ADDENDA — SCHULTZ 155 



lines on midsides; an oblique short dark brown streak on 

 pectoral base; predorsal scales 13 to occiput. 



C. brocki (Schultz) « 

 126. Coloration not as above. 



13a. Sides of body with 7 or 8 distinct, almost straight, lengthwise dark 

 brown streaks. 

 14a. Five brown streaks on each side of caudal peduncle; 3}^ or 4 

 scales between lateral line and last dorsal spine; predorsal 



scales 12 or 13 to occiput C. lineata (Schultz) *^ 



146. Four brown streaks on each side of caudal peduncle; 3 scales 

 between lateral line and second dorsal origin; predorsal 



scales 10 to occiput C. susumi Jordan and Scale " 



136. Four or 5 dark streaks on each side of body; 3 dark streaks on each 

 side of caudal peduncle. 

 15a. Five dark streaks on each side of body; pectoral rays ii,12; tips of 

 posterior lobes of median fins with black blotches. (Cuba; 



Bahama Islands.) C. rubrum (Poey) «" 



156. Four dark streaks on each side of body; pectoral rays ii,13, 

 (Zanzibar.) C. africanum Smith si 



Volume 1, page 386 



Dr. J. L. B. Smith (Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 12, vol. 7, p. 869, 

 1954) established a new genus and species, Tulelepis canis, and a new 

 subfamily, Tulepinae (which should have been spelled Tulelepidinae). 

 In volume 1 of bulletin 202, pages 386-388, fig. 62, I named a new 

 genus and species, Grammistops ( cellatus (which should have been 

 speUed ocellata), and assigned it to the subfamily Grammistinae, along 

 with Rypticus Cuvier and Valenciennes, Pogonoperca Giinther, and 

 Grammistes Bloch and Schneider. Tulelepis canis is identical with 

 Grammistops ocellata, even to the small dark spot on each side of the 

 chin. Smith's paper greatly extends the ranges of these aberrant 

 genera of serraniform fishes. Undoubtedly, additional species and 

 genera will be discovered as more extensive collecting is done in the 

 tropical In do-Pacific regions. 



On page 373, footnote 67, I stated that Aulacocephalus temmincH 

 Temminck and Schlegel probably belongs in the Chorististium rela- 

 tionship. Now that I have examined radiographs of three specimens, 

 I conclude the genus belongs in the Grammistinae, because the first 



« Ypsigramma brocki Schultz, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 202, vol. 1, p. 379, fig. 60, 1953 (Marshall and Gilbert 

 Islands). 



« Ypsigramma Uneala Schultz, U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 202, vol. 1, p. 365, flg. 59, 1953 (Marshall and Philip- 

 pine Islands). 



Chorististium susumi (non Jordan and Scale) Smith, J. L. B., Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 12, vol. 7, p. 862, 

 pi. 27, fig. C, 1954 (Matemo Island, off East African Coast). 



« Chorittistium susumi Jordan and Scale, Bull. U.S. Bur. Fish., vol. 25 (1905), p. 256, flg. 48, 1906 (Apia, 

 Samoa). 



i" Liopropoma rubre, Poey, Memories, vol. 2, p. 418, 1861 (Cuba). 



»> Chorististium africanum Smith, J. L. B., Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 12, vol. 7, p. 866, flg. 1. pt. 27, flg. 

 B. 1954 (Pinda Pembra, Zanzibar, and Tekomazl Island). 



