230 



BULLETIN OF THE BUREAU OF FISHERIES. 



8. Raja parmifera Bean. 



One specimen (no. 2904) 7 inches long, and 4 eggs, dredged at station 4252, in Frederick Sound; 

 another (no. 3001) 23 inches long, at station 4291, in Shelikof Strait; one (no. 3005) 21 inches long, at 

 station 4295, in Shelikof Strait; two fi'om station 4280, in Chignik Bay; and two from Alitak Bay. The 

 latter were both males, and furnished the following notes: First example, length of disk 21 inches; width 

 24: length of tail 20; snout to angle of pectoral 18; tip of snout to eye 7.5; weight 14 pounds. Second 

 example, length of disk 28 inches; width 31; tail 24; snout to angle of pectoral 22; tip of snout to eye 

 9.5; weight 25 pounds. Thirty to 33 spines on median line of back and tail; no marginal row of larger 

 spines on tail in female; spines on liack more numerous and smaller in female; male with two large 

 humeral spines, female with one; supraoccipital crest more developed in the male. 



Originally described by Bean (1882) from Iliuliuk, Unalaska. Gilbert (1895) records it from Alba- 

 tross stations 3252, 3259, 3267, 3270, 3272, 3281, 3282, 3292, 3293, 3310, and 3313, all in Bristol Bay. 



9. Raja aleutica Gilbert. 



No. 1775 (172(i), a specimen 33 inches long, collected at station 3602. 



Dorsal and caudal fins covered with small prickles; 4 large spines in shoulder region on median line; 

 after a slight interspace 32 additional spines on median line of back and tail, 2 of the latter being between 

 the dorsals. The spines are large anteriorly, l)ecoming smaller to the root of the tail, thence larger, as 

 large as the anterior ones fcjr half length of tail, whence they grow gradually smaller to tip of tail. Teeth 

 qt;ite sharp, conical; lateral edges of upper lip fringed; back with small prickles everywhere, except 

 an area below and behind eyes to below shoulder region, and the edges of pectoral laterally and pos- 

 teriorly; a row of pores, with short tubes, on each side and just below the first median spine, these 

 diverging toward each eye, running half the distance from spine to eye, the area about them being free 

 from prickles; a similar row of pores around the entire margin of the disk and also on each side of the 

 nasal cartilage; lateral and posterior angles of disk broadly rounded, margin between these angles 

 gently rounded. 



Originally described l)y Gilbert (1895) from station 3257, north of Sannak Pass, Aleutian Islands. 



10. Raja trachura Gilbert. 

 Recorded by Gill^ert (1895) from station 3338, south of the Shumagin Islands. Not seen by us. 



11. Raja abyssicola Gilbert. 

 Originally described from All)atro.ss station 3342, off Queen Charlotte Island, in 1,588 fathoms. 



Family 7. CHIM^KII)^. The Chimaeras. 



12. Hydrolagns colliei (Lay & Bennett). Rntjlxh. 



Common. Specimens were caught in gillnet at Nanaimo; one was seined at Port Alexander, and 

 others were dredged at stations 4191, 4197, 4201, 4215, 4216, 4218, 4219, 4221, 4223, and 4246. Seven 



Fir, 4 — nydrolagus colliei fLtiy & Bpnnett). 



specimens examined are 4.5 to 12 inches long. We have examined another example (no. 2442) 13.5 

 inches long, dredged by the Albatross April 30, 1901, at station 3790, off Tatoosh Island Light, in 122 

 fathoms. In this specimen the caudal is produced into a decided filament. 



Recorded from Alaska and Alexander Archipelago as Chimiera colhci (Bean 1882). 



