Fig. 360.—Acestra gladius, from the Jurua River, with upper and lower views of head and trunk. (⅔ nat. size.)

The "Prenadillas" of the Andes, Arges and Stygogenes, were believed to live in subterranean waters within the bowels of active volcanoes, and to be ejected with streams of mud and water during eruptions, a story that has been repeated by Humboldt. The fact is that they live in small torrents at great altitudes (up to 10,700 feet), and are swept down during periods of disturbance caused by the eruption of the volcano.[[686]] The members of the sub-family Loricariinae vary much in the shape of the body, which may be short and stout, or more or less slender, the extreme in the latter respect being attained by the species of the genus Acestra.

Fam. 6. Aspredinidae.—This family is also closely related to the Siluridae. The ribs are sessile as in the Loricariidae, but inserted very low down on the centra, which higher up bear strong transverse processes. The opercular bone is entirely absent. The gill-opening is reduced to a foramen in front of the pectoral fin. The head is extremely depressed and the mouth terminal; the tail is very slender; the body is naked. The air-bladder is large and free, the intestinal canal short. Four genera from South America: Aspredo, Bunocephalus, Bunocephalichthys, Dysichthys. Species 18. Aspredo, of the Guianas, the largest form, reaching to about a foot in length, is remarkable for the manner in which the female carries her eggs. The skin of the lower parts assumes a spongy condition about the breeding season, and the eggs, after being deposited, become attached to the lower surface of the head, belly, and paired fins, forming a single layer; each egg becomes connected with the skin of the mother by a cup-shaped, pedunculate base, supplied with blood-vessels and coated with a layer of epithelium, the formation of which is still unexplained.[[687]]

CHAPTER XXII

TELEOSTEI (CONTINUED): SYMBRANCHII—APODES—HAPLOMI—HETEROMI—CATOSTEOMI—PERCESOCES—ANACANTHINI

Sub-Order 3. Symbranchii

Eel-shaped Fishes without paired fins, with the pectoral arch free or suspended from the skull, and with the anterior vertebrae distinct, without Weberian ossicles. Gill-openings confluent into a single, ventral slit. Air-bladder absent.

The structure of the skull conforms to that of typical Malacopterygians. The praemaxillary and maxillary are well developed, the latter placed behind the former, and forming but a very small part of the oral border; the symplectic is present; the parietals form a long sagittal suture, and separate the frontals from the supraoccipital. The vertebrae are very numerous, the praecaudal bearing very strong parapophyses, to which short, slender ribs are attached. The skin is naked (Symbranchidae) or covered with minute scales (Amphipnoidae), and the vertical fins are rudimentary, reduced to mere dermal folds.

Like the Apodes, which they resemble in general appearance, these Fishes are no doubt derived from some low type with abdominal ventral fins, but whether from the Malacopterygii or the Haplomi we have as yet no data from which to conclude. Only two families are known.