Fishery BoArcl for Scotland, 



lu our next Table, the same figures are given, month by month 

 for the year 1914. 



TABLE B. 



Number of Trawlers, British and Foreign, landing at Aberdeen, 

 from Iceland and Faeroe, during the year 1914. 



That the foreign fishing-fleet, landing at Aberdeen, was almost 

 wholly German, and that it fished almost entirely at Iceland, was a 

 matter of common knowledge. So little, indeed, did other landings 

 figure in the total catch by foreign vessels that we need not make 

 any elaborate subdivision of our foreign statistics: but may illus- 

 trate the whole case sufficiently well by taking the foreign landings 

 as a whole, irrespective of nationality and place of fishing, 



TABLE C. 



Monthly Returns of Quantity and Value of all landings by Foreign 

 Trawlers at Aberdeen during the year 1914;* with their 

 percentage relation to the Total market supply of Trawled Fish. 



* From the Fishery Officer's Monthly Reports. 



We see, then, that from January to September 1914 the foreign 

 trawlers (practically all German) landed just over 30 per cent, of 



