- A fishing “toon” described, 446.
- A fishwife’s proverb, 425.
- A lobster-spill in the Thames, 389.
- A Member of Parliament on the fish supply, 67.
- A widow’s story, 463.
- About “natives,” 369.
- Absurd statement about herring spawn, 236.
- Absurdity of eating cod-roe, 291.
- Across the Channel, 56.
- Acclimatisation of fish, 125, 482.
- Account of a fisherman’s wedding-dance, 421.
- Account of the latest spawning season at Stormontfield, 108.
- Adaptability of means to end in shell-fish, 384.
- Admiration of Scottish pearls, 403.
- Advance of money in the herring trade, 255.
- Advantages of a close-time for oysters, 338.
- Advantages of the tile system in oyster-culture, 363.
- Advice to fishermen as to bait, 417.
- Age at which oysters are sent to be greened, 360.
- Age at which oysters are sent to market, 339.
- Age of herring before they spawn, 237.
- Aggregate sailings of the Wick boats, 279.
- Agriculture in France, 77.
- All fish unwholesome at time of spawning, 242.
- Allston the London oyster-merchant, 373.
- Ambition of fisher lads, 440.
- America, oysters in, 380.
- American pike, 143.
- American sociality over oysters, 346.
- Amount of attention required by a large oyster-farm, 365.
- Ancient fishing industries, 40.
- Ancient ideas as to fish, 8.
- Ancient knowledge of the oyster, 333.
- Anecdote of a minister’s visit to a fisherman, 432.
- Anecdote of a London litterateur, 379.
- Anecdotes of a fishwife, 428.
- Angler-fish, 156.
- Anglers’ fishes, 129, 137.
- Anglers and angling, 132.
- Angling all the year round, 132.
- Angling localities, 137.
- Angling in the Thames, 150.
- Angling on the Tay, 212.
- Angling sport in Scotland, 130.
- Annual revenue of the river Tay fisheries, 213.
- Annual sacrifice to crustacean gastronomy, 397.
- Anomalies in salmon growth, 105, 180.
- Antidote to enchantment, the fisherman’s, 435.
- Antiquity of pearls, 398.
- Apparatus for catching lobsters, 161.
- Apparatus for pisciculture, 115.
- Appendix, 491.
- Approach of the herring season, 246.
- Arcachon, Bay of, 365.
- Are herrings of the same shoal all of the same age?, 238.
- Are the pisciculturists robbing Peter to pay Paul?, 88.
- Are there more fish in the sea than ever came out of it?, 474.
- Arran, the island of, 165.
- Arrival of salmon ova in Australia, 120.
- Arctic Seas, no herrings in the, 231.
- Artificial oyster-breeding, 350.
- Artificial oyster-breeding in Marennes, 75.
- Artificial spawning, 86, 87.
- Art of dredging oysters, 378.
- Art of shrimping, 396.
- Art of trawling, 311.
- Ashworth’s experiments, 117.
- Ashworth’s opinion of oyster-culture, 354.
- Attention required by an oyster-farm, 365.
- Auchmithie, 444.
- Auctioneers of fish, 437.
- August herring-fishery at Wick, 280.
- Authentic contradiction to Pennant’s theory, 231.
- Authorities, list of, quoted, 499.
- Avarice of salmon-fishery lessees, 200.
- Average age at which salmon are killed, 207.
- Average capture of herrings per boat in 1820, 279.
- Average number of crans of herring taken by each boat in 1862, 276.
- Average of oyster-reproduction at Re, 358.
- Averages of the catch of herrings in 1862, 276.
- Aversion of fisher-people to be counted, 453.
- Awkward contretemps, 468.
- Bad effects of trawling, 315.
- Bag-nets, their baneful influence on the salmon-fisheries, 208.
- Bain, Mr. Donald, on the salmon question, 222, 489.
- Bait for line-fishing, 306.
- Bait for lobsters, 385.
- Bait for sea-angling, 158.
- Bait, importance of cheap, 410.
- Balance of nature, 33.
- Bale in Switzerland, 80.
- Bannock-fluke, the, 297.
- Bargain-making by fishwives, 426.
- Bargains made by boat-owners, 257.
- Barnet, Mr., of Kinross, 140.
- Barking trawlers, 309.
- Barrack-life in Comacchio, 458.
- Barrels, great numbers of, on the quays at Wick, 268.
- Basins for the young fish at Huningue, 85.
- Bass, the, of Lake Wennern, 125.
- Battle of the swine at St. Monance, 434.
- Bay of Aiguillon, 412.
- Bay of the Departed, 455.
- Bay of St. Brieuc, 351.
- Beef, the stone-mason of the island of Re, 352.
- Bell Rock, 444.
- Benefits derived from a good fishery, 44.
- Best conditions of fish for spawning, 341.
- Best kind of boats for herring-fishing, 272.
- Best kinds of fish to rear on the artificial plan, 97.
- Best spawning-ground for herring, 238.
- Best way of marking young salmon, 196.
- Billingsgate, 65.
- Billingsgate salesman’s, a, letter on trawling, 319.
- Bird’s-eye view of Fusaro, 349.
-
- Bit of dialogue, 470.
- Black-beetle, a wonderful, 17.
- Bloaters and red-herrings, 270.
- Board of White Fisheries, 486.
- Boat speculation by ship-carpenters, 441.
- Bolam, evidence on trawling by Thomas, 314.
- Bouchots for growing mussels, 411.
- Boulogne, 454.
- Bounty given in the herring-trade, 255.
- Brand, the, 263.
- Breeding-ponds for salmon at Stormontfield, 99.
- Breeding-pyramid for oysters, 350.
- Brewing of oyster-spat, 337.
- Brilliancy of fish-colour, 2.
- British oyster-eaters, 345.
- Brown, Mr. Wm., of Perth, on the salmon, 194.
- Buckhaven, 438, 439.
- Buckie, 466.
- Buckie fishermen, 302.
- Buisse, suite of ponds at, 93.
- Burning the water, 204.
- Business, how it is conducted at Re, 358.
- Buist’s notes on Stormontfield, 111.
- Buist’s opinions about the parr, 183.
- Calculations as to herring increase, 7.
- “Caller Ou,” 425.
- Cancale, 58.
- Cancale, the shell-middens of, 351.
- Canoe used by the boucholeurs of Aiguillon, 413.
- Capital of French oysterdom, 352.
- Caprice of the herring, 244.
- Capturing herrings with a seine-net, 250.
- Carlisle of Inveresk, Dr., 435.
- Carp, 144.
- Carp-breeding, 147.
- Carp-ponds, 147.
- Carriage of fish in France, cost of, 61.
- Catch of herrings in 1862-63, 272.
- Catching shell-fish, 385.
- Causes assigned for caprice of herring, 244.
- Cause of attraction to the male fish while spawning, 9.
- Cause of the parr anomaly, 105.
- Census of Fittie, 450.
- Census of persons employed in the herring-fishery, 275.
- Ceremonies among the eel-breeders of Comacchio, 459.
- Ceremony of marriage among fishermen, 421.
- Ceylon pearl-fishery, 398.
- Chance fishing, 301.
- Changes in the Crustacea, 392.
- Character of the fisher-folk, 471.
- Character of the Scottish fishwife, 324.
- Charming May, 138.
- Charitable fishery experiment, 388.
