TETEAODONTIDJE. — XCI. 169 



openings small, slit-like. Dorsals separate, the first of 1 to 8 

 spines ; 2d D. and A. long; V. wanting ; pubic bone long, movable, 

 with sometimes a spine at its end. Genera 8; species 100; car- 

 nivorous fishes of the warm seas. 

 o. Dorsal spines 3; body covered with thick, firm scales; pelvis with a blunt 



^P'"^ Balistes, 240. 



(JO. Dorsal spine single, or followed by a rudiment; skin with minute rough 

 shagreen-like scales.. 

 b. Pubic spine present; gill-slit short, nearly vertical. A. 25 to 35. 



MONACANTHUS, 241. 



bb. Pubic spine wanting ; gill-slit long, oblique. A. 36 to 60. 



Aluteka, 242. 

 240. BALISTES (Artedi) Linnseus. OaX£, to shoot; from the 

 trigger-like 2d spine of D.) 



u. A groove before eye; larger plates behind gill opening; teeth white; no 

 spines on tail. (Balistes.) 



478. B. carolinensis Gmelin. Leathek-jacket. Trigger- 

 fish. Soft D. high; C. lobes elongate in adult. Brownish; young 

 spotted with darker; 2d D. and A. with interrupted brown streaks ; 

 C. mottled ; scales on head similar to those on body. Head 3 ; 

 depth If D. Ill- 27. A. 25. Lat. 1. 51 to 62. L. 18. Warm 

 seas, rarely N. to Cape Cod. (Su.) 



241. MONACANTHUS Cuvier. (/xoVor, one; Sxaj/^a, spine.) 



u. Pubic spine movable; ventral flap moderate, not extending beyond it ; 

 dorsal spine with retrorse barbs. 



479. M. hlspidus (L.). Fool-pish. File-pish. No recurved 

 spines on tail ; first soft ray of D. sometimes filamentous. DuU 

 greenish, mottled with darker. Head 3| ; depth 1|. D. 1-32. 

 A. 32. L. 6. Cape Cod to Cuba, common. (Lat., rough.) 



242. AIiUTERA Cuvier. (? ^ouror, unwashed.) 



480. A. schoepfi (Walbaum). Dull-greenish, marbled with 

 darker; D. spine slender, not barbed ; C. long in young, shorter 

 with age. Head 3f; depth 2f D. I, 36. A. 38. L. 18. Cape 

 Cod to Texas. (To Johann David Schopf, a Hessian surgeon in 

 the Revolutionary War, and an excellent naturalist.) 



Family XCI. TBTRAODONTID^. (The Swell-fishes.) 



Body oblong, little compressed, the skin naked and usually 

 prickly; stomach capable of great inflation; teeth in each jaw con- 

 fluent into two, which form a sort of beak ; no fin spines ; D. oppo- 

 site A. ; C. distinct ; V. wanting ; P. short ; pelvic bone moderate. 

 Gill openings small; air-bladder present. Genera 7; species 70, in 

 warm seas. They are noted for their power of swallowing air, by 



