Thompson, H. 



1932. First list of fishes in the Newfoundland 

 fishing area. Ann. Rep. Newfoundl. Fish Res. 

 Comm. for 1931, Append. 1(4): 107-110. 



Young lorms are taken peiagically at Bay 

 Bulls. 



Thompson, H. 



1933. Second list of fishes in the 

 Newfoundland fishing area. Ann. Rep. 

 Newfoundl. Fish Res. Comm for 1932, 

 Append. 2(1): 125-127. 



Cunner is listed. 



Thompson, H. 



1934. Third list of fishes in the 

 Newfoundland fishing area. Ann. Rep. 

 Newfoundl. Fish Res. Comm for 1933, 

 Append. 2(2): 115-117. 



Cunner is listed. 



Thomson, K. S., W. H. Weed, III, and A. G. 

 Taruski. 



1971. Saltwater fishes of Connecticut. State 



Geol. Nat. Hist. Surv. Conn., Bull. No. 105. 



165 pp. A brief account of the field 



characters, color, description, size, 



distribution, habits, and importance of the 



cunner is provided (p. 131-132). 



ThrelfaU, W. 



1968. Studies on the helminth parasites of 

 the American herring gull (Larus argentatus) 

 in Newfoundland. Canadian J. Zool. 46(6): 

 1119-1126. 



Although metacercariae of Cryptocotyle 

 lingua parasitize the cunner, specimens of 

 the fish were not found in the stomachs of 

 gulls. 



Townsend, C. H. 



1901a. Report of the Division of Statistics 

 and methods of the fisheries. Rep. U. S. 

 Comm. Fish Fish, for 1900, 26: 163-184. 

 The cunner is listed. 



Townsend, C. H. 



1901b. Statistics of the fisheries of the New 

 England States. Rep. U. S. Comm. Fish Fish, 

 for 1900, 26: 311-386. 



Catch statistics are listed throughout text. 



Tracy, H. C. 



1906. A list of the fishes of Rhode Island. I. 

 Annotated list of the fishes known to inhabit 

 the waters of Rhode Island. Ann. Rep. Rhode 

 Island Comm. Inland Fish, for 1905, 36: 

 38-99. 



A very brief account of the distribution, 

 habitat, reproduction, food and size of the 

 cunner is provided (p. 77-78). 



Tracy, H. C. 



1910. Annotated list of fishes known to 

 inhabitat the waters of Rhode Island. Ann. 

 Rep. Rhode Island Comm. Inland Fish, for 

 1909. 40: 35-176. 



A description of the distribution, habitat, 

 reproduction, food and rate of growth of 

 the cunner is given (p. 135-136). 



Tracy, H. C. 



1911. The morphology of the swim-bladder 

 in teleosts. Anatomischer Anzeiger, 38: 

 600-606; 638-649. 



Cunner was one of nine species of marine 

 fish in which the development of the 

 swimbladder was studied. 



Tracy, H. C. 



1925. The relation of carbon dioxide to 

 spontaneous movements in the larvae of 

 Opsanus tau. Biol. Bull. (Woods Hole), 48(6): 

 408-431. 



The spontaneous movements of the 

 toadfish are compared to those of 

 Fundulus and the cunner. "It would 

 appear that the activity habits of these 

 animals are not widely different at any 

 stage of their existence, and are 

 determined by some internal physiological 

 mechanism, the earliest expression of 

 which is found in the spontaneous 

 movements of the embryo." p. 411. 



Tracy, H. C. 



1926. The development of motility and 

 behavior reactions in the toad-fish. J. Comp. 

 Neurol., 40(2): 256-369. 



Observations are made in detail on the 

 reactions, movements, and behavior of 

 larval cunner. Larval cunner behavior is 

 compared with that of the toadfish. 



34 



