pantherin, or Spare pantherin, lb. IV, vi, 1, and p. 160, and Seb. Ill, xxvii, 12; — Cirrhites vittatus, Cuv., Renard, I, xviii, 102; — Cirrh. aprinus, Cuv. et Val. Ill, xlvii, &c. § One species only is known, Chiron, georgianus, Cuv. et Val. Ill, p. 78; from New Holland. II Pomotis vulgaris, Cuv., or Labrus auritus, L., called Pond-Perch in the United States. Catesb. II, viii, 2, Cuv. ct Val. Ill, pi. 19. 94 Centrarchus, Cuv. Have the characters of the Pomotis, numerous spines in the anal fin, and, further, a group of teeth, dense as the pile on velvet, on the tongue*. From America. Priacanthus, Cut. Tlie Priacanthes have the body oblong, compressed, completely covered, as well as the entire head, and even both jaws, with small rough scales; tlie preoperculum dentated, and its salient angle spiniforra, whilst it is itself dentated. Found in the seas of hot climates ■!•. DULES, CtiV. The Doules have the operculum, as in Centropristis, terminating in spines; the preoperculum dentated, and the teeth dense as the pile on velvet; but six rays to the branchial membrane ;|;. D. riipestris, Cuv., a species nearly resembling a carp, and esteemed for its taste, is found in the fresh waters of the isles of Bourbon and the Mauritius, where it is much esteemed §. Therapon, Ctw. The Tlierapons have a preoperculum dentated, an operculum termi- nated by a stout spine; a strongly emarginate dorsal fin between the spinous and soft part : the teeth of the external row pointed and stronger than the rest. In some, the teeth of the vomer fall out at an early pe- riod. They inhabit the waters of India, and are remarkable for a natatory bladder, divided into two compartments by a stricture ||. It is hardly possible to separate the Datnia from them, although they Avant the palatine teeth; their profile is more rectilinear; their dorsal fin less emarginate^. Pelates, Ciw. Have the same internal and opercular characters as the Therapons; but their teeth are uniformly dense as the pile on velvet, and the dorsal but slightly emarginate **. * Centrnrchiis ffiicus, Ciiv., or Cychla a-nea, Lesueur, Ac. Nat. Sc. Phil.; — C. spa- roides, or Labre sparoide, Lacep. Ill, xxiv, 2; — Labre iris, Lac. IV, v, 3, which is also his Labre macroptere, III, xxiv, 1. f Jnthias macrophtalmus, Bl. 319, or Catalufa, Parra, XII, 1; — Anthias boops. Til. Schn. 308; — Scitrna liamruhr, Forsk.; — Labrus cruentaiiis, Lace^p. Ill, ii, 2, and the otlier species described in our third volume. ;J: Dules au7-iga, Cuv. et Val. Ill, li; — D. tceniurus, lb. LIII, and the otlier species described in the third vokuiie. § This is tlie Cenlropome de roclie, Lacep. IV, 273. II Holocentrus servus, Bl. 238, 1, or Scicsiia jerbua, Forsk.; — Hoi. A-Uneatus, Bl. 238, 2;— Titer, puta, Cuv. Russel, pi. 126;—Ther. theraps, Cuv., Cuv. and Val. Ill, liv, and the other species described in our third volume. ^ Datnia Buchanani, or Cuitts datnia, Buchanan, pi. ix, f. 29, and Cuv. and Val. Ill, l\;~Dat. cancelhita, lb. p. 144. •* Pclates quinqtte-linealus, Cuv. et Val. Ill, 56. ACANTHOPTEliYGIANS. 95 Hklotes, CtlV. Also very similar; have the dorsal fin deeply emarginate, and are particu- lurly distinguished by their anterior range of teeth being trilobate*. Most of these fishes have longitudinal blackish lines on a silvery ground. The Perches with less than six branchial rays and two dorsals consti- tute but two genera. Triciiodon, Steller. The preoperculum of which has very strong spines, and the operculum of which terminates in a flat point; they have no scales; their mouth is cleft almost vertically. But one species is known, Tr. Stelleri, Cuv. ; Trachinus trichodon ; Pall. Mem. de Petersb. IV, XV, 8, and Cuv. and Val. Ill, Ivii. From the north of the Pacific j". SiLLAGO, CllV. Head somewhat elongated and pointed; mouth small; teeth dense, as the pile on velvet, in the jaws and before the vomer; an operculum termi- nating in a small spine; six branchial rays; two contiguous dorsals; spines of the first slender, the second long and low. They are all from the Indian Ocean, and much esteemed for the flavour and delicacy of their flesh. The most remarkable species is Sill, domina, Cuv. ; Le Peche Madame de Pondicherry. Brown- ish, and distinguished by the first ray of its dorsal, elongated into a filament as long as the body. Its head is scaly, and the eye very small. There is another. Sill, malaharica; Scicetia malaharica, Bl. Schu. ; Soring, Russel, 113; Le Peche bicQut; not above a foot long, and fawn-coloured, which is considered one of the best fishes of India J. We now pass to those Perches which have more than seven rays to the branchiae. Three genera are known, all of which present the following peculiarity, that their ventral fins have a spine and seven or more soft rays, while in other Acanthopterygians there are never more than five soft rays. HoLOCENTRUM§, Arledi. The Holocentri are beautiful fishes with brilliant and dentated scales, * Heloiis 6-lincatus, Cuv. et Val. Ill, Ivii, or Esclave six lignes, Quoy et Gaym., Voy. de Freyciii. Zool. LXX, ]. t This fish having neither jugular ventrals, nor an elongated posterior dorsal, nor a strong spine on the operculum, nor seven rays in the branchiae, cannot be a Trachi- nus, as was thought by Pallas and Tilesius. +; Add, Atherima siliama, Forsk., or Plutlcephalus sihavms, Bl. Schn. Ruppel, Poiss. pi. iii, f. 1 ; Sillago maculata, Quoy et Gaym. Freyciii. pi. iii, f. 3. § We restrict this genus to species answering to the definition of it given by Ar- tec;!, h'cb III, ad tab. xxvii, 1, ar.d, like him, we give a neuter termination to this 96 FISHES. in which the operculum is dentated and spinous, and the preopercu- lura not only is dentated, but it has a stout spine at the angle, which is di- rected backwards. They are found in the hot parts of both oceans*. Myripristis, Cuv. These have all the brilliancy, shapes, and scales of the Holocentrums, but their preoperculum has a dentated double border, and wants the spine at the angle. This genus is remarkable for a natatory bladder, divided into two compartments, the anterior part of which is bilobate and attached to the cranium in two places, where the latter is only closed by a mem- brane, and which correspond to the sacs of the ears. They inhabit the hot parts of both oceans f. Beryx, Cuv. The Beryx differ from the Myripristis in having but a single short dorsal fin, with but a few small spines, almost hidden in its anterior edge; ten soft rays in the ventral fins \. It is impossible to remove from it the Trachicpitys, Shaw. The Trachichtes, which, with the same roughness that exists in the three preceding genera, and the same little dorsal fin as in the Beryx, have a flat spine at the lower part of the preoperculum, and one on the shoulder ; their abdomen and the sides of their tail are covered with large carinated scales §. All the Perches of which we have hitherto spoken, have their ventral fins inserted under the pectorals; there are some genera, however, in which they are differently situated. The Percoides Jugulares have their throat further forwards than the pectoral fins. Trachtnus, Lin. The Weevers, or Otter Pikes, have the head compressed, approximated name to prevent it from being confounded with the Holocentrus of Bloch and of Lacepede, which contains various other species, Serrani particularly. * Holocentrum longipinne, Cuv., which is the Hoi. sogho, Bl. 232; and his Bodianus pentacanthus, or the Jagiiaraca of Marcgr. 147; it is also the Scicena rubra, Bl. Schn. Catesb. II, ii, 2; and the Jmphiprion mafejeulo, Bl. Schn. Parra, XIII, 2; — Hoi. orientalc, Cuv. Seb. Ill, xxvii, 1; — Hoi. ruhrum, Bennet, Fishes of Ceylon, pi. iv; — Hoi. lea, Cuv. Ren. I, xxvii, 148, a very bad figure; — Sciana spinifera, Forsk. ; — Hoi. hastatum, Cuv. et Val. Ill, lix; — Hoi. diadema, Lacep. Ill, ix, 3, or Perca pulchella, Bennet, Zool. Journ. Ill, ix, 3; — H. sainmara, or Scicena sammara, Forsk, or Lahrc anguleux, Lacep. Ill, xxii, 1, and the other species described in our third volume. f Myripristis jacohus, Cuv., Desmar. Diet. Class. d'Hist. Nat; — M. japonicus, Cuv. et Val. Ill, Iviii;— ilf. hotche, Cuv. Russel, 105;— ,1/. parvidevs, Cuv. Id. 109;— the Lutjan hexagonc, Lacep. IV, 213; his Holocentre Thunberg, lb. 367; his Centropome rouge, lb. 273; the Sciicna miirdjan, Forsk, also belong to tliis genus. See its history in the third volume of our Icthyology. X Beryx decadactylus, Cuv. et Val. Ill, 222;— fi. Uneaius, lb. 226, and pi. Ixx. § Trachichtys ausiralis, Shaw, Nat. Misc. No. 578: and Gen. Zool. IV, part II, p. 260. ACANTHOPTERYGIANS. 97 eyes, and an oblique mouth ; the first dorsal fin very short, the second very long; pectoral fins large, and a stout spine on the operculum. They generally remain concealed in the sand ; wounds inflicted by the spines of their first dorsal are much dreaded, but their flesh is agreeable. Several species are found in the Atlantic, &c. The most common on our coasts is, Track, draco, L. ; Salv. 72 ; Trach. lineatus, Bl. Schn. pi. x ; and Penn. Brit. Zool. Ill, xxix. (The Dragon Weever). Grey and reddish, with blackish spots; blue streaks and yellow tints; thirty rays to the second dorsal fin; flanks obliquely striated. We have a small species, the Track, vipera, Cuv. ; Boideroc, Penn. 28; Bloch, 61. (The Otter-Pike). Paler, with smooth flanks and twenty-four rays in the second dorsal. It is more dreaded than the preceding species, be- cause as it is smaller in size persons are more liable to be stung by it. The Mediterranean contains, Trach. araneus. Hiss.; Salvian, 71; copied by Willough. pi. S. 10, f. 2. Higher; twenty-eight rays to the second dorsal fin; six or eight black spots along the flank. Track, radiatus, Cuv. ; Cuv. and Val. Ill, Ixxii. Twenty-five rays in the second d' rsal fin; head shagreened and rough ; flanks alternately marked wilh large black rings and full spots. The Weevers of remote seas are unknown to us. Percis, Bl. Schn. These fishes, in some respects, are the representatives of the Weevers in the seas of hot climates. They principally differ from them in the de- pression of their head, and by having hooked teeth in the anterior part of the jaws and vomer; but there are none in the palate. Their first small dorsal fin is somewhat more closely united to the long one which follows it*. PiNGUIPES, Cuv. Have their forms more heavy than the Percis ; strong conical teeth ; fleshy lips and teeth in the palate ; thick ventrals. Ping, brasilianus, Cuv. and Val. Ill, Ixxiv. From Brazil, the only species known. The Percophis, Cuv. Have the body, on the contrary, much elongated; some of the teeth are long and very pointed, and the end of the lower jaw projects. Percoph. brasilianus, Cuv.; Perc. Fahre, Quoy and Gaym., * Percis maculata, Bl. Schn. pi. 38;— P. semi-fasciata, Cuv. et Val. Ill, Ixxiii; — P. cijlindrica, or Sciana cijHndrica, Bl. 299, 1, which is also the Bodianus Seba; Bl. Schn. Seb. Ill, xxvii, 16; — P. cancellata, Cuv., or Zaire tetracanthe, Laeep. Ill, p. 473; and II, pi. xiii, f. 3, which is also his Bodian tetracanthe, IV, 302;— P. ocel- lata, Renard, I, vi, 42;— P. colias, Cuv., or Enchelyopus colias, Bl. Schn. p. 54, and the other species described in our third volume of Icthyology. VOL. II. H 98 FISHES. Voy. Freycin., Zool., liii, 1, 2. The only species known: also from Brazil. One of the most remarkable genera of the Jugular Perches is that of Uranoscopus, Lin., The Star-Gazers, so called because, on the superior surface of their nearly cuboid head, the eyes are so placed as that they appear constantly looking on the heavens : the mouth is cleft vertically ; the lower part of the preoperculum is crenate, and there is a stout spine to each shoulder ; but six rays in the branchiae. In the mouth and before the tongue is a long and narrow slip, which can be protruded at will, and serves, it is said, to attract small fish, while it remains concealed in the mud. A remark- able pecttliarity of their anatomy is the enormous size of the gall-bladder, a fact well known to the antients *. In some, the first dorsal, small and spinous, is separated from the se- cond which is soft and long. Uranos. scaber, L. ; Bl. 173. (The Mediterranean Star-Gazer). Grey-brown, with irregular ranges of whitish spots. Although one of the most hideous of fishes, it is eaten. From the Mediterranean. Very similar species are found in the Indian Ocean, and in Bra- zil f. Others have but one dorsal in which the spinous and soft parts are united. They are all foreign to our seas;];. In a third division of the Perches, the ventrals are inserted further back than the pectorals : they are the Abdominal Perches. The first genus is POLYNEMUS, L. The Paradise Fish, so named, because several of the inferior pectoral rays are free, and form so many filaments§ ; the ventrals are not very far back, and the pelvis is still suspended to the bones of the shoulder. They are allied to the Perches by the teeth, dense as the pile on velvet, or bent back like those of a wool-card, which arm their jaws, vomer, and palate ; but their snout is convex, and the vertical fins scaly as in many of the Scienoides: the two dorsals are separated, the preoperculum''.is dentated, and the mouth deeply cleft : they are found in all the seas of hot climates. Pol. paradiseus and Pol. quinquarius, L. ; Seb. Ill, xxvii, 2; Edw., 208; Russel, 285. (The Mango Fish), So called from its fine yellow colour: has seven filaments on each side, the first of which are twice the length of the body. The natatory bladder is * Arist. Hist., Au., lib. II, xv. \ Add Uranosc. affinis, Ur. marmoratiis, Ur. gtUtatus, Ur.fiUbarhis, Ur. Y gracum; new species described in our third vol. of Icthyology. X Vranosc. Icbeck, Bl., Sclin., p. 47; Ur. mouoptert/gius, lb. 49; — Ur. lavis, lb., pi. viii; — Ur. inermis, Cuv. et Val. Ill, Ixxi, and Ur.cirrhosus, two new species. § From the Greek 7)ema (a thread). ACANTHOPTERYGfANS, 99 wanting in this species, altboiigli it exists in all the others: it is the most delicious fish that is eaten in Bengal. The filaments of the remaining Polynemi are shorter than the body, and their number is one of their specific characters. Some of them are large, and aJl are considered excellent food*. In the succeeding genera the ventrals are altogether behind, and the pelvis no longer adheres to the bones of the shoulder. The first, for a long time, was even confounded with that of the Pikes : it is the genus SPHYRyENAf, Bl. Schn. Large fishes of an elongated form, with two separated dorsals, an oblong head, the lower jaw of which projects in a point before the upper one, and part of whose teeth are large, pointed and trenchant. Their preoperculuiu is not dentated, nor their operculum spinous. There are seven rays to the branchia?, and numerous pyloric appendages. One species is found in the Mediterranean. Sph. vulgaris; Esox sphyrcena, L. ; Sphyene spet, Lacep.;};; Bl. 389; Le Spet; Espeto (the Spanish for Pike); which attains a length of more than three feet; back bronzed; belly silvery; brown spots when young. Sj)h. picuda, Bl. Schn.; Parr., xxxv, 5, 2; Lac, V, ix, 3. A closely allied American species. The same country produces another, Sph. barracuda, Cuv. ; Catesb., II, pi. 1, f. 1. Which becomes much larger, and is nearly as much dreaded as the shark. Paualepis, Cuv. Small fishes resembling the Sphyraens, but whose second dorsal is so small and frail that it has been considered as adipose§. MuLLus, Lin. The Surmullets are rather closely allied to the Perches by several ana- tomical and external details, though the species which compose it present so many remarkable peculiarities that they might readily be made to con- stitute a separate family. Their two dorsals are far apart; the entire body and 6percula are covered with large scales which are easily dislodged; the preoperculum is without dentations; the mouth is slightly cleft and but weakly armed with teeth, and above all they are distinguished by two long * Polyn. plebeius, nr Emo'i, Brouss., Bl.,400; — Pol. urummus, Cuv. Russel, 184; — Pol. tetradactylus, Shaw, Russel, 183; — Pol. sej:tarius, Bl. Schn., pi. iv; — Pol. ennea- dactylus, Vahl.; — Pol. decadactylus, Bl. 401; — Polynemus americanus, Cuv., which is the species improperly named by Bl., pi. 402, paradhteits, and of which M. de Lace- pt'de has also improperly made a particular genus, his Pobjdactyh plutnkr, V, xiv, 3. t From the Greek sphuraina, a dart. X Spet, from Espeto, the Spanish name of the Pike. § Two or three small species described by Risso, 2d ed. f. 15 and 16, inhabit the Mediterranean. h2 100 FISHES, cirri, which depend from the symphysis of the lower jaw. They are di- vided into two subgenera. MuLLUs, properly so called. The Surmullets have but three rays to the bfanchia% operculum spine- less, and no teeth in the upper jaw; two broad plates of small teeth, as if paved, on the vomer; no natatory bladder. AH the species are from Europe. M. harhatus, L. ; Le Rouget ; Bl. 348, 2. (The Red Surmul- let). Profile nearly vertical; of a fine lively red; celebrated for the flavour of its flesh, and for the amusement it afforded the Romans, who took much pleasure in contemplating the changes of colour it undergoes when dying*; most common in the Mediterranean. M. surmuletus, L. ; Bl. 57. (The Surmullet). Larger; profile less vertical; longitudinally striped with yellow; most common in the ocean. Upeneus, Cuv. Have teeth in both jaws, but very often none in the palate; a small spine on the operculum; four rays in the branchia?; a natatory bladder. All the species are from the seas of hot countriesf . FAMILY 11. OF THE ACANTHOPTERYGIANS, The Mailed Cheeks, contains a numerous series of fishes, to which the singular appearance of their head, variously mailed and protected, gives a peculiar aspect that has always caused them to be arranged in special genera, although they have many close affinities with the Perches. Their common character consists in having the suborbital bones more or less extended over the cheek and articulated behind with the preoperculum. The Uranoscopus is the only one of the preceding family which has any thing like it, but the suborbital bone of the latter, although very broad, is connected behind with the temporal bones, and not with the preoper- culum. Linnajus divided them into three genera, Trigla, Cottus, and Scor- p;ena ; it has been found necessary, however, to subdivide them, and to add some of his Gasterostei. * Senec, Quest., Nat., Ill, c. xvnii. t Mullus vitfatus, Gm., Lacep., Ill, xiv, 1; Russel, II, 158; — M. Russelii, Cuv., Russel, II, 157; — Af. bifasciatus, Lacep., Ill, xiv. 2j — M. trifasciatus, Id., Ill, xv, 1, or M. multibnndf, Quoy et Gayin., Voy. Fieycin., pi. 59, f. 1, and several other species described m the third \o\. of our Iclhyology. ACANTHOPTERYGIANS. 