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Spotted stargazer

Spotted stargazer

Spotted stargazer

The French explorers added to European knowledge of New Zealand, its inhabitants and its natural history. Louis Isidore Duperrey spent two weeks in the Bay of Islands in April 1824. He had brought with him a naturalist, René Primevère Lesson, and an artist, Antoine Germain Bevalet. Both probably had a hand in recording a fish they called Uranoscope kouripoua, now known as the spotted stargazer (Genyagnus monopterygius).

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Alexander Turnbull Library
Reference: PUBL-0116-Poi-18
Hand-coloured lithograph by J. L. D. Coutant

Permission of the Alexander Turnbull Library, National Library of New Zealand, Te Puna Matauranga o Aotearoa, must be obtained before any re-use of this image.




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