Online Encyclopedia

CYPRINODONTS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 695 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CYPRINODONTS  . In spite of their name, the small fishes called Cyprinodonts are in no way related to the Cyprinids, or

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carp
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family, but are near allies of the pike, characterized by a flat head with protractile mouth beset with cardiform, villiform, or compressed, bi- or tri-cuspid teeth, generally large scales, and the absence of a well-
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developed lateral
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line . About two
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hundred
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species are known, mostly inhabitants of the fresh and brackish waters of
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America; only about
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thirty are known from the old
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world (south
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Europe, south
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Asia,
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China and
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Japan, and Africa) . Several forms occur in the Oligocene and
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Miocene beds of Europe . Many species are ovo-viviparous, and from their small
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size and lively behaviour they are much appreciated as aquarium fishes . In many species the sexes are dissimilar, the
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female being larger and less brilliantly coloured, with smaller fins; the anal fin of the male may be modified into an intromittent
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organ by means of which
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internal fertilization takes place, the ova developing in a sort of uterus . In the remarkable genus Anableps, from Central and South America, the strongly projecting eyes are divided by a
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horizontal
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band of the conjunctiva into an upper
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part adapted for vision in the air, and a
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lower for vision in the
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water, and the pupil is also divided into two parts by a constriction . The latest monograph of these fishes is by S . Garman in Mem .
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Mus . Comp . Zool. xix .

(1895) . The Amblyopsidae, which include the remarkable

blind cave fishes of North America (Mammoth cave and others), are nearly related to the Cyprinodontidae, and like many of them ovoviviparous . Chologaster, from the
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lowland streams and swamps of the south
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Atlantic states, has the eyes well developed and the
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body is coloured . Amblyopsis and Typhlichthys, which are evidently derived from Chologaster, or from forms closely related to it, but living in
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complete' darkness, have the eyes rudimentary and more or less concealed under the skin, and the body is colourless . See F . W . Putnam, Amer . Nat . (1872), p . 6, and P . Boston
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Soc. xvii . (1875), p .

222; and C . H . Eigenmann, Archiv.

fur Entwickelungsmechanik der Organismen, viii . (1899), P . 545 . (G . A .

End of Article: CYPRINODONTS
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