ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



Jacobi, Stephen Ludwig (of Hohen- 

 hausen), his experiments in the 

 artificial propagation of salmon and 

 trout, i., 521 ; ii., 5 ; the father of 

 artificial fish culture, v., 12 



Jaderen, fishing grounds of, resorted to 

 by Swedish fishermen, v., 258 



Jamaica, negroes from this island en- 

 gaged in United States whale fish- 

 eries, v. , 23 ; condensed report on the 

 fishing industries of the island, xiii., 



376, 377 



Jamestown, first American colony 

 planted there in 1609, v., 4 



"Jane" mackerel boat, loss of, vi. 

 119, 127 



Japan, the octopus well known here, iii., 

 351 ; Japanese book on fishing, iii., 

 351 ; geographical position of the 

 country, v., 190; returns from the 

 Imperial Statistical Bureau of sea 

 products in 1879, v., 192; statistics 

 of sea produce for 1 88 1, prepared by 

 Department of Commerce and Agri- 

 culture, v., 193 ; number of persons, 

 boats, &c., employed in fisheries, v., 



194, 195 ; sea products : exports, v., 



195, 196, 198 ; imports, v., 197 ; fish 

 of kinds different from those usually 

 eaten in England, v., 199-201 ; 

 modes of fishing adopted there, v., 

 201-206 ; preserved fish industry, v., 

 206 ; fish cookery, v., 206-209 ; 

 want of facilities for transport of fish, 

 v., 208 ; seal fisheries, vii., 171 ; this 

 country very imperfectly represented 

 at the Exhibition, xiii., 17 ; fish guano, 

 xiii., 18 ; fish oil, xiii., 18 



Japanese folk-lore, &c., iii., 34, 47 

 Japanese Government, their system of 



fish culture, ii., II 

 Jelly fishes, vi., 130; as food for 



salmon, vi., 152 

 Jew-fish, the, an abundant and useful 



food fish of the Australian seas, v., 



3i8 



Jewish traditions, &c., of leviathan, iii., 

 8; of Solomon, iii., 10, 59; respect- 

 ing fish, iii., 35, 37, 40, 49, 50 

 (note) 



Jex, Mr. ., remarks by him on the 



destruction of immature fish, iv., 

 310-320, 330-353 ; on railway rates 

 for carriage of fish, iv., 359, 360 ; v., 

 491 ; on the means of conveying fish 

 from fishing boats to the "carriers," 

 iv., 379, 380 ; on the proposed fishing 

 harbour at Berwick, iv., 391 

 John Dory, origin of the name, i., 

 117; viii., 104; supposed origin of 

 the mark on its sides, i., 117; viii., 

 104; mode of capturing its prey, i., 

 118 ; its voracity, i., 118 ; viii., 106 ; 

 rapid motion of fins, i., 118; viii., 

 1 06; size attained by it, i., 119; 

 viii., 108 ; x., 148 ; its geographical 

 distribution, i., 119; viii., 108; x., 

 146 ; anatomical details, vi., 271 ; 

 viii., 105 ; x., 146 ; habits, viii., 105 ; 

 x., 147 ; modes of capture, viii., 106 ; 

 x., 148; bait employed, viii., 106 ; 

 fins capable of inflicting dangerous 

 wounds, viii., 106 ; breeding, viii., 

 107; x., 148; value as food, viii., 

 107 ; x., 148 ; mode of cooking it, 

 viii., 107 ; x., 148 ; its food, x., 147 ; 

 commercial value, x., 148; classical 

 allusions and names, x., 148-150; 

 general description, x., 151. See also 

 Dory. 



John Dory, the, of the Australian seas, 

 thought to be identical with the 

 European fish of the same name, v., 

 322 



Johnson, Mr., remarks by him on the 

 mode of shooting and hauling nets 

 adopted on the Canadian lakes, vi., 

 102 ; on the purse seine, vi. , 103 : 

 and the gill net for cod fishing, vi., 

 103 



Joilleville, Marquis de, his profits from 

 fish culture, vii., 83 



Joncas, Mr. L. Z., his pamphlet on the 

 " Fisheries of Canada," v., 113-156 ; 

 xiii., 55> 57, 5 8 > 59, 62, 63, 140 



Jonkoping fishery district, yield of the 

 lake fisheries, v., 267 



June, angling in this month, ii., 403, 

 407, 409 



Junjura (India), mode of prosecuting 

 the fisheries, ii., 461 ; decrease in the 

 number of fishermen, ii., 461 



