156 LITERATURE OF SEA AND RIVER FISHING. 



works which may be consulted are F. Buckland's Fisli and 

 Fish Hatching (Tinsley Brothers, 1863) ; Capel's Trout 

 Qiltiire (Hardwicke & Bogue, 1877) ; Sir Samuel Wilson's 

 Trout at the Antipodes (Stanford, 1879) ; . Ashworth's 

 remarks on the artificial propagation of salmon at Stor- 

 montfield {1875), and Report of a Committee on the experi- 

 ments there (1875), and Brown's Natural History of the 

 Salmon, also in connection with the same establishment 

 (Murray, Glasgow, 1862) ; Francis Francis's Fish Culture 

 (Routledge, 1865), and his Practical Management of Fish- 

 eries {Field office, 1883) ; Hoare's Treatise on Fish-ponds 

 (Wyman and Sons, 1870) ; and Humphrey's River Gardens 

 (Sampson Low & Co., 1857). The United States of 

 America has been prolific in piscicultural publications. 

 Seth Green published his Trout Culture in 1870, and 

 L. Stone his Domesticated Trout in 1873 — a valuable 

 work ; and Norris his American Fish Culture in 1868 

 (Sampson Low & Co.). The Reports of the United 

 States Commission of Fish and Fisheries date from 1871, 

 and are all most instructive ; as are The Transactions of 

 the American Fish Cultural Association (established in 

 1 871), to which Professor G. Brown Goode is a prominent 

 contributor ; and from Canada we had last year the 

 interesting and valuable Report of S. Wilmot, Esq., on 

 Fish Breeding Operations, &c., in the Dominion. The 

 annual Fisheries Statements published by the Canadian 

 Government are well got up and worth consulting. 



Our concluding note will be in reference to the published 

 literary products of the Fisheries Exhibition itself Of 

 these the Handbooks are naturally the chief; and for 

 convenience of reference we give the Series entire : — 



The Fishery Laxus. By Frederick Pollock, Barrister-at-Law, M.A. 

 (Oxen.), Hon. LL.D. Edin. ; Corpus Christi Professor of 

 Jurisprudence in the University of Oxford, 



