ICHTHYOLOGICAL MISCELLANEA. 
2 : 
Genus CRENALTICUS nov. 
Orthotype, Salarias crenulatus pallidus Whitley. 64 
Dorsal notched. Upper lip crenulated. Mandibular canines small or 
absent. Nineteen or more dorsal and anal rays. 
In Crenalticus pallidus and G. crenulatus (Weber) the anal rays are 
produced and thickened in males. Crenalticus meleagris (Cuv. & \ al.) 65 is 
apparently congeneric. 
Both these new genera differ from Salarias Cuvier in having the dorsal 
fin excised between the spines and rays and in having canines usually present. 
Rapiscartes Swainson (“ Alticus” Commerson in Lacepede) has more fin-rays 
than Negoscartes and differs from Crenalticus in having the upper lip entire. 
Family GOBIIDH5. 
Gobiodon quinquestrigatus ceramensis (Bleeker). 
Cfobius quinquestrigatus Cuvier & Valenciennes, Hist. Nat. Poiss. xii, March 1837, p. 134. 
Tongatabou. 
Gobius ceramensis Bleeker, Nat. Tijdschr. Ned. Ind. iii, 1852, p. 704. Wahai, Ceram. 
Gobiodon ceramensis Gunther, Journ. Mus. Godef. vi, 13 (Fisehe der Siidsee vi), 1877, p. 182, 
pi. cix, fig. D. 
One (/. 4545) from Bowen, Queensland, with very dark body and fins 
and light-brown head ; another (/. 4546) from the same place is entirely 
chocolate brown. Collected and presented by E. H. Rainford. 
Family T.ENIOI DID/E. 
Leme purpurascens De Vis. 
Letne purpurascens He Vis. Proc. Linn. Son. N. S. Wales ix, 3, Nov. 29, 1884, p. 698. Brisbane, 
Queensland. Id. McCulloch & Ogilby, Reo. Austr. Mus. xii, 1919, p. 206, pi. xxxi, fig. 3. 
Tcenioides purpurascens Chabanaud, Bull. Soo. Zool. France Iii, 1927, p. 415. 
One specimen (I. 4638) measuring 113 mm. in total length, from Five- 
mile Rocks, Yeronga, Brisbane River. Presented by R. H. Walker. 
Family ELEOTRIDtE. 
Philypnodon grandiceps (Krefft). 
Eleotris grandiceps Krefft, Proe. Zool. Soc. Loncl., July 7, 1864, p. 183. Upper Hawkesbury River, 
N. S. Wales. 
Philypnodon grandiceps Waite, Rec. Austr. Mus. v, 1904, p. 285, pi. xxxvi, fig. 2 (references and 
synonymy). 
Eour (/. 4548) from Bellevue Station, about eighty miles up the Brisbane 
River. Presented by Mrs. Luinley Hill. 
84 Whitley, Austr. Zool. iv, 4, April 1926, p. 235. North-west Islet, Queensland. 
66 Cuvier & Valenciennes, Hist. Nat. Poiss. xi, July 1836, p. 332, as Salarias: “ rapporte 
par IV-ron de la terre de Van-Diemen.’’ Probably from North-Western Australia, as no Salarias 
occurs in Tasmania and P.lron did not visit the Great Barrier Reef. 
