| SECOND PART
CHAPTER 17: From Cape Horn to the Amazon
 (continued)As for the fish in these waterways, I noted various species that I
 hadn't yet had the opportunity to study.  Among cartilaginous fish:
 some brook lamprey, a type of eel fifteen inches long, head greenish,
 fins violet, back bluish gray, belly a silvery brown strewn with
 bright spots, iris of the eye encircled in gold, unusual animals
 that the Amazon's current must have swept out to sea because their
 natural habitat is fresh water; sting rays, the snout pointed,
 the tail long, slender, and armed with an extensive jagged sting;
 small one-meter sharks with gray and whitish hides, their teeth
 arranged in several backward-curving rows, fish commonly known
 by the name carpet shark; batfish, a sort of reddish isosceles
 triangle half a meter long, whose pectoral fins are attached
 by fleshy extensions that make these fish look like bats,
 although an appendage made of horn, located near the nostrils,
 earns them the nickname of sea unicorns; lastly, a couple species
 of triggerfish, the cucuyo whose stippled flanks glitter with a
 sparkling gold color, and the bright purple leatherjacket whose
 hues glisten like a pigeon's throat. I'll finish up this catalog, a little dry but quite accurate,
 with the series of bony fish I observed:  eels belonging to the genus
 Apteronotus whose snow-white snout is very blunt, the body painted
 a handsome black and armed with a very long, slender, fleshy whip;
 long sardines from the genus Odontognathus, like three-decimeter pike,
 shining with a bright silver glow; Guaranian mackerel furnished with two
 anal fins; black-tinted rudderfish that you catch by using torches,
 fish measuring two meters and boasting white, firm, plump meat that,
 when fresh, tastes like eel, when dried, like smoked salmon;
 semired wrasse sporting scales only at the bases of their dorsal
 and anal fins; grunts on which gold and silver mingle their luster
 with that of ruby and topaz; yellow-tailed gilthead whose flesh
 is extremely dainty and whose phosphorescent properties give
 them away in the midst of the waters; porgies tinted orange,
 with slender tongues; croakers with gold caudal fins; black surgeonfish;
 four-eyed fish from Surinam, etc. This "et cetera" won't keep me from mentioning one more fish
 that Conseil, with good reason, will long remember. |