Gobioidei, Discocephali, and Teniosomi 469 
20 to 22 plates in its disk, and the sides are marked by a dusky 
lateral band. 
Almost equally widely distributed is the smaller remora, 
or shark-sucker (Echenets remora), with a stouter body and 
about 18 plates in the cephalic disk. This species is found 
in Europe, on the coast of New York, in the West Indies, 
in California, and in Japan, but is nowhere abundant. Another 
widely distributed species is Remorina albescens with 13 plates 
in its disk. Remoropsis brachyptera, with 15 plates and a long 
soft dorsal, is also occasionally taken. Rhombochirus osteochir 
is a rare species of the Atlantic with 18 plates, having the pec- 
Fic. 424.—Rhombochirus osteochir (Cuv. & Val.). Wood’s Hole, Mass. 
toral rays all enlarged and stiff. The louse-fish (Phtheirichthys 
lineatus) is a small and slender remora having but ro plates 
in its disk. It is found attached, not to sharks, but to barra- 
cudas and spearfishes. 
A fossil remora is described from the Oligocene shales in 
Glarus, Switzerland, under the name of Opisthomyzon glaronen- 
sis. It is characterized by the small disk posteriorly inserted. 
Its vertebrae are 10+13=24 only. Dr. Storms gives the follow- 
ing account of this species: 
““A careful comparison of the proportion of all the parts 
of the skeleton of the fossil Echeneis with those of the living 
forms, such as Echeneis naucrates or Echeneis remora, shows 
that the fossil differs nearly equally from both, and that it was 
a more normally shaped fish than either of these forms. The 
head was narrower and less flattened, the preoperculum wider, 
but its two jaws had nearly. the same length. The ribs, as 
also the neural and hazmal spines, were longer, the tail more 
forked, and the soft dorsal fin much longer. In fact it was 
a more compressed type, probably a far better swimmer than 
