Vertebrae without transverse processes; gill-membranes attached to isthmus; dorsal and anal fins formed of unarticulated, widely set rays; dentition very feeble .......... 7. Luvaridae.

B. Pseudobranchiae absent; no well-developed transverse processes to the praecaudal vertebrae; the ribs and the epipleurals inserted close together on the centra; snout short and very deep .......... 8. Coryphaenidae.

III. Praemaxillaries not protractile, or if slightly protractile, scales large; dorsal and anal fins elongate, without distinct spinous division; most of the praecaudal vertebrae with strong haemapophyses, to which the ribs are attached .......... 9. Bramidae.

Fam. 1. Carangidae.—Praemaxillaries more or less protractile. Vertebrae 24 to 26; ribs behind the parapophyses; epipleurals on the parapophyses, rarely on the ribs.[[721]] Body covered with small scales, or naked, often with enlarged scutes on each side of the body or of the tail; dorsal spines few, or slender or rudimentary; a more or less developed spine adnate to the soft portion of the anal, often preceded by a pair of spines separated from the rest of the fin. Pseudobranchiae usually present. Inhabitants of the seas of the temperate and tropical regions, many of the species having a very wide range. About 150 species are known.

Principal recent genera: Caranx, Chloroscombrus, Selene, Mene, Apolectus, Nematistius, Seriola, Seriolichthys, Naucrates, Trachynotus, Zalocys, Lichia, Paropsis, Chorinemus. Species of Caranx, Mene, and Seriola have been described from the Eocene and Miocene of Europe, in which occur also the fossil genera named Vomeropsis, Archaeus, Carangopsis, Carangodes, Ductor, and Semiophorus.

The family is represented on our coasts by the common Horse-Mackerel, Caranx trachurus. The young of this species keep together in small bands in the neighbourhood of medusae, under which they seek shelter when disturbed. The Pilot-Fish, Naucrates ductor, is a truly pelagic fish of wide distribution, which occasionally appears on our coasts, accompanying large sharks and ships. Much has been written on the marvellous habits of this little fish, which is said to lead the shark like a pilot, directing it to its food, in exchange for which services the pilot enjoys protection from the fear which the proximity of its formidable companion inspires to its enemies among other carnivorous fishes, and an abundance of food from the shark's excrements.[[722]]

Fam. 2. Rhachicentridae.—Praemaxillaries slightly protractile. Vertebrae 25 (11 + 14), without well-developed parapophyses; ribs and epipleurals inserted close together on the centra. Body covered with very small scales; a series of short isolated dorsal spines; soft dorsal and anal long; pectorals inserted low down. A single genus, Rhachicentrum (Elacate), with a single species from the coasts of the tropical and warmer parts of the Atlantic and of the Indian Ocean.

Fam. 3. Scombridae.—Praemaxillaries large, not protractile, beak-like. Vertebrae 30 to 50, without transverse processes, but some of the hinder praecaudals with haemal arches; ribs inserted on the centra or on the haemal arches when these are present; epipleurals all on the centra. Scales cycloid and usually very small (except in Gastrochisma), sometimes absent. A spinous dorsal fin formed of slender spines, folding into a sheath; soft dorsal longer and broken up into finlets, similar to the anal; pectoral inserted high up the sides. Hypural bones completely embraced by the forked bases of the caudal rays. Pseudobranchiae present.

Fig. 415.—Tunny (Thunnus thynnus). (After Cuvier and Valenciennes.) × ⅛.