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HARVARD UNIVERSITY 


er 


LIBRARY 
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iB RR GY 
SCOume 200k 


HL RY ae FOR SCOTLAND 
- Being f for the Year 1905, 


IN THREE PARTS. 


Parr L—GENERAL REPORT. — 
Part IL,—REPORT ON SALMON FISHER 
| Pare TI. —SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS. 


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TWENTY-FOURTH 
eee AL: REPO R.-T 


OF THE 


FISHERY BOARD FOR SCOTLAND, 


Being for the Year 1905. 


IN THREE PARTS. 


Part I.—GENERAL REPORT. 
Part II.—REPORT ON SALMON FISHERIKS. 
Part IIJ,—SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS. 


PART I].—REPORT ON SALMON FISHERIES. 


Presented to both houses of Parliament by Command of this Majesty. 


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GLASGOW: 
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eth: s 


TABLE OF CONTENTS. 


TWENTY-FOURTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE FISHERY 


BOARD FOR SCOTLAND. 


Table of Weights of Salmon carried by Scottish Railways and 
Steamships, 

Curves showing Sonne ae the Tons of Salmon ee by ‘Seattish 
Railways and Steamships, 

Reports from District Fishery Boards Se mee. 

Rentals of Districts, 

Table of Boxes of Salmon sent to Eilingepate from iGcotland: years 
1884 to 1903 inclusive, showing comparison of two periods of ten 
years, and of last two years, 

Table of Boxes of Scottish Salmon sent to Bilt eepare rate all 
sources during 1905, : ; 

Inspections during 1905, 

Results of Investigations by Salmon epi 

Autumn Migration of Smolts in Scotland, 

Rearing of Smolts in Sea-water Pond, 

Hatching of Fry from Smolt Ova, 

Captures of Salmon at Sea by Trawlers, 

“The White Spot” affecting Salmon in Island of Saree 

Salmon Sealed to secure Legitimate Sale in Close Time, 

Rateable Value of Salmon Fishery Districts, . 

Annual Close Times, 

Chairmen and Clerks of District Bishery Beards 

Annual Report of Mr. W. L. Calderwood, Inspector of ‘Gaiman 

Fisheries for Scotland, and Appendices (see Repannte Table of 
Contents), ; : . DM ° . 


PAGE 
a 
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vii 
Vill 


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’ mits, 


AC 


TWENTY-FOURTH ANNUAL REPORT. 


TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE 
eerie 2S t NC oheAs Rj MP... 


His Majesty's Secretary for Scotland. 


OFFICE OF THE FisHERY Boarp 
FOR SCOTLAND, 
EpInburGa, 26th May 1906. 


SIR, 


In continuation of our Twenty-fourth Annual Report 
we have the honour to submit— 


PART Il.—REPORT ON SALMON FISHERIES. 


The weight of Salmon carried by Scottish Railways and 
Steamships during the fishing season 1905 exceeds that reported 
for season 1904 by 183 tons, and exceeds the last quinquennial 
average by 246 tons. The total is 2280 tons. From the following 
Table, which shows the actual weights in the four divisions of the 
coast usually adopted, and more clearly from the chart of curves 
also given, it will be seen that this satisfactory improvement is 
confined to the East Coast in the division of Berwick to Cairnbulg 
Point at the entrance to the Moray Firth :— 


G61) ST | 088's | 02 I OL =| 260)" * og 
rat sl Zlt 198 é p 96E |° ° * “taprog 
aya 04 MOSSBLY 
TZ ; él The | 06 erie 16% *  — ‘*moSsepy 
04 yim odeo 
FG 9 80L | 8% g [ S9L | UIA odvp 04 
| JULIO = Synquirwp 
70 . I SELL] 212 j LI Iss | ° * ‘qulog sinq 
-ULIBD 0} YOIM.LOG 
‘sq7T | ‘sa® | *symg] ‘suoy} ‘sa’T | “si | 87419] ‘sual, 
; “JOLIYSTG 
"YU S10 M—COGBL “‘IUSIOM—FOGBL 
8 a «| «OO 6L | FOC] 9S | & 8 LOO'ZT-1Z |S OL | TIlsyz j $I =| 980% g IT |.98e'r 3 COO joe Se Se Tan, 
eee ee = 7a" eae ee 
rS 61 I 9 esl | 3% mee OSL LE € &1 LST | 1% I $I 962 i PL 181 I SI CEs ee ha “1epi0g 
2 oy 0} MOSSEL 
<7 ¢ I "" hque 1-01 rae 0 1S 0 8 ose | OT g 8 60 T ¢L 68s garner larca cog |* * * ‘MOSssepy 
= 0} UCLA adeg 
S LT g Or LEL 3 el 192 | 21 T g 9SL | &% g 81 OL r 689 fe ra A SCL | ‘yjVIy edeg 09 
S quyod S[NqUAULeDO 
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3 -UUBO OJ YOLA\.1og 
—R meee a oe Maes | See ee ae ee 
§ "sqq | ‘sad |'squQ|*suoy,] “sat | ‘st® |'s3mo | ‘suor} ‘sary | “su® |'sqg | *suory ‘sat | “s1® |'s419 | ‘suoy, Re "S4M9 | “SUOT, *sIQ) | ‘SJ.MQ | ‘SUOT, 
= std *‘JOLUYSIG 
S “JUSIOM O8R.I0AV "1519 M—E061 ‘44319 M—GO6I “qUst9M—LO6T ‘34919 A—OO061 “40510 M—6681 
& LL 
RS | | | 
9 ea Be TLL°S | 96 : i LILIES é sl | bEL‘'Z | ST 3 | ¢ S136 4% 3 if 626F I Il Leb s| * *  *[eq0 J, 
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y j g 096 | 06 ; Z 68I | IZ ieainer i Glee pls (= |) ew te 666 | LT I * | 988 9 gi. t= tepiloy 
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1a I L sor JT j St. | gee IT Penieare TCOLG wed | € re Pp | OL : L 9L¢ g &I TLp |° ° * ‘MOgsupy 
| | 0} IIBIM edu 
9 g LI |006 | 02 j or. zie he lee, | LEA Ss ae Cte LEG Pe GE. | CPR Le é é 662 | ‘UPVIWA edvD oy 
| | WUlog STUQUATED 
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| | | -WILBD OF YOIMIOG 
"sary | “sad [samo ‘SUOL | ‘SQ | “SIO | 'S}MO | 'SUOT FT ‘sq'T | ‘sid “SqaO | “suOL | ‘SGT | “‘SId ‘S]M0 | ‘SUOL| ‘SQ | ‘sid |*s9M9 guog ‘sqrt | “SIO "SYMO | ‘SUOT, | 
7 easy my ; ce “yOLAqSICl 
‘QYUSIaM WSBloAy "14510 M—8681 "qUs1IOM—LO8T ‘U5TaM—968T "VUSIeM—C68T ‘1519 M—F68T 


‘sdrysurveyg puv skvmjlvy Ystyqgoog Aq potted WOUITLS JO SYSIOA\ OY} SUIMOYS ATIAV], 


CURVES SHOWING APPROXIMATELY THE TONS OF SALMON CARRIED BY 


SCOTTISH RAILWAYS & STEAMSHIPS SINCE 1894. 


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Report on Saimon Fisherves. vii 


The reports from District Fishery Boards, and others, received Leiber 
by the Inspector of Salmon Fisheries, and included in Appendix ee 
to Mr. Calderwood’s Report, show further that on the Hast 
Coast the improvement recorded is the result of successful fishing 
by means of bag nets on the coast. This branch of the Scottish 
salmon industry is now chiefly relied upon for the supply of 
fish to the market. The dry summer of 1905 no doubt contributed 
to the success of the fixed net fishing, since, through the lowness of 
many of the rivers, there was no great inducement for fish to 
ascend from the sea. For the same reason the sweep-net fishing in 
the estuaries, and the rod fishings in the rivers, are, for the most 
part, reported as below the average. In a river of large volume like 
the Tay the influence of the dry season was apparently less felt. 
Here the sweep-net fishing is reported as having been above the 
average, no very great success having been noticed in the fishings 
of the coast of the district. In the Moray Firth the sea nets, with 
the exception of those in the Deveron and Findhorn districts, are 
reported as above the average. The Deveron results are reported as 
being for all methods of fishing much below the average ; the district 
appears to be in a very backward state owing largely to peculiar 
physical conditions, to which the Inspector makes special reference 
in his report. ‘There are now no sea nets fished on the east coast 
of Sutherland, but the nets on the north coast maintained a good 
average. In the West Highlands the fishings of Skye and the 
neighbourhood are reported as having been very poor in 1905. In 
the Clyde area good reports come from the Doon district, but from 
other Clyde districts and from the Cree, Dee, and Annan, in the 
Solway, reports state that the netting was below the average. 
With regard to angling it may be said in general that, while the 
low water conditions already referred to prevented good results 
being obtained in very many excellent localities, rivers of large 
volume, such as the Tay, Dee, and Beauly, maintained their high 
reputations. In Sutherland, where, as reported last year, the 
system of storing the head waters against the advent of dry summer 
conditions has been adopted by the Helmsdale tenants, the success 
of this system was again fully borne out. The water stored above 
the Badanloch dam was sufficient to keep the river in good ply all 
through the summer. ‘The Helmsdale has always been a good 
spring river, but the summer fishing was considered practically 
valueless. The results of the storing and control of the head water 
seem to be that the spring angling has, if possible, improved, over 
a thousand spring fish having been taken in the six beats below 
Kildonan, while in addition to this a good summer fishing has 
apparently developed. 

Since the date of our last Report a District Fishery Board has New District 
been created at Thurso to regulate the fisheries of the Thurso river "Boars 
and sea coast. Sir J. G. Tollemache Sinclair of Ulbster, Bart., 
chairman. An alteration of the close time for rod fishing ts 
since been granted in this district. Arrangements are also almost 
completed for the formation of a District Board for the Bladenoch 
area in the Solway. 


Rentals of 
Districts. 


Boxes of 
Salmon 

sent to 
Billingsgate. 


vill Report on Salmon Fisheries. 


With regard to the rentals of the principal districts, the following 
brief statement is sufficient to show that the high standard 
previously referred to has been well maintained :— 


YEAR. Tweed, Tay. N. Esk. Dee. | Spey. 
1900, . ; ie 09,548 6.510 18°989 | y 
1901): ; : a 22,558 6,466 19,418 | 8,608 | 
1902, . 4 x 22,663 6,494 19,455 8,146 | 
1903, . ; ; 15,338 22,648 6,494 18,395 8,147 
1904, . ; : 15,439 23,099 6,494 19,078 7,996 
1905," . : -| 15,499 22,675 6,489 19,352 | 8,364 | 


The assessable rental of the East Coast fishery districts, exclusive 
of the Beauly and including a sum for East Sutherland which does 
not express the value, owing to the difficulty of separating angling 
from other sporting values, is now £107,771. In 1904 it was 
£106,691, in 1903 £104,815. 

While, as has been seen, the weight of Scottish salmon carried 
by train and steamer is greater than that for the last six years, the 
decrease in the number of boxes of salmon sent to Billingsgate 
continues. This decrease has previously been referred to as 
meaning simply that an increasing proportion of Scottish salmon 
is being sent to markets other than Billingsgate. As compared 
with the last quinquennial average, the figures for 1905 show a 
decrease of 2'792 boxes ; as compared with the figures for 1904, a 
decrease of 485 boxes. Totals are given in the following Table :— 


Total No. of Boxes, 
* Avange fon10 Yor tance Sd. ta ea 
rere ee. 
a ET Tk aitersias. os noes ont iy 
Total ay 1905, ae ; : : me ee 


The detailed Table, kindly furnished by the Fishmongers’ Com- 
pany, showing the supplies from all sources, and the average monthly 
prices, here follows, from which it will be noticed that, in spite of 
the decrease of supplies above referred to, the number of salmon 
sent to London from Scotland still very largely exceeds the 
number sent from any other source :— : 

| TABLE. 


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“YTUO IT 


x Report on Salmon Fisheries. 


The inspections made in 1905, which are reported upon 
separately by Mr. Calderwood, were of the Bladenoch, Girvan, 
Doon, Ayr, Loch Lomond and River Leven, and Deveron Districts. 

In order to obtain fuller information as to the migratory habits 
of the salmon, its increase in length and weight, and the 
relative times spent in fresh and salt water, the marking of fish, by 
the attachment of a silver label to the dorsal fin, has been 
continued since 1896. In the three reports which have been made 
by Mr. Calderwood on these investigations, particulars of 277 
recaptured fish are given (20th, 22nd, and 24th Annual Reports). 
The greatest number of these are from the Spey (115) and the Tay 
(77), but important results have also been obtained from fish 
marked in the Deveron, Kyle of Sutherland, Brora, Helmsdale, 
Thurso, and Annan. At the present juncture it may be profitable 
to attempt a brief summary of the results obtained. 

(1) Return of Fish to their own Rivers—The great majority of 
river recaptures confirm the belief that the salmon after visiting 
the sea returns to its own river. The exceptions to this rule 
represent about 8? per cent. 

(2) Movements of Fish along the Coast.—Recaptures in sea nets 
on the North and East Coasts, and in rivers other than those in 
which the fish were marked, seem to indicate that, when fish 
forsake their own rivers, they travel for the most part in an 
easterly and southerly direction, as from the Moray Firth to the 
neighbourhood of Aberdeen (vide Chart in Appendix IL. infra). 

(3) Descent of Kelis ——In small streams descent is more rapid than 
in large rivers. In the Tay, the river of greatest volume, grilse of 
both sexes descend at once after spawning; male salmon kelts 
descend more rapidly than females, and the latter, especially when 
large fish, may take as long as three months to descend forty miles 
of river. Kelts of both sexes frequently remain for some time in 
brackish water, and, after rapid descent, may even occasionally 
re-ascend to fresh water. 

(4) The Time of Return from the Sea.—A two-fold habit of short 
and long periods of marine sojourn exists. Young kelts, of uniform 
class, marked in January or February, return as clean salmon 
in the summer or autumn of the same year, or as spring fish of the 
year succeeding. The same two-fold habit continues throughout 
the life of the adult salmon. This habit does not imply two dis- 
tinct strains of fish. The length of time spent in the sea is subject 
to great variation. The grilse stage is passed in the sea by many 
fish. Some salmon spawn in consecutive breeding seasons, many at 
longer intervals. Throughout each winter a considerable proportion 
of clean salmon remain in the sea. 

(5) Increase in Weight—Fish marked as kelts and recaptured 
as clean salmon show great variation in growth and increase of 
weight. This is chiefly influenced by the length of time spent in 
the sea, but also to some extent by locality. A grilse kelt may 
double its weight in 88 days or longer. A Tay kelt of 6 lbs., 
remaining in the sea during the next spawning season, may enter 
the Tay, after fourteen months, as a spring salmon of 19 lbs., 
having increased to fully three times its kelt weight. A record 


Report on Salmon Fisheries. xi 


of minimum increase is exemplified by a clean Brora fish with an 
interval in the sea of only 108 days, and an increase of 2 lbs. 
Fish caught as kelts in two consecutive seasons (Brora and Deve- 
ron) have shown increases of only 4 lb. to 64 lbs. To estimate the 
condition properly it is necessary to classify records according as 
the fish show short or long periods of sojourn in the sea, and to 
select records from one river district alone; variation in weight is 
then found to be not great. The following examples are of Tay 
fish :-— 


Short Period. Long Period. 


Interval, Increase. Interval. Increase. 
176 days. 64 lbs 346 days. 9 Ibs 
Tor *,: SF Ol 4) 4, DS See 
1365 ;; 64 ,, 429) 55 123 , 
me |; Gis, 448, | anes 
200% 5 84 506.5: foe 


The average of the long period is here double that of the short 
period. Records from other districts show that while actual 
weights of Tay fish are apparently not equalled, the ratio of in- 
crease is similar. 

(6) Change of Weight of Clean Fish wm Rivers.—Clean fish 
marked on entering a river and recaptured during their ascent of 
fresh water show decrease in weights of from 0 to 2 lbs. 

(7) Habits of Spring Fish in ascending MRivers—When the 
temperature of the river water is low the ascent is not rapid, and 
on approaching swift and rough streams or small falls salmon 
usually pause till suitable thermal conditions obtain. Floods 
may cause fish to drop down stream. Fish marked a few miles up 
a river have, after such winter floods, been recaptured in the 
warmer estuary. 

Investigations have also been made by the Inspector, through Autumn 
the instrumentality ef the Tay Salmon Fisheries Company, as to rl 
the presence or absence of migrating smolts during the autumn . 
and winter months. <A report on this subject forms Appendix ITT. 

In Appendix IV. Mr. Calderwood records the attempts recently Natural 
made to rear salmon smolts in salt-water ponds; the artificial History Notes. 
spawning and hatching of ova taken from smolts; and occasional 
captures of salmon by fishing vessels out at sea. 

In Appendix V. reference is made to a singular ailment which 
affects salmon in the sea round the Outer Hebrides, locally named 
“The White Spot.” It appears to occur only at the height of 
summer and to disappear when, after rain, the salmon are able to 
ascend to the streams and lochs. 

In Appendix VI. is given a statement showing the number of 
salmon recently sealed by the officers of the Fishmongers’ Company 


xii Report on Salmon Fisheries. 


of London to secure the identification of fish which are taken out 
of cold stores for sale during the close season. 

The remaining three Appendices give—VIL., the Rateable Values 
of Scottish Salmon Fisheries; VIII., the Annual Close Times at 
present in force; and IX., a List of Chairmen and Clerks of 
District Fishery Boards. 


We have the honour to be, 


Sir, 
Your most obedient servants, 


ANGUS SUTHERLAND, Chawman. 
D. CRAWFORD, Deputy-Chairman. 
D’ARCY W. THOMPSON. 

Wok DUGUID: 

t, MILLOY. 

D. MEARNS. 

H. WATSON. 


WM. C. ROBERTSON, Secretary. 


SALMON FISHERIES. 


TWENTY-FOURTH ANNUAL REPORT 


OF 


THE INSPECTOR OF SALMON FISHERIES 
FOR SCOTLAND. 


TABLE OF CONTENTS. 


ANNUAL Report oF Mr. W. L. CAuperwoop, Inspector of 
Salmon Fisheries for Scotland, 
Inspections of the following Districts— 
Bladenoch, 
Girvan, 
Doon, . 
aE. 5. : 
Loch Lomond, 
Endrick, 
River Leven, 
Deveron, 


APPENDICES. 


Reports froin District Fishery Boards and others, 


. A Contribution to the Life-History of the Siinien—Heaae 


of Marking Fish (3rd paper), 


. Autumn and Winter Migration of Salchbn Sriolts. 
. Natural History Notes, 


Note on the Salmon Disease called “ The White spel ” occur- 
ring in the sea round Island of Lews, 


. The Sealing of Foreign and Home Salmon for Sale ie 


Close Season, 


. Rateable Values of Salat Wiehemes : 
. Annual Close Times applicable to Salmon pavers in Scouse: 
. List of Chairmen and Clerks of District Fishery Boards, 


24 


64 
70 
75 


78 


80 
81 
84 
87 


MR. CALDERWOOD’S REPORT. 


FISHERY BOARD FOR SCOTLAND, 
February 1906. 


I have the honour to submit my report of inspections during 
the year 1905. 


BLADENOCH. 


The river Bladenoch and its tributary the Tarff drain the 
extensive moorlands of Wigtownshire. No District Fishery Board 
has at any time been in existence in the interests of the salmon 
fisheries, and, perhaps as a consequence, considerable neglect of 
those fisheries has resulted. At and above Wigtown, and near 
Kirkcowan, on both Bladenoch and Tarff, the water of the river 
is used to create power for various works, and the lack of super- 
vision in the interests of the salmon fisheries is seen in the almost 
total disregard of the bye-laws of the Salmon Acts. I am 
informed that fish begin to ascend in March, but that the principal 
fishing is in the autumn. Netting is regularly carried on in the 
lowest reaches of the river, and an occasional shot of the net is 
made in the upper waters. The natural features of this river are 
such as to induce the conclusion that, given suitable attention and 
regulation, a material increase in the value of the fisheries would 
result. 

I inspected the district on Ist June. 

I first examined the dam-dyke and fish-pass at New Mills, about 
a mile above Wigtown, being accompanied by Mr. James Drew, 
Commissioner to Lord Galloway, and Mr. Andrew Thomson, Clerk of 
Works, also by gamekeepers representing the interests of Captain 
Hamilton, and Sir Wm. Dunbar, Bart., upper proprietors. 

The dam-dyke is 275 feet long and 3 feet 9 inches high, the down 
stream face being about 12 feet. The structure has the appearance 
of having been heightened, and is distinctly leaky in places. By 
reference to a report made in April 1896 by my predecessor, it 
appears that the dyke was carried away by floods in the winter of 
1894-95, and when rebuilt was not restored to quite the former 
height. The sill of the weir was, however, afterwards raised to the 
former height by the placing of a beam along the crest: This 
beam still remains, and, owing to the irregularity of the stone and 
cement work of the down stream face, is in places rather obstructive 
to the passage of salmon which may surmount the weir. No 
objections had, however, been made, so far as I am aware, to the 
abrupt nature of the sill of the weir. I had, however, been’ informed 


Appendices to Tiventy fom Annual Report 


that an obstruction existed in the fish-pass itself, concerning which 
objection had been raised. The pass itself I found to be a simple 
shoot faced with cement and containing two breaks placed in an al- 
ternate manner, as in the old-fashioned Smith’s and Cail’s structures. 
In breath it was 3 feet 114 inches at the sill, and in depth 1 foot | 
7 inches or thereby. The depth of the opening or slap at the sill 
of the weir had, however, been reduced by the introduction of a 
stout wooden board measuring 13 inches in height, so that the 
actual slap for the passage of water down the pass at the sill of the 
weir was 63 inches. This board had been introduced for the pur- 
pose, not of preventing the passage of salmon, but of securing to 
the adjoining meal mill a better supply of water. The actual result, 
from a salmon fishing point of view, was, in my opinion, to nullify 
the existence of the pass, because any fish trying to ascend the pass 
after entering and swimming through the unnecessarily rough and 
broken water, would be brought up against the perpendicular 
board. To leap the obstruction was impossible, there being no 
“take off” in a shallow pass of quick water. Such a fish would, 
in my opinion, be forced back to the foot of the weir, and any 
subsequent ascent, if successful, would be over the crest of the 
dam-dyke itself during times of moderate flood. The gradient of 
the down stream face is one in three. Without the board in the 
pass, and also, in my opinion, without the breaks in the pass, fish 
would not experience much difficulty in making the ascent, but if 
it is necessary to restrict the water flow, I consider that it would 
be better to construct a new pass than to resort to the present 
device of an obstructing board, or to level up the already too steep 
gradient of the existing pass. 

After discussing the matter with Mr. Drew, as representing the 
owner of the dam-dyke, I suggested that the rather higher level of 
river bed which forms the channel near the right bank should be 
utilised for the construction of the new pass. The gap in the sill 
of the dyke might with advantage be ciose to a large rock which 
protrudes through the substance of the weir near the right bank. 
The course of the pass would then curve slightly towards the centre 
of the channel in conformity with the bank below the dyke, thus 
enabling a length of 30 feet to be easily obtained. The gradient 
of such a pass would be one in ten. I subsequently entered into 
details respecting the requirements which seemed to me necessary 
for a suitable pass in the position referred to. 

On the day of my inspection the sluices at the intake of the 
mill-lade were being renewed, and I noticed that a very satisfactory 
heck had been provided to protect this intake. I understand that 
a heck on the tail-race below the mill-wheel is also to be erected. 

I also inspected the four dam-dykes which appear to exist above 
this weir in this district—-one in the Bladenoch proper, and three 
in the tributary Tarff. The dyke in the upper Bladenoch is at the 
Borhoise Meal Mill, the property of Captain Hamilton. It is a 
structure of loose stones varying in height from 2 to 4 feet. At 
the date of my visit the whole water of the riv er, exclusive 
of the water in the lade, was passing through the structure of the 
dyke, the level of the pool above the dyke being more than a foot 
below the uneven crest of the weir. There is a shallow slap in the 


~ 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 5 


down stream face of the dyke near the left bank, but it is so 
blocked with the loose stones above and below as to be inoperative. 
This dyke should be made water-tight, and a more suitable fish- 
pass introduced. The most suitable position for such a pass is, in 
my opinion, about 7 yards nearer the centre of the dyke than the 
present slap. The dyke is sufficiently low at this point to make 
ascent easy through a simple but well-defined gap ; and the rocks 
slightly to the left below the dyke could be readily utilized by a 
junction with the weir so as to cause a good lead up for fish. 

Since the date of my visit I have been informed that a pass in 
this dyke has been constructed. 

The Tarff water I found to be seriously interfered with. The 
three dykes are in the neighbourhood of Kirkcowan. Mentioned 
in order of ascent of the river, they are the Tarff Saw Mill Dyke, 
Milroy’s Wool Mill Dyke, and Armstrong’s Wool Mill Dyke. 
All are serious obstructions. The drainage area of the Tarff is 42°5 
square miles. 

The VYarff Saw Mill Dyke is an irregular concrete structure. 
There is no fish-pass, nor are there hecks on the lade. At the 
date of my visit the whole stream (which was then low) was pass- 
ing down the lade. The water in the pool above the dyke was, 
however, lipping the crest of the weir. 

Milroy’s Wool Mill Dyke is a low structure compared to the last, 
but is really a much more serious obstruction. A deep pool exists 
immediately above the dyke, and the natural bed of the river is 
rocky at this point. The dyke is built on the rocks below this 
pool and is rendered water-tight by cement. The bed of the Tarff 
below the dyke was quite dry, since the crest of the dyke, which 
has no pass. was some 10 or 12 inches above the level of the 
pool above the dyke. It follows that even with a pass and six- 
inch slap in the crest of the dyke no water would have been 
flowing down the river. The natural channel is towards the right 
bank, but, as I have indicated, the abstraction of water constitutes 
a serious difficulty. The left bank at the time of my visit was 
being built up so as to enclose and strengthen the end of the dyke 
near the lade entrance; this being done, I was informed by Mr. 
Milroy, to prevent the destructive action of floods. The lade was 
without hecks. 

Armstrong’s Wool Mill Dyke. This dyke is fully half a mile 
above the mill, and is about 3 feet high. It is a cement-faced 
structure similar to the Tarff Saw Mill Dyke. At the date of my 
visit the water in the pool above was finding its way in a thin 
stream down the weir. From the great length of the lade it follows 
that a correspondingly long stretch of the stream 1s deprived of water, 
and [ noticed that in this stretch several cascades and rapids occur, 
and that at two places all sorts of rubbish, including waste chaff, 
from Kirkcowan seem to be emptied freely over the steep left 
bank. The dyke has no pass, nor are there hecks on the lade. The 
mill stands a considerable height above the stream, and power :s 
chiefly developed by means of a turbine. The manager informed 
me that the drop of the water at the turbine and bye-washes was 
21 or 22 feet. The outflow enters the upper part of the deep pool 
referred to in describing Milroy’s Dyke. I noticed also an impure 

B 


6 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annnal Report 


steaming effluent—from wool-scouring—pouring down the bank 
from a pipe. The yellowish fluid seemed to be boiling. 

Speaking of the Tarff, one may say that, owing to the marked 
and complete abstraction of water which obtains, and which has 
apparently been permitted to occur without remonstrance for many 
years, it is clear that at all ordinary levels of water this tributary 
of the Bladenoch is closed to fish, and that even if fish run up as 
they appear to do during floods they are liable to be left danger- 
ously exposed when the water falls. 

Since the requirements of the Salmon Acts for the providing of 
salmon passes, sluices, and hecks are incorporated in Bye-law G of 
the Salmon Fisheries (Scotland) Act, 1868, active measures for 
obtaining compliance can only be put in force at the instance of a 
clerk to a District Fishery Board. I am of opinion that much 
good would result to the fisheries, whether sporting or netting, of 
the whole district if, after suitable arrangement of the roll entries, 
a Board could be formed which, through their clerk, could satis- 
factorily attack the difficulties which have been allowed to arise in 
the district, and by whom water bailiffs, or local keepers sworn in 
as bailiffs, could prevent poaching and other illegal practices. 

I have since been informed that in all probability a Board will 
shortly be constituted. 


GIRVAN. 


From reports previously made, the Fishery Board is aware that 
in February 1902 a most disastrous pollution occurred in this river 
from the pumping of accumulated water from the Dalquharran 
Coal Pit. The water was pumped into a burn which flows into 
the Girvan near Dailly, and from the mouth of this burn to the sea 
every fish in the Girvan died. After a fire in the pit in question, 
the water which was allowed to flood the pit, and to accumulate 
after the pit was temporarily shut down, became highly charged 
with metallic salts, especially sulphate of iron. When this water 
was at length pumped out into the burn adjoining the pit a copious 
precipitate of a bright orange colour was formed. Certain remedial 
measures were tried, as described in my report for the year 1903, 
but finally, by the continual process of pumping, the poisonous 
qualities which had accumulated were gradually got rid of, and the 
Girvan returned to its former state. In June last I visited the 
Dalquharran Pit and inspected the burn between the pit and the 
river. The bed of the burn I found to be thickly crusted with the 
precipitate of iron, and still of the bright orange colour, but the 
water itself was running clear. I saw also the six settling ponds 
which had heen specially constructed to combat the evil, but 
without effect. For two seasons now the reports reaching me have 
been to the effect that salmon were returning to the river and a 
small number spawning in the upper reaches. 

On 8th November I received a letter from the Clerk to the 
District Fishery Board informing me that a meeting of the Board 
had been held for the purpose of considering what steps should be 
taken to improve the river in view of the cessation of the pollution 
above referred to, and asking advice as to proposals for artificially 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 7 


‘restocking the river and for removing the sea nets of the district 
and impounding the head waters so as to allow an increased run 
of fish to ascend. On 9th November I replied at considerable 
length with respect to the various proposals made advocating more 
especially the removal of nets which are fished close to the mouth 
of the river, and the impounding of head waters for the purpose of 
augmenting the natural flow of water during summer conditions. 


Doon. 


The Doon, like the rivers on either side of it, has passed through 
periods when its salmon fisheries were greatly reduced in value and 
almost, it might be said, annihilated by the combined action of 
pollution and over-netting. Discharges from coal pits or iron 
works producing evil effects upon the river were especially 
noticeable in 1870, 1889, and 1893, but since the last-mentioned 
date the fisheries seem slowly to have improved. In 1896 a District 
Fishery Board was formed which has since continued, and which 
has materially assisted the recovery of the local fisheries ; but, in 
spite of fixed net fishings on the coast and a run of spring fish 
to the anglers in the river, the rental of the district has never risen 
above £498. 

I went over this district from the mouth of the river to Loch 
Doon, being much facilitated in my inspection by the kindness of 
Mr. Macrorie, the Clerk to the District Board. 

The mouth of the river offers a rather peculiar question for 
consideration. The action of the sea, in throwing forward gravel 
and sand, appears to result in the gradual turning northwards of 
the channel of the river. At the time of my insvection, the tide 
being out, it was noticeable that the fresh water found its way 
down the beach by two rather shallow channels, and that there was 
a tendency for the water to break away into subsidiary channels. 
I was informed that the more southerly of the two channels which 
now exist was some years ago the only channel. Of the two now 
existing the northerly one appeared to me to hold the more water, 
and its oblique direction along the beach appeared to bear out the 
probability of the statement that the actual mouth of the river is 
slowly moving northwards. In defining limits of estuaries to such 
rivers as run directly into the sea without inlets or natural 
estuaries, the Administrative Commissioners, under the Salmon 
Fisheries (Scotland) Act, 1862, commonly directed that a part 
of a circle was to be drawn with a specified radius from a 
point in the mid-channel of the river-mouth at low water. In 
this way tne prescribed estuarial area was secured to a river 
with a shifting mouth. The estuary of the neighbouring river 
Stinchar is so defined, and the same is true of the Girvan, 
although in the latter case the action of the waves coming from 
the south-west is entirely checked by the harbour pier. Well- 
marked cases of rivers with changing mouths, and where the 
estuaries have to be drawn in the way described, are the North Esk, 
the Deveron, and the Spey. The Commissioners under the Salmon 
Fisheries (Scotland) Act of 1862 originally proposed. a conjoint 
estuary for the rivers Ayr and Doon, from the Deil’s Dike about 


8 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


1600 yards south of the mouth of the Doon to the Bell Rock about - 
a mile and a third to the north of the mouth of the Ayr. This 
estuary, proposed in 1862, is shown in Appendix XII. to the Report 
of 1871, as well as-the separate estuaries for each river afterwards 
fixed upon in April 1864. This delimitation was, however, not 
adhered to, and two rocks lying on either side of the river-mouth in 
the case of the Doon apparently induced the Commissioners to define 
the estuary without reference to the shifting mouth of the river. It is 
directed that the limits of the estuary are—‘“‘A Segment of a Circle of 
‘400 Yards Radius, drawn from a Centre placed ‘Half Way between 
‘the nearest End of the Two Rocks on the opposite Sides of the River 
* Month... 9 Sy.cak: . .” So we have a fixed estuary for a river 
with a shifting mouth. Immediately to the north of this artificially 
defined estuary fixed nets are fished. Hence it follows that as the 
river mouth moves northwards it approaches more and more closely 
to the line of fixed nets, and the purpose of defining the estuary in 
order to mark the distance from the river the Commissioners 
considered fixed nets might be allowed is nullified. The original 
distance of 400 yards does not seem excessive, but it has now been 
considerably reduced, and no provision exists for recasting the 
definition of the boundary. It is conceivable that in a case 
such as this a river might in course of time, unless artificially 
controlled, enter the sea outwith the limits of its own estuary 
and have bag nets fishing directly in the river-mouth. I am 
glad to be able to report that a movement is now on foot 
amongst the fishing proprietors to lease and remove the fixed 
nets near the Doon mouth. Sweep nets used also to be worked 
in the tidal pools of the river, but these were removed a few 
years ago. Some sweep-net fishing is, however, still carried on, I 
understand, in the upper reaches of the river. This fishing is in 
three pools, and is for spring fish alone. T'o continue this practice 
is, in my opinion, contrary to the best interests of the river. If by 
reducing netting at the river-mouth the stock of spring fish is 
increased—and this may be reasonably expected in a few years— 
the removal of such fish in any numbers from the upper waters 
cannot but be most unfortunate in the best interests of the 
river. Qn ascending the river I inspected first the dam-dyke of 
Alloway Mill. This I found to be a smooth cement-faced structure, 
about four feet in height with a simple shoot-like fish-pass. The 
crest of the weir was rather lower at the right bank than that at the 
left. The gradient of the down-stream face was too steep. 
The toe of the down-stream face had a slight upward curve, and as 
the bed of the river immediately beyond had been washed away to 
some extent, a rather abrupt termination to the pass resulted, which, 
in low-water conditions, was against the success of fish attempting 
to ascend. The weir is the property of the Marquis of Ailsa, and I 
have, since the date of my inspection, had some correspondence 
with the estate factor, Mr. Thomas Smith, as to the best means of 
modifying the structure, and also as to the repairing of the lade 
intake which I found so undermined by the action of the water as 
to admit a full complement of water even when the sluice was shut. 
I have, since the date of this inspection, had an opportunity of again 
examining this weir, and, the water being more suitable than on my 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 9 


' previous visit, of wadeing round the obstruction and in the salmon 
pass so as to note the action of the water and to take accurate 
measurements. As a result, I have suggested alterations which 
provide for the prolongation ‘of the pass into the pool above the 
weir so as to secure a gradient of one in ten and the more adequate 
checking and concentration of descending water. 

I also inspected the Skeldon Mills—a blanket manufactory—in 
order to see the provision made to prevent the escape of the 
scouring waste wash from injuring the river, concerning which 
complaints were previously made, and to inspect the weir and lade 
in connection with the works. The scouring is done by the use of 
soap alone and the scour wash is the only waste material allowed 
to pass from the works. This is run into a pond, where the soapy 
material is allowed to settle, and the fluid from the pond is run off 
into the river by a sluice under the control of the river watcher 
who uses his discretion so as to make use of high river levels for 
the discharge. At the time of my visit the pond was full and 
emitted an evil smell from the decomposition of the soap and the 
escape of noxious gases. I was informed that the pond had been 
standing full for six weeks owing to the long continued low water 
conditions. A slight amount of leakage was noticeable. 1 cannot 
but regard the discharge of this soapy waste as most injurious to 
the river; at the same time it was very obvious that the manager 
of the mills did all in his power to minimise any evils arising from 
the existing conditions. The dam dyke above the mill was a not 
very serious obstruction of loose stones. ‘Towards the left bank 
the obstruction vanished in the bed of the river. Towards the 
right bank, where fish are most likely to ascend, a bye-wash exists 
in the sill of the weir which could very easily be opened and used 
as a fish pass when the state of the water is suitable for fish running, 
and when the mill lade intake is closed. 

At the Dalmellington Iron Works a discharge of polluted 
hot water takes place. The water appears to be used in 
the works for cooling purposes. In its discharge from the 
works, however, it first appears to receive a considerable amount 
of impurity, then passing below the roadway and a number 
of cottages it is grossly polluted by domestic sewage, and 
is run into a few roughly constructed ditches in a marsh 
between the cottages and the river. It is then joined by water 
coming in a comparatively pure though heated state from other 
parts of the works and is carried in a built ditch to the river. At 
the outfall an examination trap has been fitted. Here the actual 
foulness of the discharge is not obvious. It is probable, however, 
that the percentage of oxygen is small. By means of a pocket 
thermometer I ascertained the temperature to be 96° F., while the 
water of the Doon above and at Loch Doon was 55° F. 

About a hundred years ago the outflow of the river from Loch Doon 
was sluiced and a great barrier of rock tunnelled by Ear] Cassilis and 
Mr. Macadam of Craigengillan. The level of the loch was thereby 
diminished and an attempt made to regulate the flow of the river. 
Two sluices were constructed, each 6 ft. wide and 6 ft. 8 in. high. 
The tunnels cut through the rock were 66 feet long. One sluice 
was kept open all the year round; the other, which was at a 


10 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


different level, was seldom opened. The rush of water through the 
tunnels was found to be very great, and the sluices appear to have 
been unapproachable during floods. In a report on the Doon 
prepared by Mr. James Leslie, C.H., and Mr. Shaw, Drumlanrig, 
dated 1855, the area of Loch Doon is stated to be 1240 acres, and 
a recommendation is made ‘“ both for the sake of the mills and of 
“the fisheries that the storage of Loch Doon should be increased 
“by raising its high water level; by which means, without any 
‘damage to property beyond flooding a small portion of moorland 
‘“‘on its shores, there might be an available depth got of 20 feet. 
“This would give a storage of 1080 millions of cubic feet, which 
‘would give 4000 cubic feet a minute for six months in the year, 
“in addition to the natural flow of the river. This quantity would 
** fill a rectangular channel of 12 feet wide and 2 feet 8 inches deep, 
“ falling 1 in 4000, or nearly 16 inches per mile. 

Extensive alterations were proposed for the outlet, but these were 
not carried out, I am informed by Mr. Thomas Brown, the forester 
at Craigengillan, till the year 1885, or thirty years after the report 
above referred to. Instead of a tunnel 66 feet long, the principle 
salmon pass is now 155 feet long, 17 feet of which is in the form of 
a deep level canal at the upper end. The difference of level is 
reported to be 7 feet, so that the gradient of the pass below the 
canal-like portion is practically 1 in 20. The only portion of the 
pass now in tunnel is that which is traversed by the roadway at 
the foot of the loch. I consider that the flow of water in the pass 
could be improved and checked by the introduction of suitably 
placed stones to actas brakes to the descending current. This is 
particularly the case towards the foot or entrance of the pass, where 
the gradient is a little uneven, and where the water at one part 
becomes thin and shallow. Fish are apparently prevented at times 
from ascending the other channel. As in the case of the Helms- 
dale, upon which I reported last year, I consider that conditions 
are here ready to hand by which all evils following upon long- 
continued dry weather in summer, and consequent shrinkage of the 
river, may be overcome by the storage of water and the regulation 
of the sluices. In the Helmsdale the tenants act conjointly in 
the interests of the river, and fish each the other’s water by rota- 
tion, the river being divided into beats. The benefit derived from 
releasing water during low level conditions, by cleansing the river 
bed, drawing fish from the sea, and inducing fish to move from pool 
to pool and rise more fully to the fly, is, I consider, most marked 
in the case of the Helmsdale, and might in the same way, I believe, 
be marked in the Doon, if agreement could be come to in the mat- 
ter of storing the water and regulating the openings of the sluices. 
In Ness Glen, at Craigengillan, sufficient rough water exists to 
check the ascent of early-running fish till the temperature of the 
water has warmed from its wintry conditions. Fish should, there- 
fore, accumulate in the pools below Ness Glen, and at a later date 
and for a shorter time in the pool below ‘the fish-pass. With the 
suitable regulation, by the District Board, of the various points 
requiring attention in the Doon, I am convinced that the stock of 
fish would in a few years greatly increase and the value in the 
fisheries rise accordingly. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 1] 


AYR. 


I am informed that since the erection of the fish-pass at Over 
Mills Dam the number of fish noticed in the river at and above 
Auchincruive has greatly increased. It is necessary, however, also 
to remember that Mr. Oswald, the chief proprietor of the district, 
has removed all the nets which formerly used to be worked at the 
mouth of the river and on the coast on either side. There are now, 
in fact, no nets fished in the whole district. The Ayr has a catch- 
ment basin of 220 square miles, being therefore considerably 
larger than the Doon, Girvan, or Stinchar, which drain respectively 
126, 96, and 129 square miles (the drainage to Loch Ryan being 
included in the Stinchar district). The comparatively small rental 
of the Ayr continues, however, because the upper part of the Ayr 
district is quite valueless owing to the impassable dam-dykes 
which have been erected, and apparently allowed to remain unchal- 
lenged, at Catrine. The upper spawning grounds, the natural 
breeding places for early-running fish, are entirely cut off, and even 
the water some distance below Catrine, as well as the Lugar tribu- 
tary, have till recently been left to the will of the local fish-catcher, 
who, I have had evidence to show, is not at all particular either as 
to his methods or as to the season of his operations. During my 
visit to the district last June I made a special inspection, in. com- 
pany with the Clerk of the District Fishery Board, of the obstruc- 
tions at Catrine, and before leaving the district I also inspected the 
Lugar water, an important tributary which drains 86 square miles 
of country, i.e, only 10 miles less than the whole river Girvan. 
The river was at summer level during my visit, and I, therefore, 
had ample opportunity not only of inspecting the obstructions but 
also the bed of the river in the neighbourhood. At Catrine the 
large works of Messrs. James Findlay & Co., spinners, bleachers, 
&c., are situated ; and in taking power to these works an extensive 
lade and an aquaduct have been constructed to lead the water to the 
famous Catrine wheels. These two water-wheels develope, I am 
informed, 500 h.p. They work side by side in unison, each wheel 
being 50 feet in diameter and 12 feet wide. I was able to view the 
wheels in the lofty power-house, and anyone doing so could not fail 
to be impressed not only by the enormous structures themselves, 
but by the great quantity of water used in driving them. At the 
time of my visit the river between the intake and outfall of the lade 
was practically dry ; indeed, Mr. Macrorie and I walked up the bed 
of the river for a distance of, I suppose, about three-quarters of a 
mile, to inspect the dam-dykes. We could cross freely from side to 
side as no water was descending the river, and only pools remained 
here and there, in which shoals of minnows sported. The whole 
river Ayr at this point was carried through Messrs. Findlay’s lade. 
I have only once previously witnessed the total abstraction of a 
river of any size, and this at Messrs. Pirie’s, Stoneywood Works, 
on the river Don, recently the subject of important litigation. ~ 
On ascending the river, towards the intake of the lade already 
mentioned, one first comes upon a dam-dyke about four and 
a half feet high, situated at an iron foot-bridge some 150 yards 
below the main weir which turns the water into Messrs. Findlay’s 


12 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


lade. This first dam-dyke is a most substantial structure about 70 
feet long. The sill is of iron. The down-stream face is an abrupt 
concave slope of smooth cement, and the lower margin of this 
slope is bound with a broad flange of iron similar to the sill. 
There is no apron, and immediately below the lower iron beam a 
very deep pool occurs. There is no gap or fish-pass, nor is there 
any lade passing off from the dyke or water available for such lade. 
The structure stands as a sheer iron-shod wall right across the 
river, and has apparently been erected merely for the purpose of 
protecting the very long paved apron of the weir above. In my 
opinion it is a total obstruction to the ascent of salmon, and as such 
is the more objectionable since it is not of service in diverting 
water. J understand it was erected only some ten years ago in 
place of a less serious obstruction which previously existed here, 
and which had the same function as the present dyke. It seems to 
me clear that in allowing such an obstruction to remain, the general 
interests of the salmon fisheries of the district are seriously injured, 
and that the structure should either be entirely removed or be pro- 
vided with an efficient fish-pass. 

From this to the main weir above, the river was also dry, since it 
is from the main weir that the river Ayr is, in low water conditions, 
sent down Messrs. Findlay’s lade. 

The main weir is not thrown directly across the river but at a 
slant, so that the intake of the lade which is on the right bank is 
considerably further down the river than the left extremity of the 
weir. ‘The crest of the weir is approximately 230 feet long. The 
down-stream face is 24 feet long, and is succeeded by the long 
paved apron already referred to. The height of the weir is about 
6 feet. The structure is most solidly put together and bears signs 
of having been repaired and altered from time to time, and of being 
supervised with care. It would appear that the original weir was 
not so high as at present, since a massive iron copeing with a 
rounded up-stream surface and a perpendicular down-stream 
surface about a foot in height rests on what appears to have been 
the original sill. Close to the left bank there is a large sluiced 
bye-pass cut down to the level of the bed of the river. It is 14 
feet across, and is securely closed by a sluice gate with rack and 
pinion action. From the presence of a large bank of sand close 
to and just above the sluice, I formed the opinion that the bye- 
wash had not been used for some time. There is also a large scour 
pipe some 18 or 20 feet further out the weir. This appears to be 
more frequently used. The pipe is about 3 feet in diameter, and 
passes through the substance of the weir. Close to the right bank 
there is further a wooden slap or gap in the sill of the weir so 
arranged that it can apparently be boarded up. All these openings 
are provided for the conveyance of water down the natural river 
channel at such times as it is not wanted in the lade or when the 
lade sluices may require repairing. They have apparently no 
connection with the possible ascent of fish. The lade sluices are 
four in number, one being at a higher level than the others. The 
sluices are protected by two wide-sparred hecks. There is no 
attempt to conform in any way to the bye-laws of the Salmon Acts 
which provide for the ascent and descent of fish. With the re- 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 13 


moval or modification of the lower dyke at the footbridge it will 
be necessary to modify the crest of the upper weir also. Fish 
would have no difficulty in swimming up the down-stream face 
when there is sufficient water in the river, but the perpendicular 
iron copeing on the sill would act as a most serious obstruction to 
further progress. By those two obstructions at Catrine, 15 miles 
of the upper river are rendered inaccessible to spawning fish, 
besides about 5 miles in the Greenock water. 


Locn Lomonp DISTRICT. 


My inspections in this district were confined to the river 
Endrick, the chief spawning stream for salmon which enters the 
loch, and to the river Leven which flows out of Loch Lomond and 
enters the estuary of the Clyde at Dumbarton. 


The Endrick. 


This river rises in the high undulating country to the south-east 
of Loch Lomond, and after a hill course of a few miles descends 
the Loup of Fintry by three falls, calculated as 94 feet in height. 
From this total obstruction to the ascent of salmon to the mouth of 
the river the distance is about 21 miles. Fora distance of 10 miles 
or so below the Loup, the river presents a fine succession of pools 
and streams with much beautiful spawning ground, then for a few 
miles the bed is rather deeply cut in steep pastoral and at times 
highly wooded land where, in the neighbourhood of Gartness, two 
rocky barriers are passed which require special mention, then lower 
down where the railway viaduct crosses west of Drymen station, 
the river passes through flat meadows and the beautiful woods 
round Buchanan Castle; here the course of the river becomes 
highly tortuous and the current gentle. 

The two obstructions at Gartness are, in descending order, first 
the double obstacle of a dam-dyke and fall at the village of Gart- 
ness, and second, beyond an extensive loop of the river course, The 
Pot of Gartness. That salmon manage to surmount both obstruc- 
tions was sufficiently evident to me by the sight of a number of 
fish in the pool above the dam-dyke, but certainly the ascent must 
be accomplished with difficulty, especially at The Pot of Gartness. 
Both might with great advantage be modified or provided with 
efficient fish-passes so that the splendid spawning grounds above 
might be rendered of greater utility. ‘This is the more desirable in 
the interests of the whole district’s fisheries since in proportion to 
the size of Loch Lomond the other available spawning streams are 
comparatively small and rocky. At the time of my visit (28th and 
29th June) the river was very low, and I was, therefore, able to 
inspect very fully the formation of the obstructions referred to. 
The dam-dyke at the village of Gartness is for the purpose of 
supplying water-power to a small wool mill. The dam is above the 
fall, and the mill is below the fall, hence the fall is deprived of 
the water carried down the lade. At the time of my visit the 
mill was not working, owing apparently to the progress of some 
repairs, but the lade was running full, and the water-fall as a 
result was practically dry. The lade was unprovided with hecks. 


14 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


A very deep pool exists immediately below the fall, and at the 
time of my visit the actual rise from this pool to the sculptured 
rocks above was barely three feet. These rocks extend for some 
little distance, and the stream from above has worn a well-defined 
S-shaped channel to the edge of the fall. It would not be difficult 
to lower the crest of the fall and to improve the channel above for 
some 30 to 40 feet, so as to secure a much easier ascent to the fish. 

The dam-dyke just above, I estimated as about 54 feet high, 
with a down-stream face of about 53 feet, constructed of irregular 
stones. The length is about 75 feet, and the sill of smooth cement. 
There is no gap or fish-pass of any kind. Neither in the matter of 
the weir, therefore, nor of the lade, are the bye-laws of the Salmon 
Fisheries (Scotland) Act, 1868, observed. 

At the Pot of Gartness the obstruction to the ascent of fish is, 
as I have said, more serious. The pool immediately below is large 
and deep, and at times, | am informed, holds a very large number 
of fish waiting or trying to ascend. At the time of my visit the 
minimum leap which it was necessary for any fish to take was 
about 54 feet. In times of flood this will no doubt be sensibly 
lessened, but the entire face of the rock is precipitous and difficult 
of ascent. The natural lead up for fish is by the left bank, and on 
this side of the river the rock has been worn away to a greater 
extent than elsewhere, so that the actual barrier slants in a curving 
outline across the river. Above the precipitous face of the barrier 
the bed of the river is rocky and much broken into ledges for a 
distance of about seventy yards, with an additional rise of about 
7 feet. A wool mall, now apparently disused, is situated on the 
left bank above The Pot, and is provided with a lade drawing water 
from the upper extremity of the rocky area. The outlet of the 
lade (which has a high bye-wash falling into The Pot) is at the 
lower end of the pool, and is provided with a heck. An old 
disused meal mill stands on the right bank. No attention seems 
to be paid to the sluices at the intakes of both lades, and all water 
entering is wasted in being carried beyond the fall. 

To make a suitable pass at this obstruction without very great 
outlay it is necessary, in my opinion, to construct a channel in the 
rocky ledges above the fall, and to concentrate and direct the 
water-flow in a wide zig-zag direction, culminating at a cleft in 
the main rock face near the centre of the river. Owing to the 
lowness of the water I was able to walk all over the rocks from 
bank to bank, and to take careful note of the possible line of ascent. 

The proposal to open up this obstruction to the passage of fish 
has repeatedly been present to the minds of those interested in the 
salmon fisheries of the district. The actual ownership of the fall 
is shared between Col. Blackburn on the left bank, and the trustees 
of the late Mr. Govane on the right bank. The fact that a body of 
trustees rather than a responsible proprietor have to be consulted 
seems the cause of the delay in opening up the fall. From corres- 
pondence with the agents who act for Mr. Govane’s Trust, I learn 
that the trustees hesitate to take the responsibility of permitting 
any alteration on the rocks because of the impossibility of saying 
definitely what effect such an alteration would have upon the 
fishing or the volume of water thrown upon the proprietors below, 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 15 


including the trustees in question. It respectfully seems to me 
that if the trustees would consent to be advised respecting this 
matter a definite conclusion might be arrived at with respect to 
the question upon which they very properly hesitate, and a material 
benefit secured not only to the fishings under their charge but to 
the general salmon fisheries of the district. 


River Leven (FRoM Locu Lomonp). 


With the rise of the important dyeing and calico-printing 
industries of the Vale of Leven, and the advent of a large popula- 
tion connected with those industries, the salmon fisheries of this 
neighbourhood have declined. Yet the very insignificant level to 
which the fisheries shrank a number of years ago has been im- 
proved upon. The pollutions of the river, which were without 
doubt the cause of the decline, are not now so gross, it is stated, as 
formerly ; and everything is being done to develope the fisheries 
which remain to the beautiful loch and tributaries from which the 
river takes it rise. The improvement is due no doubt to the erec- 
tion of settling tanks in some of the works, and to the fact that 
analysis of the various effluents are made at regular intervals under 
the auspices of the Dumbarton County Council. Unfortunately, 
from a fishing point of view, the conditions of the river at the 
present day are very far from satisfactory. All the works discharge 
great quantities of colouring matter, much of which is no doubt 
comparatively harmless but which coats the bed of the river with a 
greasy sludge ; some of the works also allow actively toxic liquors 
to escape. All the works boil and discharge immense quantities of 
water which is thus deprived of its oxygen, the gas indispensible 
to the proper respiration of the fish ; and in addition to these dis- 
abilities the sewage of this thickly-populated valley, with towns 

‘like Alexandria, Renton, and Dumbarton, is poured straight into 
the ever-convenient river. 

I visited the district in the month of June, when no doubt I was 
able to see the worst aspect of the pollution, since the river was 
then at its summer level. Yet the Leven is always a river of con- 
siderable volume and well able in its lowest state to hold and allow 
the free ascent of salmon and sea-trout. I have no hesitation in 
saying that were it in a purer state salmon would run into Loch 
Lomond in spring (as to a limited extent they have been doing of 
late), as well as through summer and autumn, and that the value 
of the fisheries would soon become very considerable. At the 
present time the chief run of salmon to the mouth of the river is in 
June, while grilse and sea-trout run in July. In Loch Lomond the 
greatest number of salmon are taken in May, and the greatest 
number of sea-trout in August. The opening up of the obstructions 
on the Endrick, to which I have already referred, is a step, in 
addition to the purification of the Leven, necessary for the adequate 
distribution of the breeding stock. The Leven, in the condition in 
which I saw it, was quite unsuitable for the ascent of fish, indeed 
one could scarcely imagine that in the lower reaches fish could sur- 
vive for any length of time. Certain spots there were where 
apparently sick fish sought respite from their unhealthy surround- 


16 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


ings, and from the movements of groups of men and boys I noticed 
here and there it was evident that the unfortunate fish were then 
harassed by other dangers. In the very turbid waters of the lower 
river it is, however, very difficult to see fish. The only specimen I 
myself noticed was a dead sea-trout floating down the centre of the 
stream. 

In my inspection I proceeded downwards from Balloch to Dum- 
barton, and in two consecutive days visited each of the nine works 
concerned in the staple industry of The Vale. I should like here 
to acknowledge the courtesy of the various managers in showing 
me everything connected with the various processes which in any- 
way affected the effluents to the river. In the present report I do 
not propose to enter into a detailed description of each work and its 
particular pollutions. Such a report would necessarily have to 
consist largely of analysis more exhaustive than those given in the 
reports of the Dumbarton County Council, and would be somewhat 
out of place here. I desire rather to deal with the general ques- 
tion of the impurities as they affect the salmon fisheries, and as 
they seem to occur in certain of the works. 

In considering the colouring matter which finds its way into the 
river, it is at once apparent that while certain dyes are always 
present, such as alizarin, which gives turkey red, chrome yellow, 
which is a chromate of lead fixed by dilute acid, or prussian blue, 
containing nitrate of iron, stannious chloride, and yellow prussiate 
of potash, &c., the operations cf calico-printing as carried on in this 
district for the supply of both the home and the eastern markets, 
involve an almost infinite variety of colour mixtures and mordants 
used at different times. Some colouring matter which gives a most 
evil appearance to the river may nevertheless be comparatively 
innocuous to fish life, while others which may be combined with 
bleaching liquors, and which may be less noticeable to the eye, 
may be much more injurious to the fish. In this way it appears 
to me that those works of The United Turkey Red Co., Limited, 
which were formerly owned by Messrs. Archibald Orr Ewing & 
Co., and which are concerned primarily in simple turkey red dying 
operations, are less harmful than the works of the United Co., 
concerned in bleaching and printing, as also the works of The 
Calico Printing Association, Limited. The former also are notice- 
able as being the works at which purification by means of settling 
tanks is invariably attempted, while in the works from which the 
most injurious effluents seem to flow the same attempt at purifica- 
tion is not apparent. In treatment by settling tanks it unfortu- 
nately is the case that much of the highly-coloured waste liquid 
is of practically the same density as water, so that any sedimenta- 
tion is necessarily slow and imperfect. In spite, therefore, of the 
retention of the grosser solids and the skimming of fats, it was in 
every case noticeable that the discharge to the river was almost as 
high in colour as the inflow to the settling tanks. The most elabo- 
rate series of tanks exist at the Croft Works of The United Turkey 
Red Co. There are four sets of tanks at these the largest works in 
the district. At the time of my visit the first set contained a 
dense green colour and were provided with gratings and beds of 
ashes. The ashes, I was informed, are renewed every three months, 


' of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 17 


The second set, composed of four large tanks, contained a turbid 
alizarin waste where the fatty matter was skimmed off. The next 
set contained a fluid of a dense brown colour principally composed 
of a substance, not a dye, used in the after-treatment of dyed 
material. The remaining set of tanks were so subdivided that the 
waste fluids travelling slowly through them took a most tortuous 
course, and so prolonged the operation of settling. Fats were 
freely thrown up and all soapy wash was curded. Yet the dis- 
charge pipe showed a bright red fluid. The manager of those 
works informed me that in their laboratory the coloured washes had 
repeatedly been reduced to colourless fluids, but that this could not 
be accomplished in practice without great expense. With regard 
to more perfect filtering he also informed me that an experiment 
with a special filter had resulted in complete clogging in two 
hours, and that operations of purification in his work were there- 
fore confined to settling as completely as the difficult nature of the 
bye products allowed, and to the rendering of the effluents as nearly 
neutral in reaction as possible. As a rule the reaction seems to 
be slightly alkaline. Compared with such endeavours to purify 
the effluents, the conditions observed elsewhere seemed unfavour- 
able. At The Ferryfield Printing Co.’s Works, for instance—an 
old work—the only tanks which could be shown me were two 
small receptacles for waste wash situated under the floors of two 
of the dye houses; and at the works of The Calico Printers’ 
Association, Limited (formerly J. Black & Co.), no settling tanks, 
properly so-called, exist, although an old dye-vat is used to catch 
mixed colour waste. ‘The old dye-vat appears to be cleaned out 
once in 12 or 18 months. At the last-mentioned work three out- 
falls into the river and one into the lade carry off most of the waste 
fluids, although after washing the printing rollers the sediment is 
reported to be removed. I here saw two tanks of hyper-chloride of 
lime, but the chemist of the works maintained that practically 
none reached the river. At the time of my visit one of the 
discharge pipes from the printing house was passing into the river 
a very bright yellow, of chrome and olivine. The bed of the river 
below such discharges becomes thickly coated with various colours, 
red, green, blue, yellow, as the last discharge determines. At 
Dalquharn Works, the lowest on the river, where dyeing alone is 
carried on, but where no ciearing or settling seems to be attempted, 
a thick deposit of chromate of lead was upon the stones of the 
river edge (the dead body cf a dog, another waste product given to 
the river, was partly bright yellow and partly red). From this 
point downwards the river presents the appearance of a large open 
sewer, yet at this point we are barely five miles from Loch 
Lomond, being about one mile from the mouth of tie river. 

With regard to bleaching mixtures, I was particularly struck with 
what I saw at the Cordale Works of the United Turkey Red Co., 
which formerly belonged to Messrs. Wm. Stirling & Sons. A lime 
tank at the back of the premises I could not regard but with 
apprehension as a source of chlorine. It discharged into a section 
of the lade passing out below the works. The outfall of this section 
of the lade was suspiciously clear, stones beneath the water being 
sharply outlined and without the appearance of either natural sedi- 


18 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


ment or pollution. There seemed, moreover, to be a considerable 
amount of evidence pointing to the presence of chlorine in 
the water, although, no doubt, the amount varies considerably 
from time to time. The presence of chlorine is most injurious 
to fish life, and, even when not sufficiently strong to be fatal, 
gives a marked “iodoform flavour.” I had good proof given ma 
during last summer that fish taken in the Clyde just outside 
the mouth of the Leven were uneatable owing, apparently, to 
this characteristic taint from chlorine or some kindred substance, 
‘such as iodine or bromine. I am informed also that the fish 
netted at this spot were found to be unmarketable about the time 
of my visit. A very small percentage of chlorine is sufficient to 
taint fish, and it is extremely important that the escape of this and 
of any kindred substances into the river be entirely prevented. 
Otherwise injury to the salmon fisheries is inevitable. 

The remaining point to which I desire to refer is the quantity of 
boiled and therefore unoxygenated water which passes into the 
Leven. This affects the river in two ways—(1) in depriving the fish 
of oxygen necessary for their respiration and incidentally making 
it less possible for various substances found in the pollutions to be 
rendered inocuous by union with the river water, and (2) in locally 
raising the temperature of the river to an abnormal degree. The 
first is the more important. All the works pump large quantities 
of water for use in the dye vats and for washing dyed material and 
apparatus. It may be said that most of the works require all the 
water they can get, and that the works on the lower river cannot 
get this water in a very satisfactory condition owing to the pollu- 
tions above. In one or two of the works a certain amount of 
washing is done in the lade as it passes below the wash-houses, but 
in the majority this appears to be impossible. At some works the 
coloured discharges occur in the lades, where steam from the 
pumping engines may also be blown, in others the discharge pipes 
are carried out on the bed of the river as far as mid-stream. From 
the processes employed in the various works it is inevitable that 
most of the water lifted from the river is raised to a very high 
temperature. In dyeing, 120° to 130° F. is usual, and in the 
clearing and fixing processes 190° to even about 200° F. may be 
reached. With such high temperatures, all air is expelled from 
the water, and a fluid results which, even without the introduction 
of impurities, is quite incapable of supporting any animal life. 
But for the fact that the river Leven contains a large volume of 
pure water from Loch Lomond, the many discharges from the 
works would have a much more serious effect. I was informed by 
the Manager of one of the works that about three and a half 
million gallons were passed through his work in twenty-four 
hours. From the similarity of the processes in all the works, 
excepting the Millburn Chemical Works, where the distillation of 
wood spirit is conducted, and, I understand, the acids and lime, 
&c., used in processes of the other works are made, we may, 1 
think, fairly estimate that not less than twenty-five million gallons 
of water are used in the Vale of Leven dyeing and printing works 
each day, and that almost all this, plus much impurity, is returned 
quite destitute of oxygen to the river. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. Le, 


With regard to the eflect which the high temperature of those 
discharges has upon the river I was able to make only very imperfect 
observation, by taking an occasional reading with a thermometer 
dipped from the river bank. Daily readings were, however, taken 
for me during May, June, and July, in the river at Dumbarton and 
in the Clyde outside the river mouth. The means for those months 
are :— 


1905. Leven. Clyde. 
May, : f ; 5 hg 932 
June, E : : 99° og° 
July, : : Due 62° 


On the two days during which my inspection of the Leven 
lasted, the readings at the above places were :— 


Leven. Clyde. 
29th June, .. ; ‘ 64° 65° 
30th _,, ; 63° 65° 


My own observations, taken as described in proximity to the 
works, showed a temperature of from 68° to 69°, and below the 
last of the works (Dalquhurn), but not more than 100 yards below 
‘the outfalls, I obtained a reading of 72°. ‘The weather was 
extremely hot at the time, and this, no doubt, must be taken into 
consideration ; but the inference seems to me to be that the 
temperature of the water in the Leven is materially affected by the 
discharges from the works, although, no doubt, markedly high 
temperatures such as above are very local. Some accurate obser- 
vations as to the proportion of oxygen in the water at different 
parts of the river would be of value, as well as analysis for some of 
the more toxic pollutions. I am strongly of opinion, however, 
from what I have seen, that while some polluters of the river make 
reasonable and fair attempts to reduce the evil effects of their bye- 
products, others do not do so, and that if an equitable share in 
works of purification were borne by the various companies involved 
a material improvement would be seen in the condition of the river. 
With the great variety of substances which are introduced into the 
effluents it is more than likely that with a more complete system 
of mixing, and the possibility of greater time being given to the 
process of settling, much greater sedementation would result. It 
might, I think, very fairly be considered, for instance, whether or 
not some system could be adopted by which the waste liquors of 
certain works could be combined and treated collectively on each 
side of the river. And I consider that the particular works at 
which little or no treatment is at present existant might be 
reasonably required to purify their effluents. And in connection 
with a more systematic purification it would, I consider, be valu- 
able that by analysis of the effluents and by agreement between 
the parties concerned a standard of purity should at the same time 
be established. 


DEVERON. 


In February 1898 the cruive dyke, formerly situated about two 
miles from the mouth of this river, was removed, and a marked 


20 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


improvement in the stock of fish in the river was very naturally 
looked for after the lapse of a few years. In 1897 the assessable 
rental of the district was £2658. The reports which I have 
received from the clerk to the District Fishery Board since the 
year 1897 may, as regards rental and general results of fishing, be 
summarised as follows :— 


Year. Rental. Netting. Rod Fishing. 
1898 £2,979 Below the avearge. A failure. 

1899 3,078 Average. Below average. 
1900 3,186 Above average. 1,113 fish. 

1901 3,186 Average. 824 fish. 

1902 3,048 Average. 950 fish. 
1903 3,104 Average. 1,235 fish. 
1904 3,387 Below average. Below average. 
1905 3,368 Much below average. | Much below average. 


It is clear from a glance at these statements that no improve- 
ment is claimed, and from conversations I have had with those 
who habitually fish the water near Turriff by rod, I am forced to 
believe that the recent seasons have been very bad indeed. In 
connection with the annual marking of salmon during close season 
I organised, inter alia, a netting expedition to the Deveron. By 
the kindness of various proprietors, and especially of Mr. Milne, 
of Ardmiddle, netting was conducted from the Bridge of Marnoch 
to the Turriff Bridge. Much of the water was too rocky to allow 
of satisfactory netting, and it may be that for this and other 
reasons the test was not altogether a searching one; but the result 
satisfied me and, I think, all those who were present at the netting, 
that the stock of fish was distinctly limited during last breeding 
season. Mr. Kennedy, the superintendent, informed me also 
that all over the district the stock of fish seemed lower than he 
had ever known it. 

With regard to what may be regarded as usual causes of such a 
reduction of the fisheries, such as overnetting, pollution, &c., I 
may state that sweep netting is carried on in the Deveron from 
the mouth of the river to the Bridge of Alvah, a distance of three 
miles. In the early part of the season this extent of water is 
fished by one boat’s crew alone, there being a crew at work by day 
and another at work by night. From July onwards this amount of 
netting is doubled, two crews fishing by day and two by night. 
On the coast outside the river bag nets may be set, in accordance 
with the limits of the estuary, within 400 yards of the river mouth. 
An estuary of 400 yards radius is perhaps not excessive, but yet it 
is difficult to regard it as too small since it is precisely the radius 
of estuary prescribed for the river Dee—a thoroughly well-stocked 
river. Another factor which must be taken into consideration is 
the presence of seven distilleries in the upper waters which have 
been estimated as distilling over 6000 bushels per week during the 


i 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 21 


six or seven months the industry is annually carried on. If the 
Deveron were a thoroughly well-stocked river a limited amount of 
netting could be allowed without injury and the netting be much 
more valuable than at present. The conditions of each river have 
to be considered on their own merits in this respect, the object 
aimed at being to secure to the unnetted waters a proportion of 
every run of fish which enter the river mouth. If the netting is 
carried on too far up the river, the weekly close time becomes of 
no value, since the upper nets catch on Monday and Tuesday the 
fish which passed the lower net stations on the Sunday ; if physical 
conditions cause all ascending fish to pause at certain points and 
to congregate—and when the river is cold in the early part of the 
season fish are easily checked in their ascent—the use of a net at 
such points may remove whole runs of fish with a result injurious 
to the best interests of the river. 

In the Deveron, however, there appears to be a cause of the 
falling away of the stock other than the causes mentioned, although 
in all probability various causes contribute in varying proportion ; 
I refer to the unusual conditions noticeable by the silting up of 
the river mouth by the opposing actions of the river on the one 
hand and the sea on the other. I made short reference to the 
barrier of gravel so formed in the Twentieth Annual Report. The 
action of north-easterly gales appears to be to force the river mouth 
to the westward, yet the condition is ever an unstable one. At 
the time of my visit, last December, the actual mouth of the river 
was as far to the westward as the limits of Banff Bay and a 
retaining wall at a street called Low Shore in the town of Banff 
would permit. JI have no doubt that this is the usual point of 
outlet, as although from time to time breaches are made in the 
gravel barrier of the beach—as had occurred just before my visit— 
the overmastering force is that of the sea acting from a north- 
easterly direction. Instead of flowing straight into the sea from 
the direction of Banff Bridge, therefore, the water of the river is 
turned to the westwards by the gravel barrier referred to, and a 
long tidal basin or lagoon is formed, separated from the sea by the 
barrier. At the retaining wall of Low Shore the water is turned 
seawards through an opening grudgingly allowed, as it were, by the 
sea. In December last this opening, even at high tide, was only 
about 30 yards across, and when the river is low the sea is apt to 
make it shallow by the formation of small deltas of sand and fine 
gravel when the force of the fresh water current diminishes. 
Many have confidently informed me that at such times the mouth 
of the river is practically closed up and that no fish can possibly 
enter. The tidal basin, while it gives storage room for a few old 
fishing boats and is a suitable launching place for new boats built, 
is a most unfortunate feature from the point of view of salmon 
fishery interests, for two reasons: first, the natural flow and force 
of the river is lost on entering this basin, and second, much water 
finds its way into the sea by percolation through the gravel, so that 
the actual volume of water at the outflow of the river is diminished. 
The result is that a very poor lead in for fish is offered. I have no 
hesitation in saying that for a river like the Deveron, with a 


course of between 50 and 60 miles and a drainage area of 472 
c 


22 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


square miles, the mouth is extraordinarily poor and insignificant, 
and that, in my opinion, this is probably the most important 
factor to be considered in the present depleted condition of the 
district fisheries. Mr. Francis George, the Town Clerk of Banff, 
who is also the Clerk to the District Fishery Board, has kindly 
sent me for perusal an old map of Banff prepared from a survey 
made in 1823. From this, and from the Admiralty chart of Banff 
and Macduff prepared in 1834, and the Ordnance Survey plan 
showing what is practically the present condition, I have prepared 
the accompanying illustration of three phases in the appearance of 
the river mouth. From the 18354 chart it will be seen that a 
straight mouth was open in the barrier some distance to the east 
of the present mouth and that, apparently, a similar mouth had 
previously been open still further to the east and more in a line 
with the natural and direct outflow of the river. I understand, 
also, that shortly after 1834 a severe storm so altered the bar 
that the river found exit at the eastern or Macduff side of the 
bay, by the rocks called Palmer’s Cove. I am, however, unable 
to represent this condition in the illustration. The Deveron at 
Banff Bridge is approaching the sea in a direction opposite to the 
centre of Banff Bay, and one has, I think, to consider this the 
natural line of approach, since Banff Bay itself was in all probability 
originally formed by the denuding action of the prehistoric Deveron. 
If the river still entered the centre of the bay, or say at the more 
easterly of the two old openings shown in the 1834 chart, it is 
certain, I think, that not only would the unfortunate conditions 
inseparable from the present tidal basin be non-existent, but 
salmon would be much more likely to find the mouth and to freely 
ascend the river. With an increased stock of fish it is equally 
certain that the netting, which may at present be excessive for the 
depleted river, would be vastly improved and be less likely to act 
injuriously, and that with the satisfactory application of the weekly 
close time the rod fishing would also be placed on a very much 
more satisfactory footing. I see no reason why, given suitable 
modification and attention, the Deveron should not hold a good 
spring run as well as yield summer and autumn fishing. 

At the mouth of the Spey in 1897 a condition obtained exactly 
similar to the present state of the Deveron mouth, except that no 
definite limit to the westward extension existed as at Banff. The 
Spey had then worked its way along behind the beach for about a 
mile, and was entering the sea in a rather shallow and very slant- 
ing manner. On the recommendation of the superintendent, the 
Spey Board agreed to cut a new and direct mouth for the river. 
As compared with the Deveron, the Spey is not only a larger river, 
but, for the last few miles of its course, it is a more rapid river. 
In spite of its volume and current, however, the sea had raised a 
shingle barrier of more formidable proportions than that at Banff. 
This was, however, cut through with complete success. Mr. Wink, 
clerk to the Spey Board, has kindly given me particulars of the work 
and shown me the plan. He informs me in his letter—‘ In the 
‘construction of the cutting the shingle was simply thrown out to 
“each side and nothing was done to insure the constant flow of 
“the river through the cutting, the current being found sufficient 


MOUTH OF RIVER DEVERON 


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of the Fishery Board fur Scotland. 23 


“to keep a clear and direct outlet. ‘T'he operation was a complete 
“success at the time, but the mouth is always getting more to the 
“west in consequence of the shingle thrown up by north-east 
“storms.” The cutting was approximately 180 feet long, 60 feet 
broad at the top, and 30 feet broad at the bottom, the depth being 
10 feet. 

My opinion is that a similar cutting of the barrier at the mouth 
of the Deveron would well repay the proprietors of fishings in the 
district. 

The cost of the large Spey cutting was considerable (£232), but 
it is clear that a suitable cutting of the Deveron bar would be 
accomplished for a much less sum. At the same time it would, I 
think, be advisable to secure if possible the keeping open of the 
mouth by, it might be, causing the sea to form a protecting bank 
some distance to the east of the mouth, or by some other means 
suggested by a competent engineer. The present mouth would, I 
have no doubt, rapidly close up, and the few boats that at present 
make their way in and out of the river-mouth would be equally 
able to use the new mouth as the old. 


24 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


APPENDIX I. 


REPORTS FROM DISTRICT FISHERY BOARDS. 


As hitherto, the annual reports from District Fishery Boards and 
others are presented in the form of answers to queries issued after the 
close of the fishing season. On this occasion the arrangement has been 
somewhat modified in order to give the reader a more comprehensive 
result than has previously been possible. 

In issuing the queries [ have at the same time intimated that, with 
the replies, I shall be glad to receive communications on matters of 
special interest which any District Board desire should be brought to 
the notice of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 

Reports from 34 districts are here included. 


W. L. CALDERWOOD. 


REPORT FROM RIVER TWEED DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 

1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been—except by fixed nets— 
below the average. 

More particularly it has been 

(a) By fixed engines in the sea, above the average. 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, below the average. 
(c) By rod and line, below the average. 

2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 
(a) By fixed engine, 13,671 
(b) By sweep net, 43,689 } Approsimatey 
(c) By rod and line, 2,019 

3. Expressed as percentages for each month of the season, so as to show the 
times of greatest run, the figures are :— 


Feb. | Mar.} Apr. | May./June.| J ee Sept.| Oct. | Nov. 


By Fixed Engine, . ae - ~ - |14°5| 30:0} 400} (14 | — - 


By Sweep Net, . - . | 38 | 2°99 | 5:5 1109 | 16°8 | 21-2) 27:3) (14 | - = 


By Rod and Line, . » | 3°15; 5°12} 6°12) 1°78] 0°81) 0°08) 0:49) 4°63/30°54) 47-28 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 25 


Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared, as included in 
the above return, are as follows :—The first grilse caught by net was on 
15th March. The first grilse caught by rod and line (up the river) 
was 3rd July. The first sea trout caught in the upper districts was 1n 
August. The greatest number of grilse were caught in October and 
November by rod and line, and in May by nets. 

4. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 47 lbs. 

The particulars of time and place of capture are :—Caught on 5th August 
at Outwater Stell Fishery, near to Berwick Pier. 


Protection— 

1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £15,499 15s. 5d. 

2. The assessment levied was £3099 18s. 5d., or 20 per cent. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are—in July 9, August 9, September 
18, October 43, November 54, December 54, January 46, February 
27, March 21, April 15, May 15, June 9, and 1 engineer during the 
whole year. 

4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—Prosecu- 
tions were instituted against 189 persons during season 1904-05. 
62 persons paid fines or were allowed time to pay ; 74 were imprisoned ; 
10 absconded ; 19 were acquitted or admonished ; and proceedings 
were withdrawn in the case of 24 persons. The principal offences 
were killing salmon by means of illegal nets, cleek and light, and 
rakehooks ; being in illegal possession of salmon and engines for kill- 
ing salmon, and assaulting and obstructing baitiffs. 

Note.—There were 271 illegal nets seized in the sea and 21 in the river. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 
1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—None. 
2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws:—Duly carried out and 
enforced. 
3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—None. 
4, Natural obstructions not yet dealt with :—None. 


Pollutions— 


1. The existing pollutions are :—Poisonous matters from mills and dye- 
houses in Selkirk, Peebles, Innerleithen, Walkerburn, Galashiels, 
Hawick, Jedburgh, and Chirnside ; household sewage from Biggar, 
West Linton, Eddleston, Melrose, St. Boswells, Kelso, Coldstream, 
Sprouston, Ancrum, Lilliesleaf, Harlston, Lauder, &c. 

1. Remedial measures :—There are settling tanks connected with all the 
mills in Peeblesshire which intercept the grosser parts of the mill 
effluent, but not much good. There are purification works connected 
with the mills in Galashiels and Selkirk, but those in Galashiels do 
not appear to be of any use, from the appearance of the water flowing 
from them. Improved purifying machinery has been erected at 
Chirnside Mills lately, and satisfactory results are anticipated there- 
from. In Hawick there are irrigating tanks in a field, but not worked 
satisfactorily. 


The Salmon Disease— 


1. Disease made its appearance during season 1904-05 in the month of 
October, and reached its height in January. 
The river was free of diseased fish in June. 
2. ere Foe of diseased fish taken from the river and destroyed was as 
ollows :— 


Males. Females. 


Kelts, . : ; : 1450 883 


Clean, . i : : 44 64 


26 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning on 18th October (sea trout). 
' 2. The greatest number spawned in December and January. 
3. Spawning ceased end of February. 
4. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as good. 


Smolts— 


1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in March, April, and May, 
and the beginning of June. 
2. As asmolt year 1905 was very good. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 


1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season was 328,000. 
2. In securing ova the numbers of male and female fish captured were 
respectively 41 and 71. 


REPORT FROM FORTH DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 


1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been above the average. 
More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, above the average. 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, about the average. 
(c) By rod and line, below the average. 
2. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 42 lbs. 
The particulars of time and place of capture are :—By fixed engines at 
oe Links fishing station, on the Fife coast, in the month of 
March. 


Protection— 

1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £3274 7s. 11d. 

2. The assessment levied was 3s. 6d. per £. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are 12 in number, including superintendent. 

4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—Prosecu- 
tions were instituted against 32 persons, consisting of attempting 
to take salmon during the weekly close time with the drift or hang 
net, attempting to take salmon during the annual close time with the 
hang net, taking spawning fish from a tributary during the annual 
close time, drift or hang net fishing, breach of interdict against hang- 
net fishers, and two cases of assault on the bailiffs in the execution of 
their duty. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 

1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—Craigforth cruive has been 
allowed to remain open. 

2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—Not observed. 

3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—None have been built ; three in pros- 
pect—one at the Glasgow Corporation Waterworks at Loch Vennachar, 
one at the Airthrey Paper Mill dam dyke, on the river Allan, and 
one at the Ashfield dum dyke, also on the Allan. 

4, Natural obstructions not yet dealt with are :—The Kippenross old cruive. 


Pollutions— 

1. The existing pollutions are :—The river Forth sewage from Stirling 
and Alloa. The rivers Allan, Devon, Airth, Pow Burn, and Avon 
are polluted with chemicals from dye works, bleach works, paper 
works, and the sewage from coal pits. 


The Salmon Disease— 
1. Disease made its appearance this year in the month of December, and 
reached its height in January 1905. 
The river was free of diseased fish about the middle of March 1905. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 27 


2. The number of diseased fish taken from the river and destroyed was as 
follows :—232 for season 1904-05. 


Males. Females. 
Kelts,  . : : : f 166 46 
Clean or unspawned, . : No clean fish. 20 unspawned. 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning in October. 
2. The greatest number spawned in December. 
3. Spawning ceased end of January. 
4, As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as about the average. The rivers were 
generally high for the whole of the spawning season. 


Smolts— 
1, Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in April, May, and June. 
2. As asmolt year 1905 was about the averave. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 
None. 


REPORT FROM TAY DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish — 
1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been quite a good average. 
More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, no improvement in sea fishings. 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, better than usual. 
(c) By rod and line, about the average. 
2. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 57% Ibs. 
The particulars of time and place of capture are:—In the month 
of July, on the Tay near Newburgh, two salmon were taken in the 
nets, one 574 lbs. and one 57 lbs. Quite a number over 40 lbs. 
were taken throughout the season. One salmon of 51 Ibs. was caught 
ir. October by rod and line about two miles below Perth. Others by 
rod and line up to 43 lbs. 


Protection— 

1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £22,675 12s. 

2. The assessment levied was £1587 6s., being at the rate of 7 per cent. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are 24 in number in close season and from 
5 to 8 in open season. Of these, 7 are in the pay of the Tay Salmon 
Fisheries Co., Ltd., in close season and 2 in the open season. The 
company also give the assistance of other men when required. 

4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—Since 
last report 44 cases have been tried (39 in Perth, 3 in Cupar-Fife, 
and 2 in Forfar), involving 84 persons. The offences consisted of— 
cleeking, 12; possession of foul fish, 8; possession in close time, 7 ; 
using salmon roe, 5: fishing without leave of the proprietor, 4; 
possession of cleek with intent to take salmon, 4; stoning, etc., 2; 
fishing with small mesh net, 1; sniggering, 1. Of the 84 persons 
involved, 77 were convicted (76 being fined and 1 admonished), 6 not 
proven, and 1 withdrawn owing to youth. Fines ranging from 3s. 6d. 
to £4 3s. were imposed. The total fines amounted to £119 16s., being 


28 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


an average of £1 11s. 6d. for each of the 76 persons convicted. Fines 
were paid by 28, 32 were imprisoned, and 21 have yet to be dealt 
with. The alternatives ranged from L to 30 days. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 
1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—None. 
2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—No change. 
3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—None. 


4, Natural obstructions not yet dealt with are :—Falls of Tummell, Falls of 
Garry, Falls of Keith. 


Pollutions— 


1. The existing pollutions are :—Bleachfields at Luncarty, on Shochie and 
on Almond. Sewage pollution from Perth city. 
1, Remedial measures :—-No new measures adopted within the past year. 


The Salmon Disease— 
1. Disease made its appearance this year in the month of November, and 
reached its height in January. 
The river was never quite free of disease. 


2. The number of diseased fish taken from the river and destroyed is 
estimated as follows :— 


Males, Females. 


Kelfs; 0: : ; : 600 550 


Clean, . : : : 20 


The Spawning Season—- 


1. Fish were first noticed spawning on 29th October. 

2. The greatest number spawned between 20th November and 25th 
December. 

3. Spawning ceased about end of January. 

4. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 


spawning season is regarded as fairly favourable. Salmon were very 
numerous. 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in February, March, April, 
and May. 


2. As asmolt year 1905 was a good average. The season was early and the 
run continued late. There were no extra shoals, but a long, steady 
run of seaward movement. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 


1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season was 456,000. 
2. In securing ova the numbers of fish captured were respectively—78 
females furnished the ova and 96 males furnished the milk. 
The total number of salmon landed was. 1860. 


REPORT FROM SOUTH ESK DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 


1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been a fair success as regards net 
fishing. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 29 


More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, a fair average. 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, rather below the average. 
(c) By rod and line, very poor owing to low state of river. 
2. No reliable information can be given as to actual number of fish caught. 
3. Particulars as to the times salmon grilse and sea trout appeared are as 
follows :——On 16th February first clean fish taken. Grilse ana sea 
trout appeared in beginning of July. Main run of grilse in July. 
Sea trout below the average. Main take of salmon generally in July 
and August. 
4. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was—(a) by 
nets, not known ; (b) by rod, 354 Ibs. 


Protection— 

1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £3590. 

2. The assessment levied was 10 per cent. on rental = £359. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are 9 in number during annual close time 
and generally 3 during fishing season. 

4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—Four 
prosecutions raised, in which 7 persons were implicated. Offences 
chiefly for using drags and gaffs, Mostly all resulted in conviction 
of the accused. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 
1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—No change. 
2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—-They are well observed and 
attended to. 
3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—Good fish passes in all dam dykes on 
river. 
4, No natural obstructions on the river. 


Pollutions— 

1. The existing pollutions are :—The pollution arising from the sewage farm 
below the town of Brechin has for some time given the District Board 
much anxiety, and especially last year, when the river was for a long 
period at a low level. In consequence of complaints made by the Board 
and the county sanitary authorities, the Town Council have the matter 
under consideration, and have undertaken to devise and carry out 
remedial measures whereby the pollution complained of may be 
removed. 


The Salmon Disease— 
No disease worth noticing has appeared in the river during the year. 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning about the middle of November. 
2. The greatest number spawned in December and January. 
3. Spawning ceased about the middle of January. 
4, As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as below the average as regards the num- 
ber of breeding fish. The level of the river was low. 


Kelts— 
Chief migration took place in March and April. 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in April and May. 
2. As a smolt year 1905 was a fair average. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 
No artificial propagation of salmon on the river. 


30 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


REPORT FROM NORTH ESK DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 

1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been good. 

2. The actual number of fish caught by rod and line from 31st August, when 
net fishing closed, to 31st October, when rod fishing also closed, was 207 
salmon and 55 grilse—total 262—as recorded by bailiffs. No statistics 
as to fish caught otherwise. 

3. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season by rod and 
line was 30 lbs., and the place of capture Inglismaldie fishings. 


Protection— 
1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £6489. 
2. The assessment levied was 7 per cent. 
3. The water bailiffs employed are i2 in number, including superintendent. 
4, No prosecutions instituted. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 


1. No dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect. 
- 2. Bye-laws observed. 
3. No fish passes built or in prospect. 
4, Natural obstructions not yet dealt with are :—“ Loups,” on North Esk, 
about 12 miles from mouth. ‘“ Loups,” on West Water (tributary), 
about 12 miles from mouth. 


Pollutions— 
1, The principal existing pollution is the effluent from North Esk Distillery, 
about a mile from the mouth of the river. 
1. Remedial measures :—Filtering tanks. 


The Salmon Disease— 
1, Disease made its appearance in the month of September 1904, and 
reached its height in January 1905. 
The river was free of diseased fish in the beginning of March 1905. 
2. The number of diseased fish taken from the river and destroyed was 


as follows :— 
Males. Females. Total. 
Kelts, . : ‘ ; 488 230 718 
Clean, . : : ; vee iy 19 
737 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning early in November. 
2. The greatest number spawned in December and January. 
3. Spawning ceased in the end of January. 
4. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as fair; fish were fewer in the upper 
reaches, and the river was lower than usual. 


Smolts — 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in March, April, and May. 
2. As a smolt year 1905 was good. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 31 


No artificial propagation of salmon, 


Note.—By a clerical error in the 12th Section of the Act of 1868 the word 
“Jess” is used in place of “more,” relating to the raising, during the 
weekly close time, of the Kinnaber lade sluice at the Morphie dyke. 
This is proposed to be amended by Sub-section (ii.) of Section 29 of 
the Salmon Fisheries (Scotland) Bill, introduced into the House of 
Lords at the end of last session by the Secretary for Scotland. 


REPORT FROM BERVIE DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 


1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been fairly good. 
2. Cannot give statistics of the actual number of fish caught. 
3. The first grilse were got in the beginning of May. 
4, The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was reported 
to be 25 lbs. 
The place of capture was Shieldhill, Kincardineshire. 


Protection— 
1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £910 13s, 
2. The assessment levied was 123 per cent. 
3. The water bailiffs employed are five in number, and superintendent. 
4, No prosecutions. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 
1. No dam dykes, disused, built, or in prospect. 
2. No fish passes built or in prospect. 

3. No natural obstructions. 


No pollutions. 
No salmon disease. 


The Spawning Season— 

1, Fish were first noticed spawning early in November. 

2. The greatest number spawned between the middle of November and end 
of December. 

3. Spawning ceased early in January. 

4. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
Spawning season is regarded as fair, There was a good number of 
salmon and sea trout, but few grilse. The river was about average 
winter level. 


Smolts— 


1, Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in May and June. 
2, As a smolt year 1905 was very good. 


No artificial propagation of salmon. 


REPORT FROM DEE (ABERDEENSHIRE) DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 


1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been below an average in the 
river ; in the sea about an average. 

More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, good average. 
(6) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, below average. 
(c) By rod and line, average. 


32 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


2. Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared are as follows :— 
First grilse caught was in river at Bridge of Dee on 6th March. 
(This is almost about the earliest date on record in the district.) 
Sea trout appeared towards the middle of March. 
4. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 45 lbs. 
The particulars of time and place of capture are :—On 10th July at 
Portlethen station on the coast. 


Protection— 


1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £19,332 17s. 4d. 

2. The assessment levied was at the rate of 52 per cent. on the rental. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are 23 in number. 

4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—7 cases 
of prosecution, implicating 10 men—2 for netting river and 8 for 
having unseasonable fish in possession, Three settled by money pay- 
ments out of court, 4 came into court—and all convicted. Fines 
from 10s. to £2, besides expenses. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 

1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—No dam dykes. 

2. With regard to the observation of bye-laws :—No cause for complaint as 
to the non-observance of bye-laws either by proprietors or tenants of 
fishings. 

3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—No fish passes. 

4. Natural obstructions not yet dealt with are :—There are no natural 
obstructions in the river itself, but obstructions from rocks exist to 
some extent in tributaries, such as the Feugh at Banchory and the 
Luie at Braemar, and these the Board propose to deal with when 
suitable arrangements can be made. 


Pollutions— 


1, The existing pollutions are :— Pollution in the Dee is not very aggravated, 
but has a tendency to increase. Such as it is it arises from the sewage 
of towns situated near the river, such as Aberdeen (part of), Banchory, 
the Tarland Burn, Lochnagar Distillery, &e. 

1. Remedial measures :—A great sewer has been in course of construction 
for the last five years, which will have the effect of clearing the lower 
river of all sewage from the city of Aberdeen, directing it into the sea 
near Girdleness. The work is now approaching completion, but the 
sewer is not yet in operation. Pollution from sewage, &c., exists to 
certain extents at various places in the upper waters, and these, so far 
as above the point where the existing water supply for Aberdeen is 
taken from the river, are presently under the consideration of the 
Aberdeen Town Council, who, it is understood, intend taking steps 
to have the pollution removed. 


The Salmon Disease— 
No disease in 1905. 


The Spawning Season— 

1. Fish were first noticed spawning on 12th October 1904. 

2. The greatest number spawned in upper reaches between 12th October 
and 30th November 1904 ; in lower reaches from 1st December 1904 
to lst February 1905. 

3. Spawning ceased towards middle of February. 

4, As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as very good—indeed the best that has 
been experienced for some years. During the whole of the spawning 
season the river was low. 


Smolts—- 


1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards on 1st March 1905. 
2. Asa smolt year 1905 was very good. 


| 
| 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 33 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 

1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season was 1,000,000 
put into the hatching boxes at Drum Hatchery between 23rd and 28th 
October 1904. 

2. In securing ova the numbers of male and female fish captured were 
respectively 182 and 246. Of the 1,000,000 ova, there were sub- 
sequently removed from the boxes about 39,600 addled or dead. 
The remainder appeared to be successfully hatched and were 
deposited in burns or tributaries of the Dee, viz., the Baddoch 
Burn, the Clunie, the Geldie, and the Bynnoch Burn—all in the 
vicinity of Braemar—on dates from the 10th to the 25th of May 1905, 
apparently in a healthy and thriving condition. 


REPORT FROM DON (ABERDEENSHIRE) DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 

1, As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been slightly above an average 
on coast, slightly below an average in river. 

More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, slightly above average. 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, slightly below average. 
(c) By rod and line, about an average. 

2. Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared are as follows :— 
First grilse caught at Berryhill station on the sea-coast on 10th April. 
Sea trout appeared in beginning of March. 

3. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 60 lbs. 

The particulars of time and place of capture are :—Berryhill station 
on the sea-coast in end «f July 1905. A good many fish caught in 
July 1905, ranging from 40 to 45 lbs. weight. 


Protection— 

1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £4153. 

2. The assessment levied was at the rate of 15 per cent. on the rental. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are 15 in number. 

4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—13 cases 
of prosecution, implicating 26 men—7 for taking unclean or unseason- 
able salmon, 4 for using gaff or other illegal instrument, and 2 for 
trespassing with intent. 25 of the men implicated were convicted. 
15 of the convicted men went to prison, 10 settled fine and expenses, 
and 1 not convicted. Fines ranged from 5s. to £10, besides expenses. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 

1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—-None. 

2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—No cause for complaint as 
to the non-observance of bye-laws either by owners or tenants of 
fishings. 

3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—None. 

4, Natural obstructions not yet dealt with are :—Practically there are no 
natural obstructions on the Don requiring attention. 


Pollutions— 

1. The existing pollutions are from paper mills and wool mill on the 
banks of the lower river, and sewage matter from the northern 
district of the city of Aberdeen, extending also beyond the limits of 
the city boundary into the country. 

2. Remedial measures :—The construction of a large sewer is commenced 
(or to be commenced immediately) along the north bank of the river 
from Grandhome Bridge, about three miles from the sea, which is the 
northern extremity of the city boundary, which, it is hoped, will 
clear the river of all deleterious matter within the city boundary, 
discharging it into the sea about 2 miles south of the river mouth. 


34 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


‘The Salmon Disease— 
1. Disease made its appearance this year in the month of November, and 
reached its height in December 1904. 
The river was free of diseased fish in February 1905. 
2. The number of diseased fish taken from the river and destroyed was as 


follows :— 
Males, Females. 
Kelts, . : ‘ ‘ 102 58 
Clean, . 2 : i = ~ 


The Spawning Season— 

. Fish were first noticed spawning early in November. 

. The greatest number spawned during December. 

. Spawning ceased practically by the middle of February. 

. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as not very satisfactory. Owing to the 
low state of the river and so many obstructions by dam dykes in the 
lower river, the fish did not reach the upper waters, where the best 
spawning beds have always been. Consequently the spawning season 
cannot be called good. 


He CO bo ee 


Smolts— 


1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in the middle of March. 
2. As a smolt year 1905 was below an average. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 

1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season was about 
2,000,000 in December 1904, carried to and deposited in some of the 
tributaries in the middle reaches ; this done as the low state of the 
river prevented the fish from getting past the mill dykes.* 

2. In securing ova the numbers of male and female fish captured were :— 
Exact figures not taken note of at the time, but the proportions 
would be about 2 female fish to 1 male. 


REPORT FROM YTHAN DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 
1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been rather above the average. 
More particularly it has been 
(a) By sweep net in tidal waters, rather under the average. 
(6) By rod and line, rather under the average. 
2. The actual number of fish caught by rod and line has been 150 salmon. 
3. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 41 lbs., 
caught in a bag net at Port Erroll fishings in July. Heaviest salmon 
caught by rod and line, 27 lbs., in Upper Haddo House Water in 
October. 


Protection— 
1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £1369. 
2. The assessment levied was £175 14s. 11d. 
3. The water bailiffs employed are 5 in number during the winter, and 1 all 
the year round. 


* Further, about 80,000 ova put into the hatchery at Fish Street on 22nd December 
1904. About 60 per cent. of these were successfully hatched and put into the middle 
reaches of the Don and the Dee in the first week of June 1905. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 35 


4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—Augustus 
Herring fined 6d. and £2 of expenses for a contravention of Salmon 
Fisheries (Scotland) Act, 1844, Section 1; F. Wallace fined £1 15s. 
for a contravention of Section 15, Sub-section 1, of Salmon Fisheries 
(Scotland) Act, 1868; William H. Innes fined £1 and expenses £1 Is. 6d. 
for contravention of Section 15, Snb-section 1, of Salmon Fisheries 
(Scotland) Act, 1868; J. H. M. Neish fined £1 10s. and 9s. 2d. of 
expenses ; James Watson and William Stephen, fined 10s. and 9s. 2d. 
each of expenses for contravention of Salmon Fisheries (Scotland) Act, 
1868, Section 17. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish 
1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—None 
2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—Observed. 
3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—None. 
4, Natural obstructions not yet dealt with :—None. 


