220 REPORT OF COMMISSIONER OF FISH AND FISHERIES. [514] 
B.—LISTS OF SPECIES FOUND IN THE STOMACHS OF 
FISHES—FOOD OF FISHES. 
In the following lists I have brought together the principal results of 
the various recorded examinations of stomachs of fishes in this region, 
up to the present time, whether done in connection with the United 
States Fish Commission or independently. The special dates and local- 
ities are given in each case. 
The observations from June to September, 1871, were made in con- 
nection with the work of the commission. Those from May to July, 
1872, are based on collections made at Wood’s Hole by Mr. Vinal N. 
Edwards, for Professor Baird. Those at Great Egg Harbor, New Jer- 
sey, April, 1871, were made by Mr.8. I. Smith and the writer while on 
an independent visit to that place.* The observations made at Hast- 
port, Maine, in 1872, are not included in this report. 
The names of the fishes used in this list are those adopted by Profes- 
sor Baird, and agree, for the most part, with those used by Professor 
Theodore Gill in his Catalogue of the Fishes of the Eastern Coast of 
North America. 
STRIPED BAss; Rock-FIsH, or “ Rock ;” (Roccus lineatus.) 
At Great Egg Harbor, New Jersey, April, 1871, several ‘specimens, 
freshly caught in seines, with menhaden, &c., contained Crangon vul- 
garis (shrimp) in large quantities. 
A specimen caught at Wood’s Hole, July 22, 1872, contained a large 
mass of ‘sea-cabbage,” Ulva latissima, and the remains of a small 
fish. 
Specimens taken at Wood’s Hole, August, 1871, contained crabs, Can- 
cer irroratus ; and lobsters, Homarus Americanus. 
WHITE PERCH; (Morone Americana.) 
Numerous specimens caught with the preceding at Great Egg Har- 
bor, New Jersey, contained Crangon vulgaris. 
BLACK BASS; SEA-BASS; (Centropristis fuscus.) 
Specimens caught in Vineyard Sound, June 10, contained the common 
crab, Cancer irroratus ; the mud-crab, Panopeus Sayi; three species of 
fishes. 
Another caught May 25 contained a squid, Loligo pallida. 
Scup; PoRGEE; (Stenotoemus argyrops.) 
Forty young specimens, one year old, taken at Wood’s Hole in Augwst, 
contained large numbers of Amphipod Crustacea, among which were 
Unciola irrorata, Ampelisca, sp., &c.; several small mud-crabs, Panopeus 
depressus; Idotea irrorata; Nereis virens, and numerous other Annelids of 
several species, too much digested for identification. 
*The results of the observations made at Great Egg Harbor were published by the 
writer in the American Naturalist, vol. v, p. 397, 1871. 
