Ill 



Tage. 



APrENDICES. 



Pan jab . • • • • i 



Territory included and its physical geography — Its population — Enquiry 

 on this subject in 1869 and 1870 — Proportion of population who 

 consume fish — Local markets insufficiently supplied— Present state 

 of the fisheries and destruction of breeding fish in hilly districts — 

 Fisheries Government property, and how the Rajahs let them — 

 Fishermen not dependant on this occupation as a sole means of 

 subsistence — Breeding fish and fry if destroyed, and the result of 

 regulating the minimum size ofthe mesh of nets — Fish killed whole- 

 sale in canals constructed for working mills — Diverting hill streams- 

 Irrigation weirs and canals destructive to fisheries — Suggestions 

 respecting prohibiting the sale of the fry of fish in bazars — Fence 

 months advisable in hilly districts — Some pools in hill streams 

 should be protected during the dry months — Trapping fish objec- 

 tionable — Neighbouring native states should be asked to co-operate 

 in preservative measures — Present Panjab fishing regulations — 

 Additional ones proposed. 



Reports from European Officials ..... viii 



Secretary to the Panjab Government — Commissioner of Peshawar — 

 Deputy Commissioners of Peshawar, Hazara, and Kohat — Commis- 

 sioner of Rawal Pindi — Deputy Commissioners of Rawal Pindi, 

 Jhilam, Shahpur, and Gujrat — Commissioner of Derajat — Deputy 

 Commissioners of Banu, Dera Gazi Khan, and Dera Ismail Khan- 

 Deputy Commissioners of Jhang, Muzaffargarb, Montgomery, and 

 Multan — Deputy Commissioners of Labor and Gujranwalla — Deputy 

 Commissioners of Amritsar, Sialkot, and Gurdaspiir — Commiesionei 

 of Ambala — The Deputy Commissioners of Ambala and Ludhiana — 

 Commissioner of Jalandar: Deputy Commissioners of Jalandar,' 

 Phillur, Hushiarpur, and Kangra — Commissioner of Hissar and the 

 Deputy Commissioner — Commissioner of Delhi — Deputy Commis- 

 sioners of Delhi, Gurgaon, Sarsa, and the Extra Assistant Commis- 

 sioner of Karnal — The Revd. Dr. Carleton's observations on 

 fishing as carried on in hilly districts. 



Reports from Native Officials - . . . . xix 



Peshawar Division, from Peshawar. Ilaiipiir, Mausera, and Kohat — 

 Rawal Pindi Division, from Rawal Pindi, Attock, Gujer Khan, Fathi 

 Jang, Muni, Jhilam, Pind Dadan Khan, Chakwal, Talegang, Gujrat, 

 Kharim, and Sahem — Derajat Division, from Band, Isakhel, Mia- 

 maoli, Lakki, Dera Gazi Khan, Sangarh, Rajanpur, Jampiir, Dera, 

 Liah, Bhakkar, and Kolachi — Multan Division, from Multan, Ala 

 Dal Khan, of Khangarh, Darqgah Shere Shah, Mian Mahbab, Mu- 

 zaffargarh, Kot Adu, Montgomery, Gugaira, Pikpatan, Riaz 

 Hossain, Multan, Shoojabad, Lodhran, Mailsi, Seraie Saidhu — Labor 

 Division, from Labor, Kasur. Chunia, Sharkpur, Gujranwalla. Wazir- 

 abad, and Hafizabad — Amritsar Division, from Amritsar. Reyah, 

 Pasrur, Zaffarwal, Sialkot, Shakergarh, Batala, and Pathankot — 

 Ambala Division, from Ambala, Jagadri, Raossur, Kharar, Narayan- 

 garh, and Pipli — Jalandar Division, from Jalandar, Phillur, Nawa- 

 shahr, Nacodar, Hushiarpur, Unah, Garhsankar, and Dasuha— Hissar 

 Division, from Hissar, Hansi, Fathiabad, Bhawani, and Barwala — 

 Delhi Division, from Delhi, Larsauli, Ballabhgarh, Gurgaon, Rewari, 

 Palwal, Nuh, Fazilka, Sarsa, Kurnal, Panipat, and Kaithal. 



Sind . . . • • • xx * ls: 



Its fresh-water fisheries — River Indus — Tanks or dhands, isolated or 

 connected with the Indus, and their finny inhabitants — Canal fisheries, 

 and proof that prohibiting the use of small meshed nets, small fish 

 do not disproportionately increase over the larger sorts — Fishery in 

 Indus mostly for Shad — Fresh-water fish, river and inundation 

 descriptions — No preventible destruction ofthe immature fish appears 

 to obtain — Fish universally eaten — Fisheries peculiar. 



