gQ2 NEW YORK STATE MUSETjM 



the third of which is elongate; anal spines three, small, the sec- 

 ond the longest; ventral with a large accessory scale. Pyloric 

 caeca four to six. American; distinguished from the Asiatic 

 genus E p h i p p u s by the very much smaller scales. 

 291 Chaetodipterus faber (Broussonet) 

 Spadefish; Triple-tailj Angelfish; Moonfish 

 Chaetodon faber Broussonet, Ichth. Decas. 1, V, pi. 4, 1782, Jamaica; Caro- 

 lina. 

 Cka^todon oviformis Mitchill, Trans. Lit. & Phil. See. N. Y. I, 24<, pi. \, 



fig 4 1815, New Yorlv; Am. Month. Mag. 11, 247, FebruaxT, 1818. 

 Ephippiis gigas CuviER, Rggne Anim. ed. 2, vol. 2, 191, 1829, America; 



De Kay, N. Y. Fauna, Fishes, 99, pi. 23, fig. 71, 1842, New York; 



HOLBROOK. Ichth. S. C. ed. 1, 105, pi. 15, fig. 2, 1856; Gusthek, Cat. 



Fish. Brit. Mus. II, 61, 1860. 

 Ephlppus faber De Kay, N. Y. Fauna, Fishes, 97, pi. 23, fig. 68; Holbrook, 



Ichth. S. C. ed. 1, 108, pi. 15, fig. 1, 1856; Gunthee, Gat. Fish. Brit. Mus. 



II, 61, 1860. 

 Chaetodipterus faber Jordan & Gilbert, Bull. 16, U. S. Nat. Mus. 613, 1883; 



Bean, 19ith Rep. Comm. Fish. N. Y. 253, pi. VI, fig- 8, 1890; H. M. 



Smith, Bull. U. S. F. C. 1897, 102, 1898; Jordan & Evermann, Bull. 47. 



IJ. S. Nat. jNIus. 1668, pi. CCXLVII, fig. 619, 1900. 



Body oblong-ovate, its greatest depth equal to the distance 

 from the eye to the end of the dorsal base or anal base; least 

 depth of caudal peduncle one half length of head. Head short, 

 two sevenths of total length without caudal; snout two fifths 

 as long as the head; preorbital deep, equal to diameter of eye, 

 which is three tenths as long as the head; mouth moderate, 

 nearly horizontal, the maxilla reaching to below front of eye; 

 chin with a row of pores; dorsal and ventral outlines similar, 

 greatly convex. First dorsal spine minute; second very short, 

 one half as long as the eye; third spine longest, as long as the 

 head without the snout; fourth spine one third as long as the 

 head; the remaining spines rapidly diminishing in size to the 

 last which is one third as long as the eye. The soft dorsal is 

 separated from the spinous by a deep notch; the anterior part 

 of the fin is greatly elevated, the longest ray being three sev- 

 enths of total length without caudal; the fin is falcate, the last 

 rays being short. Caudal crescentic w'ith the outer rays pro- 

 duced, and about as long as the head. Anal similar in shape 



