28 



FISHERIES EXHIBITION LITERA TURE. 



Cedar Keys, sponge fishery at, v., 51 f 



Cederstrom's treatise on Swedish 

 fisheries, i., 528 



Ceithnach, a local name for the coal- 

 fish, viii., 154 



Cellular structure for reducing waves in 

 harbours, ix., 74 



' Cemetery," the (North Sea trawling 

 grounds), vii., 317 



" Centaur," loss of the, vii., 213 



Centrolophus (Black-fishes), description, 

 i., 112 



Centrolophus pompilus, keeps company 

 with whales, sharks, and other large 

 fish, i., 112 ; vi., 278 



Centropages typicus, found in the sto- 

 machs of mackerel and pilchards, vi., 

 281 



Centra Stephanos rodgersii, an Echino- 

 derm, eaten by sharks, vi., 279 



Cephalopoda, their subdivisions, iii., 

 334; manner of feeding, iii., 346 



Ceratodus, the barramunda of Queens- 

 land, ii., 168 



*' Cerco real " (sardine net), v., 356 



Cereals, analysis, vii., II ; as human 

 food, vii., 1 6 



Cero, artificial hatching of, v., 15 



Certificates for masters and second 

 hands of trawlers, iv., 39, 40 



Certificates of masters and mates of 

 fishing vessels ; regulations of 

 Merchant Shipping Bill, 1882, on the 

 subject, viii., 420 



Certificates of registration, their produc- 

 tion by owners of fishing boats when 

 required, ix., 236 



Cestode tuberculosis^ a destructive para- 

 site, vi., 260 



Cetacea, toothed and whaleboned forms 

 of, ii., 185; question of their destruc- 

 tion, vi., 141 



Ceylon, fishing practised with the cast 

 net, i., 292 ; salted fish exported to, 

 from Madras, ii., 450 ; varieties of 

 fish inhabiting its waters, ii., 472 ; 

 abundance of fish in the adjacent 

 seas, xiii., II ; value of the fisheries 

 carried on there, xiii., Ii ; advan- 

 tages which have resulted from the 

 removal of the Government mono- 



poly, xiii., ii ; appliances in use for 

 capture of fish, xiii., 12 ; fishing 

 boats, xiii., 13; pearl fishery, xiii., 

 13 ; the dugong, xiii.. 27 ; condensed 

 report on the fishing industries of 

 this country, xiii., 360-364 



Chacamass River (Oregon), experiment 

 in salmon hatching there, vi., 60 



Chad, a name given on the south-west 

 coast of England to the common sea- 

 bream when young, viii., 66 



"Challenger," H.M.S., dredging by, 

 iii., 438 



Chambers' fish box, vi., 226 



Chambers, Mr. W. Oldham, hatching 

 apparatus by, ii., 35; "thorough" 

 vase for rearing salmon, ii., 54 ; his 

 remarks upon fish culture, iv., 226 ; 

 remarks about land-locked salmon, 

 vi., 6 1 ; his rearing troughs suitable 

 for lobster culture, vi., 337 ; Prize 

 Essays on "the Propagation of the 

 Salmonidse," xi., 41-52 ; " the Pro- 

 pagation of other Freshwater Fish," 

 xi., 95-102; " the Introduction and 

 Acclimatisation of Foreign Fish," xi., 

 489-497 



Channel fisheries, relations between 

 England and France, i., 244 



Channel Islands, number of men and 

 boys engaged in fishing, iv., 29 



Char, varieties of, i., 164 ; size of egg, 

 ii., 24 ; Sir J. Gibson Maitland's 

 breeding ponds, ii., 26 ; Nova Sco- 

 tian variety, ii., 62 ; remarks by Sir 

 J. G. Maitland, as to condition of 

 land-locked salmon in waters having 

 no char, vi., 66 



Char fishing, laws and penalties for 

 breaking them, i., 223 ; close times, 

 i., 227 ; selling fish in close season, 

 legislative anomalies, i., 228 



Char of Loch Leven, vi., 49 



Char, Loch Rannoch, vi., 49 



Characters offish, iii., 9-13 ; amiable, 

 iii., 22, 23 ; and grateful, iii., 53-64 



Charity of fisher-folk, ii., 201 



Charter re herrings, granted to Hol- 

 landers, Zealanders, and Frieslanders, 



J-. 497 



Charters or grants, royal, ii., 307 



