ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



ring," vi., 103 ; salmon and salmon 

 fisheries, legislation and Government 

 appropriations, vi., 173 ; remarks 

 upon Mr. Whitcher's report, vi., 175 ; 

 aid given towards fish culture by 

 the Government, vii., 84 ; the seal 

 fishery, vii., 156-158; progress of 

 pisciculture in Canada, xi., 6 ; rela- 

 tive value of the fisheries of the 

 various provinces of the Dominion, 

 xiii., 56 ; the cod fishery, xiii., 56 ; 

 description of boats and vessels em- 

 ployed, xiii., 56 ; modes of capture, 

 xiii., 57 ; description of a fish-curing 

 establishment and the operations 

 carried on there, xiii., 57 ; fish 

 guano, xiii., 58 ; statement by Mr. 

 Joncas as to the value of the cod 

 fishery, xiii., 58 ; the lobster fishery, 

 xiii., 59; the herring and mackerel 

 fisheries, xiii., 59 ; the salmon fish- 

 ery, xiii., 60; exhibit of salmon rods, 

 xiii., 60 ; export of frozen and canned 

 salmon, xiii., 60 ; value of the salmon 

 fisher}', xiii., 61 ; modes of capture 

 of salmon and of white fish, xiii., 61 ; 

 the gill net and mode of working it, 

 xiii., 6 1 ; apprehensions entertained 

 as to exhaustion of the fisheries, xiii., 

 62; fish breeding, xiii., 62; total 

 value of the fisheries, xiii., 1 10 ; con- 

 densed report on the fishing industries 

 of the Dominion, xiii., 353-355 

 Canadian fishermen, economic condi- 

 tion of, iv., 1 86 



Canadian pisciculturists, vi., 337 

 Canadian Commissioner, remarks by 

 him as to parasites in fish, vii., 



31 

 Canadian fish culture, Mr. S. Wilmot's 



system, successful results obtained, 



" 9> 348 ; statistics as to salmon 



breeding, ii., IO 

 Canadian seal fisheries. See Seal 



Fisheries. 



Canal extension, ii., 319 

 Canal, Duke of Bi idgewater's, ii., 319. 

 Canals, the desirability of stocking 



them with fish, xi., 496 

 Canara, engines for fish destruction 



constructed there, ii., 486 



"Canario African Fisheries Company," 

 its success and methods of fishing, 

 v., 475-477 



Canary Islands, remarks by Mr. Herbert 

 Hounsell with respect to the fisheries 

 carried on there, v., 157 ; fitful ope- 

 ration of the quarantine laws, v., 

 478, 479 ; general description of the 

 fisheries, v., 472, 479 ; class of vessels 

 employed, v., 473 ; value of the fish- 

 eries in 1880, v., 474 



Cancale, abundance of oysters between 

 Grenville and this place, v., 101 ; 

 permanent reserve there, v., 101 



Cannanore, statistics of fish trade, ii., 

 448 ; system of trading, ii., 462 



Canned salmon, from the Columbia 

 River and rivers in Oregon and 

 California, v., 19 



Canoes, used for whale fishing in the 

 South Seas, i., 493 ; canoes in use in 

 the Gold Coast Colony, their size, 

 and purposes for which employed, 

 v., 437 



Canso, Gulf of, its herring fishery, v., 



133 



Canterbury, Archbishop of, prayer 

 offered up by him at the opening of 

 the Exhibition, xiii., 249 



Cape Ann, collecting by fishermen 

 there of zoological specimens, v., 58 



Cape Breton fishing boats, v., 123 

 ,, Chat, disappearance of cod fish 

 from, v., 152 



Cape Clear fisheries, iv., 142 



,, Cod, shore whaling at, v., 35 ; 

 mackerel and lobster fishery, vi., 295 



Cape Horn, season for seal pupping, 

 vii., 167 



Cape Verde Islands : coral fisheries, v., 

 361 ; population, v., 479 ; quantity 

 of coral found near the islands, v., 480 



Cape Whittle, vii., 158 



Capital, amount invested in salmon 

 fisheries of the United Kingdom, ii., 

 286 ; advanced to fishermen by money 

 lenders, ii., 454 ; increase of capital 

 employed in nets and boats in the 

 Scotch fisheries, iv., 89 ; amount em- 

 ployed in fishing generally in the 

 United Kingdom, iv., 157 



