104 TELEOSTEI : ACANTHOPTERI. — XX. 



a. Ventral rays united into one; D. low Tetrapturcs, 122. 



aa. Ventral rays 2 or 3; D. very high Istiophokis, 123. 



122. TETRAPTURUS Rafmesque. (rerpa-, four ; irrepov, fin ; 



ovpd, tail.) 



260. T. albidus Poey. Spear-fish. Bill-fish. Blue-black; 

 head (with sword) 2f ; depth 71. D. Ill, 39-6. A. II, 13-6. L. 8 

 feet. W. I., N. to Cape Cod. (Lat., white.) 



123. ISTIOPHORUS Lacepede. (lariov, sail ; (popea, to bear.) 



261. I. americanus Cuv. & Val. Sail-fish. Spike-fish. 

 Bluish-black; dorsal very high, its membrane with round black 

 spots. Sword, from eye, 2f times rest of head, nearly twice as 

 broad as deep. Head 2f ; depth 6. D. XLI - 7. A. 9-7. L. 6 to 

 8 feet. Warm seas, N. to Cape Cod. 



Family LIT. TRICHIURID^E. (The Scabbard-fishes.) 



Fishes closely related to the Scombridce, but having the vertebrae 

 very numerous, and the dorsal fin long and low, its spines and soft 

 rays indistinguishable from each other, and without Unlets. Ven- 

 tral fins rudimentary or wanting. Genera 6 ; species about 15, in 

 the warm seas. 



a. No caudal fin; tail tapering to a point; no ventrals; teeth very strong, 

 unequal, some of them barbed Trichiukus, 124. 



124. TRICHIURUS Linnaeus, (jplxiov, a little hair ; 



ovpd, tail.) 



262. T. lepturus L. Scabbard-fish. Cutlass-fish. Sil- 

 ver Eel. Silvery, D. dark-edged ; snout long ; lower jaw longer. 

 Head 71; depth 16. D. 135. A. very low, 100. Warm sea, N. to 

 N. Y. (A«r tttos, thin ; ovpd, tail.) 



Family LV. SCOMBRID^]. (The Mackerels. 



Body subfusiform or compressed, with small cycloid scales, those 

 at the shoulders sometimes enlarged, forming a corselet ; lateral line 

 present. Head pointed ; mouth large, not protractile ; teeth sharp, 

 large or small ; opercles unarmed ; gill openings very wide ; pseudo- 

 branchue large. Dorsals two, the first of slender spines, the second 

 usually followed by detached finlets; tail slender, keeled, its fin 

 widely forked ; V. thoracic I, 5. Vertebrae in increased number, 30 

 to 70 ; pyloric caaca many. Coloration metallic, the sexes similar. 

 Genera about 1 7 ; species about 70. Fishes of the high seas, many 

 of them cosmopolitan, coming to northern shores to spawn, and 

 often irregular in their visits. Most of them are valued as food, 

 but the red, oily flesh of some is very coarse. 



