62 CAEANGID^E. 



200. Caranx ciliaris. [234.] 



Zeus ciliaris, Block, vi. p. 29, 1. 191. 



Blepharis indicus, Cuv. §• Val. ix. p. 154; Schleg. Faun. Japon. Poiss. p. 113, pi. 60. f. 3. 



fasciatus, Riipp. Atl. Fische, p. 129, t. 33. f. 2 (not Richards.). 



Caranx ciliaris, G'unth. Fish. ii. p. 454. 



Cape Gardafui. Zanzibar. From Bed Sea through all Indian seas. 



201. Caranx gallus. [110.] 



Zeus gallus, L. Syst. Nat. i. p. 454; Bloch, t. 192. f. 1. 



Russell, i. p. 45, pi. 57, p. 46, pi. 58. 



Gallichthys major, Cuv. fy Val. ix. p. 168, pi. 254. 



Scyris indica, Riipp. Atl. Fische, p. 128, t. 33. f. 1, and N. W. Fische, p. 51 ; Cuv. $ Val. ix. p. 145, 



pi. 252 ; Cant. Mai. Fish. p. 134. 

 Caranx gallus, G'unth. Fish. ii. p. 456. 



Aden. East coast of Africa. Bed Sea through all Indian seas. 



SERIOLA, Cuv. 



202. Seriola nigro-fasciata. [369.] 



Norneus nigro-fasciatus, Riipp. Atl. Fische, p. 82, t. 24. f. 2. 

 Seriola binotata, Cuv. fy Val. ix. p. 215 ; Cant. Mai. Fish. p. 137. 

 nigro-fasciata, Riipp. N. W. Fische, p. 51 ; G'unth. Fish. ii. p. 465. 



Zanzibar. Bed Sea. East-Indian Ocean and Archipelago. 



SERIOLICHTHYS, Bleek. 



203. Seriolichthys bipinnulatus. [695.] 

 The Yellowtail [Bennett) . 



Seriola bipinnulata, Quoy £f Gaim. Voy. Uran. Zool. i. p. 363, pi. 61. f. 3; Cuv. Regne Anim. III. 



Poiss. p. 130; Jenyns, Zool. Beagle, Fishes, p. 720. 

 Elagatis bipinnulatus, Benn. Whaling Voyage, ii. p. 283. 

 Seriolichthys bipinnulatus, Bleek. Nat. Tydschr. Ned. hid. vi. p. 196; G'unth. Fish. ii. p. 468. 



D.6|i.I. A. A.I. Br. 7. 



Qnoy and Gaimard describe this fish as smaller than a mackerel, and measuring only 

 9 inches. There are two specimens in the British Museum, one from Madras, measuring 

 13 inches, and the other from Amboyna, 4J inches in length. Colonel Playfair obtained 

 two specimens at Seychelles, each of which measured 29 inches. 



Bleeker's statement, that there are two prseanal spines separate from the remainder 

 of that fin, requires further confirmation. We are unable to detect any trace of them in 

 the specimens we have examined. 



