July, 1906. Catalogue of Bermuda Fishes — Bean. 37 



XCVII. Family Exoocetidte. 



44. Exocoetus furcatus Mitchill. Flying Fish. 



5268 No. 923. Hamilton Harbor. Winter. Mr. Goodwin Gos- 

 ling. 



This individual is 3^ inches long to base of caudal. There are 

 two black barbels on the chin, shaped like a half- leaf, and each of 

 them nearly as long as the eye. D. 14; A. 9; scales about 50; 26 

 rows before dorsal. 



5269 No. 400. Flatts. Two young, under Sargassum. Oct. 10. 

 These young examples have five golden bands on the body and 



a golden blotch at caudal base. 



45. Exocoetus bahiensis Ranz. Flying Fish. 

 GooDE, Am. Jour. Sci. Arts, xiv, Oct., 1877, 29a. 



46. Exocoetus lineatus C. & V. 



GooDE, Bull. U. S. N. M., v, 1876. 76. 



47. Exoccetus rondeletii C. & V. Flying Fish. 



GooDE, Am. Jour. Sci. Arts, xiv, Oct., 1877, 293. 



48. Exoccetus rufipinnis C. & V. Flying Fish. 



GooDE, Am. Jour. Sci. .\rr< viv 0,t 1877. 293. as Exoccetus 

 roberti. 



49. Exonautes exsiliens (Muller). Butterfly Fish; Flying Fish. 



GooDE, Am. Jour. Sci. Arts, xiv, Oct., 1877, 292. as Exoccetus 



exiliens. 

 Barbour, Bull. M. C. Z., xlvi. No. 7, 1905, 114. 



C. Family Aulostoiiiiclae. 



50. Aulostomus maculatus Val. 



An example 23 inches long, taken by Louis Mowbray, August 25, 

 1893, at One Gun, North Shore, St. George's Id., by hook and line, 

 is now in the Bermuda Natural History Society's collection at 

 Hamilton. The specimen agrees with the description of Aulostomus 

 maculatus in Bull. 47, U. S. Nat. Mus. 