- Charr, 153.
- Cheek on angling, 135.
- Chief British salmon-streams, 209.
- Chief fishing-grounds in the North Sea, 306.
- Chinese pisciculture, 69, 70.
- Claires for greening oysters, 360.
- Claires for oysters, view of, 357.
- Clannishness of the fisher-folk, 481.
- Classification of fish, 1.
- Cleanliness of the Newhaven fisherwomen, 431.
- Cleghorn, Mr. John, of Wick, on the herring, 231, 232.
- Clements, John, of Hull, his evidence, 316.
- Close-times for herrings quite possible, 242.
- Close-time for lobsters in France, 391.
- Close-time for oysters, 336.
- Clyde, the river, 163.
- Coarse work of the herring-gutters, 270.
- Coast fishing-boats, 272.
- Cod and haddock fishing very laborious, 301.
- Codfish, number of eggs in a, 5.
- Codfish, description of the, 291.
- Codfish, how it grows, 31.
- Cod-liver oil, 292.
- Cod-roe at dinner, 243.
- Coldingham fishermen, good behaviour of, 438.
- Colne oyster-beds, 370.
- Cold seasons unfavourable to oyster-breeding, 338.
- Colour of fish, 2.
- Comacchio, 19, 457.
- Comacchio, drawing of a division of, 48.
- Comfort of a fisherman’s dwelling, 430.
- Commencement of the great gale on the Moray Firth, 324.
- Commerce in fish, 34.
- Commerce in herrings, 254.
- Commerce in salmon, 198.
- Commerce in shell-fish, 384.
- Commercial value of salmon, 199.
- Commissioners’ report on the herring-fishery for 1864, 275.
- Common carp, 146.
- “Commons,” in oyster nomenclature, 368.
- Community of fishers at Fittie, 449.
- Comparative tables of the fishery at Wick, 281.
- Concluding remarks on the Fisheries, 474.
-
- Conclusion, 490.
- Condition of trawl-fish, 320.
- Conditions under which the herring is found, 240.
- Conduct of the white-fisheries, 301.
- Connecticut, fish-manufactory in, 136.
- Consumption of fish, 67.
- Consumption of oysters in London, 373.
- Contents of a dredge, 378.
- Continental demand on our fisheries, 286.
- Controversies about oyster life, 335.
- Controversies about the salmon, 178.
- Controversy about the parr, 181.
- Controversy about the pearl rivers, 406.
- Controversy among fishermen at Lochfyne, 250.
- Controversy in Scotland as to fixed engines of salmon-capture, 206.
- Conversation with a Strasbourg pêcheur, 88.
- Cooking of pike, 143.
- Cooking of oysters, 346.
- Co-operation among fishermen, 309, 441.
- Co-operation better than competition, 223.
- Cornwall in the pilchard season, 251.
- Coromandel oysters, 379.
- Corry in Arran, view of, 171.
- Coste, Professor, 76.
- Coste’s, Professor, plan of oyster-culture, 347.
- Coste’s recommendation to the French Government, 350.
- Couch, Mr. Jonathan, on the food of the pilchard, 251.
- Couch on the mackerel, 21.
- Couleur de rose statements as to the fisheries, 475.
- Councillor Hawkins on the Colchester oyster, 370.
- Course of the fisheries, 55.
- Course of the herring-fishery, 229.
- Course of oyster-farming, 365.
- Course of work on the oyster-beds at Whitstable, 365.
- Crab-catching, 386.
- Cray-fish, 397.
- Creel-hawking, 436.
- Crustacean commerce, 387.
- Cullercoats fisherman, evidence of a, 312.
- Cultivating the mussel-farm, 413.
- Cultivation of “natives,” 369.
- Cultivation of our lochs, 140.
- Culture of mussels, 410.
- Culture of oysters, 346.
- Culture of oysters, progress in, 354.
- Culture of turtle on the artificial plan, 96.
- Curing of cod in Scotland, 293.
- Cure of herrings in Scotland, 1862-63, 273.
- Curing pilchards, 253.
- Curing sprats to be sold as sardines, 253.
- Curious forms of fish, 3.
- Curiosities of superstition at Newhaven, 433.
- Daily statement of the number of herring-boats at Wick in 1862, 276.
- Danube salmon, 89, 98.
- Dates marking chief incidents of salmon life, 195.
- Dealing in herrings, 254.
- Decline of creel-hawking in Scotland, 443.
- Decline of the cod-fishery, 303.
- Decrease of the Scottish haddock-fishery, 318.
- Decreasing size of haddocks, 315.
- Dee salmon-fisheries, 112, 113.
- Delineation of flat fishes, 297.
- Demand for fish in Catholic countries, 277.
- Demand for oysters, 373.
- Demand for white fish, 286.
- Dempster’s discovery of packing salmon in ice, 36, 202.
- Departure of the herring-fleet from the Texel, 45.
- Description of Auchmithie, 445.
- Description of a drift-net, 248.
- Description of a lobster-trap, 385.
- Description of a mussel-farm, 412.
- Description of a periwinkle, 384.
- Description of a trawler, 309.
- Description of green oyster-claires, 359, 360.
- Description of Newhaven, near Edinburgh, 430.
- Description of the lobster, 390.
- Description of the oyster, 334.
- Description of the pilchard-fishery, 252.
- Design for a complete suite of salmon-ponds, 103.
- Desire for more herring statistics, 283.
- Destruction of young fish, 478.
- Destructive power of the trawl-net, 308.
- Development of the herring, 240.
- Dexterity of the herring-gutters, 270.
- Diagram of herring-netting and fish, 282.
- Dialect of the Moray Firth fisher-folk, 469.
- Dialogue between a fishwife and her customer, 427.
- Differences in size, shape, and flavour of the herrings of different places, 230.
- Different countries must have different fishing seasons, 299.
-
- Different kinds of cured herrings, 271.
- Different kinds of sea-fish, 155.
- Difficulties in the way of collecting spat, 362.
- Difficulties of obtaining accurate information about the herring, 235.
- Difficulty of obtaining statistics of fisheries, 66, 285.
- Dimensions of the great heer, 228.
- Diminution of lobsters, 318.
- Discipline of Comacchio, 457.
- Disparity in size of young salmon, 106.
- Distinct races of herrings, 230.
- Dish of crablets, 344.
- Distribution of cured eels, 462.
- Distribution of fish, 37.
- Diving for pearls in Scotland, 407.
- Division of labour in Fittie, 450.
- Do fish live a separate life?, 9.
- Does an oyster yield its young in millions?, 339.
- Dogfish, diminution of, in 1862, 274.
- Dogger Bank fishery, 303.
- Doon pearl-fishery, 408.
- Doon pearls inferior, 409.
- Do the herring live singly up till the period of spawning?, 238.
- Double migration of the salmon, 193.
- Doubts as to former abundance of fish, 479.
- Dr. Dod on the herring and sprat, 239.
- Drawbacks to oyster-farming in France, 354.
- Drawing of a two-year-old smolt, 189.
- Drawings of the pearl-mussel, 399.
- Dredging for oysters at Cockenzie, 377.
- Dredging for pearls, 407.
- Dress of a Newhaven fishwife described, 429.
- Drift versus trawl nets, 250.
- Dunbar herring-fleet, 443.
- Duke of Athole’s marked fish, 190.
