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LAWRENCE, WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE MARINE ' FISHERIES OF THE PROVINCE OF QUEBEC. •;';*'*''^ ' - ByJ.F.WhUeaves,F.G.S.,(i:c, ' To tho Honorable Petek Mitchell, !•: i- Minister of Marine and Fisheries for the , Dominion of Canada, «tc., itc, ■ . Sir,— I have che honor to submit the following report of a second deep-sea drodg ing expedition to the Gulf of St. LaxvrencG, prosecut(3d by me during the summer of 1872, undci the auspices of tho Dopai-tment, and as the repreisentative of tlie Natural Hiatory Society of Monti eal. . Your obedient servant, ^ J. F. Whiteayes. ^■M INTKODUCTORY. r As soon as tlie navigation of the St. Lawrence was fairly open in 1872, preparations were set on foot for the summer's operations. A Casella's thermometer and improved deei>sea water bottles wore ordered from England ; but, unfortunately, I was not able to procure these. Had they been available, it was hoped that much more accurate thermo- metrical observations could have been recorded, and it might have been possible to ascer- tain if the chemical characters of the water varied much at different depths. My next step was to try and induce some skilled zoologist or botanist to accompany me and take a share of the woi-k, or, failing this, a practical taxidermist. Every effort was tried, but no naturalist would volunteer to go. At this juncture, my friend, Mr. A. E. Bulger, of Montreal, kindly said that ho would be willing to cruise with me, and do his best to work under my supervision. This proposal was gladly accepted ; and it is only fair to Mr. Bulger to say that his services were of much value, and that his zeal and industry in tho proper preservation of the specimens collected deserve high praise. The necessary preparations for the expedition having been made, it was arranged that we were to meet Captain Lachance at Gasp6 Basin, on the 18th July. Previous to starting, after a careful study of the Admiralty charts, I had selected three or four distinct subjects for investiga- tion, either or all of which, it was proposed to adopt, should circumstances admit. The first of tliese was to try and ascertain how far up the River St. Lawrence the marine fauna and flora extend. Principal Dawson has collected an extensive and interesting series of arctic marine invertebrates at Murray Bay, and it was thought desirable to examuie the centre of the i*iver between that place and Quebec. Opportu- nities for doing this were not, however, afforded. To make the second plan of operations proposed intelligible, it is necessary to offer a few explanatory remarks. From a point situated a little to the north of the Island of Cape Breton, a line of sixty fathoms soundings stretches irregularly, but on the whole in a north-westerlv direction, to Perc6 or Gasp^ Bay. Inside of this line of soundxngg, which includcH Uie whole of the Magdalen group, the watev in usuallj: very shallow. Tfe* Hl^ wimm » I*orc6 Csliermen say that in many places on and noav tlio Miscoii Banks, wliere they fish, the water is less tlian ton fathoms deep. Submarine olnvations of the land, to a greater or Joig extent, appear to obtain in the ai'ea circumscribed by such a line as that of which I hafe spoken. These form a kind of irregular submerged plateau, of whicli the Magdalen group and Pi-ince Edward Island form ])art, outside of v/hich the water deepens rapidly, and in many ])laces quite precipitously. Tins being the cas", such a plateau, it is thought, would form a kind of l)arrier to the cold arctic currents \\ iiich sweej) through the Strait of Eolle IhIc, and would tend to deflect tliem in a bold curve up the Iviver St. Lawrence. It seems also not improbable that this line of sixty fathoms sowndings may divide two well-marked assemblages of marine animals in Canada. Outside of it, especially in deep water, the fauna is of a decidedly Arctic and Scandinavian character. The specimens collected by me in 1871 and 1872 shew clearly that a much larger number of species are common to both sides of the Atlantic than American or European naturalists formerly sup})oscd. On the other hand, the seas of New Brunswick, of Prince Edward and Cape Breton Islands contain a more southerly assendjlage, a large proportion of the members of wlii?h ai'o characteristic New England sj)cci(!S. This Acadian fauna, as it has been called, extends at any rate to the soiith sido of the Bay of Chaleurs, and perhaps as far north as Gaspo Bay, In this latter place, although the fauna on the whole is decidedly arctic, one or two stragglers from more southern sliores ai"e rarely met with. My object, therefore, was to try and ascertain, by actual investigation on the spot, if the line of sixty fatV )ms soundings, as given on the charts, forms the line oi demarcation in Canada between the arctic and the Acadian fauna?. It was thought that by dredging alternately on both sides of this line, and carefully comparing the Specimens collected, much light might be thrown on this particular point. The third object I proposed