To complete the list of Pleuronectoid genera, the following have to be mentioned: Soleotalpa and Apionichthys, Soles with rudimentary eyes; Ammopleurops, Aphoristia, and Plagusia, which are closely allied to Cynoglossus, the latter genus having the lips provided with tentacles.

Fourth Order—Physostomi.

All the fin-rays articulated, only the first of the dorsal and pectoral fins is sometimes ossified. Ventral fins, if present, abdominal, without spine. Air-bladder, if present, with a pneumatic duct (except in Scombresocidæ).

First Family—Siluridæ.

Skin naked or with osseous scutes, but without scales. Barbels always present; maxillary bone rudimentary, almost always forming a support to a maxillary barbel. Margin of the upper jaw formed by the intermaxillaries only. Suboperculum absent. Air-bladder generally present, communicating with the organ of hearing by means of the auditory ossicles. Adipose fin present or absent.

A large family, represented by numerous genera, which exhibit a great variety of form and structure of the fins; they inhabit the fresh waters of all the temperate and tropical regions; a few enter the sea but keep near the coast. The first appearance of Siluroids is indicated by some fossil remains in tertiary deposits of the highlands of Padang in Sumatra, where Pseudeutropius and Bagarius, types well represented in the living Indian fauna, have been found. Also in North America spines referable to Cat-fishes have been found in tertiary formations.

The skeleton of the typical Siluroids shows many peculiarities. The cranial cavity is not membranous on the sides, but closed as in the Cyprinidæ, by the orbitosphenoids and the ethmoid that unite with the prefrontals, carrying forward the cranial cavity to the nasal bone, without leaving a membranous septum between the orbits. But the supraoccipital is greatly developed, and in many the post-temporal is united by suture to the sides of the cranium. In numerous members of the family the skull is enlarged posteriorly, by dermal ossifications, to form a kind of helmet which spreads over the nape; the lateral angles of this production are formed by the suprascapulæ, augmented and fixed by suture, and the median part is the extension of the supraoccipital, which is generally very large, is connected anteriorly with the frontal, and passing backwards between the postfrontals, the parietals, the mastoids, and the suprascapulæ, goes past them all on to the nape. The mastoids interpose between the postfrontals and the parietals, so as to come in contact with the supraoccipital, and the parietals but little developed are pressed to the back part of the cranium, and in some instances wholly disappear.

The suprascapula most frequently unites to the mastoid by an immovable suture, which includes the parietal when that bone is present, and extends even to the supraoccipital. It gives out besides two processes, one of them resting on the exoccipital and basi-occipital, or wedging itself between them, and the other going to the first vertebra; sometimes a plate from the exoccipital supports the same vertebra. This vertebra, though it presents a pretty continuous centrum beneath, is in reality composed of three or four coalescent vertebræ, as we ascertain by its diapophyses, by the circular elevations of the neural canal, and by the holes for the exit of the pairs of spinal nerves. There is great variety in the development of the various processes of the bones we have mentioned, and there is no less in the magnitude and connections of the first three interneurals.

In general in the species which have a strong dorsal spine the second and third interneurals unite to form a single plate, the “buckler;” the great spine is articulated to the third interneural, and there is only the vestige of a spine on the second interneural in form of a small oval bone, forked below, whose function is to act as a bolt or fulcrum to the great spine when the fish wishes to use it as an offensive weapon. The great spine itself is joined by a ring to a second spine, which belongs to the third interneural. This articulation by ring exists in Lophius and a few other fishes not of this family.

The first interneural does not carry a ray, and it varies much in the species whose helmet is continuous with the buckler, as in many of the Bagri and Pimelodi. In these cases the supraoccipital, extending backwards, conceals the first interneural, passing over it to touch with its point the buckler formed by the second and third interneurals. In other instances, as in Synodontis and Auchenipterus, the supraoccipital and second interneural, forking and expanding, inclose and join themselves to the first interneural, but leave a larger or smaller space in the middle of the nuchal armour which they contribute to form. When the point of the supraoccipital does not reach quite to the second interneural, the first interneural remains free from connection, and occasionally shows as a narrow plate interposed between the other two; in such a case the helmet is not continuous with the buckler.