THE FISHES OP BERING SEA. 475 



132. Bathyagonus nigripinnis Gilbert. 



Recorded from about Unalaska in deep water. 



133. Hypsagonus quadricornis Cuvier and Valenciennes. 



Recorded by Dr. Gilbert from about Unalaska and Bristol Bay. Also known 

 from about Kamchatka; found by Col. Nicolas Grebnitzki at Bering Island. 



134. Percis japonicus (Pallas). 



Known only from the waters about Sakhalin. 



135. Aspidophoroides giintheri Bean. 

 Bering Sea; not taken by us. 



136. Aspidophoroides inermis (Giinther). 



Recorded from about the Aleutian Islands and Unalaska. It was originally 

 described from Unalaska. 



137. Aspidophoroides bartoni Gilbert. 



Stations 3637 and 3639, off Pribilof Islands, 32 and 27 fathoms, locally abundant; 

 recorded by Dr. Bean from many stations about the Alaskan Peninsula and Unalaska. 

 Found by Stejneger on Medni Island. 



Family CYCLOPTERID^^. 



138. Bumicrotremus orbis (Giinther). 



One specimen taken from the stomach of a halibut off St. Paul Island. The back 

 was seal brown, the lower iiarts pinkish, the region about the ventral disk bright 

 pink. Also recorded by Dr. Bean from Unalaska, St. Paul, and Plover Bay. Found 

 on Bering Island by Col. No Grebnitzki. 



139. Lethotremus muticus (Gilbert). 



Recorded from near Unimak Pass. 



140. Cyolopterichthys ventricosus Pallas. Miakinka or soft fish. 



Numerous specimens taken at Petropaulski by Prof. D'Arcy W. Thompson, and 

 on St. Paul by Mr. Trevor Kincaid. Found by Stejneger on Bering Island. Recorded 

 from Atka. The species is rare in collections, but seems to be locally abundant. 



141. Cyclopteroides gyrinops Garman. 



Described from St. Paul. A few very young specimens, apparently of this species, 

 dredged by us in Golinski (Dutch) Harbor, Unalaska. 



142. Liparops stelleri (Pallas). 



Originally described from Petropaulski; not since seen. 



Family LIPARIDID^E. 



143. Neoliparis callyodon (Pallas). 



Specimens were taken at Kamchatka (Mr. Barrett-Hamilton); Captains Harbor, 

 Unalaska; St. Paul, St. George, and Sitka. They vary much in plumpness and some- 

 what in color, some being plain yellowish olive, others finely spotted with black. The 

 disk varies from 2^ to 2^ times in head. These variations are not correlated, and we 

 are unable to recognize more than one form, though it is not impossible that two 



