TETRODON. 
131 
[315] is an immature specimen, in which the spots on the back are small, crowded, 
and somewhat indistinct. 
Cape Guardafui. Zanzibar. Seychelles. Becl Sea. India. East-Indian archipelago. 
Japan. New Holland. 
447. Tetrodon lunaris. [744.] 
Russell, i. p. 20. f. 29. 
Tetrodon lunaris, Bl. Schn. p. 505; Cuv. Regne An.-, Cant. Mai. Fish. p. 378; Bleek. Atl. Ichth . v. 
p. 63, pi. 205. f. 2. 
lepa, Buch. Ham. pp. 10, 362. 
leroplcura. Gray, Illust. Ind. Zool. i. Pisces, t. 4. f. 2. 
Zanzibar. From Bed Sea to Japan. 
448. Tetrodon lineatus. 
Synonymy of the adult fish [317] : — 
Tetraodon mappa, Less. Zool. Voy. Coqu. Poiss. pi. 5. 
Synonymy of young examples [628, 715] : — 
Tetrodon lineatus, Bl. i. p. 128, t. 141; Peters, Wiegm. Arcliiv, 1855, p. 274 (not L. or Lace'p.). 
rerostatus, Jen. Zool. Voy. Beagle, Fish. p. 152 ; Schleg. Faun. Japon. Poiss. 287, t. 125. f . 2 & 3. 
Crayracion lineatus, Bleek. Atl. Ichth. v. p. 70, pi. 206. f. 1. 
Zanzibar. Mozambique. East-Indian archipelago. New Guinea. Japan. 
/ 
449. Tetrodon laterna. [ 38 .] 
?? Tetrodon implutus, Jen. Zool. Voy. Beagle, Fish. p. 152. 
? laterna, Richards. Voy. Sulph. Zool. Fish. p. 124, pi. 61. f. 2. 
? Crayracion laterna, Bleek. Atl. Ichth. v. pi. 205. f. 3. 
? implutus, Bleek. l.c. p. 71. 
Our specimens agree with Bleeker’s figure as regards general habit, and consequently 
may be identical with his fish. 
The width of the bony part of the interorbital space is not much less than the extent 
of the snout, and is conspicuously concave. The specimens (from Aden and Zanzibar) 
agree perfectly as regards the spiny nature of the skin ; the spines extend superiorly 
from the interorbital space to the middle of the distance between the dorsal and caudal, 
and inferiorly from the chin to the anal. They are rather prominent and densely 
crowded on the belly, and less prominent on the back and sides. 
The chief difference between our specimens and those described by other authors is the 
coloration. In the former the upper parts are brown, with white ocelli ; belly uniform 
yellowish white ; sides with or without several longitudinal white interrupted bands, 
but always with four irregular black blotches — one at some distance below the eye, the 
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