49^ Memoir Sears Foundation for Marine Research 



Hoar, J. Fish. Res. Bd. Canad., 6 (i), 1942: 90 (diurnal feed.); Huntsman, Science, g^, 1942: 381-383 

 (return of marked Salmon from distant places); Trans. 7th N. Amer. Wildl. Conf , 1942: 195-201 

 (planting results); Orton, Nature, Lond., I^o, 1942: 21—22, I fig. (temp. rel. to spawn.); White, J. Fish. 

 Res. Bd. Canad., 6, 1942: 24-29 (life hist. Lefeophtheirus salmonis); J. Fish. Res. Bd. Canad., 6, 1942: 

 37-44, 2 figs, (artif. spawn, beds); Aim, K. Landtbr. Styr. Medd., Stockh., 22, 1943 : 1-40 (male parr for 

 fertil. eggs); Blair, Res. Bull. Newfdld. Dept. nat. Resources, Jj, 1943 (Newfoundland and Labra- 

 dor salmon, 1939); Tchernavin, Proc. zool. Soc. London, B IIJ, 1943 : 206-232 (skuU changes in breed, 

 salmon, bibliogr.); Went, Proc. roy. Irish Acad., 49, 1943: 1 51-17 5 (changes, Shannon R. stocks 1929- 

 1941, Ireland); Huntsman, J. Fish. Res. Bd. Canad., 6, 1945: 311-325 (var. seaward migr.); J. Fish. 

 Res. Bd. Canad., 6, 1945 : 399-402 (parr migr.); La Monte, N. Amer. Game Fish., 1945 : 1 1, color, ill. 

 (distr., descr., food); Went, Sci. Proc. roy. Dublin Soc, 24, 1945: 1-8, i fig. (% of previously spawned 

 fish, Irish rivers); Huntsman, Salm. Trout Mag., I18, 1946: 234-257 (netting rel. to angling); Dymond, 

 Trans, roy. Soc. Canad., 41 (V), 1947 : i (fluct. animal populations) ; Jones, Proc. zool. Soc. London, Iiy, 

 1947: 708, I pi., I fig. (distinct, between young salmon and trout); Huntsman, Science, 105, 1947: 

 289—290 (are Lake Salmon hereditarily distinct?); Menzies, Salm. Trout Mag., 120, 1947: 130—132 

 (spawn.); Regan, Encyc. Brit., ed. 14, 1947, 9: 314 (genl.); ig: 889; Huntsman, Trans. Amer. Fish. 

 Soc, y5, 1948: 257-266 (freshets efi'ect. migr.); Salm. Trout Mag., I2J, 1948: 153-158 (sea migr.); 

 Nature, Lond., 161, 1948: 300—305 (migr.); Jensen, Spolia Zool. Mus. Hauniensis, 9, 1948: 65-67 

 (Greenland); Power, Arctic, J J, 1958:86-92 (evol. freshw. salmon); Dawson, The Salmon (iSa/OToW^/r) 

 in Game Fish, of World, 1949: 1-7 (genl., life hist.); Heller, Can. J. Res. D., 27, 1949: 243 (7 spp. 

 parasites, Canad. salmon); Jones and King, Proc. zool. Soc. London, Iig, 1949: 33—48, 2 pis., 3 figs, 

 (spawn, expts., review of spawn, behav.); Menzies, Stock of Salmon, 1949: 96 pp., 18 figs, (migr., 

 preserv., improvement); Merriman and Jean, Copeia, 1949: 220—221 (Connecticut R.); Saemundsson, 

 Marine Pisces in Zool. Iceland, IV (72), 1949: 90 (genl., Iceland); Huntsman, Salm. Trout Mag., 

 130, 1950: 227-239 (factors of migr.); Jones and King, Proc. zool. Soc. London, 120, 1950: 317-323 

 (further spawn, observ.); Salm. Trout Mag., 128, 1950: 24—26 (parr sperm prod. norm, progeny); 

 McCrimmon, Trans. Amer. Fish. Soc, yS, 1950: 128 (reintrod. in Lake Ontario); Vibert, Ann. St. 

