FISHES OF NEW YORK 175 



102 Leptocephalus conger (Linnaeus) 

 Conger Eel; Sea Eel 



Muraena conger LINNAEUS, Syst. Nat. ed. X, I, 245, 1758. 



Anguilla conger MITCHILL, Trans. Lit & Phil. Soc. N. Y. I, 360, 1815. 



Anguilto oceanica MITCHILL, Jour. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila. I, 407, 1818, pff New 

 York. 



Conger Occident alls DE KAY, N. Y. Fauna, Fishes, 314, pi. 53, fig. 172, 1842, 

 very poor. 



Conger vulgarls GUNTHER, Cat Fish. Brit. Mus. VlII, 38, 1870. 



Conger niger JORDAN & GILBERT, Bull. 16, U. S. Nat Mus. 362, 1883. 



Leptocephalus conger GOODE, Fish & Fish. Ind. U. S. I, pi. 240, 1884; JOR- 

 DAN & EVERMANN, Bull. 47, U. S. Nat Mus. 354, 1896, pi. LVII, fig. 

 148, 1900; SMITH, Bull. U. S. F. C. XVII, 90, 1898. 



Dorsal fin begins opposite to or just behind tip of pectoral; 

 eye one and one half in snout, five to six in head; snout three 

 and one fourth to four and one fourth in head; gape extending 

 nearly or quite to below hind margin of eye; head one and 

 four fifths to one and six sevenths in trunk; tail longer than rest 

 of body; pectorals three and one half in head; upper lip full, 

 with conspicuous pores. Length of head one ninth of total 

 length, depth of body two fifths length of head. Pores in lateral 

 line very conspicuous. Color dark olive brown, sometimes 

 nearly black, above; chin, space behind pectorals and lower parts 

 soiled white. 



The conger eel occurs on both coasts of the Atlantic, on our 

 coast extending from Cape Cod to Brazil, but not often coming 

 into shallow bays. An exception is noted in Great Egg Harbor 

 bay, where the fish is not rare in summer. It is sometimes 

 caught in Gravesend bay also in summer, and occasional indi- 

 viduals are captured on hand lines off Southampton L. I., by men 

 fishing for sea bass and scup. The fishermen dislike to handle 

 the species on account of its pugnacity and strength; it snaps 

 viciously at everything near it when captured in our waters; 

 yet, strangely enough, the writer has seen a hundred or more, 

 taken on trawl lines off the north coast of France, in a boat at 

 one time, and not one gave evidence of ferocity. 



In captivity in the aquarium the sea eel suffers severely from 

 fungus attacks, which are not relieved by changing the fish from 

 salt water to fresh. Perhaps the salinity of the water in some 