- Dutch fishing industry, 41.
- Duties of fishermen, 490.
- Duty charged on French fish, 61.
- Duty of the coopers at the herring curing, 262.
- Early fish commerce, 35.
- Earnings of trawlers, 319.
- Economy of the herring shoals, 277.
- Edible Crustacea described, 391.
- Edible molluscs, 384.
- Edinburgh oyster-ploys, 345.
- Edinburgh oyster-taverns, 345.
- Eel-breeders, the, of Comacchio, 45.
- Eel-cooking at Comacchio, 460.
- Eel-curing at Comacchio, 461.
- Eel-fair, 19.
- Eel, the, 17.
- Effects of the concentration of a thousand boats on one shoal of herrings, 283.
- Effects of a storm on the Moray Firth, 472, 473.
- Effects of royal notice on the fishwives, 429.
- Effects of the discovery of Mr. Dempster, 205.
- Egg-boxes at Huningue, 83.
- Egg-boxes at Stormontfield, 104.
- Egg-laying by the hen lobster, 392.
- Eggs of the salmon kind just hatching, 13.
- Emotions of the first oyster-eater, 343.
- Enemies of the salmon, 199.
- Engaging of boats for the herring-fishery, 255.
- English lakes, the, 153.
- English river scenery, 148.
- English salmon-fisheries, 217.
- English trawl fishermen, 308.
- Enterprise of the Scottish herring-curers, 259.
- Enthusiasm of those concerned in the herring-harvest, 246.
- Episode of a cradle, 468.
- Erroneous information as to pearls, 409.
- Estimated quantity of oysters in various stages of growth, 368.
- Evidence on the trawl question, 312.
- Exaggeration as to supplies of fish, 481.
- Example of a well-managed salmon stream, 215.
- Examples of nicknames among fishermen, 467.
- Excess of herrings cured in 1862, 273.
- Excitement on shore during a storm, 326.
- Excitement on the coast during the herring season, 247.
- Expense of forming an oyster-bank, 352.
- Expenses of fishing-vessels, 310.
- Experience as to the Tweed fisheries, 224.
- Experiment in fructifying fish-eggs, 8.
- Experiments in oyster-breeding in the Bay of St. Brieuc, 351.
- Experiments in pearl-fishing in the Scottish lochs, 406.
- Experiments with salmon ova in ice, 119.
- Exportation of salmon ova, 119.
- Exquisite flavour of the green oyster, 362.
- Extension of legislation on the salmon question, 204.
- Extension of pisciculture, 117.
- Extension of the Scotch pearl-fishery, 402.
-
- Extension of the salmon trade, 205.
- Extent of business done in oysters at Whitstable, 366.
- Extent of French fisheries, 91.
- Extent of oyster-beds in the Firth of Forth, 375.
- Extent of the Gadidæ family, 287.
- Extent of the mussel-farm in the Bay of Aiguillon, 412.
- Extent of the river Tay, 209.
- Extent of trawling, 311.
- Extraordinary scene on the river Doon, 404.
- Exuviation of the lobster, 391.
- Eyemouth, 438.
- Fable, Italian, 452.
- Facts of the herring question, brought out before the British Association, 232.
- Failure of the Ceylon pearl-fisheries, 400.
- Faithfulness of salmon to their old haunts, 193.
- Falling-off in the herring supply attributed to the trawl, 314.
- Falling-off of certain rivers, 205.
- Falling-off of oyster supplies in France, 347.
- Fancy picture of the growth of a fishing hamlet, 419.
- Fascines for oyster-breeding, 351.
- Farms for oysters in Kent and Sussex, 366.
- Faroe cod-banks, exhaustion of, 303.
- Faversham oyster-grounds, 367.
- Fearful scene, 329.
- Feats performed by Fisherrow women, 435.
- Fecundity of crabs, 383.
- Fecundity of fish, 5.
- Fecundity of lobsters, 383.
- Fecundity of shell-fish, 383.
- Feeding and digestive power of fish, 4.
- Feeding-ground, influence of the, on fish, 29.
- Fife, the coast of, 438.
- Figures appertaining to herring-fishery of 1862-63, 273.
- Figures illustrating the August herring-fishery at Wick, 280.
- Figures of the Dutch fishery, 44.
- Figures of the Wick catch of herrings, 279.
- Findon, 448.
- Fine flavour of the green oyster, 362.
- Finesse by a fishwife, 427.
- Finnan haddocks, 290, 448.
- Firth-built fishing-boats, 440.
- Firth of Forth whitebait, 24.
- Fish auctioneers, 437.
- Fish cadgers and hawkers, 442.
- Fish-breeding in Norway, 75.
- Fish-capture by line, 305.
- Fish-commerce, 34.
- Fish-commerce in France, 60.
- Fish-communities, 295.
- Fish-culture, 69.
- Fish-culture in Italy, 71.
- Fish-dinners, 23.
- Fisher-folk’s philosophy of marriage, 431.
- Fisher-folk, the, 418.
- Fisheries of Holland, 44.
- Fishermen’s antipathy to swine, 434.
- Fishermen, differences of opinion among, 30.
- Fishermen of Eyemouth, condition of the, 438.
- Fishermen’s belief in luck, 257.
- Fishermen’s children, 445.
- Fishermen should grow their own bait, 147.
- Fishermen’s nicknames, 466.
- Fishermen’s wives, 323.
- Fisher-names, 467.
- Fisher-people’s notions of religious duty, 437.
- Fisher-people the same everywhere, 418.
- Fisherrow, 435.
- Fisher weddings, 420.
- Fishery statistics by a Buckhaven man, 442.
- Fishes of the salmon family, 198.
- Fish-guano, observations on, 491.
- Fishing boats, best kind of, 272.
- Fish insensible to pain, 3.
- Fish labyrinth at Comacchio, 46.
- Fish life and growth, 1.
- Fishmarket at Bale, 81.
- Fish-offal as manure, 331.
- Fish-poachers, 135.
- Fish-ponds, 38.
- Fish quite local, 482.
- Fish-shoal, growth of, 32.
- Fish-table, 300.
- Fish-tithe riots at Eyemouth, 438.
- Fishwives at church, 428.
- Fishwives’ finesse in bargaining, 427.
- Fishwives of Newhaven, 424.
- Fishwives of Paris, 456.
- Fittie, 449.
- Fixed engines of capture, 205, 206.
- Flat fish, 156.
- Flat fish consumed in London, 298.
- Flat fish family, the, 297.
- Flavour of different herrings, 230.
- Flavour of fish, 28.
- Floating with the tide, 266.
- Fluctuation in the take of herrings at Wick, 232.
- Fondness for dancing of the fisher-people, 421.
-
- Fondness of gannets for herring, 283.
- Food of the herring, 243.
- Food of the mussel, 414.
- Food of the oyster, 361.
- Food of the salmon, 192.
- Footdee or Fittie, 449.
- Forbes Stuart and Co.‘s tables of the London salmon supply, 221.
- Foresight of the oyster, 342.
- Former abundance of fish doubted, 479.
- Former scarcity of the haddock, 288.
- Forming an oyster-farm, 355.
- Foul salmon at Billingsgate, 204.
- Four years’ work at oyster-farming, 356.
- France, fishing industry in, 58.
- Francis Sinclair, a herring-fisherman of Wick, 265.
