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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. 


‘<In no other section of our food supply............ could the applica- 
tion of capital to a comparatively small amount mean so considerable a 
development. ice) s et Both as regards railway and cold storage facilities 
TAG: THIN rademas Tha Sm bam CY A a Transportation— 
cheap and rapid, must be provided by the State—fish trains should have 
precedence—and rates should be very low, even to the extent of entailing 
@onsiderable loss.’’ 


The Earl of Dunraven. Paper read be- 
fore the Royal Statistical Society, March 
20, 1917. 


6 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Fish are curious creatures and we have still a great deal to 
learn about their habits. Some like the Salmon and the Shad 
(Ikan térubok) live in the sea and spawn in the rivers. Such 
fish are termed anadromous and the term is also applied to fish 
which make a migration from the deep sea coastwards for the pur- 
pose of spawning. 


Others, like some Eels, live in the rivers and spawn in the sea. 
The common Eel of Europe (Anguilla vulgaris) spawns far out 
in the ocean, after which both males and females die, never return- 
ing to fresh-water a second time. Fishes which live in the rivers 
and spawn in the sea are termed catadromous, 

Some fishes do not lay eggs but bring forth their young alive. 
Examples of viviparous fishes occur in the Shark and Ray families 
and also in the BLENNIDAE, CYPRINODONTIDAE and SCORPAENIDAE. 
Instances of functional hermaphroditism occur, and some of the 
SERRANIDAE ((Sea-Perches) are invariably hermaphrodite and self- 
fertilising. 

A Sea-Bream, Chrysophrys auratus, is an example of successive 
hermaphroditism, the male and female sex-cells ripening alter- 
nately. As. an occasional variation hermaphroditism has been re- 
corded in such well known fishes as the Cod, the Mackerel and the 
Herring." 

The eggs of fishes may be divided into two kinds; the large 
(demersal ova) which are heavy and sink; and the small (pelagic 
ova) which are buoyant and float at or below the surface according 
to their density. The buovancy of the pelagic egg depends, how- 
ever, on the density of the sea and the pelagic egg becomes demersal, 
in position, in brackish water and in fresh water. 

Demersal eges may be either viscid and adhesive or smooth 
and non-adhesive. | 

Pelagic eggs are distinguished by their lightness, buoyancy, 
small size and “remarkable transparency. They are always non- 
adhesive and free and they invariably belong to Marine Fishes. 
As a general rule it may be said that fresh water fish produce 
demersal ova and marine fish pelagic ova. 

When we realise that the eggs of most Marine fishes float, it 
is obviously futile to speak of ouarding the “ spawning grounds ” 
on our coasts. It is necessary to mention this because ‘at one time 
it was thought that spawning took place on shallow banks or even 
close in shore but this is now known to be incorrect, except in the 
case of the true Herring which lays demersal eggs in comparatively 
shallow water, and a few less important species. 

Amongst our important Marine food fishes which are known 
to produce. pelagic eggs are members of the Herring, Mackerel, 
Horse-Mackerel, Sea- Perch, Mullet and Flatfish families, i in fact, all 
our basi fish. 


Camb: Nat: Hist: 1904, 


MALAYAN FISHES. iG 


Fishes known to produce demersal eggs on our coasts are the 
Gar-Pike (Todak) and the Flying-fish (Bélalang) and their eggs 
have viscid threads by which they become attached or entangled 
with foreign objects or eggs of the same species. The eggs of the 
Todak may be seen entangled in fishing stakes (kelong) in masses,. 
which look rather like cobwebs. 


When the breeding season arrives fishes migrate to the loca- 
lities most suitable for the deposition of their eggs. At this time 
our principal food fish which produce pelagic eggs proceed far out 


Da 


to sea against the prevailing monsoonal current. This is known as 


the contranatant spawning migration. After spawning, the eggs 
are brought back by the current towards the coast. This is the 
denatant drift. 


Though the eggs of many species of fish hatch out fry which 
are miniature representations of the adult fish, the eggs of others 
hatch out darval forms, known as Leptocephali, which bear no re- 
semblance to their patents. These Leptocephali are transparent, 
attenuated creatures, often ribbon-like in shape, with very small 
heads. They appear to be incapable of much effort and to be 
specially adapted for passive drift; in fact, the Leptocephalus 
stage appear to be a marvellous provision of Nature to enable 
the young of certain fish which spawn far out at sea to reach 
the shallows near the coasts in a state of suspended animation. 
We know that the Tarpin (Jegalops cyprinoides) Malay Bulan- 
bulan and the Giant Herring (Flops hawatiensis) Malay Ban- 
dang, pass through a Leptocephalus stage, and as no Malay 
fisherman whom I have questioned, has ever seen the Parang- 
parang (Chirocentrus dorab) until it was a few inches long, 
it may be because this fish passes through a larval metamor- 
phosis also. It is only within recent years, that certain Lepto- 
cephali, long known to naturalists, have been identified as larval 
Eels." 


For example, Leptocephalus brevirostris is now known to be 
the larva of the common Eel of Europe (Anguilla vulgaris) and 
Leptocephalus morrisvi has been watched through its metamorphosis 
into the Conger Kel (Conger vulgaris). 

If the contranatant spawning migration is against the S. W. 
monsoonal current, the ova and larvae will drift in a N. E. direction 
and those that enter the Straits of Malacca, for instance, would 
gradually approach the West coast of the Peninsula. Similarly, 
a spawning migration in the South China Sea during the N. E. 
monsoon would result in the larvae being carried along and dis- 
persed along the East coast of the Peninsula, 


As the larvae approach the coast they come within the influence 
of the tides and while continuing their progress with the monsoon 
current they are carried backwards and forwards by the daily ebb 
and flow of the tides. 


1 Meek, Migrations of Fish. 


8 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Their density causes them to sink lower in brackish water until 
they eventually find bottom in the shallow bays and estuaries and in 
this way are gradually dispersed all long the coast. Then a 
metamorphosis takes place and the feeble Leptocephalus is trans- 
formed into the active little fish which swims vigorously against 
the current and feeds incessantly and voraciously all the time. 


In a recent report on the Fisheries of the Straits Settlements 
and Federated Malay States the writer drew attention to the 
Chinese fish-traps called pompang and other licensed fixed engines 
known as ambai, langgat, etc., of which there are several thousand 
between Penang and Port Swettenham. Though there are many 
kinds of these traps they all work on the same principle. In every 
case there is a wide V-shaped entrance terminating in a long 
funnel-shaped bag made of sacking or plaited split bamboos. The 
position of these traps is arranged with respect to the currents 
and tides so as to intercept the larvae and immature fish during 
their denatant drift to the shallows. Most of these traps float, and 
swing round with each tide so as to take toll both with the ebb and 
the flow, 


An examination of the contents of these traps shews that in 
addition to immature fish, which any Malay fisherman will tell you 
are the fry of valuable food fish, the bulk of the catches are made 
up of feeble, attenuated, small-headed larval-lhke fishes which the 
Malays call Bunga ayer and to which they attach no value. 


There can be little doubt that scientific investigation will prove 
that the Bunga ayer are valuable food-fish in the Leptocephalus 
stage, 


This subject has been treated at some length because of its 
great economic importance and because the questions raised cannot 
be answered except by a specialist in marine biology. 


Though myriads of larval and immature fish are caught daily 
for duck food, pig food and manure, and thousands of pikuls are 
exported as dried fish refuse, it has been argued, while admitting 
ambar catches are used mainly as pig food, that it appears a 
debatable point whether the flesh value thus produced is not as 
great as the extra fish value which might be caught if the fry killed 
by ambai were left undisturbed! 


We cannot afford to allow such points to remain debatable. 


Let us go on with the life history of the tiny fish which we 
left in the first stage of an active existence in the shallow waters 
near the coast. These shallows are the nurseries or recruiting 
grounds where the fry keep together in schools or shoals. 


“After a period in relatively shallow water, the shoal 
migrates to deeper water. At first the migration is not to a 
great distance, but with growth the annual pulsation becomes 
greater and greater, 


MALAYAN FISHES. 9 


“ The migration is not merely inshore and offshore, but is 
at the same time in a definite direction with respect to the 
coast. 


“Thus the life of the fish is spent until in from three to 
six years at the most, the call of maturity comes. In response 
thereto a migration takes place which appears to be usually 
beyond the limits of the seasonal migrations of the school.”? 


A few moments’ consideration will enable one to realise that the 
life habits of every species of fish are subject to certain fixed laws. 
It is only a matter of systematic organised research to discover 
those laws and to apply. the knowledge to the development of 
Malayan Fisheries. 


We can learn what has been done in Canada, Great Britain and 
the United States, but this general learning must be supplemented 
by detailed local research. We must work out our own local tables. 


There are, probably, no less than 2000 species of fish in 
Malayan waters. There are certainly not less than 500 species of 
economic importance, and if we take 250 species as being valuable 
Marine food fishes, some idea may be formed of the amount of 
research required before we shall be in a position to state definitely 
where a certain species may be found in full roe, where its spawning 
erounds are, where the recruiting grounds of its young are and 
when and where it travels during its seasonal migrations. 


Information of this kind will enable our fishermen to catch fish 
in the best condition and in the greatest quantities and this is the 
information which the Fishery Departments of Canada and America 
give the fishermen, even to the extent of using aeroplanes, fitted 
with wireless, to locate shoals and disseminate information. 


There is a great deal of knowledge, of which no use is being 
made, in the possession of many illiterate Malay fishermen, spread 
over wide areas, all along the coasts of Malaya. This knowledge 
should be collected and tabulated. 

The Departments of Fisheries in Ceylon, Australia, India, 
the Netherlands Indies and the Philippines have published records. 
dealing with the fishes which also inhabit our seas and, in con- 
sequence, the Fishery Officers and scientists have the benefit of a 


vast amount of scientific research work on which to build up local 
data. 


Though the question of damage to our marine fisheries has 
evoked some attention during the past two years, it is doubtful 
whether serious thought has been given to the terrible damage done 
to the fresh water fisheries by mining silt. Engineers have fought 
for their roads and railways against the invading silt, but, to judge 
from official reports, no one has fought for the fisheries and the 
need for protection of the riverine rights of the people would appear 
to have passed unnoticed. 


1 Meek, Migrations of Fish. 


10 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Within the writer's memory the main rivers of the West coast 
were fine clear streams. The waters provided irrigation for the 
rice fields and contained quantities of fine edible fish. These rivers 
are now thick turbid streams carrying a heavy burden of slime and 
silt. 


We have probably one hundred different species of, Carp alone, 
besides dozens of species of Catfish and many fine fish belonging to 
the families OSPHROMENIDAE, NOTOPTERIDAR, etc., ete. Catfish can 
exist in slime and silt though it is questionable whether they can 
thrive, but Carp certainly require clear water to breed in. 


One of our Carp the Kélah (Barbus sp.) has been described 
by Swettenham as the finest fresh water fish he ever ate in the East, 
and the Kalui (Osphromenus olfax) is so highly esteemed that 
several attempts have been made to introduce it into France, and it 
has been acclimatised in Mauritius, Australia and parts of India. 


Tin mining is necessary and some pollution of the rivers is 
unavoidable, but there have been many cases where carelessly con- 
structed dams have broken and a turbid flood of slime has been 
allowed to pour direct into the rivers for months while leisurely 
Tepairs are being made. Though much of the damage done in the 
past is irremediable, let us hope that a more general ‘recognition of 
the value of the fresh water fisheries will result in a fair measure 
of protection in the future. There are still rivers which can be 
saved. 


By saving our fresh water fisheries we shall save, incidentally, 
our rice-fields, for Rice and Fish in addition to being the two 
staple foods of the country are inseparable. When you destroy one 
you destroy the other. 


Where you can grow rice you can catch fish and where you can 
no longer catch fish you cannot grow rice. 


To explain: the mining silt which pours into the rivers gradual- 
ly raises the bed of the stream and so causes a rise in the water 
table. A rise in the water table limits the area of drainable land, 
and drainage is as necessary to a rice field as irrigation. So the 
area which can be planted with rice becomes smaller and smaller 
until eventually the water table is so high that the river channel 
can no longer carry off storm water. The resultant floods deposit 
a layer of slime and silt on the rice fields and complete the work of 
destruction. 


Fish cannot breed in the rivers polluted with slime and silt, 
so the Fisheries and rice fields perish simultaneously. In our 
policy of construction and development these facts should not be 
lost sight of. 


There is yet another point which has received no attention and 
that concerns anadromous Marine fishes which enter rivers to 
spawn. Among these fishes the principal one is the Shad (Téru- 


MALAYAN FISHES. ial 


bok), which ascends the rivers to a considerable distance during the 
breeding season. It arrives on the coast in enormous shoals, and 
twenty eight years ago, as Skeat has recorded, they were invariably 
taken in full roe, when they are in the best condition, 


Recent reports show that Térubok have fallen off both in 
quantity and, as the writer knows from his own experience, in 
quality, those now taken being mostly spent fish in which state 
they are positively unwholesome. 


These fish used to be taken in such numbers that the nets con- 
tained more than the boats could load. Within the past few years 
the writer has, on several occasions, picked up these fish by hand in 
a dying condition apparently choked by silt in their attempt to 
ascend the rivers. Failing to ascend the rivers the Shad must 
either spawn in the sea or in the polluted lower reaches and in either 
case the eggs perish. 


Unfortunately, the migrations of the Térubok do not, as far as 
the writer’s experience goes, take it to the East coast of the Penin- 
sula, so that, the Térubok fishery of Malaya appears to be in 
danger of extinction. 


This introduction would not be complete without some mention 
of the conditions under which the transport of fish from the source 
to the consumer takes place. 


There is a general agreement that transport is bad. Many 
schemes have been evolved for ensuring rapid transport and reduced 
prices, but none of them have been put into practice and probably 
none are commercially practicable. A permanent scheme is re- 
quired that can be built up by degrees; the writer has advocated 
in two reports the use of cold storage. While allowing that the 
expenditure will be great we should not lose sight of the fact that 
it will be a permanent and sound investment. 


Let us consider the existing conditions first. 


In a temperate climate fish will keep fresh for days. Here, 
near the Equator, fish caught in the morning are in an advanced state 
of decomposition before the evening. Decay is arrested by the use 
of ice. For instance, ice manufactured in Kuala Lumpur is taken 
by train to Port Swettenham and sold to small middlemen who 
go to sea and purchase from the fishermen. These middlemen are 
bound as a rule to sell the fish to the ice dealers, who again sell to 
other middlemen, who sell to the retailers in the markets. The 
result is that fish costing $15 a pikul at sea cost $80 a pikul in 
Kuala Lumpur, 30 miles away. 


Ice melts rapidly in the trains, in the boats, and in the mar- 
kets. A box of fish must therefore contain an enormous proportion 
of ice to allow for wastage, and the fish instead of being fresh, cold, 
and wholesome are in a swollen and sodden condition, 


12 MALAYAN FISHES. 


While these are the conditions under which fish are transported 
a few miles in this country, we are indebted to a single Cold Storage 
Company for the privilege of being able to purchase, if we can 
afford it, fish, meat, game, butter and fruit, imported in re- 
frigerated chambers from Great Britain, the United States, Aus- 
tralia and China. | 


Briefly, it amounts to this. We can eat foreign fish and 
foreign fowl but not the fresh produce of Malaya. Hundreds of 
tons of prime fish are caught every year on the East coast, where 
the inexhaustible supplies of the China sea are available, but all 
this fish is dried for export for lack of cold storage transport, 
though much of it is caught within 24 hours steam of Singapore. 


There can be little doubt that the whole future of the perish- 
able food business in this country depends on cold storage, but 
there is no decided opinion as to the part that the State should 
take in the development of the trade. 


It was realised many years ago, that for sanitary reasons the 
ordinary shop house was not a suitable place in which fresh meat, 
fish, etc., could be exposed for sale, and, in the Malay States, the 
sale of such perishable produce is confined entirely to the markets 
built by the State. 


It would seem, therefore, to be but reasonable and logical for 
the State to go a step further, and instal cold storage in the markets, 
and to rent space to the retail dealers in the same way that stalls 
are rented. 


The State owns the railways which run from the coast to the 
market towns and the installation of refrigerated vans on the 
railways would appear to be a natural development of a State en- 
terprise, as it is in other countries with State Railways. 


This disposes of the problem as far as the Colony and the 
West Coast States are concerned but the problem on the East coast 
is quite different. 


The development of the States on the East coast has been 
retarded because they possess no natural ports and harbours which 
can be entered during the North East monsoon, 


Though the deep sea can be fished all through the N. E. 
Monsoon and steamers run regularly up the East coast to Bangkok 
and Saigon, no fishing is done because the fishermen live on the 
mainland. A heavy sea breaks on the shallows and sandbanks 
which extend from the coast, and dangerous rollers break on the 
bars which guard the entrance to the rivers. 


Further out, in twenty fathoms or so, the seas are regular, and 
conditions for fishing far better in every way than they are in a 
strong wind in the English Channel or in the North Sea. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 13 


We know that the sea off the coast of Pahang, Trengganu and 
Kelantan swarms with fish all the year round, and all that is 
necessary is a scheme for supplying the Western States and the 
Colony, where fish is now very scarce, 


The writer advocates State enterprise in the establishment of 
cold storage depots on the islands, where there is always safe 
anchorage and shelter in smooth water. 


There is a chain of these islands all the way up the East coast. 
An island with a cold storage depot will become a permanent 
fishing settlement. Rent would be paid by the fishermen for space 
in cold storage, to be collected when the fish is sold. So far State 
enterprise is advocated. 


It would pay steamers, running from Bangkok, Saigon and 
China to Singapore, Pert Swettenham and Penang, to call “at these 
islands for fish, and those steamers not now fitted with refrigera- 
ting plant would instal it. 


Schemes for ameliorating the lot of the fishermen by granting 
loans, etc., have not succeeded because no scheme protected the 
fishermen from the middlemen, but the depots which will be the 
Penny-banks of the fishermen, always ready to receive deposits, how- 
ever small, until required, will render the fishermen independent 
of the middlemen. 


For example, there would be nothing to prevent a group of 
Malay fishermen from consigning regular shipments of fish direct 
to a Malay retailer in the market. 


Shipments would be so frequent that loans should be unneces- 
sary, but allowing that loans were asked for, to start Malays working 
on a co-operative basis, as indicated above, there would be no risk in 
advancing money on the security of the stock of fish. 


With State organised depots and State transport there would 
be a fair field for steam trawlers and steam drifters owned by 
Companies or individuals. The depots would receive the fish and 
save the trawlers a journey to port with every catch, and here again 
the middleman would be eliminated. 


This work deals, very inadequately, with fishes only. Much 
could be written and will, no doubt, be written later about our 
Crabs, Prawns, Crayfish, Pearl oysters, Edible oysters, Scallops, 
CSockles, Corals and Sponges, but considerations of space prevent 
more than the briefest mention. 


The writer has seen Pearl shell taken close to Singapore and 
has handled a pearl valued at £800 taken off the Kelantan coast. 


Rock oysters grow well here, but as they take about three years 
to mature, and no native can resist taking them while still small, 
they are practically unknown in the markets. 

Leases could be granted and oysters cultivated. Sponges too, 
can be cultivated. Comimercial sponges can be grown from cut- 


14 MALAYAN FISHES. 


tings, like flowers, and are so grown in the Philippines, and there 
are yet other marine growths which can be cultivated in the gardens 
of the sea. 


Few countries have the potential fishery advantages that we 
possess and have neglected hitherto. 


Our position between the Indian Ocean and the China Sea is 
unique and not only gives us access to an unlimited area for deep 
sea fishing, but also accounts for the large number of species of fish. 


From Kuala Perlis on the West to Kuala Tabar on the East 
we have a thousand miles of coast line; more than some nations 
possess, 


As to the vital importance of fish in the diet of all dwellers 
in this tropical country there is no question: as to the existence 
of an enormous area of potential fishing grounds there can be no 
dispute, and as to the large variety and good edible quality of our 
fish there is ample proof. Can we doubt therefore, with the ex- 
perience of other countries to guide us, and while remembering 
that the economic stability of every country depends on the price 
of the peoples’ food, that our fisheries are capable of enormous ex- 
pansion and can we doubt that an enlightened policy of exploitation 
and regulation combined with constant scientific investigation will 
render the Fisheries one of the great economic assets of Malaya? 


a 


Malayan Fishes. 
PART I. 


GIANT HERRINGS. 
(ELOPSIDAE.) 


This family contains but few species; the individuals however, 
abound in the tropical seas and are of great importance both as food 
and game fishes. 


The Bandang or Ménangin (/lops hawatiensis) is known to 
Americans in the Philippines & Hawaii as the Ten-pounder. It 
reaches a length of about 4 feet and is an edible fish of considerable 
value. 


The Bulan-bulan (Megalops cyprinoides) is the Indo-Pacific 
Tarpon and is very closely related to the well known sporting fish 
of America. It is known in Australia as the Ox-Eye or Big Eyed 
Herring. 


It has a very wide range extending from India to Australia 
and from East Africa to the Sandwich Islands. It is known to 
penetrate the rivers right up into fresh water and has been success- 
fully cultivated in brackish or even fresh water. 

From an edible standpoint it ranks very high. Its flesh is 
firm, well flavoured and possessed of good keeping qualities. It 
attains a length of 5 feet and when our fisheries are better known 
it may, as Stead has remarked, “ turn out to be as great a sporting 
fish as the Tarpon.” 


THE FEATHER BACKS. 
(NOTOPTERIDAE.) 


The Belida (Votopterus notopterus) is a fairly common fresh 
wato~ fish which attains a length of well over three feet. The belly 
is said to be extremely rich and well flavoured but the back contains 
numerous small bones. 


THE MILK FISH. 


(CHANIDAE.) 


The Bandang or Jangas (Chanos chanos) is the well known 
Milk-fish or White Mullet and is known as the Salmon-Herring 
in Australia. It is a sea and estuary fish and feeds on “ sea moss,” 
an alga (Oedogonium). 


16 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Its cultivation is a considerable industry in the Philippines, 
the Sandwich Islands and Java, and Day records that, in South 
Canara, Hyder Ali introduced it from the sea into tanks of fresh 
and brackish water where it still thrives. 


Seale’ gives a most interesting and valuable account of the 
cultivation of this fish, which is known by the Filipinos as the 
Bangos; 1 quote the following extracts: 


“ The Milk-fish is one of the most important commercial 
fishes in the Islands. It is raised chiefly in the fish ponds at 
Malabon and at other places near Manila and therefore can be 
secured at any time regardless of the weather. 


“ This fish is particularly adapted to pond culture being a 
vegetable feeder of rapid growth. 


“The eggs are deposited in the sea. The young appear 
during the months of April, May, June and July. They are to 
be found in great numbers along the beaches and are captured 
by the natives and placed in large earthen jars full of water 
called palyok. They are then ‘conveyed to the fish ponds,. 
frequently a hundred miles distant. 


“One of the jars contains about 2,500 young Bangos. 
About 60,000 are used to stock one pond of 1 hektare. As the 
fish grow they are thinned out by transfer to other ponds. 
Thirty-three per cent should reach marketable size and a year- 
ling should measure half a metre.” 


FOOD OF THE MILK FISH. 


“Tf it is desired to cultivate the food alga, the water of 
the pond is allowed to drain off and the clay is exposed to the 
full power of the sun. The alga rapidly makes.its appearance 
and a little water is then permitted to cover the bottom. This. 
is gradually increased as the Oedogonium develops. 


“ The average value of the ponds about Manila Bay is pro- 
bably 40 centavos per square metre, giving a total of more than 
6,000,000 pesos for the pond value alone, which I am convinced 
is a conservative estimate.” 


There should be no great difficulty in establishing a similar in- 
dustry in Malaya and there are many mangrove areas on the West 
Coast of the Peninsula where series of ponds could be constructed. 


There are many places where these fish are feeding on beds of 
sea moss and I saw millions of fry not far from Butterworth 
recently (March 21st) which a Javanese told me were Anak 
jangas. The Milk Fish attains a length of 5 feet. It is not often 
captured as it will not take a bait and will jump over. a seine or 
drift net. 


“ys Fishery resources of the. Philippines.” 2 


MALAYAN FISHES. 17 


HERRINGS. 
(CLUPEIDAE.) 


This is a very large and important family. The members 
range in size from the Parang-parang (Chirocentrus dorab) 
which is said to exceed a length of 12 feet to the Bilis (Stole- 
phorus tri) which measures not more than 3 or 4 inches. 

Although this family is of great commercial importance in 
Malaya, and the Herrings, Shad, Sprat, Sardines, White-bait and 
Anchovies belonging to it are highly esteemed for their flavour and 
food value by the Malays and all Eastern races, they are unknown 
to the great majority of European residents in this part of the 
world, with the exception of the Bilis, which is occasionally seen 
served as “ White bait” or as a sambal with curries or in bottled 
form as Macassar Red fish. 

From an economic point of view this family is second to none 
in importance and the fact that some of the most valuable kinds 
associate at certain periods in immense shoals accounts for the use- 
fulness of the family as a food supply. 

The following are the most important members of the herring 
family in our waters: 

The Parang-parang (Chirocentrus dorab), the Térubok 
(Clupea (Alosa) macrura), the Sélangat (Dorosoma spp.), the 
Tamban (Clupea (Harengula) spp.), (Dussumieria spp.) and 
(Spratelloides spp.), the Bilis (Stolephorus spp.) and the Bulu 
ayam (Hngraulis spp.). 

The Parang-parang is a very bony fish of excellent flavour 
and its capture by hand line provides a livelihood for several 
hundred Malays in Singapore alone. 

Passengers by steamers proceeding through the Eastern en- 
trance to Singapore roads will see a large number of small canoes 
in the deep water channel and will hear the noise of the rattles, 
which each Malay fisherman wields unceasingly. These rattles do 
not attract the fish, but keep the hand oecupied and the fisherman 
on the “ qui vive.” The Parang-parang is not a greedy biter and 
does not stay in one place. He is a rapid swimming predacious fish 
who has no time for more than a snap as he darts through the water. 
Bites are usually few and far between and an inexpert or somnolent 
fisherman would catch nothing. With an ever moving hand en- 
gaged with a rattle the fish is struck and hooked almost at the in- 
stant he bites. 


The Térubok is a Shad and is considerably larger than the 
ordinary herring. It is known to Europeans in India as the 
** Hilsa ” or “ Sable fish.” Day says: 

“They are excellent as food until they have deposited 
their ova, when they become thin and positively unwholesome. 
Their flavour has been compared to a combination of that of 
the salmon and herring: they are rather heavy of digestion.” 


18 MALAYAN FISHES. 


The roe of the Terubok (Telor terubok) is a highly valued 
delicacy and the fish are still caught in large quantities near Béng- 
kalis (Siak) and the roes dried and salted for export. Cantor 
writing in 1850, states that 40 years ago the Raja of Siak is said 
to have obtained an annual revenue of 72,000 guilders from the 
Térubok roe industry alone. 


The Selangat of the southern part of the Peninsula is known 

s Nandong in Penang and Kedah, and as Kébasi on the East 
mage It is also known to the Filipinos as Kabasi. The English 
or American name for it is the Basling Shad and in Australia a 
member of the same sub-family is known as the Bony Bream or 


“ Hair-back.” 


It is a bony little fish but very plentiful and cheap; it is dried 
and salted in enormous quantities both for local consumption and 
export. 


