CO British Museum (Natural History] Dept. of Zoology Guide to the galleries of reptiles and fishes '%■■: WW Km mm raNr H H ■ * ooooooooooqoooo ©1^ C/^< GUIDE TO THE GALLERIES OF <3¥Stf$ PPTILES AND FISHES IN THE DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM (NATURAL HISTORY). | n)c ■' 4 -4 -oJ ILLUSTRATED BY 101 WOODCUTS AND 1 PLAN. [SECOND EDITION.] PRINTED BY ORDER OF THE TRUSTEES. 1888. f; \ I I I 1 I I I I ! \ I I j e/%z$BM&as\» I I I II I ! I I I I ! I ! :iroooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo / Price ^Lcjience. , / PRESENTED €l)t trustees THK BRITISH MUSEI \ GUIDE TO THE G-.A.I-jII.IEIR.IEIES OF REPTILES AND FISHES IN THE DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM (NATURAL HISTORY). ILLUSTRATED BY 101 WOODCUTS AND 1 PLAN. [SECOND EDITION.] PRINTED BY ORDER OF THE TRUSTEES. 188S. 1 biMyf^ ALEKE T FLAM MAM. PRINTED BY TAYLOR AND FRANCIS. RED LION COUliT, FLEET STUEET. P E E F A C E. The rooms in which the dry and mounted specimens of Reptiles and Fishes are exhibited are two parallel galleries of the ground- floor approached from the Bird Gallery. The exhibition of mounted specimens of Reptiles offers greater difficulties than that of the. other classes of Vertebrate animals. Only the larger and hard-skinned forms, like Crocodiles and Tortoises, can be preserved in a dried state without distortion of their natural features ; whilst every attempt at reproducing the finely moulded body of a Lizard or Snake, or at restoring the exquisite arrangement of their scales, has ended in failure. Neither has plastic art of ancient or modern times succeeded in producing a faithful or life-like representation of a Reptile. Fishes lend themselves more readily to exhibition in a dried state than Reptiles ; and some of the mounted specimens, especially those prepared by the taxidermists of the Madras Museum, leave nothing to be desired as regards the shape of the body or the pre- servation of the various external organs. But we do not possess the means of preserving the beautiful colours of many marine fishes, especially of the Tropics, which rival in this respect those of the most brightly coloured of Birds. In order to give some idea — inadequate though it may be — of the richness and singu- larity of pattern of the coloration of these fishes, a few have been b2 iv PREFACE. painted from living specimens. Very small kinds of fishes or such as possess a very soft body cannot be instructively exhibited in a dried state, and are represented by specimens in spirit if prac- ticable. Some groups of Reptiles and Fishes are therefore represented in these Galleries by a comparatively much larger number of spe- cimens than others, which may comprise many more species. But in the present Guide, which has for one of its objects to give a general account of these animals, a more uniform treatment of the subject has been adopted. In its preparation I have been assisted by Mr. G. A. Boulenger, the assistant in charge of these Collections. ALBERT GUNTHER, Keeper of the Department of Zoology. British Museum, N. H., February 28, 1887. TO SECOND EDITION. Besides some changes in the nomenclature of Freshwater Tor- toises and references to the more important specimens added to the Fish Gallery within the last twelve-month, no alterations have been made in the present (second) issue of this " Guide.v ALBERT GUNTHER. British Museum, N. II., February 28, 1888. TABLE OF CONTENTS. THE REPTILE GALLERY. Page General Notes on Reptiles 1 Crocodilia (Crocodiles and Alligators) 3 Rhynchocephalia (Tuatera) 5 Lacertilia (Lizards) 6 Ophidia (Snakes) 16 Chelonia (Tortoises and Turtles) 24 THE FISH GALLERY. General Notes on Batrachians 31 Tailless Batrachians (Frogs and Toads) 33 Tailed Batrachians (Salamanders and Newts) .... 42 Limbless Batrachians 46 General Notes on Fishes 47 Acanthopterygii (Perches, Mackerels, &c.) 58 Pharyngognathi (Wrasses) 76 Anacanthini (Cod- and Flat-fishes) 78 Physostomi (Carps, Herrings, &c.) 82 Lophobranchii (Pipe-fishes) 90 Plectognathi (File-, Globe-, and Sun-fishes) .... 91 Ganoidei 95 Chondropterygii (Sharks and Rays) 99 Cyclostomata (Lampreys) <, Ill Leptocardii (Lancelet) 113 THE REPTILE GALLERY. GENERAL NOTES ON REPTILES. There is] but a short step from the Class of Birds to that of Reptiles. No doubt, as regards external appearance, the dissimi- larity between the living animals of these two classes is sufficiently great to allow of a sharp line of demarcation being drawn between them : Birds being shortly characterized as warm-blooded vertebrate animals clothed with feathers, Reptiles as cold-blooded, and covered with horny or bony shields, tubercles, or " scales." But there are numerous and important agreements between these two classes, especially in the structure of their skeleton, in their internal organs, and their mode of propagation ; and their close relation- ship becomes still more apparent when fossil forms are examined, such as Resperornis and ArclKRoptenjx, of which a cast is placed in Case A, in the corridor leading