to myself was to investigate the animal life of the deepest parts of the Gulf generally. It is not known with any degree of certainty where the most important of tlie Canadian edible fishe.s (such as the cod, halibut, mackerel, and herring), go to in winter. Whether they merely I'eti-eat to the deepest parts of the Gulf during the cold months, or migrate further south, remains to be asceitained. It was thought that a tolerably careful examination of the animal life of the greatest depths would at least help to shew if plenty of food for such fishes exists on or in the deep sea mud. Towing-nets Avere also provided, arranged so as to catch such miiiute animals as float on or a little below the level of the water. Yaluable iiiformation as to the food of the herring and mackerel has recently been placed on record by a Danish naturalist, Mr. Axel Boeck. The following abstract of this observer's general conclusions is partly condensed and ])artly copied from an article in Professor S. P. Baird's "Annual Ptocord of Science and Industry," for 1871. According to j\Ir. Boock, the fcod oi' herrings consists almost entirely of minute inverteljrato animals, and this is divided by tlie novthern fishermen into thi'ee classes — the "red," the " yellov.'," and the "black." These names are derived from the colour of the food wlien living," or else from its ap])earanco in the stomach of the fish." The "red meat" is the most frequent: it consists mainly of minute copepod crus- taceans. TIk^so occur on the shores of Norway and other parts of the coast of Northern Euicpe, at corlaiu poricus of summer in such abundance that the sea is colourel by them. School u]ion soliool of herrings and mackerel feed upon these; nor are such pigmy crustacenns disdained even by whales. Upon this food both herring and mackerel thrive and grow fat. If henings are taken with their stomachs full of "red meat" ?)i cut, und'i- IH' ^#^'• 80 M •m^i^i^mm '■.U. Part T. *.-{-. ,.( Abstract of a diary, kept for the most pmt on hoard the " Stella Mans." ■■ ' • "' Leaving l\tontrpal on the evening of the 13th July, we arrived at Gasp6 Bftsin on Thursday aftornoon, 18th July. Soon after landing \teleftrnoe sea-pens, a star fish (Ctenodiscus), cwo worms, and a couple of small bivalves (Astartes), were all that the bagofthe dredge contained. About 5 o'clock, p.m, a heavy galo sprang up : we ran to Mai Bay for shelter, and anchored there at 8 p.m. Wednesday, 31st July. -^Sailed from Mai Bay at 6, a.m., with a stiff N.-W. breeze blowing. Anchored just outside Gaspe Basin at 10.30 a.m. ; ashore at 12.15 a.m. Thursday, August 1st.— Ashore all day in Gasp6 Basin. Friday, 2nd August. — Set sail for Percd, at 2.45 p.m., with very little wind. Comm»nder La«hanc« and Ids first and second officer having nailed for Queb«c ibe ■i ,t, ,;■ breeze i ■■» ]>revlou« day, the schooner was left in charge of the third officer. Used a towing-not in Gaap6 Bay, joon after wo nailed. At the entrance of Gaspe Bay, we caught several throa-spined atiel jbacks, and a number of land insects of all orders. Many of the smaller Colcoptera and Ortkoptera wei'e living. They semu to be able to exist for a long time, floating on the surface. A dead cahn in the evening. Saturday, 3rd August. — Anchored off Percd village, at 7.30 a.m. Went ashore for an hour or two in the morning, and set sail again about 11.15 a.m. Hailing along by tho N.-E. side of Bonaventuro Island in the afternoon, we observed large numbers of ganneta and gulls perched upon inaccessible ledges of rook. lu thick weather, the eric; of these birds upon the Split Rock at Percd and on Bonaventure Island often (it ia said) give timely v/arning to the mariner of the proximity of land. We tried a cast (Dredge A. 5) in fifty-six fathoms — sand ; about one mile and three-quarters to tho S.-E. of Bonaventure Island. Although the dredge ^vas allowed to remain on the bottom for two houi-8 it came up empty ; the wind was so slight, tliat tho scraper must have anchored the schooner. A towing-net was used in the afternoon, with the usual results, viz., a few small fishes and some minute cnislaceans. After the dredge was hauled up, then^ was a dead calm, and the schooner had to be towed back to Perce by ihe crews of her two boats — a process which took thi-ee hours to accomplish. Anchored off Percd at 8 p.m. Sunday, 4t]i August. — Ashore at Perce all day, where wo were cordially and hospi- tably received by Judge Winter and Sheriff Vibert. Monday, 5th August.