The Tamban is one of our commonest fish and will eventually 
be one of our most important and valuable food fishes. 


Dr. Cantor who wrote a catalogue of Malayan Fishes in 1850, 
says of the Tamban bulat: “ It is highly valued for its delicate 
flavour and passes commonly as a ‘ sardine’”’: and of the Tamban 
nipis he writes, “ They pass in the Settlements of the Straits under 
the denomination of ‘Sardines’ in imitation of which they are 
sometimes preserved in oil.” 


The Moros in the Philippines have the same name Tamban 
for this fish and Seale writes “ Any of these sardines would compare 
favourably with the species put up in oil on the Pacific Coast.” 


We continue to import thousands of cases of sardines annually 
into the Straits and F. M. S., while our seas swarm with sardines. 


It is popularly supposed that sardines are preserved in olive 
oil but I have more than a suspicion that refined coconut oil, sesame 
or gingelly oil, and other vegetable oils, which are largely exported 
from the East, return to us with the imported tinned ‘herrings and 
sardines. 


The Bulu ayam and Bilis (Moro: Dilis) are anchovies and 
sprats. 


Stead writing of the Lngraulis antipodum of Australia, says, 
“ For all practical and economic purposes there is no difference be- 
tween our Anchovies and the famous fishes of that name in the 
Mediterranean Sea.” 


A glance at the systematic list of members of, the herring family 
will show that we have at least 8 species of Hngraulis and 3 species 
of Stolephorus. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 19 


QUEENSLAND-SMELT, ETC. 
(SCOPELIDAK.) 


One of the best known members of this family is the Lumi 
or Luli (Harpodon nehereus) which, when newly taken, is bril- 
liantly phosphorescent all over the body: in a salted and dry con- 
dition it is the “ Bombay-duck” so highly esteemed by Anglo- 
Indians. 

It is quite common in our waters. I have seen many immature 
specimens in purse-nets, but full grown specimens are often taken 
in sunken basket-traps off Singapore in the neighbourhood of the 
Karimon Islands. 


Day says “ this fish is highly esteemed as food whether fresh or 
salted.” It is curious that this fish which is a delicacy in India 
should be disregarded in Malaya. Malays do not care much for 
it, as the flesh is soft and flabby and they prefer firm and flaky 
meat. 


The Bélungkor (Saurida tumbil) is known to Australians as 
the Queensland Smelt and is a fair edible fish, though somewhat 


dry. 
The Mudin (Saurus myops) is a useful food fish. 


“ MILLIONS.” 
(CY PRINODONTIDABE.) 


I have called these fishes “ Millions” in the absence of any 


English name, because they belong to the same family as the fish 
known as “ Millions” in Barbados. To this latter fish, which 
eats mosquito larvae, as our fish does, the immunity from fever, 
which the inhabitants of Barbados enjoy, is attributed. It is a 
tiny fish, very common in swamps and drains in Singapore and 
elsewhere. 


CAT FISHES. 
(SILURIDAE.) 


This family which contains one fourth of the known fresh 
water fishes of the world is not represented in the British Isles, but 
in this region they are to be found wherever there is water and a 
muddy bottom, whether it be fresh, brackish or salt water. 


Members of the family may be found in swamps, pools and 
roadside drains and many of the fresh water varieties will make 
considerable journeys overland to find new pools or streams. They 
are found in all our rivers and some species may be caught miles 
out in the sea. Some of the largest exceed 6 feet in length. 


With the exception of the Lele and Lembat (CLARIIDAE spp.) 
which have no spines, all the members of this family are armed 
with spines. 


20 MALAYAN FISHES. 


The Tapah has a pair of pectoral spines only, but the Sém- 
bilang, Patin, Lawang, Pédukang and Baung have both pec- 
toral spines and a dorsal spine, 


A wound from these spines is extremely painful and the angler 
who captures one of these fish for the first time is advised to take a 
lesson from a Malay in the proper method of grasping them, which 
is very simple but worth knowing. 

They are valuable food fishes and are in great demand among 
all Malays, Chinese and natives of India. Some species are con- 
sidered to possess exceptionally nourishing qualities and are pres- 
cribed for patients recovering from illness. 


They will live for hours out of water and can be transported 
for long distances, 


The popularity of the Krian district of Perak among natives 
of India is due primarily to the rice fields and secondly to the fact 
that cat-fishes, as well as other fish, swarm in the rice fields and 
irrigation ditches, 


A volume might be written on the Cat-fishes alone. One in- 
teresting characteristic is the great care they take of their eggs and 
young. The Pédukang, for instance, lays very few but very 
large eggs which look like gelatine capsules and these they carry 
about in their mouths. As the Pédukang are among the com- 
monest estuarine fishes, any observer can obtain them during the 
breeding season and see for himself the egg in every stage of 
development, and in the final stage, immediately before hatching. 
the tiny fish is distinctly visible through the translucent envelope 


of the egg. 
LOACHES AND CARP. 
(COBITIDAE & CYPRINIDAE.) 


Only two Loaches, the Ikan pasir and the Lali, are mentioned 
in this work, but judging from records of species in Java, Sumatra 
and Borneo, there should be at least 20 species. 


The Ikan pasir (Acanthopsis choirorhynchus) is quite com- 
mon in the Pahang river and is good eating. 

The Carp family of fresh water fishes to which our Roach, 
Tench and Gudgeon belong is represented in our Malayan rivers 
by certainly not less than 100 species. 

The very incomplete list in this book gives some 28 Malay 
synonyms only. There is an interesting hobby and good sport 
with a fly and spinner awaiting any planter or prospector who lives 
near the upper reaches of any of the rivers in the Peninsula. An 
oil drum can easily be converted into a specimen tank in which 
rare fish may be preserved in spirit. The Directors of the F, M. 8. 
and 8. S. Museums would be only too glad, I feel sure, to mount 
and display specimens, and as the field is practically untouched the 
collector has more than a sporting chance of discovering and per- 
haps giving his name to a new species. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 21 


During the breeding season, the males of many species assume 
a more brilliant livery, or develop excrescences and tubercles on 
various parts of the head, especially on the snout, or also on the 
body and fins. 


The common Carp of Europe is said to have been introduced 
from China early in the seventeenth century. The Chinese con- 
tinue to import Carp into Malaya and to grow them in stock-ponds. 
The imported Carp are the Tiam (Chinese) (Labeo moli- 
torella), the Ling (Chinese) (Cyprinus carpio), and the Hwan 
(Chinese) (Ctenopharyngodon idellus). 


The ova are shipped from China in large jars full of fresh 
water and the contents of the jars are regularly and vigorously 
stirred with a stick or paddle during the voyage, to oxygenize the 
eggs, and by the time the jars arrive in this country they contain 
thousands of fry. 


These fish are very popular among the Chinese and fetch high 
prices in the markets. They attain a length of three feet or more 
and a weight of perhaps 20 to 25 pounds. The utilitarian owners 
feed them on food of such a disgusting nature, principally excreta, 
that I can say nothing as to their edible qualities, as I have never 
felt any wish to taste them. 


I imported some many years ago and intended to stock a pond 
in Kuala Pilah but unfortunately the ship was placed in quarantine 
and as their period of confinement in jars is limited, all the fry 
perished. These imported Carp have not, so far as I know, been 
bred in this country and it is more than likely that they require 
fresh running streams for the natural development of their ova. 


The question of stocking some of our streams may be worth 
consideration, but I doubt it, as we have so many indigenous Carp. 
In this connection it is well to remember that these Carp which 
have been artificially bred for centuries, have vielded numerous 
examples of hybridism. I have read in an American magazine of 
a sportsman .who for lack of other bait used aquarium gold fish 
(Carp) very successfully as live bait. He kept a stock of them in 
a fountain where they interbred with small species of American 
Carp with the most extraordinary results. 


Professors Max Weber and de Beaufort write of the Cyprinus, 
“Distribution: Fresh water of temperate parts of Asia and 
Europe, from where introduced in many parts of the world and 
changed into many varieties.” 


We have many species of Barbus including the famous sport- 
ing fish the Mahseer of India, our Témoleh (barbus mosal). The 
Kérai (Barbus neilli) is said by Day to attain a weight of 50 or 60 
pounds. . 


to 
to 


MALAYAN FISHES. 


The Catla (Catla buchanant) of India, Burma and Siam has. 
not yet been identified in our rivers and as it attains a length of 
at least 6 feet and a corresponding weight, I suggest the quest of 
the Catla, as a sound sporting proposition, to the anglers of Kuala 
Lipis, and other up country stations, with a good chance of success, 


EELS. 


ANGUILLIDAE, MURAENIDAE, CONGRIDAE, ETC. 


The Eels are placed on the Order ApoprEs which has several 
families and not less than 30 species, represented in Malayan 
waters. Eels are more popular perhaps with the Chinese than 
with any other race in Malaya. The Congers (Malong) are quite 
common and find a ready sale in the markets. 


One eel (Lhyrsoidea macrura) known as the Pampan or 
Pompa by the Javanese is probably the largest eel in the world 
and exceeds 10 feet in length. It has been found in the shallow 
seas and estuaries, and even rivers, of Sumatra, New Guinea, Natal, 
India, Ceylon and Queensland, but has not yet been recorded by 
local scientists, 


SWAMP-EELS. 


SYMBRANCHIDAE. 


The Bélut (Monopterus albus) is confined to the fresh or 
brackish waters of Burma, the Malay Archipelago and China. 


“ This eel is numerous at Chusan, in streamlets, canals. 
and estuaries. As it is a favourite article of food it is kept by 
the inhabitants of Chusan in large jars, with fresh water. But 
it is capable of living a considerable time out of water. It is 
of voracious habits, feeding on smaller fishes, and it takes 
hooks baited with earthworms.” (Cantor). 


SEA-HORSES AND SKELETON-FISHES. 


(SYNGNATHIDAE & AMPHISILIDAE.) 


The little Sea-Horse, Kuda-kuda laut (Hippocampus spp.), 
which is so like the conventional knight of the chess-board, is a 
familiar object in most Museums. It has, of course, no economic 
value. 


A peculiarity of this curious family is that “the males are 
provided with a pouch (in some species there is only a broad groove) 


in which the eggs are hatched after being deposited by the female. 


“ The males take full charge of them, and the young remain in 
the pouch usually for a short time, after being hatched.” (Stead), 


The Skeleton-Fish, as I have called it, Amphistle scutata, is 
known to Malays as Ikan kéring. It is only a few inches long 
and, as it has practically no flesh on its bony carcase, it has no 
edible value, 


MALAYAN FISHES. 23: 


GAR-FISH, GAR-PIKE AND FLYING-FISH. 
(SCOMBRESOCIDAE.) 

Most of the members of this family, of which about 200 species 
are known, are marine: some are carnivorous, and others mainly 
herbivorous, feeding on green algae. Nearly all are in the habit of 
making great leaps out of the water, this tendency culminating in 
the Flying- fish (Hxocoetus), and there is every passage between 
the small pectoral fin of a Gar-fish and the swallow-iike “ wings ” oz 
the most developed Flying-fish. 

They are excellent edible fish and the Todak (Belone spp.) 
which have green bones are nevertheless very palatable and useful 
food fish. There is a more or less prevalent idea that fishes with 
ereen bones are poisonous; this is one of the popular fallacies 
which no facts or arguments will ever overcome. 

The Puput or Jénjulong (//emirhamphus spp.) or Half- 
beak can be easily identified by the fact that the lower jaw only is 
prolonged. Both jaws of the Todak are prolonged into a long 
slender beak. 

The Todak though common is a very shy and wily fish. It 
gives a boat a wide berth and though a rapid swimming and pre- 
dacious fish it disdains ordinary lures and baits. The Malay fisher- 
men, however, circumvent them by fishing with a kite from which 
dangles a length of fine line terminating in a noose. The bait is at- 
tached to the noose. Given a breeze sufficient to keep the kite flying, 
quite good sport is obtaimed, perhaps a dozen fish or more in an 
hour. The Todak makes a fierce dash at the bait, the noose tight- 
ens round the upper jaw, and the recurved teeth prevent the noose 
from slipping. 

The Puput is also a shy biter when it sees its would-be cap- 
tor at the other end of a rod or line, and the Malays consequently 
use short baited lines attached to floats (Pélontang puput) which 
they send adrift and pick wp when the movements of the float shew 
that a fish is firmly hooked. 

Flying-fishes are very good eating but not often obtained. I 
have picked them up on the deck after a squally night at sea. 

SAND-SMELTS. 
(ATHERINIDAE.) 

These pretty little fishes, called Rennyau or Paku in Malay, 
are common all along our coasts and also frequent estuaries and 
tidal rivers. ‘Seale’ writes: 

“Tt is almost impossible to land at any wharf or to go 
ashore on any beach without seeing these little fish in count- 
less numbers. They usually grow to a length of from 10 to 


12 centimeters. They have a greenish tint on the back and a 
bright silvery band on the des 


1 Fishery resources of the Philippines. 


24 MALAYAN FISHES. 


“ There are five or six different species. 


“The most common species is possibly Atherina tem- 
mincki (Bleeker). 


‘They are known as * pescados del rey’ or fishes of the 
king, among the Spaniards. 

“ They are greatly valued as food. The young are termed 
white bait. The method of catching is usually by seine or 
corral. A profitable industry could be built up by preparing 
these fish in a good sauce, by pickling them with spices, or by 
drying. They abound at all seasons.” 


GREY MULLETS. 


(MUGILIDAE.) 


The Grey Mullet are a widely distributed and very important 
family. They inhabit shallow water in the seas, estuaries and 
rivers and none are known to occur in very deep water. 


Their habit of keeping to the shallows, in large shoals, renders 
their capture, in enclosures. which dry out at low tide, and in 
mullet nets, an easy matter. As there are no restrictions as to size 
and no close season, mullet are getting scarcer every year in 
Malayan waters. 

Grey Mullet feed, more or less, on the organic matter found in 
mud and they are peculiar among fizh in that they have a true 
gizzard, lined with a thick horny epithelium. 


Mullet are very common and highly appreciated in Australia. 
Stead’ writes: 

“ During a recent year in New South Wales alone 45,000 
baskets of Mullet—principally Sea Mullet—were received for 
disposal at the various fish markets. The average basket of 
Mullet contains about 75 pounds weight: and, if we calculate 
the fish at an average of one pound weight each, we find that 
we have the imposing total of 3,875,000 individuals.” 


In New South Wales Mullet may only be netted at certain 
times and at certain places, and there is a legal limit as to size as 
with all valuable edible fish in that Colony. 

The breeding season with most of our Mullet appears to be 
between November and February during the N. E. monsoon, 

At this time I have seen the Anding in myriads in the surf, 
near the mouth of the Trengganu river and other rivers on the 

fast coast... A quantity of vellowish foam and scum i: brought 
down by the rivers which are usually in full spate in November and 
December, and this foam either contains food or provides a suitable 
shade and shelter for the ova of the Mullet which are, I believe, 
pelagic or floating eggs. A day of steady incessant tropical rain 
during the N. E. monsoon is the day above all others to which all 


1 Fishes of Na 


MALAYAN FISHES. 25 


Trengganu Malays, male and female, look forward. When the 
rivers are in full flood, the sun obscured, the N. E. monsoon blow- 
ing half a gale, the surf thundering on the beach and full of yellow 
veasty foam, then you will see all the Malay ladies trooping out in 
their best silk coats and sarongs, and all the old blades and young 
bloods are in attendance. 


They are all out for the day to enjoy themselves and to catch 
mullet and the more it rains and blows the better they like it, the 
ladies, perhaps, because their vivid silken raiment looks best when 
it is wet, or may be it fits their figures better so. and the men, 
perhaps, because they will catch more mullet! 


These ladies have designed and made their own costumes. 
Raw Chinese silk has been teased, wound and spun; fast dies of 
vivid colour:, orange, pink, vermilion, green ; every colour and every 
shade have been prepared from roots. bark and leaves, and the 
garments have been woven in intricate designs, tartans, checks.. 
watered silks and shot silks; a creative art which bas been lost on 
the West, and will soon be lost on the East Coast, in these days of 
cheap imitation silks and aniline dyes. But let us get back to the 
mullet and the rain. 


And the more it rains the fresher keep the flowers in the 
ladies’ hair. These ladies wear no hats and there are no collars, 
draggled skirts or squelchy boots in this picnic party. 


Let us again to the mullet. Now this catching of mullet is 
an affair of casting-nets and he who catches the most mullet is 
some ace. It is not a simple poaching trick of slinging a net over 
a sleepy fish in a pool, but quite a different business, I assure you. 


The nets are made of the finest and strongest cotton, water- 
proofed in white of egg which renders them to the touch, for a 
season, as though they were made of the finest gut or sinews. The 
small net or jala anding when thrown covers perhaps 100 square 
feet of surface and it is weighted with little chains of pure tin. 
The light cord attached to the thrower’s wrist is usually 30 feet 
long and the net is often thrown so as to drop fully expanded at 
the full extent of the cord, and that throw is in the teeth of a 
North-east gale. 


Each fisherman has perhaps two or three such nets and, in 
reserve, a much larger and stronger casting net for the Pelong 
which is the giant of all our mullet. 


Keeping far back on the sandy beach, the men follow the 
shore line until mullet (Anding) are seen, and, to the novice, it is 
a difficult matter to see them. But there they are, and when you 
know what to look for, in the smother and foam, you will notice 
little black heads, in hundreds, between the breakers. Now these 
Anding are the shyest fish that swim. A wave of the hand and 
they have disappeared to pop up again at a distance further sea- 
ward, where no man can hope to reach them. 


26 MALAYAN FISHES. 


This, then, is the manner of their capture. There will come a 
moment when a great wave, like a wall, hurls itself on the beach. 
In fact these waves do it all the time! However, there is mea. ure 
of two or three moments and no more when that wave stands like 
a wall between you and the fish, and the fish forget your existence. 
In that brief time your caster of the mullet net sprints down to the 
very verge of the breaking wave and up to or over his knees in the 
water; the mae truly held and truly swung, with a long pendalum 
swing, clears the crest of the approaching wave and falls fairly on 
the group of mullet concealed in the hollow ‘beyond, and in this way 
perhaps he may be fortunate enough to take one or two hundred 
fish in one cast. But you will serve a long apprembiceship, and will, 
when learning, throw half a hundred times and have no mullet 


When the sport is in full swing perhaps 10 or 20 men dart 
simultaneously down the beach and as many nets shoot out and 
over the waves. Suddenly there comes a wild yell of excitement. 
Pélong which have been disturbed or enclosed in the Anding nets 
leap several feet in the air and break their way through the 
nets. Silvery six-pounders and even larger fish instinctively jump 
when their brothers jump. There is a rush up the beach and a 
race back to the breakers with the Pélong nets. The nets are 
thrown at random (tebar rambang) in every direction. There 
may be a shoal of Pélong and, if so, some excitement I promise 
you. 


Once a Pélong sees the net over him, he makes one upward 
dash to the apex of the net. The fisherman hurls himself at the 
fish and must grasp him then or not at all, for the next powerful 
dash for liberty takes the fish down to the bottom and he is under 
the chains and out of the net before you can wink. Out of your 
depth in a strong surf with a couple of lusty Pélong in your arms 
and a smother of net, chain and cord about you, you come to the 
conclusion that life was never more worth living and that if you 
are off to kingdom come you will take the Pélong with you. 


As I write, at Tanjong Katong, Singapore, I can see some 
Boyanese, syces probably, with baby casting nets catching shrimps, 
sprats and baby fish in a sea like glass; a miserable messy busi- 
ness. The real gladiators of the casting net are to be found only 
on the East coast. 


Our Mullet (Belanak) include the Jempul (Mugil planiceps) 
which attains at least a foot and a half in length. 


The Tamok (M. waigiensis), according to Day, attains at 
least 3 feet in length. The Anding and Kédéra, which grow to 
about a foot and a half, are excellent eating. 


The Bélanak tamok (M. waigiensis) is known in Australia 
as the Diamond Scaled Mullet. It attains a weight of several 
pounds and is of a pretty silvery colour, each scale being prettily 
margined with black. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 27 
THREAD FINS. 
(POLY NEMIDAE.) 


These fish are all excellent as food and from some rough ising- 
lass or fish sounds are obtained. 


One of our Kurau (Polynemus paradiseus) is the Tupsi fish 
of India and the Mango fish of Burma. This small fish which 
attains a length of about 9 inches only, is considered a great luxury 
both in India and Burma. It has very long filaments, longer than 
itself, proceeding from each side, just below the pectoral fins. 


The common Kurau (P. indicus) attains a length of 4 feet 
and about 20 Ibs. in weight. 


The Kurau janggut (P. fetradactylus), which is also known 
on the Queensland coast by the very unsuitable name “ Cooktown 
Salmon,” grows to a very large size. 


Day quotes Hamilton Buchanan as observing “I have been 
assured by a creditable native that he saw one which was a load for 
six men and which certainly therefore exceeded in weight 320 
pounds avoirdupois.” 


BARRACUDAS. 
(SPHYRAENIDAE.) 


The Alu-Alu are carnivorous and highly voracious fishes 
which give good sport with a trolling bait or spinner, 


Cantor mentions two species only, S. jello and S. obtusata, as 
inhabiting the seas off Penang and Singapore but I have a snap- 
shot of one taken by me off Pahang which does not agree with Day’s 
plates of either of these fish and is I think S. novae-hollandiae. 
It is more than probable that other species will be discovered in 
these waters. 


A well known American game fisherman from Honolulu who 
visited Singapore recently recognised the fish both in the Singapore 
market and from the photograph as the Alu-alu of Hawaii. 


Roughley! writes of Sphyraena novae-hollandiae, 


“ The Short-finned Pike is an edible fish of very consider- 
able value and is deservedly popular, though it has probably 
never been tasted by a-very great portion of the community. 

“Tt forms one of a too numerous collection of very 
valuable table fishes which are scarcely utilised, owing to the 
unenterprising methods adopted in their capture.” 


1 Fishes of Australia. 


28 MALAYAN FISHES. 


POMFRETS. 
(STROMATEIDAE.) 


The Bawal is one of our well known and most popular edible 
fish and takes a high place among our very best food fishes, 


Of the three species known, the Bawal chermin (Stromateus 
atous) is most esteemed, though all are good. 


The Bawal puteh and Bawal itam (8S. cinereus) are iden- 
tical, the fish getting darker as it reaches maturity. A shoal of 
immature fishes of this species seen on a calm, clear night is a 
most beautiful sight. In the reflected light of the moon, they look 
like tiny silvery stars. The Malays call them Bawal bintang. 
When mature they are a darker gray colour. 


The mature Bawal itam are very much better eating than the 
immature Bawal puteh. 


The Bawal tambak (S. niger) is the largest of the family. 
It grows to a length of two feet and is excellent eating. 


* These fishes are considered by fishermen the stupidest fish that 
swim. They have a curious sheep-like habit of huddling together 
and are also afflicted with a kind of ovine curiosity. They will 
follow anything that excites their curiosity such as a boat and this 
habit leads to their capture. 


When a shoal is observed the fishermen manoeuyre their boat 
so as to attract the interest of the fish until they are all following 
in a compact flock. At the same time the boat is taking a circular 
course and the net is being shot very quietly. At the right moment 
all the fishermen raise a tremendous din with clappers and at the 
same time splash the water with their paddles. The shoal does a 
perfect right-about turn and each fish dashes headlong into the net. 


MURREL. 
(OPHIOCEPHALIDAE.) 


These fresh-water fishes are provided with a respiratory organ: 
on each side, above and communicating with the gills, which 
enables them to breath atmospheric air. 


They can live for long periods out of water and travel over the 
land from one piece of water to another. They are useful food fish 
and well adapted for pond culture provided that the pond is well 
stocked with the small fish and frogs on which they feed, but if the 
food runs short, they will go elsewhere. 


Day writes, “ Jugglers both in India and China exhibit these 
fishes walking on the land, and children amuse themselves by 
making them crawl along.” 


The young as a rule are of a more or less orange or scarlet 
colour, 


MALAYAN FISHES. 29 


These fishes appear to be monogamous, some breeding in 
gra:sy swamps or the edges of tanks and others in holes in the 
river banks. 


They construct nests amongst the water-weeds where the 
ova are deposited. When very young the fry of all species, Aruan,. 
Toman, Bujok, etc., keep with, and are defended by, their parents, 
but as soon as they are s cufficiently strong to capture prey for them- 
selves, they are driven away to seek their own subsistance: those 
which are too obstinate to leave being eaten by their progenitors. 


The Malays have a saying Bagai toman makan anak, “ Like 
the Toman fish which eats its own young,” which is applied to 
persons in high places who misuse their powers, oppressing those 
whom they should protect. 


The Aruan and Toman will readily take a bait, especially a 
frog, and are said to rise to the salmon fiy. The largest run well 
over 3 feet in length. 


They are caught in great quantities in the Krian irrigation 
reservoir at Bukit Merah and sent alive in tubs all over the F. M.S. 


NANNYGAIT. 


(BERYCIDAE.) 


The Sébékah karang (Myripristis murdjan) is a small fish 
of no particular economic importance. 


The Brerycipak, of which there are about 70 species, live, most- 
ly at great depths, in the seas all over the world. 


The “ Nannygai” of Australia, which belongs to this family, 
is highly esteemed on account of its delicate flavour and firm white 
flesh. Roughley writes, 


“Until recently the supply of ‘ Nannygai’ to the market 
has been an intermittent one, occasional specimens only being 
found there. 


“The trawlers have now quite altered this and large 
quantities are being received from them daily, with the result 
that it is one of the commonest fish seen in the market. 


“ Hundreds of people visiting there in search of trawled 
fish are now seeing the ‘ Nannygai’ for the first time.” 
Oo JO 


I suggest that the capture of the “ Nannygai” and other, 
hitherto unrecorded, species of good edible deep water fish, by 
means of a commercial steam trawler, is well within the region of 
possibility. We have, as a perusal of this book will shew, many fish 
in our waters which range as far as Australia but no engines or 
methods of capture are utilized in our waters which take bottom 
feeding fishes in depths of 50 fathoms. 


39 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Roughley writes, “ The most prolific grounds are found to be 
between 50 and 60 fathoms in depth,” and again, “ Many species, 
which before the advent of trawling were very rarely seen in the 
markets and which were in fact considered by many to occur only 
in small numbers on our coast, could now be counted in thou- 
sands.” 


KNIGHT-FISHES. 
(MONOCENTRIDAE.) 


The Setonggang (Monocentris japonicus) is a curious little 
fish with enormous bony scales and two long ventral spines. It 
has no edible value. 


, 


“ BULL’S-EYES.” 
(PEMPHERIDAE.) 


I have no personal knowledge of these fishes and, as they are 
never captured in numbers, they are unimportant from an economic 
standpoint, 


“ DRUMMERS.” 
(KY PHOSIDAE.) 


The Telan rumput (Ayphosus cinerascens) as its name ex- 
plains is a herbivorous fish, subsisting chiefly on “ sea-grass”’ and 
“sea-moss.” It is a congener of the Drummer of New South 
Wales (Ayphosus sydneyanus) and belongs to the same family as 
that excellent food and sporting fish known in New South Wales 
as the Blackfish. 


DUSKY-PERCH. 
(LOBOTIDAB.) 


