lY.-FISHES. 



By G. A. BouLENGER, F.R.S. 

 (Two Plates.) 



The collectiou is a very small one, coiisistiug of representatives of ten species only, 

 from within the Antarctic Circle, but of these four are here described as new. In 

 addition to these species an example of a very large Notothenia, apparently closely 

 related to N. colhecki, Blgr., was obtained, harpooned, with a seal, from a hole at the 

 Winter Quarters. It was in a damaged condition, the head gone, and the caudal fin 

 partly torn away. All I have seen of the fish is a photograph and the bones of the 

 body. Dorsal with viii, 27 rays, anal wdth 26 ; scales, in a longitudinal series, 125. 

 Total length, .3 ft. 10 ins. ; weight, .39 lbs. (without the head). 



1. Trematomus borchgrevinki. 



Boulengcr, Rep. 'South. Cross' (1902), p. 179. 



Ten specimens, measuring from 170 to 250 millimetres. Winter Quarters, taken 

 in April and December, 1902, and May, 1903. 



2. Trematomus hansoni. 



Id., op. cit., p. 180. 



Twenty-five specimens, measuring from 115 to 290 millimetres. Winter Quarters, 

 taken in March and April, 1902 ; also to the south-west of the Balleny Islands, at a 

 depth of 254 fathoms, March 4th, 1904. 



3. Trematomus bernacchii. 



Id., op. cit., p. 181. 



Forty-two specimens, measuring from 100 to 280 millimetres. Winter Quarters, 

 taken throughout the year. 



4. Notothenia longipes. 



Steindachner, SB. Ak. Wien. Ixxii. i. (187(5), p. 70. 



Three specimens, measuring up to 120 millimetres, from Tent Island, January 3rd, 

 1904. 



