sats a2 Sas 7 N bam me Sean ey a en es a of) eee fii ) Raa” a Tf Gua der Title Melati peel Lim x tA RY¥ ANI a Malayan Fishes by C. N. MAXWELL Director of Supplies, S. S. and F. M. S., Singapore Printed at the Methodist Publishing House 1921. ~ Contents. Preface Introduction Part I. Descriptions of Part IT. Malay Vocabulary of Fishes Part III. Systematic deseribed Authors consulted Species Classification Index to English names . List ef Plates Plates, of the Fishes Preface. Literature dealing with our local Fish and Fisheries is wanting. The members of the Profiteering Commission (1920) who were “impressed and much handicapped by the absence of any recorded information relating to fish and fisheries,’ made certain recom- mendations for the future control and organisation of the fishing industry and these recommendations have received the approval of the Government. With the best will in the world, the task of Legislators and Fishery Officers who have no data or records to guide them, and are therefore unable to discuss our local fish and fisheries except in vague terms, would be as fruitless in the future as it has been in the past. Allowing, therefore, that recorded information in the form of a hand-book on Malayan Fishes is wanted and wanted at once, the difficulty arises that there is no one qualified or likely to be qualified for some years to write such a book. The ichthyologists are not linguists and the lnguists are not ichthyologists. This being the position, the writer has the temerity to offer this small work, which he hopes will be of some temporary service until, in due course, the importance of the Malayan Fisheries has been established and Fishery bulletins written by specialists are produced, The inclusion in this volume of several hundred Malay names of fishes, many published for the first time, should lighten the labours of scientists and help the Fishery Officers, No fishes have been included which have not been definitely recorded as inhabiting the seas, estuaries and fresh water of the Malay Peninsula. The size of the work would have been trebled if fishes of Borneo, Java, Sumatra and the Malay Archipelago generally, to- gether with Siam and Burma, had been admitted. It is safe to prophesy that most of the fishes of those countries inhabit our waters and will be recorded later on. This work may be taken, therefore, as dealing, very inadequate- ly, with one-fourth of our fishes only and probably not one-half of the local Malay names have been mentioned. The writer knows very little about fresh water fishes. 4 PREFACE. The material in this book has been put together hastily during a period of five months in the intervals of considerable pressure of other work. The plates have been beautifully prepared by Mr. Black of the Survey Department, Kuala Lumpur, but it is to be regretted that many of the fishes have been badly displayed and badly photo- graphed. The writer was unable to find time to be present at the Clyde Terrace Market, Singapore, where most of the photographs were taken, the fish being borrowed for a minute or two from the stall- holders, and in consequence, the specific identification of every fish from a poor photograph has been impossible, though the writer feels confident that the families and genera have been correctly given. The writer’s thanks are due to Messrs. Stead and Roughley. But for their works on Australian Fishes, from which quotations have been freely made, this work could not have been written. To the Directors and Staff of the F. M. S. Museums and the Raffles Museum, Singapore, who have granted me facilities for consulting the reference libraries and permission to examine and photograph specimens in the Museum collections, I desire to ex- press my indebtedness. C. N. MAxweE tt, Director of Supplies. Singapore, 16th June, 1921. Coy Malayan Fishes C. N. MAXWELL INTRODUCTION. “Fish is not a luxury, but an absolute necessary of life, with a rice- eating population, ’’ ““It is obvious that in order to secure an adequate and plentiful supply of fish, especially to large cities like Caleutta............ we must go fur- ther out—into the deep sea—which, after all, is the largest repository of piscime wealth or cle isla - facts and figures relating to the sea-fisheries of Great Britain, the United States and Canada............ ought to open our eyes to the great possibilities which lie before us.’’ ““In Bengal, Government will have to do a great deal more; it will have to create and build up the sea-fishing industry, with the object of handing it, let us hope at no distant date, to private enterprise. ““TIt will also be necessary to show the best way of working the estuarine fisheries by improved methods of capture and of bringing the catches ex- peditiously tc market in a sound state.’’ Sir K, Gupta, K. C. S. I. Report on Fisheries of Bengal and into Fishery matters in Europe and America, 1908. “1 appeal-to the whole population of these Islands, a maritime people who owe everything to the sea. I urge them to become better informed in regard to our national sea-fisheries and take a more enlightened interest in the basal principles that underlie a rational regulation and exploitation of these important industries. National etficiency depends to a very great extent upon the degree in which scientific results and methods are appreciated by the people and scientific investigation is promoted by the Government and other adminis- trative authorities. The principles and discoveries ofscience apply to aquiculture no less than to agriculture. To increase the harvest of the sea the fisheries must be continuously investigated............................. 3 W. A. Herdman, C.B.E., D. Sce., F.B.S., ete. Annual address of the President of the British Association 1920. ‘