84 



AMERICAX MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY 



BEA 



Bean, T. H. 



The fishery resources and fishing- 

 grounds of Alaska. Fisheries & Fish. 

 Ind. of r. S., 18S7, 3. sec, ,S1-11.5. pk. 

 i-iv. 1887. S 



Notes on a young red snapper 



{Lutjanus blackfurdi) from Great South 

 bay, Long Island. Proc. U. S. Nat. 

 Mus., 1887, 10, 512. 1S87.9 



Report on examination of clu- 



peoids from carp ponds. Bull. U. S. 

 Fish Comm. 18S7, 6, 441^42. 1887.10 



Description of Coregonus pusil- 



lus, a new species of whitefish from 

 Alaska. Proc. V. S. Nat. Mus., 1888, 

 11, 526. 1888.1 



Distribution and some characters 



of the Salmonidfe. Amer. Naturalist, 

 1SS8, 22, 306-314:. 1S88.2 



Fishes, determined from photo- 

 graphs. (In Dawson, George M. Re- 

 port on an exploration in the Yukon dis- 

 trict, N. W. T. etc. Canada Geol. Surv. 

 Rept., 1887-88, n. s. 3, pt. 1) 1888.3 



Key to the genera of Salmonidse 



(In Goode, G. B. American fishes. New 

 Y'ork, 1888, p. 440. 2. ed., Boston, 

 1903) 18,88.4 



Report on the fishes observed in 



Great Egg Harbor bay, N. J., dm-ing the 

 summer of 1887. Bull. I'. S. Fish Comm. 

 1887 (1888), 7, 129-154. pis. i-iii. 



1888.5 



Forest 



1SS9.1 



Bears, birds and fishes 



& Stream, 1889, 33, 348; 368. 



32,9. 



Black bass in ponds. 



Op. cit., 

 1889.2 



Crossing of salmon and trout. 



Tom. cit., 321. 1889.3 



Explorations in gulf of Aloxico. 



Tom. cit., 195. . 1889.4 



Fish 



Tom. cit.. 27 



and fishing in 

 48-49. 



Alaska. 

 1 ,8,89. 5 



Lake and brook trout hybrid. 



Op. cit., 31, 520. . 1889.9 



Lake trout. Op. cit., 32, 9. 



1889.10 



Landlocked and Atlantic salmon. 



Op. cit, 31, 520. 1889.11 



Notes on fish fungus. Op. cit., 



32, 10. 1889.12 



Notes on salmon, trout and eels. 



Tom. cit., 9. 1889.13 



Ozark mountain trout. Tom. 



cit., 320. 1889.14 



The pike-perch. Tom. cit., 470. 



1889.15 



Rainbow trout in France. Tom. 



cit., 218. 1889.16 



The red-spotted trout of New 



England. Shooting & Fishing, 1889, 5, 

 6-7. 1889.17 



Report on the department of 



fishes in the U. S. National Museum, 

 1886. Rept. Smithson. Inst., 1889, 2, 

 167-172. 1889.18 



Rubbish in the Thames. Forest 



& Stream, 1889, 31, 520. 1889.19 



Saibling and brown trout hj'brid, 



Op. cit., 32, 401. 1889.20 



Saibling in Sterling lake. Tom. 



cit., 10; 50. 1889.21 



Salmon and trout of North 



America. Tom. cit., 219-222. 1889.22 



The hagfish. Tu)n. cit., 66. 



18,89.6 



A hybrid between the lake trout 



and brook trout {Salvcliniis namaycush 

 and S. fontinati.';) Bull. U. S. Fish 

 Comm. 1887 (1889), 7, 216. 1889.7 



Introduction of a supposed carp 



sucker into New South A\'ales. Forest & 

 Stream, 1889, 32, 10. 1889.8 



91. 



Sa«-dust in streams. 



■ The silver eel. 



Tom. cit., 

 1889.23 



Tom. cit.. 330. 



1889.24 



Some recent papers b\- Charles 



Girard. Op. cit., 31, 515. ' 1889.25 



Sunapee trout from Dan's Hole 



pond. Op. cit., 32, 390. 1889.26 



The Alaskan salmon and their 



allies. Trans. Amer. Fisheries Soc, 

 1890, 49-66. 1890.1 



The American Fisheries Societ^•. 



Forest & Stream, 1890, 35, 378. 1S90'.2 



The basses and their allies. Tom. 



cit., 2-5. figs. 1890.3 



The bluefish in his abundance. 



Tom. cit., 25. 1890.4 