The Péchah périok (Lobotes surinamensis) is a large perch- 
like estuary fish which reaches a length of 3 or 4 feet and a 
weight of 25 to 30 pounds. It is known in Australia as the Dusky 
Perch. 


According to Boulenger’s classification, the family contains 
two genera, Lobotes and’ Datnioides, each with two species, and 
though the two species of Datnioides are known to occur in the 
estuaries and rivers of the Malay Peninsula, they have not yet, as 
far as | am aware, been identified under a Malay name. 

The Péchah périok is an excellent food fish and it readily 
takes a fish bait. 

It has a very wide range, being found in Queensland, the West 


Indies, on the east coast of the United States of America, as far 
North as Cape Cod, in the Mediterranean Sea, India and China. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 31 
BLOW-PIPE FISHES. 
(TONOTIDAE.) 


The Ikan sumpit or Sumpit-sumpit (Sumpitan, a blow- 
pipe) is so named from its method, unique among fishes, of shoot- 
ing water from its mouth at in-ects which it perceives close to the 
surface, 

They are very common estuary fishes congregating under 
piers, fallen trees and branches, where they may be both seen and 
heard spitting at flies and similar small game, which they knock 
down with surprising accuracy. 

In the second edition of Day’s Fishes, this shooting habit is 
erroneously attributed to another fish, Chelmo rostratus, which is 
also known to the Malays as Ikan sumpit, and a note under Toxo- 
tes reads, “It is stated in some works that these wide mouthed 
fishes shoot insects with a drop' of water........ The action is one 
which the mouths of these fishes appear incapable of effecting.” 

There is ample evidence, however, to prove that Toxotes do 
shoot, and though their mouths are large it will be noticed that they 
have the projecting lower jaw of the true cuspidore artist. 

Chelmo rostratus, on the other hand, though it has pipe-like 
projecting jaws, is a fish which is found at sea in the neighbourhood 
of coral reefs where flies and insects must be rare. 

It owes its name “ Sumpit-sumpit ” to the fact that, after 
capture, it spurts water through its mouth. 

Toxotes chatareus grows to a length of about one foot and I 
have taken several with a rod when fishing with prawn bait for 
Siakap, between half and three quarters of a pound. They are 
quite good eating. 


FRESH-WATER ‘PERCHES. 
(NANDIDAE.) 


I have no information regarding the Képau or Patong (Cato- 
pra fasciata) which is the sole member of this family recorded in 
our waters under a Malay name. . 


SEA-PERCHES. 
(SERRANIDAB.) 


The very incomplete list in this book gives some 45 species of 
Sea-perches. The family is a very large and most important one, 
containing as it does, not only some of our largest fish but also 
many of our best edible fish including the Ikan merah. Nearly 
ull the members of this family are carnivorous fishes which take a 
bait readily. 


I propose to mention only a few of the most important ones. 


32 MALAYAN FISHES. 


The Siakap or Kakap (Lates calcarifer) is also found in the 
seas and estuaries of India where it is known to Europeans as the 
“ Cock-up ” and its range extends to Queensland and Western Aus- 
tralia, where it is generally known as the “ Barramundi.” 


It is a fine sporting fish and runs to a considerable size. The 
largest that I have heard of was taken in the Bay of Bengal by the 
Government trawler “Golden Crown” and weighed 580 pounds. 
Before I read of this fish I used to be satisfied with 40 or 50: 
pounders. 


The Kerapu (/pinephelus spp.) are very well represented in 
our waters and are fine edible fish. ‘Some species lose their bright 
colouring soon after they are caught and have a dull mottled ap- 
pearance when exhibited in the fish market which would not attract 
a purchaser unacquainted with the fish. From an edible point of 
view the Kérapu differs little from the Ikan merah, the latter 
fish owing most of its popularity to its colour, 


Kerapu from 50 to 76 pounds in weight are occasionally seen 
in the markets and the Kérétang (EH. pantherinus) is commonly 
seen up to two or three hundred pounds in weight. Any Malay 
fisherman will tell you of a Kérétang of fabulous size which he 
hooked and fought for hours, being worsted in the end because his. 
boat and gear were too light to make any impression on the fish. 


Very large ones are occasionally taken in fishing stakes: 
(Kelong) and I have heard that the captors, on these occasions, 
tickle the monster until they get it quiet and then pass a strong 
rotan through its gills by which it is finally secured and hauled up. 


The largest Kérétang I ever saw was taken by a Malay and 
myself. We had to sink our boat after we had fought the fish to a 
finish in order to load it; the weight, for there were no means 
of weighing it, was estimated at 6 piculs, i.e. round about 800 
pounds, 


This fish appears to me to be identical with the Queensland 
Groper illustrated in Stead’s “ Edible Fishes of New South Wales” 
under the name Promicrops itaiara. 


I have read that this fish derives its name Groper from its 
habit of groping about the rocks but I suggest that the name origin- 
ated in Malaya or India. The Tamil name is Kurrapu. The 
Malay name is Kérapu. The Brunei Malays know it as Kurapa. 
In the Philippines it is known to the Filipinos as Garropa from 
which the transition to Groper or Grouper is a slight one. 


One of our Kerapu (EH. fauvina) is known in Australia under 
the names Brown-spotted Hind and Black-spotted Rock-cod, and of 
this fish Roughley writes, “ It is of fine edible quality and grows to 
a length of at least four feet.” 


In America members of this family are known as Sea-Bass. 


MALAYAN FISHES, 33 
The “ Snappers ” include our Ikan merah which is known as 
Jénéhak in Penang (Lutianus spp.). There are perhaps more 
than 20 species in local waters of which the list in this book gives 
13 only. 

Two or three Snappers are of a brownish colour, but the 
colouring of the rest of this brilliant family ranges between crimson, 
scarlet and golden, while some have violet, purple and blue bands. 


They are all good edible fish and no swagger dinner in Singa- 
pore is supposed to be complete unless Ikan merah appears on 
the menu. Their popularity makes them expensive, 


“ WHITINGS.” 
(SILLAGINIDAE.) 


The Bulus-bulus (Sillago spp.) is one of our common market 
fish and can be obtained all the year round, though never in large 
quantities, 

The Sillago sihama is known in Madras as “ Whiting” and 
Sillago maculata is called the Trumpeter Whiting in Queensland 
and New South Wales where it is greatly valued for its excellence 
as a food fish 


They frequent shallow water and sandy bottoms where they 
feed on small crustaceans, worms, sand hoppers, etc. There is 
probably no cleaner feeding fish than the Whiting, a fact which 
perhaps accounts in some measure for its delicate flavour and 
wholesomeness. 

Both our varieties, whether adult or young, are very shy and 
instantly bury themselves in the sand on the appearance of any 
danger. Even a passing dark cloud leads to their immediate dis- 
appearance into the sand whence they emerge a few moments later. 

Roughley writing of another species, which has the same habit 
Says: 

“Tn the capture of this fish the hauling net is principally 
used. It displays considerable resource in evading the net, 
giving at times much trouble to the fisherman. As it is hauled 
near the shore, many fish, perceiving that they have been 
trapped, quickly burrow into the sand. Were not the fisher- 
man alert to this cunning method of evasion, a large number 
of fish would be lost, but when it is known that the haul con- 
sists, in the main, of Whiting, they carefully tramp over the 
sand enclosed by the net and upon feeling any movement 
beneath their feet, quickly grab the concealed fish.” 

Whiting fishing is perhaps the nearest thing to trout fishing 
that the sea-angler can obtain. A light rod, fine tackle and small 
hooks are required and the sand flats should be fished on the flood 
tide. The bait should be cast as far as possible. The fish will be 
taken in water only ankle deep and the best bait are prawns, small 
bivalves, Remis, Képah, etc., which are found on sandy beaches, 
and beach worms, Pumpun sarong and Pumpun darat. 


34 MALAYAN FISHES. 


JEW FISHES. 


(SCIAENIDAE.) 


About 150 species of this family are found in various parts 
of the world. Nearly all are of economic value, some being highly 
so, and many of them reach a very large size, 

The Témbéreh (Sciaena diacanthus) is one of the commonest 
coast and estuary fishes and perhaps the largest member of this 
family in our waters. It attains a length of at least 5 feet. 

The Gélama (Otolithus spp.) are among our commonest 
fishes. They travel in shoals numbering many thousands and are 
taken in deep water hauling nets (Pukat pétaram) by Trengganu 
and Kelantan fishermen. ‘hese fish are dried and salted on the 
East coast and thousands of pikuls are exported annually. 

The Gélama will take a bait but are hardly worth fishing for 
as they give no sport and are insipid table fish even when quite 
fresh. As “ikan kering ” with curry they are quite good, 

“ SILVER-BREAM.” 
(GERRIDAE.) 

These are small fish inhabiting all tropical seas and entering 
estuaries, 

According to Day these fishes are eaten by the indigent classes 
in India being little esteemed when fresh, but as they salt and dry 
well, large numbers are prepared in this manner for use. 

The family contains about sixty s species of which only six are 
mentioned in this work. Some 15 species are found in Australia 
and 23 in Indian waters. They rarely exceed a length of ten 
inches: nearly all have a plain silvery coloration. 

In America, the fishes of this family are known. as “ Mojarras.” 

The Kapas-kapas (Gerres sp.) will take a bait, preferably 
prawns or beach worms, and may be caught in the vacinity of fish- 
ing stakes (Kelong) as in and also near reefs. When freshly 
caught it will be found quite a pleasant table fish with compara- 
tively few bones. 

SELEMAH. 


(LACTARIIDAE.) 


The Sélémah is the sole member of this family and is not a 
fish of much economic importance. It grows to a length of about 
10 inches, and is eaten by the natives either fresh or salted but is 
said to be insipid. 

It appears in Malabar in shoals during the months of February 
and March. 

They enter the Straits during the N. E. monsoon but not in 
large numbers and I am informed by Malay fishermen that they 
rarely take more than half a dozen on any one dav. 


They do not take a bait but a few find their way into nets and 
traps. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 35 


GRUNTERS. 
(PRISTIPOMATIDAE.) 


This family contains about 130 species belonging to four 
genera, of which three gencra inhabit our waters, viz. Pristupoma 
(Gérut-gérut), Diagramma (Tebal bibir) and Pentapus (Sélin- 
ching). 

The Gérut-gérut are good food fishes and take a bait readily. 
They are fond of back waters and one species (P. guoraca) is said 
to have been captured in fresh water. 

I have taken several in brackish water and found them, when 
freshly cooked, excellent eating. 

Our largest species (P. hasta) attains a length of about 18 
inches and is known in Australian waters as the Queensland Trum- 
peter. Of this fish Stead writes, “ The Australian home of this 
magnificent food-fish is principally along the coast of Queensland 
where it is well and favourably known.” 

The names Geérut-gérut and Trumpeter are descriptive 
of the grunting noise the fish makes after capture. 

The Tebal bibir are also good edible fish and attain a length 
of two feet or more. 

I have no personal knowledge of the Sélinching (Pentapus) 
and place it here from a description supplied to me, together with 
a pocket-kodak snap-shot which does not display the fish very well. 


SEA-BREAMS. 
(SPARIDAB.) 


This, again, is an important family which includes many 
varieties of valuable food fishes. Some are carnivorous. 

Following Dr. G. A. Boulenger’s classification, the principal 
genera found in Malayan waters are Scolopsis, Synagris, Caesw, 
Crenidens, Lethrinus and Sparus. 

Of the Gérétak lantei (Scolopsis spp.) of Singapore, so 
called from the parallel bands which distinguish most species, U 
ean say little. The only species of Scolopsis with which I am 
familiar are the Anjang-anjang and Kérisi bali, which are occa- 
sionally taken when fishing for Kérisi. 

The Kérisi (Synagris spp.) are beautiful little fish of a 
roseate hue with yellow and silvery bands. They are very common 
all up the east coast where they can be taken with a line, practically 
anywhere, in fairly deep water on a sandy bottom. 

They average perhaps five or six to the pound but I have 
taken them up to a pound or more in 30 fathoms near Tioman 
Island. Kérisi fishing is, or used to be, the favourite out-door 
sport of the Malay Princesses of Pahang, and during the S. W. 
Monsoon regular expeditions were made to the Kérisi grounds and 


36 MALAYAN FISHES. 


the little fish would be hauled in until the boats were deep in the 
water and the Royal ladies exhausted. At the right season, there 
are few more delicate flavoured fish than the Kérisi and they re- 
mind one of really good Whiting, 


But they must be absolutely fresh 1 and caught on the right 
ground; if out of season or stale, Kérisi have an unpleasant 
tang about them. 

The Délah (Caesio spp.) are small but good eating, the best 
being, perhaps, C. pinjalu which is also known as Ikan merah 
china and is in no way inferior to the Ikan merah as a table 
delicacy. 

Of the genus Sparus, three species are mentioned in this book, 
one of which, the Béras-béras (S. sarba), is the Tarwhine of 
Queensland and New South Wales, where it is considered a good 
edible fish. 


It is not to be compared however, either from a sporting or 
an edible point of view, with its congener the Black Bream (N. 
australis), which has not been recorded as inhabiting Malayan 
waters. 


The Asoh-asoh (Lethrinus nebulosus) is another useful fish 
in this family. The inside of its mouth is orange coloured as is 
that of its relative the Yellow-mouthed Snapper (L. chrysostomus) 
of Australia. 


RED MULLETS. 


(MULLIDAB.) 


Members of this family are known as Red Mullets in Great 
Britain and as “ Goat-fishes” or “ Surmullets” in America. 


The British species are Mullus barbatus and M. surmuletus, 
remarkable for their beautiful pink or red colour, and much valued 
on the market, although no longer held in the high estimation for 
which they were noted by the Romans. 

Biji nangka or Lebai are the Malayan generic names of our 
local members of this family and are descriptive. The Bijf 
nangka (Jack-fruit seed) is yellow and has a filamentous process 
similar to the barbel of the Red Mullet: a Lébai is a Malay of 
exceptional pious habit, and it will be noticed that he almost in- 
variably sports a beard consisting, as a rule, of about two or three 
long hairs, and his fellow countrymen have hit off the resemblance 
to the fish, which has two long barbels dependent from the lower 
jaw. 

The Ikan lebai are remarkably beautiful fishes and their 
briliant colouring contrasts somewhat with the solemn aspect of 
the head, which is, perhaps, an additional reason for the Malay 
nickname. 

One of our local species (Upeneus tragula) is known in Aus- 

ralia as the Bar-tailed Goat-fish. 


: MALAYAN FISHES. 37 

All these fishes are small, rarely exceeding 10 inches in length, 
Very little is known regarding their habits or distribution and they 
are not at present of much economic importance, 

I have taken a few in a trawl near Penang and there is a pos- 
sibility that with new methods of fishing they may become useful 
market fish. 

Red Mullet are known to visit the British coasts, in vast shoals, 
at rare intervals. 


BAT-FISHES. 
(SCORPIDIDAE.) 


As far as I know, these fish are represented in our waters by 
the genus Psettus only. 


The Gédabang or Nyior-nyior (P. argenteus) is known in 
Australia as the Silvery Bat-fish. It attains a length of about 
eight or nine inches only and its breadth is about equal to its length, 
It is common and of fairly good edible quality but is not, at present, 
of importance, 


The Nyior-nyior (P. falciformis) is also a small fish attain- 
ing a length of perhaps 9 or 10 inches. 


CORAL FISHES. 
‘ (CHAETODONTIDAE.) 

A large group of about 200 species of marine carnivorous 
fishes, confined to the Tropics, mostly of small size and remarkable 
for their singular forms and markings and brilliant colours, 

They are particularly abundant about volcanic rocks and coral 
reefs; but some ascend estuaries and tidal rivers, though not to any 
great distance. 

The Ketang (Hphippus argus) ranges from the Indian Ocean 
to China and Australia, attaining a foot in length. If taken in the 
sea or in clean back-waters it is an excellent edible fish, but those 
captured in the vicinity of polluted rivers should be avoided, as 
there is evidence that they are foul feeders. . 

Hamilton Buchanan remarks of it, “ When newly caught it is 
a fi-h of great beauty, easy digestion, and excellent flavour: but 
after death it soon becomes soft and strong tasting.’ In Ceylon 
“Tt is generally esteemed, its flesh partaking the flavour of trout ” 
(Bennett). 

This fish and its congener (HE. multifasciatus) are favourably 
known in Australia as Butter-fish and are a common table fish in 
hotels and restaurants. 

Ikan inggu or Ikan babi are Malay equivalents for the genus 
Holacanthus. The former term applying to the colouration and 
the latter to the rather pig-like profile and the presence, in all 
these fishes, of a pair of pre-opercular spines directed backwards, 
which are considered to resemble boar’s tusks. 


38 MALAYAN FISHES. 
‘ 
The Bonang (Plataw teira) is a deep-bodied fish which at- 
tains a length of at least 20 inches. Russell says their flavour is 
excellent and Cantor makes the same remark. 


It is known in Australia as the Dark Bat-fish. 


MOON-FISH. 


(DREPANIDAR.) 


The Daun béharu (Drepane punctat«) is a very common fish 
of fair edible value. 


Considerable quantities of this fish have been taken in trawls 
both in India and Ceylon. Sir K. Gupta says they are very much 
sought after and always command a good price in Bengal. They 
are rather too bony to be popular with Europeans in the East. 


“BLACK TREVALLY.” 
(TEUTHIDIDAE.) 

According to Dr. Boulenger’s classification (1902), this family 
comprises a single recent genus, Teuthis, with about 30 species, 
herbivorous fishes from the Indian and Western Pacific Oceans. 
According to Bottard (“ Poissons venimeux,” Paris 1889) the sting 
from the spines of these fishes is much dreaded, and this I can 
vouch for, though personally I have suffered very little incoyvenience 
from the pricks of these spines. 

It will be noticed that Duncker gives the generic synonym 
Ketang to members of this family and this is the name given by 
Malays to the genus Ephippus (CHAETODONTIDAE) which also has 
venomous spines, 

In all species of Teuthis there are 13 dorsal spines and 7 
anal spines, whereas Hphippus has 9 dorsal and 3 anal spines, which 
shews that the Malay system of clas-ification does not agree with 
that adopted by scientists. 

The Dengkis (7. nebulosa) is known on the East coast of 
Australia as the “ Black Trevally ” and the Debam (T. java) is 
also found on the Australian coast. 

They are small fish, fairly common in the markets where they 
find a ready sale. 


GOURAMI, ETC. 


(OSPHROMENIDAE.) 

This family of fresh water fishes is remarkable for several 
reasons : 

From an edible point of view, because it includes the Kalui 
(Osphromenus olfax), known in India as the Gourami, which has a 
world wide reputation as one of the finest flavoured fresh water 
fish known, as well as the Pépuyu, a favourite food fish in Negri 
Sembilan. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 39 


From an athletic and sporting point of view, because it in- 
cludes the Pépuyu (Anabas scandens) the famous climbing Perch, 
mentioned an all natural history books, as well as the Ikan bélaga 
the equally famous fighting fish, on which Pahang rajas have won 
and lost fabulous sums; and from a scientific point of view, because 
all members of this family are provided with super-branchial res- 
piratory organs, situated in a cavity above the gills which enables 
them to live, happily, out of water for long periods. 


The Kalui grows to a length of about two feet and is regarded 
as one of the best flavoured fishes in the East. It has been ac- 
climatised in India, the Guianas, Mauritius and ‘Australia. 


Day writes, 

“Commerson who observed it in the Mauritius in 1770, 
states tha he never ate any fish more exquisite in flavour, 
whether from the sea or fresh water: he also added that in 
Batavia the Dutch reared them in large earthen pots, changing 
the water daily and feeding them on nothing but fresh water 
plants, especially the Pistia natans.” 


General Hardwicke’ gives an account of the breeding of this 
fish, apparently monogamous; he observes, 

“ They commence at six months of age, whilst their fecun- 
dity is astonishing. During the breeding season, they frequent. 
the sides of tanks, where shelter is afforded them by the grasses 
and weeds growing in the water. For several days they are 
very active, passing in and out of their grassy cover, and in 
some places thickening it, by entangling all trailing shoots, 
and forming what is generally considered the spot under which 
the ova are deposited. They continue to watch this place with 
the greatest vigilance, driving away any interloping fish, and, 
at the end of a month numerous fry appear, over which the old 
gouramies keep watch many days.” 


I kept these fish in a large pond at Kuala Pilah, having first 
caught them with a casting net in the Mvar river. Their natural 
food consists of aquatic plants and I used to collect the leaves they 
like and send a leaf at a time down the stream until a Kalui rose 
to the bait. - It was then a simple matter to lure the fish nearer and 
nearer, with carefully flicked leaves until it was close enough to my 
place of concealment to enable me to throw the net over the floating 
leaf under which the fish was rising. 


There are probably many old friends who will remember the 
little dinners in Kuala Pilah, when the fish, fowl, mutton and 
vegetables were all locally raised, 


The Kalui in my pond were fed daily on leaves, principally 
wild caladium and tapioca shoots, not thrown broad-cast but in- 
serted in split bamboo poles which were pushed into the bottom of 
the pond. They ate a tremendous lot and grew very rapidly; 


1 Zool. Journ. IV, p. 309. 


40 MALAYAN FISHES. 


the caladium leaves imparting a very fine flavour to the fish. 


They will rise to a fly or beetle, and some flowers , particularly 
a large Hibiscus. Anyone intending to keep these fish in stock 
ponds is advised to keep the pond free from pollution and to feed 
the fish regularly. It is only in this way that rapid growth and 
good flavour can be obtained. 


They attain a length of two feet, a weight of at least 20 pounds 
and in shape resemble the turbot. 


The Pépuyu or Bétok (Anabas scandens) has a world wide 
reputation as the Climbing Perch. Gunther? tells us that in 1797 
Daldorf in a memoir communicated to the Linnean Society of 
London mentions that he had himself taken, in 1791, an Anabas 
in the act of ascending a palm tree (Palmyra) which grew near a 
pond. The fish had reached the height of 5 feet and was going 
still higher. He jgoes on to say that the fish is named in the 
Malayan language the “Tree Climber,” which is a mistake. He 
should, I think, have said the Malayalam language. See Day 
(Fishes of India) Undi colli. 


Meek? writes, 


Anabas has been frequently obtained on the ground and 
a specimen now in the collection of Armstrong Colleg ge, ob- 
tained from near Bangkok was found crossing the road 50 
yards from the nearest water. It is named the climbing perch 
from the habit it has of climbing up the rough bark of trees by 
movements of the spine-clad opercula. 


“The method of progression out of the water and the 
climbing of palms and palmyra trees, especially after heavy 
rains, have been repeatedly observed.” 

The Negri Sembilan Malays bave a saying, often’ quoted, which 
hits off the high estimation in which this little fish is held by inland 
dwellers: Jikalau sudah minum ayer gopong bertali ijok, sudah 
makan pepuyu, payah nak ee atl an negri int: which may be 
roughly translated: When a visitor has drunk the water and eaten 
the fish of this country, he i: loath to leave ‘it. 


The Ikan Pélaga or Bélaga (Betta spp.) probably derives its 
name from Siam where it is known as Pla Kat (Pla, fish; Kat, a 
fighter). 


It is common throughout the Peninsula and may be caught in 
most of the ponds and ditches in Singapore. 


Cantor relates that the Siameze are infatuated with the com- 
bats of these fish, staking on the issue considerable sums, and some- 
times their own persons and families. 

The licence to fight these fish used to be farmed in Siam and 
brought in a considerable revenue to the King. 


1 Study of Fishes, p. 516. 
2 Migrations of Fish, 1916. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 41 


The male fish are kept in bottles separately, and when in a state 
of quiet they are dull looking little fish, but if two bottles be 
brought together, the little creatures become greatlv excited and 
the raised fins and whole body shine with bright metallic colours of 
dazzling beauty, 

If two male fish are then placed together they fight like terriers. 
When fighting they utter a curious ringing note which sounds lke 
“Kring Kring” and probably this accounts for another name: 
by which they are known viz. Ikan karing. 

The Képar (Polyacanthus hasseltii) is another beautiful little 
fish and quite common in brackish swamps and ponds. 

This fish has been bred in confiriement by Chinese, probably for 
centuries, and is known as the Paradise fish to aquarium owners 
in Europe. In its native element, in dark or muddy water, it is 
of rather a drab brown colour but if kept in a bowl in clear water, 
it has a beautiful golden colour with red transverse bands, 


CORAL FISHES. 


(POMACENTRIDAE.) 

This family resembles the CHAETODONTIDAE (Coral Fishes) in 
form and mode of life, likewise in the brilliant colouration. For 
this reason I have applied the same English name in the absence 
of any other for this particular family. 

Over 150 species are known. Some 30 species are described in 
Day’s Fishes of India and probably the family is better represented 
in Malayan than in Indian waters. 

As the names Inggu and Gombing shew, the Malays include 
CHAETODONTIDAE and POMACENTRIDAE in one family and curiously 
enough, the scaly-finned fishes (CHAETODONTIDAE) resemble the 
POMACENTRIDAE so closely that in some instances actually the same 
colouration and markings are common to members of the two 
families. This, as remarked by Dr. Giinther, is one of many in- 
stances shewing that the colouration of animals depends to a great 
extent on their mode of life and natural surroundings. 

From an edible point of view they are not of much economic: 
importance. but all specimens brought to the markets seem to find 
ready purchasers. 


“ WRASSES” OR PARROT FISHES. 


(LABRIDAE.) 

The “Wrasses” form a large family of most brillianitly 
coloured marine fishes, inhabiting all the tropical and temperate 
coasts. 

Their regime is partially herbivorous, partially carnivorous. 
About 400 species are known, 

Some of the members of this family have been observed to: 
build nests for the protection of their eggs and young. 


42 MALAYAN FISHES. 


These ne:ts in the European Labrus are made of sea-weeds, 
zoophytes, corals, broken shells, etc., and are the work of both the 
male and female. It is also in this family that sleep was first 
observed in fishes, and this has been fully verified by Mobius, on 
Labrus ruprestis in an aquarium, the fish seeking a sleeping place 
at night and laying itself down to rest on one side? 

Tokak is the generic name applied by Malays to those mem- 
bers of this family which are provided with strong canine-like teeth, 
(See Wilkinson’s Dictionary, p. 201. Tokak. Biting, used of 
dogs, sharks, tigers, and other animals which use their teeth as a 
weapon of offence.) 

The teeth of these fishes are used however for cru:hing shells, 
coral, ete. 

A Tokak (Chaerops omnopterus) is known in New South 
Wales and Queensland as the Blue-spotted Groper. 

Little use is made of this large family of fine edible fishes from 
a commercial point of view, 

Their capture is confined to the hand line and to basket traps. 
Their habitat, deep water in the vicinity of coral reefs, renders the 
use of ordinary nets impossible but the trammel net which is un- 
known in this region should prove effective. 

Many members of this family attain a weight of 50 pounds. 


PARROT-WRASSES. 
(SCARIDAE.) 

This family is closely allied to the preceding, with which they 
have been usually united, but differing in the more or less coalescent 
teeth, forming, often, a parrot-like beak. 

I have placed tne Béchok in this family and also among the 
LABRIDAE as there are several species. 

Mr. A. W. H. Hamilton, who is an authority on Malayan sea- 
fishes, tells me that the Malays of the Western part of Singapore 
confine the synonym Béchok to a fish with green teeth, which 


seems to identify his fish as Pseudodax moluccanus (Day, 2nd 
edition Vol. II, p. 421). 


