ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



161 



Tellicherry (India), statistics of the value 

 offish taken there, ii., 448; obser- 

 vation as to the proportion of salt 

 required for curing a given quantity 

 offish, ii., 450 



Temperature, a high degree of tem- 

 perature in the sea unfavourable for 

 fishing, i., 281 ; its effect on the take 

 of herrings, i., 513; its effect upon 

 spawning beds, remarks thereon of 

 Mr. John Hepton (Grimsby), iv., 

 331 ; and of Mr. J. W. Arnold (Kings- 

 down, near Deal), iv., 349 ; its effect 

 on fish cultivation in China, Mr. 

 Wilmot's remarks thereon, v., 183; its 

 effect upon oyster culture, remarks 

 thereon of Captain Anson, v., 101 ; 

 of Lord Henry Scott, v., 104, 105 ; 

 of Professor Hubrecht, v., 112 ; 

 its mean rate during the winter 

 months, v., 382 ; its effect upon hatch- 

 eries, vi., 39; sudden changes, vi., 

 40 ; its effect upon small fry, vi., 42 ; 

 requires to be considered in rearing 

 salmon fry, vi., 45 ; degrees of tem- 

 perature on the east and wests 

 coasts of Scotland respectively, vi., 

 157 ; its effect upon fish food, vi., 

 269 ; its effect upon minute animal 

 life, vi., 277 ; its bearing on question 

 offish as an article of diet, vii., 17; 

 affects preservation of fish, vii. 221, 

 222, 224-226 ; regulated by forests, 

 vii., 269 ; its effect upon the distri- 

 bution of animal life in the ocean, 

 viii., 37; and upon migration, viii., 

 39 ; influence, on temperature of the 

 sea, of currents, xi., 560; of winds, 

 xi. , 560 ; and of the heat of the 

 sun, xi. , 560 ; variations of sea tem- 

 perature in the neighbourhood of 

 the British Isles, xi., 560 ; influence 

 of sea temperature on the distri- 

 bution of marine life, xi. , 562 ; on 

 spawning, xi., 565 ; on the process 

 of incubation, xi., 565 ; on the scar- 

 city or abundance of fish food, xi., 565 



Temple, Capt., his paper on seal fish- 

 eries, vii., 156-168; xiii., 77 



Tenacity of life in fish, viii., 30; x., 10, 

 262 ; in the weever, viii. , 80 ; in the 

 VOL. XIV. A. I. 



ling, viii., 169; in the turbot, viii., 

 195 ; in the plaice, viii., 205 ; in the 

 flounder, viii. , 220 ; in the skate, 

 viii., 318 



Tenby harbour needs improvement, 

 ix., 24 



Tench, a member of the carp tribe, i., 

 168 ; description of the variety known 

 as "Golden Tench," i., 169, 170; 

 xi., 495 ; its price in England in 

 early times, i., 398 ; its value as diet, 

 L, 404, 432 ; its colour affected by its 

 food, i., 417 ; its yield of eggs, ii., 17 ; 

 its suitability for stocking ponds, ii., 

 71 ; angling for tench, ii., 405 ; iii., 

 508-511; use in heraldry, iii., 67; 

 belie! as to its value in medicine, iii., 

 90 ; artificial hatching in the United 

 States, v., 15; spawning, vi., 219 ; 

 artificial cultivation, vi., 234; mor- 

 tality occasioned by parasites, vi., 

 254-256 



Tenkarei (India), earnings of fishermen 

 there, ii., 463 



Tenures by fish pies, iii., 46 



Teraglin, a New South Wales fish, its 

 similarity to the Jew-fish, v., 319 



Terchelling, trawling there, vii., 317. 

 See also North Sea trawling grounds. 



Terrapin fishery, a strand and shore 

 industry of the United States, v., 26 ; 

 its value, v,, 27 



Territorial or marginal waters, subject 

 to the laws of the state to which they 

 belong, i., 208 ; the limit of jurisdic- 

 tion as to fish preservation, iv., 16,17 



Tetrarhynchus reptans, a parasite of the 

 sun fish, vi., 262 



"Teuton," narrative of its loss, vii., 

 207, 208 



Teviot, the, salmon taken there, ii., 364; 

 its pollution by woollen manufac- 

 tories, xi., 73 



Texas, statistics of fisheries, v., 24, 25, 



30,3i 

 Texel, the, small fish taken in its 



neighbourhood, iv., 343 ; trawling 



practised there by vessels from the 



Humber, vii., 317 

 Thames Angling Preservation Society, 



its objects and functions, iii., 107, 



