FAMILY, XXIV— PEDICULATl. 273 



vary, generally reddish-yellow marbled with brown, and brown spots mostly edged with white, radiating from 

 the eye. Round white spots on sides, and on abdomen. In some the fins are banded. Iris golden, 

 with radiating brown lines. 



Habitat. — Red Sea, East coast of Africa, through the seas of India to the Malay Archipelago 

 and beyond. 



Genus, 2 — Hat.ieutjja, Guv. cmd Vol. 

 Astrocamthus, Swainson. 



Branehiostegals six. Body cmd head depressed, the latter very large and broad, anteriorly forrrwng the anrc of 

 a Gvrcle. Eyes antero-lateral. Olefi of mouth horizontal, rather wide, vrith the upp&r ja/w rather protractile. A 

 tramsverse hony ridge across snout, beneath which is a retractile tentacle. QUI opening nea/r the axilla on the upper 

 mrface of the body. Gills two a/nd a half : the amterior branchial arch destitute of la/minm, small teeth on jaws and 

 tongue, palate edentulous. A short dorsal and also anal fin : fin rays vmbranched. Body a/nd head covered with 

 small spines. Air-vessel a/nd pyloric appendages absent. 



" The union of the interopercle with the preorbital" is said by Dr. Giinther to be " very singular, and 

 tmique in this order of fishes. A little before the suture between the inter, and sub- opercle the preopercle is 

 joiiied to the former ; it is the smallest of aU the opercular pieces, and its limbs meet at a somewhat acute 

 angle." (Catal. iii, p. 204.) 



Bleeker found that the intestinal tract was much longer than the fish, and contained the remains of 

 shells. (Verh. Acad. Wetensch. Amsterdam, i, Japan, p. 10.) 



SYNOPSIS OF INDIVIDUAL SPECIES. 



1. Salieutcea stellata, D. 4, A. 4. Superiorly and laterally covered with spines. Pinkish. Seas of 

 India to the Malay Archipelago and beyond. 



1. Halieutaea stellata, Plate LIV, fig. 1. 



LopMus stellatus, Wahl. Skr. Nat. Kjob. iv, p. 214, t. iii, fig. 3, 4 ; Bl. Schn. p. 142. 



Lophms favjas, Lacep. i, p. 318, t. xi, fig. 2, 3. 



Lophius muricatus, Shaw, Zool. v, p. 382, pi. 162. 



Halieutcea stellata, Cuv. and Val. xii, p. 466, pi. 366 ; Temm. and Schlegel, Fauna Japon. Poissons, p. 160, 

 pi. 72 ; Jerdon, M. J. L. and Sc. 1861, p. 160 ; Bleeker, Japan, p. 10, and Atl. Ich. vi, p. 4, 1. 198, f. 3, and 200, 

 f. 2; Giinther, Catal. iii, p. 203. 



Astrocanthus stellatus, Swainson, Fishes, ii, p. 331, fig. 108. 



B. vi, D. 4, P. 13, V. 1/5, A. 4, 0. 9, Vert. 7/10. 



' Eyes — lateral, with the interorbital space rather concave. A retractile tentacle at snout above the 

 mouth and which has a trefoil extremity. Gill openings above the axilla in about the middle of the total 

 length. Fins — dorsal fin situated in the third fifth of the total length, and slightly behiild the pectorals. All 

 the fin rays unbranched. Scales — body covered with rather distantly placed spines, each of which as a rule, 

 has four or more roots, the lateral spines are the largest, and in the anterior half of the body have three or even 

 four points at their outer edges. Colours — pinkish. 



Jerdon observes that he only procirred two specimens of this fish whilst in Madras. Whilst I was there 

 it was by no means rare, but not attaining the size at which Bleeker has taken it in the Malay Archipelago. 



Habitat. — Seas of India to the Malay Archipelago and beyond ; it attains at least 8 inches in length. 

 The one figured (life-size) is from Madras. 



2 If 



