1992 Bulletin 4.7, United States National Museum. 



sides; soft dorsal with 2 bands; a similar one at caudal base and 3 narrow 

 bands on second half of caudal; pectoral indistinctly banded; head 

 speckled with brown dots. (Bean.) North Pacific; the types from Alba- 

 tross Station 2855, north latitude 57, west longitude 153 18', at a depth 

 of 69 fathoms, off Sitkali dak Island; our specimens from Puget Sound and 

 off Karluk. Concerning this species Dr. Gilbert observes : 



" Taken at Albatross Stations 3216, 3257, 3310, 3311, and 3334, located 

 north and south of the Alaskan Peninsula, and north of Unalaska Island, 

 in 50 to 85 fathoms. Tubercles on head definitely placed; 1 in front of 

 eye; 4 above orbit, the posterior 2 the largest; a pair on middle of sub- 

 orbital stay, with a smaller one above them ; 1 on temporal region, and 1 

 on shoulder; by far the largest pair on occiput, where they are high, 

 compressed spines, directed vertically upward, as long as diameter of 

 pupil; nasal spines obsolete. Cirri are generally distributed over upper 

 part of head and body, the longer ones being specially numerous on max- 

 illary, under surface of mandible, and on the opercle and preopercle ; of 

 the larger ones, 2 often proceed from 1 base ; a series of short filaments 

 along upper edge of pupil. Mucous pores large, those of the mandibular 

 and buccal series slit-like. In adults the dorsal bands break Up into 

 series of spots and become inconspicuous." (seta, bristle; gero, I bear.) 



Dasycottus setiger, BEAN, Proc. IT. S. Nat. Mus. 1890, 42, off Sitkalidak Island, Alaska 

 (Type, No. 45370. Coll. Albatross) ; JORDAN & STABKS, Proc. Cal. Ac. Sci. 1895, 810, pi. 

 83 ; GILBERT, Rept. TJ. S. Fish Comm. 1893 (1896), 411. 



735. COTTUNCULUS, Collett. 



Cottunculus, COLLETT, Norges Fiske, 20, 1875 (microps) . 



Body tadpole-snaped, the head extremely large, the body tapering rap- 

 idly from the shoulders to the slender tail ; mouth rather large, terminal, 

 oblique, the jaws about equal; villiform teeth in the jaws; a double patch 

 on vomer; no teeth on the palatines; no spines on the head, the tuber- 

 cular surface of the skull covered by skin; skull thin, its bones not firm. 

 Gills 3, no slit behind the last arch; gill membranes broadly joined to 

 the isthmus, their union extending to above the lower edge of the base of 

 the pectorals. Pseudobranchia3 very small ; no cirri, scales, or prickles ; 

 the skin thin and movable, smooth, or roughened with small warts. 

 Spinous dorsal little developed, the 2 fins usually continuous; spines very 

 slender, flexible, embedded in the skin ; pectorals short, procurrent below ; 

 ventrals very short, well separated, their rays I, 3; caudal rounded. 

 Deeper parts of the Atlantic. (A diminutive of Coitus.) 



a. Anal rays 10. MICROPS, 2363. 



aa. Anal rays 13. THOMSONII, 2364. 



2363. COTTUNCULUS MICROPS, Collett. 



Head 2f; depth 3|. D. VI, 19; A. 10. Head very large, its length, 

 breadth, and depth nearly equal; the greatest depth 'at the nape; 4 bony 

 tubercles on top of head and some at the sides, all covered by the skin; 



