Fig. 355.—Gastromyzon borneensis, ventral view, natural size.
Fam. 4. Siluridae.—Mouth non-protractile, bordered by the praemaxillaries and the maxillaries, or by the praemaxillaries only, the maxillaries being often rudimentary and supporting the base of a barbel; jaws usually toothed. Parietal bones usually confluent with the supraoccipital, forming a single large plate (parieto-occipital); symplectic and suboperculum absent. Pharyngeal bones normal, with small teeth. Ribs attached to the lower surface of long parapophyses; epipleurals absent. Pectoral fins inserted very low down, folding like the ventrals, often armed, like the dorsal, with a strong bony spine. Body naked or with bony plates. An adipose dorsal fin often present. One to four pairs of barbels.
The skull and the opercular apparatus show a reduction in the number of elements as compared with the Characinids and Cyprinids, such as the absence of the metapterygoid, the often rudimentary, rod-like condition of the palatine, and the fusion of the parietals with the supraoccipital.[[667]] The scapular arch is solidly united to the skull and is often very massive, and the occiput may be connected with the base of the dorsal fin by a buckler formed by the expansion of the first and second inter-neural bones. The pterygials or supports of the pectoral rays are large and reduced to two or three.[[668]] Teeth are rarely present on the maxillary bones (Diplomystes, Eutropiichthys), being usually confined to the praemaxillaries and dentaries; they often occur on the palate. The branchiostegal rays vary from 4 to 17. The lips are sometimes much developed, and may form a sucking disk, as in Euchilichthys and Exostoma. As in the Cyprinids, the pungent spines which may arm the fins have nothing in common with the true spines of Acanthopterygians; they result from the co-ossification, with age, of successive articles; but, contrary to the condition in the Cyprinids, the axis of the spine is single, not double. The ventral rays vary from 6 to 16, 6 being the most frequent number. Some of the exterior vertebrae may be solidly fused together, and also with the occipito-nuchal buckler. Prof. Ramsay Wright[[669]] has shown, by a study of the development, that the complex which follows the first vertebra, which is more or less rudimentary, if distinct, represents the fusion of the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th vertebrae, without even nerve-foramina denoting its compound origin; the first, strongly developed, transverse process represents that of the 4th vertebra. The air-bladder is usually large and trilocular, but additional septa may greatly complicate its structure, and external diverticula may also exist;[[670]] it may be more or less reduced and entirely or partially enclosed in a bilateral bony capsule formed by the transverse processes of the vertebrae, and sometimes (Nematogenys) ankylosed to the skull. In a few genera, like Cetopsis, the air-bladder seems to be altogether absent: it is reduced to two small oval sacs encased in the large compound anterior vertebra. As in Loaches, the air-bladder is often in immediate contact with the skin behind the shoulder-girdle. The intestinal tract may be simple and short (carnivorous forms) or extremely long and convoluted (Callichthys); as in Cyprinids, pyloric appendages are absent.
Cat-Fishes, as Silurids are usually called, are a large family embracing some 1000 species, spread over the fresh waters of all parts of the world, but mostly from between the tropics.[[671]] Only a few are marine (Plotosus, Arius, Galeichthys).
This family may be divided into eight subfamilies
(i.) Clariinae.—Dorsal and anal fins very long, extending to the caudal; gill-membranes free, or narrowly united to the isthmus. Asiatic-African genera: Clarias, Heterobranchus, Plotosus. Asiatic-Australian: Copidoglanis. Asiatic: Cranoglanis. African: Clariallabes, Allabenchelys, Gymnallabes, Channalabes. Australian: Cnidoglanis.
(ii.) Silurinae.—Dorsal fin very short or absent, anal very long; gill-membranes free. Europaeo-Asiatic: Silurus. Asiatic: Silurodon, Silurichthys, Saccobranchus, Wallago, Belodontichthys, Cryptopterus, Callichrous, Hemisilurus, Ailiichthys, Ailia, Schilbichthys, Laïs, Pseudeutropius, Pangasius, Osteogeniosus, Helicophagus, Silondia. African: Eutropius, Schilbe, Siluranodon, Physailia, Parailia. Australian: Eumeda, Neosilurus.
(iii.) Bagrinae.—Dorsal fin short, followed by a more or less elongate adipose fin; anal short or moderate; gill-membranes free. Asia, Africa, America, Australia: Arius. Asia and America: Amiurus. Asiatic: Macrones, Pseudobagrus, Liocassis, Bagroides, Bagrichthys, Rita, Acrochordonichthys, Acysis, Olyra, Hemipimelodus. African: Bagrus, Clarotes, Chrysichthys, Gephyroglanis, Auchenoglanis, Notoglanidium, Anoplopterus, Galeichthys. American: Diplomystes, Paradiplomystes, Aelurichthys, Genidens, Noturus, Callophysus, Pimelodus, Pimelodina, Nanoglanis, Heptapterus, Nematogenys, Pariolius, Pirinampus, Conorhynchus, Notoglanis, Callophysus, Sorubim, Piramutana, Bagropsis, Sciades. Australian: Nedystoma, Pachyula.
(iv.) Doradinae.—A short-rayed dorsal fin and an adipose, the latter sometimes replaced by a second rayed dorsal; anal short or moderate; gill-clefts more or less widely interrupted below. African: Synodontis, Chiloglanis, Atopochilus, Euchilichthys, Mochocus, Doumea, Phractura, Paraphractura, Andersonia, Trachyglanis, Belonoglanis. Asiatic: Bagarius, Glyptosternum, Gagata, Pseudecheneis, Exostoma, Sisor, Breitensteinia, Sosia, Chaca. South American: Doras, Oxydoras, Leptodoras, Physopyxis, Glanidium, Centromochlus, Wertheimeria, Cetopsis.
(v.) Malopterurinae.—No rayed dorsal fin, an adipose; anal short; gill-clefts interrupted below. African: Malopterurus.