38 



powers of discrimination of those whose species were incorporated by him into the 

 System, as he did not hesitate to adopt their views as to generic relations, however 

 much the inherent evidence of their own descriptions might oppose their views. A 

 large number of the species were thus repeated under different specific as well as 

 generic names. The number of nominal species was thereby increased to 82G, grouped 

 under 65 genera, (150a) Sternoptyx, (150b) Leptocephalus, (155a) Kurtus, (165a) 

 Scarus, and (170a) Centrogaster having been added to the Linnaean genera, Gmelin, 

 however, improved on the Linnaean system by the re-combination of the Amphibia 

 nantes with the Pisces, and he re-adopted the orders (V) Branchiostegi and (VI) 

 Chondropterygii. He erred, on the other hand, in separating Mormyrus from the 

 Abdominales and referring it to the Branchiostegi. 



1792. 



WALBAUM (Johann Julius). Petri Artedi Sueci Genera Piscium. In quibus 

 Systema totum Ichthyologiae proponitur cum classibus, ordinibus, generura char- 

 acteribus, specierum differentiis, observationibus plurimis. Redactis speciebus 

 242 [228] ad Genera 62 [45]. Ichthyologiae Pars III.— Emendata et aucta a 

 Iohanne Iulio Walbaum, M.D., Societatis Beroliuensis Naturae •Curiosornni, et 

 Societatis Litterariae Lubecensis Sodali. Cum tabula senea. — Grypeswaldiae, im- 

 pensis Ant. Ferdin. Rose 1792. [Svo., 4 p. 1., 723 pp., 3 pi.] 

 A j>oor compilation, like Gmelin's, in which the various previously described 

 species were introduced without a critical study into the system, aud described in 

 foot-notes in connection with the Artedian species, but combined under the Linnaean 

 genera. The nominal species (and many are only nominal), excluding the ceta- 

 ceans, are thus raised from 228 to about 965, without counting the species enumerated 

 under the new genera of authors appended to the volume. The compilation has some 

 value, not only on account of the original descriptions of species copied from previous 

 authors, but because of the reproductions of the descriptions of the new genera in- 

 troduced by various authors into the system. It is also of interest to the student 

 of American species by reason of the incorporation therein, under specific names, of 

 anonymous American species described by Schoepf. 



1798-1803. 



LACEPEDE (Bernard Germain Etienne de la Ville-sur-Illon, Comte de). 

 Histoire Naturelle des Poissons, [v. 1] par le citoyen La Cepcde, membre de 

 l'Institut national, et Professeur du Museum de histoire naturelle. Tome pre- 

 mier [-5]. — A Paris, chez Plassan, imprimeur libraire, Rue du Cimetiere Andre- 

 des-Arcs, No. 10. L'an VI de la Republique.— 179S. [ — L'an XI de la Repub- 

 lique, i. e., 1803] [4to., 5 v.] 

 The title-page was modified in each volume, and the personal titles successively 

 increased in number ; the address of the publisher was changed (in v. 3-5) ; the last 

 volume (on title-page) was dedicated to his late wife ; and only the first volume 

 bears the date of the Christian era. 



Originally published and frequently reproduced in connection with Buffon's works, 

 e.g., Buffon, 1st ed. (1749-84), v. 39-43; 1st 12mo. ed. (1752-1805), v. 78-8S ; La- 

 cepede's 1st ed. (1799-1802), 14 v. ; Lacepede's 2d ed. (1817-19), v. 13-17 ; Lamou- 

 roux and Desmarest's ed. (1824-32), suite — t. e., CEuvres du Comte de Lacepede — v 

 5-11; Lecointe's ed. (1829-34), about 25 v.; also, republished in "Histoire Natu- 

 relle" (Furve et c il; ), in 1855 : the compilation ascribed to Soxkim de Makoncocs 