- Free Dredgers’ Company at Whitstable, 366.
- Free fisheries a mistake, 489.
- Free oyster-grounds, 368.
- French boats interfering with the fishery, 318.
- French fishwoman, 454.
- French foreshores, industry on, 57.
- French legend, 455.
- French North Sea fisheries, 59.
- French oyster-eaters, 344.
- Frequent examination of oysters at Whitstable, 369.
- Fresh herrings, 258.
- Fresh-water fish, commerce in, 35.
- Fresh-water fish not of much food value, 129.
- Friday an unlucky day, 433.
- From the parr to the smolt, 187.
- Full versus shotten herrings, 241.
- Functions of the Board of Fisheries, 486.
- Fusaro, Lake, 348.
- Future of the fisheries, 481.
- Galbert’s trout establishment, 92.
- Gadidæ, 285.
- Gadidæ family, the, 289.
- Galway fisheries, 117.
- Gathering-in of the boats to the herring-fishery, 246.
- Gathering the mussel-harvest in Aiguillon, 413.
- General machinery of fish-capture, 304.
- Geographical distribution of the herring, 234.
- Geographical distribution of the oyster, 379.
- Geologists’ paradise, 164.
- George the Fourth’s fondness for Finnan haddocks, 448.
- German pisciculture, 98.
- Gipsy anglers, 135.
- Glen Sannox, 175.
- Glut of herrings at Billingsgate, 258.
- Goatfell, 165.
- Golden carp, 140, 145.
- Gold-fish in factory ponds, 145.
- Government by gyneocracy, 426.
- Gravid salmon, treatment of, 114.
- Great haul of salmon on the Thurso, 205.
- Great storm on the Moray Firth, the, of 1857, 327.
- Greed of Scottish dredgermen, 375.
- Green oysters, 359.
- Grieve, Mr., of the Café Royal, Edinburgh, 288.
- Grilse growth, 191.
- Grilse and smolt, 187.
- Ground-plan of fish laboratory at Huningue, 82.
- Ground suitable for breeding and fattening oysters, 361.
- Group of Newhaven fishwives, 424.
- Growth of a fishing village, 419.
- Growth of a fish-shoal, 32.
- Growth of fish, 1.
- Growth of salmon ova, 12.
- Growth of the mussel in the Bay of Aiguillon, 415.
- Growth of the oyster-park system, 353.
- Growth of the young salmon in Australia, 123.
- Guano, fish, observations on, 491.
- Gulf of Manaar pearl-fisheries, 400.
- Gulf of St. Lawrence, 310.
- Gunther’s opinion of the Silurus glanis, 126.
- Gutters for hatching purposes at Huningue, 86.
- Gutters of herring, 269.
- Habits and character of the Fittie people, 451.
- Habits of fish, 316.
- Habits of the haddock, 289.
- Habits of the pearl-oyster, 401.
- Haddock, the, 287.
- Haddocks, former scarcity of, 288.
- Haddocks, where are they?, 30.
- Half-decked boats, 307.
- Happy fishing-grounds, 367.
- Harbours, 302.
- Harbour accommodation, want of, in Scotland, 272, 321.
- Harvest of eels at Comacchio, 459.
- Hashing of young fish not peculiar to the trawl, 320.
- Has the oyster eyes?, 335.
- Hatching of salmon, 11.
- Hauling in the nets, 266.
- Hawkers of fish, 442.
-
- Hearing power of fish, 4.
- Herring-buss, cost of, 51.
- Herring-commerce, 254.
- Herring-curing, 260.
- Herring-fishing at Wick in August, 280.
- Herring fishing at Wick in September, 281.
- Herring, growth of the, 237.
- Herring harvest, the, 263.
- Herrings, calculations as to size of a shoal of, 6.
- Herring spawn, 14.
- Herring spawn offered for manure, 313.
- Herring, the, described, 226.
- Herring, the, its natural and economic history, 226.
- Herring, the, shoals at Wick, 278.
- Hints to the oyster-farmers, 364.
- History of the herring-fishery, 49.
- Hired hands at the herring-fishery, 248.
- Hole Haven in Essex, lobster-stores at, 389.
- Holibut, 295.
- Homeward bound, 267.
- Hooks, number of, on a fishing-line, 305.
- How a fish breathes, 1.
- How cod are cured, 293.
- How does an oyster lie on its bed?, 335.
- How long do herrings take to grow?, 236.
- How the herrings are manipulated on arrival, 269.
- How the herring-nets are worked, 249.
- How the salmon-poachers proceed to work, 203.
- How to buy and sell fish, 427.
- How to catch cray-fish, 397.
- How to angle in the sea, 159.
- How to find out a false pearl, 410.
- How to mark smolts, 196.
- How to test a pearl, 410.
- How to open the pearl-mussel, 408.
- Hull trawlers, 309.
- Huningue described, 82-85.
- Huningue, difficulty of finding it, 80.
- Ignorance of naturalists and fishermen, 287.
- Ile de Re, 352.
- Illustrations of oyster-growth, 338, 339.
- Imitation by fishermen of marked salmon, 197.
- Importance of cheap bait, 410.
- Impossibility of catching spawn in the trawl-net, 317.
- Impregnation of fish-eggs, 7.
- Improvement in the manufacture of herring-nets, 278.
- Improvement of Scottish fishing-boats, 307.
- Improvement of the salmon-fisheries, 224.
- Increase in the quantity of netting used at the herring-fishery, 277, 278.
- Increase of boats and fishermen, 313.
- Increase of the enemies of the herring, 242.
- Increase of the herring, 7.
- Incubation-hall at Huningue, 84.
- Incubation of oyster-ova, 337.
- Industry of the women at Auchmithie, 447.
- Industry at Fisherrow, 436.
- Industry of Buckhaven men, 439.
- Industry of fishwives, 425.
- Inferiority of Doon pearls, 409.
- Information about the fisher-folk, 422.
- Information as to the colour and structure of pearls, 409.
- Information for pearl-seekers, 408.
- Information for the Lord Provost of Edinburgh, 376.
- Instinct of the salmon for change, 188.
- Interior of a fisherman’s house, 430.
- Introduction into British waters of strange fishes, 482.
- Invention of mussel-culture, 410.
- Inventor of the first oyster-pond, 343.
- Investigation by the Town Council of Edinburgh into the state of their oyster-beds, 376.
- Irish and Welsh pearls, 407.
- Irish fish-carriage, 63.
- Irish haddocks, 289.
- Irish lobsters, 388.
- Irish oyster blue-book, 371.
- Irish white-fish fisheries, 304.
- Italian fable, 452.
- Italian pisciculture, 71.
- Italian oyster-eaters, 344.
- Jack in his element, drawing of, 141.
- Jacobi’s experiments in artificial fish-breeding, 74.
- Johnstone on the salmon-fisheries, 216.
- Joint-stock fishing system, 441.
- Joint-stock oyster company at Whitstable, 366.
- Juries for regulating the oyster-fisheries, 371.
- Justice to upper proprietors of salmon-fisheries, 487.
- Juvenile fisher-folk, 430.
- Keeping adult salmon till ripe for spawning, 107.
- Kelaart’s account of the pearl, 401.
- Kemmerer’s, Dr., tiles for oyster-culture, 361.
- Killing of grilse hurtful to the fisheries, 207.
