126 Bean — Description of New Fishes of Bermuda. 



than 1st; 12th as long as the eye. Longest dorsal ray 3 in head. Longest 

 anal ray 2% in head. First anal spine % e Y e ; second spine equal to 

 snout; third % snout. 



Two slender tentacles above each eye, the first minute, the second 

 about % eye. A small tentacle at each anterior nostril. 



The lower caudal lobe is now slightly the longer. Only (3 gillrakers 

 fully developed with about 8 little tubercles below on the anterior arch. 

 None of the cephalic spines greatly developed. Color rosy. 



The type of the species will be in the U. S. National Museum. 



Emblemaria markii Mowbray sp. now 



" Head 3%; depth 5}; D. XXII, 15; A. 25. 



" Body blenniform, scaleless. Jaws with strong incurved conical teeth; 

 maxillary reaching beyond the eye a distance equal to diameter of eye, 

 which is about 4 in head. Snout moderately compressed, slightly less 

 than 4 in head ; nasal cirrus equal to diameter of eye ; cirrus on upper part 

 of eyeball 2 in head, its tip sometimes branched; a small horn-like cirrus 

 over and in line of posterior margin of eye. Dorsal and anal slightly 

 joined to base of caudal; origin of dorsal beginning behind snout at a 

 distance equal to length of second dorsal spine. In the male the Gth, 7th 

 and 8th dorsal spines are the longest, 3 in total without caudal ; in the 

 female the longest dorsal spine is about 6 in length without caudal, and 

 equal to depth of body. 



" Color pale brown, with to 10 dark vertical bands on the body; ver- 

 tical fins dusky; dorsal quite dark, blotched with black; pectorals pale. 



' ' Individuals of 1 to 2% inches long are common among the mussel beds 

 (Area noe) in Hamilton Harbor, Bermuda. First taken June 20, 1907, 

 in a mussel dredge. 



"Named in honor of Dr. E. L. Mark, of Harvard University." 



Types in the U. S. National Museum. No. 74,083. 



