130 BALJiNoPrEIUDJi. 



" They fod much upon grass (Zostera) growing at the bottom of the 

 sea : in their great bag of maw he found two or three hogsheads of a 

 greenish grassy matter." — Phil. Trans, i. 13. 



Baleen from Bermuda, called Bennuda finner, is extensively im- 

 ported ; it is similar to the baleen of the Grey Finner. 



4. Megaptera Kuzira. The Kuzira. 

 Dorsal small, and behind the middle of the back ; the pectoral fin 

 rather short, and less than one-fourth the entire length of the body ; 

 the nose and side of the throat have round warts ; belly plaited. 



Balffina antarctica, Tentm. Faun. Jajion. 27. 



Bala3noptera antarctica, 'Temm. Faun. Japan, t. 30 (not t. 23). 



Megaptera antarctica, Gray, Zool. Freb. if Terror, 17 ; Cat. Cetac. B. M. 



1850, 30. 

 ? Balfenoptera lougimana, Schrenck, Amur-Lunde, 192. 



Inhab. Japan. ? Amur-Land. 



Skull in Mus. Leyden, Jide Van Beneden. 



The figure in the ' Fauna Japonica ' is from a drawing brought 

 home by M. Siebold, not accompanied by remains. M. Siebold ob- 

 serves that the Japanese distinguish three varieties : — 



1. Sato Kuzira. Black; nose more elongate and rounded, and the 

 pectoral long ; the belly and lower face of the pectoral are grey, with 

 ■white rays. 



2. Nagusu Kuzira. Paler ; nose more pointed ; the bellj'' has ten 

 plaits. In both, the lower jaw is larger than the upper. 



3. Noso Kuzira. Distinguished from the first because the back 

 and fins are white -spotted. — Faun. Jap. 24. 



Chamisso figures a species of this genus from the Aleutian seas, 

 under the name of AUomoch or Aliama ; when young, Aliamaga dach 

 (N. Acta Nat. Cur. xii. 258. t. 18. f. 5 ; Fischer, Syn. Mamm. 527. 

 n. 4), from a wooden model made by the Aleutians : and Pallas (Zool. 

 Eosso-Asiat. i. 288) calls it Bahena Allamaclc. The pectoral fins are 

 long ; they, and the underside of the tail are white. 



Pallas, under the name oi. B. Boops'l (Zool. Kosso-Asiat. i. 291), 

 describes a whale which appears to belong to this genus, found at 

 Behring's Straits by Steller, when he was shipwrecked. The head 

 was i, the pectoral fin i, the entire length, and the vent -^^j from 

 the head, as shown by the following measurements : — length, 50 feet ; 

 head, 12 feet ; pectoral fin, 10 feet long and 5 feet wide ; tail, 16 feet 

 wide, and the vent 35 feet from the head. If these measurements 

 are correct, the pectoral fin is shorter and much wider than it 

 generally is in this genus. The position of the dorsal fin is not 

 noted. 



In the Zoologia Rosso-Asiat. 293, Pallas described a whale under 

 the name of B. musculus, observed by Merle at Kamtschatka. It 

 was long and slender, ash-brown, white-clouded above, snow-white 

 beneath, and spotted on the sides. It was 22 feet 6 inches long ; the 

 dorsal was 6 feet from the tail, and 1 foot 11 inches high ; behind 

 the fin the back was two-keeled ; the pectoral fin was rounded at the 