- Kinsale oysters, 374.
- Kitchen at Comacchio, 460.
- Knox, Dr., opinion of the parr, 182.
- Labours of Gehin and Remy in pisciculture, 76.
- Lake Fusaro, 348.
- Land-crabs, 393.
- Land of a thousand lochs, 136.
- Latest achievement in pisciculture, 126.
- Laws devised for self-government at Ile de Re, 357.
- Legal mode of capturing the herring, 248.
- Legend of the first oyster-eater, 342.
- Legend of the island of Sein, 455.
- Leistering salmon, 204.
- Length of white-fish fishing-lines, 305.
- Lent, fish required during, 277.
- Line-fishing, 306.
- List of authorities, 499.
- List of rivers in which the best pearls have been found, 406.
- Living codfish, traffic in, 302.
- Living crustacea, 387.
- Lobster-bait, 162.
- Lobsters “in berry,” 393.
- Lobster-commerce, 337.
- Lobster-farming, 385.
- Lobsters good for food all the year round, 398.
- Localities for sea-angling, 162.
- Loch Awe trout, 138.
- Lochfyne herring, 28.
- Lochfyne, view of, 249.
- Lochleven pike, 140.
- Lochleven trout, 28, 139.
- Lochmaben, 27.
- Logan fish-pond, 39.
- London demand for shell-fish, 385.
- London fish-supply, inquiries into the, 285.
- London oyster-saloons, 373.
- Lord Advocate’s salmon bill of 1862, 205.
- Loss of the “Shamrock,” 322.
- Lottery nature of the herring-fishery, 267.
- Love of oysters by the ancient Romans, 380.
- Lowe’s, Mr. James, opinion about the position of the oyster, 335.
- Low state of the English salmon-fisheries, 217.
- Luck a creed of the fishermen, 257.
- Lucullus, 344.
- Machinery of fish-capture, 305.
- Machinery of herring-capture, 248.
- Mackerel-fishery, 299.
- Mackerel-growth, 21.
- Mackerel, the, 299.
- Madame Picard, the French fishwife, 456.
- Manufactured Finnans, 290, 449.
- Manufacture of sardines, 253.
- March of the land-crabs, 393.
- Marennes, 359.
- Marine Department of France, 56.
- Marked fish of the salmon kind, 197.
- Marriage dinners among the fisher-class, 421.
- Marriage scenes at Newhaven, 420.
- Marrying and giving in marriage among the fisher-folks, 420.
- Marshall, Peter, of Stormontfield, on the salmon, 195.
- Martin and Gillone’s breeding establishment, 112, 113.
- Mascalogne, the, or pike of America, 143.
- Masculine character of the fishwife, 323.
- Mathers the fisher-poet, 471.
- Mayhew’s figures, 67.
- Measurement of nets, 248.
- Members of the herring family, 245.
- Memoir on fish by a Chinaman, 70.
- Methuen on the white-fisheries, 288, 480.
- Methuen, the late Mr., brief sketch of his career, 259.
- Microscopic observation of oyster-spat, 339.
- Migration of the eel, 19.
- Migration of the herring a mistake, 228.
- Milton oysters, 372.
- Mitchell on the distribution of the herring, 234.
- Mitchell on the herring, 231.
- Mode of capturing turbot, 296.
- Modes of cooking oysters in New York, 381.
- Mode of curing Yarmouth bloaters, etc., 271.
- Mode of doing business of the Fisherrow women, 436.
- Mode of dredging for oysters, 378.
- Mode of fishing by line, 305.
- Mode of growing the mussels in the Bay of Aiguillon, 415.
- Mode of life at Comacchio, 458.
- Mode of packing ova in ice, 119.
- Mode of salmon-fishing on the Tay, 213.
- Mode of selling fish by Newhaven women, 425.
- Mode of spawning by the land-crabs, 394.
- Mode of taking pilchards in Cornwall, 251.
- Modes of sea-fishing in France, 57.
- Money paid by curers of herring in bounty and arles, 256.
-
- Money value of fresh-water fish in France, 92.
- Money value of the Colne oysters, 370.
- Monkbarns and Maggie Mucklebackit, 428.
- Monkeys catching crabs, 386.
- Monotonous life of the eel-breeders of Comacchio, 459.
- Moral success of oyster-farming, 357.
- Moray Firth ports, 302.
- More boats and less fish on the Dogger Bank, 313.
- More ways of killing salmon than angling, 203.
- Mortality of herring, 15.
- Movements of the herring at spawning time, 238.
- Mr. Ramsbottom’s salmon manipulations, 102.
- Multiplying power of the herring, 33.
- Mussel-culture, 410.
- Mussel-stakes, 411.
- Mysterious fish, 26.
- Narrow escape from extermination of the salmon, 475.
- Natives, 368.
- Natural and economic history of the oyster, 332.
- Natural and economic history of the salmon, 177.
- Natural enemies of the herring, 282, 283.
- Natural history of the codfish, 291.
- Natural history of the crustacea, 391.
- Natural history of the eel, 47.
- Natural history of the pearl-oyster of Ceylon, 401.
- Natural history of the pilchard, 251.
- Natural history of the sole, 298.
- Natural history of whitebait, 23.
- Naturalisation of fish in British rivers, 125.
- Naturalist’s Library account of the herring, 235.
- Necessity for two ponds at Stormontfield, 105.
- Necessity of describing the fisher-folk, 418.
- Nets, quantity used by a boat, 248.
- Newbiggin, evidence by a fisherman of that place, 317.
- New branch of shell-fishing, 398.
- Newfoundland cod-fishery, 53.
- Newhaven, 423.
- Newhaven fishwives, 424.
- Newhaven oyster-beds, 375.
- New York, oyster-eating in, 381.
- Nicknames of fishermen, 466.
- Non-success of the winter herring-fishery in 1864, 275.
- Northern Ensign, the, on the herring-fishery, 279.
- North Sea white-fish fisheries, 304.
- Norway lobsters, 389.
- Note from the novel of the Antiquary, 426.
- Nothing but herring, 268.
- Notice of a hermit crab, 392.
- Notice of Newhaven fishwives by the Queen, 429.
- Notice of valuable pearls, 400.
- Nova Scotia and Canadian fisheries, 54.
- Number of barrels of herring caught at Wick, 278.
- Number of buckies, 466.
- Number of eggs in a herring, 5.
- Number of men drowned on the north-east coast, 330.
- Number of oyster-farms in France, 347.
- Number of oysters on a fascine, 352.
- Number of shells that contain pearls, 409.
- Number of vessels fitted out for herring-fishery, 274.
- Number of white-fish falling off, 317.
- Nursing oyster-brood at Whitstable, 367.
- Nursing the salmon, 15.
- Objects of the English Fishery Act of 1861, 220.
- Observations on fish-guano, 491.
- Obvious abuses in connection with the economy of the fisheries, 284.
- Occurrence at St. Monance, 434.
- Oddities of the pearl-fisheries, 405.
- Officer’s, Dr., account of the ova received in Australia, 120.
- Official documents on the fisheries referred to, 66.
- Official instructions to the herring-curer, 262.
- Off to the herring, 264.
- Old believers in old fish theories, 227.
- One million of oysters eaten daily in Paris, 345.
- Open versus decked boats, 272.
- Operations of the Fishery Board, 284.