101 Trigla, Lin. * The Gurnards are the fishes in which tlie ahove character is most strongly marked; an enormous suborbital bone completely covering the cheek, and even articulated by an immove;;ble suture with the preoper- culum, so as to allow of no separate motion; sides of the head nearly vertical, giving it a form approaching that of a cube, or parallelopiped, the bones hard and rough. There are two distinct dorsals, and three free rays under the pectoral. They have about twelve cajca, and a broad and bilobate air-bladder. Several species, when caught, utter sounds which have procured for them in France their vulgar name of Grondins; in England they are called Gurnards. Trigla, Cuv. The Triglae, properly so called, have teeth dense as the pile on velvet in the jaws and before the vomer. The pectorals are large, but not suf- ficiently so to raise them above the water. Numerous species are found on the coast of Europe. Tr. pini, BL, 355 ; Trie/, cuculus, L. ? (The common Red Gur- nard). Numerous vertical and parallel lines along each side of the body, intersecting the lateral line, and formed by folds of the skin, in each of which is a cartilaginous lamina; muzzle oblique. A well- flavoured fish of a fine red colour. Tr. lineata, L. ; Tr. adriatica, Gm. ; Bl. 35 ; Rond. 295 ; Mar- tens, Voy. to Venice, II, pi. ii. (The Lineated Gurnard). The muzzle much more vertical, and the pectorals longer; the lines on the flanks encircle the body like rings. It is brought to our markets with the preceding species f. Tr.liirundo,'L.;'&\.,QOX. (The Swallow Gurnard). Neither spines nor furrows on the sides ; back brownish, sometimes reddish • pectorals one fourth of its length, the inner side edged with blue. It is the largest species taken on the coast of Europe, sometimes ex- ceeding two feet in length. Neighbouring species are found in India §. Tr. lyra, L. ; Bl., 350; Rond. 298. (The Lyre). The muz- zle divided into two dentated lobes ; a stout spine on the operculum, - super-scapular, and particularly on the humeral; spines along the dorsals; lateral line smooth; pectorals one third of its length; a beautiful fish, bright red above and a silvery white beneath. Tr. gurnardus, L. ; Bl. 58. (The Grey Gurnard). A pointed spine on the shoulder and operculum; scales on the lateral line slightly carinate; generally grey-brown above, spotted with white, and white beneath; some of them, however, are reddish or red* ' Common in the markets in France. * Trigle, the Greek name of the Mullet; Artedi united these two genera, and, since tliey have been separated, this name has been assigned to the Gurnards, t Itis popularly but wrongly believed to be the female of the red Gurnard. J It is the 7";-. cuculus, of Brunnich. § They are new; we describe them in the fourth volume of our Icthyology. 102 FISHES. Tr. cuculus, Bl., 59*. (The Cuckoo Gurnard). A neighbour- ing species which is always red with a black spot on the first dorsal. Tr. Incerna, Brun. ; Rondel. 287 f. Scales on the lateral line higher than they are wide ; the second dorsal spine prolonged into a filament. 2V. aspera; Viviani; Rondel., 296. Short muzzle, rough scales, velvet head; sharp crests along the dorsals; temple emarginate. These two last species are small, and peculiar to the Mediterranean |;. M. de Lacepede has separated three genera from Trigla: Pkionotus, Lacep. American fishes resembling the Tr. hirundo. Their pectorals, how- ever, are longer, and can support them in the air; their distinguishing character, however, consists in a band of teeth, dense as the pile on velvet, on each palatine §. Peristedion, Lacep. This genus has been separated from Trigla with still more propriety. The whole body is mailed with large hexagonal scales, forming longitudi- nal ridges ; the muzzle is divided into two points, under which are branch- ed cirri: no teeth. P. cataphracta; Tripla cataphracta, L..; Rondel., 299. Red; a foot long; from the Mediterranean; the only species well knownjl. The best of these divisions is Dactyloptekus, Lacep. The Flying Gurnards, so celebrated under the name of Flying Fishes; the subpectoral rays are much more numerous and longer; and instead of being free, as in the preceding ones, they are united by a membrane so as to form a supernumerary fin, longer than the fish, which supports it in the air for some time. Thus they are seen flying above the surface of the water, in order to escape from Dolphins and other voracious fishes ; they fall into it again, however, in a few seconds. Their extremely short snout has the appearance of a hare-lip; the mouth is beneath, and the jaws are only furnished with rounded teeth, in small patches, like paved compartments ; the helmet is flattened, rectan- gular, and rough ; the preoperculum terminates in a long and stout spine, which forms a powerful v/eapon ; all their scales are carinated. • It is the Tr. hirundo of Brunnich ; but it is neither the cuculus nor the hirundo of Lin. f It is not the Tr. lucerna of Lin., but his Tr. obscura, described Mus. Ad. Fred, part II, and subsequently forgotten. The Tr lucerna, L., is a factitious species. X Add the neighbouring species: Tr. papilio, Cuv.; — Tr. phalcsna; — Tr. sphinx; described in our fourth volume of Icthyology. § Tr. punclata, Bl. 3r53 and 354; — Tr. slrigata, Cuv., evolans, L., or lineatus, Mit- «hill, New York Trans., I, pi. iv, 4;— Tr. Carolina, L., or palmipes, Mitchill, I, cit. Tr. tnbulus, Cuv. II The tig. of Bloch, 34'9, is incorrect, and gives too many rays to the second dor- eal. Several other species are found in the East Indies. ACAMTIIOPTERYGIANS. 103 D. voUtans; Trigla volitans, L. ; Bl. 351, the Mediterranean species, is a foot long; brown above; reddish beneath; fins black, variously marked with blue. D. orientalis, Cuv. Russel, 161, is a neighbouring species from the Indian Ocean. Cephalacanthes, Lacep. Have nearly the form, and particularly the head of the Flying Gurnards; differing from them, however, in the total absence of supernumerary fins or wings. C. spinareUa ; Gasterosteus spinarella, L. ; Mus. Ad. Fred, pi, xxxii, f. 5. A very small species from Guiana, and the only one known *. CoTTUs, Lin. The Bull-heads have the head broad, depressed, mailed, and vari- ously armed with spines or tubercles ; two dorsals ; teeth placed in front of the vomer, but none on the palatines; six rays in the branchia?, and only three or four in the ventrals. The inferior pectoral rays, as in Tra- chinus, are not branched ; their c*cal appendages are small in number, and they have no natatory bladder. Those that inhabit fresh water have a nearly smooth head, and but one spine to the preoperculum ; their first dorsal is very low. The most common species is, C. gohio, L.; Bl. 39, 1, 2. (The River Bull-head). A small blackish fish, four or five inches in length. The salt-water species are more spinous, and when irritated their head becomes still more infiated. The French coasts have the following two, which are called Sea Scorpions, &c. C. scorpius, L. ; Bl. 40. (The Father-Lasher). Three spines on the preoperculum. C. hubalis, Euphrasen, New Stockh. Mem. VII, 95. Preoperculum with four spines, the first very long. The Baltic Sea has a third species, C. quadricornis, Bl. 108. (The Four-horned Bull-head). Dis- tinguished by four quadrate and bony tubercles. America and the north of the Pacific Ocean produce much larger ones'!". -^ small species is taken in the latter, whose singularity of form entitles it to notice : it is the C. diceraus, Pall. ; Sin-anceia cervus, Tilesius, Mem. Acad, Petersb. Ill, 1811, p. 278. (The Stag-horn Bull-head). Internal edge of the first spine of the preoperculum, which is nearly as long as the head, furnished with six or eight prickles recurved very pro- perly towards its base J, From this species has been separated, * It is from Guiana, and not from India, as is still asserted. t C. virginianus. Will. X, 15, or octodecim spinosus, Mitchill, New York, Trans. IV, p. 380; — C. polyacanthccephalus, Pall. Zool. Russ., &c. : Add, C.pistilUger, Pall. Zool. Russ. Ill, 143. N.B. The Cottus anostomus. Pall. Zool. Russ. Ill, 128, k the Uranoscopiis. 104 AspiDOPHOREs, Lacep. — Agonus, Bl. Schn. — Phalangista, Pall. Which have the body defended by angular plates like that of a Periste- dion, and there are no teeth in the vomer. A species is found on the coast of Europe, Cott. cataphractus, L. Bl. A small fish but a few inches long, whose mouth opens beneath, and the whole of whose branchial membrane is furnished with little fleshy filaments. The north of the Pacific produces several others, in one of which the mouth is also beneath, and the branchial membrane villous *. In others the lower jaw projects beyond the upper one, and the branchial membrane is smooth f . The jaws of some are equal, and the two dorsals separated J. Finally, there is one in India that has but a single dorsal, Lacep. has formed a genus for it, which he calls Aspidophoroibe§. Other groups have lately been observed, which are partly allied to Cottus, and partly to Scorpaena. Hemitripterus, Cuv. Have the head depressed, and two dorsals, as in Cottus; no regular scales on the skin, but teeth in the palate. The head is bristly and spinous, and has several cutaneous appendages. The first dorsal is deeply emar- ginate, a circumstance which has led some authors to believe they had three. But one species is known from North America, Cottus triptery- gius, Bl. Schn. II, which is taken along with the Cod. From one to two feet long, tinged with yellow and red, varied with brown. Hemilepidotus, Cuv., Have the head nearly similar to that of a Cottus, but there is only one dorsal ; the palatines furnished with teeth ; longitudinal bands of scales on the body, separated by others which are naked. A thick epidermis prevents these scales from being seen until the skin is dried. The species known are from the north of the Pacific *n^. * Phalangistes acipenserinus, Pall., or yig. acip., Tiles. t Phul. loricatus, Pall., or Agonus dodccaedrus, Tiles. ; — Phal. fusiformis, Pall., or Ag. rostratus, Tiles.; — Jg. lavigatus, Tiles., or Syngnathus segaliensis, Id. Mem. Nat. Mosc. II,xiv. X Cottus japonic as, Pall. Spic. ZooL VII, v, or Ag. stegoplithalmus, Til. Mem. Petersb. IV, xiii, and Voy. Krusensteni, pi. 87; — Ag.decagonus, Bl. Schn. pi. xxvii. § Cottus monopterygius, Bl. 178, 1 and 2. II It is also the Cottus acadianus, Penn. Arct. Zool. VIII, 371; the Cottus hispidtis, Bl. Schn. 63; the Scorpana flava, Mltchill, Ann. New York Lye. I, ii, 8; and per- haps the Scorpana americana, Gmel. Duhamel, Sect. V, pi. ii, f. 5; but this figure must be very incorrect. If Cottus hemilepidotus, Tilesius, Mem. Ac. Petersb. Ill, pi. xi, f. 1, 2, which is probably the Cottus truchvrm, Pall. Zool. Russ. Ill, 138. ACANTHOPTERYGIANS. 10;! Platycephalus, Bl. This genus has been separated from Cottus for still stronger reasons. The ventrals large, six-rayed, and placed behind the pectorals ; the head is much depressed, with trenchant edges, and armed with spines, but is not tuberculous ; the branchi« have seven rays, and they are covered with scales ; a range of sharp teeth in the palatines, &c. They inhabit the Indian Ocean, and bury themselves in the sand to watch for their prey. It is on this account that one species has been called the Insidia- tor — Cottus insidiator, L.* ScoRP^NA, Lin. The Scorpions have the head like that of a Cottus, mailed and rough- ened, but compressed on the sides ; body covered with scales ; several rays in the branchiae, and back has but a single fin. If we except the armature of the cheek, and the tubercles Avhich frequently give them an odd appearance, they closely approximate to certain Percoides, such as the Acerinee and the Centropristes ; but though the inferior rays of their, pectorals, as in Cottus, are articulated, they are simple and not branched. ScoRP^NA, Cuv. The Scorpions, properly so called, have the head spinous, tuberculous, and without scales ; teeth in both jaws and palatines dense as the pile on velvet ; irregular cutaneous cirri on different parts of the body. Sc. scropha, L.; Bl. 182; and better, Duham. sect. V, pi. iv. (The larger Sea-Scorpion). Redder ; larger scales and more nume- rous cirri. Sc. porcus, L.; Bl. 181, and Duham. sect. V, pi. iii, x, 2. (The Little Sea-Scorpion). Browner; scales smaller and more numerous. They live in troops among the rocks ; wounds from their spines are considered very dangerousf. The T/ENiANOTES are Scorpions with a strongly compressed body, whose very high dorsal is united to the caudal. * It is also the Cottus spatula, Bl. 424, the Cotte madegasse, Lacep. Ill, ii, 12; the Callionymus iiidicus, L., Russel, 46, or CalUomore indien, Lacep. — Add, Platyc. endrachtensis, Qnoy et Gaym. Voy. Freycin. p. 353; — Cott. scaber, L., Bl. 189, Russ. 47;— the two species or varieties of Krusenstern, pi. 59; — the Sandkriiyper of Reiiard,' part II, pi. 50, f. 210, and ten new species descrihed in the fourth volume of our Icthyology; but the Plat, undecimalis, Bl. Schn., is a Centropomus ; his PL saxatilis, a Cychia, and his PI. dormitator an Eleotris. N. B. The only foundation of the genus Centranodon, Lacep., is the pretended Silurus imherhis of Houttuyn, which is a mere Platycephalus. t Add, Sc. diabolus, Cuv., Duham. sect. V, pi. iii, f. 1; — Sc. bufo, Cuv., Parr. XVIII, 1, c; — Sc. clrrhosa, or Perca cirrkosa, Thunb. New Stockhol. Mem. XIV, 1793, pi. vii, f. 2;—Sc. papillosa, Forst., Bl. Schn. 196;— 5c. Plumier, Lacep. I, xix, 3; — Sc. venosa, Cuv. Russ. 56, and several new species described in our 4th volume of Icthyology. 106 Sebastes, Cuv., Possess all the characters of the Scorpions, except that there are no cu- taneous cirri, and that the head is less rough and scaly. There is a large species in the Northern Ocean, called the A/a- rulke, and in some places Carp, the Sehastes norvegicus, Cuv. ; Perca marina, Penn. ; Perca norvegica, Mull. Bonat. Encycl. Meth. pi. Icthy. f. 210. It is red, and frequently upwards of two feet in length. It is dried for the purpose of food, and its dorsal spines are used by the Esquimaux as needles. The Mediterranean pro- duces another, very similar, but which has fewer dorsal rays, the Sebastes imperialis, Cuv.; Scorpcena dactyloptera, Laroche, Ann. Mus. XIII, pi. xxii, f. 9. Its palate is black, and it has no nata- tory bladder, although the contrary is the case with the preceding species*. Pterois, Cuv., Have the characters of the Scorpions, properly so called, except that there are no palatine teeth, and that the dorsal and pectoral rays are ex- cessively elongated. These fishes are from India, and were not less remarkable for this singular prolongation, than for the pretty disposition of their colours j~. BLIiPSIAS, Have the head compressed; cheeks mailed; fleshy cirri under the lower jaw; five branchial rays; ventrals very small, and one very high dorsal divided by emarginations into three parts. The only species known are from the Aleutian islands J. Apistus Have the palatine teeth and entire dorsal of the Scorpions; but the few rays of their pectorals are all branched. Their distinguishing character consists in a stout spine on the suborbital, which, inclining from the cheeks, becomes a treacherous weapon §. They are all small. Those of the first division have a scaly body, and some of these have a free ray under a large pectoral || ; others have ordinary pectorals, with- out free rays^. • The pretended Sc. malabarica, Bl. Schn. 190, is a Sebastes, identical with the species of the Mediterranean.