Identifier: annualreportof6189919newy (find matches)Title: Annual report of the Forest, Fish and Game Commission of the State of New YorkYear: 1900 (1900s)Authors: New York (State). Forest, Fish and Game CommissionSubjects: Forests and forestryFisheriesGame and game-birdsPublisher: (Albany, N.Y. : The Commission)Contributing Library: Smithsonian LibrariesDigitizing Sponsor: Biodiversity Heritage LibraryView Book Page: Book ViewerAbout This Book: Catalog EntryView All Images: All Images From Book Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.Text Appearing Before Image:pecies inhabits the Atlantic Ocean and is generally common southward onboth coasts, straying north in summer to England and Newfoundland. Mitchillsexamples were 5 to 6 inches long, and the length of the barbel was 2^ inches. Theadult size is 15 inches. 86. Double-Bearded Flying Fish (Cypsilurus furcatus Mitchill). The Double-Bearded Flying Fish is described by Mitchill in the work cited, page449, plate V, figure 2. DeKay did not know either of the Bearded Flying Fishes andborrowed his accounts from Mitchill and others. This is a small species, about 6 inches long, frequenting warm seas north toCape Cod and to the Mediterranean. Specimens have been taken at Newport, R. I.The barbels vary in size and number. 87. Blunt-snouted Flying Fish (Cypsilurus gibbifrons C. & V.). This is a small fish of the Atlantic Ocean, the length of the described specimensbeing 8 inches. One example was caught at Newport, Rhode Island, by SamuelPowell. Another is in the Museum of Natural History at Paris.Text Appearing After Image:z Tj FOREST, FISH AND GAME COMMISSION. 409 Order HEMIBRANCHH. The Half Gills.Family GASTEROSTEID^E. Sticklebacks. 88. Ten-spined Stickleback (Pygosteus pungitius Linnaeus). The Ten-spined Stickleback is described by DeKay under the name of theMany-spined Stickleback. He states that this fish is found both in fresh and saltwater. He had specimens caught in the harbor of New York in company with thecommon Pipe Fish, and also from a fresh water pond on the island of New York,where communication with the sea is interrupted during the greater part of theyear. This fish is known in Great South Bay as the Thornback. A specimen wastaken in Swan River in September, 1890. In 1898, this Stickleback was not abund-ant in most localities visited, but was present in Peconic, Shinnecock and GreatSouth Bays. It is less abundant in Gravesend Bay than the other Sticklebacks.At Woods Hole, Mass., it is common in Eel Pond, Quisset Harbor and HadleyHarbor, but rare in open harbors. It is a permanent resideNote About Images Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.
Summary[edit] Description: Butterfish, Peprilus triacanthus, 82 mm TL. Off Tilghman Island, Talbot County, MD - 10/14/2009. Photo by Robert Aguilar, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center. Photo taken after preservation in 70% Ethyl Alcohol. Date: 28 April 2006, 01:54. Source: Peprilus_triacanthus_TalCo-MD_10-14-09. Author: Smithsonian Environmental Research Center.
Summary[edit] Description: butterfish, Peprilus triacanthus, 94mm SL. Kiptopeke, Northampton County, VA - 08/16/13. Photo by Robert Aguilar, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center. Date: 22 November 2006, 00:20. Source: Peprilus_triacanthus_(S0917). Author: Smithsonian Environmental Research Center.
Museum of Veterinary Anatomy FMVZ USP / Wagner Souza e Silva
Wikimedia Commons
Summary[edit] Description: English: Harvestfish “Peprilus paru”. Technique of alcohol and formalin fixation on display at the Museum of Veterinary Anatomy, FMVZ USP. Date: 7 January 2016, 09:36:21. Source: Museum of Veterinary Anatomy FMVZ USP. Author: Museum of Veterinary Anatomy FMVZ USP / Wagner Souza e Silva.
Summary[edit] Description: harvestfish, Peprilus paru (alepidotus), 49mm SL. Manokin River, Somerset County, MD - 5/28/12. Photo by Robert Aguilar, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center. This species is synonymized with P. alepidotus according to WORMS and ITIS. Historically, this species has been classified as P. alepidotus in the mid-Atlantic. P. paru ranges from the northeastern US to southern South America and there appears to be genetic differences among the disparate subpopulations. Further investigation into possible species level differences is warranted. Date: 17 November 2006, 02:32. Source: Peprilus_paru_(S0495). Author: Smithsonian Environmental Research Center.
Planche N°64 du livre "Le règne animal distribué d'après son organisation" par Georges Cuvier (Tome 8), seconde édition de 1828, représentant : -en haut : Kurtus cornutus -au milieu : Peprilus cornutus -en bas : Kurtus blochii