ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



129 



425 ; used as bait for crab fishing, vi., 

 362 ; heaviest weight on record, vi., 

 367 ; presence of fat or oil in the 

 liver, vii., 8, 20; disastrous results 

 of the mode of fishing adopted in the 

 Gulf of Valencia, vii. ,251. See also 

 Mullets. 



Red snapper fishery of the Gulf of 

 Mexico, v., II ; value of this indus- 

 try, v., 19, 27 



Redsole, another name for the solonette, 

 viii., 234 



Red wrasse, locality where found, and 

 use as food, i., 417 



Redfield, Mr., discoverer of law of 

 storms, vii., 178 



Reece v. Miller, action at law, i., 209 



Reeve, Mr., of Rotterdam, extract 

 from a letter of Sir R. Southwell, 

 addressed to him concerning the 

 Kinsale fishery, vii., 119 



Refrigerating apparatus, iv., 7; xiii., 

 315 ; refrigerating cars, v., 7 ; refri- 

 gerating warehouses, advantages to 

 be derived from their adoption, v., 

 2 93> 2 95 5 their capabilities and 

 appliances, vii., 226, 227 ; exag- 

 gerated views of their efficiency, 

 vii., 226; their insulation, vii., 226; 

 economy of working at sea by means 

 of machinery of steam fishing-vessel, 

 x., 430 ; refrigerating vans for convey- 

 ance of fish, advantages to be derived 

 from their use, x. , 453 ; their cost as 

 compared with ordinary vans, x. , 454 ; 

 description of a van exhibited at Kil- 

 burn in 1879, x., 454, 455 ; cold- 

 storage chambers, xiii., 315 



Registration of fishing boats, viii., 353 ; 

 ix., 236, 237, 245 ; for tonnage, 

 viii., 379 ; effect of present law, viii., 



379 

 Regrators, definition of the term, ix., 



159; laws respecting them, ix., 159- 



162 

 Reineke Fuchs, its affinity to some fish 



myths, iii., 20 

 Religion, its observance by fisher-folk, 



ii., 200 



Religions, fish in, iii., 31-43 

 Remora (sucking-fish), dorsal develop- 



VOL. XIV. A.I. 



ment of its adhesive organ, i., in; 



classical and other references, iii., 



25; its use in heraldry, iii., 71; 



means of conveyance by attachment 



to the bodies of whales, sharks, and 



larger fishes, vi., 278 

 Rendel, Mr., C.E., the late, his plan 



for a harbour at Brixham, ix., 35 ; 



his method of depositing pierres per- 



dues, ix., 100 

 Rendezvous of North Sea fishing fleets, 



vii., 322 

 Report by Fishery Commissioners, 1870, 



as to free passage of fish, i., 215 

 Report of Committee, 1882, to inquire 



into fish trade, iv., 37, 44 

 Report of Select Committee on Herring 



Fisheries, 1881, i., 242 

 Report upon the sponges of the Bahama 



Islands, by W. Saville Kent, v., 394- 



420. See also Sponges. 

 Reporting stations, in British Isles, for 



gaining early intelligence of weather 



changes, vii., 183 

 Reports of Fishery Commission, 1863, 



iv., 97; 1866, iv., 107 

 Reports on Tweed salmon published by 



Blackwood, vi., 152 

 Respiratory organs, not directly at- 

 tacked by salmon disease, vi., 4; 



the organs described, viii., 22; x., 



8,9 



Restigouche river, salmon supply, ii., 

 10 ; its fame amongst anglers, v., 

 146 



Restrictions, on freshwater fisheries, i., 

 208, 248; on modes of fishing, i., 

 215, 242; on times of fishing, i., 

 215 ; on weirs, i., 218; on oyster and 

 shell fishing, i., 245, 246; on use of 

 fixed engines, ii., 311; the want of 

 them in fresh water fisheries, ii., 

 443 ; often burdensome and unneces- 

 sary, iv., 129, 139, 140; the sug- 

 gestion of restrictions by zoologi^te, 

 iv., 417 



Retail trade in fish, question as to 

 cause of high price to consumer, i., 



57 



Revenue (annual) of fisheries see 

 Value of fisheries. 