— Add, Sc. capensis, Gmel. ; — Holoc. albofasciatus, Lacep. IV, 372; — Perca variabilis. Pall., or Epinephelus ciliatus, Tiles. Mem. Acad. Petersb. IV, 18Il,pl. xvi, f. 1—6. t Sc. volitans, Gm. Bl. 184;— ^f. antanata, Bl. 185; — Sc. Koenigir. Id. New Stock. Mem. X, vii, and several new species described in our fourth volume. X Blennius rillosus, Steller, or Trachinus cirrhoxns, Pall. Zoog. Russ III, 237, No. 172. Blepsias is a name descended to us from the antients without any characteris- tic designation. § Greek, Apistos, perfidus, treacherous. II Ap. aplatus, Cuv., Russel, 160, B; — Scorp. carinata, Bl. Schn. ^ Cottus australis, J. White, New South, IV, 266; — Ap. tattiaiiotus, Cuv., Lacep. At ANTHOPTEllYGIANS. lOT In a second division the body is naked; some of these also have a free ray under the pectoral*, and others are without themf . Agriopus Are deficient of the suborbital spine; the dorsal still higher than in Apistes, and reaching between the eyes; their neck is elevated, muzzle nar- rowed, mouth small and but slightly dentated, and the body without scales f. Pelor. The Pelors, with the entire dorsal and palatine teeth of the Scorpions, have no scales on the body ; they have two free rays under the pectoral ; anterior part of the head flattened; eyes proximate, dorsal spines very high, and almost free; the suborbital spine of Apistes is wanting, and their fantastic shape and monstrous aspect are alone sufficient to distin- guish them from all other fishes. They inhabit the Indian Ocean §. Synanckia, Bl. Schn., Have tlieir forms not less hideous than the Pelors; their head is rough, tuberculous, uncompressed, frequently enveloped in a lax and fungous skin ; their pectoral rays are all branched ; their dorsals are entire, and they have no teeth, either in the vomer or palatines; their frightful appearance induces the fishermen of the Indian Ocean, which they inhabit, to consi- der them as venomous ||. Lepisacanthes, Lacep. — Monocentris, Bl. Sckn., Constitute a singular genus; the body is short, thick, and completely mailed with enormous angular, rough, and carinated scales ; four or five stout free spines supply the place of the first dorsal; each ventral con- sists of an immense spine, in the angle of which some soft and almost im- perceptible rays are concealed; head bulky and mailed; front gibbous; mouth large; teeth in the jaws and palatines like the pile on velvet, but none in the vomer; eight rays in the branchiae. But one species is known, from the Japanese Sea, Mon. japonica, Bl. Schn. pi. xxiv; Lepisacanthe japonais, Lacep. Six inches long, of a silvery white ^. IV, iii, 2, a figure intitled Tesniaiwfe large raie, but one which has nothing in com- mon with the T. large raie, of the text, IV, 303 and 304, which is a Malacanthus, and the same that is represented, III, xxviii, 2, under the name of Labre large raie ; — Percu cottoides, L., Mus. Ad. Fred. II, p. 84. * Ap. minus, Cuv., Russel, 159; — Sc. monodactyle, Bl. Schn. t The species are new, and described, as well as others of the preceding subdivi- sions, in our fourth volume of Icthyology. I It is the Blennius lorvus of Gronov. Act. Helvet. VII, pi. iii, copied, Walb. Ill, pi. 2, f. 1 ; or Coryphana torva, Bl. Schn., and some new species. § Pel. obsc.urum, Cuv., or Scorp(r.na didactyla. Pall. Spic. Zool. VII, xxvi, iv; — Seb. Ill, xxviii, 3, or Trigla rubicunda, Hornstedt, Stockhol. Mem. IX, iii, and some new species described in our fourth volume of Icthj'ology. II Scorpana hnrrida, L., Lacep. II, xvii, 2; and not so well, Bl. 83; — the Sc. brnchion, Lacep. Ill, xii, 1, or Syananceia verrucosa, Bl. Schn. pi. 45; — Syn. bica- pillala. Lacep. II, xi, 3. ^ Gastervsteus jnponiciis, Houtt. Harl. Mem. XX, part H, 299, or Sc tana japonica, Thunb. New Stockh. Mem. XI, iii, copied Bl. Schn. pi. xxiv. 108 FISHES. Gasterosteus*, Cuv. The Epinoclies have also the cheek mailed, although the head is neither tuberculous nor spinous, as in the preceding genera. Their peculiar cha- racter is the freedom of the dorsal spines, and their not forming a .fin, in their pelvisj united to the humeral bones, being larger than usual, and thus furnishing the abdomen with a sort of bony mail. Their ventrals, placed farther back than the pectorals, are nearly reduced to a single spine ; there are but three rays to the branchiae. Some of them abound in the fresh waters of Europe. Two species are confounded under the name of Stickleback, — Gasterosteus aculeatus, L. (The Banstickle), which have three free dorsal spines; but the entire side of one of them, G. trachurus, Cuv. Bl., pi. 53, f. 3, is covered with scaly plates to the very end of the tail. These plates are only found on the pectoral region in the other, G. gymnurus, Cuv. Willoughb., 341. Both these species are sometimes so abundant in certain rivers in England and the north of Europe, that they are used to manure the land, feed hogs, furnish oil, &c.-i' G'. pungitiiis, L. ; Bl. 53, 4, (The Lesser Stickleback), is the smallest of the European fresh-water fishes ; nine very short spines on the back ; sides of the tail with carinated scales ; another closely allied species inhabits the same streams, G. Icevis, Cuv., in which this armature is wanting. A separate subgenus might be made of the G. spinochia, L. ; Bl. 53, 1, (The larger Stickleback), a salt- water species, of an elongated and slender form, with fifteen short dorsal spines, and the entire lateral line covered with carinated scales. Its abdominal shield is divided in two ; and, besides the spine, there are two small rays in the ventral. After this family we place the Okeosoma, Cuv., A small oval fish, whose whole body, above and beneath, is studded with thick cones of a horny substance, like hills. There are four of them, on the back, and ten on the belly, arranged in tv/o series, with several smaller intermediate ones. It was discovered in the Atlantic by Peron;};. The third family of the Acanthopterygians, that of * N. B. This name, which signifies bony belly, is only applicable to tlie Gasteros- tc'i as we have defined them, and not to several of the Scomberoides, united with them by Linnaeus on account of their dorsal spines being free : these latter we refer to our" LiCHIA. f Neighbouring species or three-spined Sticklebacks: G. argyropomus, Cuv.; — G. hrachycentnis, Cuv.; — G. tetracafilhus, Cuv., three Italian species; — G. noveboracensis, Cuv.; — G. niger, Cuv., or blaculeatus, Mitchill, Aim. New York Lye. I, 1, 10; — G. quadratus, Id. lb. f. 11; — G. cataphractus, Tiles. Mem. Acad. Pctersb. Ill, viii, 1. X The fig. and detailed description will be found in our fourth Vol. on Icthyology. Oreusoma, a mountainous body. ACANTHOPTERYGIANS. 109 FAMILY III. SCIENOIDES, The Scienoides, has close relations to the Perches, and even present nearly similar combinations of external characters, particularly in the in- dentations of the preoperculum, and in the spines of the operculum ; but both vomer and palatines are without teeth ; the bones of the cranium and face are generally cavernous, and form a muzzle more or less gibbous. The vertical fins are frequently somewhat scaly. Some of the Scienoides have two dorsals, and others have but one; among the former we first find the genus, Sci^NA, Whose common characters consist of a gibbous head, supported by ca- vernous bones, two dorsals, or one deeply emarginate, whose soft part is much longer than the spinous ; a short anal, a dentated preoperculum, an operculum terminating in points, and seven branchial rays. If it were not for the absence of the palatine teeth, these fishes would resemble the Perches. The entire head is scaly; their natatory bladder is frequently furnished with remarkable appendages, and the stones in the sac of the ear are larger than in most fishes *. We divide this genus as follows : Sci^NA, Cuv. The Scienoides, properly so called, have the spines of the anal weak ; neither canini nor cirri. Sc. timbra, Cuv. ; Peisrey of Languedoc ; Fegaro of the Genoese ; Umhrina of the Romans, &c. Six feet and more in length ; nume- rous branched appendages on each side of the natatory bladder. A good fish, but it has latterly become rare on the coast of Europe f. Otolithus, Cuv. The Otolithes have the anal spines, as in the preceding, weak, and no cirri ; some of the teeth are elongated hooks, or true canines ; the nata- tory bladder has a horn on each side which is directed forwards. They are found in America and India j. * This determination of the genus Sciaena is in accordance with the opinion of Artedi ; it has been variously modified by Linnaeus and his successors, but in our opinion not very successfully. f Artedi having confounded it with the Sciana nigra, it is only latterly that it has been again determined. See my Memoir upon this Fish in the Mem. du Mus., tome I, p. 1 ; — Add the Maigre du Cap, or Labre hololepidote, Lacep. Ill, xxi, 2 ; — the Mai- gre brule, which is the Perca ocellata, L., or Centropnme ceille, Lacep., the Scicena im- berbis of Mitchill, and the Lutjan triangle, Lacep. Ill, xxiv, 3. X Ot. ruber, Cuv., or the Peche pierre of Pondicherry ; Johnius ruber, Bl., Schn., p. 17; — Ot. versicolor, Cuv., Russel, II, cix; — Ot. regalis, Cuv., Johnius regalis, BL, Schn., or Labrus squeteague, Mitchill, Ann. New York Lye. I, ii, 6; — Ot. rhomboi- (ialis, or Lutjan de Cayenne, Lacep. IV, p. 245; — Ot. striatus, Cuv., or Gnatucupa, Marcgr., Braz. 177, and several others described in our fifth Vol. of Icthyology. 110 Ancylodon. A sort of Otolithus with a very short muzzle, excessively long canines, and a pointed tail*. CORVINA, CuV. Neither canini nor cirri; all the teeth dense as the pile on velvet. They also differ from the Sciaenoides and the Otolithus in the size and strength of the second anal spine. One species is very abundant in the Mediterranean. Sc. nigra, Gm. ; Curb noir, Bl. 297. A silvery brown; ventrals and anal blackf. JoHNius, BL The fishes of this subdivision are connected with those of the preceding one by a nearly uninterrupted series, the second anal spine is merely somewhat weaker and shorter than the subsequent soft rays. They are found in India, where they form a considerable article of food, their flesh is white and light ;|;. They are also met with in Senegal §, and in Ame- rical|. Umbrina, Cuv. Distinguished from other Scisnoides by a cirrus under the symphysis of the lower jaw. A beautiful species is taken in the Mediterranean, — Sciceva cir- rhosa, L. ; Bl. 300, obliquely streaked with steel-colour on a gold ground. It is a large and good fish, which has ten short caeca, and a large natatory bladder furnished with some lateral, rounded sinuses^. The LoNCHURUs, BL, merely appear to differ from the Umbrinas in a pointed caudal and two cirri on the symphysis **. The PoGONiAS, Lacep. Resemble the Umbrinae, but, instead of a single cirrus beneath the jaw, there are several. • Lonchurus ancylodon, BL, Schii., pi. XXV. f Add, Corv. mifes, Cuv., or Telia katchelee, Russ. 117 ;—C. trispinosa, Cuv., or Bodianus xlelUfer, Bl. 331, 1 ;— C. oscula, Lesueur, Ac. Nat So. Phil. Nov. 1822;— Bola ctcja, Buchan., Fishes of the Ganges, pi. xii, f. 27 \—C.fur':raa, Cuv., Lacep, IV, p. 424; and Bola editor, Buchan. XXVII, 24; Bodianus argyrolettcus, Mitch. Ann. New York Lye. I, vi, 3. I The English of Bengal call it the Whiting. — John, maculalus, Bl., or sarikulla, Russ. 123;— J. cataleus, Cuv., Russ. 116, or Bola chaptis, Buchan. X, 25. It is the Lutjan diacanthe, Lacep. IV, 244 ;— J. auei, Bl. 357 ;— J. karuHa, Bl. \—J. pama, Cuv., Buchan, XXXII, 26. . § J. senegalensis, Cuv., spec. nov. II J. hianeralis, Cuv., or Labrus obliquui, Mitchill, which also appears to be the Perca tindulata, L.; — J. Xanthurus, or Leiostome, queue jaune, Lacep. IV, x, 1; — '. saxalilis, Bl., Schn. ^ The Cheilodiptere cyanoptere, Lacep. Ill, xvi, 3, is merely a rudely drawn Um- brina. Add, Omb. Russelii, Cuv., Russel, 1 1 S ;—Sc. npbnlosa, Mitch. 111,5, which is also the Perca albumus, L., Catesb. XII, 2;—Kingfis)i or Whiting of the United States;— the Pogoiiallie dore, Lacep. V, 122. also belong-j to this subgenus. ** Lonchurus bar Lotus, Bl. 360. ACANTHOPTEKYGIANS. Ill One of them is found in America, — Pog. fasce, Lacep. II, xvi*, of a silver colour, when young marked with vertical brown bands, which becomes as large as the Sc. umbra, and, like it, has branched appendages to the natatory bladder f. This fish produces a sound still more remarkable than any of the other Scienoides, which has been compared to tliat of several drums. Its pharyngeal bones are furnished with large teeth as if paved [J;. Eques, BL This genus cannot be removed from these Scienoides with two dorsals. It is known by the compressed and elongated body, raised at the shoulders and ending in a point near the tail; teeth small and crowded; the first dorsal is elevated, the second, long and scaly; they all belong to America§. The Scienoides, with a single dorsal, are subdivided according to the number of their branchial rays. Those which have seven rays form various genera parallel to several genera of the Perches ; their preoperculum is always dentated. H^.MULON, CuV. A somewhat elongated profile, which has been thought to bear some re- semblance to that of a hog; the lower jaw compressed and opening very wide; two pores and a httle oval cavity under its symphysis; teeth small and dense as the pile on velvet. The parts of the lower jaw which enter the mouth when it is closed, are generally of a vivid red, from which cir- cumstance their name is derived ||, Their dorsal is slightly emarginate, and its soft part scaly; they are all from America^, Pristipoma, Cuv. Have the same preoperculum, and the same kind of pores under the • Lonchurun harhatus, Bl. 360. f It is the Labrus griinniens, Mitch. Ill, 3; the Sciicna fusca and gigas, Id., appear to be the same species at a more advanced age, and every thing proves it to be also the Labrus chromis, L.; finally, the Pogonathe courbine, Lacep. V, 121, is the same. Add, Ombrina Fournieri, Desmar., Diet. Class. d'Hist. Nat.; its cirri are almost im- perceptible. X They are figured by Ant. de Jussieu, Mem. de I'Ac. des Sc. 1723, pi. xi. § Eques balteatus, Cuv., or Eq. aniericanus, Bl. 347, 1, or Chatodon lanceolatus, L,, Edw., 210; — Eq. punctatiis, Bl., Schn., 111,2; Eq. acuminaius, Cuv., Grammisles acumhiatus, BL, Schn., Seb., III,xxvii, 33. II From the Greek aima, blood, and uloji, gum. ^ Ham. elegaiis, Cuv. or Anthias formusus, Bl. 323; — Ham. furmosum, Cuv., or Perca formosa, L., which is not the same as the preceding one, Catesb., II, vi, 1; but it is the Labre Plumlerien, Lacep., Ill, ii, 2; and the Guaibi coara of Marcgr., p. 163, the fig. of which is transferred to the capeuna, p. 185; — Ham. heterodon, or Diabase ra?/!^^, Desmar., Diet. Class. d'Hist. Nat.; — Ham. caudimacula, Cuv., or Uri- baco, Marcgr., 177; and Diabase dc Parrn, Desm., loc. cit. ; — Ham. capeuna, or Ca- peuna, Marcgr., 155, and the fig., p. 163, of the Guaibi coara. It is the Gravimist. triiitiatus, Bl., Schn., 188; — Ham. chrysopterum, Cuv., or Perca chrysoptera, L., Catesb., 1 1, ii, I, and several other species described in our fifth vol. of Icthyology. 112 FISHES. symphysis as in Haemulon, but the muzzle is more gibbous, the mouth not so deeply cleft, and tlie dorsal and anal are without scales. The oper- culum terminates in an obtuse angle concealed in its membranous edge. It is a very numerous genus, whose species are found throughout the hot parts of both oceans*. D I AGRA MM A, CuV. The cavity beneath the symphysis wanting, but the two small anterior pores still remain ; besides which, there are two larger ones beneath each branch. In every thing else, the jaws, opercula and fins are like those of Pristipoma. They are found in both oceans : those of the Atlantic have the largest scales-}-. Those of India are the most numerous and have smaller scales, a more convex front and a very short muzzle ;{;. The Scienoides with a single dorsal and less than seven branchial rays, are still more subdivided: in some of them the lateral line extends to the caudal; in others it is interrupted. Among the former we place the fol- lowing genera : LOBOTES, CuV. A short muzzle; lower jaw prominent; body elevated; the posterior angle of its dorsal and anal so elongated, that, with the rounded caudal, it appears to terminate in three lobes. Four groups of extremely small points are visible near the end of the jaw; they inhabit both oceans §. Cheilodactylus, Lacep. Have the body oblong; mouth small; numerous spiny rays in the dor- sal ; inferior rays of the pectorals simple and continued beyond the mem- brane, as in the Chirrhitesll. * Pr. hasta, Cuv., Luijanus hasta, BL, 246, 1; — Pr. nageh., Cuv.; Sciana nageb., Forsk., or Labre Comersonien, Lacep., Ill, xxiii, 1; and Lutjan microslome, lb. XXXIV, 2; — Pr. guoraca, Cuv., Russel, 132, or Perca griinniens, Forsk., or Anthias grunniens, Bl., Schn., p. 305;— Pr. Paikelli, Cuv., Russel, 121;— Pr.caripa, Id., 124, of which the Jnth. maculatus, Bl., 326, 2, appears to be a varietj'; — Pr. coro, Cuv., Seb., Ill, xxvii, 14, or Scia;7ia coro, BL, 307, 2; — Lutj. surinaviensis, BL, 25Z;—Spa- rus virgitiicus, L., of which Perca jiiba, BL 308, 2; axiA. Sparus vittatus, BL, 263, are the young; — Coins nandus, Buchan, XXX, 32. f We know but one of them, of which the Lutjanus luteus, Bl. 247, appears to be a bad figure. X It is to them that the Plbctorynque, Lacep., I, xiii, 2, must be referred. Add the ScitBna gaterina, Forsk.; — Sc. shotaj. Id.; — Diagr. litieatwn, Cuv., or Perca dia- gramma, L., Seb., Ill, xxvii, 18, or Anthias diagramma, BL, 320; — Diag. paciloplerum, Cuv., Seb., Ill, xxvii, 17; — D. pictum, Cuv., Seb., Ill, xxn, 32, or Perca picta, Thunb. New Stockh. Mem., XIII, \;—D. pertusum, or Perca pertusa, Id.. lb., XIV, vii, 1. § Holocentrus surinamensis, BL, 243, or Bodianus triurus, Mitch, III. f. 10, and new species. II The Cheilod.fasce, Lacep,, V, i, 1, or Cytiadus, Grouov,, ZoophyL, I, x, 1; — the Cheil. of Carmichael, or Cltcetodon monodactylus, Id., Lin. Trans, XII, xxiv; — Cheil. carponemus, Cnw, or Cichla macroptera, BL, Schn., 342; — Cheil. zonatus, Cuv,, or La- brus japonicus, Tiles., Voy. Kruseust. pi. Ixiii, f, 1. ACANTHOPTF.RYGIANS. 113 SCOLOFSIDES, ClW. Have die second infra-orbital dentated and terminating near the edge of the orbit in a point directed backwards, which crosses another point of the third infra-orbital running in a contrary direction. The body is ob- long, the mouth but slightly cleft, the teeth small and dense as the pile on velvet, and the scales large. There are no pores in the jaws. From the Indian Ocean*. BIicRoPTEiius, Lacep. Have the body oblong; three pores on each side of the symphysis; the last rays of the soft part of the dorsal separated from the others, and form- ing a small particular fin; operculum without dentation f. Those Scienoides which have less than seven branchial rays and an in- terrupted lateral line, form several genera of small, oval fishes, prettily diversified in their colours, which may be distinguished as follows by the armature of their head. They are manifestly related to the genus Cha;- todon, and resemble, externally, several of our fishes with labyrinthian branchias. Amphiprion:|:, Bl. Schn. Have the preoperculum and the three opercular pieces dentated, the lat- ter even furrowed; a single range of obtuse teeth §. Premnas, Cuv. Have one or two stout spines on the infra-orbital, and the preoperculum dentated]]. Po M A C E N T RU S ^ , LciCef. Preoperculum dentated, operculum luiarmed; a single range of tren- chant teeth**. * Scol. hate, C\i\.,\\a.m.eAhy Bloch Atithias japonicus, '.i25, {. 