from the Bird- into the Reptile- Gallery (see also the figure given on p. 61 of the Geological Guide). Reptiles are termed " cold-blooded " because the temperature of their blood is raised but a few degrees above, and varies with, that of the outer atmosphere, owing to the imperfect separation of the divisions of their heart, which allows more or less of a mixture of the arterial and venous currents of the blood. Reptiles are ovi- parous or ovoviviparous ; no important change takes place after exclusion from the egg ; they breathe by lungs throughout life. Their skull articulates with the vertebral column by a single occi- pital condyle (see fig. 1), and their lower jaw with the skull by a separate bone (quadrate) (see figs. 1, 13, and 14). The remains of the oldest known Reptiles, those found in the Permian formations, seem to belong to the Rhynchocephalian type, REPTILE GALLERY. Fig. 1. Back view of skull of Crocodile. o, single occipital condyle ; q, quadrate bone. of which only one representative is still living (in New Zealand). Reptiles flourished and attained their greatest development in the Secondary period — Pterosaurians (large flying Lizards, see Geolo- gical Guide, p. 39), Dinosaurians (huge terrestrial Reptiles far exceeding in size our largest Crocodiles), Dicynodonts, Ichthyosau- rians, and Plesiosaurians (large marine creatures, Geological Guide, pp. 41, 45, 47), Crocodiles, Lizards, and Turtles lived in abun- dance; Snakes, however, did not appear before the Tertiary period. At present some 4000 species of Reptiles are known, which are unequally divided among five Orders, viz. Crocodilia (Crocodiles and Alligators), Rhynchocephalia, Lacertilia (Lizards), Ophidia (Snakes), and Chelonia (Tortoises and Turtles). In this classification of Reptiles the naturalist is guided much more by the structure of the skeleton and the other internal organs than by the external appearance. In fact, in Reptiles, as in many other classes of the Animal Kingdom, outward similarity is decep- tive as to the natural relationship — that is, as to the degree in which they are related to each other as descendants from a more or less remote common ancestor. Take, for instance, a Crocodile, a Lizard, a Slowworm, and a Snake. The observer who, like the CROCODILES. 3 naturalists of the last and preceding centuries, is guided by external appearance only, would without hesitation place the Crocodile and Lizard together, and associate the Slowworm with the Snake ; whilst a study of their internal structure shows the Lizard and the Slowworm to be most closely related to each other, and both uearer to the Snake than to the Crocodile. Reptiles are most abundant in hot climates, become less nume- rous in higher latitudes, and are altogether absent in the Arctic and Antarctic regions. In the Gallery — Wall-C; ises 1-10 contain the Crocodilians. )) 11 )) Rhynchoeephalians. }} 11-22 >) Lizards. )> 23-27 )) Snakes. a 28-44 j> Tortoises and Turtles Large specimens are exhibited separately on stands placed on the floor of the Gallery. Order I. CROCODILIA. The Crocodilians differ in many anatomical characters from [Cases the Lacertilians, or true Lizards, with which they were formerly 1_i^-J associated on account of their external resemblance. The organs of their chest and abdomen are separated from each other by a muscular diaphragm ; their heart is divided into four cavities, as in the higher vertebrates. The ribs are provided with two heads for the articulation with the vertebrae, and with processes directed backwards ; and their abdomen is protected by a series of transverse bones, as may be seen in the skeleton of the large Cro- codile (CaseE, opposite Wall-Case 5). The teeth are implanted in sockets, while in other recent Reptiles they are united to the jaws. The tongue is completely adherent to the floor of the mouth. The nostrils are situated close together at the upper side of the extre- mity of the snout; the eyes and the ears likewise are near to the upper profile of the head, so that the animal can breathe, see, and hear whilst its body is immersed in the water, the upper part of the head only being raised above the surface. When it dives, the nostrils are closed by valves, a transparent membrane is drawn over 4 REPTILE GALLERY. the eye, and the ear, which is a horizontal slit, is shut up by a movable projecting flap of the skin. The limbs are weak, the ante- rior provided with five, the posterior with four digits, of which three only are armed with claws, and which are united together by a more or less developed web. The tail is long, compressed, crested above, very powerful, and admirably adapted for propelling the body through the water. The back, tail, and belly are protected by a dermal armour formed of quadrangular shields, of which the dorsal and, in several Alligators, also the ventral contain true bone imbedded in the skin. The Crocodilians are thoroughly aquatic in their habits, and the most formidable of all the carnivorous freshwater animals. Crocodiles and