FISHES OF HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. 
267 
Color in alcohol, uniform brown, margin of each scale with darker; a large white blotch on 
middle of back above; lips, margins of vertical fins, base of pectoral above, and ventrals, dusky 
blackish. Young examples are very deep brownish black with pearly white blotch extending down 
on side of body pronounced, the pectoral pale, and soft dorsal whitish above. Some also show margins 
of anal and caudal whitish and a white nuchal spot. 
Our collections contain 40 specimens ranging in length from less than half an inch to 4.75 inches, 
all from Honolulu except one, which was collected at Waikiki Beach. This pretty little fish is rather 
common in crevices of the coral reefs. Apparently the 1 lawaiian species, albiwlla, is different from the 
common tnmaculalus of the South Seas. 
Dascyllus albisella Gill, Proe. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila. 1 still, 149. Sandwich Islands; Gunther, Shore Fishes - , Challenger, Zool., 1, 
part vi. 61, 1879 (1880) < Honolulu); Gunther, Fische der Siidsee, VII, 236,1S81 (Honolulu); Jenkins, Bull. U. S. Fish 
Comm., XXII. 1902 (Sept. 23,1903), 457 (Honolulu); Snyder, op eit. (Jan. 19, 1904). 527 (Honolulu; Albatross Sta¬ 
tion 3968). 
Dascyllus IrimaculatuH, Gunther, Fische der Siidsee, IV, 13, 1875 (Sandwich Islands t. Gunther, Fische der Sud see, VII, 236, 
1881 (Society, Kingsmill, Pelevv, Yap, Loisiade, New Hebrides, and Sandwich Islands); Steindachner, Denks. Ak. 
Wiss. Wien, LXX, 503, 1900 (Honolulu); not of Riippell. 
Tetradrachmum trimaculatum, Bleeker, Atlas, IX. taf. 409, fig. 8, 1879; Fowler, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Pliila. 1900, 503 (Sandwich 
Islands). 
Genus 143. CHROMIS Cuvier. 
Body oblong or ovate, the depth t wo-fifths to two-thirds the length of body without caudal; pre- 
opercle entire, or nearly so; lateral line wanting on tail; mouth small; teeth conical, in 2 or more 
series, the outer series enlarged and blunt; scales rather large, 24 to 30 in a longitudinal series; sub- 
