﻿18 
  DISTRIBUTION 
  OF 
  FISH 
  AND 
  FISH 
  EGGS^ 
  1914. 
  

  

  Stations 
  Operated 
  and 
  the 
  Output 
  of 
  Each 
  for 
  the 
  Fiscal 
  Year 
  1914 
  — 
  Con. 
  

  

  a 
  For 
  convenience 
  in 
  handling, 
  transfers 
  were 
  made 
  as 
  follows: 
  

  

  Wvtheville 
  to 
  (^lincv, 
  2,165 
  rock 
  bass; 
  to 
  White 
  Sulphur 
  Springs, 
  35,'250 
  rainbow 
  trout 
  flngerlings; 
  to 
  

   Erwin, 
  oOS.tiOi); 
  to 
  Central 
  Station, 
  25,000; 
  to 
  Leadville, 
  531,000; 
  to 
  Nashua, 
  110,000; 
  to 
  Cape 
  Vincent, 
  25,000 
  

   rainbow 
  trout 
  eggs. 
  

  

  The 
  eggs 
  hatched 
  at 
  the 
  main 
  stations 
  hsted 
  in 
  the 
  foregoing 
  tahle 
  

   are 
  in 
  many 
  cases 
  obtained 
  from 
  auxiliary 
  sources, 
  usually 
  temporary 
  

   stations 
  occupied 
  during 
  the 
  season 
  only, 
  or, 
  in 
  soriie 
  instances, 
  mere 
  

   camps 
  which 
  are 
  sliifted 
  from 
  year 
  to 
  year. 
  In 
  the 
  Great 
  Lakes 
  and 
  

   off 
  the 
  New 
  England 
  coast 
  collections 
  are 
  made 
  by 
  the 
  Bureau's 
  vessels 
  

   or 
  boats 
  in 
  favorable 
  localities. 
  The 
  following 
  temporary 
  stations 
  

   and 
  collecting 
  points 
  furnished 
  eggs 
  of 
  the 
  given 
  specif 
  for 
  the 
  main 
  

   hatcheries 
  during 
  1914: 
  

  

  List 
  of 
  Egg-Collecting 
  Stations, 
  1914. 
  

  

  