IN THE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM. 
35 
4^ in the length of the body and reaching to the vent. Upper 
lateral line terminating below the 26th. dorsal ray. Uniform pale 
reddish brown, the fins somewhat darker, [longus, long • pinna, a 
fin]. 
Type in the Queensland Museum. 
Total length 96 millimeters. 
Coast of Queensland. 
Described from an example obtained many years ago at Bowen ; 
two smaller specimens were taken at the same time, but are 
unfortunately in bad condition. 
The generic name Cichlops Miiller Si Troschel, 1849, being 
antedated in birds by Cichlops ( = Anthus) Hodgson, 1844, and 
therefore inadmissible, Gill (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xxviii, 1905, p. 
119) proposed to resurrect Labracinus Schlegel. But this genus 
was never described nor even referred to any type, and in fact was 
not published until some years after its MS. attachment to specimens 
in the Leyden Museum. It is therefore but just that Castelnau's 
name Dampieria (Res. Pish. Austr., p. 30, J875) having been fully 
diagnosed should receive recognition. 
CALLIONYMIDiE. 
CALLIONYMUS LIMICEPS sp. nov. 
ROUGH-HEADED SCULPIN. 
B. vi. D. iv 9. A. 9. C. 10. P. 18-19. V. i 5. Body much 
depressed, its depth 10^ to 12^, its width 6 to 6| in the total 
length. Lateral line originating a little above and behind the gill- 
opening ; thence bent downwards and outwards to a level with the 
base of the pectoral, from which it takes an irregularly undulating 
course to and slightly beyond the middle of the base of the caudal ; 
nuchal line inconspicuous in the adult ; occipitoparietal line passing 
forward above the gill-opening from tho origin of the lateral line to 
trie postero-inferior angle of the eye, where it curves downwards 
to form a wavy line across the suborbital region, but does not reach 
the angle of the mouth ; opercular system consisting of a bifurcate 
line, which diverges from the occipital line] midway between the 
gill-opening and the eye, the anterior branch passing directly down- 
wards to the base of the preopercular spine, the posterior back- 
wards and downwards across the^front half of the opercle, over 
which it distributes radiating canals. Head strongly depressed, its 
depth to 3 in its width, its length 3 to 3|- in the total length. 
Snout short or moderate, with feebly convex profile, its width at the 
corners of the mouth greater than its length in the adult male, 
equal to or less in the female and young. Upper jaw the longer ; 