HORSE MACKERELS. 
(CARANGIDAE.) 
A large and important family of carnivorous fishes, all of 
which are edible and many of large size. 
Members of this family compose the bulk of the fish taken in 
nets on the East coast, which are dried and salted for export. 


Some of our principal local varieties are the Chéncharu 
(Caranx rottlert), the Selar (Caranz, not less than 12 species), 
the Chermin (C. gallus), the Nyior nyior (Trachynotus spp.) 
and the Talang (Chorinem us spp.). 


1 The Cambridge Natural History, 1904. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 43 


When freshly caught and cooked they are all excellent eating, 
but they do not keep well. 

The Chencharu is quite common and is found in large shoals. 
When in season, large numbers will be found in the markets and if 
quite fresh they are good edible fish. They are said to attain a 
length of 5 feet. 

All the Selar are good eating, but the fresher they are the 
better. They give good “sport with a light rod and small hook, to 
which a few small white feathers have been “ whipped.” 


They like shade and will be found in the neighbourhood of 
piers and under vessels. When cruising, I have often noticed 
Selar taking shelter under my yacht, when we were becalmed, and 
if the period coincided with a meal time, we used to catch as many 
as we wanted in a few minutes. 

There are, at times, large numbers of Sélar in shallow water 
off Singapore as, probably, many sea-side residents know. 

The Chermin (C. gallus) is a deep-bodied fish somewhat re- 
sembling the Dory in shape and is one of the best, if not the best, 
food fish in this family. It is found generally on reefs; takes a 
prawn or fish bait, and gives splendid sport as it fights very hard 
and takes a bit of playing. 


Specimens 2 feet in length are not uncommon and it is said 
to grow to five feet in length. It is known in Australia as the 
Silvery Moon-fish. 


The Nyior nyior (Trachynotus ovatus and T. bailloni) are 
known in Australia as the Dart. These fish must be fresh to be 
appreciated. 


The Talang (Chorinemus spp.) is a common fish in the 
markets and fairly popular with most Asiatics, but some Malays 
have a prejudice against it and will tell you that it gives them an 
irritating and disfiguring affection of the skin. 


It may be that the general appearance of these fish, all of which 
have a row of dark blotches along the side, may suggest the un- 
sightly blotches seen on the faces, bodies and limbs of natives who 
are afflieted with certain kinds of skin disease, kédal, sopak, ete. 
or that the consumption of this fish when not perfectly fresh causes 
urticaria, but the subject should be worth investigation. 


One local species of Talang (S. sancti-petri) is known also in 
Australia as the Queen-fish, and another (S. tooloo-parah) is known 
also in Phihppine waters as the Talang-talang. 


There are many other excellent food fish in this family in- 
cluding the Lembudek or Demudok, Gérépoh and Berkas, not 
specifically identified. 


The generic term by which the Caranz branch of this family is 
known to the Moros, in the Philippines, is Daing puti. The name 
Daing belang occurs locally and is applied to Caranx speciosus 
and C. compressus, 


44 MALAYAN FISHES. 


MACKERELS, TUNNIES, ETC. 


(SCOMBRIDAE.) 


The fishes of the “ Mackerel” family are pelagic forms, abun- 
dant in all the seas of the tropical and temperate zones. They 
travel about in shoals, spawn in the open sea, but periodically ap- 
proach the shore in pursuit of other fishes on which they feed. 

Our most important local members of this family are the 
Pélata (Siamese pla thu) (Scomber microlepidotus), the Tong- 
kol (Thynnus thunnina) and the Tenggiri (Cybium spp.). 

The Pélata is a fish of great commercial importance in Siam 
and on the East Coast, where it is extensively salted and dried ‘for 
export. 

The Tongkol is the Malay generic term for the Tunny and, 
I believe, for the Bonito also. These fish gives excellent sport when 
they are on the feed but often one sees a school of these fish Jump- 
ing and disporting themselves, and on such occasions they seem to 
disdain the bait which is “ trolled” past them. 

The Ténggiri is, in my opinion, the best fish in our waters. 
The best ‘both from a sporting and from an edible point of view, but 
I may be prejudiced in its favour because I have had more sport 
with this fish than with any other. Seale’ gives corroborative 
evidence as to its edible qualities as follows, “In this family is 
the tanguingue, which is a true Spanish Mackerel. By many 
people this is regarded -as the finest food fish in the Philippine 
waters.” 

A recent visitor to Singapore from Queensland told me that 
he had had great sport with these fish on the Barrier Reef and that 
they attained a weight of 100 pounds. 

The big fish stay out in deep water and the best time to take 
them is during the N. E. monsoon. The best bait is a whole fish 
about 8 or 9 inches long, and at least 100 or 150 yards of line should 
be run off the reel, so as to keep the bait a long way astern as you 
sail along in a good breeze. 

When making a passage in a heavy sea with no time for rod 
fishing we used to boom out as many as five brass wire lines and 
perhaps have two or three fish on at once averaging 20 pounds or 
so. 

When our fisheries are better understood and depots with re- 
frigerating plant are established on the islands off the East coast, 
more attention will certainly be paid to our oceanic fishes. Sea 
going fishing smacks should do a good trade with catches of Bonito, 
Tunny and Spanish mackerel, 

One of the Spanish mackerels in America is one of the most 
highly esteemed of all American fishes and always commands a high 
price. Stead mentions that the catch in 1897 amounted to 
1,183,456 pounds, worth nearly £14,000. 


1 Fishery resources of the Philippines. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 45 
HAIRTAILS. 


(TRICHIURIDAE.) 
The Timah-timah (Trichiurus spp.) are some of our com- 
monest fishes and are generally on sale in the markets. 


I have never eaten them but the Chinese and: Indians purchase 
them readily. 


These fish have no caudal fin, the body being ribbon like and 
tapering to a fine point. 

Miniature specimens an inch or two in length form a con- 
siderable proportion of the catches of illegal purse nets. The or- 
dinary size of marketable specimens is about three to four feet. 


Day quotes Russell as observing that in his time they were 
esteemed by the European soldiers in India, and Jerdon states that 
they afford very delicate eating. 


SAIL-FISHES. 
(HISTIOPHORIDAR.) 


A family of large oceanic fishes, occurring in tropical or sub- 
tropical seas. On account of their formidable sword, large speci- 
mens are held in dread by fishermen and are rarely taken and still 
more rarely preserved. 

The Japanese in Hawaii have a regular fishery for Sail-Fish 
and Tuna. ‘The Japanese fishermen in Singapore, who are the 
only deep water fishermen in our waters and whose methods are 
much more enterprising and thorough than those of the Malays and 
Chinese, are taking these fish occasionally. 

I am informed that a Sail-Fish, three fathoms long was sold in 
the Clyde Terrace market within the past two weeks, but the in- 
formation arrived too late to enable me to get a photograph. 

This fish is known to Malays as Sélayer or Layeran (Layer, 
a sail), and is by no means rare. 


FLAT-FISHES. 


(PLEURONECTIDAE.) 


Flat fishes are a large group of some 500 species, mostly 
marine, 

The very young are transparent and symmetrical with an eye 
on each side, and swim in a vertical position like other fishes. 

As they grow, the eye of one side moves by degrees to the other 
side, where it becomes the upper eye. . 

If, at that age, the dorsal fin does not extend to the frontal 
region, the migrating eye simply moves over the line of the profile ; 
in other genera, the dorsal fin has already extended to the snout 
before the migration takes place, and the eye, passing between the 


46 MALAYAN FISHES. 


frontal bone and the tissues supporting the fin, appears to pass from 
side to side through the head, as was believed by some of the earlier 
'observers.' 

As a food supply the flat-fishes are of great importance, the 
flesh of the majority being of excellent quality and flavour, and 
they are deservedly popular with Europeans in Malaya. 

The family is represented in our waters by, certainly, not less 
than 19 species, of which 12 are included in the systematic list in 
this work. 

The Malay generic Da are Ikan sabélah and Ikan lidah 
for all members “of this family, but in some districts the name 
Sabélah is applied to those genera which have a distinct caudal 
fin (Psettodes, Pseudorhombhus) and the name Lidah to the tongue- 
shaped genera (Synaptura, Plagusia, Cynoglossus). 

In the Straits of Malacca these fish are very common in shallow 
water on sand and mud where they keep close to the bottom. This 
habit of keeping close to the bottom renders them particularly 
lable to capture by the beam or “ Otter” trawl. I have taken 
these fish in a beam trawl in fair numbers both off Singapore and 
off the Krian coast. 

On the great Kra flats off Krian which are formed of very soft 
mud I found it necessary to fit “ ski” or wooden skates to the irons 
of the trawl to enable the trawl to slide on the surface of the mud, 
and took considerable numbers of these fish as well as some large 
Rays. 

I should expect a trawler to be successful on the long banks 
and in the deep water gullies which, as a glance at the chart will 
shew, run in the direction of the prevailing currents, in many parts 
of the steamer route between Penang and Singapore. 

An enormous amount of destruction of immature flat fish 
takes place daily in shallow water, specimens an inch or two in 
length being taken in seine nets and purse-nets from one end of 
the Straits to the other. A special effort should be made to stop 
this murder of miniature fish which has diminished our food supply 
to a very considerable extent. 

Two species of our Ikan sabélah are fauna on the Queens- 
land coast. One, Psettodes crumet, is known as the Queensland 
Halibut, and the other, Pseudorhombus rusellut, is generally called 
the “ Flounder.” 

GOBIES. 


(GOBIIDAE.) 
A large family of some 600 species, the great majority marine, 
mostly carnivorous and of small size. 
The largest form (Eleotris marmorata) from the rivers of Siam, 


Borneo, Sumatra and the Malay Peninsula grows to nearly three 
feet, whilst the smallest (Mystichthys luzonensis) from the Philip- 


1 Cambridge Nat. History. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 47 


pines, attains a length of about half an inch and is believed to be 
the smallest known fish. 

The family is not of much economic importance at present 
and I have no personal knowledge of their edible qualities. 

Our most noteworthy species are the Bélontok (Hleotris mar- 
morata) the Bélodok (Gobius spp.), the Tembakul and Bélachak 
(Periophthalmus spp.). 

The Bélontok has already been alluded to as attaining a large 
size and not less than seven species are known to inhabit our 
waters, ; 

One of our Bélodok (G. butis) is said by Day to be much 
esteemed by the natives of India, as being very light and whole- 
some, but unless elaborately cooked is not relished by Europeans, 
because of its deficiency in, or earthy, taste. 

It attains a length of a foot and a half, takes a bait freely and 
is largely bred in tanks in India. 

The Témbakul and Bélachak will be familiar to most resi- 
dents in Malaya as the Mud-Skippers which may be seen disporting 
themselves on the mud and among the mangroves, along all our 
coasts and estuaries. 

Malays have told me that these fish are good eating and possess 
great medicinal virtues. 

They have verv conspicuous prominent eyes, which are capable 
of protrusion and retraction, and extraordinary muscular pectoral 
fins which thev use like arms for progression on mud and for 
climbing. 

Day writes. “ They climb on to trees, holding on by their 
pectoral fins exactly as if they were arms. Now and then they 
plant these firmly as organs of support, the same as one places 
one’s elbows on a table, then they raise their heads and take a 
deliberate survey of surrounding objects.” 

Saville-Kent is quoted by Stead as follows: 

“4 remarkable circumstance associated with the life 
economy of Periophthalmus is the fact that it cannot sustain 
life if continually water-submerged like ordinary fish. The 
exposure of its tissues to the action of atmospheric air with 
every fall of the tide appears to be essential to its well-being, 
and examples experimentally kept under water for prolonged 
intervals were literally drowned. 

“ As a provision for its abnormal life-habits, it has been 
ascertained that Periophthalmus possesses a supplementary 
respiratory organ which, singular to relate, is represented, in 
this instance, in the creature’s tail. 

“The fish while reposing on the surface of the mud com- 
monly leaves its tail more or less immersed in the water. The 
blood circulates with abnormal energy through this thin mem- 
branous appendage, which accordingly fulfils the function of a 
supplementary gill.” 


48 MALAYAN FISHES. 


SUCKING FISHES. 


(ECHINEIDIDAE.) 


These fishes, generally known as Remora, attach themselves: 
by means of a remarkable adhesive disc on the upper surface of the 
head to boats and ships, or to whales, sharks and turtles and in 
this way manage to do a good deal of travelling with the minimum 
amount of effort. As they are not strong swimmers they obtain a 
mueh larger supply of food by riding about in this way than other- 
wise would be possible. 

The natives of Cuba, Zanzibar and the Torres Straits use these 
fish for catching turtles; the fish being held by a metal ring round 
the base of the tail to which a line is attached. “When one of 
these fish, a foot in length, has its wet sucker applied to a table,. 
and is allowed time to lay hold, it adheres so tightly that it is im- 
possible to pull it off by a fair vertical strain ” (lydekker)?. 

The Gémi (/chineis naucrates) is very common in these seas.. 
It takes a bait readily, is edible, and may, occasionally, be seen in 
the markets. 

GOBLIN-FISHES. 


(SCORPAENIDAE.) 

Some members of this family are Perch-shaped and edible, 
growing to a large size (Sebastes, Scorpaena, etc.). 

Nearly all are distinguished by a powerful armature, either of 
the head, or fin spines, or both, and in some the spines are provided 
with poison glands (Scorpaena, Pterois, Pelor and Synanci«) and 
a sting from these spines is extremely painful, 

Lépu is the Malay synonym for all members of this family. 


FLAT-HEADS. 


(PLATYCEPHALIDAE.) 

This family with a single genus, Platycephalus, and some 40' 
species, inhabits the coasts of the Indian Ocean and the Western 
Pacific. 

The Malay generic term is Baji-baji, so called from the wedge: 
shaped head, and so far some four species have been identified in 
Malayan seas, 

They live on the bottom, hidden in the sand as a rule, and as 
they depend on their protective colouring and spines to save them 
from possible enemies, they do not swim to any distance when dis- 
turbed but dart away for an instant and then lie motionless half 
buried in the sand. 

This peculiarity renders them particularly liable to be taken by 
trawls and a large proportion of the catches made by the New 
South Wales trawlers is composed of these fish, 

They are good edible fish and common in the markets. 


9 Royal Nat. History. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 49 


“ STAR-GAZERS.” 
(LEPTOSCOPIDAE.) 


Information is wanting, but, I think the Pukul gendang 
(Percis pulchella) is rare and economically unimportant. 


SPINY-EELS. 
(MASTACEMBELIDAE.) 


These are eel-shaped carnivorous fishes, very common through- 
out Malaya where they are known by the generic term Tilan. 
The largest species reach a length of three feet and the flesh of all 
species is of excellent quality. They are found far inland and often 
at considerable elevations. 

Day states, “ Excellent as food, although owing to their resem- 
blance to eels (in fact they are eels with spines) or snakes, some 
people object to them.” Buchanan observes, “ sought after by the 
natives, the highest of whom in Bengal make no scruple of eating 
them ; and by Europeans they are esteemed the best of the eel-kind,” 


FROG-FISHES. 
(BATRACHIDAE.) 


These carnivorous fishes apparently dehght in mud and dirty 
water ; they frequent the shores, ascending tidal rivers and estuaries. 
At Penang “ the natives attribute poisonous qualities to these fishes, 
and reject them even as manure” (Cantor). 


ANGLER-FISHES AND “ CROAKERS.” 
(ANTENNARIIDAE & MALTHIDAE.) 


These fishes have no economic value, 


LEATHER-JACKETS. 
(TRIACANTHIDAE AND BALISTIDAE.) 

These two families may be conveniently taken together in this 
small work as there is a strong affinity between them. 

Though containing many species of no economic value one 
species, the Jébong (Balistes stellatus), is preferred to all other 
fish by many Malays, including fishermen, whom T have questioned. 
I think that the main reason for this preference is that the flesh 
of this fish more nearly resembles that of a chicken than any other 
fish, and consequently the change to what approximates to a meat 
<liet is welcomed. 

The Jébong has a tough leathery skin which has to be re- 
moved before it is cooked. The cook should not be allowed to re- 
move the head which is the best part of this fish, and of many 
others, especially perhaps the Tenggiri. 

Leather-jackets are held in considerable esteem in Australia ag 
food fish and are commonly served in hotels and restaurants. 


50 MALAYAN FISHES. 


BOX-FISHES. 


(OSTRACIONTIDAE.) 
This family is of no edible importance. 


GLOBE-FISHES AND PORCUPINE FISHES. 
(TETRODONTIDAE & DIODONTIDAE.) 


These fish possess poisonous properties and instances have been 
recorded of persons dying shortly after eating them. Malay fisher- 
men, however, commonly eat the Buntal pisang (Tetrodon 
lunaris) and some other species, being careful to remove all the 
poisonous organs, 


SHARKS AND DOG-FISHES. 


_ (CARCHARLUIDAE, SCYLLIDAE, SPHYRNIDAB.) 


Sharks are active predacious fishes living at different depths 
in the sea from the surface to nearly a thousand fathoms and rang- 
ing from mid-ocean to the shallower waters round the coasts in every 
part of the world. They are most abundant in the Tropics where 
they attain their greatest size, and some of the Sharks are the 
largest of living fishes. 

Among the ScyLLIpAE (Dog-fishes) we have in these waters the 
Tiger or Zebra Shark (Yu chechak or Yu to’kek) with dark 
bands on a tawny ground which attains a length of at least 10 feet. 

Among our species of the true Sharks (CARCHARTIDAE) we have 
Yu tenggiri (Galeocerdo rayneri) which attains a length of over 
12 feet and is very ferocious, but fortunately rather rare, and the 
Yu jerong or Yu sambaran (Carcharias sp.) which has also a 
bad reputation, 

The Hammer-head Sharks (SPHYRNIDAE) Yu bengkong, Yu 
sanggul or Yu palang are voracious, usually live in deep water 
and grow to a length of 15 feet. 

There is no scientific record of the D of RHINODON- 
TIDAE in these waters. Sharksof this family are probably the largest 
knewn and are said to exceed 50 feet in length (some writers men- 
tion 70 feet), but to be quite harmless. Specimens have been seen 
or captured in the neighbourhood of Ceylon, and on one occasion 
I watched a very large shark, in clear water, near Nipah Bay, 
Tioman Island, for more than half an hour, which appeared to 
equal the length of my yacht (35 feet). 

The economic value of sharks has not yet been fully realised. 
Fishermen regard them as a nuisance as they tear nets and take 
fish off their hooks, and they are avoided as much as possible. 
Incidentally sharks are a nuisance to trawl-fishermen in Australia, 
and if there is any delay in getting the “ cod-end ” containing the 
fish on board, the sharks will bite pieces out of it. There is how- 
ever every indication that shark-leather will soon be an ordinary 
trade commodity. The skin of sharks is composed of two layers: 


MALAYAN FISHES. , 51 


the outermost integument, “ shagreen,” is covered with denticles, 
and hitherto, owing to the difficulty of treatment, has had a very 
limited use, but within the last few years a method has been dis- 
covered of separating the outer and inner skins and the latter can 
be tanned and used in every way like ordinary leather. It is there- 
fore likely that the high price and scarcity of ordinary leather will 
eventually lead to the universal exploitation of the shark, ray and 
porpoise fisheries with special nets and appliances. I see in the 
Australian Magazine “Sea, Land and Air” (September 1920) 
that a Marine-Leather Company is operating successfully off the 
coast of Florida and North Carolina. 

Other commercial products are the blood, fins, liver and meat. 
The blood is said to furnish one of the finest waterproof glues yet 
known for aeroplane propellers, etc.; the fins are a well known 
Chinese delicacy, and the American Bureau of Ffsheries has 
published some thirty recipes for cooking shark-meat. 

Small sharks are esteemed as food by the Malays, Indians and 
Chinese and are excellent eating, 

The liver of the shark is rich in oil and is said to equal that of 
the Cod in its medicinal properties. It is also used in the prepar- 
ation of soap, paint, etc., including the treatment of leather, 


SAW FISHES. 
(PRISTIDAE.) 

The family contains one genus (Pristis) with about four or 
five species, 

These fish are termed Béroi by Malays in some districts but 
the descriptive names Yu gergaji, Yu parang and Yu todak are 
more commonly heard, Malays placing these and the RHINOBATIDAE 
among the Sharks (SELACHOIDET) and not among the Rays (Ba- 
THOIDEL), with good reason. 

Boulenger states that an arbitrary distinction has been made 
which has little to recommend it except custom and some measure 
of convenience. 

These fish are readily eaten by Malays, Chinese and Tamils 
and are very common. They enter rivers right up into fresh water 
and small specimens two or three feet long are often taken acci- 
dentally in casting nets. 

They have always appeared to me to be very lethargic and slug- 
gish and as the small ones in a net give less trouble than any other 
fish of the same size, I have always considered them to be more for- 
midable in appearance than in reality. However, Day writes 
“Great injuries are inflicted by these fishes, which strike side- 
ways with their formidable snouts; and although not personally a 
witness to the fact, I ‘have been informed on native authority, that 
large ones have been known to cut a bather entirely in two.” 

It would be interesting to know whether there is any record of 
patients having been admitted to hospital in India or Malaya, suffer- 
ing from injuries inflicted by these fish. 


52 : MALAYAN FISHES. 

A saw-fish measuring 23 feet 6 inches exclusive of the saw was 
taken in the Bay of Bengal by the Government trawler “ Golden 
Crown” and I believe that this is the largest recorded fish. No 
mention is made of the length of the saw of this specimen but it is 
not likely to have been fess than 7 feet. The largest saw in the 
Raffles Museum, Singapore, measures 5 ft. 103 in, 


BEAKED-RAYS. 
(RHINOBATIDAE.) 


These are harmless, sedentary, bottom-feeding fishes which 
subsist chiefly on shell-fish, crabs, ete. They are considered good 
eating and are sold regularly in the markets. 


They are known to Malays as Yu kéméjan. 


ELECTRIC-RAYS. 
(TORPEDINIDAE.) 


These Rays to which the Malays have given the descriptive 
names Pari kébas or Pari sébar have the power of inflicting 
electric shocks. “The fish” writes Dr. Giinther, “ gives the elec- 
tric shock voluntarily, when it is excited to do so in self defence, 
or intends to stun or kill its prey. The electric currents created 
in these fishes exercise all the other known properties of electricity ; 
they render the needle magnetic, decompose chemical compounds, 
and emit the spark.” 

Our Malayan species are very small. I have a specimen of 
the Pari kebas (Astrape dipterygia) about six inches long and 
there is no record yet of specimens over 18 inches. 

When trawling on the Australian coast we took many speci- 
mens which appeared to be between two and three feet in length 
and one or two new deck hands experienced shocks which appeared 
to cause only momentary inconyenience, 

Cantor says that out of the water they may be handled with 
impunity. 

STING RAYS. 
(TRYGONIDAE.) 

Nearly all the members of this family are provided with long 
whip-like tails, which are generally armed with spines. In the 
larger kinds these formidable spines may be as much as 8 or 9 
inches in length; and, as they wear out they are, from time to 
time, shed and replaced by new ones growing from behind. 

These spines inflict very severe wounds, the pain of which is 
greatly increased by the apparently poisonous cutaneous mucus 
introduced into the wound. 

The Pari beting (Trygon uarnak) attains a large size, 5 feet 
or more across the disk, and a weight of well over 200 pounds. In 
one haul of the trawl in the Bay of Bengal the “ Golden Crown” 
took four of these fish which weighed respectively 180, 170, 160 
and 122 pounds, 


MALAYAN FISHES. 53 


The Pari dédap (Urogymnus asperrimus) is the sole repre- 
sentative of a genus and remarkable from the fact that its back is 
covered with osseous tubercles, among which are studded, at inter- 
vals, a number of conical denticles or spines rather like limpets in 
appearance, 

This fish ranges between the Red Sea, East Coast of Africa, 
seas of India and the Malay Archipelago. 

I recently overheard a Malay in the Raffles Museum apply the 
name Derédap to this fish and perhaps a note on the word Dédap 
and its derivatives may be of interest. 

Dédap—a tree (Hrythrinus sp.) with scarlet flowers, the bark 
of which is studded with spines of the same lmpet-like shape as 
those of the Pari dédap. 


Dédap—a shield or buckler. 


Rédap—a small drum, (probably so called from the kind of 
skin used). 

M érédap—( Riau, Johor) springing up plentifully, of prickly 
heat and other skin eruptions, the feature of which is a large num- 
ber of pustules. 

The word dédap as meaning a shield is obsolete both in collo- 
quial Malay and in literature and it is interesting to note that its 
place has been taken by the Indian word Périsa. 


EAGLE-RAYS. 


(MY LIOBATIDAE.) 

This family contains five genera and about 27 species. All 
five genera are represented in Malayan seas. 

These fish feed principally on Molluses, the shells of which 
they grind with their large grinding-teeth. Some of them attain 
an enormous size, over 20 feet in width, a thickness of 3 to 4 feet 
and a weight, probably, of over a ton. 

They are variously known as Devil-fishes, Sea-devils, Bat- 
fishes, Eagle-rays, etc., and it is interesting to note that the terms 
Bat and Eagle are taken from the Malay, viz. Pari kélawar and 
Pari lang. 

The largest of this family are the Pari paus (Dicerobatis spp. 
and Ceratoptera spp.). 

I have seen these fish leap out of the sea to a height of perhaps 
7 or 8 feet, time after time, coming down each time with a tre- 
mendous splash, and Malays have told me that the fish does this to 
shake off the remora which hang on to them in large numbers. 

In conclusion I may add, that all the Rays and Skates are eaten 
by natives of the East, while the “wings” or fins are highly esteemed 
by the Chinese. Fishes of this order would form a considerable 
proportion of the catches of a trawler and would provide a cheap 
and valuable food, for which there is a constant demand, either 
fresh or salted. 


Malayan Fishes. 
PART II. 


ALPHABETICAL LIST OF MALAYAN FISHES. 


Note :—The letters and abbreviations inserted in brackets after 
the Malay name of each fish, refer to authorities for both the Malay 
and scientific synonyms. 

Where no authority is given the writer accepts responsibility 
for the identity of those species, 


LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS. 


C..= Cantor. D: = Dennys. ER: = Rowell’ RK: Mi.— -Ramies 
Museum. Dun. = Duncker. Blkr. = Bleeker. M. W. and de 
B. = Max Weber and de Beaufort. S. = Sauvage. Wilk. = Wil- 
kinson. CC. and 8. = Clifford and Swettenham. S. M. = Selangor 
Museum. Blgr. = Boulenger, 


Alu-alu. Sphyraena novae-hollandiae. 
a obtusata. 
” jello. 
Barracudas. Fam. SPHYRAENIDAE. 
Members of the genus Sphyraena are called “ Barra- 
. . . 5 = . . . 
cudas ” in America and elsewhere, and Pikes in Australia. 
See also Kachang-kachang and Tenok. 
Ambu-ambu (Wilk.). “‘The name of a large deep-sea fish. 
When preserved this fish is known as Ikan kem- 
bal. mas.” 


Probably Tongkol or Ikan ayer. 
Thynnus thunnina or the Bonito Thynnus pelamys. 
Mackerel. Fam, SCOMBRIDAE. 
See Kembal mas. 
Ampas tebu (R. M.). Pristipoma operculare. 
“ Grunters.” Fam, PRISTIPOMATIDAE, 


Ampit. Anak ampit (Wilk.): (Kedah) a fish; better known as 
Ikan pélaga. This is probably the well known 
fighting fish Ikan bélaga: Betta pugna. 

