ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



97 



London, Chatham and Dover Railway 

 Company, rates for carriage of fish, 



iv., 365> 375 



Long-fleuk, a name given at Edinburgh 

 to the long-rough dab, viii., 191 



Long flounder, or Pole, one of the 

 flat-fish family, i., 158 



Long Forties (North Sea trawling- 

 grounds), vii., 317 



Long-legged portunus, vi., 365 



Long-line fishing, iv., 320, 328, 337- 

 341 ; vi., 289; vii., 281 



Long-nose, another name for the gar- 

 pike, viii., 236 



Lophobranchii, or tufted gills, technical 

 description of this sub-order, i., 175 



Lord-fish, a member of the Gadidse 

 (cod-tribe), i., 151 



Loss of life at sea among fishermen, 

 iv., 377-403 ; xiii., 120-124 



Losses of fishermen, iv., 160, 171 



Louisiana, statistics of fisheries, v., 24, 

 25, 30, 31 ; its crab fisheries, v., 50 



Lovat, Lord, remarks by him on salmon 

 and salmon fisheries, vi., 149, 182 



Love, the fish-gods of, iii., 22, 31, 32, 

 50; (Venus' day), iii., 42; love in 

 philtres, &c., iii., 51, 52 ; fish friendly 

 to lovers, iii., 57, 59. See Phallical 

 fish. 



Lowell, His Excellency James Russell, 

 presides at conference on "The fishing 

 industries of the United States," v., 

 3 ; his remarks with respect thereto, 



v., 79 



Lowering and disengaging gear for 

 boats, vii., 21 1 



Lowestoft, fishing port, i., 10; iv., 41 ; 

 its social condition, iv., 173; size 

 of mesh of nets used there, iv., 314, 

 322 ; fisheries carried on there, vii., 

 95 ; viii., 335 ; apprentices taken by 

 trawlers, viii. , 336 ; vessels em- 

 ployed, viii., 337 ; payment of crews, 

 viii., 337; its importance as a fishing 

 port, ix., 255 ; its participation in the 

 herring fishery, xi., 132, 160 



Lowood Weir, on the River Leven, ii., 



334 



Luce. See Pike. 

 " Luck " in fishing, iv., 162 



" Lucky proach," the long-spined Bull- 

 head (Coitus bubalis), i., 97 



Lucullus, fish culture practised by him, 

 ii., 4 



Lug, a Cornish name for the bib, viii., 

 148 



Lug-a-leaf, a name formerly given in 

 Cornwall to the brill, viii., 199 



Luggatee, a name formerly given in 

 Cornwall to the turbot, viii., 193 



Luggers, a kind of drift boat still in 

 use, i., 15 



Lug-worms as food for salmon, vi., 

 152, 184 



Lump-fish, anatomical details, i., 129- 

 132 ; as food, i., 427 



Lump-suckers, ova attached by adhesive 

 mucus, ii. 15 ; brief description of the 

 family, ii., 152; its intestinal canal, 

 vi., 271 



Lund, Mr., his "Essay on Fishes," v., 

 257 



Lundberg, Dr. R., statistics and re- 

 marks respecting Swedish herring 

 fisheries, v., 259 



Lund's hatching-box, vi.. 211 ; xi., 87, 

 99 



Lundy Island, necessity for harbour of 

 refuge, iv., 384 



Lune River, diseased fish in 1882, 

 vi., 5 



Lybster, the dilapidated condition of 

 its harbour, and its limited capacity, 

 ix., 1 8 ; suggestions for provision of 

 funds for effecting the necessary im- 

 provements, ix., 1 8 



Lyman, early fish culturist, v., 13 



Lynn, dearth of oysters there, iv., 100 ; 

 grant to Corporation, in 1872, of a 

 fishery "order" for cultivation of 

 oysters and mussels, vi. , 308 ; value 

 of the mussel beds in this locality, 

 vi., 314. 



Lynn deeps, a source of supply of 

 whelks, vi., 303. 



Lyon, Mr. Washington, remarks by 

 him on pollution of rivers by sewage, 

 vii., 56 



Lyons, cultivation of coarse fish, vi.,235 



Lythe, a local name for the pollack, 

 viii., 158 