 Centr. Hydrobiol. appl., j, 1950: 27-149 (age, growth, spawn, cycle, races); Ackerman, Handbk. Fish. 

 Atlant. Seaboard, 1951 : 106-107 (genl.); Haslerand Wisby, Amer. Nat., 55, 1951 : 223-238 (discrimina- 

 tion of stream odors, parent stream behav.); Hewitt, Salm. Trout Mag., TJI, 195 1: 40—44 (salmon 

 rivers, Spain); Hoar, Publ. Ont. Fish. Res. Lab., yi, 1951: 1-51 (hormones); Menzies, Rep. Atl. 

 Salmon Fisher. Canada, Atl. Salmon Ass., 1951 (conserv. problems); Wolf, Salm. Trout Mag., iji, 

 1951: 68—76 (causes of decline, also papers in later numbers Salm. Trout Mag.); CoUins, Fish. BuU., 

 U.S. Fish Wildl. Serv., 73, 1952: 373—396 (orient, of migr. anadrom. fish.); Dunbar and Hilde- 

 brand, J. Fish. Res. Bd. Canad., 9, 1952: 92-94 (life hist., commerc. import. Ungava Bay; also refs. to 

 earlier authors); Hoar, Trans, roy. Soc. Canad., 46, 1952: 39 (thyroid function, anadromy); Huntsman, 

 Salm. Trout Mag., Jj6, 1952: 185-191 (wandering vs. homing); J. Cycl. Res., l, 1952: 43-53 (causes 

 of cycles); Jones, Nature, Lond., J69, 1952: 882 (spawn, parr with female); Jones and King, Proc. zool. 

 Soc. London, 122: 1952: 61 5—619 (spawn, parr with female); Rostlund, Freshw. Fish Fishing N. .'\mer., 

 1952: 4, 25, 26, 52, 258 (refs.); Bigelow and Schroeder, Fish. BuU. (74) U.S. Fish Wildl. Serv., 5J, 

 1953: 121-131, I fig. (Gulf of Maine); Brainard, Atl. Salm. J., 3, March, 1953: 74-76 (Connecticut 

 R.); Harriman, Atl. Salm. J., Aug. 1953: 108 (restor. in Narraguagus R., Maine); Hansen and Hermann, 

 Danm. Fisk. Havunders., J5, 1953: 78-81 (Greenland); Hayes, Bull. Fish. Res. Bd. Canad., 99, 1953: 47 

 pp., 26 figs, (artif freshets, etc.. La Have R. populations); Hoar, Biol. Rev., 28, 1953 : 437-452 (control, 

 fish migr.); Johnson, Salm. Trout Mag., 138, 1953: 135-153 (early and late runs); Rostlund, Copeia, 

 3, 1953 : 192—193 (discus. Henry Hudson's rep. of salmon in Hudson R., 1609); Sedgwick, Salm. Trout 

 Mag., ijy, 1953 : 77-82 (relation, of parr age and early or late return for first spawn.); White, Bull. Fish. 

 Res. Bd. Canad., gy, 1953 : 44 pp., 1 17 figs, (kingfisher predation); Anon., Bull. U.S. Fish Wildl. Serv., 

 88, 1954: I— 12 (genl. acct.); Huntsman, Nature, Lond., iy4, 1954: 215-217 (water movements 

 re migr.); Jones and Ball, Brit. J. Anim. Behaviour, 2, 1954: 103-114 (spawn, behav.); McCrimmon, 

 J. Fish. Res. Bd. Canad., II, 1954: 362-403 (planting results); Vibert, Trans. Amer. Fish. Soc, 83, 

 1954: 194—201 (effect of sun and gravel on develop.); Wisby and Hasler, J. Fish. Res. Bd. Canad., II, 

 1954: 472-478 (effect of olfactory occlusion on migr.); Wooding, Canad. Dept. Fish., 1954: (genl. 

 acct.); Aim, Rep. Inst. Freshw. Res., Drottn., 36, 1955: 13 (artif. hybridization); Carlin, Rep. Inst. 

 Freshw. Res., Drottn., 36, 1955: 57-74 (tag. smolts, Sweden); Elson, Prog. Rep. Fish. Res. Bd. Canad., 