3) Delica. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 55 


Fam. OSPHROMENIDAE, 

See also Pala and Belaga. 
Anding. See Bélanak. Grey Mullets. Fam. Muarurmar. 
Anjang-anjang (Blkr. Andjong-andiong). 

Pentapus caninus. 

(R. M.) Scolopsis ghanam. 

Grunters. Fam. PrisTrPOMATIDAR. 
Aruan (Dun. ) = Gah cee piel qachua 


35 sg lucius. 
(Dunes D2) ig striatus, 


The Murrel of Northern India. 

The “ Murrel.” Fam, OpuroceEPHALIDAR, 
Aruan tasek (Dun. D. R.). LHlacate nigra. 

Mackerel. Fam, ScoMBRIDAR. 


Asoh-asoh (R.).  Lethrinus nebulosus, 
Sea-Bream. Fam. SPARIDAE. 
Ayam (Blkr. Hajam). Monacanthus choerocephalus. 


» ” hajam. 
Balistes stellatus. 
Leather-jackets. Fam, BALISTIDAE. 
Ayer. Ayer-ayer ((Cliff.). “The name of a sea-fish ” Thynnus 
thunnina C. V. The Tunny or Tuna. 


The name “ Ayer” is used on the East coast of the 
Malay Peninsula, and Tongkol elsewhere. 


Mackerel. Fam. SCOMBRIDAE, 
Babi. Holacanthus spp. 


So called from the shape of the head and the presence of 
a spine considered to resemble a pig’s tusk. 


Coral-Fishes. Fam. CHAETODONTIDAE. 
Bagat. Caranz sp. 

Horse-Mackerel. Fam, CARANGIDAE. 
Bagok. Arius sp. Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE, 
Baji-baji |D. R.). Platycephalus tuberculatus, 


AN macracanthus. 
és (eM). y punctatus. 


Flat-heads. Fam. PLATYCEPHALIDAE. 
Bakap (Unid.). Cat-fish family. SILURIDAE. 
Bakok or Bangkok. 4q.v. 


56 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Balut (M. W. & de B. III 515). Macrotema caligans. 
An eel belonging to the order SYNBRANCHOIDEA. 
Bambangan. Also Bambang and Mambang. Lutianus sp. 
Snapper. Sub-fam. LUTIANINAE. 
Banang. Large of its kind: viz, Puput banang. Jolong-jolong 
banang. 
Bandan (D. R.). Sparus hasta. 
Sea-Bream. Fam, SPARIDAE. 
Bandang (M. W. & de B. IL 15). Chanos-chanos. 
The Salmon-Herring of Australia, 
The Milk-fish of India. 
The Milk-fish. Fam. CHANIDAE. 
(M. W. & B. IL 3). Hlops hawmensis. 
The Bony-fish: A small relative of the Tarpon. 
Giant-herring. Fam. ELopsipar. 
Bangkok. Also Bakok on East Coast. 
i (M. W. & de B. 11 40). Hngraulis setirostris. 
” Be gray 1. 
Herring. Fam. CLUPEIDAE. 


Barat-barat (Blkr.). Triacanthus strigilifer. 


a blochaa. 
La nieuhofi. 
Monacanthus chinensis. 
penicilligerus. 


Leather-jackets. Fam, TRIACANTHIDAE, 


Barau-barau. Also Bébarau and Sébarau. 
Hampala macrolepidota. 
(Dun. Barbus hampal). 
Carp. Fam. CYPRINIDAE. 
This fish gives good sport with live bait or spinner. 


Barau-barau laut (R, M.). Priacanthus hamrur. 
Sea Perch. Sub-fam, PRIACANTHINAE. 


Batu (R. M.) (D.R.). Proteracanthus sarissophorus. 
Sea-Bream. Fam. SPARIDAE. 
Baung. The following varieties are recognised: Baung akar, 
B. kunyet, B. gantang, B. pisang, B. puntong. 
pes | (ID) Macrones nigriceps. 
» (M. W. & de B. IT 341). s nemurus. 
, kuning (M. W. & de B. II 343). ,, planiceps. 
Cat fish. Fam. SILURIDAE. 


° MALAYAN FISHES. 57 


Bawal (Tamil Voval). The following varieties are distinguished. 
B. chermin (C.). Stromateus atous. 


B. itam (D.). 3; cinereus, 
B. puteh. 5 55 
B. tambak (C.). 3 niger. 
B. kéedewas. nr cinereus. 


Pomfret. Fam. STROMATEIDAE. 
Bayan. Bayan-bayan. 
(Boyan R. M.). 
Chilinus fasciatus, 
# chlorurus. 
Parrot-fish. Fam, LABRIDAE. 
Beberas (M. W. & de B. III 126). Cyclocheilichthys apogon. 
Carp. Fam. CypRINIDAE. 
Béchok (Wilk. 93). Julis lunaris. 
Parrot-fish. Fam. LABRIDAE. 
Pseudoscarus spp. 
Pseudodax moluccanus, 
“ Parrot-wrasses.”” Fam. SCARIDAE, 
Bégahak (J. S. A. S. VIII 120). Belodontichthys dinema. 
_ Cat-fish. Fam, SILURIDAE. 
Bekil. Also Berkil, q.v. 
Bélachak. Periophthalmus koelreuteri. 
Goby. Fam. Gosripar. | 
Belaga. Or Berlaga. Ikan berlaga (literally) fighting fish. 
Betta pugnax. 
» bellica. 


Three varieties of fighting fish are recognised, viz., 
Anak karing, A. sempila, Karing gajah and they fight 
only with members of the same species, 


See also Bleeker’s Atlas Vol, LX, Betta picta. 
Osphromenus striatus. 
Fam, OSPHROMENIDAR, 


Belalang. Hxocoetus oligolepis. 


a5 neglectus. 
€ mgripinnis. 
a speculiger. 


Flying-fish. Fam, SCOMBRESOCIDAE. 


58 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Bélanak (Dun, D. R.). Mugil cunnesius. 


(Dun.). » _ planiceps. 
5 »  speigleri. 
P Bs waigiensis, 
B. jémpul (C.). *,  planiceps. 
B. rapang (R. M.). 5  bleekert. 
B. anding. 3 borneensis. 
B. tamok. 55 waigiensis. 


Other Malay varieties are Bélanak angin, B. bakau, 
B kédeéra, B. puteh, Puntong damar or Puting damar, 
and Pélong. 


Grey Mullet. Fam. MuUGILIDAE. 
Bélau. See Sélangat bélau. 
Bélibas. See Gélibas. 
Bélida (R, M.). Notopterus notopterus. 
Pa Da Ks _ chitala. 
Feather-backs. Fam. NOTOPTERIDAE. 


Bélidang or Béledang. (C. & S. Dict. 259) a salt water fish 
shaped like an eel (unid). 
Bélin (R. M.). Muraena (Gymnothorax) undulata. 
Pisoodonophis cancrivorus. 
Eels. Fam. OPHICHTHYIDAE. 


Béliak mata (M. W. & de B. II 68 Mata belo). 
Clupea (Alosa) kanagurta, 


Béliak mata jantan. Clupea (Harengula) moluccensis. 


Béliak mata kapak. Pellona dussumiert. 
Herring. Fam, CLUPEIDAE. 


Bélodok (Dun.). Apocryptes lanceolatus. 
x Periophthalmus schlosseri. 


Gobius giuris. 
Boleophthalmus boddaerti. 


2 
3? 
Bélodok kerapu (Dun.). Gobius sadanundio. 
lobang $) Gobius sp. aff. caninus. 
Goby. Fam. GOBIIDAE. 


Bélodok karang (D. R.). Platyglossus dussumiert, 
Parrot-fish. Fam, LABRIDAE. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 59 


- 


Bélontok (Dun.). Eleotris butis. 
(Wilk.). Gobius viridipunctatus, 
Goby. Fam. GoBIIDAE. 
Belungkor. Saurida tumbil. 
Cf. M. W. & de B. IL 142 Belanka (Bintang). 
The Queensland Smelt. 
Fam. SCOPELIDAE, 


Belukang. Arius leiotetocephalus. 
(Dun. Arius liocephalus). 
Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE, 
See Pédukang. 
Belut. Monopterus albus. 
(M. W. & de B. III 414). An eel belonging to the 
order SYNBRANCHOIDEA, 
Béngkalis. Also Méngkalis. 


Ikan béngkalis is another name for the Ikan téru- 
bok. 


Béngkongkong. Also Békukong, Béekuku and Kuku. 
(Blkr. Bekukung VIII 108). Sparus hasta. 
Sea-Bream. Fam. SPARIDAE. 

Béntulu (M. W. & de B. III 209). Barbichthys laevis, 
Carp. Fam. CYPRINIDAE. 

Béras-béras. A yphosus spp. 
Drummers. Fam. KypHOSIDAE. 

Bérchat (S. bertchat). Opliocephalus gachua. 
“ Murrel.” Fam. OPHIOCEPHALIDAE. 


See Aruan. 


Berkas. Caranz sp. 

Horse-mackerel. Fam, CARANGIDAE, 

Bérkil. A dark red fish of the Ikan merah family, which fre- 
quents timber rather than reefs, i.e. near piles, 
piers, sunken barges, ete. 

Lutianus sp. 
Snapper. Sub-fam. LUTIANINAE. 


Béroi. Also Yu gergaji. 
Pristis spp. 
Saw-fish. Fam. PRISTIDAE, 


60 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Bésikor. Also Mésikor. Diagramma spp. 
Grunters. Fam. PRISTIPOMATIDAE. 
Bétok (Dun.). Anabas scandens. 


The well known climbing perch of natural history books. 
Fam. OSPHROMENIDAE. 


Bétulu. See Bentulu. 
Biang-biang also Mémbiang (M. W. & de B. II 29). Setipinna 
breviceps. | 
Herring. Fam. CLUPEIDAE. 
Biji durian (Dun.). Osphromenus malayanus. 
Fam, OSPHROMENIDAE, 
Biji nangka (D. R.).  Upeneus tragula. 
Red Mullet. Fam. MULLIDAE. 
Bilis (M. W. & de B. Il 16). Stolephorus commersonit, 
tri, 
(“ White-bait”) Herring. Fam. CLUPEIDAE, 
Bonang. Platax teira., 
Coral-fish. Fam. CHAETODONTIDAE, 


Bongkar karang. Literally the reef lifter. A name applied to 
large members of the Ray family. 


Boyan. See Bayan. 


Bujok. Opliocephalus sp. 
“ Murrel.” Fam. OPHIOCEPHALIDAE. 


Bulan or Bulan bulan (M. W. & de B. II 6). Megalops cypri- 
noides. 
Giant-Herring. Fam. ELopsIpAr. 


Bulu ayam. Ooilia dussumieri. 
, quadrifilis. 
(Anchovy) Herring. Fam, CLUPEIDAE. 


Bulus bulus or Bébulus (D. R. Bolas-bolas). Sillago sthama 
5, maculata, 
The Whiting of Australia. Fam. SILLAGINIDAE. 


Bunga ayer (C.). Stolephorus indicus. 
Engraulis Russellir. 
See Bilis. 
(“ White-bait”) Herring. Fam. CLUPEIDAE. 
Note: Bunga ayer, are probably the larvae or young 
of valuable food-fishes in the Leptocephalus stage. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 61 


Buntal. A name applied to a large number of fishes belonging to 
the families OSTRACIONTIDAE (Box-fishes) ; TETRO- 
DONTIDAE (Globe-fishes) ; and DiopoNTtIDAE (Sea- 
porcupines ). 


Buntal batu (R. M.). Ostracion cubicus. 


,1 kotak or peti. N NASUS. 

” ” “5 cornutus, 
Buntal pisang. Tetrodon lunaris. 

, duri (Dun). - reticularis, 

, landak. Diodon novemmaculatus. 

” ” (R.M.). or) hystria. 


Chabok. See Parang-parang. 

Chandong. Opisthopterus tartoor. 
Raconda russelliana. 
Herring. Fam. CLUPEIDAE, 

Chélek mata (D. R, Chileh mata).- Pristipoma maculatum. 
“ Grunters.” Fam, PRISTIPOMATIDAE. 


Chémpéras also Témpéras (R. M. Temporas). 
Cyclochetlichthys apogon. 
Carp. Fam, CYPRINIDAE. 

Chéncharu also Jaru-jaru (Dun.). Caranx rottleri. 
Horse-mackerel. Fam, CARANGIDAE. 


Chénchodak. See Todak. 


Chérechek (Cliff. 351). A fresh water fish with bright scales and 
red fins. 
(Cf. M. W. & de B. III 62 Tjettjereh). 
Rasbora argyrotaenta, 
Carp. Fam. CypRINIDAE. 


Chérmin. Caranz gallus. 

The Silvery Moon fish of Australia. 

Horse Mackerel. Fam, CARANGIDAE. 
Chérmin. See Bawal chermin. 
Daing belang. Caranx compressus. 

»  Spectosus, 

Horse Mackerel. Fam. CARANGIDAE. 
Darok-darok. (See C. & S, dict. 395). 

Carp. Fam. CypRINIDAE. 


62 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Daun (S. M.). Barbus oatesii. 
Carp. Fam. CypRINIDAE. 


Daun (Dun.). Platax teira. 
Coral-fish, Fam. CHAETODONTIDAE. 


Daun baharu (D. R.). Drepane punctata, 
The Moon-fish of Queensland, 
Ephippus orbis, 
Coral-fish. Fam. CHAETODONTIDAE. 


Debam. Teuthis java. 
“ Black Trevally.” Fam. TEUTHIDIDAE. 


Délah. Caesio lunaris, 
= Ce Meo ee na 
a pinjalu. 


Délah karang (D.). Caesio chrysozona. 
Sea-Bream. Fam. SPARIDAE. 


Démbudok. Caranz sp. 
Horse Mackerel. Fam. CARANGIDAE, 


Dengkis. Teuthis nebulosa. 
” (Rk. Dukas). Teuthis virgata. 
“Black Trevally.” Fam. TEUTHIDIDAE. 


Duri (Dun.). Macrones nemurus. 
»  (D. B.): Artus sagor. 
Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAFE. 


Engor-engor. Macrones nemurus. 
Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE. 
Gabus (Wilk. 557). Ophiocephalus sp. 
“ Murrel.,.” Fam, OpHIOCEPHALIDAE. 


Garing (M. W. & de B. III 152). Labeobarbus tambra 
Carp. Fam. CyPRINIDAE. 


Gédabang (D. R.). Psettus argenteus. 
The Silvery Bat-fish of Australia, 
Bat-fish. Fam. SCORPIDIDAE. 


Gelam (D.). Psammoperca vaigiensis. 
Sea-Perch. Fam. SERRANIDAE. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 


Gélama (C.). Umbrina russellu. 


63 


panjang (D.). Otolithus argenteus. 


Sclaena spp. 


The following varieties are distinguished: viz.: 


G. panjang. 
papan. 
China. 
sekang. 

, rapang. 

... batu. 

... itam. 

,0 perak. 

, batu keling. 

. lanjut. 

. kuning dada. 
dahi tinggi. 

> cherua. 

. pisang. 

Jew-fish. Fam. SCIAENIDAE, 


‘Gélibas also Belibas & Libas (R. M. Belibas). Teuthis oramin. 
“Black Trevally.” Fam, TEUTHIDIDAE. 


Gemang. ‘The synonym for large [kan sembilang. 


Plotosus spp. 
Cat-fish. Eam, SIURIDAE, 


‘Gémang darat (Dun.). Silurichthys phaiosoma. 


Cat-fish. Fam. SILuRIDAR. 


Gémi also Gédemi and Kémi (C.). Lchineis naucrates. 


Sucking-fish. Fam, ECHINEIDIDAE. 


Gérépoh. Like the Sagai but with thicker lips. 


Carane sp. 


Horse Mackerel. Fam, CARANGIDAE. 


‘Gérétak lantei (R. M. Kertah lantei). 
Ss .» Scolopsis personatus, 


55 


Synagris japonicus. 


(D. R.). Lethrinus nebulosus, 


Sea-Bream. Fam. SPARIDAE, 


‘Gergaii. Yu gergaji. 
(Dun. C.). Pristis cuspidatus. 
Saw-fish. Fam, PRISTIDAE, 


64 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Gérut-gérut (Dun.). Mesoprion sp, 
Snapper. Fam, LUTIANIDAE. 
a » (D. Blkr.). Pristipoma hasta. 
” »  (Blkr. Krot-krot) ,, maculatum., 
= 55 $ Krot) a gquoraca, 


b) 


“ Grunters.” Fam. PRISTIPOMATIDAE. 


Gombing (Cf. R. Rombin karang). Heniochus macrolepidotus. 
Coral-fish. Fam, CHAETODONTIDAE. 

Glyphidodon coelestinus. 

Coral-fish. Fam. POMACENTRIDAE. 


39 


Haruan. See Aruan. 
Hayam. See Ayam. 


Inggu. Dascyllus sp. 

» (R.M.). Pomacentrus albofasciatus. 

, (D.R, Ingu). Amphiprion ephippium. 

» (R.M.y. Amphiprion frenatus. 
Coral-fish. Fam. POMACENTRIDAE, 

, (D.R. Ingu rombin). Holacanthus sexstriatus. 

. (D.R. Ingu rombin). Holacanthus mesoleucus. 
Coral-fish. Fam. CHAETODONTIDAE. 


Jahan. Arius thalassinus. 

Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE. 
Jalu jalu (R. M.). Caranx boops. 
Horse-mackerel. Fam, CARANGIDAE. 
Caesio pinjalu, 
Also known as Ikan merah china. 
Sea-Bream. Fam. SPARIDAE. 


99 bb) 


Jampong (R. M.). Chilinus chlorurus. 
Parrot-fish. Fam. LABRIDAE. 


Jangas = Bandang. 
Fam. CHANIDAE. 


Jarang gigi (C.). Otolithus maculatus. 
: argenteus. 


9 2? 


As 5 ruber. 
53 Collichthys biaurita, 
Jew-fish. Fam. SCIAENIDAE. 


Jaru-jaru. See Chéncharu. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 65 


Jéboh. See Tamban jéboh. 


Jébong (D. R.). Balistes stellatus, 
“ Leather jackets.” Fam. BALISTIDAE. 


Jéembedi. Engraulis sp. 
Herring. Fam. CLUPEIDAE, 
Jémpul. See Bélanak. 


Jénéehak. Lutianus roseus. 


(Blkr.). >»  johnin. 
As ;, sebae. 
2 is fulviflamma, 
_ ss lioglosus. 
ir a argentimaculatus, 


Nore:—The generic names Ikan merah and Ikan jénéhak are 
synonymous. The latter name being used in the north, 
(Penang and Kedah) and the former in the south, Singapore, 
ete. 

Snapper. Sub-fam, LUTIANINAE. 

Jéngkua (unid.). 

Carp. Fam, CYPRINIDAE. 


Jénijalu see Jalu jalu. 
Jérong. See Yu jérong. Shark. Fam. CARCHARIIDAE. 


Jolong jolong or Julong: also Jénjulong (Dun.). Hemirham- 
phus cantoris. 


(Dun.). Hemirhamphus buffonis. 


ss $5 limbatus. 
$3 55 pogonognathus. 
a 33 Auviatilis. 

# PI. 5 far. 


Jolong-jolong banang. /emirhamphus far, 
Gar-fish. Fam, SCOMBRESOCIDAE. 


Juara (Wilk. 235). An edible fresh-water fish. 
(Cf. M. W. & de B. II 258 juaro). Pangasius poly- 
uranodon. 
Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE. 
Kachang-kachang. A fish similar to, but smaller than, the Alu- 
alu, q.V. “ere 
“ Barracudas.” Fam, SPHYRAENIDAE, 


66 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Kachi. Diagramma spp. 


“ Grunters.” 


Fam. PRISTIPOMATIDAE, 
Novacula spp. 
Parrot-fishes. Fam. LABRIDAE, 
Kakap also Siakap. The “Cock-up” of Europeans in India, 
whence the name by which this fish is known in 
Queensland was probably derived. 


(Blkr.). Lates calcarifer. 

Sea-Perch. Fam, SERRANIDAE. 
Kalat (R. M.). Pseudoscarus rivulatus. 

“ Parrot-Wrasses.” Fam. SCARIDAE. 


Kalui (Dun, D. R.). Osphromenus olfaz. 


Habitat—China and the fresh waters of the Malay 
Archipelago. 


Naturalised in Mauritius, Cayenne, Australia and in- 
troduced into some parts of India, viz., near Cal- 
cutta, Madras and the Neilgherries. Attains 20 
Ibs. or more in weight and is excellent eating when 
kept in clean water. Known as Gurami in India. 


Notre:—Kalui probably derived from Kallawah. (Tamil) a 
perch. 


Fam, OSPHROMENIDAE. 
Kapas, Kapas-kapas, (Blkr.). Sparus hasta. 
Sea Bream. Fam. SPARIDAE. 
»  (Blkr.). Gerres abbreviatus. 
»  filamentosus. 
“‘Silver-Bream.” Fam. GERRIDAE. 
Karang. Reef or coral. 
Ikan karang. Fish frequenting rocks and coral reefs. 
Kasi-kasi. Engraulis baelama. 
(“ Whitebait ”) Herring. Fam. CLupEmpar. 
Kawan-kawan (R. M.). Dangila burmanica, 
93 cuvieri. 
Carp. Fam. CYPRINIDAE. 
Kébasi (Pahang) = Sélangat q.v. 
Kédémut. Caren sp. 
Horse-Mackerel. Fam. CARANGIDAE, 
Kédéra. See Bélanak. 


Grey Mullet. Fam. MuGILIDAE, 


MALAYAN FISHES. 67 


Kedewas. See Bawal. 
Pomfret. Fam. STROMATEIDAE, 


Kédondong. A large bulus-bulus. 
See Bulus-bulus. 
Whiting. Fam. SILLAGINIDAE. 


Kekek gédabang (R. M.). Hquula edentula. 
“ Silver-Bream.” Fam, GERRIDAE. 
Kékek labu. Gazza minuta. 
“ Silver-Bream.” Fam, GERRIDAE. 


Kékek jawa. Mene maculata. 


Kékek gédabang. Mene maculata. 
Horse-Mackerel. Fam. CARANGIDAE. 
Kélabau (Wilk. 524). A fresh water fish (Unid.). 
(Cf. M. W. & de B, III 129). Osteochilus kelabau. 
Carp. Fam, CYPRINIDAE. 
Kelah (R. M.). Barbus kolus, 
3 D se stracheyt. 
Carp. Fam. CYPRINIDAE. 
Kelalawer (Blkr.). Antennarius hispidus. 
Angler-fish. Fam, ANTENNARIIDAE. 
Kélara (See Wilk. 524). The young of the sembilang. 
Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE. 
Keli (Dun. D. R.). Clarias magur. 
Ber (G8): »  teysmanni. 
Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE. 
Kémbal mas. Vhynnus thunnina, 
See Tongkol. 
Mackerel. Fam. SCOMBRIDAE, 


Note:—Kembal mas and Tombol mas derived from Tamil 
Kombola mach. 


Kembong (Dun.). Carana calla. 
Horse-Mackerel. Fam. CARANGIDAE., 
(R M.). Scomber microlepidotus. 

Mackerel. Fam. SCOMBRIDAE. 
Kéméjan. Also Kéménnyan. 

Rhynchobatus djeddensis. 

_ Beaked-Rays. Fam. RHINOBATIDAE. 


68 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Kémi. See Gemi. 
Kenderap. Bagarius sp. ? 
Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE. 
Kepar. An edible fresh water fish, common in ponds and swamps. 
See Bleeker Vol. IX Polyacanthus hasseltu. 
(Plate only: no description). 
Fam. OSPHROMENIDAE. 


Képau (Dun.). Catopra fasciata, 
Fresh-water Perch. Fam. NANDIDAE, 
Képau laut (R. M.). Glyphidodon notatus. 
Coral-fish. Fam. POMACENTRIDAE. 


Képayat. (See Wilk. 522). A large fish (unid.). 
Cf. M. W. & de B. III 109 Kapyah. 
Mystacoleucus marginatus. 

Carp. Fam. CYPRINIDAE. 


Keping (R. M. Kepang). (Glyphidodon notatus. 
(Coral-fish. Fam. POMACENTRIDABR, 


Képiyat (M. W. & de B. III 179 Kepiat). 
Puntius schwanefeldi, 
‘Carp. Fam, CYPRINIDAE. 
Kerai (Dun. Krai). Barbus goniosoma. 
(R.M. Kereh).. *,,; netilh. 
kunyet. ae SD 
jelawat. g si 
Carp. Fam, CYPRINIDAE. 


bb) 


29 


Kerapu (Dun.). Epinephelus tauvina. 
a - Cromileptis altivelis. 
a Plectropoma maculatum. 
Se (Day I 450, Dun. D. R.). Epinephelus lanceolatus. 


- (Blkr, R.). - fasciatus. 

P (Blkr.). - boelang. 

,» karang (Blkr.). 4s miniatus. 

, lumpur (Blkr.). §, pantherinus, 
bloso (Blkr.). e corallicola. 

, tutul (Blkr.). 5 merra, 

5, Bebeh (Blkr)- a fuscoguttatus, 

P os 3 2 serfasciatus. 

a A A a hoevenu, 

» lili. (ER: Me): Fr salmoides. 

,, sonoh. Cromileptis altivelis. 


Sea-Perch. Fam, SERRANIDAE, 


MALAYAN FISHES. 


Kérétang. Epinephelus pantherinus, 
Sea-Perch. Fam, SERRANIDAE. 


Kéring, Ikan kéring. Lit. dried fish. 
Amphisile scutata. 
Sea-snipe. Fam. AMPHISILIDAE. 


Kérisi (Blkr. Gurisi mejrah). Synagris taeniopterus. 
Japoracus, 


2 2) 2” by) 39 


. tolu. 


3) 3) 9) bb 99 


Sea-Bream. Fam. SPARIDAR. 


Kérisi aji-aji. Synagris nematopus. 
» bali (R, M.). Scolopsis bilineatus, 
Sea-Bream. Fam, SPARIDAE. 


Kerong-kerong also Méngkerong. 


Es 2 (D. R.). Therapon puta. 

i :- 4 a quadrilineatus. 
3 55 A A theraps. 

rs “ (Bika). “ jarbua. 


‘Snapper. Sub-fam. LUTIANINAE. 
3 - (D. R.). Centrogenys vaigiensis. 
Sea-perch. Fam. SERRANIDAE. 
Kérosok (R. M.). Monacanthus cheirocephalus. 
padi (R. M, Kerusu padi). JMonacanthus 


“Leather Jackets.” Fam. BALISTIDAE. 


39 


Kértakok (D. R.). Batrachus grunniens. 
Frog-fishes. Fam, BATRACHIDAE. 


Ketang also Kitang (Dun, D. R.). Hphippus argus. 
(D. R.). Holacanthus annularis. 
Coral fish. Fam. CHAETODONTIDAE. 


Ketang (Dun.). Teuthis virgata, 
fs stellata, 


39 DE) 
pe). » java. 

” » D concatena. 
3 bb} ss dorsalis, 


“Black Trevally.”. Fam. TEUTHIDIDAE. 


