1658 Bulletin 4.7, United States National Museum. 



Poey ; s Scarus restrains * seems to be based on young examples with rather 

 sharper snout than usual, (tjuacamaia, Spanish name of a large parrot 

 with very thick jaws.) 



Guacamaia, PARRA, Descr. Dif. Piezas Hist. Nat., p. 54, pi. 26, 1787, Cuba. 



Scarus guacamaia, CUVIER, Regne Animal, Ed. n, Vol. 2, 265, 1829; no description ; based on 



PARRA; not Scarus guacamaia, CUVIER <fc YALENCIENNES Scarus pleianus, POEY; 



JORDAN & GILBERT, Synopsis, 938, 1883; BEAN, Bull. U. S. Fish Com. 1888, 198. 

 Scarus turchesius, CUVIER & VALENCIENNES, Hist. Nat. Poiss., xiv, 181, 1839, Porto Eico; 



GUICHENOT, Scarides, 23, 1865 (note on type) ; JORDAN, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mas. 1886, 543 ; 



note on original type. 



Scarus rostratus, POEY, Memorias, n, 221, 1860, Havana. 



Pseudoscarus rostratus, POEY, Synopsis, 349, 1868 ; POEY, Enumeratio, 118, 1875. 

 Pseudoscarus turchesius, POEY, Repertorio I, 317, 1861 ; POEY, Synopsis, 348, 1868 ; POEY, 



Fauna Puerto Riqueiia, 337, 1875. 



Pseudoscarus guacamaia, GUNTHER, Cat. , iv, 233 ; POEY, Synopsis, 348, 463, 1868. 

 Hemistoma guacamaia, JORDAN & GILBERT, Synopsis, 607, 1883. 

 Scarus guacamaia, JORDAN & SWAIN, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1884, 84; JORDAN, i.e., 137; 



JORDAN, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1886, 48 ; JORDAN, Review Labroid Fishes, 688, 1890. 



2075. PSEUDOSCARUS PEBBICO (Jordan <fc Gilbert) . 



(PERRICO.) 



Head 3 in length; depth2i. D.IX,10; A.II,9; scales 24. Bodyrobust, 

 deep, compressed; top of head with a large adipose hump. No pointed 

 teeth at angle of mouth ; upper lip covering about ^ ne surface of the 

 upper dentary plate ; lower lip covering base only of lower dentary plate. 

 Cheek with 2 rows of scales, the lower of 4, the upper of 5 ; lower limb 

 of preopercle wholly naked. Caudal fin somewhat rounded, its lobes 

 not produced; pectoral fin f length of head, reaching to tips of ventrals; 

 ventrals inserted under front of pectorals. (Coloration in life, light 

 brownish, with some greenish shadiugs on sides and bluish green on 

 caudal peduncle; fins all bright blue; snout and forehead bluish; orbits 

 surrounded by radiating dots and dashes of green; teeth green. In 

 spirits, a yellowish area below and in front of eye ; upper edge of dorsal 

 and lower edges of caudal, anal, and ventrals yellowish, as is the lower 

 side of the head. I Pacific coast of Mexico; known from Mazatlan, La 

 Paz, and the Venados Islands. A large species common in the rocks about 

 Mazatlan. It is seldom caught, and is not eaten. The type here described 

 is 23 inches in length. It is remarkable that this single species and Calo- 

 tomus xenodon are the only Scaroid fishes yet described from the eastern 

 Pacific, (perrico, a Spanish word for parrot). 



dark green or blue, as is that of anal and that of caudal between the points ; pectorals 

 and ventrals yellow, the latter tinged with green toward the edges. Type, a dried skin, 

 not fully grown, from Porto Rico." 



On the same specimen examined by us in Paris wo have the following note: " Scarus 

 turchesius. (Cuv. &Val., xiv, 181.) A' dried skin, 0.40 m. long, from Porto Rico. (Plee.) 

 Color laded to a plain brown, paler than in S. coelestinus ; no canines. Forehead not very 

 fleshy (young); caudal with its lobes exserted for J to their length ; dorsal, anal, and 

 ventrals less produced than in the type of Scarus coelestinus ; scales on cheek in 2 rows ; 

 head 3f in length ; depth 3; teeth faded, but still partly green." 



hea 

 toh 



o im seuoscarus turchesiua differs from P. rostratus in having the jaws less terminal 

 and the head uniformly colored ; posterior part of caudal bordered with blue, as is the 

 dorsal and anal. 