- Opinion of Mr. Anderson on the salmon question, 207.
- Opinion of Mr. Ffennell on the English Fishery Act of 1861, 220.
- Opinions of a Billingsgate salesman, 320.
- Opinions, different, about shell-fish, 333.
- Orata, Sergius, 72, 343.
- Organisation for supplying London with oysters, 366.
- Origin of Buckhaven, 439.
- Origin of Finnan haddocks, 290.
- Origin of fisher colonies, 423.
-
- Ossian, 174.
- Our chief food fishes, 285.
- Our Lady’s Port of Grace, 423.
- Our skipper at Wick, 264.
- Ova of the salmon, how it develops, 12.
- Overfishing of the herring, 227.
- Overfishing of the herring as pointed out by Mr. Cleghorn, 233.
- Overfishing of the oyster, 347.
- Overshooting, 169.
- Owners of salmon fisheries on the Tay, 213.
- Oyster-beds of Colne and Whitstable, 346.
- Oyster-beds of Georgia, 380.
- Oyster-breeding fascines, 351.
- Oyster close-time, 336.
- Oyster-eaters, 343.
- Oyster-growth, 338.
- Oyster, natural and economic history of, 332.
- Oyster-parks described by Mr. Ashworth, 354.
- Oyster-pyramid, 350.
- Oyster-saloons of New York, 381.
- Oyster-seekers, 373.
- Oyster Street at Billingsgate, 374.
- Oyster tiles, 363.
- Oyster-women of Paris, 456.
- Oysters able to move about, 342.
- Oysters at one time nearly forgotten, 343.
- Oysters hermaphrodite, 340.
- Oysters, how they are made green, 359, 360.
- Oysters in France, increase in price of, 64.
- Oysters on trees, 379.
- Oyster-ploys, 345.
- Oysters, when in season, 336.
- Packing herrings, 41.
- Packing of trawled white fish, 311.
- Pandore oysters, 377.
- Paper on the herring read at British Association meeting, 1854, 231.
- Paper on the sea fisheries of Ireland, 286.
- Parr at a year old, 182.
- Parr-growth, 180, 181.
- Parr in salt water, 194, 195.
- Parr-icide, 200.
- Paris, revenue derived from fish by, 64.
- Paucity of oyster-spawn during late years, 340.
- Payment of fishermen on the St. Lawrence, 310.
- Pearl-fisheries of Scotland, 398.
- Pearl-seekers at work, 404.
- Pearl-seekers, information for, 408.
- Peat-smoked haddocks, 448.
- Pennant’s opinion as to the haddock, 289.
- Pennant’s story of the herring a myth, 228.
- Percentage of salmon eggs hatched in Australia, 124.
- Percentage of mussels that contain pearls, 408.
- Percentage of oysters that arrive at maturity, 341.
- Percentage of salmon ova that come to life, 200.
- Perch, the, 151, 152.
- Perforated chests for keeping lobsters alive, 387.
- Perth as a centre for the angler, 213.
- Periwinkle, a peep at the, 384.
- Peter Marshall of Stormontfield as a pisciculturist, 111.
- Petticoat government, 450.
- Pickled herrings, discovery of, by the Flemings, 43.
- Pictures of the Dutch fishery, 42.
- Pig-feeding by means of parr, 200.
- Pike, 140.
- Pilchard, the, 251.
- Pisciculture, 69.
- Piscicultural establishment at Huningue, 76.
- Pisciculture in China, 69.
- Plan of a turtle-farm, 96.
- Plan of cultivating oysters, 346.
- Plan of fishing adopted at Yarmouth, 271.
- Plan of smoking haddocks in Auchmithie, 446.
- Plan of the salmon-ponds at Stormontfield, 100.
- Planting and transplanting mussels, 414.
- Playing a salmon, 131.
- Plea for the total abolition of the brand, 263.
- Plentifulness of salmon long ago, 476.
- “Please to remember the grotto,” 332.
- Plessix oyster-bed, 364.
- Pleuronectidæ, 285, 295, 297.
- Poaching as a trade, 202.
- Points in the natural and economic history of the herring, 232, 233.
- Ponds for fish, 38.
- Pont oyster-grounds, 368.
- Pooldoodies, 374.
- Pope and Swift as oyster-eaters, 345.
- Portessie, 321.
- Powan, the, 29.
- Practicability of artificial breeding on the Severn, 219.
- Practical nature of French fish-culture, 95.
-
- Prawn-catching, 396.
- Prawns and shrimps, 395.
- Preparation of the eels at Comacchio, 462.
- Present price of haddocks, 288.
- Prestonpans, 437.
- Price of fish in France, 62.
- Progress of Beef’s oyster-farm on the Ile de Re, 353.
- Progress of herring growth, 237.
- Progress of salmon growth, 179.
- Progress of the parr, 105.
- Progress of the ova in Australian waters, 122.
- Progress of the people of Fittie, 451.
- Proper stock of fish for the Severn, 218.
- Proper time to shoot the nets, 265.
- Proposal for a jubilee on the Severn, 218.
- Proposal for a tax on the boats, 284.
- Proportion of netting used and herring taken, 282.
- Proportions of meat and shell in the oyster, 341.
- Proposal to make each salmon river a joint-stock property, 223.
- Proposal to note growth of sea-fish in a marine observatory, 17.
- Proposal to sell the herring as they are caught, 257.
- Prosperity of the fisher-folk, 440.
- Price paid for pearls, 405.
- Price of three haddocks in 1790, 288.
- Primitive hatching apparatus, 115.
- Primrose, Hon. Mr. Bouverie, 485.
- Principal changes introduced by Tweed Acts, 216.
- Private oyster-layings, 371.
- Probable extinction of the Firth of Forth oyster-beds, 375.
- Problem in salmon life by the Ettrick Shepherd, 185.
- Process of curing the herring, 261.
- Process of gutting the herring, 269.
- Produce of the oyster greening claires, 361.
- Productive power of shell-fish, 382.
- Productiveness of artificial system, 90.
- Profile of the ponds at Stormontfield, 101.
- Profit of Beef’s oyster-farm, 353.
- Profits of oyster-farming, 372.
- Prosperity of the oyster-growers, 358.
- Provisions of the salmon and trout Act of 1861, 221.
- Public writers on the British fisheries, 474.
- Pulteneytown heights, 264.
- Pulteneytown quay, scene at, 267.
- Purchasers of Scottish pearls, 403.
- Quaint fishing villages of Normandy and Brittany, 454.
- Qualifications of an angler, 135.
- Quality of the herring captured in 1862, 276.
- Quantity of herring branded in 1862, 273.
- Quantity of netting employed in the herring-fishery, 277.
- Quantity of pilchards sometimes obtained, 252.
- Quantity of spawn from each oyster, 339.
- Queensferry, whitebait ground near, 22.
- Question of fish growth, 16.
- Rapid growth of oyster-culture in Ile de Re, 352.
- Rapid hatching of herring ova, 236.
- Rapid transit, effect of, on the fisheries, 36.
- Rapidity of salmon growth, 196.
- Ravages of the herring shoals by codfish, 282.
- Raw oysters the best for the stomach, 346.
- Reasons of the fishermen for marrying on Friday, 420.
- Recent fishing Acts for England, 219.
- Recent reports of the Inspectors of English fisheries, 217.
