BLENNIID^. — LXXXIII. 157 



No pyloric caeca or air-bladder. Vertebras about 25. Small, car- 

 nivorous fishes, creeping about on sea-bottoms after the fashion of 

 the Darters, a group which the Gobies much resemble. Genera 70 ; 

 species about 400, chiefly of tropical seas and ponds. South of 

 Cape Hatteras a multitude of species are found, but only one is at 

 all common N. of that point. 



a. Ventral fins united ; dorsals separate, free from caudal. ( GoKince.) 

 b. Ventral disk not adnate to belly; teeth simple; shoulder girdle without 

 fleshy processes. 



c. Body with ctenoid scales ; dorsal spines 6 GoBius, 203. 



cc. Body with small, cycloid scales ; dorsal spines 7 or 8. 



MiCKOGOBIUS, 204. 



ccc. Body entirely naked Gobiosoma, 205. 



203. GOBIUS (Artedi) Linnaeus. (The old name, from xa^ios, 

 gudgeon.) 



434. G. soporator Cuv. & Val. Olivaceous, dotted. C. short. 

 Head 3; depth 4f. D. VI-l, 9. A. I, 8. Scales 35-13. L. 6. 

 Tropics; N. to Carolina. (Lat., sleeper.) 



204. MICROGOBITJS Poey. (|[i«/)o'9, small; Gobius.) 



435. M. eulepis Eigenmann & Eigenmann. Yellowish, dotted; 

 1st D. with black spot. Head 4 ; depth 5^. B. VII - 15. A. 16. 

 Scales 50-14. L. 2. Fortress Monroe, (fv, well ; Xems, scale.) 



205. GOBISOMA Girard. (Gobius; trS^a, body.) 



436. G. bosci (Lac^p&de). Body moderately chubby; cheeks 

 tumid. Olive with darker cross-shades. Head 3^ ; depth 5 to 6. 

 D. VII- 14. A. 10. L. 2^. Cape Cod to S. C. (To M. Bosc, 

 French consul at Charleston.) 



Family LXXXIII. BLBNNIID^. (The Blennies.) 



Body oblong or variously elongate, naked, or covered with smooth 

 scales ; teeth well developed ; suborbital ring without " stay " ; D. 

 long, continuous, or divided ; the anterior portion, and sometimes 

 the whole fin of spines, either stiff or fiexible ; anal long ; V. jugu- 

 lar, few rayed or wanting; C. present; tail not isocercal; pseudo- 

 branchise present; air-bladder usually wanting. Vert. 30 to 100. 

 Genera 50 ; species nearly 300, a varied group mostly inhabiting 

 shallow sea-bottoms and rock-pools. A few are ovoviviparous. 

 (Blenniuit, ancient name, from ^Xevva, slime.) 



a. Teeth long, slender, curved, like comb-teeth, in front of jaws only ; body 

 naked ; soft rays forming about half of D. ; V. well developed. Vertebrae 

 30 to 40. Carnivorous, oviparous, tropical. (BlenniiiuB.) 

 b. Gill membranes broadly united to the isthmus. 



d. Mouth large; head pointed; no canines. . . . Chasmodbs, 206. 

 dd. Mouth small, the head blunt in profile. 



