ANIMAL EESOURCES AND FISHERIES OF UNITED STATES. 127 



ISeiiicfii. 



Bass-seines. 

 Bluefish-seines. 

 Capeliu-scinos. 

 Ilerring-seines. 



2G119. Model of liprriiig-seine. l^sed on coasts of New England and the 

 Provinces in capture of herring {Cltipea harcrKjiis), and in the Hud- 

 son, rotoinac, Delaware, and Chesapeake, and in North Carolina. 

 American Net and Twine Company, Boston, Mass. 



26127. Model of herring-seine. American Net and Twine Company, Boston, 

 Mass. 



Shad-seines. 



These are used in the rivers of the Arlantic and Gulf coast. 



These seines are knit from cotton thread. On the Connecticut River, 

 the seines are of nine-thread twine, 5-5^ mesh; on the Hudson, the mesh 

 is four inches, knit of six-thread twine in the wings and nine thread in 

 the bunt. In the Delaware, Potomac, and Chesapeake, the mesh is 3^ to 

 ^ inches, the twine 12, I.'), and 18 thread; in North Carolina, the mesh is 

 21 to 3| inches, and the cotton twine twelve-thread. (E. B. French.) 



Cod-seines. 



26137. Model of cod-seine. Used in Provinces in capture of cod (Gadiis 

 viorrhua). American Net and Twine Company, Boston and New 

 York. 30 to 40 feet deep. Mesh 5 inches, 18 to 21 thread, cotton. 



Lance-bnnts. 



Baird collecting-seines. 



26136. Baird net. Designed 1ty Prof. S. F. Baird. Used by naturalists in 

 collecting small fishes in brooks and ponds and in following behind 

 large seines to secure the small species which escape through the 

 meshes, six-thread coarse cotton. American Net and Twine Com- 

 pany, Boston, Mass. 



26126. Model of Baird net. American Net and Twine Company, Boston, 

 Mass. 



Bait-seines. 



26123, 26130. Model of minnow-seine. Used by amateurs in capture of 

 minnow-liait. i to f inch mesh, six-thread cotton twine. Ameri- 

 can Net and Twine Comi)any, Boston, Mass. 



26121. Modcd of minnow-seine, with bag. Used by fishermen to secure bait 

 for eel-pots. American Net and Twine Company, Boston, Mass. 



26668. Minnow-seine. Property of J. A. Nichols, Syracuse, N. Y. Contrib- 

 uted by Forest & Stream Publishing Company. 



Other seines. 



2232. Seine. Anderson River Eskimos. Mackenzie's River district. Robert 



MacFarlane. 

 2444. Seine made of "babiche." Tschutehi Indians. Capt. John Rodgers, 



U. S. N., North Paciiic Exploring Expedition. 



