FAMILY PERCIDiE. 35 



GENUS APHREDODERUS. Lcmcw. 



Six branchial rays. Teeth velvet-like. Denticulations on the two edges of the suhorhital. 

 Preopcrcle denticulated. Opercle ivith a spine at its angle. Ventral fins without a spi- 

 nous ray. Vent under the throat. 



Obs. This genus is founded on a species first observed in ihe neighborhood of Philadclpliia, 

 and referred, after a very slight examination, to Scolopsides of Cuvier, a genus of the family 

 Scienidse. The presence of teeth on the palatines excludes it, however, from this family. 

 Subsequently Lesueur again saw it at New-Orleans, and elaborated its characters under a 

 new genus Aphredodcrus of the family Pcrcida;. This genus is in fact one of the most sin- 

 gular of the whole family, by the position of its vent, and the absence of a spine to the ventral 

 fin. But one species has yet been detected. 



THE SPINELESS PERCH, 



Aphredoderus .sayanus. 

 PLATE XX[. FIG. 62. 



Scolopsis saynnus. GiLLiAMS, Jour. Acad. Nat. Sc. Vol. 4, p. 81, pi. 3. 

 Apt>mloderus gibbosvs. Cuv. ct Val. Hist. Poiss. Vol. 9, p. 448, pi. 278. 



Characteristics. Dusky ; beneath light yellowish. Gibbous. Length three to five inches. 



Description. Body oblong, thick, subcompresscd. Back elevated, descending with an equal 

 curve from the soft rays of the dorsal to the nape. Depth to total length as one to four nearly. 

 Scales small, rough, rounded and ciliated ; forly-fivc to fifty are counted in a longitudinal series. 

 The lateral line very slightly curved, nearly straight, and passing near the middle of the body. 

 Head flattened above. The anterior portion of the suborbital has a bony crest, supporting 

 two or three spines, which are continuous with the denticulated crest of the upper margin, so 

 that the lower margin of the orbit is smoi)lh, while the upper two-lhirds of the margin is rough ; 

 two crests form a longitudinal furrow between them. Preopcrcle wide, finely denticulated' 

 with its angle rounded, and covered with six rows of scales. Opcrcles large, scaly, witii a 

 smooth margin, but a short robust spine near its angle. Eyes moderately large. Nostrils 

 double ; that near the margin of the orbit large, with an anterior valvular membrane ; the 

 anterior somewhat smaller, tubular. Lower jaw longest. Numerous conic incurved teeth on 

 the jaws, anterior part of the vomer, palatines and pharyngeals. Tongue smooth ; its end 

 rounded and free. Branchial rays six. At the angle formed by the fold of ihe branchial 

 membrane, is placed the vent. 



Dorsal fin high, commencing an inch and a half from the end of the snout, and placed in 

 the middle third of its body ; it has three, and according to (lilliams four, spinous rays ; the 

 branched rays higher than the others, nearly subequal, the last somewhat shorter. X'enlrals 



