BioStor
Sign in using Mendeley
100 PROCEEDINGS OF TIIE ACADEMY OF May 21s/. Vice President Bridges, iu the Chair. Thirty-four members present. Papers were presented for publication, entitled : " Descriptions of Forty-nine New Species of the Genus Malauin," by Isaac Lea. " Synopsis of the Uranoscopoids," by Theo. Gill. May 2St7i. Mr. Lea, President, in the Chair. Twenty-eight members present. On report of the respective committees, the following papers wore ordered to be published in the Proceedings : On the HAPLOIDONOTINiE. BY THEODORE GILL. There are found in the larger fresh water rivers and lakes of North America, west of the Rocky Mountains, and in the sea and inlets along its eastern and gulf coast, fishes which have the closest external resemblance to the typical Scisenoids, and especially to the Corvince. Yet those fishes whose external characters are scarcely sufficient to even justify generic separation from the Corvince are distinguished by a structure of the lower pharyngeal bones, which is entirely different from that exhibited by the corresponding bones of the Sciaeninffi. The difference existing between them is of such character that the learned Johannes Muller considered himself justified in assigning to them an ordinal value, and his views have been since adopted by almost all of the most learned ichthyologists. In the Scieeninae, the lower pharyngeal bones are always and as decidedly distinct from each other as in any of the Acan-thopteri of Mailer. In the fishes now under discussion, the corresponding bones of the adult are firmly and immovably united in the same manner as those of the Pharyngognathi. The study of them is therefore of the greatest interest and importance, for we have thus the simple question of the value ot the comparative characters of one part of the organization, relieved of all secondary considerations, to decide upon. There are no other differences of structure to accompany this one supposed fundamental character. There had been previously known many forms, which had respectively the acanthopteran and pharyngognathan pharyngeal bones, which mutually re-semble each other. Such are the Centrarchinae and the Chromoids. The mem-bers of these two groups have a very strong resemblance to each other. This is equally exhibited in form, in the armature of the fins, in color and in habits. But it is found that while the first fishes have always teeth, at least on the vomer, six branchiostegal rays and an entire lateral line, the Chromoids have the palatine arch entirely edentulous, only five branchiostegal rays, and the lateral line always interrupted ; it may perhaps be also added that the fishes of the last family have the intermaxillary bones with longer ascending processes, and consequently capable of greater protrusion than those of the [May,

Identifiers

Export

On the Haploidonotinae

T N Gill
Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 13: 100-105 (1861)

Reference added over 2 years ago

Tweet

Viewer

Page 100
Page 101
Page 102
Page 103
Page 104
Page 105
Title
áàåäçéèÉöøüæœß
Authors
One author per line, "First name Last name" or "Last name, First name"
Journal
ISSN
OCLC
Series
Volume
Issue
Starting page
Ending page
Date
Year
URL
DOI
 Update 
blog comments powered by Disqus
Page loaded in 0.58208 seconds