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336
The Descent of Man.
Part II.

has been called the gemmeous dragonet "from its brilliant gem-like colours." When fresh caught from the sea the body is yellow of various shades, striped and spotted with vivid blue on the head; the dorsal fins are pale brown with dark longitudinal bands; the ventral, caudal, and anal fins being bluish-black. The female, or sordid dragonet, was considered by Linnæus, and by many subsequent naturalists, as a distinct species; it is of a dingy reddish-brown, with the dorsal fin brown and the other

Fig. 29. Callionymus lyra. Upper figure, male; lower figure, female.
N.B. The lower figure is more reduced than the upper.

fins white. The sexes differ also in the proportional size of the head and mouth, and in the position of the eyes;[1] but the most striking difference is the extraordinary elongation in the male (fig. 29) of the dorsal fin. Mr. W. Saville Kent remarks that this "singular appendage appears from my observations of the species in confinement, to be subservient to the same end as the wattles, crests, and other abnormal adjuncts of the male in gallinaceous birds, for the purpose of fascinating

  1. I have drawn up this description from Yarrell's 'British Fishes,' vol. i. 1836, pp. 261 and 266.