REPORT ON FISHES COLLECTED IN THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. 
447 
79. Caranx speciosus (Forskal). “ TJlua PauU.” 
Color in life (field Nos. 106 and 296, 4.5 and 5.25 inches in length), head, body and fins a bright 
golden yellow, the body with 11 black crossbands, narrow ones alternating with broader ones, the 
bands not extending on the fins. A large' specimen about, 20 inches in length, even when fresh, 
showed no trace of the bands and lacked the bright yellow color on the body. I obtained 3 specimens, 
and 2 are in Dr. Wood’s collection, 7.75 and 8.5 inches in length, each of which shows the crossbands 
distinctly. The fish does not seem to be very common at Honolulu. 
Scomber speciosus Forskal, Desc. Anim., p. xn, 1775, Red Sea. 
Caranx speciosus, Gunther, Cat., n, 144, 1800; Steindachner, Denks. Ak. Wiss. Wien, lxx, 495, 1900 (Hawaiian Islands). 
Gnathanodon speciosus, Jordan & Evermann, Fishes North and Mid. Amer., i, 928, 1896. 
80. Alectis ciliaris (Bloch). “ Ulua Kihikihi.” 
Color in life, lead colored above, bright silvery below; first dorsal filament white, tips of the other 
filaments white and black; a dusky blotch on the dorsal fin. One specimen was secured, 5.5 inches 
in length. Two specimens in Dr. Wood’s collection, each 5.5 inches in length, have the same colora- 
tion, and in addition show about 5 indistinct crossbands on the upper part of body. One specimen 
(field No. 1337) 2.5 inches long, was obtained by the Albatross in 1896. This fish seems to be rare at 
Honolulu, as only occasional examples are taken. 
Zeus ciliaris Bloch, Ichthyolgia, vi, 27, pi. 191, 1788, East Indies. 
Caranx ciliaris, Gunther, Cat., ir, 454, 1860; ibid., Fische der Siidsee, v, 135, pi. 89, 1876 (Hawaiian Islands). 
Alectis ciliaris, Jordan A Evermann, Fishes North and Mid. Amer., i, 931, 1896. 
Family XXVI. KUHLID4J. 
81. Kuhlia malo (Cuvier & Valenciennes). 
Color in life, upper parts light gray, lower part silvery. It is a good food-fish. Numerous speci- 
mens are in my collection, the largest being 8.7 inches in length. It is very common about the islands, 
ascending the fresh-water streams. 
Dales malo Cuvier & Valenciennes, Hist. Nat, Poiss., vii, 479, 1831, Tahiti. 
Family XXVII. C0RYPH£NID4E. 
82. Corypbaena hippurus Linnaeus. “ Mahihi.” 
Head 4.75 to base of caudal; depth through base of pectoral, nearly equaling head; D. 56; A. 26; 
maxillary reaching middle of eve ; dorsal beginning over anterior portion of eye, its highest portion 
1.3 in head; profile nearly vertical; ventral inserted slightly behind upper ray of pectoral, under 
thirty-seventh dorsal ray; pectoral 1.3 in head; ventral 1.2 in head. Color in life, body bluish-gray 
above, silvery on belly, with golden tinges, covered with numerous small blue spots; dorsal bright 
blue (in alcohol the blue becomes black). I have examined several specimens in the market, some 
44 inches in length. In one the maxillary reached nearly to the vertical of posterior border of eye. 
The example described is 37 inches in total length, or 28.5 inches to base of caudal. This is the first 
record of this species in the eastern portion of Polynesia. This fish is used for food in Honolulu. One 
specimen w as obtained and several larger ones were seen in the market from time to time. 
Coryphtcna hippurus Linnaeus, Syst. Nat., ed. x, 261, 1758, in the open sea; Gunther, Cat., n, 405; Gunther, Fische der 
Siidsee, 146, 1876. 
Coryphsena japonica Schlegel, Fauna Japon., Poiss., 120, pi. 64, 1842. 
Family XXVIII. AP0G0NID4}. 
83. Fowleria brachygrammus Jenkins, new species. 
Head 2.6 in length; depth 2.6; eye 3 in head; snout 1.5 in eye=interorbital; D. vii-i, 9; A. ii, 
7; C. 22; P. 11; V. i, 5; scales 12-22-4; dorsal and ventral outlines symmetrical; front of mouth on 
axis of body; cleft of mouth oblique; suborbital very narrow, 2.5 in snout; teeth minute, villiform, on 
jaws, vomer, and palatines; preopercular margin entire, a small flat spine at angle of opercle; angle of 
preopercle rounded; gillrakers of moderate length, only 7 well developed on lower half of first arch, 3 
anterior ones rudimentary; first dorsal spine very short, second a little longer than half of the third, 