The Salmon Disease— 
1. Disease made its appearance this year in the month of January, and 
reached its height in February. 
The river was free of diseased fish in April. 
2. The number of diseased fish taken from the river and destroyed was 91, 
being 69 males and 22 females. 
The return for the previous season, which could not be included in last 
: year’s report, is as follows :—97 salmon, 11 sea trout—85 males and 
23 females. 94 fish were diseased ; 14 not diseased—100 kelts, 8 not 
spawned. 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning on 10th November 1904. 
2. The greatest number spawned between 14th December and i4th 
January. 
3. Spawning ceased in February. 
4, As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as very favourable. 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in April and May. 
2. Asa smolt year 1905 was very good. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 
1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season was about 
70,000. 


REPORT FROM UGIE DISTRICT, 


Take of Fish— 
1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been slightly improved. 
More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, slightly improved. 
(b) By sweep net it tidal or fresh waters, about the average. 
(c) By rod and line, about the average. 
2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 
(a) By fixed engine, 900 salmon ; 800 grilse. 
(b) By sweep net, 600 sea trout. 
(c) By rod and line, 27 salmon ; 5 grilse ; 1500 finnock and sea 
trout. 
3. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 43 lbs. 
The particulars of time and place of capture are :—The fish was taken at 
Boddam in the month of August 1905. 


36 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Protection— 

1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £778. 

2. The assessment levied was 15°635d, per £. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are five in number; Mr. George Anderson, 
who devotes his whole time; and, when on their beat, the assistance of 
four gamekeepers in the employment of Colonel Ferguson, of Pitfour. 

4, No prosecutions were instituted. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 

1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect:—There have been no 
alterations on dams during the year 1905, and no new ones built. 

2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—The dams are worked in 
accordance with the provisions of the bye-laws (Sch. F and G) 
regulating the same. ‘The cruives are only worked for the capture of 
fish for hatchery purposes. 

3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—None. 


Pollutions— 
None. 


The Salmon Disease— 
1. Disease made its appearance this year in the month of December 1904, 
and reached its height in January 1905. 
The river was free of diseased fish is May 1905. 
‘The number of diseased fish taken from the river and destroyed was as 


follows :— 
Males. Females. \ 
Kelts. : : : 2 3 
Clean, . ; j ; = bs 


The Spawning Season -- 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning on 20th November 1904. 
2. The greatest number spawned between 26th November and 31st 
December 1904. 
3. Spawning ceased on Ist January 1905. 
4, As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as good, 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in April 1905, and 
continued up to the end of August. 
2. Asa smolt year 1905 was good. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon—- 
1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season was 150, 000. 
2. In securing ova the numbers of male “and female fish captured were 
respectively 3 and 6. 


REPORT FROM DEVERON DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 
1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been much below the average. 
More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, a little below the average. 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, much below the average. 
(c) By rod and line, much below the average. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 37 


2. Expressed as percentages for each month of the season, so as to show the 
times of greatest run, the figures are :— 


Feb. | Mar. | April.| May. | June. | July. | Aug. | Sept. 


By Fixed Engine, , i , - - -- be 2 4 = ss 


Memories i, 5.) 6 1-.8,): 9 |. 8 | 108} 50 |. 85} - 


By Rod and Line, . : ; - _ ~ = 2 = 2 = 


Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared, as included in 
the above return, are as follows :—First grilse appeared on 2nd May, 
and principal’ run occurred in July. Principal run of sea trout 
occurred in July. 

4. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 45 lbs. 

The particulars of time and place of capture are :—Caught by fixed 
engine at Port Fife station, Gamrie. 


Protection— 


1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £3368 14s. 

2. The assessment levied was £863 4s. 7d. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are 11 in number, and superintendent. 

4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :-—-Case 
against John Rennie for illegal fishing at Huntly. Fined 10s. 


No obstructions to the passage of fish. 
No pollutions. 


The Salmon Disease— 
1. The number of dead fish taken from the river was as follows :— 


Males. Females, 
Kelts)" ~. ; ; : 69 19 
Clean, .. : ' - 1 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning on 16th October 1904. 
2. The greatest number spawned between 15th November and 31st December 
1904. 
3. Spawning ceased on 19th January 1905. 
4, As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as fair. 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in the beginning of April, 
2. As asmolt year 1905 was good. 
D 


38 Appendices to T'wenty-fourth Annual Report 


REPORT FROM SPEY DISTRICT, 


Take of Fish— 
1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been about the average. 
More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, above the average, 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, below the average. 
1. Percentage of fish taken each month, 1905 :— 


By Net and Coble. By Fixed Engine. 


Salmon.| Grilse. | Trout. |Salmon.| Grilse. | Trout. 


February, . ; ; : 10:3 - “2 aL? ~ | 
March, : : : - ff - iJ: 3°6 - a7 
Mori Sete oe ae 11-2 ‘1 7-9 4:8 E 6 
Maye se ee ere | 168 19 | 15:4 | 20°8 21 | 24-6 
Fane ee th Weel vere 586 leas a eae 
July, . « «. -  #b) 290028) sepgenele n6-7a} tagos Yestom aeae 
Augustiaataiscue ban ssudlee208 elp pled 52 | 21:2 | 10: 16 


Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared, as included in 
the above return, are as follows :—First grilse taken 30th March, main 
take in July ; first sea trout taken 11th February, main take in June. 


3. The weights and particulars of the heaviest salmon taken during the 
season were as follows :-—March 23rd—1 salmon, 40 lbs., by net and 
coble, river “ Raik” ; July 3rd—1 salmon, 38 lbs., by net and coble, 
river “Raik” ; July 7th—1 salmon, 35 lbs., by sea bag nets ; July 22nd 
-—1 salmon, 38 lbs., by net and coble; July 22nd—1 salmon, 45 lbs., 
by net and coble; August 18th and 26th—2 salmon, 38 lbs. respec- 
tively, by net and coble. 


Protection— 

1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £8364 15s. 

2. The assessment levied was £1167 lls. 7d. The rate was 2s. 9$d. per &. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are 46 in number. 

4. Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—One man 
prosecuted before Sheriff Court for attempting to gaff salmon on 
spawning redds. Fined 10s., with 30s. 6d. expenses, or seven days’ 
imprisonment. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 
1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—Much the same as last year. 
No new dykes built during the year. 
2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—-Fairly well attended to. 
3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—No change. 


Pollutions— 
1. The existing pollutions are principally caused by distilleries, 
1. Remedial measures :—Purification works or schemes for such are being 
provided at almost all of the distilleries in the district. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 39 


The Salmon Disease— 
1. Disease made its appearance in the month of November 1904, and reached 
its height in January 1905. 
The river was free of diseased fish in June. 
2. The number of diseased fish taken from the river and destroyed was on 
Fiddich, 32, as follows :— 


Males. Females. 


SS 


Kelts, . 3 : : 29 3 


Clean, . ; ; : - - 


The Spawning Season— 


1. Fish were first noticed spawning on 5th October 1904. 

2. The greatest number spawned during November 1904. 

3. Spawning ceased in March 1905. 

4, As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as a record good one for 18 years, 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in April, May, June, and 
July. 
2. Asa smolt year 1905 was very good—above the average. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 
1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season was 850,000. 


2. In securing ova the numbers of male and female fish captured were 
respectively 35 and 70. 


REPORT FROM LOSSIE DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 


1. Bags nets used in sea at Lossiemouth, and occasionally a sweep net at 
river mouth. Extent of catch not known. 
Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared are as follows :— 
Grilse and sea trout run up the Lossie, seeking up to spawning 
grounds as early as July and August, if spates or freshets occur. 


Protection— 


1. His Grace the Duke of Richmond and Gordon contributed voluntarily 
£57 9s. 8d., and Captain Dunbar-Brander £15, to meet expenses for 


ear. 
2. The water bailiffs employed are 3 in number during spawning season, 
and 1 during smolt protection. 
3. Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—1 prose- 
*  ceution for “sniggering,” when 2 men were fined £1 each with 
expenses. 
Other 2 were reprimanded for taking smolts in ignorance of the law. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 
1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :--No difference from last year. 
2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :— Fairly well observed. 
3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—No difference from last year. 
4. Natural obstructions not yet dealt with are rcck or linn at Kellas. 


40 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Pollutions— 
1. The existing pollutions are Elgin burgh sewage, as also some half-dozen 
distilleries. 
1. Remedial measures :—Experimental sewage works at Elgin. Distilleries 
doing something in way of settling tanks, &c., &c. 


The Salmon Disease— 
1. Disease made its appearance in the month of November 1904, and reached 
its height in January 1905. 
The river was free of diseased fish in June. ; 
2. The number of diseased fish taken from the river and destroyed was 41, 


as follows :— 
Males. Females, 
Kelis, ~. ‘ : : 31 10 
Clean, . ‘ ; ; = 33 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning on 14th October 1904. 
2. Spawning ceased middle of January 1905. 
3. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as an average one. 


Smolts—- 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in April, May, and June. 
2. As a smolt year 1905 was an average one. 


REPORT FROM FINDHORN DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 
1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been below the average. 
More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, below the average. 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, about an average. 
(c) By rod and line, below the average. 
2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 
(a) By fixed engine, 15,702. 
(b) By sweep net, 5523. 
(c) By rod and line, below the average. 
3. Expressed as percentages for each month of the season, so as to show the 
times of greatest run, the figures are :— 


Feb. | Mar. | April.| May. | June. | July. | Aug. | Sept. 


—S — | | | 


By Fixed Engine, . : . | 287 | 777 | 1200 | 2334 | 3404 | 6346 | 13854]; - 


| 
| 


By Sweep Net, . : : 97 | 253} 433) 726 | 1280 | 2426) 108; - 


By Rod and Line, . : : - = = = = = = " 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 4] 


Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared, as included in 
the above return, are as follows :—NSea trout in June and grilse in 
July. 
4, The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 41 lbs. 
The particulars of time and place of capture are :—Burghead by bag net. 


Protection— 
1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £3661. 
2. The assessment levied was £300. 
3. The water bailiffs employed are 3 in number yearly; 12 extra during 
close or spawning season. 
4, There were no prosecutions. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 
1. No dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect. 
2, With regard to the observance of bye-laws, they are strictly adhered to. 
3. No fish passes built or in prospect. 
4, Natural obstructions not yet dealt with :-—None. 


Pollutions— 
None. 


The Salmon Disease— 
There never was any disease in the river Findhorn. 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning on 14th October. 
2. The greatest number spawned between 20th October and 20th November. 
3. Spawning ceased in 1905 about 25th January. 
4, As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as very good. 


Smolts— 


1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in April, May, and June. 
2. Asa smolt year 1905 was very good. 


REPORT FROM THE NAIRN DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 


1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been—Salmon, average ; grilse, 
rather below average. 

More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, about the average, 
(b) By rod and line, about the average. 
2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 
(a) By fixed engine 
(6) By sweep net ix information available. 
(c) By rod and line 
4, The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 35 lbs. 
The particulars of time and place of capture are :—April 1905, Kingsteps 
Sea Station, Nairn. 


Protection— 


1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £1218 10s. 

2. The assessment levied was £157 7s. 9d. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are 1 permanent and 2 during close ::eason. 

4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—No 
prosecutions ; one case reported which resolved itself into a charge of 
assaulting the police ; offenders convicted and sharply punished. 


42 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 
1, Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—No changes, 
2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—No changes. 
3. Fish passes built or in prospect ;—No changes. 
4. Natural obstructions not yet dealt with :—None. 


Pollutions— 
No pollution since the town sewage was carried into the sea. 


The Salmon Disease— 
No salmon disease. 


The Spawning Season— 


1. Fish were first noticed spawning on 6th November. 

2. The greatest number spawned between 12th November and 14th 
December. 

3. Spawning ceased about 20th January. 

4, As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as very good in all respects. 


Smolts— 


1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in April. 
2. As a smolt year 1905 was an average year. 


REPORT FROM THE NESS DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 


t. 1, As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 

generally throughout the district has been below the average. 

Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared, are as follows : 
—We sometimes have an occasional grilse in May, but more usually 
in June, July, and August, July being the biggest run. June and July 
are the principal months for sea trout. Our biggest takes of salmon 
are in February and April. 

2. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 41 lbs. 
The particulars of time and place of capture are :—River Garry, March. 


Protection— 


1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £3646 10s. 

2. The assessment levied was 1s. 10d. per £. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are 8 in number—4 permanent, 4 temporary. 

4. Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—Two 
prosecutions for contravention of the weekly close time. Learnie— 
One case, for three nets, fined £18, with expenses (July 1905). 
Oromarty—The other, for one net, £10, with expenses (July 1905). 
One case of unclean salmon, fine £1, with £1 10s. expenses ; this case 
was taken at Fort-Augustus, Loch Ness (May 1905). 


Obstructions to the Passace of Fish— 

1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—Bught dyke repaired last 
season, also Dochfour dyke repaired. The fish pass entering Loch 
Ness from river is an obstruction when the rivers are in a low state, 
and fish ascending to the upper reaches are stopped there until there 
is sufficient water to enable them to get over fish pass. 

2. Fish passes built or in prospect :—Fish pass on the river Morrison 
finished last season, with the result that the spawning grounds are 
pretty well stocked, thus showing that there is now a free passage for 
fish ascending to those spawning grounds. 


Pollutions— 
1. The existing pollutions are very slight. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 43 


The Salmon Disease— 
No disease last season. 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning about Ist November or end of October. 
2. The greatest number spawned from middle of November to middle of 
January. 
3. Spawning ceased end of January. 
4, As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as fairly good. 


Smolts— 


1, Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards early in April. 
2. Asa smolt year 1905 was above the average. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 
1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season—We did not 
have any fish striped since 1895. 
2. In securing ova the numbers of male and female fish captured were :— 
In that year in the months of December and January there were 4 
males to 1 female. 


REPORT FROM CONON DISTRICT, 


Take of Fish— 


1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been an average one. 
More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, considerably above the average. 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, below the average. 
(c) By rod and line, below the average. 
2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 


0) aa {Tt is impossible to obtain accurate information 


ea from the lessees of salmon fishings. 


(c) By rod and line 
3. Expressed as percentages for each month of the season, so as to show the 
times of greatest run, the figures are :— 


Feb. | Mar. | Apr. May. |June.| July. | Aug. | Sept. 


———_—- 


SN ee eS 


By Fixed Engine, . : : 1 9 10 13 15 40 12 - 
By Sweep Net, . 3 : 2 7 9 8 Tf 43 14 - 
By Rod and Line, . . : 3 15 14 (ij 13 18 13 10 


Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared, as included in 
the above return, are as follows :—The main run of sea trout was in 
March and April. The first run of grilse was about the middle of 
May. 

4, The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 30 lbs. 

The particulars of time and place of capture are :—Shandwick Fishery, 
in June. 


Protection— 


1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £2974 10s. 
2. The assessment levied was ls. 4d. per £. 


+4 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


3. The water bailiffs employed are 4 in number—3 temporary and 1 per- 
manent, 

4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—There 
were 2 prosecutions for failure to observe the weekly close time. (1) 
In the first case the respondents were Messrs. George Paterson & Sons, 
salmon fishers, Portmahomack, and they were charged for failure to 
slap the leaders of their bag nets at several fishing stations on two or 
three successive weeks. A conviction was obtained on one or two of 
the charges. and a fine of £12 was imposed. (2) The other prosecution 
was against Mrs. Margaret Tough, lessee of the Geanies Fisheries, also 
for failure to observe the weekly close time. A conviction was 
obtained and a fine of £5 imposed. In addition to the above, a pro- 
secution was instituted in London by the Fishmongers’ Company 
on our behalf against J. Finlayson, fisherman, Cromarty, for 
sending foul fish to the London market. The trial took place in 
London, and defendant was convicted and fined £10 15s., being 5s. for 
each fish taken, with £10 10s. of expenses, or, in default, two months’ 
imprisonment. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 


1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—No dam dykes have been 
disused nor built, or are any in prospect. 


2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—All the bye-laws have been 
strictly observed. 

3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—No fish passes have been built, nor are 
there any in prospect. 

4, Natural obstructions not yet dealt with are :—Falls of Orrin, Falls of 
Scatwell, Falls of Conon, Falls of Rogie, and Falls of Garve. 

Pollutions— 
None. 


The Salmon Disease— 
None, 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning about the middle of October. 
2. The greatest number spawned between 5th November and 18th Novem- 
ber. 
3. Spawning ceased about the middle of December. 
4. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as about the average. 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in March, April, and May. 
2. Asa smolt year 1905 was fairly good. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 
1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season was nil. 
Owing to the very heavy floods during the time spawning salmon were 
on the redds, it was not practicable to put a net on the river. 


REPORT FROM ALNESS DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 


1, As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been below the average. 
More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea—No fixed engines in Alness district. 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, below the average. 
(c) By rod and line, below the average. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 45 


2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 
(a) By fixed engine—No fixed engines. 
(b) By sweep net, not known. 
(c) By rod and line, not known. 

3. Grilse appear about middle of June, and best run is in July; sea trout 
June and July. Finnochs can be got near mouth of river nearly all 
the year round. A few salmon are to be found running up the Alness 
from April to October. 

4. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 16 lbs., 
taken by rod and line; cannot say the weight of heaviest landed by 
net, but several were got over 20 lbs. 


Protection— 

1. The assessable rental for 1904-05 was £735 15s. 

2. The assessment levied was 3s. per £.=£110 7s. 3d. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are as follows :—1 permanent head water 
bailiff, with temporary assistant watchers as may be found necessary 
during the spring and autumn months. During spring of 1905 
2 temporary assistants were employed, and during autumn of 1905 
1 temporary assistant. 

4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted :—None in 1909. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 

1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—No change. 

2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—There has been no breach 
of bye-laws. 

3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—No change. 

4, Natural obstructions not yet dealt with :—No natural obstructions in 

; the district. 

Pollutions— 

1. The existing pollutions are :—Sewage from the villages of Alness and 
Bridgend, and also from some mansion-houses in the vicinity of the 
river. This matter is under the consideration of the local authorities. 

1. Remedial measures :—The Easter Ross District Committee and the Mid 
Ross District Committee, as the local authorities within whose 
districts the said villages are situated, are at present discussing a joint 
scheme under which the sewage of both villages will be carried direct 
into the sea. 


The Salmon Disease— 
1. The river was free of diseased fish in 1905. 


The Spawning Season— 

1. Fish were first noticed spawning on or about 20th October. Sea trout, 
salmon, and grilse were first noticed spawning in end of October. 

2. The greatest number spawned about the middle of November. 

3. Spawning ceased generally about Christmas. 

4, As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as below the average. The water was 
heavy in flood most of the season, which made it difficult to ascertain 
the numbers of spawning fish. 


Smolts— 
1, Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in May and June. 
2, As asmolt year 1905 was good. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 


1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season was nil, but over 
40,000 were got from Helmsdale river with a view to getting earlier 
salmon to run up the river Alness. 


46 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


REPORT FROM KYLE OF SUTHERLAND DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 


1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been very good. 
More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, above the average. 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, above the average. 
(c) By rod and line, average. 
2. Grilse and sea trout appeared in June. 
3. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 38 lbs. 
The particulars of time and place of capture are :—May, sweep net, Bonar 
Bridge. 


Protection— 

1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £3514 10s. 

2. The assessment levied was 2s. 1d. per £. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are 17 in number. 

4. Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—There 
were 2 prosecutions on sea coast for failure to comply with the weekly 
close time, viz. :—(1) Against George Main, lessee of Dornoch net 
fishings, in Dornoch Sheriff Court, on 26th June 1905, when accused 
was fined 10s. 6d. with 15s. of expenses; and (2) against George 
Anderson & Sons, lessees of Portmahomack net fishings, in Tain 
Sheriff Court, on 27th June 1905, when complaint was found not 
proven. James Robertson, miller, Grinds, Lairg, was prosecuted in 
Dornoch Sheriff Court, on 7th November 1905, for taking from the 
river Shin more water than was necessary for lawful purposes, and 
was fined £3, with £1 of expenses. 


The Salmon Disease— 
1. Disease made its appearance this year in the month of October, and 
reached its height in November. 
The river was free from diseased fish in December. 
2. The number of diseased fish taken from the river and destroyed was as 


fellows :— 
Males. Females. 
Kelts, . ; ; é 3 1 
Clean, . - } 4 = a 


The Spawning Season— 
1, Fish were first noticed spawning on 16th October. 
2. The greatest number spawned in November. 
3. Spawning ceased in the middle of November. 
4, As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as very good. 


Smolts— 


1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in April and May. 
2. Asa smolt year 1905 was below the average. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 


1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season was 160,000. 
2. In securing ova the numbers of male and female fish captured were 
respectively 40 and 20. 


——————————————— 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 47 


REPORT FROM SUTHERLAND (EAST AND WEST), BEING 
FOR HELMSDALE, BRORA, FLEET, KIRKAIG, INVER, 
LAXFORD, AND INCHARD DISTRICTS. 


NOTE.—The particulars printed in italics refer to the West Coast of 
Sutherland. 


Take of Fish— 
1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been above the average by rods. 
2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 
(a) By fixed engine—- Salmon, 646 ; grilse, 4731 ; trout, 211. 
(b) By sweep net—Salmen, 826 ; grilse, 312 ; trout, 125. 
(c) By rod and line—Helmsdale, 1325 ; Brora, 382. 
3. Expressed as percentages for each month of the season, so as to show the 
times of greatest run, the figures are :— 


Jan. | Feb.| Mar. | April.| May. | June. | July. | Aug.) Sept. 

Salmon, | — ~ 3°56 | 3:89 | 30°65 | 36°22 | 23°83 | 1:85) - 

By Fixed Engines Grrilse, - - - 02| 1:33| 43°73 | 52:01) 2:91| - 
Trout, ~ ~ “47 "47 | 7:68 | 54:97 | 35:09 | 1°42) - 

Salmon, | - — | 82°68 | 27°60 | 24°57 | 7°87] 4:35)2°93; - 

By Sweep Net Grilse, ~ - - — | 12°82 | 67°00} 13°46 |6°72) - 
Trout, - - ~ — | 16:00 | 64°80 | 16-00 | 3-20; - 

By Rod and Line, . . | 90 | 6°80 | 32:00 | 17°73 | 15°54] 14:06] 7°47 | 3:09 | 2°41 


Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared, as included in 
the above return, are as follows :—On the West Coast grilse were first 
caught in the month of April and sea trout in March by the bag nets. 
The river Brora netting did not start till lst May ; the figures shown 
for the months March and April were arrived at by including fish 
netted in Loch Brora during those months. 

4, The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 26% Ibs., 
by rod and line. 

The particulars of time and place of capture are :—Caught on No. 6 
beat (lower) of the river Helmsdale by Frank Sykes, Esq., Borrobol. 


Protection— 

1. The assessable rental for 1905, according to valuation roll, was, East Coast 
£2160, West Coast £1317, but angling is mostly let with shootings 
and not apportioned at full value. 

2. The water bailiffs employed are 4 in number, but gamekeepers are bound 
to assist in watching the rivers and streams. 


Obstructions to the Passage of F'ish— 

1, Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—The Badanloch dam has been 
heightened two feet with a view to keeping the river Helmsdale 
supplied with water for a longer period than formerly. 

2. hee hc to the observance of bye-laws :—The bye-laws have been 
observed. 


Pollutions— 
There is no pollution. 


The Salmon Disease— 
1, Disease made its appearance last year in the month of June on the river 
Brora and continued till the spawning season. It has not been noticed 
since. 


West Coast. 


Brora Net 
Fishings, 


Helmsdale 
River. 


48 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


2. The number of diseased fish taken from the river and destroyed was 9. 
Of 5 of these there were 2 males and 3 females; sex of others not 
known. 


The Spawning Season— 

1. Fish were first noticed spawning on October 25th, 1905. 

2. The greatest number spawned between the 2nd and 10th November 1905. 

3. Spawpiag ceased about the end of Nov2mber 1905. 

4. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as an unsatisfactory one as far as the state 
of water is concerned. Rivers were in high flood, and observations 
were difficult. 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in the second week of 
April. 
2. Asa smolt year 1905 was an exceptionally good year. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 
1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season was 985,000. 


2. In securing ova the proportion of male to female fish captured was 2 
males to 3 females. 


REPORT FROM THURSO DISTRICT, 


Take of Fish— 


1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the dis strict has been about an average. 
2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 
(a) By fixed engine—Salmon, 717; grilse, 4350. 
(b) By rod and line, 432. 
The particulars showing results of coast fishings by fixed engine are 
exclusive of the Holborn Head and the Dunnet fisheries. 
3. Expressed in numbers for each month of the season, so as to show the 
times of greatest run, the figures are :— 


Feb. | Mar. April.| May. pies | Suly. Aug. | Sept. 
EEE OES oe (RS Nate Par Bie ws byt “shee a A Ss Sse 
/ | | 
- | 2) 178 | 2107 | 9593 | 172| - 


or By Fixed Engine, . 
| By Rod and Line, . 


i 
gia. 


Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared, as included in 
the above return, are as follows :—Grilse in July. 
4, The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season by rod and 
line was 25 lbs. 
pape ys of time and place of capture are :—September 5, beat 7 
of river. 


Protection— 
The water bailiffs employed are 2 in number. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 
None. 


P ollutions— 
None. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland 49 


The Salmon Disease— 
No disease. 
The Spawning Season— 
1, Fish were first noticed spawning on 25th October 
2. The greatest number spawned on November 10th. 
3. Spawning ceased about 23rd November. 
4. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 


spawning season is regarded as poor. 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in April and May. 
2. Asa smolt year 1905 was not good. 
Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 
1, The number of ova secured locally during the past season was 100,000. 
2. In securing ova the numbers of male and female fish captured were 


respectively regular. 


COUNTY OF SUTHERLAND — NORTH COAST (RIVERS 
HALLADALE, NAVER, BORGIE, KINLOCH, AND HOPE). 


Take of Fish— 
1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been up to the average. Grilse 


fell off suddenly about the middle of July. 


More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, an average year. 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, an average year. 
(c) By rod and line, an average year. 
2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 
(a) By fixed engine, 446 salmon, 3020 grilse. 
(b) By sweep net, 509 salmon, 2372 grilse. 


(c) By rod and line, 418 salmon and grilse. 
3. Expressed as percentages for each month of the season, so as to show the 


times of greatest run, the figures are :— 
June. | July. | Aug. | Sept. 


! 
Jan. | Feb. | Mar. | April.) May. 
By Fixed Engine, zty 4 | 40 | 54 

26 - - 


By Sweep Net, . hy 
25 24 3 8 2 


25 


By Rod and Line, 
Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared, as included in 


the above return, are as follows :—First grilse appeared on 28th April; 


run of sea trout in March and April. 
4, The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 31 lbs. 


The particulars of time and place of capture are :— 
(a) By fixed engine, 31 lbs., at Halladale in July. 
(b) By sweep nets, 28 lbs., at Naver in May and also in July. 
(c) By rod and line, 21 lbs., at Borgie, May 1, 1905. 


Protection— 
1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £1315 per valuation roll, but angling 
mostly let with shootings and not apportioned at fixed value in roll. 


2. No assessment was levied. 


50 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


3. The water bailiffs employed are 4 in number, in addition to keepers who 
assist in watching. 
4, No prosecutions. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 
1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—None. 
2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—None. 
3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—None. 
4. Natural obstructions not yet dealt with :—None. 


Pollutions— 
None. 


The Salmon Disease— 
None. 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning on 22nd October. 
2. The greatest number spawned between 28th October and 20th November. 
3. Spawning ceased early in December. 
4. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as favourable. 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards from 20th April till 20th 
May. 
2. Asa smolt year 1905 was fairly good. There was a better appearance of 
smolts than in the three previous years. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 
None ; but 25,000 young salmon fry placed in rivers in April. 


REPORT FROM BALGAY DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 
1. By rod and line, rather below the previous average. 
2. The greatest run of sea trout and grilse was in the month of July. 
3. The particulars of time and place of capture are :—The river Balgay and 
Lochdoule. 


Protection— 
1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £40. 
2. The assessment levied was nil—all expenses paid by Mr. C. J. Murray, of 
Lochearron, and Hon. Captain King Noel. 
3. One water bailiff is employed. 
4. Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—One. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 


1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—None. 
2. Fish passes built or in prospect :—None. 


Pollutions— 
None. 


The Salmon Disease— 
None. 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning on or about the 14th October, rather 
later than on the previous (wo or three years, especially sea trout. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 5] 


2. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as favourable. 


Smolts— 
As a smolt year 1905 was apparently good. 


REPORT FROM SKYE DISTRICTS (SNIZORT AND 
SLIGACHAN). 


Take of Fish— 


1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been much below the average. 
More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, much below the average. 
(c) By rod and line, below the average. 
2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 
(a) By fixed engine, numbers unobtainable. 
(6) There is no sweep netting. 
(c) By rod and line, numbers unobtainable. 
3. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 34 lbs. 
caught in July. 


Protection— 
1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £540. 
2. The total expenditure was £14. This sum was equally divided and paid 
by the several proprietors, five in number. 
3. The water bailiffs employed are 15 in number. 
4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :--No 
prosecutions during 1905. 


REPORT FROM LOCHY DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 


1, As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been under the average so far as 
rod and line fishing is concerned. No netting is carried on. 

2. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was; 47 lbs. 

The particulars of time and plaice of capture are :—In less than 5 minutes 
in a small narrow stream. 


- Protection— 

1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £2231. 

2. The assessment levied was ld. per £. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are 12 in number. 

4. Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—1 
prosecution against 2 persons salmon poaching in estuary—ali 
convicted ; 2 prosecutions against 2 persons salmon pvaching in 


estuary—all convicted ; 3 prosecutions against two persons poaching 
in river Nevis—1 convicted. 


The Spawning Season— 


1. Fish were first noticed spawning on tributaries 20th October. 

2. The greatest number spawned from 20th November till 20th December. 

3. Spawning ceased by end of June. 

4. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as—(1) fair number of breeding fish; 


(2) river in flood most of the time ; (3) rather unfavourable spawning 
season. 


52 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards about 20th May. 
2, As a smolt year 1905 was very poor. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 
1, The number of ova secured locally during the past season was 80,000. 


REPORT FROM AWE DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 
1, As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been an average catch. 
More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, 23 bag nets. 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, 2 sweep nets. 
(c) By rod and line, very difficult to estimate. Rods are let out 
by two hotels in addition to the sporting tenants’ rights. 
2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 
(a) By fixed engine 
(b) By sweep net No information can be got from tenants. 
(c) By rod and line 
3. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 54 Ibs. 
The particulars of time and place of capture are :—-Awe, netted, time 
not known 


Protection— 

1. The assessable rental for 1905-1906 was £1305 19s. 

2. The assessment levied was £163 4s. 10d. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are 1 in number, Donald Rankin, Oban. 

4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—(1) 
Against M‘Coll, salmon fisher, Appin, for using a net having mesh not 
of legal size. Accused pled guilty and was fined £2. Year 1904-1905. 
(This complaint was at the instance of the Fishmongers’ Company of 
London.) (2) Against Donald M‘Millan and John M‘Callum, Tay- 
nuilt, for night poaching. Accused pled not guilty, but on evidence 
the charge against M‘Millan was found not proven, and M‘Callum was 
found guilty and fined £1, with expenses. (3) Against Alexander 
Carmichael and 7 others for poaching. Under this charge Alexander 
Carmichael, John Bell, and William Reid, fishermen, Oban, and 
Alexander M‘Callum, painter, Oban, were found guilty and each fined 
£2, with the alternative of a month’s imprisonment. The net and boat 
used were confiscated. (4) Against Archibald Macfadyen, salmon 
fisher, Shuna. Charge—fishing during close time. Accused pled 
guilty and was fined £1, with expenses. (2), (3), and (4) complaints at 
instance of Awe Board.) 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 

1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—Mill lade on the river 
Lusragan at Connel. The fish ladder is obstructed by a board at top, 
prohibiting the fish from ascending or descending. The board has 
been removed several times at the instance of the Board, and steps are 
again being taken for its removal. The board has been placed in its 
position by the owner of an adjacent tweed mill, Mr. D. Cameron 
MacLachlan. 

2. Fish passes built or in prospect :—No necessity for any fish passes in 
river Awe. 

3. Natural obstructions not yet dealt with :—None. 

[This answer must be regarded as applying exclusively to the Awe, 
and not to the other streams of the District, such as the Orchy and 
Etive.—-W.L.C. | 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 58 


Pollutions— 
_ 1, The existing pollutions are :—In the Lusragan river all refuse from a 
tweed mill goes into the river. 
1. Remedial measures :—The taking of the refuse in a pipe to the sea would 
eure this 


The Salmon Disease— 
None. 


The Spawning Season-— 

1 Fish were first noticed spawning on 27th October. 

2. The greatest number spawned in November. 

3. Spawning ceased about the end of December. 

4. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as a very good average season, especially 
in sea trout. Such numbers of the latter have not been seen of recent 
years. 


Smolts— 


1, Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards about 8th March 1905. 
2. Asasmolt year 1905 was a fair, good year. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 

1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season was nil. Ova 
has lately been secured fora hatchery built in October 1905 at the head 
of Loch Etive for Mr. Ian T. Nelson. Should further particulars be 
required, these can be got from Mr. Nelson and submitted. 

2. In securing ova the numbers of male and female fish captured were 
nil. 


REPORT FROM CLYDE AND LEVEN DISTRICT 
(INCLUDING LOCH LOMOND). 


Take of Fish— 


1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been, by net in the Clyde 
considerably above, and by rod in the Leven and Loch Lomond pro- 
portionately below, the average. 

More particularly it has been 

(a) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters of the Clyde and Leven 
mouth, above the average. 

(b) By rod and line in the Leven and Loch Lomond, below the 
average. 

Note.—There are no fixed engines in this district. 

2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 

(a) By sweep net, 297 salmon, 748 grilse, and 5619 sea trout. 

(b) By rod and line, approximately, in Loch Lomond only, 38 
salmon and grilse and 435 sea trout. 

3. Expressed as percentages for each month of the season, so as to show the 
times of greatest run, the figures are :— 


Feb. | Mar. |April|May. |June.| July./Aug. |Sept.) Oct. | 


| 
Salmon, ; - _ I 7 a EG ey - ~ | 58 


| By Sweep Net 2 Grilse, - Apel ae > 4 14 | 86 = = = 
Sea Trout, . - - | = yt to”) OO - =o) ans 

SS Be ROS far wel Se So oe PS ee RS cae Ses aeeine: ieeicoecmeen. eoceeemns Goto sceee RUT OO Pee 

| Salmon and | | 

| By Rod & Line | Grilse, - . - 3 | 23. | 36 | 20 - q: | 10 ~ 

| Sea Trout, . - - 2 3 6 - | 55 | 82 Z| 


E 


54 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared, as included“in 
the above return, are as follows :—Grilse, 24th May; sea trout, 27th 
April. 

4. The oan of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was (1) by 
rod and line in river Leven, 23% lbs., and (2) by sweep net in the 
Clyde, 20 lbs. 

The particulars of time and place of capture are :—(1) Caught by minnow 
on April Ist between Balloch Bridge and the loch ; (2) ae in July 
in Clyde below Dumbarton. 


Protection— 

1. There is no District Board for the Clyde and Leven district, but the duties 
of one are voluntarily undertaken by the Loch Lomond Angling Im- 
provement Association at private cost. 

2. The water bailiffs employed vary in number with the season of the year, 
and the system of watching was fully described in last year’s report. 

3. Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :— 


1905. Convictions. 


April 24—Taking parr from river Fruin, 
June 4—Otter fishing on Loch Lomond, 
» 24—Netting raid on Leven shots, 

», 27—Gafting in Leven, 
5 30— Do. 
July 5— Do. 
» Ia Do. 
» ll— Do. 


14—Netting raid on Clyde shots, 
Aug. 2—Gaffing in Leven, 

14—Poaching Fruin, roe, parr, . 
Sept. 6—Hang nets in Loch Lomond, 


ow 
| Nr KK CONF Ewe pe 


Total, 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish—- 

1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—None. 

2. With regard to the ‘observance of bye-laws in respect of dams, Jades, and 
heeks, the provisions of the bye-laws are satisfactorily attended to. 

3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—None. 

4, Natural obstructions not yet dealt with are almost too numerous to 
mention, as practically all tributaries of the loch are impeded by 
natural falls, many of which are quite impassable. The most 
important is the Pot of Gartness, which is only passable in a flood, 
and which makes about 12 miles of the Endrick spawning ground 
difficult of access. The proprietors will not consent to the pass being 
made easier for fish. 


Pollutions— 

1. The existing pollutions are many and grievous. The Leven is foul with 
chemicals and dyes from the turkey red and bleach works on its 
banks, several of which make no effort to clean their effluents. It is 
also putrid with sewage effluents, none of which are treated before 
entering the river. During June and July 1905 the river was 
impassable during the drought for migratory fish, and the flesh of the 
fish hanging about the mouth of the Leven became tainted and un- 
saleable. The Clyde is polluted with sewage and other pollutions. 

1, Remedial measures :—None are being taken by those at fault, but the 
Association is attempting to interdict the Western District Committee 
of the County Council of Dumbarton from discharging the sewage 
from two new sewers into the Leven at Alexandria without adequate 
treatment. Interim interdict has been granted. 

The city of Glasgow’s sewage scheme will ‘take some years yet before it 
is fully in operation as regards the Clyde. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 55 


The Salmon Disease— 


Disease is practically unknown, but a case is said to have been observed 
in the river Fruin. 


The Spawning Season— > 
1.. Fish were first noticed spawning :—(1) Sea trout on October 2nd ; (2) 
~. salmon in November. 
2. The greatest number spawned :—(1) Sea trout in November ; (2) salmon 
in December. 
3. Spawning ceased :—(1) Sea trout by end of November ; (2) salmon by 
middle of January. | 
4, As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as about the average. 


Smolts— 


1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in May. 
2. Asa smolt year 1905 was an average good one. 


Artificial Propacation of Salmon— 


_1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season was :—(1) 
Trout, 166,000 ; (2) salmon and sza trout, 144,000. 
2. In securing ova the numbers of male and female fish captured were 
: not observed. 
3. Out of 21 sea trout marked in October 1904 as many as 9 were 
observed in 1905, but by mischance none of the labels were obtained 
for statistical purposes. 


REPORT FROM AYR DISTRICT. 
Take of Fish — ; 


1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been above the average. Fishing 
during the season has been carried on solely by rod and line. 

2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 

(a) By rod and line, about 120, but the information available is 
not very accurate. 

3. Expressed as percentages for each month of the season, so as to show the 
times of greatest run, the figures are :— 


Feb. | Mar. | April.| May. | June. | July. | Aug. | Sept. | Oct. 


By Fixed Engine, . - - = = 4 = 3 : 


| By Sweep Net, . - - - - ae tke = - = = 


By Rod and Line, . ~ ~ ~ - - 40 30 35 


eal 


Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared, as included in the 
above return, are as follows :—Sea trout—First run about end of Jnne. 
Grilse— About same time. Salmon—First big run occurred during the 
5th, 6th, and 7th of August. Before that there had been a spell of 
very dry weather, and there was no water to allow the fish to get up. 

4, The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 24 lbs, 

The particulars of time and place of capture are :—This fish was caught 

_ bya Mr. M‘Intyre, a local angler, when fishing in Gadgirth water. 
He was fishing with a brown turkey fly. The water was not deep at 
the place. The fish was in splendid condition. 


Or 


D6 Appendices to Twenty-jourth Annual Report 


Protection— 


1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £110. 

2. The assessment levied was £44. 

3. One bailiff only is regularly employed, but during the month of October 
the Board employed the services of a special constable. 

4. Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—Three 
men were fined for fishing with roe and having salmon roe in their 
possession ; two of these men were also convicted for having parr in 
their possession. Two men were fined for having parr in their 
possession, and one of them was also convicted for having a “ jigger ” 
in his possession—an instrument for dragging for salmon. One man 
was fined for fishing without permission of the proprietor ; this 


case has been appealed, and there are six similar cases awaiting the 
decision in that appeal. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 


1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—-The only obstruction to the 
passage of fish is the dam dyke at Catrine Cotton Works, and the 
matter is presently receiving the attention of the Board. 

2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—The bye-laws are pretty 
generally observed. There are one or two mill lades with hecks which 
are not satisfactory, but the Board is having them put in order. 

3, Fish passes built or in prospect :—There are no fish passes in the dam 
dyke at Catrine Cotton Works before referred to, but the Board has 
presently the matter before them, 


Smolts— 
‘1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in end of April, in May, 
and in the beginning of June. 
2. Asa smolt year 1905 was an exceptionally plentiful one. The report of 


the bailiff is that smolts were in larger numbers than during any time 
during the past six years, 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 
Nothing is being done in this respect. 


The Salmon Disease— 
The river was free of diseased fish during the whole season. 


The Spawning Season— 

. Fish were first noticed spawning on Ist December. 

. The greatest number spawn during December. 

. Spawning ceases about the end of January. 

. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 


spawning season is regarded as exceptionally good, especially as regards 
the increasing numbers of sea trout spawning. 


em & be 


Pollutions— 


1. The existing pollutions are:—No cases of pollution came under the 
notice of the Board during the season. No dead fish were taken out 
of the water which had been killed by polluting matter. 


REPORT FROM DOON DISTRICT. 
Take of Fish— 


1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been smaller on account of the 
exceptionally dry season, 

More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, over the average of previous years. 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters. Fishing in this manner 
is not now employed. 
(c) By rod and line, below the average. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 57 


2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 
(a) By fixed engine, not known. The lessees of the fishings refuse 
to give information. 
(b) By sweep net, none. 
(c) By rod and line, 78 salmon and 203 sea trout in lower reaches, 
i.e., from Monkwood water to the sea. There is no infor- 
mation as to the upper reaches, but the catches were pretty 
fair. 
3. Expressed as percentages for each month of the season, so as to show the 
times of greatest run, the figures are :— 


j Fr | 
| Feb. | Mar. apa May. June. July.| Aug. Sept. | Oct. 
i 


| | | | | 
Se le Se Soe eee eee 
H ' 


By Fixed Engine, er 2 


_ 


By Sweep Net, . Spe (bce e559 en he = = = ee 


aga (eee cal pares 


| 
| By Rod and Line, st Ps | 1 


Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared, as included in 
the above return, are as follows :—Grilse appeared in June; sea 
trout appeared in May. 

4, The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 36 Ibs. 
by net and 254 lbs. by rod and line. 

The particulars of time and place of capture are :—The 36-lb. fish was 
captured in August in the bag net in the sea near to the river mouth ; 
the 25}-lb. fish was captured by rod and line about the beginning of 
August in Doouholm water about three miles from the river mouth. 


Protection— 

i. The assessable rental for 1905 was £498. 

2. The assessment levied was £37 7s. 

3. There are only two water bailiffs empioyed, but during October the Board 
engaged the services of a special constable to watch the upper reaches 
of the river. The keepers also of the various proprietors look after 
the water. 

4. Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows:—(1) The 
lessees of the bag-net fishings in the sea were prosecuted for failure 
on two separate occasions to remove the leaders of eight of their 
nets during the weekly close time. The Sherift assoilzied the 
defenders, but this decision was reversed on appeal to the High Court 
of Justiciary. The ground of the decision was that the fishermen 

_ nust prove, in order to escape the penalties provided by the Act, that 
during the whole period of the weekly close time they were unable to 
remove the leaders. (2) Two men were convicted and heavily fined for 
taking sea trout during the close season. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 
1. With regard to the observance of bye-laws, they are generally observed. 
2. The pass in Alloway dam dyke has been modified and rendered of easier 
gradient. 


Pollutions—- 


1. The existing pollutions are :—Scouring wash from the Skeldon Mill 
(blanket manufactory). 
1. Remedial measures :—None. 


The Salmon Disease— 


1. Disease made its appearance this year in the month of July, and reached 
its height in August. 


The river was free of diseased fish in end of August. 


58 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


2. The number of diseased fish taken from the river and destroyed was 


as follows :— 
Males. Females. 
Kelts, . ‘ . ; cy - ae 
Clean, . : ; ; 9 8 


| 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning in November. 
2. The greatest number spawn in December. 
3. Spawning ceases in January. 
4. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as very good. 


Smolts— 


1, Smolts are noticed to be migrating seawards in February. 
2. As a smolt year 1905 was fair. 


REPORT FROM GIRVAN DISTRICT. 
Take of Fish— 


1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the “district has been much below the average 
both i is sea and river. Supposed to be the least productive season on 
recor 

2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 

(a) By fixed engine, 202 salmon, 300 grilse, 1200 sea trout. 
(6) By rod and line, 1 salmon, about 300 sea trout so far as known. 

3. Particulars as to the times salmon, orilse, and sea trout appeared are as 
follows :—First salmon caught 3rd May 1905; first sea trout caught 
3rd May 1905. No grilse caught till 2ist June. 

4. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 27 lbs. 

The particulars of time and place of capture are :—In August at Lendal- 
foot (Crown Sea Fishery). 


Protection— 
1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £544. 
2. The assessment levied was £27 4s. 
3. The water bailiffs employed are 1 in number. 
4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—One 
prosecution : illegal capture of fish at Bridgemill dam. Two panel, 
fined £1 or 14 days each. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 


1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—No change. 

2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—On two occasions the 
weekly close time was not observed in August owing to stormy 
weather, but proceedings were not considered advisable. 

3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—None. 

4. Natural obstructions not yet dealt with are :—Fairlaw Linn, 0 near upper 
part of river. 


Pollutions— 


1. The existing pollutions are :—None since the pumping of the polluted 
water from Dalquharran Colliery ceased. 
1. Remedial measures :—Nozne. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. AQ 


The Salmon Disease— 
No salmon disease observed. 


The Spawning Season-- 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning in December. 
2. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as very poor—the number of breeding fish 
observed being small. 


Smolts— 
As a smolt year 1905 was, curiously enough, considered quite an average 
one—at least the average number of smolts and fry were observed in 
the lower reaches and estuary. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 
1. The number of ova secured locally during the past season was nil. 
2. In securing ova the numbers of male and female fish captured were 
nil. 


General— 

Owing to the falling-off in the returns this year, a meeting of proprietors 
was convened to consider what steps should be taken to improve 
matters now that the pollution has ceased. Very valuable suggestions 
and advice, kindly tendered by Mr. Calderwood, have since been 
before the proprietors, and it is hoped something practical may result. 


REPORT FROM STINCHAR DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 
1, As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been smaller. 
More particularly it has been :— 

(a) By fixed engines in the sea, considerably less. 
(b) By rod and line, less. 

2. Grilse and sea trout appeared in August. 

3. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 20 lbs. 


Protection— 
1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £400. 
2. The assessment levied was £15 13s. 4d. 
3. There is one water bailiff employed. 
4, Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—-No 
prosecutions. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 
1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—None. 
2. Fish passes built or in prospect :—None. 
3. Natural obstructions not yet dealt with :—None. 


Pollutions— 
No pollution. 


The Salmon Disease— 
No disease. 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning on 28th November. 
2. The greatest number spawned 1st December to middle of January. 
3. Spawning ceased about end of January. . 
4, As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as bad. 


60 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards about Ist March. 
2. As a smolt year 1905 was below the average. 


REPORT FROM RIVER CREE DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 
1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been below average. 
More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, below average of some years, but, 
being a dry season, a little above last year. 
(b) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters, below average. 
(c) By rod and line, up to average. 
2. Expressed as percentages for each month of the season, so as to show the 
times of greatest run, the figures are :— 


l | , 
| Feb, | Mar. | Apr. | May. Bi une, | July. | Aug. | Sept. / 
| 
Se ae ypee oe oe 
| By Fixed Engine, . ‘ ; | Not known. | | 
SS Sas Sheik CALE, — & SAUER Gone Biv Wee —— 
| | 
| By Sweep Net, . ‘ ; | Not k|nown. 
| Cait i cued 
Se eee | oe ae a Sere 
| By Rod and Line, . : : | - | 8 | 50 16% | 8% 25| 934, 43$ 


Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared, as included in 
the above return, are as follows :—Grilse about 18th Mav; trout a 
little earlier. 


Protection—- 

1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £728. 

2. The assessment levied was 8d. per £. 

3. The water bailiffs employed are 4 in number—employed from Ist June 
till 31st October ; remainder of year, 3. Spawning ground well 
watched. 

4. Particulars as to prosecutions instituted :—None. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 


1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—None. 
2, With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—Seem to be regular. 
3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—None. 
4. Natural obstructions not yet dealt with are on High Cree, at Bargrennan 
Lynn. 
Pollutions— 
None. 


The Salmon Disease-- 
1. Disease made its appearance this year in the month of May, and reached 
its height in June. 
It is not known if river free yet from disease (end of November). 
2. The number of diseased fish taken from the river and destroyed :—No 
count kept. 


The Spawnins Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning on 21st November, 
2. The greatest number spawned in November. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 6] 


3. Spawning ceased end of November. 
4. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as very moderate. 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in April and May. 
2. As a smolt vear 1905 was not remarkable in any way. 


REPORT FROM DEE (SOLWAY) DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 
1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been average. 
TY S, 2 . . 
2. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken during the season was 30 lbs. 
The particulars of time and place of capture :—June. 


Protection— 
1. The assessable rental for 1905 was £1556. 
2. The assessment levied was £77 16s. 
3. The water bailiffs employed are 16 in number. 
4. Particulars as to prosecutions instituted :—None. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish-— 
1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :— None. 
2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—These are observed. 
3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—None. 
4. Natural obstructions not yet dealt with :—None. 


Pollutions— 
No pollution. 


The Salmon Disease— 


No disease. 


The Spawning Season— 
1. Fish were first noticed spawning during the last few days of October. 
2. The greatest number spawned during the first ten days of November. 
3. Spawning ceased about Ist December. 
4. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 
spawning season is regarded as fair. 


S3) 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards in April and May. 
2, As asmolt year 1905 was very light. 


REPORT FROM ANNAN DISTRICT. 


Take of Fish— 
1. As compared with the average results of previous years, the take of fish 
generally throughout the district has been below the average. 
More particularly it has been 
(a) By fixed engines in the sea, below the average. 
(6) By sweep net in tidal or fresh waters—No sweep-net fishing in 
district. 

(c) By rod and line, below the average, 


62 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


2. The actual number of fish caught has been as follows :— 
(a) By fixed engine—Notes not taken ; take therefore cannot be 
iven. 
(b) apn net—No sweep nets fished in district. 
(c) By rod and line—Notes not taken ; take therefore cannot be 
given. 

3. Particulars as to the times grilse and sea trout appeared are as follows :-— 
Grilse, second week in May—best takes first and second weeks in 
July ; sea trout, in March—best takes third and fourth weeks in 
June ; salmon, first caught 27th February—best takes second week in 
July and first week in September (in Solway Firth). 

4. The weight of the heaviest salmon taken in the Solway was 45 lbs., with 
a haaf net, on Annan burgh fishings on 24th August 1905, and with 
rod and line 36 lbs., on the Mount Annan portion of the Annan on 
8th November 1905. 


Protection— 

1, The assessable rental for 1905 was £3256. 

2. The assessment levied was £447 14s, 

3. The water bailiffs employed are 4 in number—3 at Annan and 1 at Loch- 
maben (one of thoge at Annan does duty at Moffat during spawning 
season). 

4. Particulars as to prosecutions instituted are briefly as follows :—One 
person was tried at Sheriff Court, Dumfries, contravention of Salmon 
Act, 1868, Section 15 (Sub-section 4), and fined 5s. and 34s. 9d. of 
expenses. 


Obstructions to the Passage of Fish— 

1. Dam dykes disused, built, or in prospect :—No alteration. 

2. With regard to the observance of bye-laws :—On the Annan—No heck 
at the tail of the mill race at Brydekirk Mill, belonging to James 
Graham, meal miller there. On the Kirtle—No heck at intake or tail 
of mill race at Beltenmont Mill, belonging to Miss Ann Beattie, 13 
Charles Street, Annan, and no heck at tail of mill race at Kirtlebridge 
Mill, belonging to the trustees of the late John Irving, per H. C. 
Irving of Burnfoot, Ecclefechan, and never was. On the Mein—No 
heck at intake or tail of mill race at Mein Mill, belonging to the 
Duke of Buccleuch. On the Dryfe—No heck at intake or tail of mill 
race at Sandbed Mill, belonging to Walter Jackson, but there is a heck 
across the lade above the wheel. On the Milk—No heck at intake of 
the mill race at Scroggs Mill, belonging to the Earl of Mansfield, but 
there is a heck across the lade at the entrance to the wheel, which is 
placed close on the Milk water.’ 

3. Fish passes built or in prospect :—No alteration. 

4. Natural obstructions not yet dealt with :—None in district. 


No pollutions. 


The Salmon Disease-- 
1. Disease made its appearance this year in the month of January, and 
reached its height in March. 
The river was free of diseased fish at end of April. 
2. The eas of diseased fish taken from the river and destroyed was as 
follows :— 


Males. Females. 


of the Fishery. Board for Scotland. 63 


The Spawning Season— 

1. Fish were first noticed spawning on 23rd December at Mount Annan. 

2. The greatest number spawned during last week in January and first 
week in February. 

3. Spawning ceased first week in March. 

4. As regards numbers of breeding fish, and state of the water, the past 

_ spawning season is regarded as about an average. The numbers seen 

were more than during last season. The river was of a medium size. 


Smolts— 
1. Smolts were noticed to be migrating seawards during the month of May. 
2. Asasmolt year 1905 was a fair average. 


Artificial Propagation of Salmon— 
None in district. 


Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


APPENDIX IL. 


THE LIFE-HISTORY OF THE 
MARKING 


A CONTRIBUTION TO 
SALMON, AS OBSERVED BY MEANS OF 
ADULT FISH. 


[‘T'Hmp Paper. | 


BY 
W. L, CALDERWOOD, 


Lnspector of Salmon Fisheries for Scotland. 


In continuing the marking of salmon an attempt has been made 
to extend the area of operations, and, as far as possible, to gain 
information along lines suggested by previous results. The number of 
recaptures which I am able to report is not so great as in my second 
paper | Z'wenty-second Annual Report, Part I1., p. 84], but the results 
are interesting because of additional recaptures on the coast—so that 
T am able to present a chart of these—and because the proportion of 
spring fish taken is considerable, especially from the rivers Helmsdale 
and Brora. The total number of recaptures since my last paper is 
thirty-seven. The particulars are tabulated as formerly in the con- 
secutive order of the mark-numbers. 


TABLE OF RECAPTURES, 1904 AND 1905 MARKING. 


-The particulars at time of marking and at time of recapture are bracketed 
together, the former above the latter. 


Note.- 


{ 


| | ) | | 
| No. Weight. Length.) Condition. | Sex Date Larne condbies Remarks. | 
lbs. ine hes. | 
f 14 36 Kelt. ) ( 19 Jan. 1903. | [Gnnaird, 
| 022A a a | Tay. 
U Est. 17 43 Kelt s U 18 Jan. 1905. | Newbury, . Found dead 
Tay. (apparently 
| from disease). 
ote.—- Was in poor condition, had ja large frame, jand had been a 
| heavy fish| when in’ condition. 
| 83474 §. 12 37 Kelt. ? M § 10 Mar. 1903. | Tummel, 'lay. | Bad condition. 
ioe ca 254 41 Clean. § ~~" 0} 17 Aug. 1904. | Estuary, Tay. | Poor condi- 
tion, and re- 
| ported as 
| | bull trout.’ 
Note, —On recapture, this |fish had both sea lice anid gill maggots. y 
74 28 Nearly 24 Nov. 1902. |Almond moutii,| A grilse. 
sora spawned ah I F, { y. 
\Est. 24 | Unspawned. Oct. 1904, | Earn mouth, | Found dead. 
| Tay. | 
f 2 234 | Unspawned. 7 10 Nov. 1903. | Lower Tay. A grilse. 
a 73) 97 Clean. \ P. | 19 Aug. 1904. | Lower Tay. | A “bull 
| trout.” 
| | Note,—Had |both sea |lice and gill malggots. 


No, 


-— 


| sonaf 
{| 


4B 


94104 


Est 


2038 


lbs. 


aber 
| 


| inchas. 


i 
i 


TABLE OF RECAPTURES, 1904 AND 1905—Con 


36} 


24 


Date. 


Kelt. i { 17 Jan. 1905. 
Clean, ~ Ul 8 Mar, 1906. 
Kelt. 24 Mar, 1904, 
ean 

Unspawned. | sf l 14 Dec. 1904, 
Kelt. |) §|17 Jan, 1904, 
Clean. jf ° (| 16 June 1905. 
Kelt. . , §) 11 Feb. 1904, 
Clean. § -° 0117 July 1905. 
Kelt. ity §| |14 April 1904. 
Clean. § ~ ° U}19 Aug. 1904, 

| | 

Kelt. 2 — §/ 15 April 1904. 
Kelt. =f °° (| 30 April 1904. 
Kelt. iat can cchs) 20 Feb. 1905. 
Clean. § -*° .U| 26 Aug. 1905, 
Kelt. t yy. §| 23 Mar. 1904. 
Clean. |§ ~* | 5 July 1905. 

_Unspawned. | ? gS | 24 Oct. 1904. 

Spawning. |f ~* (| 25 Oct. 1905. 


| Note.—|Three otjher sea trout} were re 
| ticulars cannot, 


Kelt. 25 April 1905. 
F, 
Clean, i | 7 July 1905. 
Kelt. ? | Mar. 1905. 
Clean. «fap cit"? 25 Aug. 1905. 
| | 

Unspent. ; FE { 28 Sept. 1904. 
Clean, ‘ 27 Mar. 1906. 
Kelt, ’ §| March 1905. 
Clean. § ~? 0120 April 1905. 


| 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland, 


tinued. 


Where caught. 


Logierait, 
Tay. 

| Pyerod Sta- 
tion, Tay. 


i 
| 
| Deveron, 


Spey. 


Tummel, Tay. 
Tay. 


Tummel, Tay. 
Tay estuary. 


Deveron. 


Nr. Aberdeen,| Mark found in 


Deveron. 
On coast near 
Banff. 


Deveron. 

On coast near 
mouth of 
Ugie. 


R. Stinchar. 


| 
| 
| 


| 


(Ardmeallie.) | 


65 


Remarks. 


Laithers 
Water. 
Brae Water. 


ered from | 
Grove’s shop | 
in Bond St. | 
through Mr. 


| 
Mark recov- | 
| 
Towse, | 


(Ardmeallie. ) | 


fish shop in | 
Newquay, 
Cornwall, | 
Fish sent| 
from Aber- | 
deen by rail | 
from Mr. | 
Hector’s 
fishery. 


(Ardmeallie. ) | 


\ Grilse, 


On coast near | ~ 


Girvan (Len- 
dal Foot), 


Luss. 
Luss Water. 


Deveron 
(Muiresk), 
Deveron. 


R. Helmsdale. | 


On coast at 
Hilton of 
Cadboll. 


Helmsdale, 
Helmsdale. 


Helmsdale. 
Balintore. 


A sea trout. 


Coast S, 


A sea trout. 


captured, at Liuss, of which |par- 
pl petedately, be |given. 


S. of Tarbat | 


Ness. 


of 
Tarbat Ness. 


66 


~I 

oo 

c—) 

ioe] 
es 


co 
—) 
ba | 
oo 


*1156B 


11588 


1180B 


1203B 


12048 


12238 


1232B 


12438 


ee SO SS WB ROPES ™ (teen ati 


1266s - 


1833B 


oS 


19038 | 


19088} 


lbs. 
8 


Pos 


Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


inches. 


30 
36 


354 
38 


281 


6 Ripe for 


Weight.} Length.} Condition. 


a 
f 


Kelt. 
Clean. 


Kelt. 
Clean. 


APB HIRE. 


Kelt. 


Kelt. 
Clean. 


Kelt. 
Clean. 


Kelt. 
Clean. 


Kelt. 
Clean. 


Kelt. 
Clean. 


Kelt. 
Clean. 


Kelt. 
Clean. 


Kelt. 
Clean. 


Kelt. 
Clean. 
Kelt. 


Clean. 


Kelt. 


Kelt. 


j 
| 
i 
j 
| 
} 
| 
| 
| 
| 
| 
| 
| 
| 


Clean. \ 


Clean. 


+Unspawned. 


Clean. 


Sex. 


F, 


M. 


M. 


F. 


F. 


r M. 


F. 


TABLE OF RECAPTURES, 


' 
' 
‘ 
: 


Date. 


9 Noy. 1904. 
17 April 1906. 


9 Nov. 1904. 
9 Nov. 1906. 


24 Oct. 1904. 
Feb. 1905. 


25 Oct. 1904. 
Feb. 1905. 

9 Nov. 1904. 
22 Mar. 1906. 
9 Dec. 1904. 
25 July 1905. 


9 Dec. 1904. 


26 April 1906. 


12 Dec. 1904. 


30 April 1906. 


7 Mar. 1905. 


26 April 1906. 


7 Mar. 1905. 


2 April 1906. 


7 Mar. 1905. 


26 April 1906. 


20 Mar. 1905. 


6 April 1906. 


20 Mar. 1905. 
18 July 1905. 


31 Mar. 1905. 


26 April 1906. 
“115 Jan. 1906. 


31 Jan. 1906. 


18 Dec. 1905. 
21 Feb. 1906. 


19 Dec. 1905. 
31 Mar. 1906 


1904 AND 1905—Continued. 


Where caught.| 


Helmsdale. 
Dunbeath. 


Helmsdale. 
Helmsdale. 


Dee, Cluny 
Water. 

Dee, at 
Crathes. 


Dee, Geldie 
Water. 
Dee Estuary. 


Helmsdale. 
Helmsdale. 


Helmsdale. 
Rockfield 
Fishery. 


Helmsdale. 
Halladale R. 


Helmsdale. 
Helmsdale. 


Loch Brora. 
Loch Brora. 


Loch Brora 
Loch Brora 


Loch Brora. _ 


Loch Brora. 


Loch Brora 
Loch Brora 


Loch Brora. 
On coast at 
Berriedale. 


Loch Brora. 
Loch Brora. 


Sandside. 


R. Thurso. 


Culter, Dee. 

Glentana, 
Dee. 

R. Dee. 


R. Dee. 


Remarks. 


Stripped at 
Kildonan. 
Coast net. 


Found dead— 
no other par- 
ticulars. 


Found dead. 


Stripped = at 


Kinbrace. 


S. of Tarbat 


Ness. 


Stripped after 
teing kept 
in pond. 
Afterwards 
putin Isauld 
Burn. 

14 miles -up 
river. 


28 miles up. 


Donald’s 
Gurth. 
Culter. 


* The erormous increase in weight given for this fish I regard with some suspicion. I 
received the particulars about a month after the recapture, and the increase is considerably 


greater than any shown by previous records. 


+ In view of the particulars of recapture I am inclined to think that, in marking, a mistake 
as to condition was made, and that the fish was a very early run clean fish, which had become 


coloured in the fresh water. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 67 


Micratory MovEMEN'Ss. 


Nine of the recaptures have been made on the coast, and two fish 
are found to have wandered to other rivers. By combining these 
recent recaptures with the few similar recaptures which we previously 
have obtained, while disregarding several recaptures at such short 
distances as to be unimportant in the present connection, I am able to 
present the accompanying chart. All migrations down the coast in a 
southerly or south-easterly direction are indicated in red, while move- 
ments up the coast in a northerly or westerly direction are inserted in 
black. There are 15 red lines and 5 black ones. The total of 20 out 
of 274 recaptures, or 83%, may or may not represent the actual propor- 
tion of salmon which desert the districts and rivers of their birth; but 
the result is at all events of some value as indicating for the first time 
with some probable degree of accuracy the nature of the coastal move- 
ments which take place. Three of the red lines represent the 
somewhat rapid movements of kelts after leaving the fresh water where 
they were marked. Line A represents a kelt marked in the Grimersta, 
West Lewis, caught in five months at Castletown, near Thurso, still 
not recovered from the kelt condition. We are indebted to the private 
marking of Mr. J. Byres-Leek for this interesting record, and I have 
the specimen preserved. Line C represents a fish artificially stripped 
at Sandside by Mr. Pilkington’s keeper and released in a small burn 
on 15th January of this year. It was retaken 14 miles up the river 
Thurso, still a kelt, on 31st January, 2.¢., in 16 days. Like other kelts 
in small streams, this fish had evidently made a prompt descent to the 
sea, and, it may be, the artificial stripping affected its movements. The 
reascent of a larger stream is striking and, so far as our records go, 
unique. In the light of this Sandside-Thurso fish it is possible that the 
Grimersta-Castletown fish marked by Mr. Byres-Leek had in the 
interval between marking and recapture been in the fresh waters of 
some north-coast river, thus accounting for the continuance of the kelt 
condition. The third case is line K, an unspawned fish marked in Spey 
on 14th December 1896, recaptured as a kelt in the Dee on 22nd 
February 1897. If, as seems most probable, this fish spawned in the 
Dee rather than the Spey, its movements are analagous to those of the 
fish represented by line L, a large male fish unripe in the Spey in 
December 1896, recaptured as a partially spent kelt in the Deveron in 
March 1897. Three Helmsdale fish represented by letters H, I, and 8 
made southerly migration to Portmahomack, just south of Tarbat Ness. 
Three other Helmsdale fish (E, F, and G) go from that river into the 
Brora, while a Brora fish (D) goes north to Berriedale, and a 
Helmsdale fish goes north to Dunbeath (line T). Two rather 
remarkable migrations are represented by the lines B and V. The 
particulars of marking and recapture of those two cases are :-— 


| 
No. Lbs. | Inches. | Condition.| Sex. Date. Where Caught. 
7283, | 3 24 Kelt. F, | 20th April 1901. Loch Brora. 
84 — Clean, F. | 17th July 1901. Coast off Halladale. 
11588 | 8 30} Kelt. F. 9th Dec. 1904. River Helmsdale. 
18 35 Clean. F. | 26th April 1906. River Halladale. 


Those two fish leaving neighbouring rivers were both taken 90-100 
miles north in or at the Halladale river in the Pentland Firth. ‘The 
Increase in weight in the former was 5 Ibs. in 88 days; the increase in 


ac 


68 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


the latter 10 lbs. in 506 days. | No doubt the second fish had spawned 
in the interval, or the increase would have been more marked; but the 
interest of the recaptures lies not in the increase of weight, but in the 
fact that two fish should have followed so similar a course in contra- 
distinction to the condition revealed by the other coastal recaptures as 
shown in the red lines. ‘There is nothing to show that this is more 
than a coincidence, but as Helmsdale and Brora marking is likely to be 
continued on an even greater scale more evidence may be gathered in 
the future. ‘The five fish which are traced from the Deveron out of the 
Moray Firth, represented by lines M, N, O, P, and R, offer, however, 
the most striking feature of the chart. The similarity of the records 
are remarkable, and can hardly, I think, be considered as accidental. 
The details are :— - 


{ 
Increase | Increase| Interval! 


| No. | Lbs. | Inches. |Condition.} Sex. Date. in fajita 1 of 
Weight. | Lengie, Time. | 
| Ae 5 | Lbs. : Th. | Days. | 
See BP Lee ny Kelt. | F. | 20th Feb. 1905. |) ; REP bec 
M  209B4/ d0(est.)) - | Clean. | F. | 26th August 1905.|5 42 (est), - | 187 | 
| | | | | 
howe: (| 4 | 25 | Kelt. | F. | 28th April 1903. |] , | | 
Beet o i it com ee Clean. | F. | 25th July 1903. if 44 z 83 | 
Bethea a se tom Kelt. | F. | 24th March 1903. ) 9 
0 96074 | 62 26 Clean. | = | 11th July 1903. 15 ™ - 109 
peagalhie, 3 he Oar aon elt. M. | 11th March 1901. |) . 
| = 6508. } 58 254 | Clean. llth July 1901. |f 7# 2a} qi 422 
| 
16 eee Kelt. - | 14th April 1904. |) : 
R 202n \ 25 403 Clean. M. | 19th August 1904. | § : we | —_ 


The mark in the fish represented by line M was only noticed after the fish had 
been sent by rail from Aberdeen to New Quay, in Cornwall. 


Another Deveron fish, marked 95234 in Laithers Water when a kelt, 
was recaptured the following winter in the lower waters of the Spey, 
an unspawned female, thus forming an exception to the Deveron series. 

With regard to the migrations not referred to in the chart, we have 
18 fish, marked as kelts, recaptured in their own rivers (including a 
Loch Lomond sea trout and a Deveron sea trout). These recaptures 
bear out what was in my second report on this subject described as the 
short and long habits of migration. Similar evidence has also recently 
been reported in connection with the Irish salmon marking.* In the 
present instance, however, it is noticeable that the great majority of 
the fish have spent more than a year in the sea before returning to 
the river. Omitting the two sea trout and taking the 16 remaining 
fish, we have only No. 9147 representing a short migration and recapture 
in nine months. The others show intervals of from 112 months to 
two years, Viz. :— 


8437A—17 Months. 732B—24 Months. 1204B—13 Months. 
9048A—23 m 807B—16 s 1223B—12? _,, 
48—17 ia 1158B—135__,, 1232B—13 “A 
16B—17 sf 1180B—143 __,, 1266B—11# 
672B—18 a 1203B—123 _,, 9410A—14 


It may be noticed that on 26th April of this year three recaptures 
were made in Loch Brora, and that of these, two of the fish had been 
marked on the same day, 7th March 1905. No. 1203 had gained 73 lbs., 
and No. 1223 5 lbs. 


* A,B. E. Hillas, Fisheries, Ireland, Sci. Invest., 1904, VII. (1906). 


C 


K 


= 


iS ForRTH 


HART sHowinc Movements oF SALMON ACONG THE Coast oF SCO 


& 


Longitude West of Greenwich 3 


TLAND. | 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 69 


INCREASE OF WEIGHT. 


If the fish marked as kelts and recaptured as clean fish be taken in 
the order of their increase of weight the following result is procured :— 


Increase. Interval. No. District. 
(?) 21 lbs 218 days. 11568 Helmsdale. 
1Bio; 521 4, 16B Tay. 
LG? 5 Gols 9043A Tay. 
134 ,, p25: 4% 83474 Tay. 
Ap ee LGS:4. 5, 627B Helmsdale. 
ne, 5251/4, 736B Helmsdale. 
103 ,, So leat 1266B Brora. 
1 Oiis3, CaS 104i 0),1 637B Helmsdale. 
1D & 506... ,, 1158p Helmsdale. 
De 55 265 ,, 95234 Deveron, Spey. 
92; 4G 933 5; 316B Stinchar. 
Kst. 9 ,, 514. ,, 4B Tay. 
Berrys b2trrog 2028 Deveron. 
S--54 AOB 5 5; 8078 Helmsdale. 
Diktics 504. ,, 11808 Helmsdale. 
7k; BAD tas cs 12038 Brora. 
Dg TD ape 1223B Brora. 
Est. 44 ,, 1S éFrivg 2098 Deveron. 
ae 420; 5; 1243B Brora. 


The same great variation in rate of increase, as has previously been 
remarked, is again apparent—9 lbs. are gained by one fish in 127 days 
and by another fish in 498 days. Such extreme contrasts must be ex- 
plained to some extent by understanding that a fish entering fresh 
water and spawning on two consecutive seasons cannot grow as rapidly 
as a fish which remains, it may be, one or two consecutive spawning 
seasons in the sea. To estimate the condition properly, it seems 
necessary to classify the records according as fish show short or long 
periods of sojourn in the sea, and to select records from one river dis- 
trict alone. Variation in weight is thus found to be not great, fish 
recaptured after intervals of from 6 to 8 months showing a variation of 
about 3 lbs., and fish recaptured after intervals of from 12 to 18 
months a variation of 9 or 10 lbs. 


ADDENDUM. 


Since the above results were compiled the following recaptures have 
been made :— 


No. | Lbs. | Inches. | Condition.| Sex. Date. : District. 

749 § 7 31 Keit. F, | 9th November 1904. | Helmsdale. 

i. 19 44 Clean. F. | 10th May 1906. Helmsdale. 

1186 | 45 264 (o F. | 12th December 1904. | Helrmsdale. 

lly | 3 4 F. | 8th May 1906. Helmsdale. 

1167 | 3 224 F. | 9th December 1904. | Helmsdale. 
11 30 F. | 16th May 1906. Near mouth of R. 

Brora. 


The last is not included in the chart showing coastal migrations. 


70 Appendices to T'wenty- owrth Annual Report 


APPENDIX IIL 


——————EE 


AUTUMN MIGRATION OF SALMON SMOLTS 1N SCOTLAND. 


— 


By W. L. CALDERWOOD. 


In my last Annual Report (Appendix ITI.) Idealt with the seaward 
migration of smolts in the spring as observed by the aid of certain 
netting operations, both with a small-mesh sweep net and with a 
sparling net lowered from a smack moored in the Tay estuary. The great 
abundance of smolts congregating in the neighbourhood of Kinfauns, 
where the first trace of marine influence seems to be felt, was referred 
to, and by the use of the sparling net in the lower estuary the difference 
of habit between the salmon and sea-trout smolt was apparently ascer- 
tained in the rapid descent to the open sea on the part of the salmon as 
contrasted with the lingering estuarial habit of the sea trout. 

Since the time when Shaw at Drumlanrig proved that parr and 
smolts are the young of the salmon, the significance of the spring 
migration to the sea of shoals of smolts has been recognised. Num- 
erous observations have since been made to ascertain the age and 
growth of smolts previous to the seaward migration, and the generally 
accepted view at the present day undoubtedly is that in our country 
the great majority of salmon smolts leave the river for the sea when 
they are 26 months old or thereby, but that some go a year earlier and 
some a year later. The famous Stormontfield experiments have largely 
guided opinion on this point, and from these it has been estimated that 
§ per cent. migrate the first year, 60 per cent. the second year, and 32 
per cent. the third year. It has to be understood, however, that this 
statement refers to the British Islands,and not apparently to other habitats 
of S. salur, such as Norway and the American Continent. It is accepted 
on all hands that the greatest annual migration of smolts takes place in 
spring. Further than this, it has, however, been ascertained by a 
limited number of observers that smolts also migrate seawards in 
autumn and winter, and probably to some extent all through the year. 
On this point information from Scotland has been practically absent. 
Many writers, it is true, have referred to parr as being found at all 
seasons, but it is by no means clear that the references were to fish 
sufficiently advanced to be in the migratory condition, although the 
name parr has sometimes been employed to describe the little fish with 
silvery scales usually called smolts. tn: England, Murie, Proc. Zoo. Soc., 
1870, states on the authority of Bucklana that “ there is good evidence 
“of a second migration of smolts in the month of September.” Willis 
Bund, Salmon Problems, p. 60, maintains that in a well-stocked salmon 
river the time when smolts of various stages destend depends upon 
various conditions, and that no hard and fast rule can be laid down; 
and on p. 9 of the same work he describes finding silvery scaled samlets 
in eel traps in the Severn in December 1884. Day, Fritish and Irish 
Salmonide, p. 90, states as a fact that migrations occur in the autumn 
‘as weli as probably throughout the year.” From time to time refer- 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 71 


ences to autumn smolts have appeared in The Field and Land and 
Water; and in Major Traherne’s Habits of the Salmon, a short chapter 
is devoted to the subject, in which very definite reference is made to the 
catching of smolts in December in the river Galway. There are two 
reasons why, if migrations regularly occur in autumn and winter, the 
movements of the little fish are likely to have been overlooked. The 
smolts do not seem to have the habit of gently rising and breaking the 
surface of the water as in spring, or are never in sufficient numbers to 
make such rising noticeable; and also the occurrence of the close 
season results in fewer observers being by the river banks, and in the 
absence of all tests likely to demonstrate that smolts are in the water. 
In the reports prepared from year to year by Mr. Willis Bund, as 
chairman of the Severn Board of Conservators, and which have 
occasionally been sent to me by the kindness of the author, it is 
noticeable that the occurrence of an autumn run of smolts has come to 
be regarded as an established fact. In the report upon the season 1904, 
for instance, I notice that in referring to the effects of the Liverpool 
Waterworks it is suggested that the cutting off of the spring freshets 
has prevented to some extent the descent of the spring migration of 
smolts and has caused an increase in “the autumn migration of smolts.” 
That there is, as a matter of fact, a great increase in the number of 
smolts descending in the autumn is definitely stated, and in a letter 
received by me from Mr. Willis Bund the catching of these fish in the 
eel traps is described. Evidence was given before the Irish Inland 
Fisheries Commission to show that, at any rate in certain rivers, smolts 
are found descending at seasons other than spring, and Mr. Holt, in a 
letter to me on the subject from Dublin, says:—‘I have had a good 
“many sent to me from time to time, and an autumn migration seems 
‘to occur regularly. While there is no doubt that the fish are moving 
“down and, from the position of some captures, are going into brackish 
‘“‘ water, I do not remember to have ever seen one quite so silvery or so 
“large as some of the spring smolts.” 

From Scotland, as has been said, evidence on this subject is much 
more deficient, and it has been a point of some interest therefore to 
determine whether or not these autumn and winter migrations occur 
with us. Through the kindness of the Tay Fisheries Co., and the 
courtesy of the Tay District Board, a small-meshed net has been fished 
by the employees of the Company on six occasions during the last 
close time and present spring. Fishing was conducted on 18th Sep- 
tember, 31d November, 7th December, 10th January, 13th February, 
and 27th March, on each occasion at or in the neighbourhood of Kin- 
fauns, in the upper estuary of the Tay, past experience having shown 
us that descending smolts congregate here previous to their more rapid 
passage to the sea. (Z'wenty-tnird Annual Report, Part II., p. 82.) 

The results are as follows :— 


18th September 1905. Eleven shots with the net were taken as 
follow :— 


3 at “ Inchyret ”—blank. 
2 at ‘ Lower Mary” produced— 
1 Salmon Parr. 
1 Yellow Fin or Sea-trout Smolt. 
1 Brown Trout. 
3 Whitling (clean). 


zat * Flookie 
3 Salmon Parr. 
5 Yellow Fins. 


72 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


4 at “‘ Tappie ”— 
14 Salmon Parr. 
4 Brown Trout. 

1 Whitling. 


Of the 18 salmon parr obtained, 2 were nearing the silvery-scaled 
smolt stage. 


ord November 1905. Fourteen shots taken as follow :— 


The tide was ebbing. Water temperature at 1 p.m. = 46°, 
Dd at “ Sleepless ”— 
| Salmon Parr, 10°8 em. long. 
1 Yellow Fin. 
2 Whitling, 18-0 em, long. 


6 at ‘“ Tappie ”— 
9 Salmon Parr and Smolts, 10°7, 11:0, 6:0, 14°5, 12 em. 
3 Yellow Fins. 
6 Whitling (clean). 
1 Sea Trout. 


3 at ‘‘ Pyerod ”— 
19 Salmon Parr and Smolts. 
9 Yellow Fins. 
1 Brown Trout. 
3 Whitling. 


Ten of the smolts and parr taken at Pyerod were brought by me to 
Edinburgh and examined carefully. Notes on this examination are 
as follow :— 


(a) Length, 14:0 cm.; depth of caudal ped., 1:1 cm.; max. bone 
vertically below centre of eye; scales, 12; pectorals, ventrals, 
and anal fin, yellowish ; adipose fin, slate colour. 

A shapely little fish with silvery scales, black spot on oper- 
culum, and a few red spots on sides. A salmon smolt. 

(6) Length, 12:0 em.; depth of caudal ped., 1-0 cm.; max. bone 
vertically below centre of eye; scales, 12. A salmon smolt. 

A silvery fish of appearance exactly as (a). 

(c) Length, 10°5 cm. ; depth of caudal ped., 09 cm. ; scales, 12 or 
possibly 13; max. bone vertically beneath centre of eye; all 
lower fins yellowish ; adipose fin and caudal fin pink edged. 

This fish was not silvery, but presented the appearance 
characteristic of parr. 

(2) Length, 12°0 cm.; depth of caudal ped., 0-9 cm.; scales, 11 ; 
max. beneath centre of eye; dorsal, caudal, and adipose fins 
tinged with pink; ventral and anal fins whitish; pectoral fins 
with dark veins in rays; two black spots on operculum. 

A silvery fish, but still bearing 8 parr bands on side, and 
red spots along lat. line; dorsum spotted, dusky. In transi- 
tion stage—between parr and smolt. 

(e) Length, 8-5 em. ; depth of caudal ped., 0-7 cm. ; max. vertically 
beneath centre of eye; scales, 12; adipose and caudal fins 
tipped with red; under fins whitish. 

A silvery fish without parr markings. <A few red spots still 
on lat. line. A salmon smolt of small size. 

(fj) Length, 11:7 cm.; depth of caudal ped., 0°9 cm.; max. bone 
vertically beneath centre of eye; dorsum spotted ; adipose fin 
dusky ; ventral and anal fins whitish. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 13 


A silvery fish with 8 parr marks. In transition stage 
between parr and smolt (as specimen (d) ). 
(g) and (h). Two parr, 5°8 and 6:3 cm. respectively. 


Mr. Johnston, who contributed to last Annual Report the 
paper on Zhe Scales of Tay Salmon, examined the scales of 
specimens (g) and (2) and formed the opinion that these small 
examples were less than a year old. 


7th December 1905. Six shots were taken at Kinfauns with result as 
follows :— 
3 Salmon Parr. 
7 Yellow Fins. 
14 Whitling (clean). 
3 Sea-trout Kelts. 


I was not present on this occasion, but Mr. Johnston kindly sent 
me one of the parr. It was 11:2 cm. in length, and although showing 
the parr marks and red spots was a fairly silvery fish, and might almost 
be described as a smolt. 


10th January 1906. 'Ten shots were taken at Pyerod fishing station, 
near Kinfauns :— 


2 Salmon Parr, 8:9 and 5°3 cm., without silvery scales, 
20 Yellow Fins. 
23 Whitling. 
12 Sea-trout Kelts. 

1 Grilse Kelt. 

1 Salmon Kelt. 

1 Perch. 


In every haul of the net numbers of young flounclers were also taken 


(P. flesus). 
13th February 1906. Netting in neighbourhood of Kinfauns :— 


7 Salmon Parr. (3 showing subdued silvery condition, 
largest 10°5 cm., 3 very small fry.) 
15 Yellow Fins. 
1 Sea-trout (clean). 
34 Sea-trout Kelts. 
45 Whitling. 


27th March 1906. Netting near Kinfauns 


50 Salmon Parr. 
68 Yellow Fins. 
21 Whiting. 
2 Sea Trout (clean). 
13 Sea Trout (kelts). 
1 Grilse Kelt. 
1 Pike. 


Water low ; temperature 38° F. The salmon parr varied from 4:6 


to 14 cm. Many of the larger examples were silvery, though not 
brightly so. 


15 shots :— 


From these observations it will be seen that while ordinary river parr 
were found in the tidal waters of the Tay in September 1905, they did 
not occur, apparently, in any great number. Only 18 were caught in 
eleven shots with the net at four neighbouring fishing stations. 


74 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


In November the numbers had increased, and many of the young fish 
showed silvery scales, which, although not quite so bright as those 
upon migrating smolts in the spring, nevertheless gave strong presump- 
tive evidence that these fishes were migrating to the sea. Twenty-nine 
salmon parr and smolts were caught in fourteen shots with the net at 
three neighbouring fishing stations. 

In December these silvery fishes were not found, but a limited number 
of ordinary parr were caught. Three were taken in six casts of the net. 

In January 1906 the fishing showed results similar to those obtained 
in December. Only 2 salmon parr were found in ten casts of the net, 
and the parr were without silvery scales and were small in size. Such 
small parr might be found at any season in this locality. Our nettings 
in the spring produced very many of them which had probably descended, 
in company with the migrating smolts, but which were not in a condition 
to migrate, many of them being only about two inches long. 

In February similar results were obtained. Of 7 parr, 3 were slightly 
silvery, 1 was a non-silvery parr, and 3 were small fry with scales little 
more than formed. 

In March fifteen shots with the net resulted in 50 parr and semi- 
silvery smolts, many about 54 inches long, and, as it were, approximating 
to the condition of the usual spring smolt. 

-It is more than probable, therefore, I think, that ordinary salmon parr 
inhabit the upper tidal waters of the Tay at all times. I may add that 
similarly I have specimens 3 to 34 inches long taken from the stomach 
of a cormorant which was shot while diligently feeding in tidal water at 
the mouth of the river Helmsdale; 16 small salmon parr were in the 
stomach, and the bird was shot in the month of December. We have, 
however, no evidence to show that these small parr actually enter the sea, 
as the fry of Pacific coast salmon are reported todo. In the same way I 
am inclined strongly to doubt if the 8 per cent. of one-year-old parr which 
were said, on the authority of the Stormontfield experiments, to migrate 
to the sea, did more than descend to the upper estuary to remain there, 
as we find that apparently so many parr do through the summer. I 
am inclined also to think that the parr caught by Dahl in Norway 
at the mouths of rivers in July and August and which, if I mistake 
not, he considers are migratory year old fish, are prototypes of the 
small class of parr found near Kinfauns at all seasons of the year. If 
one might venture upon a theory from the result of these experiments 
in the Tay, I would suggest that in all probability the semi-silvery 
smolt-like specimens we find in November, and which, as I have 
said, are probably descending to the sea, represent the juvenile 
company, this 8 per cent., which descended so far with their associates 
of an older generation, and which after spending the summer in those 
upper tidal waters make an early descent in winter. In support of this 
it is worthy of notice that the sizes of the silvery November fish are 
rather less than the sizes of the twenty-six months old spring smolts 
and that the silvery migratory dress is less bright. From artificial 
rearing of young salmon it is abundantly clear that young fish of similar 
age may be of very different length; but it is fairly certain that this 
feature is greatly exaggerated by artificial and abundant feeding in 
confinement. The view, however, that the November smolts are 
descending before rather than after the usual time is greatly strength- 
ened by the examination of the scales. Mr. Johnston, who has 
examined the scales, describes the fish as “rising two years.” If my 
view is correct, the November migratory smolts will be about twenty 
months old. The netting in December, January, and February, while 
showing ordinary parr in this upper tidal area, does not result in 
evidence to indicate that during these months smolts are descending. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 75 


APPENDIX IV. 


NATURAL HISTORY NOTES. 


By W. L. CALDERWOOD. 


(A) Smotts Rearep IN Sar WATER. 


In September 1901, a sea pond, which had been excavated in the beach at 
Tugnet, at the mouth of the river Spey, was completed, and a syphon pipe 
adjusted for the tidal supply of salt water. This pond was constructed 
in connection with the salmon hatching operations which for some years 
have been carried on at Fochabers under instruction of His Grace the 
Duke of Richmond and Gordon, and as an elaboration of the rearing of 
the fry in the ponds at Cunninghaugh, near the mouth of the Spey. Mr, 
Muirhead, the Duke’s commissioner, and Mr. Rae, the manager of the 
extensive salmon fisheries of the estate, have from time to time very 
kindly supplied me with information respecting the rearing operations, 
and I have repeatedly visited the ponds. 

In 1901 many of the smolts which had been reared to their natural 
period of seaward migration, i.e., about 26 months, were retained in the 
fresh-water ponds pending the completion of the sea pond above referred 
to. In May they had been active silvery little fish, but by September, when 
the pond was ready, they had reverted to the more sombre parr colour- 
ation. Twenty-five of these two-year-olds were introduced in the middle 
of September into pure sea water in the new pond. They ceased feeding 
at once, and in a few days four were dead. The salinity of the pond 
was then reduced by about half, through the introduction of fresh water. 
The fish at once recommenced feeding, and it was at the same time 
noticed that a clear silvery dress was again assumed. The food supplied 
was the chopped liver used at the fresh-water ponds. 

These few young fish having been successfuly established in sea water, 
the pond was stocked with 500 salmon smolts. 

In May 1902, while some repairs were being made to the super- 
structure of the pond by a carpenter, it was noticed that the fish had 
become frightened, and presently that they were turning up, sick, in 
large numbers. The water in the pond at the time was four feet in 
depth. Mr. Rae was hastily summoned, but, in spite of efforts to aerate 
the water, some 400 of the fish died. The remaining hundred were 
removed from the pond and carried back to the fresh-water ponds of 
Cunninghaugh. It was subsequently discovered that a considerable 
quantity of disintegrated seaweed had been carried into the Tugnet 
pond by the syphon through the beach, and it was believed that the 
rapid movements of the frightened fish stirred up this sediment to such 
an extent that the water became poisoned by the gasses from the 
decomposing seaweed. Twelve of the dead fish were sent to me for 
examination, and I afterwards received also a sample of the sediment, 
which was analysed. The fish were distinctly silvery in appearance, 


76 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


but were not very well nourished or plump in outline. But for the 
the silvery scales there was nothing to distinguish them from smolts 
which were reared in fresh water alone. In length the fish varied from 
8 to 10 inches, being then three years old. 

As a result of this most unfortunate accident, the pond was divided 
into two compartments, so that each could be cleaned out periodically 
and the fish transferred from the one to the other. 

The experiment was subsequently repeated, and after the second lot 
of smolts had been one year in the sea pond under the new and 
apparently healthier conditions, I received a specimen 13 inches in 
length (33° cm.). This specimen has already been figured together with 
a specimen of a Galway fish (Proc. Roy. Soc. Hd., xxv., p. 395). 

One great difficulty experienced at Tugnet is the procuring of a supply 
of suitable food from a marine source. The food supplied to the fish 
has been exclusively, so far as I am aware, the liver used at the 
fresh-water ponds at Cunninghaugh. Dahl, in Norway, who succeeded 
in a year and a half in rearing smolts to nearly the same size (21:5 to 
31:5 cm.), fed his little fish on marine worms, the fry of Gobius ruthes 
parrt and G'. minutus, two common shore fishes, and in the autumn and 
winter on fresh herring. 


(B) SPAWNING OF SMOLTS. 


At the Cunninghaugh Ponds, where the smolts above referred to 
were reared, it was found in December 1904 that some smolts taken from 
the fresh water were ripe. There were three females about two and a 
half years old, one larger and probably older female, and one male two 
and half years old. The females were stripped on 22nd December 1904, 
and the ova impregnated by the milt from the male. As, however, 
the quantity of milt was rather deficient, a ripe adult male fish was 
procured and some additional milt from this fish used. The ova were 
then placed in the Fochabers Hatchery and kept separate from the 
ordinary salmon ova. They hatched out well on 5th April 1905, the 
proportion of loss being, I am informed, in no way remarkable. Last 
December (1905) Mr. Rae kindly sent me two sets of specimens, one of 
those fry, and the other of the ordinary salmon fry hatched at the same 
time from the eggs of adult fish. The two sets of specimens are 
indistinguishable in every respect. 

Another search was made for ripe smolts last December in order that, 
if possible, the impregnation might be effected by male smolt milt 
alone. On 17th January (1906) two ripe females and one ripe male 
were secured. Concerning these Mr. Rae writes—“ We spawned these 
and fertilised with the male smolt only, and in due time we will be able 
to let you know how they progress. The ova is as large as grilse ova, 
of a green colour. . . . The females were about 3 lb. in weight 
each, and the male about 7 lb.” 

I have since been informed that this experiment with smolt ova and 
srnolt milt has totally failed. 


(c) SALMon CAUGHT OUT AT SEA. 


After considerable inquiry I have obtained the following limited 
number of records of salmon captured by steam trawlers. It is evident, 
however, that a few other captures may from time to time have 
occurred, but salmon captured at sea by those whose business it is to 
fish for white fish may not always find their way to market or be re- 
ported to the owners, especially in the close season. 


of the Fishery Board for Seotland. La 


1888, or earlier.—1 salmon : locality now unknown. General 
Steam Fishing Company, Granton. 

—— On several occasions, and on at least one occasion, two fish at 
a time; 30 miles east of the May Island. Charles Muirhead, 
Edinburgh. : 

1892, January 28th.—1 salmon : 18 lbs. : 20 miles 8.E. by E. of 
Scurdy Ness, Montrose. Joseph Johnston &: Sons, Montrose. 

1892, February 21st.—1 salmon : 16} lbs. : 13 miles S.E. by E. of 
Scurdy Ness. Joseph Johnston & Sons, Montrose. 

1899, November, .—l1 salmon : 12 lbs. : off the tail of the 
Dogger Bank. A trawler of Messrs. Haggerup & Doughty, 
through a Fish Inspector, Billingsgate. 


Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


APPENDIX V. 


“THE WHITE SPOT” AFFECTING SALMON IN THE 
ISLAND OF LEWIS. 


Through the kindness of Mr. George Pople, the tenant of the 
Grimersta fishings on the west side of Lewis, I have received several 
specimens of fish and heads of fish showing this peculiar ailment. It 
occurs in fish which, owing to dry weather and the shrunken state of 
the streams, are unable to leave the salt water but remain for a 
considerable time in the shallow bays. When the streams become 
sufficiently swollen after rain to admit of their ascent in fresh water, 
“the white spot” disappears. The only reference to this disease of 
which I am aware is in Scottish Moors and Indian Jungles, p. 141, by 
Captain J.T. Newall, who was at one time tenant of Scaliscro shootings, 
just south of Grimersta. It is as follows :—‘‘ The summer in the Lews 
‘‘in 1880 was remarkable for the unusual heat. Salmon, in consequence, 
“could not ascend the rivers, which became so attenuated as to afford 
“no waterway for them. Fresh water being equally necessary as sea 
“for the health of the fish at the proper season, they suffered in 
“consequence. Many became quite blind, and developed a white spot 
‘‘on the head, the result being the death of numbers near the mouths 
“of rivers.” The natural inference is that the lack of fresh water is 
responsible for this trouble. This I consider very unlikely indeed. 
The blindness, the bright sunshine of hot weather, the perfect trans- 
lucency of the sea water around these western islands, and the shallow 
nature of the estuaries or bays in which the fish congregate, seem to me 
to suggest a diffierent cause. One is reminded of the pale-skinned, 
sightless condition to which fish are reduced when confined too long in 
aquaria exposed to sunlight. | When in Stornoway in 1902, I was 
informed by a former gamekeeper at Stornoway Castle, the present 
lessee of the Royal Hotel, that in summers when this disease is really 
bad, the fish become so helpless that boys stone them and drag them 
ashore in the neighbourhood of the harbour, but it is evidently unusual 
for fish to become blind or to die of the disease. Mr. Pople, in sending 
me the specimens referred to, informs me that he had never seen a fish 
dead from this cause. The summer of 1905 was unusually dry, and one 
of the specimens sent was described as the worst Mr. Pople had seen 
during his tenancy. The dull white appearance had developed into a 
raw red sore. The significant remark is also made in a letter of 
14th August, “although we have had it very dry it has been more or 
“less cloudy and windy, it (the disease) would have been worse in 
“brilliant sunshine and light east or no wind.” The accompanying 
figure represents the head of one of the specimens received from 
Grimersta, and shows the early or “ white spot” condition of the ailment. 
The specimen was killed on 14th August, and represents, I believe, an 
average state of the peculiarity. The skin is unbroken, the white area 


=' #5446445 
5! , ge es Od 
a Sony 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 79 


is noticeable not only on the crown of the head but to some extent in 
the occipital region behind the head, it also extends downwards to the 
operculum, in which region, I am assured, it first appears. It is not 
noticeable in front of the eye, which organ appears to be normal and 
functional. The colour was a dead white, slightly clouded here and 
there with a bluish tint. Pigment remains in the dorsal region only at 
the end of the snout and in a patchy manner above the eyes. There is 
a distinct depression in the region of the cranial cavity above the brain. 
The fish was otherwise healthy and in splendid condition, with pyloric 
appendages loaded with fat ; indeed, it may be stated that the disease 
does not appear to reduce the plump condition of the fish affected. In 
another specimen received, killed on 24th July, and showing the disease 
in a more advanced state, no very marked difference to that seen in the 
figure is noticeable on the crown of the head, but the white area above 
the muscular tissue just beyond the head shows the surface broken and 
ulcerated in three places. The spreading of this condition over the cir- 
cumscribed area ultimately seems to give rise to the prevailing red colour 
seen in the worst specimens. On lifting the specimen killed on 24th 
July from the box in which the fish came, the pupil or lens ‘dropped out 
from one of the eyes. The specimen was certainly not very fresh, having 
been sent during the hottest of the summer and having taken three days 
to reach Edinburgh from Grimersta Lodge. Still this could not, I con- 
sider, account for the ease with which the lens of the eye dropped out. In 
no specimen which I have seen or of which I have heard has the fish 
been affected except in the region of the brain and medulla. 


W. L. CALDERWOOD. 


80 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


APPENDIX. VI. 


THE SEALING OF FOREIGN AND HOME SALMON 
FOR SALE DURING CLOSE SEASON. 


The modern possibility of placing salmon in cold store during the 
fishing season, and of selling such fish during close time, has opened up 
the further possibility of evil-disposed persons selling poached fish or 
fish caught out of season under the guise of fish out of cold stores. To 
anticipate and prevent any such practice, The Fishmongers’ Company of 
London, at the suggestion of their chief inspector, Mr. Morris, have 
adopted a system of sealing salmon placed in cold stores. This has now 
been practised since 1896, with the concurrence of the fish trade, and 
during recent years has become very generally adopted. 

Through the kindness of Mr. J. Wrench Towse, clerk to the Fish- 
mongers’ Company, I am enabled to give particulars of the number of 
salmon sealed during the three last winters. W.L.C. 


NUMBER OF SALMON SEALED BY THE FISHMONGERS’ COMPANY 
oF Lonpon, Croseé Srasovs 1903-1906 tNcLUSIVE. 


