FISHES — GASTEROSTEIDAE — aASTEROSTEUS INTERMEDIUS. 



89 



berry. Others from Shoalwater Bay, Washington Territory, collected by Dr. J. Gr. Cooper, 

 exhibit no difiference in structure from the one just alluded to. 



List of specimens. 



3. GASTEROSTEUS INTERMEDIUS, Grd. 



Spec. Cn.\R. — Body plated all over ; peduncle of the tail keeled. Dorsal spines three, moderate in development and incon- 

 spicuously serrated upon their edges ; anterior one inserted immediately behind the base of pectorals. Insertion of ventrals 

 under the second dorsal spine, their own spine being serrated upon both edges, more conspicuously above than below, and 

 their extremities not extending as far as the tips of the ossa innominala. Posterior margin of caudal fin concave. 



Syn. — Gasierosteus intermedius, Grd. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sc. Philad. VIII, 1856, 135. 



But we have received from Cape Flattery specimens of this genus which bear, mayhap, a still 

 closer affinity towards G. pleheius than even G. serratus. With the latter it agrees in having 

 the sides of the body plated all over, whilst it differs by the proportional size of the head, the 

 eye, and the spines, both dorsal and ventral. 



Their size is a little over two inches, agreeing in that respect with G. serratus, but the head 

 is contained three times and a half only in the total length, in other words, constituting the 

 two-sevenths of the latter, and thus resembling more G. pleheius. The upper surface of the 

 head is corrugated or granular, and the opercular, as well as the sub-orbital bones, exhibit con- 

 spicuous series of granulated ridges. The nostrils are nearer the anterior rim of the orbit than 

 to the extremity of the snout. The eyes are circular and well developed, their diameter entering 

 four times in the length of the sides of the head, and a little more than once in advance of their 

 anterior rim. 



The dorsal spines are intermediate in development between those of G. pleheius and G. serra- 

 tus ; their edges are rather inconspicuously serrated. The anterior one is inserted on a vertical 

 line passing immediately behind the base of the pectorals, and when bent horizontally backwards 

 it reaches the base of the second spine. The latter, when in a similar position, will not extend to 

 the third and small spine in advance of the soft fin. The origin of the latter or second dorsal 

 takes place in advance of the ossa innominata ; its structure, as well as that of the anal, presents 

 nothing peculiarly distinct from the same fins in G. serratus, except that the middle rays are not 

 quite as deeply bifurcated. The caudal constitutes nearly the eighth of tlie total length ; it is 

 posteriorly concave, and constructed as in the preceding species. The ventrals are inserted 

 under the second dorsal spine, and when bent backwards their extremities do not extend as far 

 as the tips of the ossa innominata. 



The formula of the rays does not differ from that of G. serratus. 



D I, I, I, 11 ; A I, 9 ; C 5, 1, 5, 5, 1, 4 ; V I, 1 ; P 10. 

 12 a 



