FISHES OF HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. 
195 
The above description, based upon the type (original No. 100), a specimen 8 inches long, obtained 
by Doctor Jenkins, at Honolulu, 1889. Another example, No. 327, 5 inches long, is in the saint' 
collection, and these agree very closely with specimens from the Philippines, which are determined as 
Car a ng us hasselti . ('a rang ns politus is probably a synonym of the latter species. 
•' A,Vtl ’U’t• 
mm 
Fig. 75 .—Car an (jus politus Jenkins; from the type. 
f Sdar hasselti Bleekcr, Ycrh. Bat. Gen.. XXIV, 53. 1X52, Moluccas. 
? Caranx hasseltii, Gunther, Cat., IT. 430,1860 (Moluccas; Amboyna). 
Caranfjus politus Jenkins, Bull. U. S. Fish Comm., XXII, 1902 (Sept. 23, 1903), 115, fi#. 17. Honolulu (type, No. 50709. 
U. S. Nat. Mus.) 
148. Carangus affinis (Riippell). “ Amnka“PAakah&Ui.” Fig. 70. 
Head 3.9 in length; depth 3.5; eye 4.1 in head; snout 3.0; interorbital 3.(5; maxillary 3; 1). vii-i, 
23; A. ii—i, 20; scutes 43. 
Fig. 7(5 . — Carangus affinis (Riippell). 
Body fusiform, dorsal and ventral outlines about the same; head longer than deep; snout conic, 
its tip on a line with middle of eye; upper jaw bluntly rounded; lower jaw produced, rather pointed; 
series of small teet h on vomer, palatines, and tongue, a single row of minute canine-like teeth in each jaw; 
tongue rounded, thin, and moderately wide, free for most of its length; maxillary reaching anterior 
