40 CYPRINID.E. 



Tlic characters of this species are so decided, tliat I liad 

 no diiFiculty in identifying it as the Cyprimis Buggen/ia^ii 

 of Bloch ; and on the next visit to London of my friend 

 William Thompson, Esq. of Belfast, who has devoted such 

 unwearied attention to the Zoology of Ireland, I found that 

 he had also obtained an example of the same species of 

 Bream from the river Lagan, near Belfast, which circum- 

 stance was made public in the printed Proceedings of the 

 Zoological Society for 1837, page 56, as already quoted. 



This species of Bream is at once distinguished from either 

 of the two species which have been hitherto found in this 

 country, by the greater thickness of its body, which is equal 

 to half its depth ; while in either of our other Bream the 

 thickness of the body is only equal to one third of its depth ; 

 the scales of this species are also larger in proportion, although 

 the figure here given, not having been drawn on a comparative 

 scale with them, does not exhibit this peculiarity. The anal 

 fin is shorter and has a smaller number of rays than that of 

 Ahramis blicca, which in its turn has its anal fin smaller, and 

 Avith fewer rays than that of Ahramis vulgaris, which is the 

 Bream most generally known in this country. 



This new species was first described by Bloch from speci- 

 mens found in Swedish Pomerania, in the river Pene, and in 

 the lakes communicating with it. The specimens were sent 

 to Bloch by M. Buggenhagen, and hence the trivial name 

 which has been devoted to it for specific distinction. I have 

 also called it the Pomeranian Bream, considering it no ob- 

 jection to attach to this fish the name of the country in which 

 it was first discovered, although it may happen to have been 

 afterwards found elsewhere. The fish attains to the length of 

 twelve or fourteen inches in that country according to Bloch; 

 the flesh is white, but not much in request on account of the 

 number of small bones which are found in it. It is taken in 

 the same manner and by the same means as the common 