- Re-discovery of pisciculture, 73.
- Red-letter days of August, 332.
- Reel o’ Collieston, 422.
- Regulation of British salmon-fisheries, 487.
- Regulation of salmon-rivers, 488.
- Regulation of the Scottish herring-fisheries, 484.
- Relation between upper and lower proprietors of salmon rivers, 222.
- Relation of the curer to the fishermen, 255.
- Remedies for failing salmon supplies, 225.
- Remy, the re-discoverer of pisciculture, 73.
- Rental of French fisheries, 91.
- Rental of Firth of Forth oyster-beds, 375.
- Report of the Lochfyne commissioners on the herring, 235.
- Reprehensible feature in herring commerce, 256.
- Reproductive power of the oyster, 338.
- Reproductive power of the oyster in green claires, 260.
- Return from the beds on the Ile de Re, 356.
- Revenue anticipated from licences on English rivers, 221.
-
- Revenue from fish to the city of Paris, 64.
- Revenue from oysters grown in Lake Fusaro, 349.
- Revival of pearl-seeking in Scotland, 402.
- Rev. Mr. Williamson on the double migration of salmon, 194.
- Rhine salmon, 201.
- Richmond’s, Duke of, salmon-fisheries, 215.
- Rights of fishing in France, 91.
- Rise in price of oysters at Ile de Re, 358.
- Rise in the price of white fish, 301.
- Rise of a herring-curer, 259.
- River cray-fish, 397.
- River Doon pearl-fever, 404.
- Rivers of France, the, 73.
- Roaming fish, 32.
- Robertson’s Tweed salmon tables, 217.
- Rockall fishery, 303.
- Roe of the cod used in sardine-fishery, 254.
- Round of labour at Auchmithie, 446.
- Routine of oyster-work at Whitstable, 369.
- Roxburghe, Duke of, as an angler, 130.
- Salmo Ferox, 138.
- Salmon a day or two old, 14.
- Salmon and herring contrasted, 15.
- Salmon-angling in the north of Scotland, 131.
- Salmon-culture, 102.
- Salmon-beds in the tributaries of the Tay, 209.
- Salmon, commercial value of, 199.
- Salmon, double migration of, 193.
- Salmon egg, description of a, 10.
- Salmon-growth versus cod-growth, 20.
- Salmon in Australia, 118.
- Salmon, natural and economic history of the, 177.
- Salmon ova, period required to hatch, 13.
- Salmon, progress of, in coming to life, 12.
- Salmon-poaching, 202.
- Salmon rivers, regulation of, 488.
- Salmon, what do they eat? 192.
- Salmon-watcher’s tower on the Rhine, 201.
- Salting eels at Comacchio, 461.
- Sardine-fishery in Brittany, 59, 253.
- Scarcity of white fish, 313.
- Scattering of oyster-spat, 337.
- Scene in a Scottish herring-curer’s office, 469.
- Scene in the Buckie small-debt court, 468.
- Scene of Sir Walter Scott’s Antiquary, 444.
- Scene on the waters, 265.
- Scenes on the coast, 444.
- Scenery on the Tay, 211.
- Scientific and commercial fish-culture, 75.
- Scotch name for the turbot, 297.
- Scotch pearls in the middle ages, 402.
- Scotland for trout, 134.
- Scottish chap-books, 439.
- Scottish fishing boats all open, 307.
- Scottish fishing villages, glance at, 422.
- Scottish herring-fishery, 50.
- Scottish oyster-eaters, 345.
- Scottish pearl-fisheries, 398.
- Scottish prejudice against eels, 19.
- Scottish salmon-streams, 209.
- Scovell’s lobster-pond, 388.
- Sea-angling, 154.
- Sea-fish, proposal to note growth of, 17.
- Sea-perch, 153.
- Season for lobsters, 397.
- Secret of oyster-culture, 346.
- September fishery at Wick, 281.
- September the right month for inaugurating the oyster season, 333.
- Sergius Orata, 72, 343.
- Series of ponds for artificial breeding on the Severn, 219.
- Set-line fishing, 160.
- Severn, the, 218.
- Severn, suggestion for a pond on the, 116.
- Sex of the oyster, 340.
- Sexual instinct of fish, 10.
- Shaking the herring out of the nets, 267.
- Shape of a dredge, 378.
- Shape of fish, 3.
- Shad, 25.
- Shaw of Drumlanrig, 74.
- Shaw’s parr experiments, 185, 186.
- Shell-fish fisheries, 382.
- Short and simple annals of the fisher-folk, 462.
- Shooting the nets, 265, 266.
- Should there be a close-time for herring? 241, 242.
- Shrimp-eggs, 383.
- Shrimps and prawns, 395.
- Shrimpers at work, 395.
- Sickening of oysters, 336.
- Signs and tokens among the fisher-people, 453.
- Silurus glanis, 126-128.
- Silver eel, the, 18.
- Sillock-fishing in Shetland, 294.
- Size and weight of salmon diminishing, 206, 207.
-
- Size of oysters, 341.
- Size of the codfish, 291.
- Skate-liver oil, 293.
- Sketch of fisher-life in the Antiquary, 429.
- Sketch of the river Tay, 210, 211.
- Slaughter of small-sized fish, 320.
- Smaller varieties of the flat-fish, 298.
- Smelling power of fish, 3.
- Smolt and grilse, 187.
- Smolt exodus of 1861, 110.
- Smolt growth, 180, 181.
- Social condition of the Newhaven fisher-folk, 430.
- Social history of the oyster, 342.
- Société d’Ecorage in France, 60.
- Society of Free Fishermen at Newhaven, 377.
- Soft crabs, 393.
- Soles of a moderate weight best for the table, 298.
- Sole, the, 298.
- Song sung by the dredgers, 379.
- Sophisticated oysters, 374.
- Source of the Tay, 210.
- Sowing and planting mussels, 414.
- Spat-collecting tiles, 363.
- Spawn of herring just hatched, 14.
- Spawning at Tongueland, 114.
- Spawning of oysters, 337.
- Spawning periods of the herring, 236.
- Spear for killing flat fish, 161.
- Spearing flat fish, 161.
- Spey, the, as a salmon stream, 214.
- Sprat-controversy, 237, 239.
- Sprat-fishery, 253.
- Stake and bag nets, 208.
- Stake-nets on the river Solway, 208.
- Stakes on which to grow oysters, 364.
- State of knowledge in Newhaven sixty years ago, 431.
- Statements of trawlers, 314.
- Statistics of boats and herring ports, 275.
- Statistics of Colne oyster-beds, 370.
- Statistics of English oyster-grounds, 367.
- Statistics of Newfoundland fishery, 54.
- Statistics of oyster-culture in the Ile de Re, 356.
- Statistics of oyster-growth in Ile de Re, 365.
- Statistics of rent and produce of fisheries on Tay, 213.
- Statistics of Tweed fisheries, 217.
- Statistics of Wick Herring-Fishery, 1865, 502.
- St. James’s Day for oysters, 333.
- Steamboat travelling, 443.
- Steuart of Colpetty on the pearl, 400.
- Stock of breeding fish proper for Tay, 214.
- Stock of fish kept by Lucullus, 71.
- Stoddart’s calculations as to salmon growth, 111, 200.
- Store-boxes for crabs and lobsters, 387.
