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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: MOL-MOS |
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MORMYR . The mormyrs (Mormyridae) are one of the most remarkable families of the Malacopterygian fishes, confined to the fresh waters of tropical Africa and the Nile. About loo species, referred to two sub-families and ten genera, are now known, a great
body
ibis
numenius
long considered as " pseudoelectric,"MORNAY Very little is known of the habits of these fishes. Professor G. Fritsch, of Berlin, during his stay in Egypt
great
prey hidden between stones or buried in the mud, and that the fleshy mental appendage with which they are provided is a tactile organ compensating the imperfection of the vision in the search
late
nest
Venerated by the ancient Egyptians, the mormyrs are often represented on hierogiyphics and mural paintings as well as in bronze models. The ' Oxyrhynchus," remarkable for its long , curved snout, is the most frequently depicted. A revision of the Mormyridae has been published by G. A. Boulenger in the Proc. Zool. Soc. (1898), with a bibliographical index to the various anatomical and physiological contributions. The skull has been minutely studied by W. G. Ridewood, Journ. Linn. Soc. (Zool. xxix., 1904, p. 188). Figures of the most remarkable forms will be found in Boulenger's Poissons nouveaux du Congo, Ann. Mus. Congo (Zool. i. and ii., 18981902), and in his Fishes of the Nile (London, 1907, 400) On the breeding habits of Gymnarchus, cf. J. S. Budgett, Trans. Zool. Soc. (1901), xvi. 126. (G. A. B.)End of Article: MORMYR If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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