Alligators, when young, and the Gharials through- out their existence, feed chiefly on fish ; but large Crocodiles attack every animal which they can overpower, and which they drown before devouring. The eggs, of which one (of Crocudilus porosus) is exhibited in Case 2, are oblong, hard-shelled, and deposited in holes on the banks of rivers and ponds. The flesh of these animals is not eaten, but their hides have lately been introduced as an article of commerce; a portion of the skin pre- pared for the trade may be seen in Case 5. The large stuffed Crocodilians are arranged in two groups in the middle of the Gallery, that (C) nearest the entrance containing the Old- World forms, the other (D) the American kinds. The smaller specimens occupy Wall-Cases 1-9, and a series of skulls is exhibited in Case 10. About 25 species are known. Crocodiles proper (Crocodilus) are distinguished from the Alli- gators by having the fourth lower tooth passing into a notch at the lateral edge of the upper jaw. They inhabit Africa, Southern Asia, the tropical parts of Australia, Central America, and the West Indies. The Indian Crocodile (Crocodilus porosus) is very common in the East Indies and Tropical Australia, and has been said to grow to a length of 30 feet. This size, however, must be exceptional ; and a very large specimen obtained in North-east Aus- tralia and exhibited in the middle of the Gallery measures only 17^ feet. The African Crocodile (Crocodilus vulgaris) attains nearly to the same size as the Indian species. It was worshipped by the TUATERA. 5 ancient Egyptians, and was once common in Egypt proper. It has now been almost exterminated in the lower parts of the Nile, but infests in great numbers all the freshwaters of Tropical Africa; and it is believed that more people are killed by Crocodiles than by any other of the wild beasts of Africa. The Gharials (Gavialis) may be readily recognized by their extremely long and slender snout. The Gharial of the Ganges (G. gangeticus), of which a large specimen (B) is mounted in the middle of the Gallery opposite to the entrance, is abundant in that river and its tributaries, and attains to a length of 20 feet. It feeds chiefly on fishes, for the capture of which its long and slender snout and sharp teeth are well adapted. Old males have a large cartilaginous hump on the extremity of the snout containing a small cavity for the retention of air, by which means these indi- viduals are enabled to remain under water for a longer time than females or young. In the Alligators {Alligator) the fourth lower tooth is received [Cast in a pit in the upper jaw, when the mouth is shut. With the '-> exception of one species which has been lately discovered in China, they are found only in America. They do not grow to the large size of the true Crocodiles. The species most generally known is A. mississippiensis, which abounds in the southern parts of North America. The Black Alligator (A. sclerops) is common in South America as far south as 32° lat. S. Order II. RHYNCHOCEPHALIA. Of this Order, which seems in the Permian and subsequent forma- [Case Y. tions to have been represented by various genera, one species only has survived to our period. It is the Tuatera of the Maoris, or Hatteria of naturalists. Case M. contains an example of this inter- esting Reptile, with skeleton and skulls. It is the largest of the few Reptiles inhabiting New Zealand, but scarcely attains to a length of 2 feet. Formerly it was probably found in several parts of the northern island ; but at present it is restricted to a few small islands in the Bay of Plenty, where it lives in holes feeding on other small animals. Externally there is nothing to distinguish the Tuatera from ordinary Lizards; but important differences obtain in the structure of its skeleton, viz. the presence of a double 6 REPTILE GALLERY. horizontal bar across the temporal region, the firm connection of the quadrate bone with the skull and pterygoid bones, biconcave vertebra: (as in Geckos and many fossil Crocodiliaus), the presence of an abdominal sternum and of uncinate processes to the ribs (as in Birds). Order III. LACERTILIA, or Lizards. The Order of Lizards comprises over 1600 species, which ' exhibit a great variety of form and structure. Some, like our common Lizards, possess four legs and a long tail, and are endowed with great rapidity of motion ; others, like the Chame- leons, are arboreal, and have their limbs and tail adapted for climb- ing on the branches of trees ; others, like the Geckos, can ascend smooth vertical surfaces, their toes being provided with special adhesive organs. The limbs may be rudimentary or disappear entirely, as in our common Slowworm, in which case the Lizard assumes the appearance of a Snake ; but, in all, rudiments at least of both pectoral and pelvic bones are hidden under the skin. Lizards may be characterized as Reptiles with the skin covered with scales Fig. 2. Hind legs of Lizards, to show the gradual abortion. a, Chalcidea ocellatu8) b, ChalcideB mionei t