176 DEEP-SEA FISHES OF TUE ATLANTIC BASIN. 



of Lisbon from January to April, where it is known as tlie Impcrador. It was afterwards 

 fouud at Madeira by Lowe, who, unaware of the existence of two species in those waters, 

 lijiurcd it in the Cainbiidgc Transactions under the name of B. splendens, and it has since 

 been found to be almost as abundant about Madeira as Lowe's subsequently described 

 species. It is known by the Madeiran fishermen as the Alfonsin a casta larya, and it 

 is more brilliantly scarlet, though it has a paler mouth. It is obtained at a depth of fi-om 

 300 to 400 fathoms, at from I to '2 leagues from the shore, and attains the weight of 4 or 



5 pounds. The (Jhallviigcr obtained specimens from the Sea of Japan at a depth of 345 

 fathoms. Dr. Dodcrlein also obtained specimens in Japan in 1881. 



The type of B. borcalis was taken at Boruffis, near Bergen, March 8, 1839. Two addi- 

 tional examples, referred to this species, were secured near Bergeu in 1871; these are men- 

 tioned in "Norges Fiske," 1874, and again by Lilljeborg in his " Skandinavisk Fauna" in 

 1881. Lilljeborg admitted it as a si>ecies doubtfully distinct from B. dccadacfylus. 



Collett has compared the type of B. horeuUs with an adult specimen of B. decadactylus 

 from Madeira and with Steindachner's descriptions of examples of this species from Lisbon 

 and the Canaries and those taken by Doderlein in Japan. The type of D. borealis is only 

 1*80 millimeters long, and Collett is satisfied of its identity with B. decadactylus. He has 

 critically studied the chief diagnostic characters relied upon by Diiben and Keren, namely, 

 the greater height of the body and the number and size of the nasal spines. 



We x>i-esent below a translation of the essential i)arts of his discussion: 



Lowe, in 1840, and Steindachner, in 1877, showed that the character stated by Cuv. 



6 Val. (copied by Giinther) of the body height iu B. dcmditctijlus equaling the length of 

 head, is erroneous. In this species the length of the head is always less than height of 

 body, and is contained in it from 1^ to li times. In the Museum example from JMadeira 

 the proportion between the head length and body height is as 1 to 1.33 ; in the type of />*. hore- 

 alis, which is only on<vhalf as long as the Madeira specimen, and thus should have a rela- 

 tively greater height of body, the proportion is as 1 to 1.43. Is'o specific difiereuce can be 

 based on this character. 



The number aiul size of the spines of the snout he found to vary with the size and age 

 of the fish, and he concludes that this character is unimportant. In Japanese examples of 

 B. decadactylus, measuring 370 millimeters, the preorbital spine is one-third as long as the 

 eye, almost exactly as iu the typical specimen of B. borealis. The relative length of this 

 spine decreases with age. 



In the radial formula and number of scales, B. borealis and B. decadactylus agree. 

 There is no difference in their proportions, dentition, and other specific characters. 



BEKYX SPLENDEN8, Lowe. (Figure 197.) 



Beryx spUndene, Lowe, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1833, 142; Cambridge Phil. Trans., VI, 197 (the figure rep- 

 roseuts li. decadac.tylua); Fislies of Madeira, 47, pi. vili. — Gunther, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., 1878, 

 I, 485; Challenger Re])(>rt xxii, 33. — Hilgendorp, Sitzungsber. Gesellsch. Naturf. Freunde, Berlin, 

 1879, 78.— Stkndaciinkr, Uv. cit., 221. 



Body compressed, elongate, its height equal to the length of the head, and contained 

 3i times in the total. The pectoral and dorsal fins, which are equal iu length, are one-fifth 

 of the entire length of the fish; the ventral, one-sixth. The dorsal and anal fins are higher 

 than in B. decadactylus, and the insertion of the anal is under the end of the dorsal. 

 Caudal deeply forked. Scales large, the whole surface spinous, with short reflexed points or 

 ])rickles, giving a general roughness to thetcmch. Lateral line nearly straight, following 

 the curvature of tlie back, incon.spicu ous, and with 71 to 70 scales, with 8 above and 20 be- 

 below the lateral line in transverse series. Its color is thus described by Lowe: "At the 

 moment of cai)ture, whilst this fish is yet alive, t\w whole body beneath the lateral line is of 

 a pure, resplendent, silvery white; the fins alone, and merely the ridge of the back and head, 

 the inside of the mouth, the lower jaw, and parts beneath the eye, being of the brightest 

 scarlet, contrasting strongly with the pure silver of the whole sides and belly, which only 

 after death turn iridescent-rosy, or sometimes rich golden scarlet. The hind parts of the 

 dorsal and the ventral tins are transparent; the iris is pale .scarlet. There is a watery trans- 

 parency about the scarlet of the back in this state jjerfectly inimitable by ai't. 