1903-1904. | 1904-1905. | 1905-1906. 
Aberdeen, Scottish, °. : : 2,875 979 1,966 
Danish, : ‘ oe 45 ace 
Dundee, Scottish, . ‘ ; pic 31 34 
Edinburgh, Scottish, ; 60 30 60 
Canadian, : ; 14 13 “ae 
Leith, Scottish, : : ; # 5) 6 
Glasgow, Scottish, . : ; 234 234 272 
Canadian, . ; : 1,664 57 38 
Perth, Scottish, : : ; Lyon as sak 
London, Scottish, . : 442 35 739 
Trish, . , , : 180 147 ai 
Canadian, . ; A 7,386 587 1,364 
British Columbian, . ice 2,665 9,547 
Liverpool, Scottish, . : : 50 < 100 
Trish, : : ; 50 50 = 
Canadian, : : 4,715 6,144 4,839 
British Columbian, . ote 244 — 
Hull, Scottish, . : , : 3D 6 
Trish, : ‘ : : 35 i “ite 
Norwegian, . . : 25 163 10 
English, . : - — = 13 
Nottingham, Scottish, ‘ : 157 158 3D 
Canadian, . : aes oo 23 
Leicester, Scottish, . : : 49 38 84 
Eastbourne, Scottish, : : a 13 21 
Southampton, Scottish, . : vee aa 119 
Birmingham, Scottish, . : a ee 1 
English, : : aoe a 1 
Chesterfield, Scottish, : 2 40 nee ay 
Cheltenham, Scottish, : : oa 10 
| 19,732 11,652 19,272 


ae | 
Grand total, 50,656. Total for Canadian and British Columbian 
Fish, 39,300. 


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Penge — ITA. SIGN 


84 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


APPENDIX VIII. 


ANNUAL CLOSE TIME APPLICABLE TO THE SALMON 
RIVERS IN SCOTLAND. 


N.8.—Observe that, in the following List, the days fixing the commencement and 
termination of the Annual Close ‘Time for Net- fishing and for Rod- fishing, respec- 
pleat are in all cases inclusive, as in the case of the Add, the first river in the 

ist 


Annual Close Time for 
Rod-fishing. 


Annual Close Time for 


Name of River. Net-fishing. 


Add, 5 From Sept. 1 to Feb. 15, | From Nov. 1 to Feb.15, 
both days inclusive. both days inclusive. 
Aline, From Aug. 27 to Feb, 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Alness, . From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov, 1 to Feb. 10. 
Annan, From Sept. 10 to Feb. 24. | From Nov. 16 to Feb. 24. 
Applecross, From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb, 10. 


Arnisdale (Loch “Hows "0L), 
Awe : 
Aylor t (Kinloch), 


yr, : 
Baa and Goladoir, : : 
Badachro and Kerry (Gaiz- 


From Aug. 


From Aug. 
From Aug. 


From Aug. 


From Aug. 


27 to Feb. 


27 to Feb. 
27 to Feb. 


27 to Feb. 
27 to Feb. 


10. 
10, 
10. 
10. 
10. 


From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 


From Nov. 1 to Feb, 10. 


From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 


From Nov. 1 to Feb. 


10. 


Yorn). A : From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Balgay and Shieldag, From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Noy. 1 to Feb, 10. 
Beauly, . From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10, | From Oct. 16 to Feb. 10. 
Berriedale, From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Beryie, =: 2 : From Sept. 10 to Feb. 24. | From Nov. 1 to Feb, 24, 
Bladenoch, : ° From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Brann. *; : : From Aug. 27 to Feb, 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Brora, ; From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Carradale (in Cuntyre), From Sept. 10 to Feb. 24. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 24, 
Carron, From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb, 10. 
Clayburn, Finnisbay, ‘Aven- 

nangeren, Strathgravat, 

North Lacastile, Sealla- 

dale and Mawrig (Last 

Harris), - From Sept. 10 to Feb, 24, | From Nov. 1 to Feb, 24. 
Clyde and Leven, From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb, 10, 
Conon, From Aug. 27 to Feb, 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Cree, : . | From Aug, 27 to Feb, 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb, 10. 
Creed or Stornoway, and 

Laxay (Island of Lews), | From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Noy. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Creran (Loch Orerai), From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10, | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Croe and Shiel eee 

Duich), . . | From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov, 1 to Feb, 10. 
Dee (Aberdeenshire), . : From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. i6. 
Dee (Kirkewdbrig ight) : From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Deveron, ; From Aug. 27 ta Feb. 10, | From Nov, 1 to Feb. 10. 
Don, ; . : From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10, 
Doon, From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Noy. 1 to Feb. 10. 


Drummachloy or Glenmore 
(Isle of Bute), 
Dunbeath, 


From Sept. 1 to Feb. 


From Aug. 


27 to Feb. 


15. 
10. 


From Oct. 16 to Feb, 15. 
From Oct. 16 to Feb. 10. 


Karn, . | From Aug. 21 to Feb. 4. | From Nov. 1 to Jan. 31. 
Eekaig, . | From Sept. 1 to Feb. 15. | From Nov, 1 to Feb, 15. 
Esk, North, . | From Sept. 1 to Feb. 15. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 14. 
Esk, South, From Sept. 1 to Feb. 15. | From Noy. 1 to Feb, 15. 
we, From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Noy. 1 to Feb, 10. 


| 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


Name of River. 


Fincastle, Meaveg, Ballana- 
chist, South Lacastile, 
Borve, and Obb ae est 
Harris), . 

Findhorn, : 

Fleet (Suther landshia ), 

Fleet (Kir kewdbrightshire} ¢}, 

Forss, ‘ 

F orth, : 

Fyne, Shira, 
(Loch Fyne), 

Girvan, . é é . 

Glenelg, . ! ; . 

Geur, 

Greiss, Laxdale, | or Thunga, 

Grudie or Dionard, 


‘and " Avay 


Gruinard and Little €riin- 


ard, 

Halladale, Strathy, D Naver, 
and Bor zie, 

Helmsdale, 

Hope and Polla or Str: athbeg, 

Howmore, . ; 

Inchard, 5 

Inner (in Jura), 

Inver, 

lorsa (in Arr an), 

Irvine and Garnock, 

Kannaird, . : 

Kilchoan or Inyerie ‘(Loch 
Nevis), . : 

Kinloch (Kyle of 7 ‘ongue), - 

Kirkaig, . : : 

Kishorn, 

Kyle of Sutherland, 

Laggan and Sorn 1 (Island of 
Islay), 

Laxford, 

Leven, : 

Little Loch Broom, 

Lochy, 

Loch Duich, 

Loch Luing, 

Loch Roag, 

Lossie, 

Luce, 

Lussa (Island of Mull, 

Moidart, 

Morar, 

Mullanageren , 
and Lochnaciste 
Uist), 

Nairn, 5 

Naver and Borgie, see Halla- 
dale. 

Nell, Feovhan, and Euchar, 

Ness, : : 

Nith, 

Orkney Islands (River from 
Loch of Stenness, &c.),  . 

Ormsary (Loch Killisport), 
Loch Head, and Stor- 
noway (Mull of Cantire), 

Pennygowan or Glenforsa, 
and Aros, : 


" Horasary, 
North 


Annual Close Time for 


Net-fSishing. 


From Sept. 


From Aug. 


From Sept. 
From Sept. 


From Aug. 
From Aug. 


From Sept. 
From Sept. 
From Aug. 
From Aug. 
From Aug, 


From Aug. 


From Aug. 


From Aug. 
From Aug, 
From Aug. 
From Sept. 
From Aug. 
From Sept. 
From Aug. 
From Sept. 
From Sept. 
From Aug. 


From Aug, 
From Aug. 
From Aug. 
From Aug. 
From Aug. 


From Sept. 
From Aug, 
From Aug. 
From Aug. 
From Aug. 
From Aug. 
From Aug. 
From Aug. 


From Aug. 


From Sept. 
From Aug. 


From Aug. 


From Aug. 


From Sept. 
From Aug. 


From Aug. 
From Aug. 
From Sept. 


From Sept. 


From Aug. 


From Aug. 


85 
Annual Close Time for 
Rod-fishing. 

10 to Feb. 24. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 24. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Oct. 11 to Feb. 10. 
10 to Feb. 24.| From Nov. 1 to Feb. 24. 
10 to Feb. 24. | From Nov. 1 to Feb, 24. 
27 to Feb. 10.| From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Oct. 16 to Jan, 14. 
1 to Feb. 15. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 15. 
10 to Feb. 24. | From Nov. 1 to Feb, 24. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Novy. 1 to Feb, 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Noy. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Oct. 1] to Jan. 11. 
27 to Feb. 10.| From Oct. 1 to Jan. 10, 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Sept. 11 to Jan. 11. 
10 to Feb. 24. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 24, 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
10 to Feb. 24. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 24. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb, 10. 
10 to Feb. 24.| From Nov. 1 to Feb. 24. 
10 to Feb, 24.| From Nov. 1 to Feb. 24. 
27 to Feb. 10.| From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10.| From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Noy. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Oct. 16 to Feb. 10. 
10 to Feb, 24. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 24. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb, 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb, 10. | From Nov, 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Noy. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Noy. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Oct. 16 to Feb. 10. 
10 to Feb. 24. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 24. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Novy. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
10 to Feb. 24. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 24. 
27 to Feb. 10.| From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Oct. 16 to Feb. 10. 
10 to Feb. 24. | From Nov. 15 to Feb. 24. 
10 to Feb. 24. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 24. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Novy. 1 to Feb. 10. 
27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Web, 10. 


86 Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Annual Close Time for Annual Close Time for 


Name of River. 


Net-fishing. Rod-fishing. 
Resort, From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Noy. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Ruel, From Sept. 1 to Feb. 15.) From Nov. 1 to Feb. 15. 
Sanda, From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Noy. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Scaddle, From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Noy. 1 to Feb. 10. 


Shetland Islands 
Sandwater, &c)., 


(River of 
From Sept. 10 to Feb. 24. 


From Nov. 16 to Jan. 31. 


Shiel (Loch Shiel \ . | From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Noy. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Sligachan, Broadford, and 

Portree (Isle of Skye), From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Snizort, Orley, Oze, and 

Dr ynoch ( (Isle a Skye), From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Noy. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Spey, From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Oct. 16 to Feb. 10. 
Stinchar, From Sept. 10 to Feb, 24. | From Noy. 15 to Feb. 24. 
Tay (except Barn), From Aug. 21 to Feb. 4. | From Oct. 16 to Jan. 14. 
Thurso, From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Oct. 6 to Jan. 10. 
Torridon, ey 

Shieldag, From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Ugie, : From Sept. 10 to Feb. 24. | From Noy. 1 to Feb. 24. 
Ullapool Bae Br oom), From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Orr; . From Sept. 10 to Feb. 24. | From Nov. 30 to Feb. 24. 
Wick, From Aug. 27 to Feb. 10. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 10. 
Ythan, From Sept. 19 to Feb. 24. | From Nov. 1 to Feb. 24. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


APPENDIX IX. 


87 


LIST OF CHAIRMEN AND CLERKS OF SALMON FISHERY DISTRICT 
BOARDS IN SCOTLAND. 


DISTRICT. 


Alness, - - 

Annan, - 

Awe, 

Ayr, : 

Baa & Glencoill- 
eader (Mull) 

Balgay, - - 


Bervie, - - 
Broom, - - 


Conon, - - 


Cree, - - 
Dee (Aberdeen), 
Dee (Solway), - 
Deveron, - - 
Don, - - 
Doon, - - 


Esk (North), - 


Esk (South) - 
Findhorn, 


Forth, 
Girvan, - : 


and 
Grui- 


Gruinard 
Little 
nard, 


Kyle of Suther- 
land, 
Little Broom, - 


Name and Address of Chairman. 


Col. Alex. J. C. Warrand, Ryefield 
House, Conon Bridge, Dingwall. 

A. Johnstone Douglas, Esq. ,Comlongan 
Castle, Ruthwell. 

The Duke of Argyll, Inveraray Castle, 
Inveraray. 

Richard A. Oswald, Esq., of Auchin- 
cruive, Ayr. 

The Duke of Argyll, Inveraray Castle, 
Inveraray. 

C. R. Manners, Esq., C. E., i2 Lombard 
Street, Inverness. 

David Scott Porteous, Esq., of Lauris- 
ton, as mandatory of the Commis- 
sioners of Woods and Forests. 

W. Ewing-Gilmour, Esq., of Inverlael, 
per A. W. G. Aitken, Esq., 8.S.C., 
Edinburgh. 

John Little Mounsey, Esq., W.S., 5 
Thistle Street, Edinburgh, Commis- 
sioner for Col. J. A. F. H. Stewart 
Mackenzie of Seaforth. 

The Earl of Galloway, 
Newton-Stewart. 

The Lord Provost of Aberdeen. 


Cole Wi d..): M. 
Gatehouse. 
Wm. MacIntosh, Esq., Factor for the 
Duke of Fife, St. Leonards, Banff. 
Vacant. 


Cumloden, 


Baillie of Cally, 


Marquis of Ailsa, Culzean Castle, May- 
bole. 

The Rev. J. 8. More Gordon of Charle- 
ton and Kinnaber, per George More 
Gordon, Esq., Charleton, Montrose. 

William Douglas Johnston, Esq., Mon- 
trose. 

R. C. Munro Ferguson, Esq., of Novar, 
M.P., per J. J. Meiklejohn, Esq., 
factor. 

Mandatory of Commissioners of Woods 
and Forests. 

John Campbell Kennedy, Esq., of 
Dunure. 

Alfred N. G. Aitken, Esq., 8.S.C., 
Edinburgh, Factor and Commissioner 
for Hugh Mackenzie, Esq., of 
Dundonnell. 

Sir Charles Lockhart Ross, Bart., of 
Balnagowan. 

Alfred N. G. Aitken, Esq., S.S.C., 
Edinburgh, Factor and Commissioner 
for Hugh Mackenzie, Esq., of 
Dundonnell. 


Name and Address of Clerk. 


William J. Duncan, Solicitor, 
Dingwall. 

John F. Cormack, 
Lockerbie. 

Alex. MacArthur, Solicitor, Oban. 


Solicitor, 


Wilfrid C. Macrorie, Commercial 
Bank, Ayr. 
Alex. MacArthur, Solicitor, Oban. 


Duncan Shaw, W.S., 15 High 
Street, Inverness. 
W.C. Walls, Solicitor, Montrose. 


W. R. T. Middleton, Solicitor, 
Dingwall. 


W. R. T. Middleton, Solicitor, 
Dingwall. 


A. B. Matthews, 
Newton-Stewart. 
Alex. Duffus, Advocate, Aberdeen. 


Solicitor, 


W. Nicholson, 
Kirkcudbright. 
Francis George, Solicitor, Banff. 


Sheriff-Clerk, 


Alex. Duffus, Advocate, Aberdeen. 


Wilfred C. Macrorie, Solicitor, 
Ayr. 
J. R. Findlay, Solicitor, Montrose, 


James Don and David G. Shiell, 
Solicitors, Brechin. 

William Grant, National Bank 
Buildings, Forres. 


Patrick Welsh, County Buildings, 
Stirling. 
T. Gerald Tait, Solicitor, Girvan. 


W. R. T. Middleton, Solicitor, 
Dingwall. 
John M‘Crone, Solicitor, Dornoch. 


W. R. T. Middleton, Solicitor, 
Dingwall. 


88 


APPENDIX VIII. (conéinued)—List OF CHAIRMEN AND CLERKS OF SALMON FISHERY DISTRICT 


DIsTRICT. 


Lochy, - - 


Lossie, - 


Lussa (Mull) & 
River from 
Loch Uisk to 
Loch Buie, 

Naim, .. - = 


Ness, : : 
Nith, . : 


Pennygowan or 
Glenforsa, & 
Aros (Mull), 

Sligachan, 
Broadford, & 
Portree (Skye) 

Snizort, Orley, 
Oze, and Dry- 
nock (Skye), 

Spey, > 7 


Stinchar, - - 


Tay, - : 


Thurso, - - 


Torridon, - 
Ugie, - 
Ythan, - - 


Tweed (Police 
Committee of 
the Commis- 
sioners), 


Appendices to Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


BOARDS IN SCOTLAND. 


Name and Address of Chairman. 


Lord Abinger, Inverlochy Castle, Fort- 
William. : 

The Duke of Richmond and: Gordon, 
Gordon Castle, Fochabers, per George 
Muirhead, Esq., Commissioner. 

Maclaine of Lochbuie, Isle of Mull. 


Brodie of Brodie, Brodie Castle, Forres. 


George Malcolm, Esq., Factor for Mrs. 
Ellice of Invergarry, Fort-Augustus. 

John Henderson, Esq., Solicitor, Dum- 
fries. 

Vacant. 


Lachlan Macdonald, Esq., of Skeabost. 
Lachlan Macdonald, Esq., of Skeabost. 


The Duke of Richmond and Gordon, 
Gordon Castle, Fochabers, per George 
Muirhead, Esq., Commissioner. 

The Earl of Stair, Lochinch, Wigtown- 
shire. 

Hon. Morton Stuart Gray, Kinfauns 
Castle, Perth. 

Peter Keith, Esq., mandatory for Sir 
J. G. Tollemache Sinclair, Bart., of 
Ulbster. 

C. R. Manners, Esq., C,E., 12 Lombard 
Street, Inverness. 

Lieut.-Col. Ferguson, of 
Mintlaw. 

Earl of Errol, Slains Castle, Aberdeen- 
shire. 

Sir Richard John Waldie-Griffith, 
Bart., of Hendersyde Park, Kelso. 


Pitfour, 


Name and Address of Clerk. 


N. B. Mackenzie, Solicitor, Fort- 
William. 
John Wink, Solicitor, Elgin. 


Alex. MacArthur, Solicitor, Oban. 


H.T Donaldson, Solicitor, Nairn. 


Anderson & Shaw, 
Inverness. 

C. Steuart Phyn, 
Fiscal, Dumfries. 

Alex. MacArthur, Solicitor, Oban. 


Solicitors, 


Kenneth Macrae, Sheriff-Clerk, 
Portree. 


; 

Procurator- 

Kenneth Macrae, Sheriff-Clerk, | 
Portree. 


John Wink, Solicitor, Elgin. 


Stair M‘Harrie, Rephad, Stran- 
raer. 

Condie, Mackenzie, & OCo., 
Solicitors, Perth. 

David Keith-Murray, Solicitor, 
Thurso. 


Duncan Shaw, W.S., 15 High | — 
Street, Inverness. 
Robert Gray, Solicitor, Peterhead. 


D. M. A. Chalmers, Advocate, 


Aberdeen. 
David W. B. Tait, W.S., Kelso. 


| 
. 


Noie.—In addition to the districts specified above. the Duke of Sutherland is sole proprietor of the districts of the 


{ 
following rivers, viz. :—Helmsdale, Brora, Fleet, Kirkaig, Inver, Laxford, and Inehard (under the charge of his factor, | 
Mr Donald M‘Lean. Dunrobin Office. Golspie); and the Halladale, Naver, Borgie, Kinloch, and Hope (under the charge ~ 
of his factor, Mr John Morrison, Tongue); W. E. Gilmour, Esq., of Rosehall, ete., is proprietor of the rivers Dionard, 7 
Polla, Strathy, arid Armadale, also in the north of Sutherland ; Lord Lovai has sole right of fishing in the river Beauly — 
(Mr J. T. Garrioch, Beauly, factor); and the Countess of Cromartie is sole proprietrix of the district ef the river — 
Kannaird (under the charge of her factor Mr George Wethersposn, Cromartie Estate Office, Kildary). 


Fishery Hoard for Scotland, 
Fdinburgh, 19th May 1905. | 


Guascow: Printep By JAS. HEDDERWICK & SONS LIMIFRD 
For His Maggstry’s STATIONERY OFFICE. , | 


, vias: —. Aviat 
TRACT OF THE an) Kisonom. 1890-1904. Price Is. 3d. 
uc * do. -CoLontEs. -1890- 1904. ; Price 1s. 9d. 
do. Forrien Countries. Years 1893-1902-03. Price 1s. 6d. 
oR act Brrrish Inpra, 1894-1895 to 1903-1904. Price 1s. 3d. 
B: EO or mm » Usime et da 1905, Vol. I. Price 7s. 8d. 
miounianey) dane aye foe aS Vol. I. ae Nos oh Paear aay Say 


Ca. 2797.) poen Import Doms, 1905. ies 4 vo Price 2s. 
‘Cd. 2556. Navigation: AND SHIPPING SvaremMent. 1904, Roth Price 3s. 1d. 


y ae 1761, eae 2669.) British AND ForKiGN TRADE AND ROE IG CONDITIONS. 
pe kts etr tly ‘Memoranda, Tables, and Charts. Prepared by the Board of Trade. First 


sang APE ant and Second Series, and Index. | Price 7s. 
a Ca. aes - East Inpia. Trade of. Years 1899- 1900 to 1903-1904. Price Is. 3d. 
ye [Ca. 2629.) — SravisticaL ‘TABLES RELATING TO. Brrvish A OLON ES, POSSESSIONS, AND 
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TWENTY-FOURTH 
ANNUAL. REPORT 


by OF THE 


. FISHERY BOARD FOR SCOTLAND. 


Being for the Year 1905. 


IN THREE PARTS. 


Part I,—GENERAL REPORT. 
Part II.—REPORT ON SALMON FISHERIES. 
Part III.—SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS. 


PART III.—SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS. 


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1906, 
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CONTENTS. 


GENERAL STATEMENT, 


Trawling Investigations, . 

The Hatching and Rearing of Food Fishes, 

Scientific and Technical Instruction to Fishermen, 

Investigations on the Herring Fisheries of the Firth of Clyde, 

The Chemical Composition of the Herring, ‘ ‘ 

The Rate of Growth and the Age of Herrings, . 

The Rate of Growth and the Age of Food Fishes, 

The Tay Sprat Fishery, 

The Specific Characters of certain Species of the Codfish Genus, 

The Otoliths or Earstones of Fishes, 

The Spawning and Fecundity of the Plaice, : 

The Spawning of the Scat hed and the Paternal Guardian- 
ship of the Eggs, 


SCIENTIFIC REPORTS. 


I. Trawling Investigations. By Dr. T. Wemyss Fulton, F.R.S.E., 
Superintendent of Scientific Investigations, : 


II. Observations on the Otoliths of some Teleostean Fishes. By 
Thomas Scott, LL.D., F.L.S, (Plates I.-V.), : 


Preliminary Remarks, . 

List of Fishes whose Otoliths are described, 
Systematic Description of the Otoliths, : 
Literature bearing on the Otoliths of Fishes, 


III. The Food Value of the Herring. By T. H. Milroy, M.D., 


B.Sc., F.R.S.E., Professor of ERED: Rue S College, 
Belfast, ; 


Previous Analyses of He 
Methods of Analysis, 
Analysis of May Lochfyne Herrings, 
is July Lochfyne Herrings, 
A September Lochfyne Herrings, 
io October Lochfyne Herrings, 
ar November Lochfyne Herrings, 
; December Helmsdale Herrings, 
Ei 4 Lochfyne Herrings, 
oy a Lochboisdale Herrings, . 
February Lochboisdale Herings ; 
Tables of Ratios, ; 
Summary of Results, : 
Remarks on Nutritive Value of Spent. Herrings, with 
some additional Tables illustrating Differences in 
Composition of these Fish, 


Contents. 3 


PAGE 
IV. Report on the Operations at the Marine Fish Hatchery, Bay of 
Nigg, Aberdeen. By T. Wemyss Fulton, M.D., F.R.S E., 

Scientific Superintendent. (Plates VI.-VIT.), Ms 08 
V. On the Specific Characters of Gadus luscus, Gadus minutus, and 
Gadus esmarku. By H. Chas. Williamson, M.A., D.Sc. 

(Plates VITI.-X.),  . : on eG 

Introduction, . : : ; Do EG 

List of Body Dimensions, 3 ; hee 8) 

List of Enumeration Characters, ot eed 

Discussion of the Averages, . : ; Joe k 

The Numbers of Fin-Rays, : Sa) 826 

The Numbers of Vertebre, ; ne ss 

The Reproduction of the Three Species, > 30 

The Skulls of the Three Species, ae (5: 

General Comparison between the Three Species, Bere 82% 

A Specific Description, . : ; ies 

VI. On the Tay Sprat Fishery, 1905-1906. By John Fletcher, . 159 
VII. On the Spawning of the Lumpsucker (Cyclopterus lwmpus) and 
the Paternal Guardianship of the Eggs. By T. Wemyss 

Fulton, M.D., F.R.S.E. (Plate XI.) ip a kOO 
VIII. On the Rate of Growth of Fishes. By T. Wemyss Fulton, 

M.D., F.R.S.E. (Plates XII., XIII.), : eee eS 

Introduction, . : : ; rag eal We 

Species dealt with, Aarne (5) 

Methods, . » 2 £80 

Comparison between Different Species, E80 

Influence of External Conditions, vO 

A Law of Growth, . A : 1 882 

Plaice (Plewronectes platessa),  . : wo), 184 

Common Dab (P. limanda), : fo lel, 

Flounder (P. flesus), . “eto 

Lemon Dab (P. microcephalus), ee 

Long Rough Dab (Drepanopsetta platessoides), «496 

Turbot (Rhombus (Bothus) erent) ; a sh99 

Brill (Rhombus levis), . e205 

Cod (Gadus callarias), . ’ ee 209 

Haddock (G. ceglefinus), : : e226 

Whiting (G. merlangus), 229 

Grey Gurnard (Trigla gurnai dus), ; . 232 

Tables of Measurements, I.-XXV.,_. Ae. 243 
IX. Notes on New and Rare Copepoda from the Scottish Seas. By 

Thomas Scott, LL.D., F.L.S. (Plate XIV.), ; ee ree 
X. On the Spawning and Fecundity of the Plaice (Plewronectes 
platessa). By T. Wemyss Fulton, M.D., F.R.S.E., 

Superintendent of Scientific Investigations, 281 


XI. On Two Cases of Hermaphroditism in the Cod (Gadus callarias). 
By H. Charles Williamson, M.A., D.Sc., Marine Laboratory, 
Aberdeen, (Plates XV., XV. y ; 290 


+ 


Contents. 


XII. On the Growth and Age of the Herring (Clupea harengus). By 
T. Wemyss Fulton, M.D., F.R.S.E. (Plates X VII.-XIX.), 


E 


SU See 


“I o> 


Sao 


Previous Opinions and Observations, 

(a) English Authors, : 

(b) Scandinavian and Dutch, 

(c) Meyer and Jenkins, 

(d) Masterman and Cunningham, . 
The Size of the Herring when it first attains Maturity, 
The Maximum Size attained by the Herring, 
The Spawning-Periods of the Herring, A 
The Duration of Embryonic Development: Rela- 

tion to Temperature, 


. A Criticism of Meyer’s Conclusions and Observations, 
. The Scottish Collections, 


(a) Larval and Post- larval Stages, 
(6) The Annual eres 
Conclusions, . 
Literature, 
Description of Plates, 


PAGE 


293 
293 
294 
295 
298 
299 
301 
302 


303 
304 
307 
308 
323 
304 
338 
338 


TWENTY-FOURTH ANNUAL REPORT. 


TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE 
SOE Ne Sole G heave DT Ry) M.’P:, 


His Majesty's Secretary for Scotland. 


OFrFIcE oF THE FisHERY BoarD 
FOR SCOTLAND, 
EpinpurGu, 30th August 1906. 
SIR, 
In continuation of our Twenty-fourth Annual Report, 
we have the honour to submit— 


PART II—SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS. 


GENERAL STATEMENT. 


This, the third part of the Twenty-fourth Annual Report, deals 
with the scientific investigations conducted by the Board in 1905, 
so far as they have been completed, by means of the Parliamentary 
Vote granted for the purpose. 

The scientific work has, as usual, been carried out under the 
supervision of Dr. T. Wemyss Fulton, the Scientific Superintendent 
under the Board, the researches having been for the most part 
undertaken at the Marine Laboratory at Aberdeen, in the Moray 
Firth, and the Firth of Clyde. The sea-fish hatchery, which is 
also situated at Aberdeen, was reconstructed during the year in 
connection with the formation of a new road at the Bay of Nigg 
by the Town Council of Aberdeen and at their expense, as described 
below, where a statement of the hatching operations will also be 
found. 

In the Firth of Clyde, and more particularly in Lochfyne, an 
investigation into the natural history and migrations of the herring 
was continued, with the view of ascertaining if possible the cause 
of the decline in the yield of the herring fishery there in recent 
years, and whether any regulations affecting the time or methods 
of fishing would be likely to be beneficial to the fishery as u whole. 
As stated in the first part of this Report, the catch last year was 


6 Part [11 —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


one of the poorest on record, the shortage on the previous year’s 
catch, which was much below the average, amounting to 3160 
crans In quantity and £6243 in value. The work has been done 
as far as was possible by the use of fishing boats and the hire of a 
small yacht for monthly observations within the loch itself, and 
this had to be interrupted during the winter. 

The investigations into the condition of the fishing-grounds in 
the. Moray Firth were made as far as possible by the use of 
commercial trawlers, without expense, as referred to more fully 
below, and the observations on the growth, reproduction, and distri- 
bution of the edible fishes continued as in the last few years, as 
well as those on the destruction and capture of immature and 
undersized fishes. Owing to the unfortunate stranding of one of 
these vessels in Aberdeen Bay last December, while engaged in 
procuring plaice for the hatchery-ponds, and the loss of life 
occasioned thereby, the Board have thought it right to refrain from 
making use of such vessels for inshore work in future. 

As mentioned later, the Board has been pleased with the favour- 
able response of seaboard County Councils to their invitation 
to send fishermen to the Marine Laboratory and Hatchery at 
Aberdeen for a week’s instruction, each spring, in the life-history 
of fishes, and they hope that the facilities offered may be still 
further taken advantage of. 


TRAWLING INVESTIGATIONS. 


During the last few years, since the Garland was disposed of, 
the fishing grounds in certain parts of the territorial waters, 
especially in the Moray Firth and Aberdeen Bay, have been 
examined from time to time by means of commercial steam- 
trawlers, whose services were obtained without expense, partly 
with the view of ascertaining their condition and partly for the 
purpose of scientific research on the reproduction, growth, and 
distribution of fishes, and the capture of immature or undersized 
fish. A number of papers embodying the results of this work have 
already been published in previous Annual Reports. In the present 
Report there are two containing further observations by Dr. 
Fulton, one on the growth of fishes, referred to later, and the 
other furnishing an account of the trawling experiments last year, 
with detailed tables of the fish captured and the proportions which 
were unmarketable. 

The more important areas in the Moray Firth were visited in 
lebruary, September, October, and November, and the grounds in 
Aberdeen Bay were also examined in March. The aggregate 
quantity of fish brought to the market in the various trips was 
3884 cwts., and the total number of fishes caught in the recorded 
hauls was 71,982, of which 41,444, or over 59 per cent., were 
unmarketable. 

On most of the occasions marketable fish were by no means 
plentiful, and the voyages were not very profitable financially. 
This was particularly noteworthy in the Moray Firth in the 
autumn months, at which time the vessels working on the offshore 
erounds in the North Sea were much more successful. Haddocks 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. fi 


of marketable size were exceedingly scarce, the total catch of these 
being under twenty boxes for all the trips together, and more than 
half of them were obtained in February; in September they 
totalled five boxes, and in November a box and a half. 

On the other hand, immense shoals of young haddocks, under 
two years of age, were present in the bays in autumn, from which 
they were absent in the spring, and by far the greater part of those 
taken were thrown overboard as unmarketable. 

Some of the hauls may be referred to as showing the enormous 
destructive power possessed by the modern otter-trawl when 
employed in shallow bays at certain seasons. In six hauls in the 
Dornoch Firth at the end of September, the duration of the actual 
fishing being 232 hours, 25,563 fishes were caught, and of these, 
18,809, or 734 per cent., were thrown overboard as unmarketable. 
The number of haddocks taken in these six hauls was large, viz., 
10,361, but only 394 of them were large enough to be marketable, 
96 per cent. of the catch being returned to the sea. The prevalence 
of the small haddocks on the ground in autumn, and their scarcity 
in spring, may be shown in another way. While in February it 
took ten hours’ trawling to catch one unmarketable haddock and 
two marketable, the number of the former taken in the same time 
in September was 4196 and of the latter 166. The capture of 
small unmarketable plaice was also very considerable on this 
ground in autumn, 54 per cent. of the 13,610 plaice caught in the 
six hauls being rejected on account of their small size. 

All the young haddocks and a large proportion of the young 
plaice caught in this way perish, although under favourable 
conditions many of the latter may be preserved. 

It was shown formerly by similar investigations on board 
commercial trawlers fishing on the deeper grounds in the North 
Sea that the percentage of small fish taken there was less than in 
the waters near shore. In the Moray Firth in February the 
proportion of the unmarketable was 19 per cent., and in autumn it 
was 67 per cent. 

Observations were also made on the maturity and growth of the 
fishes caught, and a number of experiments were carried on with 
small-meshed nets. 


THE HATCHING AND REARING OF PLAICE. 


Owing to the formation of a new road at the Bay of Nigg last 
year, the Town Council of Aberdeen, from whom the site of the 
hatchery is leased, desired that that building and some others 
might be transferred to an adjoining part of the ground and 
re-erected at their expense. To this proposal the Board agreed, 
and the hatchery, the boiler and pump-house, and the storehouse 
were accordingly taken down and rebuilt on the new site. 

The change involved considerable re-arrangement of the pipes, 
&c., and the opportunity was made use of to effect some improve- 
ments which experience had shown to be desirable. The Town 
Council gave all reasonable facilities for the alterations and 
improvements being carried out, so that the hatchery is now better 
adapted for the work than it was before. The building itself is 


8 Part III—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


now somewhat enlarged; a concrete floor replaces the old wooden 
one; a strong wall has been built along the seaward face of the 
site, and granite retaining walls around the gravitation tank. In 
the present Report a brief description is given of the hatchery as 
rearranged, with illustrations showing the interior and exterior, the 
pumping plant, and the large spawning-pond in which the breeding 
fishes are kept and where the eggs are shed at the spawning 
season. 

During last year the eggs of the plaice were first discovered in 
the pond on 20th January, about the usual date when they make 
their appearance. Collections of eggs were thereafter obtained 
almost daily. The numbers gradually increased until the middle 
of March, after which they declined until 16th May, when the last 
collection was made. The duration of the spawning in the pond 
was thus about 117 days, which may be regarded as approximately 
the period in the sea. The aggregate number of eggs collected in 
the season was estimated at 40,110,000, of which 48 per cent. were 
spawned in March, 23 per cent. in February, and the same pro- 
portion in April. 

The duration of the period of embryonic development, until the 
eggs hatch, varies with the temperature of the water. The average 
at the beginning of the season, when the temperature is low, is 
about three weeks; towards the end of the season, with the 
temperature some degrees higher, hatching takes place in about a 
fortnight. The larval fishes, on issuing from the eggs, are retained 
in the apparatus for several days until the yolk-sac is partly 
absorbed, and it is calculated that the eggs and larve are protected 
in this way for about half of the time from the spawning of the 
eggs until the young plaice undergo their metamorphosis and 
assume the form and habit of the adult. 

The estimated number of fry which hatched out and were placed 
in the sea was 24,500,000. Most of them were distributed off 
Aberdeen, but one lot of about three and a half millions was taken to 
St. Combs, further up the coast, at the request of the fishermen, 
and there distributed. 

Since the establishment of the hatchery the total number of the 
fry of plaice which have been set free in the sea amounts to 
387,750,000, the number of fry of other fishes, as turbot, lemon 
dabs, and cod, being close upon 17,000,000. 

Owing to the circumstance that the hatchery is worked in con- 
junction with the Marine Laboratory, the expense of the hatching 
operations is comparatively small, the annual expenditure being 
estimated at rather under than over £100, which meets the cost of 
extra coal and an additional assistant at the height of the season. 


SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNICAL INSTRUCTION TO FISHERMEN. 


For some years past, as mentioned in previous Reports, by an 
arrangement with the Technical Education Committee of the 
County Council of Aberdeenshire, representative fishermen from 
various parts of the coast of that county have visited the laboratory 
and hatchery in spring, to attend demonstrations on the life- 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 9 


history and habits of fishes, such as might be of interest and use 
to them, and to see the processes of fish-hatching. 

The fishermen were so much interested in the instruction they 
received that, in some instances, on returning home, they held 
public meetings to discuss and communicate what they had 
learned ; and as it appeared to the Board desirable to encourage 
this inclination among the fishing population for knowledge of the 
kind, they invited other seaboard County Councils to send fishermen 
to the demonstrations, if they felt so disposed, no expense being 
incurred except for the travelling and maintenance of the men. 
The response has been gratifying, fishermen from the counties of 
Argyll, Bute, Caithness, and Elgin having attended the last course 
of instruction. 

The subjects taught include the life-history of such fishes as the 
herring, cod, haddock, and plaice, as well as of the mussel and 
edible crustacea, the instruction being given in as simple a manner 
as possible. The food, reproduction, growth, &c., of fishes are 
explained and illustrated by specimens and experiment, and the 
men are shown the process of fertilisation and the development of 
a fish within the egg. Demonstrations are also given on various 
methods of “ barking” nets and lines, a subject which, touching as 
it does on their daily occupation, is always interesting, and the 
opportunity is taken to show them some of the fish-curing and ice- 
making establishments in Aberdeen, as well as the fish-market. 

With reference to the “ barking” of nets, it may be stated that 
experiments are being tried as to the relative value of certain 
methods for the preservation of herring-nets,and that the Congested 
Districts Board have courteously agreed to defray the cost, and to 
have the trial of the nets made on board the experimental motor- 
fishing boat Pioneer. 

It may be worth stating that on the whole question of the 
technical education of fishermen and those engaged in the fishing 
industry most other countries in Europe are in advance of our- 
selves. In France and Germany there are a number of schools 
devoted to this work, directly or indirectly under the patronage of 
the State; there are several in Denmark, The Netherlands, Belgium, 
and Sweden. Most of them are concerned chiefly with that part 
of a fisherman’s knowledge which relates to navigation, fishing- 
grounds, and actual fishing, but many offer elaborate facilities for 
instruction of a more purely scientific kind, and are provided with 
laboratories, museums, libraries, and a teaching staff; some have 
ships as floating schools for practical work. By far the most 
important and the best-equipped institution of the kind is the 
Imperial Fisheries Institute at Tokio, Japan, which was recently 
rebuilt by the Japanese Government at a cost of £17,000. The 
buildings and grounds occupy 84 acres, including a dock for the 
experimental vessels; there are sixteen lecture rooms, as well as 
laboratories, inuseum, and libraries ; the staff includes ten professors 
and many assistants; and the course, which is divided into three 
sections—fishing, fisheries technology, and pisciculture—extends 
over three years. The aim is to educate the young Japanese 
connected with the fishing industry in the most thorough and 
Scientific manner ; but much work is also done in training teachers 


10 Part LIT.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


for the local fisheries and technical schools, and men who wish to 
devote themselves to such industries as canning and curing fish, 
the manufacture of fish-oils, iodine, &c. 

In this country there is perhaps room for a more thorough 
scientific and technical training in connection with the treatment 
and curing of fish than now obtains. 


INVESTIGATIONS ON THE HERRING FISHERIES IN.THE FIRTH OF 
CLYDE. 


The investigations on the herring fisheries in the Clyde refer 
chiefly to Ballantrae Bank and Lochfyne. With regard to the 
former, where a Bye-law (No. 18) is in operation interdicting seine- 
net fishing within a certain area, the fishery last season, as for 
some years past, was a failure, the weather having been almost 
continuously stormy up to the middle of March. The Fishery 
Officer reports that, although the “appearances” of herrings on 
the bank were as good as ever they were before—that is, the 
presence of whales, solan geese, and the oily look of the surface, by 
which fishermen judge of the location of herring-shoals—and 
though it was conclusively proved that herrings visited the ground 
to spawn by the fact that the gill-nets set for cod were coated with 
herring-eggs, the total quantity of herrings taken was 383 crans— 
15 by drift-nets, 83 by seine-net, and 285 by “trammels” or set- 
nets. No observations were thus possible as to the herring at 
Ballantrae ; and, owing to the want of a steamer, equipped for such 
work, dredging operations on the bank could not be undertaken. 

The fact that shoals of herrings have continued to frequent these 
erounds every spring in recent years, and have been scarcely at. all 
disturbed by the action of the nets of fishermen, while the Loch- 
fyne fishing has been extremely unsuccessful, does not lend support 
to the theory, strenuously held a few years ago, that the seine- 
net fishing at Ballantrae was injurious to the fishing in the loch; 
though sufficient time has not yet elapsed to make this certain. 

The investigations in Lochfyne concern the decline in the yield 
of the fishery in recent years, especially in 1904 and 1905, the 
latter being amongst the worst years on record, and are designed to 
throw light on the movements of the herring-shoals into and out 
of the loch, the places where the herrings spawn and the periods, 
the relation of the abundance of food-material in the loch to the 
abundance of the herrings, the growth of the herring, and the great 
fluctuations that occur. An investigation of this kind is difficult 
under the most favourable circumstances and must necessarily 
cover several successive seasons. As much as possible has been 
done by the hire of boats; monthly observations on the tempera- 
ture and food-material for the herring have been made for over a 
year, but they had to be suspended during last winter, owing to 
the lack of funds to meet the expenses. 

In addition to the information afforded by the course of the 
fishing and the places of capture of the fish, two methods have 
been adopted with the object of tracing the migrations of the 
herring. One consists in marking the herrings with a printed silk 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. in| 


tag, suitably treated, and then liberating them, and over 500 
herrings have been thus dealt with. The tag contains directions 
to the finder and enables the particular herring to be identified. 
So far, five of the marked herrings have been caught again, but as 
they were caught within the loch, and not far from the place of 
liberation, they do not afford evidence as to the route of the 
herrings from the loch or their destination. The herring is much 
more delicate than ordinary round fishes and flat fishes, as plaice 
and cod, which are made the subject of similar experiments, and it 
was found necessary to attach the tag to them while they were 
still in the water within the bag of the seine-net. This method 
will be persevered in, since the recovery of a single marked herring 
at a distance from the place of liberation, particularly if it is 
caught at a spawning-ground and about the spawning-time, affords 
direct and conclusive evidence as to the migration of that particular 
herring, and presumptive evidence as to the movement of the shoal 
to which it belongs, since the individuals composing it are governed 
by a common object, namely, reproduction. 

The second method consists in the attempt to identify a particular 
shoal by a study of the characters of the herrings belonging to it. 
It was applied in particular to the large and fine fish which loiter 
till near the end of the year in the deep water of the upper loch, 
which they quit by easy stages, and are believed, and probably 
rightly, to make their way down Kilbrennan Sound to spawn in 
the early months of the year somewhere off the southern part of 
Kintyre. Many hundreds of these herrings were examined at 
different periods, weighed, various measurements tabulated, and 
the condition and weight of the reproductive organs determined ; 
the latter observations affording incidentally valuable information 
as to the ripening process and its duration. These herrings were 
traced down the loch at the end of the year, and they appear to 
have gone down Kilbrennan Sound, but, owing to the absence of 
the Fishery Officer at Campbeltown on other duties, sufficient 
samples of the herrings being caught in the early part of the year 
could not be procured. It is accepted as a working hypothesis 
that these large herrings pass down Kilbrennan Sound, but there is 
not conclusive evidence to show that they do so. 

In the meantime, it may be pointed out that in the past the 
fluctuations in the yield of herrings in Lochfyne in different years 
have been noteworthy, as the following Table, which covers the 
long period of half a century, shows :— 


| | 
| Average | Average, | 
owey ou Period ee a eae ood ne ae Minimum Catch “Maximum Catch 
of Boats.| Barrels | Barrels eee erence, 
Taken. |per Boat. 
| | | pike Barrels. Barrels. | 
1827-36, . ; Shae 300; 15 3,469 11:5 1,453 (1830) 4,898 (1832) 
1837-46, . ‘ ; g00 | 7,388 |  25°1 3,225 (1839) 9,400 (1846) | 
1847-56, . ; ota: BOG 19,949 504 10,630 (1852) 32,726 (1851) | 
1857-66, . : ; 558 | 33,096 59:3 | 16,151 (1864) 79,893 (1862) | 
1867-76, . ; : 473 | 25,561 53°4 6,934 (1874) | 384,471 (1876) 


12 Part IT1—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


THE Foop-VALUE OF THE HERRING. 


As part of the series of researches now being carried out by the 
scientific department of the Board on the herring and herring 
fisheries, it was decided to obtain analyses of herrings in order to 
determine their composition and food-value at different periods of 
their development, especially when ripe or nearly mature and when 
spent. This investigation was undertaken by Dr. T. H. Milroy, 
Professor of Physiology, Queen’s College, Belfast, who furnishes an 
important paper on the subject which is contained in the present 
report, the detailed analyses being set forth in numerous Tables. 
Herrings have been analysed before, but the results have shown 
much discrepancy from the fact that the season of the year or the 
sexual development of the fish has been ignored. Professor 
Milroy shows that great differences in the muscle of the herring 
exist at different periods, even when the herrings are taken from 
the same waters. The herrings used for the research were obtained 
principally from Lochfyne, but also from Lochboisdale and Helms- 
dale. 

The composition of the herrings is stated in terms of water, 
proteid, fat, and phosphoric acid, and as the muscle or flesh 
constitutes the main source of the nutritive value of the herring, it 
is important to recognise the variations in its composition. These 
are most striking, especially as concerns the percentage of fat, and 
as this food principle possesses such a high caloric value, any 
marked decrease in its amount lowers the nutritive value of the 
fish to a serious extent. The lowest fat-percentage was found in 
the large spent herrings from Lochboisdale in February, and the 
total amount of fat present in the collective muscles of the average 
fish was exceedingly small. In these muscles the percentage of 
water was higher than normal, but the proteid and phosphorus 
percentages were but little affected. In Lochfyne, the fat-per- 
centage of the flesh of the herring continues to rise during August, 
September, and October. It begins to fall slowly in November, 
markedly in December, most markedly during spawning, and 
continues at a low level until the fish begin to feed again. 

With regard to the nutritive value of spent herrings, Professor 
Milroy says the statements often vaguely made as to their 
unwholesome character usually rest upon the general appearance 
of the flesh, which is undoubtedly poorer in fat. But the nutritive 
value depends not only upon the fat, but upon the proteids, and 
the analyses show that in this respect spent herrings compare by 
no means unfavourably with the maturing or mature fish. Fully 
mature fish, about to spawn, are in the same condition as freshly 
spent fish. 

A similar research on the composition of the herrings of the 
east coast of Scotland is now in progress. 


THE RATE OF GROWTH AND AGE OF THE HERRING. 
To the present Report a paper is contributed by Dr. Wemyss 


Fulton on the growth and age of the herring, based upon the 
measurements and examination during the last six years of nearly 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 18 


20,000 specimens, which were obtained mostly in small-meshed 
nets around the cod-end of otter-trawls during the trawling inves- 
tigations. It is shown that the opinions hitherto generally held as 
to the growth of this fish, and which are for the most part based on 
the investigations of a German naturalist, Dr. H. A. Meyer, which 
were made at Kiel, on the Baltic, over twenty-five years ago, are 
not well-founded, and that the herring grows more slowly than he 
supposed. 

Dr. Meyer’s observations and experiments are submitted to 
critical examination, the results showing that he over-estimated 
the growth of the herring in winter, when the growth of all fishes 
is retarded, and missed at least a year in the computation of its 
age. The gradual growth of the young post-larval herring from 
the spring and from the autumn spawning respectively is traced, 
the latter towards the end of the year being between one and two 
inches in length, while the growth of the spring herring under 
more favourable temperature conditions is quicker. 

The herring when one year of age measures barely two and a 
quarter inches in length, and it does not reach maturity and spawn 
until five years old and of an average length of about 94-94 inches. 
The size of the herring at different ages is approximately as fol- 
lows :— 


Increase in Length 


a ee Re: Tepgth. from Previous Year. 

Mm. | Inches. Mm, Inches, 

Lear... + ‘ ; : ? ; 60°5 23 = = 

2 Years, . ‘ ; f : ; 113 45, 52 2A. 

Bor as : : ; : . , 159 64 47 1g 

Bs at 200 1g 41 13 

er 238 93 38 13 

ee, 257 104 is) ma 


Herrings over twelve inches long, like the large Lochfyne fish, may 
be ten years old and more, and the very large herrings that are 
occasionally caught, measuring 14-15 inches, are probably over 15 
years of age, and may be 20. Compared with most fishes caught 
by lines or trawls, the herring caught by drift-nets has a great 
advantage, since no less than four generations of undersized or im- 
mature herrings escape capture by passing through the meshes of 
the net, and only fish which have reached adult size are taken. 
The paper is illustrated with three plates of diagrams. 


THE RATE OF GROWTH AND THE AGE OF THE Foop FISHES. 


Another paper dealing with the growth of numerous species is 
contributed by Dr. Fulton, the results being founded upon the 
measurements of nearly 209,000 fishes belonging to 21 species, 
which was done almost entirely by means of the commercial 


14 Part LIL.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


trawlers employed in the trawling investigations, as previously 
described, and is the same method as that which has since been 
used so extensively in the course of the international investigations 
in the North Sea. During the course of the investigation, which 
has extended over six years, the numbers of the chief species dealt 
with have been as follows :— 


Plaice, . : a top Whiting, . §8,164 
Common Dab, . 26,230 Gurnard, 5,495 
Long Rough Dab, . 20,261 Norway Pout, 7,192 
Cod, : ! , 7,176 Herring, . * 197806 
Haddock, éye®. 25D BB A760 Sprat, . : 6,473 


From a study of the growth of the different fishes and the size 
at which they attain maturity, a law of growth is stated, namely, 
that fishes approximately double their size and increase their 
weight about eight times after they have reached sexual maturity. 

The species whose growth and age are specially dealt with in 
the paper are the plaice, dab, flounder, lemon dab, long rough dab, 
turbot, brill, cod, haddock, whiting, and grey gurnard. A general 
conclusion is that fishes do not grow so quickly as is generally 
supposed. Thus, while the plaice reaches a length of about three 
inches in the first year of its life, the female is five years old and 
the male four years when they attain maturity. It is estimated 
that the turbot does not spawn until it is at least seven years old, 
while the cod spawns at four or five years, the haddock at three, 
and the whiting when two years of age. The paper is accompanied 
by a number of tables of measurements and two plates. 

In connection with the question of the growth of fishes, a research 
on the rate of digestion by Dr. Noél Paton, whose investigations on 
the salmon are so well known, is in progress. Two sets of observa- 
tions have been made, but the final results are reserved for next 
year’s Report. 


THE TAY SPRAT FISHERY. 


Mr. John Fletcher contributes a paper on the sprat fishery in 
the Tay, similar to the one published last year, but dealing with 
the winter of 1905-1906. ‘The fishery was again a comparative 
failure, only 1371 crans of sprats, including young herrings, being 
taken. The estimated number of young herrings caught in the 
sprat fishing is stated to have been nearly 12,000,000, while the 
sprats are estimated at a little over 16,000,000, the estimated 
percentage of young herrings amounting to 42-4. 


THE SPECIFIC CHARACTERS OF THE GADIDA. 


Dr. Williamson contributes a paper, illustrated with three plates, 
on the classification of certain members of the cod-family, viz., the 
bib, or whiting-pout, the poor-cod, and the Norway pout, the paper 
being a continuation of a previous one, in which the cod, the 
saithe, and the lythe were dealt with. Two of the species, the 
whiting-pout and the poor-cod, have often been confused, certain 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 16 


authors at different times maintaining that they are specifically 
the same, a circumstance attributed to only a few specimens having 
been examined, and the specific characters as published ambiguous. 
By a study of the distinguishing characters and numerous measure- 
ments, Dr. Williamson shows that these two species are distinct, 
and a key is given incorporating the results of the previous and 
the present researches, by which the six species may be separated. 
The same naturalist supplies a paper, with two plates of drawings, 
on hermaphroditism in the cod, a condition which is normal in 
certain fishes, as the Gilthead (Chrysophrys awratus), and occurs 
occasionally in others. 


THE OTOLITHS OR EARSTONES OF FISHES. 


In this Report will be found a long and elaborate paper by Dr. 
Thomas Scott on the otoliths or earstones of teleostean or bony 
fishes, which is illustrated by five plates containing figures of the 
otoliths described, belonging to about seventy species. The 
otoliths of different fishes vary remarkably in shape and size, 
and Dr. Scott shows how these differences may be used as a means 
for the identification of the various species should other data not be 
available. It is thus sometimes possible, as the author has shown 
in previous papers, to tell upon what fishes a particular fish or ceta- 
cean may have been feeding, by the presence of the earstones alone. 
The otoliths consist almost entirely of calcareous matter, only a trace 
of organic tissue being present. The structure shows that the limy 
matter is deposited in concentric layers, the density of each layer 
being slightly greater or less than the one immediately preceding 
it. In fiat fishes, the earstones form round or oval discs, so thin 
that the alternating concentric layers are easily made out. The 
number of such layers, or growth-lines, appears to correspond more 
or less closely with the age of the fish, but Dr. Scott is of opinion 
from his researches that it is doubtful if the evidence of age 
obtained in this way can be safely relied on. 

The same naturalist also contributes a brief paper on new and 
rare copepoda from the Scottish seas, illustrated by a plate of 
drawings. Most of the species were obtained in the Firth of Forth 
and the Moray Firth. 


THE SPAWNING AND FECUNDITY OF THE PLAICE. 


An experiment was made on this subject by Dr. Fulton, by 
keeping adult plaice about to spawn in tanks and collecting all the 
eggs that appeared in the overflow daily, or twice daily. By this 
means the number of eggs spawned by each of the two females 
experimented with was determined, as well as the duration of the 
spawning and the quantity of eggs that appeared from day to day. 
One of the females spawned steadily, and almost daily for a period 
of 36 days, the quantity shed at any time being small; the 
spawning of the other extended over 41 days, but eggs were 
spawned on only 16 days during the period, large quantities of 
eggs being shed on each occasion, as many as 49,000. The first 


16 Part Il] —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


female produced a total of about 163,500 eggs, and the second one 
a total of 252,700. The eggs of one of the fishes were found to be 
smaller than those of the other, and towards the end of the 


spawning the size of the egg became reduced in each case. 


THE SPAWNING OF THE LUMPSUCKER AND THE PATERNAL 
GUARDIANSHIP OF THE EGGS. 


A paper by Dr. Fulton describes the spawning of the Lumpsucker 
and the remarkable assiduity with which the male guards the eggs 
during the period of incubation, which lasts for about two months. 

During all this time the male stands sentinel over the eggs, 
repelling the attacks of intruders, pursuing other males that 
approach them, constantly aérating them by a movement of his 
fins, and by spouting currents of water on them from his mouth, 
and refusing all food until almost the end of his long vigil. 


We have the honour to be, 


Your most obedient Servants, 


ANGUS SUTHERLAND, Chairman. 
D. CRAWFORD, Deputy-Chairman. 
D’ARCY W. THOMPSON. 

WR DUG ELD: 

L. MILLOY. 

D. MEARNS. 

H. WATSON. 


WM. C. ROBERTSON, Secretary. 


SCIENTIFIC REPORTS. 


I.—TRAWLING INVESTIGATIONS. By Dr. T. Wemyss Futron, 
F.R.S.E., Superintendent of Scientific Investigations. 


INTRODUCTORY. 


Last year the investigations into the conditions of the fishing grounds 
in the Moray Firth and Aberdeen Bay, by means of steam trawlers, 
whose services were obtained for the purpose without expense, were 
continued as in previous years as far as circumstances permitted, In the 
Moray Firth the more important areas were visited in February, 
September, October, and November, and the grounds in Aberdeen Bay 
were also examined in March. The grounds at Burghead Bay and in 
the neighbourhood on the south coast were most fully examined, but a 
number of hauls were also taken in the Dornoch Firth, off the Suters of 
Cromarty, and a few off the Caithness coast. 

On most occasions fish were found to be scarce, and the results of the 
voyages were not regarded as financially profitable by the owners, 
especially in the Moray Firth in September, October, and November, 
when the vessels working on the usual-grounds in the North Sea were 
much more successful. Haddocks, in particular, were unusually scarce, 
only 19} cwts. being taken in the whole of the voyages together, and of 
these 12? cwts. were got in the February trip. In September the total 
quantity of haddocks amounted to only 5 cwts., and in November to 14 
ewts., while none at all were caught in Aberdeen Bay in March. The 
haddocks that were taken were mostly small, and in autumn large 
numbers of these small unmarketable haddocks were brought up in the 
trawl in the Moray Firth and thrown overboard. On one occasion close 
upon 4000 were taken in a single haul. Particulars in regard to these 
are given below, and in the Tables appended. The total quantity of fish 
of all kinds brought to market in the course of the variovs trips 
amounted to 3884 cwts., mostly consisting of plaice. 

With regard to the number of fishes taken, the aggregate for the 
completely recorded hauls was 71,982, of which 30,538 were marketable 
and 41,444 unmarketable, either because of their small size, or because 
they were not of edible kinds. The total number of plaice taken in these 
hauls was 29,958; the number of haddocks was 26,348, the greater 
proportion being too small to be marketable, and the number of cod was 
302. As showing the quantity of unmarketable fish in autumn as com- 
pared with spring (February) it may be said that while at the latter 
period 12,882 marketable fish were taken as against 3088 unmarketable, 
in autumn the number of unmarketable was 26,133, while the number of 
marketable was almost the same as in spring, viz., 12,756. 

One of the objects of these trawling investigations is to ascertain as 
far as possible the changes which occur in the abundance of the food and 
other fishes on the grounds in different seasons and years; but observa- 


tions are also made on the reproduction of the fishes, their spawning, 
B 


18 Part ITT —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


food, &c., while at the same time collections of floating organisms, or 
plankton, are obtained. The employment of commercial trawlers for this 
purpose is associated with certain disadvantages, particularly from the 
point of view of comfort; but as the trawling work is carried on 
precisely as it is when fishing for market purposes, opportunities are 
afforded for various observations bearing on this method of fishing, as, 
for example, the proportion of marketable and unmarketable fishes which 
are taken, the influence of the size of the mesh on the size of the fish 
caught, &c. The expense, moreover, is comparatively slight, as no charge 
is made for the use of the vessels, which are also available for procuring 
supplies of adult living plaice for the hatchery, without cost. 

On some of the occasions the records of the catches on board the 
trawlers were made by Dr. Williamson. 


i: 


The first of the trawlings was made in the Moray Firth and Aberdeen 
Bay from the 6th to the 11th February, the steam-trawler ‘‘ Loch 
Lyddoch” being employed; rather heavy weather was encountered 
during the latter part of the trip. The places visited in the Moray Firth 
were Burghead Bay and the grounds off it, the grounds in deeper water 
to the east of the Suters of Cromarty, and the Dornoch Firth. A gale 
which sprang up, with a heavy sea, prevented the vessel from visiting 
Smith Bank and the grounds off the Caithness coast, as was intended. 

The first hauls were made in Burghead Bay in the afternoon of 6th 
February, the wind when the work commenced being from the westwards 
and light. A drag in from about 5 to 12 fathoms for four hours, 
and therefore somewhat close in, yielded a total of 596 fish, of which 511 
were marketable and 85 unmarketable. The greater part of the market- 
able catch consisted of plaice, and witches were fairly numerous, The 
plaice numbered 292, all of them marketable, and most of them medium 
and small, only 1 large plaice being taken. There were 100 witches, 
all marketable, and among the other flat-fishes, 3 turbot, 13 brill, 1 
halibut, 26 common dabs, and 7 flounders. Round-fishes, especially 
haddocks, were scarce ; they included 2 cod, 7 codlings, 39 haddocks, all 
but 1 being small, 18 whitings, and 2 catfish. The unmarketable fishes 
consisted mostly of common dabs, whiting, and codling. The second 
haul, in the same locality and about the same depths, was for four hours 
and five minutes. The number of fishes secured was 792, of which 
712 were marketable and 80 unmarketable. Plaice were better repre- 
sented, the total being 492, all of them marketable, and consisting chiefly 
of medium and small specimens. This catch also included a halibut, 3 
turbot, and 14 brill, as well as 49 witches, all marketable, and 100 
common dabs. There were also 7 cod and 11 codlings; haddocks were 
equally scarce, only 26 being taken. A third haul in the same place 
gave somewhat the same results. It was for four hours, and the aggre- 
gate catch amounted to 863 fishes, 768 being marketable and 95 
unmarketable. Plaice formed the bulk of the catch; they numbered 
375, mostly small and medium, and there were also 178 witches, all 
marketable, as well as 37 brill, 79 common dabs, and 5 flounders. The 
marketable round-fishes included 4 cod, 28 codling, and 43 haddocks, all 
of the latter, except one, being small. 

In the three hauls in this place within the range of depth mentioned, 
occupying altogether twelve hours and five minutes, 2251 fishes were 
caught, of which 1991 were marketable and 260 unmarketable. The 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 19 


particulars are given in the following Table, the marketable fishes being 
represented on the first line (I.) and the unmarketable on the second line 
(II.). 


——————EE 


Cod. — Codling. | Haddock. | Whiting. Cat-fish, Halibut. 
——— pelt 1 EES jes ee oe Sie SED Aehee raho at 
ae eee adit 108 41 2 2 
Te. 9 5 8 | 
Peo peter! 18 55 113 a es D 2 
==" cs 07 ger PTT BER SB ER 
Turbot. | Brill. Plaice. | Witch. ee fee Flounder. 
te So i aa eae sae RECS 
| E 6. 64 1,159 | 327 6 205 12 
pa iad ee a ne 183 
_2 LS SS eG eee ot 
Total| 6 | 64 Ringesiiec saAe lie Le 388 12 
| | 


In addition to those in the Table, there were 3 herrings, 34 anglers, and 
18 thornbacks. 

In the same locality, but in rather shallower water, another haul was 
taken on the 8th, which may be here referred to. The depth was from 
7 to 10 fathoms, but mostly 7, 8, and 9, and it lasted four hours and 
twelve minutes. The catch was smaller than in the others, totalling 367 
fishes, 334 being marketable and 33 unmarketable. Plaice were not so 
numerous, consisting of 263 (3 baskets of mediums and 14 of small). 
There were also 2 turbot and 21 brill. Haddocks were represented by 
2 smali, unmarketable specimens, but, on the other hand, there were 
17 cod. 

After the three first hauls above referred to, the vessel shifted a little 
further out into deeper water. The light on Burghead pier bore about 
S.S.E., and the depths ranged to about 25 fathoms, the distance from the 
light being about four miles. In the first haul, in from 17 to 20 fathoms, 
which lasted for four hours and ten minutes, 1295 fishes were caught, of 
which 1011 were marketable and 284 unmarketable. The bulk of the 
catch was made up of plaice, haddocks, and witches. There were 273 
plaice, mostly medium and small (see page 35), and all marketable, 371 
witches, all marketable and all except four large, while the number of 
haddocks was 277, of which 213 were marketable, thougn nearly all were 
small. The catch included 12 cod, 22 codling, 2 coal-fish, 2 cat-fish, 3 
turbot, and 4 brill. 

The second haul, made in the same locality in from about 17 to 21 
fathoms, and which lasted for four hours and five minutes, yielded 1460 
fishes, of which 1081 were marketable and 379 unmarketable. Haddocks 
were much scarcer than in the preceding drag, the bulk of the fishes 
being plaice and witches. The number of plaice was 384, and they were 
all marketable ; most of them were mediums and thirds. The witches 
numbered 528, there being 466 large, marketable, and 62 unmarketable. 
There were also 11 brill, 1 turbot, 6 lemon dabs, 10 cod, and 2 cat-fish. 
The number of haddocks was 148, and 63 of them were too small to be 
marketable. It is of interest to note that in this catch there were 9 
berried edible crabs, 


20 Part I11.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The next haul in the same place, for four hours and fifteen minutes, 
yielded 1013 fishes, 822 being marketable and 191 unmarketable. Plaice 
were the most numerous in the catch, the total being 563, and all but 11 
marketable. Witches were much less abundant, the total being 74, 4 of 
them unmarketable. Among the other flat-fishes were 1 halibut, 4 
turbot, and 18 brill, as well as a black or common sole—a fish which is 
exceedingly scarce in the Moray Firth. Haddocks were scarce, only 64 
being taken, nearly all small, and 18 unmarketable. The number of cod 
was 5, and there were 2 cat-fish, 1 starry ray, and 4 cuckoo rays. In the 
next haul, which lasted for four hours and fifteen minutes, the range of 
depth was rather greater, from 12 to 25 fathoms. The aggregate number 
of fishes was 707, of which 599 were marketable and 108 unmarketable. 
Plaice formed the bulk of the catch, numbering 385, and all but 4 were 
marketable. ‘There were 60 witches, 3 of which were unmarketable, 3 
turbot, 14 brill, and 1 megrim. Haddocks were poorly represented, the 
number being 67, and 7 were unmarketable and nearly all the others 
small. Three cod and 27 codling were taken, 7 of these being unmarket- 
able, as well as 2 coal-fish and a cat-fish. A fifth haul, lasting for four 
hours and ten minutes, in somewhat shallower water, from 13 to 17 
fathoms, yielded a total of 816 fishes, 673 being marketable and 143 
unmarketable. The result was much the same as in the previous four 
drags, the bulk of the catch consisting of plaice, which numbered 456, all 
but 6 being marketable. There were 65 witches, all marketable, 1 
turbot, 14 brill, 5 cod, and a cat-fish. 

Altogether, in the five hauls off Burghead, the aggregate time of actual 
fishing being twenty hours and fifty-five minutes, the total number of 
fishes taken was 5291, of which 4186 were marketable and 1105 
unmarketable. The particulars for each kind of fish are given in the 
following Table, the marketable being shown on the first line (I.) and the 
unmarketable on the second line (II.). 


Cod. |Codling.} Haddock. | Whiting. | Coal-fish. Cat-fish.| Halibut. | Turbot. 


I 35 52 425 105 4 8 1 12 
II 15 158 37 
Total 30 67 583 142 + 8 1 12 


Lemon Common 


Dab. Bab) Megrim. | Flounder. 


Brill. Plaice. Witch. 


I, 61 2,040 1,029 15 258 1 10 
il, - 21 69 678 1 
Total 61 2,061 1,098 15 936 1 12! 
Long :. 
se ‘ . Thorn- Starry Cuckoo 
Ronen Sole. Herring. sales Ray. Ba Angler 
I 1 14 77 1 J 36 
II 72 14 3 a7 
Total 72 en 14 91 il 4 73 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 21 


The vessel then steamed in the direction of the Cromarty Firth and 
made a number of hauls off the Suters of Cromarty. The distance from 
the Suters was about five miles to the east, and the depth varied from 
about 18 to 35 fathoms. The first drag, on the 9th February, lasted for 
34 hours, the depths taken being 25, 18, and 35 fathoms. The number 
of fishes caught was 1357, of which 1113 were marketable and 244 
unmarketable. In this haul plaice were barely represented, the total 
being 13, and it is noteworthy that 4 were small (thirds), 7 were 
mediums, and 2 large ; there were none belonging to the fourth class. 
The bulk of the catch consisted of witches, of which there were 9 basket- 
fuls, the number being 850, and of these 792 were marketable and 58 
too small to be taken to market. Among the other flat-fishes were 1 
turbot, 4 lemon dabs, 224 common dabs, and 23 long rough dabs; but, 
in contrast tv the hauls off Burghead, no brill were taken. Among the 
round-fishes, haddocks were much better represented, and the medium- 
sized fish, practically absent off Burghead Bay, were fairly represented. 
The total number of haddocks was 132, all but 13 being market- 
able; 8 were large, 58 medium, and 53 small (thirds), The number 
of cod caught was 16, and there were 6 marketable codlings and 1 
coal-fish. 

The depths got in the next haul in the same locality, which lasted for 
three hours and thirty-five minutes, were 23 and 29 fathoms. The 
number of fishes taken was 1774, of which 1411 were marketable and 
363 unmarketable. The catch differed from the previous one in that 
plaice and haddocks were much more abundant and witches less abundant. 
The number of plaice taken was 278, three of them being too small to be 
marketable; of the marketable, 4 were large, 129 medium, 99 were 
thirds, and 43 fourths. The witches numbered 493, of which 477 were 
marketable, and the great majority were large. Among other flat-fishes 
were 3 brill, 2 lemon dabs, 242 common dabs, and 119 long rough dabs 
The number of haddocks taken was 536, of which 483 were of marketable 
size, and 53 too small to be taken to market. The catch also included 27 
cod, 11 codling, all but 1 marketable, as well as 26 whiting, 1 coal-fish, 
1 pollack, and 2 hake. Two other hauls were taken on the 10th, the 
depths ascertained in the first being 12, 25, and 28 fathoms ; this haul 
lasted for three hours and fifteen minutes. The catch consisted of 1080 
fishes, 963 being marketable and 117 unmarketable. Plaice and haddocks 
were best represented. The former numbered 326, all marketable, there 
being 4 large, 150 medium, 115 thirds, and 57 fourths. There were 438 
haddocks, 419 of which were marketable, and they almost entirely 
consisted of mediums, Witches numbered 197, all but 7 being market- 
able ; and the catch included 5 cod, 1 hake, 2 brill, and 38 long rough 
dabs. The fourth drag, also on the 10th, lasted for four hours and fifteen 
minutes, the depths being 15, 18, and 25 fathoms. The catch amounted 
to 947 fishes, 831 being marketable and 116 unmarketable. There were 
461 witches, all marketable and mostly large ; 17 plaice, all marketable 
and consisting of large and mediums; 1 megrim was also taken, as well 
as a number of dabs. Among the round-fishes were 312 haddocks, of 
which 281 were marketable, 279 of them being mediums, and 2 large. 
There were 14 cod, 10 codlings, a hake, and a gurnard. 

Altogether, in the four drags taken in the deepish water to the east of 
the Suters of Cromarty, the actual duration of trawling being fourteen 
hours and thirty-five minutes, the aggregate number of fishes caught was 
5158, of which 4318 were marketable and 840 were unmarketable. The 
particulars as to the different fishes are shown in the following Table, 
the marketable being distinguished from the unmarketable. 


22 Part III. —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 
| 
— Cod- | Had- | Whit- | Coal- |} Pol- Gir- je. . : 
Cod. ‘ling. | dock.) ing. | fish. | lack. Hake. aap ‘Turbot.} Brill. |Plaice. 
I.) | G24 223) Leeann a leoo gym lie Le | 3 eet 
5 ee u 6 3 
Total | 62 | 27 LAs og | am! Tale Seer) a Sea 
‘ | | Long : . | 
tguon| Com Twive, Megrin. ough Pet] He angie. | haem | Gre 
| abd. 
jor eg Ava aaeego yy A IEA Lo ote dog thi: naa 
Pru . | 384 Bld oevied. WsdOR | ae <a 822s NaS 
a SR ----—— iapmanitiecst >| SS 
Total's! (61610 } 2001 Jo 9 1 197%) (292 2) oo 91 20 | 
| | 


The vessel then proceeded to the Dornoch Firth, where some hauls 
were taken, but the catches were not as a rule very large. The first was 
made on the 9th February, mostly in 10 and 12 fathoms, and it lasted 
for four hours and a half. The number of fishes caught was 1195, of 
which 942 were marketable and 253 unmarketable. Plaice were most 
numerously represented, the number being 805, of which 740 were 
marketable and 65 unmarketable ; the former consisted of 2 large, 106 
mediums, 260 thirds, and 372 fourths) The other flat-fishes included 1 
brill, 4 lemon dabs, 199 common dabs, and 166 flounders. Round-fishes 
were practically absent, being represented only by 2 small haddocks. 
The next haul was for an hour, with the small-meshed net around the 
cod-end of the otter-trawl. In the latter the number of fishes amounted 
to 277, of which 138 were marketable. The plaice numbered 240, of 
which 115 were marketable and 125 too small to be marketable. There 
were also 18 flounders and 9 small common dabs. Round-fishes again 
were represented by only 2 small, unmarketable haddocks. ‘The third 
drag in the Dornoch Firth, in from about 43 to 12 fathoms, lasted for 
four hours and ten minutes, and the number of fishes taken was 950, the 
number marketable being 624 and the unmarketable 326. The catch 
included 788 plaice, most of them being small; 312 were too small to be 
marketable, and of the 476 marketable, 254 belonged to the fourth class, 
143 to the third, and 79 to the second (mediums). Among the flat-fishes 
were also no less than 140 flounders, while the common dabs numbered 
8. Haddocks were represented by a single unmarketable specimen, and 
there were no other round-fishes. 

Omitting the haul with the small-meshed net around the cod-end of 
the otter-trawl, the total number of fishes taken in the two ordinary 
hauls, representing eight hours and forty minutes’ trawling, was 2145, of 
which 1566 were marketable and 579 unmarketable. The particulars 
in regard to the different species of fish, marketable and unmarketable, 
are as follows :— 


Haddock. Brill. | Plaice. Remon) Coenen Flounder. | Angler. hora 


| Dab. Dab. back. | 

| oe Se ee HE, op TP SR a eS i eS ee ___ a et ee = 

er 2 1) “rong 4 17 S06 "ate 20 | 
I. ited att 377 = ate 0 ; 3 8 


Total 3 1 | 1,593 4 07 «| 30 «| 8 a 
{ 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 23 


The numbers of the different kinds taken in the small-meshed net may 
be contrasted with the numbers taken in the trawl net. 


In Small-meshed 


In Otter- Net outside 

trawl. Trawl Net. 
Haddock, 2 1 
Whiting, — 628 
Codling, -- ii 
Gurnard, —_ 8 
Plaice, . : : 240 355 
Common Dab, 9 524 
Long Rough Dab, . — 6 
Small or Yellow Sole, : o 6 
Herring, ’ f ‘ ; ; — 8 
Sprat, . : — 15 
Armed Bullhead, “= 6 
Goby, sp., — 3 
Sand-eel, — 3 
Pipe-fish, — 6 
Flounder, 18 — 
Angler, . 3 = 
Thornback, 5 — 

277 1576 


In the hour’s drag a total of at least 1853 fishes had entered the trawl, 
of which it retained 277, while the remaining 1576 escaped through the 
meshes of the trawl and were retained by the small-meshed net. The 
result shows that haddocks, both big and little, were practically absent 
from the grounds in the Dornoch Firth which were fished over at the 
time ; that small whitings, too small to be taken in the otter-trawl, were 
present in large numbers, while large whitings were absent, and that small 
codling were there in inconsiderable numbers. No codling or whiting 
were caught in any of the hauls with the ordinary net. The large 
number of small plaice which escaped from the trawl net is also 
noteworthy, and still more, the common dabs. On the other hand, while 
18 flounders were taken in the otter-trawl, none were got in the small- 
meshed net, the smaller flounders not making their way into water of 63 
fathoms depth, but remaining close in on the beach and the brackish 
water. The abundance of large flounders in the deepish water at this 
time of year is in agreement with what has been found on other 
occasions,* and is referred to more fully below. The presence of young 
gurnards may be noted. 

After leaving the Dornoch Firth, the grounds east of the Suters of 
Cromarty were again visited, as above stated, and an attempt was then 
made to go to Smith Bank, but owing to the strong wind and high sea 
the vessel was forced to turn, and it then proceeded to Aberdeen Bay. 
Here a haul was made off the Quarries, on February 11th, in from eight to 
twelve fathoms of water ; it lasted for an hour, the small-meshed net being 
attached as described above. There was a strong north-west breeze and 
a rough sea, and the number of fishes taken in the otter-trawl was only 
60, 47 being marketable and 13 unmarketable. The catch consisted of 
7 cod, 20 codlings, all marketable, 14 marketable haddocks, and 8 
whitings among the round-fishes, while the flat-fishes were represented by 
only 7 common dabs, no plaice being taken, and there were also 9 starry 
rays. 

te * Twenty-first Annual Report, Part 111., p. 44. 


24 Part 111 —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


A second haul, for three hours and forty minutes, in from 10 to 12 
fathoms, was made in the same locality, the number of fishes secured 
being 252, an extremely poor catch. The marketable numbered 162 and 
the unmarketable 90. Round-fishes were again most numerous; there 
were 5 cod, 35 codling, all but 3 marketable, 146 haddocks, of which 121 
were marketable, 12 unmarketable whitings, and 6 gurnards. Flat-fishes 
were scarce, and consisted of 3 medium-sized plaice, a single flounder, and 
12 common dabs. 

The fish contained in the small-meshed net numbered 490, and belonged 
to eleven species. The particulars for each of the nets are as follows :— 


Otter-trawl. Small-meshed Net. © 


Cod, . 7 Lae 
Codling, . : 20 16 
Haddock, . : 14 

Whiting, . / 3 
Gurnard, . = 
Lesser Weaver, . ao 
Goby, sp., . . = 
Armed Bullhead. : = 
Plaice, ; . : é — 
Common Dab, ; ; rf 
Herring, . ; — 
Sprat, , : - 
Pipe-fish, . : — 
Starry Ray, 9 


—" 
Cr 


eal 


bo 
Ne) 
Sew OD Wer WL © 


| 


60 490 


The quantity of fish landed at the warket by the vessel as a result of 
this trip was as follows, the particulars having been supplied by the 
Fishery Officer; the total weight being 151? cwts. :— 


oO 


Cod. Codling. Coal-fish. Haddock. Whiting. Cat-fish. Angler. Hake. ‘Turbot. 
4 3 D Yo t 


241 38 12 123 


Halibut. Lemon Dab. Plaice. Brill. Common Dab. Witch. Flounder. Skate. 
a 2 524. 23 31 282 


REMARKS ON THE MATURITY OF THE FISHEs. 


During the investigations carried on in February a number of obser- 
vations were made by Dr. Williamson, who had been requested to 
determine in as many cases as possible the condition of sexual maturity 
of the fishes, especially by using pressure in the ordinary way to see 
whether ripe eggs or spermatic fluid could be squeezed out, or to note 
whether the fish were spawning. In the hauls made at Burghead Bay 
between the 7th and 9th February, 2 of the male cod taken were found 
to be quite ripe, but none of the females appeared to be ripe ; the number 
of cod caught was over 60. ‘The ripe males were obtained about four 
miles off, in from 18 to 30 fathoms of water. Of 4 coal-fishes captured 
in these hauls, 3 were males and 1 was a female ; the 3 males were ripe 
and ‘‘running” and the female was ripe and had transparent eggs. 

Some of the plaice which were taken were also found to be ripe, though 
the great majority were immature. The number measured and examined 
by Dr. Williamson at Burghead Bay was 1534, and of these, so far as 
could be observed, 3 males and 5 females were ripe, 4 of the females being 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. BS 


in reality spent, but a few mature eggs could still be squeezed from them. 
The sizes of these were as follows :—Males, 392, 420, 440 mm. ; females, 
520, 530, 595, 625, 685 mm. These fishes were got in from 12 to 25 
fathoms. Besides these, 3 males and 43 females were nearly ripe, the 
sizes of which were as follows, in millimetres :— 

Males—395, 415, 436 mm. 

Females—386, 388, 391, 392, 393, 400, 400, 403, 409, 412, 412, 415, 
419, 420, 420, 420, 420, 420, 431, 435, 440, 443, 445, 456, 457, 460, 
460, 461, 470, 476, 481, 488, 501, 505, 508, 510, 530, 550, 564, 595, 
634, 655, 674. 

The smallest of the females indicated as immature measured 21°8 cm., 
and the largest 46 cm. ; the smallest of the males was 20°5 cm., and the 
largest 43 cm. 

Four nearly ripe female plaice were also obtained in one of the hauls in 
from 23 to 29 fathoms, five miles off the Suters of Cromarty. Their 
sizes were as follows :—498, 511, 561, 704 mm. 

In the previous year, at the very end of March (30th and 31st), a few 
spawning and spent plaice were taken at the outer part of Dornoch Firth, 
but they were not numerous.* 

In a previous year at the latter part of January and in the middle of 
February, spawning plaice were got in large numbers on Smith Bank and 
a little to the south of it.t 

Only one ripe haddock was found; it was a male, one of 62 large 
specimens caught in 23-29 fathoms, five miles east of the Suters of 
Cromarty, on 7th February. Haddocks, however, and especially large 
haddocks, were very scarce during the trip. 

Flounders, which were taken in large numbers, were not as a rule quite 
ripe. Ripe males were obtained a few miles off Burghead in from 17 to 
25 fathoms, and ripe males and females were taken in the Dornoch Firth. 
Most of the females were full and nearly ripe, but not spawning. As 
previously stated, flounders migrate to the deeper waters offshore in spring, 
for the purpose of spawning, and are then caught in the trawl in considerable 
numbers, A large one was caught in from 23 to 29 fathoms, about 5 
miles off the Suters of Cromarty. In the Dornoch Firth as many as 
140 and 166 were taken in single hauls. 

None of the turbot or brill taken were ripe. The number of these 
fishes got at Burghead Bay was large, viz., in the nine hauls 146 brill 
and 21 turbot. Five brill and a turbot were also secured in the deeper 
water off the Suters of Cromarty. In one of the hauls off Burghead, 37 
brill were captured, in another 21, and ina third 18. All the specimens 
of both species were large enough to be marketable, which is the usual 
experience; and their abundance was no doubt associated with the 
presence of herrings on the ground. 


il; 


At the end of March a series of trawlings was made in Aberdeen Bay 
by the steam-trawler “‘Fifeness,” from the morning of the 27th to the 
morning of the 29th. Fish were remarkably scarce, with the exception 
of cod and codling, of which a considerable number were taken. 
Haddocks were practically absent from the grounds, only a few being got. 
The wind during the continuance of the work was from the south-east at 
first, and later from the south-west, and it was a moderate breeze. The 
first ordinary haul was taken in from 6 to 10 fathoms, between Donmouth 


* Twenty-third Annual Report, Part IIL., p. 21. 
+ Seventh Annual Report, Part IT,, p. 171. 


26 Part ITZ.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


and ‘‘ Black Dog,” and it lasted for three hours and five minutes. The 
total number of fishes caught was 232, consisting of 208 marketable and 
24 unmarketable. Among the former were 50 cod, of a rather small size, — 
known as “‘half-cod,” as well as 46 codling, 100 plaice, all but 2 market- 
able and of medium size, 5 flounders, a common dab, and 30 starry rays. 
The second haul, for four hours and ten minutes, off Newburgh, in 6 to 
12 fathoms, yielded only 158 fishes, the marketable numbering 135. 
They consisted of 29 cod, 38 codling, 23 plaice, and a few others, 
including 62 starry rays. The third haul, a little further to the north, in 
about the same depths, for three hours and fifty minutes, yielded 297 
fishes, of which 292 were marketable. Cod were less numerous, 
numbering 4; there were also 9 codling, a few dabs and starry rays, and 
a lumpsucker, while on this occasion the catch of plaice was relatively 
large, viz., 258, most of them being medium, and 9 large. The num- 
bers in other hauls were even less. 

Altogether, in six recorded hauls, representing twenty hours and thirty- 
five minutes of actual trawling, the total number of fishes taken was 
only 1018, consisting of 937 marketable and 81 unmarketable. The 
particulars are as follows, the marketable being indicated on the first 
line :— 


4 foie al Gag ae : Com, | Starry 
Cod, |Codling. As Whiting.) Plaice. | Flounder. Paik Ray. 
I 90 119 3 10 567 9 55 84 
1H 1 7 2 1 21 49 
Total 90 120 Sed 4 17 569 | 10 76 133 


Two hauls were made with the small-meshed net around the cod-end, 
the first in from 6 to 10 fathoms between Donmouth and “ Black Dog,” 
and it lasted for one hour and five minutes. The number of fishes in 
the otter trawl was only 30, consisting of 21 codling, 2 plaice, 2 whiting, 
and 5 starry rays. In the small-meshed net outside the cod-end were 
154 small dabs measuring from 29 mm. (11 inches) to 177 mm. 
(3 inches), as shown on page 252. 

The second haul was taken in deeper water, about 3 miles off Girdle- 
ness, the depth being from 18 to 25 fathoms, and it lasted for seventy 
minutes. In the otter trawl, which was torn, there were 76 fishes, and 
in the small-meshed net 718, as follows : — 


In Trawl. In Small-meshed Net. 

Codling, . :; 9 

Ling, . ; ; 3 — 
Haddock, . ; ; 19 314 
Whiting, . 3 364 
Norway Pout, . = 9 
Turbot, : . 1 — 
Plaice, : ; 14 — 
Lemon Dab, . ; : 6 — 
Common Dab, . ‘ 21 5 
Long Rough Dab, — 16 
Herring, : _— 4 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 27 


The quantity of fish, as returned by the officer, which was landed at 
the market, as the result of twelve hauls and forty-one hours and fifty- 
five minutes actual trawling, was 47 cwts., as follows :— 


Cod. Codling. Ling. Turbot. Halibut. Lemon Dab. Plaice. Dabs. Skate. 
173 8 3 - ale 162 2 2 


Ss $ 8 
Phi: 


The next series of trawlings was made by the steam trawler “ Star of 
the Ocean” in the Moray Firth at the end of September and the 
beginning of October, and the trip was not a very productive one. Fairly 
good catches of plaice were obtained in the Dornoch Firth and at 
Burghead Bay, but they were mostly small, and marketable haddocks 
were scarce. On the other hand, small haddocks, too small to be 
marketable, were very abundant, and the same was the case with small 
unmarketable plaice. : 

The first place visited was Burghead Bay, where a haul was taken on 
28th September for two hours and five minutes, in from 5 to 12 fathoms 
of water. The number of fishes caught was 2470, of which 803 were 
marketable and 1667 unmarketable. Haddocks and plaice were most 
abundant. The number of haddocks taken was 1423, but only 73, 
which were of medium size, were marketable, the other 1350 being too 
small for market. Of a total of 738 plaice, all but 16 were marketable, 
but by far the greater proportion were small, viz., 711. Among the 
other flat-fishes were 2 brill, a lemon dab, and 208 common dabs. 

The vessel then steamed to the Dornoch Firth, where a number of 
hauls were made off Dunrobin Castle. The first, in from 5 to 15 fathoms, 
lasted for four hours and five minutes, the total number of fishes taken 
being 2909. Most of them were unmarketable, viz., 1994, while the 
other 915 were marketable. ‘The catch consisted mostly of plaice and 
small haddocks. The plaice numbered 2095, of which 828 were market- 
able and 1267 unmarketable. The former consisted of 23 large, 30 
medium, and 775 small. Among the flat-fishes were fourteen lemon dabs 
and 1 witch. All the haddocks taken, 549 in number, were too small 
to be marketable; all the 52 whitings caught were also unmarketable. 
The catch included 19 cod, 57 codling, 11 of which were unmarketable, 
51 gurnards, and a number of dabs. The next drag, which was for four 
hours in much the same depth of water, yielded 814 marketable and 630 
unmarketable fishes, a total of 1444. The haddocks numbered 424, all 
but 24 being unmarketable. There were 967 plaice, of which 215 were 
unmarketable, and 12 lemon dabs. Rather an unusual feature was the 
presence of 19 mackerel among the other fishes. It is not very uncom- 
mon for an odd mackerel to be taken in the course of these trawlings, but 
rarely so many are captured. The next haul, in from about 63 to 15 
fathoms, and which lasted two hours and fifty-five minutes, yielded the 
large total of 4833 fishes, 1172 being marketable and 3661 unmarketable. 
Haddocks were very numerous, the total being 2291, but only 36 of 
these were marketable; all the rest were thrown overboard. The only 
other round-fishes present were 3 codling, 1 whiting, and 63 gurnards. 
Plaice were even more numerous than the haddocks, the total number 
being 2465, and 1123 of them were marketable and 1342 unmarketable; 
of the former 7 were large, 86 medium, and 1030 small. A mackerel was 
taken in this catch and also five lemon dabs. 

In the next drag, in from 6 to 15 fathoms, which lasted four hours and 
five minutes, the large total of 6447 fishes were caught, 1559 being 
marketable and no less than 4888 unmarketable. Plaice were most 


28 Part ITT.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


numerous, the total number being 3908, of which 1430 were marketable 
and 2478 unmarketable ; the former included 2 large, 100 medium, and 
1328 small. The number of haddocks taken was 1888, of which 122 
were marketable and 1766 unmarketable. Five codling, 2 lemon dabs, 
and a number of common dabs and gurnards were comprised in the catch. 

The succeeding two drags were also exceedingly productive as far as 
the number of fishes was concerned. In one, made in from 8 to 15 
fathoms, and lasting for four hours and twenty-five minutes, the total 
catch amounted to 5991, of which 916 were marketable and 5075 
unmarketable. The latter filled nearly twenty baskets. The number of 
plaice caught was 1623, 754 being marketable and 869 unmarketable— 
the great proportion of the former being small, as in the previous drags. 
Of 4091 haddocks, only 141 were of marketable size, 100 of them being 
large and 41 medium. The other 3950 were thrown away. Eleven 
codling were taken in this haul, as well as a turbot, 6 lemon dabs, and a 
number of unmarketable common dabs. The next haul, in the same 
locality for four hours and fifteen minutes, yielded 3939 fishes, of which 
1378 were marketable aud 2561 unmarketable. The plaice numbered 
2552, the marketable aggregating 1273 and the unmarketable 1279. The 
other flat-fishes were 11 lemon dabs and 67 common dabs. The haddocks 
numbered 1118, of which 71 were marketable and 1047 unmarketable. 
Three mackerel were taken in this drag. 

Altogether, in the six recorded hauls in the Dornoch Firth, the duration 
of actual trawling being 23 hours and 45 minutes, the aggregate number 
of fishes taken was 25,563, of which 6754 were marketable and 18,809 
unmarketable, the percentage of the former being 26°5 and of the latter 
73°5. The proportion of the unmarketable fishes was thus very large 
and far above what is usual. In the February hauls the proportion was 
almost exactly reversed, there being then 73 per cent. of the total catch 
marketable and 27 per cent. unmarketable. The particulars of the 
marketable and unmarketable of each kind of fish are as follows :— 


Cod Codling. Haadoel Whiting.} Gurnard. | Plaice. Turbot. 
| | 
salir tar oe gd os se =| ——EEeEE————————————— —_ 
ile 19 77 394 1 - 6,160 1 
Dey lao 12 N 9.eR7 Ny oe 458 7,450 
Total 19;) 4a eso 10,361 | 53 458 13,610 1 
| Long | 
L ! | Thorn- 
C cake ee Witch. | ane Mackerel. | Angler. Sooke 
Sg Oe | — raceme | —<——— _ _—__—_ = 
i 7 | 50 1 - 23 - 21 
II §28 | 23 16 3 
| 
= | al bidual i Vii = [| rl 
Total} 835 50 1 | 23 | 28 16 ee 


From this it will be seen that the total number of haddocks caught in 
the six hauls was 10,361, and of these 9967, or 96 per cent., were 
unmarketable, while the total number of plaice taken was 13,610, of 
which 7450, or 54 per cent., were unmarketable. The difference between 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 29 


the February and September hauls in regard to the numbers of small 
unmarketable fishes may be contrasted by comparing the numbers taken 
per hour’s fishing, as follows :— 


Marketable. Unmarketable. Total. 


February 181 67 248 
September 284:4 (G8) 1076°3 


The proportion of small plaice and especially small haddocks, differed 
very much, as the following figures of the numbers taken on each occasion 
per hour’s fishing show. 


HADDOCK, PLAICE. 
Market- | Unmarket-| 7,4. | Market- | Unmarket- , 
able. able, weal able. able. Total. 
February, - 0:23 0-11 0:34 | 140°4 43°5 184 
September, - 16°6 419°6 436°2 | 259°3 313°7 573 


The circumstances show to what an extent the capture of immature 
specimens of these fishes may take place at some seasons in bays by the 
use of the trawl-net. All the young haddocks taken in this way 
probably perish, and there is no doubt that the great majority of the 
young plaice perish likewise, although, apart from previous experiments 
recorded on the point, there are reasons for supposing that under 
favourable conditions a considerable number may survive. Thus, in 
February, Dr. Williamson observed that some of the small plaice which 
had been lying all night in a basket along with a number of other small 
fish taken in the small-meshed net were alive at 10.30 next morning, 
When placed in a bucket of sea water they swam about freely. 

After leaving the Dornoch Firth, a haul, which lasted two hours and 
twenty minutes, was made outside the entrance to Cromarty Firth, the 
depth being about twelve fathoms. The catch was a small one, consisting 
of 479 fishes, of which 182 were marketable and 297 unmarketable. 
Haddocks were present in greatest abundance, 395 being taken, of which 
141 were marketable and 254 unmarketable. The other round-fishes 
comprised 2 cod, 7 codling, 2 small whiting, and 4 gurnards. The number 
of plaice was 61, of which 35 were marketable and 26 unmarketable; the 
only cther flat-fish represented was the common dab, of which there 
were 6, } 

Burghead Bay was then visited and a number of hauls taken in depths 
rangiug from about 5 to 15 fathoms. In the first, in from 5 to 12 
fathoms, which lasted for four hours and thirty-five minutes, 3901 fishes 
were secured, 1479 being marketable and 2422 unmarketable. Plaice 
and haddocks formed the bulk of the catch. Of the former the number 
obtained was 1460, of which 1194 were marketable and 266 unmarketable 
—a proportion contrasting with the condition in the Dornoch Firth. 
Small haddocks were, however, very numerous, for of a total of 1334 
haddocks caught only 29 were marketable, the remaining 1305 being too 
small to be taken to market. ‘The catch included among round-fishes 1] 


30 Part L11.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


cod, 7 codling, 13 whiting, and 159 gurnards, and the other flat-fishes 
were 9 brill, 10 lemon dabs, 7 witches, and 866 common dabs. The next 
haul, for four hours and five minutes, in from 8 to 12 fathoms, was less 
productive, the total number of fishes taken being 791, of which 591 
were marketable and 200 unmarketable. No marketable haddocks were 
obtained, and only 56 unmarketable. There were 7 brill, 4 lemon dabs, 
120 common dabs, and 559 plaice, of which 535 were marketable and 24 
unmarketable. 

Several other drags were made in the same locality, in some of which 
the net was badly torn and the catches were small. The particulars in 
regard to three of them, in which this did not occur, are as follows. In 
the first, in from 8 to 14 fathoms, and which lasted for four hours and 
twenty minutes, the number of fishes secured was 2218, those marketable 
numbering 1162, and the unmarketable 1056. The most abundant of 
the fishes was plaice, which totalled 1220, of which 1012 were marketable 
and 208 unmarketable. Common dabs were also numerous, the total 
being 622, but 492 of them were unmarketable. Other flat-fishes 
included 1 turbot, 12 brill, and a lemon dab. The total of haddocks was 
101, only 5 being marketable ; there were also 9 codling and 216 gurnards. 
The next haul, which lasted for four hours and fifteen minutes, aud was 
made in water of from 8 to 13 fathoms depth, yielded 1569 fishes, 854 
being marketable and 715 unmarketable. Plaice, common dabs, and 
haddocks formed the bulk of the catch. The plaice numbered 792, of 
which 690 were marketable and 102 unmarketable. Three brill and a 
black or common sole were also taken, as well as 268 common dabs, 14 
witches, and 5 lemon dabs. In the third of the hauls, lasting for four 
hours and a half, and in the same depths, 1898 fishes were obtained, 931 
being marketable and 967 unmarketable. The plaice numbered 919, of 
which 826 were marketable and 93 unmarketable. There were 416 small 
haddocks, all being unmarketable. Other round-fishes included 6 codling, 
103 whiting. and 38 gurnard. There were also 398 common dabs and 3 
lemon dabs. 

In the five drags collectively, the time of trawling occupying 21 hours 
and 45 minutes, the total number of fishes taken was 10,377, the 
marketable numbering 5017, or rather over half the aggregate number. 
The particulars of the marketable and unmarketable of the various kinds 
are given in the following table :— 


| 
| 


| | | 
Cod. |(Codling.| Haddock. | Whiting. |Gurnard.| Turbot.' Brill. | Plaice. 


locate! 4 62 13 - 1 81 | 4,257 
I. =i iB6 2,198 164 468 Was 10 ae 693 
| a NE | ee ae a 
Total 1 | 40 2,260 177 468 1 | 81 | A360 
| | | | 
Lemon Witch Common So] oe ‘Anolar Thorn- 
Dab. ee Dab. pois Dab. Suet. | back. 
i 23 17 585 1 : 5 17 
II 4 1,689 50 50 8 
Total 93 91 2,274 1 50 55 25 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 31 


The average numbers per hour's trawling of the total fishes, the 
marketable and unmarketable, and of the plaice and haddocks are as 
tollows :— 

Marketable. Unmarketable. Total. 


All kinds, . 230°7 246°4 477-0 
Plaice, . 195-7 BM Ele: 227°6 
Haddock, . ; 2°9 101-0 103°9 


They furnish a strong contrast to the corresponding figures for the 
Dornoch Firth, 

The quantity of fishes, in ewts., landed at the market as the result of this 
trip is given in the following Table, the total amounting to 1233 ewts :— 
Cod. Codling. Haddock. Turbot. Halibut. Lemon Dab.  Plaice. 

31 2 5 4 A 1 99 


Brill. Common Dab. Witch. Skates. 
13 5f 4 6 


3g 


Of the plaice, there were 52 cwts. of large, 25} cwts. of medium, and 68 
cwts. of small. 
EY: 


At the beginning of November another series of hauls was made in the 
Moray Firth, mostly at Burgnead Bay and in the Dornoch Firth, but 
also on the Caithness coast. The weather was rather stormy, and the 
vessel, the ‘’ Cairntoul,” had to be run for shelter to the Cromarty Firth. 
The fishing turned out to be poor from the market point of view, haddocks 
especially, which usually form an important item in the catch, being 
extremely scarce. 