2;— An/fi. Vosmeri, Bl., 321, a poor figure, and the same as the Perca aurata, i>Iungo Park, Lin. Trans. lU,'6o;~Anth.Ulineaius,^\. 325, \\—Scol. huriata, Cuv. Kussel. 106;— ico/. ///- cogenis,QviY., or Holoc. cilic, Lacep. IV, 371; — Sciaiia glianam, _Forsk., and several new species. t But one species is known, the Microplere Dolomieu, Lacep., IV, iii, 3. We have also some few more subgenera of this subdivision, which we shall speak of in our 5th vol. of Icthyology. X I greatly reduce the number of species of this genus, as composed by Bloch. § Amph. epiiippum, Bl., 250, 2; — Aniph. bifasciatus, BL, 316, 2; — Amph. polymims, Bl., 316, \;—percula, Cuv., or Luij. perchot, Lacep., IV, 239, Klein., Misc., IV, xi, 8; — Amph. leuciirus, Cuv., Renard, VI, 49, and various new species. II Chatodon biaculcatus, Bl., 219, 2, which is also the Hclocentre Sonneraf, Lacep., IV, 391; and the Liilj. trifasciatus, Bl„ Schn., 567; and Kaehlreuter, Nov. Com. Petrop., X, viii, 6; Seb., Ill, xxvi, 29, is a variety of it; — Pr. Unicolor, Cuv., Scb. Ill, xxvi, 19, which is also the Scorpctw aiguillonnee, Lacep. Ill, 268. ^ We define them cliflJerently from Lacepede, and greatly diminish tlieir number by divisions. ** Chtetoilon pavo, BL, 198, 1, which is the Pomacentre paon, Lacep., and his Holoc. fliananthe, IV, 338; — Pomacentrus coeruleus, Qaoy et Gaym., Voy. Freycin., pL 64, f. 2\—P. punctaUis,\h., \ :—P. emurginafus, Seb. Ill, xxvi, 26,"27, 28;— the IM negrillon, Lacep. IV, 367. VOL. II. I Ill- FISHES. Dascvllus, Cuv. The fishes of this genus only difTer from tliose of the preceding one in their teeth, which are very short and dense as the pile on velvet*. They all inhabit the Indian Ocean. Glypiiisodon, Lacep. Have the operculum and preoperculum entire ; a single range of trench- ant and generally emarginated teeth. They are found in the Atlantic -j-, but the Indian Ocean produces many more;{;. Some of them are distinguished from the others by numerous spines in the anal§. Heliasus. Have the opercular pieces of the Glyphisodon and teeth similiar to those of a Dascyllus, that is, small and dense as the pile on velvet. They are found in both oceans 11. FAMILY IV. SPAROIDES. The Sparoides, like the Scienoides, have a palate destitute of teeth. Their general figure and several details of their organization are the same ; they are also covered with scales more or less large, but they have none on the fins. Their muzzle is not gibbous, nor the bones of their head cavernous ; there are neither indentations in their preoperculum, nor spines on their operculum; their pylorus is furnished with ca2cal appendages. They never have more than six rays in the branchiae. They are divided according to the form of their teeth. The first tribe, that of Sparus, properly so called, Cuv., have the sides of the jaws furnished with round molars in the form of pavement; we subdivide it into five genera. • Chcstod n aruanus,L., Mus. Ad. Fred. XXXII, Bl., pi. 198, f. 2. t The Jacaraqiia, Marcgr., or Cluetod. saxatilis, L., Mus. Ad. Fred., XXVII, 3, which is also the Chat, marglnntus, Bl., 287; and his Ch.mauritii, 213, 1; and the Ch. sargoidf, Lac; but it is not the Ch. saxatilis, Bl., 206, 2; — Ch. enrassao, Bl., 212. X Chcetod. bengalensis, Bl. 213, 2, or Labre wacrogn^tere, Lacep., Ill, xix, 3; — Gl. melannrus, Cuv., or Labre G-bandef, Lacep., Ill, xix, 2; — Chat, sordidus, Forsk., or Calamoia pota, Russel., 85; — Gl. sparoides, Cuv., Lacep,, IV, ii, 1; — Gl. lachrymatus, Cuv., Quoy et Gaym., Freycin., pi. 02, f. 7;— G/. azureus, lb., pi. 64, £ 3;— Gl. uni- ocellalus, lb., f. 4. § Chalod. suratemis, Bl. 2\1 ;— Chcetod. maailatus, Bl., 427. jl The species are new; we describe them in our 5th vol. of Icthyology. ACANTHOPTKRYGIANS. 115 Sargus, Cuv. Trenchant incisors in front of the jaws almost similar to those of Man. Several of them which differ but little from each other inhabit the Mediterranean, and are even found in the gulf of Gascony. Their colours consist of vertical black bands on a silver ground*. Some have emarginated incisors f. The round molars of others are on a single line and very small. From the Mediterranean ;};. Chrysophris, Cuv, Have round molars on the sides of the jaw, forming at least three rows on the upper one ; a few conical or blunt teeth in front. Two species in- habit the European seas. Chr. auratus; Sparus aurata, L. Bl., 266 §, and much better, Duhara. Sect. IV, pi. 2. Four rows of teeth above; five below, one of which is oval and much larger than the others: a large and excellent fish called Chrysophris — golden eye-brow — by the an- tients, on account of a crescent-shaped band of a golden hue which extends from one eye to the other. Chr, microdon, Cuv. Colours nearly the same as in the aurata; smaller; the forehead more gibbous; only two rows of molars be- low, all of which are as broad as they are long, or broader ; the large oval one is wanting ||. Pagrus. The Pagres differ from the Chrysophris in having but two rows of small rounded molar teeth in each jaAv; the front teeth either resemble those of a card, or are small and crowded. Pac/r. vulgaris; Sparus pagrtis, \j. and Arted. Silvery, with a reddish gloss; no black spot. The Mediterranean**.. * The Sargue de Rondeht (Sargus raucus, Geoff.), Eg. Poiss. pi. xviii, 1, Ronde- let, 122; — Sp. pantaxzo of Risso; — the Sargue de Salviani (Sargus vulgaris, G.), Eg. XVIII, 2; Salvmni, fol. 179, Pise. 64;— the Sparaillon (Sargus annularis, L.), Rondel. 118; Salv. 63; Laroche, Ann. Mus. XIII, pi. xxiv, f. U;—Sp.ovis, Mitch., or Sheephead of the United States. t Perca unimaculata, Bl. 308, 1, or Salema, Marcgr. 1j3; — Sparus crenidens^ Forsk., probably belongs to this subdivision. X S. punlaxzo, Gm., or Sp. aculirostris, Laroche, Ann. JIus. XIII, xxiv, 12, of which Risso makes his genus Charax. § The teeth belong to another species, and those of the true Chr. aurata are figured pi. 74, as appertaining to the Anarrhichas. II Add: Sparus bufonites, Lacep. IV, xxvi, 2, the same as his Sp. perroquel, lb. 3; and perhaps as the Sp. hnffara, Forsk. 33; — Sp. sarba, Forsk. 22; — Chr. chrysargyra,. Cuv., Chitchillee, Russel, 91;— Sp. has/a, Bl. Schn. 275, or Sp. bcrda, Forsk. 33;— Sp. calamara, Cuv. Russ. 92; — Scicena grandocnlis, Forsk. 53; — Chtrlodon bifasciatus^ Forsk., which is also the Labre cliapelet, Lacep. Ill, iii, 3, his Spare mr/lio, lb. XXVI, 2, and his Holocenlre rabagi, IV, Suppl. 725, &c. ** It is also the Sp. pagrus of Brunnich, but not that of Bloch; the latter has not figured the true Pagrus, which is the Sp. argenleu.i of his posth.umous "System," IIG FISHES. The Indian Ocean and the coast of the United States produce some of these fishes, whose first dorsal spines are prolonged into filaments*. Others taken at the Antilles are remarkable for the first interspinal of their anal fin, which is hollow and terminates in a beak like a pen ; the point of the natatory bladder runs into this kind of funnel. They are called Sardes a plumes f. A more remarkable peculiarity is that of a Cape Pagrus, whose maxillaries are enlarged and as solid as stone. We call it Pagrus Utlioynathus. Pagelus, Cuv. The Pagels have teeth very like those of the preceding genus ; but the molars, also in two rows, are smaller ; the front conical ones are slender and more numerous. A more elongated m.uzzle gives a very different physiognomy to this genus. Several species are found in the European seas. Pag. erythrinus; Spams erythrinus, L.-, 61.274. A fine fish, of a silver colour, with a pale rose gloss ; body high and compressed. Pag. centrodontus ; Sp. centrodont., Laroche; the Rousseau of the Marseillais; the Besugo of the Spaniards; Ann. Mus. XIII, xxiii, 2. Silvery, glossed with rose ; a large, irregular black spot on the shoulder %. Pag.acarne, Cuv., the J came. Rondel. 511; Spams her da of Risso,ljut not of Forskhal. Smaller and more oblong ; silvery, tinged with greenish towards the back ; no black spot. Pag. hogaraveo; Sp.bogar., Gm.; Rondel. 137. (TheBogueravel). More oblong; muzzle more pointed; gilt tinged with violet; a black spot on the axiUa. Pag. mormyrus; Sp. mormyrus, L. ; Rondel. 153; Geoff. Eg. Poiss, pi. xviii, 3. Vertical black bands on a silver ground. In the second tribe there is but one genus, Dentex, Cuv. Characterized by conical teeth even on the sides of the jaws, generally in one range, some of the anterior of which are drawn out into large hooks. They would be rather closely allied to the genus Hsmulon were it not that the indentation of the preoperculum is wanting, and that they have one ray less in their branchiae. The cheek is scaly. Two species are found in the Mediterranean. D. vulgaris ; Sparus dentex, L. ; Dentale of the Italians, Bl. 268. Silvery, shaded with bluish, towards the back ; sometimes three feet in length §. * Sparus spinifer, Forsk. ; — Sp. argyrops, L., or Lahrus versicolor, Mitch, t Pagr. calamus and Pagr. penna, Cuv. X It is the Sparus pagrus, BL, pi. 262. § Add, D. macrocephalus, Cuv., or Lahre macrocephale, Lacep. Ill, xxvi, 1 ; — Sparus cijnodon, Bl. 278; — Denlex hexodun, Quoy et Gaym. Voy. Freycin. 301. acanthoptervgians. in D. macrophthalmus ; Sp. macrophth.,' V>\. 272. Red, witli very large eyes; much rarer than the preceding, and about half its size. We distinguish from the other species of Dentex, by the name of Pen- TAPODA, those whose mouth is less cleft, head more scaly, body less ele- vated, and whose caudal is covered with scales to the end*. By that of Lethrinus, we distinguish such as have no scales on the cheek ; most of them, as in Hsmulon, have some red about the angle of the jaws f. All these fishes have a pointed scale between the ventrals, and one above each of them. A third tribe is also composed of a single genus, Cantharus, Cnv. Teeth short and dense as the pile on velvet, or bent and crowded like cards all round the jaws; those of the external row being the strongest; body elevated and thick; muzzle short; jaws not protractile. Two species are found in the Atlantic and Mediterranean. Canth. vulgaris ; Spams canth.,!^.; Rond. 120, and Duhara., sect, iv, pi. iv, f. 1. Silver-grey, longitudinally striped with brown; some small rough teeth behind the bent ones. Canth. brama; Spams hrama, L. About the same colour; all the teeth bent J. In a fourth tribe the teeth are trenchant. It comprises two genera, Boops, Cuv. Teeth of the external row trenchant, mouth small and not at all pro- tractile. Several species are found in the Mediterranean. B. vulgaris; Spams boops, L. ; Rond. 136; La bogue vulgaire. Twenty-four teeth in each jaw, with an oblique, cutting edge ; the body oblong, with longitudinal gold-coloured stripes on a silver ground. B.salpa; Sparus salpa, L. ; Bl. 265; La Saupe. More oval; stripes of a more brilliant gold, on a ground of burnished steel; teeth broad and emarginated. Oblada, Cuv. Differ from Boops in having small crowded teeth behind the incisors, which somewhat approximates this genus to Cantharus. Ob. melanums; Spams melanurus, L. ; Salv. 181. Silvery, striped with blackish ; a broad black spot on each side of the tail. * Spams vittatus, Bl. 275; — the Sp. raije d'or, Lacep. IV, 131, and some new species. t Spar, chccrorhynchus, Bl., Schn. 278; — Bodian lutjan, Lacep. IV, 294; — Kurwa, Russel, 89; — Scicena maksena, Forsk., p. 52, No. 62; — Sciana harak, Id. X The fig. of Blocli, 269 and 270, intended to represent these two species, convey no correct idea of them. 118 FISHES. We are able to form a fifTli family of Acantliopterygians, FAMILY V. MENIDKS, The Menoid Fish, which differ from the preceding families in the ex- treme extensibility and retractibility of their upper jaw, which is owing to the length of the intermaxillary pedicles which withdraw between the orbits. Their body is scaly, as in Sparus, in which genus they have hitherto been placed. Mtena, Cvv. The Mendoles are distinguished from a true Sparus by having their teeth dense as the pile on velvet, in a narrow and longitudinal band on the vomer. Those also in the jaws are all extremely fine, forming a very narrow band. The body is oblong, compressed, and somewhat similar to that of a Herring; an elongated scale above each of the ventrals, and an- other between them. Several species inhabit the Mediterranean. M. vulgaris; Spams mcena, h.; Bl. 270. (The Common Men- dole). Back lead colour; belly silvery; a black spot on the flank opposite the last spine of the dorsal. M.jusculum, Cuv. (The Juscle), only differs from the common one in having a narrower body, a shorter muzzle, and a higher dorsal. M, radiata; Sparus radiatus, Osbeck; Sp. tricuspidatus, Spinola; Ann. Mus. X, pi. xviii. (Osbeck's Mendole). A deep steel-blue; oblique blue streaks on the cheek ; blue spots on the ventrals ; the dorsal still higher. Smaris, C7fV. The Picarels do not absolutely differ from the Mendoles, except in the total deficiency of teeth in the vomer; their body is generally somewhat less elevated. Some of them are found in the Mediterranean. S. vulgaris; Sparus smaris, L. ; Le Picarel commun, Laroche, Ann. Mus. XIII, pi. xxv, f. 17. (The Common Picarel). Lead- grey above ; silvery beneath ; a black spot on the flank. S. aleedo, Riss., so called from the beautiful blue with which its body is variegated. S. cagarella, Cuv. (The Cagarel Picarel). The body as high as that of the Mcena vulgaris, from which it only differs in having no palatine teeth. Cm'><\o, Lacep. Only differs from Smaris in a dorsal somewhat higher in front, and sur- rounded at its base with fine scales. They inhabit the Indian Ocean, and are shaped so as nearly to resemble a spindle*. * Casio asuror, Lacep. Ill, 86, or Vuclcnm, Valent. 132, or Canlhdre douteujc. Diet. Class. d'Hist. Nat. livr. IV ; — C. smarts, Cuv., or Fackum mare, Renard, I, pi. 32, ACANTHOPTEKYGIANS. 11£^ Gkrres, Cuv. — MocHARRA, hi Soutk America, Also have the mouth protractile, but, in extending itself, it descends ; their hody is elevated, the anterior part of the dorsal in particular, along tlie base of whose posterior portion is a scaly sheath. They have no other leeth than those in the jaws, which are small and crowded. The first in- terspinal of their anal fin is. tabular as in certain Pagri. They are excel- lent food, and inhabit the hot parts of both oceans*. G. rhomheus, Cuv. ; Sloane, 11, pi. 253, f. 1, (The Rock Barbs of Jamaica), a species that is said to penetrate occasionally as far as the coast of Cornwall, following pieces of wood covered with Anatifs, carried there by the currents f The sixth family of the Acanlhopterygians, or FAMILY VI. SQUAMIPENNES, Is so called, because the soft, and frequently the spinous parts of their dorsal and anal fins are covered with scales, which encrust them, as it were, and render it difficult to distinguish them from the mass of the body. This is the most remarkable character of these fishes, the body of which is generally much compressed, the intestines long, and the cseca numerous. They were comprised by Linnsus in the genus Ch^todon, Li7i. The Chastodons, so named from their teetli, which in length and tenuity resemble bristles, collected in several close rows like the hairs of a brush. Their mouth is small; their dorsal and anal fins are so completely covered with scales similar to those on the back, that it is extremely diflicult to ascertain where they commence. These fishes, very abundant in the seas of hot climates, are adorned with the most beautiful colours, a circumstance which has led to the collection of them in museums, and to numerous gra- phic representations of the species. Their intestines are long and ample, and their caca long, slender, and numerous ; their natatory bladder is large and very strong. They frequent rocky shores, and their flesh is good for eating. f. 174 ; — Bodianiis argentius, BI. 231, or Picarel raillard, Quoy et Gaym. Zool. Freycin., pi. 44, f. 3i—Sparus cmiivg, Bl. 263, or Cychla cuning, Bl. Schii., p. 336. M. de La- cepede also makes a Ccesio of the Scomber, equula of Forskhal, or Centrogaster equula of Gmelin, which is our Equula caballa. * Labrus oyena, Forsk. Kupp. Voy. Poiss., pi. Ill, x, 2, or Spare bretov, Lacep. IV, 134, or Labre long musean, Id. Ill, xix, 1, and p. 467; — Gerres apriov, Cuv., Catesb. II, xi, 2 ; — G. rhombeus, Cuv., or Stone-bass, Sloane, Jam. li, pi. 253, f. 1 ; — G. poieti, Cuv., Ren., pi. ii, f. 9, Valent., No. 354;— C lineuius, Cuv., or Smarts lineatus, Hunib. Zool. Obs. pi. xlvi, f. 2; — Gerres argyreus, Cuv., or Sci(fna argyrea, Forster, or Cychla argyrea, Bl. Schn.; — G. filumentosus, Cuv., or U'ordatvahali, lluss., f. 68. t Couch, Lin. Trans. XIV, part I, p. 81. 