192 
BULLETIN OP THE UNITED STATES FISH COMMISSION. 
Head 3; depth 3.75 to 4.25; eye 4; D. ix, 15 or 1(5; A. 11 to 13; P. 13 or 14; B. 6. Head 
broad, somewhat depressed; bones of liead cavernous; lower jaw included; maxillary to 
below middle or hinder edge of pupil, 2.34 in head; teeth in jaws and in a narrow crescent 
on vomer; eye equal to snout; nasal spines blunt, covered by the skin, no ocular, opercular, 
nor suprascapular spines; preopercnlar spines three, upper slender, curved upward; lower 
straight, pointing downward; middle one short, blunt, a more tubercle; a very slight tubercle 
represents the fourth spine belonging to thegeniis; no slit behind last gill; three flairs of 
cirri on top of head, one above eye mnltilid, another at occiput single or bifid, the other 
between them tritid to multilid; a minute barbel on tip of maxillary; whole top and side of 
head, lower jaw, and edge of preopercle thickly covered with pores; a double series of pores, 
34 to 3d each, along lateral line, many accessory pores arranged in groups of one to five 
between the pairs of the lateral line, the larger number anteriorly; nostrils with short tubes; 
dorsals united at base, the spines with short lilameuts, middle spines 3 in head, middle rays 
of soft dorsal 2.5 in head; caudal and ventral three-tifths in head, veutrals usually reaching 
vent or anal, but sometimes falling short of both; pectoral three-fourths of head, reaching 
to or beyond anal. Color dusky, colorless below, a pale bar across occiput (often absent), 
another between dorsals, two across body under soft dorsal, and another behind soft dorsal; 
sometimes the pale portion predominates and the dusky portion is left as four bars, sometimes 
jilaiu dusky without bars; spinous dorsal dusky with three or four colorless spaces on web; 
other fins barred with scries of dusky blotches, veutrals sometimes colorless; five to eight 
oval white spots behind pectoral, sometimes obscure; males with inner ray of ventrals 
tuberculate or serrate. 
The most common fish in the rock pools at Karlnk. 
The tyxie is in Leland Stanford .lunior University Museum, No. C063; cotypes are in the Fish 
Commission and the U. S. National Museum. 
Named for Mr. William B. Bradfctid, secretary of the Alaska Packers’ Association. 
Dorsal. 
Anal. 
No. of 
specimens. 
Pin r.ays. 
No. of 
specimens. 
Pin rays. 
11 
IX, 15 
_ 
11 
12 
IX, 16 
22 
12 
1 
IX, 17 
Till, 17 
" 
13 
10 . Neoliparis callyodon (Pallas). Very common at Karlnk and Uyak Bay. 
11. Neoliparis rutteri Gilbert A Snyder. 
NeoUpav's rutteri Gilbert & Snyder, in .Jordan & Evermann, Fishes of North and Middle 
America, xiart ii, 2108, 1898, Uyak Bay, Kadiak Island, Alaska. 
Bare; three specimens from Karlnk and three from Uyak Bay. The species is distinguished 
from jSfeoUparifs caUi/odon, with which it is found, by the large size of the ventral disk, fewer 
rays of dorsal and anal, and the elevated spines of the male. 
12 . Pholis ornatus (Girard). - Common at Karlnk, Uyak Bay, and Alitak Bay. 
13 . Anoplarchus atropurpureus (Kittlitz). Crest well developed; color very dark, markings 
indistinct. Common at Karlnk, Uyak Bay, and Alitak Bay. 
14 . Gymnelis viridis (Fabricius). 
Head 6.5 to 7 ; depth 10 to 11; eye ecpial to snout, 4.34 to 5 in head; maxillary re.aching to 
posterior margin of eye, 2.2 to 2.5 in head ; D. 90 to 98 ; A. 70 to 77 ; B. 5. 
Body long and slender, compressed; width of head equal to its depth, 1.75 in its length; 
interorbital space narrow, width of bone less than half length of eye; teeth strong, blunt, a 
single series in side of each jaw, none on vomer or i)alatiues ; xiseudobranchiae small ; pectoral 
broad, nearly circular when spread, 2.50 in head; dorsal even, its height, measured vertically, 
1. .50 times eye; anal half a.s high as dorsal, both confluent with caudal; ventrals wanting. 
Plain olive, paler below; an irregular white stripe along side of head under eye from middle 
of maxillary to preopercle ; often one or more small round black spots on dorsal, but at no 
definite portion, these usually not occurring in individuals with the white strix)es ou cheeks. 
Numerous specimens from Karlnk, the longest about 4.25 inches. One specimen has the 
depth 14, maxillary slightly more than 2 in head; width of head 1.2 in its dei)th, 2.34 in its 
length; ux>per ray of pectoral 1.5 times lower ray. Length 4.25 inches. 
