no 
MULLER’S TOPKNOT 
Rhombus pundatus, 
Fleuronedes hirtus, 
Rhombus hirtus, 
Fleuronedes pundatus. 
Rhombus pundatus, 
tt 
Bloch ; f. 189. Tvrton’s Linneeus. 
Fleming; Br. Animaia, p. 196. 
Cuvier. 
Jenyns; Manual, p. 462. 
Yarbell; Br. Fishes, vol. ii, p. 334. 
Gunther; Cat. Br. Museum, vol. iv, 
p. 413. 
Pennant appears to have been the first to notice this fish, 
but he seems to have had but a slight knowledge of it, as in 
the engraving he has given, in the first octavo edition of his 
British Zoology, he bestowed upon it the name of Smear Dab, 
which in his text he had already assigned to a very different 
species. But on the other hand it must not be imputed to 
him, but to his engraver, that the eyes in his figure are directed 
towards the right. Since the time of Pennant, however, a 
considerable amount of confusion has mingled itself with the 
accounts which naturalists have given of the characters of this 
fish as compared with another closely allied to it, which has 
sprung more especially from the belief that the distinction 
between them is to be recognised by marks which assuredly 
are neither constant nor decisive. A principal one of these is 
said to be that the one or two first rays of the dorsal fin in 
the species known as Bloch’s Topknot, next to be described, 
are lengthened into a separate filament; but I entertain no 
doubt that this supposed mark is only of casual occurrence, 
and may as well be met with in one species as the other; as it 
is not uncommon also in the Turbot, Brill, already referred to, 
and, as we shall presently see, in the Megrim or Scaldfish. It 
is somewhat remarkable, however, that I have not seen this 
elongation of the first rays in any other species besides those 
of the genus lihombus. 