Kétarap (R. M.). Pseudoscarus ghobban., 
“ Parrot-wrasse. Fam. SCARIDAE. 


69 


monoceros, 


70 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Ketewas. See Bawal. 
Kia-kia. See Yu kia-kia. 
Kubal. Polynemus spp. 


A name applied to large fish of this family. 
Threadfins. Fam. PoLYNEMIDAE, 


Kuda laut (Dun.). Hippocampus hystrix. 


Kuda-kuda ayer (D. R.). Hippocampus gudtulatus. 
Sea-Horses. Fam. SYNGNATHIDAE, 


Kuku. See Béngkongkong. 


Kuning-kuning. Lutianus erythropterus, 


Snappers. Sub-fam, LUTIANINAE. 


Kurau. Polynemus paradiseus. 

fs (C2 - indicus. 

. ) (R.). 5 sextarius. 
Kurau pipit 3, sextarius. 
Kurau janggut (Dun.). , tetradactylus. 


Threadfins. Fam. POLYNEMIDAE. 
Lais (M. W. & de B. II 204). Belodontichthys dinema. 
» Cryptopterus cryptopterus. 
» (Dun.). * micropus. 
Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE. 
Lalang (Dun.). Crossochilus oblongus. 
mB! pe Rasbora damiconius. 
= Chela spp. 
Carp. Fam, CyPRINIDAE, 
Lali (M. W. & de B. III 24 Langli). Botia hymenophysa. 
Loach. Fam. CoBITIDAE. 
Lambai. Teuthis sp. 
“ Black-Trevally.” Fam. TEUTHIDIDAE, 
Lampam (M. W. & de B. III 178). Puntius schwanefeldt. 
(R. M.). Barbus jerdont. 
Carp. Fam. CyPRINIDAE. 
Lampila (S.) (Lampile). Betta bellica. 
Fam. OSPHROMENIDAE. 
See Bélaga. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 


Landok (Pahang). Sparus datnia. 


Sea-Bream. Fam. SPARIDAE. 


Langgai. Trichiurus savala, 


Langi. 


“ Barracouta.” Fam, TRICHIURIDAE. 


Lau (East coast). Polynemus sextarwus. 


Jew-fish. Fam, PoLYNEMIDAE. 


Pawang (C. & S. dict. 171). 
Cf. M. W. & de B. II 259. Pangasius sp. 


” 3? 


Cat-fish. Fam, SILURIDAE. 


Lawi ayam. See Bulu ayam. 


Layer, Layeran or Sélayer (Dun, D. laiar). 


Layur (D. R.) also Sélayur. 


dius. 
Sail-fish. Fam. HistioPHORIDAE. 


“ Barracouta.” Fam. TRICHIURIDAE. 


Lebai (R. Lebis). Mulloides flavolineatus. 


Upeneus luteus, 
5 tragula. 


Red-Mullet. Fam. MuULLIDAE. 


Lebam. See Debam. 


Lele (Wilk. 629) Jar. 
(M. W. & de B, TI 189). 5  melanoderma, 


Lembat (M. W. & de B. IT 190). 


oth 


A term applied to Tenggiri of the largest size. 


271. Bagarius sp. 


Histiophorus gla- 


Trichiurus savala. 


Clarias punctatus, 


= N 191). ,  batrachus. 


Cat-fish. Fam. SILuRIDAE. 


Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE. 


Lembu (Dun.). Ostracion cornutus. 


33 


99 


3? 


93 


Box-fishes. Fam. OsTRACIONTIDAR. 
Triacanthus sp. 


Clarias nieuhofi. 


“ Leather-jackets.” Fam, Banistrrpar. 
Lépu (Dun.). Antennarius hispidus. 


Angler-fish. Fam. ANTENNARIIDAE, 
(Dun. D. R.). Synancidium horridum. 
(Ra Scorpaena polyprion. 
ie Pterois antennata. 
panjang (R. M.). Pelor didactylum. 

Goblin-fishes. Fam. SCoRPAENIDAE. 

Malay varieties are Lépu sémaram. 

»  béranyut. 
, landak. 


92 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Mata lalat (Hanitsch Jour. S. B. R. A. 8. Dec., 1912). 
Haplochilus panchax. 
“ Millions.”” Fam, CYPRINODONTIDAE. 


Lidah also Lidah-lidah (Dun.). Cynoglossus lida, 
sd bi grandisquamis. 
In lingua. 
(Dun. C.). Plagusia bilineata. 
, Cynoglossus elongatus. 
2 Psettodes erumet, 
baji (D. R.). Synaptura orientalis. 
lumpur (D. R.). Synaptura commersoniana, 
a (C.). Cynoglossus cantoris. 
Flat-fish. Fam, PLEURONECTIDAE. 
See also Sa-bélah. 


Lisah (C.). Periophthalmus schlosseri. 
(Mud-Skipper). Goby. Fam, GoBIIDAE. 
Logu (D. R.). Choerops oligacanthus. 
“ Parrot-fishes.” Fam, LABRIDAE. 
(R. M.). Myripristis murdjan, 
“\Silver-Bream.” Fam, BERYCIDAF. 
Loma (R. M.). Thynnichthys sandkhol, 
Carp. Fam, CYPRINIDAE. 
Luding. A term applied to small Tenggiri. 
Luli (C.). Harpodon nehereus, 
See Lumi. Fam. SCOPELIDAE. 
Lumban (R.). Teuthis java. 
The “ Black Trevally ” of Australia. 
“ Black Trevally.”. Fam, TEUTHIDIDAE. 
Lumi. Harpodon nehereus. 
The “ Bombay-duck.” Fam, SCoPELIDAE. 
Lundu (M. W. & de B. II 345). Macrones gulio. 
‘Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE, 
Malong (Dun, D. R.). Muraenesox talabon., 
i talabonoides, 
a cinereus, 
Conger eels. Fam. MURAENIDAE. 
Mamong. Cuaranw sp, 
Horse-Mackerel. Fam. CArANGIDAE, 


MALAYAN FISHES. 73 


Mandi abu. Diagramma spp. 
“ Grunters.” Fam. PRISTIPOMATIDAE. 
As Novacula spp. | 
“ Parrot-fishes.” Fam, LABRIDAE. 
Mata béliak (M. W. & de B. II 68 Mata belo). 
Clupea (Alosa) kanagurta. 
See Beliak mata. 
Herring. Fam. CLUPEIDAE. 
Mayong. Arius sp. 
Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAH. 
Mempinis. Engraulis spp. 
(“ White-bait.”) Herring. Fam. CLUPEIDAE.: 
Mempurong. Also Porong or Purong. 
Lycothrissa crocodilus. 
(Sprat or Anchovy.) Herring. Fam. CLUPEIDAE. 
Ménangin. Llops hawaiensis. 
Giant Herring. Fam. ELopsipar. 
Méngkai or Mingkai (Wilk. 651). A species of Ray. 
Méngkerong. See Kerong-kerong. 
Merah (R. M.). Lutianus roseus. 
Snapper. Sub-fam. LUTIANINAE. 
Merah China. Cuaesio pinjalu. 
Sea-Bream. Fam. SPARIDAE, 
Mérawan. Luticnus sp. 
Snapper. Sub-fam. LUTIANINAE, 
Mudin or Mudim. Saurus myops. 
Mésikor. Diagramma spp. 
“ Grunters.” Fam. PRISTIPOMATIDAE. 
Novacula sp. 
Parrot-fishes. Fam. LABRIDAE. 


9 


Mersuji. J/istiophorus sp. 
Said to be smaller than Sélayer. 
Sail-fish. Fam. HiISTIOPHORIDAE. 


Fam, ScOPELIDAE. 


Nandong (Kedah) = Sélangat. 
Herring. Fam, CLUPEIDAE. 


74 - MALAYAN FISHES. 


Nyior-nyior (D. R. Nior-nior). Trachynotus ovatus. 
The Dart of Australia. 
Horse-Mackerel. Fam. CARANGIDAE, 


Nyua-nyua (Dun.). Barilius guttatus. 
Luciosoma setigerum. 
Carp. Fam. CYPRINIDAE. 
Otek (Blkr.). Arius utik. 
Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE. 


Pachal. See Parang-parang. 
Paku. See Rénnyau. 


Pala (Dun.). Betta pugnaz. 
Fam. OSPHROMENIDAE. 
See Belaga. 
Parang-parang (M. W. & de B. II 18). Chirocentrus dorab, 
The terms used to describe different sizes of this fish 
are: 
Pachal, largest. 
Tégap, large. 
Chabok, medium. 
Sudip, small. 


Chabok sétu or sétul is the term applied to this fish 
when caught, (usually in seine nets) in shallow 
water: amongst the marine plant (sétul). 


The Dorab. Fam. CLUPEIDAE. 


Pari kebas (C.). Narcine timlei. 
3 £ Astrape dipterygia. 
linchin ,, Temera hardwickii. 
bunga (C. banga). Astrape dipterygia. 
Electric-Rays. Fam, ToRPEDINIDAE. 


2? 


3) 


Pari dedap (Dun.). Urogymnus asperrimus. 


) Deting)) ,; Trygon uarnak. 
bendera. »  sephen, 
39 daun 3) 3) 3) 


» lalat. Trygon walga. 
» rennyau , kuhli. 
Sting-Rays. Fam. TryGonmag. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 


Pari kelawar (C.). Myliobatis vespertilio, 

n an 5 a meuhofi. 

» lang (C. D.). Aetobatis narinari. 

,0, daun (C.). Rhinoptera adspersa. 

>» paus (D.). Dicerobatis eregoodoo. 

a » (Dun). Ceratoptera ehrenbergit. 

9 kola By) 3? ” 
Eagle-Rays. Fam. MYLIOBATIDAE. 


Pasir (Dun.). Acanthopsis choerorhynchus. 
Loaches. Fam. CoBITIDAE. 
»  (R.M.). Labeo boggut. 
Carp, Fam. CYPRINIDAE. 


Pasir-pasir also Mémpasir (Blkr.). Scolopsis personatus. 


> 35 cancellatus. 

3 a ciliatus, 

o> a bilineatus. 

3 > vosmaeri. 

” bs bimaculatus. 

3? es monogramma, 


Sea-Bream. Fam. SPARIDAE, 


Patin (M. W. & de B. II 257). Pangasius pangasius. 
Cat-fish. Fam, SILURIDAE. 


Patong (S, petong). Catopra fasciata. 
Fresh-water Perch. Fam. NANDIDAE. 

Péchah périok (C.). Lobotes surinamensis. 
The Dusky Perch. Fam, LOBoTIDAE, 


Pédukang (M. W. & de B, II 327). Anak dukang. 
Hemipimelodus borneensis, 
Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE, 
See Bélukang. 


Pélaga. Also Ampit-ampit, Pala and Bélaga. 
Betta pugnac. 
»  bellica. 
Fam, OSPHROMENIDAE. 


Pélaling. Siamese, pla = fish. 
Horse mackerel, Fam. CARANGIDAE, 

Pélata (Meek. Siamese Pla-thu). Scomber microlepidotus. 
Mackerel. Fam. ScOMBRIDAE. 
Varieties are Pélata Bali and Pélata minyak. 


76 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Petek-petek (Dun.). Ambassis ranga. 
2 . a me commersonii, 
Sea-Perch, Fam. SERRANIDAE, Sub-fam. AMBASSINAE. 
Peti, Ikan peti. A name applied to the Box fishes. 
See Buntal. Fam. OSTRACIONTIDAE. 
Petong (S.). Catopra fasciata. 
Fresh-water Perch. Fam. NANDIDAE., 
Pias. Dorosoma chacunda, 
Herring. Fam, CLUPEIDAE. 
Pijat-pijat. Scolopsis torquatus. 
Sea-Bream. Fam. SPARIDAE. 
Pinang-pinang (D. R.). Chaetodon. octofasciatus. 
CR: Mf.) % vagabundus. 
Coral fish. Fam. CHAETODONTIDAE, 
Sparus datnia. 
Sea-Bream. Fam. SPARIDAE. 
Pipit (D. R.). Chelmo rostratus, 
Coral fish, Fam, CHAETODONTIDAE. 
Ponggok. A fish inhabiting reefs. Unidentified. 
Porong. See mémpurong. 
Puchuk (C.). Trichiurus savala, 
=f haumela, 
“ Barracouta.” Fam. TRICHIURIDAE. 
Puchok pisang (Unid.). Carp. Fam. CyYPRINIDAE. 
Pukul gendang (R. M.). Percis pulchella. 
Star-gazer. Fam. LEPTOSCOPIDAE. 
Puntong damar. See Bélanak. 
Puput. Also Puput Malacca. 
a (M. W. & de B. 1190). Pellona amblyuropterus. 
, elongata. 
(M. W. & de B. II 98) ,, dussumieri. 
Raconda russelliana, 
Herring. Fam. CLUPEIDAE. 
Puput (R.). Hemirhamphus limbatus. 


Puput banang Me far. 
Gar-fish. Fam. SCOMBRESOCIDAE. 


MALAYAN FISHES. TT 


Puteh (Dun. as Barbus maculatus). Puntius binotatus. 
ahi (irae x  apogon). Cyclochetlichthys apogon. 
» (,, )- Rasbora vulgaris. 
» (,, as Barbus obtusirostris). Mystacoleucus marginatus. 
Carp. Fam. CYPRINIDAE. 
Puyu. Also Puyu-puyu and Pepuyu. 
a (S. Dun). Anabas scandens. 
The Climbing Perch. Fam, OSPHROMENIDAE. 
Rapang. Also Répang. 
See Bélanak rapang and Gélama rapang. 
Rénnyau. Atherina forskali. 
ss temmincki. 
Sand-Smelts, Fam. ATHERINIDAE. 
Riu-riu. (Dun.). Lais hevanema. 
Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE, 
Rong (Dun.). Dangila cuvieri. 
beras (C. & S. dict. 271). Idem. ? 
»  (R.M.). Labeo caeruleus. 
Carp. Fam, CYPRINIDAE, 
Rumbong-rumbong (R. M.). Lutianus madras. 
Snapper. Sub-fam, LUTIANINAE., 
Rumi-rumi (D. R.). Hchinets naucrates. 
Sucking-fish. Fam. ECHINEIDIDAE. 
Sa-bélah (Dun.). Synaptura achira. 
(C.). Psettodes erumer. 
* Pseudorhombus russellit. 


Flat-fish. Fam. PLEURONECTIDAE. 
See Lidah. 


Sagai (R.). Carane gallus. 
PANDAN Pr armatus, 
Horse-Mackerel. Fam, CARANGIDAE, 
Sai (Wilk. 367). A kind of Ray. 
Sébarau also Barau-barau (Dun.). Hampala macrolepidota 
(Barbus hampal.) 
(R.M.). ,,  hexastichus. 
Carp. Fam. CYPRINIDAE. 
Sébékah. Apogon spp. 
Sea-Perch. Sub-fam, CHILODIPTERINAE. 


78 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Sebekah karang. Myripristis murdjan. 
Nannygai. Fam. BERYCIDAE. 
Sedakang (R. M.). Gerres altispinnis. 
“ Silver-Bream. Fam, GERRIDAE. 


Sekiki. See Kekek. 
Selampai (C.). Collichthys biaurita. 
Jew-fish. Fam. SCIAENIDAE. 
Sélangat (M. W. & de B. II 26 selangkat). 
Dorosoma chacunda, 
i belau ,, NASUS. 
hg tuli _,, sp. 
Herring. Fam. CLUPEIDAE. 


Sélangin (C.). Polynemus tetradactylus. 
a 5 A sextarius. 
Thread-fins. Fam. PoLYNEMIDAE. 


Selar (Dun). Carana kurra. 
3. es Trachynotus baillon. 
» batang (R.). Caranx djeddaba, 
abu-abu (R. M.). .. wre, 


,  kuning 4, .  gymnostethoides. 
,  letup-letup. oblongus, 
A ie as +,  compressus. 


The Malays of Singapore enn between three 
sizes of Selar batang, viz., 
Small, Sélar Penghih. 
Medium, ,, keledek. 
Large, ,, batang. 
Other varieties, Selar bulat and Selar lepir. 
Horse Mackerel. Fam, CARANGIDAE. 


Sélayer. Histiophorus gladius. 
Sail-fish. Fam, HIsTioPHORIDAE. 


Sélayur. Trichiurus savala. 
“ Barracouta.” Fam. TRICHTURIDAE. 


Sélemah. Lactarius delicatulus. 
Fam. LACTARIIDAE, 


Seliap (D. R. Saliup). Chorinemus lysan. 
af £ 3; sancti-petri. 
Horse-mackerel. Fam. CARANGIDAE. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 79 


Sélichin. Anampses caeruleopunctatus. 
Parrot-fish. Fam. LABRIDAE. 


Séligi (R.). Anacanthus barbatus, 
Leather-jackets. Fam, BALISTIDAE. 


Sélikor. The synonym in Singapore for a large Chéncharu. 
Caranx rottlert. 


Sélimang (M. W. & de B, III 230). Hpalzeorhynchus kallopterus. 
Carp. Fam. CYPRINIDAE. 


Selinching. Pentapus spp. 
“ Grunters.” Fam, PRISTIPOMATIDAE. 


Séluang (S.). Rashora argyrotaenia. 
(Dun trilineata. 
(R.). Barilius guttatus. 
‘Small varieties are known as Séluwang beras C, & S. 
dict. 271. 
Carp. Fam, CYPRINIDAE. 


22 


3. 


Séludu (Blkr. as Arius maculatus). Pseudarius arius, 
(C. Surdudu). Arius macronotacanthus, 
Cat-fish. Fam, SILURIDAE. 


=3 


Semangka (D.). Apogon frenatus. 
’ GSea-Perch. Sub-fam. CHILODIPTERIN AE. 


See Sebéekah. 


Sémaram. Centrogenys waigiensis. 
Sea-Perch. Fam. SERRANIDAE, 

(R. M.). Centropogon indicus, 
karang (R. M.). Synancia verrucosa. 
““Goblin-fish.” Fam. ScORPAENIDAE. 


99 


Sémbak. See Tongkol. 
Sembilang (D. R.). Plotosus canius. 
(C. Blkr.). Paraplotosus albilabris. 
karang (M. W. & de B. II 230). Plotosus anguillaris. 
Cat-fish. Fam. STLURIDAE. 


2) 


39 


Sémpila. Also Sémpilai (Wilk.) and Lampile (S.). 
See Belaga. 
Fighting-fish. Fam. OSPHROMENIDAR. 


Senangin (C.). Polynemus tetradactylus. 
3 3 sextarws. 
Thread-fins. Fam. POLYNEMIDAE. 


80 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Séndarat. Lutianus argentimaculatus, 
Snapper. Sub-fam. Lurraninae. 

Séenderong (D. senderang sendok). Plectropoma maculatum. 

Hpinephelus sexfasciatus. 

Sea-Perch. Fam. SERRANIDAR, 

Séngaring. See Wilk. 384. Also Karing. 
‘Cf. M. W. & de B. III 152. Séngkaring. 
Labeobarbus tambra, 


Carp. Fam. CYPRINIDAF. 
Séenohong. A large Senangin. 
Sényor. Psettus falciformes, 
Bat-fish. Fam. SCORPIDIDAE. 
Sepat. (Dun). Osphromenus trichopterus. 
Fam. OsSPHROMENIDAE. 
Sepat karang (Rt. M.). Lobotes surinamensis, 
The Dusky Perch. Fam, LoBoTIDAE. 
Sepat karang. Pempheris spp. 
“ Bull’s Eyes.” Fam. PEMPHERIDAE. 
Sérandong (See Wilk. 381). A fresh water fish. (Unidentified). 
“Tt is something like the Sélangat.” , 


Serasah. Literally rubbish, manure, 
Ikan sérasah. Small and immature fish used as 
manure. 
Seriding (Dun.). Hquula edentula., 
* Silver-Bream.” Fam. GERRIDAE. 


Sétoka. A small Ray. 
Sétonggang. Monocentris japonicus. 
Knight-fishes. Fam. MONOCENTRIDAE. 


Sétu or Sétul. A marine plant with edible fruit. Hnhalus aco- 
rovde3. 
See Parang-parang sétu and Tamban sétu. 


Sia-sia (R. M.). Diploprion bifasciatum. 
Ambassis gynocephalus. 
Sea-Perch. Fam. SERRANIDAE. 

Siakap (C.). Lates calcarifer. 
Sea-Perch. Fam. SERRANIDAE. 


Sirat-sirat. A marine eel (unid.). 


MALAYAN FISHES. 81 


Songsong arus. Caranw sp. 
Horse-mackerel, Fam. CARANGIDAE. 
Sudip. Anak sudip. The young of the Ikan parang. 
Sumpit. Sumpit-sumpit. 
(Dun. C. D. R.). Toxotes chatareus. 
(Blkr,). »  jaculator. 
Blow-pipe fish. Fam. 'Toxoripar. 
= Chelmo rostratus. 
Chaetodon vagabundus, 
Coral-fish. Fam. CHAETODONTIDAE, 


Susur batang (Dun, Sulir batang, as Rashora daniconius.) 
Rasbora einthoveni, 
Carp. Fam. CYPRINIDA®, 
Talang (Dun.). Chorinemus lysan, 
sancti-petri. 
3 moadetta. 
Large specimens of Chorinemus are usually called 
Talang and small ones Séliap. 
Horse-mackerel. Fam. CARANGIDABR, 
Tali (S.) ? Acanthopsis choerorhynchus. 
Loach. Fam. CosprripAe. 
Tambak. See Bawal tambak. 


Tamban (M. W. & de B, II 58 tembang). Clupeoides lile. 
. (M. W. & de B. Il 76). Clupea (Harengula) fimbriata, 
a betul (C. batal). Clupea perforata. 


i bulat (C.). Dussumieria acuta, 

A nipis (C.). Clupea perforata. 

a siantan. Clupea (Harengula) fimbriata, 
3 nt Fs (Amblygaster) leiogaster. 
A chinchang rébong. Clupeoides lile. 

te jéeboh. Dussumieria acuta, 

be 7 a hasseltu. 


Tamban. Anak tamban jéboh. Spratelloides delicatulus. 
"A gracilis. 
Also Tamban sétu (unid.) & Tamban béluru (unid.) 
(“Sardines”) Herring. Fam, CLUPEIDAE. 
Tambéra. Also Témbéra or Tébéra. 
re (M. W. & de B. III 152). Labeobarbus tambra. 
Carp. Fam. CyPRINIDAE. 


82 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Tampok-tampok (Wilk. 187). Gerres oblongus. 
“ Silver-Bream.” Fam. GERRIDAE. 
Tanda-tanda (Wilk. 193). Lutianus sillaoo. 
a bohar. 
Snapper. Sub-fam. LUTIANINAE, 
Tapa also Tapah (Dun.). Callichrous pabda. 
Cf. M. W. & de B. IJ 202. Wallago spp. 
Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE. 


Tebal bibir (R. M.). Diagramma cinctum, 


» » 5 punctatum, 
parks (sina A crassipinum. 
Rey. : pictum. 

33 2 


“ Grunters.” Fam. PRISTIPOMATIDAE. 
Tebal pipi = Gerut-gerut q.v. 
Tékok (onom.). Halieutaea stellata, 
Croakers. Fam. MALTHIDAE. 
Telan. See Tilan. 
Telan rumput (R. M.). Ayplvosus (Pimelepterus) 
“Drummer.” Fam, KYPHOSIDAE, 
Témbakul. Periopthalmus schlosseri. 
(Mud-skipper) Goby. Fam. Gosripag. 


Téembélian. Barbus sp. 


Carp. Fam, CYPpRINIDAE, 


Témbéreh (C. Tembari). Sciaena diacanthus. 
(Wilk. 181). Otolithus punctatus. 
Jew-fish. Fam. SCIAENIDAE. 


Téméngalan (R. M.). Barbus burmanicus. 


cinerascens- 


(Blkr. Teban-galang). Amblyrhynchichthys trun- 


catus. 
Carp. Fam. CYPRINIDAE. 


Temenggong (Blkr.). Priacanthus tayenus. 
Sea-perch. Fam. SERRANIDAE, 


_Teménong = Kembong. q.v. 


Témoleh (R. Tamaleh, as Barbus apogon.)  Cyclocheilichthys 


cpogon. | 
Carp. Fam, CYPRINIDAE. 


Témpéras (R, M. as Barbus apogon.)  Cyclocheilichthys apogon. 


MALAYAN FISHES. ; 83 
Témpuwa (Wilk. 188 as Barbus «pogon.) Cyclochetlichthys 
apogon. 
Carp. Fam. CyPRINIDAE, 


Tenggiri (Dun.). Cybium kuhlir. 


ha (iC.). 7” commersonit. 
ee a is lineolatum. 
, batang (D.). ,, commersonit. 


> Musang ” 55 


, papan (C.). ,, guttatum. 


The descriptive terms Tenggiri luding, T. tohok, T. 
padi, T. tundan and Langi are used with reference to the 
size of these fish. 


Mackerel. Fam. SCOMBRIDAE. 
The Ténggiri is the well-known sporting fish, the 
Spanish Mackerel of the Philippines and Australia. 
Téngkerong. See Kerong-kerong. 
Ténok. . Sphyraena novae-hollandiae. 
a obtusata, 
A jello. 


Small Kachang-kachang, larger Alu-alu, largest size 
Ténok. 


“ Barracudas.” Fam. SPHYRAENIDAE, 
Térbul. Osteochilus hasselti. 
Cf. S. “Teboye” Duncker p. 205. 
Carp. Fam. CYPRINIDAE. 
Teri (M. W. & de B. 11 46). Stolephorus com mersonu. 
33 3 D. indicus. 
- —- - tri. 
(“ Whitebait ”) Herring. Fam. CLUPEIDAE, 
Téripang (R. M.). Saurus indicus. 
Fam. SCOPELIDAE, 
Térubok (M. W. & de B. II 66). Clupea (Alosa) macrura. 
Se padi a - - toli. 
4 korin = Po iy sp. 
Herring. Fam. CLUPEIDAE. 
Tilan. Also telan (Dun.). Mastdcembulus unicolor. 
Ss se i maculatus. 
Dungun armatus. 
Spiny-Eels. Fam. MASTACEMBELIDAE. 


84 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Tilan pasir (D. R.). Trypauchen vagina. 
Goby. Fam. GoBIIDAE. 
Timah-timah. See also Sélayur and Langgai. 
eer (Dun.). Trichiurus savala. 
haumela, 
“ Barracouta.” Fam, TrICHIURIDAE. 
Timun-timun also Méntimun (R. M.). Lutianus lineolatus. 
la decussatus. 


js vitta. 
Snapper. Sub-fam. LuTIANINAE, 


Tiram. Engraulis sp. 
Herring. Fam. CLUPEIDAE, 
Todak, also Chénchodak (Dun.). Belone cancila., 


2 (Dim: Co): |  strongylurus, 
” (Dun. D.). choram. 
5 COD: »  annulata. 