- -Sailenndlo of hooka and a sinker Attached to the snd, repeatedly along the rocky bottom, near the ship's anchorage, in about seven fathoms of water. Although several hcoks and lines wera thus lost, quite a number of speiimens were in this way obtained. Among these were several large purple sea cucumbers (Pentacta Jrimdoaa), nearly a foot long, K sesrlet Ilolothurian ( Lophothnria Fabricii), a ruddy sea peach \Cynthia), and a living green sponge, new to me. Ucsides these more striking specimens, the hodcs brought up a quantity of small sea weeds, amongst which were multitudes of scarlet oaprellre (which have bf*en called the monkeys of the crustacean world), jHtrasitio sponges and isoophytes, abcut six kinds of shells, &c. kc, Tuesday, 20th Augiist. — Arrived at Perce at 3 am. Dr. Forlin and Mr. Tetu lefb tis here. Instructions having been receivotl to look after an American schooner (the B. A. Baker J, on the Orphan Bank, we left Perce at noon, bound for the former place. On our way, we got a cast on a rough and heavy bottom, which cut the doubly-knotted bags and protecting cowhide of the dredge almost topieces Dredge A., 14,50 fathoms — stony and rocky bottom ; Bonaventure Island bearing N.N.-W., fifteen miles distant; Point St. Pexer N. j^W., twenty-two miles distant. Many interesting things in this haul ; among them a couple of Boltenias, nearly two feet long, a dozen or more living Pectens (Island- icus)' — more than twenty species in all, not counting the woiins, zoophytes, or crustacean It was nearly dark when the contents of the bag were emptied out, so that the looking after the specib^ens had to be defen-ed till next morning. Weather fair, with a fina breeze all diay. Wednesday, 21st August. — Alongside the B. A. Baker, on the Orphan Bank, at 6 ft.ni. Having transacted the business we had with her, in pursuanci^ of orders received^ we sailed for Perc6, and arrived there at 11 a.m. Ashore in the afternoon and evening. Thursday, 22nd August. — Left Percd at 9 a. m., bound for *be Magdalen Islands. A dense fog prevailed in the moming which cleared away in the afternoon, and there wm a heavy sea on, rrith a stiff S. W. gale all the' day and night. Friday, 23rd August. — At 2 a.m., sighted Amherst Island, four Ihiles distant. Wind light, W.N.-W. ; rain and fog in the morning. At 11 a.m., Deadman's, Qrind« stone, and Amherst Islands visible ; many terns in sight. About noon we tried a cast, but not with much success, as the yam fastening the two arms of the dredge got cut by rocks, so that the bag came up nearly empty. Dredge A. 15, twenty fathoms — ^rocky bottom — between Grindstone and Amherst Islands. We looked eagerly to see if thertt were any southern forms among the things brought up, but the results were purely negative. All of the tweriCy species observed are particularly common forms, whidk range from Greenland to Cape Cod. At 4.30 p.m., we saw the lighthouse on Amhent Island. Entry Island was visible at 6 p.m. Anchored off La Demoiselle Hill, on Amhent Island, at 7.10. Saturday, 24th August, — Anchored in Pleasant Bay, off Amherst Harbour, at 6.45 a.m. Went fiahore after bi-eakfuat, and took a walk with Mr. J. J. Fox, who shewed ua much polite attention. The part of the island where we were is low and sandy, and iji some places marshy. .3Ia*iy characteristic swamp plants were noticed, such a* SnTracenid^ I.'ulum, KahniOf Jiriophorum, JJrosera, Spiranthen, and (in the shade) Monotropa un0ora. The most interesting species (to me) was the '^candleberry myrtle" f Mi/rtca ceryeraL the >>eiri€s of which were fernierly boU«d down by the inhnbitant* tO mitk« ea(ndle*|tti | 3 10 WM told by Mr. Fox. Tho trees were mostly stunted spruce, hemlock, Canada balsam, elder, and low junipers. On the west point of Amherst Harbour are sub-aericl sand dunes, which have choked up and killed the few stunted trees which once grew there. We coUectfOd what looked like a promising gathering of fUatoms from i lagoon, Uie water of which was brackish to the taste, but in which fresh-water snails (LimtuKa eiodet) wer^^ living. Unfortunately, tlie tide was high, yet we managed to collect six species of shells on the b'^ach. These are Pecten iemiicostatus, Galliata convexa, Maotra aolidissima, Maxihcera, cortakif Zirphcea crispata, and Lunatia heroa. Of these, Galliaia eonvexa is a decidedly southern fo--m, and so, in my judgment, is Mactra aolidiasima, although Dr. Packard states that he found this latter i-arely in or near the Strait of Belle Isle. We noticed a little magnetic iron in the sand on the shore, and Mr, Fox t<»ld us that gypsum and the black oxide o*' manganese are also found on the island. We were also informed by the tame gentleman that ship-worms are often very prevalent in Amherst Harbour. When we had finished our stroll, we went to Mr. Fox's house, and on the way we F-et Judge Winter, also Captain Brown, commander of *he Peter Mitchell, who invited us to cruiso with hin . This last polite offer we were compelled to decline, as it was necessary that we should return to Montreal early in September. After examining tho blasting operations for the removal of obstructions to the entrance of the harbour, wo endeavoured to do a little shallow-water dredging in one of the ship's boats, but with very little success. We got three hauls in about seven fathoms water. The first brough^i «p a lot of sea-weed only"; the second a small crab (Cancer irroratuaj, and fov.r common species of shells (Tellina tencra, Niissa trivittai^x, Lacuna vincta, and Margarita helicina J ; and the thii-d and last, nothing at all, A-shoi-e again in the evening. Sunday, 25th August. — Left Pleasant Bay