40 DELPHINID^. 



Of an uniform grey, ash or leaden colour. Teeth gg. 



Length — 6 — 8 feet. 



Hab. — Sind, Cutch, and Malabar Coasts. 



Delphinus longirostris, Gray, Spic. Zool. i; Cat. Seals and 

 Whales, Br. Mus. p. 241 . 



Colour black. Dorsal fin high. Teeth ^ small, slightly curved. 

 Eostrum three-fifths of entire length. Palate grooved in the hinder half ' 

 of skull. 



Hah. — Sind, Kutch, and Malabar Coasts. 



Platanista, Rostrum long, compressed, slightly enlarged at the 

 extremity. Teeth as in Delphinus, recurved in both jaws. Paddles 

 fan-shaped. Dorsal fin rudimentary. Eye minute. 



Platanista Indi, Blyth, Bep. As. Soc. 13; /. A. S. Bengal 

 xxviii., 493; Oat. Mus. As. Socy. Beng. 92 ; Jerdon, Mam/mals of Ind. 

 159; Murray, Edbh., Zool., 'Sfc, Sind. Platanista Gangetica, var 

 minor, Owen. Oat. Ost. Mus. Col. Sing., 449, No. 2481. Bhoolun, Sisur, 

 Sind ; Soosoo, Hind. ; Sehoo, Assam ; Eooh, Sylhet, — The Gangetic 

 AND Indus Poepoise. 



Animal 5 — 8 feet long, with a long compressed snout, a vaulted 

 compressed forehead, longitudinal blow-hole, scarcely perceptible eye, 

 distinct neck, broad and abruptly truncated pectoral fins and a small 

 (or rudimentary) dorsal fin; snout in males shorter {Anderson, A. and 

 Z.Bes.); ear-hole semi-lunar; teeth 27 on each side in the lower 

 jaw, 26 in the upper — total 106, sometimes less. A speciu" n from 

 the Indus, 4^ feet long, had pectoral fins or paddles, 1\ inches by 5, and 

 a rostrum of 10|^ inches. Colour reddish salmon all over the body, 

 except the tail, which was brownish grey. The dry skin becomes 

 a pearly grey throughout. 



Dr. Gray, in his Oat. of Seals and Whales, Br. Mus., says : — That the 

 skull of the Indus porpoise presented by Sir A. Burnes is conspicuously 

 different from that of P. Gangeticus, that the maxillary crests are 

 wanting, and that the skull is more robust. He gives the length 

 of skull as 20^ inches, and the greatest width at zygomatic arches 

 9|*, the symphysis of lower jaw 11 inches, length of the animal 7 feet. 

 Dr. J. Anderson, P. R. S., Superintendent of the Indian Museum, after 

 working up the question of separating the Indus and Gangetic species, 

 concludes that the Indus porpoise does not differ in any very essential 

 character to justify a separation. In his Anatomical and Zoological 

 Researches will be found a very exhaustive description of the ana- 

 tomy of this species. He has also, from personally watching its habits 

 in a captive state, given a most interesting account of its mode of 

 respiration, &c. 



Eab. — The larger rivers connected with the Ganges, the Brahma- 

 pootra and Indus Kivers* 



