PEOPAGATION" AND DISTRIBUTION OF FOOD FISHES, 19 2 8 359 

 Transfer of eggs between stations, fiscal year 1928 — Coutinued 



Species 



Number 

 of eggs 



From- 



To- 



Chinook salmon_ 



Cisco 



Lake trout 



Landlocked salmon 

 Loch Leven trout.. 



Rainbow trout 



Silver salmon 



Sockeye salmon.. 



Steelhead salmon 



2, 050, 000 

 1,161,000 

 1, 081, 000 



3, 000, 000 



12, 000 



378, 000 



252, 000 



1, 360, 000 



219, 000 



3, 528, 000 



50, 000 



15,000 



50,000 



200,000 



350, 000 



300,000 



20,000 



50,000 



125,000 



25, 000 



134, 000 



112,000 



320, 000 



113,000 



87, 000 



478,000 



26, 000 



100,000 



1,017,000 



84, 000 



50,000 



753, 000 



100,000 



50, 000 



25,000 



Big White Salmon, Wash 



Little White Salmon, Wash.. 



do 



do 



Quinault, Wash 



Battle Creek, Calif... 



Mill Creek, Calif 



Cape Vincent, N. Y... 



Alpena, Mich _ 



Duluth, Minn 



do 



Craig Brook, Me 



Grand Lake Stream, Me 



Bozeman, Mont 



Meadow, Mont 



do 



do 



do 



do 



White Sulphur Springs, W. 

 Va. 



Manchester, Iowa 



do 



Neosho, Mo 



do 



Bourbon, Mo 



Lost Creek, Wyo 



do 



do 



Quinault, Wash. 



do 



"""'doI""'""'""'I"""'"""" 



Baker Lake, Wash. 



Applegate, Oreg 



Birdsview, Wash.. 



Clackamas, Oreg. 



Birdsview, Wash. 



Quilcene, Wash. 



Salmon, Idaho. 



Central Station, Washington, D.C. 



Baird, Calif. 



Do. 

 Central Station, Washington, D.C. 

 Charlevoix, Mich. 



Do. 

 Leadville, Colo. 

 St. Johnsbury, Vt. 

 Craig Brook, Me. 

 White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. 

 La Crosse, Wis. 

 Bozeman, Mont. 

 Holden, Vt. 

 Cape Vincent, N. Y. 

 Glacier Park, Mont. 

 Central Station, Washington, D.C. 



La Crosse, Wis. 

 Northville, Mich. 



Do. 

 La Crosse, Wis. 



Do. 

 Saratoga, Wyo. 

 San Marcus, Tex. 

 Neosho, Mo. 



Puget Sound Stations, Wash. 

 Clackamas, Oreg. 

 Rogue River, Oreg. 

 Birdsview, Wash. 



Do. 

 Clackamas, Oreg 

 Charlevoix, Mich. 



GENERAL FISH-CULTURAL NOTES 



NEW STATIONS 



No new stations were operated during the year. However, a new 

 substation at Fort Worth, Tex., auxiliary to the San Marcos station, 

 has been virtually completed in respect to pond and water-supply 

 construction. It is situated on property donated by the city. The 

 ponds were completed too late to be used this season, but they will be 

 on a productive basis in 1929. There are five ponds with a total 

 water area of 17.59 acres. The station will be used largely for the 

 propagation of bass and crappie. The work was carried on under 

 a special appropriation of $18,000. 



At the close of the year work had just been started on a combina- 

 tion trout and pond station at Crawford, Nebr. This will be operated 

 as an auxiliary to the Spearfish (S. Dak.) station. It is to be built 

 on park property donated by the city of Crawford, and work will 

 also be conducted on Federal land belonging to the Fort Robinson 

 Military Reservation. Trout will be propagated chiefly, but the 

 station will serve as headquarters for directing cooperative rearing 

 of warm-water fishes in the surrounding territory. An appropria- 

 tion of $35,000 was made available July 1, 1927, and has been con- 

 tinued for the coming year. 



At the close of the year the bureau acquired title to a large tract 

 of land near Valdosta, Ga., on which it will build a hatchery to be 



