1>K\ KI.Ol'MKNT OK THK WHITE-FISH. 521 



brown confervoid growth had developed in the water, and the young fish attempting to swallow 

 it always got it entangled in its gills and soon died. 



" In my absence I visited Clarkston and purchased for private parties from Mr. N. W. Clark 

 one thousand young Trout, which I brought safely to a brook two miles north of Waukegan, Illinois. 

 Mr. Clark gave me one hundred and fifty young White-fish, most of them with the yelk sac only 

 partially absorbed. The difference in temperature evidently made some difference in the rapidity 

 with which the umbilical sac disappeared, as the young fish I had carried home were in the same, 

 stage of development, April 14, as when I had visited Clarkston previously. Now, May 1, the fish 

 in Mr. Clark's troughs still retained considerable of the sac, while on the 28th of April the young 

 fish in the jar had lost it entirely. The jar had been kept in a moderately warm room, with a 

 temperature of about 65, while the water in the troughs at Clarkston flowed from a pond that had 

 been covered with ice until within a few days previous. 



(Hi) Rate of Growth." Further research for the youngfish was unavoidably delayed until thelst 

 of July. Towards the end of June, from a seine-haul at Waukegan, a specimen of Coregonus allnm, 

 measuring eight and three-tenths inches in length, one of C. quadrilateralis, measuring seven and 

 four tenths, and one of Coregonus harengus, measuring three and four-tenths inches, were obtained. 



"At Sanlt Ste. Marie, Michigan, on July 2, with an Indian in a birch canoe, the vicinity both 

 above and below the rapids was explored in the current and in the still water and along the shores, 

 to find the smallest grade of White-fishes that were to be had. Along the shore, in the sharp 

 current, schools were found of which the smallest taken measured four inches and nine-tenths, 

 and the largest six inches and one-tenth. It was quite evident that they had all been batched the 

 same season. Another excursion in the birch resulted in nothing materially different. The 

 minimum measurement of the next grade taken was eight inches and three tenths. 



"At Shoal Island, one of the Apostle Islands of Lake Superior, a White-tlsh was taken from 

 the pound-net about the middle of August measuring six inches in length, and another measuring 

 six and one-half inches. 



"On the 3d of December, at Point Edward, Canada, at the outlet of Lake Huron, two speci 

 inens of Coregonus aJbus were obtained from a seine, one measuring six inches and eight-tenths, 

 and the other seven inches and seven-tenths. 



"It is very probable that the Shoal Island fishes of August and the Point Edward one* of 

 December 3 were the larger-grown individuals of the same generation as those taken at Sanlt Ste. 

 Marie in Jnly. The difficult point to decide was in what year the beginning of this generation 

 should be placed. 



"The only positive data with reference to the growth of White-fish are found in the observa- 

 tions of Mr. Samuel Wilmot, of Newcastle, Ontario, in charge of the government hatching house of 

 Canada. Mr. Wilmot reports that in November, 1868, he placed a quantity of spawn in the hatch 

 ing troughs for an experiment, and in the following March and April a large number of young fry 

 made their appearance. He failed in finding food adapted to the young fish, but a number that 

 escaped through the screens were carried down to a small pond, where they seemed to thrive 

 and soon became well-developed young fish. In the month of September they were exhibited at 

 a fair in London, Canada. They were then about five inches long. In December the young fish 

 had attained the length of seven inches. 



"Mr. N. W. Clark, of Clarkston, Michigan, visited Wilmot's hatching-house in 1871, and in an 

 address before the house of representatives of Michigan said: ' Enough is known, from the success 

 of Samuel Wilmot, esq., of Canada, to sustain as in the assertion that they (the White-fish) in- 