at 6. i5 a.m,, with afresh northei'ly breeze blowing and a heavy sea on. Anchored between Grindstone and Allright Islands at 10.30 .i.m. Spent a few hours in the evening on Grindstone Island. Monday, 26th August — -Set sail at 4 a.m. The whole day w-ja hot, with little or no wind. By seven in the evening we had made only twenty miles. Cflr>e Breton was visible in the distance about 4 p.m. The greate?; ^^art of the afternoon was employe.! iu using Jhe to wing-net on the surface, withniort)suceriment8 on some ot the living medusae caught during the day, and found them to emit a palish phosphorescence in the dark when touched. The light on the new lighthouse at the Bird Bock was plainly visible at 9 p.m. ■ Tuesday, 27th August. — At 9 a.m , the dreJge was thrown over in a place which I had long wished to explore carefully. Circumstances, however, were again unfavourable. The sea was so high and the breeze so fresh, that the dredge had to he hauled up befora it had been down two hours. Hnd the sea been quite smooth and the wind light, I should have preferred to let it scrape for at least four. Dj-edge A.'No. 16, and last, 318" fathoms — Hack mitfl, with angular and rounded stones ; between the east end of Anti> cost) and the Bird Rocks. Rather more than a bucketful of m\id and sevei-al large stones came lip in this haul. The specimens visible to the naked eye wei-e a few Trilocuiinaif nearly a quarter of an inch wide, two or three worms, one shrimp, fmd 9.n. Aniphipod ; ono brittle star (AmphiuraJ a small example of the same coral as the one previously collected, and nine species of sbells. These last are just the sama as had been collect^ before in from 100 to 200 fathoms. A portion of this mud has been examined micros* copically, witn the following results: — Concave discs of a large Coadnodiicut we frequent ; foraminifwa veiy^abundant and^ interesting ; jiolycysjkina starce, and|none new f X ' ■ J li lo me; a few $ix-nii/iil sjvin^o sMictil*-^ liidicatJng the oxi&teuce of tlie HexactruelUUse in our waterg; and two or tlii-tie ishells of a pteropod, J/eteyofusua balca. From such a hurried attempt at an examinRtion of the deepest spot in the (iulf, with such unpropittouR weather, not much was to be expected ; nor is to be wondered at that the results weie so oomparativclj barron. To got a fair idea of the animal life existing at this depth, it would be necessary to stay on the ground for at least a week, supposing the weather to be favourable all the time. In the afternoon the bi-eoze increased, and th"? sea was very heavy. After tlie di-edge was hauled in, we at o.ice made for Gasp6 Basin, and at eight o'clock in the evening the day's run wav. tifty-aix miles. About 8.30 p.m. it began to rain, and rained heavily all night. Wednesday, 28th August. — Still making for Caspd Basin. The wind had changed from S.-W. to N.-E. During the greater part of the day there v/as a stiff breeze blowing, with a heavy sea on ; but towards sunset the weather changed. Inside Cape Gasp^ about 7 p.m but as the wind was dead ahead after we had rounded Point Peter, little progress was made for some hours. "^ Thursday, 29th August — Ashoro :n Gaspe Basin all day, waiting for the up steam- ship. In the afternoon a telegram was received (and next morning a letter) from Captain Brown, R.N., commander of the Goveuiment schooner, /'".ter Mitchell, pressing us to cruise with him for another fortnight. Ifc 'va.s necessary, however, that we should both be back in Montreal early in September, if possible on the Ist. Added to this, all the bags of* the dredges had b«en cut to pieces, and our stock of ilcohuland bottles was exhausted. As we could not make up these doficiences in Gaspc, or get fresh supplies, further cruising would have been uselessj even if M'e could have spared the time. We were accordingly, with great reluctance, compelled to decline Captain Browne's polite and kindly invitation. Friday, 30th August. — The "teamship Miramichi being late, we did not leave Gasp6 Basin until an early hour in the .norning. Ai'rived in Quebec on Sunt'ay forenoon, so that we were unable to get homo before Tuesday, 3i-d September. From the above condensed narrative of our proceedings since we left Montreal, it iiiay be readily seen that iwiy thing like systematic dredging was impracticable. Wherever a cast was possible, w^ availed ourselfof tl •• opportunity, thinking it was better to try an unproioising locality than to do nothing at all. When no dredging could be done, and the weather permitted, tovingnets were almost invariably usee'. Circumstance's were so much against us the whole time, that it was only the utmost pei-severance and a determi- nation to leave no effort untried that prevented the expedition from bacoming a total failure. Owing to the want of room on her deck, the Stella Maris is not nearly so well vuited for dredging operations as La Canadienne or the Peter Alitchdl ; and, in addition to this, she was unusually short-handed while we were on board. , . '.,, ,:..,>";,!:/.:' r.iV tl..- ■^t ■ «•#;.;;! ■i#|;i?»v ■??