The first haul at Burghead Bay, in from 8 to 10 fathoms of water, was 
for three hours and five minutes, and the total number of fishes taken 
was large, viz., 4331. ‘They consisted, however, mostly of unmarketable 
fish, the marketable numbering 780 and the unmarketable 3551. Plaice 
was by far the most important, the total being 1005, of which 679 were 
marketable and 326 too small for market. One turbot and 7 brill were 
among the flat-fishes, as well as a few common dabs. A feature of the 
catch was the large numbers of small unmarketable haddocks that were 
taken. They totalled 2852, whereas not a single haddock of marketable 
size was taken. There were also 23 unmarketable codling, 90 whitings, 
and 117 gurnards. In the next haul, in the same locality, the depth 
being from 8 to 13 fathoms and the duration of the haul three hours and 
fifteen minutes, 3859 fishes were secured, of which 324 were marketable 
and 3535 unmarketable. The former were made up entirely of plaice, 
with a few dabs and two thornbacks; the plaice numbered altogether 
445, of which 301 were marketable. All the round-fishes were unmarket- 
able, and they comprised 2748 haddocks, 198 whiting, 47 codling, and 
204 gurnards. 

The total number of fishes taken in the two drags, the time of actual 
trawling being six hours and twenty minutes, was 8190, of which 1104 were 
marketable and 7086 unmarketable. The particulars are as follows :— 


Codling. Haddock. Whiting. Gurnard. Turbot. 
I 1 
II 70 5,600 288 321 
Total 70 5,600 288 | 32] 1 


[ Continued, 


32 Part L11.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


) Brill. Plaice. Common Dab. ge ugh Thornback. 
I if 980 107 9 
| 
I] 470 | 330 7 
eS ae ee | ee | ee 00 Sh ES 
Total 7 1,450 | 437 7 9 


The steamer then went to the Dornoch Firth, where some hauls were 
taken on the usual ground. The catches here contrasted with those at 
Burghead Bay in that round-fishes of marketable sizes were present, 
though not in great numbers, but the small haddocks were still abundant. 
The first drag, in 8 to 13 fathoms, which lasted for three hours and ten 
minutes, yielded 2557 fishes, of which 188 were marketable and 2369 
were unmarketable. There were 7 cod and 12 codling, all marketable, 
and the haddocks numbered 2358, consisting of 88 which were market- 
able and 2270 which were unmarketable. There were also 14 marketable 
whiting, 1 coalfish, and 27 gurnards. The plaice numbered only 69, 51 
of which were marketable, and the other flat-fishes comprised 14 lemon 
dabs and 55 common dabs. 

The next haul, in from 6 to 10 fathoms, which lasted for three hours 
and twenty minutes, yielded 1013 fishes, consisting of 227 marketable 
and 786 unmarketable. The catch included 2 cod, 29 codling, 11 of 
them marketable, 118 whiting, mostly small, and 14 gurnards. The 
haddocks numbered 641, of which 59 were marketable and 582 unmarket- 
able. The plaice comprised 143 marketable specimens and 39 unmarket- 
able, and there were a few commmon dabs. 

In the two drags made in the Dornoch Firth and completely recorded, 
the actual time of trawling being six hours and a half, the aggregate catch 
was 3570 fishes, of which 415 were marketable and 3155 unmarketable. 
The particulars as to the marketable and unmarketable of the different 
species are as follows :— 


Cod. Codling. | Haddock. Whiting. | Coal-fish. | 
RUN ee 53 Ol | 147 26 1 
is j 18 2,852 106 
Total 9 41 | 2.999 | 132 1 | 
\ 
G d Pewee Lemon Common ‘Novels | 
| Bian ; Dab. Dab. eye 
I 194 6 9 
TI. 41 57 8 72 1 
Total 41 251 {tax 81 1 
| 


On leaving the Dornoch Firth the vessel steamed up the coast and 
took some hauls off Lybster and Noss Head; the weather was bad and 
the catches poor, though a number of cod were obtained. In a haul for 
three hours and twenty minutes off Lybster, in from about 18 to 30 
fathoms, the total number of fishes caught was 356, of which 110 
were marketable. There were 40 cod and 68 codling, all, except one, of 
marketable size, but haddocks were scarce, only 28 being taken, and all of 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 33 


them unmarketable ; there were also 13 unmarketable whitings, 10 plaice, 
and 202 gurnards. The catch off Noss Head was not completely 
recorded, but it included a number of cod and codling, and three baskets 
of gurnards, 

The weather at this time was very bad, a strong wind blowing from the 
south-east, and the sea was high. ‘The vessel left the Caithness coast 
and steamed to Burghead Bay, where some more hauls were taken. 
Fairly good catches of plaice were got, but marketable round-fishes were 
practically absent, while the small unmarketable haddocks were much 
less abundant than on the previous visit a few days before. ‘The first 
drag, in from about 6 to 10 fathoms, lasted for four hours and five 
minutes, the catch numbering 1026 fishes, of which 541 were marketable 
and 485 unmarketable. The marketable fishes were confined to flat-fishes, 
viz., 2 brill, 535 plaice, and 4 common dabs; there were also 21 
unmarketable plaice and 71 unmarketable dabs, There were 332 small 
haddocks, 22 small whitings, and 36 gurnards, all unmarketable. 

The number of fishes taken in the second haul, in from about 5 to 
9 fathoms, and which lasted for four hours and five minutes, was 
1858, the marketable amounting to 1037 and the unmarketable to 821. 
Among the round-fishes were 1 cod, 5 small codling, 606 haddocks, all 
small and unmarketable, 52 unmarketable whiting, and 19 gurnards. 
The flat fishes comprised 3 turbot, 2 brill, 1046 plaice, of which 1015 
were marketable, 1 witch, and 116 common dabs. In the third haul, in 
the same locality and depth, the number of fishes taken amounted to 
1029, the haul lasting for four hours. The number marketable was 723, 
and there were 306 unmarketable. With the exception of one codling, 
all the marketable fishes consisted of flat-fishes. They comprise d4 
turbot, 7 brill, 695 plaice, and 16 common dabs; there were also 38 
unmarketable plaice and 115 unmarketable dabs. The round-fishes 
included 9 codling, 57 unmarketable haddocks, 15 whiting, and 71 
gurnards. 

Altogether in these three recorded hauls in Burghead Bay, the actual 
duration of the trawling operations being 12 hours and 10 minutes, the 
ageregate number of fishes captured was 3913, of which 2301 were 
marketable and 1612 unmarketable. The particulars as to the market- 


able and unmarketable of the various species are given in the following 
Table :— 


van Ccdling. Haddock. Whiting. Gurnard. Turbot. Brill. Plaice. 
i! z il 11 


2,245 
13 995 89 126 90 
1 14 995 89 126 q 11 2,335 


ae Dab. Witch. Long Rough Dab. Angler. Thornback. 
i - - 3 
290 - 5 4 


322 E - 5 a 3 


Asa result of the week’s working in the Moray Firth, during which 
19 hauls were made, the total quantity of fish landed at the market by 
the vessel was 664 cwts. As already stated, the weather was severe 
during most of the time and the steamer had to run for shelter on two 
po The quantities of the different kinds of fish landed were as 
ollows :— 


Cod. Codling. Saithe. Haddock. Catfish. Turbot. Lemon Dab, 
of 8 * 1h s ; ‘ 


Plaice. Brill. Common Dab. Witch. Thornback. 
444 1 1} 1 2 


* 


TRAWLING IN VESTIGATIONS—TABLE I. 


34. Part IIL. —Twenty-fourth Annual Report . 
Be) 
bbe 

/ ry 


| Time Trawl 
Temperature. , Fish Caught. 
| Depth Down. Moc 
Place | Date. 3 FI in “ Na No. Remarks. 
4 3 g |Fms.| |; 3 Name taken to| *#rown| Total 
= 5 re) 2 = Market.| ~ "or No. 
4/2 a a = board. 
| 
/ 1905. 
| 1. Burgh- | Feb. 6.| .. 9 a 5-12 | 3.0 7.0 | Cod, ss a 2 a 2 || Wind W. ; light. 
head Bay. p-m. | p.m.} Codling, .. a 7 9 16 
Haddock (1), ..| 1 eB 
| re (2), °.. | = be i 
a (8);> Oe. tS # ae 
: — 39 5 44 
Whiting, .. .. 18 8 26 
Cat-fish, .. he 2 ee 2 
Halibut, .. ae 1 8 1 
| Turbot, .. 4 3 > 3 
Brill, a os 13 a fey SS) 
Plaice (1), baht Me & 
» (2), .. {162 
33 (3), wd 129 
—292 Ae 292 
Witch (1), Es 100 ae 100 
Lemon Dab, ne 1 Be 1 
Com. Dab,.. 26 48 74 
Flounder, .. a0 7 Rr: 7 
Herring, .. Bre .. 3 3 
Angler, .. of + 12 12 
511 85 596 
20 » ae : ss. |e (eo0:| 41240) Cod, me Pe 7 : 7 | Wind W. by 8.3 
p-m. | p.m. | Codling, .. . 11 es 11 fresh breeze. 
Haddock (1), nie 4 2% 
” (2), es ! 
” (3), Se 22 
— 26 26 
| Whiting, .. st 9 * 9 
Halibut, .. ee 1 ne 1 
Turbot, .. aA 3 a 3 
Brill, oe ts 14 a4 14 
Plaice (1), .. ope ee eS ae 
sea (4) eter .. [245 
| ” (3), $ 178 
” (4), + 68 
— 492 ah 492 
Witeh(), <i) 2 49 a 49 
| | | Com. Dab, Sao 60 | 160 
| | | Thornbacks, se . 12 12 
Angler, .. - +. 8 8 
712 80 792 
Bs Bebiy,] 457 | 40-7 44404), «ad 6. -| O \eods Ty | 4 ée 4 
a.m, |/a.m.-| Oodling, 5 ..; 28 i 28 
Haddock (1), ie i | 
» (3), «| 42 
— 43 43 
Whiting, .. ae 14 A 14 
Brill, ah +3 37 . 37 
Plaice (1), 6 4 ie 
” (2), 154 . 
| ” (3), 145 
ee: 70 a as 
—375 “a 375 
| Lemon Dab, a 5 He 5 
Witch (1), .. ts 178 AP 178 
Com. Dab,.. <, 79 75 154 
| Flounder, .. si 5 4 5 
Thornback, te ae 6 6 
| Angler, .. Ae st 14 14 
| 768 | 95 | 863 IF 
| 2 or =e 


Time Trawl 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


TRAWLING INVESTIGATIONS—TABLE I. 


Fish Caught. 


Temperature. Dexa 
Depth 
Place. Date. & E in se 
= o |Fms. : 2 
r on »~ » 3 
= = x) C 3 
| < R aa) A) a0) 
| 1905. 
qt OTF Feb. 7.} 45:0 | 42°5 | 43°0 |17-20] 1.50] 6.0 
Burghead p.m. | p.m. 
Bay. 
¥ 
5 de 5 17-21] 6.40 | 10.45 
p-m, | p.m. 
6. Burgh- | Feb. 8. 17-20] 4.30] 3.45 
head Bay. a.m. | a.m. 


Pro 


: a 


Name. 


Cod, 
Codling, .. 
Haddock (1), 
» (2), 
”? (4), 


Whiting (2), 
Coal-fish, .. 
Cat-fish, 
Turbot, 
Brill, 


Plaice, 3 _ 
Lemon Dab (1), .. 


” te ae 


Witch (2), .. 


» (2), -. 


Com. Dab,.. 
Flounder, .. 
Herring, 
Thornback, 
Angler, 


Cod, 
Codling, . 
Haddock (1), 


> ’ 


Whiting, 
Cat-fish, 
Turbot 
Brill, 

Plaice (1), .. 


Lemon Dab, 
Witch (1), .. 
Com. Dab,.. 
Long Rough 
Thornback, 
Angler, 


Cod, 

Codjing, .. 

Haddock (1), 
» (4); 


Whiting (2), 
Cat-fish, 
Halibut, 
Turbot, 
Brill, 
Plaice, 
Lemon Dab, 
Witch, 
Com. Dab,.. 


Long Rough Dab, 


Flounder, .. 
Black Sole, 
Herring, 
Angler, .. 
Thornback, 
Starry Ray, 
Cuckoo Ray, 


No. 
taken to} Over- 
Market. 


Dab, 


~ 
(oy) 
bo 


201 


‘VW 


board. 


No. 
thrown | Total 


No. 


oo 


—— 


10 Ys 
26 4 
2 : 
83 a 
85 63 
39 17 
2 Hr 
1 “ie 
1st ae 
il a 
sar fa 
166 a3 
40 Re 
—38t xc 
6 io 
466 62 
32 193 
a 31 
23 5 
22 4 
1,081 379 


5 
5 4 
1 - 
45 : 
— 46 18 
5 7 
2 - 
1 
4 
18 
552 11 
4 
70 4 
73 131 
ne 11 
2 he 
1 
3 
10 
19 2 
1 be 
1 3 
822 191 


5 
9 


1,013 


30 


Remarks. 


Burghead bearing 
E 


We . 


Nine berried edible 
crabs were taken. 


Of the plaice there 
were 4 large and 
4 baskets medium, 
2 baskets thirds, 
and 4 basket 
fourths. 


Part I11.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


7. Burg- 
head Bay. 


Temperature. 


‘Time Trawl 


Date. 


Air. 


- 


| Surface. 


Bottom. 
hot 


42°5 | 12-25] 9.15 


a.m. 


7-10 | 1.48 


p.m. 


13-17 | 6.30 


ip.m. 


Down. 


Fish Caught. 


Name. 


1.30 | Cod, 
p.m. Codling, 


6.0 
p.m. 


10.40 
p.m. 


Haddock (1), 
» 4), 


Whiting, .. 
Coal-fish, 
Cat-fish, 
Turbot, 
Brill, : 
Megrim (i); 
Plaice, : 
Lemon Dab, 
Witch, 
Com. Dab,. 
Flounder, a 


Long Rough Dab, 


Angler, : 
Thornback, 


Cod, 
Codling, 
Haddock, .. 
Whiting, 
Turbot, 
Brill, 
Plaice, 
Lemon soe 
Com. Dab,. 


Flounder, Li 


na Rough Dab, 
Ang oler, : 
Thornback, 


Cod, 
Codling, .. 
Haddock (3), 
Whiting, .. 
Cat-fish, 
Turbot, 
Brill, 
Plaice (2), . 
” ( ti 
” (4), : 
Witch, 
Com. Dab, 


Long Rough Dab, 


Herring, 
Angler, F 
Thornback, 


Oe 


TRAWLIN( G INVESTIGATIONS—TABLE I. 


“ poe 
0. thrown 
taken to| Over- | Total | 


Market.| board. No. | 


3 3 

20 a 27 
5 Si 
55 a: 

——s00) 7 67 

9 6 15 

2 2 

1 1 

3 3 

14 14 

iE a 

381 4 385 

2 oe 2 

57 3 60 

40 60 100 

5 1 6 

4 18 18 

ae 1 1 

1 1 2 

599 108 707 


17 17 

3 3 6 

By 2 2 

1 1 re 

2 2 

21 21 

263 5 268 

2 ms 2 

16 20 36 

7 35 7 

#e 1 1 

: 1 1 

2 2 

334 33 367 

5 : 5 

5 ae 5 

21 6 27 

9 5 14 

1 40 1 

Hf : 1 

14 14 
219 Ae 
177 = 
54 Re 

—450 6 456 

65 De 65 

73 93 166 

+ 12 12 

4 se 4 

4 15 19 

21 6 27 

673 143 816 


Remarks. 


ees: 


The plaice consist- 


ed of 2 large, and 
of 3 baskets of 
medium, 2 of 
thirds, and 

basket of fourths. 


The plaice consist- 


ed of 3 baskets of 
mediums and 13 
of thirds. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


TRAWLING INVESTIGATIONS—TABLE I. 


Temperature. 
Place. Date. ) ra 
oO = 
2/3 
ra = 
-_ 8 fo) 
< mM faa) 
1905. 
10. Five | Feb. 9. 
miles east 
of Suters of 
Cromarty. 
il. ” ” 
12. Dornoch 3 45°1 | 42°5 


Firth. 


Time Trawl 
Down. 


Fish Caught. 


18 to | 6.30 
35 a.m. 


10,25 
a.m, 


23 to 
29 


12 | p.m, 


Hauled. 


10.0 
a.m. 


2.0 
p.m. 


43°0 | 10to]| 4.50 | 9.20 


p.m. 


No. 

No. |thrown 
taken to) Over- 
Market.| board. 


Name. 


Cod, 
Codling, .. 
Haddock (1), 


Plaice (1), os 
” (2), oe 
” (3), ais 


Lemon Dab, 
Witch (1), . 
2? 


” (2), ee 


Com. Dab,.. ts 
Long Rough Dab, 
Angler, i 
Thornback, 
Gray Skate, 


Cod, 
Codling, .. 
Haddock (1), 
inh BH 
Whiting, .. 
Coalfish, 
Pollack, 
Hake, ae 
Gurnard, .. 
Brill, a 
Plaice (1), .. 


Lemon Dab, 
Witch (1), . 
io MBE oo 


Com. Dab,.. : 
Flounder, .. Sa 
Long Rough Dab 
Herring, .. as 
Angler, : 
Thornback, 

Grey Skate, 


Haddock, (3) + 

Brill, ae se 

Plaice (1), . a8 

»» (2), .. a 

», (3), .. ce 

a 4). 372 ae 
—740 65 

Lemon Dab, 4 ae 
Com. Dab,.. 14 185 

Flounder, .. 166 Ls 
Thornback, 15 3 
942 253 


805 


4 
199 
166 

18 


1195 


Remarks. 


There were 9 bas- 
kets of witches. 


Part LII.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


TRAWLING INVESTIGATIONS—TABLE I. 


38 
—j | a 
| Temperature. 
| 
Place. | Date. og oa g 
oO 
rir 
nu a + 
| b S| ete 
oe —- - a ——} 
| 1905. 
18. Dornoch, Feb. 9 
| Firth. 
| 
| } | 
| | 
| 
| 
| 
14. a ; Feb. 10 | 
} | 
a5: Five Pe 42°8 | 42°0 | 42:7 
miles east 
of the 
Suters of 
Cromarty. | 
| | 
| 
! | 
| | 
| 
| 
| 
| 
16 - lr eb. 11.) | | 
| | 
| | | 
! | | 
| 
| 
| 
| 


Depth 
in 
Fims. 


43 to 


12 to 


15 t 
25 


Time Tr awl 


Down. 
| 
. ee 
» 
° a 
in | 
10.15 |} 11.15 
p.m. | p.m. 
5.0 | 9.10 
ain. ain, 
11.45] 3.0 
a.m. p. m. 
12.80] 4.45 
am. | a.m 


Fish Caught. 


Remarks. 


Small-meshed shot, 


No. 
No. | thrown 
Name. taken to} Over- es 
Market.) board. : 
Haddock, .. 2 
Plaice (2), .. re 
»» (3); -- . 
” (4), eke sks 
240 
Flounder, .. 18 
Com. Dab,. 9 
Angler A 3 
Thornback, 5 
6 277 
Haddock, .. 1 
Plaice (2), . ae 
” (3), Ot ane 
ey .. 
788 
Com. Dab,.. 8 
Flounder, .. 140 
Angler, 3 
Thornback, 10 
950 
Cod, 5 
Haddock (1), we 
» (2), +: 
438 
Whiting, 4 
Hake, it 
Gurnard, 2 
Brill, %e 
Plaice (1), .. 2 
” (2), —— 
» (3), . . 
” (4), = =*8. 
326 
Witch, (1) .. 197 
Com. Dab,. 58 
Flounder, , 1 
Long Rough Dab, 38 
Thor nback, f 8 
1080 
Cod, 14 
Codling, 10 
Haddock (1), ne 
3 (2), = 
312 
Whiting, .. 15 
Hake. is il 
Com. Gurnard, 1 
Plaice (1), . ae 
” )s 9 ass 
17 
Witch (1), . =e 
” (2), . ae 
461 
Megrim, 1 
Com. Dab, 37 
Long Rough Dab, 17 
Angler, 29 
Thornback, os 32 
~831 116 947 


Date. 


17. + Five |Feb. 11. 
miles east 
of the 
Suters of 
Cromarty. 


18. Aber- 
deen Bay 
off the 

Quarries. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


TRAWLING INVESTIGATIONS—TABLE I. 


Temperature. 


Bottom 


Time Trawl 


Down. 
Depth - 
in 3 
Fms. < = 
ot 
5.20 
a.m. 


8 to | 6.40 | 7-40 
12: | p.m. | p.m, 


10 to | 8.20 | 12,0 
P22) ie pshas |iprtns 


a 


Fish Caught. 


No. 
No. |thrown I 
Name taken to} Over- Te 
Market.) board 
Cod, 1 ok il 
Codling, 3 1 4 
Haddock, 1 4 5 
Whiting, .. ss 1 1 
Plaice 6), ye 4 BS 7 
Witch (1), .. 109 2: Nes 
” (2), a) 9 oy oe 
—118 es 118 
Com. Dab, . ae 12 12 
Long Rough Dab, at 8 8 
Angler, 5 3 sha 
140 29 169 


Cod, 
Codling, : 
Haddock ( 2), 
Whiting, 
Com. Dab,.. 
Starry Ray, 


Cod, 

Codling, ae 
Haddock (2), 
Whiting, 
Com. Gurnard, 
Plaice(2), .. 
Flounder, .. 
Com. Dab,. 
Starry Ray, 


39 


Remarks. 


Net badly split and 
catch small; 
Strong N.N. W. 
wind, increasing 
to a gale, with 
snow showers; sea 
very rough. 


Small-meshed, 
Strong N. W. breeze; 


sea rough, 


40 Part I11.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


TRAWLING INVESTIGATIONS—TABLE I. 


| Temperature. mB ectnwwl Fish Caught. 
|e ee Se Bench 
Place. | Date. | 3 < in = No. Remarks. 
8 o |Fms. : © No. | thrown 
| on ~ ~ Total 
4 ~ = g 3 Name. taken to} Over- 
Lec al = S = te Market.| board. 
| 1905. | 
| 1. Aber- /Mar. 27.) .. 5'3 6-10 | 6.20 | 7.25 | Codling, .. - 21 ¥ 21 | Small-meshed ex- 
deen Bay a.m. |a.m. | Whiting, .. Are a 2 2 periment. 
| between | Plaice (2), .. Be 2 sh 2 | Wind §S.E.; light 
| Don- Starry Ray, ” 5 Be 5 breeze ; sea mode- 
mouth | | a eee nes 
and Black 28 2 30 
Dog. ST ee oe ee 
- ane i €: E3 s a 8.0 | 11.5 | Cod, Bs oe, 50 fe 50 
a.m. | a.m.| Codling, .. fe 46 Aa 46 
Plaice (2), .. as 98 2 100 
Flounder, .. 35 4 i 5 
Com. Dab,.. im Bs 1 1 
Starry Ray, Aes 10 20 30 
208 24 232 
3. Off a ss as Se 6-12 | 11.55 | 4.5 | Cod, eh. al 29 re 29 
Newburgh. a.m, | p.m. | Codling, .. ne 38 48 38 
Whiting, .. “if 1 1 2 
Plaice (2), .. Ae 23 ue 23 
Flounder, .. os 3 ye 3 
Com. Dab,.. Bs 1 40 1 
Starry Ray, of 40 22 62 
135 23 158 
4. Off 49 # a .. |5%-11] 4.30 | 8.20 | Cod, Pas 4 ae 4 
Newburgh p:m. | p.m. | Codling, >. iP 9 1 10 
and Old Whiting, .. sf , 3 3= 
Castle. Plaice (1), ... Se We) . 
See (2) Rae . (249 
—-258 EY, 258 
Com. Dab,.. Be 14 ore 14 
Starry Ray, Si 7 oe if 
Lumpsucker, the x 1 at 
292 5 297 
} oe ee 
| 
i 
5. Cruden |Mar.27| .. | .. .. | 611} 880 | 12.45] Cod, 2 2 
Bay. and 28. p-m. | a.m. | Codling, 4 4 
Whiting, .. 2 2 
Plaice (1), a ss 
; DN oe Se LG 
ane =—=70 170 
Flounder, Sie 2 ae 2 
Starry Ray, a 18 5 23 
198 5 203 
a 
—_—. — : ee 


—— a 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 41 
- . 
TRAWLING INVESTIGATIONS—TABLE I. 
Temperature. eee Fish Caught. 
; Depth : 
By =«CéPPzilacce.. Date. o a in oS No. Remarks. 
EF g Ss |Fms.| |, 2 No. | thrown] Total 
~ & 2 ° 2 Name. taken to] Over- | No. 
| ‘2 & a a as Market,| board. 
EE weeps a eee ees (ee er es -— 
Z 1905. 
#| 6. Off Mar. 28. 6 to 10) 5.2u | 9.30 | Cod, 5 5 
| Newburgh. a.m. | a.m. | Codling, if 1 
has Haddock, 3 3 
eh Whiting, i 1 8 
ay Plaice (2), .. 16 16 
= Com. Dab,.. 40 19 59 
mi Starry Ray, 4 2 6 
76 22 98 
/ eee Ge eee vee 
| 7. Off 5 6 to 10} 7.40 | Mid-| Cod, 3 Nearly half a bas- 
| Donmouth p.m. |night.| Codling, 13 ket unmarketable 
| and Bath- Plaice, 5 bskts. fish, mostly dabs. 
ing Station. Mutboty. 1 
Black Sole, 1 E 
8. 3} miles.| Mar. 29. 18to | 6.20| 7.30 | Codling, 9 i 9 | WindS.W., moder- 
off Girdle- 25 | a.m. | a.m. | Ling, a 3 as 3 ate breeze. 
ness. Haddock, .. 19 19 | Trawl-net torn. 
| Whiting, .. 3 3 
Turbot, : 1 By 1 
| Plaice, (2) .. 14 oe 14 
Lemon Dab, 6 oe 6 
Com. Dab,.. 21 21 
33 43 76 


42 


| 


Part I1L.—Twenty-jourth Annual Report 


TRAWLING INVESTIGATIONS—TABLE I. 


Time Trawl 


| Temperature. Fish Caught. 


Down. 
ig ___|Depth Revise ee 
Place. Date. a F in rc No. Remarks 
8 S |Fms| ,; ) No. | thrown Total 
re =] 3 ° 5 Name. taken to| Over- No 
| ‘Z = g = asl Market.| board. ; 
1905. 7 
(1. Burghead|Sept. 28.) .. 5 to| 6.15 | 8.20] Codling, .. ai 1 4 5 | Wind N.E., mode- 
Bay. 12 | am. | a.m. | Haddock (2), st 73 1350 1423: rate; sea choppy. 
Whiting, .. “ts 4 43 47 
Gurnard, .. ay ah 34 34 
Brill, Ge Be 2 e 2 
Plaice mee ty: B | Eleven squids. 
Pa Rs ate 
A (eye 711 oe 
—722 16 738 
Lemon Dab, ah 1 Ee i 
Com. Dab, : 208 208 
Angler, .. ae ne 12 12 
803 1667 2470 
2. Dornoch as = 52°2 | 54:0 |5 to15|} 1.55 | 6.0 | Cod, ws ee 19 B & 19 | Wind N.E.; mode- 
Firth, off p-m. | p.m. | Codling, .. ey 46 11 57 rate breeze; sea 
Dunrobin Haddock,.. ... 5 549 549 | choppy. 
Castle. Whiting, .. ie a 52 52 
Gurnard, .. Belt Saat 51 51 
Plaice (1), .. sh 29 fe oe 
PACA ae eeasO Se be 
eer OS) ase cs Be be 
—828 1267 2095 : 
Lemon Dab, .. 14 i 14 | Fourteen squids. 
Witch, ae oe i Sts i 
Com. Dab,.. e 5 37 37 
Long Rough Dab, Se 23 23 
Thornback, S 7 * 7 
| Angler; 2: a on 4 4 
915 1994 2909 
| 3 Ps any At 53°0 | 54°0 | 6to | 4.30 | 8.380 | Haddock (2), ec 24 400 424 
| 15 | am.| am | Grey Gurnard, .. 5e 15 15 
| Plaice (1), .. am lO - 7 
ott Ban(Z) sree sa | 1 ar Sh 
Fu) 4G) eds a5) ee bi a 
—-752 215 967 
Lemon Dab, oe 12 =e 12 
Mackerel, .. tee 19 x3 19 
Thornback, a) 7 2B 7 
Boer i 
| 814 | 630 | 1444 
| fa) eae hr 
| 
4, ’ ” 63 to} 10°5 1.0 Codling, als oe 3 ita ; 3 
15 | a.m. | p.m. | Haddock (1), Bey |b! 7 as 
An (2), BP alts ye : : 
oy: 2255 2991 | Five small squids. 
Whiting, ae 1 fs 1 
Grey Gurnard, .. - 63 63 
Plaice (1), .. os 1 ae 5 
| en es. 
aro) Ware .. {1030 = ae 
——-1123} 1342 2465 
Lemon Dab, 5 ee 5 
Mackerel, .. 1 ee i 
Angler, Bi 1 1 
Thornback, 3 3 
1172 3661 4833 


ee, 


i 


Place. 


pepe on TT ee a emery tame teeter ea ee 


— 


Firth, off 
| Dunrobin 
} Castle. 


o A A A ah 


Firth. 


18. Outside 
_ Cromarty 
- Firth. 


1 5 Dornoch |S 


. of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


TRAWLING INVESTIGATIONS—TABLE I. 


Temperature. es Lat 
own. 
Depth 
Date. Py j in cd 
3 5 Fins.| |; 2 
S = 3 } 3 
A= 3 ° As} 
< A) —Q na x 
1905. | 
ept. 29. G to | 110) | 5.15 
15 | p.m. |} p.m. 
” 29. 8 to! 5.55 | 10.20 
SN poms. |) ms 
“5 ys 52°0 | 54°0 | 8 to | 3.45] 8&0 
15 | am | am 
” ats 52°0 | 53°0 | 12 12 2.20 
noon. } p.m. 


Name. 


Codling, .. 
Haddock (1), 
” (2), 


Grey Gurnard, 
Plaice (1), .. 

7 oe 
Lemon Dab, 
Com. Dab, 
Angler, 
Thornback, 


Codling, .. 
Haddock (1), 
2 


a) (2), 


Grey Gurnard, 
Turbot, 
Plaice (1), .. 


” (2), Diy 


Ph be) Hae 2 


Lemon Dab (2), .. 


Com. Dab,.. 
Thornback, 


Codling, .. 
Haddock (1), 
» (2), 


Grey Gurnard, 
Plaice (1), .. 


99 pb he 


» (3); . 


Lemon Dab, 
Com. Dab,.. 
Mackerel, .. 
Angler, .. 
Thornback, 


Cod, 

Codling, .. 

Haddock (1), 
” (2), 


Whiting, .. 
Grey Gurnard, 
Plaice (1), .. 

” (3), Dc 


Com. Dab, 
Grey Skate, 


Fish Caught. 


No. 
No. /thrown 
taken to] Over- 
Market. | board. 
5 
59 
63 oe 
——— ee) 1766 
ne 82 
2 se 
100 
1328 AN 
——1430| 2478 
2 ave 
: 554 
5 
3 
1559 4888 


i x 
100 bie 
41 ae 
—141 3950 
BE 79 
1 ce 
8 Ae 
38 ys: 
708 ae 
—-754 869 
6 a, 
be 177 
3 a 
916 5075 


12 if 
20 60 
51 oe 
— 71 1047 
bi 168 
4 oe 
74 uc 
1195 ae 
——1273] 1279 
11 Bs 
a 60 
3 as 
Se 6 
1 de 
1378 2561 


2 de 
4 3 
100 : 
41 ane 
—-141 254 
ae 2 
oe 4 
al : 
34 
—- 35 26 
os 6 
2 
182 297 


Total 
No. 


1623 
6 
177 
3 


“Ibo 


479 


5991 


3939 


43 
Remarks. 
Four squids. 
There were 193 


basketfuls of un- 
marketable fish. 


44 Part 11..—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 
TRAWLING INVESTIGATIONS—TABLE I. 
| Temperature. jack Fish Caught. 
Depth e 
Place. Date. | 3 a |_in a No. Remarks. 
s =) 8 © a Name. taken to] Over: 
‘a PD ra) a ae Market.| board. ; 
1905. 
9. Burghead} Oct. 2. 5 to} 2.45 | 7.20 | Cod, il ; 1 
Bay. 12) Bi fasme|| acm) |@Codlino ws. 3 4 7 | Five squids. 
Haddock (2), 29 | 1305 | 1334 
Whiting (2), 13 LS 13 
Grey Gurnard, a 159 159 
Brill, a 9 aa 9 
Plaice (1), . 5 : ie 
ae.) Saar 167 ae 
3 ee 1022 a * 
——1194) 266 1460 
Lemon Dab (1), .. 10 ae 10 
Witch (1), .. 7 * tf 
Com. Dab,.. 206 660 866 
Angler, ac 28 28 
Thornback, 7 i 7 
1479 2422 3901 
LOS Fr se me .. | 8 to/11.55] 4.0 | Codling, 9 9 | Wind N.W., mod- 
12 | a.m.]| pm.| Haddock, .. 56 56 erate 
Whiting, .. 14 14 sea moderate. 
Gurnard, .. 12 12 
Brill, _ 7 - 7 
Plaice (1), .. 8 ne ae 
3p sols 149 =. ae 
” es 378 as be 
—535 24 559 
Lemon Dab, 4 ae 4 
Com. Dab,.. 39 81 120 
Angler, He 4 4 
Thornback, 6 : 6 
591 200 791 
11) Fn Ocks2)5\eae: is BS is 8.15 | 12.30 | Cod, 3 a i Unmarketable 
3 p.m.| a.m. | Turbot, 2 ka i fishes filled two 
Brill, : 5 5 baskets. 
Plaice (1), .. 4 : 
STs 278 é 
3) PO) as 723 : 
-—1000 : 
Lemon Dab, a : 
Witch (1), .. 3 : 
Com. Dab, 29 : 
Thornback, 10 : 
1059 * 
12. 55 Oct. 3. 10 to} 6.0 | 10.10} Codling, 1 5 6 | Net split badly. 
15} | a.m. | a.m. | Haddock, .. ae 47 47 
Whiting, .. : 10 10 
Gurnard. .. sie 22 22 
Plaice (1), .. 1 ais oe 
se aes 7 <3 
30 nigel 41 a 
— 49 13 62 
Com. Dab, ash 12 36 48 
Long Rough Dab, “is z if 
Angler, .. as : 5 5 
62 145 207 


Place. 


Date. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


TRAWLING INVESTIGATIONS—TABLE I. 


Temperature. 
a 
13) 
eae: alee= 
a= = \e) 
<q Nn Q 


a 


Fish Caught. 


Time Trawl 
Down. 
Depth 
in = 
Fms ¥ < 
} 3 Name 
= lie 


8 to} 10.50} 3.30 | Codling, 
153 | a.m. | am. | Haddock, . 
Whiting, . 
Gurnard, .. 
Brill : 
Plaice (1), . 
” yee 
” gore 


Com. Dab, 

Black Sole, =a 
Long Rough Dab, 
Angler e sie 


8 to} 4.25 
14 | p.m. 


8.45 
‘p.m. 


Codling, .. 
Haddock (1), 
Grey Gurnard, 
Turbot, 
Brill, oh 
| Plaice (1), .. 
ye) Ble 
| »» (3), .. 


Lemon Dab, as 
Com. Dab, ae 
Long Rough Dab, 


8 to 13) 7.30 | 11.45 
a.m. | a.m, 


Codling, .. 
Haddock (1), 
” (2), 


Whiting, 
Grey Gurnard. 
Brill, ; 


” yi chp. 


Lemon Dab, 
Witch (1), .. ni 
Com. Dab,. . “if 
Long Rough Dab, 
Black Sole, a 
Angler, 1 
Thornback, 


8to13} 5.30 
p.m. 


10.0 
p.m. 


Codling, 

Haddock, .. 

Whiting, .. 

Grey Gurnard, 

Plaice (2), .. 
(3) 


9? dy] Ai 


Lemon Dab, 
Com. Dab, 
Angler, ‘ 
Thornback, 


-. 1817 


No Remarks. 
No. thrown 
taken to Over- es 
Market. | board. . 
| 
| 
11 11 | Net split badly. 
378 37 
52 52 | Fifteen squids. 
28 28 
2 ; 2 
15 | - 
62 | ee 
107 | ae # 
—184 82 266 
24 107 131 
1 A 1 
te 6 6 
5 2 Ul 
216 666 882 


1 8 9 | Wind W., strong 
5 96 101 breeze. 
a 216 216 
1 sifs 1 
12 12 
8 ne 
187 aah 
—1012 208 1220 
1 ae 1 
130 492 622 
ave 36 36 
1162 1056 2218 
rare Caste se aaa 
; 9 9 
2 Ae Ne 
26 oe a 
— 28 325 353 
<n 47 47 
43 43 
3 82 3} 
Z ‘ie ava 
ee Ay ne 
577 os Ae 
—690 102 792 
5 ae 5 
10 4 14 
108 160 268 
i 14 14 
1 bes 1 
5 6 11 
4 5 9 
854 715 1569 
6 6 
416 416 
103 103 
38 38 
153 A on 
673 We ae 
—826 93 919 
3 ae 3 
102 296 398 
os 12 12 
F 3 3 
931 967 1898 


+6 Part III.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 
TRAWLING INVESTIGATIONS—TABLE I. 

T : Time Trawi Fish Caught 

emperature. Dawn ish Caugnt, 

Depth x PE. ‘ a oe 
lace. Date. 3 ; in : 0. emarks, - 
— S 8 | rms : fs No. | thrown] iota ) 

7 3 $ S 3 Name. taken to} Over- “No 
a AS & & = Market.| board. : 
1905. ; ; . axe 
1. Burg-}| Nov. 1.| 46°4 |} 48°9 | 49°0 | Sto | 5.15 | 8.20 | Codling, 23 23 | Wind E., moderate ;}) ~~ 
| head Bay. 10 | p.m.| p.m | Haddock, .. . 2852 | 2852 sea moderate. pesd Bay 
: Whiting, .. : 90 90 
Gurnard, .. S 7 117 
Turbot, if ~ i 
Brill, ; 7 - 7 } 
Plaice (2), .. 149 8 5 { 
o ES); 530 ns G3 
—679 326 1005 
Com. Dab, ae 86 136 222 
Long Rough Dab, a 7 a 
Thornback, 7 i 
780 3551 4331 
| 
e a Nov. 2.| 45°7 | 484] 49:0] 8to! 5.0 | 8.15 | Codling, 47 47 | Wind N.E., strong ; i 
13 jasm; |-acm. |Haddock, 5: 2748 2748 sea rough. 
Whiting, .. 198 198 
Gurnard, .. 2 204 204 | 
Plaice (2), . 59 ae es 
ae 158), a 242 = fy. 
—-301 144 445 } 
Com. Dab,.. 21 194 215 
| Thornback, 2 ai 2 
324 3535 3859 
3. Dornoch an 46'8 | 49°71 | 48°5 | 8 to | 10.20] 1.380 | Cod, 7 an Hl 
Firth. 13 am.| p.m.| Codling, .. 12 Re 12 
Haddock (2), 25 ae Ar 
7 (38), G3 Se me 
— 88 2270 2358 
Whiting, 14 ee 14 
Coal-fish, .. 1 Sa i 
Gurnard, .. a oT 27 
Plaice (2), .. ily) AG a 
” (3), . 34 .. ‘. 
—— 5! 18 69 
Lemon Dab, 6 8 14 
Com. Dab,.. 9 46 55 
188 2269 2557 
4. ” ” 6 to | 2.40 6.0 Cod, 4a — 2 
10 | p.m.| p.m. |} Codling, .. abt 18 29 
Haddock (2), 39 ae Ry 
»  ), 20 -- ci 
-— 69 582 641 
Whiting, 12 106 118 
Gurnard, .. Pi 14 14 f 
Plaice, 143 39 182 
Com. Dab, ae 26 26 
Angler, 1 1 
| 227 786 1013 
5. Off Nov.3.| .. 18to| 4.0 | 7.20 | Cod, 40 ms 40 . 
Lybster. | 30 |a.m. | .m. | Codling, 62 i 63 
| Haddock, .. a 28 28 
Whiting, ip 13 13 
Gurnard, . ne 202 202 
Plaice, 8 2 10 
=o 
110 246 356 | 
=) eee 
OS — 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 47 


TRAWLING INVESTIGATIONS—TABLE I. 


. 
Temperature. oba a Fish Caught. 
Depth 
Place. Date. 3 g in od No. Remarks. 
3 o |Fms.| |; = No. |thrown| moa] 
£ = a ° = Name taken to| Over- -% 
Z I Q ae < Market. | board. ; 
1905. 
Burg- | Nov.4.| .. a .. |6to010/10.55| 3.0 | Haddock, .. & 3 332 332 | Wind S.E., strong 
head Bay. a.m. | p.m.| Whiting, .. me x 22 22 breeze; sea 
Gurnard, .. aye Ss 36 36 rough. 
Brill, 4 ac 2 ae 2 
Plaice, x Se 535 21 556 
Com. Dab, oe 4 71 ae 
‘Long Rough Dab, D 3 3 
541 485 1026 
os = fe sie =24 71 to 9} 3.45.) 7.507" Cod, os a 1 ee iL 
p.m. | p.m. |} Codling, .. by at 5 5 
Haddock, .. ie i 606 606 
Whiting, .. ok ar 52 52 
Gurnard, .. as . 19 19 
fi) EULDOt;) - Aig 3 o. 3 
Brill, 86 Re 2 in Z 
IRlaice; sae se || TONNE: 31 1046 
Witch, iss ss 1 ae 1 
Com. Dab. as 12 104 116 
Angler, .. By fe ay 4 
Thornback, ae 3 ne 3) 
1037 821 1858 
“5 Noy. Gab 5. e .. |5 to 9} 6.0 | 10.0 | Codling, .. si 1 8 9 | Wind E.N_E. ; 
a.m. | a.m. | Haddock, .. fe 57 57 heavy sea. 
Whiting, .. ae cs 15 15 
Gurnard, .. es - 71 (fi 
Turbot;, &. Be 4 Br 4 
Brill, 3, bs 7 ote 7 
Places = iN. 695 38 733 
Com. Dab,.. a3 16 115 131 
Long Rough Dab, ie 2 Z 
723 306 1029 


ee ee 


48 Part II.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Il.—OBSERVATIONS ON THE OTOLITHS OF SOME 
TELEOSTEAN FISHES. 


By Tsomas Scort, LL.D., F.L.S., Mem. Soc. Zool. de France. 
(Puatss I-V.) . 


CONTENTS. 
PAGE 
(1) Preliminary Remarks, . 48 
to} List of Fishes whose Otoliths are described, : 52 
(3) Systematic description of the Otoliths, . : 53 
(4) Literature bearing on the Otoliths of Fishes, . 80 


I.—PRELIMINARY REMARKS. 


Rather more than twenty-five years ago a portion of my leisure was 
devoted to a study of the post-tertiary and surface geology of the Clyde 
Valley. Consequently, the rich fossiliferous beds that were exposed 
about that time in connection with the excavations for the James Watt 
Wet Dock at Greenock were of special interest to me as well as to all 
engaged in this study. It was about that time and in connection with 
these researches that my attention was first directed to those curious 
bodies known as the otoliths, or earstones of fishes. 

These studies had made me acquainted with the late Dr. David 
Robertson, of Glasgow, and subsequently of Millport, whose name is so 
intimately associated with the Marine Biological Station at the latter 
place. This gentleman, who already possessed large collections of 
natural history objects of various kinds, had among them an extensive 
series of the otoliths of recent and known fishes, and these collections I 
had the frequent privilege of inspecting. 

If I remember rightly, one of the reasons which induced Dr, Robertson 
to make this collection of otoliths was that such objects were expected to 
occur, or had already been noticed, in the fossiliferous clays then under 
examination, and that, therefore, a familiarity with the recent forms might 
help in identifying the kinds of fishes such fossil otoliths might belong to. 

With Dr. Robertson’s assistance, always freely given to those engaged 
in natural history pursuits, I soon became interested in these things. 
Later on, when carrying out the work assigned to me by the Fishery Board 
for Scotland, the food of fishes engaged my attention from time to time, 
and in order to obtain the information desired it was necessary to 
examine the stomachs of many of the fishes captured. As this 
examination proceeded it became manifest that small fishes were often 
captured by the larger specimens for food, as their remains sometimes 
formed a considerable proportion of the contents of the stomachs examined. 
Frequently, however, the otoliths or earstones were the only parts that 
remained, or that were least affected by the action of the digestive fluid; 
it was therefore obvious that a familiarity with the earstones of fishes 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 49 


already known might be useful as a means whereby we could ascertain 
what was the species of fish that those found in the stomachs belonged 
to. 

Of course, the usefulness of the earstones for this purpose depends on 
whether the difference between those of one species of fish and those of 
another is sufficiently distinct and constant, either in their size, form, or 
sculpture, This information, however, could only be acquired by the 
comparative examination of the earstones of many kinds of fishes and 
also of large and small examples of the same kinds. Unfortunately, I 
have not been able to give so much attention to this research as it 
deserved, nevertheless a good deal of time has been devoted to it, and 
though the results have been in some respects disappointing, several 
interesting facts have emerged which will be referred to presently. 

The earstones of about seventy species of fish are described in the 
sequel and, with one or two exceptions, the descriptions are illustrated 
by enlarged photographs. Before proceeding, however, to describe 
the various forms, the following remarks may not be out of place, and 
the first thing I wish to refer to is the position of the earstones. 

The earstones or otoliths of teleostean fishes are contained within 
special chambers—the ear-chambers—one on each side of the head and 
situated between the eye and the base of the skull. There are usually 
several stones in each chamber, one being comparatively large and the 
others very small. The form of the large stone is generally well defined, 
_ but the others are irrecular in shape, and therefore, in this paper, the 
term earstone or otolith will refer only to the large stone. The otoliths 
are not outgrowths from adjoining parts of the skull, but are free within 
the ear cavity, and are covered by a thin membrane to which nerves are 
attached. 

I have endeavoured to ascertain whether the size of the earstones was 
in any way correlated with the intensity of the sense of hearing, that is, 
whether the possession of large or small eazstones was an indication of a 
higher or lower development of the sense of hearing, but have been 
unable to obtain any positive evidence bearing on this question. For 
example, haddock, coal-fish (especially in the earlier stages), lythe, and 
also cod have their sense of hearing tolerably acute. This was demon- 
strated over and over again at the Rothesay Aquarium, and these fish 
have large earstones. The conger, on the other hand, which has com- 
paratively small earstones, appears to be a dull and listless fish. But it 
has been noticed that lumpsuckers, and more especially the young of that 
species, have a keenly intelligent look, yet their earstones are extremely 
small compared with the size of the fish. 

The position which the earstones in sifu occupy in relation to the head 
of the fish has been observed in a number of cases, and is referred to in 
the descriptive part of the paper. It may be stated here, however, that 
in the majority of species where careful observation could be made, it 
was observed that the two earstones were placed lengthways, or nearly so, 
with the head. They were not, however, usually parallel to each other, 
but diverged more or less posteriorly. In the case of many of the larger 
fishes—except the Pleuronectidee—the earstones are elongated, and have 
one end truncated, often obliquely, and the other end angular or produced 
to a more or less sharp point, as is well exemplified by those of the 
whiting. The truncated end is usually directed towards the front of the 
head, but there are a few fishes, such as the herring and some others, 
where the anterior end is pointed. It may also be remarked that the 
earstones in these larger fishes have frequently one side concave and the 
other convex. The convex sides usually face each other, and are com- 


D 


50 Part I1I,.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


paratively smooth, while any sculpture with which the earstone may be 
ornamented is more frequeutly found on the outer or concave side, The 
upper margin of the earstone is also the one which is likely to have the 
edge notched or crenulated, whereas the lower margin is often tolerably 
even and gently curved. 

The earstones of the Pleuronectide are generally more or less circular 
and sometimes nearly circular, in other cases they are broadly oval, and 
they are nearly always flat and thin. Their true position in relation to 
the head is, for this reason, and also because of the remarkable change 
that takes place in order that both eyes may be accommodated on the 
same side, not so obvious as in the case of those whose eyes retain their 
normal position. 

Secondly, a few general remarks about the size, structure, and form of 
the earstones of different fishes and their value as a means for the 
identification of species may be useful here. As already stated, it is 
many years ago since the earstones of fishes were taken up as a systematic 
study. This study was undertaken for the purpose of ascertaining if, 
failing other evidence, the species of a fish could be determined by the 
earstones alone. I soon became satisfied that, except in certain cases, 
they could not be altogether relied upon for this purpose, especially when 
dealing with young fishes whose otoliths have not yet attained the form 
and structure peculiar to the adult. But though it may frequently be 
difficult to distinguish the species of a fish where the otoliths are the only 
parts left by which it may be identified, yet they may be fairly reliable 
as a guide for ascertaining the family and also sometimes the genus to 
which the fish belongs. It is not difficult, for example, to distinguish 
the earstones of the more typical of the Gadoids, and especially of those of 
most of the genus Gadus—they are usually so massive in structure as to 
differ in this respect alone from those of almost all other groups of fishes 
with which I am familiar. Yet there are one or two species belonging 
to this family that possess earstones so different from those of the genus 
Gadus, that if it were the case that no other parts of the fishes were 
available for determining the family they belonged to, one would be 
inclined to ascribe them to some other than that of the gadide. I have 
already referred to the family Pleuronectide as possessing earstones more 
or less rotundate, flat and thin, and thus presenting characters by which 
they differ from most of the other teleostean fishes mentioned here. But 
though the peculiarities in shape and structure that characterise the 
earstones of fishes may not generally be reliable for the identification of 
species when unsupported by other evidence, still there are several fishes 
that possess otoliths so distinct, that by means of them alone the species 
may be determined with almost absolute certainty. In support of this 
statement I need only refer to the following species:—The earstones of 
the black goby, Gobrus niger, possess characters by which they may be 
distinguished with tolerable certainty from those of other fishes. They 
are nearly flat, and of a broadly rhomboid form, as may be seen on 
pl. i. B., figs. 19 and 20, and pl. v., fig. 6. 

The earstones of the whiting have also a form unlike that of the 
otoliths of any other fishes known to me; they are considerably elongated, 
and are obliquely truncate at one end, while the opposite end is drawn 
out iuto a tapering extremity which ends in a sharp point (see figs. 30 
and 31 on pl. ii. A.). 

The hake has earstones so different in shape and so thin that when 
placed beside the massive otoliths of the cod and coal-fish, belonging to 
the same family, they suggest doubts as to whether these species are so 
closely related to one another as their position indicates. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 51 


The megrim or whiff is the only kind of fish I have met with that 
exhibits a fairly constant difference in the shape of the right and leit 
earstones. At first I imagined this difference to be merely accidental, 
but the examination of several specimens, both large and small, revealed 
similar differences in all of them. 

.The earstones of the argentine have also a peculiar shape, and are 
‘unlike any of those that have been examined. They may be described as 
scaphoid or boat-shaped, except that the length and depth are nearly the 
same ‘Two pairs of these earstones are represented on pl. i. B., figs. 44 
and 45, and photographs of them considerably enlarged will be found on 
piv. fe. 9, 

The earstones of very young and immature fishes may, but frequently 
do not, possess the characters peculiar to the species as seen in the adult 
form, and it is this fact that makes the identification of fishes by the 
earstones alone unsatisfactory, whereas if the fishes be of adult size, or 
nearly so, the uncertainty of determination is greatly minimised. There 
can, for example, be little or no difficulty in recognising the earstones of 
adult whiting or codfish or of those of the hake. 

Besides the difference in the shape of the earstones of fishes there is 
also sometimes considerable differences observed in the proportional sizes 
of those of different fishes—that is, it does not always follow that a large 
fish belonging to one species will have earstones proportionally larger 
than a smaller fish belonging to another species, for we sometimes find 
that the difference is the other way. For example, the earstones of a 
lumpsucker fifteen and a half inches long measured 1'5mm. by 1:3mm.; 
a lemon dab twelve inches long had earstones that measured 3°5mm. by 
2mm., while those of a long rough dab ten inches long, or only two-thirds 
the length of the lumpsucker, measured 6mm. by about 4°5mm—four 
times the size of those of the lumpsucker. Then, again, a cattish, the 
length of which was twenty-seven inches, possessed earstones 4mm. long 
by 2°5mm, at the widest part, while a hake of about the same length as 
the catfish was found to have earstones nearly 25mm. long by about 9mm. 
at the widest part. Jn further contrast with the earstones of the fishes 
just mentioned, it may be stated that a codfish measuring fully three feet 
in length had earstones of about the same width as those of the hake, but 
they were nearly 7mm. shorter, their length reaching only to 18mm., but 
the difference in length was fully made up by their more massive struc- 
ture. The weight of these two earstones was about 22 English grains, or, 
more correctly, 1:485 grammes, while the weight of the two otoliths from 
the hake was about 12 English grains, or ‘735 grammes. It may also be 
mentioned that the two earstones of a codfish which measured forty inches 
in length weighed nearly 30 English grains—and it should be noted that 
this was the weight of them after they had been thoroughly dried. 

Moreover, the earstones of teleostean fishes appear to consist almost 
entirely of calcareous matter, for when those from a tolerably large codfish 
were subjected to a red heat they remained practically unaltered in size or in 
shape, but were so brittle that they were easily crushed between the finger 
and thumb. On the other hand, when otoliths were placed in dilute 
hydrochloric acid they completely dissolved away with much effervescence, 
leaving but the merest trace of organic matter. 

This calcareous matter does not form a homogeneous mass, but is 
deposited in layers, and the density of each alternate layer is usually less 
or greater than the one immediately preceding. In some cases these 
layers are arranged so regularly as to imply a more or less regular and 
periodic activity or quiescence in the secreting tissues by which the ear- 
stones are formed. The result of this alternating activity and quiescence 


52 Part ITI —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


is well seen in the structure of the otoliths of several species of the 
Pleuronectide, the shape of which is more or less circular, and they are 
so thin as to be almost transparent, especially when just removed from the 
ear-chamber. It is evident that the calcareous matter that is added 
to these earstones from time to time is deposited chiefly around the 
circumference, and only to a small extent laterally. In several of the 
Gadide, on the other hand, considerable additions are made to the thick- 
ness as well as round the edges of the otoliths. In not a few other fishes 
the form of the earstones is so irregular that the calcareous matter of 
which they are composed cannot have been added symmetrically as in the 
case of the earstones of the Pleuronectidee. 

An attempt is being made to utilise these concentric growth-lines for 
the purpose of ascertaining the age of the fish they belong to, somewhat 
after the manner a botanist reckons the age of an exogenous tree by 
counting the number of alternating light and dark rings exhibited in a 
cross section of the wood; and it is probable that an estimate of the fish’s 
age founded on these growth-lines may be approximately correct as regards 
plaice or any other fish whose earstones have a regular form and are 
sufficiently thin to show the concentric lines clearly. But it is doubtful 
how far such a method can be relied upon if applied to such fish as the 
bream, mullet, hake, herring, and others having earstones irregular in 
shape. Moreover, it is probable that the abundance or scarcity of food 
that the fish have to live upon, or variations in the kinds of the food, may 
retard or quicken the deposition of calcareous matter, and may lead to the 
formation of pseudo rings, whole or incomplete, that may tend to com- 
plicate or in some measure to nullify the calculation. 

The discussion of these questions is, however, outside the scope of the 
present paper, which is merely intended to contain notes descriptive of 
the sizes and forms of the earstones of a number of the fishes that have 
come under my own observation. 

The plates which illustrate this paper were prepared from photographs 
made by my son, Andrew Scott, A.L.S. The earstones represented by 
the photographs were collected at various times and mounted on slides, 
by myself, but only a limited number of them were selected for 
mounting. Those represented on Plates I., II., and ILI. are nearly twice 
the natural size, while Plates IV. and V. show them considerably 
enlarged. 


IJ.—LIST OF FISHES WHOSE EARSTONES ARE DESCRIBED IN THE 
PRECEDING NOTES—ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED. 


Agonus catwphractus (Linn.), Pogge, - . E : : . © B36 
Ammodytes tobianws, Linn., Lesser sand-eel, - - - - -» 169 
Anarrhichas lupus, Linn., Catfish, - : : : : -) SQ 
Anguilla vulgaris, Leach, Fresh-water eel, — - - : : 26 “79 
Argentina sphyrena, Linn., Argentine, - - : : 2° 6 
Atherina presbyter, Cuv., Sand smelt, - - : : - ‘canta 
Bothus maximus (Linn.), Turbot, - - : : : =» Bal 
Callionymus lyra, Linn. ; Dragonet, . - - - 658 
7 maculatus, Bonepart, Spotted dragonet, - - - 58 
Clupea harengus, Linn., Herring, - : : : allrey 
5  ptlchardus, Bloch. , Pilchard, .- - : ; : dts 

5  spratius, Linn., Sprat, - : - : = : nat aS 
Conger niger (Risso), Conger-eel, - : : : d | ae 
Coregonus lavaretus, Penn., Powan,  - : : : : 1 7G 
Cottus scorpius, Linn., Sea scorpion, - E : 3 ‘ ee 53 
Cyclopterus lumpus, Linn. , Lumpsucker, ‘ : . ~.. 59 
Drepanopsetta platessoides (Fabr.), Long rough dab, - - E - 69 
Enchelyopus viviparus (Linn.), Viviparous blenny, — - - - . ae 


Esox tucius, Linn., Fresh-water pike, - : st RT 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. d3 


PAGE. 
Gadus eglefinus, Linn., Haddock, : - : : : - 62 
»  callarias, Linn., Codfish, - = - = = ah Ave 

»  Esmarki, Nilsson, Norway peut, - - - - - 64 

ie luscus, Linn., Brassy, - f : A 4 AGS 

93 merlangus, Linn. , Whiting, - : : = St 3. 

» minutus, Linn., Poor cod, - : = - : 29 G4. 

»  pollachius, (Cuv.), Pollack, : : : : : 7 bo 

»  poutassow, Risso, Couch’s cr poi - : - : - 64 
PF virens, Linn., Coalfish, - : $ 2 ae 
Gobius minutus, Smel., Speckled goby, - - - - - 58 
py. NEGEN, Linn., Black goby, - 2 c : Seow Tiss: 
Hippoglossus vulgaris, Flem., Halibut, - - - . ctaer Oo 
Labrus bergylta, Ascan., Ballan wrasse, - : : = - -OCGE 
4» | Mmesius, Linn., Striped wrasse, - : : : 21 36) 

»  rupestris, Linn., Jago’s goldsinny, = - - - - an Ok 
Lepidorhombus whiff, (Walb.), Megrim - - - - “it hb 
Leuciscus rutilus, Linn., Roach, : : - : aay ba 
Lophius piscatorius, Linn., Angler fish, - - lis 
Lumpenus lampretiformis, (Walb. ); Sharp- tailed lumpenus, : : 215160 
Merluccius merluccius, Linn., Hake, - - . - 66 
Molua molva (Linn.), Ling, - 5 : : ie 1G, 
Mugil chelo, Cuv., Thick-lipped grey mullet, - - - - 60 
Mullus barbatus, Linn., Red mullet, - - : : - 54 
Nerophis lumbriciformis, Will, Worm Fipecebs - . - ies delle 
Onos cimbrius (Linn.), Four- bearded rockling, - - : 67, 
», tricirratus (Briin.), Three-bearded rockling, : - : Bey 
Perca fluviatilis, Linn., Fresh-water perch, - | - - : - 68 
Pholis gunnellus, Linn., Butterfish, — - = - : : Saas 
Phycis blennoides, Briin., Greater fork-beard, - - : : 266 
Platophrys laterna (Walb.), Scaldfish, - - - - - Sen of 4 
Pleuronectes cynoglossus, Linn., Witch sole, - - . - zhi: 
- flesus, Linn., Flounder, - - - - : spas 

i limanda, Linn., Dab, - - - - - - 74 

“es microcephalus, Don., Lemon ald - - - seas |: 

Py platessa, (Linn.), Plaice, - - - HPL F2 
Raniceps raninus (Linn.), Lesser fork-beard, - ‘ : G8 
Salmo (?) fario, Linn., Brown trout, - - - - : ser 
,, salar, Linn., The salmon, : - . = - ee 
Scomber scombrus, ‘Linn., Mackerel, - - : . Serato Th 
Scorpena dactyloptera, De la Roche, Blue mouth, - - . - 55 
Sebastes norvegicus, (Ascan.), Norway heeldoek - - . - 54 
Solea lutea, Risso, Solenette,  - - - - he 
»  variegata, Don., Variegated sole, - - - . - 75 
Suh arts, Guensel., Black sole, - - - oe ao 
Sparus centrodontus, De la Roche, Common sea 5 Seay . - - 64 
Trachinus draco, Linn., Greater weaver, - - - eng 
otf vipera, Cuv., Lesser weaver, - . ema sy 
Trigla gurnardus, Linn., Grey gurnard, - - ae BY) 
», lineata, Gmel., Streaked gurnard, : : : - oP a0 

5,  lucerna, Linn., Sapphirine gurnard,_ - - - - 06 

» . pint, Bloch, Red gurnard, 2 - - - - 56 
Zeugopterus punctatus, Bloch, Miiller’s top- knot, . : - eiCGe 


Il J.—Systematic DESCRIPTION. 


Nomenclature followed.—A History of Scandinavian Iishes, by B. 
Fries, C. U. Ekstrém, and C. Sundevall, 2nd edit., revised by 
Prof. F. A. Smitt (1893- -95). 


Arrangement followed.—Dr. Francis Day, The Fishes of Great Britain 
and Ireland, 2 vols. (1880-84). 


Fam. PERCIDA. 
Genus Perca. 


Perca fluviatilis, Linn. Fresh-water Perch. Pl. it. B., figs. 54-57; pl. 
v., fig. 13. 


D4. Part I1.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Four specimens of the fresh-water perch were examined—one about 
14 inches long, one 8 inches, one 7 inches, and one 63 inches. The 
earstones of the largest specimen measured 105mm. in length and about 
55mm at the widest part, while those of the other three specimens 
measured respectively 7mm. by 3°5mm. and 6mm. by 3mm. The larger 
earstones are thus proportionally the shorter ones, the first being equal to 
about one thirty-fourth part of the entire length of the fish, the next 
about the one-thirtieth, and the last rather longer. These earstones are 
very irregular in outline, and the greatest width is towards the posterior 
end. The lower margin is tolerably even and slightly arcuate, but the 
upper is irregular, with a prominent notch near the proximal end ; this 
end is narrow and bluntly rounded. Both the posterior end and the 
upper margin are distinctly but irregularly crenulate; they are also 
moderately compressed and thin. The earstones of the smaller fishes ~ 
have a general resemblance to those of the large one, but they are 
distinctly less crenulated, and the surface is not so rugose. The specimens 
seem t) vary to some extent in form and sculpture. 


Fam. MuLuIp&. 
Genus Mullus. 


Mullus barbatus, Linn. Surmullet or Red Mullet. Pl. ii. B., fig. 49; 
pl. v., fig. 23. 


The fish from which the earstones were taken measured scarcely 82 
inches in length. ‘The earstones are broadly ovate in outline, the posterior 
extremity is truncated, while the proximal end is narrow and bluntly 
rounded ; the lateral margins are obscurely crenulate, and the surface is 
somewhat rugose. The earstones of the red mullet are apparently pro- 
portionally smaller than those of the fresh-water perch. Those just 
described measured only about 45mm. long by about 3mm. in greatest 
width, and are thus about equal to little more than one-fiftieth part of the 
length of the fish. 

Fam. SPARIDA. 


Genus Sparus. 


Sparus (Pagellus) centrodontus, De la Roche. Sea Bream. PI. ii. B., 
figs, 6 and 7. 


The earstones of two examples of this species are shown on Plate i. B. 
The larger of the two fishes measured 17 inches in length, and the 
smaller 15 inches. The earstones of the first (fig. 6) measured 15°5 mm. 
along their greatest length, and 8mm. in depth, and those of the smaller 
one (fig. 7) 14mm. by 7‘5mm. In their outline and markings these 
earstones are somewhat similar to those of the large fresh-water perch, 
but the lower margin is rather more arcuate, and they are more incurved 
when seen from above. They are also considerably larger in proportion 
to the length of the fish, being about one twenty-seventh or twenty- 
eighth part of the extreme length. 


Fam. ScoRPHNIDA, 
Genus Sebastes. 
Sebastes norvegicus (Ascan.). Norway Haddock. PI. iii, B., figs. 50-52. 


The earstones of three small examples of Sebastes are represented on 
Plate iii. B. The fishes measured 5 inches, 54 inches, and 6 inches in 


of the Fishery Board for Scotiand on) 


length respectively. The earstones, which are tolerably flat, are broadly 
oval in outline, those of the largest of the three fishes (fig. 50) measure 
fully 7mm. in length and 45mm. in width, the greatest width being near 
the middle. The lower margin is moderately convex and even, the 
posterior end is broadly truncate, bnt the proximal end terminates in a 
short narrow process ; the upper margin, from the posterior end forward 
to about the middle of the otolith is slightly arcuate and even, but it then 
slopes abruptly towards the narrow proximal extremity. The lateral 
surfaces are moderately smooth. The earstones of the smallest of the 
three fishes (fig. 51) measure 6°4mm. by 4mm., and closely resemble the 
others in form and sculpture. The earstones of these young Sebastes are 
comparatively as large as those of the sea bream. 


Genus Scorpena. 
Scorpena dactyloptera, Dela Roche. The Blue-mouth. PI. iii. B., fig. 53. 


The earstones of a Scorpeena 14 inches long are represented by the 
photograph (fig. 53). They are moderately large, measuring 14mm. in 
length and about 6 7mm. in width, the greatest width being a little in 
front of the middle. The lower margin is tolerably arcuate and obscurely 
crenated ; the posterior extremity is truncated, and the margin slopes 
obliquely forward. The proximal portion of the earstone is moderately 
long and narrow ; the upper margin, which is obscurely crenate or Jobed, 
extends from the posterior angle in a nearly straight line, slightly diverging 
from the lower margin, to a little beyond the middle, where it terminates 
in an abrupt break, and from this break to the anterior extremity the 
earstone is comparatively narrow. Both the inner and outer sides of the 
earstones are nearly smooth, These earstones were equal to about one- 
twenty-fifth part of the entire length of the fish. 


Fam. Corrip2. 
Genus Cottus. 
Cottus scorptus, Linn. Sea Scorpion. PI. il. B., figs, 63-65. 


The earstones represented by fig. 63 (PI. ili. B.), and which are about 
6mm. in length by 3mm. in depth, were obtained from a large variety of 
Cottus scorpius (var. grenlandicus), but the size of the fish was not 
recorded. The middle portion of the lower margin is nearly straight, 
then it turns slightly upwards at both ends; the upper margin is nearly 
parallel with the middle portion of the lower, but this part of the upper 
margin, beginning at the posterior end, extends only to a little 
beyond the middle of the otolith, where it terminates somewhat abruptiy, 
the remaining part of the otolith being narrow and ending in a moderately 
sharp-pointed extremity. The posterior end is bluntly rounded. A 
second and more typical specimen of C. scorpius, which megsured 
63 inches in length, had earstones only a little smaller than the other, 
their form being also slightly different (fig. 65). Fig. 64 represents the 
otoliths of a very small Cottus belonging to the same species. 


Genus Trigla. 


Trigla gurnardus, Linn. The Grey Gurnard. Pl. i. B., figs. 46-52 ; 
p). iv., figs. 12 and 13. 


56 Part III—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The earstones of seven fishes of different sizes are represented on 
Plate i. B. The largest fish was about 15 inches in length and the 
smallest 7 inches, but though the earstones differ considerably in size 
they retain to a large extent their characteristic form and sculpture. 
Their general outline may be thus briefly described. The upper and 
lower margins are arcuate, but the one rather more so than the other. 
One end is obliquely truncated, while the other is bifid or forked, and a 
distinct groove extends from the apex of the fork to almost the opposite 
end of the earstone. The earstones from the largest fish (15 inches long) 
measured 4°8mm. in length by about 4mm. in depth, and are thus com- 
paratively small in proportion to the size of the fish, being only equal to 
an eightieth part of its length. They are represented by fig. 46. The 
other fishes in the series measure about 134 inches, 131 inches, 123 
inches, 93 inches, 74 inches, and 7 inches in length, and the length of 
their earstones stated in the same order is nearly 4°5mm., 4°Omm., 4°3mm., 
3°Omm., 2°7mm., and 2°5mm., their greatest width being about one-fifth 
less than the length. They were all nearly flat or only slightly incurved. 
Figs. 12 and 18, pl. iv., represent figs. 50 and 51, on pl. 1., B., considerably 
enlarged. 


Trigla pint, Bloch. The Red Gurnard. PI. i. B., fig. 53; pl. iv., fig. 15. 


The earstones represented by fig. 53 are from a red gurnard 345mm. 
(nearly 132 inches) in length. They have a general resemblance to those 
of the grey gurnard, except that the lower margin is produced posteriorly 
into a sharp point. ‘The extreme length of the earstones is about 5‘5mm. 
by 3°5 in depth. Fig. 15, pl. iv., shows the earstones considerably 
enlarged. 


Trigla lineata, Gmel. The Streaked Gurnard. Pl. i. B., figs. 54 and 55; 
pl. iv., fig. 20. 


The two specimens of Zrigla lineata whose earstones are represented 
here measured respectively 10; inches and 8 inches in length. The 
otoliths, which do not differ much in size, being about 4mm. long by fully 
25mm, in depth, are in their form and markings somewhat similar to 
those of Z'rigla gurnardus. Fig, 20, pl. iv., shows the earstones, 
represented by fig. 54, greatly enlarged. 


Trigla lucerna, \Linn. The Sapphirine Gurnard. PI. 1.B., fig. 56; pl. iv., 
fig. 2]. 


The earstones of these species have also a general likeness to those of 
Trigla gurnardus. The specimen from which those represented here was 
obtained measured 104 inches long, and the earstones were about 3°8mm. 
by 2°Omn. 

Fam. CATAPHRACTID2. 


Genus Agonus. 


Agonus cataphractus, Linn, The Pogge. PI. 11. B., fig. 18; pl. ill. B., 
figs. 44-46; pl. v., fig. 27. 


Four examples of Agonus ranging from about 6 inches to 43 inches in 
length were examined for their earstones. These were found to have a 
narrow oval form, rather obtuse at the one end and pointed at the other 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 57 


Those of the largest fish measured 5'4mm. in length by about 2mm. in 
depth (see fig. 45, pl. ili. B.), while those of the smallest (fig. 18, pl. ii. B.) 
measure 5mm. by about 2mm. It will be noticed that the earstones of 
the pogge are moderately large in proportion to the length of the fish. 
Those of the smallest specimen are about the one twenty-third part of its 
entire length. 


Fam. PEDICULATIDA. 
Genus Lophius. 


Lophius piscatorius, Linn. The Angler-fish. PI. iti. B., figs. 61 aud 62 ; 
ph ivy fig) 313° ply vi; fig. 19. 


The earstones from a fairly large angler, 36 inches long, are represented 
by fig. 61 on pl. iii. B. They are comparatively broad, and their out- 
line is somewhat irregular; the lower margin, which has a stout rib 
extending nearly from erd to end, is obtusely geniculated, the angular 
part being nearly intermediate between the two extremities. The upper 
margin is arcuate and thin, and at the anterior end where it meets the 
lower margin it forms a blunt-pointed angle, but the posterior end is 
obliquely truncated. Numerous and somewhat obscure lines radiate from 
the middle portion of the lower rib to the edge of the upper margin, 
which may be crenulate or notched. These earstones are about 10°5mm. 
in length by about 7mm, in depth. The earstones of the smaller angler, 
the size of which has not been recorded, have the upper margin more 
regularly arcuate, while the lower want the angular outline of the larger 
otoliths, They measure about 5‘5mm. by 3°5mm. The angler’s earstones 
are small when compared with the length of the fish, those of the large 
specimen mentioned being only a little over one-ninetieth part of the 
entire length of the fish. 


Fam, TRACHINIDA. 
Genus Trachinus. 
Trachinus vipera, Cuvier. The Lesser Weaver-fish. Pl. ii, B., figs. 8 and 9. 


The earstones of the lesser weaver-fish are narrow and somewhat ovate 
in outline ; both ends are pointed. Those represented by the figures on 
pl. i. B. have thin surfaces slightly decorticated, so that the markings 
are obscure. The larger of the two fishes represented (fig 8) measured 
127mm. long (about 5 inches), and the earstones were fully 6mm. in 
length by 25mm. in depth; the smaller fish measured 119 mm., and its 
otoliths were slightly smaller than the others. 


Trachinus draco, Linn. The Greater Weaver-fish. Pl. ii. B., fig. 10, 


The specimen of Trachinus draco, from which the earstones represented 
by fig. 10 were obtained measured 11? inches in leugth. The earstones, 
though somewhat similar in shape to those of the lesser weaver just 
described, were considerably larger, being at least 10mm. long by fully 
4°5mm. in depth. 


Fam. SCOMBRID. 
Genus Scomber. 


Scomber scombrus, Linn. The Mackerel. Pl. iii. B., fig. 36; pl. v., 
fig. 33. 


58 Part I1T.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The earstones of the mackerel are comparatively small. The one 
represented by figure 36 is from a fish of average size and about 35mm, 
in length, It has a general resemblance to the earstones of the herring, 
being narrow, with the sides parallel, the posterior end obtusely rounded 


and unequally bifurcated in front, the lower branch being produced into 
a narrow- pointed extremity. 


Fam. Goslmp&. 


Genus Gobius. 


Gobius niger, Linn. The Black Goby. PI. ii. B., figs. 19 and 21; pl. 
V., fe. 


In this species the earstones are large in proportion to the size of the 
fish, and their broadly rhomboid form is so unlike that of the earstones 
of any of the other kinds of fishes examined that they appear to be 
characteristic of this particular species and to indicate that it might be 
possible to identify the fish almost entirely by the earstones. 

The two fishes from which the earstones shown on Pl. i. B. were 
obtained measured 105mm. in length, and their earstones are about 4mm. 
long by tully 3mm. in width. These earstones are thus about equal to 
one twenty-fifth part of the length of the fish. 


Gobius minutus, Gmel. The Speckled Goby. PI. ii. B., figs. 21-24, 


The largest of the four fishes represented by the earstones shown on 
pl. il. B., figs. 21 to 24, measured about 3 inches in length. The other 
three were smaller, the largest being 54 and the smallest 43mm. The 
earstones of the larger specimen were obscurely quagrangular in form and 
measured about 2°2mm. across the longest side, the width being slightly 
less. ‘Lhe earstones of the other specimens were very small, and 


resembled minute circular discs, the largest being little more than 1mm. 
in diameter. 


Fam. CALLIONYMID2. 
Genus Callionymus. 


Callionymus lyra, Linn. The Dragonet. PI. iii. B., figs. 10-14; pl. 
v., figs. 10 and 11. 


The earstones of the dragonet are very small, and they are subovate in 
outline; the lower margin is nearly straight, but the upper is boldly 
arcuate. The posterior end is rather blunt, but the anterior extremity 
ends in most of the specimens in a short point. In some of them it is 
slightly bifid, and the upper margin is also obscurely crenulated. 

The earstones of five fishes of different sizes are shown on plate iii. B. 
The fishes measure 10 inches, 8} inches, and 72 inches in length, while the 
length of other two (figs. 13 and 14) is doubtful. The earstones of the 
largest fish are about 3mm. long, which is equal to about one eighty- 
fourth part of the entire length of the fish. The earstones of the others 
are somewhat smaller and rather more pointed at the extremities. 


Callionymus maculatus, Bonap. TheSpotted Dragonet. PI. ili. B., figs. 
1-9; plate v., figs. 18 and 24. 


— 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 59 


- Nine examples of this Callionymus have their earstones represented on 
pl. ili. B. The sizes of the fishes are, three at 150mm., one at 130mm., 
two at 112mm., one at 100mm., and two at 80mm. Their earstones 
Closely resemble those of Callionymus lyra both in shape and size, except 
that in one or two of them the anterior end is rather more distinctly 


~ notehed, 


Fam, Discopo.. 
Genus Cyclopterus. 


Cyclopterus lumpus, Linn. The Lumpsucker. PI. iil. B., fig. 58; pl. v., 
fig. 15. 


The earstones of the lumpsucker are exceedingly small when compared 
with the size of the fish. In an example 154 inches long the earstones 
measure only 1‘4mm. in length by about 1mm. in depth, or about one 
two-hundred-and-eightieth part of the length of the fish. They are 
subrotund in form, but one side is straight or nearly so, while the other 
is boldly arcuate or gibbous. Both ends are rounded, but one of them, 
where it joins the nearly straight lateral margin, is moderately angular, as 
shown by the enlarged photograph (fig. 15, pl. v.). 


Fam. GoOBIESOCID, 
Genus Anuarrhichas. 


Anarrhichas lupus, Linn. The Cat or Wolf-fish. Pl. 111. B., figs. 40-43 ; 
pl. v., fig 21. 


The earstones of the cat-fish are small in comparison with the size of the 
fish. Those of a specimen 274 inches long measured about 4mm. in 
length by about 2‘2mm. in depth, so that these earstones are only about 
the one hundred and seventy-fourth part of the length of the fish. They 
have a somewhat rugged appearance, resembling a rudely formed arrow- 
head, being broadest and thickest at the (?) posterior end, then tapering 
to a sharp point at the opposite extremity. The earstones of a fish 12 
inches long did not differ greatly in shape from those of the larger 
example, but were considerably smaller, being only about 2°7mm. long 
by about 16mm. in depth (see fig. 43). They were proportionally 
rather larger than tnose of the larger fish, but small compared with those 
of the Gadoids. The earstones of other two examples of Anarrhichas, 
123 inches and 133 inches in length, are represented by figures 
42 and 41. 


Fam. BLENNIID-. 
Genus Pholis, 
Pholis gunnellus, Linn. The Butter-fish. Pl. ii. B., figs. 38 and 39. 
The earstones of the butter-fish are also very small. They are of an 
oval shape, but neither in form nor sculpture is there anything very 


characteristic about them. Those obtained from a fish 44 inches long 
measured about 1mm, by ‘6mm. 


60 Part IIT.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Genus Enchelyopus. 


Enchelyopus (Zoarces) viviparus, Linn, Viviparous Blenny. PI. iii. B., 
fig. 37; pl. ve fig. 3). 


The viviparous blenny possesses earstones that somewhat resemble 
those of the mackerel in size as well as in form, but they appear to be 
rather larger in proportion to the size of the fish, and their upper margin 
is rather more boldly arcuate. A fish measuring 12 inches possessed ear- 
stones 4mm. in length by 2mm. in depth. They were thus about equal 
to one seventy-sixth part of the length of the fish. 


Genus Lumpenus. 


Lumpenus lampretiformis, Walb. Sharp-tailed Lumpenus. PI. i. B, 
figs. 51-63; pl. iv., figs. 22, 23, and 26, 27. 


The earstones of this speeies are small and oblong in shape. The upper 
margin is obscurely crenulated ; the anterior end is slightly notched, or 
pointed, while the other is subtruncate or bluntly rounded. Those 
represented by the figs. 57 and 58 are from two fishes 295mm. long, and 
measure about 3mm. in extreme length by 2mm. in width. Another 
fish 176mm. long had earstones measuring 2°5 by 13mm. (see fig. 63, pl. 
i. B, and fig. 27, plxiv.). 


Fam. ATHERINID. 
Genus Atherina. 


Atherina presbyter, Cuvier. Sand Smelt. PI. iii. B., figs. 34 and 35; pl. 
v., figs. 22 and 26. 


The sand smelt has tolerably large earstones compared with the size of 
the fish. The larger of the two specimens examined, which measured 
about 5 inches in length, had earstones 4mm. long by 2:2mm. in depth, 
while those of the smaller fish, which was 34} inches in length, measured 
2-3mm. by 15mm. The earstones of the larger fish were equal in length 
to about the one thirty-second part of the entire length of the fish. 
Both margins are even and arcuate, one end is bluntly rounded, but the 
other, in the earstones of the larger fish, terminates in a sharp and slightly 
hooked process, and in those of the smaller the same extremity is bluntly 
pointed. 


Fam. MuGILip&. 
Genus Mugil. 


Mugil chelo, Cuvier. The Thick-lipped Grey Mullet. Pl. ili. B., fig. 48; 
pl. vz, fig, 12. 


The earstones of the grey mullet are distinctly incurved and somewhat 
twisted, but this is not very clearly shown in the photograph. The lower 
margin is slightly thickened and nearly parallel with, but rather shorter 
than, the upper. The posterior end is abruptly truncated, the edge being 
crenulated, and in some examples deeply incised; the anterior extremity 
is obliquely truncated, the edge being thin and slightly irregular, while 
the angle is produced into a short tooth. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 61 


The fish from which the otoliths were obtained measured 154 inches in 
length, and its earstones are 9mm. by 4°5mm.—they are thus equal in 
length to about the one forty-fourth part of the length of the fish. 


Fam. LABRID®. 
Genus Labrus. 


Labrus bergylta, Ascan. The Ballan Wrasse. PI, ii. B, fig. 12-14; 
BE V., fic. ‘Bi 


Three specimens of this Zabrus have their earstones represented on 
pl. ii.B. They measured about 387mm., 330mm., and 254mm. respec- 
tively. The earstones are comparatively small—those of the larger fish 
(fig. 12) areabout 5°4mm. in length by about 3mm. indepth. The length 
of these earstones is thus equal to about the one-seventieth part of the 
entire length of the fish. The specimen next in size had earstones 
slightly smaller (fig. 14), while the earstones of the third specimen (fig. 
13) are a little over 4mm. long. The lower margin of the larger ear- 
stones is slightly arcuate and crenulated, especially, the proximal half of it. 
The upper margin slopes upward in a nearly straight line from each end, 
so as to form an obtuse angle near the middle. The front end is deeply 
bifureate, but the other terminates in a blunt point (see pl. v., fig. 8, 
which shows the otoliths greatly enlarged). The other earstones do not 
differ much from those described, except that the upper margin is not so 
distinctly angular. 


Labrus mixtus, Linn. The Striped Wrasse. PI. 11. B., fig. 15. 


The earstones of this Labrus have a close resemblance to those of the 
ballan wrasse, and could scarcely be distinguished from them. Those 
represented by fig 15 were obtained from a fish 11} inches in‘length, and 
measure fully 5mm. each. 


Labrus (Ctenolabrus) rupestris, Linn. Jago’s Goldsinny. PI. ii. B., 
fig, 16. ' 


This is a smaller species of Labrus than the others, and the earstones 
are proportionally small. The fish which is here represented by its ear- 
stones measured about 44 inches in length (108mm.), and the size of its 
earstones is 3°2 by 16mm. They resemble those of the other species in 
their general character. 


Fam. GADIDA. 
Genus Gadus. 


Gadus callarias, Linn. (syn, Gadus morhua, Linn.). The Codfish. PI. 
1. A., figs. 1-10. 


The otoliths of nearly all the species of Gadus, especially in those of 
adult size, are usually large, and massive in structure. One side is 
slightly concave and the other convex. The concave or exterior side is 
usually ornamented with ridges and furrows which are more regular and 
distinct in the otoliths of fishes that are young, or half-grown fishes. 
Those otoliths from codfish, particularly from examples 20 inches 


62 Part ITI.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


long and upwards, differ in shape from the earstones of other species of 
Gadus in being distinctly wider at the anterior end, instead of having the 
upper and lower margins parallel or nearly so. The lower edge, which is 
longer than the upper, is only slightly convex, and in some cases nearly 
straight. A thick rib extends along the lower aspect of the convex 
or inner side, as indicated by the photographs (fig. 2), but the stones 
become thinner towards the upper edge. The upper edge is slightly con- 
vex and shorter than the lower. Anterior end obliquely truncated. 
Posterior end narrow, bluntly rounded, and terminating in a shallow 
depression. Upper and lower margins usually irregularly but distinctly 
crepulated. The pair of earstones represented on the plate by fig. 1 were 
removed from a codfish 404 inches long; they measure about 21mm. in 
length by fully 10mm. in depth.* Figure 2 on the same plate represents the 
earstones of another fish 363 inches long, which measure about 18mm. by 
fully 9mm. Below I give in tabular form the sizes of the earstones of 
other fishes represented on pl. i. a. 


Earstones. 
es pe Plate Length of Fish. 
Length. | Depth. 
3 15 inches. About 13'‘0mm. 30mm. | Nearly 60mm. 
4 ZTE ty >», 15°5mm. 7°5mm. 
5 veal | _ ;, 14°5mm. About 6°5mm. 
6 10 ie ,, 10°5mm. sty 4-‘Omm. 
i 9 ‘5 » 95mm. a 3°7mm. 
8 ar 3, >, 6mm. | : 25mm. 
9 | ae ;, . o*7mm., < 23mm. 
10 ee oh eran | Fully 20mm. 


Gadus eglefinus, Linn. The Haddock. PI. ii. a., figs. 1-5 and 9-16 ; 
pl. iv., figs. 1 and 2 


The earstones of tolerably large specimens of haddock have the upper 
margin nearly straight, and parallel with the lower margin; the crenula- 
tion of this margin is not very strongly marked, but the lower margin, 
which is slightly convex, is distinctly crenated. Among the haddocks 
examined for the purposes of this paper, one was thin and. emaciated, and 
its earstones were not only comparatively narrow and elongated, but they 
were also devoid to a considerable extent of the grooves and ridges so 
characteristic of earstunes of the normal type; this pair of earstones is 
represented by fig. 3., pl. li. A. 

A fairly large number of haddocks have been examined, and I find that 
most of those about 8 or 9 inches long have their earstones obliquely 
truncated in front, and that posteriorly the upper and lower margins con- 
verge, though somewhat unequally, to form a narrow, blunt pointed 
extremity. “They are also laterally incurved, so that the hollow surface is 
toward the outside, the convex side being inside, as in those of the codfish. 
The earstones of the smaller haddocks are not so distinctly truncated in 
front, and the upper and lower margins are not parallel, but converge from 
the widest part near the anterior end eradually to the posterior extremity. 

* These earstones are thus equal to about the one forty-ninth part of the entire length 


of the fish. Inthe other example specially referred to they are about the one fifty-first 
part of its length. The earstones appear to be proportionally longer in the smaller fish. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 63 


The outer surface was more distinctly ornamented with small rounded 
ridges and furrows extending to both margins, producing a crenulated 
edge nearly all round. The largest fishes—4 in number—which are 
represented here by photographs of their earstones, range from 177 inches 
to 184 inches in length. The length of the earstones varied from a little 
over 16mm. to 18mm., and the variation in depth is slightly over 1mm. 
The annexed Table gives the sizes of the various fishes and of their ear- 
stones :-— 


Karstones. 
Figuye on the |. Length of Fish. 
Length. Depth. 
PGT. ih. A:).:. 18 inches, ... | 17°Omm. aoe tb) Or 2mm. 
2 Ps Be ESAS ty, we 2!) ES, .. | 6°3mm. 
One 18°0mm. and ; 
Smarr, Si iepygeds es, a ee \ About 5-6mm. 


(Fish very | emaciated. ) 


Ove 16:2mm. and 
4 B Rs: BiZas,; 4 one about>?| 6:3mm. 
17mm. As 
5 be 143. —C«,, oe 160mm. ... {*5°Omm., to5‘5mm. 
9 oe ch 13% (Cy, ae 14°7mm. os Fully 5‘Omm. 
10 Fr iF 12 es he 13°3mm. if 4°5mm. 
ll ead ie: LOSS e55 ee 11°5mm. ee 4-3mm. 
12 _ oy OFF ss ae 115mm. oF 4°3mm. 
13 ae me S29 045 re 11:2mm. ahi 4°3mm. to 4°5mm. 
14 “ ale 
15 * al 64-52 ,, 6 8-8°5mm. ae About 3‘0mm. 
+16 s ia 


Ti will be observed that the length of the haddock’s earstones in 
proportion to the length of the fish is greater than in the case of the 
codfish. In the two largest haddocks referred to here the earstones are 
nearly equal to the one twenty-seventh part of the length of the fish, 
while in one example, 8? inches in length, they reach to about one- 
twentieth part of the length of the fish. 


Gadus luscus, Linn. The Brassie or Lib. PI. ii. a., figs. 17-24; pl. iv., 
fig. 3. 


The larger examples of the brassie possess earstones even more massive 
in structure than those of the haddock or codfish. The outer surface, 
which is distinctly incurved, is also more coarsely rugose, being orna- 
mented with somewhat irregular and comparatively large rounded bosses, 
especially on the lower aspect of the exterior surface. These bosses, and 
to some extent the whole outer surface as well, have a polished and glassy 
appearance. The inner surface is convex and nearly smooth. The 
anterior end is obliquely truncated, and the anterior portion of the upper 
margin is nearly straight and parallel with the lower; then it gradually 
converges towards the lower edge till both meet in the moderately sharp- 
pointed posterior extremity. The massive structure of these otoliths is 
observable even in the smaller specimens. A brassie about 14 inches 


* Another haddock, 14 inches long, had massive earstones 16mm, in length by 6°5mm. in 
width. These are shown on pl. iv., fig. 2. c 

t The pair of earstones represented by fig. 16, pl. ii. A., are shown greatly enlarged on pl. iv. 
fig. 1, and the ridges and furrows on the outer surface are more clearly indicated in the figure. ‘ 


64 Part IIl.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


long had very massive otoliths ; they measured about 135mm. in length 
by 65mm, at the deepest part (these are represented by fig. 24). Those 
of a somewhat smaller fish were equally massive but rather shorter, 
measuring about 12°2mm. by 6mm, A number of other specimens of the 
same species have been examined, and measurements of six of them with 
the corresponding sizes of their earstones are given in the Table annexed. 


: Karstones. 
Figure on eae Length of the Fish. }—-—— 

Length. Depth. 
af a ts A.) 89mm. About 50mm. 25mm. 
18 a 110mm. a ~~ 60mm. 30mm. 
19 a 162mm. > oc Omm., Fully 40mm. 
20 Ht 210mm. 5» 0 Oem ni. 45mm. 
21 Ss 114 inches. oo Ll Onsma. 5‘3mm. 


22: ee Lidnr\ 3, | >> 1i-4mm. 55mm. 


In the larger examples of the brassies referred to here the proportion 
that the length of the earstones bears to the length of the fish is about 
the one twenty-sixth part, but it appears to become greater in the smaller 
fishes as in the case of the haddocks. 


Gadus minutus, Linn. The Poor Cod. 


This species is nearly allied to the last, and appears to possess somewhat 
similar earstones. No specimens are represented by the photographs. 


Gadus esmarkii, Nilsson. The Norway Pout. PI. ii. a, figs. 25 -28. 


Four specimens of Gadus esmarkia are represented by their earstones 
on pl. ii. A. They measured respectively 63 inches, 52 inches, 47 inches, 
and 4 inches. Their earstones have a tolerably close resemblance to those 
of small Gadus luscus, but they are scarcely so massively formed, and are 
rather longer and narrower. Those removed from the largest specimen 
of Gadus esmarkit measured about 75mm. in length by fully 3mm. in 
depth, aud those of the next three specimens measured about 6'5mm., 
5'2mm., and 5mm. in length, and their depths varied in a corresponding 
degree. The earstones of the largest specimen were, as indicated by the 
foregoing measurements, about the one twenty-second part of the entire 
length of the fish. 


Gadus poutassou, Risso. Couch’s Whiting. Pl. i. a., fig. 29; pl. iv. 
fig. 5. 


This species is represented by a single pair of otoliths; they are froma 
fish 155mm. (fully 6 inches) in length, and measure 85mm. long by 
nearly 3mm. in depth. In their shape and sculpture they have a general 
resemblance to those of Gadus esmarkii, but are rather more slender and 
elongated. The anterior end is bluntly rounded, the upper and lower 
margins taper in a nearly uniform manner to the sharp-pointed distal 
extremity, and both margins are crenulated. The exterior side is only 
slightly incurved and moderately rugose, and the inner surface is nearly 
smooth. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 65 


Gadus merlangus, Linn. The Whiting. PI. il. a., figs. 6-8, 30 and 31. 


The earstones of numerous whitings have been examined, and all, 
except those of very small specimens, agree in the peculiar form by which 
they may be distinguished from other species of Gadus. They are 
elongated and narrow. ‘The lower margin is tolerably even and slightly 
convex. The anterior end is obliquely truncated, and with the edge 
usually crenulate. The upper margin, for about two-thirds of its length, 
from the anterior extremity, is nearly straight and parallel with the lower 
edge, then it gradually converges towards the lower margin, so that the 
posterior end is narrow and tapering and has a sharp-pointed termination. 
The earstones are somewhat concave outwardly, and slightly convex and 
nearly smooth on the inside. The lower edge is tolerably thick, while 
the upper, especially where it begins to taper towards the posterior end, 
is compressed and thin. 

Photographs are given of the earstones of five whitings which measured 
respectively 14 inches, 124 inches, 113 inches, 1]? inches, and 9 inches in 
extreme length, and the size of their earstones given in the same order is as 
follows :—20mm. long by 5mm. in greatest width (fig. 30), 16mm. by 
about 4°5mm. (fig. 8), 16°5mm. by nearly 5mm. (fig. 7), 15mm. by about 
47mm. (fig. 6), and 12°5mm. by about 4mm. (fig. 31). The earstones of 
two young whitings, about 68mm. (2# inches) in length, but which are 
not represented among those photographed, measured 3°5mm. by about 
1‘5mm., which is fully twice the length of those of a lumpsucker 154 
inches long. 

By comparing the length of the earstones of a number of whiting of 
average size with the length of the fish they were taken from I found 
that, though the proportion varied to some extent, the length of the 
earstones approximated to about one-eighteenth part of the extreme 
length of the fish. 

The proportion between the length of the earstones and of the fish 
they belong to varies considerably in the different kinds of fish. An 
examination of numerous examples of fish belonging to various species 
seems also to indicate that where the earstones are massive in structure, 
as in some of the Gadoids, they are shorter in proportion to the length of 
the fish than those that are thin and narrow. This may tend to explain 
why the earstones of the whiting are generally proportionally more 
elongated than those of the haddock or codfish. 


Gadus virens, Linn. The Saithe or Coal-fish. Pl. i. a., figs, 14-16. 


The earstones of large coal-fish are very massive in structure. Fig, 14 
represents those of a fish of average size, but I am unable to state the 
exact length of the fish, though it could not be much under 36 inches. 
These earstones measure about 24mm. long by about 8mm. in greatest 
width. The upper and lower margins are tolerably straight and nearly 
parallel, and they are slightly crenulated along the edges. The front end 
is somewhat obliquely truncated, but at the posterior end the upper and 
lower margins converge so that they meet and terminate in a blunt point. 
They are also slightly twisted, and have the outer side incurved and 
slightly rugose, while the inner side is convex and nearly smooth. 

Figs. 15 and 16 represent the earstones of two saithe about 15 inches 
long; they are narrow and elongated, and small when compared with 
those of the whiting. These earstones measure from 1lmm. to about 
11‘5mm. in length, which is equal to about the one thirty-third part of 

E 


66 Part III.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


the length of the fish. This shows a somewhat marked difference from 
those of the whiting 14 inches long that measured 20mm. in length, or 
about the one-eighteenth part of the length of the fish. 


Gadus pollachius (Cuv.). The Pollack or Lythe. Pl. i. a., figs. 11-13. 


The lythe has earstones closely resembling those of the saithe in shape, 
in size, and sculpture. Fig. 11 represents the otoliths of a lythe 31 inches 
long; they measure about 20mm. in length by about 8mm. in greatest 
width. The length of these otcliths in proportion to the length of the 
fish is scarcely equal to half the length of those of the whiting referred to 
above, but what is wanting in length is made up by their more massive 
structure. Figs. 12 and 13 represent the earstones of two smaller fishes, 
but their lengths have not been recorded. 


Genus Werlucius. 


Merlucius merluccius (Linn.). The Hake. PI. iii. a., figs. 32-35. 


The earstones of the hake differ remarkably from those of other 
British Gadoids, They are thin and leaf-like, and are somewhat ovate in 
outline; they are broadest near the anterior end, and thence taper 
gradually backwards to the narrow distal extremity. The lower side has 
an evenly, but not very boldly, rounded edge that extends unbroken from 
the front to the posterior end. The upper edge is very thin and more 
or less finely serrated, the divisions between the serrations being in 
some parts very distinct; near the anterior end this margin rises into a 
prominent angle and forms the widest (or deepest) part of the earstone. 
Immediately posterior to this angle the margin is slightly concave, and 
this imparts to the angular prominence a somewhat gibbous appearance, 
as shown in the figure; from this point the margin slopes gradually to 
the distal end. ‘The earstones of comparatively small fishes show the 
same gibbous appearance, The posterior end of the earstones is some- 
~ what narrow and sharp-pointed. The fish from which the largest earstone, 
shown on pl. iil. A. (fig. 33), was taken was a tolerably large one, but its 
length was not recorded. This earstone measures about 27°5mm., long 
by fuliy 9mm. in greatest width. The next largest of the otoliths 
represented by the figures were from a rather smaller fish than the one 
just referred to, but its length has also not been recorded. These otoliths 
are about 25mm. in length, and their greatest width nearly Imm. Two 
otoliths from a hake 16 inches long (fig. 34) measure nearly 17mm. by 
about 6mm., and another fish 144 inches long was furnished with ear- 
stones 16mm. in length by about 5:5mm, in greatest depth. In these 
last two examples the length of the earstones is equal to one twenty- 
fourth and one twenty-third part of the entire length of the fishes they 
were taken from. 


