FISHERIES EXHIBITION LITERATURE. 



Towse, Harry W., condensed report 



by him on aquaria, xiii., 323-327 

 Training homes for fishery apprentices, 



iv -> 399 



Trammel net, its description, i., 299 ; 

 employed in India, ii., 456; how 

 used in Great Britain, viii., 48; Mr. 

 J. S. Cragg's design for its construc- 

 tion, x. , 423 



Tramways, as a link between fishing 

 boats and railways in Ireland, vii., 



139 



Transit of fish by railways and parcels 

 post, in England, iv., 309; in Ireland, 

 iv., 339 



Transport at Gold Coast, effected by 

 means of waterways, or on the heads 

 of natives, v., 437 



Transport of fish, difficulties attending 

 this in India, ii. 444 ; Mr. Spencer 

 Walpole's paper on this subject, open- 

 ing remarks, statistics of quantities 

 sent to market, iv., 117-120; the im- 

 portance of railway communication at 

 small cost, iv., 121 ; cheap rates to 

 be secured by healthy competition, 

 iv., 123; water carriage, iv., 124; 

 Mr. J. C. Bloomfield's remarks upon 

 this subject, iv., 131-133; excessive 

 cost of transport the real reason of 

 dear fish, iv., 134, 135, 169; transport 

 by railways, iv., 358; difficulties 

 attending transport in Europe, v., 

 292 ; in Japan, v., 208, 209 ; 

 deficiency of transport injuriously 

 affects Irish fisheries, vii., 78; satis- 

 factory results immediately achieved 

 from improved methods, vii. , 85-87 ; 

 condition in which fish should be 

 kept whilst in transit, vii., 225 



Transport of live fish, improved methods 



in the United States, v., 16 

 Transport of lobsters from Atlantic to 

 Pacific seaboard, vi., 341, 342; a 

 failure, vi., 343 

 Transport of fish ova, experiment 



made in India, ii., 479 

 Transportation theory of salmon disease 



superfluous, vi., 6 



Traps set in weirs for capture of fish, 

 i. } 216, 221. See also Weirs. 



Travancore (India), statistics of the fish 



trade there, ii., 448 

 Trawl, name given in Scotland to the 



stop-seine net, viii., 46 

 Trawl fishing, rig of boats used, i., 15; 

 nature of the ground fished over, i., 

 1 8, 19; regulations affecting trawlers, 

 i., 20; importance of the trawl 

 fishery, i., 41; xiii., 294; laws 

 restricting trawlers' operations, off 

 the Cornish coast, i., 239; off Ire- 

 land, i., 246; the beam-trawl, i., 

 254, 255-274; distinction between 

 British and foreign trawling, i., 257 ; 

 the French trawl, i., 259 ; cost of 

 smacks and their outfit, i., 263 ; 

 clean ground of the first importance 

 for trawling, i., 268; development 

 of the trawl fishery, i., 273; the 

 otter trawl, its description and 

 use, i., 274-278; the "Pole or 

 Hammer" trawl, i., 277; the trawl 

 as applied to herring fishery, ii., 218 ; 

 North Sea trawling, ii., 233; round 

 of trawl work, ii., 234; risks of 

 trawlers, ii., 235 ; their earnings, ii., 

 236 ; capital invested in the industry, 

 ii., 237 ; danger of trawling to 

 human life, iv., 46; trawling appa- 

 ratus described, iv., 53; viii., 50, 

 345 ; xiii., 126 ; trawling vessels de- 

 scribed, iv., 54; xiii., 118; capture of 

 immature fish by trawlers, iv., 86, 

 1 06, 311, 326, 330, 331, 336, 342, 

 344 ; development of this industry, 

 iv. , 86 ; proportion of ground covered 

 by trawlers, iv., 91 ; shrimp trawlers, 

 iv., 96; line fishermen's complaints 

 against trawlers, iv., 101 ; disputes 

 between drift-net fishers and trawlers, 

 iv., 103; ix., 199; international 

 rules, iv., 104; difficulties in obey- 

 ing them, iv., 105 ; increase in num- 

 ber of vessels engaged in trawling, 

 iv., 313 ; reasons for high price of 

 fish caught by this method, iv., 313 ; 

 antiquity of the trawl-net, iv., 314; 

 size of its mesh, iv., 315 ; prejudice 

 against trawling in Loch Fyne, iv., 

 434; the Chinese trawl-net, v., 174; 

 damage done to drivers by trawlers, 



