Schistura. INDIAN CYPRINID&. 441 
I].—ScHisTuRA ZONATA, J. M. 
‘ t. 53. te 
Without suborbitar spines; the body is encircled by about eleven com- 
plete rings of green colour ; opercula broad, naked, and silvery, fins pellucid, 
without dots, 
DD Ea shh is Ve8 Ace C217. 
This small species was found in ponds in the Muttuc district in Upper Assam. 
The pyloris is reflected forward so as to form the stomach into a small lunate 
sac, on the surface of which two or three convolutions of the intestine take 
place ; between the stomach and intestine there is a narrow stricture, pro- 
bably a pyloric valve. Limbs of the lower jaw firmly united at the symphysis, 
as in the Gudgeons. 
IIJ.—ScuHIsTuRA RUPECULA, J. M. 
ti, Oiealn Oe 
Without suborbitar spines ; there are about fourteen bars or zones encir- 
cling the body like those of the last ; pectorals and ventrals round. 
1:3 7 PALO)! Ve8i A. 72 C16. 
This species was found by Dr. Macleod in the mountains in the vicinity of 
Simla, and is very evidently distinct from either of the adjoining species. 
I1V.—ScHISTURA OCELLATA, J. M. 
This is a different species from either of the accompanying, although it is 
difficult to make the real differences appear correctly either in drawings or 
descriptions. The fin rays are, 
IDG) SPAR WARS Ang (Callie 
