Fig. 335.—Principal forms of Osteoglossids. A, Dapedoglossus testis (restoration); B, Scleropages leichardti; C, Osteoglossum bicirrhosum; D, Arapaima gigas; E, Heterotis niloticus. All much reduced.

Scleropages.—Mouth large; vomer, palatines, pterygoids, and glossohyal toothed; mandibular barbels; branchiostegal rays 15 to 17; body compressed, with trenchant abdomen; coracoids forming a ventral keel; dorsal fin short; ventral fins nearly equally distant from end of snout and caudal fin; vertebrae 29 to 31 + 30; air-bladder not cellular. One species from the northern parts of Australia, and one from Sumatra, Banka, and Borneo.

Osteoglossum.—Mouth large; vomer, palatines, pterygoids, and glossohyal toothed; mandibular barbels; branchiostegal rays 10; body compressed, with trenchant abdomen; coracoids forming a ventral keel; dorsal fin long; ventral fins nearly twice as far from the caudal as from the end of the snout; vertebrae 28 + 59; air-bladder not cellular.—South America (Guianas, Brazil).

Arapaima.—Mouth rather large; vomer, palatines, pterygoids, and glossohyal toothed; branchiostegal rays 16; belly rounded; dorsal fin rather long; ventral fins equidistant from head and caudal fin; vertebrae 36 to 38 + 41 to 42; air-bladder cellular.—South America (Guianas, Brazil).

Heterotis.—Mouth moderate; branchiostegal rays 7; belly rounded; dorsal fin rather long; ventral fins nearer end of snout than caudal fin; vertebrae 27 + 42 to 43; air-bladder cellular; fourth branchial arch with an accessory breathing-organ. Africa (Nile, Senegal, Gambia, Niger).

Dapedoglossus, from the Eocene of Wyoming, appears to be nearest to Scleropages, and Brychaetus, from the Eocene (London Clay) of Sheppey, Kent, to Arapaima, so far as the state of preservation of these fossils enables us to form an opinion.

Fig. 336.—Distribution of the Osteoglossids.

Dr. Günther has directed attention to the remarkable coincidence of the geographical distribution of this family and the Dipneusti, although, however, the latter are not known to be represented in the Malay Archipelago. "Not only," he adds, "are the corresponding species found within the same region, but also in the same river systems; and although such a connexion may and must be partly due to a similarity of habit, yet the identity of this singular distribution is so striking that it can only be accounted for by assuming that the Osteoglossidae are one of the earliest Teleosteous types which have been contemporaries of and have accompanied the present Dipnoi since or even before the beginning of the Tertiary epoch."

The Queensland species of Scleropages (S. leichardti) is known to the settlers by the name of Barramunda, which has also been applied to Neoceratodus. Arapaima gigas is one of the largest fresh-water Fishes known, exceeding a length of 15 feet and a weight of 400 pounds. Its flesh is much valued. Sir R. Schomburgh has observed that the mother protects the young, who, for some time after their birth, always swim in front of her. A similar observation has been made in the Gambia on Heterotis niloticus by the late J. S. Budgett, who states that the Fish builds enormous nests in swamps, in about two feet of water; the walls of the nest are made of the stems of the grasses removed by the Fish from the centre; the floor is the swamp-bottom, and is made perfectly smooth and bare. The nest appears to be used for at most four or five days; the newly-hatched larvae are provided with long external gill-filaments of a blood-red colour.[[646]]