294 BULLETIN OF THE BUREAU OF FISHERIES. 
Table; 9. — Record of the: Total Catch of Lobsters in the Harbor of Woods Hole, Mass., 
from December i, 1893, to June 30, 1894, Showing the Number and Size of Egg-bearing 
Females. 
Length in 
inches. 
Number of 
males. 
Number of 
females. 
Females 
with eggs. 
Total. 
Length in 
inches. 
Number of 
males. 
Number of. 
females. 
Females 
with eggs. 
Total. 
6 
64 
1 
I 
io l A 
62 
71 
17 
133 
64 
3 
4 
7 
io l A 
79 
103 
28 
182 
6 -X 
T 
7 
45 
47 
1 
93 
104 
18 
18 
2 
36 
74 
1 
I 
II 
3i 
62 
20 
93 
' 7 14 
66 
47 
113 
11 4 
11 
30 
4 
41 
8 
168 
140 
2 
308 
12 
9 
14 
3 
23 
84 
12% 
84 
I:[ 
&A 
143 
115 
7 
258 
124 
1 
1 
1 
84 
26 
27 
1 
53 
13 
4 
4 
8 
170 
94 
32 
38 
4 
70 
14 K 
I 
2 
3 
9 V 2 
15 
3 
9 4 
27 
29 
3 
56 
10 
167 
184 
36 
351 
I»3I3 
i»344 
168 
2,657 
The reproductive curve, based upon body length, is seen to begin with the 7-inch 
lobster and to rise very slowly between this and the 9-inch size. 
We do not assume that lobsters are always uniformly distributed, or that had the 
experiment been conducted elsewhere the results would not have been somewhat dif- 
ferent. Where thousands of lobsters are captured at any point a considerable number 
measuring 8 inches or less may be found to have eggs outside of the body, but the 
proportion of this number to the total number of animals of the same length captured 
in the same place for the entire period will undoubtedly be very small. 
LIMITS OF THE BREEDING SEASON. 
Much confusion formerly existed concerning the time when the lobsters laid their 
eggs. This arose mainly from the fact that the eggs are carried by the females for a 
period of 10 months before they are hatched, and because of occasional departures 
from the common rule to which the majority conform. The following conclusion was 
reached in 1895: “About 80 per cent of spawning females lay their eggs at a definite 
season in the summer months, chiefly in July and August. The remainder, about 20 
per cent of the whole number, extrude eggs at other seasons, in the fall and winter 
certainly, and possibly also in the spring.” While this statement seems to me now to 
be in the main correct, I consider it very probable that considerably less than 20 per 
cent of the whole number of spawners lay eggs out of season, as was then suggested. 
It is not necessary to review the data by which it was definitely proved that eggs are 
at least occasionally deposited in winter and fall. The only way to check these results 
is to determine the retarding influence of a temperature varying from 67. i° to 32. i° F. 
(September to February, Woods Hole, Mass.) upon different batches of eggs laid out 
of the usual season. When normal eggs in the egg-nauplius stage, which in summer 
