Jordan and Evermann. Fishes of North. America. 933 



reflections ; a large blue spot on opercle ; lips bluish ; no spot on pectoral. 

 Length 3 feet. Cuba. (Poey.) We have examined Poey's drawings of 

 this species and are sure that it is distinct from Hynnis alexandrinua, 

 the Egyptian species. 



s, POKY, Memoriae, it, 23f>, 1800, Havana. (Coll. Poey.) 



1327. HINNIS HOPKINSI, Jordan & Starks. 

 (PAMPANO.) 



Head 3 ; depth 2 ; eye 3. D. VI-1, 18 ; A. II, I, 15 ; snout 2f in head ; 

 maxillary 2f ; pectoral 3^ in body ; V. 2 in head ; dorsal lobes 2 in head ; 

 caudal lobes If ; anal 2i ; preorbital 4 in head. Body oblong, compressed, 

 elevated, with angular outlines, ventral outline sharp. Top of head 

 sharply carinate ; profile nearly straight from snout to nape, there boldly 

 convex, then nearly straight to elevated front of soft dorsal, a concavity 

 in profile before soft dorsal and before anal. Mouth oblique, rather 

 large, the jaws equal. Broad bands of small sharp teeth on jaws, vomer, 

 and palatines. Eye very large. Dorsal and anal lobes low, none of the 

 rays prolonged. Lateral line with a long arch, as long as straight part, 

 which has about 12 elevated scutes and 37 scales in all from end of curve; 

 curved part of lateral line undulating behind. Gill rakers short, rather 

 few, 12 in all, those above angle obsolete. Body minutely scaly. Belly and 

 lower parts largely naked, a large patch of scales on cheeks ; head other- 

 wise naked. Pectoral long, falcate, reaching seventh anal ray ; ventrals 

 not short, reaching past vent. Caudal moderate. Bright blue above, with 

 bright reflections ; sides bright silvery ; no golden ; a narrow brownish 

 streak not quite so wide as pupil from upper part of gill opening to middle 

 of base of soft dorsal ; pectoral tipped with black ; axil of pectoral dusky ; 

 upper fins rather du<*ky, lower white ; dusky on angle of opercle inside 

 and out, but without definite spot. One specimen, 26 inches long, taken 

 with a seine in the surf at Puerto Viejo, near Mazatlan. (Named for 

 Timothy Hopkins, esq., of San Francisco, founder of the Hopkins Labora- 

 tory on Monterey Bay, in recognition of his deep interest in biological 

 research.) 



Hittniin lopl-iiisi, JORDAN & STARKS, Kept. Fishes Sinaloa, MS., 1895, Mazatlan. (Type, No. 

 1563, L. S. Jr. Univ. Mus. Coll. Hopkins Expedition.) 



425. VOMER, Cnvier and Valenciennes. 



7omer, CUVIER & VALENCIENNES, Hist. Nat. Poise., ix, 189, 1833, (broirnii). 

 Plntysommi, SWAIN-SON, Class' n Fishes, n, 250, 1839, (brotmii). 



This genus is closely allied to Caranx, from which it differs only in its 

 distortion of form, and in its weak teeth and very low fins. Body broad 

 ovate, very strongly compressed, all the outlines sharply trenchant. 

 Head very gibbous above the eyes, its anterior profile vertical ; lateral 

 line strongly arched, its posterior portion with very weak shields. Scales 

 minute, rudimentary ; soft dorsal and anal extremely low, not falcate. 

 Young much deeper in form than the adult, all the fins higher, resembling 

 Selene. Warm seas, (vomer, a plowshare, from the form of the body.) 