120 PISHES. The CHii:ToooNS, jiroperly so called, Have the body more or less elliptical ; the spinous and soft rays continuing in a pretty uniform curve ; the snout projecting more or less, and some- times a very small indentation in the preoperculum. They have a mutual resemblance in some respects, as in the distribution of colours, and most of them, for instance, are marked with a vertical black band, in which is placed the eye. In some there are several other vertical bands parallel to the former*, hi others they are oblique or longitudinal f. The flanks of some are sprinkled with brown spots];. Others again are merely marked with lines of reflections in various di- rections; in this it is merely the ocular band§; and in that, in addition, are ribands on the vertical fins||. One or two ocellated spots are observed in some^. Some of these Chastodons, properly so styled, are distinguished from the others by a fllament formed by the prolongation of one, or several of the soft rays of the dorsal**. Finally, some are remarkable for the very small number of the spines of their dorsals ff (a). Chelmon, Cuv. Separated from Chsetodon on account of the extraordinary form of the snout, which is long and slender, only open at the extremity, and formed by a most excessive prolongation of the intermaxillary and lower jaw. Their teeth are very fine, and dense as the pile on velvet, rather than like hairs. One species, Chcet. rostratus, L., Bl. 202, has the faculty of spurting drops of water on the insects it perceives on the shore, and « Chat, striatus, L., Bl. 205, f. \;—Ch. octofasciatus, Gm., Bl. 215;— H. collare, Bl. 216. f ChiZt. Meyeri, BL, Schn., improperly called Holocanthe jaiine et noir by Lacep. IV, xiii, 2. X Chat, miliarjs, Cuv. Zool. Voy. Freycin., pi. 62, f. 5. § Chat. Klrinii, Bl. 218, 2;—Ch. Seba, Cuv., Seb. Ill, xxvi, 36. II Chat, vitlalns, BL, Schn., Seb. Ill, xxix, lS;—Ch.vagabimdus, BL 204;— C/(. de- aissatus, Cuv., Russ. 83; and Klein, Misc. IV, ix, 2; — Ch. bifascialis, Cuv., Voy. de Freycin., pi. 62, f. 5; — Ch. striganguhis, Gm.; — Ch. baronessa, Cuv., Renard, I, xliii, 218; — Ch.frontalis, Cuv.. or Pomacentre croissant, Lacep.; — Ch. Jasciatus, Forsk., or Ch.ftavus^ Bl., Schn., No. 37. ^ Ch. tiesogallicus, Cuv., Ren. I, v, 37; and Will. App. V, 4; — Ch. capistratus, L., Seb. Ill, XXV, 16, Mus. ad Fred. XXXIII, 4;— Klein. Misc. IV, xi, 5\—Ch. bimacu- lafus, Bl. 219, 1; — Ch. plebeius, Gm.; — Ch. unimactilatus, Bl. 201, 1; — Ch. sebanus, Cuv., Seb. Ill, XXV, 11;— CA. ocellatus, Bl. 211, 2. •* Chat, selifer, Bl. 426, 1; — Ch. auriga, Forsk.; — Ch. principalis, Cuv. Ren., part II, Ivi. 231), Valent., No. 407. f f These species are new, as well as many others which belong to preceding sub- divisions — they will be described in our Icthyology. KgF (a) Freycinet relates, in his Voyage round the World, that in wading through the coral reefs at the island of Guam, in search of Mollusca, he was assailed by a very small Chsetodon, not bigger than his hand: the animal butted the hand, and obsti- nately resisted eveiy attempt to drive it away. The Naturalists, from this circum- stance, gave it the name of Ch. bellicosus. — Eng. Ed. ACANTHOPTFRYGIANS. \2l thus bringing them within reacli. It is a cornraon pastime of the Chinese at Java*. Heniochus, Ciiv., The Coachmen, differ from the true Chietodons, because the first spines of the back, and particularly the third or fourth, rapidly increase in length, forming a filament sometimes double the length of the body, and resem- bling a kind of whipf . Ephippus, Cuv., The Horsemen, are distinguished by a dorsal deeply emarginated between its spinous and soft portions ; the spinous part, which has no scales, can be folded into a groove formed by the scales of the back. In one of the subdivisions there are three spines in the anal fin, and oval pectorals. America produces a species {Eph. gigas, Cuv.) remarkable for the very great enlargement into the shape of a club of the first inter- spinal of its dorsal and anal fins, and by a similar enlargement of the crest of the cranium J. In a second subdivision from the Indian Ocean, there are three spines in the anal, and long and pointed pectorals §. A third, also from the Indian Ocean, has four anal spines, and very small scales. One species, Chcetodon argus, L., Bl. 204, 1, has the reputation of feeding, by preference, upon human excrements j]. Another species of this same subdivision has been discovered in a fossil state in Mount Bolca^. The Taurichtes are the Horsemen of India, which have an arcuated and pointed horn over each eye**. HoLACANTHUS, Lacep., Have for their distinguishing character a large spine at the angle of the preoperculum, and the edges of the same bone, in most species, dentated. Their flesh is excellent, and they are remarkable for the beauty of their colours, and the regularity v/ith which they are distributed. Numerous * Sclilosser, Trans. Pliil, 1767, p. 39. — Add, Ch. longirostris, Brousson, Dec. Icthyol. f Chatodon macrolepidotus, L., Bl. 200, 1 ; — the Chcet. acumlnatiis, L., Mus. Ad. Fred. XXXIII, f. 2, appears to be a mere individual variety of it; — the Chat, cor- nutus, L., Bl. 200, 2, of which the ChiBt. canescens, L., Seb. Ill, xxv, 7, is only a young uncoloured specimen. I Add, Ch(Ftodonfaher, Brousson, pi. 212, 2, of which the Chat. Plumieri, Id. 211, 1, may be a variety;— CV;/. ScJw., The Sea-Breams, are connected with this family by the scales covering the vertical fins, which have but a small number of spinous rays concealed in their anterior edges ; but they have slender teeth placed like cards in the jaws and palatines, an elevated profile, very short snout, a forehead descending vertically, and a mouth, when shut, that is almost vertical; the scales extend as far as on the raaxillaries ; there are seven rays in the branchiae; a low dorsal and anal, but commencing in a salient point; a short stomach ; a small intestine, and only five csca. But one species is known, Sparus Raii, Bl. 273; it inhabits the Mediterranean, and sometimes strays into the ocean; an excellent fish of a burnished steel colour, Avhich attains a large size, but is in- fested with various species of intestinal worms. PERlPIIERrSj ClW., Have a long and scaly anal, the dorsal short and elevated; head obtuse; the eye large ; a small spine on the operculum ; small crowded teeth in the jaws, vomer, and palatines. From the Indian Ocean ||. * Pimdeplcrus (fat fin). This genus of Lacepede, IV, 429, formed from Bosc, is the same as that of Xistere, \, 484, formed from Commerson; and there is every i-L'ason to believe that the Dorsuuire, Lacep. V, 482, which is certainly identical with the Kyphose, III, 114, may very possibly also be the same as the Xisterus. + The Pimeloptirc hn.squien, Lacep. IV, ix, 1, or Chcetodon cyprinaceus, Ijrousso- net; — the Pim. marciac, Qiioy et Gaym. ^'oy. Freycin. pi. 62, f. 4; — Pim. du Cap, or Kipliose double basse, Lacep. III,viii, 1; — a Brazil species, formerly named by Bankes Clicctodon ciisis. X This genus, the name of which is borrowed from Lacep., does not, however, contain the same species. § I strongly suspect that it is the Brania which RI. Ilafinesque has in view, in his Lepodus sarngns, Nouv. Gen. No. 144. Shaw makes two species of it, but why, it is impossible to say, the Sp. Rati, and Sp. cas/aneuln; the latter after Lacep.; but Lacep. made his genus only for the species of Bloch and Kay. II Pempheris touca, Cuv., Sparus argeiiteus, J.White, A^\>. 2G7, or Kuiius argcn- teas, Bl. Schn. 104; — P. mangula, Cuv., Iluss. 114; — P. molucca, Cuv.^ Ren. I, xv, 85, and Valent, No. 46. 124 TOXOTES, Cuv, The Archers have the body short and compressed; the dorsal placed on the last half of the body, with very stout spines, the soft part, as well as that of the anal which corresponds to it, scaly ; the snout depressed, short ; lower jaw projecting beyond the upper one ; the teeth quite as dense as the pile on velvet in both jaws, on the extremity of the vomer, palatines, pterygoids, and on the tongue ; six rays in the branchiae, inferior edge of the infra-orbital and preoperculum finely serrate. Their stomach is wide and short, with twelve caecal appendages to the pylorus ; natatory bladder large and thin. The species known, Toxotes jacnlator, Cuv. ; Lahrus jaculator, Shaw, vol. IV, part II, p. 485, pi. G8*, from Java, is celebrated for the same faculty that distinguishes the Chcet. rostrattis, of spurting drops of water on the insects which adhere to aquatic plants, to bring them down for the purpose of seizing them. It can force the water to a height of three or four feet, and rarely misses its aim. The seventh family of the Acanthopterygians, or FAMILY VII. SCOMBEROIDES, The Scomberoid Fishes, is composed of a multitude of fishes with small scales, a smooth body, numerous caeca frequently united in clusters, and whose tail and caudal fin in particular are extremely powerful. This is a family of the greatest utility to man, by the size of its fishes, by their agreeable flavour, and their inexhaustible reproduction, which brings them periodically into the same latitudes, where they constitute the object of the most extensive fisheries. Scomber, Lin. The Scombers have the first dorsal entire, while, on the contrary, the last rays of the second, as well as those of the anal, which correspond to them, are detached, forming what are termed false or spurious fins, or pinnce spurice. The genus is subdivided as follows : Scomber, Cuv. The Mackerels have a fusiform body covered with uniformly small and smooth scales; two little cutaneous crests on the sides of the tail; an empty space between the first and second dorsal. Sc. scombrus, L., Bl. 54. (The Common Mackerel). Blue back, varied with black undulating streaks ; five false fins above and be- * It is also the Scarus Schlosseri, Gm., Lacep. and Shaw, the Sciana jaculalrix of Bonnatere, the Lahre sagittaire of Lacep., and the Cdiio! chatareiis of Buchanan. ACANTHOPTERYGIANS. 125, neath. They visit in summer our sea-coasts in great abundance, and afford as large a supply of fresh and salt fish as the herrings. Some- times they may be seen at other seasons; those which are caught in the early part of the spring are well known, in the sea-ports of France, under the title of Sansonnets. The Common Mackerel has no natatory bladder; but, and it is a singular fact, that organ is found in several other species, so similar to it, that some attention is neces- sary to distinguish them ; such are the little Mediterranean Mackerel, Sc. colias; Sc. pneumatophonts, Laroche, Ann. Mus. XIII; and the Sc. grex, Mitch. Ann. New York Lye. I, 423, which is some- times seen on the coast of the United States, in countless numbers, &c.* Thynnus, Cuv. The Tunnies have round the thorax a sort of corslet formed by scales larger and smoother than those on the rest of the body ; a cartilaginous carina between the two little crests on the sides of the tail; the first dor- sal extends so far as to be very close to the second. Sc. thynnus, L. (The Tunny). This is the large fish which has been taken in the Mediterranean, from a very autient date, and by the astonishing abundance in which it is caught, and converted into oil, salt fish, &c., constitutes a great source of wealth to Provence, Sardinia, Sicily, &c. It is said to attain the length of fifteen and eighteen feet, and has nine spurious fins above, and as many beneath ; the pectorals are one-fifth of its whole length. Several neighbour- ing species inhabit the Mediterranean, which have hitherto been but badly distinguished. Sc. brachypterus, Cuv. ; the Alieorti, Rondel., 245, and Duham., Sect. VII, pi. vii, f. 5. Pectorals but one-eighth of the whole length. Sc.thunina, Cuv.; La Tonine, Aldrov. 315; Descrip. de I'Eg. Poiss. pi. xxiv, f. 5. A brilliant blue marked with black lines, un- dulated and curved in various ways, &c. It is also in this first group that we must place the Sc. pelamys, L., Lacep. II, xx, 2. (The Tropical Bonita, or Rayed-belly Tunny). Four longitudinal blackish bands on each side of the bellyf. The Orcynus, Cuv. The Germons only differ from the Tunnies in the extremely extended pectorals, which are one-third of the entire length, and reach beyond the anus. Sc. alalomja, Gm. ; German of the Biscayans ; Alalonga of the Italians; Diiham. Sect. VII, pi. vi, f. 1, under the improper name of Tunny; Willoughb. App. pi. x, f. 1, is taken in the Mediterra- * Add, Scomber vernaUs, Mitch, loc. cit.; — Sc. canagurta, Cuv., Russ. 136. t Add, Sc. coreita, Cuv., Sloane, Jam. I, 1, 3; — Dangiri mmigelang, Renard, I, Ixxvi, 189. ]2Ci FISHES. nean, with the Tunny, and in summer visits the gulf of Gascony, in numerous bodies, where it constitutes an important fishery. The back is a blackish blue, gradually fading into the silvery white of the belly. It is frequently found to weigh eighty pounds; its flesh is much whiter than that of the Tunny. Auxis*, Cuv. The Auxides have, with the corslet and moderate pectorals of the Tunny, the dorsals separate, as in the Mackerels. One species inhabits the Mediterranean. Sc. bisus ; the Bonicou, or Scomhre Laroche, of Risso ; Rafin. Caratt. pi. ii, f. 1 ; Egypt., XXIV, 6. Back of a fine blue; oblique blackish lines; flesh a deep red. Another is taken in the Antilles, called the Thon, or Tunny, which attains a size equal to that of the European Tunny +. SardaJ, Cuv. The Sardes are distinguished from the Tunnies solely by their separate, pointed, and very strong teeth. Sc. sarda, Bl. 334; Aldrov. 313; Salvian. 123; Belon, 179§. The only species known, but common in the Black Sea and Medi- terranean. It is blue, the back obliquely streaked with blackish ; remarkable for the extreme length of its gall-bladder ; a fact well known to Aristotle Ij. It also inhabits both oceans. Cybium^, Cuv. The Tassards have the body elongated, and without a corslet ; large, compressed, trenchant teeth, resembling lancets; palatine teeth dense as the pile on velvet. Several species are found in the hot parts of both oceans; some of them become very large**. TiiYRSiTEsff, Cuv. TheThyrsites differ from the Tassards in the anterior teeth, which are * Auxis. antient name of a fish of the Tunny family. + Add, the Tasard, Lacep. IV, p. 8; — the Albacore, Sloane, Jam. I, 1, 1. X Sarda was the antient name of the Tunny that was caught and salted in the Western Ocean. § It is the Amia of the antients, and of Rondelet, 238; the Sarda of Rend. 248, is the young of the same species. It is also the Scomber palamitus of Rafin.; the Sc. ponticiis, Pall. Zool. Russ. II Arist. Hist. II, c. xv. The gall-bladder of tlie common Tunny is equally as long. ^ Cyhium, the antient name of a dish prepared from the Tunny and from another fish of the same family. ** C. Commersonii, Cuv., Sc. Commersonii, Lacep., or Konam, Russ. 133; — C. lineo- latum, Cav., Mcnigeking, Russ. I, vii, 53; — C. giittatitm, Cuv., or Sc. guttatus, Bl. Schn. pi. V, Vingeram, Russ. 134; — C. maculatum, or Sc. tnaculatus, Mitch. Ann. New York Lye. I, vi, 8; — C. Regale, Cuv., or Sc. regalis, Bl. 333, which is also the Scomberoviore Plumier, Lacep. HI, 293; — C. cavalla, or Guarapuca, Marcgr. 178. it The antient name of some fish of this family. ACANTirOPTERYGIANS. 127 longer than the others, and in having pointed, palatine teeth ; no lateral carina to the tail. This little subgenus leads insensibly to Lepidopus and to Trichi- urus*. GEMPYLUsf, Cuv. The Gempyles are similar to Thyrsites in the jaw-teeth, but there are none in the palate, and the ventrals are almost imperceptible; an addi- tional mark of affinity with Lepidopus J. XiPHiAS, Lin. The Espadons, or Sword Fishes, belong to the family of the Scombe- roides, and approach the Tunnies, particularly in their excessively small scales, in the carince on the sides of their tail, in the power of their caudal tin, and in their whole internal organization. Their distinguishing cha- racter consists in the beak, or long ensiform point or tusk, which termi- nates their upper j^aw, and supplies them with a most powerful weapon of offence, with which they attack the largest sea animals. This beak is chiefly composed of the vomer and intermaxillaries, being strengthened at its base by the uethmoid, frontals, and maxillaries. Their branchis are not pectinated; each of them being formed of two large parallel lamina?, the surface of which is reticulated §. They swim with astonishing swift- ness, and their flesh is excellent. XiPiiiAs, Cuv. The Sword Fishes, properly so called, have no ventrals. But one spe- cies is known (rt). Xiphias gladius, L. (The Common Sword-Fish). The point horizontally flattened and trenchant like the broad blade of a sword ; sides of the tail strongly carinated. It has but one dorsal, which rises from before and from behind; the middle of it becoming worn with age gives it the appearance of being double. It is one of the largest and best fishes of the European seas, frequently attaining the length of fifteen feet. It is more common in the Mediterranean than in the Atlantic Ocean. A parasitic crustaceous animal |1 pene- * Scomber dentntus, Bl. Sclin., or Sc. atun, Euphrasen and Lacep., or Acinacee Idtarde, Bory St. Vincent. t The antient name of an unknown fish. X Gempylus serpens, Cuv., or Serpens marinus compressus lliidus, Sloane, I, 1, f. 2. § This led Aristotle to say that the Xiphias has eight branchiffi. II Improperly named by Gmelin, the Pennaiula filosa. J^^ (a) Another species is well known to British Icthyologists, the A'. Notistium, or l-'lying Sword-Fish. It possesses distinct ventral fins, and the dorsal beihg high and long enables this fish to swim with such velocity that its beak, striking against the stout oak plank of a ship, will pierce it. In the British Museum, in the Eleventh Room, may be seen in a case over the fire-place, a remarkably fine prepared spe- cimen of this rare fish; the spectator will also see beside it, a piece of oak plank belonging to an East Indiaman, which had been pierced by one of the same species, but niucli larger than the specimen. — Eng. Ed. 128 FISHES. trates into its flesh, and sometimes renders it so furious that it dashes itself on shore*. Tetrapturus, Rafin. Have the point of the muzzle shaped like a stilet ; each ventral consist- ing of a single non-articulated blade ; two small salient crests on each side of the base of the caudal as in the Mackerel. One species inhabits the Mediterranean, the Aiguille of the Sici- lians, Tetrapturus helone, Rafin., Caratt. pi. i, f. 1. Makaira, Lacep. Have the stilet-shaped point of the muzzle and two small crests of a Tetrapturus, but the ventrals are wanting. But a single specimen has ever been seen, and that was captured at the island of Reen in 1802. It is the Mak. noiratre, Lacep.; Xiphias nmkaira, Sh.