265 



situated just opposite to the light narrow spaces between the 

 transverse bands; the smaller specimen has two very indistinct 

 eye-like spots in the front part of the Гш, and light perpendic- 

 ular stripes on the fin, opposite to similar but more strongly 

 marked ones on the back of the body which divide the dark 

 transverse bands. 



Professor N. Knipowitsch *) has lately pointed out that 

 the figure in Collett's work on the fishes of the iNorwegian 

 North-Atlantic Expedition (pi. IV, fig. 32) is not quite correct, 

 as the snout (in front of the eye) is too long. In the specimens 

 at my disposal the dorsal fin also as a rule starts farther back 

 than Collett indicates, namely above the space between anus 

 and the end of the pectoral fin, sometimes behind, sometimes 

 in front of the middle of the line which connects these points; 

 only in one specimen the dorsal fin is continued as a low fold 

 to a point above the hindmost third of the pectoral fin, that is, 

 as far to the front as Collett states it in his diagnosis. 



Gadidæ. 

 Gadiis callarias Linné. 



Graah mentions the common Cod among the fishes which 

 he saw during his stay on the coast of the South-eastern 

 Greenland (I. с p. 194). 



Gadus ogac Richardson. 



1836. Gadus ogac Richardson, Fauna boreali-americana, p. 246. 

 1842. G.ogat Kröyer, in Gaimard: Voyages en Scandinavie, en Laponie etc., 

 Poissons, PI. 19. 



Graah mentions this species among the fishes which he 

 saw on his voyage along the South-eastern Greenland (I.e. p. 194); 



Zool. Ergebnisse d. Russ. Exped. nach Spitzbergen, Fische; Ann. Musée 

 Zool. de I'Acad. Imp. des Sciences St. Pétersbourg, T. VI, 1901, p. 20. 