*■• JMti' ' Part IT, <'J ProvUional Summary q/ the Zoological reattlta oj the Exptdiiion In order to be able to name the various specimens collected with any degree ct certainty, it is necessary to have access to collections and books which are not to be met with in Montreal or in any other city of the Dominion, i v'scriptioi^ of not a few of the Canadian marine invertebrates are to be found only in Norwegian, Swedish,or German scien- tific journals, some of which I have bsen unable to see. What would have been still mc.'^ useful, viz. a correctly-name, Although large numbers of these interesting objects woi-e collected, especially from the 313 fathoms' locality, not many novel forms have aa yet been observed among thein. The following are the most interesting of the species, or varieties, not enumerated in Mr. G. M. Dawson's paper on the St. Lawrence Fcitiminifara : — Marrfinulina aptnoaa^ M. Bars/ Criatdlaria ci'epidula, Boltvina punctata, Nonwnina umbUicatula, Trocham- minn incerta, Valvulina Austriaea, Trihcnlina trigonula. Yery'hvr, if any, truly abyssal forms (such as Glohigerina injlata and Pulvinulina Michdiniana and elegans) have as yet bodix taken in the St. lAwrence. According to Sars, however, some of these are found in SOO fathoms, off the coast of Korway. Pohjoyatiiia. • Only a few specimens of this gi'oup o'' animals were collected, and these are exactly the same species as those dredged last year. ., Spovge?, Quite a large number of species of sponges were procured, and from all depth.s. Among these ai-e a simply pinnate sponge witli an internal axis of siliciouH spicules, possibly belonging probably to the genus Cfiondrocladm. Another, of which only fragments were obtained, has true six-rayed spicules, and belongs to the division Hexao- tanellidce of Dr. Oscar Schmidt. About fifx«en cr twenty apeeiea were collected, soiiie of them of considerable size. All the families of sponges have now been found in the (Julf, except that which includes those which are of the most commercial value, and which are ^«ogeth( / devoid of spicules. The deep-water species collected are of special intereist, .Uydrozoa. A portion of the Hydrozoa collected in 1871 and 1872 have been microscopically examined, and the following species have been recognized so far : — {Athecata.) Corym pvtilla — Gaertner. TuMaria indivifg, — Linn. , lary xi — Ellis and Sol. Tliecaphora.) OUHo'-Twc Sp. Campauularia volubUi$ — Lin n. „ verticilkita — Linn. *£il^f^ »/heJ>eoM~>Sars., var. Saiackt (QrammMia) a&Mfmci-^avM» ffakcium hmecinum, — Linn. „ robustum — Venill. „ muricatum — Ellis and Sol. SeHularella polyzonias — Linn. „ nigosa — Linn. Sertularia abietina — Linn. fdicula — Ellis and Sol. argentea—FjWm and Sol. „ t'lipresaina — Linn. TImiaria thuja — Linn. „ articulata — Pallas. Aghwfhoema mf/riophyUitm (fJ-^lAax^ m n ■^ 1«J >4»'r'> Aetinozoa, "SV,J fi»-, . t .■ ' t».',,, i^:: .f .*-4i .t j;.j^*i* C|. . 4*' '■ S'.,'<. Besides th« two common sea anemones {Metru'ium marffinatuni and Urtietna cratsicomis), Professor Yerrill recognizes two species new to the St. Lawrence among the sptrcimens collected last summer. One is Urticina digitata (MuUei*), and the oA&e an ./I c^tno^V, apparently distinct from il.jf a va of Koren and Danielssen. The Alcyoniums of the Qulf require a careful study. There are apparmtlj thrae ipecies among those obtained in 1872, one of which is A. rubiforme, Ehr. By far the most interesting a*nong the specimens collected are two oxamples of <• true coral. These were taken in *wo localities, about' 150 miles apai't — one in 200, the other in 313 fathoms. Although a^veral species of coral are known from Norwegian seas, no members of this group have hitherto been recorded from any locality on the American side of the Atlantic, north of the State of Massachusetts ; and not only so, but the St. Lawrence coral (if it be in indigenous species) belongs to a division of this order, of which not a solitary example has been taken so far north on the Atlantic coast of America even as New York Bay. The tw:) specimens obtained, though more or less perfect, were dead, and in a very friable and brittle condition. They are cup corals, which, when living, were tenanted each by a single poiypite. Although they obviously belong to the family Turbinolidse, the books at my disposal were insufficient even to name the gemis to which they should be referred. They are so unlike any arctic or boieal corals of which I have seen eithe<* specimens or figures, and Lave such a tropical or sub-tropical aspect, that at the time they were dredged I thought they might be specimens brought by ships in ballast. Professor Verrill (to whom I sent one of these corals) Avrites me that it is an undescribed species of Flabellum, and adds that he thinks that the specimens are fossil. The lattisr hypothesis I think very improbable, as there are no older tertiary or creta- ceous deposits in Canada from which such fo.