8 



FISHERIES EXHIBITION LITERATURE. 



small oysters not allowed to be taken, 

 v., 1 02 ; absence of spat on certain 

 oyster beds there, v., no; use of 

 trawl there by French fishermen, vii., 



259 



Archestratus, an authority as to the 

 modes of cooking fish, i., 379 



Arctic chimera, i., 185 



Arctic folk-lore, &c., iii., 32 



Arctic Ocean, abundance of animal life 

 there, vi., 299 



Arctic under-current, xi., 553-555 



Ardglass herring fisheries, vii., 76, 137; 

 falling off therein, xi., 116 



Arennes, oyster bed at, v., 101 



Argentine Republic, its participation in 

 the seal fishery, vii., 160, 163 



Argentines, i., 160 



Argonauta argo. See Paper Nautilus. 



Argyll, the Duke of, remarks by, on 

 Professor Ray Lankester's paper on 

 the Scientific Results of the Interna- 

 tional Fisheries Exhibition, iv., 432- 

 441 



Ark, the. See Flood. 



Arklow herring fisheries, vii., 76 



" Aries," xi., 201 



Armed bullhead, i., IOO 



Armed gurnard, i., 100 



Arnold, Mr. J. W. (of Kingsdown, near 

 Deal), his remarks with reference to 

 the destruction of immature fish, iv., 

 348; to the loss of life at sea among 

 fishermen, iv., 397, 398 



Arsenic, pollution of rivers by, iv., 260, 

 264, 275, 276 



Art, place of fish in, iii., 47 



Artificial baits, i., 315 



Artificial cuts leading out of salmon 

 rivers to be provided with gratings to 

 prevent passage of fish down them, 

 i., 220 



Artificial fishing grounds in France, 

 ordered to be destroyed, i., 501 



Artificial introduction of eggs or young 

 fish to supply deficit created by the 

 removal of egg-producing adults, iv., 



417 



Artificial mermaids, Japanese, iii., 215- 



217 

 Artificial propagation of fishes, iv., 



3 2 3> 33IJ v., 14; vi., 36; viii., 37, 

 43; its scientific aspects, ii., 346- 

 357 ; impregnation of the ova, x., 

 59-61 ; treatment of ova after im- 

 pregnation, x., 61-63; feeding of 

 young fry, x., 63-66 ; treatment of 

 the fish when old enough to procure 

 their own food, x., 665-67; prac- 

 ticability of keeping sea fish in water 

 partially or wholly fresh, x., 68, 69 



Artificially-hatched fish, v., 14, 15 



Aryan folk-lore, &c., iii., 49, 58, 60 



Ascidians, injury caused by them to 

 mussel scalps, vi., 306 



Ashtoreth, a fish divinity, iii., 195 



Asia, Northern, devastation of fish by 

 salmon disease, vi., 26 



Asphaltic masonry and concrete, ix., 98 



Asterites, adularia, astrobolos, and other 

 fish-gems, iii., 52 



Astrology, fish in, iii., 51 



Astronomy, fish in, iii., 42, 48, 51 



Atergatis, a fish divinity, iii., 194, 195 



Atherines, i., 141, 416; iv., 7 



Atherinidae, i., 141 



Atkins, Mr. Charles G., his work as a 

 fish culturist, v., 13, 69, 74 



Atkins, Mr., his testimony as to ob- 

 structions to the passage of fish in 

 American rivers, i., 523 



"Atlantic," loss of, vii., 200 



Atlantic shore fisheries of the United 

 States, v., 25, 27 



Atlantic storm warning stations, vii., 

 184 



Atmospheric vicissitudes, their influ- 

 ence on migration of various forms of 

 life in the ocean, vi., 269, 281 



Attwood, Captain, his investigations as 

 to the destruction of lobster eggs by 

 mackerel, vi., 295 



Atwater, Professor W. O., his analysis 

 of American food fishes, v., 58 



Austin, Captain, remarks by him on 

 oyster culture, v., 101 



Australia, importation of salmon eggs 

 from America, v., 70 ; notes of the 

 chief families of food fishes, v., 308- 

 337 '> pollution of water by wool- 

 washing, and its subsequent purifi- 

 cation by passing through forests, 



