172 TELEOSTEI: PEDICULATI. — XXIII. 
247. MALTHE Cuvier. (dn, a name of some soft-bodied 
fish.) 
485. M. vespertilio (L.). Bat-risH. Drasio. Dark gray, 
reddish below; forehead produced in a long rough process of varia- 
ble length, D.I,4. A.4. L.6. Warm seas, rarely N. (Lat., 
bat.) 
Famiry XCV. ANTENNARIIDA. (THE FRoG-FISHEs.) 
Head and body somewhat compressed, the mouth nearly vertical, 
the chin projecting; gill openings small, pore-like, in lower axil of 
P. Spinous D. of 1 to 3 isolated tentacles. Genera 5; species 
40, living in floating seaweed, etc., in warm seas. (Lat., antenna, a 
feeler.) 
a. Head compressed; dorsal spines 3; skin smooth with many fleshy tags; V. 
Jong. + » « 6 + » © je ate eels, 9) eB GEEiny Miele 
248. PTEROPHRYNE Gill. (arepov, wing; Ppvvn, toad.) 
486. P. histrio (L.). Movusr-risu. Yellowish, much marbled; 
wrist slender. Head 21; depth14. D. TI-14. A.7. V.5. L.5. 
Warm seas, occasional N. (Lat., stage-player.) 
Famity XCVI. LOPHIIDA. (THE ANGLERS.) 
Head wide, depressed, very large; body contracted, tapering, 
scarcely longer than head; mouth enormously wide, with a stomach 
proportionate; teeth very strong, unequal, some of them long, sharp 
canines and most of them depressible ; strong teeth on vomer and 
palatines. Gill openings large, in lower axil of P. Skin smooth, 
with many dermal flaps. Spinous D. of 3 isolated tentacles, and 3 
spines joined by membrane, the first spine enlarged at tip and ex- 
tending over the mouth, said to serve as a bait for smaller fishes. 
One genus with 3 or more species, large fishes of the cool seas, 
remarkable for voracity. 
249. LOPHIUS (Artedi) Linneus. (Old name from dodos, 
crest. ) 
487. L. piscatorius L. Goose-FisH. ANGLER. FISHING- 
FROG. ALL-MouTH. BELLOws-FISH. Brownish, mottled; mouth 
behind tongue, unspotted. D, III-IlI,10. A.9% V.1,5. L.3 
feet or more. N. Atl, S. to Cape Lookout, common N. The eggs 
of this fish are remarkable, in ribbon-like bands, pink in color, 30 to 
40 feet long and a foot in width. These float near the surface in 
summer. (Lat., fishing.) 
With this monstrous creature, unexcelled for pure ugliness in 
the class to which it belongs, we may close the long series of 
fishes. 
