602 LIST OF FISHES OF WEST INDIES. 



316. ARAMACA Jordan &. Goss. 



802. Aramaca papillosa (LinnsBus). 



{? Citharichthys ocellatus Poey. ? Heviirhombus aramaca* Giinther iv, 422.) 

 808. Aramaca soleaeformis (Agassiz). (G. iv, 422.) 



317. HEMIRHOMBUS Bleeker. 



804. Hemirhombus aethalion (Jordan). (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 1886.) 



805. Hemirhombus fimbriatus Goode & Bean. (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 1885, 591.) 



318. CITHARICHTHYS Bleeker. 



806. Citharichthys spilopterus Giinther. (G. iv, 421. P.) 



(Hemirhombus fu8CU8 Poey.) 



807. Citharichthys cayennensis Bleeker. (Comptes Rendus Ac.Sci. Amst., 1862.) 



808. Citharichthys guatemalensis Bleeker. (Nederl. Tydskr. Dierk., 1864-'73.) 



809. Citharichthys ventralis Goode & Bean. (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 1885, 592.) 



810. Citharichthys diuoceros Goode & Bean. (Goode & Bean, Bull. M. C. Z., xii, 



157, 186.) 



319. ETROPUS Jordan & Gilbert. 



811. Etropus rimosus Goode & Bean. (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 1885, 593.) 



320. PARALICHTHYS Girard. 



812. Paralichthys brasiliensis (Ranzaui). (G. iv, 429.) 



(Pseudorhombus vorax Giinther.) 



321. MONOLENE Goode. 



813. Monolene atrimana Goode & Bean. (Bull. M. C. Z., 1866, xii, 155.) 



322. ACHIRUS Lac^pfede. 



§ Baiostoma Bean. 



814. Achirus inscriptus (Gosse). (G. iv, 473. P.) 



(Monochir reticulatus Poey.) 



815. Achirus maculipinnis (Agassiz). (G. iv, 473.) 



816. Achirus gronovii (Giinther). (G. iv, 477.) 



$ Achirus. 



817. Achirus achirus (Linnaeus). (G. iv, 477.) 



{Solea broioni Gthr. ; ? Pleuronectea apoda Mitcliill ; ? Pleuronectes lineatns L.) 



*The Aramaca of Marcgrave, which is the sole basis of Pleuronectes aramaca Wal- 

 baum, oi Pleuronectes macrolepidotus Blocli, of Rhombus aramaca Cuvier and of Pleu- 

 ronectes papillosus Linnfeus, can be no known species other than the present. Marc- 

 grave's species is of course an Aramaca, having the form of a sole. It is represented 

 as having the eyes wide apart, the left pectoral jiroduced, the mouth very large, the 

 body oblong, and the coloration stone-like (sand-color) on the left side and white on 

 the eved side. 



