I8rt ACANTHOPTERYGII. 



VI. THE MACKEREL FAMILY. 

 SCOMBERIDA. 



Representatives in British Fauna. — Gen. 10. Sp. 12. 



Gen. 22. Scomber. Sp. 43. ^'. scomber. The Mackerel. 



44. S. colias. . The Spanish Ditto^ 



23. Thynnus. . 45. T. vulgaris. The Tunny. 



46. T. pclamys. The Bonito. 



24. Auxis. . . Al. A. vulgaris. The Plain Ditto. 



25. XiPHiAS. . . 48. X. gladius. The Sword-fish. 



26. Naucrates. . 49. A^. dudor. Tlie Pilot-fish. 



27. Caranx. . 50. C. trachurus. Horse Mackerel. 



28. Centrolophus. 51. C. pompilus. The Black-fish. 



29. Zeus. ... 52. Z.faher. . The Dory. 



30. Capros. . . 53. C. aper. . The Boar-fish. 



31. Lampris. . . 54. L. guitatus. Ophah or King-fish.. 



Tliis interesting family is one of the most nu- 

 merous of Osseous Fishes, after the Perches, it* 

 described species amounting to upwards of 320. 

 Many of them crowd the surface of the ocean, 

 especially in warm latitudes, and their range is 

 most extensive. Ten genera, as above noted, visit 

 the British shores; and sixteen genera, or one- 

 twentieth of the wliole, have been discovered on the 

 North American coast. Some inhabit only the mid- 

 dle longitudes of the Atlantic, and there pursue the 

 Flying-fish, as Dr. Richardson has well remarked, 

 over the vast wastes, as the herds of Wolves do the 

 Bison on tlie prairies of America. When con- 