Genus Phycis. 
Phycis blennoides (Briin.). The Greater Forkbeard. Pl.1. 4, fig. 27. 


The earstones from a moderately large specimen of the greater fork- 
beard are represented by fig. 27 on pl.i. a. This fish, the size of which 
was not recorded, possessed tulerably large earstones. They measure 
about 16°5mm. in length by 65mm. in depth. The upper margin, which 
is nearly straight, has the edge moderately sharp and irregularly serrate, 
while the anterior extremity is obliquely truncated. The lower margin 
is boldly arched and somewhat angular in the middle, and converges 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 67 


posteriorly towards the upper margin more than it does forward, and the 
posterior end is therefore moderately narrow and is also bluntly rounded, 
as shown by the photograph. The earstones are slightly concave 
outwardly and considerably thickened towards the anterior end, especially 
on the lower aspect. 


Genus Molua. 
Molua molva (Linn.).. The Ling. Pl. i. 4., figs. 19-26. 


The earstones represented by fig. 19 were obtained from a medium- 
sized ling, but the exact length of the fish was not stated. These 
earstones have a general resemblance to those of the coal-fish and lythe. 
The anterior end, however, is not angular but forms a bold curve, which 
merges into the upper margin. This margin is only slightly arched in 
the middle part, then slopes posteriorly to the sub-central and narrow 
rounded distal extremity ; lower margin nearly straight except near the 
posterior end, where it converges to meet the upper margin. The otoliths 
are about 20mm. in length by about 8mm, in their greatest width. The 
earstones of young ling apparently differ to some extent from those of 
larger fish in their form and structure. Fig. 22 represents the earstones 
of a fish 221 inches long, and though the general contour is similar to the 
larger otoliths, the upper margin is not regular. These earstones measure 
only about 9mm. in length. Fig. 23 represents the earstones obtained 
from a ling about 103 inches long, and which measure fully 55mm. Figs. 
24 to 26 represent the earstones of smaller specimens of ling ranging from 
83 inches to 7 inches in extreme length. 


Genus Onos. 


Onos tricirratus (Briin.). The Three-Bearded Rockling. Pl. i. B., figs. 
9-12; pl. iv., fig. 18. 


The three-bearded rocklings possess earstones that are narrow and 
elongated ; the upper and lower margins are nearly parallel, and when 
viewed from the side are seen to be slightly sigmoid in outline and some- 
what twisted. Those represented by fig. 11 were obtained from a fish 15 
inches long, and measure neatly 8mm. in length—equal to about the one 
twenty-sixth part of the entire length of the fish—and they are about 4 
times longer than broad. These earstones appear, however, to vary a 
good deal in length, for those taken from another fish only a little shorter 
than the one just referred to measured about 6°2mm., but the width is 
akout the same as that of the other. It was also observed that the 
otoliths of small fishes did not possess the sigmoid outline that char- 
acterises the adult examples. Two specimens 11% inches and 8 inches 
long respectively had earstones measuring 4°D5mm. and 35mm —the last 
wanted the sigmoid appearance already referred to (see figs. 10 and 9). 


Onos cimbrius (Linn.). The Four-Bearded Rockling. Pl. i. B., figs. 13-17; 
pl. iv., fig. 10-11. 


This species possesses earstones quite distinct from those of the three- 
bearded rockling ; their outltne is obscurely triangular, two sides being 
nearly equal and shorter than the third side, and this difference ; is notice- 
able in the earstones of even small examples. Those represented by fig. 
13 were removed from the ear-chambers of one of the largest of the fishes 
examined. This fish measured 260mm. (fully 10 inches), while the 
extreme length of the earstones was only 5‘Omm. and the greatest width 
2:5mm, These earstones are thus only about the one-fiftieth part of the 


68 Part [II.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


entire length of the fish. The annexed table contains the measurements 
of a few of the other fishes examined and of the sizes of their otoliths. 


Earstones. 
=f hae “i a Length of the fish. 
Length. Depth. 
14 | 220mm. 3°7mm. 20mm. 
15 | 185mm. 3‘lmm. 1‘7mm. 
16 | 177mm. 3'lmm, 1‘7mm. 
7 | 165mm. 3‘lmm. 1°7mm. 


The earstones of the three smallest fishes are almost identical in size 
and shape. 
Genus Raniceps. 


Raniceps raninus (Liun.). The Lesser Fork-beard. Pl. i. B., figs. 1-8 ; 
pl. iv., fig. 6. 


The earstones of the lesser fork-beard or tadpole fish are tolerably large; 
their outline forms a nearly regular oval ; both the lower and upper mar- 
gins are moderately thin and convex, and converge towards both ends 
which are narrow and rounded, but the posterior extremity is more pointed 
than the other. A thickened but obscurely defined rib extends along the 
middle line from end to end, and gives a massive appearance to the 
otolith. The largest fish represented here was 12 inches long, and its ear- 
stones measured—one, fully 14mm., the other 15mm. in length and about 
7mm. in greatest width, so that in this example the length of the 
earstones is equal to about the one twenty-second part of the entire length 
of the fish. 

Fig. 5 represents the earstones of a fish about 83 inches long, and as 
they measure about 11mm. in length they show almost the same propor- 
tion to the length of the fish as the other—viz., about one-twentieth part. 
Fig. 7 represents the earstones of another fish that measured about 
180mm., and as the earstones are nearly 10mm. in length, it seems to bear 
out what has been already stated, that in some species and within certain 
limits the smaller fishes possess earstones relatively larger in proportion 
to the length of the fish than the adult specimens. The annexed Table 
gives the length of a number of the fishes examined, with the sizes of 
their otoliths :— 


Earstones. 
Figure on the Length of the 
Plate. (i. B.) Fish. 
Length. Depth. 


: 1 fully 14 and 1 
] 12 inches, '.; { has ino \ 70mm 
Average of the 
- 105s, rs { two: 12 Sina \ 60mm 
3 ee ah 12°3mm. i o‘omm. 
4 DP Voss oe 12‘0mm. = 5°3mm, 
5 te ad's If 11°2mm., bee 45mm. 
6 i eer 5 10°'7mm. es 4‘5mm., 
iI Tees AeA 9‘8Smm. xt 4‘5mm. 
8 4 a6 i 2:4mm. ¥ 1‘Omm. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 69 


The last example had earstones so small as to be greatly out of propor- 
tion to the length of the fish when compared with the others in the series. 
I mention the fact in order that further attention may be drawn to it. 


Fam. OPHIDIIDA. 
Genus Ammodytes. 


Ammodytes tobianus, Linn. The Lesser Sand-eel. Pl. 1. B., figs. 64 
and 65. 


The earstones of the sand-eels are very small, and their general outline 
is oval, but somewhat narrow and pointed at the posterior end. The 
earstones represented by fig. 64 were obtained from a fish 7 inches long, 
and they measured 35mm. by about 1°6mm., while those represented by 
fig. 65 are only about 2°5mm. by 1:‘0mm., and were obtained from a fish 
125mm. (5 inches) in length. 


Fam, PLEURONECTIDE. 
Genus Hippoglossus. 
Hippoglossus vulgaris, Flem. The Halibut. PI. ili. a., figs. 1-6 and 14. 


The earstones represented by fig. 1 are those of a halibut that weighed 
179 lbs. (or within 2 lbs. of 13 stone). The fish was captured in 1884, 
when I obtained the head of it for examination ; the length of the fish 
was not recorded. The otoliths measure from 17mm. to 18mm. in length by 
about 11mm. in width, but the two differ slightly in size. Those repre- 
sented by fig. 14 were removed from a small halibut about 187 inches 
long, and these otoliths measure about 8°5mm. in length by about 5mm. 
in depth. In this example the length of the earstones is only equal to 
about one fifty-fourth part of the entire length of the fish. The earstones 
represented by figs. 3 and 4 are from two fishes that are each about 11? 
inches in length, and they measure 6mm. by about 3°5mm., while those 
represented by figs, 4 and 5 are from fishes measuring respectively 260mm. 
and 220mm. in length. 

In this species, as in most of the Pleuronectide, the earstones are flat 
and moderately thin. Those of the Jarge halibut mentioned above havea 
somewhat irregular outline; on one side the margin is nearly straight, 
while the margin opposite is somewhat convex, and exhibits in one of the 
otoliths a distinctly crenulated edge. One end is obliquely truncate, but 
in the case of one of the stones the other end has a wide shallow notch, 
while the other otolith is furnished with a hook-like process. The ear- 
stones of the smaller fishes are ovate, and have a rather more regular 
outline ; the posterior end is somewhat truncated, but the anterior end is 
narrow and rounded. 


Genus Drepanopsetta. 


Drepanopsetta platessoides (Fabr.). Long Rough Dab. PI. i. a, 
figs. 7-13. 


In this species the earstones of the larger fishes are broadly ovate, the 
length being only about one-third more than the greatest width. The 
upper margin is distinctly arched, but the lower is only slightly and irre- 


70 Part IIT.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


gularly convex. One end is subtruncate, but the other is broadly rounded. 
‘The earstones of a considerable number of long rough dabs have been 
examined, and it has been noticed that though the larger examples 
retained their characteristic shape there was some variation in the propor- 
tion of their sizes to the length of fishes they belonged to. The two 
largest of the fishes among the number selected for this paper measured 
respectively 370mm. and 317mm. in length, their earstones—represented 
by figs. 7 and 8—are almost identical in size, and measured about 7°5mm. 
and 5mm. in length aud width. It has been observed that the length 
of the earstones of most of the Pleuronectids examined are shorter in pro- 
portion to the length of the fish than those of the more typical Gadoids. 
The earstones of the two fishes mentioned above averaged, ronghly, about 
the one forty-fifth or forty-sixth part of the average length of the fishes. 
It has also been noticed that where there is an increase in the width of 
the otoliths there is to some extent a corresponding decrease in the length. 

In the annexed Table the length of other five examples of long rough 
dabs are given, with the lengths of their earstones:— 


Earstones. 
Figure on the ~ Length of the 

| Plate. (iil...) Fish. 

Length. Depth. 

| po Pity rede bac eS el eee ees Fee waibh aA SATE 

age. : One 4°5mm. and 

| 9 10 inches. About 65mm. che = tease 
10 oN ape Brym sw) 02000 About 3°8mm. 
1 ABS isse . 48mm: \- *'3 DORM, 
12 | apy 1% | Fully 30mm. 53. 2 Ue 
13 | ates | About 2°5mm. | s; .. 270mm 


The earstones of the smaller fishes become more and more rotundate as 
the length of the fishes decrease. 


Genus Bothus. 
Bothus maximus (Linn.). The Turbot. Pl. i. B., fig. 33. 


The earstones represented by fig. 33 were from a turbot of about the 
average size (about 20 inches in length), One of them, which is barely 
6mm. over all, in its general outline is very like one of those of the large 
halibut already referred to (fig. 1, pl. ili, 4.), but much smaller, and it is 
fully 4mm. in width; the other earstone, which is nearly of the same 
length as the first, but about 45mm. in depth (or width), has a somewhat 
different form, and differs also in having the entire margin distinctly 
crenulated. This difference between these two earstones may be only 
accidental, but the otoliths of another fish to be presently described show 
that such variation may be normal. Whether it beso in the present case, 
however, can only be ascertained by the examination of several specimens 
of different sizes, but not the very young, where variations of this kind 
tend to disappear. ; 

The earstones of the brill, Bothus rhombus, are not represented among 
the specimens photographed, but they appear to resemble those of the 
turbot. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 71 
Genus Zeugopterus, 


Zeuyopterus punctatus (Bloch). Miiller’s Topknot. Pl. i. B., figs. 42 
and 43. 


The earstones represented by the figures 42 and 43 are from two 
fishes, one of them being 84 inches and the other 54 inches in length. 
These earstones are small and somewhat oval in shape, but deeply notched 
and truncate in front. One side, the inner one, is slightly convex and 
is longitudinally grooved, but the reverse side is smooth. Those of the 
larger fish are nearly 4mm. long by 2°5mm. in greatest width; those of 
the other fish are 3mm. in length, and rather wider than the larger one. 


Genus Lepidorhombus. 


Lepidorhombus Whiff (Walb.). Sail Fluke, Whiff, or Megrim. Pl.i.B., 
figs. 31 and 32; pl. ii. B., figs. 1-5; pl. v., figs. 1 and 2. 


The earstones of a megrim about 17 inches long are represented by 
fig. 1, pl. ii. B., and fig. 2, pl. v., and they measure about 7mm. in length 
by nearly 5mm. in greatest width. The length of these earstones is thus 
about the one-sixtieth part of the entire length of the fish. 

In the megrim, as has been already stated, the earstone on the left side 
differs somewhat in shape from the one on the right side, and this 
difference is observable even in the earstones of the smaller fishes, but 
perhaps not in very young specimens ; I find that in such specimens the 
characteristics peculiar to the species or genus are usually obscure or 
undeveloped. This will be more readily perceived by comparing the 
photographs of the earstones of the larger megrim mentioned above with 
those of the two smaller fishes represented by figs. 31 and 32, pl. i. B., 
and which measure respectively 168mm. and 87mm. in length. Compare 
also with the earstones represented by fig. 5, pl. ii. B., which are those of 
a fish 11 inches in length. 

In the examination of large fishes or of those of moderate size the 
difference in the shape of the earstones is readily noticed, one of them 
being pear-shaped—that is, broadly truncated and somewhat emarginate 
at the posterior end, with the lateral margins boldly rounded and 
converging towards the narrow anterior extremity; the lower edge is 
tolerably even, but the other is scarcely so regular. The curve of the two 
sides is slightly different, and this makes the anterior extremity appear 
as if it were turned somewhat upward. Each earstone is also slightly 
incurved on the outer aspects, the inner being correspondingly convex. 

The other earstone, like the last, is also widest posteriorly, but the 
posterior end is obliquely truncated and deeply, and sometimes irregularly, 
notched. The entire lower edge is boldly curved and tolerably even, 
but the upper margin, though it has the posterior portion nearly straight 
or slightly rounded, and more or less distinctly crenulated, is towards the 
front end interrupted by a considerable break in its continuity ; this 
break appears to be more distinct in the earstones of larger fishes, and 
the presence of this break causes the anterior extremity to terminate in a 
tolerably sharp point. 

I have already given the size of the earstones of the largest fish 
examined, and the sizes of a few of the others will be found in the 
annexed Table. 


72 Part III—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Earstones. 
Figure on the Length of the 
Plate. Fish. 
| Length. Width. 
| 
2 (Pl, tie B.) 164 inches. About 6'5mm. 4'5mm. 
> “ 14 n » o'3mm.- | 4°Omm. 
| 4 He 12 - » 50mm. | 35mm. 
Pe mar | One 3‘5mm., other 
jade a is ae | ee { rather less, 
a2 KGPh. iy KB.) 165‘0mm. 3 ¢3°6mm.: 25mm: 
33 ss 87‘Omm. | » 20mm. | 15mm. 


\ 


It will be noticed that while in the case of the first four the earstones 
are only about one-sixtieth or sixty-fourth part of the length of the fishes 
they belonged to, the earstones of the smaller fishes are proportionally 
larger, as in some other examples previously mentioned. 


Genus Platophrys. 
Platophrys laterna (Walb.). The Seald-fish. Pl. i. B., fig. 30. 


The earstones of a single example of the scald-fish are represented here. 
They are from a fish measuring 138mm. (about 54 inches) in length, and 
are of an oblong form. The posterior end is truncated, and there is a 
small notch at the anterior extremity. They measure about 3mm. long 
by about 2mm. in width. 


Genus Pleuronectes. 
Pleuronectes platessa (Linn.). The Plaice. Pl. ui. a., figs. 15-21. 


The earstones of seven examples of plaice, the length of which ranges 
from 610mm. (about 24 inches) to 64mm., are shown on pl. iii. a. The 
large pair have a tolerably massive structure, and are of an oval shape ; 
the posterior end is moderately broad and somewhat obliquely truncated, 
while the anterior end is tolerably narrow and rounded; the lower margin 
is evenly, but not very boldly, rounded or much thickened. The upper 
edge, which is thicker than the other, is moderately straight but of a 
somewhat irregular outline, and exhibits a shallow notch near the middle. 
They measure about 12mm. long by about 7°5mm. broad. They are thus 
about one-fiftieth part of the entire length of the fish. The other ear- 
stones represented by the photographs are from comparatively small 
fishes, the lengths of which, and of their earstones, are given in the 
annexed Table. 


Earstones. 
Figure on the Length of the 
Plate. (ili. A.) Fish. 
Length. Width. 

Ege Sa AUREL INL Wri hy ot OS ee cS RCA Ee TT 
| 1 287mm. About 65mm. Nearly 4°5mm. 
17 273mm. » 62mm. About 4°5mm. 
| 18 | 273mm. | » 6 0mm, ja » 40mm. 

19 | 160mm. | som OG, vy fs 2 

20 9imm. | . arm. ,, , 2 OMm: 
| 21 64mm. | 22 Omme or oe Som 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 73 


The earstones of two other plaice, each about 456mm. long (not 
represented among the photographs), measured fully 65mm. in length by 
about 55mm. at their greatest width, and 9mm. by nearly 6mm., and 
thus agreeing fairly well with the others in their proportion to the length 
of the fishes they belonged to. 

On comparing the earstones of the smaller halibut with those of the 
larger specimens of long rough dabs and plaice, a certain similarity may 
be traced both in the general form of the otoliths and of their markings 
as well as in the proportion of the length to the depth (or width). It 
will be seen that they are all broadly oval in outline, their lower edge is 
evenly rounded, and the widest part of the otolith is apparently at the 
posterior end. The earstones of Plewronectes flesus and Pleuronectes 
limanda, and of one or two others, are also somewhat similar in form to 
those referred to. There is, however, at least one notable exception in 
the Genus Pleuronectes, P. cynoglossus, or the Witch Sole, to be referred 
to presently, the earstones of which are nearly circular in outline instead 
of being oval. 


Pleuronectes microcephalus, Don. The Lemon Dab. PI. i. B., figs. 
19-25. , 


The earstones of the lemon dab are comparatively small and are not 
very distinctly characterised. Fig. 19 represents those of a fish 15 inches 
long, and they only measure a little over 4mm. by about 2°5mm. To 
show how small these earstones are it is only necessary to mention that 
those of a long rough dab scarcely as large as this species had ear- 
stones nearly double their length, while the earstones of a plaice that was 
at least 4 inches shorter were one and a half times as long. In the 
annexed Table the sizes of several other lemon dabs are given whose 
earstones are represented by photographs on the accompanying plates. 


Karstones. 
° t 
eure “i ie Size of the Fish. 
Length. Depth. 
20 12 inches. 3’5mm. 2-Omm. 
Pa TE 55 3°0mm. 1°5mm. 
22 63 oe 28mm. 1-5mm. 
23 Dei! ; 25mm. 1-3mm. 
24 ihn 2:Omm. 1‘Omm. fully. 
25 3k 4; 1-7mm. 1:Omm. 


The earstones represented by fig. 20 have the upper and lower margins 
nearly parallel, one end is obliquely truncated, but the other is pointed ; 
in the smaller specimens both ends are rounded, and they are all pro- 
portionally smaller than those of the plaice or the long rough dab. 


Pleuronectes flesus, Linn. The Flounder or Fluke. PI. i. B,, fig. 18. 


The earstones represented by fig. 18 were obtained from a fish of 
average size, but its exact length was not recorded, and they are the only 
examples included among the photographs of the present series. They 
have an outline somewhat resembling the earstones of the plaice, and 
measure about 65mm. in length by fully 4°5mm. at the widest part. 


74 Part I1I.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


They are broadly ovate, and the margins are obscurely crenulated ; they 
are also moderately thin, and at the time they were removed from the 
fish the concentric growth-lines were very distinct. - 


Pleuronectes limanda, Linn. The Dab. Pl. ii. B., figs. 28 and 29; pl. 
lli. a. figs. 27-31, 


The earstones represented by figs. 27 and 28, pl. iii. a., are from dabs 
of moderate size (8 to 9 inches long), but their exact length was not 
recorded. They have a tolerable resemblance to the earstones of young 
halibut, represented by figs. 2 to 5 on the same plate (pl. iii. a.). They 
measure about dmm. in length by about 3mm. in depth. Figs. 29 to 30 
represent the earstones of fishes measuring 73 inches, 52 inches, and 44 
inches long, while the earstones themselves measure about 4‘5mm., 
3‘dmm., and 3mm. respectively, their width being about two-thirds of 
the length. 


Pleuronectes cynoglossus, Linn. The Witch Sole. Pl. i. 3B. figs. 
26-29; pl. iii. a., figs. 22-26; pl. iv., fig. 30. 


The witch sole has earstones which differ very distinctly in shape from 
all the other species of Pleuronectes referred to here. They are large in 
proportion to the size of the fish, very flat, and nearly circular in outline, 
and it is in this latter respect. that they differ so distinctly from the 
other species. 

The largest of the witch soles mentioned here measured 16 inches in 
length, and its earstones (pl. ili. «., fig. 22) were fully 8mm. across their 
longest diameter by about 7°5mm. across the narrowest part. The lower 
margin is nearly straight, but otherwise the outline is almost circular. 
The longest diameter of these earstones 1s about one-fiftieth part of the 
entire length of the fish. The other specimens whose earstones are 
represented here were of various sizes, and all of them smaller than the 
one referred to above. The length of the different specimens and the 
size of their earstones are given in the annexed Table. 


| 


Earstones. 
es the Length of the Fish. 
Length. Width. 
26: (plicis Bs) 170mm. 35mm. 3.5mm. 
27 a 165mm. 3°5mm. 3‘2mm. 
28 iy 160mm. 35mm. 3°3mm. 
29 - 153mm. 32mm. 30mm. fully. 
23 (pl. ii. AL 12 inches. 5'5mm. o'Omm. 
O4 | Ws One 5‘5mm. and One 5‘Omm. and 
"3 | ay ‘sv? one 5‘Omm. one 4°7mm. 
25 = | 102 es, 50mm. 4°5mm. 
26 oa OF ne sy 4°3mm. 4:‘2mm. 


It will be observed that the earstones represented by fig. 26 (pl. iii. a.) 
have about the same proportion to the length of the fish as that of the 
larger examples specially referred to, while a slight variation is observ- 
able in the length of the earstones of the smaller fishes. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 75 


Genus Solea. 


Solea vulgaris, Quensel. The Black pote: Pl.-i. By: fig. 343 pls iv. 
fig. 17. 


A single pair of earstones are represented among the photographs 
given here. They are from a fish of scarcely average size, its entire 
length being only 123 inches, but they represent the characteristic form 
and size of the earstones of Solea vulgaris. The earstones of this 
specimen were 5mm. across the longer diameter, by fully 4mm. in width, 
so that they are equal to about one sixty-third part of the entire length 
of the fish. A smaller specimen, whose earstones are not represented on 
the plate, measured about 240mm., and its otoliths about 35mm. by 3mm. 
fully. ‘The earstones of this specimen were therefore only about the one 
sixty-ninth part of the length of the fish. 

These earstones have an obscurely quadrilateral outline, a side and an 
end being nearly at right angles with each other. The remaining side 
and end are slightly arched, as shown in the figure. The earstones 
of the smaller fish just mentioned have also an outline similar to 
that described. 


Solea variegata, Don. The variegated Sole or Thickback. PI. i.B., figs. 
35 and 36; pl. iv., figs. 28 and 29. 


The earstones of two specimens of this species of sole, nearly of the 
same size, are shown on pl. i. B., and by figures considerably enlarged on 
pl. iv. The specimens measured respectively 140mm. and 137mm. in 
length. Their earstones are flat, almost circular, disks measuring about 
3mm. across the longer, by nearly 2°5mm. across the shorter diameter. 
The size of these earstones in proportion to the length of the fish is there- 
fore greater than that of the black soles mentioned above. 


Solea lutea, Risso. The Solenette. Pl. i. B., fig. 37-41; pl. iv., figs. 24 
and 25. 


A number of solenettes have been examined for their earstones, and a 
few of them are represented among the photographs. These earstones 
are very small and have little to characterise them except that they are 
flat, and nearly circular in outline. The size of the different fishes and of 
their earstones are given in the annexed Table. 


Earstones. 
mals on us Length of the Fish. —— 
Length. Width. 
ge oe \ 117mm. 30mm. 2°2mm. 
eae oe \ 98mm. 2°Omm. 1‘5mm. 
39 (pl. i. B.) 90mm. About 2°0mm. 1‘5mm. 
40 > 76mm. 1-7mm. 1‘5mm. 


| 
| 
4] ee 64mm. 1-5mm, 1‘5mm., | 


76 Part III.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Fam. SALMONIDA. 
Genus Salmo. 


Salmo salar, Linn. The Salmon. PI. ii. B., fig. $1; pl. v., fig. 9. 

The earstone represented by fig. 31., pl. ii. B., measures about 7mm. in 
length and about 36mm. in depth. The length of the fish they were 
obtained from has not been recorded; I may mention, however, that those 
represented by fig. 9 on pl. v. are from a salmon weighing about 10 lbs., 
but, as in the previous example, the length of this fish was not stated. 
The earstones are of an oval form, with both ends moderately narrow and 
Pay pointed, but one end is more drawn out than the other, as shown 
in fig. 9. 


Salmo (?) fario, Linn. The Brown Trout. PI. ii. B., fig. 30. 


The earstones represented on pl. ii. B. are from a trout weighing three 
quarters of a pound, which was caught in Loch Thom, near Greenock, 
many years ago. 


Genus Coregonus. 


Coregonus lavaretus, Penn. The Powan (or Pollan). Pl. ii. B., figs. 
25-27; pl. v., fig. 29. 


The earstones represented on pl. ii. B. are from Loch Lomond powans 
measuring 8} inches, 8 inches, and 74 inches in length. Those from the 
first two fishes are nearly of the same size—viz., about 55mm. long by 
dmm. in greatest width, one of the ends—(?) the anterior—is moderately 
broad and has a rounded margin, but the other end is pointed; the lower 
margin is tolerably even, while the upper, which anteriorly is nearly 
parallel with the lower, slopes from about the middle to the pointed 
extremity at the posterior end. The earstones of the smaller fish measure 
about 5mm. in length and 25mm. in depth, and these have the posterior 
end rather more pointed than in the others. 


Genus Argentina. 


Argentina sphyrena, Linn. The Hebridean Smelt. Pl. i. B., figs. 44 
and 45; pl. iv., fig. 9 


The Hebridean smelt is one of a small number of fishes that possess 
earstones of a shape so unlike those of other fishes that there can be little 
difficulty in determining the species the fish belongs to by the earstones 
alone. The earstones of two specimens are represented by the photo- 
graphs—figs. 44 and 45, pl. i. B. Fig. 9, pl. iv., gives a greatly enlarged 
representation of those in fig. 44. The fishes from which these ear- 
stones were obtained measured 84 inches and 8 inches respectively, while 
the earstones themselves measured about 3°5mm. in extreme length and 
depth—the length and depth being about equal. These earstones, which 
differ in form from those of the other fishes mentioned in this paper, may 
be described as broadly scaphoid or boat-shaped, the short lower margin 
representing the keel, and the longer upper margin with its two small 
prominences being the deck, while the obliquely truncated anterior end 
represents the bow, and the other and nearly rectangular end the stern. 
The extreme length of these earstones is rather more than the one-sixtieth 
part of the length of the fish. 


—~I 
~“I 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


Fam. Esocip”. 
Genus sox. 


Esox lucius, Linn. The Fresh-water Pike. Pl. iil. B., fig. 60; pl. v., 
fig. 20. 


The fresh-water pike from which the earstones represented on pl. iii. B. 
were obtained was of moderate size, but its length has not been recorded. 
There were three otoliths of moderate size in each ear-chamber, and one 
or two smaller ones. The largest stones measured about 9mm. in length 
by 5mm. in greatest width. They are very irregular in outline, especially 
along the upper margin and round the (?) anterior end. The lower 
margin is tolerably even and slightly arcuate; the anterior end is broad 
and deeply notched, and the anterior portion of the upper margin, which 
is nearly straight, is separated from the posterior portion by an abrupt 
break in its continuity—this latter portion being narrow, and tapering 
gradually to the pointed distal extremity. One of the other two stones is 
narrow and elongated, and fully 45mm. in length; the third stone is 
small and subtriangular in outline, as shown in the photograph. 


Fam. CYPRINIDA. 
Genus Leuciscus. 


Leuciscus rutilus (Linn.). The Roach or Braise. Pl, iii. B, fig. 59; 
plays ite. BD. 


The earstones represented by fig. 59, pl. iii. B., are from a roach about 
54 to 6 inches in length. They are somewhat reniform in general outline, 
and the surface is ornamented with radiating grooves which terminate in 
the irregularly crenulated or jagged margins. They are about mm. 
across the widest part by about 3mm. in depth. The peculiar form and 
structure of these earstones are more obvious in the enlarged photographs 
on pl. v., fig. 5. They do not resemble any of the others described in 
this paper. 


‘Fam. CLUPEID. 


Genus Clupea. 


Clupea harengus, Linn, The Herring. PI. iii. B., figs. 15-24; pl. v., 
figs. 3 and 4. 


The earstones of a series of ten herrings of different sizes are repre- 
sented on pl. iii. B. The largest of the series (fig. 15) measured 123 
inches (about 314mm.) in length, and the smallest (fig. 24) about 125mm. 
In these earstones the lower margin, which is only slightly arcuate, is 
obscurely crenulated along the edge, but is otherwise unbroken; the 
upper margin is nearly straight and parallel with the lower, but its con- 
tinuity is interrupted by a distinct break near the middle, and in conse- 
quence of this break the anterior half of the earstone is very narrow, and 
only about half the width of the posterior portion. The posterior end is 


78 Part I1I.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


broadly rounded, and the posterior portion of the upper margin is also 
crenulated. The sizes of the various specimens referred to and of their 
earstones are given in the annexed Table :— 


Earstones. 

+7 HA ae ea Figure on the Length of the 

Plate. Fish. | 7 : Ser 

| | Length, Depth. 

ae ad Jjpievart Ttagal ate dah ot Lj aay bea pisig sem 
15 (Pl. iii. B.) 3l4mm. Not quite 4°5mm.*| Fully  2-Omm. 

16 fe 292mm. | About 5 ore ne 2-Omm. 
17 x 279mm. 4‘5mm. a 2-Omm. 
18 33 266mm. | Near ly 50mm. | About 2:0mm. 
19 x 235mm. | Fully 50mm. | Nearly 2°5mm. 
20 - 230mm. | ts 50mm. 25mm. 
21 = 215mm. | 35mm. | Scarcely 20mm. 
22 “5 205mm. | About 3°5mm. | Fully = 15mm. 
23 iy 156mm. |. ae 27mm. | About — 1‘5mm. | 
24 sf 125mm. by 20mm. | Fully 10mm. | 

lol ante fifi: aillt + hin ute 


The comparative sizes of the earstones of the herrings given here varied to 
some extent, ranging from about the fiftieth to the sixtieth part of the 
length of the fish they belonged to. 


Clupea sprattus, Linn. The Sprat. Pl. iii. B., figs. 25-32; pl. v., 
figs. 15-17. 


The earstones of the sprat are extremely small, and easily missed. 
They resemble those of the herring to some extent, but are comparatively 
shorter and broader, and even very small specimens exhibit this charac- 
teristic difference. ‘he earstones of the largest of the sprats examined 
for this paper, and which measured about 32 inches in length, were only 
about 1‘5mm., in extreme length by 1mm. in depth. Other two sprats, 
34 inches long, showed scarcely any difference in the size of their ear- 
stones from that of the specimen just referred to (see figs. 27 and 28). 
The position of these otoliths in the ear chamber is similar to that of the 
herring—that is, the narrow part of the earstone is towards the front of 
the head, and the upper margin is more irregular in outline than the 
lower. The earstones represented by fig. 29 are from a fish 35%, inches 
(84mm.) long, and are about Imm. in length by 0°‘7mm. in depth. The 
otoliths represented by figs. 30 to 32 are from sprats measuring 72mm., 
67mm., and 60mm. long. 


Clupea pilchardus, Bloch. The Pilchard. Pl. ii. B., fig. 33; pl. v., 
fig. 32. 


The earstones of the pilchard, as will be seen from the photograph, 
are somewhat similar to those of the herring, both in form and size, 
except that they are rather more pointed at the anterior end. The fish 
from which these earstones was obtained was 6? inches (171mm.) in 
length, and the earstoues themselves measured 3mm, by about 12mm. 


*The earstones of this specimen were imperfect. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 79 


Fam. MuRaNIDA. 
Genus Anguilla. 
Anguilla vulgaris, Leach. The Kel. Pl. i. B., figs, 67-69; pl. v., fig. 25. . 


The largest specimen of the eels whose earstones are represented here 
measured about 24 inches in length, and the other two 16 inches and 12} 
inches respectively ; their earstones are very small, those from the 
largest fish are only about 35mm. long by 2mm. in depth. Those 
belonging to the fish next in size (16 inches) measured fully 2°5mm. by 
1.7mm., while those of the smallest specimen (124 inches) measured 2mm. 
by 1.5mm. The earstones of the largest of the three fishes are only 
about one-seventieth part of the entire length of the fish; they are thus 
smaller in proportion to the length of the fish than most of the others 
described here. 

Genus Conger. 


Conger niger, Risso. The Conger. Pl.i B., fig. 66; pl. iv., fig. 14; pl. 
v. fig. 7. 


Among the earstoenes represented here are those of two specimens of 
conger —one 282 inches in length, the other 54 inches, ‘The first are 
represented by fig. 66, pl. i. B., an enlarged photograph of which is shown 
by fig. 14, pl. iv.; while those of the larger fish are represented by fig. 7, 
pl. v. The smaller earstones are nearly 9mm. long by about 3°5mm. 
in depth, but the length of the larger specimens was 11‘dmm. ; they are 
thus equal to about the one hundred and twenty-third part of the entire 
length of the fish. The earstones of the smaller fish are moderately thin 
and of a narrow oval outline, being widest near the middle and with one 
end narrowly rounded and the other narrow and angular. Those of the 
larger fish are tolerably massive, the sides are nearly parallel but some- 
what sinuous in outline, and the ends, like those of the smaller fish, are 
one of them bluntly rounded, while the other is angular. The surface of 
the earstones does not appear to be ornamented with any regular 
markings except one or two shallow longitudinal ridges. 


Fam. SYNGNATHID. 
Genus Nerophis. 
Nerophis lumbriciformis, Will. The Worm Pipe-fish. 


The earstones of a specimen of this pipe-fish have been in my collection 
for many years (since March 19, 1885-—the date when the fish was cap- 
tured at Lunderston Bay, Firth of Clyde). They are so exceedingly 
small that they have not been photographed with the others represented 
here. They are compressed, and resemble circular disks, except that one 
end is slightly notched, the notch being a little on one side of the middle 
line. They are somewhat like certain small Foraminifera, such, for 
example, as Baloculina depressa, but more diminutive. Their true form 
can only be made out satisfactorily under the microscope, with a l-inch 
objective. They measure across their longest diameter about ‘26mm. 
(about gy of an inch), while their shortest diameter is about ‘19mm. The 
earstones of these fishes are so exceedingly small that they are easily 
overlooked. 


80 Part IIT-—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


IV .— LITERATURE. 


The following are some papers in which the otoliths of fishes are more 
or less specially dealt with :-— 


Dr. RerpiscH.—‘‘ Ueber die Eizahl bei Pleuronectes platessa und die Alters- 
bestimmung dieser Form aus den Otolithen.” Wissensch. Meeresuntersuch., 
1899. Neue Folge Bd. 4, Abthlg. Kiel, p. 231. (This work I have not 
seen. ) 


Dr. C. Fryp.—‘‘ Die Otolithen der Fisch in Bezug auf ihre Bedeutung fiir 
Systematic und Altersbestimmung.” Dissertat. Kiel, 1901. (I have not 
seen this paper.) 


Dr. J. T. JENKiIns.—‘“‘ Altersbestimmung durch Otolithen bei den Clupeiden.”’ 
Wissensch. Meeresuntersuch., 1902. Neue Folge Bd. 6, Abthlg. Kiel, p. 83. 


J. T. Cunnrneuam.—‘‘ Zones of Growth in the Skeletal Structures of the 
Gadide and Pleuronectide.” Twenty-third Annual Report of the Fishery 
Board for Scotland, Pt. III., p. 125. et sec., pls. vii.-ix., 1905. 


Dr. W. Wa.tace.-—‘‘ Preliminary Investigations on the Age and Growth rate of 
Plaice.” International Investigations, Marine Biol. Assoc. Report, pp. 
199-225, pl. i., 1895. 


Dr. Apo1.F SEVERIN JENSEN.—‘‘On Fish Otoliths in Bottom Deposits of the 
Sea.” Meddelelser fra Kommissionen for Havunderségelser. Ser. Fiskeri 
Bd. 1, pp. 1-14, with figures in the text, 1905. 


Some observations on Fish Otoliths by the writer will also be found in Part III. 
of the 7'wentieth and Twenty-first Annual Reports of the Fishery Board for 
Scotland, p. 486 and p. 218, 1902 and 1903. 


EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES. 


a=anterior end of otolith ; w=upper margin of otolith. 


PLATE. toa: 
Fig. 1-10. Earstones of Codfishes, various sizes. slightly enlarged. 
Fig. 11-13. we Lythe, - bie 
Pig. 14-16. ae Coal-fishes, __,, . : “f 
Hig. 17-18. ‘ (?) Ling, M ; : a4 
Fig. 19-26. : Ling, ; 2 
Fig. 27. " a Greater Forkbeard, ; ee 
PGA TE. eB: 
Fig. 1-8. Earstones of Lesser Forkbeard, various sizes . slightly enlarged. 
Fig. 9-12. xe several 3-Bearded Rocklings, various sizes ¥. 
Fig. 13-17. # several 4-Bearded ea ss rs 
Fig. 18. one Flounder, y 
Fig. 19-25. = several Lemon Dabs, various sizes a 
Fig. 26-29. as four Witch Soles, “x c - 
Fig. 30. i one Scald-fish, a : nf 
Fig. 31-32. ee two Megrims . 4 : of 
Fig. 33. " one Turbot : ; : ie 
Fig. 34. . one Black Sole : ; . 
Fig. 35-36. He two Solea variegata : 5. 
Fig. 37-41. ,. several Solenettes, various sizes . x4 
Fig. 42-43. A 4 two Miiller’s Topknots . : =; 
Fig. 44-45. + two Argentines : a 
Fig. 46-52. _ several Grey Gurnards, various sizes * 
Fig. 53. e one Red Gurnard : , a 
Fig. 54-55. i two Streaked Gurnards . ' o 
Fig. 56. es one Sapphirine Gurnard . ; ” 
Fig. 57-63. Be several Lumpenus, various sizes . - 
Fig. 64-65. as two Sand-eels : ; s 
Fig. 66. 3 one Conger , : a 


Fig. 67-69. ie three Fresh-water Eels 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


PLATE II. a. 


1-5 and 9-16, Karstones of Haddocks, various sizes 


Fig. 

Fig. 6-8 and 30, 31. “ Whitings, ws 

Fig. 17-24. Earstones of Brassies, various sizes 

Fig. 25-28. - Norway Pouts, various sizes 

Fig. 29. », one Couch’s Whiting 
PLATE II, B. 

Fig. 1-5. Earstones of Megrims, various sizes 

Fig. 6-7. is two Sea Breams 

Fig. 8-9. two Lesser Weavers 

Fig. 10. - one Greater Weaver 

Fig. 11; se one Bass. 

Fig. 12-14. 7 three Ballan Wrasses 

Fig. 15. z one Striped Wrasse 

Fig. 16. ie one Jago’s Goldsinny 

Fig. 17. i one Lesser Grey Mullet 

Fig. 18. A one Pogge . : 

Fig. 19-20. es two Black Gobies . 

Fig. 21-24. - four Speckled Gobies 

Fig. 25-27. 73 three Powans 

Fig. 28-29. i two Dabs 

Fig. 30. . one Trout . 

Fig. 31. 2 one Salmon 

Fig. 32. "A one Sand-eel 

Fig. 33. - one Liparis 


PLATE IIL. a. 


Fig. 1-6 and 14. Earstones of Halibut, various sizes 

Fig. 7-13. Earstones of Long Rough Dabs, * 

Fig. 15-21. 5 Plaice, re 

Fig. 22-26. m2 Witch Soles a 

Fig. 27-31. ES Dabs oe 

Fig. 32-25. it Hake Pe 

PLATE III. sz. 

Fig. 1-9. Earstones of Spotted Dragonets, various sizes . 

Fig. 10-14. 3 Dragonets, ce 

Fig. 15-24. oe Herrings, * 

Fig. 25-32. Fs Sprats, . 

Fig. 33. cf one Pilchards ; 

Fig. 34-35. $5 two Atherines 

Fig. 36. : one Mackerel P 

Fig. 37. 3 two Viviparous Blennies . 

Fig. 38-39. two Butterfishes 

Fig. 40-43. ‘6 four Catfishes 

Fig. 44-46. is three Pogges 

Fig. 47. 7” one Chimera 

Fig. 48. : one Grey Mullet 

Fig. 49. o one Red Mullet 

Fig. 50-52. fs three Norway Haddocks 

Fig. 53. a one Scorpena dactyloptera 

Fig, 54-57. - four fresh-water Perches . 

Fig. 58. hn one Lumpsucker 

Fig. 59. i one Roach . 

Fig. 60. - one fresh- water Pike 

Fig. 61-62. s two Lophius : 

Fig. 63-65. e three Cottus : ‘ : 
PLATE IV. 

Fig. 1. Karstones of a small Haddock . 

Bigs. 2. rr a Haddock, 14 inches long 

Fig. 3. as a Gadus luscus 

Fig. 4. ie a Gadus esmarku . ° 

Fig. 5. i a Gadus poutassou . 

¥F 


81 


slightly enlarged. 


” 
9 


bie] 


Lee 


slightly enlarged. 


ig. 3and 4. Earstones of two Herrings 


ig. 33. a a Mackerel . 


Part II].—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


6. Karstones of a Lesser Forkbeard : considerably nies 
a a a Lesser Forkbeard asd ei ae 
8. a a small Ling it 
ree i an Argentine ’ sf 
ig.-l0 and ll. _,, two 4-Bearded Rocklings : ms 
if: 12.and 134 *,; two Grey Gurnards : a 
. 14, ‘. a small Conger = 
: ke. sf a Red Gurnard ms 
ig. 16. 55 a Turbot = 
ig. 17. = a Black Sole : ae 
= 18: "4 a 3-Bearded Rockling 3 
ED. - a Fresh-water Eel - ay, 
ig. 20. ra a Streaked Gurnard ; ; = 
Nig. 21. a Sapphirine Gurnard i ; oe 
22, 23, 26 and 27, Earstones of four Lumpenus S : 
' 94 and 25. Earstones of two Solenettes : 
ig. 28 and 29. a two Solew variegata » 
. 30. Earstones of a Witch Sole ; 
Sh. me Lophius piscatorius oF 
PLATE V. 


. Land 2. Right and left earstones of two ] mt considerably enlarged. 


> 


5. Karstones of a Roach. me 

6. sh a Black Goby ty 

Ts fe a Conger, 54 inches long 5 

8. 7% a Ballan Wrasse . io 

9. ss a Salmon, weighing 10 Ibs. : a 

, tO ane ae oe two Common Dragonets, 112mm. cis cs 

42, a a Lesser Grey Mullet : e 

ES nas a Fresh-water Perch “ 

ig. 15, 5 a Lumpsucker, 154 inches long * 

. 16-17. three Sprats ; a 

is. 18 and ‘24. -.,, two Spotted Dragonets a 

ig. 19. 2 a Lophius, 36 inches long . fe 

. 20, ps a Fresh-water Pike “0 

ely va a Catfish, 27 inches long . si 

. 22 and 26. 3 two Atheri ines, 34 and 5 inches long fe 

eh bf a Mullus barbatus ; ‘ RS 

» 20. nt a Fresh-water Eel . a 

ig. 27. * a Pogge, 52 inches long a 
= 2s a Lemon Dab, 15 inches long 


29. One Earstone of a Coregonus, 8 inches long 
. 30. Earstones of a Cyclogaster liparis : 
. 31. One Earstone of a Viviparous Blenny 

. Dee i a Pilchard . : 


Lu 
= 
< 
=) 
oO 


7, B. REPORT, 1906. 


(ZB. ket 
Jha) Peabo aad 


19. 20. a) ae.a3 aa as 26 97 


GU BR 66 cave oe 6 ee cy Go ee 


36. 37. 38. 39. 4o. 4. 


be @¢6 ee ua ee ee O@ OS ee ce cece 
44% 45 474g, 49% 50. si 5g 53 


PSS G6 ED Ob Ob 64 bats ae ws HA 


. | §% 59. 60 6t 62.63. GA 65 & 
“ pes 2. om -£ ef eS y ie ; Gg : rm wEYY tT 


AR 


€6- €67. 68.69 


Otoliths or Teleostean Fishes. 


Photo by A. Scorn, 


PLATE II 


28. 


iD) " xTh : 


a 
vo 
= 
-< 
s 
8 
v 
S 
Ss 
v 
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NS 
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92. «33 


| Sl. 
28. 29, 30. | 
eeee — m y yee 


1906. 


F.B. REPORT, 
Photo by A. Scorn, 


lees. anion in nn 


ee RE TR 


a a i. 
= ve ime ~ - woe — ~ _ — - ae ee ae pena Ren | 
} ¢ >. ; : ‘i 
Bs ; ; 
M 2 
- ; . 
: f 
a } — 
5 = 
7 = ; 
wi { a 
: ‘ bi =F 
: i 
ie ca 
WJ 
le é a- 
4 : z 
= ; 3 
4 
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| 
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t 
1 


PLATE Ill. 


p, B. REPORT, 1906. 


~ 1. $9. 'O+ W tr. 1B. 14, US. 16. wy. 1%. 


AWE SYT ET sa deve PG DG pg Fe a PRHbE a 


20. 21. na 25. 24. 95. 96. 27 28. 29. 30. 31. 32, 9% 34. 35. 
Hep ANL Ves meee Ty 


36. 32 33.39 40. Al. 4a. 4%. 


4h 45. 46.47 
p 4 -~ 99 epesne QU Gb be Ga 


B: 
2 
= 
“3 
2 
S 
S 
= 
3 
S 
o 
ld 
iS 

iS 
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s 
= 
s 
2 
= 
S 


by A. Secor. 


Photo 


F. B. REPORT, 1906. ; PLATE IV. 


Ph 
hoto by A. Scorn. Otoliths of Ueleostean Fishes. 


PLATE Vv 
5, B, REPORT, 1906. 


Photo by A. Scorn. 


Otoliths of Teleostean Fishes. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 83 


II..—THE FOOD VALUE OF THE HERRING, 


By T. H. Mirror, M.D., B.Sc., F.R.S.E., Professor of Physiology, 
Queen’s College, Belfast. 


CONTENTS. 
PAGE 
Previous Analyses of Herri Ings, 5 ; 83 
Methods of Analysis, ; : 85 
Analyses of May Loch Fyne Herrings, ; : ; ; 86 
a ,, July s : 88 
4s 5, September ,, fe : : , : 89 
- ,, October a ma : : 5 90 
3, ,, November ,, es : : ; 92 
Ps ,, December Helmsdale _,, : : : : 93 
ee <3 by Loch Fyne _,, : : 2 ; 94 
a ue x3 Lochboisdale ., ; : f ; 95 
.. February fe 4 2 ' ; . 96 
Tables of Ratios, : : : : 97 
Summary of Results, . 25,57 SOM 
Remarks on Nutritive Value of Spent Her rings, with some addi- 
tional Tables illustrating differences in Composition of these 
Fish, : : ; : : : ; : 103 


Tue Nutritive VaLug or THE HERRING AT DIFFERENT PERIODS. 


It is extremely important that we should possess definite information 
with regard to the changes which the herring undergces during its 
development. This is especially true with regard to the chemical changes 
in its composition, as, merely looked at from the economic standpoint, it 
is advisable to determine the periods at which the fish is most valuable as 
a food and those at which it is least valuable. As a problem in biological 
chemistry, it is also extremely important to arrive at accurate information 
with regard to the metabolic changes which take place in the fish before, 
during, and after, the spawning period. 

On looking up the literature on the subject, I have been unable to find 
any work dealing with the changes in composition of the edible parts of 
the herring which must occur during the reproductive life of the fish. 

There have, of course, been analyses published of the chemical com- 
position of the herring in the fresh, salted, and pickled conditions, but no 
reference is made to the condition of the herring at the time of the 
analysis beyond certain vague statements such as “in fine condition,” 
etc. Payen (“Subst. Alimentaires,” p. 488) gives analyses of salted herrings. 
Konig, in his large work on “ Nahrungs- Mittel,’ ” Bd. 1., pp. 201-7, gives 
some of his own analyses as well as those of others. 

Almén gives a very detailed account of the analyses of the flesh of 
various fish in a communication by him to tke Royal Society at Upsala 
(‘Analyse des Fleisches einiger Fische. Mitgeteilt der Kéniglichen 
Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Upsala, am 7ten April, 1877”— Upsala 
1877. 

ea the fish examined by Almén was the little herring (Clupea 
harengus v. membre). By far the most important contribution on the 
subject of the food value of fishes is undoubtedly the report by Atwater 


84 Part IIT.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


in the U. S. Commissioner’s Report on Fish and Fisheries. 1888, Part xvi., 
1892). This report deals with the chemical composition and nutritive 
values of food fishes and aquatic invertebrates. Analyses were made of 
the flesh of 123 specimens of American fishes belonging to 52 species, and 
among these are given analyses of fresh, salted, and pickled herrings. He 
also collects all the analytical literature and gives a table of the maximal, 
minimal, and average amounts of the food principles present in the 
herring as given by different authorities. 

[ give it here in order to show that there are marked variations in the 


analytical results, especially as regards the fat. 
] 


| 


| | | : | Protein 
| | Water. | eee 1.€. Fats. Ash 
| | stance. N x 6°25. 
Maxima. | 7611 | 30:97 19:12 mi}:.00L, 
| | 
Minima, _ 69°03 | 23°89 15°31 4-89. ee 
Average. 7210 | 27-90 17-75 8:02 1-69 


Atwater adopted all the precautions which he thought necessary to 
render his analyses accurate, and devotes some part of his paper to a criti- 
cism of the methods of analyses employed by his predecessors, explaining 
in some cases the differences in the results by probable analytical errors. A 
very important and most probable cause of divergence in the analytical 
results was a difference in the condition of the herring at the time of the 
analysis. As we shall see, there are great differences in composition of the 
muscle of the herring at different periods, and these differences are to be 
observed in herrings obtained from the same waters, when they are 
examined at different months of the year. 

For purposes of comparison it is extremely desirable that the herrings 
should be obtained from the same district at regular intervals for at least 
two years, and that analyses should be made of muscles and genitalia. 

This would be a work of no great difficulty if three or four persons 
were occupied with the investigation, but it could not be covered by a 
single worker unless he devoted his whole time to the work. I have been 
unable to devote more than a comparatively small portion of my time 
during the last two years to the work, and it is ouly during the last year 
that I obtained satisfactory material for the research. 

The work, therefore, will deal with herrings mainly obtained from the 
Loch Fyne district during 1905 and 1906. 

Only these fish were employed for analysis which had arrived at the 
laboratory in absolutely fresh condition. During the summer months 
they were sent in a double walled japanned tin carrier, an ice-salt mixture 
filling the space between the two walls. At other times they were sent 
with salt sprinkled over them or without any preservative. 

The fish were measured and weighed, and the ovaries or milt removed, 
weighed, and examined microscopically, the ova being measured by means 
of an ocular micrometer. The measurement for length was made from 
end of snout to end of tail fin; for girth, in front of the dorsal fin around 
the thickest part of the fish, The measurements are given in centimetres, 

The weights of the fish and reproductive organs are given in grammes. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 85 


Mertruops or ANALYSIS. 


It was impossible to adopt many precautions which might have been 
desirable, owing to the necessity for carrying through the analysis as 
quickly as possible. 

Such estimations as these of the percentage of water in the muscles and 
reproductive organs cannot be carried out in such a way as to absolutely 
prevent loss of weight from any other cause than the removal of water. 

(1) Water percentages.—The skin was removed, then as much of the 
the muscular tissue as could be conveniently obtained was minced up 
extremely fine by being passed through a mincing machine. 

Specimens were taken between watch glasses and dried in a warm oven 
at a temperature between 60°—70°C., under conditions where oxidation 
was prevented as far as possible, the final drying being carried out in 
vacuo. 

The same procedure was adopted in the case of the reproductive organs. 

(2) Mitrogen and Phosphorus estimations.—It was of course necessary 
to estimate the amount of nitrogenous material in the muscles and 
genitalia, and it was also thought advisable to estimate the amount of 
phosphorus. 

The total nitrogen was estimated in a small portion of muscle and also 
in a similar quantity of ovary or milt respectively, the method that was 
adopted being that of Kjeldahl. 

For purposes of convenience the numbers for the total nitrogen are not 
given in the tables, but are converted into terms of protein by multiplying 
the amount of the total nitrogen by the usual factor, 6°25, This is, of 
course, simply a matter of convenience, some of the nitrogen being present 
in other forms than protein. As, however, by far the most important 
nitrogenous constituent in the muscles and genitalia is the protein, 
probably not more than 2 per cent. of other nitrogenous constituents 
being present, it is sufficient to state the amounts of total nitrogen in 
terms of protein. 

The phosphorus was estimated in a portion of the fluid obtained after 
incineration by the Kjeldahl method. 

The fluid was rendered ammoniacal, then acidified with nitric acid, and 
the phosphate then precipitated by ammonium molybdate. The phospho- 
molybdate precipitate was subsequently dissolved in ammonia, and the 
phosphate precipitated by magnesia mixture. The triple phosphate was 
then received on an ash-poor filter paper, washed, dried, and incinerated. 
It was then weighed and the weight of the Mg.P.O, was then calculated 
in terms of P,O;, and given as such in the tables. 

(3) Fat.—The finely powdered dried material (muscles or genitalia) 
was placed in a Soxhlet filter paper tube and extracted with ether in the 
usual way for about 36-48 hours. Only about 3-4 grammes of the 
dried material were taken, so that the extraction ought to have been fairly 
complete. The fat was freed from ether and weighed in the usual way. 

In the tables the amounts of proteid, fat, and P, O; are given in two 
forms, first, in grammes per 100 grammes fresh muscle and fresh ovaries 
or milt ; secondly, in terms of grammes in total fresh muscle or genitalia 
respectively, as calculated for the average fish of the batch under 
examination. 

It was thought advisable not only to give the percentage amounts of 
proteid, fat, and P, O;, but also the absolute amounts in the muscles and 
genitalia respectively of the same fish. The weight of the muscles of the 
fish was obtained roughly by deducting 4 of the total weight, this 
fraction being supposed to cover the weight of the head and bones. 


86 Part II]. —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Tables are also given showing the ratios which exist between the 
weight of the fish and that of the reproductive organs at different periods, 
and also those existing between the more important constituents of _ 
muscles and genitals. 


Locnu Fyne Hrrrine, May 10, 1906. 


(Otter.) 
Length. Girth. Weight. Condition 
| 
-Cm. Cm. Gm. | 
25 11: 113 | Very immature, probably 
234 | 1] 101 | previously spent her- 
224 12 104 | ring from condition 
233 11 102 | of ovarian capsule. 
23 103 93 ‘There were large num- 
23 10 90 | bers of very small 
23 104 88 | ova present, varying 
214 104 80 in size from ‘07- 
223 103 &5 ‘15mm. 
22 10 80 | 
213 10 | 74 
22 10 fi 
ee py Oe ae ES ee s eee Sree oe ee | 
22 9cm. 10-7em. | 90°4gm. Average. 


Weight of genitals (fresh) of 12 herrings, 2°5 grammes. The water 
percentage of these genitals was 71°52. 


Analyses of the museles of these herring :— 
Females— 


(a) Amounts stated in percentages of fresh material. 


In grammes Water. Proteid. Fat. P.O, 
per cent. 72°69 18:98 7°25 68 
(6) Grammes in the total muscles of the average fish of this 
series. 
Proteid. Fat. P.O; 
In grammes, . 11°38 4°35 “40 


ArprisHalc, May 1], 1906. 


These herring were very small, and, with one exception, contained very 
immature ovaries. One herring (No. 11) contained ovaries which 
weighed 14-75 grammes, and the ova which were present measured 1*2mm. 
in diameter and were being discharged. 

The immature ovaries, although they contained large numbers of very 
small ova, were evidently comparatively recently spent (see following 
pages for measurements and analyses). 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 87 


Length. Girth. Weight. Condition. 
Cm Cm. Gm. 
Series a. 1 20 8°5 58 The ova were 
2 20°5 9 60 very imma- 
3 20°5 9-5 67 ture, The 
4 20°5 9°5 67 weight of | 
D 20°5 9 64 the 10 pairs 
6 21 9 72 of genitals 
7 21°5 10 75 was 2'4gm. 
8 22-5 9 15 in the fresh 
9 21 9°D 70 condition. 
10 25 11 116 
Average, 21°3cm. 9-4cem. 72:4om, | 
ll 23 10 ot Ovaries 
weighed 
14:75 gm, 
and __ their 
ova measur- 
ed 1:-2mm. 


Analyses of the muscles of these herring :— 
Females—- 
Series A—( fish with immature ovaries previously spent). 


(a) Amounts stated in percentages of fresh material. 


In grammes Water. Proteid. Fat. BO: 
per cent. 73°01 17°55 5°85 "82 
(>) Grammes in the total muscles of the average fish in the 
series. 
Proteid. Fat. Legis 
8°47 2°82 "39 


B—(herring with mature ovaries). 


(a) Amounts stated in percentages of fresh material. 


Water. Proteid. Fat. P,O 
72°9 20°58 3°52 51 


(b) Grammes in total muscles of fish. 


Proteid. Fat. P50: 
12°34 AS MG | 48 


Lage 


— 


88 Part I11.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


JuLY 29, 1905.* 


eb 26s ks: ae : 
. is Weight of 
Length. Girth. Weight (eis | 
Cm. Cm. Gm. Gin. 
24 12 116 0°35 
22 1f 96 | 0:46 | 
23°5 T2 99 0:20 
23 13 120 0°67 | 
23 13°5 9] 0:20 
22°5 12 105 0:74 
23 12 107 0°33 
24 12°5 124 1:18 | 
21°5 ce! 82 0:49 
D075 12 105 0°43 
22-5 11°5 102 0°39 
O. 1 i | 92 0:22 
23 12 97 0-15 | 
24 13 127. 0°50 
22-5 12 100 0°44 
25 13 137 0°53 
24 12°5 119 0°81 
yap 14 88 0°20 
29 11 92 0-20 | 
ea ia | 120 0°65 
Avg. 22:9 11:9 100:9 0-45 | 


These herring were still in immature condition; the ova were only 
slightly larger than in the herrings caught on May 10. 


Analyses of the muscle (fresh) :— 
(a) Amounts stated in percentages of fresh material. 


Water. Proteid. Fat. P.O; 
71°60 18-18 7°32 “45 
(6) Grammes in the total muscles of the average fish. 
Proteid. Fat. P.O; 
tale 4:90 “30 


Analyses of the genitals (fresh) :-— _ 
(a) Grammes in 100 grammes of fresh material. 

Water. |... Proteid. Fat. P;O; 

72°5 13°52 8:92 ae 
(6) Grammes in the amount of genitals present in the average 

fish of series. 
Proteid. Fat. » 1) BG; 
05 03 003 


* For analyses of the muscles of herrings caught in Loch Fyne during the latter 
part of May and beginning of June 1906, sce pp. 103-107. 


oj the Fishery Board for Scotland. 89 


ARDRISHAIG, SEPTEMBER 15, 1905. 


These herring were very small, the average length of six females being 
20cm., and the : avergge weight 80 grammes. The weight of the ovaries 
in these six herrings was 5° 70 grammes weighed in the fresh condition— 
that is to say, the average weight per fish was ‘95 grammes. The ova 
were very immature, varying in size from 15mm,.-'45mm. 

The male herrings had approximately the same measurements, the 
average length of eleven being 20cm., and the average weight ‘75 grammes. 
The testes from these eleven herrings weighed 10°65 grammes in the fresh 
condition, 7.e., ‘97 grammes per fish. 


Analyses :— 
Females— 
I.—Muscles. 
(a) Amounts stated in percentages of fresh material. 
Water. Proteid. Fat. P,O, 
63°68 19-28 Lisl 64 
(>) Grammes in totel muscles of average fish. 
, Proteid, Fat. PO: 
10°41 6:37 “34 


II.— Ovaries. 


(a) Grammes in 100 grammes fresh ovaries. 


Water. Proteid. Fat. P.O; 
66:02 18:91 7°34 1:23 
(5) Grammes in ovaries of average fish. 
Proteid. Fat. P.O; 
017 0-07 ‘O11 
Males— 


I.—Muscles. 


(a) In percentages of fresh material. 


Water. Proteid. Fat. P,O5 
61°68 18°65 14:25 59 
(6) Per average fish in total muscles. 
Proteid. Fat. PLO; 
9-32 7:12 "25 
II.—-Testes. 
(a) In 100 grammes fresh material. 
Water. » Proteid. Fat. P,0, 
72:00 22°18 2°84 -- 
() In total testes of average fish. 
Proteid. —- Fat. P.O; 
0:21 0:27 


OcrosEr, 1905 (Loch Fyne). 


Some of these herrings were in rather a more mature condition than 
others, and so the females have been divided into two series for analysis ; 
first, those with ovaries containing ova of about ‘28mm. in diameter, and, 
secondly, those whose ova averaged ‘9mm. 


90 


Part III—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


SERIES A. 
Length Girth. Weight. Condition. 
Cm. Cm. Gm. 
28 15 206 The ovaries from these 
27 13°5 150 7 herrings weighed 
25 13 147 collectively 17gm., 
24°5 12:5 130 and the average size 
23°5 12 115 of ova was ‘28mm. 
23°5 12°5 122 
26 13 148 
25cm | 13cm 144-5om. Average. 
Serres B. 
Length. Girth. Weight. Condition. 
Cm, Cm, Gm. 
29°5 16 257 The ovaries from these 8 
28°5 15°5 220 herrings weighed col- 
27°5 13:2 167 lectively 74gm., and 
24:5 12°5 129 the average size of 
24 12°2 1ig the ova was ‘59mm. 
25 14:5 220 
29°5 15:5 229 
28 14 197 
27cm. 14cm. 192em. Average. | 
Males. 
Length. Girth Weight. Condition. 
Cm. Cm. Gm. 
28°5 16 242 The testes from 4 of 
30°5 17 275 these herrings weighed 
| 27 14°4 157 collectively 96gm. 
27 13-2 157 
27°5 145 185 
baa: 19-5 135 
25°5 12°5 148 
25'5 3 143 
26 12 119 
27 13 145 
27 12:2 123 
| 26°7cm 13-6em. 166gm. Average. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


Analyses of Females :— 
Series A. 
Muscles. 


(a) In percentages. 


Water. Proteid. Fat. 
69:97 12°78 14:25 
(b) In total muscles of average fish. 
Proteid. Bat. 
12°39 13°82 
Ovaries. 


(a) In percentages. 


Water. Proteid. Fat. 
78:21 17:26 233 
(6) In ovaries of average fish, 
Proteid. Fat. 
“41 “OO 
Series B. 
Muscles. 


(a) In percentages. 


Water. Proteid. Fat. 
70°46 14°84 12:70 
(b) Per average fish. 
Proteid. Fat. 
14°80 12°51 
Ovaries, 
(a) In percentages. 

Water. Proteid. Fat. 
68:02 22°45 4:80 
(b) Per average fish. | 

Proteid. Fat. 
| 2:08 “44 
Males— 
Muscle. 
(a) In percentages. 
Water. Proteid. Fat. 
68°91 16S 12°63 
(b) Per average fish. 
Proteid. Fat. 
18°44 14:39 
Testes. 


(a) In percentages. 


Water. Proteid. Fat. 

72:13 22°62 925 
(b) Per average fish. 

Proteid. Fat. 

5°42 54 


P,0; 
53 


91 


92 Part L11.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


ARDRISHAIG, NovEMBER 6, 1905. 


These herring were large and in good conditon, and the ova were 
almost mature. They have been divided into two sets, females and 
males, the measurements of which are as follows :— 


I. Females. 
Length. Girth. Weight. ase 
S. 

Cm. Cm. . “Gin: Gm. 
30 16°5 275 : rs Sef 
31 16 270 38°2 
33 Ls 326 51:6 
31 16 255 31°8 
30 16 261 25°6 
Bl 16 260 18°9 
32 16°5 297 31°6 
32 Ly 290 25:2 
a2 16°5 275 314 
30 16°5 276 28°8 
32 16°5 304 32 

29 15 210 20:1 
30 15 204 15°4 
29 14 192 15°8 

Avg. 30°8cm. 16cm. 264¢m. 29°5gm, 
The ova were from ‘8—lmm. in diameter. 
Il. Males. 
Length. | Girth. Weight. Weight of Testes. — 
een | eee, eee es 2 Aree ee ee 

Cm. Cm. Gm. Gm. 
a1 br 279 . 44°5 
31 17 316 : 52 

31 16 pide ire 40-6 
29 14 215 31-4 
30 16 257 40°9 
33 16 296 ot °3 
32 16 287 40:1 
30 1% 290 41:1 
al 17 303 46°6 
Sil 16 252 | 35:6 
Bi 15:5 230 26:8 
29 14:5 195 24-4 


30 16 255 44°6 


Avg. 30°7cm. 16cm. 265:'5gm. 38°9em, 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 93 


Analyses :—- 
Females— 
Muscle. | 
(a) In percentages, 
Water. Proteid. Fat. P.O; 
66°34 19°87 —10°85 59 
(d) In total muscles of average fish. . 
Proteid. Fat P.O; 
52°45 28°64 1°55 
Ovaries. 
(a) In percentages of fresh material. 
Water. Proteid. Fat, P.O; 
68°04 25-04 2°85 "91 
(b) Per average fish. 
Proteid. | Fat. EO. 
7°38 ‘84 ‘26 
Males— 
Muscle. 
(a) In percentages. 
Water. Proteid, Fat. P,O; 
68°22 17°94 10°84 ‘46 
(6) Per average fish. 
Proteid. Fat. PO. 
31°77 19-18 ‘81 


HeLMspALE HErRRinNGs, December 6, 1905. 


Two herrings (females) were taken for analysis from a batch containing 
fish of approximately the same size. Their measurements were :— 


Length. Girth. | Weight. Weight of Ovaries. 
Cm. Cm. | Gm. Gm, 
29 14:5 195 26 
29 14°5 | 194 35 
Avg. 29cm. 14‘5em. | 194:5em. 30-5em. 


| 


Size of ova, *8-1:2mm. ‘These herring had evidently commenced to 


spawn. 
Analyses :— 
Muscle. 
(a) In percentages. : 
Water. Proteid. Fat. POF 
70°50 23°01 2°75 ‘TT 
(b) Per average fish (total in muscles). 
Proteid. Fat. P20; 


28°76 3°4 96 


OO ie ae 


94 Part I1I.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Ovaries. 
(a) In percentages. 
Water. Proteid. Fat. PO; 
65°73 27°76 3°34 119 
(b) Per average fish. 
Proteid. Fat. Paes 
9°82 1:00 "34 


Loco Garr, DecEMBER 13, 1905. 


These fish were very large, with ovaries of greater weight than in any 
other herrings which were analysed. ‘The ova varied in size from ‘9mm. 
to 1-2mm. 


The following were the measurements :-— 


Females. 
| Length. Girth. | Weight. | weet ie 
| Am eae ERE a ee 
| Cm. | Cm. Gm. Gm. 
| 31 | 17:5 326 63 
30°5 | 15 268 | 43 
30°5 | 16°5 272 30 
31 16°5 330 48 
30°5 16 285 47 
31 175 318 51 
| Avg. 30°‘7cm. | 16-5em. |  299-89m. 479m. 
| __ eae sori ve ahaha reren ait a) 
Males. 
| 
: ; Weight of 
Length. Girth. | Weight. Pecteee | 
Cm. Cm. Gm. Gm. 
31 17 298 61 
31 iy 320 55 
Ave. 31 17cm. 309¢m. 58gm. 
| 
Analyses :— 
Females. 
Muscle. 
(a) In percentages. J 
Water. Proteid. Fat. P,0; 
67°36 20°56 8:18 68 
(5) Per average fish. Posy 
Proteid. _ Fat. P,0; 
41°12 16°36 1:37 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 95 


Ovaries. 


(a) In percentages. 


Waiter, Proteid. Fat. P.O; 
67°33 25°72 2°89 1:03 
(6) Per average fish. 
Proteid. Fat. P.O; 
12°08 1°35 “48 
Males. 
Muscle. 
(a) In percentages. 
Water. Proteid, Fat. Se ae 
68°31 21°45 9°24 73 
(>) Per average fish. 
Proteid. Fat. P.O; 
44°18 19-03 1-51 
Testes. 
(a) In percentages. 
Water. Proteid. Fat. P.O; 
72°10 22°05 373 2°10 
(0) Per average fish. 
Proteid. Fat. P.O; 
12°78 2°16. 1:21 


LocusorspALE Herring, DEcEMBER 28, 1905, 


These fish were either spawning or spent. They have therefore been 
divided into two classes for examination—one, Series A, spawning, the 
ova varying in size from ‘9mm. to 1°4mm; the other, Series B, spent. 

The males were not examined. 


Serigs A. 
: Ep Weight of 
Length. Girth. Weight. Ovaries. 
Cm. Cm. Gm. Gm. 
96-5 14 157 14:8 
26 135 141 25 
965 13 168 20°3 
26 14 160 18:3 
26 13 150 19°4 
25 12 115 10°5 
26 13°5 150 18'8 


EE EN eee 


96 Part ITT.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Series B (spent). 


Length Girth Weight 
Cm Cm. Gain 
23 12 153 
28 12 140 
Avg. 25:°5cem. 12cm. 146:5gm. 


Series A (spawning). 


Muscles. 
(a) In percentages. 
Water. Proteid. Fat. P30, 
74:12 18-91 2°02 66 
(6) Per average fish, 
Proteid. Fat. P.O, 
18°15 1°93 6] 
Ovaries. 
(a) In percentages. | 
Water. Proteid. Fat. P.O; 
70:00 24°75 3°72 93 
(b) Per average fish. 
Proteid. Fat. P,O; 
4:23 63 "16 
Series B. 
Muscles. 
(a) In percentages. 
Water. Proteid. Fat. B ops Bt 
75°30 19°69 (1:55 | wes 
(6) Per average fish. 
Proteid. Fat. P,O; 
18°53 151 ‘75 


Frepruary 8, 1906. 


These herring were in the spent condition. Six females were taken 
for examination. Their measurements were as follows :— 


Length. Girth. Weight. 


Cm Cm. Gm 
26 it 115 
28 12 143 
28 12 155 
29 i] 156 
29 12 150 
28 12 136 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 97 


-74 pairs of spent ovaries were taken from herrings sent at this time, 
and were found to weigh 9°51 grammes. These were dried and analysed. 


I.—Muscles. 
(a) In percentages. 
Water. Proteid. Fat. EO. 
78°97 18-05 0°68 ‘73 
(5) Per average fish. | 
Proteid. Fat. P,O, 
16°60 0°62 0°66 


II. —Ovaries (spent). 
(a) In percentages. 


Water. Proteid. Fat. BO. 
82:07 3°78 11°83 191 
(b) Per average fish. 
Proteid. Fat. PO; 
"29 ‘09: 016 


Before discussing these results it will prove of some advantage to com- 
pare the ratios which exist between the weight of the fish and the weight 
of the ovaries, as well as certain other ratios. 


Ratio oF WeicHt or Fish to WEIGHT OF OVARIES AT 
DIFFERENT SEASONS :— 


| | 


| Weight | Weight 
District and Period. | of of Condition. 
Fish. | Ovaries. | 


| eee 


Loch a ai Toy"; . | 434°6 1 Immature. 
‘5 May 11_—Series A, 7 | POUEG 1 Immature. | 
Pe May 11—Series B, : 6°] it Mature. 
i July 29, . ; . | 224:2 1 Immature, | 
ae Sept. 15, . ; : 84:2 1 Immature (Ova *15-45mm.), 
Es Oct.—Series A, . : 60:2 ] Immature (Ova ‘28mm. ), 
o Oct.—Series B, . : 20°8 i! Immature (Ova ‘59mm. ). 
Nov.6, > «3 : oe. 80 1 Almost mature (Ova *8-1mm. ). 
Helmsdale—Dec. 6, : : oe aa 1 Almost ature (Ova *8-1‘2mm.). 
Loch Fyne—Dec. 13, _ . = | 68 1 Mature (Ova ‘9-1:2mm.). 
Lochboisdale—Dec. 28— Series A, ‘ 8:5 1 Spawning. 
Dec. 28— Series B, . | Spent. | Spent. | Spent. 
4 Feb. .8, . : Bs - Spent. 


Ratio oF PRotTeipD To Fat IN THE MUSCLES AND OVARIES RESPECTIVELY :— 


Mt ean Pericd: Muscles. | Ovaries. @ondition 
Proteid : Fat.|Proteid : Fat, 


Loch Fyne—May 10, . ZO 2 — | Immature. 

> May 11—A, 3°00 : 1 Immature. 

ae May 11—B, 5°84 : 1 - - | Mature. 

ae July 29, 245.3. 1 1°51: 1 | Immature. 

a Sept. 15, . 163° s; I 2°57 : 1 | Immature (Ova ‘15-'45mm.). 

- Oct.—A, . 0:89: 1 6°82 : 1 | Immature (Ova 28mm.). 

Pe Oct.—-B, . LG. 2d 4°67 : 1 | Immature (Ova ‘59mm.). 

Nov. 6, Sons S78 2 1 Almost mature (Ova *8-lmm.). 
Helmsdale—Dec. 6, 8°36 : 1 8:31 : 1 | Almost mature (probably 
about to spawn). 

Loch Fyne—Dec. 13, . ° 2°5L-2 1 8:9 :1 | Mature (about to spawn). 
Lochboisdale—Dec. 28—A, . 9°36: 1 6°65 : 1 | Spawning. 

; Dec. 28—B,. | 12°70: 1 ~ — | Spent. 

a Feb. 8, . et 20'O4" 3) 3°12: 1 | Spent. 


—— 


G 


98 Part II1.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


District and Period. 


Loch Fyne—May 10, 4 
May tA. 


Helmsdale—Deec. ce. 

Loch Fyne—Dec. 13, ‘ 
Lochboisdale— Dec. 238 A, 
Dec. 28—B, 
Feb. 8, 


99 
? 


Ratio OF TOTAL PROTEID OF MUSCLES TO TOTAL PROTEID . 


OF OVARIES. 


Muscle Ovarian Conditi 
Proteid : Proteid. onaition. 


bo 
Woe 


“I | PI COIN St Olea Ei at 


Immature, 

Immature (Ova *15 --45mm.). 
Immature (Ova ‘28mm. ). 
Immature (Ova ‘59mm. ). 
Almost mature (Ova *8-1mm.). 
Almost mature (Ova ‘8-1‘2mm. df 
Mature (about to spawn), 
Spawning. 

Spent. 

Spent. 


hb NwWoeEENNe® 
pe Sean 


On 


Ratio OF TOTAL Fat oF MuscLes To ToTAL Fat oF OVARIES. 


District and Period. 


Loch Fyne—July 29, . 
Sept. 15, : 


Helmsdale—Dec. 6, 
Loch Fyne—Dec. 13, ; 
Lochboisdale— Dec. 28—A, 


- Feb. 8, 


Fat of Fat of 


Muscles : Ovaries. SEE 
163°3 i Immature, 
91 1 Iuumature (Ova 1]5-*45mm.). 
41°8 al Immature (Ova ‘28mm.). 
28°4 il Immature (Ova ‘59mm. ). 
34 1 Almost mature. 
3°43 1 Almost mature (about to spawn). 
12-1 al Mature 
3 a Spawning. 
6°8 iL Spent. 


nnn eee ad 


| TABLE. 


Ss 
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| 9-81 Wy e¢-T | 69-61 | 08-¢L | yueds = ¢ 9F1 ral 7 a 7 ae me ae 

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SF. C$-1 | 80-31 | S0O-T 68% | 32-¢3 | S829 3I-IF 89. 81-8 | 92.0% | 98-49 | 3-1-6. Lr | 8662 G9T | 108 ie ‘“(ayey) yoo) ‘eT 
as Re 00-1 6e-6 | 6I-T FEE | 9-42 | 81.99 91-82 thy C16 | 10-86 | 09:02 | @I-8- | $08 | ¢-F6T CFT | 6g | ‘erepswmay) 9 900 
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of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 101 


On looking over these tables, especially the one given on pp. 99, 
one is struck by the very marked variations in the composition of the 
muscle of the female at different periods during its reproductive life. In 
all probability much the same changes occur in the case of the muscles 
of the male herring during the growth of the testes, but the data which 
are given are insufficient to warrant one in drawing definite conclusions 
on this point. 


SUMMARY OF RESULTS. 


(1) The tables on pp. 97, 98, show clearly the alteration in the ratio 
between the weight of the fish and the weight of the ovaries before, 
during, and after spawning, the variations being produced by the 
proportionately much greater increase in the ovaries than in the rest of 
the fish during the period of maturation. 

(2) As the muscles constitute the main source of the nutritive value of 
the herring, it is most important to recognise the variations in their 
composition. These are most striking, especially as concerns the 
percentage of fat, and as this food principle possesses such a high caloric 
value, any marked decrease in its amount lowers the nutritive value ot 
the fish to a serious extent. 

The lowest fat percentage which was obtained occurred in the large 
spent herrings obtained from Lochboisdale in February last, and the 
total amount of fat present in the collective muscles of the average fish 
was exceedingly small. The percentage amount of water in these 
muscles was higher than normal, but the proteid and P,O; percentages 
were but little affected. 

The herrings obtained from the same district at the close of December 
of last year contained a slightly larger percentage of fat in their muscles, 
and of the two series of fish examined those which were spent contained 
rather less than those which were spawning. 

In the herrings obtained from Helmsdale at the beginning of December, 
the fat percentage was but little above that of the Lochboisdale spawning 
fish. Some of these herring were evidently just about to spawn, the 
ovaries being very large. 

The herrings obtained from Loch Gair about the middle of December 
show a moderately high percentage of fat, but still markedly lower than 
in any Loch Fyne herrings caught during the months of September, 
October, and November. The highest percentage of muscle fat was 
found in October fish. 

In the summer fish from Loch Fyne, where the ovaries were in an 
immature condition the fat percentage was usually about that which is 
often given as the average for the herring. The fat percentage of the 
herring muscles, therefore, continues rising during the three months, 
probably, of August, September, and October. It begins to fall slightly 
in November, markedly in December, most markedly during spawning 
and continues at a low level until the fish begin to feed again. 

The variations in the total amount of fat present in the muscles of the 
fish are practically the same as those observed in the percentages, except in 
cases where the herrings being extremely large—as, for example, the Loch 
Gair specimens—the absolute amount of fat present remains high although 
the percentage has commenced to fall. For further details with regard 
to the fat percentages the reader is referred to the tables. 

The variations in the percentage amounts of proteid are less marked. 
It is naturally lowest when the fat percentage is highest unless in cases 
where the amount of water in the muscles is below the average when 
both proteid and fat may show a fairly high percentage. 


102 Part ITI.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


(3) The fat percentage of the ovaries is highest, evidently, in the case 
of Loch Fyne herrings between the months of July and September. It 
is low at the time when the amount in the muscles is high. The absolute 
amount of fat in the ovaries per average fish is, of course, highest in the 
case of the large November and December fish. With the onset of 
spawning the absolute amount of fat begins to fall. 

The total amounts of P,O; in the muscles and ovaries are highest 
during the months of November and December. 

(4) The ratio of muscle proteid to ovarian proteid practically is the 
same as that between total weight of fish and total weight of ovaries (see 
tables, pp. 97, 98). 

(5) The ratios between the muscle proteid and muscle fat, and ovarian 
proteid and ovarian fat are shown clearly in the table on p. 97. 
The most important ratios are those between the muscle proteid and 
muscle fat. Owing to the rise in the fat percentage during September, 
October, and November, it gradually approaches that of the proteid, and 
in the case of the October A series actually rises above the latter. 

(6) The ratio between the muscle fat and ovarian fat is given in the 
table on p. 98. 

(7) The composite table on p. 100, giving analyses of male muscle 
and testes is not sufficiently complete to enable one to draw definite 
conclusions from it, except in so far that the male muscle evidently under- 
goes the same changes as the female. 

In the light of the above facts, it is interesting to compare the principal 
feeding times for these herring with the variations in their composition. 
Brook and Calderwood (Report on the Food of the Herring, Fourth Annual 
Report of the Fishery Board for Scotland, Edin., 1886, Appendix F. No. 
VI., pp. 102-128) state that on the West Coast of Scotland the principal 
spawning time is from February to April (e.g., on the Ballantrae coast), 
while the principal feeding time is from April to September. The 
principal food is copepods, which are taken practically exclusively from 
April to June. Towards the end of the feeding time they are practically 
replaced by schizopods. 

The spawning takes place, just as in the case of the East Coast fish, 
six to eight months after the richest feeding. 

Heincke (‘‘ Naturgeschichte des Herrings,” p. 48) has shown that the 
herring after spawning seeks a place where it can get ample food 
to recuperate. For example, the herrings of Schley, after leaving the 
spawning beds in June, take three or four months to feed up in Kiel 
Bay. In September and October they are fattest, and then begins anew 
the development of the reproductive organs, which up to this time was 
checked. This takes up the whole autumn and winter, the fish still 
taking food, but it is not used for the building up of fat, but for the 
development of the genitalia. With the increase in the development of 
the genitals, the desire for food diminishes until spawning time arrives, 
when no food is taken at all. There are thus three periods in the yearly 
life of the Schley herring :— 

Ist. The restitution or the feeding period. This continues for 3-4 - 
months after spawning and is the principal feeding time. The 
spent thin fish during this period recovers and lays on a large 
amount of fat. 

2nd. The ripening period. This continues for 6-7 months. The . 

_ herring still continues to eat but gradually with less desire, while 

the sexual organs increase at the expense of the fat. 

3rd. The spawning period. This continues for 2 months, and 
during this time feeding stops. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 103 


It is possible that for a short time (a month perhaps) after spawning 
the herring does not take food. 

There are without doubt similar periods during the reproductive life 
of herrings from all districts. Heincke’s statements with regard to the 
storage and using up of the muscle fat were based on no analytical 
evidence. 

There are still many points in connection with variations in the 
metabolism in herrings during spawning which require to be worked out, 
especially the cycle of phosphorus between muscles and ovaries. 

Before concluding, I should like to refer to a subject which is at 
present attracting a good deal of attention, namely, the nutritive value 
of spent herrings, 

Statements are made vaguely as to the unwholesome character of the 
spent fish. Now, upon what foundation does this rest? Usually upon no 
further evidence than the general appearance of the flesh of the fish, 
which is undoubtedly poorer in fat than in the maturing herring. But 
the nutritive value of the fish does not depend solely upon the fat which 
it contains; the percentage of proteid must also be considered, and if the 
tables of analyses be consulted, it will be seen that in this respect the 
spent fish compare by no.means unfavourably with the maturing or 
mature fish. 

But there is one other point which one must bear in mind, namely, 
that in many cases spent fish contain a large percentage of fat in their 
muscles, and to illustrate this I include some tables of analyses of fish 
caught in Loch Fyne in May and June of this year. In many cases 
these were fish which were undoubtedly storing fat after the discharge of 
ova had taken place. It is true that this storage of fat does not take 
place to any marked extent until three or four months have elapsed since 
the last spawning took place, but still the herrings present the appearance, 
so far as the genitals are concerned, of spent fish. 

Again, the poverty of fat in the muscles of freshly spent herring may 
render them more digestible in the case of some individuals at least. 

One must also remember that fully mature fish about to spawn are in 
much the same condition as freshly spent fish (vide Helmsdale herrings, 
December 6), and yet these fish would scarcely be termed unwholesome. 

It would have been of extreme value to have had analyses made of 
herrings which had left Loch Fyne in January and gone to Kilbrannan 
Sound and Campbeltown district ; but unfortunately I was unable to 
obtain specimens. 

I subjoin the analyses to which I have just referred. 

Attention may be specially directed to the analyses of the flesh of the 
large spent fish of June 2, as these show a comparatively high fat 
percentage. 


May 16, 1906. 
The herrings sent on this date from Ardrishaig were young immature 


fish. The genitals of 16 of these herrings weighed only 2:15 grammes, 
and the ova were exceedingly small, -°05--O8mm. 


| TABLE. 


104 Part 111.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The following table gives the measurements and weights :-— 


Length. Girth. Weight. 
oe ae eee nee one —_—_——_| 
mm. Cm Gm 
19 8:5 50 
20 9 63 > 

es) 9 58 

19 8:5 42 

22 10°5 75 

19 9 51 

20 95 63 

19 8 45 

21 Lies 63 

20 4 D7 

19 8°5 57 

20 9 55 

20 8°5 46 
19 8 45 

19 8°5 50 

| 18 8 38 
Avg. 19:5cm. 8°8cm. | 53em. | 


Analyses of the muscles of these herrings :— 


(a) Amounts stated in percentages of fresh material. 


Water. Proteid. Fat. 
68°14 24°66 3°37 
(6) Grammes in the total muscles of the average fish of this series. 
Proteid. Fat. 
8°72 ry9 


May 17, 1906 (Loch Fyne), 


These herrings were much larger than those obtained on the previous 
day. Female fish were selected, and all were found to be in the spent 
condition, although large numbers of small ova (‘08—"3mm.) were present 
in the collapsed ovaries. The weight of the ovaries from nine fish was 
7°53 grammes. 

Measurements, &c., were as follows :— 


Length. Girth. Weight. 
Cm. | Cm. Gm. 
23 11°5 101 
25 19 142 
25 11°5 | 117 
25 19 116 
25°5 12 | 127 
] 23 | 15 | 97 
| 24:5 12 117 
| 25°5 15 | 138 


24°5 10 | 103 


Avg. 24:5em. | 11‘4cm. | 117gm. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 105 
Analyses of the muscles of these herring :— 


(a) Amounts stated in percentages of fresh material. 


Water. Proteid. Fat. 
74°88 18°76 2°65 
() Grammes in total muscles of the average fish of the series. 
Proteid. Fat. 
14°63 2°06 


May 23, 1906 (Loch Fyne). 


The herrings sent on this date varied in character. Some were 
undoubtedly spent herring, although large numbers of young ova were to 
be found in the ovaries; others were as certainly young immature 
herring. Thus a subdivision has been made into two classes. 


Series A. 
Length. Girth, Weight. Genitals. 
Cm. Cm. Gm. Spent and re-maturing 
28 12°5 159 ovaries (ova ‘08- 
27 12°5 160 2mm.) ; weight of 
26 12 125 ovaries from four fish, 
25 12 122 4‘15gm. 
Avg. 26°5cem. 12cm. 141-5em. 
| 
Serigs Bb. 
je im | 
Length. | Girth. Weight. Genitals. 
ES 
| | 
Cm. | Cm. Gin. 
23°5 | T6 104 | Very small immature 
23 10°5 89 ovaries (ova ‘06- 
22 | 1] 89 Imm.); weight of 
23 11 oir | ovaries of eight fish, | 
22°5 11°5 95 2°15gm. 
22 11:5 91 | 
20 Pl 94 
21 10 94 
Avg. 22cm. | llem. 94om. | 


Analyses of the muscles of these herrings :— 


In the case of these fish additional analyses were made in order to 
determine the amount of coagulable proteid present. Throughout this 


106 Part L1I.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


paper the numbers given for “ proteid” refer simply to the total nitrogen 
calculated as proteid by multiplying the amount of the former by 6°25. 

In the case of these herrings a weighed quantity of fresh muscle was 
mixed up thoroughly with anhydrous sodium sulphate, the mixture boiled 
with alcohol to coagulate the proteid, and then the powder extracted 
frequently with boiling distilled water until all the sulphate was removed. 
The remainder, consisting of coagulated proteid, was incinerated in the 
usual way with sulphuric acid (Kjeldahl) and the nitrogen estimated. 
On multiplying the latter by the usual factor the amount of coagulable 
proteid was obtained. 


(a) Amounts stated in percentages of fresh material. 
Series A.—- 


Coagulable 
Water. Proteid. Proteid. Fat. 
70°81 20°67 18:71 5:34 

Series B.— 
67°58 19°95 16°13 9°57 
(b) Grammes in total muscles of fish. 

Coagulable 
Proteid. Proteid. Fat. 
Series A. . =>) 19°42 17°58 5-01 
Ar Bn, & | 12°56 10°16 6°02 


JuNE 2, 1906 (Loch Fyne). 


These herrings were large spent fish with young ova in the ovaries. 
Females were selected for analysis. 


$$ a 


Length. Girth. Weight. Genitals. 
Cm. Cm. Gm. 
29 14 211 Weight of ovaries 
28 13 180 of these sixfish, 
27 13 170 10°7gm. 
26 13 165 
26 13 150 
26 12 138 
Avg. 27cm. 13cm. 169gm. 
Analyses :— 
(a) In percentages of fresh material. 
Water. Proteid. Fat. 
72°35 17°81 oi 
(6) Grammes in total muscles of fish. 
Proteid. Fat. 
30°09 15°39 


JUNE 2, 1906 (Loch Fyne). 


Fourteen young immature herrings were obtained on the same day as 
the spent fish of the preceding series. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 107 
Length. Girth. Weight. Genitals, 
Cm & Cm. Gm. | 
24 12 109 Weight of geni-. 
23 bi | 96 tals of these 
| 22 12 | 103 fish, 3°6gm. 
21 i 83 | 
| 22 De =H! | 
22 10 (Ms 
20 10 72 
21 S 62 
22 11 82 | 
21 9 69 | 
Lit 10 64 | 
19 9 56 | 
19 9 50 
“9 9 | 50 
Avg. 21cm. Wem: >| 762m. 


Analyses of the muscles :— 


(a) In percentages of fresh material. 
Water. Proteid. Fat. 
63°02 21-06 12°52 


(6) Grammes in total muscles of fish. 
Proteid. Fat. 
10°74 6°38 


108 Part ILI.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


IV.—_REPORT ON THE OPERATIONS AT THE MARINE FISH 
HATCHERY, BAY OF NIGG, ABERDEEN, IN 1905. By 
Dr. T. Wemyss Fuuron, F.R.S.E., Scientific Superintendent. 


(Fiares VI. Viel} 


Last year, owing to the making of a new road at the Bay of Nigg, it 
was desired by the Town Council of Aberdeen, from whom the site of the 
hatchery is leased, that the hatchery and some of the buildings in connec- 
tion with it should be transferred to au adjacent site and re-erected at their 
expense. This was agreed to by the Board, and the hatchery, the boiler 
and pump-house, and the store-house were accordingly taken down and 
re-built on ground lying to the north of the old site, and contiguous to it. 
This alteration involved a re-arrangement of the pipes to a considerable 
extent, and the opportunity was taken to effect some improvements which 
experience showed was desirable, both in connection with the pipes and 
pumping plant, and in connection with the buildings. The Town Council 
and the burgh Surveyor, under whose charge the removal was made, gave 
every reasonable facility for these alterations and improvements being 
effected, and the hatchery is thus much better adapted for the work than 
it was before. 

A strong wall of boulders, about two feet in thickness, has been built 
with concrete on the seaward face of the new site, so as to protect it from 
the action of the sea in storms; and this has been made continuous with 
the bulwark of boulders built up after the great storm in February 1900, 
which happened in conjunction with spring tides, when the site of the large 
spawning pond, then in course of construction, was flooded. Owing to 
the somewhat higher level of the ground at part of the new site, that next 
the road, it was necessary to excavate it toa small extent in order to keep 
the levels the same as formerly. This is required, as the water supplied 
to the hatching apparatus comes by gravitation from the storage or 
reservoir tank (a, fig. 1, plate VI.), to which it is pumped from the sea. 
Strong granite retaining walls have been built around the reservoir, and 
between it and the new site. 

The establishment consists, in addition to the laboratory (showy at a 
in fig. 2, pl. WI.), of (1) a spawning pond, (2) a reservoir or storage tank, 
(3) the hatching-house, (4) boiler and pump-house, (5) a tank-house, 
(6) storehouse, and it may be desirable to give a brief description of the 
arrangements as they now exist. 

The spawning pond (fig. 2, pl. VI.), which was the most costly part of 
the establishment, consists of a large concrete tank or pond sunk in the 
ground in order that it may be filled and emptied, according to the state 
of the tide, without pumping being required, The levels were arranged 
so that at high water of ordinary neap tides an average depth of four feet 
might be obtained in the pond. The tank is 90 feet in length by 35 feet 
in width, and has an average depth of 74 feet, the bottom sloping to one 
end, where the depth is 10 feet; it is capable of holding about 160,000 
gallons of sea water. The water is admitted from the beach by an inflow 
pipe 12 inches in diameter; the portion of this going through the 
embankment separating the pond from the beach is of iron, the remainder, 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 109 


on the beach itself, being of fireclay pipes, which have answered very well, 
and have only given rise to trouble on one occasion, in the course of last 
spring, when a section had to be renewed. The end of the inflow consists 
of a length of an iron pipe, terminated by an upturned part, raised about 
two feet from the bottom, and covered with a large shield of wire-netting. 
Tnis arrangement is to prevent the access of sand, debris, and weeds as far 
as possible. The outflowing water escapes by a flap-valve at the end of 
the pipe, beneath the up-turned portion, and on the same level as the rest 
of the pipe. 

The water on entering goes into a small compartment of the pond called 
the filter chamber. Here it passes up through wire-netting, which may 
be of any dimension of mesh, and, if necessary, through filtering materi al 
There are two slide-valves, one controlling the connection of the filtering 
chamber with the sea and the other the connection between the chamber 
and the pond. The water may be admitted direct to the pond, or it may 
be pumped from the filter chamber to the reservoir tank. 

The latter (a, fig. 1, pl. VI.) is built of concrete on a natural mound 
lying between the new site and the spawning pond. It is a strong tank, 
29 feet long, 7 feet high, and 20 feet in breadth, and capable of holding. 
15,570 gallons of water. It is from it that the supply to the hatching 
apparatus and to the tanks in connection with the laboratory is obtained 
during the night. It can be filled by the pumps in about two hours and 
a quarter. A pipe, carried through the concrete wall at the bottom, 
leads the water to the hatchery; another carries a supply to the tank-house 
for laboratory work, and another allows it to pass into the spawning pond. 
The pipe going to the tank-house is shown in fig. 2, p!. VI., at e, and the 
pipe entering the pond is on the left of the letter e, and close to it. The 
water from the reservoir may be filtered or unfiltered; the iron pipe 
which passes through the wall of the tank is connected with a flexible 
hose, the end of which enters a floating box, so arranged that the supply 
is drawn from the surface, where there is less matter in suspension, and 
through flannel or other material. 

The hatching-house, as now arranged, measures 493 feet in length by 
24 feet in breadth, part of it being 28 feet wide. The height of the 
building is 18 feet; it is lighted by 16 windows, and is painted inside in 
light tints, the walls being pale green and"the ceiling white (fig. 1, pl. VIL.). 

Two material improvements were made in the re-erection of the build- 
ing. A concrete floor, suitably sloped, replaces the previous wooden floor, 
and isa great advantage, since the water which is spilled over the floor 
when the work is going on now flows away into convenient gutters, which 
are connected with the drain going to the beach. ‘The hatchery is much 
drier now, and the appearance improved. A large sink, supplied with 
fresh or sea water, has been erected in the middle of the floor for washing 
hatching boxes, &c. The other chief improvement consisted in taking in 
the filtering apparatus, which were previously outside, and this was effected 
by extending the walls and roof, the gable being put further out. For the 
**tumbling-boxes,” which impart automatically a certain movement to the 
hatchiug boxes, two brick chambers have been built below the concrete 
floor, each 4 feet 4 inches by 4 feet 8 inches, and 34 feet in depth. One 
is In connection with the waste water from each side of the hatchery, that 
is, the water which leaves the hatching boxes and is carried to the pond. 

The filters consist of one large box, 8 feet by 4 feet and by 2 feet deep, 
and several smaller boxes, which receive the water from the larger one. 
All these are fitted with filters of flannel or blanketing, on frames covered 
with wire-netting and made tight by rubber bands; all the water which 
comes from the reservoir must pass up through them by pressure, and it 


110 Part III. —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


then passes on to the hatching apparatus. These are 22 in numuer, and 
are of the Dannevig pattern. They are shown in fig. 1, pl. VII., which isa 
view of the inside of one end of the hatchery. The apparatus on each 
side are supplied by separate pipes. 