» pendek (Penang) (Blkr.). Hemirhamphus georgu. 
- 2 (Malacca). 2 far. 
Gar-fish. Fam. ScoMBRESOCIDAE, 
Toka-toka also Sétoka. A small Ray. 
Tokak (Blkr. Toka). Cossyphus diana. 
2 Chaerops omnopterus, 
Parrot-fish. Fam. LABRIDAE, 
Toman (R.). Ophiocephalus striatus. 
“ Murrel.” Fam, OPHIOCEPHALIDAE. 
Tombol mas (R. M.). Thynnus thunnina. 
The Tunny. See Kémbal mas. 
‘Mackerel. Fam. ScOMBRIDAR, 
Tombong damar (Wilk. 181). A fish (unid.) 
See Puntong damar. 
Tongkol. Thynnus thunnina, 


Small sized fish are called Choreng, medium sized 
specimens Sembak, large ones Tongkol and exceptionally 
large ones Kembal mas or Tombol mas. 


The Tunny or Tuna. 
Mackerel. Fam. SCOMBRIDAE. 
Tudong periok also Tudong tempayan. 
(Blkr. Tudjong-prio). Platax batavianus. 
»  vespertilio, 
Coral-fish. Fam. CHAETODONTIDAE. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 


Tuli. Literally deaf. See Selangat tuli. 
Tumbok banir. Histiophorus sp. 
Sail-fish. Fam, HIsTIOPHORIDAE. 


85 


Tumbok tebing (Dun. Tumbok ka tubing). Neg, Semb. 


Luciocephalus pulcher, 
Fam. OSPHROMENIDAE. 
Tunjang langit. Triacanthus oxycephalus, 
“ Leather-jackets.” Fam. BALISTIDAE. 
Ubi (C.). Sillago sthama. 
“Whiting.” Fam. SILLAGINIDAE. 
Udip. Petit ikan parang (Favre). See Sudip. 
Umbut-umbut (S. Mombu). Dangila lineata. 
S 
Barynotus microlepis. 
Carp. Fam. CYypRINIDAE. 
Undok-undok. Hippocampus sp. 
The Sea-Horse. 
Fam, SYNGNATHIDAE. 
Ungar (Wilk. 57). Lutianus argentimaculatus. 
john. 
Snapper. Sub-fam. LUTIANINAE, 
Unsat or usat. Plotosus sp. 
Cat-fish. Fam. SILURIDAE. 
Yu (R. M.). Carcharias dussumiert. 
,, tenggiri. Galeocerdo rayneri. 
Sharks. Fam. CARCHARIIDAE. 
Yu béngkong (D.). Sphyrna (Zygaena) malleus. 
CDs): a! Se blochu. 
Hammer-head Sharks. Fam, SPHYRNIDAE. 


3? 


Yu pendek (D.). Scyllium marmoratum. 
.. chechak (D. Chikak). Stegostoma tigrinum. 


... tokek (C. Tokay). 55 3 
,, tokek (C. Tokay). Chiloscyllium indicum. 
. belangkas (D.). * 


Dog-fishes. Fam, SCYLLIDAE. 

» parang (Dun.). Pristis cuspidatus. 

3? gergaji 2” 29 29 

,,1 todak (D.). ke $5 
Saw-fishes. Fam. PRISTIDAE. 

, kia-kia (D.). Rhynchobatus djeddensis, 

¥ >» (D.). Rhinobatus thonint, 
Beaked-Rays. Fam, RHINOBATIDAE. 


(M. W. & de B, III 116 Umbu-umbu). D. 


cuviert. 


Families of Malayan Fishes. 
PART III. 


ELOPSIDAE (GIANT-HERRINGS). 


Elops hawaiensis Regan. Bandang, Ménangin. 
Megalops cyprinoides Brouss. Bulan-bulan. 


NOTOPTERIDAE (FEATHER-BACKS). 
Notopterus notopterus Pall. Belida. 
chitala H. B. pa 


CHANIDAE (THE MILK-FISH). 
Chanos chanos Forsk. Bandang, Jangas. 


CLUPEIDAE (HERRINGS, SHADS, ETC.). 


Chirocentrus dorab Forsk. Porang-parang. 
Spratelloides delicatulus Benn. Anak tamban jéboh, 
a gracilis Schleg. 5; 5; 5 
Dussumieria acuta (. V. Tamban bulat, T. jeboh. 
a hasseltii Blkr Tamban jéboh. 
Dorosoma nasus Bl. Sélangat bélau, Nandong, 
Kebasi. 
chacunda H. B. Sélangat, Kébasi, Nandong, 
Pias. 
Setipinna breviceps Cant. Biang-biang. 
Ae taty C. V. ” 
Lycothrissa crocodilus blkr. Mémpurong. 
Engraulis baelama Forsk. ! Kasi-kasi. 
grayi Blkr. Bangkok. 
mystax Bl. Schn. Bulu ayam. 
- setirostris Brouss, Bangkok. 
. spp. Tiram, Mémpinis, Jémbédi. 
Stolephorus commersonii Lac. Bilis, Teri. 
“ indicus y, H. Bunga ayer, Teri. 
a tri Blkr. Teri, Bilis. 
Coilia dussumieri (. V. Bulu ayam, 
quadrifilis Giinth. £ Sg 
Clupeoides lile C. V. Tamban, T. chinchang ré 


. bong. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 87 


Clupea (Amblygaster) clupeoides 
Blkr. 

,, (Amblygaster) leiogaster C. V. 

Clupea (Alosa) toli C. V. 

macrura Blkr. 

kanagurta Blkr. 

spp. 


2 29 


, (Harengula) fimbriata C. V. 


” es moluccensis Blkr. 
“ A perforata Cant. 


Pellona amblyuropterus Blkr. 
> elongata Benn. 
dussumieri (. \. 


Opisthopterus tartoor C, V. 


Raconda russelliana Gray. 


Tamban. 


Tamban siantan. 
Térubok padi. 
Terubok, Ikan béngkalis. 


Beliak mata. 


Terubok korin. 

Tamban, T. siantan. 
Beliak mata jantan. 
Tamban betul, T. nipis. 


Puput, P. Melaka. 


Beliak mata, 
kapak. 
Chandong. 


Puput, Chandong. 


SCOPELIDAE (QUEENSLAND-SMELT, ETC.). 


Saurida tumbil BI. 


Saurus myops BI. Scho. 
Ba indicus Day. 
Harpodon nehereus H. B. 


Belungkor. 
Mudin or Mudim. 
Teripang. 


Lumi, Luli. 


CYPRINODONTIDAE (° WILLIONS”). 


Haplochilus panchax. 


Mata lalat. 


SILURIDAE (CAT-FISH ). 


Clarias melanoderma Blkr. 
nieuhofi C. V. 

2 batrachus L. 

A teysmanni Bikr. 
Silurichthys phaiosoma Blkr. 
Wallago sp. 

Belodontichthys dinema Blkr. 
Callichrous pabda H. B. 
Crytopterus cryptopterus Blkr. 
- micropus Blkr. 
Paraplotosus albilabris C. \. 


Plotosus sp. 
aa canius -H. B. 
» anguillaris Bl, 


Lele. 

Lembat. 

Lele, Kéli.(*). 
Keli. 


Gemang darat. 
Tapa, Tapah. 
Lais, Bégahak. 
Tapa, Tapah. 
Las. 


Sembilang. 

Unsat or Usat. 

Sembilang, Kélara, Gemang. 
Sémbilang karang. 


1. Duncker and Rowell give C. magur H. B. for Keli, which is now 
regarded by Max Weber and de Beaufort as a synonym of C. batrachus. 


88 


MALAYAN FISHES. 


Lais hexanema Blkr. 


Pangasius spp. 


pangasius H. B. 


polyuranodon Blkr. 


Arius thalassinus Riipp. 


Hemipimelodus borneensis Blkr. 
Macrones nigriceps CU. \ 


sagor H. B. 
leiotetocephalus Blkr. 
macronotacanthus Blkr. 
utik Blkr, 

maculatus Thunb. 

spp. 


nemurus (C, V. 
planiceps C. V. 


gulio H. B. 
bleekeri. 


Bagarius sp. ? 


Riu-riu, ? 


Lawang. 

Patin. 

Juara. 

Jahan. 

Duri. 

Pédukang, Belukang. 
Seludu. 

Otek, 

Séludu. 

Mayong, Bagok. 
Pédukang. 

Baung. 

Duri, Baung, Engor-engor. 
Baung kuning. 
Lundu. 

Engor-engor. 
Kenderap. 


COBITIDAE AND CYPRINIDAE (LOACHES A ND CARPS). 
COBITIDAE (LOACHES). 
Acanthopsis choirorhynchus Blkr. Pasir. 


Botia hymenophysa. 


2? 


Lal. 


CYPRINIDAE (CARPS). 
Chela oxygaster ©. V. 


sp. 


Rasbora argyrotaenia blkr. 


23 


trilineata Steind, 


lateristriata var, suma- 


trana Blkr. 
einthoveni Blkr. 
vulgaris Duncker. 


Luciosoma setigerum (. YV. 


Amblyrhynchichthys 
Blkr. 


Mystacoleucus marginatus (, V. 


Dangila cuvieri C. V. 


burmanica Day. 
lincata Sauv. 


Barynotus microlepis Blkr. 
Thynnichthys sandkhol Sykes. 


truncatus 


Lalang. 

29 
Séluang, Chéréchek, 
Séluang. 


Puteh. 
Susur batang, Lalang. 
Puteh. 


Nyua-nyua. 


Téméngalan, 

Keépayat, Puteh. 

Umbut-umbut, Rong, Ka- 
wan-kawan, 

Kawan-kawan. 

Umbut-umbut. 


23 29 


Loma. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 89 


Osteochilus kelabau Popta. Kelabau. 

3 hasselti C. V. Térbul. 
Hampala macrolepidota C. Y. Sébarau, 
Labeobarbus tambra C. V. Tambéra also T’émbéra, 


Garing, Séngaring. 

Cyclocheilichthys apogon C. V. Bébéeras, Témpéras, Chém- 
peras, Puteh, Tempua, 
Temoleh. 


Puntius schwanefeldi Blkr. Lampam, Kepiat. 

4 binotatus C. V. Puteh, Keran; 
Barbichthys laevis C. VY. Bentulu. 
Labeo caeruleus Day. Rong. 

; boggut Sykes. Pasir. 
Epalzeorhynchus kallopterus 

Blkr. Sélimang. 
Crossochilus oblongus C. Y. Lalang. 
Barbus burmanicus Day. Téméngalan. 

2 jerdoni. Lampam. 

,,  hexastichus McLell. Sebarau. 

5 neilli Day. Kerai. 

# kolus Blkr. Kelah. 

a stracheyi Day. Zi 

, . oatesii Blor. Daun. 
Barilius guttatus Day. Séluang, Nyua-nyua, 
(Unidentified). Darok-darok, Puchok pisang. 


Kerai jelawat, K. kunyet. 


ANGUILLIDAE, CONGRIDAE, OPHICHTHYIDAE, ETC. 
(EELS, CONGER-EELS, ETC.). 


Muraenesox cinereus Forsk. Malong. 
Z talabon Cant. a 
= talabonoides Blkr, :, 


Pisoodonophis cancrivorus Rich. Jélin. 


Muraena (gymnothorax) undu- 
lata Lac. » 


(Unidentified). Laki sembilang, Sirat-sirat. 
Belidang. 


SYMBRANCHIDAE (SWAMP-EELS). 
Monopterus albus Zuiew. Belut. 


Macrotema caligans Cant. Balut. 


90 MALAYAN FISHES. 


SYNGNATHIDAE, AMPHISILIDAE (SHA-HORSES 
AND SKELETON-FISHES). 


Hippocampus guttulatus Cuv. Kuda-kuda. 
hystrix K. P. Kuda laut. 
Amphisile scutata L. Kering. 


SCOMBRESOCIDAE (GAR-PIKES, GAR-FISHES AND 
FLYING-FISHES). 
Belone cancila H. B. Todak. 
strongylurus y. H. ase 
choram Forsk. 
annulata C. V. Ns 
Hemirhamphus limbatus ©. VY. Puput. 


a far Forsk. Todak pendek. Puput ban- 
ang. 
3; cantoris Blkr. Jolong-jolong, Jenjolong. 
buffonis C. V. Sg 
3 pogonognathus 
Blkr, a i 
ba fluviatilis Blkr. 5; 
- georgii C. V. Todak pendek. 
Exocoetus oligolepis Blkr. Belalang. 
D neglectus Blkr. ie 
y nigripinnis C. \. 5 
, speculiger Val. 5 


ATHERINIDAE (SAND-SMELTS). 
Atherina forskali. Rennyau, Paku. 


temmincki. i 


3) 


MUGILIDAE (GREY MULLETS). 


Mugil planiceps C. V. Bélanak, Jémpul., 
speigleri Blkr. 55 
vaigiensis Q. G. >  B. tamok, 
»  cunnesius C. V. > 
ay Dleekeri 2 Bélanak rapang. 
oeur Forsk. ,» tamok. 
,» borneensis Blkr, » nding. 
Sen » angin, B. puteh, B. ke- 
dera, Puting damar, 
Puntong damar, Tom- 


bong damar, B. ba- 
kau, Pelong. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 


91 
POLYNEMIDAE (THREADFINS). 
Polynemus indicus Shaw. Kurau, K. janggut, Kubal. 
ks. sextarius Bl, Schn. Kurau, K. mimi, Lau, 
- tetradactylus Shaw. Kurau janggut, Senangin, 
Sénohong, Kubal. 
In paradiseus BI. Kurau. 
SPHYRAENIDAE (BARRACUDAS). 
Sphyraena novae-hollandiae Tenok, Alu-alu, Kachang- 
Giinth. kachang. 
os obtusata C. V. - 
P jello C. V. FS 
2 commersonii CC. \. 
STROMATEIDAE (POMFRETS). 
Stromateus atous C. \. Bawal chérmin. 
- cinereus BI. Bawal puteh, Bawal itam, 
Bawal kedewas. 
a niger BI, Bawal tambak. 
OPHIOCEPHALIDAE (MURREL). 
Ophiocephalus gachua H. B. Aruan, Berchat. 
eA lucius C. VY. 58 A 
: striatus Blkr. og Toman. 
“p spp. Gabus, Bujok. 
BERYCIDAE (NANNYGAIT). 
Myripristis murdjan Forsk. Sébéekah karang, Logu. 
MONOCENTRIDAE (ANIGHT-FISHES). 
Monocentris japonicus Bl. Schn, Sétonggang. 
PEMPHERIDAE (BULL’S-EYES). 
Pempheris mangula C(. V. Sépat karang. 
3 Spp.- ” 3 
KYPHOSIDAE (DRUMMERS). 
Kyphosus cinerascens Forsk. Telan rumput. 
a sp. Beras-beras, 
LOBOTIDAE (DUSKY-PERCH),. 
Lobotes surinamensis BI. Péchah périok, Sepat karang. 


TOXOTIDAE (BLOW-PIPE FISHES). 
Toxotes jaculator Pall. Sum pit-sumpit. 
ig chatareus H, B. 


92 MALAYAN FISHES. 


NANDIDAE (FRESH-WATER PERCHES). 


Catopra fasciata Blkr, 


Képau, Petong, Patong. 


SERRANIDAE (SHA PERCHES). 


Serraninae. 


Centrogenys vaigiensis Q. G. 


Cromileptes altivelis C. V. 
Plectropoma maculatum C. V. 
Epinephelus tauvina Forsk. 


Pe lanceolatus BI. 
N fasciatus Forsk. 
- boelang C. V. 


miniatus Forsk. 
pantherinus Blkr. 


$5 corallicola Blkr. 

a. merra BI. 

- fuscoguttatus Forsk. 

is hoevenii Blkr. 

N salmoides Lac, 
Priacanthinae. 

Priacanthus tayenus Rich. 

a hamrur C. V. 

Centropominae. 


Lates calcarifer BI. 
Psammoperca vaigiensis ©, V. 


Ambassinae. 
Ambassis commersonii C. VY. 
a ranga H, B. 
os gymnocephalus Lac. 
Chilodipterinae. 
Apogon frenatus Blkr. 
een spp. 


Lutianinae (Snappers). 
Lutianus roseus Day. 


% argentimaculatus Forsk. 
ey lineolatus Rupp. 

eS johnii Bl, 

a sebae C. V. 

= fulviflamma Forsk, 


N lioglossus Blkr. 


Kerong-kerong, also Méng- 
kerong, Sémaram. 
Kerapu, Kerapu sonoh. 
Kerapu, Senderong. 
Kerapu, K. lilin, K. kayu. 


Kerapu. 
la Senderong. 
33 
= karang. 


Keritang, Kerapu lumpur. 
Kerapu. 
33 


bb) 


Es lilin. 


Temenggong. 
Berau-barau laut. 


Siakap, also Kakap. 
Gelam. 


Petek-petek. 


2 
Sia-sia. 


7 
Sébékah. 


Ikan merah, Jénéhak. 

Ungar, Séndarat. 

Timun-timun, also 
timun. 

Ungar, Jénéhak. 

Jénéhak. 


33 


Mén- 


bb) 


MALAYAN FISHES. 93 
Lutianus erythropterus BI. Kuning-kuning. 
madras U. \. Rumbong-rumbong. 
sillaco Russell. Tonda-ltanda. 
bohar Forsk. ¥ 
decussatus C. \V. Timun-timun, Méntimun, 
vitta Q. G. P ” 
spp. Bambangan, Mambang or 
Bambang, Mérawan, Ber- 
hil, Sénggarat. 
Therapon theraps C. V. Keérong-kérong, also Méng- 
kerong and Téngkerong. 
jarbua Forsk, Kérong-kérong. 
puta C. V. 
quadrilineatus BI. 3 


Diploprion bifasciatum Kk. V. IL. Sva-sia. 
Mesoprion sp. Gérut-gerut, 


SILLAGINIDAE §(“ WHITINGS ”). 


Sillago sihama Forsk. Ubi, Bulus-bulus, Bébulus, 
Kedondong. 
sa maculatus QQ. G. Ubi, Bulus-bulus, Bebulus, 


Kedondong. 


SCIAENIDAE (JEW-FISHES). 


Sciaena diacanthus Lac. Tembereh. 
Ucbrina russellii C. V. Gelama. 
Otolithus maculatus C. V. Jarang gigi. 
argenteus C. V. Gélama panjang, Jarang 
gigi. 
ruber Bl. Schn. Jarang gigi. 
spp. Gélama panjang, G. papan, 


G. China, G. sékang or 
séngkang, G, rapang, G. 
batu, G. itam, G. perak, 
G. batu Keling, G. lanjut, 
G. kuning dada, G. dahi 
tinggi, G. chérua, G. pi 
sang. 


Collichthys biaurita Cant, Sélampa, Jarang gigi. 


GERRIDAE (“SILVER-BREAM”). 


Gerres filamentosus C. V. Kapas-kapas. 
' abbrevlatus Blkr. 58 
Ae altispinnis ? Sédakang. 


oblongus ©. Y. LTampok-tampok., 


94 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Equula edentula BI. 


Gazza minuta Bl. 


Kekek gédabang, Sériding. 
labu. 


LACTARIIDAE (SELEMAH). 


Lactarius delicatulus CC. V 


Sélémah. 


PRISTIPOMATIDAE (GRUNTERS), 


Pristipoma maculatum BI. 


hasta Bl 


operculare Playfair. 


. 


os guoraca (. \ 


Diagramma crassipinum Ripp. 
pictum Thunb 
cinctum Tem. Schileg. 

ie punctatum Blkr. 


5 spp. 


Pentapus caninus Blkr. 


F sp. 


Geérut-gerut, Cheélek mata. 
2 

Ampas tebu. 

Gerul-gerut. 

Tebal bibir. 


.. 


2 - 
Bésikor, Mesikor, 
abu, Nachi. 


Mandi 


Anjang-anjang. 
Selinching. 


SPARIDAE (SHA-BREAMS). 


Scolopsis ghanam Forsk. 


- cancellatus (. V. 

¥ ciliatus Lac. 
vosmeri BI. 

x bimaculatus C. V. 

we monogramma k. V. H. 
personatus (. \. 

. bilineatus Bl. 

oe torquatus C. \.(") 

Synagris notatus Day. 

ss japonicus Giinth. 

- taeniopterus (. \. 
telu C. V. 


: nematopus Blkr. 
Caesio kuning Bl, 
>»  lunaris Ehr. 
pinjalu Blkr. 


chrysozona Kk. V. H. 


Anjang-anjang. 
Pasir-pasir. 
22 


93 


Géeretak lantai. 
Keénsi Bali. 
Pijat-pijat. 
Kerisi. 
. Geretak lanta.. 


aji-aji. 
Delah. 


a3 
Jalu-jalu, Jénjalu, Ikan 
merah China, Délah. 
Délah karang. 


1, Day gives S. torquatus = S. vosmeri the former being the young 
and the latter the adult, but Bleeker regards them as separate species, as do 


the Malays. 


MALAYAN FISILES. 95 


Proteracanthus sarissophorus Batu. 
Cant. | 
Lethrinus nebulosus Forsk. Asoh-asoh, Gérétak lantai. 
Sparus hasta Bl. Schn.(’) Kapas-kapas, Béngkong- 
hong, Beékukong, Kuku, 
Bandan. 
datnia H. Bb. Pinang-pinang, Lar dok. 


MULLIDAE (RED MULLETS). 


Upeneus tragula Richardson. Biji nangka. 
luteus Bikr. Lebai. 


Mulioides flavolineatus Lac. 


3° 


SCORPIDIDAE (BAT-FISHES). 
Psettus argenteus L. Gedabang. 
falciformis Lac. Sényor. 


CHAETODONTIDAE (CORAL-FISHES AND BUTTER 


FISHES). 

Ephippus orbis Bl. Daun baharu. 

argus L. Ketang. 

Chelmo rostratus L. Pipit, Sumpit-sumpit. 

Heniochus macrolepidotus L. Gombing. 

Holacanthus sexstriatus C. V. Inggu. 

pa mesoleucus Bl. Fe 
annularis Bl. Ketang. 
€ spp. Babi. 

Platax teira Forsk. Daun, Bonang. 
batavianus (. V. Tudong periok. 
vespertilio Bl. 45 a 

Chaetodon octofasciatus L. Pinang-pinang. 

vagabundus L. Sumptit-summt, Pinang- 
pinang. 


DREPANIDAE (MOON-FISH). 


Drepane punctata L. Daun baharu. 


1. According to Day, S. kasta = S.berda. 


96 MALAYAN FISHES. 


TEUTHIDIDAE (“BLACK PREVALLY ”), 


Teuthis nebulosa. Déngkis. 
aA virgata C. VY. Kelang, Dengkas. 
stellata Forsk, 3 
java L. Lumban, Ketang, Debam, 
Lebam. 
concatena C. V. Gélibcs, Kelang. 
dorsalis C, V. Ketarg. 
oramin Giinth.(*) Gélibas, Bélibas. 
, sp. Lamba. 


OSPHROMENIDAE (GOURAMI. FIGHTING FISHES, 


HTC.). 
Osphromenus olfax L. Kalua. 
malayanus Duncker. Biji durian. 
trichopterus Pall. Sepat. 
Anabas scandens Dald. Puyu-puyu, Pépuyu, Bétok. 
Luciocephalus pulcher Gray. Tumbok tebing. 
Betta pugnmax Cant. Ikan bélaga, Sémpila, Pe- 
laga, Pala. 
bellica Sauy. Ikan bélaga, Sémpila, Pe- 
laga, Lampula. 
spp. Anak ampit, A. karing, Ka- 
ring gajah. 
Polyacanthus hasselti C. V. Kepar. 


POMACENTRIDAE (CORAL-FISHES). 
Amphiprion ephippium BI. Inggu. 
frenatus Brev. 
Dascyllus sp. 


Pomacentrus albofasciatus Schleg. 


2 


2 


2 


Glyphidodon coelestinus C. V. Gombing. 
notatus Day. Kepau laut, Keping. 
LABRIDAE (“WRASSES” OR PARROT-FISHES). 
Chaerops omnopterus Rich. Tokak. 
oligacanthus Blkr. Logu. 
Cossyphus diana Lac. Tokak. 


Chilinus fasciatus Bl. 


Bayan, Boyan. 
chlorurus BI. 


Jampong, Bayan, Boyan. 


Anampses coeruleopunctatus Sélichin. 
Riipp. 


I. Day suggests that oramin may prove tobesynonymous with dorsalis 


MALAYAN FISHES. 97 


Platyglossus dussumieri C. V. Belodok karang. 
Novacula spp. Mandi abu, Méesikor, Kachi. 
Julis lunaris. Bechok. 


SCARIDAE (“PARROT-WRASSES ”). 


Pseudoscarus ghobbam Forsk. Ketarap. 
x rivulatus C. V. Kalat. 
Pseudodax moluccanus C, V. Beéchok. 


CARANGIDAE (° HORSE-MACKERELS ”), 


Caranx rettleri BI. Chéencharu, Sélikor, Jaru- 

jaru. 

kalla C. V. Selar, Kembong. 

gallus L. Sagai, Chermin. 

armatus F[orsk. Saga, 

kurra C. V. Selar, Kembong. 

gymnostethoides Blkr. Selar kuning. 

djeddaba Forsk. Selar batang. 

compressus Day. Selar létup-letup, Daing be- 
lang, 

ire C. V. Selay abu-abu. 

boops C. V. Jalu-jalu (?). 

obiongas C. V. Selar létup-létup. 

speciosus Forsk. Daing belang. 

spp. Berkas, Songsong arus, Se- 


lar bulat, S. lepir, Bagat, 
Mamong, Pélaling, kK éde- 
mut, Gérépoh, Déembudok. 


Mene maculata Bl. Schn. Kekek gédabang, kK. Jawa. 
Trachynotus ovatus L. Nytor-nyior, 
bailloni Lac. Sélar, 
Chorinemus moadetta C. V. Talang, Seliap. 
Iysan Forsk. He x5 
ShivPetrirC. 1V- A 


SCOMBRIDAE (MACKERELS, TUNNIES, ETC.). 
Scomber microlepidotus Riipp. Peélata, Kembong. 


Thynnus thunnina C. \. Ikan ayer, Tongkol, Sémbak, 
Choreng, Kembal mas, 
Tombol mas, 


98 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Cybium kuhlii C. V. Tenggirt, Luding, Tohok, 

Langit. 

commersonii Lac, 
lineolatum Cuy. 


guttatum Bl. Schn. T. papan i ae 
TRICHIURIDAE (HAIR-TAILS). 
Trichiurus savala Cuy. —  Timah-timah, Sélayur, 
Langgai, Puchuk. 
haumela Forsk. Timah-timah, Sélayur, 
Langga, Puchuk. 
HiSTIOPHORIDAE (SA/L-FISHES). 
Histiophorus gladius Brous:. Sélayer, Layer, Layeran, 
spp. Tumhok banr, Mersuji. 


PLEURONECTIDAE (FLAT FISHES). 
Psettodes erumei BI. Lidah, Sabélah. 
Pseudorhombus russelli Gray, 
Synaptura achira Duncker. 
orientalis Bl. Schn. 
commersoniana Lac. 
Cynoglossus lida Blkr, 
lingua H. Bb. 
elongatus Gunth. 
hamiltonii Ginth. 
= cantoris Blkr. 
Plagusia bilineata Bl. 


9° 7? 


GOBIIDAE (“GOBIES”). 
Eleotris butis H. B. Bélontok. 
Gobius giuris H. B. Bélodok. 
sadanundio H. B. 3 kerapu. 
sp. aff. caninus C. V. (?). ya lobang. 

