This latest revision of a leaflet of long 

 standing includes infornnation on mor- 

 phology, distribution, spawning, fecun- 

 dity, age, growth, artificial propagation, 

 and the sport and commercialfisheries. 

 Effects of the sea lamprey on Great 

 Lakes stocks of lake trout are reviewed 

 in the final section. 



ESCHMEYER, PAUL H., and REEVE M. 

 BAILEY. 

 1955. The pygmy whitefish, Coregonus coul- 

 teri, in Lake Superior. Trans. Amer. 

 Fish. Soc. 84:161-199. 



Discovery of a large population of 

 pygmy whitefish in Lake Superior ex- 

 tended the known range by 1,100 miles. 

 The morphology of the Lake Superior 

 stock is compared with that of other 

 populations. Information is given for the 

 Lake Superior stock with respect to: 

 geographic distribution and local abun- 

 dance; bathymetric distribution; length 

 frequencies; age and growth; sex ratio; 

 maturity; fecundity; spawning; food; and 

 associates. 



ESCHMEYER, PAUL H., and WALTER R. 



CROWE. 



1955. The movement and recovery of tagged 



walleyes in Michigan, 1929-1953. Mich. 



Dep. Conserv., Inst. Fish. Res., Misc. 



Publ. 8, 32 p. 



Report on recaptures from 14,000 

 walleyes tagged in various State of 

 Michigan waters over a 25-year period. 

 Kind and extent of movements varied 

 according to the conditions of the experi- 

 ments. Walleyes tagged in the Muskegon 

 River scattered widely through Lake 

 Michigan; many were recovered 100- 

 175 miles from the point of tagging. Tags 

 depressed the rate of growth. 



ESCHMEYER, PAUL H., RUSSELL DALY, and 



LEO F. ERKKILA. 



1953. Movement of tagged lake trout in 



Lake Superior, 1950-1952. TheFisher- 



man (Grand Haven, Mich.) 21{3):4, 11. 



Condensed version of 1953 paper of 

 the same authors under a similar title. 



ESCHMEYER, PAUL H., RUSSELL DALY, and 

 LEO F. ERKKILA. 

 1953. The movement of tagged lake trout 

 in Lake Superior, 1950-1952. Trans. 

 Amer. Fish. Soc. 82:68-77. 



Recoveries from 733 native lake trout 

 tagged at Cornucopia, Wis., and off the 

 Keweenaw Peninsula amounted to 155 

 fish or 21.1 percent. Percentages of 



recapture for different kinds of tags 

 were: aluminum, lower jaw, 10,7;monel, 

 upper jaw, 14.0; streamer, 19.8; Peter- 

 sen, 45.4. Large fish moved greater 

 distances before recapture than did 

 small ones. Many fish crossed State 

 lines, and a few were captured in 

 Canadian waters. 



ESCHMEYER, PAUL H., vide: RALPH HILE; 

 JOHN VAN OOSTEN. 



FINLEY, W. L., vide: JOHN VAN OOSTEN. 



GALLAGHER, HUBERT R., A. G. HUNTSMAN, 



D. J. TAYLOR, and JOHN VAN OOSTEN. 



1943. Report of the International Board of 



Inquiry for the Great Lakes Fisheries. 



Int. Bd. Inq. Great Lakes Fish., Rep. 



Suppl.:l-24. 



General review of management and 

 research problems concluding with rec- 

 ommendations for: common investiga- 

 tion of the fisheries; joint regulation 

 and management of stocks found to be 

 common; provisions for collection of 

 complete and accurate statistics; and 

 tests of effectiveness of planting fish. 



GALLAGHER, HUBERT R., and JOHN VAN 

 OOSTEN. 

 1943. Supplemental report of the United 

 States members of the International 

 Board of Inquiry for the Great Lakes 

 Fisheries. Int. Bd. Inq. Great Lakes 

 Fish., Rep, Suppl.:25-21 3. 



A major source of information on the 

 Great Lakes fisheries. Body of report 

 includes detailed treatment of: trends 

 of production; evidence of and factors 

 contributing to depletion; problems of 

 regulation and management; history of 

 the many unsuccessful attempts to attain 

 adequate and uniform regulations; and 

 need for international investigation and 

 control. Appendixes include selected 

 bibliography on the Great Lakes fish- 

 eries and complete record of all avail- 

 able statistics on production through 

 1940 (many of these statistics com- 

 piled from original records and pub- 

 lished for the first time). 



GORDON, WILLIAM G. 



1961. Food of the American smelt in Sagi- 

 naw Bay, Lake Huron. Trans. Amer. 

 Fish. Soc. 90(4):439-443. 



Young of the year (0 group) sub- 

 sisted principally on planktonic Crus- 

 tacea (copepods, cladocerans) which 

 were present in all stomachs that con- 

 tained food (no volume measurements). 

 Fish in a Nov. 1 collection of the I-group 



15 



