568 



portion of the 1,000,000 to 1,500,000 pounds of fish marketed 

 annually at Havana. 



The development in recent years of extensive systems of 

 levees in the bottoms of the Illinois River for the purpose of 

 protecting farm lands from untimely floods increases the impor- 

 tance of, and necessity for, the reservoir backwaters. In con- 

 nection with these systems it might be feasible from an engi- 

 neering point of view, and perhaps even profitable from the 

 commercial standpoint, to convert some of the adjacent low- 

 lying- marshes, swamps, bayous, and lakes into reservoirs in 

 which invading and richly fertilized storm waters might be 

 impounded and retained as river levels fall. The increased vol- 

 ume of water thus provided should — in the light of our results 

 —yield an abundant plankton, and support a large fish popula- 

 tion. Under present conditions of abundance of most of our 

 valuable food fishes in the Illinois, stocking such reservoirs 

 is relatively a simple matter. If properly protected from es- 

 cape at high water, such an area once stocked with the now 

 rapidly disappearing Polyodon, whose roe is much sought for 

 the manufacture of caviar, might become a very profitable in- 

 vestment. 



As a basis for further development of the fishing industry 

 it seems desirable that public and private waters should be 

 more accurately defined, and that fishing privileges for market 

 purposes in the former should be matters of license or franchise 

 to responsible parties, so that legislation concerning methods 

 and seasons of fishing could be more easily controlled. With 

 the ever increasing industrial development in the drainage ba- 

 sin of the Illinois River, especially in Chicago and the minor 

 cities along its banks, there is great danger that industrial 

 wastes will so accumulate in the river waters that not only the 

 plankton but also the fish and other animal inhabitants will be 

 driven out or exterminated. Legal supervision over the dis- 

 charge of such industrial wastes may soon become imperative 

 for the Illinois River as it has for some European streams. 

 With the legal status thus clearly defined, and with wise legis- 



