232 DKLl'UINID^. 



the La Plata, of which the following is a description, is probably the 

 same as Stenodelphls BlainvUJei ; it is figured Voy. Amer. Merid. 

 t. 23. The skidl of this animal was not examined nor preserved. 

 It was blackish, pale beneath, with a white streak along each side 

 from behind the blower, where it is broadest and gradually becoming 

 narrower behind, not quite reaching to the tail. 



According to Desmarest, Freminville saw a dolphin on the coast 

 of Brazil which was 15 feet long, with a very convex forehead ; 

 ashy, with a white streak on each side of the head, on the back, 

 throat, and belly. 



2. STENO. 



Head convex. Forehead convex. Beak moderate, tapering. Body 

 elongate, fusiform. Pectoral fin moderate, ovate, falcate. Dorsal 

 falcate, in the middle of the back. Skull round, subglobular. Fore- 

 head erect. Beak elongate, compressed, higher than broad, tapering 

 in front, convex above. Triangle elongate, deep, produced rather 

 beyond the teeth-line. Palate convex, not grooved on the side. 

 Lower jaw elongate, compressed in front; sjTiiphysis elongate, about 

 one-fourth the length. 



Steno, Gray, Zool. Erebus ^ Terror, 43, 1847 ; Cat. Cetac. B. M. 1850, 

 127 ; Proc. Zool. Soc. 1864, 236. 



This genus is at once known from Lagenorliynchus and Delphinus 

 by the length, compression, and tapering form of the beak of the 

 skull. 



The foetus of Steno fuscus is very peculiar for the elongated taper- 

 ing head ; the pectoral fins are rather large, strongly falcate ; the 

 dorsal rather beyond the middle of the back. Its tongue is flat on 

 the top, and nearly as broad as the space between the sides of the 

 jaAvs ; it is entire on the edges of the sides, and slightly dilated in 

 front, crenulated on the edge, and with a larger flat lobe in the 

 middle of the tip. (See * Zool. Erebus and Terror,' t. 26. f. 1, a, h, c.) 



a. Beak separated from the forehead by a cross groove. 



b. Beak scarcely separated from the forehead. 



a. Beak separated from the forehead by a cross groove. 

 1. Steno Malayanus. The Malay Dolphin. 

 Grey-ash above and below. Nose of skull about three-fifths of the 

 entire "length. Teeth |^. 



Delphinus Malayanus, Lesson, Voy. Coq. t. 9. f. 5 ; Hist. Cetac. 152 ; 



Srhlegel, Abh. i. t. 1, 2. f. 2, t. 4. f. 3 (skull and teeth). 

 D. Capensis, Rapp, Cetac. t. 2. f. 1 (not Gray nor Cuv.). 

 D. Eappii, Reichb. Cetac. iii. 48. t. 18. f. 5, 7. 

 D. pluniheus, Cuv. li. A. i. 288; F. Cuv. Cetac. 151; Mannn. Lithog. 



t. ; Pucheran, Rev. ^- Mag. Zool. 1856, 145. 

 Steno Malayanus, Gray, Zool. Ereb.^ Terror, 4S; Cat. Cetac. B.M. 127. 



Inhab. Indian Ocean. 



