﻿HISTORY OF THE FISHES OF MASSACHUSETTS. 365 



this species strewed along the shore, where they had been left by the tide, while in pur- 

 suit of sand-eels and other small fishes. .Since that period, the blue-fisli having been 

 more common, this species does not exist in as great abundance. 



Occasionally this species is brought to market, and when perfectly fresh is a veiy 

 sweet fish, boiled, broUed, or fried. It soon becomes soft, and is preserved with diffi- 

 culty. As it does not appear to be known abroad, and the fishenncn consequently have 

 no call for it, it is not cm-ed, but is considered worthless. In the months of Septem- 

 ber and October the whiting is used somewhat for bait for the dog-fish, and answers 

 a good purpose. This species remains upon our coast untU late in the autumn, when, 

 the water becoming colder, they disapj)ear. 



Dr. Dekay's figure of this species is bad. The second dorsal and anal fins do not 

 show the emargination at all, and the caiidal is too deeply concave. 



Dr. Dekay thinks that Mitchill was induced to attribute three dorsal fins to this spe- 

 cies on account of " the accidental rupture of the membrane." I think this is not the 

 case ; but that, owing to this deep emargination, the membrane connecting the nine- 

 teenth and twentieth rays was so low as almost to seem like the extremity of a fin. 



Massachusetts, Storek. Connecticut, Lixsley, Ayres. Xew York, Mitchill, 

 Dekay. 



GENUS YI. PHTCIS, Aetedi. 



Body elongated. Two dorsal fins, first short, second long ; ventral fins with a single 

 ray only at the base, afterwards di^^ded. Chin "n-ith one barbule. 



Phycis Auericanus, Storer. 



The White Hake. 



(Plate XXIX. Fig. 3.) 



Enchdyopus Americanus, Schxeideb, Griffith's Ccv., x. p. 489. 



Gadas hngipes, Codling, Mitch., Trans. Lit. and Phil. Soc. of N. Y., i. p. 372, pi. 1, fig. 4. 



Phi/cis furcatus, Stokek, Bost. Jonm. Xat. Hist, i. p. 418. 



Phycis Americanus, American Hake, Sioeek, Report, p. 138. 



« " Codling, Dekat, Report, p. 291, pi. 46, fig. 150. 



" " Stores, Mem. Amer. Acad., New Series, ii. p. 473. 



" " " Synopsis, p. 221. 



Color. This fish, when first taken, is of a reddish-brown color above, bronzed upon 

 the sides. The throat, and abdomen in front of the anus, are white, thickly sprinkled 

 with miaute black dots, causing them to appear almost fuliginous ; less of this appear- 



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