MACKEREL. J2I 



ACANTHOPTERYG1L SCOMBER1D&.' 



THE MACKEREL. 



Scomber scomter, LINNJEUS. BLOCK, pt. ii. pi. 54. 



,, scombi'us, Cuv. et VALENC. Hist. Nat. des Poiss. t. viii. p. 6. 



,, ,, Common Mackrel, PENN. Brit. Zool. vol. iii. p. 357, pi. 62. 



Mac/car^, DON. Brit Fish. pi. 122. 



vulgaris, Mackerel, FLEM. Brit An. p. 217, sp. 161. 



Generic Characters. Scales on the body small and smooth ; vertical fins not 

 bearing scales ; two dorsal fins widely separated ; some of the posterior rays of 

 the second dorsal and the anal fin free, forming finlets ; sides of the tail slightly 

 carinated ; one row of small conical teeth in each jaw ; the parts of the gill- 

 cover without denticulations or spines ; branchiostegous rays 7. 



THE MACKEREL is so well known for the beauty and 

 brilliancy of its colours, the elegance of its form, its intrin- 

 sic value to man as an article of food, both in reference to 

 quantity as well as quality, that farther observation on these 

 points will be considered unnecessary. 



The Mackerel was supposed by Anderson, Duhamel, and 

 others, to be a fish of passage ; performing, like some birds, 

 certain periodical migrations, and making long voyages from 

 north to south at one season of the year, and the reverse 



* The family of the Mackerel. 



