220 A JOURNEY IN BRAZIL. 



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Mr. Agassiz has already secured quite a number of th&amp;lt;? 

 singular type of Acara, which carries its young in its mouth, 



affected by it, because no one would have appreciated more than he the 

 results of my journey, which I had hoped soon to share with him. You 

 will naturally understand that it is to the class of fishes I consecrate the 

 better part of my time, and my harvest exceeds all my anticipations. You 

 will judge of it by a few statements. 



On reaching Manaos, at the junction of the Rio Negro and the Amazons, 

 I had already collected more than three hundred species of fishes, half of 

 which have been painted from life, that is, from the fish swimming in a 

 large glass tank before my artist. I am often pained to see how carelessly 

 colored plates of these animals have been published. Not only have we tripled 

 the number of species, but I count new genera by dozens, and I have five or 

 six new families for the Amazons, and one allied to the Gobioides entirely 

 new to Ichthyology. Among the small species especially I have found nov 

 elties. I have Characines of five or six centimetres and less, adorned with 

 the most beautiful tints, Cyprinodonts resembling a little those of Cuba and 

 the United States, Scomberesoces allied to the Belone of the Mediterranean, 

 a considerable number of Carapoides, and Rays of different genera from those 

 of the ocean, and therefore not species which ascend the river ; and a crowd 

 of Goniodonts and Chromides of unpublished genera and species. But what 

 I appreciate most highly is the facility I have for studying the changes which 

 all these fishes undergo with age and the differences of sex among them ; which 

 are often very considerable. Thus I have observed a species of Geophagus in 

 which the male has a very conspicuous protuberance on the forehead, wholly 

 wanting in the female and the young. This same fish has a most extraordi 

 nary mode of reproduction. The eggs pass, I know not how, into the mouth, 

 the bottom of which is lined by them, between the inner appendages of the 

 branchial arches, and especially into a pouch, formed by the upper pharyngials, 

 which they completely fill. There they are hatched, and the little ones, freed 

 from the egg-case, are developed until they are in a condition to provide for 

 their own existence. I do not yet know how long this continues ; but I have 

 already met with specimens whose young had no longer any vitelline sac, but 

 were still harbored by the progenitor. As I shall still pass a month at Teffe 

 I hope to be able to complete this observation. The examination of the struc 

 ture of a great number of Chromides has led me to perceive the affinities be 

 tween these fishes and several other families with which we have never thought 

 of associating them. In the first place, I have convinced myself that the Chro 

 mides, formerly scattered among the Labroides and the Sciamoides, really con 

 stitute a natural group recognized nearly at the same time and in an indepen- 



