BY J. DOUGLAS OGILBY. 25 
Pseudolabrus gymnogenis (Gunther, ibid., iv, p. 117, 
1862: Port Jackson. One specimen; Mooloolah;: C. 
Sigley & H. W. Haseler ; Cat. No. 178. 
Pseudolabrus nigromarginatus Macleay, ibid., iii, 1878, 
p. 35: Port Jack on. One specimen ; Caloundra Banks ; 
W. H. Sidle ; Cat. No. 158. 
Olisthops cyanomelas Richardson, Ann. & Mag. 
Nat. Hist. (2) vu, 1851, p. 291 : King George’s Sound. One 
specimen ; Southport ; H. Myers; Cat. No. 568. 
Cesiosoma equipinnis Richardson, Zool. Erebus & 
Terror, Fish. p. 121, 1848: King George’s Sound. Not 
uncommon on the Snapper Banks off Moreton Bay, but 
apparently not found inshore as is its habit further south. 
Atypichthys strigatus Gunther, ibid., 11, p. 64, 1860: 
Swan River. Large examples are occasionally taken in the 
same localities as the preceding species. 
Parachetodon ocellatus Cuvier & Valenciennes, ibid., 
vil, p. 229, 1831: loc. ign. One specimen; Morteon Bay ; 
Miss Gwendoline Fitzgerald ; Cat. No. 446. 
Pseudorhombus nove-cambrie Ogilby, Proc. Linn. Soc. 
N. 8S. Wales, xxii, 1898, p. 296: Port Jackson. Not un- 
common in Moreton Bay. 
Aserragodes macleayanus Ramsay, Proc. Linn. Soc. 
N. 8. Wales, v, 1881, p. 462: Port Jackson. I have seen 
specimens from the Brisbane River and trawled a pair off 
Caloundra. 
Synaptura nigra Macleay, ibid., vi, 1881, p. 49: Port 
Jackson. Not uncommon in our southern estuaries. 
Addenda to the New South Wales fauna— 
Spilotichthys labiosus Macleay, Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. 
Wales, vili, 1884, p. 202: Wide Bay. Occurs at least as 
far south as the Tweed Heads. 
In addition to the above, I provisionally refer to 
Odontaspis tricuspidatus Day (Fishes of India, p. 713, pl. 
elxxxvi, fig. 1, 1878: Karachi), a pair of large sharks 
captured in my presence some years ago on the coast of 
New South Wales in the course of a visit of inspection to 
the Manning River oyster beds by the late Hon. J. Want, 
Dr. James Cox, and others. Day’s description agrees 
fairly well with my notes taken from the specimens in 
