CL UP EI FORMES 



' >■- 



caudal muscles ; they are especially powerful in Gymnarchus. This genus 

 is also remarkable for its larval stage with a large yolk-sac and external 

 gills (Fig. 379, Budgett [67a], Assheton [20]). All African. 



Sub-Family Mormyrintae. Differs from Gymnarchus in having a simple 

 air-bladder, toothed paraspbenoid and glossohval, special bones alongside 

 the electric organs, a foramen 

 in the scapula, or between it 

 and the coracoid, and complete 

 fins. 



Mormyrops, J. M. ; Petro- 

 cephalus, Marc. ; Mormyrus, 

 L. ; Gnathonem us, Gill ; Stoma- 

 torhinus, Blgr. ; Marcusenius, 

 Gill. 



Sub - Family Gymnar- 

 chidae. Gymnarchus, Cuv. 



Family Hyodontidae. 

 Hyodon seems to be related 

 both to the Notopteridae and 

 to the Mormyridae. It differs 

 from the latter in possessing 

 a wide mouth, with strong 

 teeth on the maxillae as well 



as the premaxillae, a symplectic, and in the absence of a closed ovisac 

 (p. 368). There is the same lateral temporal fossa covered over by an 

 expanded supratemporal, and vesicle of the air-bladder, which here lies 

 against a fenestra of the auditory capsule. The pterygoids are separate, 

 and the hyopalatine arch movably articulated. A prominent toothed 



Fig. 370. 



Larva of Gymiiarchus niloticus, Cuv. (Alter Budgett, 

 Trims. Zool. Soc.) 1, yolk-sac; 2, external gills 3 

 and 4, subintestinal vein. 



\ 



Fig. 3S0. 

 Kotopti riis kwpirat, Lac. (After Day, Fishes of India.) 



ridge is formed by the paraspbenoid. The very large coracoids meet 

 ventrally in a keel. The body is elongate and compressed. 



Hyodon, Le S. ; rivers of N. America. 



Family Notopteridae. Another small family, allied to the two last. 

 These highly specialised fish have a very compressed body, a very short 

 trunk followed by a long tapering caudal region, with a dorsal fin small 

 or absent. The tail is gephyrocercal, and the caudal fin continuous with 

 the very long anal (Fig. 380). The pelvic fins are reduced or absent. 



