168 
U. S. P. E. E. EXP, AND SUEYEYS-ZOOLOGY-GENEEAL EEPOET. 
which, in the present state of things, we could hut render more confused in attempting their 
ulterior identification. 
EMBIOTOCA, Agass. 
Gen. Char _Head of moderate development; mouth small; upper jaw slightly the longest. Lips thick and fleshy, lower 
one attached by a frenum to the symphysis of the dentary (chin). Pre-maxillaries protractile. Teeth on both jaws, short, 
conical, blunt, slightly recurved and disposed upon one single row. Pharyngeal teeth pavement-like. Spinous portion f 
dorsal fin generally lower than the soft; the greatest difference in height between the two being observed upon their contiguity. 
Five or six branchiostegal rays. Scales of medium development; lateral line well marked, continuous from head to base f 
caudal and concurrent with the dorsal outline. No scales upon the fins. 
Stn.— Embiotoca, Agass. in Amer. Jour, of Sc. 2d series, XVI, 1853, 386 ; and, XVII, 1854, 366.—Grd. in Proc. Aead. 
Nat. Sc. Philad. VII, 1855, 320. 
There is another feature which exists more or less developed in the different species of this 
genus; we refer to an area of enlarged scales upon the post pectoro-ventral region. This 
character is particularly evident in E. jacJcsoni, E. cassidii, and E. webbi. 
It is also proper to state that in two instances ( E . ornata and E. cassidii) the young, towards 
the period of their escape, have exhibited a structure of the fins which reminds us forcibly of 
what has been said to be the case in Rhacochilus toxotes ; the posterior extremity of both dorsal 
and anal fins extending beyond the base of the caudal; the latter being long and truncated. 
1. EMBIOTOCA JACKSONI, Agass. 
Plates XXVII &.XXVIII, and Plate XXVI, Figs. 3 & 4. 
Spec. Char _General form sub-elliptical. Anal broadly rounded upon its external margin ; origin of that fin opposite the 
sixth or seventh articulated ray of the dorsal. Tips of pectorals reaching a vertical line intersecting the base of the third 
articulated ray of dorsal. Eyes rather of small than of medium development. Posterior extremity of maxillary reaching a 
vertical line passing in advance of anterior rim of orbit. Frontal region slightly depressed above the eyes. Branchiostegals 
five in number. About sixty scales in lateral line. Female, uniform dark purplish brown ; male, olive brown with diffused 
darker blotches. 
S TN ,_ Embiotoca jacksoni, Agass. in Amer. Jour, of Sc. second series, XVI, 1853, 387 ; and, XVII, 1854,366.— Grd. in 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sc. Philad. VII, 1854, 151 ; and, VII, 1855, 320. 
As far as our own observations go, both males and females of this species reach about the 
same size. From among a dozen specimens, two of them appear full grown. They are nearly 
eleven inches in total length, and four in greatest depth. They are those which we have caused 
to be represented on the accompanying plates ; one being a female, the other a male. 
The head constitutes the fourth of the distance between the end of the snout and the tips of 
the central rays of the caudal. Its upper surface is gently sloping from the occiput forwards, 
with a slight depression above the eyes. The snout is sub-conical and rounded. The eyes, 
sub-circular in shape, are under the medium size ; their horizontal diameter being comprised a 
little more than four times in the length of the side of the head, measured as usually from the 
extremity of the snout to the extreme posterior margin of the opercle. The mouth is small, its 
gape slightly oblique upwards, and the posterior extremity of the intermaxillary extending to a 
vertical line intersecting the anterior rim of the orbit. There are from twelve to fourteen teeth 
on the upper jaw, and from ten to twelve on the lower. They occupy the anterior portion of 
the mouth. Four concentric rows of scales may be observed on the cheeks ; the row nearest to 
