404 . HISTORY OF THE FISHES OF MASSACHUSETTS. 
This not uncommon species in Massachusetts Bay is frequently seen after severe 
storms thrown upon our beaches. Occasionally it is taken while fishing for cod, 
with the hook; and it is also caught in nets set for menhaden; generally, however, 
it is found attached to sea-weed and other substances floating near the shore. 
Richardson tells us that * the Greenlanders eat its flesh, either cooked or dried, and 
its skin raw, throwing away only the tubercles”; and Dr. Neal observes, “that it is 
purchased at Edinburgh for the table" With us, however, it is not used as an article 
of food. The common weights of this fish are from three to four pounds, and from 
six to twelve pounds. ‘The largest specimen I have met with was taken in January, 
1843, and. weighed eighteen pounds and three quarters. 
Greenland, Fasricius. Maine, Massachusetts, Storer. New York, Mircuitt, DE- 
KAY. 
FAMILY XXI. ECHENEIDA. 
With a flattened disk upon the top of the head, composed of numerous carti- 
laginous transverse plates, directed obliquely backwards, dentated or spinous at their 
posterior edge, and movable, by means of which they are enabled to attach them- 
selves to other substances. ads bu | 
GENUS ECHENEIS, Lm. 
Body elongated, covered with very small scales. A single dorsal fin, placed oppo- 
site the anal. Head very flat, covered with a disk; mouth wide, with numerous 
small, recurved teeth on both jaws, tongue, and vomer. 
ECHENEIS ALBICAUDA, Mitchill. 
The White-tailed Remora. 
(PLATE XXXII. Fie. 3.) 
. Echeneis albicauda, White-tailed Remora, MircmtLL, Amer. Monthly Magazine, 11. p. 244. 
Echeneis naucrates, The Indian Remora, Storer, Report, p. 153. 
Echeneis albicauda, White-tailed Remora, DexaY, Report, p. 307, pl. 54, fig. 177. 
S r w ds Storer, Bost. Journ. Nat. Hist., 1v. p. 183. 
" LASS e 9 > Mem. Amer. Acad., New Series, 11. p. 483. - 
Di Di s f. Di Synopsis, p. 231. 
Color. Above, of a grayish-slate color; lighter upon the sides, with a dark band, 
which, commencing at the tip of the lower jaw as a small black point, runs along 
its margin to the angle of the jaw, where it expands to a band which passes to the 
tail, interrupted only by the eyes; in front of the pectorals this band is only two 
