2 THE FISHES OF THE INFOLF EXPEDITIONS. 



Lycodes muraena Coll. 



A specimen io3/ 4 inches long (275" ,m ) was obtained in the Davis Strait between Godthaab and 

 Sukkertoppen, at Station 27: 64 54' Lat. N., 55" 10' Long. W., at a depth of 393 fathoms (a temperature 

 of 3 .8 C. at the bottom, which consisted of a soft gray clay with numerous pebbles, mostly granite). It 

 agrees substantially with the figure and description of Collett (< Den uorske Nordhavsexpedition , Fiskene, 

 p. 116, pi. IV, fig. 29—31; compare also F. Smitt: Skaudiuaviens Fiskar p. 618 and Giiuther's 



Deep-Sea Fishes: Challenger Expedition ■■> S. 79, tab. 12, fig. A). The species has been taken in several 

 instances by the said Norwegian expedition at the banks off Helgeland, Beeren-Island and Spitsbergen 

 (Norsk-0erne) mi depths of 350 — 658 fathoms, the bottom brown, green or bluish-gray clay, the bottom 

 temperature being -r- o°.o. a -f i.;C. L. murana is further taken by an English expedition in the 



Faroe-channel at 540 — 608 fathoms. In 1896 Iugolf obtained further 12 younger specimens at the 

 following stations: 



Tlie larger specimen from Stat. 27, the only squamate, has larger eyes than the smaller and younger 

 ones, apparently also a less flatfish head and a shorter snout. It is therefore not quite certain that it 

 is identical as species with these. The size of the younger specimens lies between 203 mm and io8 mm . 

 Of the scales nothing is seen in these smaller specimens. In the larger of them the length of the head 

 is scarcely '/s of that of the whole body (trunk and tail), in the smaller ones it varies between 1 -4-6.5 

 and 1 -4-8.1. With 2 exceptions (Stat. 27 and 65, where the bottom temperature was + 3°.8 and -j- 3 ) 

 all these specimens were from stations with a bottom temperature below zero. 



Of allied species with a similar longish eel-like shape some other species are described 1) L. 

 Verrillii G. &B., 2) L. paxilhts G. & B. (into which L. paxilloidcs is afterwards drawn as a synonym), 

 for these species may be consulted the (Oceanic Ichthyology p. 309 — 11 and 527, fig. 277, 279, 280 and 

 282. Further 3) L. (Lycodonus) mirabilis Goode & Bean (G tint her: Deep-Sea Fishes, Challenger 

 Report etc. p. 81 ); 4) L. (Lycodophis) albus Vaill. (.-Expeditions scieutifiques du Travailleur* p. 309, 

 pi. 26, fig. 1), caught at a depth of 3975 metres on the way between the Azores and France, and 5) L. 

 (Lysenchelys) forifer Gilb. (Proceed. Un. St. Nat. Mus. XIII (1890), p. 104), from South California at a 

 depth of -857 fathoms. 



Lycodes frigidus Coll. 



Den norske Nordhavs Expedition;, Fiskene, p. 96, pi. Ill, fig. 24; Oceanic Ichthyology* p. 335, 

 fig. 274. 



As I have no doubt that the numerous specimens of a Lycodes, taken in larger or smaller 



