eae peice, with several obscure brownish basal spots, Cau- 
dal pale brown, upper and lower rays darker. Other fins 
dull brown. Length 27 mm, (Caudal damaged). Hawaiian Is- 
lands. We also include a Samoan example about 108 mm, long 
in the Academy. 
Dules guamensis as figured by Hombron and Jacquinot!}* 
agrees best with these examples, though the pale edge of the 
caudal above and below is hot shown. Their figure of D. 
vanicolensis shows the occiput very gibbous?t® 
ll 
Voy. Pol. Sud, Zool, Atlas, 1855, ‘1, 5, fig. l. 
1135 
inG,, Tigs 2. 
Kuhlia marginata (Cuvier). 
Head 2 4/5 to 2 7/8; depth 2 2/3 to 2 7/8; D. IX, I, II, 
43; A. III, 12, 1, often 14, 1; scales S8? to 45 in lateral 
line to caudal base and 4 more on latter; 5 scales above late 
eral line to spinous dorsal origin, 9 below; 12 predorsal 
scales; snout 3 2/5 to 3 7/8 on head from upper jaw tip; eye 
24/5 to 3; maxillary 2 1/8 to 2 1/6; interorbital 2 7/8 to 
S 1/10, 
Body elongately déllipsoid, “ead width 2 to 2 1/4 
its total length. Snout conic, length 3/4 its width, Eye 
with hind pupil edge midway in head length, Maxillary 
little beyond front eye edge or about first third in eye; 
expansion 3 in eye. Mandible slightly protrudes, Teeth 
conic, fine, in bands in jaws, on vomer and palatines, 
