142 THE CYPEINODONTS. 



From the former it differs in the long anal fin, the deep caudal pedicel, 

 and the sharp compression between ventrals and caudal ; while it is dis- 

 tinguished from the latter by the short dorsal, its posterior position, and 

 the depth and compression of the hinder portion of the body. The structure 

 of the jaws and mouth remove it entirely from Haplochilus. 



Pterolebias longipinnis sji. n. 



Plate III. Fig. 14, teeth. 



B. 6 ; D. 10-9 ; A. 20-19 ; V. 8 ; P. 16-15 ; LI. 31-32 ; Ltr. 10-11 ; Vert. 

 15+16. 



Body of moderate length, depth three and two thirds times in the length, 

 without the caudal ; caudal portion deep, thin, sharp at the lower edge. 

 Head depressed, crown flattened, three and one half times in the length to 

 the caudal fin. Snout short, half as long as eye, curved from orbit to orbit. 

 Eye large, less than three times in head, one and one half times in forehead, 

 longer than snout. Mouth wide, extending close to the eye, oblique ; sym- 

 physes firm ; lower jaw prominent, upper short not very protractile. Man- 

 dibles comparatively long. Teeth subconical, hooked, in bands, outer series 

 larger, in open order. Pharyngeal teeth resembling the maxillary but stouter, 

 some usually worn off on the tops like molars. Scales large ; lateral line 

 distinct. Fins elongate, varying much in shapes among individual specimens, 

 bases scaly. Dorsal small, pointed, first ray four fifths of the distance from 

 snout to caudal, above fourteenth ray of anal. In cases some of the rays are 

 nearly as long as the head and extend upon the caudal. Anal long, deep, 

 reaching the caudal, pointed behind, rounded below. Ventrals narrow, 

 anterior rays near half as long as body without head or caudal, with the 

 filamentary prolongation, reaching hind end of base of anal ; bases under 

 mid-length of pectorals in males, and under their tips in females. Caudal 

 broad, pointed, long, in one case as long as the body without the caudal 

 or head. 



Females of one and three-fourths inches with fully developed ova. 



Olivaceous or brownish, darker on chin, back, and edges of fins. All fins 

 with small spots in transverse series, fainter on ventrals and anal. Ventral 

 surface little lighter. Largest specimen three and two tenths inches in 

 length, one and three tenths of this being caudal. Santarem. 



