644 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



and December when there is a great loss of eggs through storms. 

 Fabricius records its spawning in Greenland in December and 

 January and describes its eggs as red colored. The eggs, he 

 states, are deposited on seaweed. The Grreenlandere eat the fish 

 for their daily food and they eat its eggs raw. 



Grenus triglopsis Girard 

 Body and head slender; ekin naked; lateral line chainlike; 

 teeth on vomer, none on the palatines; eye large, the interorbital 

 area concave; bones of lower part of head extensively cavernous; 

 a small but distinct slit behind last gill; gill membranes almost 

 free from the isthmus, forming a broad fold across it; preoper- 

 cular spines straight, simple, 4 in number, the lower turned 

 downward; fins large. Freeh-water fishes, closely related to 

 One o c o 1 1 u s , from which they have doubtless become 

 degraded through fresh-water life. There is no tangible differ- 

 ence in structure in any part of the body. 



315 Triglopsis thompsoni Girard 

 Lake Sculpm 



Triglopsis thompsoni Gikard, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist. IV, 19, 1851, off 

 Oswego, Lake Ontario; Monograph Fresh-Water Cottoids, N. A. 65, 

 pi. 2, figs. 9, 10, pi. 3, figs. 22-25, 36-38, 1852; Joedan & Gilbeet, Bull. 

 16, U. S. Nat. Mus. 709, 1883; Joedan & Eveemann, Bull. 47, U. S. Nat. 

 Mus. II, 2005, 1898. 



Triglopsis stim/psoni Hoy, Trans. Wisconsin Ac. Scl. 98, 1872, Lake Michi- 

 gan. 



Ptyonotus thompsonii Gunthee, Cat. Fish. Brit. Mus. II, 175, 1860. 



Body elongate, very slender, the depth being one sixth of the 

 length. Head long, depressed above, the length being one third 

 of the length of the body. Snout long and pointed; eye quite 

 large, nearly as long as snout, much vp^ider than interorbital 

 space, one fourth as long as the head; jaws subequal; mouth 

 large, the maxillary extending rather beyond middle of eye; pre- 

 opercle with four sharp spines, the upper much shorter than 

 pupil; cavernous structure of skull highly developed; upper sur- 

 face of head smooth; gill membranes not broadly united; nearly 

 free from isthmus. Dorsal fins well separated; spinous dorsal 

 short and low, its hight little more than length of snout; second 



