2438 Bulletin ^y, United States National Museum, 



Under parts imuiaciilate; the niottlings aloug base of dorsal frequently 

 uniting- to form a series of oblong blotches alternating with those of lateral 

 line; other .specimens show no traces of dorsal blotches; dorsal fin trans- 

 lucent, faintly mottled with darker; caudal with brownish cross bars; 

 pectoral with a round dusky shade at base; fins otherwise unmarked. 

 ,]\I:indible with a single series of conical teeth, which widens at symphysis 

 iuto an irregular double series or narrow patch ; a similar series of conical 

 teeth in premaxillaries, within which is a band of fine villiform teeth. 

 A number of small specimens from Disco, Greenland, are entirely similar 

 except for the darker coloration. This species is near L, angniUaris, but 

 the latter has a larger mouth, larger teeth, and more numerous fin rays. 

 (Named for Otho Fabricius, the first student of the fishes of Greenland.) 



Blenniun limipenus, Fabricius, Fauna Gronlandica, 151, 1780, Greenland; not Blennivs 



lumperius, Linn^US, which is a species of Gaid ropsarus, with 2 barbels at the chin. 

 Ckmnellus fabricii, Cuvier & Valenciennes, Hist. Nat. Poiss., xi, 431, 1836, Greenland, 



after Fabricius; Kroyer, Naturhist. Tidsskr., i, 377, 1837; Gaimard, Voy. Scaud., 



Zool., Poiss., pi. U, fls. 1. 

 Lumpenvs niibilus, IvICHABDSON, Last Arctic Voyage, Fishes, 13, pi. 28, 1855, Wellington 



Sound. (Coll. Edward Belcher.) 

 Blennius (Clinus) lumpenvs, Richardson, Fauna Bor.-Amer., 90, 1836. 

 Glinus lumpenus, Reinhardt, Dans. Vidensk. Selsk. Nat. Af h., vii, 194, 1838. 

 Stichceus lumpenus, Gunther, Cat., in, 280, 1861. 

 Stichceus nubiliis, Gl'nther, Cat., in, 564, 1861. 

 Centroblmnius nubihis. Gill, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila. 1864, 209. 

 Lumpenus fabricii, Jordan & Gilbert, Synopsis, 778, 1883. 

 Leptohlennius nubilus, Jordan & Gilbert, Synopsis, 778, 1883; Gilbert. Rept. TT. S. Fish 



Comra. 1893 (1896), 451. 



2794. LUMPKXUS LAMPETR^FORniS (Walbaum). 

 (Snake Blenny; Tangbrosme.) 



Head 9; depth about 15. D. LXXIII (LXVIII to LXXIY); A. 50 (49 

 to 52) ; V. I, 3. Body elongate, head slender; lower jaw little shorter than 

 upper; maxillary reaching front of eye. Vent well forward, near end of 

 first third of body; pectoral convex, somewhat shorter than head; first 

 3 or 4 rays of dorsal short, little connected; caudal acuminate, free from 

 dorsal and anal. Yellowish or greenish, with numerous (about 20) faint 

 brown blotches of dift'ereiit sizes, some of them conllueut and extending 

 obliquely upward on dorsal; caudal with transverse dark shades. (Col- 

 lett.) North Atlantic and Arctic on both shores, south to Sweden and 

 Norway, east to Spitzbergen; rare south to Cape Cod, if L. serpvntinus is 

 the same. We can find no difference on a comparison of our notes with 

 published figures and descriptions, excejit that Storer describes serpeniinxis 

 as having the caudal plain yellowish. (Eu.) {Lampetra, lamprey; forma, 

 form.) 



BUnnius capiti laivi, etc., Mohr, Hist. Nat. Islandise, 85, taf. 4, 1786, Iceland ; D. 72 ; A. 54. 



Blennius lampetrwformis, Walbaum, Artedi Piscium, iii, 184, 1792, Iceland; after Mohr. 



Centronotus islandicus, Bloch &, Schneider, Syst. Ichth., 157, 1801, Iceland; after MOHR. 



Glinus nebulosus, Fries, Vet. Akad. Handl., 55, 1837, Bohuslan, Sweden. • 



Glinus mohri, Kroyer, Natnrli. Tidsskr., 1 R, 1837, 32, Iceland. 



Blennius yraeilis, Stuvitz, Nye Mag., Naturvid., l, 400, 1838, west coast of Norway. 



