Fishes of the Wester 7i North Atlantic 473 



Jordan and Fowler, 1 903, of their mitsukurii was actually suckleyi) ; Hubbs, J. Pan-Pacif. Res. Instn., 

 3 (3), 1928: II (listed for Oregon, Washington); Mori, J. Pan-Pacif. Res. Instn., j (3), 1928: 3 

 (listed for Korea); Quigley, Biol. Bull. Wood's Hole, ^o, 1928: 439 (weight in rel. to length, per- 

 centages of sexes; breeding. Straits of Georgia); Fowler, Hongkong Nat., /, 1930: 88 (not seen); 

 Jordan, Evermann and Clark, Rep. U.S. Comm. Fish. (1928), 2, 1930: 21 (in check list; Aleutians 

 to Santa Barbara, California; Kamchatka); Fang and Wang, Contr. biol. Lab. Sci. See. China, 8, 1932: 

 246 (dcscr., ill., Chefoo, China); Tanaka, Jap. Fish Life Colors, 22, 1933: (not seen); Daniel, 

 Elasmobranch Fishes, Univ. Calif. Press., 1934: 37, 154, fig. 147 (gill arches and rakers); Walford, 

 Fish Bull. Sacramento, ^5, 1935: 42 (ill., California); Barnhart, Mar. Fish, south. Calif., 1936: 10 

 (distrib., California). 



Squalus acanthias Jordan and Gilbert, Proc. U.S. nat. Mus., j, 1881: 458 (listed, Puget Sound to Santa 

 Barbara, California); Bean, Proc. U.S. nat. Mus., 4, 1882: 261, 269, 272, 274 (records for Brit. 

 Columbia, Alaska); Jordan and Gilbert, Proc. U.S. nat. Mus., 4, 1882: 33 (habits, food, abund., 

 breeding season) ; Bean, Proc. U.S. nat. Mus., <5, 1884: 361 (Brit. Columbia); Eigenmann, Proc. U.S. 

 nat. Mus., J5, 1893: 129, 132 (near San Diego, California); Bean and Bean, Proc. U.S. nat. Mus., 

 /p, 1897: 237 (name only. Commander L) ; Schmidt, Pisces Mar. Orient. Rossici, 1904: 287 (descr., 

 meas., discuss., E. Siberia, in Russian); Pavlenko, Kazani Turdy Obschestro E. Stest., 42 (2), 1910: II 

 (Peter the Great Bay; in Russian); Berg, Faune Russie Poiss., /, 1911: 71 (California to Vladivos- 

 tok; in Russian); Soldatov and Lindberg, Bull. Pacif. Sci. Fish. Inst. Vladivostok, 1930: 16 (Peter the 

 Great and Olga Bays, Japanese Sea, in Russian). 



Squalus mitsukurii (in part) Jordan and Fowler, Proc. U.S. nat. Mus., 29, 1 903: 630, fig. 3 (Japan; but as 

 pointed out by Jordan and Hubbs in Mem. Carneg. Mus., 10, 1925: 103, the descr. was of a member 

 of the jernandirius group; see discuss., p. 454); Jordan, Tanaka and Snyder, J. Coll. Sci. Tokyo, 33, 

 1913: 18 (ill. and refs. in part). 



Sgualus mitsukurii Jordan and Evermann, Bull. U.S. Bur. Fish., 25, 1 905: 45, fig. 6 (ill. only; wrongly 

 stated to be "from the type"); Tanaka, Annot. zool. jap., 6, 1908: 236 (Sakhalin I.); Smith, Proc. 

 U.S. nat. Mus., 41, 1912: 679 (Japan); Jordan and Metz, Mem. Carneg. Mus., 6, 1913: 4, fig. 2 

 (ill., Korea); Tanaka, Fish. Japan, 26, 1917: 471, pi. 130, fig. 368-370 (descr., ill., Japan); not 

 Squalus mitsukurii Jordan and Fowler, Proc. U.S. nat. Mus., 26, 1903: 629 (descr. of type spec). 



Squalus suckleyi (in part) Garman, Mem. Harv. Mus. comp. Zool., 36, 191 3: 194 (descr., NE. Pacif., but 

 not his var. mitsukurii, for mitsukurii Jordan and Fowler, 1 903: 629, is probably one of the jernaniiinus 

 group, see discussion, p. 454); Fowler, Proc. Pan-Pacif. sci. Congr., 4, 1930: 495 (California, Brit. 

 Columbia, Japan, Formosa; but refs. for Hawaii probably fernandinus) ; Fowler, Bull. U.S. nat. Mus., 

 100 (rj), 1 941: 258 (descr., but refs. only in part) ; not Squalus suckleyi Fowler, Mem. Bishop Mus., 10, 

 1928: 23 (Hawaiian Is., probably fernandinus). 



Squalus zvakiyae Tanaka, Fish. Japan, 27, 1918: 475 (to replace mitsukurii Tanaka, 1917, because the latter 

 is preoccupied by Jordan and Fowler, 1 903, 629). 



Squalus sucklii suhsp. mitsukurii Schmidt, Trans. Pacif. Comm., Leningr., 2, 1931: 7 (doubts if Japanese and 

 Black Sea specs, are separable). 



Squalus cubensis Howell-Rivero, 1936 



Cuban Dogfish 



Figures 89, 90 



Study Material. Male, 524 mm. (Harv. Mus. Comp. Zool., type. No. 1458); fe- 

 male, 672 mm. long (Harv. Mus. Comp. Zool., No. 1461)5 very young male and female, 

 each about 280 mm., with umbilical scars still evident, and male embryo about 203 mm. 

 long, with yolk sac attached, all from Havana, Cuba (Harv. Mus. Comp. Zool., No. 

 1459, 1460, 1462). 



