Pelagic fishes, often descending to great depths. About 12 species are known,[[724]] referable to 6 genera: Brama, Taractes, Pterycombus, Pteraclis, Bentenia, and Steinegeria. Taractes, often confounded with Brama, differs from it not only in the larger, keeled scales, but also in the protractile mouth and in the much greater development of most of the ribs, which form curved lamellae of great width.[[725]] Pteraclis is very remarkable for the enormous, sail-like dorsal and anal fins.

Division III.—ZEORHOMBI.

Aberrant, strongly compressed Perciformes, with very short praecaudal region, modified much as in the Flat-Fishes, culminating in asymmetrical forms, and characterised by the combination of an increased number (7 to 9) of ventral rays, with absence of hypural spine (by which the Berycidae are excluded), or by asymmetry of the skull in the forms in which the spine of the ventral fin has been lost.

Among the symmetrical forms, the existing Zeidae agree with the Berycidae in having more than five soft rays to the ventral fins, and are probably derived, together with the Eocene Amphistiidae, from some common ancestral group still to be discovered in Cretaceous beds. These Zeidae have much in common with the Pleuronectidae,[[726]] and might be regarded as forming part of the family out of which the latter have sprung, were it not that they have lost the last half-gill. Amphistium is probably more nearly related to the Pleuronectidae, which may have been directly derived from the family of which it is as yet the only known representative.[[727]]

This division embraces three families only:—

A distinct spinous dorsal fin; anal spines detached from the soft portion; a ventral spine; gills three and a half, four slits between them .......... 1. Zeidae.

Dorsal and anal spines few, continuous with the soft rays; a ventral spine .......... 2. Amphistiidae.†

No spines; cranium twisted in front, with the two orbits on one side; gills 4, a slit behind the fourth .......... 3. Pleuronectidae.

† Extinct.

Fam. 1. Zeidae.—No subocular shelf; praemaxillaries strongly protractile. Gill-membranes free from isthmus; 7 or 8 branchiostegal rays; gills 3½; pseudobranchiae well developed. Lower pharyngeal bones separated. Vertebrae 30 to 46, the anterior with sessile ribs, the posterior praecaudals with long neural spines bent forwards and with transverse processes directed downwards, forming haemal arches and bearing the ribs at their extremity; epipleurals much reduced or absent; hypural large, without the basal spine or knob present in most Perciformes and all Scombriformes and Percesoces, bearing fewer than 20 rays. Dorsal and anal fins elongate, the former with a distinct spinous portion, the latter with 1 to 4 spines detached from the soft portion. Pectoral fin supported by 4 pterygials, of which 3 are in contact with the perforated scapular bone; post-temporal forked and solidly attached to the skull. Ventral fin with 1 spine and 6 to 8 soft rays.