Gobioidei, Discocephali, and Tzniosomi 671 
teeth on the vomer. Other related forms of the subfamily 
of Eleotrine, having the ventral fins separate, are Eleotris 
pisoms, a common river-fish everywhere in tropical America; 
Eleotris fusca, a river-fish ee from Tahiti and Samoa 
Candle ‘Nd Z 
eee sit 
Fic. 581.—Guavina de Rio, Philypnus dormitor (Bloch & Schneider). Puerto Rico. 
to Hindostan; Dormitator maculatus, the stout-hodied guavina- 
mapo of the West Indian regions, with the form of a small 
carp. Guavina guavina of Cuba is another species of this type, 
and numerous other species having separate ventrals are found 
in the East Indies, the West Indies, and in the islands of Poly- 
nesia. Some species, as Valenciennesia strigata of the East 
Fic. 582—Dormeur, Eleotris pisonis Gmelin. Tortugas, Fla. 
Indies and Vireosa hane of Japan, are very gracefully colored. 
One genus, Eviota, is composed of numerous species, all minute, 
less than an inch in length. These abound in the crevices in 
coral-heads. Eviota epiphanes is found in Hawaii, the others 
farther south. Hypseleotris guntheri, of the rivers and springs 
of Polynesia, swims freely in the water, like a minnow, never 
hugging the bottom as usual among gobies. 