<3sils could have been washed out. In 200 fathoms, off Cape Rosier, about fifteen living examples of a Virgularia ("Sea Bush") were collected. Tlie genus was tiien new to America, but other examples have been since taken by Dr. Packard on the St. George'fs Bank. At first, Professor Venill and myself thought the St. Lawrence Virgularia a dwarf and depaupemted variety of the £uro])eaii V. mirabilis ; but the former now refers it to Kolliker's V. Lyvngmanni, a species previou«»ly known only from the Azoi-es. The same gentleman cOnsidei's the Canadian Pennatula to be a well-marked variety of the Pennatula acuhaUi of Dunielssen. Tliis latter he regards as specifically distinct from P. Phosphorea, but Kollike?; is of a different opinion ; so that, after all, the at. Lawrence Sea Pen may be one of the many varieties of the common European species. My specimens pi-esent such vai'iable characters that the latter view seems by no means improbable. By far the larger number of examples obtained in 1872 were cut in two by the scraper of the dredge, so that Only the upper halves of the coenosarc were found in the bag. This strengthens the idea that these sea pens Uv« with the naked portion of the stem buried in the deep sea mud. ^^P^'k Echinodermata, ■ ■**{ Nine specimens of Schizaater fragUi$ were taken in deep water. Aateriaa Glroenlknd- iaua Steenstrup occuri-ed in several localities, and pK^ratter vulitaris in two. An undeter- mined s]>eoies of Eitpyrgus (new to science, ^c?e Verrill,) was di-edged ii} fifty-six fath(Hira, off Bonaventuve Island. The sea cucumbers (Holotliurians), collected in shallow water off Cape Rosier, are the largest I liave seen from the seas of the Dominion. The following is as complete a list as is at present possible of the echinodermata of the Gulf of St. Law- rence, north of the Bay of Chaleurs. Those to which an asterisk is affixed were found "by Dr. Packard, and not by myself : — *A$tropIii/ion eucnemis. — Mull and Trosch. „ Agassizii — Stimps. OphMoaiUha ajdmUoaa — Mull and TrcMch. Oj)hiophoUs aculeaia. — Mull. Amphiura (neai* to Boreali«, Sai-s, Jidt Venall).-.^j.^,^j,^:,.;^j,,^y4g^^^.j^^^ *9*:V M i m fc13 jiR OphioylypJM Sar$U. — Lutkea. >, robusla. — Ayres. „ nodo$a.^^Latken. Ctenodisciis eriapatua. — Retzitis. Pteraaler m«/i if^ft '^jr'tA • ' ■- : A- ■" i?\ AnneUda, Dr. W. C. Mcintosh writes to me as follows, respecting the coUecticn of marine worms made in 1871 : — " In No. 15, off Gape Rosier lighthouse;, in 125 fathoms, are the followin/9; : — Trophonia plumoaa. — Mull. SabelUi iMvonia. — Savigny. Amphipoi'ua (Xemertean) — fragment ' Eunoa nodoaa.- — Sars. Epheaia gracllia. — Rathke. Nothria conchylega. — Sars. Ammot)ypane aulogaater. — Rathke. " A battle, mai-ked ' various localities to the south, noi-th, and east of Anticosti,' in from 100 to 112 fathoms contains : — 1 Goniada nviculata. — QSrsteil. Thelepua circinatna. — Fabr. Ammotrypane aulo'jaater. Praxilla gracilis. — Sars. Ampfnctene auricoma. — Muller (tube). 2'rophonia phtmoaa. '.' Tereb«Uid^b? " In No. T-a^e three species agi'eeing with the foi-egoing. In No. 14, 200 fathoms," south of Anolcosti, Lumbrinereia fragilia, MuUer, occurred. Idl addition, there is a specimen of a small Balaivogloasxia, while a Lepidoiwtua, Nepihya, Maldane, Praxilla, and Kotlifia need determination. It is interesting to find many ot oar old (Shetland) friends on your side of the Atlantic. All the specimens named are comparatively comuiot;, but they are none the less valuable on this account, since they give us information about the distribution of the Annelida, a subject requiring much light." Another letter, received afbor the 1872 collection had come to hand, contains some general comments on the specimens, as follows : — " I find your collection of this year very much more valuable than that of the previous one. The species are more numerous, the specimens in bettor condition, and the rarities more abundant. This is all I can tell you at present, as I have done nothing further than group the animals according to their .<3;enera. I shaU write you when I have had time to finish them." Two s{)ecies belonging to a group of worms (Sipunculids), formerly i-egarded as aberrant members of the sea cucumber family, wera collected in three localities. One of these is Pltaacoloaoma boreolia. Kef. (taken also from St Ueorge's Lank, in 110 fathoms), and the other "is probably P. (Eratedtii, Kef., bnt may b© new." — (Verrill.) Cruatacea. The crustaceans collected this year are very numerous, both in genera and species, and many of them are of considerable interest. A number of difficult and critical species hare bee^ determined for me by Mr. S. J. Smith. *» To prevent repetition, an asterisk is prefixed to each of these. The microscopic forms, Copepods and Entomostraca, have not y«t been «xMnined. The following Is a list of those which have been identified, so far >— s* i- of marine s, are the Dt --n \jitico«ti,' :>{.«» - ■« ; /i ; K •_ fatlioms, tiere is a mllfi, and d) friends iiuou, but about the received » on the Lttble than in bet^r as I hare write you of ■worms ttily, -were also from Kef., but .> : ..'."'<_ ■, ■ ■.