109. LIPARIDID2E LIPAEIS. 743 



D. about 48; A. about 48; P. 27; V. 14 (papillae). (Goode & Bean.) 

 Halifax. 



(Goode & Bean, Proc. U. S.Nat. Mus. 1879, 46.) 

 l>b. Dorsal separated from caudal by a notch. 



113. 1L. monfageii (Donov.) Cuv. 



Yellowish, the vertical fins brighter, with darker margins. Trunk 

 thick; head broad; skin thin, loose; head flat above the nape, slightly 

 prominent; snout very broad; maxillary not reaching eye; posterior 

 nostrils simple; eye 9 in head, half length of snout or iuterorbital 

 space; pseud obranchiai none; posterior nostril not tubular; pectorals 

 notched; dorsal continuous, not joined to the caudal; anal not con- 

 nected with caudal; ventral disk circular, not quite half as long as 

 head. Head 4 in total length; depth 5. D. 28; A. 24; C. 14; P. 30; 

 vert. 10 + 25. (Giinther.) Massachusetts to Greenland and Northern 

 Europe; not rare. 



(Cydopterm montayui Donovan, British Fishes, iii, pi. 68; Giiuther, iii, 161: Collett, 

 Norges Fiske, 1875, 67.) 



1139. to calBiodoei (Pallas) Gthr. 



Olivaceous, punctate with black dots, light below. Body depressed 

 forwards, compressed and tapering behind; head narrowed forwards; 

 snout rounded; eye small; iuterorbital space broad and nearly flat; 

 maxillary not reaching eye; teeth small, evidently tricuspid, in broad 

 bands; skin lax, thickish. Gill-openings very small. Dorsal and anal 

 barely joined to base of caudal rays; edge of disk with 12 papillae; 

 diameter of disk about one-half length of head. D. 28 ; A. 26. Alaska; 

 abundant. 



(Cyclop! erus callyodon Pallas, Zoogr. Koss.-Asiat. iii, 75, 1811; Giiuther, iii, 162.) 



1140. Li. cyclopiis Gthr. 



Reddish olive, with darker specks, most conspicuous on the fins; a 

 dark bar at base of caudal; a dark streak below eye; a pale streak 

 along sides. Skin not very thick, adherent. Body everywhere com- 

 pressed, even the head being deeper than broad; head scarcely convex 

 above, the nape not prominent; jaws equal; maxillary reaching to 

 opposite middle of the small eye; teeth small, three-lobed ; ventral 

 disk oval, three-fifths length of head. Dorsal fin scarcely emarginate, 

 the spines rather stiff, the first spine in front of vent; pectorals reach- 

 ing vent; caudal entirely free from dorsal and anal. Head 4; depth 5. 

 D. VII, 23; A. 27; C. 12. Monterey to Puget Sound. (Here described 



