204 NEW-YORK FAUNA. 
GENUS STILBE. 
Body compressed. Dorsal and abdominal outlines convex. Head small, with no teeth nor 
barbels. A short spine before the dorsal fin, which is short. Anal fin long. With the 
other characters of Cyprinus. 
THE NEW-YORK SHINER. 
STILBE CHRYSOLEUCAS. 
PLATE XXIX. FIG. 91. 
Cyprinus crysoleucas, Shiner. M1rcuitt, Report in part, &e, p. 23. 
The New-York Shiner, C. crysoleucas. Ip. Tr. Lit. and Phil. Soc. N. Y. Vol. 1, p. 459. 
Leuciscus chrysoleucas, New-York Shiner. Storer, Fishes of Massachusetts, p. 88. 
Characteristics. Greenish above; sides silvery. Dorsal and abdominal outlines convex. 
Head very small. Length three to six inches. 
Description. Body much compressed, deep ; one-third of the total length, measured in a 
line with the ventrals. Scales deciduous ; on the sides, large, orbicular, with concentric and 
radiating stria, festooned on the edges. Lateral line deeply concave, following nearly the 
abdominal outline. Head very small, scaleless ; upper jaw longest ; mouth opening upwards, 
toothless. Eyes large. Nostrils double ; the posterior largest. ‘Three flat branchial rays. 
Abdominal outline very convex, thin, cultrate. 
The dorsal fin subquadrate, higher than long, highest in front; the first is a short spine, 
nearly hidden under the skin, about three lines in length ; the second and third successively 
longer, and simple ; the fourth longest, and with the remainder branched, and gradually dimi- 
nishing to the last. This fin is placed over the space between the ventral and anal, its last 
ray being nearly over the first of the anal fin. Pectorals pointed, feeble, and with fifteen 
rays. Ventrals long, pointed, and nearly equidistant between the snout and the end of the 
body. Anal longer than high ; its margin excavated ; the first rays longest, the last higher 
than the penultimate ray; the first two rays simple. Caudal forked, with pointed lobes. 
Color. Back, dorsal and caudal fins greenish. Upper part of the head dark brown, with 
metallic green behind the orbits. Irides pale yellowish ; beneath the orbits, pearly. Oper- 
cles brilliant yellow, which disappears shortly after being taken from the water. Pectorals 
and ventrals with faint orange tints. Sides of a brilliant lustrous white, which has suggested 
the popular name. 
Length, 5°0. Depth, 1°3. 
Fin rays, D. 10; P.15; V.10; A. 14; C.19 2. 
This beautiful little fish, which is usually much smaller than the one whose dimensions are 
given above, is common in all the fresh-water streams of this and the adjoining States. Its 
