i6o 



FISHERIES EXHIBITION LITERATURE. 



Tackle (fishing). See Fishing-tackle. 



Tackle for hoisting fish out of the water, 

 iv., 347 



Tadpoles, general description, ii., 170, 

 171, 172 



Tadpole-fish, a member of the cod 

 family, its commercial value, i., 152 



"Tailor," a New South Wales fish, 

 good, but chiefly used for bait, v., 324 



Talisman, fish as, iii., 51 



Talmud, legends of, See Jewish Tra- 



ditions, <rv. 

 'Talus, or spending beach, ix., 82 



Tamlin-cod, a name given to the cod, 

 viii., 128 



Tamlin, Mr. David (Swansea pilot), 

 remarks by, upon the harbour accom- 

 modation of the Welsh coast, iv. , 389 ; 

 upon saving life at sea, iv., 401 



Tanjore, earnings of fishermen there, ii., 



463 



Tanks in India, their overflowing, ii., 

 471 ; their drying up, ii., 472 



Tanna, remarks by collector at, as to 

 mode of curing fish in Bombay Pre- 

 sidency, ii., 452 



Tanneries, description of refuse from 

 them, iv., 265 ; remedies against their 

 polluting influence on streams, iv., 

 265, 266 ; Mr. Baldwin Latham's 

 description of his mode of dealing 

 with tan water, iv., 294 



Tapeworm in pancreatic coaca, vi., 249 ; 

 in minnow, vi., 250; an immature 

 ligule, vi., 251 ; its appearance in 

 the ponds of La Bresse, afflicting the 

 fish there, vi., 254 



Tar works as agents of stream pollu- 

 tion, iv., 272-274 



Tarragona, invention by a local fisher- 

 man of a submarine light for attract- 

 ing fish, v., 360 



Tarwhine, an important New South 

 Wales food fish, v., 314, 



Tasmania, trout fishing there, ii. , 362 ; 

 success attending rearing of English 

 trout, vi., 274; well represented at 

 Exhibition, xiii., 23 ; attempts to in- 

 troduce the salmonidae into the waters 

 of the colony, xiii., 23 ; measure of 

 success which has attended these 



attempts, xiii., 23 ; condensed report 

 on the fishing industries of this 

 colony, xiii., 398-404 



Taste, organs of, in fish, viii., 28 ; x., 1 6 



Tax on fishing implements, ii., 481 



Tay river, capture of a large salmon 

 in this river, ii., 364 ; Sir Robert 

 Christison's experiments on salmon, 

 vi., 152; opinion from this locality 

 as to District Boards, vi., 193; out- 

 break of salmon disease there in 

 1881-82, xi., 56 



Tea, beef and fish, comparative analysis 

 of their value as food, vii., 9 



Teddington Lock, liberty to fish there, 

 i., 209 



Tees Bay, harbour accommodation re- 

 quired there, iv. , 398 



Tees, river, no epidemic disease therein, 

 vi., 5 ; its inaccessibility at low water, 

 ix., 5 



Teeth in fish, adapted to their food, vi., 

 269 ; how disposed, viii., 14 ; names 

 given to various forms, x., 16, 17 ; 

 their continual renewal, x., 17 



Teign (Lower) Fishing Association, iii., 

 156 



Teignmouth, character of the fishery 

 carried on there, ix. , 256 ; injury 

 caused to fisheries by river pollution, 

 xi., 311 



Teetotalism, amongst fisher-folk, of the 

 Claddagh (Ireland), ii., 254; amongst 

 the Dutch fishers, ii., 262 



Telegraph cables, viii., 471-474 



Telegraphs, facilities afforded by, for 

 conveyance, distribution, and equali- 

 sation of price of fish, iv., 87 ; tele- 

 graphic communication with fishe- 

 ries, development of, by the Cana- 

 dian Government, v., 143 ; opinion of 

 Mr. W. F. Witcher thereupon, v., 

 144 ; telegraphic communication be- 

 tween China and London, v., 171 ; 

 telegraphs, might be rendered of great 

 value to the fisheries, ix., 189 



Teleostean fishes, their characteristics, 

 i., 82; ii., 134; viii., 7; genera de- 

 scribed, viii., 57, et seq. 



Telescope-fish, or Gold Carp of China, 

 i., 204 