A viridipunctatus ? Bélontok, 
Periophthalmus schlosseri Pall. Tembakul, Lisah, Bélodok. 
koelreuteri Pall. Belachak. 

Trypauchen vagina BI. Tilan pasir. 
Apocryptes lanceolatus Bl. Schn. /élodok. 
Boleophthalmus boddaerti Pall. 


33 


ECHENEIDIDAE (SUCKING-FISHES). 
Echineis naucrates. Gémi, Gédémi, Rumi-rumi. 


MALAYAN FISHES. 99 


SCORPAENIDAE (GOBLIN-FISH ES). 
Scorpaena polyprion Blkr. Lepu, Dépu, Gédémpu. 
Pterois antennata Blkr. 
Pelor didactyllum Pall, 


3) 


Centropogon indicus Day. »  sémaram, 
Synancia verrucosa Bl]. Schn. Sémaram karang. 
Synancidium horridum L. Lépu, 

(Unidentified), L. béranyut, L. landak. 


PLATYCEPHALIDAE (FLAT-HEADS). 
Platycephalus punctatus C. V. Baji-baji. 
tuberculatus ('. \. 
macracanthus Blkr. 


LEPTOSCOPIDAE (STAR-GAZERS). 
Percis pulchella Tem. Schleg. Pukul gendang. 


BATRACHIDAE (FROG-FISHES). 


Batrachus grunniens L. Kertakok. 


MASTACEMBELIDAE (SPINY-EELS). 


Mastacembelus unicolor (. V. Tilan or Telan. 
maculatus C. \. 
armatus Lac. s 


ANTENNARIIDAE (ANGLER-FISHES). 


Antennarius cantori Blkr. Lépu, Dépu, Gédémpu. 
caudimaculatus Giinth. i ae a. 
coccineus Giinth. 2 3: 
hispidus Bl. Schn. , , Aélalawar. 


MALTHIDAE (CROAKERS). 


Halieutaea stellata Wahl. Tékok. 


TRIACANTHIDAE (LEATHER-JACKETS). 


Triacanthus strigilifer Cant, Barat-barat. 
blochii Blkr. 35 
brevirostris Schleg. 
oxycephalus Blkr. 33 , Tunjang langit. 


nieuhofi Blkr. ; 
spp. af Lembu. 


100 MALAYAN FISHES. 


BALISTIDAE (LEATHER-JACKETS). 


Balistes stellatus Lac. Jébong, Ayam. 

Monacanthus hajam Blkr. Ayam. 
sinensis L. Barat-barat. 
choerocephalus Blkr. Kerosok, Ayam. 
penicilligerus Cuy. Barat-barat. 
monoceros |.. Nerosok padi. 

Anacanthus barbatus Gray. Seligi. 


OSTRACIONTIDAE (BOX-FISIIES). 


Qstracion nasus BI. Buntal kotak, B. batu. 
cubicus L. ; 
cornutus L. a 6 San 


TETRODONTIDAE (GLOBE-FISH ES). 


Tetrodon lunaris Bl. Schn. Buntal pisang. 
reticularis Bl. Schn. duri, 


DIODONTIDAE (PORCUPINE-FISHES). 


Diodon novemmaculatus Blkr. Buntal landak. 
hystrix L. 


SCYLLIIDAE (DOG FISHES). 


Scyllium marmoratum Benn. Yu pendek. 
Stegostoma tigrinum L. Yu chéchak, Yu tokek. 
Chiloscyllium indicum L. Yu tokek, Yu belangkas. 


CARCHARIIDAE (SHARKS), 


Carcharias dussumieri Val. Yau. 
Galeocerdo rayneri McD. B. Yu tenggiri. 
(Unidentified). Yu jerong, Yu sambaran, 


Yu puna, Yu laras, Yu 
chemangi, Yu bodoh. 


SPHYRNIDAE (HAMMER-HEAD SHARKS). 
Sphyrna (Zygaena) malleus Risso, Yu béngkong, Y. palang, Y. 
sanggul. 
(Zygaena) blochii Cuv. Yu béngkong, Y. palang, Y. 
sanggul. 


MALAYAN FISHES. me 
PRISTIDAE (TRUE SAW-FISHES). 


Pristis cuspidatus Lath. Beroi, Yu parang, Yu ger- 
gari, Yu todak. 


RHINOBATIDAE (BEAKED RAYS). 
Rhinobatus thonini Lac. Yu kia-kic, Kéméjan. 


Rhynchobatus dieddensis Forsk. = Bs Ss 


TORPEDINIDAE (EFELECTRIC RA YS). 


Narcine timlei Bl. Schn. Pari kebas. 
Astrape dipterygia Bl. Schn. x oa ees bunga: 
Temera hardwickii Gray. > linchin. 


TRYGONIDAE (STING-RAYS). 


Trygon uarnak Forsk. Pari kelawar. 
sephen Forsk. ,,” bendera, P. daun. 
walga M. H. Pa 
kuhlii M. H. P ,,0—&— PIMAU. 
Urogymnus asperrimus Bl, Schn. . déedap. 


MYLIOBATIDAE (HAGLE-RAYVS). 


Myliobatis vespertilio Blkr. Pari kelawar. 
nieuhofi Bl. Schn. 

Aetobatis narinari Kuphr. » lang. 

Rhinoptera adspersa M. H. > aaun. 

Dicerobatis eregoodoo Cant. , Paus. 

Ceratoptera ehrenbergii M. H. » paus, P. kola. 


UNIDENTIFIED (PAYS). 


Sai, Mengkai, Séloka. 


102 MALAYAN FISHES. 


Authors Consulted. 


BLEEKER, Dr. P. Atlas Ichthyologique des Indes Orientales Neer- 
landaises.. 9 Vols: 1862—1878, 


Boutencer, Dr. G. A. Fishes (Teleostei).) 
Brivce, Dr, T. W. Fishes. 


Cambridge Nat: Hist: Vol VIL: 1904. 


Cantor, Dr. T... Catalocue of Malayan Fishes. Jour; A, SI 
Bengal. 1849. 


Currorp, H. aNp Swerrennam, F. A. Dictionary of the Malay 
language. Parts I-V. 1894—1902. 


Day, Dr. Francis. Fauna of British India. Fishes. 2 Vols: 
1889. 


Duncker, Geora. Die Fische der Malavischen Halbinsel. 1904, 
GUNTHER, Dr. ALBERT. Study of Fishes. 18890. 
Merk, Dr. The Migrations of Fish. 1916. 


RoveHury, T. C. Fishes of Australia and their Technology. 
196, 


Seate, Alvin. Fishery resources of the Phillipines. (Philippine 
Jour: Science. 1908). 


Sreap. Davip A. Fishes of Australia. 1906. 
Sreap, Davin A. Edible Fishes of New South Wales. 1908. 


STEAD, Davip A. A brief review of the Fisheries of New South 
Wales. 1910. 


TENISON-Woops. Revo. J. E. Fish and Fisheries of New South 
Wales. 1882. 


WEBER AND DE Breatrort, Drs. The Fishes of the Indo-Austra- 
lian Archipelago. 3 Vols: 1911—1913. 
Witxkinson, R. J. Malay-English Dictionary. 2 Vols: 1901. 


Index 


A. 
Anchovy 
Angler-Fishes 

Be 
Barracouta 
Barracuda 


Barramundi 
Bar-tailed Goat-Fish 
Batfish, Dark 
Batfish, Silvery 
Bat-Fishes 
Beaked-Ray 
Big-eyed Herring 
Black- “spotted Rock-Cod 
Black 'l'revally 
Blow-pipe Fishes 
Blue-spotted Groper 
Bombay Duck .. 
Bony Bream 
Box-Fishes 
Bream, Sea 
Bream, Silver 
Brown-spotted Hind 
Bull’s-Eyes 
Butter-Fish 


Carp 

Catla 

Cat-fish fs 
Climbing Perch 
Conger-Eels 
Coral-Fishes 
Croakers 


D. 


Dart AH 

Devil-fishes 

Diamond-se aled Mullet 
Dog-Fishes 

Dorab 

Drummers 

Dusky-Perch 


Eagle-Rays 
Eels 

Hels, Conger 
Eels, Spiny 
Eels, Swamp 
Electric Rays 


meri Gaels 
Sa EO (KOR Wl 
= 92, 89. 
- 87, 41, 95, 96. 


49, 99. 


. 02, 101. 


to English Names 


13 


Feather-Backs 
Fighting-Fishes 
Plat-Fishes 
Flat-heads 

Flounder 
Flying-Fishes 
Fresh-water Perches 
Frog-Fishes 


Ga. 
Garfishes 
Gar-Pike 
Giant-Herrings 
Globe-Fishes 


Goat-Fish, Bar-tailed i 


Gobies 
Goblin-Fishes 
Gourami 
Grey-Mullets 
Groper, Queensland 
Grunters 


Hair-back 
Hair-tails 

Half-beak 
Halibut, Queensland 
Hammer-head Sharks 
Herrings | 
Hilsa 
Horse- Mackerels. 


J. 
Jew-Fishes 

K. 
Knight-Fish 

L. 


Leather-jackets 
Loaches Se 


M. 


Maeassar Redfish 


Mackerel he 
Maekerel, Horse 
Mackerel, Spanish 
Mahseer DA 
Milk-Fish 
Millions 


- 20, 


- Ad’. 


86. 
96. 


5 wish 
gg. 


90. 
92. 
gg. 


5 wok 


100. 


oe 


, 90. 


, 100. 


104. 


Moon-Fish a 
Moon-Fish, Silvery 
Mud- skipper : 
Mullet, Diamond- scaled 
Mullet, Grey 

Mullet, Red 


Murrel 

N. 
Nannygai 

Oo. 
Ox-Eye 

P 


Paradise-Fish 
Parrot-Fishes 
Parrot-Wrasses 
Perch, Climbing 
Perches, Freshwater 
Perches, Sea ya 
Pescados flel Rey 
Pike, Short-finned 
Pun 
Porcupine- Fishes 


Q. 
Queen-Fish 
Queensland Groper 
Queensland Halibut 
Queensland Smelt 
Queensland Trumpeter 


R. 
Rays, Beaked 
Rays, Eagle 
Rays, Electric 
Rays, Sting 
Red-Mullets 


INDEX 
38, 62, 95 s 
- 43, 61. Sable-Fish 
» 47, 82. Sail-Fishes 
- 26. Salmon-Herring 
.. 24 90. Sand-Smelts 
9 36,95. S: iw-Fishes 
- 28, 91. Sea-Horses 
Sea-Perches 
Selemah 
2059s Shad 
Sharks Be Da 
Sharks, Hammer-head 
ality Silver-Bream 
Silvery Moon-Fish 
Skeleton-Fishes 
* | Smelt, Queensland 
-- 41. : 
: Smelt, Sand 
. 41, 96. S . 
.. 42. 97 Snappers 
agate Spanish Mae kerel, Barred 
-+ 40, 60, S 
- piny-Eels Bt 
(31, 92" | D 
. 31. 92 Star-Gazers 
vir aa Sucking-Fishes 
24. : 
an Swamp-Eels 
~ al. 
IR Gil. 
- 50, 100. a 
Tarpon 
Tarwhine 
AS, Ten-pounder 
an oe Thread-fins 
py Trevally, Black : 
46. a . 
-.19. 87. Trumpeter, Queensland 
i 35. Trumpeter W an 
Tunny 
. 52, 101. W. 
Be Dog LOM W hitebait 
52) TOM: W hite- Mullet 
By RON Whiting .. 
5 3154 Si): Wrasses .. 


ADDENDA ET CORRIGENDA. 


Yr. 7: for Tarpin read Tarpon. 


P. 59: add Béras-béras. Sparus sarba. 
The Tarwhine of Australia. 
Sea-Bream. Fam. SPARIDAE. 


P, 95: add Sparus sarba Forsk. Béras-béras. 


. 96. 
-. 35, 
- 44, 97. 


pang 
.. 45, 98. 
-- 15, 56. 
- 23, 90. 
-- 51, 101. 
- + 22, 90. 
-- 31, 92, 
-- 34, 78, 94. 
-- 17, 86. 
- 50, 100. 
- 50, 100. 
- 34, 93. 
-- 43, 61. 
-- 22, 90. 
- 19, 87. 
** 23, 90, 
>: 33, 92, 
* 44. 
~~ AQ; 83, 99. 
- = 49), 76; 99: 
>> 48, 98. 
C 22, 89, 


.. 15. 
-- 36. 
: oe 


> 91. 


Si Alife 
» 15. 
- + 355 99. 
Ba ails Slo) 


XII. 
AU 
Sung 
XV: 
SV 
ove Le 


DVI. 
XIX. 
xox. 
XXI- 
XXII. 
XXIIT, 
AXIV. 
XXYV. 
AMV TD. 
XX VIE 
XXVIII. 
XXIX. 
XXX. 
San 
XXXIT- 
XXXII. 
DOA TVs 
XXXYV. 


LISTOF “PLATES. 


BULAN 


BELIDA 
PARANG-PARANG 
SELANGAT 
THRUBOK KORIN 
TAMBAN PANJANG 
TAPAH 
BEGAHAK or LAIS 
JAHAN 
KELAH 
TEMBELIAN 
UMBUT-UMBUT 
HWAN or CHOW 
LIAN or LIN 
MALONG 
TODAK 
PUPUT or JOLONG- 
JOLONG 
BERANAK ANDING 
BELANAK TAMOK 
KURAU 
ALU-ALU 
BAWAL PUTEH 
ARUAN 
SEBEKAH KARANG 
SUMPIT-SUMPIT 
KERONG-KERONG 
KERAPU 
SIAKAP 
IKAN MERAH 
BULUS-BULUS 
TEMBEREH 
GELAMA TIKUS 


KAPAS-KAPAS 


GERUT-GERUT 
PASIR-PASTR’ 


Ox-Eye, or Big-eyed Her- 
ring. 

Feather-back. 

The Dorab. 

Hairback or Gizzard Shad. 

The Hailsa. 

* Sardine.” 

liver Cat-fish. 

River Cat-fish. 

Sea Cat-fish. 

‘Carp. 

Carp. 

Carp. 

Chinese Carp. 

Chinese Carp. 

Conger-eel. 

Gar-Pike. 

Gar-fish. 


Grey-Mullet. 
Diamond-sealed MuHet. 
Mango fish. 
Barracuda. 
Pomfret. 
Murrel. 

“ Nannygai.” 
Blow-pipe fish. 
Sea-Perch. 
Sea-Perch. 
Sea-Perch, 
Snapper. 

“ Whiting.” 
Jew-fish. 
Jew-fish. 

“ Silver-Bream.” 
Grunter. 
Sea-Bream. 


XXXVI. 
XXXVII. 
XXXVIITI. 
XXXIX. 


XL: 


XLI. 
XLII. 
XLIMT. 
XLTV. 


ALY. 
AU 


Sa 
POG EE: 


XLIX. 


LXIII. 
LXIV. 


LAY. 


LXVI. 
LXVII. 
LXVITII. 
LXIX., 


XX: 
LX XI. 


LX XII. 


LIST OF PLATES. 


DELAH 


ASOH-ASOH 
PINANG-PINANG 
BIJI NANGKA 
GEDABANG 


KETANG 
BABI 


TUDONG PERIOK 
DAUN BAHARU 


DENGKIS 
DEBAM 
KALUI 
GOMBING 
TOKAK 
BECHOK 


CHENCHARU 
DAING BELANG 


CHERMIN 
SAGAI 


NYIOR-NYIOR 


TALANG 
TONGKOL 


TONGKOL CHORENG 
TENGGIRI PAPAN 
TENGGIRI BATANG 


SELAYUR 
SA-BELAH 
LIDAH 
BAJI-BAJI 


BARAT-BARAT 


JEBONG 


YU TOKEK 
YU PALANG 
YU KEMEJAN 
PARI BETING 


KBRAPU, KURAU, 
TULANG, PARANG 


Sea-Bream. 


' Sea-Bream. 


Sea-Bream. 

Red mullet. 

Silver Bat-fish. 
Spotted Butter-fish. 
Coral-fish. 
Coral-fish. 
Moon-fish. 

“ Black Trevally.” 
“ Black Trevally.” 
Gurami., 

Coral-fish. 

Wrasse, 
Parrot-Wrasse. 
Horse-Mackerel (Hard tail) 
Banded Horse-Mackerel. 
Silvery Moon-fish. 
Trevally. 

Dart. 

Queen-Fish. 

Tunny. 

Tunny. 


Spotted Spanish Mackerel. 


Barred Spanish Mackerel. 
Hair tail, 

“< Hahibut-? 

** Sole.” 

Flat-head. 

Leather-jacket. 
Leather-jacket. 

Dog-fish. 

Hammer-head Shark. 
Beaked-Ray. 

Sting-Ray. 

MERAH, TENGGIRI, 


YU, PARI, MALONG, DURIL. 


‘3 aka BIq 10 “AH -xXO 
'(seprowadho sdormban ) ua NWINd 


seyou| 9 G v € T L o 


ua UU 


III 


‘yoeq - Tue 
‘(enuagdojou sniiazdoj0 Ny ) VaIlagd 


SSHONI gi tt OF 6 8 Z 9 Ss + € G L Lo} 


Heh 


‘(qoLop sniguar0uyy ) Die ae INVUVd ONVAVd 


SASHONI TL Lt OL 6 8 Z 9 S v € T [i * (a) 


P+ ++ tH Ht HH 


III HLV'Id 


‘(snspu nuLosoLog ) 


sayouy 


peys psezziy so youqsrepy 


EC T L Oo 


Sere ig ee es ee 


EY Wel 


Ws 
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PSH eq 
(ds (wso1y) vadnjy ) NIYOM WOCNAAL 


seyoul ol LL OL 6 8 ZL 9 S v € (4 L (0) 


WA 


INS EISEN Mal 


«, 9UIPILG ,, 


(ds vadnjy ) ONVINVd NVEAWVL 


sayou| § ra t o 


IA HLV Id 


"YsH JE) sOATY 


(ds obvyn jy ) HVdVL 


SS3HONI GL LL OL 


TN, AV ald 


(numaup shygyovuopojeg ) SIVI 40? MVHVYOUd 


SAHONI GL ILO 6 g@ £0 Ss + € @ Lt O 
He + 4 + 4 + + ++ + +4 SI 


DOA HLY Id 


PP 


den 


‘ystj-jeQ ea 
P NYHVI 


Pa A HE OG Oh a AG a 


SI AU ++ 


x MEV ed 


"die 
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REDO a Bhat) (hI gE EA Gol 2° 


pf ft 


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SAHONI_ Cle Lie Olmron wan acd, AR ua 


IX ALVW Id 


kaa ai} 


(svdajosovm snj0uhang ) LASWO- Lagann 


SHHON/ GL ut OL 6 8 L 2 s + Di pr k Q 


Hara aid 


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‘died aseuty) 


(snpjapr wopobuksnydouayy ) MOHD 10 NVMH 


seyou| TL LL OL 6 8 ya 9 S v € T L fo) 


MIX 


ds shyjyoruuhy.y, ) 


sauoul 


KIX LY Tel 


(‘ds xosauenanyy ) "199 -198U0) 


DNOTVN 


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‘(ds auojag ) MVYAOL 


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PADS CRD Val 


*USII - IE 
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soeyou| 9 G + E T i 


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SAGA 


! JI Kat 
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SSHONI ZL tL OL 6 8 Z 9 s + £ T l o 


a a Tn a +1 7-1 


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sayou| 9 Ss 


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*( snasyp ppd snwmauhjog ) ae gc Ava NM 


seyou| 9 


XX ELEY id 


vy, , , 
Cam A 


(nuossamuos vuanshydg ) pA eas DAY: DI 


seyouj 9 S + € z L 0 


ee ee 


Pereka 


‘yoIFWOg 


HALNd IVMVd 


"( snaseura snaypuouy ) 


SBHONI dl LL OL 6 8 Z 9 Ss v 8 z L o 


OGG Sal 


‘(‘ds snppydavorvydg ) eae NVOUW 


seyouj g S 


{| 


ih 
| 
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‘(unlpanw suysrwudiuhpy ) oe ONVUVA HVAAAAS 


seyouj £ IA L Oo 


A 


AIXX ALV 1d 


4 
DAN 
on A 


Pane oe 


ri did - 
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LX ELV 


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P 
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¥ 
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na 


PLATE XXVIII 


12 INCHES 


11 


10 


( Lates calcarifer ). 


Sea- Perch. 


SIAKAP 


PLATE XXX 


11 12 INCHES 


10 


a. 


Ss yg 


( Lutianus 


Snapper. 


IKAN MERAH 


; 
Rue 


=e 
f 


P 
Di 
A 


ae) 
ah Pou, 


AUHYAN .. 


‘(punys obpyig ) SARS 


— 


ena 


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Pe) he HAMAAWAL 


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| “ysty- mol 
(ds mung) SOMIL VAVTAD 


+ € 4 I a 


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IIXXX ALV 1d 


H 
ng 
Sg ; 
m 
i 
’ Sat 
2 ie 
ames aoe 
Seer ig” 


Lg 


Rac bs 


PLATE XXXIII 


( Gerres abbreviatus ). 


»Silver- Bream’’. 


KAPAS-KAPAS 


pu 


*(pyspy nuodiysr ) 


seyouj ZL LL OL 6 8 


‘joyaNIyy 


INAI LAUD 


AIXXX HLVW Id 


‘(ds sisdooog ) ees WISVd-UISVd 


AXXXOH LV Adi 


*Wwealg -e98S 


"(burung 01820) HVTIHQA 


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TNO? AY ad 


‘uIeaIg te 


HOSV- HOSV 


(snsopnqaw snwivyjoT ) 


seyou! ZL LL ol 6 8 L 9 Ss * 


TAXXX HLV'Id 


‘uleaIg <e29S 


‘(mugop sniodg ) ONVNId-ONVNId 


seysu| g G + € z l Oo 


ade 5% 


Ny TNS ; 


ITAXkxX ALVId 


Ca 
D 


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al Ry Phe 


a. 


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LI 
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Pu ta AA 


: ‘yaTTNW. pe 
(mba snawedn ) a a VMONVN Id 


seyouj ¢ T t o 


AA 


XIXXX BLY id 


"Usj -Jeg JAN 
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sayu) 9 S v € 4 L o 


LIX ay ad : 


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‘(‘ds snyzuvovjo zy ) : Idvad 


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seyouj 9 G b € T L 


HINA 


‘(oymsodson xnymrg ) eee. MOINAd ONOGOAL 


SA3HONI GL LL ot 6 8 


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*qs1J - LOO] J 
‘(nyopound sunda ) NuvHyd Nnva 


SER eM I ral! LL OL - 6 8 Z 9 S + € Zt L fo) 


AI HEV Td 


Fam 


"Acne, Hor 


( ds syma, ) SIMDNAG 


seyouj ZL it OL 6 8 ya 9 Cotes v € T L (o) 


os ae a a oe a a 


NIX ALV'Id 


"Acne, Meng 
‘(vanl syma, ) WVdHd 


seyou) ZL LL OL 6 8 Z 9 S 1d € T L Oo 


a ae 


TAR SLY Td 


IWeIng 


Yao sruamotyds() ») | IQTAVYM 


SAHONI ZL Lb OL 6 8 L 9 Ss AA € T 


KAH Vitel 


Ka 


ki 


- 


+ 


v 
“4 
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(ds wopoprydhiy ) ole ONIGWOD 


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BUNS DGG AT 


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a 


MIE. GL Td 


PA a 


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vr by a 


‘aSSBIA, “Joe 


«(‘ds snumosopnasg ) MOHOUE 


seyoul 9 Ss > € T t o 


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Ae GEN Aart 


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seyouj ZL Mio 6 8 Z 9 Ss v € Tq L Oo 


AAA 


HI aay Id 


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seyou] TL LL OL 6 8 it 9 v Sg 4 L 
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PEATE LIV 


- 


12 Inches 


9 10 11 


8 


SAGAI 


Trevally. 


i 
k 
7 pa 

ra 
x 

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4 
hi 
? if a 
| 
PA 


PLATE LV 


12 Inches 


11 


10 


(Trachynotus ovatus ). 


Dart 


NYIOR-NYIOR 


“ysif -ueang 
DNVIVL 


‘(vyappow snwmaurLoyy) ) 


Sout Bi fhe oil GE 7 Gy i aaa ae L Oo 


TA eV. 


‘(ds snuuhyy, ) IOMONOL 


seyou; TL tL OL 6 8 £ 


AS EIEN a 


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seyou| Z| tt OL 6 8 Z 9 Le v € T l fo} 


———— a a a + 


ng 


; *ja1eyHoe stued d 
‘(mnqoynb wnigho ) D a SU NVdVvd TalDoONaL 


S2HON! GL ey Zee) 


Lt OL 6 oy. 
bt tt tt 


ial any td 


‘jelayoey, ystuedg poisieg 
ONVEVa TaD NA 


‘(uuosseuruos wnighig ) 


SAHONI TL LL OL 6 


eae 1 


xa Ad 


[rey Ire H 


‘(vjamnnYy snunvyoruy, ) aA AGES 


SSHONI Zl tlLor6 glogogg t+ 6 Gt O 


PH tt tt tt 


IDG IA Bre 


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‘(vamn1o sapoyasg ) HV14dq4 Vs 


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1a ah 


(ds vingdoufig ) Tks HVAIT 


Seyou| g ¢ 


£ 
- {++ 


UDCA CRE Glial 


Peed - Fela 


‘(ds snyoydoohqnpg ) I{va -ifva 


soyou| gi LL OL 6 8 L 9 S v € (6 L fo) 


+ 4} _+_+—_++_+_ +_ + 


NIX A 


‘yoyor! - layyea'T 


‘(ds snyuvovu0y ) LVYVd- LVaVd 


20 you; 


DSC Te SEY lich 


*‘joyoul - 194}eo 
‘(snyoyjays sajsyog ) es DNOdAI 


a 
- 


seyouj 9 S v € Oo 


pp | a 


TAX a Al ved 


3 -3 x 
‘(ds nhog ) eas MHMOL NA 


SAHONI GL tt OL 6 8 Z 9 sg y € a L o 


A 


LASS Gy Id 


‘yreyS pesy -Jowurey 


(ds (nuavbhz) vushydg ) DNYIVd NA 


seyou| Zz. 6 9 Cs, 10) 


yeoy € z L 


IHAXI ALV Ad 


“ 


“Avy -poyeos 
‘(sisuappalp snynqoyouhyaz ) sae ee NV(@WaAM NA 


yo24 € T L SOUSUITSL (Geo feo 


—— + + 4 


MIA a Lv id 


wil 


“KEY - SUNS 
‘(ynuson uobhay, ) ONILYd IHYA 


19094 Ss (A L SAHONI TI o 


A oe ee 


SOC LY td 


PEATE xXx! 


; Bion AR Sipe Kee 


a 7 


Pr 


a 


~ 


KERAPU 


MERAH, TENGGIRI, 


KURAU, 


, 


, PARANG. 


TALANG 


Photo taken at Clyde Terrace Market Singapore 


PLEATENEXXII 


YU, PARI, MALONG, DURI. 


Photo taken at Clyde Terrace Market Singapore 


Ganesh CE Lanas 


D A x 


a SMITHSONIAN 
INSTITUTION 
sf LIBRARIES 


Ciel. Erom 


Anne 


P 


TERA. YAN ele a 


i 


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