Leuciscus. INDIAN CYPRINID#. 405 
and the jaws recurved directly upwards, with a sharp point on the apex 
of the lower jaw; both are so nearly allied to each other, and correspond so 
much with the Leuciscs in the form and disposition of their fins, that we 
may describe them together in the same genus, although perhaps the true 
place of the one would be at the close of the Perilamps, and of the other, at 
the commencement of the Leuciscs. 
J].—LEvcIScUS LATERALIS. 
Cyprinus anjana, Buch, Coll. 
The dorsal is placed opposite the ventrals, anal small; a blue stripe 
extends from the mouth over the operculum on either side to the 
caudal. The head is more compressed than the body, the jaws somewhat 
flattened and directed upwards, with a short point on the apex of the lower 
one, which is received into a corresponding fissure in the upper jaw. There 
is a depression on the crown, from which the jaws appear recurved, and this 
is the only difference in the figure of this species from that given of Cyprinus 
daniconius, P.G. t. 15. f. 89. The fin rays are, 
D.9: P.13: V.9: A.7: C.19. 
IIl.—Cyprinus DANICONIUS Buch. 
PGs te lowies9: 
The arch of the back descends equally from the base of the dorsal to the 
apex of the jaws, without a depression at the nape, or on the crown. The 
head and body are equally compressed, the sides are marked with faint streaks 
more or less apparent in different specimens, but often obscure and merging 
to grey and yellow. The mouth is horizontal, and the head placed in a line 
3C 