- Stories about the pike, 142.
- Storm scenes on the Moray Firth, 328.
- Storm of October 1864, 322.
- Stormontfield, proceedings at, 13.
- Striking example of the effect of bag-nets on the Tay, 206.
- Summer time of Wick’s existence, 247.
- Superstition as to the name of Ross, 468.
- Superstition of the fisher-folk, 432.
- Supposed migration of turbot, 296.
- Supposed spawn of turbot, 286.
- Sutherland lochs, 136.
- Table of oyster reproduction, 371.
- Tabular view of the August and September herring-fishery at Wick, 280, 281.
- Tabular view of the fish seasons, 300.
- Tabular view of the herring-harvest of 1862, 276.
- Tackle for sea-angling, 157.
- Tay before and after stake-nets, 214.
- Tay, the, as a salmon stream, 209.
- Tay, the river, its fish and commerce, 79.
- Tax on oysters at Billingsgate, 374.
- “Tee”-names, 466.
- Templeman’s evidence, 313.
- Temperature of the river Plenty in Australia, 121.
- Tempest on the Moray Firth, 325.
- Thames and other anglers, 130, 151.
- Thames, attempts to re-stock that river with fish, 24.
- Thames, the, 148, 149.
- The bounty system in the herring-fishery, 256.
- The cause of the migratory habits of salmon, 194.
- The cook and the grouse, 287.
- The Dead Man’s Ferry, 455.
- The dredging song, 379.
- The eastern pearl-fishery, 400.
- The first oyster-eater, 342.
- The first oyster eaten as a punishment, 343.
- The herring-fishery, preparations for, 246.
- The food of fishes, 31.
- The greening of oysters, 359, 360.
- The herring a local fish, 229.
- The herring-fishery a lottery, 257.
- The latest English salmon Act, 221.
- The laird and the laddie, an anecdote, 406.
-
- “The man in the black coat,” 433.
- The mussel as food, 416.
- Theories about eels, 18.
- Theory as to the growth of smolts, 196.
- The pearl-fever on the Doon, 403.
- The pearl-mussel, 398.
- The pearl shell-fish, 398.
- The present Fishery Board, 263.
- The senses of fish, 3.
- The women of Auchmithie, 446.
- The world of fish depicted, 394.
- Thinning the mussels, 415.
- Tiber, fish of the, 72.
- Tiles for receiving the spat of oysters, 363.
- Time of fishing for herring, 245.
- Time required for hatching herring-ova, 239.
- Time when the lobster becomes reproductive, 391.
- Torbay fisherman, evidence by a, 315.
- Total catch of Herrings for 1865, 503.
- Tour among the Scottish fisher-folk, 419.
- Tourist talk about fish, 78.
- Town of Comacchio, 459.
- Trade in shrimps, 397.
- Traffic in living codfish, 302.
- Transformation of herring-gutters, 270.
- Travelling in France, 78.
- Trawled fish not fit for market, 314.
- Trawler, a, 309.
- Trawling at particular places exhausts the shoals, 312.
- Trawling for herrings, 249.
- Trawling increases the fish, 316.
- Trawling on the French coast, 57.
- Trawl question, the, 308.
- Trout produced at five centimes each, 94.
- Trout, the, 133.
- Tummel, river, 210.
- Turbot, 296.
- Turbot fishing, 315.
- Turbot, natural history of the, 287.
- Turtle-culture, 96.
- Tweed Acts of 1857-59, 216.
- Tweed poachers, 203.
- Tweed tables of weight and size, 207.
- Twelve fish for a penny, 89.
- Unchangeable nature of the fishing class, 425.
- Unger’s revival of the Scottish pearl-fishery, 402.
- Unparalleled destruction of the seed of fish, 243.
- Upper proprietors of salmon-fisheries, 487.
- Uses of the codfish, 292.
- Uses of the sillock, 295.
- Use of the trawl-net in turning up food for the fish, 316.
- Value of a cod-roe, 292.
- Value of boats and nets lost in the storm of 1848, 330.
- Value of early-caught herring, 258.
- Value of mussels at Aiguillon, 417.
- Value of salmon at present, 477.
- Value of Scottish pearls, 403.
- Value of the close-time for salmon, 201.
- Value of the oyster stock at Whitstable, 366.
- Varied manipulation at Stormontfield, 105.
- Varieties of cod, 294.
- Varieties of crustacea, 383.
- Varieties of fish suitable to breed in ponds, 39.
- Various modes of catching crabs, 386.
- Various ways of fishing for the pearl-mussel, 405.
- Vendace, the, 26.
- View of a herring-curing yard, 261.
- View of a mussel-farm, 412.
- View of Huningue, 83.
- View of oyster-claires, 357.
- View of oyster-parks, 355.
- Village of Auchmithie, 445.
- Virginia oyster-beds, 380.
- Virtues of “cauld iron,” 433.
- Visit of the smolts to the sea, 190.
- Vivian, Mr., of Hull, on trawling, 311.
- Viviparous fish, 16.
- Voracity of pike, 142.
- Wages at Comacchio, 458.
- Waiting for the fish to strike, 266.
- Walter Scott on the fishwives, 426.
- Walton’s plan of hurdles for the culture of mussels, 411.
- Want of a close-time a great fish-destroying agency, 243.
- Want of harbour accommodation, 302.
- Want of more knowledge about our shell-fish, 382.
- Want of precise information as to fish-growth, 16.
- Warnings, 453.
- Waste places in England suitable for fish-culture, 116.
- Weather during the fishing of 1862, 276.
-
- Weather prophecies of the Board of Trade, 331.
- Weight of trout, 133.
- Welled boats, 306.
- Welsh and Irish pearls, 407.
- Whale-fishery, the, 55.
- What has been accomplished at Stormontfield, 109.
- What do salmon eat? 192.
- What we desire to know of all fish, 21.
- What will be the future of the British fisheries? 481.
- When do oysters become reproductive? 339.
- When do turbot spawn? 287.
- When Gadidæ are in season, 286.
- When herring are in best condition, 240.
- When should herring be captured? 241.
- When white fish are in season, 300.
- Where are the haddocks? 30, 288.
- Where the best turbot are got, 296.
- Where the oyster spawn goes, 340.
- “Whiskered pandores,” 377.
- Whitebait, 22.
- Whitebait found in many rivers, 22.
- Whitebait poor eating, 23.
- White-fish fisheries, the, 285.
- White-fish fisheries of Ireland, 304.
- White fish when in season, 299.
- Whitehills harbour, 321.
- Whiting, the, 294.
- Whitstable, 366.
- Who was Ossian? 174.
- Wick during the herring season, 268.
- Williamson, Rev. D., on the salmon, 193.
- Winter fishing at Wick, 274.
- “Wise Willy and Witty Eppie,” 439.
- Wives of the oyster-farmers, 362.
- Wolfsbrunnen trout-pond, 39.
- Woodhaven salmon station, 212.
- Working a mussel-farm, 416.
- Working an oyster-bed, 368.
- World of fish, the, 394.
- Yarmouth, 271.
- Yarmouth boats, their size and cost, 271.
- Yarmouth, the great fishery at, 49.
- Yarrell’s account of the herring, 231.
- Yarrell’s and Buist’s opinion about the parr, 183.
- Young’s experiments on the parr, 186.
- Yield of a bouchot, 416.