-j- IsTioPHORUS, Lacep. — Notistium, Herman. The Sails have the beak and caudal crests of a Tetrapturus, but the dorsal is very high and serves them for a sail when swimming; their long and slender ventrals are composed of two rays. There are several imperfectly determined species, one of which inhabits the Indian Ocean, Scomber cjladius, Broussonet, Acad, des Sc. 1786, pi. x; Xiphias velifer, Bl. Sclm. ; Xiphias platisterus, Shaw, IV, part II, p. 101, and was long ago described J. All the fishes of this genus attain a very large size. Centronotus, Lacep. The Centronotes comprise a great genus of Scomberoides characterized by the spines, which, in the Acanthopterygians in general, form the an- terior portion of the dorsal, or a first separate dorsal, but in them are free and unconnected by a common membrane ; they all have ventrals. They are subdivided as follows : Naucrates, Rajin. The Pilots have free dorsal spines ; body fusiform ; a carina in the sides of the tail as in the Tunny, and two free spines before the anal fin. The common species, or the Fanfre of the sailors of Provence ; * N.B. The Xiph. iviperator, Bl. Schn., pi. 21, taken from Duliam. Sect. IV, pi. xxvi, f. 2, is merely a copy of a bad figiire given by Aldrovande (Pise. p. 332), for that of the common Xiphias. This species must consequently be suppressed. f It yet remains to be seen whether this was not a Tetraptm'us that had lost its ventrals. The fig. of Lacep. IV, xiii, 3, is taken from the rude drawing of a fisherman. X It has also been figured byNieuhof, App.; Willoughb. App. pi. V, f. 9, by Renard, I, pi. 34, f. 182, and 11, pi. 54, f. 233; by Valentyn, No. 527. The Gue- bucu, Marcgr. 171, hardly appears to differ from the species of India, Bl. 345; is a falsified copy of a figure of Pr. Maurice, wliich differed much less from that of Marcgrave. ACANTIIOPTEaYGTANS. 129 Gasterosteus ductor, L. ; Scomber ductor, Bl. 338, (Tlie Pilol-Fisli), is blue, with broad vertical bands of a much deeper blue. The name of Pilot-Fish owes its origin to the fact, that it follows vessels to seize upon what may fall from them; and, as a similar habit is ob- served in the Shark, it has been said that the former acts as a guide or pilot to the latter ; it is not above a foot long. A black species is found at Brazil, the Ceixupira, Marcgr. 158; Scomber niger, Bl. 337, which is eight or nine feet in length. Elacates : Have the general form of the Naucrates, and their free dorsal spines ; but the head is horizontally flattened, and both the caudal carina and the free spines before the anal are wanting*. <^ t \ LicHiA, Cuv. f~. fjf The Lichia have the free spines on the back, and two others, also free, before the anal ; body compressed, and the tail without the lateral carinae. In front of the dorsal spines is a single one, laid flat, and pointing for- wards. Three species inhabit the Mediterranean, all of whi,cli are eatable, and already well characterized by Rondelet. L. amia; Scomber amia, L. ; the Lichia proper, or V§4i(J0, Ron- delet, 254; Amia, Salv. 121. The lateral line strongly covered or forming an S ; a large species more than four feet in length, and weighing a hundred pounds. L. glauca; So. glaucus, L. ; the Derbio, Rondel. 252. The lateral line nearly straight; the anal and second dorsal marked with a black spot in front ; teeth small and crowded. L. sinuosa, Cuv.; Rond. 255. (The Sinuous Lichia). The blue on the back separated from the silvery hue on the belly by a zigzag line; the hooked teeth in a single range f. Lacepede separates from the Lichia, by the name of Scomberoides, which is not very appropriate, those species where the last rays of the second dorsal and of the anal are divided into spurious fins, as in the Mackerels ;}:. The Trachinotus, Lacep. From which his Acanthinions and Coesiomores do not generically differ, are Lichia with an elevated body, and a more vertical profile, and the dorsal and anal tapered into longer points §. * El.mntla, Cuv., Pedda mottah, Russel, 153; El. americana, Cuv., Centronotus spinoaus, Mitch. Ann. cit. Nov. I, iii, 9, which is probably tlie Gasterosteus canaden- sis, L. ; and some new species. t Add, Sromb. calcar, Bl. 336, f. 2. X Scomb. Forsteri, Bl. Schn., or Scoviberdide Commersonien, Lacep. II, xx, 3, or Akenparah, Russ. U\;—Tolparah, Iluss. 138;— 5c. aculeatus, Bl. 336, \;—Sc. lysan, Forsk.; — Sc. saliens, Bl. 335: and Lacep. II, xix; — Gasterosteus occidentalis, L., Brown. Jam. xlvi, 2; — Quiebra-acha, Parra, xii, 2. § Chcetodon glaucus, Lacep. 210, or Acanthinion bleu, Lacep. IV, 500; — Chat, rhomboides, Bl. 209, or ylc. rtiomboidc, Lacep.; — Gast. ovatus,h., or Mookalee parah, Russ. l5i;~C(esiomore Block, Lacep. Ill, iii, 2;— Scomber falcatns, Forsk.; — Casi- omore baillon, Lacep. Ill, iii, 1; — Bollah-parah, Russel, 142. VOL. II. K 130 FISHES. Rhynchobdella, Bl. Schn. Have free spines on the back as in Ceiitronotus, and two free spines be- fore the anal, but, as in a true Xiphias, the ventrals are wanting; the body is elongated. They are divided into two subgenera. In Macrognatiius, Lacep. The muzzle is prolonged into a cartilaginous point, which extends beyond the lower jaw; the second dorsal and the anal are distinct from the caudal*. Mastacembelus, Gronov. The two jaws about equal, and the dorsal and anal almost united with the caudal -f. Both subgenera inhabit the fresh waters of Asia and feed on worms, which they obtain from the sand. Their flesh is much esteemed. This is perhaps the proper place for a genus not yet well under- stood. The NoTACANTHUs, 2?/.— Camimlodon, OtJi. aucl Fuh. The body much elongated, compressed, and covered with small soft scales; the obtuse muzzle projects in front of the mouth, which is armed with fine and closely-set teeth; nothing on the back but free spines; ventrals behind and beneath, or on tlie abdomen ; a very long anal reaches to the tip of the tail, where it unites with a very small caudal. Not. nasus, Bl. 431. The only species known; it inhabits the Arctic Ocean, and is two feet and a half in length. Sekiola, Cuv. The Serioles present all the characters of a Lichia; a horizontal spine before the first dorsal; a small free fin supported by two spines before the anal; body compressed; a lateral line without carina or armature; but the spines of the first dorsal are united into a fin by a membrane. One species, the Peche lait (Milk Fish) of the French at Pon- dicherry; Scomber lactarius, Bl. Schn. ; Russ. lOS; is remarkable for the great delicacy of its flesh. Another, Seriola cosmopolita, Cuv. ; Scomber chloris, Bl. 339, is noticed as one of the few fishes common to both oceans;};. There is a species whose last dorsal and anal ray is detached, Seriola bipinnulata, Cuv.; Zool. de Freycin,, pi. 61, f. 3. * Ryncliobdella orientalis, Bl. Schn., or Ophiditm aculcatuvi, Bl. 159, 2, or Ma- cro^nate aiguillonne, Lacep. II, viii, 3; — lili. polyacau/ha, Bl. Schn., or Macrogtiaie arme, Lacep.; Buchan, pi. xxxvii, x, 6; — Rh. oral, Bl. Schn., pi. Ixxxix; — Macrog. puncalus, Buchan, xxii, 7. f Rhynchobdella liideperisis, Bl. Schn.; Gronov. Zoopli., pi. viii, a, x. X Add, Seriole Dumeril, Risso; — Scomber fasclatus, Bl. 341; — Seriole de Rafinesque, Risso, or Trachurus aqiiilus, Raff. Caratt. xi, 3. ACANTHOPTERYGIANS. 131 NoMEUs, Cuv. Tlie Shepherds, which for a long time were placed among the Gobies, are related in many particulars to the Serioles, but their extremely large and broad ventrals, attached to the belly by their internal edge, give them a very peculiar character. Nom. mauriUi, Cuv.; the Harder, Marcgr. 153. A species from the American seas ; silvery, with transverse black bands on the back*. Temnodon, Cuv. The Temnodians have the tail unarmed; the small fin, or free spines before the anal, of the Serioles; the first dorsal is very slight and low, the second and the anal covered with small scales; but their principal character consists in a range of separate, pointed and trenchant teeth in each jaw; behind these, above, is a row of small ones, and the vomer, palatines and tongue are furnished with others, very small and crowded. The operculum terminates in two points, and there are seven rays in the branchiae. Tem. saltator, Cuv. The only well known species ; it is about the size of a Mackerel, and one of the small number of fishes com- mon to both oceans -(". CaranXj Cuv. Scomberoides characterized by a lateral line more or less mailed with scaly plates or bands, carinated and frequently spinous. They have two distinct dorsals, a horizontal spine before the first; the last rays of the second but slightly connected, and sometimes separated into spurious fins ; some spines free, or forming a small fin before the anal. Several species inhabit the seas of Europe, resembling the Mackerel in form and flavour, and remarkable for the bands or plates which cover their lateral line, commencing from the shoulder. They are confounded under the name of Saurels, Bastard Mackerel, &c. — Scomber trachurus, L.; but they differ in the num- ber of bands J and the more or less sudden curvature of the lateral line. Species very similar to those of Europe are found as far as New Zealand. In some, the plates merely cover the posterior and straight part of the * It is the Gobius Gronovii, Gmel., the Gobiomore Groiwrien, Laeep., the Eleotris maurilii, Bh Schn., and the Scomber zonatns, Mitch. Ann. Op. cit. I, iv, 3,— it attains tl'.e size of a Salmon. The other Harder of Marcgr. Braz. 166, appears to be a Mitgil. Harder or Herder (Shepherd), is a name applied by Dutch sailors to various fishes for reasons similar to those which have induced European mariners to call the Naucrates, Pilot-fish, &c. It is even possible that from the resemblance of the black bands, our Nomeus may have been confounded with it. t We possess specimens which scarcely difl!er from each other, from Alexandria, the United States, Brazil, Cape of Good Hope, and New Holland. It is the Cliei- hidiptere heptacanihe, Lncep. Ill, xxi, 3, copied from Commerson, and. his Pomatome skib, IV, viii, 3, from Bosc. It is also the Perca saltatrix, L.; Catesb. II, viii, 2, or Spare sauteur, Lacep. Add, Perca anturctica, Carmich., Lin. Trans. XII, xxv? X There are from seventy to a hundred of these bands. K 2 132 FISHES. lateral line, its anterior and arcuated portion being furnished with small scales. Some are fusiform, and of these, one has a single spurious dor- sal and anal fin*, another has severalf , but most of them have none j. Others again, Avhich have a more elevated body, but still retain the oblique and but slightly convex profile, are remarkable for a single range of teeth §. Some fishes of this genus, termed Carangues by the French sailors, have an elevated body and a sharp profile, curved into a convex arch, and descending suddenly. The species are very numerous in both oceans. C. carangus; Scomber carangtis, Bl. 340. (The Carangue of the Antilles). Silvery, with a black spot on the operculum, and frequently found to weigh from twenty to twenty-five pounds; an excellent fish. A very similar species, but in which the black spot is wanting, the Guaratereba, Seb. Ill, xxvii, 3, (The Bastard Carangue), is, on the contrary, very apt to prove poisonous 1|. We might also distinguish those speci6s which have no teeth**, and those, the points of whose second dorsal and anal are extremely elongated, which I have designated by the name of CiTUL^ff. We are thus gradually led to fishes which may be united under the common name of Vomer, which become more and more compressed and elevated, where the arma- ture of the lateral line successively diminishes, and the skin becomes fine, satiny, and without any apparent scales, which have no other teeth than those dense as the pile on velvet, and which are distinguished from each other by various prolongations of some of their fins. LinuiTus and Bloch placed them, but improperly, in the genus Zeus. We divide them as follows : Olistus, Cuv. Differ from Citula, inasmuch as the middle rays of the second dorsal are * Kurra-woodagahwah, Russ. 139; — Car. punctatus, Cuv., called Scomber hippos, by Mitch., New York, op. cit. I, v, 5, but which is not the hippos of Linnseus; — Curvala pinima, Marcgr. Braz. 150. t Scomber liotleri, Bl. 34G, and Russel, 143;— ^^c. cordijla, L., but not his syno- nymes, wliich are Carangi. X Scomb.crumenophlalmus, Bl. 343;— 5c. Plumieri, Bl, 344, the same as the Sc. ruber, 343, and as the Caranx Daubenton, Lacep. Ill, 71. § Scomb. dentex, BL, Schn.; — Caranx lime, Geoff. Saint- Hil., Eg. Poiss. xxiii, 3, to which the Cihila Banskli, Kiss., 2d ed. VI, 13, and perhaps the Trachurus imperialis, Rafin., Car. XI, 1, are, at least, closely allied. II Add, the Scomb. hippos,!.., vihxch. is the Sc. chrysos, Mitch.; — Ekalali parah, Russ. 146, perhaps the Scomb. ig/iobilis, Forsk.; — Car. sex-fasciatus, Quoy et Gaym., Zool., Freycin. pi. 65, L '\:;—Jarra dandree parah, Russ. 147; — Scomb. Kleimi, Bl. 347, 2; — Sc. Sansun, Forsk.; — Kuguroo-parah, Russ. 145; — Talan-parah, Id. 150, or Scomb. malabaricus, Bl., ^chn.;—Wootin-parah, Russ. 148. ** Scomb. speciosus, Lacep. Ill, 1, 1, or Polooso-parah, Russ. 149, of which the Car. petaurista, GeofF., Egypt. XXIII, 1, aj^pears to be the adult. ft Tchawil-parah, Russ. \5l;— Mais-par ah, Id. 152. ACANTHOPTEllYGIANS. 133 not branched, but merely articulateJ, and are extended into long fila- ments*. ScYUis, Cuv. Have the same filaments, and nearly a similar form; but the spines which shouhl form the first dorsal are entirely hidden in the edge of the second. 'I'he ventrals are short -f-. Blepharis, Cuv. Have long filaments to the second dorsal and anal; ventrals much pro- longed, the spines of the first hardly piercing the skin|; body elevated; the profile not more curved than usual. Gallus, Cuv. Have the profile more vertical than in Blepharis, but all the other cha- racters similar §. Argyreyosus, Cuv. The profile still more elevated ; the first dorsal decidedly marked, and some of its rays prolonged into filaments like those of the second. Their ventrals also are much lengthened 1]. In Vomer, properly so called, The body is compressed, and the profile vertical, as in Gallus and Ar- gyreyosus, but there is no prolongation to any of the fins^. The genus Zeus, Lin. After abstracting the Galli and Argyreyosi, &c., comprehends fishes with a compressed body, an extremely protractile mouth like that of the Me- nides, and having but few and weak teeth. They require, however, to be greatly subdivided. Zeus, Cuv. The Dories have dorsal eraarginate, its spines accompanied by long slips of the membrane ; a series of bifurcated spines along the base of the dorsal and the anal. Z.faber, L., Bl. 41. (The Common Dory). Yellowish, with a * The species is new. t The Gal. d'Alexandrie, Geoff., Eg. Poiss. XXII, 2. X Zeus ciliaris, Bl. 196; — Zens sutor, Cuv., the Cordonnier of Martinique. § Zeus gallus, L., Bl., or Gurrah-parah, Russ. 57; — Chewoola-parah, Id. 58. II Zeus vomer, Mus. Ad. Fred, xxxi, 9, and better, Bl. 93, 2, or AbacaUda, Marcgr. 161; — Zeus rostratus, Mitch., op. cit. II, 1. N. B. The Zeus niger, Bl. Schn., is founded on a mistake; a figure of the Abacatuia, in the work of Marcgrave, p. 145, being placed next to the description of the Guaperva or Chatodon arcuatus. The Seline argentee, Lacep. IV, ix, 2, is an Abacatuia, whose first dorsal and ventrals had been worn. His SeUne quadrangulaire is the Chcet. faber. ^ Zeus setapinnis, Mitch., op. cit. I, 9, Labat. Voy. de Desmarchais, I, p. 312. 134 FISHES. round black spot on the flank ; an excellent fish, that is sometimes styled the Fish of St. Peter (a). Z. pungio, Cuv. ; Rond. 328, is another species, distinguished by a stout bil'urcated spine on the shoulder. From the Mediterranean. Capros, Laeep. Have the'emarginated dorsal of the Dories, and a mouth still more pro- tractile; but no spines along the dorsal and anal; the entire body covered with very rough scales. But one species is knov/n, Zeus aper, L., which is small and yel- lowish. It inhabits the Mediterranean*. The Lampris, Retzius. — Chrysotosus, Lacep. Have but a single dorsal, highly elevated before, as is the case with the anal; and which has but one small spine at the base of its anterior edge. There are ten very long rays to each ventral; the lobes of their caudal are also very long, but all these prolongations become worn away with age ; sides of the tail carinated. Lamp, guttatus, Retz. Violet spotted with white, and has red finsf . It attains a large size, and inhabits the Arctic seas; the only species known. Equula, Cuv. The Equula have only a single dorsal, bi;t with several small spines, the anterior of which are sometimes very long; the snout highly protrac- tile; body compressed; edges of the back and belly dentated along the fins. They are small fishes, several species of which inhabit the Indian Ocean I . The snout of some of these species, when in a state of quiescence, is singularly retracted ; by suddenly protruding it they are enabled to seize upon such small fishes or insects as may pass within reach §. * It is also the Perca pitsilla of Brunnich. f It is the Zeus regius, Bonnat. Eiicycl. Icthyol., f. 155; the Z.imperiaUs, Shaw, Nat. Misc., No. 140; the Z. luva, Gmel.; the Z. guttatus, Brunnich, Soc. des So. de Copeiih. Ill, u88; the Scomber pelagicus, Gunner, Mem. de Dronth. IV, xii, 1; the C/irysotose luiie, Lacep. IV, ix, 3; the Moon-Fish, Duham., Sect. IV, pl.vi, f. 5; the Upah of Pennant, &c. X The type of this genus is the Scomber equnia of Forskhal, of which Gmelin has made his Ceiitrogaster equula, and Lacep. his Casio poulain. Add, Eq. ensijera, Cuv., or Scomber edentulus, Bl. 428, or Lcyognathe argente, Lacep.; — Eq. cara, Cuv., Russ. C6; — Eq.fasciata, Cuv., or C/upea Juiciala, Lacep. V, p. 4C3, Mem. du Mus. I, xxiii, 2; — Eq. splendeus, Cuv., Russ. 61 ; — Eq. daura, Cuv., Russ. 65; — Eq. totta, Russ. 62; — Eq. coma, Russ. et Seb. Ill, xxvii, 4, &i\—Eq.ruconius, Buchan, XII, 35; — Eq. viinuta, Cuv., or Scomber mivutus, Bl. 429, 2, which may very possibly be the same as tlie Zeus argentarius, Forster, IX, Schn. 96. § Eq. insidialrix, Cuv., or Zeus iiisidiator, Bl. 192, f. 2 and 3. f^° (o) The legend on which this title is founded represents the Dory to have been the fish from which St. Peter took the tribute money, and the impression of his finger and thumb on the sides of its body were destined to commemorate the miracle. — Eng. Ed. ACANTIIOPTERYGIANS. 