112 THE CYPRINODONTS. 
B. 6; D. 11-9; A. 11-14; V. 6; P.14; Ll. 29-32; Ltr. 8-9; Vert. 
14+ 16. 
Body comparatively stout, short and thick, compressed behind the head, 
caudal pedicel deep and short, head and nape broad, depressed on the 
upper surface. Head longer than depth of body, nearly one third of the 
length to the. base of the caudal, as broad as deep, crown flat. Snout short, 
not as long as the eye, blunt, rounded; chin steep. Mouth large, directed 
obliquely upward, lower jaws longer, firmly united ; upper short, protractile. 
Teeth conical, hooked ; outer series larger, in open order; inner small, in 
bands; pharyngeal with a shoulder. Eye large, little longer than the snout, 
nearly two fifths of the head, half of the forehead. Dorsal origin almost 
directly opposite that of anal, two thirds of the distance from the eye to the 
base of the caudal, or half of that from the occiput to the end of the caudal 
fin. Anal larger, deeper and reaching farther back than dorsal. Ventrals 
small, not reaching anal. Pectorals narrow, pointed, not reaching bases of 
ventrals. Caudal deep, short, little more than half as long as the head, con- 
vex on the hind margin. Scales large. Intestine short, hardly as long as 
head and body. 
Olivaceous, light and yellowish to dark and brownish, whitish to silvery 
beneath and on the lower half of the head, edges of scales darker. A small 
spot of brown on the base of each scale, of the upper flank and back, gives 
the appearance of vitte. Fins plain, or with transverse streaks, or clouded, 
or darker toward the tips. A darkish streak behind the eye. A faint dark- 
ish streak along the middle of the side. Top of head dark. Small to 
medium sized specimens have a blackish patch behind the upper angle of 
the operculum, half a dozen or more narrow, more or less distinct, vertical 
streaks of brown on the hinder portion of the body, and transverse series of 
dots on dorsal anal and caudal, more or less zigzag on the last. Small and 
light colored individuals have a narrow band of brownish from the eye 
around the lower lip. Largest specimen two and one half inches. 
Fresh waters of Spain. 
Fundulus nisorius. 
Fundulus nisorius Cope, 1877, P. Am. Phil. Soe. (2d ed. of extra) 456. 
“Stout; head four times in length to basis caudal ; orbit four times in 
length of head, and twice in interorbital width. Depth 3.75 times in length. 
