232 BULLETIN OF THE BUREAU OF FISHERIES. 



428. Caranx regularis Garman. Fiji. 



Caranx regularis Garman, Bull. Mus. Camp. Zool., vol. xxxix, no. 8, 1903, 232, Fiji. 



429. Caranx parasitus Garman. Fiji. 



Caranx parasitus Garman, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. vol. xxxix, no. 8,1903, 232, Fiji. 



430. Caranx boops Cuvier & Valenciennes. New Guinea; Vanicolo; East Indies. 



43 1 . Caranx novas-guineae Cuvier & Valenciennes. New Guinea. 



432. Caranx affinis Riippell. Hawaii; East Indies. 



433. Caranx hasselti (Bleeker). New Guinea (Macleay); Hawaii; East Indies. 

 (Carangus politus Jenkins.) 



A specimen of Carangus hasselti from Negros in the Philippines agrees in every respect with 

 Jenkins's account of Carangus poliMs. 



434. Caranx helvolus (Forster). Tahiti(?); Hawaii. 



This species, obtained by Forster on the second cruise of Captain Cook, was rediscovered by 

 Professor Snyder in 1901. 



435. Caranx cheilio (Snyder). Hawaii. 



436. Caranx papuensis Alleyne & Macleay. New Guinea. 

 Caranx papucnsis Alleyne & Macleay, Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. \V. 1876, 325. 



437. Caranx platessa Cuvier & Valenciennes. New Guinea (Alleyne & Macleay); Australia. 

 (Caranx georgiamis Cuvier & Valenciennes.) 



438. Caranx bucculentus Alleyne & Macleay. New Guinea. 



439. Caranx moresbyensis Macleay. New Guinea. 



Caranx moresbyenszs Macleay, Free. Linn. Soc. N. S. W. 1883, 3n8, Port Moresby (New Guinea). 



440. Caranx obtusiceps (Macleay). New Guinea. 



441. Caranx cheverti Alleyne & Macleay. New Guinea. 



442. Caranx laticaudus Alleyne & Macleay. New Guinea. 



443. Caranx caeruleopinnatus Cuvier &. Valenciennes. New Guinea. 



444. Caranx ferdau (Forskal). Lupo. -Samoa; Hawaii; Tahiti; Bonin Is. ; East Indies. 



This species is not rare about Hawaii and was frequently taken at Samoa, where it is valued as a 

 fo.od fish. 



445. Caranx ajax (Snyder). Hawaii. 



446. Caranx gymnostethoides Bleeker. Johnston I., south of Hawaii; East Indies. 



447. Caranx speciosus" (Forskal). Hawaii; Samoa; New Guinea; Fiji; East Indies; Panama. 

 Not rare about Hawaii, and occasionally taken at Pago Pago. Life colors of a specimen from 



Pago Pago, green-golden with green iridescence; black transverse bars on head (through eye), next one 

 blackish; others siniply dark, fading posteriorly; caudal with blackish tips and margin. 



448. Caranx edentulus Alleyne & Macleay. Percy I., New Guinea. ' 



449. Caranx armatus (Forskal). New Britain; New Guinea (Peters, Alleyne & Maclea}'); East 



Indies. 



450. Caranx oblongus (Cuvier & Valenciennes). Vanicolo; Oualan; New Britain; Solomon Is. ; 



Sumatra. 

 This species, as originally described, has the anal rather low, the opercular spot wanting, the 

 plates on the tail about 40. It is not clear that all the above references belong to it, although speci- 

 mens from Sumatra, recorded by Mr. Fowler as Cilula oblonga, agree fairly with the original account. 



a The genus Caranx was originally based on C. speciosus, a species without teeth in the adult stage. Carangus has small 

 even teeth; Tricopterus, larger, unequal teeth, and Citvla, the dorsal rays produced, the teeth being very small. For 

 the present we place all these species in a single genus, Caranx, as the subdivisions need better definition. 