135 Mene, Lacep. Have the snout of an Equula, and the entire body more compressed; ab- domen trenchant, and very convex beneath; a circumstance resulting from the development of the bones of the shoulder and pelvis, while the dorsal line is almost straight, which throws the ventrals behind the pec- torals. But one species is known, the Mene Anne-Caroline, Lacep. V, xiv, 2, or the Zetis maculahis, BL, Schn., pi. xxii, Russel, 60. It is of a fine silver colour, spotted with blackish near the back. From the Indian Ocean. Stromateus, Lin. Possess the same compressed form as is found in the different species of Zeus, and similar diminutive and slightly apparent scales, under a satiny epidermis ; but the snout is obtuse and non-protractile : a single dorsal whose few spines are concealed in its anterior edge ; no ventrals. The vertical fins are sufficiently thick to tempt us to approximate them also to the Squammipennes. Independently of the ordinary lateral line, there is a stria on the flank which has been considered as a second one. The oesophagus is armed with a number of spines which are attached to the velvet by radiating roots. S.fiatola, L.; Belon, Aquat. 153; Rondel. 493*. A pretty, oblong species, inhabiting the Mediterranean, remarkable for spots and interrupted bands of a golden tint, on a lead-coloured ground. iS*. stellatus, Cuv., from the coast of Peru, is nearly similar in form, but is sprinkled with black spots; it is common in the markets at Lima. Several other species inhabit the Indian Ocean, called by the French colonists Pamples (a). They are generally more elevated than the fiatola, and spines or trenchant blades are frequently found before their dorsal, and even their analf. We may distinguish from among them the Peprilus, Cuv. In which the pelvis forms a trenchant and pointed blade before the anus, * This fig., in which the left pectoral is bent downwards, being mistaken by La- cep. for a ventral, gave rise to his genus Chnjsostromus, which must consequently be suppressed. t The Stromatetis w/^er, Bl. 422, and better, 160, under the false name of ^/r. jtani, Rnss. 43;— the Sir. albus, Cuv., Russ. 4.4 ; — Str. candidus, Cuv., Russ. 42; — Sir. argenleus, Euphrasen, New Stockh. Mem. IX, pl.ix, or Sir. aculeatiis, Bl.,Schn.; Sir. griseus, Cuv. g^ (o) And, by the English in India, Pomfret. One of the species of the Indian fishes, S. Niger, the Black Pomfret, is caught plentifully in the roads of Poncli- cherry, in the months of March and April. Tliey are taken in great abundance only at intervals, as the fisli collect together near the coast, and remain there for tvvo or three days, then disappear for about the sanie period, when they return, and thus continue for some time the alternate movement. The fish must be eaten within a few hours after being caught. — Eng. Ed. 136 FISHES. that might be taken for a vestige of the ventrals*. Besides this, there are the trenchant blades of which we have just spoken, and there is eveu one species in which these blades are crenated-f-. LuvARUs, Rafin., Appear to be closely approximated to Peprilus; the extremity of the pel- vis is furnished with a small scale that acts as an operculum to the anus; no trenchant blades; a prominent carina on each side of the tail, as in the Tunny, &c. Luv. imperialis, Rafin. Ind. d'lttiol. Sicil. pi. i, f. 1. Silvery, with a reddish back ; an extremely large species that inhabits the seas of Europe ;{:. Seserinus, Ciw., Have all the characters of the Stromatei, even internally; but on them are seen two small ventrals, or rather vestiges of ventrals. Ses. Rondeletii, Cuv. ; Rondel. 257. A small species from the Mediterranean. KURTUS, Bl. The Kurtes are closely allied to Peprilus, from which they particularly differ in the less extent of their dorsal, and in the development of their ventrals : the anal is long, the scales are so extremely small that they are hardly visible till the skin is dried ; there are none on the fins ; seven rays in the branchiae ; a pelvic spine between the ventrals, and several small trenchant blades before the dorsal, at whose base is a spine directed horizontally forwards. A singularity of structure is presented in their skeleton ; the ribs are dilated, convex, and form rings which are in contact with each other, thus enclosing a conical and empty space, wiiich extends beneath the tail, in the inferior rings of the vertebra, in a long and thin tube which contains the natatory bladder. The Kurt, indicus, Bl. 1G9, is very probably the female of the Knrtus cornutus, or Somdrum-Kara-Mottee of Russel, a fish very remark- able for a little cartilaginous and curved horn, which rises from the first of the small trenchant blades before the dorsal. CoRYPH^NA, Lin. The Coryphoena, vulgarly called Dories, and, by the Dutch, Dolphins: the body compressed, elongated, covered with small scales; upper part of the head trenchant; a dorsal extending along the whole of the back, *'CheBtodon ahpidotus, L.,or Stromateus longipinnis, Mitch.; — Sir. cryplosus, Mitch.; — Sir. paru, Sloane, Jam. II, pi. eel, f. A. f Peprilus crenulatus, Cuv., a small and new species. X A specimen was taken at the Isle of Re, in 1826, a drawing of which was for- warded to us by M. Journal Rouquet, one of the custom-house officers of that island. I suspect that we should refer to it, at least as a'congener, the Atisonia Cu- vieri, Risso, 2nd ed. pi. xi, f. 28, which is figured, however, with two anal spines. ACANTHOPTERYGIANS. 137 composed of rays almost equally flexible, although there is no articulation to the anterior ones ; seven rays in the branchia;. CoRvrii^NA, Cuv. The Coryphsnae, properly so called, have the head much elevated; the profile curved into an arc which descends very suddenly ; eyes very far down ; teeth in the palate as well as in the jaws. Large and beautiful fishes, celebrated for the rapidity of their motions, and the eternal war they wage against the Flying Fish. C. hippurus, L. (The Mediterranean Coryphsena), Sixty dorsal rays; a silvery-blue above, with deep blue spots; a lemon-yellow, with light blue spots beneath. Several neighbouring species are found in the ocean, hitherto confounded with it*. Caranxomorus, Lacep., Have the head oblong and but slightly elevated, the eye in a mediate position, thus differing in both these respects from the true Coryphaenffi-f". In the Centrolophus, Lacep., The palatine teeth are wanting; there is an interval without rays between the occiput and the commencement of the dorsal J. A species of each of these two last subgenera inhabits the Mediterranean, and occasionally strays into the ocean. AsTRODERMUS, BonnelU, Have the elevated and trenchant head and long dorsal of the Coryphaenae ; but the mouth is slightly cleft, there are but four rays in the branchiae, and their ventrals are very small and placed on the throat; but their pe- culiar character is, that the scales scattered over the body assume the ra- diated form of small stars. Astrod. guttatus, Bonn. ; Diana semilunata, Risso, Ed. II, pi. vii, f. 14. Silvery, spotted with black; red fins, and a very high dorsal. From the Mediterranean, and the only species known §. Pteraclis, Gronov. — Oligopodus, Lacep. Teeth and head of the Coryphaeus ; but the scales are larger, the ven- trals jugular and very small, and the dorsal and anal as high as the fish itself. • We will describe several of them in our Icthyology, and endeavour to settle their synonymes. f Scomber pelagicus, L., Mus. Ad. Fred, xxx, f. 3, or Cychla pelagica, Bl. Schn. ; —Cor. fasciolata, Pall. Spic. Zool. Fasc. VIII, pi. iii, f. 2. J Coryphana pompilus, L., Rondel, 250; — the Centrolophe nSgre, Lacep. IV, 441, the same as the Perca nigra, Gmel., Borlasse, Hist, of Cornw. pi. xxvi, f. 8, or Halo- ceritre noir, Lacep.; the Merle, Duhani. Sect. IV, pi. vi, f. 2. § Astrodervius guttatus, Bonnelli, or Diana semilunata, Riss. 2nd ed. VII, f. 14. 138 FISHES. P. vellfer ; Coryphcena velifera, Pall. Spic. Zool. Fasc. VIII, pi. 1 *. From the Carolinas, and the only species known (a). The Eighth Family of Acanthopterygians, that of FAMILY VIII. T^NIOIDES, Taenioids, or R,ibband Fish, is closely connected with the Scombe- roides, and its first genus is even intimately allied with Gempilus and Tliyrsites; the fishes which compose it are elongated, flattened on the sides, and have very small scales. The first tribe has the muzzle elongated, the mouth cleft and armed with strong, pointed, and trenchant teeth, and the lower jaw advancing beyond the upper one : it comprises but two genera, Lepidopus, Gouaju, Whose special character consists in the reduction of the ventrals to two small scaly plates; the thin and elongated body is furnished with a dorsal above, which extends throughout its length, with a low^ anal beneath, and terminates in a well-formed caudal; there are eight rays in the branchiae; the stomach is elongated, with upwards of twenty cjgcums near the pylo- rus, and a prominent glandular body is attached to the natatory bladder, which is long and slender. Lep. argyreus, Cuv. (The Garter Fish). Frequently five feet in length; it has been described under several names -j", and is found from England to the Cape of Good Hope, but is rare every where. Trichiurus, Li?i. — Lepturus, Artedi, — Gymnogaster, Gronov., Have the form of body, muzzle, and jaws, similar pointed and trenchant teeth, and a dorsal extending along the back, as in Lepidopus ; but the * Bosc assures us that he caught it in Carolina; Pallas says that his is from the Moluccas. — They may be diiFerent species. f It is the Lepidojjus of Gouan., Hist. Pise. pi. i, fig. 4; the Trichiurus caudaliis, Euphrasen, New Stockh. Mem. IX, pi. ix, f. 2; the Trick, gladius, Holten, Soc. Hist. Nat. Copenh. V, p. 23, and pi. ii; the Trich. ensi/ormis of Vaudelli, or Favdcl- lius lusitanicus of Shaw; the Zipntlieca tetradens of Montagu, Werner, Soc. I, p. 81, pi. ii; the Sarcina urgyrea, Rafin. Nouv. Caratt. pi. vii, f. 1; the Lepidope Pert 71, Riss.; and the Lepidope argente of Nardo. |^° (a) In the ninth volume of his great work on Icthyology, Cuvier is enabled to describe three more species. The first is the P. oceUuUis,'hrovtg\\t home by the na- turalists, Quoy and Gaymard; it was found in the stomach of a bonila, which was caught in the Indian Sea, near Madagascar, in south latitude 30°, and was so fresh at the time, that it must have been then but recently swallowed. The other two species are P. trichepterus and P. CaroUmis. The whole are in the King's Cabinet in Paris. — Eng. Ed. ACANTHOPTERYGIANS. 139 ventrals and caudal are wanting, and tlie tail is drawn out into a long, slender, and compressed filament. In lieu of the anal there is merely a suite of small and hardly perceptible spines on the under edge of the tail; the branchia; have but seven rays. They reseml)le beautiful silver rib- bands; their stomach is elongated and thick; their intestines straight; their caeca numerous, and tlieir natatory bladder long and simple. Trich. lepturvs, Lin.; Brown, Jam. pi. xlv, f. 4*, is found in the Atlantic, both on the coast of America and that of Africa. Two other species are known from the Indian Ocean, one of which, Trich. haumela, Schn.; Chpea haumcla, Forsk. and Gmel. ; Savala, Russel, I, 41, is very similar to the Lepturus, being only somewhat shorter. The other, 2'rich. savala, Cuv., is still less elongated, and has a smaller eyef . A second tribe comprehends genera in which the mouth is small, and but slightly cleft. Gymnetrus, Bl., Have the body elongated and flat, as in all the preceding divisions, and totally deprived of the anal fin; but there is a long dorsal whose length- ened anterior rays form a sort of panache, but they are easily broken; the ventrals, when not worn or broken, are very long, and tlie caudal, composed of very few rays, rises vertically from the extremity of the tail, which ends in a small hook. There are six rays in the branchiae; the mouth is slightly cleft, very protractile, and furnished with but few and small teeth; some small spines on the lateral line, which are more salient towards the tail. These fishes are extremely soft, and their rays are fra- gile ; they have been frequently and incorrectly figured from mutilated specimens:!:; their skeleton has the bones, especially those of the vertebra-, but very slightly indurated, their stomach is elongated, and their caeca are very numerous ; the natatory bladder is wanting, and their mucous flesh is very rapidly decomposed. * It is the Ubirre of Laet., Ind. Occid. 573, which, through a mistake, pointed out by himself, he has placed in Marcgr. p. 161, as belonging to the description of the Much, which is a MurEena; this mistake has produced such confusion, that Bloch and others were led to believe that the Trichiurus is a iVesh-water fish. I A transposition in the text of Nieuhof has caused electric properties to be attri- buted to the Trichiuri of India, which they most assuredly do not possess. X The FaLv venetornm of Belon, of which Gouan has made his genus Trachyp- TERUS, and which has become the Ctpola irachyptera, Gmel., only differs from the Tavia altera of Rondel, 327, and even from his Tania prima, which is the Cepola tania, L., and from the Spada maxima, Imperati, 587, or Cepola gladius of Walbaum, and from the Tcenia falcata, Aldrov., av Cepola iris of Walbaum, in the various de- grees 'of individual mutilation. It is the same with respect to the Vogmar of the Ice- landers of Olafsen and Powelsen, Isl. tr. fr. pi. li, or Gymnogasier arclicus of Brun- nich, Scient. Soc. Copenh. Ill, pi xiii, which is the genus Bogmarus, Bl. Schn.; with respect to the Oymnelre cepedien, Risso, Ed. I, pi. v, f. 17; to the Argyctius quadrimaculatus, Rafm. Caratt. I, f. 3; to his Scarcina quadrimaculala and imperialis; to the Gymnetriis mediterraneus of Otto; to the Epidesmus maculatus of Ranzani, Opusc. Scientif. Fascic. VIII, and to the Kegalecas maculatus of Nardo, Phys. Journ. Favia, VIII, pi. i, f. 1. All these fishes hardly difl'er in species, and not in the least as to genus. Bonnelli is the person who has described the least mutilated specimen: he calls it the Trachyplerus cristatus, Acad. Turin, XXlV, pi. ix. 140 FiSHKS. Several species are found in the European seas which differ in the num- ber of their dorsal rays, and which, when entire, that is when young, fre- quently present a most singular appearance from the prolongation of their fins. The most brilliant of the Mediterranean species has but from one hundred and forty to one hundred and fifty dorsal rays : all that have been caught were either small or of a middling size. Another has from a hundred and seventy to a hundred and seventy-five rays, spe- cimens of which are found in cabinets, from four to five feet in length. A third has more than two hundred of these rays, and is more than seven feet in length. The Arctic Ocean produces two species, called in Norway the King of the Herrings*; to one of which some give one hundred and twenty rays, and others give one hundred and sixty, and say that it attains the length of ten feet; the other has more than four hundred rays, and is eighteen feet in length -j-. The ventrals consist of a long filament dilated near the extremity. They are also found in India :}:. Stylephorus, Shaw. A vertical caudal, as in Gymnetrus, but shorter; the extremity of the tail, instead of being curved into a small hook, is prolonged into a slender cord longer than the body. S. chordattis, Shaw, Lin. Trans. I, vi, Nat. Misc. VII, pi. 274, and Gen. Zool. IV, part I, pi. ii. There is only known a badly preserved specimen, which was taken in the Gulf of Mexico, and even of it, for a long time, we only had quite a mutilated drawing. M. de Blainville, however, has given us a more faithful representa- tion; Journ. de Phys. tome LXXXVII, pi. i, f. 1, which exhibits no ventrals. In a third tribe the snout is short, and the mouth cleft obliquely. Cepola§, Lin. The Ribband Fishes have a long dorsal and anal, both reaching to the base of the caudal, Avhich is tolerably large ; the cranium is not at all ele- vated; snout very short; lower jaw curved upwards ; the teeth prominent, and the ventrals sufficiently developed. There are but two or three non- articulated rays in the dorsal, which are as flexible as the others; the * It is the RegaUcus glesne, Ascanius, Ic. Fasc. II, pi. xi, which he afterwards named Ophidium glesne, Mem. Scient. Soc. Copenh. Ill, p. 419, or the Regalicus remipes, Brunnich, lb. pi. B, f. 4 and 5 Bloch, Syst. pi. 88, copies and alters the figure of Ascanius. A better copy is, Encycl. Method, f. 358. f Gymnetrus GriUi, Lindroth, New Stockh. Mem. XIX, pi. viii. X Gymnetrus Russelii, Shaw, IV, part II, page 195, pi. 28. Add, the Gymnetrus Hawhenii, if the figure be correct; but the Regalec Utnceole, or Ophidic chinoise, Lacep. I, xxii, 3, or the Gymnetrus cepedianus, Shaw, does not be- long to this genus. § This name of Cepola, given by Willoughby as a Roman synonyme of the Fierasfer, has been applied by Linn, to the present genus, to which the Fieraafer does not belong. ACANTIIOPTERYGIANS. 