The pump-house is contiguous to the hatchery room, and opens into it. 
It is provided with three Worthington direct-acting steam pumps, specially 
made for use with sea water, and brass lined. They are shown in fig. 2, 
pl. VII. They are so fitted up that any one of them, or all together, can 
be used to pump water from the filter-chamber, either to the reservoir or 
to the pond; there are two suction pipes, one for the large pump and one 
for the two smaller pumps. Steam is supplied by an upright donkey 
boiler, with two tubes, which is fitted with an injector and pump, but the 
town water supply can be used direct, the working pressure being usually 
40lbs. The pump-house measures 18 feet 10 inches by 15 feet; its 
position is shown at 0 in fig. 1, pl. VI. 

The tank-house, which is used in connection with the scientific 
researches at the laboratory, is built partly over one end of the large 
spawning pond (fig. 2c, pl. VI.), and there is a platform along this side 
over the pond. It is provided with six concrete tanks, four of which 
have plate glass in front and back, and the other two plate-glass fronts 
only. The latter are 6 feet 4 inches long, 4 feet 3 inches deep, and 34 feet 
high ; the others are 54 feet in length, the other dimensions being the same 
as in the larger tanks. These tanks may also be used for experiments with 
fresh-water fishes if desired, fresh water pipes being fitted up to them. A 
bench runs along one side and one end of the tank-house, provided with 
a central leaden gutter, and suitably sloped, and pipes are carried over it 
to supply either sea water or fresh water to small tanks aad dishes. 

The various operations iu connection with the work at the hatchery 
have been described in previous reports. Here it may be enough to say 
that the adult living plaice, from which the spawn is procured, are kept 
in the large spawning pond from year to year, their food consisting chiefly 
of mussels. The plaice which die are removed from the pond as soon as 
observed, and a fresh stock to replace those lost in this way is obtained 
each autumn by sending the attendant out on trawlers working inshore, 
who brings them in in tubs through which a current of water is 
maintained. 

When spawning begins, the eggs float in the water of the spawning 
pond, from which they are removed by a large net of mosquito netting, 
which is towed around the pond for an hour or so each day as a rule. 

The eggs are then transferred to the hatching boxes, which receive a 
supply, as copious as possible, of clean filtered sea water, until hatching 
occurs ; and when the larve have nearly, but not quite, absorbed the 
yolk they are transferred to the sea in suitable localities. 

The cost of the hatching work is small. The scientific investigations 
carried on at the laboratory require that water should be pumped regularly 
to supply the tanks, dishes, and apparatus in the tank-house, and some- 
times in the hatching room, and the only additional expense incurred in 
connection with the hatching work is for extra coal while the work is 
going on, for the assistance of a boy to help the attendant during the 
busiest weeks, and for the hire of boats to put out the fry. The total 
cost is estimated at under £100. 

The hatchery has been of great advantage in connection with the 
demonstrations to fishermen from the coast of Scotland, who come each 
spring to the laboratory for this purpose, It forms a great attraction to 
them, and enables them to form useful conceptions as to what goes on 
naturally in the sea with respect to the reproduction of fishes, as well as 
furnishing them with specimens for the study of their development. As 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 111 


mentioned below, four delegations of fishermen attended these demons- 
trations in the course of last spring. 

- During the season last year the eggs of the plaice were first discovered 
floating in the pond on 20th January, which is about the ordinary time 
when they first occur. Examination of the water some days earlier failed 
to reveal their presence, and only a few hundreds were obtained on the 
20th. The number gradually increased up to about the middle of March, 
and after that declined, the last collection, of a few hundreds of eggs, being 
made on the ]6th May. 

The duration of the spawning in the pond was therefore about 117 
days, which may be taken as approximately the period in the sea. The 
total number of eggs obtained was estimated at 40,110,000. The greater 
number were collected in March ; the collections in February and April 
were nearly equal in quantity to one another; while in January and May 
comparatively few were obtained. The figures showing the quantity for 
each of the months, and the percentages in each month for the last three 
years, are as follows :— 


Number Percentages. 
Collected. 
19038 =) 1904 1905 Mean. 
January, -  -| 1,080,000 0:3 | 1°6 2°6 1°5 
February, - ~-| 9,242,000 TS PGE 23-0 92°3 
March, - - | 19,475,000 562 55°7 485 53°5 
Wels -- *. | ~-'|- 9,431,000 At | 164 23°5 21:3 
icy, | = 882,000 i ee 22 1-2 
| 


In two Tables which are included in this paper, the particulars are 
given from day to day of the number of eggs collected and the tempera- 
ture and specific gravity of the water in the pond, in the hatchery, and 
on the beach, and of the quantities of fry which were placed in the sea. 

It will be seen that the temperature of the water in the pond when the 
eggs were first obtained was about 3°5°C. (33°8°F.); that it remained low 
to about the end of March, and that towards the end of the spawning it 
had risen to 10°C. (50°F.) and over it, the highest reading being on 15th 
and 19th May, when the temperature was 10°6°C. (51°1°F.), 

During the season trouble was occasionally caused by the filters, and 
the death-rate was larger than usual. The number of dead eggs (including, 
however, the shells of the eggs which had hatched), amounted to about 
15,790,000, which gives a rate of 39 per cent. The estimated number of 
fry put out into the sea, as given in Table II (p. 115) may be stated at 
24,500,000, when allowance is made for the shells of the eggs and the 
debris contained in the boxes. 

Most of the fry were put out off Aberdeen in March, April, and May, 
the first lot on the 8th of March, and the last on the 23rd May. One 
lot, by the request of the fishermen of the district, was taken to St. 
Combs, further up the coast, on the 24th of April. The fry in this lot 
were estimated to number about 3,517,000, which were dispatched by 
rail under the charge of the attendant, the water in which they were 
placed having been previously cooled to a temperature of 1°5°C. (34:7°F.) 
to obviate risks in carriage. The number of adult plaice found in the 
pond, when it was cleaned out after the hatching season was over, was 282, 
and a fair number of dead fish and the remains of some others were 
removed, 


112 Part I11.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


TaBLeE [.—Showing the Daily Progress at the Hatchery, and the 
Temperature and Specific Gravity of the Water. 


Eggs tig In Pond. In Hatchery. On Beach. 
Date. rea ci We ceria eae 

vin: Temp. | Sp. Gr. | Temp. | Sp. Gr. | Temp. | Sp. Gr 

January J 52 27°2 5:9 27°2 

iH 2 4:8 | 27-2 56 | 27-2 
4. 3 50 | 27°6 6:7 |. 120 
in 4 52 | 27-5 67.| 27-4 
: 5 53 | 27:4 64 | 27:6 
Me 6 53 | 27-4 6:3 | 27-5 
7 468 04 agar 4:8 | 276 
4 9 4:7 | 27:6 60 | 27°6 
& 10 43 | 27-9 x & 
“ 11 47 | 27-9 68 | 277 
is 12 42 | 27-6 = 
13 36 | 27°9 2 
i 14 3°38 | 27-9 
. 15 x x4 
16 28 | 28:0 52 | O72 
is 17 3:0 | 27-9 57. | 2a 
s 18 3°3 | 27-6 57 | 27-6 
. 19 A - 3:4 |  OF-7 BL) Dar 

few ; -, ; 7 
. 204 canal Ae 35 | 78 52 | 27-7 
% 21 es 4:0 | 27°5 58 | 275 
22. | 40,000 * i > 
. 93 | 40,000 30) | O78 52 | 276 
% 24 | 40,000 4:4 | 27-7 51 | 27:4 
is 25 | 80,000 4:1 | 27:8 4:9 | 27:3 

| 
:; 26 | 160,000 3:6 | 27°8 47} O76 
se 27 | 160,000 BET on Qi 4:2 | 27-4 
98 | 80,000 47 | O77 et 
29 i] * dre 
80. | 820,000 | 49 O79 58 | 26-9 
ie 31 | 160,000 AD | 2757 27°5 
February 1 | 200,000 3:9 | 27-7 4-4 | 27:8 4:0 | 276 

: 2 | 120,000 33 | 27°8 3-7 | 27-6 39 | 27°8 
é, 3 | 320,000 30 | 27°9 D1 27-9 4:4 | 27:7 
7 4 | 180,000 32 ‘| 97-8 4:7 | 27°6 56 | 27-8 
ap 6 | 200,000 48 sell 2056 1 160 eee m4 
: 7 | 320,000 4:2 | 276 4:8 | 27-7 50 | 27°5 
8 | 160,000 4:0 | 27:6 4-4 | 27-7 4-2 | 2755 
- 9 | 200,000 49 | 97° 54 | 27-6 5-2 | 97-4 
i 10 | 280,000 4:4 | 97:5 50 | 27-6 52 | 27-5 
» 11 | 200,000 32 | 27-6 28) 7 40 | 27:7 
4s 13 | 200,000 if i - ity a 
fi 14 | 580,000 3-4 | 27°8 Serp tayg | i 
fs 15 | 480,000 38 | 27:6 56 | 97°3 56 | 267 
: 16 | 280,000; ... 4:4 | 276 61 | 273 Bs Bs 
2 17 | 580,000 /1,098,000} 4:2 | 27:7 | 51 | 27°6 4:9 27°8 
:, 18 | 336,000]... £8 Fi O27eO lta “Gel tree 58 | 27:8 
49 19 oe pie fl Beata at “8 a ar Ss, 
iy 20 | 732,000 3:3 | 27:8 28° | 278 ; | 
3 21 | 904,000 Boe) OTs BQ | 97-7 4-2 | 27-7 
‘ 22, | 237,000 3-4 | 27°5 3:5 | O74 ca 
A 23 | 237,000 35 | 27-6 3:4 | O77 
24 | 430,000 36 | 27-6 39 | 27:8 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland, 113 


TABLE 1.—continued. 


ee 
: 


In Pond. In Hatchery. On Beach. 
Eggs Eggs 
Date. Col. | p28 | ————_——— : 
lected Temp. Sp. Gr. | Temp. | Sp. Gr. | Temp. | Sp. Gr. 
February 25 | 560,000 o7 \ 27-6 4:5 | 27°3 | 
oy 26 aA 573 : Es RS Ass | 
‘ 27 | 646,000 |1,163,000 3:6 | 27°5 4:6 | 27:3 | 
‘ 28 |860,000|... 36 | 27-7 4°8 | 27-4 | 
March 1: 603,000] _... 41, 273 | 50 | 270 | 52 | 248 
4 2 | 495,000 41 | 27-2 48 | 26:8 Om) pa 27" 
4 3 | 474,000 38 | 272 3°8 | 27-2 4:6 | 275 
¥ 4 | 689,000 4°3 | 927-0 rT De DOr ne 207 
Fe 5 aa Sham i ee be Sec Zac Neg 
4 6 | 947,000 ae Bs ine 
: 7 1,034,000]... 43 | 27°3 4-6 | 27:4 51 | 27°6 
. 8 | 560,000 |1,077,000) 4:2 | 27-4 4:8 | 27:3 5-2 | 27-6 
‘ 9 | 560,600]... 33 | 97-3 4-4 | 27-4 4-8 | 27:2 
- 10 | 517,000 SRS | Paes 42 | 97-4 pick 
| 
a 11 ee ROHR ser sei 
i 12 tae UF gee i ee | 
- 13 |1,679,000] 4°6 | 27°2 AQe MOTO. 1 | 
. 14 | 603,000|_... 50 | 27-2 BeGi | 827-2 || 
15 | 689,000 ag 5:6 27°6 | 
$ 16 | 711,000 |1,391,000; ... | Mi 
a 17 |1,301,000| __... 56 27-2 58 | 27°6 56 O71 
: 18 | 560,000 ye = 3 | 2 ee 
., 20 1,077,000]... 54 27-2 57 | 27-1 | 56 | 27:3 
| 
, 21 | 646,000]... 6 | 2% Ue On 56 | 27°6. |. 
23 22 | 646,000 {1,390,000 60 | 27:3 62 | 27-4 58 | 27°6 
., 23 |904,000| ... 62 | 27-4 62 | 27-4 5-9 | 27-4 
, 24 | 646,000 59 | 27°3 58 | 275 59 | 26:5 
., 25 |775,000 aR nth hs i “ a, 
| 
; 26 fe Peete at th os Be ae a PUNO” Maite 
BF 1. 775,000! =. : as Ad ; ms P 
: 28 | 517,000 |1,785,000, __... & aes $3 “ 
id 299 |474,000| ... er a he fs Re ae 
.. 30 | 947,000 te a om > 2 
i 31 | 646,000 6-6 | 27-2 66 | 27:4 Me a eae 
April 1, |'732,000:| .... 6-2 | 27:2 59 | 27:6 a a 
if 3 | 947,000 2,088,000 65 | a72 | 67 | a6 | 67 a74 
‘ 4 | 689,000]... T1 | 975 74 | 97-4 8:0 |- 27:3 
. 5 | 517,000 68 | 27:3 Ged OTE | kaa - 
es. 6 | 646,000 58 | 27:3 56 | 27-5 5-4 | 275 
ie 7 | 560,000 Gama aay 54 | 27+4 46 | 26:7 
. 8 | 474,000. oy i = r x = 
* 10 | 603,000 4M D756 5:6 27-4) 64 | 27-4 
11 | 517,000 55 | 273 | 57 | 269 | 62 | O75 
id 427'307;000'|).., 58 | Q7°4 64 | 269 | 64 | 973 
i 13 Es ee 60 1 2741 64 | 265 lag 
14 | 517,000 |2,303,000, 63 | 27-1 65 | 26-9 bites 
ee, 15 | 345,000}... ts ae ae tind tae 
i 16 ee, ome ; | 4 
17 | 517,000 62 26-9 6-2 | 26:8 62 | 266 
18 | 474,000 60 | 27-0 59 | 27-1 61 | 27-0 
= 19 | 215,000 64 265 66 | 261 64 26-1 
. 20 | 258,000 6  26°6 67 | 961 | 68 | 26-4 
‘a 21 | 215,000 62 26-7 58 | 965 | 62 | 26-4 | 
4 22 | 215,000 Gi |. 264 61 | 26-6 6% | 266 


114. Part IJ. —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


TABLE 1.—continwed. 


In Pond. In Hatchery. On Beach. 
Kees Ege's 
Date. Col- 88 
lected Dead. 
; Temp. | Sp. Gr. | Temp. | Sp. Gr. | Temp. | Sp. Gr. 

April 23 | Ce sh ee be i ‘ 

~ 24 6°4 26°8 6'3 26°8 ne ee 

» 25 6°5 26°7 6°8 26°6 6'5 27° 
» 26 | 67 26°6 6°6 26:9 8°9 27°1 

“A 27 | 259,000 (it 26°6 (exe 26°8 3 " 
<j 28 | 172,000 i 75 26°8 7°6 26°9 7:2 24°7 
is 29 | 258,000 bia av 26°9 74 26°7 69 26°5 

a 30 . 12,195:000) Se. os oe Ay ‘ ue 
May 1 | 108,000 8:2 26°2 76 25°3 76 25°8 
‘. ed a eee 8-0 26°3 74 26°8 74 -26°5 
» 3 | 258,000 8:2 26°83 78 27°3 82 26°3 
3 4 23 8-4 26°5 8:2 26°8 7°0 26°9 
. 5 | 260,000 8:4 26°7 9:2 26°9 8:0 27 °2 
‘3 6 85,000 8°8 26°8 9-4 27°0 84 27°0 

b>] is eee wae wae see . wee 
ey 8 85,000 96 26:4 9°6 26:1 8:2 27°0 

55 9 ee 9°6 26:8 9:2 2 2 2 = 
a 10 9°8 26°7 9°8 27°1 84 27°3 
5 1 86,000 |1.301,000} 10°4 26°6 10:2 26°8 9:0 27°3 
* eh ee +4 10:2 26°7 9°6 26°4 9:2 271 

copa Biel aden Wie 

” 14 mie a oa 

a 15 10°6 26°9 9°8 270 9°3 27°1 

| A few : ‘ : 
- 16 | Rae ; 9:8 | 97:2 | 106 | 266 98 | 271 
9 17 vi 9°8 27-2 10:0 26°6 9°5 27°4 
5 18 10°4 26°4 10°0 26°8 9°5 26°3 
* UR ae bes 10°6 26°5 11:0 26°6 9-2 26:9 
» 20 ~ a 103 26°8 10:2 26'9 9:2 26°3 

Totals, 40,110,000)15.7 91,000 


During the spring just passed, delegations of fishermen from Elginshire, 
Caithness, Argyle, and Bute and Arran attended the demonstrations at 
the hatchery, and expressed themselves as pleased and instructed by what 
they learnt. Iam indebted to Dr. Williamson for taking the photographs 
which are reproduced in the accompanying plates. . 


(TABLE. 


F. B. REPORT, 1906. 


PLATE 


Bie 1. 


SEES 


Vi. 


Ny 


“J 


PLATE VII: 


F, B. REPORT, 1906, 


penton ROP NAIA IR EE 


— 


en oameamemmanmmmmemeattae nana Reet ete a i ee " - - 


1 


Fig 


\ 
\ 


Pig | oy eeige a 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 115 


TABLE JI.—Showing Particulars in connection with the Distribution of the Fry. 


Date. 


8th Mar. 
20th |; 


Zoth 
5th April 
24th ,, 
4th May 
10th ,, 
23rd _,, 


Fig... I. 
Bis. | 2, 


o 

fe 

z Surface Water. Estimated 
a = number 

Locality. a 2 Weather. of fry 

fa) & | Specific /Temper- put out. 

= |Gravity.| ature. 

F F. 


About 4-mile off Bay 

of Nigpgy, \/- «=| (14 | 41°4 |) 262 40°6 bis 1,055,000 
'wo miles East of 

mouth of Don‘*- | 17 | 41°7 | 27:4 42°8 | Overcast, 2,930,000 


Off Girdleness, - - 7 42°4 | 27°6 45°1 | Sunshine, | 3,518,000 
Off Girdleness, - - 7% | 42:1 | 27-2 40°8 | N.-W.wind,} 2,931,000 
Gest Combs, --) e fi co | 8 517,000 
Off mouth of Don, -| 12 | 45:3] 26°9 48-9 Ev 2,344,000 
Off mouth of Don, -| 10 44°8 | .27°4 51°8 Sti iae 4,689,000 
Off Girdleness, - -| 13 | 47:1 | 27-0 50°9 to 3,516,000 
24,500,000 


DESCRIPTION OF PLATES. 


er 


PLATE VI. 


View of the outside of the Hatchery from the landward side. (a) Storage 
tank or reservoir ; (b) corner of pump-house ; (c) store-house. 

View of the large spawning pond and laboratory. (a) Laboratory ; 
(b) valve ; (c) tank-house ; (d) marks the place where the inflow pipe 
enters ; (e) pipe supplying the tank-house. 


PLATE, VII. 


View of the inside of the hatching room, showing the hatching apparatus 
on each side. 
View of the sea-water pumps and their connections. 


116 Part I11.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


V.—ON THE SPECIFIC CHARACTERS OF GADUS LUSCUS, 
GADUS MINUTUS, and GADUS ESMARKII. 


| By H. Cuartes Wiiiramson, M.A., D. Sc., Marine Laboratory, 
. Aberdeen. 


(Plates VIIT.-X.) 


nt cl I inne 


CONTENTS. 

PAGE 

Introduction, - - - = , B 116 
List of Body tite cces: - - - - - - 119 

List of Enumeration-Characters, - - - - - 121 

Discussion of the Averages, - - - - - 121 

The Numbers of Fin-rays, - - - - - : 124 

The Numbers of Vertebre, - - - - - 129 

The Reproduction of the Three she - - - - 130 

The Skulls of the Three Species, - - - - - 131 

A Discussion of the Species, - - - - - 135 

A Specific Description, - - - - - - 135 

The Diagnosis of a Species, - - - - - 136 
. General Sener of ees Three Species, . - - 136 
Key, - ; - - - 138 
. Literature, - - - - : - . - 139 
List of Tables, - : - - - - 141 

Tables, - . - - - : - 142-158 

INTRODUCTION. 


The present research is a continuation of the paper contributed to the 
Twentieth Annual Report of the Fishery Board for Scotland, Part IIL., 
entitled, “A comparison between the cod (Gadus callarias), the saithe 
(Gadus virens), and the lythe (Gadus pollachius) in respect to certain 
external and osteological characters.” In that paper a beginning was 
made with the review of the species of the genus Gadus. In several 
instances the accepted specific descriptions are unsatisfactory ; so much so 
is this the case that difficulty is experienced in separating certain species. 
A certain amount of confusion has existed in the diagnosis of G. luscus 
and G. minutus ; and the third species, G. esmarkii, which has, through 
Dr. Fulton’s trawling experiments, been shown to be common in Scottish 
waters, might in its smaller stages be mistaken for a young minutus. The 
three species under review are the three smallest species of the genus; 
in the former paper the three largest members were dealt with. A 
systematic study of the three forms has become necessary in order to 
definitely fix the specific characters. It is very seldom that a single 
member of a species will exhibit all the distinguishing characters well. 
it has thus been necessary to examine a considerable number of specimens 
of each species. The main purpose is to arrive at an accurate and suitable 
specific description, and with this end in view, both the characters in 
which they agree, as well as those wherein they differ, must be studied. 
A minute comparison is therefore instituted between the three forms, and 
by the method which was adopted in the previous research. The method 
has been to make a number of measurements on the body of the fish, in 
order to determine the comparative magnitude of corresponding distances 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. Li7 


on specimens of each species, and also to determine to what extent the 
dimensions vary in the same species. The number of fin-rays in the 
unpaired fins and the number of vertebrae formed the basis of comparison. 
In the selection of the measurements a wide choice exists. It is 
important to have measurements and characters in which the different 
forms agree accurately defined. Such characters should not be included 
in the specific description ; they belong to the sub-genus. The intro- 
duction into a specific description of the relation between the sizes of 
two characters, both of which do not lend themselves to accurate defini- 
tion, should be avoided. 

There are certain characters selected, to which one is guided by the 
general appearance of the fish. A glance at the forms when compared 
side by side will often indicate possible specific differences. These points 
of difference sometimes vanish when a number of fishes have been 
examined ; they may be found to be peculiar, individual, and not specific. 
Many and varied characters may be from time to time adopted, to be 
dropped again on account of the difficulty of suitably measuring the 
quantities. 

Most of the measurements which were made will be discussed in 
detail. The values of such characters for specific distinction is in that 
way determined. 


All the measurements have been expressed in terms of the length of 
the fish. ) 


THe FIsHes EXAMINED. 


All the fishes which have been studied for the purpose of this 
research were obtained in the North Sea, with the exception of 4 speci- 
mens of Gadus minutus which were kindly sent from Plymouth* by Dr. 
H. M. Kyle. The specimens of /uscuws and minutus were got chiefly in 
the neighbourhood of Aberdeen. The G. esmarkit were obtained during 
Dr. Fulton’s trawling investigations in the North Sea. Some were 
obtained off Aberdeen and in the Moray Firth, others were captured in 
the vicinity of the Shetland Islands. The esmarkit were got in the 
small-meshed cod-end with which the ordinary trawl was covered. The 
luscus and minutus were taken in the ordinary trawl. 

Iuscus and nunutus are often confused, and are known collectively 
under the names “ Brassies,” ‘‘ Miller’s Thooms,” “ Skelchies,” ‘ Davies,” 
etc. They were obtained on or near hard ground within a radius of 25 
miles from Aberdeen. Luscus was obtained on one occasion in quantity 
at a point 6 miles E.S.E. of Cruden Scaurs, Aberdeenshire. Out of 38 
brassies, 36 were Juscus and 2 minutus. Usually only an odd example 
of /uscus was obtained among frequent little lots of minutus. Luscus and 
minutus are frequently got on the haddock lines, but only in small 
numbers. On 11th June, 1906, one luscus, and fow minutus were 
caught on a haddock line near Aberdeen. 

In the following Table are set out the various points at which Juscus 
and minutus appeared among the fishes taken in the trawl of the s.s. 
“ Fifeness,’ Aberdeen, during the spring of 1905. 


“These were 4 females measuring 11, 11°3, 11:4 and 16’6em. respectively. 


| TABLE. 


118 Part II]. —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


| Locality. Date. Luscus. |Minutus. 

Vicinity of Aberdeen _... December 16, 1904, 1 2 
14 Miles E. by N. of Aberdeen... - SA 1 4 
14 Miles E, by 8. * ~ January 11, 1905, 3 4 
16 Miles 8. E. Py =e we 2. ae ne 2 
44 Miles 8.E. a La sf Wa. 1 17 
10 Miles off Aberdeen... cL ¥, 19.51 33 2 1 
44-10 Miles S.E. of Aberdeen ... 1 | kc SO 3 6 
6 Miles K.S.E. of Cruden Scaurs, + 

Aberdeenshire a an sn 36 De 
20 Miles S.E. of Aberdeen ae ‘ 27,8 $i 1 35 
21 Miles E. by S. of Aberdeen... February 3, ,, 1 14 
6 Miles E. of Aberdeen ... fs ) i} rane 6 3 
20-25 Miles S.E. of Aberdeen ... ee nO. se ite OF 5 
21 Miles E.S.E. of Aberdeen, 

41-50 fms. an a: Le March Gy 2 18 
Vicinity of Aberdeen _... A A 4 is is: 27 

Ss os a a8 * 5) ae ae 25 

i Ss a =n May ts ee oe, 29 

a9, 29 vee eee 9 ri oe) 1 21 | 


A proportion of the above, specimens of Juscus and minutus species was 
examined fresh ; the majority were, however, examined some time after 
being preserved in formaline solution—a 24 per cent. solution of formaline 
in fresh water. 

All the specimens of esmarkit, with three exceptions, had been pre- 
served from two to five years, in formaline solution mainly; some were 
preserved in alcohol. 

The following are localities whence came some of the specimens of 
esmarkit which were examined :— 


Number of 
Locality. Date. Specimens 
of Esmarkii. 


rake Firth—off Dunbeath ” October 10, 1900 9 
3. Deep he ia off Kin- 
“naird Head. July 4, 1901 10 
Moray Firth .. : a Ab February 7, 1905 1 
Off Aberdeen, 65 fms. f. ee June 28, 1901 7 
21 Miles E.S. E. of Aberdeen Ae March ~ 9, 1905 Pe 
Between Orkney and Shetland Is. October, 1900 17 


The sizes and sex of all the fishes examined are shown in the following 
Table :— 


[ ‘Tape. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 119 


G, Esmarkia, | G, Minutus. G, Luscus. Total at Each Size. 
Length. | | * | (ee 3 hey yar | 
Cm. ele | | | = = | K 
| Sex. | | Sex. | Sex. Ss Pui ee 
a be | Sle al a aS lott cle 
oo EE a) S00) SS See es en lee AeG | [eis 
| 
8 Jf 1 ee elaine he 1 
9 a 2 hehe: a 3 
10 1 The hes = 4 
11 5 <5 al ee Pa 2 16 3 
12 3 aad Dh a ae eae Sine 13 
Cs ae apts ze Y peer ee) BI 5 
oy ei} xe 19 2 
15 Pee acy ti 1 pe oe 24 2, 
ice tee Is bet | 8 Bir | 1 a 13 6 1 
17 1 8 Giall chs sl re % On li Mery 
18 +7 5 1 5 6 © ik Biile Lh 
19 getty aul ee OUND SEE 4 | 20 
20 Soe DA a A; 29 
21 1 ShorbO.t,| ceo te ligt dig ea if 
22 ear ie 0o ee ees (eee 
23 As ASA 1 18 er se ake Je 
24 | re ken Ay hee ti 28 3 
oan | b akG 1 laa 17 3 
26 | 9 Suge 9 fs 
Bp | 3 Lot me 1 3 2s 
28 | Tess a6 1 a 8 
29 1 1 3 1 4 
30 3 2 sag 5 
31 | | a 2 2 
32 | | £ 2 2 
3 ers Ie es 2 
34 Di Gas 2 
35 1 2 3 
36 t * 1 
37-39 he ~ 
40 - | 1 1 
Total]... ‘s ~ a ba FN Bs Ae a ew el dakoneny D8 


THE Bopy DIMENSIONS. 


The comparison between the three species is instituted then by means 
of the following body dimensions :— 

Tue GiRTH is measured by means of a thread passed round the fish at 
three points :—(1) Pectoral Girth—in the axilla close to the base of the 
pectoral fin. (2) Girth at anus—at the level of the anus. (3) Girth at 
the root of the tail—at the thinnest part of the caudal peduncle, 7.e., the 
part of the tail extending between the end of the third dorsal fin and the 
beginning of the caudal fin. 

Dorso-VENTRAL Heicut or Bopy.—This dimension was measured by 
callipers. For the pectoral height the point of the callipers was put 
between the bases of the ventral fins, while the other point was made to 
touch a point in the dorsal line, immediately above. The callipers were 
made to touch the parts lightly. The other two points were at the level 
of the anus and on the root of the tail, at the narrowest part. 

DIAMETER OF THE Hyx.—The diameter of the eye was the horizontal 
diameter of the orbit. — 

INTERORBITAL Space.—The interorbital space is the distance on the 
dorsal surface of the head between the orbits. 

GreaTEest LENGTH oF THE VENTRAL, PEcToRAL, AND First Dorsan 
¥ins. —The fin was measured from the base of the first ray, ¢.e., in the 


120 Part ITT.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


case of the ventral and pectoral fins the most dorsal ray-——in the case of 
the first dorsal fin, the most anterior ray—to the tip of the longest ray. 

HeicuT or THE Larerat LINE aBoveE THE LarERAL Ax1s.—The lateral 
axis is here taken as coinciding with the straight posterior part of the 
lateral line. This line was continued by a thread on the measuring board 
along the fish, and the interval between it and the lateral line was 
measured at two points—viz., at the level of the anus and at the level of 
the base of the pectoral fin. In duscus, in place of the measurement at 
the pectoral fin, which is very close to the anus, a new point at the 
middle of the first dorsal fin was chosen. 

LENGTH oF THE Rami oF Tart-Fin.—That is, the distance from the 
base of the first fin-rays of the caudal fin on the dorsal or ventral line of 
the body to the tip of the ramus of the tail. 

THE SPREAD OF THE T'arLt.—The greatest breadth of the tail-fin. For 
the purpose of this measurement it is not spread out to its fullest extent, 
but is allowed to fall on the table. 

LenctH or THE CaupaL PEepuncie: dorsal.—The part of the dorsal 
edge between the end of the third dorsal fin and the beginning of the 
caudal fin. 

GREATEST HeiGuT oF THE UnpatreD Fins.—The fin is stretched out, 
and its greatest breadth is measured, 7.e., between the base and the highest 
point vertically above the base. This is a character which it is often im- 
possible to get, owing to the fact that in trawled fish the fins are usually 
frayed or broken. 

The above measurements of the eye, interorbital space, of the fins, and 
of the height of the lateral line were made by means of dividers. 

THE Distance OF DIFFERENT PoINTS FROM THE ANTERIOR TIP OF THE 
Fiso.—The anterior tip of the fish is in duscus and minutus the tip of the 
upper jaw, in esmarkii the tip of the lower jaw. ‘The distance of each 
point was measured as projected on the lateral axis. The lateral axis is 
the line joining the anterior tip to the middle rays of the tail-fin. 

These points are :— 


Anterior edge of the orbit (for the length of the snout). 

The base of the first fin-ray of the ventral fin. 

The base of the first fin-ray of the pectoral fin. 

The opercular cleft. 

The hindmost part of the edge of the operculum. 

The anus, 

Beginning and end of each of the unpaired fins. 

Beginning of the caudal fin, dorsal and ventral. 

Tip of the ramus of tail, dorsal and ventral. 

Point where the lateral line begins to rise up off the horizontal—the 
anterior end of the straight part of the lateral line. 


The beginnings of the fins were marked by means of pins inserted at 
the base of the first ray. A pin inserted in the anus was taken as the 
position of the anus. A pin lying in the opercular cleft indicated that 

oint. 
: For the purpose of these measurements a measuring board, similar to 
that which was used during the research on the ‘‘ Mackerel of the Kast 
and West Coasts of Scotland” (Highteenth Annual Report of the 
Fishery Board for Scotland, Part III, p. 295), was employed. The 
measurements made on the soft body of the fish are not such as permit of 
exact determination, and probably the errors due to the want of rigidity is 
greater in small fish than in large specimens. There is, however, 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. Ft 


greater accuracy to be obtained on the whole by making the measure- 
ments on such a board as described in the 18th Report, than by merely 
stepping off the distances on the fish with a pair of dividers. If the fish 
are in good condition, in both methods greater accuracy will be obtain- 
able than in specially soft specimens. 

The measurements were made in centimetres. 

The Measurements Represented as Percentages of one Common 
Standard.—-All the body dimensions were converted into percentages of 
one standard, viz., the length of the fish. 

THE LEncTH oF THE FisH is the distance from the anterior tip 
(premaxilla or mandible, as the case may be) to the end of the middle 
rays of the tail fin. 

The fishes of each species have been arranged in centimetre groups. 
The average of the percentages of the length of the fish which each body 
dimension was found to represent was calculated for the fishes of each 
size. They have been arranged in Tables VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII. 
Alongside each average is added in brackets the number of fishes on 
which the average is based. 

The average percentage for each character has then been calculated in 
ali the fishes of each species in which the character was noted. The 
number of characters examined in each specimen varied very much; 
while in some all the characters were noted, in others one or two 
characters were measured. 


Enumeration- Characters. 


THe Numper or Rays in THE Unpairgp Fins.—The enumeration 
of the fin-rays is rendered difficult from the fact that we are dealing with 
small fishes. ‘The last rays in the fins with the exception of the first 
dorsal are minute. The first rays of the first anal fin are sometimes 
liable to be missed on account of their very small size. 

In a few cases the number of rays in the paired fins and the caudal fin 
was counted. 

THe Number oF VERTEBR#.—The number of vertebrae was counted 
after the fish had been boiled. The posterior vertebre are very small ; 
the backbone tapers down to a fine extremity. The vertebre are not so 
easily counted in preserved fishes as in fresh specimens, A fish that has 
been preserved in formaline solution, when boiled, usually becomes 
distorted. This is due to unequal shrinkage ; the skin is much affected 
in this respect, becoming very tough. The vertebra bearing the ural 
elements is counted as the last vertebra. 

THE NuMBER OF THE VERTEBRA BEARING THE First H#&MAL 
ArcH.—This character was noted in a number of instances. 


DiscussIOoN OF THE Bopy DIMENSIONS. 


The averages taken along with the range of variation of the character 
gives a more or less partial view of the species, By a comparison 
between the species we shall be able to see in how far any of these 
dimensions is of specific value. If we find that the ranges of variation 
in two species overlap for any one character, that character cannot be 
regarded as of primary rank in a specific description. In a dimension of 
which the ranges of variation do not overlap in two species we have a 
character of primary rank. The characters as set out in Table XITT. will 
now be examined in detail. 


122 Part I11.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


In respect to the Girth, a character in which there is a wide difference 
existing among the three species, so far as the eye can judge, we find a 
distinct enough separation between certain of the species. At the 
pectoral region Juscus has a girth equal on the average to 60 per cent. of 
the length of the fish, thus exceeding by a considerable amount the 
respective girth in minutus and esmarkii. And since the range of 
variation in dwscus does not overlap that of esmarki the difference in the 
girth is of some specific value. The ranges of variation in luscus and 
minutus meet though they do not overlap, and between these two the 
character is of more or less negative value. Minutws and esmarkii 
overlap in their ranges of variation and this character is not therefore of 
value. At the anus, the girths in the three species increase a little. The 
girth of mznutus now overlaps that of duscus. In the girth at the root of 
the tail, where a considerable difference exists between minutus and 
luscus, judging by the eye, a small difference only is shown by the per- 
centages, but a complete separation is seen between luscus and esmarki 
in respect to this character. The dorso-ventral height of the body agrees 
closely with the girth relations. 

In all three species the horizontal diameter of the eye is on the 
average as great or greater than the length of the snout, z.e., the distance 
from the tip of the jaws to the anterior edge of the orbit.  Luscus 
has a distinctly smaller eye than minutus and esmarkii—which two 
agree exactly—but complete separation in this character does not 
hold between any two of the species. In the size of the interorbital 
space the reverse relation is seen, Juwscus having a larger average than the 
other two, in which there is equality. By their variation, however, they 
merge into one another. 

In the matter of the lengths of the ventral, pectoral, and first dorsal 
fins, although very distinct agreements and differences are shown in the 
averages, still the latter are so small that they are really of no specific 
value. Thus in minutus and esmarkii the average size of the ventral fin 
is the same, while that of Zuscws is a little larger ; whereas in the case of 
the pectoral fin, duscws and esmarkii agree closely and have a fin a little 
longer than minutus. The first dorsal fin is on the average rather larger 
in duscus than in minutus, but the two ranges of variation overlap. 
This character was not noted in esmarkit. 

In the following characters—height of the lateral line above the lateral 
axis, the length of the rami of the tail, and the spread of the tail, the 
greatest height of the unpaired fins—only a few observations were made. 

Luscus shows a considerably higher bend in the lateral line than 
esmarki2z, and a little higher than minutus. 

The lengths of the rami of the tail of the three forms agree closely, but 
in the spread of the tail Zwscus and minutus exceed esmarkii, being on the 
average half as broad again as the latter. 

The length of the barbel was in esmarkzi on the average 3 per cent. of 
the length of the fish ; in one specimen of mdnutus the barbel was 5 per 
cent. of the same quantity. i 

Distances from the Anterior Tip of the Body.—The average for the 
length of the snout, 7.e., the distance of the anterior border of the orbit 
from the tip of the jaws, is the same in luscus and minutus, and 1 per 
cent. over that in esmarkit ; but in the latter the snout is measured from 
the tip of the mandible, which projects on the average 1 per cent. in front 
of the premaxilla. When that amount is subtracted we get an equal 
average measurement for the snout in all three. 

The ventral fin is situated nearest the tip of the jaws in /uscus, next in 
minutus, aud farthest back in esmarkii. The ranges of variation of the 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 123 


first and the last meet but do not overlap ; they each overlap the range of 
variation of this character in minutus. In the distance of the opercular 
cleft from the anterior end of the body we obtain the same average in 
each species, and in respect to the hind edge of the operculum, while 
the averages differ to the extent of 2 per cent. between minutus and 
esmarkii, each of these differs from Jwscus by 1 per cent. only. 

The position of the pectoral fin is practically the same in all three 
species in respect to the distance of the base of the first fin-ray trom the 
anterior end of the fish. The distance of the anus from the snout is a 
diagnostic difference between Juscus and minutus. In the average, the 
position is at 26 per cent. in the former and at 32 at the latter; the 
ranges of variation do not overlap. In esmarkw the anus is on the 
the whole slightly farther back than in minutus, with, of course, a corres- 
pondingly greater divergence from duscus. Between esmarkw and 
minutus the ranges of variation overlap. 

In the position of the first dorsal fin, there is very close agreement, and 
overlapping. 

In the second dorsal fin all three overlap, both in respect to the point 
at which the fin begins, and also in the position of the end of the fin, 
Luscus and minutus have a longer fin-base than esmarkzt. 

In respect to the beginning of the third dorsal fin, they are all equal, 
but as Juseus has a shorter fin-base than the two others—the fin ends in it 
a little farther anteriorly than in the other two. 

The first anal fin commences close behind the anus; it ends first in 
esmarkit, and then a little distance farther posteriorly in minutus and 
luscus. 

In the matter of the second anal all three species agree, both in its 
commencement and its end, 

The caudal peduncle is on the average smaller in lJuscus than in 
esmarkii and minutus, but the ranges of variation overlap. 

The bend in the lateral line rises farther back in /uscus than in the 
other two. It is usually just behind the middle of the length of the 
body ; in no case in duscus did it commence on the anterior half of the 
body ; in minutus and esmarkii it did in some cases begin just on the 
anterior side of the middle of the body. ‘The lateral line rises more 
rapidly in duscus than in minutus and esmarkit, 

The general relation between the three forms in respect to the different 
characters selected has been briefly discussed, but these relationships 
expressed in this form are of themselves of no value from the point of 
view of specific description. These characters may and do indicate 
where specific characters may be found. For a specific description it is 
necessary that the selected characters be tested on one fish.- A specific 
character which infers comparison with a fish of another species is of 
only secondary value. ach character must be expressed in terms of the 
individual fish. The size of the eye, for example, may be of specific 
value when it is stated in terms of the length of the snout, or of any 
other part of the fish, while it is of no value when compared to the size 
of the eye in another species. 

: The position of the anus is a very good guide in diagnosing certain 
species, and it is important in the present case. The form in which 
it is represented in the Tables, as being situated at a certain per- 
centage of the length of the fish from the tip of the jaws, is not a useful 
one for a specific description. It should be expressed ina relationship 
that is more readily measured, aud for this the relation between the posi- 
tion of the anus and the situation of the first dorsal fin. Now, an 
examination of the measurements of the distance of the two points shows 


124 Part II[.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


that among specimens of duscus the anus was situated exactly below the 
beginning of the first dorsal in three cases; in two cases it was in front of 
that point to the extent of 1 per cent. of the length of the fish, and in 
seven cases it was behind the beginning of the first dorsal to the extent 
of 2 per cent. of the fishes’ length. 

In lduseus, then, the anus is situated below the beginning of the first 
dorsal fin. ‘ 

In minutus the anus occupies a very different position in relation to the 
first dorsal fin. Of 34 examples of minutus, in 31 the anus was below 
the second half of the first dorsal, in one case it was below the middle 
point of the fin, and in two cases it was just in front of the middle point 
to the extent of 1 per cent. of the length of the fish. In minutus, there- 
fore, the anus is under the second half of the first dorsal fin, z.e., from 
the middle of the fin to the hind limit of its base. The amount by 
which the anus was in front of the middle point of the fin would not 
be noticeable to the eye, and for all practical purposes it would be 
regarded as coinciding with the middle point. 

In esmarkit the anus is below the second half of the first dorsal fin ; 
this was found to be the case in all the fishes in which these characters 
had been recorded—viz., 56 in number. In one of these the anus was 
exactly below the end point of the fin-base. In esmar/ti, then, the anus 
is situated below the second half of the first dorsal fin. 

The comparative depth of the members of the two species, /uscus and 
minutus, has been insisted on in a specific description. It is not, however, 
very easy to reduce this relation to a specific character. In some speci- 
mens it is well marked; but while /uscus is always a deep fish, minutus is 
variable in this respect. Sometimes in a collection of minutus it is 
possible to divide them up into two lots differing markedly in the depth 
of body, and in the deeper lot simulating in depth duscus, It is necessary 
to know the range of variation in this character as determined by the 
measurements of various examples. If, therefore, we examine the 
average dorso-ventral height of each species, as Set out in Table XIII, we 
find the average height at the anus is, for Juscus, 26 per cent ; for minutus, 
21 per cent.; and for esmarkii, 18 per cent. of the length of the fish. In 
luscus, however, the depth ranges from 28 per cent. to 22 per cent., while 
in minutus the limits were 24 per cent. and 18 per cent. The relation 
between the two species might be summarised thus :—Where the dorso- 
ventral height reaches one-quarter or more of the length of the fish, we 
have to deal with /uscus; where the same character is as small as 
one-fifth or less of the length, the fish is probably minutus or esmarkit; 
but where the relation lies between one-quarter and one-fifth, either of 
the two first species may be represented. It is evident, then, that a 
character such as this is only of small importance for specific diagnosis. 


The Lengths of the Bases of the Unpatred Fins. 


The inter-relations of the sizes of the different fin-bases may be here 
considered. In the following Table the average size of the fin-base, 
expressed as a percentage of the length of the fish, and its range of varia- 
tion is given for each of the three species. 


1D 2D. 3D | 

Species) jf sree: aie eh Prrebe RE ie ee eee MMos 
| Vari-| a4: Vari-| ay: ‘ Vari-| ,. 

Max.| AY. ate Min. Max. eal BA Min. | Max.| Av ants potniy 


'G.luscus | 13 | 406] 10 | 
\G.minutus| 13 | 12) 34 
|G.esmarkit| 15 | 42 | 56 


| 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 125 
LA BA. 
| Species. ax ——_|—_—____________—_ 
Vari-| x: : Vari-| a7: 
Max.| Av. aie Min. | Max.| Av. nites Min. 

G. luscus ne oe ae Bs 45 | 389°8| 40 37 17 15 45 12 
G. minutus “e mS a Bt 35 31 42 28 18 155 34 13 
G. esmarkii > sh re a; 31 25% 71 25 19 | 167 47 14 
Sey Een na ae 


| 
' 


The base of the first anal fin is measured from the hind edge of the 
anus to the end of the base of the fin. 

Various relationships between the lengths of the fin-bases may be made 
out by inspection of the averages. Take, for example, the ratio between 
the lengths of the anal fins :— 

In luscus the first anal bears to the second anal the ratio of 40 : 15, 
BOP Oued. 

In minutus the corresponding ratio is 31 : 15°5, ze, 2:1. 

In esmarkii the corresponding ratio is 28 : 17, 7.¢., 5: 3. 

From these data, then, it might be expected that a specific character 
could be obtained in the relation between the two anal fins. To test its 
value from the point of view of specific description it is necessary to find 
what ratios are found ina number of fish. These are set out below. The 


various ratios found existing between the anal fins in respect to the length 


of their bases is set out for each species, and the frequency with which 
each occurred in the sample of fish is also added. 


Ratios of the F Frequency | Frequen 
First Anal to beh ae Ee i ay 


the Second ; - bob 
; G. luscus. | G’. minutus.| G.esmarkiz. 
Anal Fin. 


aes El 1 

Hy ae ae | ~ 

oo eee ] 

ye iL 2 

AO ae oa 2 

Pas) aaa 4 

fie eel 7 

26: 1 6 ae 

vic ae | 12 i| 

es I gt 4 Ae 

pe ae | ] iI 

Ea 3 4 

4 ieee A 3 = | 
2) ee | 8 it | 
MOGs |b 6 3 
Sin 7 9 | 
tay eee a 7 | 
dG: ek 8 
biel ro 

1 ee | 4 

feo gail 2 
Total 44 33 47 | 


126 Part LII—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 

The extensive overlapping between duscus and minutus and between 
minutus and esmarkia renders this character of value only as a distin- 
guishing feature between luscws and esmarkit. In luscus the first anal is 
always more than twice as long as the second anal; in esmarkii it is 
usually less than twice the length of the second anal. 

The above is the most promising relationship between the lengths of 
the fin-bases in any of the species. 

The three species agree fairly closely in the lengths of the dorsal fins, 
but show wide diversity in the lengths of the anal fins. Jf we add the 
bases of the fins of each species together, keeping the dorsal and anal 
groups separate, the relations will be seen more easily. 


Sum of Bases Sum of Bases | 


Species. of Dorsal Fins | of Anal Fins 
(Average Sizes). | (Average Sizes). 
G. luscus, 49°3 548 
G. minutus, .. 50°7 46°5 
G. esmarku, 50°5 44-4 


In each species a portion of the dorsal edge equal to half the length of 
the fish bears fin-rays. On the anal edge the size of the fin-bearing part 
varies with the species. 


The Number of Rays in the Unpaired Fins. 


_ In the accompanying Table are arranged the average, maximum and 
minimum number of rays found for each fin. A detailed analysis of the 
numbers of fin-rays in each fish is given in Tables I, II, III. The range 
of variation in each species is shown in Table V. 


iD. 2D. 3 D. LAS 2A. 
Species. an Stee ae hs Pris ci 
Max.| Av. | Min. | Max.| Av. | Min. | Max. | Av. | Min. | Max. | Av. | Min. | Max. | Av. | Min. 
G. luscus 15 13°5} 12 26 23 21 | 22 20 18 | 36 o4 31 22 21 18 
G. minutus. 15 13 11 26 23 | 20 | 23 21 is | 31 28 26 23 22 20 
G. esmarkii. 18 15 14 29 25 21 29 26 23 32 29 24 30 27 24 


In respect of the first dorsal, Juscus and minutus agree closely both 
in average, 13, and in the range of variation, 15-11. Esmarkw has a 
larger number of rays, viz. 15 on the average, with a maximum and 
minimum of 18 and 15 rays respectively. 

In the second dorsal the two former species are again almost identical 
with an average of 23, while esmarkii has an average of 25. 

The close agreement persists between /uscus and minutus in the 
third dorsal also, esmarki having in this fin also a higher average. 

The first anal, however, brings about a separation between dusews and 
minutus ; this was, of course, apparent also when the length of the fin- 
bases were discussed. Jwscus has 34 fin-rays, and minutus 28 rays in 
the fin, while esmarkit approaches the latter closely, having an average 
of 29. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 127 


In the second anal luscus and minutus are again in close agreement 
with averages of 21 and 22 respectively, while esmar/ii shows an average 
of 27 rays. 

Esmarkwi has a much larger number of fin-rays than either /uscus 
or minutus, 

The average number of fin-rays in all three dorsals is, for /uscus 56; 
minutus, 57; and esmarhii, 66, 

It was {noticed above that the extent of the dorsal edge which bore 
fin-rays was the same in all three species. It therefore follows that in 
esmarkit we have to deal with a rather lighter and less robust ray than in 
the two others. 

The anal rays (first and second) amount to 55 in the case of Juscus, 50 
in minutus, and 56 in esmarkii. Here luscus has a total of 55 rays 
distributed on a portion of the ventral edge equal to 50 per cent. of the 
length of the fish, while minutus has 50 rays on 46 per cent, of the 
length, and esmarkit has 56 rays ona part equal to 45 per cent. of the 
length of the fish. In the anal fin-bearing part we have in esmarkit a 
greater number of rays to the unit of length than in luscus and minutus. 

If, now, we divide the average length of the fin-base by the average 
number of rays we shall get a relative index of the robustness of the fin- 
rays in the different species, and in the different fins of the same species. 


Average Index of Fin-rays for each Fin. 


Species. 13 | ap aD, Px 2A 
G. luscus, zs, 8 1:07 ‘65 ta oy iL 
G. minutus, sai0 "84 1:04 | iol ef 
G. esmarkit, Ge oO shel 88 63 ‘96 63 


The index of the fin-ray of esmarkii is smaller than those of luscus 
and minutus, in all the fins except the first. There is also to be noticed 
that in each species the indices of the third dorsal and second anal agree 
closely, and together differ from the indices of the second dorsal and first 
anal fins. In the two former fins the rays are set more closely together, 
which probably means that they are less robust rays than those of the 
other fins. | 

The three species agree fairly closely in their respective indices for the 
first dorsal fin. In all three species the indices for this fin are less than 
those of the second dorsal and first anal fins. 

From the Tables given above it is seen that there is no typical generic 
number of rays either for the dorsal or anal group, In the two closely 
related forms, /uscws and minutus, there is an almost identical number of 
fin-rays for each fin in the dorsal group, but they are both widely 
separated from esmarkit in this comparison. In the matter of the anal 
fin-rays, Juscus aud minutus were separated. Here the anal rays have a 
specific value. The dorsal fins are together, on the other hand, a sub- 
generic character. The extent of the dorsal edge of the body furnished 
with fin-rays is the same in all three species; but the quality of the rays 
is specific, and involves different numbers, 


(128 Part I11.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The Number of Rays in the Paired Fins and Caudal Fin. 


ete | ey 
Species. lof the| Sex. | Vet | Pecto- (Caudal) 
| | Fish ral Fin.|ral Fin.) Fin, 
| snp. | 
| 24 3 | 6 19 a 
| 26 cies a 18 38 
G. luscus. 27 oes ek 20 40 
| 27 6 2D. sina | 
| Average, 6 (4) | 19 (A) Average, | 64) 1914) 89 @) 39 (2) | 
| Arg seo i ean 
14 Q 6 19 
19 ae 6 20 
pa Q 6 20 ra, 
| 22 2 6 18 Be 
| G. minutus. 1 5 2 6 18 39 
24 2 6 19 38 
25 oe @ 28. Jide sie of 1 Lie 19 
Average, | 6(8) 19 (8) |38-6(3) 
ip. | oe | 6p | 
15 Q | 6 19 | 
16 m) a Be eS 
ae 18 2 ieee pee at EY 
G. esmarkit. 1 9 6 | 90 4.0 
Average, : 6 (5) 19:6(5) 
| | | 


—=— 


In all the specimens examined the same number of rays was obtained 
in the ventral fin, viz.,6. In the case of the pectoral fin there is a 
fairly similar amount of variation in each species; and the number of 
caudal rays is apparently very similar in the three species. The absence 
of variation in the ventral fin is to be expected, from the fact of there 
being so few rays. That may be one of the factors, but it may also be 
in part due to the fact that the ventral fin has a well fixed function in 
the genus—that its function, whatever it may be, is exactly similar in 
each of the species in which its rays remain the same. 


The Lengths of the Ventral and Pectoral Fins. 


The authors of “The Scandinavian Fishes” state in their description 
of G. minutus that the tip of the ventral fin reaches past the anus. This 
is not constant. The ventral fin has a long filamentous tip in the 
three species, : 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 129 


In duseus the ventral fin always extends past the anus, but in minutus 
and esmarkii the tip of this fin often fails to reach the level of the anus. 

Of 18 examples of minutus, in 6 the tip of the ventral fin did not 
reach the anus; in 3 cases it reached the anus exactly ; and in 9 cases it 
passed the anus. 

Fifty-two examples of esmarkwt were examined for this character. In 
20 the tip of the ventral fin did not reach the anus ; in 20 it reached the 
anus; and in 12 specimens it reached past the anus. 

The tip of the pectoral fin extended past the anus in all the specimens 
ofeach species in which the character was noted, viz., 9 examples 
of luscus, 18 of minutus, and 43 of esmarkit. 


The Vertebre. 


The details regarding the variation in the number of vertebra in the 
three species will be found in Tables I., II., III, IV. They are 
summarised in Table VI. 

The average number of vertebrae was :—JZuscus, 48°4 ; minutus, 49°4 ; 
esmarki, 53°4. 

In the matter of the average number of vertebree, Juscus and minutus 
come very near each other, the latter exceeding the former by one. 
Esmarkit has the comparatively high average of 53'4. The higher 
number of vertebra is accompanied in this species by a higher number 
of rays in the unpaired fins. 

The average number of the vertebra bearing the first heemal arch was 
16 in duscus, and the same in minutus, while in esmarkii the average, 
was 18°6. 


The Urinary Bladder and Ureter. 


The urinary bladder in J/uscus has no lobe; in minutus and esmarkit 
it has usually two lobes. 

_ Luscus.—None of the specimens examined had a lobe to the urinary 
bladder. The bladder in this form is coloured a silvery white. 

Minutus.—In the great majority of cases where this character was 
noted, two lobes were found attached to the urinary bladder, one on each 
side. This was the condition in 12 males and 39 females. In 6 speci- 
mens (3 males and 3 females) one lobe only was made out. In no case 
were both lobes absent. They are diverticula of the bladder, and vary in 
size. Sometimes both are long, narrow processes ; one may be a short 
flap; or both may be small. 

In one female 23cm. in length the left lobe had a small secondary 
lobe attached to it. 

In a female 25cm. long, captured in March, both lobes were large ; 
they were well supplied with blood-vessels, and their edges were frilled. 
Two of the females got at the same time, measuring 23cm., had similar 
lobes. In another March fish, a male 22cm. long, one lobe only was 
found, and it was well supplied with blood-vessels, Another male, 
22cm., captured in March, had two long lobes which were supplied with 
blood-vessels, but were not frilled. A ripe female in June had large 
frilled lobes. 

Esmarkii.—In this form there are usually two lobes to the urinary 
bladder. In four cases, however, no lobe was made out. These fish had 
been for two or three years in the preservative. In 15 specimens one 
lobe only was distinguished, but in the remaining 63 examples in which 
the character was noted both lobes were found. The lobes may be both 
long, or one may be short, 

I 


130 Part III.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The Ureter varies in position with respect to the swim-bladder. It 
may come down from the kidney on either side of the swim-bladder 
Its position has been noted in a number of specimens, 

Luscus.—Out of 11 cases the ureter was on the left in 7, and on the 
right in 4. 

Minutus.—Out of 39 cases the ureter was on the left in 14, and on the 
right in 25. 

Esmarkit.—Out of 53 cases the ureter was on the left in 21, and on. 
the right of the swim-bladder in 32. 


Reproduction. 


G'. luscus.—All the specimens of luscus examined were mature. The 
smallest male in the collection measured 16:8cm., and the next in size 
was 2lem., while the smallest female was 25cm. long. Fifty-three 
specimens were examined in all. 

The reproductive organs ripen early in the spring. 

In January, of the males (24 in number), 22 had large testes, and 2 
had developing smaller testes ; of 18 females, 17 had large ovaries, and 
one had a smaller developing ovary. 

In February 1 male and 3 females were ripe, and 3 males had large 
testes. In 1 female there was a developing ovary. 

In March 1 female was ripe, and another had a developing ovary. 

In May the one specimen examined was a spent female. 

A female measuring 24cm. obtained in June had a small ovary. 

The ovary is regarded as ripe when it contains transparent eggs. 
These are to be seen through the skin of the ovary scattered over the 
ovary, giving the condition known as the ‘‘ beaded roe.” The ovary may 
thus be labelled ripe before it is actually running. The large ovaries are 
white ‘‘ hard roes.” 

M‘Intosh and Masterman give the spawning time of this form as 
January-—February. Fulton found a luscus ripe in the Forth in March 
and another in May. According to Heincke and Ehrenbaum duscus 
spawns at Heligoland from (March ?) April to August. 

G. minutus. All the fishes of this species of which the condition of 
the reproductive organs has been recorded were mature. The smallest 
male and female measured 15cm., and above that size mature males were 
obtained at each centimetre up to the length of 22cm. No male larger 
than that was found. Mature females were found at every centimetre of 
length from 15cm. up to 29cm., with the exception of 28cm., at which 
size no minutus was obtained. The evidence therefore points to the 
conclusion that minutus becomes mature both in the male and female at 
or before reaching a size of 15cm. in length. 

The reproductive organs of minutus ripen about the same time of the 
year, but a little later than in Juscus. Ripe females of minutus were not 
met with till March. 

In December 5 females had small developing ovaries. 

In January 1 male was ripe, 10 males had large testes, while 1 male 
had a small developing testis. Thirty females had large ovaries, and 22 
had small developing ovaries. 

In February 16 males had large testes, 73 females had large ovaries, 
and 5 females had small developing ovaries. 

In March 6 males had nearly ripe testes, 2 females were ripe, and 55 
females had large ovaries. In this month nearly all the ovaries were 
large, white ‘‘ hard roes.” 

In May 2 males had nearly ripe testes, and 48 females were ripe. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. Tat 


In June 2 females were ripe and 2 males had fairly large testes. Two 
males from the Firth of Forth were ripe. 

The spawning time of this species is, according to M‘Intosh and 
Masterman, March—J une. 

The ovary of Juscus and minutus is distinctly triangular. The base of 
the triangle is parallel and close to the swim-bladder, the apex is the 
attachment by the oviduct to the anal region. The ovary grows forwards 
into the abdominal cavity and posteriorly into the post-abdominal cavity. 


The Ripe Eggs of Luscus and Minutus. 


G. luscus.—The ripe eggs of /wscws were found in a female in February. 
The transparent eggs measured 1‘1 x 1:25 and 1:2 x 1:25mm. The 
opaque eggs in the same ovary measured about ‘7mm. in diameter. The 
fish had been in formaline solution. 

In March the eggs, which were dead, were pressed out by the genital 
aperture. They were ripe, and measured 1:07 x 1:25; they were in the 
fresh condition. 

Cunningham found the eggs of a ripe luscus to measure from 1:05— 
115mm. M‘Intosh and Masterman found that the ripe eggs of this 
form after being preserved in spirit measured 1:14—1-16mm. in diameter. 

G. minutus.—In January three-fourths of the eggs in the ovary were 

olked. 
‘ In February, in one fish the yolked eggs measured ‘55mm. in diameter. 

On April 1 two of the minutus were in a spawning condition. The 
eggs flowed freely out at the genital pore. They were not fertilised: no 
ripe male was available. After being in water overnight some of the eggs 
remained transparent and floating. They were measured, and the sizes 
of their diameters in millimeters were as follows:—1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, ‘97, 
Pee raee he) (995 87, 297,799, 90-9 6 "85.9 Ke BD, “87, “87, 87, °87. 
‘87. Some of the eggs showed a striated zona. 

According to M‘Intosh the ripe egg of minutus measures ‘906mm. in 
diameter. 


Maturity of G. esmarkii. 


G. esmarkii.—The smallest matuse specimens of this form, so far as the 
development of the reproductive organs bore witness, were a male at 
llem. and a female measuring 9cm. in total length. Both had developing 
genital organs. 

Holt found two ripe females, measuring 42in. (about 11cm.) in length, 
in April, Fulton says that spawning probably takes place in February 
and March. 

The ovary of esmarkii is like that organ in luscus and minutus— 
triangular in shape. It has only a slight attachment to the roof of the 
abdominal cavity, except for the ureter. It grows forward along the floor 
of the abdominal cavity, and is in some specimens pushed to one side by 
the great development of the liver. 


The Swim- Bladder. 
The swim-bladder in Juscus and minutus is large. It is usually found 
to be ruptured. In one case an uninjured swim-bladder was noticed. 
The Skulls of Luscus, Minutus, and Esmarkit. 


The skulls of Juscus and minutus resemble one another much, and both 
differ distinctly from the skull of esmarkiz. The main character of 
difference is the slope of the ethmoid bone. When the three skulls are 


132 Part ITT —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


examined in side view the ethmoid in esmarkii (Z., fig. 9, pl. xi.) is 
seen to slope backwards quickly, whereas in minutus (fig. 6, 7b.) and 
luscus (fig. 3, 2b.) it is more nearly vertical, 

There are few distinguishing features between the skulls of Juscus and 
minutus, even when they are compared side by side. To convert these 
differences into characters by which the skull might be recognised apart 
from the other is well nigh impossible, so closely are they related. 

A general contrast will, therefore, be made between the two. 

In two fish of the same size the skull of minutus was the larger—it 
was slightly longer and higher. 

Seen from above, when the skull is resting on the vomer and the par- 
asphenoid, the calcified base of the ethmoid (E.) is partly hidden by the 
crest of the bone in duscus (fig. 4); in minutus the whole of the base is 
visible (fig. 8). 

The processes from the parietals (P. pr.) are large, winglike, in luscus ; 
they are narrow in minutus. The squamosals (Sq.) project posteriorly 
farther in luscus than in minutus. The notch between the frontal (F.) 
and post-frontal (pt.-F.) which receives the mucous canal passing 
round the eye, is much smaller in minutus than in luscus. The frontal 
in Zuscus contracts a little over the orbits and then expands again into a 
broadened anterior extremity. In minutus it comes to its narrowest over | 
the orbits, and is continued forward with the same breadth. 

The breadth of the anterior end of the skull, measured from the outer 
angle of one pre-frontal (pr.-F.) to the outer angle of the other, is in luscus 
greater than in minutus. 

Side view.—The occipital spine (Oc. Sp.) of luscus (fig. 3) is much 
higher than that of minutus (fig. 6). The part of the spine on the 
frontal rises more rapidly in the former. 

The hind edge of the occipital spine may be straight, or it may be 
slightly incurved just before reaching the occipital foramen. 

The front edge of the ethmoid has less backward slope in /useus than 
in minutus. 

In minutus the pre-frontal rises up to meet the outer corner of the 
frontal: it raises the latter a little. In duscus it does not rise so much. 

Seen from below, the pre-frontal*is roughly of a quadrant shape in 
luscus (tig. 12), and of a sextant shape in minutus (fig. 11). 

The parasphenoid (P.s) is more slender in ménutus than in luscus. 

The brain-case is more spherical in shape in minutus than in luscus. 

Seen from behind, the squamosal (Sq.) bends outwards and upwards 
in duscus (fig. 5). In minutus it projects more in a horizontal direction 

fig. 7). 

The opisthotic (op. O.) forms in minutus a projecting angle where the 
post-temporal articulates with it; this angle was not noticed in luscus. 

The par occipital (par.-Oc.) of d/uscus is continued backwards in a pro- 
jecting angle (Ang.), and in consequence the edge of the ex-occipital 
(e.-Oc., fig. 3) curves downward in a concave sense to the articulation 
with the shorter arm of the post-temporal. It is thus contrasted strongly 
with the blunt termination of the par-occipital in minutus (fig. 6). 

The skull of esmarkii is long when compared with that of manutus. 
An esmarkii measuring 15‘5cem. in length had a skull equal in length to 
that of a minutus 21cm. long. 

The ethmoid slopes back very quickly in esmarki (fig. 9). The 
frontal is narrow over the eyes, and the pre-frontals stand out prominently 
laterally, but the breadth across them is small (fig. 10). 

The vomer projects further in front of the pre-frontals in esmarkit 
fig. 13) than in minutus and luscus. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 133 


Otoliths.—Generally, the otolith of minutus was heavier, more massive 
than that of Juscus, in fish of the same length. The bossing or marking 
on the concave surface of the earstone is more distinct in duscus; it tends 
to become smoothed down in minutus. Two minutus of one length 
had very different otoliths; in one they were much more massive than 
in the other fish. 

The otolith of esmarkdi shows a tendency to transverse ridging in place 
of, or in addition to, bossing on the concave surface. 

The clavicle, §c.—Slight differences are to be seen in the clavicle, post 
clavicle, and premazilla between minutus and luscus. © Thus, in the 
clavicle the ridge dividing the outer surface of the bone is broader and 
more prominent in /uscus than in minutus. The post clavicle of minutus 
has a curved expanded superior end; in Juscus the head of the bone is 
expanded and bent a little off the straight. 

In the premaxilla the only noticeable difference was in the rather 
longer and narrower shape of the plate expansion on the distal part of the 
bone in minutus. 


Teeth. 


The teeth are small in dJuscus and minutus and minute in esmarkit. 


A Discussion of the Species. 
Gadus luscus and G. minutus. 


Only a very brief notice of the literature is necessary. Yarrell gives 
characteristic figures of luscus and minutus. The specific characters are 
treated only briefly. He says with regard to duscus that it has the 
power of inflating a membrane which covers its eyes, and for that reason 
it is called Pout, Bib, Blens, Blinds. Tho anus is in a line under the 
origin of the pectoral fin. The end of the rays of the tail are nearly 
square. It has a dark spot at the origin of the pectoral fin. The Bib is 
the deepest gadid. ‘The fin-formula given by Yarrell is—1 D, 11; 2 D, 
203.3 D, 16; 1 A, 33; 2 A, 19; P, 18; V,6. Vertebre, 48. 

G. minutus has, according to this author, the following fin-formula :— 
Pee aa), 19 oD, 17,351 Ay. 25,3 .2.A, 17); P, 14; V, 6. 

At different times the identity of the two species, G. minutus and G. 
luscus has been maintained. This is the view which Smitt maintains in 
the last edition of the ‘“ Scandinavian Fishes,” although plates showing 
perfectly characteristic Jwscus and minutus are included in the work. 
According to this author, Steindacher had asserted that the depth of the 
fish is merely a character of age, and he referred to the same category the 
character derived from the union of the anals in /uscus and their separa- 
tion in minutus. The comparative depth of the two species is certainly 
not a character that can berelied upon. But the deficiency in the second 
character mentioned I have not been able to find in the adult. Schmidt 
found this a very reliable character in the very young stages. Further, 
Smitt remarks that ‘‘the size of the eyes has been long since ascertained 
to undergo a relative diminution with increasing age.” The relative size 
of the eyes in Juscus and minutus is not of much importance. 

Smitt has compared 5 minutus and 3 luscus with respect to a large 
number of characters. In a considerable proportion of these very close 
agreement is found between the two species. That is to be expected, 
since luscus and minutus resemble one another closely ; in fact they form 
a small group of two fishes very distinct from the other Gadids. The 
following are the characters which Smitt selected :—Length of the head ; 
distance of the beginning of each of the three dorsal fins from the tip of 


5 


134 Part I11.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


the snout ; lengths of the ventral and pectoral fins ; length of the bases 
of the third dorsal and first anal fins ; the horizontal diameter of the eye ; 
breadth of the hind extremity of the maxilla; distance between the 
ventral fin and beginning of the first anal fin. All these characters were 
represented as percentages of the total length of the fish. In most of 
these characters not only do duscus and minutus come close together, but 
they both closely resemble esmarkzi, as reference to Table XIII. will show. 
In the characters the length of the bases of the third dorsal, minutus and 
esmarkiz, come close together, both being separated from minutus. In the 
length of the base of the first anal considerable diversity exists between 
the three forms. It is not necessary to follow Smitt into the other 
characters, which are represented as percentages of various standards. It 
is to be expected that the different species in a genus will show very 
many points of close resemblance, and that the characters in which they 
differ may be few. The specific tout ensemble may be very characteristic, 
and still not be easily reduced to a specific description. The specific 
descriptions of the two fishes in the ‘‘Scandinavian Fishes” recite in 
detail many points in which the two species of luscus and minutus agree, 
and do not emphasise the points of difference. 

The fin-formulee and vertebre given in the “ Scandinavian Fishes ” are 
as follows :— 

LIuscus—1 D, 12-14; 2 D, 20-26; 3 D, 18-20; i A, 27-35; 2 A, 
17-21; Pect., 19-20; Ventr., 6. Vertebre, 48. 

Minutus—1 D, 12-15; 2 D, 19-25; 3 D, 17-24; 1 A, 25-31; 2 A, 
17-23 ; Pect., 17-19; Ventr., 6. Vertebre, 50. 

The variations in the number of fin-rays found during the present 
research are arranged in Table V., p. 149, and the variations in the 
number of vertebre appear in Table VI., p. 150. 

Schmidt discusses Smitt’s evidence on the question of the identity of 
the two species. He shows that in the young stages /wscus and minutus 
are quite characteristic, and are easily separated by the specific characters 
that hold good in the adult. He emphasises the position of the anus 
with reference to the first dorsal fin, and the union of the anal fins which 
he finds constant in the young stages. He also lays stress on the differ- 
ence in depth between the two species. He describes and figures a series 
of both species up to 5cm. in length. 

Parnell, in his account of the Brassy (Morrhua lusca), mentions that 
the scales are very deciduous. It is characterised by a dusky spot at the 
base of each pectoral, by the first anal fin commencing under the middle 
of the first dorsal. He had examined Morrhua lusca up to a size of 17 
inches (42cm.). Parnell says that this fish resembles Morrhua minuta, 
but the latter has a shorter anal fin than Morrhua lusca. This author 
does not record Morrhua minuta from the Firth of Forth. The fin- 
formula of a Morrhua lusca, measuring 16 inches (40cem.) in length, he 
gives as follows:—1 D, 13; 2 D, 24; 3D,17; 1 A, 31; 2 A, 18; P, 
15; V, 6. In the case of the third dorsal he obtained a number (17) 
which is less than the smallest number found in any of the specimens 
examined in the present research, viz., 18 rays. 


Gadus esmarkit. 


This form, which was first recorded for Scottish waters by Giinther, 
was obtained by Sir John Murray in the Clyde and certain lochs on the 
West Coast of Scotland. 

The distinctive characters selected by Giinther are the following :— 

The lower jaw projects beyond the upper. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 135 


The teeth of the outer series in the upper jaw are a little larger than 
the inner ones. 

The snout is almost equal to the length of the diameter of the eye. 
[This character is preferably expressed as follows :—The diameter of the 
eye is equal to or exceeds the length of the snout. | 

The eye is very large, being a little less than one-third of the length of 
the head. 

The barbel is slender, being about half as long as the eye. 

The fin-formule were—1 D, 15-16; 2 D, 23-25; 3 D, 22-25; 1 A, 
27-29; 2 A, 23-25. 

In the “Scandinavian Fishes” the fin-formule are given as follows :— 
1 D, 14-16; 2D, 22-26; 3D, 22-27; 1A, 26-30; 2A, 24-38. 
Pect., 19. Ventr., 6. Vertebree, 52. 

Attention is called in the latter work to the lateral line which is “ dark 
(though not very distinct) and anteriorly slightiy curved.” 

The numbers of fin-rays and vertebree found in the esmarkit examined 
for the purpose of this research are set out in Table III., p. 145. 

Giinther drew attention to the cysts that are found in the eye of 
esmarkii. They are arranged in the iris, may be few in number, or they 
may occupy almost the whole of the iris, in this way appearing as a ring 
of white balls. These cysts occur in minutus also. 

In 1893 Professor M‘Intosh described a ‘‘peculiar Poor Cod” which 
is, he informs me, a Gadus esmarkit. Professor M‘Intosh has kindly 
permitted me to have a drawing made of this specimen, and it is 
reproduced in pl. ix. 

Since then Dr. Fulton has obtained it in large numbers. Schmidt has 
described in detail the post-larval and young stages of G. esmarktt up to 
a length of 5:'4cm. He remarks that in an example of 19mm. the eyes 
are but relatively small, their diameter being of the same size or but little 
larger than the distance from their anterior margin to the end of the 
snout. 


A Specific Description. 


For the purpose of determining the specific description a large number 
of measurements was made on specimens of each species, These show 
that external measurements made on a single fish may be of little value 
from the point of view of specific diagnosis, since the variation of each 
character is large, and, so far as is apparent, independent of, or at least 
not necessarily correlated with, any other contiguous character. The 
amount of variation which may occur in the characters, while the general 
specific identity is retained, is large. Specific identity means identity of 
function. The specific characters mean a difference in the life and habits 
of the animal which we may not be able at present to estimate. The 
correlation between the specific characters and the life of the fish is a 
field hitherto practically unexplored. Thus there are perplexing simi- 
larities and differences between fishes. The former mean that the fishes 
perform similar functions, but at the same time in certain other functions 
they occupy different spheres in the economy of the sea. 

In working out the specific characters it is well to consider the points 
in which the species agree, in order that these may form part of the 
generic or sub-generic description. The object of the specific description 
is to enable an observer to diagnose a single fish, and for that purpose a 
chart is required. 

The Genus may be divided into certain sub-genera. The species may 
be arranged into two or more groups, each characterised by some common 
character. The species in each sub-genus may then be distinguished 


136 Part IIT.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


from one another. Each species might appear in several sub-genera. 
For example, the members of the cod family discussed in the previous 
paper and in this, include G. callarias, G. virens, G. pollachius, 
G. luscus, G. minutus, and G. esmarkit. Now, these may be divided 
into two groups, as follows:—(a) Group of large fish, callarias, virens, 
and pollachius ; (b) group of small fish. Thus, if the fish is over 17 
inches in length it will probably belong to the first group, if less than 
that it may belong to either group. 

Nothing should appear in a specific description except what can be 
readily gauged without the aid of any accurate measurements. A 
measurement shown as a percentage of the length is a poor guide except 
when its fullest range of variation is taken, for its value. The average is 
of no value by itself, 7.¢., as a specific character. It may be used to show 
broad relationships. 

Even in the case where two species are so distinct that a glance is 
sufficient to separate them, still it is often very difficult to get readily 
gauged characters sufficient to describe the species. The attempt is made 


to describe a solid by means of a few characters, which are usually mere 
distances. 


The Diagnosis of a Species. 


The simplest mode of diagnosing a species is by means of a key of the 
genus. Accompanying the key there should be a particular description of 
the general appearance of each species. The key should be full, so that 
the species may be determined by different routes. There is hardly a 
single character which can be absolutely depended on. The specimen 
which it is desired to diagnose may be affected in such a way as to render 
a character, even an important one, doubtful. For example, a G. esmarkit 
may be found in which the mouth is fixed wide open, the hyoid and 
branchivstegal apparatus having become rigid. In such a specimen it 
could not be determined whether the lower jaw projected in front of the 
upper or not, and in this way a very valuable character becomes unavail- 
able. In another case a G. minutus has been observed in which the 
lower jaw projected out in line with the upper jaw, if it did not actually 
pass it slightly. The sum or resultant of the characters has therefore to 
be relied upon for the sure diagnosis. 


General Appearance of the Three Species. 
Luscus, fig. 2, pl. viii.; Minutus, fig. 1, 2b.; Hsmarki, pl. ix. 


They are all three small fishes. The largest size of Jwseus and minutus 
appears to be 17 inches (42cm.), and Fulton gives 10 inches as the length 
of the largest esmarktt recorded so far. 

LIuscus and minutus are deep fishes. While duscus is the deeper of the 
two, still considerable variation exists in minutus in this character. In 
one catch of minutus obtained in February it was possible to divide the 
fishes into two groups, in one of which the members were distinctly 
deeper than those in the other group. The deep group consisted of 15 
females measuring from 21cm. to 24cm., while the narrower specimens 
numbered 42. Of the latter, 7 were males measuring from 17‘5cm. 
to 22cm., and the remainder, 35 females, measured from 20cm. to 25cm. 
in length. All the fishes had well-developed reproductive organs, and the 
only difference appeared to be that in the deeper fish the ovaries were 
rather larger than in the other lot. Ina deep fish variations in depth are 
readily noticed. Where the character is large the variations are compara- 
tively large. Msmarktd is a more slender fish than the preceding. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 1347 


Colours and Scales.—The three species have silvery snouts, cheeks, and 
shoulders. 

Minutus has large silvery scales that are very easily rubbed off. The 
exposed part of the scale is covered with dark dots on a ground of silver. 
The overlapped part of the scale is colourless. The scales of the dorsum 
above the lateral line have a golden-yellow ground dotted with black. 
The golden-yellow colour is also seen on the silvery scales on the side. 

The scales of /uscus are smaller than those of minutus; they also are 
very deciduous. On the scale from the side of Juscus there is a broad 
edging of black dots. Beneath the scales the skin is thin and somewhat 
iridescent. When wet the skin of luscus has a slight golden sheen, but 
when dried the black-dotted scales give it a dirty black appearance. In 
large specimens preserved in formaline the appearance is silvery, but 
the skin has generally a blackish aspect, 

When preserved, minutus remains of a brownish-yellow colour, that is 
when the silvery scales are rubbed off, as usually happens. Where they 
remain attached the skin becomes of a dark appearance. The skin is of a 
rougher texture than that-of Juscus. It is slightly pinkish on the dorsum. 

In both species the belly is silvery. Lsmarkii also is silvery on the 
_ sides. 

The Axillary Mark.—In luscus the axillary mark is a large blue-black 
patch covering the sides of the axilla, and extending out on the clavicle 
and over the hase of the pectoral fin. In minutus it is a small dark area 
on the axilla and the base of the first pectoral fin-ray. It does not 
extend on to the clavicle much. In esmarkii there is a very similar 
axillary mark to minutus: it is a collection of small black dots which 
spread over the base of the pectoral fin. 

The Peritoneum in esmarkii is black, and in preserved specimens the 
black layer shines through the thin abdominal wall. 

The Fins.—The anal fins of luwscus are blue-black ; those of minutus 
yellow and black spotted. The first anal of minutus is sometimes very 
dark. 

Most of the unpaired fins of esmarkii have a black border. Thus the 
anterior border of the first dorsal is black, while the superior and hind 
borders of the second and third dorsal fins are likewise black. The black 
parts of the second anal and caudal fins are the hind border and the hind 
half of the fin respectively. There are black spots along the bases of the 
fins, and also on the anterior border of the first anal. The anal fins of 
preserved specimens are without pigment, except on the anterior part of 
both fins, where a small area is covered with small dots. This character 
is more prominent in the larger specimens. The caudal fin is more or 
less all black. 

The second and third dorsals are separate in minutus and in esmarkit, 
and are usually separate in /uscus. In one specimen of Juscus, however, a 
male measuring 16°8cm. in length, the second and third dorsals were united. 

The first and second anals are separate in minutus and esmarkti, but 
are united in duscus. There is a thick integument on the unpaired fins in 
luscusand minutus. In the former the first anal is a thick flabby fin, the 
integument being soft and loose. This fin is often inflated with a gas, 
which can be pressed out at the edge. 

There is a characteristic difference between Juscus and minutus in the 
shape of the third dorsal and second anal fins, as will be seen by reference 
to Plate VIII. The hind edges of these fins in Juscws are cut straight 
across, at right angles to the longitudinal axis of the fish. In minutus 
the hind edges slope away posteriorly. In esmarkzi the slope is more 
pronounced and longer than in minutus (pl. ix.). 


138 Part IIT.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The Caudal Fin of luscus has its hind margin slightly concave, that 
of minufus is distinctly concave, aud in esmarkit the hind margin is 
deeply cleft. 

The ventral fin ends in a filamentous tip in all three species. 

_ The Mandible projects a little in front of the upper jaw in esmarkit; 
In mtnutus and luscus the upper jaw projects in front of the lower. 

The side and tip of the lower jaw are dark coloured in esmarkii. The 
under-surface of the dentary part of the lower jaw is white in Juscus; pale, 
colourless in minutus. In consequence, the sensory pits on the under- 
surface of the dentary show up well in /uscus and are faint in minutus. 

The Barbel is long and stout in luscus and minutus. In esmarkii it is 
thin and short, not being longer than half the diameter of the eye. In 
the last species the barbel often lies back along the under surface of the 
Jower jaw in the hollow between the two dentaries. The barbel is not 
so short in esmarkit as it is in Gadus virens, in which species it is very 
inconspicuous. 

The Lateral Line is curved over the abilomen in all three species. In 
luscus and esmarki the line is dark and more prominent than in minutus. 
The bend rises from the hind straight portion more abruptly in duseus; in 
minutus and esmarkit the rise is more gradual. 

The Anus is beneath the beginning of the first dorsal fin in Juscus, and 
beneath the second half of the corresponding fin in minutus and esmarki. 

The Eye in the three species here discussed is specially large. In 
luscus it is slightly smaller than in minutus and esmarkit. The diameter 
of the eye is equal to or greater than the length of the snout, 7.e., the 
distance from the tip of the upper jaw to the anterior edge of the orbit. 
They all exhibit at times the loose cornea which is sometimes inflated 
with gas or fluid, giving the eye the well-known bulged appearance. 
Sometimes cysts are found on the front of the eyeball in the region of 
the iris. 

Two of the larger esmarkii, measuring 18‘5cm. and 19cm. in length, 
had eyes which appeared to be larger in proportion than the smaller fishes, 
The eyes measured in horizontal diameter 7°3 and 7°8 per cent. of the 
total length of the fish respectively. Four others measuring 19cm., and 
one of 2lcm., had eyes measuring 7 per cent. of the total length of 
the fish. The small difference in diameter will, of course, entail a con- 
siderable difference in the area of the eye, and it is by the area, not the 
diameter, that the eye of the observer makes the comparison. Any 
variation towards an increase in the size of an already specially large 
character will of necessity attract attention. 

The barbel in duscus is rather bigger and stouter than that of manutus. 
In five specimens of the latter the barbel measured two-thirds or a little 
more than the horizontal diameter of the orbit. 

In the key are introduced the following Gadid species—G. callarzas, 
G. virens, G. pollachius, G. luscus, G. minutus, and G esmarkit. 


KEY. 
I. LowEr JAw (Length of)— i. 
a. projects in tront of Upper Jaw, . . virens; pollachius ; esmarkit. 
b. of same length as e oe . virens (young) ; minutus (sometimes). 
c. shorter than Ay 6 , : callarias ; luscus ; minutus. 
II. Anus (Position of)— 
a. below the beginning of the First Dorsal Fin, . -  «  duscus. 
bs alee .f) Hirst half pVG5", ees a8 é .  pollachius ; minutus. 
C. an ,, second,, ,, 5 «6 Minutus ; virens; esmarkit. 


33 be) bd 
ad. 55 5 trst half .,, ¢; Second |. - : : callarias. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


III. LateraL LInE— 
a. curved, dark, 
b. * posterior part white, 
c. straight, white, : 


IV. Taiz Fry (Hind Edge)— 

. Straight or slightly convex, 
very slightly concave, 

. slightly concave, 

. distinctly forked, 

. deeply cleft, 


2 Vo os 


¥.. —— (The part from = of pepe eae to 
a. sharp, 
b. blunt, 


V{. Eye (horizontal diameter of the eee 


a. as large as, or larger than, the snout, 
b. not so large as the length of the snout, 


VII. BarBEL— 
a. absent, 
b. very minute, 


c. small, slender, about half the diameter of the eye, 


d. big, stout, ; : : 


VIII. Anat Frns— 
a. united, 
b. separate, 


IX. VENTRAL Fin* (length of)—— 


callarias ; 


VUTENS ; 


139 


. pollachius ; minutus ; luscus ; esmarkiz. 


callarias. 
virens. 


callarvas (large). 
callari tas (small) ; luscus. 
3 . minutus. 
‘esmarkii. 


pollachivs ; : 
virens. 


anterior ae of the orbit)— 
virens ; pollachius ; esmarkit. 
callarias ; luscus ; minutus. 


minutus ; esmarkii 
virens ; pollachius. 


luscus ; 
callarias ; 


pollachius, 
virens. 
esmarkit. 
minutus. 


callarias ; luscus ; 


luscus. 


pollachius ; minutus ; esmarkii. 


a. less than two-thirds of the length of the Pectoral Fin, virens; pollachius. 


b. about five-sixths of the length of Pectoral, 


c. almost as long as the Pectoral, 


X. SECOND AND THIRD DorSAL FiIns— 
a. united, 


b. separate, callarias ; 


XI. Gratu at Pectoral Region— 
a. greater than the girth at Anus, 
b. less than the girth at the Anus, . 


XII. ScaLtes—very deciduous, 


XIII. Leneto— 
a. not exceeding 10 inches (25 cm.), . 


b. not exceeding 17 inches (42 cm.),. 


c, exceeding 17 inches (42 cm.), 


virens ; pollachius ; 


callarias. 


luscus ; minutus ; esmarkia. 


sometimes in luscus. 


luscus ; minutus; esmarkii. 
callarias. 

virens ; pollachius ; luscus ; minutus ; 
esmarkii. 
luscus ; minutus. 


callarias ; virens ; pollachius ; luscus ; 
minutus ; esmarkii. 
virens ; pollachius ; 

luscus ; minutus. 
virens ; pollachius. 


. callerias ; 


. callarias ; 


LITERATURE. 


CuNNINGHAM.—‘‘ Marketable Marine Fishes.” 


tions of G. luscus and G. minutus. ] 


Day.—-‘‘ The Fishes of Great Britain and Ireland.” 
Fuiton.—‘‘ The Spawning and Spawning Places of Marine Food-Fishes.” 


London, 1896. [Short descrip- 


London, 1880-1884. 
Highth 


Annual Report of the Fishery Board for Scotland, for the year 1889. 


[Spawning of G. duscus. ] 


—-—— ‘‘On the Comparative Fecundity of Sea-Fishes.” 
the Fishery Board for Scotland, for the year 1890, p. 243. 


luscus. | 


—— ‘‘Ichthyological Notes—Gadus esmarkii.” 
the Fishery Board for Scotland, for the year 1902, Pt. III., p. 282. 


bution of G. esmarkiz. | 


Ninth Annual Report y 
[Eggs of G 


Nineteenth Annual Report of 
[ Distri- 


* The slender tip of the ventral fin may be broken sometimes. 


140 Part I11.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Fuiton.—‘‘Ichthyological Notes—G@adus esmarkii.” Twentieth Annual Report 
of the Fishery Board for Scotland, for the year 1901, Pt. III., p. 539. 


‘*The Rate of Growth of Fishes—Gadus esmarkit.” T'wenty-second 
Annual Report of the Fishery Board for Scotland, for the year 1903, p 195. 
[Rate of Growth and Distribution. ] 

GUNTHER.—‘‘ Catalogue of Fishes in the British Museum.” 


‘* Report on the Fishes obtained by Mr. J. Murray in Deep Water on the 
North-West Coast of Scotland, between April 1887 and March 1888.” 
Proceedings Roy. Soc. Hdinburgh, vol. xv., p. 205, 1889. [Specific 
Description of Gadus esmarkii. | 
HEeINCKE u. EHRENBAUM. —‘‘ Kier und Larven von Fischen der deutschen Bucht.” 

II. ‘*Die Bestimmung der Schwimmenden Fischeier und die Methodik 
der EKimessungen.” Wissen. Untersuch. von der Komm. wissen- Untersuch. 
der deutschen Meere in Kiel u. Biol. Anstalt auf Helgoland. N.¥. 3er Bd. 
_ Abtheil. Helgoland. Hft. 2. 1900. Pp. 131 et seg. [Eggs and Spawning 
of G. luscus. ] 


Hont.—Royal Dublin Society. Report of Council for 1891. [Gadus esmarkii.] 

M‘Intosu.—‘‘ Report of the St. Andrews Marine Laboratory, No. III.” Fourth 
Annual Report of the Fishery Board for Scotland, for the year 1885, p. 201. 
[Gadus luscus and Gadus minutus. ] 

——— ‘‘Contributions to the Life-Histories and Development of the Food- and 
other Fishes,” Hleventh Annual Revort of the Fishery Board for Scotland, 
for the year 1892. Part III. [Eggs of Gadus minutus: On a peculiar 
** Poor Cod” (G. esmarkii. ] 

M‘Intosu and Mastrerman.—-‘‘ The Life-Histories of the British Marine Food- 
Fishes.” London, 1897. [Eggs, larvee, and post-larval stages of G. luscus 
and G. minutus. | 

Mosrus u. Hernckre.—‘‘ Die Fische der Ostsee.”’ Berlin, 1883. [Specific 
Description of G. minutus. | 

PARNELL. —‘‘ Fishes of the Firth of Forth.” Edinburgh, 1838. [Description of 
Morrhua lusca. 

‘“ SCANDINAVIAN Fisuxs.” (By Fries, Ekstrim, Sundevall, Wright, and Smitt.) 
Stockholm, 1893. 

Scumipt.—‘‘ The Pelagic Post-larval Stages of the Atlantic Species of Gadus.” 
3 Plates and 16 Figuresin the Text. Pt. I. Meddelelser fra Kommissionen 
Jor Havunderségelser. Serie, Fiskeri. Bind I. No. 4. Copenhagen, 1905. 
[Post-larval stages of G. luscus, G. minutus, and G. esmarku, with figures. ] 

WILLIAMSoN.—‘‘ On the Pelagic Fish-Eggs and Larve of Loch Fyne.”  Seven- 
teenth Annual Report of the Fishery Board for Scotland, for the year 1898. 
Pt. IIT, p. 79. [Occurrence of the eggs of G. luscus and G. minutus. ] 

‘*A Comparison between the Cod (Gadus callarias, Linn.), the Saithe 

(Gadus virens, Linn.), ond the Lythe (Gadus pollachius, Linn.), in respect 
to certain external and osteological characters.” Twentieth Annual Report 
of the Fishery Board for Scotland, for the year 1901. Pt. III., p. 228. 

YARRELL.—‘‘ A History of the British Fishes.” London, 1861. [Descriptions of 
Gadus luscus and G. minutus. ] 


EXPLANATION OF PLATES. 
PLATE VIII. 


Fig. 1. Gadus minutus, 27 em. long. , large ovary. Reduced. 
Fig. 2. Gadus luscus,28 cm. 9, nearly ripe. Reduced. 


PLATE IX. 
Gadus esmarkii. Nat. size. 

PLATE X., 
Fig. 3. Skull of G. luscus, 2, 28-7 em., . x 2 
Fig. 4. 9 9 9 »” C x 2 
Fig. a s3 ”9 29 ” ct . 
Fig. 6. » Gt minutus, 25 cm., = 2 
Fig. 7 - ty 26 cm., ; : ‘ x 2 
Fig. 8 i q. 25 cm., ; : : : x 2 


F. B. REPORT, 1906. ‘ 


PLATE VIII. 


hy 
eS ea 


Satan! 


EE 


Li 


ne 
54) 9,0, 
i Ai x & 
+ 


Ky 
sina 
WARY Nite 
i 
(4 
i etait 


L 


> I 
A. H. Waker, delt. ; 


Fig, 2. G@. luscus. 


PEATE 4X. 


F. B. REPORT, 1906. 


i. 


I 


Gadus esmar 


A, H. WALKER. 


Sere 


ry 


re pee 
pr. F. V. Pt. F . 


A. H. Wacker. Flos, 3, 4, 5, 12. Gadus luscus. Fias. 6, 7, 8, Ul. G. minutus. Figs. 9, 10, 13, 14, G, esmarkii. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 141 


Fig. 9. Skull of G. esmarkii, x 2 
Fig. 10. - - : x 2 
Fig. 11. i G. minutus, 26 cm., x 2 
Fig. 12. »  G. luseus, 28 cm., x 2 
Fig. 13. »  G. esmarkia, x 2 
Fig. 14. es i x 2 
LETTERS USED. 
Ang —Angle. | P. pr.—Process of Parietal. 
b. Oc.—Basi-occipital, par. Oc.—Par-occipital. 
#.—¥Ethmoid. p. S.—Parasphenoid. 
e. Oc.—-Ex-occipital. pr. F.--Pre-frontal. 
F,—Frontal. | pt. F.—Post-frontal. 
Oc. Sp.—-Occipital Spine. | Sq.—Squamosal. 
op. O.—Opisthotie. V.—Vomer. 
P.—Parietal. 
LIST OF TABLES. 
PAGE. 

Localities near Aberdeen where the one of G. luscus and G. minutus 

were captured, , : ‘ ‘ ; sy E18 
Localities where some of the G. esmar i were aiid 4 : Thy eats 
Table showing the sex and sizes of the fishes examined, ; , . shes 
Table showing the average lengths of the bases of the unpaired fins, 124-5 
Table showing the ratio of the peice of the base of the first anal to that of 

the second anal, . 125 
Table giving the sum of the acti of the bases of the dor cal and hing fae, 126 
Table showing the average number of rays in the unpaired fins, : . 126 
Table of the average index of the fin-rays for each fin, : ; oem 
Table of the number of rays in the paired fins and caudal fin, , $28 


TaBLE I.—Gadus luscus. Number of VERTEBR&, the Number of the 
Vertebra bearing the First Hama ARCH, and the Number 
of FIN-RAYS, - s 4 


sf II.—Gadus minutus. Number of es the Number of the 
Vertebra bearing the First Hamat ArcH, and the Number 


of FIN-RAYS, . 143-4 
» ILlL—Gadus esmarkii. Number of VERTEBRA Le FIN-RAYS, 145-7 
.» IV.—Gadus esmarkii. Number of Vertebra pearing the First 

H#MAL ARCH, . : 148 


* V.—Gadus luscus, G. minutus, G. esmarkit. The Range bE oa 
TION in the Number of FIN-RAYS in each Fin. FREQUENCY 
of each Number, p ; : : ; . 149 


»  ViI.—Gadus luscus, G. minutus, G. esmarkii. The Range of Varta- 
TION in the Number of VERTEBRa. Frequency of each 
Number, : , 3 4 3 : = dad 


» VII. and VIII.—Gadus luscus. The Bopy-DIMENSIoNS represented 
as Percentages of the Length of the Fish. AVERAGE at each 
size (Centimetre groups), : : : ; 151-2 


» IX. and X.—Gadus minutus. The Bopy-DImMEnsIons represented as 
Percentages of the Length of the Fish, AVERAGE at each 
size (Centimetre groups), : : : 153-4 


» AI. and XII.—Gadus esmarkii. The Bopy-DIMENsIons represented 
as Percentages of the Length of the Fish. AVERAGE at each 
size (Centimetre groups), : : 155-6 


», AXII1.—Gadus luscus, G. minutus, G. nae The Range of VARIA- 
TION of the Bopy- DIMENSIONS, : = Lae 


i 


Part III —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


TABLE I.—-Gadus Luscus., 


Number of Vertebroe, Number of Vertebra bearing the First Hemal Arch, 


Length. 
Cm. 


AA A Ww WB A A AM 


* 


sO) Gn@) an©) 4n©) 


Average, 


Variants, 


Sex. 


and Number of Fin-rays. 


VERTEBRA, FIN-RAYS. 
Rdacont ieee iD, |-2D..| 3D. |. 
Hemal Arch. 
49 16 14 26 22 35 22 
48 16 13 24 20 35 22 
48 16 12 22 20 31 20 
48 16 15 22 19 32 21 
49 17 15 22 19 33 21 
48 | 16 18 23 19 32 21 
49 16 14 24 20 36 22 
48 16 14 24 19 34 22 
49 16 13 21 18 32 18 
48 16 13 22 21 34 22 
49 16 13 23 18 30 21 
49 16 13 24 21 35 21 
48 16 14 25 19 36 22 
48°4 16 13°5 23°3 19°6 33°F 21 
13 13 13 13 13 13 13 


* Sex not recorded. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 143 


TABLE II.—Gadus Minutus. 


Number of Vertebroe, Number of Vertebrabearing the First Hamal Arch 
and Number of Fin-rays. 


VERTEBRA. FIN-RAYS. 

Length. 4 : i Setters 

= ade fal weicine at 1 De ilu 2D, (esas ea oe 
‘ |Heemal Arch. 

11 Q 49 13 24 20 27 20 
11:3 2 50 | 18 23 21 28 23 
tim). o 50 | 18 24 23 28 23 
14 2 49 13 23 29 21 
14-6 Q 50 14 22 21 26 22 
16°6 = 49 |) aie 24 22 27 7A 
17-2 g 49 16 pase 23 23 27 22 
ye | 3 49 16 18 22 20 21 
17°8 3 49 16 13 26 on 30 23 
18 2 50 if 
18-2 3 48 16 
18-2 3 50 16 
186 2 49 17 14 24 23 29 22 
4 |. 6 50 16 13 23 21 29 23 
19°6 2 49 16 12 24 20 28 22 
19°7 12 992 21 28 22 
20 2 48 16 
20 2 13 23 21 28 21 
20°5 2 48 16 13 20 22 29 22 
21 3 51 16 12 24 a 28 21 
21 3 50 17 | 14 21 28 23 
21 2 49 16 | 
21°2 2 49 16 | i 22 21 28 22 
21°3 2 49 16 | 12 22 21 29 22 
21:4 d 51 16 14 21 22 22 
21°5 3 49 15 13 23 19 28 21 
21°6 fe) 50 16 

Be 2 50 16 
21-7 3 50 a 13 20 21 27 23 
21°8 2 49 16 h 12 24 23 29 28 
21°8 g 49 16 L138 22 Py) 27 23 


144 Part III —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 
TABLE II.—continued. 


VERTEBRE. FIN-RAYS. 


a Ree Role 1p, |) 2D ea a ee 
\Hemal Arch. 