-*■■■•■ Cancer irrorattia, Sara (r=iJ. Sayii, Gould ; not C. Borealie: VerriU). — The common crab of the Gulf. ' Hyas coarctata. Leach. — Common. A favourite morsel with cod. Hycta aranea, Linn. — Rare. ' Chionoccetea opilio, Fabr. — Frequent. r ; v.i *Lup •is, » I Taken in 1871, but not iu 1872. * „ polaria, Pandalua annulicomia, Leach. — Common in many places. (Amphipoda.J The ami gement adopted in this group is that given in Axel Boeck's Crustacea amphipoda borealia et artica, published in the Forhandlingar i Videnskabs-Selskabet i Christiania for 1870- •^Ilyperia, sp. (youn,g — Towing-net. ^Stegocephalaa ampulla, Bell. (Phip])s, sp.) — A. 8. *' We had one ftrom St. George's Bank." (Smith) ^PJioxua Kroyer i, Stimpson (not of Bate). — Only one example. . i '^Eusirua cuapidatua, Kroyei*. — " Not known south of Greenland before." — (Smith.) ^ Tntopia aculeatua, Boeck. (Lepechin sp.) — In fifty-six fathoms, off Bonaventure Island — a local but apparently - gregarious species. "We had it from the Banks this summer sparingly." (Smith.) *Acaiithozo7i6 cuapidata, Boeck. (Lepechin sp.) — One example, from seventy-fire to eighty fathoms, off Cape Bosiei' — rare. " Not uncommon in the Bay of Fundy." Smith. , j *IIplmeria, comigera 1 Boeck. (Fabricius, sp.) — Frequent, and of large sire. ^Calliopitia Icemuacultia, Boeck. — ^Towing-net. ^Melita dentata, Boeck. (Kroye?, sp.) — One specimen. " Common in the Bay of Fundy." (Smith.) *Byblia Gaimardii, Boeck. (Kroyer, sp.) — Five individuals of this species iren taken in sixty fathoms, sand, off Bonaventure Island. " Common in the Bey of Fundy." (Smith.) . ts uf^in Caprella aeptentrionalia, Kroyer. — Abundant among sea weed, oh a stcrhf bott. Verruemia, Linn., Smitt.) Defrancia lucernaria, Sars. ^. ^^*^^ i ^fj^i vlw '^'-f^^^^ir^^^^tnifJL .i:^^^^^^tft^0^ t/^^^i-Y (Ctenoatomata.) I....- iJ^nxjt ed Bev .^ ; views. ; quently icularly generic e yet to __ ete, not (Smitt.) « Alcyowdvwm, gdatvnomm, Fallaa Tunicata. Ten species of these curious moUuscoids were collected, of •which six are simple and four are compound forms. Most of these have b«en examined by Professor Verrill, who has identified all those to which an asterisk is prefixed. The simple species are : — BoUenia clavatat Ffj live in shallow wator in the summer and retire to deeper places in winter. As it is not possible to dredge at this soason, we cannot tell whether ijuoh is the case or not. The evidence in our possession is ui present insufficient to shew more than that a certain amount of food for cod does imq\u;stionably exist in the greatts'i: depths. The dates at which cod spawn vary much in different seasons and at difierent places. No kind of animal food seems to come amiss to this fish. It devours greedily herring, capelin, mackerel, lance, squids, crustaceans, moJlusca, brittle stars,and even, as Dr.Eortin and others ussure me, young individuals of its own species. After the spawning season is over, the adult cod (the " mother fish " of the fishermen) congregate mostly on banks, where they devour crustaceans, molluscs, &c. The young ilsh, on the oth( r hand, live and feed in shallow water, near the shore. The cod which feed on banks, take only, or almost only, fuU-yrown specimens of crabs, shells, &c, and leave immature ones. As these fish rarely visit the si' me feeding ground two years in succession, a constant supply of food is thus ensured. The natural enenues of the cod are, fortunately, not very numerous, nor do they seem to affect the value of the fisheries in an appreciable way. The grampus and the various kinds of seal, the osprey, bald eagle, and various sea birds, together with sharks and some other larga fishes, imdoubtedly destroy great numbers ot cod. Far more to be feared than these are the results which can hai-dly fail to ensue from a wasteful and improvident system of fishing. The practice of manuring the gromid with capelin, herrings, &c. (and doubtless often with young cod also), has often been complained of : it should be discouraged and if possible put a stop to. From the Appendices to the last Report of the Fisheries branch of this Department, I learn that in the year ending 30th June, 1871, 1,457 barrels of herring, 7,848 of capelin, and 260 of smelts, were used as manure ! In Gaspe Bay, complaints have often been made in my hearing of the use of seines along shore (by Americans), for the purpose of catching mackerel or bait. Large quan- tities of young cod ai-e said to be caught in these seines with the mackerel, and the former are thrown away as useless. It seems desirable to prevent, as far as possibhj, the capture of cod of a size too small to be of any value for food. Crews of United States' scliooners, &c., fishing outside the three-mile limit, clean and salt the fish caught on board their vessels, and almost invariably throw the ofllil overboard upon the fishing grounds. It is said that this latter proceeding has an injui'ious effect, and that it tends to drive the cod away from its spawning grounds. This, however, may be local prejudice merely ; and in justice to \h.Q Amdricans it must be added, that the law does not, at