3150 Bulletin 4.7, United States National Museum. 



obtained were procured at a depth of about 200 feet. While it is a brightly 

 colored fish, it lacks some of the iridescent hues of S. gairdneri crescentis, 

 and consequently is less attractive in appearance. It is kno\vn as the 

 long-nose, or long-headed trout." (Meek.) 

 Length nearly 2 feet. 



Known only from Crescent Lake, Washington, where two specimens 

 were obtained in 1898 by Prof. D. G. Elliot. 

 Salmo bathoecetor, MEEK, Kotes on a collection of cold-blooded Vertebrates from the 



Olympic Mountains: Field Columbian Museum Publication 31, Zoological Series, Vol. 



i, No. 12, 227, February, 1899, Crescent Lake, "Washington. (Type, No. 2035, Field 



Columbian Museum.) 



Page 572. Myctophum gracllis (Liitken) is reported by Liitken from 

 Denmark Strait, west of Iceland. 



Page 583. Before Yarrella, Goode & Bean, insert the following: 

 875 (a). CYCLOTHONE MEGALOPS, Liitken. 



Together with a great number of CycJothone microdon captured at station 

 1264 38' lat. N., 32 37' long. W., 1,040 fathoms there occurred a single 

 specimen of a length of 70 mm., habitually looking much like the said 

 species, but differing by the eyes not being particularly small, and by 

 totally wanting the light glands or "photospheres." It can, therefore, 

 apparently, hardly be referred to the same genus. The dorsal and anal 

 fins are very like those of C. microdon, though with the difference that the 

 dorsal fin begins somewhat before the anal fin, while this, on the other 

 hand, ends somewhat farther back than the dorsal fin. Quite black. A 

 somewhat larger specimen (105 mm.) from station 9 64 18' lat. N., and 

 27 long. W., 295 fathoms is so badly preserved that it gives only the 

 information that the eyes are not small and that both jaws are armed 

 with small teeth directed obliquely backward, with a few longer ones 

 in the foremost part of the lower jaw and the* foremost part of the palate 

 or the intermaxillary. The nearer determination of this specimen must 

 be reserved for a future discovery. 



It seems evident that these specimens belong to species else unknown, 

 but as the material is so scanty I shall limit myself to the short prelimi- 

 nary notes made above. (Liitken.) 



Cyclothone (?) megalops, LUTKEN, Ichth. Results Danish Ingolf Exped., Vol. n, 10, 1898. 

 west of Iceland. 



Page 617. Macdonaldla rostrata was taken in 1895 by the Ingolf expedi- 

 tion west of Iceland. 



Page 669. After Characodon variatus, Bean, insert : 



983 (a). CHARACODOX ENCAUSTUS, Jordan & Snyder. 



Head 4; depth 3 ; depth of caudal peduncle 8; eye 3 in head; snout 4; 

 interorbital space 3| ; height of dorsal 4| in length ; anal 6^ ; length of 

 pectoral 5; ventral 6; caudal 4; D. 16; A. 15; scales 35, 13 transverse 

 series counting upward and forward from origin of anal, 9 on caudal 



