104 THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 
COMMISSION OF CONSERVATION. 
White fish areas in the Great Lakes. 
Commission of Conservation, Canada, 1911, Lands, Fisheries, Game 
and Minerals, pp. 154-155, with four maps. 
Taken from an article by Paul Reighard, of the University of Michigan, 
on “A Plan for Promoting the Whitefish Production of the Great 
Lakes. Bulletin of the United States Bureau of Fisheries, vol. xxviii, 
p. 645. 
Fish Culture in Canada. 
Idem, pp. 156-157. 
Fisheries of Manitoba. 
Idem, pp. 164-175. = 
The Fisheries of British Columbia. 
Idem, pp. 176-191. 
This article was contributed by the Attorney General's Department, 
British Columbia. 
CunnineHaM, F. H. 
Fish Breeding. 
Forty-fourth Annual Report, Department of Marine and Fisheries, 
Ottawa, 1910-11 (1911), Fisheries, appendix No. 16, pp. 347-412. 
Gives information regarding the work of the forty-one hatcheries in 
operation throughout the Dominion, and the species of fish handled. 
GAUTHIER, C. W. 
Whitefish in the Great Lakes. 
Commission of Conservation, Canada, 1911, Lands, Fisheries, Game 
and Minerals, pp, 146-153. 
GILL, THEODORE. 
Notes on the Structure and Habits of the Wolf-fishes. 
Proceedings of the United States National Museum, vol. 39, No. 1782, 
pp. 157-187, with bibliography, and plates 17-28. 
In this paper a number of species of wolf-fish, occurring off the coasts 
of Canada and Greenland are described or referred to. They are as 
follows:—Lycichthys fortidens, sp. nov. (off coasts of Maine and Nova 
Scotia); L. latifrons (Iceland and Western Greenland); L. denticula- 
tus (Western Greenland); L. paucidens (Off coasts of Maine and Nova 
Scotia); Anarrhichas minor (North Atlantic, south to Scotland and 
Maine); A lupus (North Atlantic, along the shore of Europe to British 
Channel and of North America to Cape Cod); A lepturus (North 
Pacific, south to Vancouver island); and Anarrhichthys ocellatus 
(North Pacific from Alaska to Monterey). 
KENDALL, WILLIAM CONVERSE. 
Notes on Percopsis guttatus, Agassiz and Salmo omiscomaycus, Walbaum. 
Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, February, 1911, 
vol. xxiv, pp. 45-52. 
In this article the name Percopsis omiscomaycus (Walbaum) is used 
instead of Percopsis guttatus, Agassiz, in describing the species so 
widely distributed in northern and central Canada. 
