2 ACANTHOPTERTGII. 



vomer and palatines. Anterior portion of the dorsal fin spinous : ventrals 

 thoracic 1/5 or sometimes 1/4. Scales ctenoid or cycloid. Lateral line when 

 prei-ent continuous (except in some species of Ambassis). Air-vessel usually 

 present and more or less simple. Pyloric appendages in varying numbers. 



Genus I.— Peeca, Artedi. 



BranoMostegals seven : pseudoh-ancMce present. Body oblong and somewhat 

 compressed. Treopercle serrated, with denticulations on its lower limh directed 

 forwards. Opercle spinate. Teeth mlliform in jaws, on vomer and palatine hones : 

 tongue smooth. Two dorsal fins separated at their bases, the first with 13 or 14 

 spines : the anal with 2 spines. Scales rather small, ctenoid, not extended on to 

 the upper surface of the head. Pyloric appendages few. 



Cuvier selected the Peroh as an appropriate type for the first Genus into 

 which he sTibdivided the Percoides. 



Geographical distribution. — Fresh waters of both the Arctic regions, rarely 

 descending to salt water. 



1. Perca flaviatilis, Plate I. 



IlepK?;, Aristotle, Hist. Anim. lib. vi, c. 14 ; ^lian, xiy. c. 23, 26. 



Perca, Pliny, xxxii, c. 9, 10; Ausonius, a.d. 400, v, 115 ; Jonston, De Pise. 

 1649, lib. iii, tit. iii, c. i, p. 156, t. xxiv, f. 3. Tine Perche de riviere, Belonius, 

 1553, p. 291. Perca major, Schonevelde, 1624, p. 65 ; Artedi, Genera Piscinm, 1738, 

 Gen. 39, Syn. 66, species, 74. Perca fluviatilis major, Aldrovandns, 1638, v, cap. 53, 

 p. 622. 



Perca _/ZMOT'aii'h's, Rondeletius, 1554, ii, pp. 196, 197; Salviani, 1554, f. 2445, 

 226 ; Gesner, 1558, p. 698, f. 168&, and Edit. 1598, fol. 168 and 172, c. fig ; 

 Willughby, De Historia Piscinm, 1686, iv, c. 14, p. 291, t. S, 13. f . 1 ; Ray, 

 Synopsis Methodica Avium et Piscium, 1713, Pise. p. 97, No. 23 ; Gronovius, 

 Zoophyl. 1763, p. 91, No. 301 and Mus. i, No. 36 ; Linnaeus, Syst. Naturaj, Ed. 

 12, 1766, p. 481; Rutty, Natural History of the County of Dublin, 1772, i, p. 368; 

 Pennant, British Zoology (Edition 1), 1776, iii, p. 254, pi. xlviii, (Edition 2), 

 1812, iii, p. 345, pi. lix ; 0. F. Miiller, Zoologiae Danicse Prodomus, 1776, p. 46 ; 

 Linneeus, Systema Naturse, Gmelin, 1788, p. 1306 ; Marsigli, iv, t. xxiii, f. 1 ; Blooh, 

 Fische Deutschlands, 1782-84, t. Iii ; Bonnaterre, Encyclopaedia Ichthyologia, 1788, 

 p. 126, pi. liii, f. 204; Lacepede, Histoire des Poissons, 1798-1803, iv, p. 399; 

 Donovan, Natural History of British Fishes, 1802-8, iii, pi. Hi ; Shaw, General 

 Zoology, 1803, iv, p. 545, pi. Ixxix ; Turton, British Fauna, 1807, p. 100 ; Jurine, 

 Poissons du Lac Leman, 1825, p. 1 ; Cuvier and Valenciennes, Histoire Naturelle 

 des Poissons, 1828, ii, p. 20, t. i-viii ; Flemming, History of British Animals, 

 1828, p. 213 ; Nilsson, Ichthyologias Soandinavicse, 1832, p. 81 ; Bonaparte, 

 Icones, Fauna Italica, 1832-41, iii, p. 79, f. 1 ; Fries och Ekstrom, Skandinaviens 

 Fiskar, 1836, pi. i ; Jenyns, Manual of British Vertebrate Animals, 1835, p. 330 ; 

 Yarrell, British Fishes (.Ed. 1), 1836, i, p. 1, c. fig. (Ed. 2), 1841, i, p. 1 (Ed. 3), 

 ii, p. 112 ; Cuvier, Regne Animal, Poissons, pi. vi, f. 1 ; Templeton, Magazine of 

 Natural History (Series 2), 1837, i, p. 409; Pamell, Fishes of the Frith of Forth, 

 1838, p. 8; Swainson, Natural History of Fish, 1839, ii, p. 198; Demidoff, 

 Voyage dans la Rnssie Meridionale, 1840-42, iii, p. 365 ; White, Catalogue of 

 British Fish, 1851, p. 9 ; Thompson, Natural History of Ireland, 1856, iv, p. 69 ; 

 Giinther, Catalogue of the Fishes in the British Museum, i, 1859, p. 58 ; Schlegel, 

 De Dieren van Nederland, 1862, p. 32, pi. 3, f . 2 ; Blanchard, Les Poissons des 

 eaux douces de la France, 1866, p. 130, fig. 8 ; Collett, Norges Fiske, 1875, p. 15 ; 

 Steindachner, Ak. Wien, SB, Ixxviii, Abth. i, 1878, p. 399 ; Houghton, British 

 Fresh-water Fishes, 1879, p. 1, pi. i. 



Perca vulgaris and P. helvetica, Gronovius, Catalogue of Fish by Gray, 1854, 

 pp. 113, 114. 



Perca Italica, Cuv. and Val. ii, p. 45 (variety destitute of bands.) 



Perch, Couch, History of the Fishes of the British Islands, 1862, i, p. 185, pi. 



