316 



COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 



FIG. 290 Sturgeon (Acipenser sturio). Atlantic coast. 



and a scaly exoskeleton. The skull is extremely com- 

 plicated ; the upper and lower jaws are complete, and the 



gills are comb -like 

 or tufted. The tail 

 is homocercal ; the 

 other fins are varia- 

 ble in number and 



FIG. 291. Cat-Hsu, or Homed Pout (Pimdodw catus). position. In the 

 American rivers. - TT i 



soft -tinned lishes, 

 the ventrals are ab- 

 sent, as in the Eels ; 

 or attached to the 

 abdomen, as in the 

 Salmons, Herrings, 

 Pikes, and Carps; or 

 placed under the throat, as in the Cod, Haddock, and 

 Flounder. In the spiny- h'nned Fishes, the ventrals are 

 generally under or in front of the pectorals, and the scales 

 ctenoid, as in the Perches, Mullets, and Mackerels. 



4. Dipnoi. These Fishes connect the class with the 

 Amphibia. They have an eel -like body, covered with 

 cycloid scales ; an embryonic notochord for a back-bone ; 



FIG. 292. Cod (Morrhua Americana). Atlantic coast. 



PIG. 293. Protopteru* annectens; one fourth natural me. African rivers. 



