2112 Bulletin 4.7, United States National Museum. 



eye 7 in head; interorbital space 2f; maxillary 2^; pectoral If; ventral 

 disk 2J. Body moderately elongate, much compressed posteriorly, about 

 as wide as deep anteriorly, its greatest depth under middle of soft dorsal 

 where the back is elevated. Flesh very firm, the body retaining its form, 

 the skin loose but not flaccid. Head small, the nape not produced ; mouth 

 moderate, the maxillary extending to below the anterior margin of orbit; 

 jaws subequal; teeth tricuspid, arranged in series which are nearly trans- 

 verse on middle of jaws, becoming more and more oblique toward the 

 sides, the outermost series nearly parallel with the sides of jaws ; nostrils 

 ending in a short, wide tube; gill opening short, extending downward to 

 about the fifth pectoral ray, its length about \ interorbital space ; oper- 

 cle ending in a flap, which extends over middle of gill opening ; ventral 

 disk slightly longer than wide, its distance from tip of lower jaw \\ 

 times its length ; vent equidistant from posterior edge of ventral disk 

 and front of anal ; skin thick and not very loose. Origin of spinous dorsal 

 a little in front of the vertical from vent, its distance from snout 3 in 

 length of body; anterior part of dorsal separated by a notch; origin of 

 anal about equidistant from snout and base of caudal fin ; some of the 

 lower rays of pectoral produced forming a notch in the lower posterior 

 margin of fin, the fourth to the tenth of the upper rays the longest, form- 

 ing a rounded point behind, extending slightly past the vertical from snout ; 

 dorsal and anal scarcely connected with the caudal; caudal long and 

 slender, rounded behind. Color, a uniform dark olive green, under parts 

 white, a light streak medially along back from dorsal to occiput, a light 

 spot over opercle ; pectoral light at base, dusky behind ; other fins colored 

 like the body ; lips white. The specimen described above, 4 inches long, 

 taken in rock pool on Waadda Island, Neah Bay. A second specimen, 

 about 5 inches long, is in the museum of the California Academy of Sci- 

 ences. It was collected off San Francisco by Mr. H. D. Dunn. In this 

 specimen, the dorsal rays are VI, 27 ; anal 25 ; pectoral 30 ; caudal 15 ; 

 teeth blunt. Flesh firm; form and color of the young example above 

 described. San Francisco to Puget Sound. (Named for Mrs. Flora Hartley 

 Greene, then assistant curator of the museum of Leland Stanford Jr. Uni- 

 versity.) 



Liparis cyclopus, JORDAN & GILBERT, Synopsis, 743, 1883 ; not GUNTHER. 

 Neoliparis florce, JORDAN & STARKS, Proc. Cal: Ac. Sci. 1895, 830, pi. 96, Waadda Island, 

 Neah Bay. (Type, No. 3133, L. S. Jr. TJniv. Mus. Coll. E. C. Starks.) 



2447. NEOLIPARIS GREENI, Jordan & Starks. 



Head 3f; depth 4; depth at disk 5. D. VI, 34; A. 30; pectoral 35; 

 caudal 15; eye small, about 10 in head; snout 2f; longest pectoral ray If; 

 disk 2|; longest dorsal ray 2^; longest anal ray 2; caudal If. Body 

 elongate, posteriorly compressed; profile undulate, over snout blunt and 

 rounded, depressed over eyes, well rounded from eyes over occipital region. 

 Skin thin and exceedingly loose nearly to the end of the dorsal and anal 

 rays. Jaws equal; maxillary extending to posterior margin of eye; teeth 

 small, nearly simple, depressible and blunt, slightly hooked back, arranged 

 in oblique series, those in the front running nearly straight in, but toward 