141 spine of the ventrals is alone stiff and sharp ; there are six rays in the branchiae, and the abdominal cavity is very short as well as the stomach; they have some cseca, with a natatory bladder which extends into the base of the tail. Cep. rubescens, L. ; Lin. Trans. VII, xvii, and Bl. 170, under the false name of Cep. tcenia^, the Ribband, or Red-band Fish. A Mediterranean species of a reddish colour. LoPHoTES, Giorfia, Have the head surmounted with a high osseous crest ; to its summit a long and stout spine is articulated, bordered behind with a membrane, and originating from this spine a low fin, whose rays are nearly all simple, ex- tending equally to the point of the tail, which has a distinct but very small caudal; an extremely short anal beneath that point; moderate pectorals, beneath which are scarcely perceptible ventrals, composed of four or five excessively small rays. The teeth are pointed and not crowded; the mouth is directed upwards, and the eye very large. There are six rays in the branchia;, and the abdominal cavity occupies nearly the whole length of the body. L. cepedianus, Giorna, Mem. of the Imp. Acad, of Turin, 1805, 1808, p. 19, pi. 2. The only species known; it is found, though rarely, in the Mediterranean, and becomes very large f. A Ninth Family of Acanthopterygians, FAMILY IX. THEUTYES. The Theutides is as closely allied to the Scomberoides as the preced- ing one, and in other points, such as the armature, which is found in several genera on the sides of the tail, or in others, the horizontal spine before the dorsal, &c. It contains but very few genera; they are all foreign, and have a compressed, oblong body, a small mouth, but slightly or not at all protractile, each jaw of which is armed with a single range of trenchant teeth ; palate and tongue without teeth, and a single dorsal. They are herbivorous fishes, feeding on fucus and other marine plants ; their intestines are very large. SiGANUs, Forsk. — BuRo, Commer. — Centrogaster, Houttuyn. — Ampiiacanthus, Block, The Sidjans have a remarkable character — unique, in icthyology — in their ventrals, which are furnished with two spinous rays, one external, * Add, the Cepola ja-ponica, Krusenst, Voy. pi. Ix, f. i. t Tlie description of Giorna is imperfect, because he only had a mutilated speci- men, of whose origin he was ignorant. I drew mine from an individual more than four feet in length, takeu at Genoa. See An. Mus. XX, xvii. 142 FISHES. the other internal, the three intermediate ones branching as usual. They have five branchial rays, and a horizontal spine before the dorsal. The styloid bones of their shoulder lengthen out in a curve, so as to unite themselves by their extremities to the first interspinal of the anal*. Numerous species are found in the Indian Ocean f. AcANTHUKUS, LcicSp, and ^/.— Harpurus, Forst, These fishes, vulgarly called Surgeons, have the teeth trenchant and notched; a strong moveable spine on each side of the tail, that is as sharp as a lancet, and inflicts severe wounds on those who carelessly handle these fishes; hence their vulgar name. They inhabit the hot parts of both oceans J. The dorsal of some species is very high§. Some have a sort of brush composed of stiff hairs, before the lateral spinel]. In others again the teeth are deeply notched, or pectinated on one side^. The Prion URUS, Lac6p. Only differ from the preceding genus in the armature of the sides of the t;;il, which consists of a series of fixed, horizontal, and trenchant blades**. Naseus, Commers. — Monoceros, Bl. Schn. Have, like the preceding, the sides of the tail armed with fixed trenchant blades: but the teeth are conical, and the front projects in a kind of horn or knob above the muzzle; but four rays in the branchi«, and three soft ones in the ventrals; the skin resembles leather ff. • GeofF. Phil. Anat. I, 471, and pi. ix, f. 108. f Tketitis joints, L., Gronov. Zoophyl. pi. VIII, f. 4; — Siganits stellatus, Forsk.; — Amphac. punctatus, Bl. Schn., or Acanihurus meleagris, Shaw; — Buro hrunneus, Commers., Lacep. V, 421; — Siganns rimdatiis, Forsk.; — Amphac. nehulosus, Quoy and Gaj-m. Zool. Voy. Freycin. p. 369; — Csntrogaster j'ascescens, Houttuyn; — Chatodon puttatus, Bl. 196; — Amph. marmoratus, Quoy and (jaym. Voy. Freycin. Zool. pi. 62, f. 1 and 2; — Amph. magniahac, Ih. f. 3; — Centrogaster argentatus, Houtt, and seve- ral others to be described in our Icthyology. + Chatodon chimrgus, HL 20ii; — Theulis hepattis, L.; Seb. Ill, xxxiii, f.3;—Ac. ghiuco pareius, Cuv., Seb. III. xxv, 3, which appears to be the true Chatodon nigricans, L. ; — Chat. Irioslegiis, Brousson., Dec. Icth. No. 4, or Acanthure zehrc, Lacep., which is also his Chat, zebie, III, xxv, 3; — Ac. gutfalus, Bl., Schn.; — Ac. suillus, Cuv., Re- nard, I, pi. xiv, {.S2;—Chat. Uneatus, L.; Seb. Ill, xxv, \;—Chat. Achilles, Brous- sonnet; — Chat, meta, Russ. 82; — Chat, sohal, Forsk., of which Lacep. has very im- properly made a genus under the nmne o{ A pisunis; — Ac. striatus, Cuv.; Paninau, Renard, pi. 1, f. 8 ; — Ac. argente, Quoy and Gaym. Voy. Freycin., p. 63, f. 3; — Chat, nigrofuscus, Forsk.; — Chat, nigricaiis, Bl. 203, which is not that of Linnaeus. § Ac. velifer, Bl. 427. II Ac. scopas, Cuv., Renard, I, pi. xi, 101. % Ac. ctentdon, Cuv., a new species. *• Prionure microlepidote, Lacep. Au. Mus. IV, p. 205; — Acanihurus scalprum, Langsdorf. ft Naseus fronticornis, Cuv., Lacep. Ill, vii, 2, Bl., Schn., pi. 42, Hasseq., it. pal. 332; — Nas. tandock, Ren. I, iv, 23 ; Valent. 5 18 ; — Chat, unicornis, Forsk., differ from our first species. — Nas. hrevirostris, Cuv., Ren. I, xxiv, 130; — Nas. tiimifrons, Cuv., badly drawn, Ren. J, 178; — Nas. incornis, Cuv., Ren. I, f. 128, and not so well, f. 147, ACANTIIOPTKRYGIANS. ]43 AxiNURUS, Cuv. ^fore elongated tlian the preceding, and without horn or knob, but with tlie same branchial and ventral rays as in the preceding genus ; each side of the tail armed with a single, square, trenchant blade, without a shield; the mouth very small, and the teeth very slender*. Priodon, Cuv. Combine the notched teeth of Acanthurus, the three soft ventral rays cf Naseus, and the unarmed tail of the Sidjans f . FAMILY X. The tenth family of Acanthopterygians comprehends a small number of genera, distinguished by LABYRINTHIFORM PHARYNGEALS, That is to say, that part of their superior pharyngeals is divided into small irregular lamellae, more or less numerous, intercepting small cells, in which they have the power of retaining water for the purpose of being used in moistening the gills when the animal is on shore — an apparatus by which it is enabled to quit the pool or rivulet, which constitutes its usual element, and crawl to a considerable distance from it, a singular property, not unknown to the antients J, and which induces the people of India to believe that they fall from heaven. A NAB AS, Cuv. It is in this genus that we find the greatest degree of complication in these labyrinths ; the third pliaryngeals, however, have teeth as if paved, and there are others behind the cranium. Their body is round and co- vered with strong scales, their head broad, muzzle short and obtuse, and mouth small; the lateral line is interrupted at its posterior third. The borders of their operculum, suboperculum, and interoperculum strongly dcntated, but not that of the preoperculum. There are five rays in the probably the Acanthurus harpuras, Shaw; — Nax. carolinarum, Quoy and Gaym. Zool. du Voyage de Freycin., \A. 63, f. 1; — Nas. tuber, Commers., or Nasor,- Loupe, Lacep. Ill, vii, 3, or Acanthurus nasus, Shaw, Renard, I, f. 79, Valent., No. 119 and 478. * Axinurus tUynnoides, Cuv., a new species brought by Quoy and Gaymard from New Guinea. f Priudon annularis, Cuv., a new species brought from Timor by the same gen- tlemen. X Tiieophrastus, in his treatise upon fishes which live out of water, speaks of small ones which leave their native streams for some time and then return to them, and says that they resemble Mugils. 144' FISHES. branchiae, and many spinous ones in the dorsal, and even in the anal. The stomach is moderate, rounded, and their pylorus has but three ap- pendages. But one species is known. An. testudineus, Cuv.*, called in Jamaica the Paneiri or Tree- Climher, highly celebrated because it not only leaves the water, but, according to Daldorf, even climbs up the shrubs on its banks ; this latter assertion, however, is denied. Found throughout all ludia. POLYACANTIIUS, Ku/ll. Have their rays spinous, and more numerous than Anabas; the same mouth, scales, and interrupted lateral line; but neither of the opercula is dentated ; the body is compressed, and there are four rays in the branchi* ; a narrow band of small, short, and crowded teeth in the jaws, but none in the palate; the branchial apparatus is more simple, and their pylorus has but two cEPcal appendages. Found in rivers, &c. throughout all India f. The Macropodus, Lacep. Only differ from Polyacanthus in a less extended dorsal, which terminates, as well as the caudal and the ventrals, in a slender point, more or less elongated. The anal is larger than the dorsal. These also are fresh-water fishes, found in India and China |;. Helostoma, Kuhl. In addition to the characters of Polyacanthus, the fishes of this genus have a small compressed mouth, so protractile that it has all the appear- ance of protruding and withdrawing between the suborbitals; their very small teeth are attached to the borders of the lips, and not to the jaws or palate : there are five rays in the gills. The arches of the branchiae, on the side next to the mouth, are furnished with lamellae, nearly similar to the external ones, which may also assist in the process of respiration §. Their stomach is small, and has but two pyloric appendages, but their in- testine is very long; the natatory bladder is of a middling size, and its walls are thick. OsPHROBENUslI, Commers. Possess all the characters of Polyacanthus, but the forehead is somewhat concave ; the anal larger than the dorsal, as in Macropodus ; the suborbi- • It is the Amphiprion scansor, Bl., Schn., p. 204 and 570, or Perca scandens, Dal- dorf, Lin. Trans. Ill, p. 62. It is also the Anthias testudineus, Bl., pi. 322, and the Coius cohoius, Ham. Buchan, pi. xiii, f. 3S. f Trichopodus colisa, H. Buchan; — Trich. hejeus, Id. 118; — Trich. coira, Id. 119; — Tr.lalius, Id. 120; — Tr. sola, Id. lb.;— Tr. chiina, Id. 121 ■,—Tricliogaster fascialus , Bl., Schn., pi. xxxvi, p. 164; — Ch(€lodon chinensis, BL, pi. ccxviii, f. 1. \ The Macropode vert dore, Lacep. Ill, xvi, 1, and a new and much more beauti- ful species with alternate red and green bands. § But one species is known {Hel. temminckii, Cuv.), from the Moluccas, which we shall minutely describe in our Icthyology. II This name is derived from the Greek word osphromai, olj'acio, and was invented ACANTlIOPTEUYCrANS. 145 tals and lower part of the preoperculiim very delicately dentated; the first soft ray of the ventrals extremely long^ six branchial rays and the body strongly compressed. A species of this genus originally from China. Osphr. olfax, Commers. ; the Gourami, Lacep. Ill, iii, 2, be- comes as large as tlie Turbot, and is considered even more delicious. It was introduced into the ponds of the Isle of France, where it in- creases rapidly, and has been taken thence a short time since to Cayenne. The female is said to dig a cavity in the sand for the re- ception of her eggs. The Trichopouus, Lacep. Differ from Osphromenus in having a more convex forehead, and a shorter dorsal, besides which there are but four rays in the branchiae; the first soft ray of their ventrals is also very long. There is but one species known; a small fish of the Moluccas, marked with a black spot on the side*. Spirobranchus, Cuv. Possess the general form of Anabas, but the opercula are not dentated; the operculum merely terminating in two points ; a series of palatine teeth. Sp. capensis, Cuv. A diminutive fresh-water fish from the Capo of Good Hope; the only species known. The Ophicephalus, Bl. Resemble all the preceding genera in most of their characters, and parti- cularly in the cellular conformation of the pharyngeals, which are adapted to retain water. These fishes also creep to a considerable distance from their ordinary abodes, but what particularly distinguishes, and even sepa- rates, them, from all other Acanthopterygians, is the absence of spines in the fins, the first ray of their ventrals at most excepted, and even tbat, though simple, is not sharp and stiff. Their body is elongated and almost cylindrical; their muzzle short and obtuse; their head depressed and fur- nished above with scales, or rather polygonal plates, as in Anabas, &c. There are five rays in their branchiae ; the dorsal occupies nearly their whole length, the anal also is very long, the caudal rounded, the pectorals and ventrals moderate, and the lateral line uninterrupted. Their stomach is shaped like an obtuse sac ; two tolerably long csecuras adhere to the pylorus. The abdominal cavity extends above the anal, close to the end of the tail. All the jugglers of India exhibit this fish out of water for the diversion of spectators, and even the children amuse themselves by forcing it to crawl upon the ground. In the markets of China the larger by Ccmmerson, who conjectured tliat the hollow pharyngeals visible in this fish, as in others of the family, might be organs of smell, a kind of aethmoides. N. B. 'I'he Osphromeiie gal., Lacep., Scarus galliis, Forsk., is a Julis, Cuv.; but we have two new species of true Ophromeni, Opiir. tiotaius, and the vitiatus, Cuv. • It is the Labnis tric/wptenis, Gme]., Pall., Spic, Fasc. VIII, p. 45; the Trichop- terus Pallasii, Shaw, IV, part II, p. 392; the Trichogaster irichopterus, Bl., Schn., and the Trirhopode trirlw/itere, Lacep. N. B. The Trichopode mentoimier, Lacgr., or T. suiyrus, Shaw, vol. IV, part 1 1, p. 391, Only rests upon a bad figure of Gourami. VOL. II. L 146 FISHES. species are sliced alive for consumption*. They may be divided by the number of tlieir dorsal rays. Some have but thirty odd of these raysf. Others forty odd i. Some again have more than fifty §. FAMILY XL MUGILOIDES. The Mugiloides constitute the eleventh family of the Acanthoptery- gians, and is composed of the genus JMuGiL, Lin. The Mullets, which may virtually be considered as a distinct family, so many peculiarities do they offer in their organization ; their body is almost cylindrical, covered with large scales, and furnished with two separate dorsals, the first of which has but four spinous rays; the ventrals are in- serted a little behind the pectorals. There are six rays in the branchiae ; their head is somewhat depressed, and covered with large scales or poly- gonal plates, their muzzle very short. Their transverse mouth forms an angle, by means of a prominence in the middle of the lower jaw, which corresponds with a depression in the upper one, the teeth being exces- sively tenuous, and frequently almost imperceptible. Their pharyngeal bones, highly developed, give an angular form to the opening of the oesophagus, similar to that of the mouth, which only permits fluids or very small matters to pass into the stomach, notwithstanding which this sto- mach terminates in a sort of fleshy gizzard, analogous to that of Birds ; they have but few pyloric appendages, but the intestine is long and doubled. They are capital fish, resort to the mouths of rivers in large troops, and are continually making great leaps out of the water ; the European seas produce several species hitherto very imperfectly ascertained ||. M. cephahis, Cuv. (The Common Mullet). Distinguished from all the other species of Europe by its eyes, which are half covered by two adipose veils, adhering to the anterior and posterior edge of the orbit; by the fact, that when the mouth is closed, the maxillary is completely hidden under the sub-orbital ; and by the base of the • This is most incontestibly the genus alluded to by Theophrastus. + Ophicephalus vtmcfnfus, Bl., or Opk. lata, Buchan. ; — O. marginatus, Cuv., or O. gachua, Buchan.? pi. xxi. f. 21, or Cor. motta, Russel, II, pi. 164; — 0. auranticus, Buch. X Ophicephalus striatus, Bl. 359, or Muttah, Russel, pi. 162, or O. cliena, Buch.? ." O. sola, Id.; — O. sowara, Russ. 163. § Ophicephalus viurulius, Buch., which is the Bosirichoide ceille, Lacep. II, xiv, 3; — Oph. burca, Buch. xxxv, 20, to which the Bostriche tachete, Lacep. Ill, p. 143, is at least very closely allied, and several new species to be described in our Icthyology. II Linnaeus and several of his successors have confounded all the European Mul- lets under a single species, their Mugil cephalus. ACANTIIOPTERYGIANS. 147 pectoral being surmounted by a long and carinated crest. The nasal openings are separated from each other, and the teeth are tolerably prominent. It is the largest and best of the Mediter- ranean species. We have not seen it on the Atlantic coast of Europe, but its characters are visible in several species of India and of America*. Another species, nearly as large, and common to the Mediterranean and the ocean, is the M. capito, Cuv. ; the Ramado of Nice. It has the maxillary visible behind the commissure of the jaws even when the mouth is closed; much weaker teeth; nasal orifices approximated; the skin of the edges of the orbit not extending to the globe of the eye ; the sur-pectoral scale short and obtuse ; a black spot at the base of the latter finf. Two smaller species, M. avratus, and M. saltator, (the M. dore, and M. sauteur, of Risso), approach the capito; the maxillary of the first is hidden under the sub-orbital as in the cephalus, but the nasal orifices are approximated as in the capito ; the other, with the characters of the capito, has an emarginated sub-orbital which allows the end of the jaw to be seen J. A third large species, also common to both seas, is the M. chelo, Cuv. (The Great-lipped Mullet). Particularly dis- tinguished by its extremely bulky fleshy lips, whose edges are ciliated, and by teeth which dip into their substance like so many hairs; the maxillary is recurved, and shows itself behind the com- missure. AI. laheo, Cuv., a small Mediterranean species, has, in proportion to its size, still larger lips, with crenated borders. Several of these thick-lipped species are found in the Indian Ocean §. The Tetragonurus, Risso, So called from the two salient crests that are found on each side near the base of the caudal, form another of these insulated genera, which seem to be representatives of particular families. These fishes are partly allied to the Mullets, and partly to the Scomberoides. Their body is elongated; their spinous dorsal long, but very low, the soft one approximated to it, * America produces five or six species badly characterized and confounded by Linn., under the name of M. alhula. Among the number is the M. Plumieri, Bl., become a Spln/rana in Bl. Schn. p. 110, and the M. lineatus, Mitch. The true cep//a- lus of the Mediterranean is found on the whole African coast. Add, of species from India, the Bontali, Russel, II, 1