22 2 12 22 ; 
22 2 50 16 12 26 22 29 24 
22 a 48 16 | 
22 2 51 17 
29 2 49 16 13 93 23 29 22, . 
92 | 2 50 16 - 21 21 Q7 22 
222 | & 50 16 
22-4 3 50 17 12 25 21 28 22 
99-4 | Q 50 16 
225 | 9 49 15 
26 | 9 49 16 12 24 23 24 
23 Q 48 15 12 22 22 27 23 
23 Q 49 16 14 21 22 23 
23 fe) 50 
23 Q 50 16 12 21 21 29 22 
233 | Q 50 16 15 23 21 29 23 
ee a ee. 49 15 

| 24 Q 49 16 13 23 22 29 21 

| 242 | 9 49 16 
244 | 9 49 16 13 21 23 27 22 
2438 | 9 50 18 13 24 20 28 21 
253 | 9 50 13 24 22 31 24 
25-4 49 16 12 26 20 29 23 
26°4 49 17 13 24 21 30 93 

| Average, - 49°4 16 12°% 22°9 2104 28°2 22°2 


Variants,  - 52 43 39 39 P) “ag 35 39 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 145 


Taste IL1.—Gadus Hsmarkit. 


Number of Vertebree and Fin-rays. 


| Toneilh VERTEBRE. FIN-RAYS. 
| Total ; 
| se Number. | 1p, 2D. 3D. LA, 2A, 
8:6 15 24 24 29 26 
9:5 | 16 24 26 29 27 
16 24 28 29 29 
15 26 24 29 o7 
53 14 25 26 27 28 
15 24 26 30 26 
15 27 27 29 27 
15 25 27 29 28 
15 25 25 97 29 
15 26 26 30 29 
15 26 29 27 
16 25 26 27 28 
15 25 27 29 29 
15 25 25 30 97 
16 26 28 30 26 
14 23 24 27 28 
15 23 23 27 26 
16 27 26 30 26 
16 28 27 31 27 
14 28 26 30 27 
16 22 25 28 28 
15 22 26 27 24 
14 25 26 29 26 
16 26 26 32 28 


4+¢ +0 +0 10 G& GW +0 40 +0 


LOOT _ Ian 


146 


Length. 


Cm. 


| yass 3d 


—_ 
re 
sa 
+0 +0 +0 0 WO GA GG 


_ 
or 
rr 
i 40 40 Hol Go ao 4o. Gi tO Ge 4O 40 4O 40 O% 10 (O1O oO too 


Part IIL —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


VERTEBRA. 


Total 
Number. 


TABLE I1I1.—continwed. 


FIN-RAYS. 


3D. 


1B ON 


29 
28 


28 


27 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 147 


TABLE III.—continued. 


Baligth: VRRTEBRH. FIN-RAYS. 

Pee ey ak ap five fas, 
woe ae Recta [nae Cake [Wer a as ee | 
| 156 2 16 26 27 30 28 

15°6 4 15 27 26 30 27 

15°6 Be 16 25 27 29 27 

15°6 ¢ 15 24 28 28 27 

15:7 3 14 21 23 27 26 

15-7 2 16 26 26 29 27 

15-7 2 15 25 30 26 

16 o 15 25 25 29 25 

16 g 15 24 26 28 25 

16 2 15 26 28 27 

16 15 27 26 31 26 

16:3 Se 16 25 25 27 26 

163 17 24 25 28 26 

16:5 2 16 24 26 27 29 

16°6 2 15 26 28 30 28 

16°6 2 16 25 26 28 26 

16°7 £ 25 27 29 26 

16:8 Be 15 25 26 vil 26 

17 Q 15 26 25 30 26 

17 2 15 25 27 27 26 

17 g 15 24 28 28 28 

17:2 3 14 24 26 30 27 

17°3 fe) 16 24 28 28 a 

175 2 15 23 28 30 

17°6 2 15 27 25 29 27 

17°8 2 15 24 26 28 24 

18°4 2 28 24 28 

18°6 fe) 15 25 

21 ce) 16 25 28 30 30 

: 2 15 26 28 29 28 

Average, - 15°3 25 26 (28°9) 29 27-2 

Varian ts, - 93 92 91 94 91 


148 Part LIL— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Taste LV.—Gadus Hsmarkia. 


Number of the Vertebre bearing the first Hwemal Arch. 


Length. Number of the 


She ‘otal Number | Vertebra bear- 
C : of VERTEBR&. ing the first 
Me Heemal Arch. 
14:7 2 53 18 | 
14:7 54 19 
15:2 53 18 


— 
Sy 
bo 

+O) +0) “O50 OS 
On 
re 
ps4 
(2) 


149 


16 ieee - ae ate pins Pe: Z Il £Z QZ IZ g V6 eee ose eee eee aes eee eee ene eee ose eee eee eee i - a (euy puooseg 
56 mf deete-to |, leeleglerlerle |t ttl lc bee doe be bee bee |e be fe fe Pe Pe |- -  euy 4sang 
eT Lyi FE ST 9 Z eee vote see eae eee eee wae eee eee ees eos see } - a ‘Tes1o( psy TIMUVNSA SAdC VP) 


I 
Z6 eee een Grete Sere were eee spa IE 9 EL 0% 87 0Z F p I eee eran reieie slays 590 eae wieie S00 eee Gow | (ule - Vesiog paoseg 


CC ge LT LS 


6g cist eee kegel Resell PES ies tan eral ee sou | ose |f aaa) aa te eleva if - Yeuy puoseg 
ee Pe eeu etermel ean eree ec rer | tpg |p Mensa moa) ee sce ee | ee ee Noo eee | vee [ae feet oh | are | ay kL ceuy qsatq 
9¢ Sy eet) comeilieeialeeray| ogo |iune |pases ee Geet | bee fm pe et gre qe ge lee | | oe - qesiog puns | ‘SQLQNIW SQd¥Y 
6g sre Pree wal Peres [ee ree [mee foes [ee | ow eh a ee ie le | % 


6e wee [vee cee Poses foes [cee fines Pree [tee | ere fees fee fee fore fore fe [om tee bee foe tee |r le | er | ay -  esaogy 4saty 


- Tes1oq puoosg 


el eee eee eee eee eee eae eee see woe eee eee eee eee ose 9 G I eee ii wae oes aoe eee one eae is Teuy puoseg 
EL G g Fé 7, e i wee eee woe wee ere eee eee wee eee wee nae eae vee eee wae see eee eee eee eee 2 ‘[eUuy 4Sdly 
EL ve fire [ore fee fee fee fie Poe pe fee tee for per teeta [ez fe le iz - “[esxod, PAUL, ‘SQ082T SAC VY 


gL ese oon eee eae owe eee oan eee eve eiere I I F G YT I 
eT tee [ose foes [cee fice Pree [vee Pete foot fee fee fee fee fee fie fee Poe fee fee tee deed ze Te lo la dee | -  fesaod 4Sapy 


- Ves1og, puodeq 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


“SINVIV A 
40 
UAAWAN 


9 | GE | PE | SS | ce | TE | OF | Ge | 8B | Le | 9G | Lo | Fe | Le ee | We O@ | GE | SE | LE | OL | SE | PL | SE | GE 


| "NT “‘saloads 


‘SAVU-NIY dO UAEWAN 


‘waqunay yonea fo houaenbowy 
‘urg yono wr shnu-ug fo saqunay ayn ure uounrimy fo abuny oy]--A WIAV, 


, , sh ene Den EC Te ee 


Ee 


tie onal 


OS ee SF rr 


~~ 


150 Part III —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Taste VI, 


Variations in the Number of Vertebre—Frequency of each Number. 


Number of Vertebre. Number |A¥erage 

epecies Variants of Ver 
48 | 49] 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 tebree. 
Gadus luscus, . if 16 a a a ee es. | “8 13 48°4 
Gadus minutus, 5 24 | 20 3 iz ae i, ae 52 49-4 
Gadus esmarki, |... ee ee we 4 23 21 2 50 53°4 


= *XOS POUTUIOJOPUN JO YSY GUO SOpNIOUL [%4O} OG], y 


— 
¢ g g g g g 9 OL 6 OL OL Ic 1¢ 6 6 8 6 6 8 Foie Ne oe Bete ‘sqUBLIe A 
L 6 Fi 6 ol SI 9 L 06 Li OL 9 9 96 Fa Pi 69 09 : : J 4 ‘9SUIVAY 
(TST OLIC) Pll oa =o 1 (Spee |Demit orl (Ss (t)9 | (1) 9 | (Ze (1)'9e | () FL Gt) 99 (CD) €9 if OF 
° eee . 5 . (g) 9 (g) 9 eee eee falare’ eee Z T ce 
; ; ; ; (Z) ¢ | (2) 9 “ z ES 
8 es : ; ; (Z) ¢ | (a) 9 3 Ke, gg 
= 2 AiG) : (z) 9 | (2) 9 | Z Ze 
W 
= i (z) ¢ | (Z) 9 i G te 1g 
Q (ital alee =e1(G)o-| (Gop as Z e 0g 
> 
= eee eee eee eee eee oor eee eee eee ese eee (¢) 9 (e) 9 eee eee Z I 6% e 
S 
RQ a sie a on oe ae ECW (1) 20} (1) 21} (9) ¢ | (9) 9 | (1) ¢ | (1) 821 (1) 98 | (LD) FL] CD 69 9 I 8% 
=> 
3 (1) | (tg | (dD) et} (1D) ot (1) st (D Zr] (2) 9 | (@) 2 1 (@ st} (Z) 21 (3) HL] (TD 9 (TD 9] (2) g |Z) 22 | (2) 2 (Z) SL} (3) #9 G i) 1% 
s (1)9 | (16 {(t) Ft (D6 | (1) 02] (1) 02] (Dz | (1) 9 | (Z) | (@) ST} (z) st | (8) 9 | (8) 9 | (2) ¢ | (%) Go| (1) 8B | (@) FT (Z) 6¢ 6 9 9% 
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snpyy— XY] VIAV 


Part III —Twenty-fourth Anwual Report 


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‘VITIXVNGUg jo diy, wos oourysiq 


‘ysig ay? Jo yybuaT ay) ur sabnyuso1ag abv.way sv pozuasaidas suoisusug-ANpog eyf ‘snrynwpy snpyy—X AAV], 


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‘ysug oyn fo yzbueT oyg fo sabviucowig sv payuasasdas suoisuaurg -pog ay ‘uywwwsy snpyy—TX WAVY, 


Part ITT.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


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‘ATMIGNVIY JO dig—: za ‘ysty JO JulOg AOWeJUY UOAy vOULISIG 


‘(sdno.y ajawiyuan) ary yona yo abpsanp = ysug ayn fo yybuaT ayy fo saboquaouag sv paquasaidas suoisuewmgy -hpog ey “wy4nwse snpoy— TTX ATAV 


157 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


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of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 159 


VIL—ON THE TAY SPRAT FISHERY, 


1905-1906. 


By Joun Fuetcuer, University College, Dundee. 


oe 


I regret to report that the Tay sprat fishing has again been a compara- 
tive failure. Only 1371 crans of sprats, including young herrings, were 
taken out of the river this season, as against 1348 crans during last 
season 1904-1905, and 14,966 crans during the season of 1883-1884. 

The 1371 crans consisted of somewhere about 28 million sprats and 
young herrings, of which some 57 per cent., or 16 million, were sprats 
measuring from about 4:5 centimetres to 14:5 centimetres in length, and 
the other 11 million, or 42 per cent., were young herrings measuring from 
4°3 centimetres to 17'5 centimetres. 

The bulk of the fish were caught during the first half of November, 
and at that time the sprats were of large size and of first-class quality, 
and the prospects of a good fishing season, which were afterwards 
completely disappointed, appeared to be excellent. The large size of 
these sprats contrasted greatly with the much smaller and younger sprats 
of last season, and caused a striking difference in the relative numbers 
of fish per cran during the two seasons. 

Last season the average number of fish per cran was 28,800, and this 
season it was 19,200 during the first half of November, and 24,000 
during the rest of the season. 

Most of the fish were sent off fresh to the various English markets; a 
fair proportion, however, were salted and shipped to Germany for sardine 
purposes, while a small fraction were either sold for manure or thrown 
into the river, mostly while the men were at the sparling fishing. 

The 1371 crans of fresh and salted fish brought to the fishermen a sum 
of somewhere about £350. 

During January and February, while the men were at the sparling 
fishing, it was often difficult and sometimes impossible to obtain accurate 
information regarding the quantities of young herrings and sprats captured 
along with the sparlings. The difficulty was mainly due to the great 
scarcity of fish, and to the fact that small quantities were being sent off 
from Newburgh by the fishermen themselves, whilst other small quanti- 
ties were taken to the Dundee Fish Dock, situated at the extreme east 
end of the city. 

I ascertained, however, that the number of sprat boats engaged at the 
sparling fishing varied from 1 to 20 during the latter half of December 
and the whole of January, and from 1 to 7 during February. Each boat 
during December and January brought in along with the sparlings from 
1 bucket to 2 crans of young herrings and sprats per day, while during 
February the average quantity was only about 2 or 3 buckets per day. 

Unlike last season, the Broughty-Ferry fishermen and the sprat fisher- 
men paid no heed to the Board’s recommendation of January, 1904, 
namely :—that both fishermen should observe a line of division drawn 


160 Part [11.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


between Broughty-Ferry and Tayport. On several occasions the 
Broughty-Ferry men drifted for winter herring as far up the estuary as 
the Tay Bridge, while the sprat men were several times from 7 to 2 miles 
below Tayport. 

During the course of this season’s fishing 40 samples of mixed sprats, 
young herrings, and other fishes were bought and examined. The samples 
consisted of :— 


Young Herrings, . AT, 1 Yo, from 436m. 40 17-5em, 
Sprats, . ; : be Og cakes 4°5 ,, to 146 -,, 
Young Sparlings, 600, 25); 4-255 Gor 85-0... 
,, Whiting, SOBs) B50 od ving BOCs 
ee COR eS : PLD in Bro C2 = to 160% 
yh aCe - 4 ee 4:3 ,, to 1bOe, 
cas Ge AE : 5) Ue ee DiS 45, nO, Ole 
opp IOURGERS, ¥ +: i aa ee 5:0; ,,2°:00 10:0. = 
»  waithe, . ! TT on as) dpe es 80) A Ole. 
27,007 
Agonus cataphractus, . 109 


Ammodytes tobianus, . 70 
Liparis montagui, 70 
Gobius minutus, . 70 
Syngnathus, sp., . ; ; 9 
Cottus scorpius, . i 
Gasterosteus spinachia, 4 
Centronotus gunnellus, 3 
Gasterosteus aculeatus, 1 
Petromyzon fluviatilis, ] 


The numbers of young cod, whiting, plaice, dabs, flounders, and saithe 
are somewhat larger than is shown in the above Table, owing to the fact 
that the daily catches are to some extent picked before and sometimes 
after being brought into the Dundee Tidal Harbour. Large quantities of 
leaves, rushes, and weeds of all kinds also enter the nets, and even 
branches of trees, which sometimes cause great damage to the nets, and 
the picking and throwing overboard of this rubbish and of the young 
fish entails a great amount of labour to the men. 

During the first half of the month of November, while the fish were 
abundant and the percentage of sprats remained over 70, the number of 
other fishes caught along with the sprats was quite insignificant. 

A typical unpicked sample of the fish consisting of :— 


Sprats, ; oe LObT 
Young Herring, . 86 

seer, OBEN, en : ; 1 
Agonus cataphractus, . s ; 1 
Shrimps, . L 


1146 


The above sample represents about one-seventeenth part of a cran. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 161 


On the other hand, during December, January, and February, when 
the fish were very scarce, and the percentage of young herrings very high, 
a typical unpicked sample of the fish consisted of :— 


“ Halflin” Herrings, . 16 
Young Herrings, ; ee Des 
Sprats, : ‘ : ; 54 
Young Cod, : 38 
» Whiting, : : 35 
5»  Sparlings, : : ; 416 
>) ppaaibhie, |. ‘ 5 
i oe Walco, | ; : 12 
Sand-eels, . : ] , 2 : 25 
Gobius minutus, ' : ; , ‘ 21 
Liparis montagut, ; ; 11 
Agonus cataphractus, . 1] 
Shrimps ( Crangon vulgaris ) ; 600 


There were also present in this sample about 200 larval fish, consisting 
of over 90 per cent. young herring and about 10 per cent. of young sprats, 
sand-eels, and sparlings. 

The whole of the above sample represeuts about one-twelfth part of a 
cran. The 40 samples of sprats and young herring examined during this 
season represented about one-thousandth part of the entire season’s catch. 

The catch was carefully examined on every day when the fish were 
landed at the Dundee Tidal Harbour, but on some days ho large samples 
of sprats and herring were bought or examined, a rongh estimate only 
being made of the proportion of sprats and herring which made up the 
catch. 

By these two methods the following Table has been drawn up, showing 
the approximate composition of the catch throughout the season, 


An asterisk denotes the days when the estimate was only a superficial 
one :-— 


| | i 
Date. | No. of Crans. Noe of ae | eee Ms Total Ni set 
erring. Fish. 
1905. 
i 14 25,200 10,800 36,000 
November 1 . i 1 16,800 7,200 24,000 
a Pee ni 1} 15,000 15,000 30,000 
e Big ule 2 8h 61,200 142,800 204,000 
E Bc Tal e>) 1862 250,992 3,334,680 3,585,600 
ks ‘tae 56 107,520 967,680 1,075,200 
8 8 | Woh >. | of 243,072 1,782,528 2,025,600 
53 9 | 168} 647,040 2,588,160 3,235,200 
noe i) | 404 186,624 590,976 777,600 
ES oye air poses 308,160 719,040 1,027,200 
OR: - aa | 1264 1,360,128 1,068,672 2,428, 800 


Date. 


November 14* . 
; 15 
i 16*,.. 
a 17 
49 18* 3 
i 20" +s 


_ 28%; 


December 1* . 


39 4 


ae 19-30 


1906. 
January 1-31 . 


February 1-24. 


No. of Crans. | No. of Young N 


274 


121 


1,2513 


3 


[°.) 


(toa | 


Estimated wasnated Earth gape : 
Herring. o. of Sprats. Feh 
264,000 264,000 528,000 
998,976 1,324,224 2,323,200 
492, 480 601,920 1,094,400 
192,000 192,000 384,000 
331,800 142,200 474,000 
192,000 48,000 240,000 
331,740 16,260 342,000 
441,600 38,400 480,000 

8,640 9,340 18.000 
404,484 688,716 1,093,200 

1,539,000 171,700 1,710,000 
454,860 343,140 798,000 
277,200 184,800 462,000 
268,800 115,200 384,000 
367,200 40,800 408,000 

9,761,316 | 15,390,684 | 25,152,000 

10,800 1,200 12,000 
134,400 57,600 192,000 
100,800 43,200 144,000 

29, 400 12,600 42,000 

8,400 3,600 12,000 
130,200 55,800 186,000 
8,400 3,600 12,000 
188,800 57,200 246,000 
364,800 | 91,200 456,000 
85,400 | — 10,600 96,000 
10,800 1,200 12,000 
900 100 1,000 
460,800 115,200 576,000 
1,533,900 453,100 1,987,000 
ie ae 
576,000 144,000 720,000 
| elt). Wee ae 
96,000 24,000 


129,000 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 163 


1905-1906. 
Estimated | Estimated | Estimated | Estimated Es teers 
Months, No. of |No.of Young} No. of | Total No. of t Yor sche 
Crans Herring. Sprats. Fish. Wt CARE 
erring. 
ane || eee eee eee) eee 
October, . : 13 ..| 25,200 10,800 36,000 70°0 
November, . L 1,251? 9,761,316 | 15,390,684 | 25,152,000 38°8 
December, . ; 823 | 1,583,900 453,100 1,987,000 77°6 
January, . : 30 | 576,000 144,000 720,000 80:0 
February, . : 5 | 96,000 24,000 | 120,000 80:0 
emai s Me eae is pa oe ace 


1,371.4 | 11,992,416 | 16,022,584 26,015,000 | 42:4 


With regard to the relative percentages of young herrings and sprats, I 
would point out that there is every indication that when a larger body of 
fish than usual enter the Tay estuary the percentage of sprats is usually 
very high; this was certainly the case during the past season 1905-6, 
but was not quite so noticeable during the previous season of 1904-5. 
It is also, of course, of equal importance to note that when fish are com- 
paratively scarce in the estuary it is due usually to the falling-off in the 
numbers of sprats—in other words, whilst young herring are always 
present in the Tay estuary the larger shoals of sprats are only occasionally 
present. 

The destruction of young herrings and other fishes is, therefore, not so 
alarmingly great as one would imagine it to be on first looking at the 
samples and the tables of percentages, and does not, in my opinion, argue 
for any drastic changes in the mode of fishing. 

The fishermen, however, should not persist in fishing when the per- 
centage of sprats falls below 60, and when the fish are of small size and 
not of much use for purposes of food. 

The sale of fish for manure purposes should, I think, also be strictly 
prohibited, even when the fish are unusually abundant aud the percentage 
of sprats very high. 

During the course of the two past_winters over 40,000 sprats and young 
herrings have been carefully measured with the object of ascertaining the 
probable age groups of both fish and the probable annual rate of growth. 
_ These measurements will be dealt with on another occasion. 


GENERAL. ACCOUNT OF THE Sprat Fisaine, 1905-1906. 


This season’s sprat fishing was late in beginning, later even than last 
season, and the lateness was again due to the great scarcity of fish. ‘The 
recular sprat fishing of this season began on the 6th of November and 
practically came to an end during the latter half of December; it was 
taken part in by the same number of boats, and by practically the same 
number of men as last year. ) 

The two main features of this season’s fishing were (1) the excellent 
quality of the sprats whilst they remained plentiful in the estuary, and 
(2) the great scarcity of both sprats and young herring during the latter 
half of December and the whole of January and February. 

The quality of the sprats was the best seen in Dundee for some years, 
the catches during the first week of the regular fishing consisting of over 


164 Part ILI1.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


70 per cent, of first-class sprats, the number of young food fishes other 
than young herring forming only an insignificant fraction. 

The sprats were mostly of large size, their average sizes varying from 
98cm. to 12‘5cm., and contrasted greatly with the much smaller and 
younger sprats of last season. 

Unlike last season, there was a keen demand for sprats throughout 
almost the whole of this season, and the usually brisk competition amongst 
the buyers kept the prices generally at a high standard. 

In consequence of the good prices which the fishermen obtained for 
their fish, there was less dissatisfaction amongst them than last year, but 
there still remained great discontent amongst the buyers, owing to what 
they consider the excessive railway rates charged for the carriage of the 
fish to the various English markets. 

The complaints of the fishermen gradually increased, however, as the 
fish became scarcer, and much real distress prevailed again during January 
and February. 

With regard to the great scarcity of fish during December, January, 
and February, some of the men thought it was because of the want of 
south-easterly gales, and others because of the weak tides, heavy spates, 
and frosty weather. I also interviewed a few old fishermen, some of 
whom had been all their days taking part in the various fishings on the 
River Tay, and one and all complained bitterly of the great scarcity of all 
kinds of fish in the River Tay at the present day. They attribute this 
great scarcity of fish to the general increase in the numbers of bleaching 
works, dye works, ink factories, paper mills, and tanneries, and to the 
gradually increased sewerage from Perth downwards. ‘They declare that 
20 and 25 years ago fish of many diferent kinds were very plentiful in 
all parts of the river; salmon and trout were exceedingly plentiful, and 
great numbers of large black flounders were got all the way from New- 
burgh to Broughty-Ferry, and were particularly plentiful on the north side 
of the Middle-Bank, where they are now scarce and of a much smaller 
size. Large cod were also very plentiful in various parts of the estuary, 
and were occasionally captured in considerable numbers as far up the 
estuary as Invergowrie Bay. Plaice, dabs, brill, and other fishes were also 
in much greater numbers than at the present day. During that time— 
20 and 25 years ago—the sprat boats only numbered some half-dozen, but 
they quickly increased until they numbered somewhere about 30, and 
have remained at about that number for many years. 

Here I must mention, in connection with the general scarcity of fish in 
the river, the bitter complaints of the sprat fishermen and the Broughty- 
Ferry fishermen, who allege that the barge and dredger men in the 


employment of the Dundee Harbour Trustees deposit large quantities of : 


mud and filth in the vicinity of Monifieth Bay, and have thus completely 
destroyed excellent spawning grounds of the winter herring. The barges 
containing mud dredged from the Dundee and ‘ayport harbours are 
supposed to be towed out to the mouth of the river, but the fishermen 
assert that on the approach of darkness, or if there be the least sign of a 
storm outside, the mud is at once dumped down in the vicinity of 
Monifieth Bay. I advised the fishermen to communicate with the Fishery 
Board in connection with the matter, but found later that the Broughty- 
Ferry Town Council had been in communication with the Dundee 
Harbour Trustees, and that the latter had, in consequence, instructed their 
emplovees to convey all mud to the mouth of the river. 

During the course of this season’s fishing, I pointed out to several 
fishermen and buyers that the Fishery Board regretted the destruction of 
so many young herring and sprats in the Tay estuary, and I suggested 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 165 


the general use of the drift-net instead of the usual bag-net ; but both 
fishermen and buyers were unanimously of opinion that drift-net fishing 
for sprats in the Tay estuary was impracticable; the currents, they 
maintained, were far too strong, and the drift net would not capture 
nearly enougk fish to enable both fishermen and buyers to earn a fair 
living. 

I further pointed out to the buyers the possibility of the drift-nets 
capturing more sprats than young herring, because of the deeper, rounder, 
and more serrated bodies of the sprats, but one of the buyers assured me 
that he had seen, on several occasions, as many young herring as sprats 
captured in the drift-nets at other sprat fishing stations, Ialso, in the 
course of my visits to the harbour, pointed out to the buyers that the 
barrels they were using in conveying the fish to the various English 
markets were generally of too large a size, and that the fish before they 
reached their destination must be in a very pulpy condition, and many 
of them not of much use for cooking purposes. 

I suggested as an alternative the general use of smaller flat boxes. 
The buyers admitted the barrels were far too large, but argued that 
smaller flat boxes would have to be made of much stronger wood, and 
this would only add to the weight and subsequent cost of the carriage of 
the fish. 

1 discussed also the question of the preservation and tinning of the 
sprats for sardine purposes, and one of the buyers—Mr. William Hopkins, 
a noted Anstruther herring curer and exporter—-was of opinion that 
the question was worthy of every consideration, but pointed out that a 
business of this kind would require a large sum of money to set it agoing, 
and it would not very likely pay for a year or two, because practically 
the whole trade is at present in the hands of foreigners. 

I learned also that some of the fishermen had bought preserving and 
tinning apparatus several years ago, but they only met with fair success, 
owing chiefly to the high prices of sprats during some seasons, 
and their pocr quality and small size during other seasons. If 
sprats are to be used for sardine purposes they must be bought at or 
below 5s. or 6s. per cran, and they must be of a fair size and com- 
paratively free from young herrings. Young herrings can, however, be 
sardined like the sprats, but they require more labour and expense, and 
are not nearly so palatable as the sprats themselves, 


FurTHER Notes on THE Naturat History oF THE SPRAT AND THE 
Youne or THE HERRING, 


Fairly large numbers of young herrings and comparatively small 
numbers of sprats appear to be present in the Tay estuary at all times of 
the year, but the larger shoals of full-grown sprats only occasionally. 

The Tay estuary would therefore appear to be more of a natural 
nursery ground for young herrings than for sprats, but its usefulness as 
such is very much diminished by the enormous amount of impurities 
poured into the river. 

Here, then, arise the two most interesting points in connection with 
the natural history of both fish, namely :—‘ Why do they enter our 
estuaries at all during the winter months, and what are the causes of the 
constant fluctuations in their numbers.” 

As I pointed out in last year’s report, the question of food :may 
safely be left out of account altogether, principally because of the 
ill-success which attended the examination of the estuarine waters for 
food material, and the almost complete absence of food material in the 
stomachs of both the sprat and the young herring. 


166 Part III.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Again, with regard to the tides, I am still of opinion that spring tides 
have no more influence in bringing the fish into the estuary than neap 
tides have. This opinion is against that of many of the fishermen, but I 
found that in 1904-1905 as many large catches of fish were made during 
neap tides as during spring tides, and that during the past winter, 
1905-1906, the largest catches of the season were made during the lowest 
phases of the neap tides. Here we must bear in mind, however, that 
the greater strength of the spring tides undoubtedly adds to the capturing 
power of the bag-net. 

Slight variations in the temperature of the air, I also find, have no 
marked influence on the movements of the fish, but prolonged frosts and 
subsequent colder waters of spates may drive at least the younger forms 
out into the sea again. Neither of these, however, account for the 
principal fluctuations in the number of fish in our estuaries. 

Spawning may, of course, be left out of account altogether, as the 
sprats do not spawn in the estuary proper, and spawning does not take 
place until the spring and early summer months. 

Storms, and especially south-easterly gales, on the other hand, are 
undoubtedly important factors to be taken into account; but that south- 
easterly gales do not always drive the fish into the Tay estuary may be 
easily seen by referring to the weather statistics of the two past sprat 
fishing seasons. I may point out, however, that a series of westerly 
gales sometimes drive many of the fish from the upper parts of the 
estuary, and may give rise to large catches of young herring. 

It was after a week of storms and south-easterly gales when the largest 
shoal of sprats of the past season made its appearance in the Tay estuary; 
but a greater storm of wind and rain a few days afterwards made little or 
no difference in the numbers of fish in the estuary. The same remarks 
hold good for the sprat-fishing season of 1904-1905. 

There only remains now the question of the constant persecution by 
numerous and varied enemies and the consequent inherent restlessness 
and timidity of both fish. As is well known, large shoals of cod, ling, 
whiting, dogfishes, mackerel, and other fishes feed upon the sprat and 
herring, and shoals of haddock devour the spawn of the herring in large 
quantities. Seals, porpoises, and dolphins and many sea birds are also 
well known to be formidable enemies; add to all these, then, the cannibal- 
istic habits of the two fish themselves, and the great destruction made 
upon them by the sprat fishermen, and one cannot wonder at the great 
and constant fluctuations in the numbers of both fish in our estuaries. 

A sudden shoal of cod, whiting, or dogfish, or an increase in the 
numbers of seals and porpoises, or even the occasional presence of a whale 
in the vincity, will doubtless drive large shoals of sprats into our estuaries. 
Here I may mention that only a few years ago a large whale made its 
appearance in the Tay estuary, and during the same time the water was 
simply teeming with sprats, young herring, and young whiting. I may 
also mention that both porpoises and dolphins are not uncommon just 
outside the river, and seals are sometimes very plentiful even in the 
estuary. 

This incessant persecution, then, hy numerous and varied enemies, may 
well explain the presence of the sprat, at any rate in such large and 
varying numbers, in our estuaries. 

From the preceding remarks one could naturally conclude that a 
diminution in the number of enemies would result in an increase in the 
numbers of sprats and herring, and that both fish, especially the sprat, 
would. in consequence remain further and longer away from our estuaries. 

Again, during other seasons, when perhaps cod, whiting, dogfishes, and 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 167 


so on, are very abundant, the numbers of sprats and young herring in our 
estuaries would very likely be much greater, although the actual total 
number of both fish in the sea would rapidly grow less. In this way, 
then, we may find a possible explanation of the occurrence of fat and lean 
fishing seasons in the various sprat fisheries round our coasts. 

In connection with the above ideas I interviewed several fishermen and 
buyers belonging to Dundee, Broughty-Ferry, and St. Andrews, and 
obtained information from them which went to support my theories. 

I found that very few sprats and young herring had been present 
in St. Andrews Bay during the autumn wonths of 1905, and that little or 
no cod were caught there during the same time. After, however, a week 
of storms in the North Sea, a large shoal of sprats, unmixed with young 
herring, made its appearance in St. Andrews Bay on the 2nd or 38rd of 
November, 1905, and large numbers of cod and whiting were being caught 
there at the same time. 

All the cod, the fishermen informed me, were simply gorged with sprats, 
and many of the cod were vomiting up the sprats whilst being hauled on 
board. 

This large shoal of sprats made its appearance in the Tay estuary about 
the same time as it did in St. Andrews Bay, and on the 6th of November 
the largest catch of the season—namely, 1862 crans—was made by the 
Tay sprat fishermen. 

Another, if not greater, storm of easterly gales and rain took place on 
the 13th November, 1905, and caused great loss and damage to fishing 
apparatus in St. Andrews Bay. It also completely cleared out all the cod 
and codling as well as the sprats in the bay, and since that date, and 
until the close of the sprat fishing season towards the end of the following 
February, the fishing in St. Andrews Bay was a complete failure. 

This great storm caused little or no increase in the numbers of sprats in 
the Tay estuary, so that the bulk of the St. Andrews Bay sprats must 
have sought shelter elsewhere. 

Following closely upon the disappearance of the cod and codling from 
St. Andrews Bay, or in the course of the next two or three days after the 
storm, the Tay sprat fishing almost suddenly fell away and became a 
complete failure, and, further, it remained a failure along with the St. 
Andrews Bay fishing until the close of the Tay sprat fishing season. 

I also found, upon further inquiry, that the season of 1904-1905 was 
a poor cod and codling fishing season in St. Andrews Bay, and this, of 
course, entirely coincides with the poor and unproductive sprat fishing in 
the Tay estuary at the same time. 

With regard to the difference in the quality of the sprats during the 
two past seasons, it may be that owing to the mildness and exceptional 
dryness of the season 1904-1905 the younger forms of the sprat were 
enabled to remain much longer and much more constantly in the Tay 
estuary than usual, and that the cold and heavy spates of the past season 
1905-1906 drove the younger and smaller forms of sprats out into the 
sea. These and like questions, however, can only be answered by 
observations and experiments extending over a period of several years, and 
require very careful scientific study. 


Note ON THE EXTERNAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE SPRAT 
AND THE YOUNG OF THE HERRING. 


There is generally not much difficulty in distinguishing a sprat from a 
young herring, even when the external features are only taken ints 
account and the internal structure left entirely alone, 


168 Part III.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The external differences, however, between the two fish appear so 
slight to a beginner that it takes him some considerable time to separate 
even small quantities of one from the other; and it is only after he has 
handled several thousands of fish, or has otherwise had long experience 
of them, that he is able to separate the one from the other with any 
degree of comfort and rapidity. 

The proper method is, therefore, to first of all accustom the eye to the 
differences in the general shape and colour of the two fish ; but to make 
sure, the thumb or forefinger must be drawn along the throats of the 
fish, when the sharp spines in the case of the sprat at once distinguish it 
from the comparatively smooth-throated young herring. 

If in doubt about the general shape, colour, and spines, the position of 
the pelvic fins in relation to the first ray of the dorsal fin must be noted, 
and if still in doubt the number of rays in the pelvic fins themselves 
have to be counted. 

In very small and semi-transparent fish the number of vertebrae have 
to be counted. 


The following Table shows the general external differences between the 
two fish :— 


Sprat. Young Herring. 
General shape. .| Deeper and narrower in the | Relatively not so deep in the 
body. Belly curved from body, and nauch less curved 
head to tail. in the belly; whole body 


usually more tapering to- 
wards tail. 


—_—_———_— —_ 


Colour. . : . | Narrow strip of slaty blue col- | Broader strip of greenish blue 
our on back, Sides of body colour on back. 
relatively more silvery. 


—— 


i a 


Head. . ; . | Short from snout to occipital | Relatively longer. 
region. 

Spines. . : . | Well developed on throat and | Weak on throat and not so well 
belly. developed on belly. 

Eyes. . q . | Small. Relatively large. 


Position of Pelvic | In nearly all fish above, but | In nearly all fish above, but 


Fins. sometimes below, 5 cms, in sometimes below, 5 cms. 
front of first dorsal fin ray. | _ behind first dorsal fin ray. 
Number of Rays in | 7, usually. 9, usually. 


Pelvic Fins. 


Serre ne | peer EE | ET 


Tai. . | Greyish in colour and usually | Darker fringe and more uni- 
ragged. form in shape. 


ee ee 


Vertebre, . . | Not more than 48. Not less than 54, 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 169 


VII.—_ON THE SPAWNING OF THE LUMPSUCKER (Cyclopterus 
lumpus) AND THE PATERNAL GUARDIANSHIP OF THE 
EGGS. By Dr, T. Wemyss Futron, F.R.S.E., Superintendent of 
Scientific Investigations. 


(PLATE XI.) 


The lumpsucker is a common fish on our shores in spring, when it 
comes close in among the rocks to deposit its spawn, the spawning-season 
extending from February to nearly the end of May. Its food consists 
of marine worms, celenterates, crustacea, and small fishes; Dr. Murie 
has taken 100 whitebait (young herrings and sprats) from the stomach of 
a specimen.* It is stated by several authors that the stomachs of females, 
especially, often contains nothing save a quantity of fluid; this is no 
doubt owing to their being mostly caught during the breeding season, 
when food is usually not taken by fishes. 

The males are much smaller than the females and somewhat more 
numerous ; they are brightly-coloured red on the fins and lower surface 
during the spawning time, while the females are dark leaden blue or 
slatey-coloured. The mass of eggs produced by a female is large, and 
may reach as much as 35 per cent. of the total weight; the average for 
three specimens examined by me was 27 per cent. In a female, 144 
inches in length and weighing 6 lbs. 12 ounces, caught on 16th May, 
and included in the following table, the eggs weighed 2 lbs., while 150ce. 
of ovarian fluid escaped from the ovaries. 

The eggs measure about 2°2mm.—2°6mm., and have a volume of 
4-18cc. ; I found them to number from 79,758 to 136,764 in females a 
little over 18 inches long. The fecundity of the lumpsucker is therefore 
high. When examined in the ripe female before extrusion they are 
usually reddish or salmon-tinted, but may be lilac, pale violet, pale 
brown, or pink. On extrusion they are pink, but this tint fades on 
exposure to light, and gives way toa faint greenish or yellowish hue ; later 
they become dark, owing to the development of pigment in the embryos. 

The whole of the eggs are laid at one time, or at all events this appears 
to be the usual occurrence, but an examination of the ovaries of the 
females included in the Table below tends to show that it does not 
always happen, as several of them were found to be only partly spent. 
One of the females referred to in this paper, moreover, deposited her eggs 
in two lots after an interval of thirteen days. The eggs in the ovary, 
just before extrusion, are bathed in a plentiful fluid, but they are not 
adherent ; when the fingers are passed through the mass, the feeling 
conveyed resembles that of contact with a mass of half-boiled sago. 
Around the eggs the secretion is syrupy, and on separating them glutinous 
threads pass between them. This substance hardens in sea water and 
binds the eggs into a large compact spongy mass, leaving narrow channels 
between by which water enters. It is doubtful, as we shall see, whether 
this arrangement would not be fatal to many of the eggs were it not for the 
constant attention of the male fish; and perhaps the same attention is given 
by the parents of other shore forms whose eggs are laid in adherent masses. 


*M‘Intosh mentions annelids (Nereis), Third Annual Report, p. 60; Parnell says it 
feeds on worms and small fish, Fishes of the Firth of Forth, p. 382 ; Scott found ccelenter- 
ates (Berie, Pleurobrachia) annelids, and crustacea, in their stomachs, Twentieth Annual 
Report, p. 467 ; Murie’s observations are given in Report on the Sea Fisheries of the Thames 
Estuary, Part I., p. 139. 


170 Part II]—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


‘These masses of eges may be found attached to rocks, &c., about low 
water mark. 

In the following Table I give the measurements and other particulars 
of 69 lumpsuckers taken from a salmon stake-net in the Bay of Nigg in 
spring a few years ago, between 2nd May and 24th July. 


' 
: 
| 
FEMALES. MALES. | 
| 
Date. | | 
Length. | Weight | (°°%™@!_ | Length. | Weight. | (sczual : | 
| 
Inches. | Lbs. oz Inches. | Lbs. oz. 
May 2 18 Lye 2 Ripe 10 It. 2A Ripe 
hes l44 iran o oo 10 iments re 
seb al 18 | 8 1% |Nearly spent 144 oa 2 me 
en 14g BPP 'G Ripe 12 pe tbe cs 
= 172 | 7 93 Nearly spen 114°} 2 -02 x | 
of 18s 10 73 5 1Qeintho® Ad - | 
— 17 ty 6.144 Spawning Lik? «lace ot J | 
pe ae ie | ee Ae Spent 9 | pap oo kee * | 
8 16 er aar:: Spawning if Seer 3 
Wonk 10 17 6. GIG if 12 2 94 |Nearly spent 
PY = 16 | 5& 144 oy pee | sae Se Aue . 
Canta 15 6 152 Ripe Be ee ee emer Ripe ; 
et oe 143 4 3 Spent 10; 71d 7% | Nearivirame | 
NEA gis Mey i Tse 3 7 Ripe 
..- age th Als 104: Sy eet aFF + 
BE yt: 450 Be te 7% | «» 114 | Nearly ripe 
ov Le 19 oe al2 Spawning : ah sg 
ee Be 143 5 6 ¥ 
be) 16 183 | 9 8 9) 
epee! 14; 6 12% us 
5° On 15t | 5 102 Ripe 
a 144 | 4 $ Spent 
ny = 14 53 124 |Nearly spent 
ett |: 17 ls ig Naek Ripe Batis 
i To 154 | 4 #1 Spent ft 
Es toy wjela. of » 
ert 144 | 5 133 Ripe bs 
ty 18 | oO ye a ae 
aes 15 6 143 7 st sie gee im! 
OTIS 15 69 2 Spawning 114 hee 5 Ripe 
Lemrniyeps ey fe 43 12 b 4 ie 
Jy 220 144 5 143 Ripe 13 | 2 132 |Nearly spent 
a) a 164 6 44 Spent 103 | 1 pie Ripe 
Seite ts We 10-12 Ripe oo eb ae 
f é 144 6 Of Hi ABIS T5280 i is 
8 Di | 164 | 9 2 15 3 ling Ripe 
- 16 7 O% | Nearly spent Shateli cme OE Nearly ripe 
a 14 Ss. ot oa = soa a Se Ee 
2” a 143 | 4 Zz ”? eee oie. 
June 7 16 | 8hHG. EAE Spent Ae 
He 3 144 | 5 94 |Nearly spent e ap | 
mye! hDA rr toy Diao d 6 lug 1; 125 Immature 
ee ll | 2 2% |QuiteIm’ture (Pee eee a 3 
July 3 ee Seo ieee or 104 1 5 * 
oe) = Wo 93 1 7 ” 
has a satdw Bivhdy i 
3 aa ey nee $ 
ates G2 11 1_ S13 e 
» 10 Lal 23 
ae - 103 1 24 2? 
ed | | 10? 2 4 i 
Average, — 19'S nO, aut 11 1 14 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 171 


There were 39 females and 30 males. The females ranged in length 
from 19 to 11 inches, but the latter specimen was immature, the smallest 
female which was mature measuring 14 inches (35°5 cm.) and the weight 
of the mature females ranged from 10 lbs, 12 0z. (4871 grammes) to 3 lbs. 
124 ounces (2113 grammes), but this specimen had got rid of most of its 
egos. The average length of the 39 females was 15:8 inches (about 
39cm.) and the average weight 6 lbs. 6 oz. (2889 grammes). 

The length of the males varied from 15 inches to 74 inches, the 
smallest ripe being 9 inches (23cm.); the weights ranged from 107 oz. 
(290 grammes) to 4 lbs. 6 oz. (1982 grammes) ; the former was not quite 
mature, the minimum weight of the males that were certainly spawning 
being 152 oz. (432 grammes). The average length of the 30 males was 11 
inches (28cm.) and the average weight 1 lb. 14 oz. (822 grammes.) The 
difference in the size of the males and females is thus striking. 

In June all the fish were spent or nearly so, and in July they were all 
immature, No female was obtained after 13th June, no doubt because 
they withdraw probably to deeper water, and the last male was got on 
llth July, though the net was examined up to the middle of August. 

One of the habits of the lumpsucker well known to fishermen is the 
guardianship by the male of the mass of eggs after they are deposited. 
The habit was long ago accurately described by Fabricius in his descrip- 
tion of the fishes of Greenland, and it has been referred to since by most 
writers, though often with scepticism. Couch, for example,* is of opinion 
that the description of Lacépéde to this effect is exaggerated, and that the 
presence of the male near the eggs is accidental. M‘Intosh has given a 
graphic and pathetic picture of the male remaining on the beach guarding 
the eggs in a mere runlet of water after the tide had withdrawn from 
them.t 

The authors of ‘“‘ Scandinavian Fishes,” ~ quoting from Malm, state 
that a fisherman of Bohuslain, named Johan Persson, had observed the 
spawning of this fish for three years in succession in the same cleft of the 
rocks at a depth of three or four fathoms ; that the male posted himself a 
couple of feet away and ‘blew on the roe,” besides defending it from 
enemies, defeating the attacks even of the crab. This habit of ‘“‘ blow- 
ing” upon the roe seems to have escaped the notice of naturalists; but 
from what follows it will be seen that the observation of the Swedish 
fisherman was quite accurate, and that an important part of the duty of 
the male taking charge of the eggs is to spout currents of water from his 
mouth on them. 

I should think there are few better instances among fishes of parental 
devotion to the progeny than what is shown by the male lumpsucker. 
For weeks and months he devotes himself to the nursing of the eggs with 
the most remarkable assiduity, refusing to be driven or seduced from his 
post ; fasting and rejecting food until almost the end of his long and 
trying vigil: “blowing” upon them and fanning them with his fins all 
the time to keep them well aérated and clean; removing anything that 
might injure them, and defending them with courage and even ferocity 
from the attacks of foes great and small. When his task is ended and 
the eggs are hatched it is not wonderful that he is worn-out, thin, and 
exhausted with his zealous labours. 

Last spring four living lumpsuckers were obtained from the local 
salmon stake-nets and brought to the Laboratory, and as two were males 

* ‘© British Fishes,” II., p. 187, 


tAnn. and Mag. Nat. Hist., XVIII., 5th Series, p. 81; Ann. Rep. Fishery Board 


for Scotland, Part III., p. 174; M‘Intosh and Masterman, “British Marine Food 
Fishes,” 183. 


+ Vol. L, p. 297." 


172 Part I1I.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


and two were females, and the latter were evidently full of eggs, the 
opportunity was taken to make some detailed observations as to the 


spawning and the guardianship of the eggs by the male. The two females - 


were first procured, and a few days afterwards the two males, and they 
were all put together in a tank, in which were also a number of small 
flounders, a few small plaice, and a lobster which had been there for a 
long time and dwelt by day in a hole under a stone at the back. 

The concrete tank measures 54 feet long by 4 feet 4 inches wide, and 
is 33 feet high; it is provided with plate glass in front and back, and 
during the observations the height of water was maintained at 274 inches, 
so that the quantity of water was about 336 gallons (1663 litres). The flow 
amounted approximately to 80 gallons per hour. Since light is admitted 
to the back of the tank by a window narrower than the tank, and partly 
under the level of the ground, the back corners are not so well illuminated. 
The outflow from the tank was so arranged at first that the water 
had to pass first through a layer of sand around the lower end of a large 
fireclay pipe standing erect on the bottom, and high enough to reach above 
the surface, then up the inside of this pipe till it reached a lateral hole in 
the iron outflow pipe, which passes through the concrete bottom of the 
tank and is enclosed by the fireclay pipe. 

On the morning of 24th March it was found that both the female 
lumpsuckers had spawned. Two large masses of eggs had been deposited 
during the night, in close contact with one another, in the left-hand 
corner of the tank, in front, against the glass, and between the side of the 


tank and a stone, on the top of which a large sea anemone was fixed (see 


figure on plate XI.). It was thusin a good position for observation. So 
closely were these masses applied to one another that they appeared at 
first to form a single mass, distinguishable only by a difference in tint. 
Later, when the eggs were nearly ready to hatch, they were separated 
throughout by an interval or gap of about half-an-inch, showing that the 
masses had in reality not been adherent to one another. It may therefore 
be surmised that though both females spawned during the night, 
23rd—24th March, an interval of time elapsed between the layings; and, 
further, that the adhesiveness of the eggs is soon lost in sea water. 

Both clumps of eggs were pink at first, but one lot was much paler 
than the other, and thereby readily distinguished. 

After the females had shed their eggs they retired to the shadiest spots 
at the back of the tank, and passed the time in clinging to or lying on 
large stones which were there. They were sluggish and quiescent, scarcely 
moving, and at this time they took no food. Their system was no doubt 
much upset by the sudden ejection of so large a mass of eggs, which they 
had carried for some months. 

The two males, on the other hand, occupied very different positions, 
both as regards their place in the tank and as regards their place in the 
social or domestic polity of the lumpsuckers present. One of them lay 
close to the masses of eggs; the other was as far from them and his fellow 
male as he was able to get, clinging to the wall of the tank in quite the 
opposite corner, and near the surface of the water, from which he often 
pushed his snout. 

The former was guarding both masses of eggs. He was lying behind 
them, with his snout against them, and obviously keenly attentive to his 
surroundings as well as to the responsible duties of his office. The move- 
ment of another fish in the water, or of a person standing in front of the 
glass plate of the tank was sharply watched. If the hand or face or 
a handkerchief was approached towards the glass, the little lumpsucker 
came up over the eggs with eagerness and celerity, and remained there in 


aan ———— 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 173 


an attitude of watchfulness. If the hand was placed on the glass near the 
egos, he made a furious charge at it; with so much force, indeed, in the 
early days of his long guard, that he obviously hurt his snout. 

This was repeated again and again, and day after day. If anyone 
entered the tank-house and came within five or six yards of the tank, he 
was observed by the alert little sentinel, who rose up and watched him. 
When the attendant bared his arm and plunged it into the water to place 
a flat stone behind the eggs (so that the actions of the fish might be better 
observed as he rested upon it at a higher level), his arm was charged with 
such fury that it was: forcibly driven against the front of the tank. The 
guarding male showed the courage, ferocity, and tenacity of a bulldog, 
which, indeed, he somewhat resembled, with his ugly visage, heavy jaws, 
and restlessly moving eyes, the whites of which were often exposed and 
conspicuous against the dark colour of his cheeks. His capacity as 
a defender of the eggs lay more in his power of butting than of biting, for 
which his mouth is not well adapted. All attempts to drive him off were 
futile. When a stick was pushed down into the water towards him he 
shoved it away with his snout, or charged at it. 

During the two months that the eggs were under his care, the patient 
and devoted parent never left them, except for a moment now and again 
to pursue the other male. He could neither be driven away by menace 
nor enticed away by guile. The most savoury mussels, which were 
ereedily swallowed by the other lumpsuckers, did not tempt him. On the 
contrary, if one were allowed to sink near him or the precious eggs, he took 
it in his mouth, swam rapidly towards the middle of the tank, and 
promptly ejected it there, returning immediately to his post. Until 
almost the close of his vigil he ate nothing. 

His conduct towards the other occupants of the tank was very interest- 
ing. Occasionally a flounder would swim lazily and aimlessly round the 
tank. The moment it approached the eggs, the lumpsucker turned 
swiftly towards it, and, if necessary, headed it off. Now and then he 
would make a sudden dash at the trespasser, who precipitately retreated. 
The flounders soon came to understand the position, and avoided the 
corner where the eggs were lying; they chose to occupy the other side of 
the tank, preferring the company of the old lobster, though he was in the 
habit of catching one of them by stealth occasionally and devouring it. 
His quiet, sly, diplomatic ways, though really more dangerous, were less 
alarming to thein than the furious but harmless assaults of the lumpsucker. 

Of special interest was the conduct of the two males towards one 
another. By rights, it may be supposed, and under ordinary circum- 
stances, each mass of eggs would have been guarded by a male fish, and 
probably fertilised by him alone. But owing to the two females having 
laid their eggs in the same corner—for whatever reasou—a conjoined 
guardianship was only possible if friendly feelings existed between the two 
‘males. This was far from the case. The male which had obtained 
possession of the eggs showed throughout the whole period the most 
rancourous and persistent animosity to the unattached one. The latter, 
on the other hand, displayed the greatest fear of his successsful rival. 

- It may be supposed that in the night when the females were spawning, 
or about to spawn, the two males engaged in a combat or contest for the 
privilege of fertilising the eges and guarding them. The one which was 
worsted in the nuptial fight never regained courage to attempt further 
contest for his rights, but displayed a most craven spirit from first to last, 
lurking in the darkest part of the tank as far from his rival as he could get. 

It was sometimes possible, but always difficult, to drive or push him in 

the direction of the other male by means of a stick, He was more 


174 Part III—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


readily enticed by holding mussels in front of him under the surface of 
the water, when he would swim after them as they were slowly with- 
drawn ; but, though very fond of mussels, his fear of the other male 
usually subdued his appetite before he had gone very far, and he turned 
back. ' 

Whenever the guarding male saw his late opponent moving, even a 
comparatively little way from his retreat, he rushed at him with the 
utmost fury—I was not previously aware that so clumsy aud usually 
sluggish a fish could swim so fast—and the other male made off with equal 
speed, and often attempted to jump out of the water, or was partly 
knocked out. On such occasions so much commotion was made that 
waves were created in the tank and the other fishes were alarmed. These 
were the only occasions that the guardian left the eggs for a few moments, 
The animosity was kept up during the whole period of the experiment, a 
fact which is of some interest. 

The females took no part at all at any time in looking after the eggs, 
as some authors have supposed them to do. They lay indolent and quiet 
at the back of the tank for some days. On the 2nd April, one of them 
began to swim about and come to the surface. She took not the least 
notice of the eggs or of the males, nor the males of her. Even when she 
came so close to the eggs as to brush them with her fins, the male merely 
looked at her, or moved a little aside to let her pass. 

On the 5th April, a second deposit of eggs, comparatively small in 
quantity, was observed, laid over the top of one of the other clumps. It 
had been deposited during the night by one of the females. Three of the 
usual dimples or cup-like depressions were noticed on the surface of them, 
caused no doubt by the fondling snout of the male. 

On the 15th April, attempts were again made to induce the sentinel 
male to eat mussels. He took no notice of those dropped at some dis- 
tance; if they came near, or fell on the eggs, he seized them, swam a foot 
or two away, and ejected them. Very different was one of the females, 
who devoured them in great numbers, as did also the other male, if within 
what may be called his safety-zone, all his actions being dominated by 
fear of the guarding male. The second female, perhaps the one which 
had recently deposited the eggs referred to, still lay quiescent at the back 
of the tank, and did not attempt to seize mussels. The active female 
showed the greatest indifference to the lobster, and when by accident she 
touched his open claws he merely withdrew a little further into his hole. 

From the first, the guarding male was observed to fan gently the mass 
of eggs with his breast fins, clearly for the aération of the eggs, but for 
some time the action was leisurely performed and was by no means so. 
striking as it became later. It is certain that the duties of the male is 
not confined to guarding the spawn from foes, but that an important part 
of them include the aération of the eggs by creating currents through the 
mass, 2nd the keeping of them clean. It is indeed a little surprising how 
a sufficient supply of oxygenated water can reach the interior of the compact 
mass by the narrow and tortuous channels which exist between the adhering 
eggs. The mass may be six or seven or more inches in diameter. It is 
probable that under natural circumstances the surging movement of the 
tides is the most influential agent in effecting this. At all events, from 
the early part of April onwards, the male lumpsucker kept fanning the 
spawn with more zest than at first. And on the 10th April another 
action was for the first time observed. Placing his mouth about an inch 
or so from the spawn he spouted water out upon it, the action of the 
gill-apparatus being thus reversed, as I have observed also in plaice with 
their snout above the level of the water.* : 


* Twenty-second Annual Report, Part III., p. 287. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 175 


This curious action was most purposive and effective. The current 
created was so strong as to sway the algw growing on the side of the tank 
in the neighbourhood as well as the tentacles of the anemone, and even 
to cause the whole mass of eggs to rock visibly backwards and forwards. 
This action was done at brief intervals and from this time onwards. 
Later, when the eggs were hatching it was redoubled, and great activity 
was shown with the fins. The movement thus created in the water very 
probably helped the escape of the larval fishes from the eggs, At this 
time the ‘‘ pumping” or ‘‘ blowing” action was at the rate of fifteen or 
sixteen in ten seconds, and in the pauses the fins were kept vigorously 
at work. 

On April 17th, I tried an experiment. I removed the devoted lump- 
sucker in adip-net and placed him in an adjoining tank of the same 
dimensions, in which were a few dabs (which were greatly alarmed). 
After turning round once or twice, as if to get his bearings, he swam 
towards the corner where he expected the eggs to be and paused about a 
foot away. He then swam up to a stone at the back of the tank and 
paused again; he next moved restlessly all round the tank, and came 
back once more to what appeared to be the familiar corner; then he 
moved slowly towards the other corner and lay quietly on the bottom, 
having apparently abandoned the quest. 

Meantime, I endeavoured to get the cther male to undertake the 
guardianship of the eggs. He was driven gradually to the corner where 
they lay, and paused a moment, but rather, it may be conjectured, with 
surprise at the absence of his foe than from any impulse to attend to 
them. The experiment was repeated with a like result, no inclination 
being shown by this male to assume the duty. Whether he would have 
done so later may only be conjectured. Finally, I placed this male in 
the other tank beside the proper guardian in order to see whether the 
latter would attack him in the absence of the eggs. Hedid not. He 
merely looked at him, without making any attempt to approach or 
pursue him. On the other hand, the newcomer recognised his enemy, 
and rushed off as before, but finding that he was not pursued, he soon 
settled down and approached the other male, who took not the least 
notice of his presence. 

Both males were then put back into the tank containing the eggs. The 
guardian at once sought for them and resumed his duty, and with it 
also his animosity to the other male, and the old relationship was 
re-established. 

Towards the end of April the conditions were the same as before, the 
sentinel Jumpsucker “ blowing” and fanning the eggs, refusing mussels, 
removing them from near the eggs if dropped there, chasing away 
wandering flat-fishes and relentlessly pursuing the other male, and coming 
up angrily and aggressively when one approached the front of the tank. 

By this time the egg masses had become very dark, owing to the 
development of black pigment in the now well-advanced embryos. The 
masses at first, as stated, were pink; this tint faded and they appeared 
pale green, whitish, then dirty amber-coloured, and then dark, for the 
reason mentioned. 

The colours of the males were also different. The one that was 
guarding the eggs, and had probably fertilised them, had lost his bright- 
ness and was dingy, while the other,who most likely had not spawned, 
possessed the red colour on his fins and lower part as vividly as at first. 

More than a month had elapsed since the guarding male assumed duty, 
and during that time he had eaten nothing. He was looking thin and 
and was infested with ecto-parisites (Caligz), and appeared sometimes 


176 Part IIL.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


exhausted by his onerous task and prolonged fast. That this was not 
entirely due to these causes was shown when the supply of water to the 
tank. was increased, and when it was directed to his corner. After a 
refreshment of this kind he moved round about with vigour, energetically 
spouting water on the eggs and fauning them with his fins. 

Towards the end of the month he took a mussel occasionally and 
swallowed it. This was first noticed on the 26th, and on some days he 
ate as many as five; any excess he carried off and ejected, as before; and 
at the beginning of May he was as alert, active, and pugnacious as ever. 

On one day at this time I dropped on the top of the egg-mass a little 
commen swimming-crab, about 14 inches in breadth, which, apprehend- 
ing danger, clung tightly in one of the snout-depressions on the surface 
of the eggs. It was amusing to watch the lumpsucker ineffectually trying 
to rout him from the hollow jn which he had taken refuge, the blunt 
snout of the fish preventing a hold being got on the crab, He tried again 
and again to dislodge or seize the crab. At last the crab turned partly 
on its side, and extended its widely-opened chele as if to defend itself, 
which gave the fish its opportunity. It seized the crab in its mouth and 
swam off with it to the furthest corner of the tank, where it dropped it. 

Karly in the experiment the outer fire-clay pipe was removed and an 
apparatus fitted up to the overflow, so that all the water leaving the tank 
passed through two boxes with fine silk-gauze bottoms. This was to 
retain the larval lumpsuckers when they issued from the eggs. The 
first of these was got on 5th May, 43 days after the eggs were deposited 
and fertilized. The daily temperature of the water during this period 
may be seen by reference to the tables on pages 113 and 284. When 
the eggs were spawned it was 42°5°F; in April it varied from 41°5° 
to 46° ; and at the end of the month was 43°7°F. and 45°F., rising to 
44°6° and 47°F. in the first week of May. 

For the first few days after the 5th, the tadpole-like larval lumpsuckers 
were found in small numbers in the overflow-filter every morning, and 
they slowly increased in numbers. ‘They were very active, swimming 
with great rapidity by a lashing movement of the tail, a large yolk 
containing an oil globule at the right side being conspicuous. 

At this time, as I have mentioned, the male parent was most assiduous 
in his attention to the egg-masses, redoubling his activities both in fanning 
and “blowing” upon the eggs. He ate mussels sparingly, sometimes 
fasting for a few days, and carrying off and ejecting the proffered food. 
He also continued to chase the other male and drive off intruders. 

Up to the 22nd May, or almost exactly two months from the time the 
eges had been spawned, and seventeeen days after they had begun to 
hatch, the conditions deseribed continued. The young lumpsuckers were 
appearing in greater numbers, but still not in such abundance as one 
might have expected. The largest number was about two or three 
hundred in a day. They were also to be seen adhering to the glass front 
of the tauk, and numbers were thus accounted for. None were observed 
on the back of the male, a habit sometimes attributed to them. 

It was now noticed, however, that many of the larval lumpsuckers were 
dead and white, and these were also seen floating in the water. On 
examination, it was found that the condition of the tank was unsatisfac- 
tory; it was obviously rather dirty from an accumulation of weed and 
refuse, and had probably too many occupants for the experiment, and 
when the egg-masses were examined their lower parts were found to be 
black and fetid, a circumstance that explained the presence of the dead 
and whitened young lumpsuckers. Clearly the aération had not been 
sufficient for the interior of the egg-masses, The supply of water to the 


5 
J 
- 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 17, 


tank was increased, but it was judged that that would not suffice, and the 
blackened parts of the spawn were torn off, the portions that seemed in 
good condition being replaced in their old position. The spell, however, 
was broken. The male did not resume his attention to the eggs, the mass 
of which was indeed much broken up and diminished in size. He pushed 
some of the pieces about the tank and withdrew. Both he and the eggs 
were placed in another tank, without any better result. He pushed the 
pieces about a little and left them. And when the other male was 
introduced, ne seemed oblivious to its presence ; his animosity, at first 
associated no doubt with reproduction and fertilisation, and then with the 
care of the eggs, had quite departed. 

On examining the portions of the egg masses that remained, the surface 
was found to be flocculent from the empty egg-shells from which the 
young fishes had escaped, most of which were still attached to it, On 
the other hand, the interior of the mass was solid, the eggs all containing 
embryos, some of which had died, but many were subsequently hatched 
out in jars. From an early pericd some of the eggs, but not many, next 
the glass in front of the tank, were observed to be white and opaque 
(dead), but they did not decay. 

The difficulty of hatching the eggs of the lumpsucker was pointed out 
previously by M‘Intosh, who stated that in tanks they speedily acquire a 
fetid odour, that the death of a few causes putrefaction of the whole, and 
that they had not yet been hatched out in tanks.* He does not give any 
particulars as to the dimensions of the tanks or the flow of water, but 
probably the chief difference between his experiments and that described 
here was that the male in the latter case was constantly engaged in tending 
the eggs, which shows how efficient that attention may be. 

The hatching of the eggs, so far as it was accomplished in the tank 
under the care of the male, extended from the 5th to the 22nd of May, 
or seventeen days. The greater number were still unhatched on the 
latter date. It seems a long period, considering that the eggs were 
deposited, and no doubt fertilised, at practically the same time. Under 
natural circumstances, it is probable that the time taken for the hatching 
of all the eggs is prolonged, for it is difficult to understand how the larve 
could make their way from the interior of the mass by the narrow channels 
between the eggs if the eggs there were hatched as soon as those on the 
exterior. The condition of the masses shows that this does not occur, and 
that hatching proceeds from the outer surface inwards, a process which must 
take a considerable time. It seems very likely that the development of the 
eggs towards the centre of the mass is retarded, owing to defective or 
inferior aération there, compared with the eggs on the surface and near it ; 
and that this is related to the gradual disintegration of the outer surface 
as the eggs hatch there, and a pathway of escape is opened to the larvee. 

One could not fail to be impressed with the advantage to the species 
of this guardianship of the eggs by the male fish. Numerous foes must 
be driven off and the eggs preserved, and I do not think the story of 
Fabricius, that the lumpsucker under such circumstances will attack the 
wolf-fish, need be doubted. The courage and pugnacity of this usually 
docile and inoffensive fish seem boundless when it is protecting its eggs, 
and in contests of this kind it not infrequently happens that courage and 
determination count for as much as strength and the power of inflicting 
real injury. 

The conclusions from the experiment may be thus summarised :— 

(1) The male alone defends the eggs, the female taking no part 
whatever in protecting them, 


*Annual Reports Fishery Board for Scotland, 3rd, p. 60; 14th, p. 272. 
M 


178 


Part ITI—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


(2) The guardianship is prolonged till the eggs hatch, probably till 
all are hatched, a period exceeding two months in duration. 

(3) The male not only protects the eggs from enemies, but is con- 
stantly engaged in cleansing and aérating them, both by the 
movement of his fins and by spouting currents of water upon 
them from his mouth. 

(4) He removes from them or their immediate neighbourhood foreign 
bodies which might injure them, and carries them to a distance. 

(5) The male fasts during at least the greater part of his long vigil, 
but begins to feed towards its close. 

(6) He drives away other males, and displays great animosity to 
them throughout the whole period. 

(7) This animosity is shown only when the eggs are present. 

(8) The period of incubation may extend over 40 days. 

(9) The hatching of the eggs is also prolonged and gradual, those at 
the surface of the mass hatching first, and those at the centre 
last ; aud this difference in the rate of development is probably 
correlated with a difference in the degree of aération or oxy- 
genation of the eggs, the better oxygenated hatching first. 


F. B. REPORT, 1906. PLATE XI 


The figure is a reproduction of a photograph taken by Dr. Williamson through 
the glass ‘front of the tank, and shows the eggs and male zm situ. The male lump- 
sucker (a) occupies a position which he often took up, adhering to the side of the 

tank above the eggs. His outline is somewhat blurred, owing to movement while 
the photograph was being taken. Very often he sat on the stone bebind the eggs, 
part of which is shown at b. The egg-masses which he is guarding and attending 


to are shown at ¢, c. 


The anemone, which was his constant companion, is repre- 
sented at d. 


—_ 


Se. 


Se 


— ——EEE—— 


wt 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 179 


VUI—ON THE RATE OF GROWTH OF FISHES. By T. W. 
Wemyss Futron, M.D., F.R.S.E., Superintendent of Scientific 


Investigations. 
(Plates XII., XIIT.) 
CONTENTS. 

INTRODUCTION. Page. 
Species Dealt With, a ee aa ie 5 Bare Wit) 
Methods, e, oe ee ae aes Oe 
Comparison Between Different Species, fe es ae Ea? 180 
Influence of External Conditions, if nat Et Tae 
A Law of Growth, de ude ee . ae aoe 

Plaice (Plewronectes platessa), un ae a ee lig Ree Ore 

Common Dab (P. limanda), ... ae ie ie =p ao MASS 

Flounder (P. flesus) . es oe fe oe ako 

Lemon Dab (P. microcephalus), Rs ue Sot he2, 

Long Rough Dab (Drepanopsetta platessoides), re ee ae ee 5) 

Turbot (Rhombus (Bothus) maximus), Pr a. RG Rhea S12) 

Brill (Rhombus levis), Any ae a an me lee 3208 

Cod (Gadus callarias), ~ Bes id a a ante LO 

Haddock (G. ceglefinus) <i Aodhan co. aes as i eeeO 

Whiting (G. merlangus), ... be bes bt es eater 7 

Grey Gurnard (T7vigla gurnardus), ... a Shy. ish: e743) 

Tables of Measurements, I.-XXV., ... ~~ id ce .. 284 

INTRODUCTION. 


For a considerable number of years special attention has been devoted 
to the study of the growth of fishes by the scientific department of the 
Board. In 1889, I began observations on this subject by {wo methods, 
(1) by marking fishes (plaice, dabs, lemon dabs, brill, turbot, cod, &e.) by 
attaching to them brass labels bearing a number, the method which is 
now so largely used in connection with the international investigations, 
and then returning them alive to the sea; in the case of the herring, by 
removing a portion of the caudal fin; (2) by keeping the fishes in tanks, 
and noting the changes that occurred from time to time in their length 
and weight.* 

Since then very many fishes have been dealt with by another method— 
viz., by collating the measurements of large numbers of each species, by 
which the earlier series or generations can be separated from one another 
and the rate of growth ascertained, the measurements grouping themselves 
into curves or waves. This method was used to a limited extent by 
Miescher Ruesch in his classic studies on the salmon of the Rhine, and 
by other observers, as Ljungman, in studying the growth of the herring. 
These observers, however, did not classify the measurements in a scientific 
manner, which was first done by Dr. C. G. J. Petersen, who thus placed 
an important method at the service of investigators. 


Species DeaLt WITH. 


In the course of my investigation on growth during recent years, a large 
number of fishes have been dealt with—viz., nearly 209,000, belonging to 
21 species. The results in regard to many of them have been given in a 


* “An Experimental Investigation on the Migrations and Rate of Growth of the Food- 
Fishes,” Eleventh Annual Report, Part III., p. 117 


180 Part II1—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


series of papers in the Annual Reports of the Board.* The numbers of 
the various species measured for this work, and already dealt with, are as 
follows :— 


Plaice, - - 17,950 | Gurnard,'-— -—- 65,495 
Common Dab, — 26,230 Norway Pout, - 7,192 
Flounder, — —- 231 Hake, - = 571 
Lemon Dab, - 2,201 Herring, - -— 19,806 
Witch, - -—- 9§,422 Sprat, - - 6,473 
Long Rough Dab, 20,261 Grey Skate, - 432 
Turbot, - - 212 Angler, - - 722 
Brill, - = 807 Armed Bullhead, 1,312 
Cod, —- = 4,176 Lesser Weever, 417 
Haddock, —- - 28,760 Lumpenus ~ 738 
Whiting, - - 58,164 


Numerous measurements of other forms, as halibut, megrim, ling, pollack, 
coalfish, tusk, catfish, have also teen made, and will be dealt with later. 

Most of the fish were measured on board commercial steam-trawlers, 
engaged either in trawling investigations in territorial waters or in 
commercial fishing in the North Sea. 


Metuops. 


In a previous papert I gave a full account, with illustrations, of the 
method adopted in collecting and measuring the fishes. Besides this 
method, there is no doubt that much may be learned by keeping 
fishes in confinement, and measuring and weighing them from time 
to time, for comparison with those obtained on the fishing grounds, and 
this has been done. Another method, referred to above—viz., labelling 
the fish—has also in certain cases given good results, most, perhaps, with 
flat-fishes. Recently a fourth method has been employed, especially in 
Germany, by the examination of the markings on the scales, otoliths or 
ear-stones, and bones. It has also been used in the international investi- 
gations in this country by Garstang and Wallace, with reference particularly 
to the growth of the plaice, and the results agree with those obtained by 
a study of the measurements.{ 


CoMPARISON BETWEEN DIFFERENT SPECIES. 


While one general result of the investigations on the rate of growth of 
fishes has been to show that they do not grow so fast as was generally 
believed, it has been made clear that different species may increase at 
different ratus, apart from differences in size. In fishes which undergo a 
marked metamorphosis, growth is sometimes, and perhaps always, slow, 
especially at early periods. It is thus with the plnice and other fiat-fishes, 
with the eels, and with the herring and sprat. Among round-fishes, as 
the cod, the haddock, and the whiting, on the contrary, growth is com- 
paratively rapid. A young haddock grows many times faster than a 

laice. 
/ With regard to the age at which fishes attain mature size and begin to 
reproduce, similar differences exist. So far as the investigation has gone, 
*19th, 20th, 2st, 22nd. 
| Twentieth Annual Report, Part III., pp. 226-334. 


+ North Sea Fisheries Investigation Committee. Report (No. 2, Southern Area) on 
Fishery and Hudrographical Investigations in the North Sea and Adjacent Waters. 


aes 


eet 


of the Fishery Board for Scotiand. 181 


no sea fish has been found to attain the mature condition in the first 
year of its life, or before the close of its second year. Some spawn for the 
first time at the end of their second year, 7.¢e., when two complete years 
of age. These, as a rule, are the smaller species, as the sprat, the armed 
bullhead, the Norway pout, and the lesser weever ; but this class includes 
also the whiting, which reaches maturity with comparative rapidity. 

Among those which spawn for the first time at the end of their third year 
must be included the haddock, though some of these may reach maturity 
at the close of two years, the common dab and the long rough dab. 
Amongst the latter two species, indeed, the male comes to maturity a year 
earlier than the female, when two years of age, a phenomenon common to 
most flat-fishes. 

Thus, with the witch, the male matures at three years and the female 
at four years; among plaice the male matures at four years and the 
female at five. Among round fishes, on the other hand, the two sexes 
reach maturity at the same age. 

The cod does not attain its mature condition before the completion of 
its fourth year, while such large flat-fishes as the turbot, halibut, and brill 
take a longer time—the turbot probably not before it is seven years old, 
and the brill not before it is five or six. The approximate age at which 
the angler first spawns is, as the minimum, four years for the male and five 
years for the female. 

How many years fish live after they reach sexual maturity 1t would be 
difficult to decide ; but it is certain that in most cases the duration of 
reproductive life greatly exceeds the immature period. The method of 
determining the age by a study of the measurements is not well suited to 
solve the question, owing to the fusion of the groups from the variations 
in the rate of growth, and it is here that the method of estimating the 
age by the markings or number of zones on the hard structures may be 
of special advantage. Fishes of a size above the normal limit for the 
species are very old. When dealing with the plaice in a previous report* 
I remarked that the largest specimens I then described must be sixteen 
years old, but Professor Heincke, from an examination of the bones of the 
gill-cover, concludes that such individuals are twenty years old and more. 


INFLUENCE OF EXTERNAL CONDITIONS. 


Among the conditions which influence growth the most important, 
apart from quantity of food, appears to be temperature. Direct experi- 
ments on this point, by keeping fishes in water of different temperature, 
are described in the T'wenty-second Annual Report, where it is shown 
that those in the water that was warmest grew much faster than those in 
colder water. Previous experiments in tanks,f in which the fish were 
retained over winter and supplied with water from the beach at the ordinary 
temperatures, proved that the growth of plaice of 13 and 14 inches and 
of dabs is almost or quite arrested in January and February. It has alsu 
been shown that the growth of small plaice and dabs oa the beaches 
ceases in winter, and that among such round fishes as the haddock and 
whiting the retardation of growth is marked in the early months of the 
year, when the temperature is low, the growth of these fishes taking place 
mostly in a few months in summer. 

With regard to the whiting, I have been struck with the attenuation 
shown by many individuals examined in the early part of the year, and 
I think it is not improbable that the storage of fat in the muscles and the 
liver of fishes during summer and autumn is not merely for supplying 


* Twentieth Annual Report, Part III., p 357. 
+ Eleventh Annual Report, Part III., p. 193. 


182 Part L11.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


material for the growth of the reproductive organs, as is commonly 
supposed, but is also connected with maintaining their nutrition over the 
colder portion of the year. Fat is often got in immature fishes in 
quantities, as in the herring and Norway pout, for example.* 


There are reasons for the belieft that growth is modified with respect 
to period and amount in the deeper waters of the northern part of the 
North Sea, compared with the waters near the coast, but to what extent, 
the growth of fishes in the sea in deep and moderately deep water, as on 
the fishing banks in the North Sea, is affected by the changes in the 
temperature of the water is not yet clear, there being a want of sufficient 
observations as to the changes in the temperature that actually occur 
there. 


It is clear that a knowledge of the changes in temperature that take 


place is necessary to understand not only the growth of fishes and its 


variation, but their biology generally. All the other observations ought 
to be correlated with the temperature changes, just as the biological 
changes on land are, and what is wanted is a calendar of physical 
conditions throughout, the year to which the biological observations may 
be referred, whether they relate to plankton, food of fishes, spawning 
periods, development, growth, or migrations. 


The salinity of the water is another condition which probably modifies 
growth to a considerable extent, and it is not unlikely that it is one of 
the causes which produce a change in the range of size and the average 
size in species in certain localities. Some fishes, as the plaice, the dab, 
and the lesser weever, I have found to be of smaller dimensions, and of 
slower growth, in the Solway Firth, where the salinity is reduced, than 
on the East Coast, and the same cause probably acts on other forms. 
The subject is one which has not yet been much investigated. 


A Law or GRowrTH. 


During the researches on the growth of fishes, it has become apparent 
to me that there exists a relationship between the size at which sexual 
maturity occurrs in the various species and the general maximum size 
to which they attain. It may be expressed in one way by saying that 
fishes approximately double their size and increase their weight about eight 
times after they have reached sexual maturity ; or that fishes attain sexual 
maturity when they reach about half their maximum length and about 
one -eight of their maximum weight. 


It cannot be said at present that the law is more than approximately 
correct, for our knowledge of the precise average size at which the males and 
females of many fishes first spawn is as yet meagre —it is not well determined 
even for the cod—and the same is true as to the general maximum size 
to which many fishes attain ; a limit, moreover, which, in some instances 
at least, may have been modified by the action of man. For example, 
the maximum size of most fishes at Iceland is larger than in the North 
Sea at present, though there is no reason to suppose that growth is 
quicker there; and it is known that when. the Dogger Bank was first 
worked by trawlers the general maximum size for plaice was higher than 
it is now. 


* A research on this subject is at present being made for the Board by Dr. Noél Paton, 
whose investigation of the changes in the salmon are well-known, as well as one on the 
rate of digestion in fishes. + Twentieth Annual Report, Part IIT., p. 394. 


o'' en =*4¢ 


a 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland, 183 


But the facts are sufficient to justify the statement in its broad sense, 
and doubtless the extensive investigations now being carried on will ere 
long show how far it may he incorrect. It is to be noted that it applies 
to the fish in a region in which growth is naturally modified ; if plaice, 
for example, reach maturity in one region ata size less than in another, 
then the maximum size is also less. It is the same with the males and 
females among flat-fishes ; the males, as a rule, attain the mature condition 
at a less size than the females, and their maximum growth is corres- 
pondingly curtailed. As the maximum size of a species of flat-fish is 
approached, the proportion of males diminishes and the proportion of 
females increases ; and all the very large individuals are females. 

I give in the following Table the information such as it exists for a 
number of species, the sizes being in inches :— 


Approximate Size| Approximate Age} Approximate Exceptional 
at Maturity. at Maturity. Maximum Size. | Records of Size. 
Species. 

Female.) Male |Female.| Male. | Fema Male. | Female.| Male. 
Plaice, . ae Oke 13-14 5 4 32 see 384 
Gomme Dabs.: hos TE |i 2.6 3 1 ee TOR 1 
| Flounder, . geo aise ee | : § ty 18 
Lemon Dab, . — 10 8 4(?) vis | 20 
Witch, . ae WaeeS | 1GS11 4 3 | 23 ‘ 241 
Halibut, ; 48 30 oe a 84 
Megrim, 4 12 94 1g Lat 24 
L. RB. Dab, . 63-7 | 3 2 | 13-14 12 164 
Rarer) iia) | diel P|) gp | (70 lbs.) 
Brl, .< , 15 6 26 | 
Dade 5 |, 26-27 re 4-5 | 5-58 | 68 
Haddock, . | 11 11 3 | st oO 33 
Whiting, . | 84-9 ae 2 | 2 | 18 
Norway Pout, 44 Ake | 8-84 soe | 92 | oe 
Gurnard, 9 oe a Lee | 
| Angler, . : 30 27 a a) 


The approximate maximum size is as far as possible derived either from 
market measurements or from fish which have been measured on trawlers. 


PLAICE (Pleuronectes platessa ). 


A considerable number of collections of plaice were measured, partly 
from Aberdeen Bay and the Moray Firth, as well as from the Solway 
Firth and Lochfyne ; special attention being given to the small forms. 
The total number of plaice dealt with in this paper, whose measurements 
are given in the Tables appended is 11,385, making with those described 
in the previous paper an aggregate of 17,950. 


184 Part II1—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 
LOCHFYNE. 


The small plaice taken in Lochfyne were obtained by the push-net on 
the beaches at low water, that is to say, in two or three feet of water at 
that period of the tide. Those dealt with here were got in July and 
August, 1901, and in June and July, 1903, the aggregate numbers being 
4751 fish. They were taken at several different places in the loch, as 
shown in Tables J.~ILI. (p. 243), most being got at Inveraray, Strachur, 
Big Harbour, and Salen. They all belonged to the same series, the fry 
of the year, and consideration of their measurements gives an indication 
of the rate of growth at this stage in Lochfyne, Taking first of all the 
catches in July and August, 1901, it will be seen from the Tables that 
the push-nettings in July, which were made between the Ist and 6th of 
the month, resulted in the capture of a total of 3529 small plaice. The 
sizes ranged from 12mm. to 58mm.,a difference of 46mm. The maximum 
numbers were ranged about 2:5cm. to 3cm., and the average length was 
computed to be 30'3mm. (Plate XIT.). 

The period in August when the collections were made was from the 
28th to the 3lst. The numbers were smaller, viz., 556 fish. They 
ranged in size from 34mm. to 88mm., a difference of 54mm. The 
greater numbers were ranged about 50mm., or more than 20mm. higher 
than in July, and the average size was calculated to be 55°9mm., or an 
increase of 25°6mm. (as near as possible, 1 inch) in the period, which 
may be placed at 58 days from the middle of the one series of collections 
to the middle of the other (Plate XIT.). 

It is noteworthy that in some of the collections, most noticeably in 
July, the plaice of one locality were sensibly larger than those of others, 
a fact that was pointed out at the time by Mr. Dannevig. Taking the 
four chief places at which collections were made in that month, the range 
and averages in millimetres are as follows :— 


Number of Smallest. Largest. Average. 


Fish. 
Inveraray, : : 1,163 19 58 35°9 
Strachur, . i : : 668 16 51 28°9 
Big Harbour, . A 822 12 51 27°0 
Salen, : : : F 806 14 51 261 


| ABLE. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 185 


The contrast between two of the places may be brought out in the 
following manner by comparing the sizes at Inveraray and Strachur, 
reduced to percentages, the number of fish being in the former case 1163 
and in the latter 668, and both series collected on the same days (see 
fig. 3, pl. xii.) :— 


Cm. Strachur, | Inveraray. 
1 eS as 
m3) 0°15 = 
2 | 8°50 0-08 
z3) 37°90 2-90 
3 | 35°90 25°50 
5) 11°80 37°40 
4 4-20 20°40 
8) 1:00 8°80 
5 0:40 3°60 
zs) ~ 1:10 
6 ~ 0:08 


It may be said that in August the average size and the minimum size 
were also larger at Inveraray than at Strachur, the average at the former 
place being 66°5mm. and at the latter 52°Omm., while the minimum sizes 
were 48mm. and 34mm. In the collections in June and July, 1903, the 
same feature is repeated, thus :— 


| Date. see! a Smallest. Largest. Average. 
Inveraray, . » | June 22 | 86 17 | 47 207 
Strachur, . i ee 94 15 29 19°94 
Inveraray, . «mf daaly LO, Ve 105 17 50 30°4 
Strachur, i ke 50 19 57 26°8 


The explanation put forward by Mr. Dannevig to account for this 
difference was the probability that the temperature at Inveraray is higher 
than at Strachur, owing to the former locality being less affected by the 
deep-water tidal currents, and he pointed out that the size of the small 
plaice at the top or upper parts of the loch appears to be slightly greater 
than at the lower parts near the mouth. So far as the somewhat limited 
observations on the temperature are available they seem to show a rather 
higher temperature at Inveraray, as a rule, but not always. 

The other collections referred to in the Tables were made in June and 
July, 1903. The period in June extended from the 22nd to the 26th, 
and the small plaice caught numbered 218. They ranged in size from 
15mm. to 47mm., a difference of 32mm., and the average length was 
computed to be 239mm. The get number ranged about 20mm., but 
it would appear from the curve (fig. 2, plate XII. : that the smaller sizes 
were not fully represented. 

In July the collections were made from the 10th to the 13th. The 
number of plaice taken was 448, ranging in size from 17mm. to 57mm., 
the average being 29:0mm., or only about 5mm. higher than in June. 
The interval may be placed at about 18 days. 


186 Past IIT —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The measurements of the plaice in these four series of collections, 
reduced to percentages, are as follows :—- 


1903. 1901. 
Cm. se 
June. July July, August. 
1 - ~ oa = 
Zz) 13°3 1:3 = 
2 35:3 8°9 7:3 - 
5 25°7 32°8 30°2 = 
3 17°3 371 29°3 = 
5 46 145 174 18 
4 1:8 3°3 87 9°0 
5 1°4 1° 3°6 12°6 
5 ~ pal ie’ 20°1 
D - ‘2 “4 16°9 
6 — - 03 13°1 
5 - - - 10°2 
7 = - - 73 
5 - - - 4°7 
8 - - - 2°5 
D - - - 14 
9 - - - 18 


The features are also shown in the curves. It is probable from an 
examination of the individual collections that the larger forms are not 
sufficiently represented. They no doubt move out into somewhat deeper 
water even at this early stage, and in part get beyond the depth at 
which a man wades in using the push-net at low tide. 


ABERDEEN Bay. 


A number of collections were made in Aberdeen Bay by means of a 
small fine-meshed shrimp net, used from a yawl, in depths usually 
ranging from 3 to 6 or 7 fathoms. The measurements of these 
are grouped in ‘5 centimetres in Table IV., and it is apparent that, 
though the numbers of fish are in no case large, three annual series or 
generations are at least indicated. Thus, there is represented a series 
ranging from 2cm. to 9cm. or 10cm. or a little more ; another from 15cm. 
or l6cm. to 24cm. or 25cm., and a third from about 27cm, to 34cm. 
These are best seen in the aggregates for March, April, and May, which, 
with those for September and November, as grouped in centimetres 
measure as follows :— 


| TABLE, 


é 
4 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 187 


Cm. March. April. May. September. | November. 


CONIC? Om COND 

MOCO Oro! [ | | 
——d 

) ——s | 4 


i ll coll | 


mt Oo mt se ee ee es eo 


LE cose Me Ue 1 Ta tee Bil Reet fie al SY ha ie a | a pe SOR enh -Vie 0} 


1 


Fee] Ve Ed Enel RRs) Fett A= i em (Ue Heat Ue es Sl at Lay Ceaue| eel in* || Soe FRI Dead Sa YSN FPS) Th ea TT 
Je femal UTR erat; Sais Spee Seti Uf eel Lh TERE EY Ds TEU be] ee (el b  e HNSD 


LHP Ors] | SENN]! RRR eE | 


It is clear that the small plaice ranging from about 4cm. to 9cm. in 
spring belong to the previous year, and are one year old or a little more. 
The plaice of the year appear on the sands in May in great swarms, On 
12tn May, 1904, a collection of 717, measuring from 12mm, to 18mm., was 
taken on the sandy bottom in Aberdeen Bay in a fine-meshed net in hauls 
made in from 4 to 7 fathoms. On 18th May a collection of 1320 was 
taken in the same way in from 3 to 5 fathoms; they measured up to 
19mm. and 20mm. In both cases several of the specimens were incom- 
pletely metamorphosed. Some of those caught on 12th May were kept 
alive in a tank, and on July 7—56 days afterwards—seven of them 
measured 26mm., 24mm., 24ram., 23mm., 21mm., 19mm., and 17mm. 

From these records it appears that the first group in spring, the sizes of 
which range mostly about 5cm. to 7cm. or 8cm., is about one year of age; 
the second group, with a size mostly from 17cm. to possibly 22cm., 
represents two-year-olds; and the third group, ranging mostly about 
29mm. to 32mm., is at least a year older. The numbers of fish are not 
large in any of these collections, and the precise limit between one series 
and another is uncertain. In a collection made on 9th May, 1902, in 
Aberdeen Bay, in from 4 to 10 fathoms, there were 126 plaice, of which 
the first series, over one year old, comprised 98 specimens, ranging in 
size from 57mm. to 126mm., the arithmetical average being 92°2mm.,, 
and the maximum ordinate on the base-line in the curve 925mm. The 
second series, which was imperfect, comprised 28 specimens from 140mm. 
to 227mm., the average of this lot being 190°8mm., and the maximum 
ordinate 185mm., or 74 inches.* 


* Twentieth Annual Report, Part III., p. 358. 


188 Part III.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Dornocu FIrra. 


In the Dornoch Firth some collections of small plaice were also 
obtained, the particulars of the measurements being given in Tables 
[V. and VI. On 7th December, 1904, a haul in from 4 to 9 fathoms 
yielded 182 plaice. The smallest ranged from 59mm. to 98mm. ; there 
were 19 between these sizes. There were also 13 measuring from 
125mm. to 145mm. The remainder measured from 173mm. to 472mm. 
‘The first group is evidently the fish of the year; the limits of the other 
series are not certain. On 9th February, 1905, another haul with the 
fine-meshed net, in from 53 to 10 fathoms, yielded 355 plaice, ranging in 
length from 5em, to 16cem., and distinguished into two well-marked 
groups. ‘The first included 283 specimens, measuring from 52mm, to 
99mm. (2;',-34 inches), or it might possibly be 108mm. (43 inches), the 
maximum number being around 7em. (see fig. 4a, pl. XIT.). The average 
length was computed, on the former limit, at 74mm., or very nearly 
3 inches. If at the larger limit, the average size would be 74°5mm. 

Grouped in centimetres, the measurements are as follows :— 


5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 
Si 59) 115 78 6, 29 6 ve 14 jal 19 8 1 


The smaller series are obviously fish of the previous spawning, and 
about 10 or 11 months old. 

In the second, older series, comprising 72 plaice nearing the end of 
their second year, the greater number are grouped about 13cm. to 
14cm. (54-53 inches), the mean size being about 13°3cm., or 5} inches, 
and the apparent growth from the previous series amounts to about 
65cm. (28 inches); but the representation of the larger fishes may not 
be perfect. 

In another haul on the 31st of March, or about 52 days later, but in a 
ditfereut year, viz., 1904, the second series is represented by 29 specimens, 
ranging from 112mm. to 196mm. (43-7? inches), as follows, in centimetre 
grouping, the mean size being about 14°5cem. (53 inches) :— 


9 GO LL a2 ease RG ey nS (ee ee, 
1 1 1 7 3 6 8 1 1 1 = 


These may be regarded as two years of age (fig. 48, pl. XIT.). 

The same group is represented in other collections, as given in Table 
VI., but only by a few fishes, viz., in October, November, and December. 

In a haul taken on the 22nd October, 1903, in from 8 to 13 fathoms 
of water, the 363 plaice which were caught were measured. Though the 
small-meshed net was employed, the smallest plaice caught was 164mm.,; 
the great bulk of them formed a group between 20cm. and 29cm., with 
the maximum from 23cm. to 26cm. These fish were approaching their 
fourth year. 


ANNAN. 


A few collections of small plaice in April, 1904, were sent to me by 
Mr. George Bryson, Annan, which had been taken by shrimp-net in the 
Solway, on the ordinary shrimping grounds. It will be seen from Table 
IV. that an early series of fish, about one year of age, is represented, 
most distinctly in the collection on the 23rd of the month, and also a 
second series, less distinctly marked off from the third, and again )hest 
shown in the collection on the 23rd. They indicate the same feature as 
shown in the previous paper dealing with the growth of the plaice, that 
the rate of increase in the Solway is slow. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 189 


BurRGHEAD Bay. 


The plaice taken in several of the hauls in this locality were measured, 
and the measurements are given in Tables V., VI., at the end of this 
paper. On 20th October, 1903, a collection of 233 was taken in from 
8 to 12 fathoms, the small-meshed net being around the cod-end. . The 
smallest plaice caught was 175mm., and, with another specimen measuring 
193mm., probably represented the second group. The next smallest was 
216mm., and the bulk of the plaice came between this and 30cm., 
the majority measuring from 24cm. to 26cm., aud representing the third 
series. The haul in the Dornoch Firth two days later, in which 363 
plaice were taken, corresponded pretty closely, as above indicated. 

At the beginning of December (6th and 7th), 1904, a considerable 
number of plaice taken in from 44 to 16 fathoms, in Burghead Bay, were 
measured, the sexes being first determined and dealt with separately. The 
number so treated in three hauls was 1737. These measurements are 
given in the appended Table V. The separation of the groups is not 
so well seen in these cases as one might expect. The great bulk of the 
fish measured between 25cm. and 42cm., and in the case of the females it 
was not difficult to see that they were separated into two groups, at 34cm. 
to 35cm. ‘The curve formed by the measurements of the males is much 
less regular. 

The plaice in some other ordinary hauls, taken in from 5 to 21 
fathoms on 7th February, 1905, were kindly measured for me by 
Dr. Williamson, the sexes being distinguished, and also the condition of 
the reproductive organs (Table VII.). The range in size was from 
20-68cm., but the separation of the groups is not very clear ; females seem 
to show maxima about 30-3lcem. and 34-35cm. ‘The size at maturity, 
it will be observed, is about 4lem. fer males and 42-43cm. for females ; 
but the number of mature or nearly mature plaice was very small. 


COMMON DAB (Pleuronectes limanda). 


The number of common dabs whose measurements are dealt with here 
is 8094, belonging to 28 collections from the Moray Firth and Aberdeen 
Bay. With those included in the previous paper, the total number of 
common dabs, mostly measured on board commercial trawlers, is 26,230. 
In many of the recent collections the first, or youngest, series is specially 
well represented, and the facts show that this fish grows slowly. 


ABERDEEN Bay. 


The collections of young dabs made here were taken in fine-meshed 
nets, mostly from a fishing yawl, in comparatively shallow water, the 
depths ranging as a rule from 3 to 6 or 7 fathoms. There are 11, viz., 1 
in January, | in February, 1 in March, 3 in April, 2 in May, 1 in 
September, and 2 in November. In Table VIII. appended, the measure- 
ments of the fish in each collection are given in ‘5 centimetre groups. 
Few of them show well in any series but the first. 

On the 3rd January, 1906, a collection of 323 was obtained in 8 
fathoms of water. The smallest measured 27mm., or slightly over 1 inch, 
and the largest was 63mm., or 24 inches; the majority ranged in size 
from 35mm. to 41mm. (13-12 inches), and the average size computed is 
39°2mm., or slightly over 14 inches. 

The next collection, on 11th February, 1905, was taken in somewhat 
deeper water, viz., 8-12 fathoms, and comprised only 16 small dabs. The 
smallest measured 32mm., and the largest of the series 67mm., most 
ranging from 3°5cm. to 4:5cm. 


190 Part ITI—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The third collection, on 27th March, 1905, was in from 5 to 10 fathoms, 
and the small dabs obtained numbered 154, measuring from 32mm. to 
78mm. (14-3, inches), the majority ranging from 4:5cem. to 6cm. 

Three collections were obtained in April, 1904, iu from 3 or 4 to 6 
fathoms of water. In the first, on the 8th, 28% small dabs were secured, 
the smallest measuring 23mm. and the largest 67mm. (43-2 inches), 
while in this case the majority ranged from 3cm. to 4cm. in length. In 
the second, on 16th, the small dabs numbered 308, ranging in size from 
24mm. to 82mm. (12-34 inches), and the majority measured from 3°5em. 
to 5em., most being about 4cm. On the 26th the number secured was 
178, measuring from 25mm. to 83mm., the majority being froin 3:5cm. to 
45cm. The curve for the collection on the 16th is the most symmetrical. 
These fish were very nearly, or quite, one year old. 

‘Two collections were obtained in May, 1904. In the first, on the 4th, 
in from 3 to 7 fathoms, 37 small dabs were taken; they measured from 
30mm. to 5lmm., the majority being from 3:5cm. to 45cm. (1-3,-14 
inches). In the second, in the middle of the month, 70 were taken in the 
same place and depth ; they measured from 3lmm. to 58mm., the majority 
ranging from 4cm. to 5cm. The fish in these collections may be con- 
sidered to be about one year old. 

In the next collection, on 1st September, 1904, in from 4 to 9 fathoms, 
the small dabs numbered 279, and they ranged in length from 20mm. to 
59mm. (4-23 inches), most measuring 3°5em., and 4cm., or nearly as 
much asin May. Twocollections were obtained in November, 1903. In 
one, on the 13th, in 6 to 9 fathoms, 114 small dabs, measuring from 20mm. 
to 82mm. (# to 3¢ inches), were taken; the curve is not very regular, 
but the largest numbers are grouped under 5cm. to 6°5cm. In the 
second collection, got on the 19th, in from 2 to 10 fathoms, 108 small 
dabs ranged from 33mm. to 72mm. (1;—24 inches), the greater number 
measuring 4°5em. to 55cm. The dabs of the year appear for the first 
time in the September collection; but no collection was made between 
May and that month. 

