272 MEMOIRS OF THE CARNEGIE MUSEUM. 
from Giinther’s plate. This was possibly drawn from a different and otherwise 
unknown species, but more likely the plate, if correct, represents the young. We 
present a figure of a specimen from Tsushima straits. 
238. Sebastodes matsubare (Hilgendorf). 
Uraga channel (Coll. Owston). 
239. Thysanichthys evides sp. nov. (Plate XXXII, fig. 3). 
We base the accompanying description upon six specimens from Misaki, the 
type, the longest, 95 mm. in total length, being No. 6019a, Carnegie Museum ~ 
Catalog of Fishes: 
Head 2.5 in body-length; depth equal to head; eye 3.33 in head; snout 4; 
interorbital space 3; maxillary 1.8; pores in lateral line 22; scales, counting vertical 
Fie. 40. Sebastodes tokionis Jordan & Starks. (From Proc. U.S. N. M., Vol. X XVII, p. 104). 
rows above lateral line, 45; in transverse series, from insertion of anal to last dorsal 
spines, 5/11; D. XIII., 10; A. III., 6. 
Armature of head more developed than in Sebastichthys elegans; nasal, pre- 
ocular, supra-ocular, post-ocular, tympanic, parietal, nuchal and coronal spines 
present, the latter small, all very acute and_all prominent; pre-orbital with three 
prominent triangular, blunt points, overlapping the maxillary; suborbital stay 
prominent, forming a naked sharp ridge below eye, ending at level of upper oper- 
cular spine in a small spine, the ridge with two small posteriorly directed spines 
(much less prominent than in Thysaninchthys crossotus). Pre-opercle with a 
double upper spine, another immediately below, and a third more distant. Opercle 
with two sharp, somewhat dorsally directed, spines of equal strength; a similar one 
on clavicle, on post-temporal, and a smaller one immediately before the latter. 
Interorbital space deeply concave, a pair of ridges separated by a sharply marked 
