88 



FISHERIES EXHIBITION LITERATURE. 



Junks, (Chinese), model adopted in 

 designing them, ii., 176; their ex- 

 cellence as sea boats, vii. 184 



Junks (Japanese), the vessels principally 

 used for the Japanese fisheries, v., 



195 



Juries, work of, report thereon, xiii., 

 262-265 



Jute works, extent to which they con- 

 tribute to the pollution of rivers, iv., 

 270 



Jutland reefs, resorted to by Swedish 

 fishermen, v., 258; and by vessels 

 from the Humber, vii., 317 



Kaira (India), decrease in the number 

 of fishermen at this place, ii., 461 



" Kajak " for seal fishing, xiii., 5, 81 



Kanakas (South Sea Islanders), en- 

 gaged in the whale fisheries of the 

 United States, v., 21 



Kanara (India), condition of the fisher- 

 men there, ii., 461 



Kangra (India), mode of conducting 

 fisheries in former times, ii., 480 



Katsuo, a kind of tunny fish much es- 

 teemed in Japan, v., 200; when 

 dried known as Katsuobushi (dried 

 fish), v., 200 



Kaviar, analysis of, i., 365 



Keeling, another name for the cod, 

 viii., 128 



Kellin, a name given in Aberdeen to 

 the ling, viii., 168 



Kelp, the cutting of it a rude method 

 of cultivation, vi., 49 



Kelts, name given to salmon after 

 spawning, ii., 296; sketch of head 

 of one, ii., 297 ; theory as to their 

 fate in the rivers of the Pacific slope 

 of North America, ii., 301 ; their 

 destruction of smolts, vi. , 28 ; kelts 

 not always "unclean" fish, vi , 157 ; 

 their alleged destruction of "/arr," 

 vi., 158; analysis of the flesh of 

 kelts, vi., 183 



Kemp, Mr. (Whitstable), on the de- 

 struction of immature fish, iv., 350 



"Kenmure Castle," loss of the, vii., 

 209, 213 



Kennet, river, fish found there, iii., 

 124 



" Kent," loss of the, vii., 200, 206 



Kent, W. Saville, paper by him on 

 " British marine and freshwater 

 fishes," i., 73-204; remarks by him 

 on Captain Moloney's paper respect- 

 ing West African fisheries, v. , 489 ; 

 report on sponges of the Bahamas, 

 v., 394-420 ; on the cultivation of 

 molluscs, vi., 319; paper by him 

 on the artificial culture of lobsters, 

 vi-> 325-346; xiii., 141 



Kerry, coast of, annual value of the 

 mackerel caught there, i., 39 



Kettle-net, described, i., 316, 513; how 

 used, viii., 47; x., 422; objections 

 to its use, x., 423 ; its prohibition 

 advocated, x., 424 



Key West, negroes employed there in 

 the shore fisheries, v., 22 ; head- 

 quarters for American sponge fleet, 



v., 5i; 



Keys of Southern Florida, the seat of 

 an extensive sponge fishery, v., 19 



" Kidelli " (fishing weirs), their demoli- 

 tion decreed by Magna Charta, ii. 

 317; ix., 146, 147, 232; and subse- 

 quently by other enactments, ii., 318 



Ki kone, Japanese author of book on 

 fishing, iii., 352 



Kilbourn, J. K., paper on "Fish Pre- 

 servation and Refrigeration," vii., 

 217-229 



Kilkeel, statistics of herring fisheries 

 there, vii., 76 



Killer- whale, the, ii., 182 



Kinder Printing Co., their contribution 

 to the pollution of rivers, iv., 260 



King-fish, extravagant prices paid for 

 it in the United States, v., 9 



King-fish of the W T est Indies, occa- 

 sionally found in the Australian Seas, 

 v., 321 



King-fish, Tasmanian, v., 320 



King-fish, the, one of the most de- 

 structive fishes in the Australian seas, 

 v., 323 



" King mackerel," vi., 116 



