FISHERIES EXHIBITION LITERATURE. 



United States Fish Commission, v., 

 66, 73 ; remarks on the clam fisheries 

 of the United States, vi., 316 ; his 

 opinion as to the kind of tanks best 

 adapted for lobster culture, vi., 337 ; 

 account by him of the introduction of 

 German carp into the inland waters 

 of the United States, vii., 102 ; his 

 opinion as to the advantages to be 

 derived from the use of steam fishing 

 vessels, vii., 103 ; and as to the 

 extent to which the fishing industry 

 may derive benefit from Government 

 assistance, vii., 104; short account 

 of the seal fisheries of Alaska, vii., 173 



Earnings of fishermen in the United 

 Kingdom, iv., 167 



East Anglian Piscatorial Society, h'i., 



153 



East coast of England fisheries, partici- 

 pation therein of Cornish fishermen, 

 vi., 121 



Eastern salmon fishery of the United 

 States, its value, v., 27 



Eastport, a fishing town of the United 

 States, the centre of the sardine in- 

 dustry, v., 20 



Eaton Fishing Club, iii., 153 



Ebn Modalbir, imposition by him of a 

 tax on fishing in Egypt, i., 474 



Ebro river, experiments in fish culture 

 in salt water lakes near its mouth, v., 

 360 



Ecclesiastical privileges of fisheries, iii., 

 33; fish-badges of abbeys, &c., vi., 



73 



Echineis, same as the remora or suck- 

 ing fish, iii., 25 



Echinorhynchi, parasites of the sal- 

 monidse, vii., 298 



Echiodon, Drummond's, i., 154 



Economic condition of fishermen, paper 

 thereon by Professor Leone Levi., iv., 



I5I-I87 



Economic fishes, special biology of, iv., 

 418, 419, 421 



Economic transmission of sea fishes, 

 improved facilities for, vii., 128-133 



Eden, Mr. F., article by him in the 

 Fortnightly Review on salmon fish- 

 eries, vi., 1 88, 203 



Eden river, a good trout and salmon 

 stream, iii., 147 ; appearance of sal- 

 mon disease therein, 1877, vi., 5 ; 

 outbreak of the disease in 1878, xi., 

 60 



Edgartown, a whaling port of the United 

 States, v., 20 



Edible fish seldom sacred among the 

 Egyptians, iii., 37 



Edinburgh, H.R.H., the Duke of, 

 paper by him on the sea fisheries of 

 the United Kingdom, iv., 23-79 ; 

 xiii., 103, 104, 107, 120, 121, 122, 

 123 ; estimate of annual gross take 

 offish in British waters, iv., 119, 120, 

 123 ; remarks by him at Practical 

 Fishermen's Congress, iv., 376; 

 statement as to annual consumption 

 of fish in London, v., 150 ; testimony 

 as to excellence of Norwegian lobster, 

 v. , 290 ; report by him on the work 

 of the juries, xiii., 262 



Edward, Mr., of Banff, captures speci- 

 men of a rare species of goby, vi., 

 282 



Edwards, Mr. (Lowestoft), prize offered 

 by him for best boat for conveying 

 fish to steam carrier, iv., 378, 379 



Eel-bucks, i., 319 



Eel farm of Commacchio, ii., 257 



Eel fisheries of the United States, v., 

 25, 27 ; of Sweden, v., 264, 267 ; of 

 Italy, xiii., 39 ; of Denmark, xiii., 80 



Eel-pot, must not be set in salmon rivers 

 between certain dates, i., 228 



Eel-pout, i., 152. See also Burbot. 



Eel river, California, salmon fisheries 

 and canneries, v., 33, 34 



Eels, migratory fish, i., 40 ; brought to 

 the Thames from Holland in welled 

 smacks, i., 53 ; never eaten by Scotch- 

 men, i., 6 1 ; prices in England in 

 early times, i., 394, 397; when in 

 season, i., 399 ; Holinshed Chronicles 

 on Eels, i., 401 ; value as food, i., 

 432, ii., 153 ; ancient methods of 

 catching, i., 481; classed with catadro- 

 mous fishes, ii., 15, 78; very destruc- 

 tive to the spawn of other fishes, ii., 

 78 ; much of the supply of eels for con- 

 sumption in England derived from 



