III. Pectoral rays attached to an undivided cartilaginous plate representing the pterygials; ventral fins jugular, reduced to a filament formed of two adnate rays; fins without spines .......... 15. Podatelidae.
Fam. 1. Trachinidae.—Second suborbital with an internal lamina, supporting the globe of the eye; mouth large, protractile. Ribs and epipleurals nearly equally developed, sessile; posterior praecaudal vertebrae with short parapophyses. Gill-membranes free from isthmus; 6 branchiostegal rays; gills 4, a slit behind the fourth; pseudobranchiae well developed. Scapula and coracoid well developed, a foramen between them; pectoral rays attached to the scapula and to three short and broad pterygials, two of which are in contact with the coracoid. Ventral fins jugular, close together, with 1 spine and 5 soft rays. Body elongate, covered with small cycloid scales forming oblique bands. A short spinous dorsal and a long soft dorsal and anal. Vertebrae 35-43 (10-11 + 25-32). No air-bladder.
This family includes but one genus (Trachinus), the Weevers, with 4 species, occurring on the coasts of Europe, the Mediterranean, and West Africa north of the Equator. A fossil species has been described from the Upper Miocene of Croatia. The two British species, T. draco and T. vipera, are well known for the painful wounds which they are able to inflict through their sharp, grooved dorsal and opercular spines, which convey a very active poisonous fluid secreted by small glands at their base. As these fish like to bury themselves partially in the sands in shallow water, people bathing occasionally tread on them with, as a rule, at least violent pain as a result.[[743]] The flesh is not bad eating, and great numbers of the larger species (T. draco), are brought to the Paris market.
Fam. 2. Percophiidae.—Percophis, with a single species from the coast of Brazil, differs from the Trachinidae in the scapular fenestra being situated entirely in the scapula, in the ventral fins being rather widely separated at the base, and in the quincuncial disposition of the scales. Vertebrae, 57 (22 + 35). Bleekeria and Embolichthys, from the Indian and Japanese seas, with the ventral fins rudimentary or absent, which have been placed in the Ammodytidae, appear to be related to Percophis.
Fam. 3. Leptoscopidae.—Differ from the preceding in the absence of a subocular shelf. Scapular fenestra either in the scapula or between the scapula and the coracoid. Mostly Marine Fishes, various in form, from the tropics to the Antarctic circle, some occurring at great depths. About 25 species, referable to 7 genera: Leptoscopus, Parapercis, Neopercis, Pteropsaron, Bembrops, Pleuragramma, Chimarrhichthys. The latter, from New Zealand, is the only freshwater form of the family, and is remarkably adapted for living in alpine torrents. Pleuragramma antarcticum, brought home by the Southern Cross Expedition, comes from 78° 35´ S. lat., the farthest point at which fishes have yet been obtained in the Antarctic region. Macrius amissus, from the Pacific Ocean at a depth of 1000 fathoms, which, judging from a very imperfect description, probably belongs to this family, measures 5 feet, and is the largest known deep-sea Teleostean.
Fam. 4. Nototheniidae.—Also closely allied to the Trachinidae. No subocular shelf; a single nostril on each side; ventrals widely separated; pectoral arch usually as in the Trachinidae, but scapular fenestra sometimes in the scapula (Trematomus). Body varying much in shape according to the genera, the form sometimes suggestive of the Cottidae; scales usually ctenoid, sometimes absent; anterior (spinous) dorsal sometimes absent; lateral line often double, or even triple. Mostly from the Southern seas and the Antarctic circle. About 40 species, referable to 19 genera, of which the following are the principal:—Notothenia, Trematomus, Chaenichthys, Champsocephalus, Cryodraco, Acanthaphritis, Eleginops, Bovichthys, Gymnodraco, Gerlachia, Bathydraco, Racovitzaia, Harpagifer, Draconetta.
Fam. 5. Uranoscopidae.—Agree with the Trachinidae in general structure, and in the closely approximated ventrals. Scales very small, in oblique bands, or absent. Pterygials much reduced, fused with the scapula and the coracoid; scapular fenestra in the scapula. Parapophyses strongly developed on the praecaudal vertebrae, with the ribs attached to their upper surface. The head is very large, broad, partly covered with bony plates; cleft of the mouth vertical; eyes on the upper surface of the head. Vertebrae 25 to 30 (12-14 + 13-16). Four genera: Uranoscopus, Anema, Cathetostoma, Ariscopus, with 15 species, from the tropical seas, northwards to the Mediterranean and Japan, southwards to South Australia and New Zealand.
Fam. 6. Trichonotidae.—Small elongate fishes very nearly related to the Callionymidae, with which they agree in the arrangement of the bones at the base of the pectoral fins and the absence of epipleurals; but post-temporal more distinctly forked and detached from the skull, suborbital arch ossified (without subocular shelf), gill-openings wide, a single long dorsal fin, a long anal fin, and body covered with scales. Vertebrae 48-53. Five marine species, referable to 3 genera: Trichonotus and Taeniolabrus from the Indian Ocean, and Hemerocoetes from New Zealand.
Fam. 7. Callionymidae.—Suborbital arch ligamentous; entopterygoid absent; basis cranii simple; mouth rather small, protractile. Vertebrae few (7 + 14), the last two much enlarged; most of the vertebrae with bifid neural processes, simulating a "spina bifida"; first vertebra ribless,[[744]] second to fourth with sessile ribs and no transverse processes, fifth to seventh with ribs inserted on short transverse processes; no epipleurals. Post-temporal forked, but completely adnate to the skull; scapula separated from the coracoid by a fenestra; pectoral rays attached to the scapula and to three broad pterygials, all three in contact with the coracoid. Ventral fins jugular, widely separated from each other, with 5 soft rays in addition to a short spine. Gill-openings very narrow, generally reduced to a foramen on the upper side of the operculum; 6 branchiostegal rays; gills 4, a slit behind the fourth; pseudobranchiae well developed. Body naked. Two dorsal fins, the first composed of a few flexible spines; second dorsal and anal rather short (7-10 rays).
Small marine fishes, referable to 2 genera; Callionymus, with about 45 species, nearly cosmopolitan, and Vulsus, with a single species from Amboyna and Celebes. In the common British species, the Dragonet (Callionymus lyra), the male acquires very marked secondary characters, the snout becoming more elongate, the second dorsal fin much produced, and the body ornamented with yellow and blue bands. The courtship and pairing have been described by E. W. L. Holt,[[745]] who observes that this curious fish offers the only instance of a definite sexual intercourse among Teleosteans propagating by pelagic ova. In the Indian C. carebares it is the female that is the more brightly coloured.