present, allow LjH^^ li n m li , :ili 2d them to clean and prepare theii* fiah ashore. If it is illegal to throw the offal overboard, as I have been informed is the case, wJiut else are they to do 1 The utilization of cod-uffal is a matter of considerable importance to the residents alorig our sea coast. If the offensive smell could be cheaply and easily removed, a valuable manure would always bo available for agriodtiwal purposes. Many methods for effecting this have been devised, and I venture to Kiiggesfc that eartli is well known to be one of the best deodorizers. In many phices on the north shore of the St. Lawrence, visited by me in 1871, the stench from decomposing fish offal spread \ipon the fields with no previous preparation ^as almost intolerable. As might have been expected, many cases of fever, etc., were reported at these stations,* which Commander Lavoie attributed wholly to the noisome effluvia of this primitive manure. Many intestinal woi'ms are to lie found in the stomachs of cod ; and as pigs feed largely upon fish-offal, and pork is the ])rincipal meat consumed alonjj the coast, it is easy to see that diseases may arise in this way. With regard to the halibut fishery I have very little practical knowledge. Dr. Storer, in his excellent memoir on Jie fishes of Massachusetts, states it as his opinion that the American halibut is identical with the European species, the Hippoijlosaus vulgaria of Fleming. Later writers, however, on both sides of the Atlantic, think differently on this point. Dr. Gunther descriV)es the Canadian fi.sh as a distinct and new species, to which he gives the name Hippoglossua Groenlandiciis. He says that the halibut of Europe " has the lateral line with a strong curve above the pectoral, the depth of the curve being one- fourth its width." In the Canadian species, according to the same writer, " the lateral line descends gently in an oblique straight line above the pectoral, and is not curved." Professor Theodore Gill, in a papq;i' on the fishes of the Bay of Fundy (published in the Canadian Naturalist, vol. ii., page 257), gives the name Ilippoglosaus Americamis to the St. Lawrence halibut. In summer, this species appears to feed along the bottom in shallow water ; and in winter it probably retires to the daepest places it can find. Few Canadians seem to engage in the halibut fishery : it appears to be at present mainly prosecuted by Americans. In the Montreal retail market, halibut fetches a somewhat high price, ranging from 13 to 20 cents per pound. it has never been my good fortune to visit any station along the coast where either or mackerel is cured for the market ; nor have 1 been able to examine tlio contents of the stomachs of either. Many American naturalists, such as Lesueur, Storer, and others, regard the American herring as a distinct species from the European fish. Dr. Gunther and Professor Rein- hardt are of a different opinion, and can see no essential diff>ri,nce between the two so-called species. Dr. Gunther also states that all the whitebait he has seen are young herrings. I am aware that this l-vtter statement has been called in question, but, in my judgment, it has not been disproved. If, then, the American and the European herring are conspecific, and whitebait are young herring (both of which Dr. Gunther asserts to be the case), it follows that, in summer, whitebait must be abundant in the Gulf of St. Law- rence. There seems to be no reason why whitebait dinners should not be as feasible at Tadousac,(fec. as they are at Richmond, and other places of resort in or near London. The so-called " sardines " of the Lower St. Lawrence are young herrings. The true sardine of the Meditermnean (which appears to be the same sper^ies as the pilchard of Cornwall) has not yet, so far as I know, been fourd in America. In Commander Lavoie's report of the cruise of La Canadienne for 1871, it is stated that large quantities of herring are taken at the Magdalen Islands by means of the seine, xhe following passage is quoted from a lecture on the herring fishery, by M. A. Warren, Esq., the owner of a large fishing establishment on the Labrador coast : — " Of late years, herring seines have been much used on the Labrador coast, almost entirely superseding the use of nets, to the manifest injury of the fithing population." The common mackerel of our coast is probably the Scomber sco/tibrus of Linnaeus, of whioh*the a^. vemalis of Mitchell appears to be a synonym. If Dr. Gunther's view be the correct one, the mackerel of Canada and New England ib the same as that of Northern herring n Europe. Mr. Putnam nays that " the northern limit of the mackerel is the Strait of Belle Tsle;" while, according to Professor Reinhardt, the cod, halibut, and herring are found in Greenland, but the mackerel is not. Tn the European Hpecies there i.s no air-bladder. Like the cod, the mackerel is very voracious, and seems to take readily all kinds of animal food. Besides devourini:; small fishes of various kinds, like the heiring it feeds also upon such marine animals its float oti or n