25 
STREAKED GURNARD. 
MuUus imlerUs, Willowhbt; p. 278, Tab. S. 1, f. 1. 
Trigla lineata, ' 1®®' 
__ xuETON s Linnrous. Cuviee. 
Donovan; pi. 4,. 
„ Jenyns; Manual, p. 339. 
__ Yareell; British Fishes, vol. i, p. 45 
why the olcler’^Tatullkt! sh'oX^tand" ^ 
the fish now named the Streaked C ■ ^ classing 
under the name of M„n ■ i t that family, 
I., it. genoT.,.l™ *',Unbe.,cM Mullet 
resembles tbem; and ifTarc'cas b*" greatly 
on the western mru f rt. 1 • usually considered) 
places of resort hein^th ^ k^gdom, it is only locally so, the 
and from which it dof'"'"’! to its peculiar habits, 
y a wnicn. It does not much wander AT,- 'rn 
met with it on the east coast of 1 1 a \ Thompson 
been caught near alvr in Se tl 1 example has 
i»..nce, Ld 1 , i. „tri;:„"™”“i^r.b :? r r 
j'tTe r“ s 
ebetej and althougb it uL'alUkeep." ““'the 
eppear, to imitate the Sunnulleis in efFecZ £ “ 
.0 believe that hZ™ tS ZT'Z 
species of its own genus, in springing out It the °‘’T 
one oeeasion.in tho hatbonr of Polperro ll t-,* I”' “ 
a fish was seen to do this in a way tUt a„„e d 
when mken in a net it was fo.nd^lte rilArZ Zd^ 
Ihis fish does not usually take a halt , u ^i vaumard. 
of resort are eonilned to a peculiar gnallty rf JLInViU 
