22 THE FISHES OF THE <INGOLF> EXPEDITIONS. 



Lycodes Liitkenii Coll. (1. c. p. 103, pi. Ill, fig. 25). 



Is likewise taken formerly west of North-Spitsbergen (459 fathoms) and in the Kara sea. The 

 «Ingolf>> Expedition got 6 specimens from station 116: vSonth of Jan Mayen ( 70" 05' Lat. North, 

 8° 26' Long. W.), depth 371 fathoms, temperatnre at the bottom -^ 0-.4 C. The coloration is essentially 

 as in the specimen figured by Collett: 6 — 8 light bands. 



Lycodes perspicillum Kr. [L. rcticiilatus Rlult. juv.?). (Tab. IV, fig. 5.) 



A young (42'""') specimen of this species with the characteristic dress of many young L}'codidse 

 — a series of 10 darkly bordered saddle-spots across the back — was fished on sandy bottom off Sukker- 

 toppen, Davis Strait (Station 29), 64-34' Lat. N., 54" 31' Long. \V., at a depth of 68 fathoms. 



L. gracilis Sars. 



To this species, after having conferred with ni}- colleague. Prof. Collett, I have referred two 

 specimens from station 31: Davis Strait (66-35' Lat. North, 55° 54' Long. West, depth 88 fathoms, 

 temperature at the bottom i^.e C.) They are 572 and 9'/^ inches long, both covered with scales. The 

 relation between the length of the head with the trunk and the entire length ( 100""" -^- 244'"" and 

 55'"™ -\- 143""") is about I -H a'/j a 2'/2- I" colour they are light with more or less distinct traces of the 

 juvenile dress. 



L. gracilis was known from a small specimen (43™") from the Christiania Fjord (oNordhavs 

 Expeditionen p. 106) and is later found again in L^eso Rende and in the Skager Rack in adult 

 specimens. I suppose that Prof. Collett will give a full account of the species in its more developed 

 condition as it is now known. 



L. pallidus Coll. 



(. Nordhav.s-Expeditionen p. no, pi. Ill, fig. 26, 27; Liitken: Kara Havets Fiske.' p. 134, 

 pi. 17, fig. 1—3.) 



Of this species there are from the «Ingolf»-Expedition: 

 Station Lat. N. Long. W. Fathoms Temp, at the bottom 



Hitherto known from the northern coast of Spitsbergen, 260 — 458 fathoms (Collett) and from the Kara 

 sea (Liitken). The specimens from the ^Ingolf expedition have a size reaching to 245'"'". The larger 