‘The measurements of these dabs may be arranged in centimetre groups, 
as follows, from January to November, according to the dates. 


= 

Cm. © Ye} 19 = = a =~ - . oO 
S| a.) eo | & leo he Sal oa ee 

Sn ee ce ep ae ca Geeta a) GO ie as 

oD re N (oa) re N = re Sal ri re 

i A (a. es eet 4 ee pie = = = = 

D) 7 zi Sle 5 3 ts See BDI 6 > 

3 7 Ba ee Oe Cee ern STO a. aie 9 6 

4 120 9/35 1 88 Ia go | a0 aie) 198 | SS eines 

5 24 Hrosleee6- BY C16 wleF aie UT 14 4dr ASed Fel “She eee 

6 1 1 47 tt 3 o 1 ai ee 

Peel a 7 = 2 3 z. A _ 7 1 

8 = a - a 2 1 LE: ‘4 A 2 s 

9 zs . = 2 F v 2 z 3 - Pe 

10 = 1 bs i Z ™ i i tae 13 - 1 
11 3 - us k S 3 a Sl SG x f 
12 A o = r Pod a bas) = Seiler iO i 1 
13 = - = _ 2 ae 2 = 9 %: e 
14 : : : Z cls ple E: = 7 i = 
15 : 2 Z £ 1 5 i ua 5 de 
16 - - 2 - 4 =e 2 - | - 
17 &: ~ = : ss 1 = = 2 = = 
18 = Me = 1 a E. - : 5 a s 
19 x * by 2 a * - SS eas % 3 
20 2 = 2 a e 2 ¥ 1 4 “2 
21 ss a : = of = s 1 2 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 191 


In one or two of the coliections a second group is fairly well indicated. 
Thus, in that of 26th April, we have a series extending from 112mm. to 
164mm. (43-64 inches), most being aggregated at 12cm. to 14cm. This 
group is apparently approaching two years of age. Then, in the collection 
taken on Ist September, the second group begins at 89mm, and apparently 
ends at 153mm., and it represents fish at nearly the end of their second 
summer’s growth. A comparison of the Tables and dates will show that 
the very small dabs grow slowly, and like the small plaice, grow very 
little in winter. 


Moray Fiera. 


In some collections from the Moray Firth the small dabs are also well 
shown (Tables IX-X.). On 9th February, of a collection got in the 
Dornoch Firth, in from 64 to 10 fathoms of water, 377 ranged in size from 
3lmm. to 78mm., the greater number being aggregated from 4cm. to Sem. 
These fish, of course, belonged to the spawning of the previous year, and 
were about nine months old. On the 7th December, in another collection 
from the Dornoch Firth, in from 4 to 9 fathoms, 219 specimens measured 
from 24mm. to 65mm. (the next largest being 92mm.) ; they were mostly 
ageregated from 32mm. to 42mm., and chiefly at 36mm., or barely 
14 inches. In a large collection made at Smith Bank on the 27th 
December, 1903, 66 small dabs measured from 25mm. to 72mm. (the next 
largest being 84mm..), and in this case the greater number were aggregated 
between 25mm. and 35mm. 

In the Tables the measurements of a large number of older dabs are 
given, but the division between the annual series is not always very clear. 
In the Dornoch Firth, in the hauls in December, a group with the 
majority of the specimens aggregated between 10cm. and 12cm. (about 
41 inches) may be noted; while in the collections from Smith Bank in the 
same month the group has the aggregate between 10cm. and 14cm. In 
the haul from the Witch ground at the end of January the aggregate is 


at 14-5cm. to 15°5em. (53-63 inches), and these fish are approaching 
their third year. 


FLOUNDER (Pleuronectes flesus ). 


The information afforded by the collections as to the rate of growth of 
the flounder is rather scanty, small specimens of this species coming only 
rarely under observation in the course of the investigations. The young 
flounders prefer the shallows, especially at the mouths of streams, and 
where the water is brackish, and even the adult is uncommon in water of 
moderate depth, except at certain times of the year. The number 
measured was 231. 

In the course of the push-nettings in Lochfyne specimens of flounders 
were occasionally secured, though usually in very small numbers. <A 
series obtained on 5th July, 31 in all, measured from 16mm. to 53mm. 
5-91 inches), the greater part being grouped at 3cm., or scarcely 1} 
inches, the arithmetical average being 31:9mm., or 1? inches. This is 
rather more than with the little plaice collected at the same time, in which 
case the majority ranged from 24mm. to 32mm., and the computed 
average size was 30°3mm. The spawning period of the flounder in Loch- 
fyne, according to Williamson, is a little later than that of the plaice.* 
It is not unlikely that at this period the habitat of the young flounder 
leads to an exceptionally rapid growth, viz., in the very shallow and 
mostly brackish waters, where the temperature in the summer months is 
highest ; and probably also its growth in winter is arrested. 


*Seventeenth Annual Report of the Fishery Board for Scotland, Part III. 


192 Part ITI. —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Another collection, on 10th September, in Lochfyne, yielded 17 young 
flounders, the smallest measuring 44mm. and the largest 78mm. (1?-3;4 
inches). It is not clear, however, that the last, and another at 77mm., 
belong to the same series, since none were taken between 61mm, and the 
sizes stated. They were mostly aggregated about 5cm., or 2 inches. 
The other collections of little flounders were small, and serve to in- 
dicate only a few points. Thus, some taken in spring, and therefore not 
belonging to the year’s spawning, were rather small in certain cases. On 
27th March 2 were got in Lochfyne, measuring 63mm. and 99mm. On 
25th May 2 were taken in the Dornoch Firth, one measuring 60mm. and 
the other 70mm. At Annan, in April, two, measuring 82mm. and 90mm. 
were taken. These represented fish of the preceding year, and there are 
few of the second series in the collections; but it is probable that while 
those mentioned, and a few others of the same kind in the Table, belong 
to the second group, or those a little over one year old, those in the 
Tables at 17cm. to 19°5cm. are at least a year older. 

A large collection of flounders was obtained in the Dornoch Firth on 
the 30th March, 1904, in from 5 to 16 fathoms, in the otter trawl, and as 
they were either actually spawning or nearly ripe, the sexes were 
separated and measurements made. They numbered 158, namely, 136 
males and 22 females, the males in this species preponderating in numbers 
over the females. It is unfortunate that the small-meshed net was not 
used on this occasion, but, at the same time, it is not probable that many 
more small flounders would have been taken, as the smaller fish do not 
migrate to the depths referred to. The smallest male flounder in the 
collection measured 2('2mm., or just 8 inches, and the smallest female was 
252mm. ‘The measurements are not sufficient to enable the fish to be 
separated into definite annual series with any certainty, but they in all 
probability represent flounders of at least three years and over. 


LEMON DAB (Pleuronectes microcephalus ). 


The growth of the lemon dab has not been made out so well as that of 
most of the flat-fishes. This is owing to several circumstances. The 
spawning period is of exceptional length, extending from the middle of 
April to well on in September and even into October. Of a number of 
large lemon dabs examined at a fish-yard at Aberdeen on the 21st and 22nd 
September, all the males—129 in number—yielded more or less spermatic 
fluid on pressure, and of 168 females, 44, or 26 per cent., contained ripe 
eggs, and were, in point of fact, spawning. On 10th November all were 
found to be spent. Eggs of the lemon dab were also obtained in tow- 
nets on 8th October. Owing to this circumstance of the extended 
spawning period, the various annual groups soon coalesce to such 
an extent as regards length that it is difficult to separate them. 
Another difficulty is the scarcity of small specimens. For a long time 
lemon dabs under three or four inches were unknown, though now 
specimens under that size have been recorded by Holt, Cunningham, and 
myself. Still another reason is the fact that large individual collec- 
tions of lemon dabs are not very often obtained by the trawl. They are 
scattered, and it would appear that collections from different parts may 
show a different rate of growth. ‘The number dealt with in this paper is 
2201. 

I ascertained that in the Solway the boats that carry on prawn-fishing 
by means of trawl nets often take considerable numbers of small lemon 
dabs, and I arranged for collections to be made from the boats and the 
fish forwarded to me, Such collections were obtained in April, May, and 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 193 


September, and the measurements, in ‘5cm. groups, are given in Table 
XII. (p. 256). The fish are caught on rough ground off the 
Cumberland coast, in about 4 fathoms of water, and are rather localised 
in their distribution. 

In dealing with them the sexes were first carefully determined, 
microscopical examination being resorted to when necessary ; the propor- 
tions of the sexes in these collections were thus made precise and certain. 
Most of the series were also weighed and the condition of the reproductive 
organs made clear, and some remarks on this head may be of interest. 
In the collection in September it is noted that the females had small 
ovaries, weighing less than one gramme, and usually only a fifth or a 
tenth of a gramme, The eggs were small and unyolked, the largest 
measuring up to ‘106 and ‘134mm. In May the great majority had 
also small unyolked eggs, but some of them had large eggs and 
would have spawned in the ensuing summer. This was the case 
with one measuring 201mm., in which the eggs measured ‘72mm., and 
also in others from 164mm. to 188mm., where the eggs were of the same 
size. In one of 188mm., weighing 75 grammes, the roe weighed 5:9 
grammes and the eggs were ‘73mm. in diameter. Another of 182mm. 
long weighed 66 grammes, the roe weighing 4:0 grammes, and the 
egos were of the same diameter as those mentioned. I previously 
recorded instances of still smaller lemon dabs being quite mature.* 

These lemon dabs from the Solway Firth varied in length from 5’dcm. 
to 20cm., the smallest obtained was 57mm. (23 inches) taken in April, 
and the largest was 202mm. (8 inches). The smallest were got in April 
(22nd), and the Table shows that in all probability a group terminates 
about 10cm. No males were got between 98mm. and 114mm., and no 
females between 89mm. and 111mm. ‘Two females were taken at 57mm. 
and 59mm., the next being 80mm.; while the smallest male was 71mm. 
There is thus a suggestion that the two females represent the larger 
specimens of a younger group. 

In the May collections three groups appear to be represented, when 
curves are drawn of the measurements; the first and third are only partly 
present, the bulk of the collection consisting of fish from 10cm. to 16cm. 
and aggregated around 13cm. and 14cm. (53 inches). The figures for 


the totals for the 6th and 15th May, grouped into centimetres are as 
follows :— 


Ome sO. 7, 6c Sy 1C. Wl 12 s18 140 15 116. 17% 1801920 2 
eee ehh eine st PANS ces bisa BNt-e. Ter gees 
ee ee se Ss lt 2, 19. 12, 98a Tk IL 45 Ot, 
Pe ee ESO ne dios (EBS BH la0 2902 
eee eee eT ey ee a NN 


Obviously none of the specimens belong to the year; the smallest must 
be approaching one year of age, or are over it. 

In the collections made in September the extreme range of the sizes is 
very much the same, and the curve of the total shows that a division 


* Twenty-first Annual Report of the Fishery Board for Scotland, Part III.. p. 48, 
N 


194 Part ITL.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


between two groups is about 13cm. to l4cm., the fish being aggregated 
at about 12cm. and 16cm, to 17cm. respectively. The figures of the total 
measurements arranged in centimetres are as follows :— 


io) 
ive) 


7 LO, ehh 518 galdye tte Sg AB ATs Deapel Seq Boas 
1.8) 10: 8) 1:22» 4005 Che BOY eEST ani fir G2 1,62 1: OF 9 2 ~ 


The corresponding figures for the individual collections are :— 


Om; 6.7 38 69) 20 Alii? AS FAA 6.517 4 AS O20, az) 


Sent) 2 ule Silerer? lere 2. Re Amey gota gots Siiqeis 
go telg OSI Beh aT ae 0” si aod meee alee aa oe ee ee 
lbw) 2 Eye (BRO 92, Qe Seas sewer ee eae 


Are 5 Semele lp 3 oes <a = Nash Nepoel: E e esales Ramm! Ob vse peep ee eget 


Small lemon dabs, though not quite so small, were also obtained in 
various hauls in the Firth of Forth and in the Clyde, the particulars of 
the measurements of which, arranged in ‘5cm. groups, are given in 
Tables XIV., XV, In May, in the Forth, a collection of 68 ranged in 
length from 10cm. to 30cm., four groups being probably, but unequally, 
represented. In the most outstanding the majority of the fishes are 
grouped around l5cm. to 17cm., and they are thus a little larger than the 
corresponding May collection from the Solway, where, as was previously 
shown, plaice and dabs at all events grow more slowly than on the east 
coast. It would appear that these fish are entering their third year, 
the two-year-old fish being represented by the few of a smaller size. 
There is a second aggregation of lemon dabs between 23cm. and 30cm., 
but they not improbably represent at least two series. The figures, 
as arranged in centimetre groups, are these :— 


1O\ALY 22S 914 15) 16 17 A819" 207 21 22°23" 24 25 26 a ee ee 
A le PLOT OR TB ae OP RL re PE Se ee Oe, gee ee 


A small collection was also obtained in August, but the number was 
scarcely sufficient to give a reliable clue to the growth. Arranged in 
centimetres, the measurements are these :— 


9 10 11 12 18°°14. "15.16. 47° 18" 19. 20 <2). 22. .285 24 ~ 2b 20 aie 
DS I 2 2 TS A Bh ae a eee 


The collections in the Clyde (Table XV.) were obtained in somewhat 
deep water in the neighbourhood of Ailsa Craig. In September, those 
taken numbered 79, and a curve of the measurements shows them mainly 
agcregated between 12cm. and 18cm., with a deeply-indented apex, the 
maxima being at 13cm. and 16cm., thus corresponding fairly closely to the 
collection from the Solway in the same month of the year. On the 5th 
October a number measured from 8cm. to 25cm., the mass being 
aggregated between 13cm. and 19cm., there also being an indentation in 
the curve at 15cm. ‘The figures grouped in centimetres are these :— 


8.9, .10.-4)- 12) 137 a4 152 16) WOES) 19) S20 219 22 223) eee 
LQ = a5 8 FD SB A Le, SR 


The collections from Aberdeen Bay were more numerous (Tables XIII., 
XIV). The largest was obtained on 21st August at the “ Doghole,” a 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 195 


few miles off, in 58 fathoms of water, the specimens uumbering 118. 
The measurements, arranged in centimetres, are as follows :— 


Teh pla, We Te 1b IG 1G, IS 19.20 = 214522,: 238) 2a 2b 26 
ame te Pee eel BeBe dy. Oy 10, 13) « Bhi Sty Ayly © 


27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 385 36 37 38 389 40 41 42 43 
Pee ore ee so a Ot ee Se ee 


The curve shows at least five groups, though the lines are not very 
regular. The first comprises the fish up to about 15cm. The middle of 
the base is about 12cm. or 12‘5em. ‘The next extends from 16cm. to 
to 22cm. or 23cm., the maximum number are at 21cm., and the middle 
of the base about 19cm. to 20cm. The third extends from 22cm. or 
23cm. to 30cm., the greater numbers are at 27cm., and the middle of the 
base is about 26cm. or 26°5cm. 

In hauls in July, on the 31st and 30th, that is about three weeks 
earlier, the same order of grouping can be made out, the measurements 
being as follows :— 


Pete plo F421 1G). 1715-1920. 20 22) 2324 25 26 27 + 28 
eee Pet Te Me Dice A Oe a DS Ot de = 
29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 388 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 
erent Gem eto ae ory Beg RA Bon Eek Peet Qi ey hy 


In collections made in October, the first and second of the above 
indicated series are best shown. The following are the figures of the 
measurements, arranged in centimetres :-— 


9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 380 31 
1 A) ee ee eee ee ee ee ee 
Zoe Sw AOA BSP HG TY 2 3+ 8 = == ="2 
erste) yy 224 218 24 le Ser i= = so =- =- = = I 2 


There are also given in Table XIII. the measurements from a large num- 
ber of hauls taken in the Moray Firth and Aberdeen Bay on two occasions, 
the first from 8th to 13th October, 1900, and the second from 31st 
October to 9th November in the same year. ‘The curve formed by the 
former series shows two great aggregations, the first extending from about 
15cm. or 16cm. to 27cm. or 28cm., and the second from the latter point 
to 41cm. In the former the maximum number are aggregated at 23cm. 
(9 inches), and in the latter they are aggregated at 36cm. (144 inches), a 
difference of 13cm., or a little over 5 inches. It seems tolerably certain, 
however, that one or other of these, and probably both, aggregations com- 
prise more than one annual series, though the very deep depression 
between the two cones is marked, and very distinct. The measurements 
at the beginning of November are less satisfactory, the curve formed being 
irregular. The second aggregation is poorly represented, but the first is 
well marked, but begins at 14cm., and the maximum number are at 18cm.; 
there is a well-marked depression at 27cm., much as in the curve of the 
measurements taken some weeks earlier. The figures arranged in centi- 
metres for the two series of measurements are as follows :— 


Pa Wash IG 6h 7e U8xel 20) ) Bile 220123) 24. 25) 26.2%) 28 29/30 


Pigeon ete? Oe bee to) S17 82, A 2 IBA ASE ID PT 64 aS GO 
(Jienere tons ose lun 16) 2h) 200 1412) 14) TS) AL 10010) 9.8 1D Tid (10 


dl 382 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 


Meester ort sus or 20 OS ib. £ ik Lk 
er are oer ee Take! oy Mt Thi Dyes Deo be.) B= 


196 Part LI1—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Larval and post-larval lemon dabs have been obtained at periods 
which correspond with the long spawning season. Thus, Cunningham 
records specimens of 10mm. and over taken in April, and specimens of 
this size are taken in May, while at the end of October they have been 
secured in considerable numbers measuring from 8mm. to 18mm. __It is 
obvious that in the succeeding year, say in spring, the young lemon dabs 
derived from these would vary much in size. The early ones would have 
the full benefit of the favourable temperature throughout the whole year, 
while those of October would meet with the colder water in winter and 
have their growth retarded. Thus, a specimen caught by the “ Garland” 
on 7th May, which measured 25mm., was no doubt derived from the pre- 
ceding year, while specimens measuring 27mm. taken in August belonged 
to the same year. 

Young lemon dabs in some number were got by Holt at the Humber 
in October and November, measuring from 2 to 34 inches, which might 
possibly have been derived from the spawning of that year, but the larger, 
at least, were more probably from that of the year before. 

Cunningham, at the beginning of June, took small lemon dabs on the 
Essex coast from 3 to 5 inches long, and these were clearly at least one 
year old. 

The evidence seems to me to justify the belief that the growth of the 
lemon dab is slow, and probably does not much, if at all, exceed 5cm. to 
6cm. (2 to 24 inches) ina year. It is probable that the female does not 
spawn before the fourth year, though the prematurely mature specimens 
occasionally got* probably spawn at an earlier age, and may form a 
distinct variety. 


LONG ROUGH DAB (Drepanopsetta platessoides, Fabr. ). 


Various collections of long rough dabs were measured, the total num- 
ber being 3529, part of them being from the Moray Firth and part from 
Aberdeen Bay (Table XVI.). Including those dealt with in the previous 
paper, the aggregate number measured amounts to 20,261. 

Several of the collections contained the very small series which are 
always in this species well separated from the older series, contrasting 
with the case of the lemon dab. The spawning period of the long rough 
dab extends from the end of January well into May, and is chiefly 
marked at the end of March and the beginning of April. Each year’s 
brood have therefore the summer following for growth, and not, as in the 
lemon dab, part of them the summer and part of them the winter. 

In three collections made in the Moray Firth the early group is well 
shown. The first was taken on 28th December in 30 fathoms, on the so- 
called witch ground off Burghead; the second on 23rd January, but 
somewhat further east off Kinnaird Head, in 50 fathoms; and the third 
on lst April, in the neighbourhood of the place where the first haul was 
made, in from 30 to 32 fathoms. 

In the December collection 73 fish belonged to this group; they ranged 
in length from 46mm. to 65mm. (143—2,%, inches) (the next largest in the 
collection being 85mm.), and the average length was 56‘8mm., or 24 
inches. In the January collection there were 57 specimens, ranging from 
47mm. to 68mm. (12-214 inches) (the next largest being 86mm.), and 
the average computed size was 57-4mm., or 21 inches. The third collec- 
tion contained 84 specimens of the class, varying in length from 47mm. 
to 70mm. (13-2 inches), and the average was 56:°2mm., or almost 24 
inches, the next largest in the collection being 89mm. 


*See Twenty-first Annuel Report, Part III., p. 48. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 197 


Number of Range in Average 

Fish. Length. Size. 
28th December 1903. 73 46-65mm. | 56'8mm. 
23rd January 1904 . . 57 47-68mm. | 57-4mm. 
Ist-Aprili904. -. ._.. 84 47-70mm. 56°2mm. 


As already stated, the locality of the collections in December and April 
were the same, and the facts show how much retarded the growth of 
this fish may be during winter. 

In previous collections, described in my paper in the Twentieth Annual 
Report, numbers of these small long rough dabs were secured, and the 
average length in some cases may be referred to. The facts show that 
the growth of this somewhat deep-water fish does not materially differ in 
the north-eastern parts of the North Sea as compared with the Moray 
Firth. In the deep water off the Shetlands, on 3lst August and 4th 
September, the average size was 48'3mm. and 48:'4mm. On 16th-19th 
October it was 53°3mm.; on 11th December it was 54:'4mm., and on 19th 
May 68'4mm. Off Aberdeen Bay, on 21st August, 11 specimens had an 
average length of 53mm.; on 16th December the average length of 116 
specimens was 65‘5mm. On 4th July, in from 83-85 fathoms, off 
Kinnaird Head, 146 had an average length of 98°3mm. (33 inches). It 
is thus clear that the growth of this fish, as formerly remarked, is slow, 
and that when one year old its average length does not greatly exceed two 
inches. 

In some of the collections the older groups are well indicated. In that 
of 28th December, off Burghead, the sexes were not completely separated, 
but in the lot of 23rd January they were. The females in the second 
series in this collection range in length from 92mm. to about 129mm. 
(33-5, inches), the average being about 112mm., or llem. (47 inches). . 
The males vary in size from 89mm. to 118mm, or thereabout, and the 
average size is a little over 10cm. (or 4 inches). ‘The increase in length 
from the previous annual series is thus about 5:5cm., or 27 inches; in 
other words, the females at this stage grow about that more in the course 
of a year. The difference in the case of the males is less, viz., from 
57mm. to about 103mm., or 4:5cm., a little over 1? inches. 

The curve in this case shows a somewhat more rapid growth of the 
females than the males, the latter lagging behind, and the fact suggests 
that the males are approaching reproductive activity. I have shown 
before that males may be sexually mature when scarcely 5 inches 
(127mm.) long, and may show testes half developed when only 34 inches 
(89mm.) long. The date of this collection about coincides with the 
beginning of the spawning season, and is more than three months distant 
from its close, and thus probably some of the males would reach repro- 
ductive length during the spawning season. It is much more likely that 
the third series represented in the collection is the chief reproductive 
series. In it the males extend in length from 11‘5em. (42 inches) to 
16cm. or over (63 inches), the average size being about 13:5cm. (53 
inches). This group is very nearly three years of age. 

The females in the third series are widely separated from the second, 
so that, in the curve, the curve of measurements of the males of the third 
series is intercalcated in the gap between the curve for the second and 
third series of females—a usual circumstance among flatfishes at the 


198 Part III —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


period when maturity is reached. The third series of females, which 

comprises the greater number of fishes, begins about 12°5cm. and appears 

to extend to 20cm. The cone in the curve is a wide one, and the apex, 

or point where the fish are chiefly aggregated, is at 16-5em. (64 inches). 
The results may be stated in tabular form as follows :— 


. Apparent 
‘ Range in Average 
Group. Sex. | Probable Age. Sion Siro. SSeke de in 
Rach es Rpsiincia? ee | 
I, a 10 months. | 47-68mm. 57-4mm. 57mm. 
= | Q | lyear and 10 months. 9-l13cm. llem. 5‘5em. 
: | 
cinas 4 55 9-12cem. | 10cm. 4:5cm. 
ai { fe) 2 years and 10 months, | 12°5-20cm. 16°5cm. 55cm. 
Oy eal uf - 11-5-léem. 13°Sem. | 35cm, 
( 


In the collection obtained on Ist April the sexes were also separated 
and measured in the older groups. In the second series, or those about 
two years old, the females extended in length from 89mm. to 126mm. 
(33-442 inches), the average being about 10°5cm., or 43 inches. ‘This 
shows a rate of growth of about 5cm, (2 inches) from the previous year’s 
fish. The males extended from about 9cm. to llem., (34-43% inches), 
the average length being about 10cm., or a little less, indicating a growth 
from the previous year’s series of about 4°5cm. (1? inches). 

In the third group represented the females extend from 131mm. to 
apparently 210mm. (53-83 inches), the fish being mostly aggregated 
between 15cm. and 17cm., the apex of the curve being at 17cm. If the 
latter be taken as the mean size of the group, the growth from the 
previous series would be on the average about 6‘5cm., or 24 inches, which 
is too large for this series. The presence of a small cusp ‘at 15cm. leads 
oue to suspect that this group is made up of two series. 

The males of the third series are not numerous, and their size extends 
from about llem. to 15cm., the average length being approximately 13cm., 
or 52 inches; the amount of growth indicated in the year from the 
previous series being 3cm., or barely an inch and a quarter. In tabular 
form the particulars are these :— 


3cm. 


| 
| Apparent 
Group. Sex. Probable Age. | Range in Size. | Average Size. | cores in 
Year. 
pare 2a Le eS eo ae pes aes | 
I | - 1 year. | 47-70mm. 56°2mm. | 55em. 
P28 2 years. 9-13cm. 10°5em. | 50cm. 
II 
3 9-llem. 10cm. | 4‘5cem. 
| 2 3 years. (13-21cm.) (17) (6°5cm.) 
Ill. 


ay id 5 11-l5em. 13 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 199 


Of the other collections whose measurements are given in the Tables, 
it may be said that in that taken on 13th May at the “ Doghole,” off 
Aberdeen, in 55 fathoms, in which case the sexes were separately dealt 
with, the younger series is imperfectly represented. A group beginning 
as to the females about 12cm, or 13cm. shows an aggregation at 14cm. 
and 14‘5cm., the apex in the curve of the measurements being at 14°5cm., 
after which there is a drop to 15°5cm. and a subsequent rise, indicating 
that the third series in the collection of Ist April contains two series. 
This is rather confirmed by the position of the aggregation of the males, 
the apex of the curve being in the gap between, viz. at 15°dbcm. The 
numbers, however, are not very large. 


TURBOT (Rhombus (Bothus) maxinus). 


Observations as to the rate of growth of this important flat-fish leave 
much to be desired. The number measured by me, the measurements of 
which are given in Table X VII., was 212, but comparatively few of these 
refer to young fishes. 

The spawning period is in summer, from about the middle of April to 
the early part of August, and is at its height in June. The larval turbot 
measures 2°2mm. to 2°8mm.; after the absorption of the yolk, in about a 
week, it measures 3°2mm. to 4’8mm., and metamorphosis is usually com- 
pleted at about 27mm.* 

The pelagic metamorphosing forms are got in August and September, 
and partly in July, and the young forms on the sands in September and 
later. Tbus Cunningham notes the pelagic forms from early in August 
till 8th September, measuring from 15mm, to 37mm., and which he 
thought were about one month old, but are probably older. 

M‘Intosh refers to specimens of 21mm. to 28mm. in July and August, 
and of 4lmm. to 62mm. on 7th September; on 18th September, three, 
respectively, 44mm., 48mm., and 55mm., were got by me at the mouth of 
the Don. M‘Intosh records them 3 inches long (about 7*5cm.) in the 
middle of December, and this is the largest for the year of which I have 
noted a definite record. 

From this time on to about the end of March it is almost certain the 
turbot grows little or not at all, as with other small flat-fishes in the 
same habitat. 

In the spring of the next year the recorded sizes are as follows :—23rd 
May, 22 inches (60mm.), by M‘Intosh; April 25th, 79mm.; May 16th, 
three at 68mm., 73mm., and 85mm., by Cunningham, who also says that 
from April to June, at Cleethorpes, they measure from 75mm. to 105mm, 
(3-43 inches). I received one from the Solway Firth, taken on 23rd 
April, which measured 95mm., while another from the same locality, 
caught on 27th November, was 119mm. (4? inches), and had no doubt 
passed through the second summer of its life. 

The young turbot at or approaching one year of age is thus a very little 
fish, and probably ranges in size from about 70mm. (2? inches) or less to 
about 105mm. (42 inches). 

A tank experiment of Cunningham’s may be mentioned. In June he 
put into a tank a number of young turbot in the pelagic transforming 
stage; on the 19th October three, whose measurements are given, were 
65mm., 95mm., and 99mm. respectively; on 4th April, in the next year, 

~ the one which survived was 108mm. 


* Hhrenbaum, Nordisches Plankton, Vierte Lieferung, I. Eier und Larven von Fischen. 
Theil J., p. 199, Kiel und Leipzig, 1905. 


200 Part III—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


I append a Table showing the occurrence of the small turbots in the 
various months of the year. The bracket shows the spawning period. 


Cm. | Jan. | Feb. | Mar. | April.| May. |June.|July.| Aug. | Sept. | Oct. | Nov. | Dec. 


SS ee ee ee ee ee Le ee ee 


a ee | —_~ | —_—__ 

1 7 } rt u 2 ie E e 2 ii u i 
5 Stowe Weed. be fete) Betbbali&y | ay sobre Sere 

2 = bem dy a, dona eg sll oe) ea ORG a] SS Sen 
5 HE O_O QUES REE Ae ORE a Ge CO tae ed 

3 eopab ty 2i4 yenoluges!: pe ORT Sf) wera oxi of? er See 
5 <a = au se = = ch oS bl A. 

4 Ie eee (a en We trie Si eben! ts eh eine 2. 8) 
5 a ee ee me en em ne 

5 ee ee eee ee Meee ee Lhe ho a ee 
ne ee Pee ene a ee hcg ee 

6 | Da MEMO Lec eon eo oR 
D - = = = = = = = = = = 

7 i te ‘i 2 Se = ne = is ts tf 
5 L a OSES op aa Stl Deas E = Z a ae Ie 

8 = = - B B B - ; - - - - 
5 Hy ted | Seem aaBy B.S Bow EE 2h Pe ae eee 

9 a a al Ba ea a a ae as ee PS RE PS - 
5 a é ent) oars a Be) (aos a é = s = = 
10 - ~ - By aK B - - - - % = 
5 <ydai al) “aly WBoll aBlalt Bb ke et flescadee 7. Wy oul 
a ~ = = & = ES Bo u ze es = as 
5 - - pal ksuxox dee ox: = = = =, = = 
12 = ~ - ~ as x S - U 4 x - 
2 - B B Be sax x = = 2 = ‘a E. 
13 - B B BS | xxx x = = = = = = 
"5 - B B B = - - = - = - - 
14 - B BuaiheiBe) xxx - - - - = a 
"5 - XB B B XX ~ - - - - = = 
15 - B B Boxxx |, Mes x - - - = = 
5 - - ~ 23) ORK Gh Be - - - - = a 
16 - - - ~ x XX ~ - - - = =: 
5 - - - ~ XX ~ - - - - = 
Wy : = a bs 2 ; a) - li - uf = 
25) ae a a4 ty i xX b= = ZI 4 x = 
18 - - ~ ~ = exo - - - - = a 
5 be me oe. 3 pt ao xX = = id es a 
19 - ~ - ON. "ase 2A Gx - - - - = 
75) + = a S a xX S i es * a = 
20 ~ ~ = = We hex x x 7 2 4 - - 
5 a liege Vhs Jomde.: Melle ee eee 


In the salmon stake-nets at Montrose 52 young turbots were taken in 
May, June, and July, the measurements of which are given in inches in 
the Table subjoined (2), and as near as possible in centimetres in Table 
XVII. 

The greater number were obtained in May, viz., 30, while 17 were got 
in June and 5 in July; perhaps an indication that the young turbot move 
further out with the rise in temperature. 

From what has been stated above, it is probable that the smallest at 4 
inches (101mm.) are turbot of the preceding year and are approaching 
their first year of age. Whether those at 44 to 4? inches (115mm. to 
120mm.) in May are also fish of the preceding year, under one year of age, 
is not so clear. The curve formed by the May measurements appears to 
show the presence of four groups, and the first is separated from the 
second by a deep division at 13cm (54 inches), and the second from the 
third at 17cm. to 18cm. (7 inchas) The figures, in centimetres, are as 
follows :— 


16° Ai 12" AS a 1S 6 ay 19 20. 21. 22-28. 94.25 96 Aves 


== 


Bs 6 LS 7 DS 2 8 Wer ee et fe ee 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 201 


It does not appear to me altogether probable, judging from the facts 
given above, and those that follow from the older groups, that all the 
turbot up to 13cm. (53 inches) are under one year of age. It will be 
observed that the young turbot are rather smaller than the young brill, 
and it must be borne in mind that the addition of a unit of length toa 
turbot means a much greater increase in growth than to any other 
fiat fish, owing to its breadth and thickness and its consequent greater 
proportional weight.* 

If regarded provisionally as approaching their second year, then the 
next group, from 13cm. to 17cm. or 18cm. (53 to 7 inches), must be looked 
upon as nearing their third year; the fourth group, from 17cm. or 18cm. 
to 22cm. (7 to 8? inches), as nearing their fourth year; and those from 
22cm. to 26cm. (8? to 107 inches) as approaching their fifth year. 


TABLE 2. 
Inches. May. | June. | July. 

= 3 ~ - 
4 = = = 
4 3 1 - 
3 1 1 id 

5 5 2 a 
4 1 ee 
; ; i E 

6 7 1 
4 1 1 ~ 
! aa bee 
2 i = 

7 - 3 ~ 
z = = 1 
4 2 ~ 
A ea eS 
4 | 

8 2 2 1 
t as = = 
sf is ie 2 
3 pe 2 ve 
4 

9 1 2 3 
i ig ape - 
4 = = a: 
2 | 
3 Ee 2 a 

10 1 = a” 
1 = = 
} = 
i a = B. 
2 | 
3 3 z= = 
; | 
11 | 1 = = 

t = = _ 


The possibility of each of these groups being a year younger must not 
be lost sight of ; in any event, those of the latter size can scarcely be less 
than four years of age or near it. 

Turning now to the collections which contain the larger fishes, we have 
some in October, November, December, and February, which are of 
interest. The measurements are given in Table XVII. 

Although the numbers are not large in any instance, the arrangement 
and order of the figures are such as to lead to the supposition that the 
groups are of small dimensions. 

The group above referred to, from the stake-nets, as extending from 
about 22cm. to 26cm., is represented by only a single specimen, at 23cm., 
taken in December at Burghead Bay. It is at the end of either its fourth 
or fifth summer. 


*See Twenty-second Annual Report, Part 111, pp. 144, 216. 


202 Part III—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The next series is represented in a collection from Aberdeen Bay in 
October, and in it there are ten turbot from 27‘5cm. to 30cm. (102-11? 
inches), which are a year older. 

The other series are shown in the Moray Firth collections in November, 
December, and February, the sizes ranging from 33cm. to 80cm. From 
Table XVII. it will be seen that a division appears to exist at 34-35cm., 
and it is probable that this group extends back at least to 30-5cm., as 
indicated in the October series. 

The arrangement of the measurements in one-centimetre groups may 
be shown in the subjoined Table, in which column 4 summarises the 
figures for the three months, October, November, and December, and 
column 6 summarises them all :— 


to 

eo} 
1) 1 eY~perepewi. |! i i 
ae ea te Sip eel ALB aL} 
Cots 1 RMWWWDBI IT TS 


POSS) PP SIP Thee te Ue ey 
Paste [Th ye ah 


Oo 
OV 
| 


i 
W WW CONS Bm Cots | BRWWDWD! I ITN 


BY 


& 

Leta yee eI 
be OVO [a 
em I 1 Come 

wWDWOUDOS Ny 


NO Od No el S| 


> 
bo 
| 
| 
| 
bo 


i 
WNBDWDW W W 


tia 
aw) 
!wbp i 
1 RODwes 
woe} 


pat 
css} 


5 
Waieal ear *9 
ee 
NI NON ON 
So 
MH} Cote 


Foie eel 


) 


There appears to be evidence in this Table of the existence of at least 
five groups, and possibly six, if those turbot under 34cm. in November 
and December are regarded as separate from the October group. The 
points of probable separation of the groups, as shown in the ‘dcm. 
grouping, are 34-35'5cm., 46cm., and 50cm., or 52cm. 

The age of these turbot is considerable in any way the figures may be 
regarded. It is possible that they represent fish of 43, 54, 64, 71, 83, 
and 94 years of age; but they may be a year less, and, if the October 
group is looked upon as terminating at about 34cm. in November and 
December, the fishes above that size may be a year less still. 

It, however, seems certain that turbot ranging from 35cm. to 4lem. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 203 


(1332-162 inches) are not under 54 years old, and that those about 50cm. 
(20 inches) are not under 74 years of age, while those between 40cm. and 
46cm, (16-18 inches), when reproduction is supposed to commence, are at 
least 64 years old at the season of the year referred to, and may be a 
year, or possibly two years, older still. 

It seems to me probable that the turbot does not spawn until it is 
at least seven years of age. 

With reference to the slow rate of increase in length of the turbot, as 
thus indicated, the relatively great increment in weight must not be lost 
sight of. Thus a turbot of 44cm. (174 inches) weighs about 1830 
grammes, and one of 50cm. (193 inches) weighs about 2700 grammes, 
while plaice of the same lengths weigh just about half—viz., about 950 
and 1430 grammes respectively—and a female plaice of 44cm, is at least 
five years of age, and may be six. On the other hand, one would expect 
that the rate of increase of weight in the turbot would be greater than in 
the plaice, owing to its piscivorous habit and feeding. 


BRILL (Rhombus levis). 


As with the turbot, so with this fish, the observations in respect to the 
rate of growth are not as complete as they might be. A considerable 
number of specimens were, however, measured, viz., 1182, and they appear 
to be satisfactory as regards certain groups (Table XVIII.). 

The spawning period of the brill is about a month or so earlier than 
that of the turbot, extending from the end of March into July, the chief 
spawning taking place in May. The egg is larger than that of the 
turbot, varying according to Heincke and Ehrenbaum, from 1:24mm. to 
1-46mm., and hatching occurs in twelve or thirteen days. 

The smallest specimens in my collections were procured from Aberdeen 
Bay on 18th September, being taken on the beach at low tide by means 
of a push-net; they numbered six, and measured as follows:—38mm., 
40mm., 47mm., 49mm., 51mm., and 54mm., cr 13 to 23 inches. At the 
mouth of the Forth, on the 17th September, four specimens measuring 
41mm., 54mm., 57mm., and 58mm., and another of 78mm., or a trifle 
over three inches, were obtained in another year, Other small specimens 
taken were as follows:—One at 41mm. (13 inches), by the push-net in 
Lochfyne on 27th July ; one measuring 51mm., on 27th July, by shrimp- 
net at Annan, and another in the same locality on 30th April which 
measured 80mm. (33 inches). M‘Intosh mentions specimens measuring 
from 22mm. to 29mm. in August, one of 24mm. on 25th July, and 
others from 50mm.-6lmm. in September. Cunningham records 34 
specimens measuring from 22mm. to 25mm., between 21st May and 11th 
June. 

All the above, with the exception of the specimen taken in the Solway, 
measuring 82mm. (37 inches), on 30th April, were no doubt derived from 
the spawning in the same year. 

Other specimens which have been described, and which apparently 
belong to the spawning of the previous year, are as follows :—That 
referred to above, which was 82mm. long, on 30th April; one of 74mm. 
(242 inches) taken on 4th May; one of 91mm. and another of 96mm. 
(3# inches) taken on 25th April; one of 104mm, taken on 28th April; 
two on 1ldth June, measuring 89mm. and 104mm.; and two on 14th 
May, measuring 98mm. and 108mm. (4} inches)—all of which are 
referred to by Cunningham. These specimens, together with some of the 
smaller individuals got in salmon stake-nets and referred to below, may be 
included in the following Table ; the latter are represented by a small (x), 
the former by a large (X) :— 


revert i AE Si toi 
1 - . - = = as - 3 7 = 3 
"5 = = = a, = a 2 on = fe _ — 

2 - ~ - XXXXXX - | XX - - = = 
33) - - ~ XXXXXX X ~ - - - ~ 

3 - ~ - - ~ x . Xx - - = - 
5 u 3 = a As = = bs es = = a 
is - - - - - - xX - (XXX - ~ - 
) ~ - - - ~ ~ - - X - - - 

5 - - - - - - X - |XxXxX - ~ ~ 
z) - - - - - - - - |XXxX]} - - - 

6 ~ - - - -~ - - - | XX - - - 
5 E Z i a e =: = » a x -f = 

7 = cs a = a ie = = as 4 . = 
5 - ~ - - x - - - - - = = 

8 - - - ».« - - - - xX ~ ~ - 
5 = = bs cS 2 2 & m a - - £ 

) - - - X ~ 4 ~ - - - - = 
*D ~ - - X x - - - - - - - 
10 - - = = —- |X Xx = - = = - = 
9) - - - Xx - x - - ~ - - - 
11 - - - =) - - - ~ - ~ ~ 
z3) - - - = x 90.4 - - - - = = 
12 - - - - - - ~ - - - - - 
#5) - - - =) LARK XX x ~ - - - ~ 
13 - - - - - - ~ - - - - - 
5 a ¥: = . Fe J ay 2 u zs rr if 
14 - - ~ - x x X - - - ~ - 
at) ~ ~ - - - x - - - - - - 
15 : - - - =~ | XX | KXRKY OK - - ~ - - 
16 - ~ - - x . - - - ~ - - 
“5 - - - - x x - - - - - - 
i - - - - - - ~ - - - - 
5 = = s » o “4 Ss 3 £ a E + 
18 - ~ - - Xx x - - - ~ - 
5 - - - - - - ~ - x - - 


The outstanding feature of the above Table is that a line drawn 
diagonally from the top left-hand corner (at January) to the bottom right- 
hand corner divides the small brill into two groups, an upper and a lower; 
and the inference is that those below the line in April, May, and June 
are 2 full year or more in age. 

Before considering this Table further, reference may be made to some 
experiments by Cunningham in rearing young brill in tanks. He placed 
the 34 specimens, measuring from 22mm. to 25mm., taken between 2st 
May and llth June, and above mentioned, in an aquarium. He 
computed their age to be about three weeks or a month. On 18th 
October following four of them were measured, and their length was found 
to be from 70mm. to 98mm. (2#-3% inches), the growth of these four, in 
the 140 days or so that elapsed, amounting to about 60mm.—or, to give 
the extremes, to from 45mm. to 76mm. The author does not state 
anything as to the sizes of the others, except that on 4th October one 
measured 85mm. ; nor is the temperature given, but it is obvious that 
the period comprised the chief season of growth. Other two of these 
brill were measured on 3rd April in the following year, and their lengths 
were respectively 84mm. and 88mm. (34-34 inches), giving an approxi- 
mate increase from the beginning of June in the previous year, or in about 
307 days, of only 6cm., or 23 inches. These fish were nearly one year old. 

Cunningham suggests as a reason for the slow growth, which he thinks 
had been abnormally checked, that they were fed on marine worms and 
not on living fish; but it is much more likely that it was chiefly owing 
to the lowered temperature of the water in winter. I have already shown 
that small plaice at the same stage, which frequent the same habitat on 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 205 


the beach, do not grow between October and April,* and that this is true 
also of larger plaice kept in tanks and supplied with water from the beach. 

It is probable that the young brill, living on the margin of the sea, does 
not increase in length from November till the latter part of March. 

In a subsequent year Cunningham records having placed some young 
brill in the pelagic transformation stage in tanks in June. On 19th 
October following three measured 80mm., 85mm., and 104mm., and on 
4th April in the next year one was 113mm.f 

Looking to the Table above given, it will be seen that under natural 
conditions the young brill in September may reach a length of 6cm. 
and even 8cm., while those taken in April of the following year may 
measure from 80mm. to 105mm.; in May they may be as small as 
74mm., 96mm., and 98mm., and in June as small as 89mm., that is, 
when fully one year old. 

Some years ago a record was kept at Montrose of small brill and turbot 
taken in May, June, and July in stake-nets, as previously mentioned. 
They were measured to fractions of an inch. The total number of brill 
was 53, and 30 of them were taken in May, 16 in June, and 7 in July. 
The particulars are set forth in the appended Table. 


Inches. May. | June. | July. 


_ 


bo 
cote 


JU) 
DY acoA 


i 
Reo ye BK toe 


for) on 


“I 


pt BRA! i lcoto Het 


oo 


— 
ace Olona Plcorofe 


—_ 
jo 


DMI cob 
Cea iat 0 he ORS ee eee en See) SIE sh eS een 


rE AY iV 0) ore STS aT 80 al FT Varad (SRT BCs ie Peal Vet Het Hl cae ecm Ue hod Mee Lng a1 it Vag oe | et Ce Tif eM EPS Veer Laat be Gt Le 


ET TP Te TP TST ROSS TS] TS PBT STS To TSS nie TRey [0S SS Tit OPT ssl Th Te eT Ts 0 


* Twentieth Annual Report, Part III., p. 342. 
_ Jour. M.B.A., Il., p. 106 ;:IIL,,. p. 272. 


206 Part III-—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The smallest one was got on 19th June in St. Cyrus Bay ; it measured 
17 inches, or about 3cm., and belonged no doubt to the brood of the year. 
The next smallest were 4 inches, or about 10cm., and brill of this size 
were procured on 8th and 12th May, and doubtless represent the fish of 
the previous year, and would therefore be about one year old. At 44 
inches (114mm.) four were taken, two on 4th and 5th May, and two on 
Sth and 6th June. The next size was five inches (127mm.), of which six 
were taken—four in May, one in June, and one in July (8th). At 6 
inches (152mm.) there were eleven, six of which were obtained in May, 
four in June, and one in July. The largest brill secured was 117 inches, 
in May. 

Looking down the column for May, the place where the first striking 
interval occurs is between 8 inches and 8? inches, or about 20cm. to 
22cm. ; but it is pretty certain that fish of this length, or even of 72 
inches (19°5cm.) do not belong to the same series, which, as we saw, has 
individuals measuring as low as 74mm. in May. 

The nature of the net by which the brill were taken must be borne in 
mind, practically all the very small fish and many of those of the sizes 
included in the Table no doubt escaping. It seems to me, considering the 
Table, the rate of growth of other flat-fishes, the much greater increase in 
weight or volume in the case of the brill than with the plaice, dab, &c., 
that the one-year-old group is represented in May by those at 4 inches 
(10:2cm.) and probably at 43 inches (11:5cm.); that those from 5 to 7 
inches (12‘7cm. to 17‘8cm.), or perhaps to 74 inches (19°O0cm.) are two 
years of age ; those from 8 to 94 inches (20cm. to 24cm.)—and the group 
is obviously only partially present—are three years of age; while the 
brill at 114 inches (28-5em.) is probably four years old. 

It seems to me likely that the range of size of the one-year-old brill is 
from about 70mm. to about 115mm. (2? to 45 inches), or perhaps a little 
less, with an average size of about 90mm. to 95mm. (34 to 32 inches). 

Attention may now be given to the catches made on board trawlers in 
the Moray Firth, the particulars in regard to which are given in Table 
XVIII. These hauls were limited to November, December, and February, 
and the collection in the latter month was a small one. In none of the 
cases were the sexes separated, the fish being too valuable to be opened 
for the purpose, and the collections under the various dates represent a 
series of hauls, all the brill taken having been measured. Some groups 
come out with distinctness, and the measurements may be grouped here 
in centimetres. 


' TABLE. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 207 


oS 
NOVEMBER. DECEMBER. et = 
Lacs) ” 
o 5 2 | Bb 
-Q 2 orm ve) 5 
Cm ators” Wrst Mas lia! | Gait sadist Wea 
melee | 2) se ee | 8 | 82) 8a) ey ee 
on am & an ON I os Os Oo ao 
Sat ete Cenie|eg |S he AM | « | pm 
eee see Se | 6 Le le ie ee 
A&|MO |] oO |MAR IAA] SO la =< mM | A 
21 - ~ - = - — 1 2 3 - 
22 - - - - = = 1 ai 3 1 
23 2 - 2 = = = 4 4 8 1 
24 — - - - - - 1 _ I = 
2D 1 - ~ - - - 2 - oy 1 
26 1 1 2 1 - i 3 2 5 = 
al 2 2 4 = 2 2 5 3 8 - 
28 - 6 6 ii 3 4 8 6 14 1 
29 - 7 ff 1 2 3 8 5 13 1 
~ 30 2 6 8 2 4 6 9 9 18 1 
31 2 Le 13 1 (i 8 16 9 25 3 
32 2 10 12 1 8 9 16 12 28 5 
33 3 4 7 3 4 7 fi 8 15 1 
34 Ps i 3 Ms 2 3 5 6 qt = 
35 ] 1 2 1 1 2 7 6 13 2 
36 4 7 11 ~ 2 2 23 8 31 2 
37 4 4 8 - 1 1 o7 16 3 10 
38 3 4 i ~ 1 1 39 18 57 25 
39 2 6 8 - 1 1 35 2D 60 22 
40 3 4 i i - 1 36 23 59 24 
4] ~ 3 3 r 1 2 25 16 41 27 
42 - 4 4 2 1 3 je 11 22 1 
43 3 3 6 di 1 2 12 8 20 13 
44 - - - ~ 1 1 4 ri 1 6 
45 - 1 3 3 6 4 
46 - ~ 2 2 5 4 9 ~ 
47 - 1 iL - - - 2 3 5 2 
48 - - - ~ 1 1 1 2 3 1 
49 I - ih - I 1 5 1 6 - 
50 ~ - - 2 - Z 1 2D, 3 2 
5 - - - -- - - - i 1 - 
52 - _ - - 1 1 ~ - _ - 
53 - - - - - - 1 = 1 1 
54 - = - _ = = = = 2 = 
55 - - ~ = = . = > = = 
56 ~ - ~ - - - - - - 1 
57 - - - - - - - - = - 
58 - = _ - = = ss == 2 = 
59 - — - - 2 _ = = = = 
60 - = - - - - i - i! - 
§1 - - “s - = - - - - - 
62 rn Ot 4 bead sa Sle a : 


The curves formed by these figures combined indicate a great group, 
which includes the greater proportion of the brill between about 34cm. 
(133 inches), where a division between groups is most distinct, and 42cm. 
or 43cm. (17 inches). Taking the larger combined series first, for all hauls 
in November and December, the group extends from 34cm. to 45cm., 
but the lower part of the descending line of the curve and its form 
indicate the probability that two groups are combined, the probable 
division being at 41cm. to 42cm. ‘The great majority of the fishes are 
aggregated at 37cm. to 40cm., the largest number being at 39cm. and 
the next at 40cm. (153-15? inches). 

In the November series the curve and its limits are much the same, the 
group beginning at 34cm., and it appears to terminate at 44cm. or 45cm., 


208 Part [II —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


but more probably at 42cm. The fish are aggregated between the same 
limits, 37cm.—40cm., but the greatest number is at 38cm. (15 inches). 

In the December series the lower limit is at 34:°5cm.; the greater 
number of the fishes are at 39cm. and 40cm., most being at 39cm.; but 
the end of the group is not clear, the line falling gradually from 42cm. to 
49cm. 

The curve for the measurements of brill taken on 9th—-11th Novem- 
ber shows plainly a group beginning about 35cm., but the greater numbers 
of fish are at 36cm., after which the line of the curve falls more or less 
regularly to 41cm., then rising to 43cm., and falling thereafter; there are 
none between 43cm. and 47cm., but the numbers are not large. 

The fish taken in the Dornoch on 9th-l1th November show a group > 
beginning about 35cm., and there is a similar fall at 41cm. to 42cm., and 
a rise to 43cm. In the hauls on 25th and 26th December this fall at 
41cm. is also present. The curve of the measurements of the brill taken 
at Burghead on 21st-27th November show the group beginning at 33:5cm. 
or 34cm. and ending at 42cm., but there is a depression at 39:5cm. to 
40cm.; most of the fish are aggregated between 37°5cm. and 40'5cm. In 
the brill taken in the early part of February the limits of the great mass 
are from about 34cm. or 35cm. to 44cm. or 45cm., but there are depres- 
sions at 39:5cm. and 42cm.; the greater number of the fishes are 
aggregated between 38cm. and 41cm., mostly at the latter (16 inches). 

Comparison of the upper part of the cone of the curves, that is to say, 
the “modal” sizes, or the sizes at which the brill are most numerous, in 
the different periods, is indicated in the following Table :— 


Greatest Number 


BEtaoon. Maximum. Mean. 
Burghead, November 9, 10. 36-39 36 37°5 
4 s PAE 37-41 38 39 
“ December 6-12. : 37-41 39 38°5 
February 6-7 . 38-41 41 39°5 
All November : : : 37-40 38 38'5 
All December ‘ ; ; 37-41 39 39°5 


The next smallest series of brill shown in these collections ends where 
the last one begins, about 34cm. to 35cm. Inall cases the measurements 
and curves indicate that the smaller fishes in the group are not fully 
represented. The fish are aggregated in greatest numbers at 3lem. to 
32cm., which is larger than it ought to be by the limits of the group. 
The distances from the actual apex in the curves of the two groups, or the 
sizes of greatest frequency, are as follows, in centimetres :— 


Smaller Larger Apparent Annual 

Group. Group. Growth 
November . L : ‘ 31°5 38 6°5 (28 in.) 
December . : : . 32 39 7 (22 in.) 
Together : : : ‘ 32 39 7 = (2# in.) 
Burghead, Noyember 9, 10, . 31 36 5/(2 5a) 


The smaller group is well represented in the collection of 21st—27th 
November, but it is poorly shown in most of the others. It is obvious 
that the amount of growth in a year, as indicated in this comparison, is 
small, 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 209 


The third or smallest group represented has its upper limit, as stated, 
about 24cm. (94 inches), but the lower limit cannot be determined from 
these collections, the smallest specimens measuring only 21cm. (216mm.), 
or 84 inches, but it may be inferred from the consideration of the brill in 
the other collections. 

The principal reason of the unequal representation of the three groups 
above referred to in the collections from the Moray Firth is no doubt the 
depth of water in which the trawling was carried on, 44 or 5 to 13 and 
more fathoms. The smaller brill frequent the shallower water, and thus 
the proportion taken of the larger members of the second series is greater 
than the proportion of the smaller members, while comparatively few of 
the third or smallest series were caught, and they were only the larger 
fishes of that series. 

It appears to me that the size—or age-groups—of the brill in these 
collections may be represented as follows with approximate accuracy :— 


| 


| Inches. | Centimetres. 
lyearold, . : 23-44 70-115 
Dr UA Si : F 5-74 12-17°5, 18 
| ouryae ts ; ; 3-10 19, 20-24 
Bien Fs . = 10-12 25-30 
Rego ee : . 12-14 30-35 | 
W <Oreesio8 ¥ 3 : tal 14-16 35-40 | 
Teas bys a F . 16-174 40-44 


At the same time, it must be recollected that the sexes were not distin- 
guished and separately measured, and, judging from the case in other 
flat-fishes, the growth of the males will be slower than that of the females 
after the size of maturity is reached, and it is thus possible that what 
appears to be an age-group after that size may only be a sex-group. But, 
from the remarkable agreement in the various collections, as shown by the 
ageregate or combined curves, and by the separate curves, as to the 
existence of a division between groups at 34cm. to 35cm., it is clear to me 
that this confusion does not exist below that point, but that the sexes so 
far grow equally; and, therefore, that sexual maturity is not reached 
either by males or females till a size above 34cm. to 35cm. (134 to 13% 
inches), and that the great spawning group lies, in winter, between 35cm. 
and 41cm. or 42cm. (14 to 16, 17 inches), when they appear to be about 
six years old. 

It may be added that the weight of a brill at a given length is much 
greater than with other flat-fishes, except the turbot.* The weight ofa 
plaice about 39cm. is approximately 650 grammes; that of a brill about 
the same size is approximately 950 grammes. Thus the amount of growth 
of the brill by the increase of, say, lcm. in its length is much more than 
in the plaice with a similar increase. 


COD (Gadus callarias). 


The number of cod measured and dealt with in the present paper, 
and belonging to 50 separate collections, is 3813, which, with those 
treated of in the paper published previously, makes a total of this species 
of 7176, most of which belong to the two or three first generations. 

The main points brought out in the paper referred to were that the 
young cod of the year were on an average in October, when about six or 


* See Tables in Twenty-second Annual Report, op. 144, 219. 
O 


210 Part I11—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


seven months of age, approximately 4? inches in length, the size varying 
from about 3 inches to about 74 arene and in December they were of 
much the same size. It was estimated that the growth during the second 
year amounted to about 16°7cm., or a little over 6 inches; that the 
average size of a cod when about two years of age was approximately a 
little over 13 inches; when about three years old about 20 inches; and 
when four years old about 27 or 28 inches ; and that though some might 
reach a size equal to that of sexually mature males when three years of 
age, the great majority, and perhaps all, would not spawn till they were 
about four years old. 

Since the publication of my paper on the growth of the cod, in the 
Annual Report for 1900, a number of investigations have been made on 
the same subject, which may be briefly referred to. 

Dr. Petersen gave an estimate of the growth, in Danish waters, as 
follows :—In its first year it is between 1 and 8 inches long; in its 
second between 10 and 18; in its third between 20 and 30; and in its 
fourth year 30 inches and longer; and he states that this rate of growth 
is somewhat similar to what is given by me in the above paper. Measure- 
ments are not given by Dr, Petersen, except in certain cases, viz., of fish 
taken at the end of March by line, and two groups are shown—first, one 
in which the first hig has been completed, and which measure from 
about 9cm. to about 22cm. (34-92 inches) ; and second, a group which 
have completed two years, and measure approximately from 27cm. 
to 52cm. or 53cm. (103-204 inches), the maximum number in each 
group being massed about 15cm. or 16cm. (6-63 inches) and 36cm. to 
39cm. (143-154 inches) ; while cod above 52cm. or 53cm. (203 inches) 
are described as of greater age.* 

In several of his papers dealing with the Norwegian fishery investiga- 
tions, Hjort has given an account of the rate of growth of the cod. A 
length of between 8cm. and 16cm. (34-52 inches) is assigned to it in its 
first year, and between 18cm. and 24cm. (73-93 inches) in the second 
summer of its life, when it is about 14 years old, which agrees with my 
results, In a table of measurements of cod taken on the south-west 
coast of Norway in August, the following sizes are shown :—(1) a group, 
about six months old, from 4 cm. ‘to 13cm. (13-53 inches), most 
pessurine 6cm. (2) A group, about 14 years old, from ‘16om. to 30cm. 
(64-112 inches), and most about 25cm. (92 inches). (3) A group, 
about 1 years of age, from 32cm. to 42um. (123-163 inches), All 
these groups agree with my own determinations.T 

In another work on Norw egian fisheries, Hjort, referring to the cod on 
the coast of Finmarken, distinguishes four age-groups :—(1L) One year old, 
about 20cm. long (73 inches). (2) When two years old, and known as 
** Finmarken cod” or “ Lodde cod,” and forming an important fishery on 
the Finmark cvast, to which a length of 50cm., or 192 inches, is assigued. 
(3) A group, at least three years of age, comprising the largest cod, and 
forming the basis of the “Skrei” fishery, and measuring about 70cm. in 
length (273 inches) ¢ It seems to me that the two last groups are probably 
too large ; they do not, at least, agree with the rate of growth in the North 
Sea. No details of the measurements are furnished, except in a diagram, 
which shows the measurements of the Finmarken cod in April, and of 
the larger cod on the Malangsgrunden. A growth of 30cm. (11? inches) 
in a year from the first to the second group seems excessive. 

In another paper, Hjort refers to the Danish investigations on the 
“Thor,” referred to below, and mentious that with the cod taken by the 

* Report of the Danish Biological Station, LX., pp. 4, 30. 


+ Hjort and Dahl, Fiskeforség i Norske "Fjorde, pp. 75, 77. 
+ Fiskeri og Hyvi ufangst i i det Nordlige Norge, pp. 50-53, 


f,; 
4 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 211 


“Michael Sars” between Finmarken and Bear Island, the following 
groups appeared to exist, though he states that the material at disposal 
was not abundant or sufficient to make the distinction between the groups 
very clear:—(1) One year old, 10cm. to 30cm. (4-11? inches); (2) 
30cm. to 60cm, (113-234 inches); (3) 60cm. to 90cm. (234-354 
inches), Detailed measurements are not given.* 

In connection with the Danish investigations at Iceland, Schmidt, in an 
important paper, deals with the rate of growth of the cod, of which very 
large numbers were measured. His results at Iceland differ from those 
of other workers in other regions in certain respects. With the exception 
of the youngest group, the cod were taken on the east coast of the island, 
between Seydisfjord and Heradsfloi, with eel-seines, Hnglish trawls, and 
long-lines, in depths from 0-350 fathoms. The period was between 19th 
and 29th July, 1904. The youngest group, from 3cm. to 7cm., are not 
found in July on the east coast, and those of this series included in his 
tables and calculations as to age, were taken on 23rd August at Reyk- 
iarfjord, on the north coast, with an eel-seine in a few fathoms. These 
groups are as follows :— 


Group. Probable Range of Sizes. Approximate Approximate 
Age. | Average Size. | Annual Growth. 
pag =, Gare Inches. | Cm. | Inches. Cm. | Inches. 
1 4 year, 3-' 14-34 | 5 | 2 
2 ives el) 817 8h-62 llorl2, 44 65 | 2% 
3 ZF, 18-30 74-113 22 8# 10:0 | 313 
4 Oe 55 30-45 113-173 | 83 or 84; 133 115 | 48 
5 tint: 45-81. | 172-32 | 61 | 24 7-5 | 103 
6 aaa 81-105 | 32-412 | 88 | 342 | 27-0 | 108 


It will thus be seen that the growth of the cod at Iceland, according to 
these results, is abnormally slow in the early stages. That a small cod 
should grow only 24 inches in a year, and reach an average length of 
only 43 inches in the middle of its second summer, is remarkable, while 
the increase to the third summer is only 44 inches. These Iceland cod, 
when approximately 34 years of age, correspond to the cod in Scotland 
which are scarcely more than two years old. In the next year, to the 
middle of the fourth summer, the increase is very much greater—viz., 
about 102? inches; and the increase to the following summer, when they 
are supposed to be about 53 years old, is also over 10 inches. The 
difference between these groups is brought out more strongly when the 
mean weight is considered, as well as the length of the fish. These are 
as follows, according to the Tabies I published in the Report for 1903+ :— 

e Bericht iiber die Thitigkeit der Kommission A. August, 1902—Febrnar, 1904 ; 
Ds DL; 


+ Fiskeriunderségelser ved Island og Ferderne i Sommeren, 1903, pp. 62 et seg. 

tTwenty-second Annual Report, Part III. ‘*The Relation of Length to Weight,” 
pp. 142, 229. I may take this opportunity of pointing out that Dr. Kyle, in his excellent 
paper on small plaice, ‘‘ First Report on the Statistical Material received by the Bureau 
regarding the Quantities of Small Plaice landed in the Various Countries” (Conseil 
Permanent International pour L’Exploration de la Mer, Rapports et Procés-Verlaux, etc., 
Vol. IV. ; Juillet 1904-Juillet 1905 (1905, p. 50), has, by an oversight, referred to my 
determinations as showing the fish at every 5 centimetres of longth, instead of every 0°5 
centimetre, 


212 Part III —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


4 Year, = - 1:04 grammes, or gr 02 
13 5) z 13:1 ” ” 2 ” 
Dd vers ‘ O04 ” ” 33 ” 
33 +) - 3807 9 ” 133 ” 
day Ra) ceates ee pitches 
BE Ea sa O00 on lepilbse aes, 


The spawning period at Iceland is much the same as in the North Sea, 
and Dr. Schmidt found that the cod of the last group, with an average 
size of 88cm., and ranging from “a little under 70cm. and upwards,” in 
July, had spawned in the spring, while those of the group, with an 
average of about 60cm. (24 inches), would spawn for the first time in the 
following year. 

It may seem to one possible that the second group of small cod, with 
au average size of 44 inches, might have been spawned in the spring of 
the year, and that the smaller fish, taken on the north coast, have a 
different rate of growth there. It must be remembered, however, as 
Dr. Schmidt has so well shown, that the physical conditions, as tempera- 
ture, vary very much at different parts of the coast of Iceland, and that 
the life and wanderings of the cod are influenced thereby. He, moreover, 
gives a table showing the growth of young cod at one place (Seydisfjord), 
and all taken in this case with one apparatus, the eel-seine, between 23rd 
May and 17th—23rd September, 1903. On 23rd May 180 measured 
from 7cm. to llem., with an average of about 9cm. (34 inches) ; on 23rd 
July 3300 measured from 10cm. to 17cm. (4-62 inches), the average size 
being placed by him at 12cm. (4? inches), though it might perhaps be better 
at 13cm.; on 17th—23rd September 1350 measured from 13cm. to 20cm. 
(51-72 inches), the average being at 16cm. (6} inches). The first group 
thus grew about 3cm. (17 inches) in the two months May-July ; in the 
two months from July to September the growth amounted to 4cem 
(14 inches), and in the whole period of four months it amounted to 7cm., 
or 2? inches. In the September collection, moreover, 30 much smaller 
cod were obtained, measuring +cm. and 5cm. (14-2 inches), and relating 
these to the older group, and taking their average size at 4cm., the 
growth over the winter would amount to only 5cm., or 2 inches, and from 
September to September it amounted to about 12cm., or 43 inches. These 
fish were caught between the shore and 5 fathoms depth. 

A collection made with the eel-seine, from the shore to 63 fathoms, on 
9th September, 1903, at Vaagfjord, Suder, in the Ferdes, showed three 
groups :—(1) The young of the same year, 277 in number, measuring 
from 4cm. to 12cm. (17-43 inches), with an average size of about 7cm. 
(22 inches) ; (2) a group of 87, measuring from 17cm. to 3lem. (637-123 
inches), about 14 years old, or more, and with an average size of about 
25cm. (93 inches) ; (3) a group of 5 cod, from 37cm. to 4lem. (144-163 
inches). These results agree well with my own, and show an increase in 
the year of about 18cm. (74 inches), 

Recently a good deal of attention has been given, especially by German 
investigators, to the growth of fishes as indicated by the markings on the 
bones, otoliths, and scales. Mr. Stuart Thomson investigated the age of 
cod by means of the markings on the scales. The specimens were taken on 
26th August, and measured 20°9cm. (83 inches) and 25-lem. (9-9 inches), 
and the age determined in each case was about one year and 4—5 months ; 
the fish were thus well on in their second summer's growth. The result 
agrees with those obtained by me, as Mr. Thomson points out ; they tally 
almost exactly with the collection on 22nd August, referred to in the 
Table below, 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 213 


Most work of this kind, by making use of the hard structures of fish 
as a guide to their probable age, has been done by Professor Heincke and 
his coadjutors at the Biological Institute of Heligoland. The results are 
uot yet fully pnblished, but Professor Heincke has given some of his 
conclusions in two recent publications.* The investigation was made on 
the cod on the German coast and at Heligoland, a fact to be kept in 
mind, as it is possible that on the shallow coast on the other side of the 
North Sea, where the saltness of the water is less than on this side, the 
cod grow less quickly than they do on the western side, as appears to be 
the case in the Baltic. Heincke estimates the size of the cod in the 
southern part of the North Sea as follows :— 


Year. Range of Sizes. Average Size. Increase. 
Cm. | Inches. Cm. Inches. Cm. 
In first year, - -| 8-18 34-74 14 5 
In second year - — — about 27 108 18 
In third year, - - -- _ », 935-40 133-153 1 
In fourth year, - _ », 45-50 172-192 10 


He says they have learned from a study of the bones that a cod of 50cm. 
(19? inches) ‘has lived at most four complete years, and we believe— 
provisionally—that the cod does not spawn for the first time until it has 
lived four complete years, probably at the end of its fifth, at latest the 
sixth year.” And, again, in the later paper, that it does not become 
sexually ripe until the completion of the fourth year, and perhaps only 
after the completion of the fifth year, when the average size is between 
55cm. and 60cm. (213-232 inches). 

After spawning, the rapidity of growth diminishes, as in other fishes, 
so that a cod of 75cm. (294 inches) is at least 7 years, and probably 8-9 
years old; one of 85cm. (334 inches) at least 8, and probably 9 or 10 
years old, and one of 100cm. at least 10, and probably 12 or more years 
of age. Young cod, under one year of age, were found to grow in the 
aquarium at Heligoland, when well fed, not less than 1mm. daily (or at 
a rate of about 14 inches a month) from the beginning of August to the 
middle of September, and from the middle of September to the end of 
October 3 to 3 of a millimetre daily; and it is stated that growth in the 
open sea would certainly be greater. As stated in my previous paper, a 
cod of 11}? inches in the tank at the Laboratory at Aberdeen grew to 
123 inches between 28th August and 26th September, or at the rate of a 
millimetre per day. 

Mr J. T. Cunningham has also studied the rate of growth or age of cod 
by the markings on the hard structures, but his conclusions do not quite 
agree with those of Professor Heincke, and he differs also as to the 
structures best fitted to show the growth.t Professor Heincke found the 
otoliths and scales much less satisfactory than the bones, and particularly 
the coracoid and scapula, especially in the cod, ‘* which, for the rest,” he 
says, “is one of the most difficult species on which to determine the age.” 
On the other hand, Cunningham found these bones and others of the cod 
unsuitable for the determination of the age, it being impossible, he says, to 
distinguish with certainty the annual rings or zones. Speaking of the 

*“The Occurrence and Distribution of the Eggs, Larve, and Various Age-Groups 
of the Food-Fishes in the North Sea.” Conseil Perm. Intern. pour L’Explor, de la Mer, 
General Report on the Work of the Period, July, 1902-July, 1904, p. 29, 30; Die 
Beteiligung Deutschlands an der Internationalen Meeresforschung, III. Jahresbericht, 


p. 75. 
+ Twenty-third Annual Report Fishery Board for Scot., Part UI., p. 181 et seq. 


214 Part ILI —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


zones of the vertebra, he says “one may count three at one time, and at 
the next attempt there seem to be four or five, and the total number 
always remains doubtful and uncertain.” He found that tranverse slices 
of the otoliths showed the markings much better, and he chiefly used 
them in determining the age of the specimens of cod he studied. Here 
are some of the results, though doubt is expressed as to the certainty of 
the determination in some cases :— 


Caught 9th November. | Caught 9th March. 


| Length. Probable Age. | Length. Probable Age. 
Cm. |Inches | Cm. Inches. 
47 184 about 24 years || 24°38 | 10 2 years 
54 213 Bk Li 80'D aoe. 2. oe 
64 | 253 31--, 307 | 124 5D es 
possibly 2 ,, || 33°5 | 182 De 
73 292 34 ,, %| 443 | 17% 3 is 
| 45°6. | 184 a4; 
| 67°5 27 Avan 
| 


According to these later results, Mr. Cunningham says, the cod at two 
years of age is 10 to 13 or 14 inches in length, at three years 17 to 19 
inches, at four years 27 inches; but, he adds, it would require the 
examination of a large number of specimens to ascertain the average and 
range of sizes at these ages. So far as these results go, they are in 
agreement with my own derived from the method of measuring the fishes. 

Lately Dr. 8. Strodtmann published a paper on the spawning and migra- 
tions of fish in the Baltic, which contains some observations on the growth 
of young cod, taken in Travemtinder Bucht.* 

A series numbering 555, taken on 15th October, 1904, measured frora 
5em. to 16cm. (2-6; inches), the average being 10°Ocm., or barely 4 
inches. A month later, November 14th, 743 ranged from 5cm. to 15cm., 
the average being 10‘5cm. On December 12th, 333 measured from 7cm. 
to 19cm (23-74 inches), the average being 13°5, or 52 inches. At the 
beginning of March in the following year they ranged from 9cm. to 
17cm., and numbered 75, the average size being 12°8cm., and at the 
beginning of April 123 ranged from 9cm. to 17cm., the average being 
13cm., or 53 inches. These results agree closely with my own. On 
September 9th, 84 measured between 16cm. and 30cm. (63—11# inches), 
the average being 21:5cm. (84 inches), which is also near what will be 
found in the Tables appended. 

It will be noticed that the young cod in December are rather larger 
than in either March or April, while from November to December they 
appear to have grown 3cm., which Dr. Strodtmann considers to be 
improbable at that season. In the course of the summer they increased 
by 8:5cm., or 32 inches. He compares the growth at the place indicated 
with the growth of young cod at Biisum, on the North Sea, and shows 
that the latter at the beginning of October had a greater range of size and 
a larger average size than in the Baltic at the middle of the month. The 
Baltic fish ranged from 5cm. to 15cem., according to the diagram, the 
average being 10cm., while the North Sea cod ranged from 5em. to 16cm. 
or 17cm., and the average was 12cm. or 13cm. (43-53 inches. At 
Aberdeen in the same month the average was 12cm. also. 

In the Tables appended to this paper will be found the measurements 
of the cod I have dealt with, grouped into centimetres, and the following 


*Laichen und Wandern der Ostseefische, p. 209. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 215 


Tables show details of these and the arrangement into the various series 
or generations. In some cases, where the number of cod in the collections 
was fairly large, the distinction of one group from another was tolerably 
easy, especially when the millimetre measurements and tables were con- 
sulted as well as the diagrams or curves. All the measurements were 
made to millimetres, and curves were constructed of each collection. In 
other cases, the division of one series from another is only approximate, 
and one or two or several fish may belong to one or the other. For 
example, in the collections from Aberdeen Bay, the chief group in July 
might terminate at 32cm. or 34cm. instead of at 28cm., so far as these 
measurements by themselves indicate ; but this interpretation would be 
opposed to the limits of the group later in the year. It will be often 
found, as in the July collections, that a few fish at the end of what may 
appear to be a compact series are considerably larger than the others and 
separated from them by a good interval; and it is difficult to decide 
whether they should be looked upon as stragglers from that series—fish 
which have grown much quicker than their fellows—or stragglers from 
the next larger series, which may not be well represented. 


COD. 
: Approximate] Approximate 
Range of Size. Modal Mean Length Age. reel eal as 
Date. Group} No. ‘Size. Preceding 
Series. 
Cm. | Inches. Cm. | Inch.|Years.|M’ths. : 
Cm. | Inch. 
I.—ABERDEEN Bay— 
January 15, 1902 - I. 7 | 9-7-16-2} 343-63 9-11 12:5 5 92 
1: 15 26-40 | 104-153 30 31-32 |12-123; 1 94 19 74 


DI. 3 48-59 | 19-23 56 ane De 2 


February 11,1905, - I. 16 8-17 31-63 | 9-10 12-5 5 


March 29,1905 - -| I. Ge) S19 | sey hi |: 135 | 52 1 
May 13, 1902, - -| IL. 5 | 14-20-7] 54-81 tf a ie eae ie 
The ie (Bet 87-34 1105-133) 1. ber eae a | ie 
Sumeris, 1001, --) -| J. | 31 | 14-3-23| 5e-on,| 18 | 185 | 74 ryt 
June 28,1901, - -| IL | 19 | 19-26 | 74-103 | 21 22 | 88 KN. 3 
2 | 29-36 2 a 3 iS 2 | 3 
6 | 54-60 | 213-23} 
July 30, 1901, - Ls: 1 6-5 rs 4 
Il. | 43 | 16-7-28| 6-11 23 ga (gue let te | af 
II. | 26 | 29-3-46|11,3,-181/  .. 1A x e | 4 
1 49-8 
July 31,1901, - -| IL | 32 |167-27.9| o§-11 | 19-23 | 225] 87 Et 


216 Part [1I1.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


COD.—continued. 


Approximate) Approximate 


Range of Size. A ent 
Mean L pparen 
Date. Group] No es mean wen gu ase Growth from 
-| Size. Preceding 
Cm. | Inches. Cm. | Inch. | Years |M’ths. Series: 
Cm. {Inch. 
1.—Aberdeen Bay— 
continued. 

August 21, 1901 - - 1K 18 | 6-5-8-8 | 2,%-34 8 7:7 3 4} 

ll. | 85 |18-7-32-3] 73-123] 22 | 235) 92 1 | 4 | 158] 6} 
III. 12 |36-4—48-7) 144-19} or a re 2 43 
6 | 51°3,53 7" a8 aie ss 3 43 

58-5 
60°8 61,63 

September 3, 1901, -j| IL. 93 | 18-4-32| 74-128 25 25 92 1 5 
Ill. 8 | 39-4-45| 153173 |... Re - 2) 5 
IV. 6 50-61 | 193-24 me ae x 3 5 
September 4, 1901, -j| 1 14 | 22-38-32) 83-128 25 as 50 i i) 
September 4. 1901, -/ II. 24 |20-7-29-9) 8}-11} 25 oe we 1 5 
September 4, 1901, - I, 1 8-3 34 os on a Bee 5 
1 29 |19-4-29-8) 78-11} | 25, 27 ae oe 1 5 
September 4, 1901, - i 1 8-3 3} a 53 Ae ve 5 
(Three haulscombined.) | II. 67 | 19-4-32| 78-128 25 25 95 1 5 


September 10, 1901, - I. 41 |6-0-15-3| 23-6 9 9-5 34 ae 54 
m |) te1-29-3) 7712) We ie? 1 see 
September 3-10, 1901,- | I. | 42 |60-153] 29-6 9 (05 1783 Ide [eee 
(Combined.) ir | 167 | 181-32] 7-128 | 25 | 25 | 92 | 1 | .. | 155] 6B 
Wl. | 8 | 394-45/153-173|  .. Peay a: 2 
Ty. | 66 | 50-61 |193-9a-] 4... Wa be 3 
October 18, 1901- -| 1. | 75 |79-199|/ 34-77] 12 | 12 | 42 | -. | 6 
Il. | 37 |29-2-35-8] 98-142 | 26 | 285] 13 | 1 | 6f | 165 | 6} 
2 |51-8-56-0 
re Pee ae ee 
October 31,1903, -| 1. | 21 |4.8-15-7/47-63. 198111 12.1) 43 | 3. eo 
| Il. | 13 |22-7-360l836-14,5| 25-27 | 29 | liye 1 | 7 +| 17 '| @F 
| Wu. | 5 |30.5-53-3/164-213| all te 2| 7 
1 | 557 
| 5 |69-6-77-8| 273-30} 


Date. 


I.—Aberdeen Bay— 
continued— 


November 5, 1901, 


November 6, 1901, 


November 5 and 6, 


(Combined.) 


November 28, 1901 


November 29, 1901 


November 28 and 29, 
(Combined.) 


December 16, 1901 


December 12, 1904 


II.—Moray FIRTH. 
Dornoch Firth— 
February 9, 1905, 


June 9, 1903, 


| October, 22, 1903, 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 217 


COD—continued. 


‘ Approximate|Approximate 
Range of Size. Apparent 
a x =) Modal |Mean Length} Age. = [growth from 
BOP oe Size, (2. Preceding 
Series. 
Cm. | Inches. Cm. | Inch. | Years|M’ths. 
: Cm. | Inch. 
II. | 20 |26-7-35-9) 103-143] 30 30-5 | 12 1 7 
III. 5 | 46-4-52 | 184-20} pea St 
2 |56-8-57-4 
I. | 301 |86-19.0] 38-74 i 12 | 43 7 
I. | 301 |86-19-0| 33-74 11 12 | 43 7 
II. | 20 ae 103-141) 30 305 | 12 fe 2 18-5 | 74 
i 1 18-7 : 8 
II. | 43 |23-8-88-1} 98-15 31 32 | 128 spe Pats) 
II. | 12 |39.7-53.8| 158-213 [47 | 184] 2g (15 | 52) 
fe 10° | 3} 
I. | 87 |7-8-20-7|3y.8%| 10 | 3 a 8 
II. | 185 |21-8-38-3] 8§-15,;| 31 31. | 123 fleas nic Meera * 
III. | 21 |39-2~-57-3/12,77-222 [47 | 184) 2 es 16 | 64 
i | 88 1 7-8-20-7 | 3-88. | 10 [13 | 58] 8 
II. | 178 |21-8-38-3] 83-15),| 31 31 | 123 pi aaa 1.78 
Ill. | 38 |89-2-57-3|15y7,-222 [47 | 18h] Dia 28 16 | 6} 
I, | 18 |83-20-8| 33-83, | 10 12), | <54 84 
II. | 70 | 23-41-8}| 9-163 32 32 | 128 1 Ski 18 | 7a 
1 51 
1. 16 |31-9-42-2| 124-168 1 8f 
III. 35 |43-7-61-6] 174-244 [49-5 | 194] 2 | 8 
IV. 33 66-3 | 26-26} 3 | 8 
66-9-67-1 
i 7 |85-16-2| 38-68 10 
I. 25 | 33-48] 15-12] 35 40 | 1% 2h 
I. 3 | 66-98 | 28-33 7 
iY. 2 | 21-9-31 | 88-125, 1 7 
III 3 |42-3-47-4| 168-188 as Mee h..8 ca 


218 Part Il] —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


COD—continued. 


Approximate} Approximate 


Range of Size. Modal (Mean Length Age. 


Appareut 
Growth from 


| Date. Group) No. | Size Preceding 
Cm. Inches. Cm. | Inch.! Years|M’ths. aa 
: Il.—Moray Firth—cont. Cm | Inch. 
| November 9-10, 1901,-} | 78 |9-7-19-1| 348-73 | 12 | 125 | 4te 74 | | 
II. | 113 |20-7-36-7) 83-14y,| 25 27-5 | 10}3 it 74 15 5g 
III. 4 a 17-202 | 2 re 
PNoveniber 12, 1903." = 1k 4 |12-5-20-5) 448-87), 73 
| m1 6 |25-7-34-3| 102-134 
| Ill. | 16 {44.8-61-0] 178-24 
IV. 10 | 66-4-76 | 254-30 


| V. 10 | 79-89 | 31-35 


3 |97, 105, 106 
} 
December 7, 1904, - I. 13 | 7-7-11-9| 3-43 
| II 2 |25°6-27°7 
| 
December 19, 1901, - | II. 41 | 25-41-6 | 93-163 33 31 
Ill. | 15 |46-0-60-0] 18-233 


Smith’s Bank, - - I. 4 |12-8-20-3) 5y,-8 


April 1, 1904, -) #1 TL | 22 231-388] 94-152 | 28 
Tl. | 7 | 46-59 {173-23} 
| October 23, 1903,-  -| L 3 |7-2-12-6| 22-5 
I. 6 |23-2-39-6| 91-15} 
November 8,1901, -j| IL. 4 |9-8-13-9| 32-5} 
Il. | 42 |25-9-40-1]10,%,-153] 29 | 31-5 
December 27, 1903, - | II. 33 |25-0-37-5| 93-143 30 30 
UL. 3 |45-6-50-2 
Burghead Bay— 
September 7, 1901 - I. 1 10-6 
Il. | 34 |20-7-32-3] 84-1214] 25 26 
| October 20,1903 -| I. | 4 |16-0-15-4] 4-6, 
II. | 15 |20-9-29-4] 81-113 
December 6, 1904,  -| II. | 32 |21-4-33-2|3/7,-13),| 25 27 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


COD—continued. 


2 s22-388 Sic 


Pears bore 


19 


a 
Pr } 
| 


Range of Size. Modal “ean Sr a Apparent | 
Date. Group) No. =e aoe ~ Be iae) | 
Cm. “Inches. | Cm. Inch. | Years M'ths Beries. 
I—Moray Firth—cont.| | olin Se hice | | Om. | Inch. | 
December 20-25, 1901, Ie 91 10:5-21-9 43-743 15 15 | 5a | | 9 | 
Il. | 179 |229-39.8) 9-158 | 26 | 305/| 12 | 1 | 9 | 155 | 6 
Il. | 40 40:3-59-8 152031) Beall as 183 2 | Oy ele) 62 
IV. | 67 '61-2-72-4| 24-283 3 | 9 | 
6 76-6-84-5 30-33} | | 
10 | 91-100 | 36-394 | 
| 3 101,102,108 393-403; -. | | 
| 1 110 | 484 
SEA ss ok le la 
December 29, 1903, -| Il. | g |26-398 10-156 | | 
III. 3 |48-2-45-4) 17-173 |. | | 
173, 90, 98 | | 
'100, 101, 
|103, 104,) pscsiel | | 
ff} tt 
Cromarty Firth, — - il 16 87-22. 34-83 | | =H 93 
January 7, 1901, 19 22 258-3063 10,815} ee as 1 93 
orem te 2 Gerd 3 ty ce |S aren aoe _ (eae ees ees eee 
Of Lybster, Caithness. | | 
October 23, 1903. a I. 6 Geaad 21-58 | z | ne 
Sie | 3 (248-324 * a ae 
November 8, 1901, -/ II. | 114 26-8-37-8 104-142} 32 SS a 7 iis 
| 
eee ate elie oa) Cae [vam fora] np onlay on 
January 17-18,1902 -| IL. | 17 138-228 54-83 94 
Me | 980. \230-40-7| 91-16) |. . 31 S05 | ioe ort, |. 0k 
Ill. | 41 (41-9-62-5 ‘iad [50 | 193]/ 2 | 9% 
cea Bees. ok |S errs eS eS I ae ee ee 
June 4, 1901, - | III. | 20 |26-6-36-3| 10-142 2 2 
Iv. | 13 |40-5-56-5} 16-223 | 38h 2 
2 |65-3-68-7 
III.—Firti or Fortn. r ; 
May 13-16, 1901,- -| IL. | 145 96-230 33-91 13 15 | 5% € hie 
ul 3 | 25-27 
Fraly, 2, 1900p 2) mle Bs -|o, 99. 1 406-84 |199-35,|. 5 6) Q orlp 4 | 
Il. | 77 |15-2-30| 6-112 | 20 22 | 88 he te ote Td ek | 
mm, Pe: | | 


220 Part III —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


COD—conttinued. 


| | Rangeiof Size. Approximate EPL CEEmB Ue Appareee 


Mean Length “4 

Date. Group, No. Modal ts oe Growth froin 

————_—_—————| Size. |________|____—_—__| Preceding 
| Cm. | Inches. Cm. | Inch. | Years M’ths. ee 
Il.—Firth of Forth— | | 
continued. | 
August 19, 1901, -|0 ae |) OGe: | Satins | oneae ¥ 75 i 8 Sl Gees 
II. | 98 |14-8-81-6/533-127,| 21 | 22:5 | 8% 1 | 435] 15 | 5h8 


August 22,1901,- -| I. | 46 |5-8-13-2| 23-5,%, 7 est 
Il. | 47 |16-8-29-7| 68-113 | 22 | 225] 8% 1 | 43-5 | 145] 59 


August 21, 1901, - - Ie 10 | 6-4-7-9 | 23-32 it 7 23 .. | 43-5 
ite | 19 {18-8-29-2| 73-114 22 23-5 9} i 44-5 | 165 | 6} 


August 19-22, - = I. | 146 | 5-4-13-2] 22-5,'; 7 7-5 3 sc 41-5 


Il. | 159 |14-8-31-6/5}3-1275| 21 | 225 | 8% 1 | 43-5] 15 | 538 


(Combined.) 


IV.—Orr SHETLAND 
ISLES 


May 19-22, 1901, =}, a. 3 |18-1-23-7| 74-93 se 6 i aed ee 8 
III. | 268 |25-2-41-2} 935-163] 32 | 325 | 122] 2 | 


| IV. | 141 [41-8-61-6] 16-243 | 50 60 | 19%] 8 | 14 | 38 | 7 


The first series, that is, cod in their first year, comprises over 900 
specimens, and they are present in greater or less numbers in thirty-four 
of the collections. 

They first appeared in a collection made in the Dornoch Firth on 9th 
June 1903, the haul being made with the small-meshed net around the 
cod-end of the otter trawl, in from 8 to 11 fathoms. Twenty-five were 
taken measuring from 33mm. to 48mm. (1,°,-1% inches), the average size 
being 38:8 mm., ora trifle over 14 inches. ‘These young cod were approxi- 
mately 24 months old. It is of interest to note that on 30th March in 
the following year (1904), a shoal of spawning cod of large size were 
discovered on the same ground, a little further off, in from 13 to 15 or 16 
fathoms.* 

They next appear in the collections of 30th July, in Aberdeen Bay, 
and of 23rd July in the Firth of Forth. In the latter case 29 were 
obtained, measuring from 4'6cm. to 8°4cm. (113—-35%, inches), and with 
an average size of about 6cm., or 22 inches. ‘The arithmetical average 
was 61‘3mm. An examination of the curve shows that the smaller cod 
are not duly represented, the rise from 4cm, to 5cm. being very abrupt ; 
more probably 2°5cm. or 3cm. would indicate the lower limit of the 
group, and 5cm., or 2 inches, the average size. In the collections made 
in the Firth of Forth from 19th to 22nd August, or nearly a month later 
than the above, the range in size of 146 specimens was from 5:4cm. to 
13-2cm. (24-5,8, inches), and the average size wasiabout 7cm., or 23 
inches, an increase of about 2cm., or # of an inch (fig. 5, pl. XIT.). 


* Vide Twenty-third Annual Report. Part III, p. 21. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 221 


In Aberdeen Bay, 18, obtained on 21st August, measured from 6‘5cm, 
to 88cm. (2;%,-34 inches), the average size being 7‘7cm., or 3 inches, 
In collections trom the 3rd to the 10th September, the range of the 42 
specimens was from 6cm., to 15:3cm., (23-6 inches), the average size being 
9-5cem., or 32 inches (fig. 6, pl. XII.). On 18th October 75 measured from 
78cm. to 19-9cm. (3-73 inches), the average size being 12cm., or 47 
inches. On the 3lst of the same month, but in a different year, 21 
ranged from 4°8cm. to 15°7cem. (1£-6,3, inches), the average size being 
12cm., or 42 inches. A week later, on the 6th November, a large 
collection of 301 had a range from 8°6cm. to 19cm. (33-74 inches), the 
average being 12cm., ur 4? inches, the same as on 18th October. At 
the end of the month, on the 28th and 29th, 38 measured from 7:8cm. 
to 20°7cm. (3,4,—-8;% inches), the average being approximately 13cem., or 
54 inches; and on [6th December in the same year, 18 ranged from 
8:3cm, to 20°8cm. (34-8,°, inches), also with an approximate average of 
13cm. 

At the middle of January, 7 ranged from 9°7cem. to 16:2cm, (443-62 
inches), the average size being about 12°5cm., or 5 inches. Then on 11th 
February in another year, 16 were from 8cm. to 17cm. (33-62 inches), 
the average being the same, and on 29th March, the last collection from 
Aberdeen Bay containing fish under one year of age, 6 ranged from 9cm. to 
19cm. (34-74 inches), the average size being about 13°5cm., or 53 inches. 

It will thus be seen that the young cod increase in size rapidly in the 
summer and up to October, and that after that to March the increase 
appears to be but slight. ‘The numbers obtained in the winter and early 
spring were, however, small. The increase from August to the end of 
the year was about 2 inches or a little more. 

The collections of cod under one year of age from other parts of the east 
coast are, as a rule, small, but one or two are fairly large. In the Dornoch 
Firth, on 9th and 10th November, 78 measured from 9°7cm. to 19:lem. 
(312-74 inches), and the average size was about 12:5cm., or 447 inches 
(fig. 6, pl. XII.). In Burghead Bay, also in the Moray Firth, on 20th and 
25th December, in another year, 91 ranged in length from 10°5cm. to 
21-9cm. (43-7,°; inches), the average size being about 15cm., or 54 inches. 
In the Cromarty Firth, on 7th January, 16 measured from 8°7cm. to 22°2cem. 
(33-82 inches), and on 17th January, in another part of the Moray Firth, 
17 ranged in length from 13-8cm. to 22:3cm. (54-87? inches), but these 
fish were taken in the ordinary trawl-net, and the smaller specimens are 
not duly represented. 

The collections when the cod is one year of age, in April or the end of 
March, are not sufficient to show with precision its size at that period, 
but, from what has been said and from what follows as to the size a 
little later, it may be placed at about 57 or 54 inches (13cm. or 14cm.), 
with a range from 3 to 8 inches or a little more (7'5cm. to 20cm.). The 
growth of the cod in its second year appears to be somewhat more rapid, 
probably owing to its becoming more and more piscivorous in its 
feeding. 

The second series, comprising cod in their second year, is well repre- 
sented by over 2000 fish in 48 of the collections. The growth in summer 
is rapid. In Aberdeen Bay, 5 taken on 13th May ranged from 14cm. 
to 20°7cem. (54-84 inches). In the Firth of Forth, 145, caught between 
13th and 16th May, measured from 96cm. to to 23cm. (32-94 inches), 
with an average length of 15cm., or 52 inches, On 1st April, 4 caught 
at Smith Bank, in the Moray Firth, were from 12-8cm. to 20-3cem, (5;4,— 
8 inches), and 3 taken in deep water off the Shetlands on 19th and 22nd 
May were from 18*lcem. to 23-7cm., or between 73 and 93 inches, 


222 Part [11-—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


On 13th June, in Aberdeen Bay, 31 specimens, computed to be ee 
1 year and 24 months old, measured from 14:3cm. to 23em,. (53- 
inches), the mean size being 18-5em., or 7} inches. On the 28th, ae 
caught in the ‘ Doghole,” in 65 fathoms, ranged from 19cm, to 96cm. 
(73-103 inches), the mean being 22cm., or 83 inches ; the arithmetically 
computed average was 21:9cm. 

In July two collections were made in Aberdeen Bay and one in the 
Firth of Forth. In the former, on the 30th, 43 measured from 16°7cm. 
to 28cm. (62-11 inches), the average being 23cm., or 9,/, inches ; these 
were taken at the “Doghole,” in “62 fathoms. On the next day, 32, 
caught in 11-13 fathoms, ranged from 16‘7em. to 27-9cem., or the same, 
the average length being a little less, viz., about 22-5cm., or 83 inches. 

On the 23rd the collection in the Firth of Forth comprised 77 speci- 
mens, about | year and 4 months old; they ranged from 15°2cm. to 
30 cm. (6-11? inches), the average being 22cm., or 83 inches. 

On 21st August, 85, from the “ Doghole,” in 58 fathoms, were from 
18-7em. to 32°3cm, (73-1232 inches), the average being about 23°5cm., or 
9¢ inches. Their age was about 1 year and 4 or 5 months. In the Firth 
of Forth they were represented in three collections in August, as 
follows :—On the 19th, 93 varied from 14°8em. to 31-6cm. (5}3-127/ 
inches), the average being 22°5cm., or 84 inches; on the 21st, 19 ranged 
from 18:8 to 29:2cm. (73-114 inches), the average being 23°5cm., or 9} 
inches; on the 22nd, 47 measured from 16°8cm. to 29:-7em. (63-11? 
inches), the average being 22‘5cm., or 83 inches (fig. 5, pl. XIT.). 

In September, in Aberdeen Bay, 167 were caught Be the 3rd and 
19th ; they ranged in length from 18*lcem. to 32cm. (73-123 inches), the 
average being about 25cm., or 9% inches. At Burghead “Bay, on 7th 
September, 34 ranged from 20°7cm. to 32:3cm. (1 1211 inches), the 
mean size being about 26cm., or 103 inches (fig. 6, pl. XII.). These 
fish were one year and five or six months old. 

Several collections were got in October. In Aberdeen Bay, on the 
18th, 37 measured from 22°2cm. to 35°8cm. (82-143 inches), the mean 
being 28° eo ue 11} inches. On the 31st, 13 ranged from 22-7em. to 
36cm. (815-14,3, inches), the mean being about 29cm., or 11;% inches. 
The ora ei this series in the October collections from the Moray 
Firth are small. In the Dornoch Firth, on the 22nd, two measured 
21‘9cm, and 3lem.; at Smith Bank, on the 23rd, six ranged from 
23-2cm. to 39:'6cm. (93-154 inches; in Burghead Bay, on the 20th, 15 
measured from 20°9cm. to 29°4em. (87-114 inches); and on the 23rd, 
off Lybster, on the ccast of Caithness, three were from 24°8cm. to 
32°4cm. 

On 5th November, at the “ Doghole,” in 70 fathoms, 20 of this series 
were obtained ; they ranged from 26°7cm. to 35°9cm. 104-143 inches), 
the mean being about 30°5cem., or 12 inches, On the 28th, 43, taken 
with the ordinary trawl-net in “Aberdeen Bay, measured from 23°8cm. to 
38-1lem. (98-15 inches), the mean being about 32cm., or 123 inches. On 
the following day a collection of 135 belonging to this series tie from 
21'8cem. to 38 3cm, (83-15;4, inches), the mean being 3lem., or 124 
inches. These were about 1 year and 8 months old. 

In the tate ee on the 9th and 10th, 113 measured from 20°7em. 
to ee 7cm. (83-14,% inches), the average length being about 27'5cem., or 
1143 inches (is 6) pl. XIE)! At Smith Bank, on the 8th, 42 ranged 
ae 25-9em. to 40-lem. (10,3,-152 inches), the mean being 31-5em., or 
122 inches. Off Lybster, on the 8th, 114 measured eS, 26°8cem. to 
37°8em., (103-14 inches), the average ‘being 32em., or 123 inches. 

In December, in Aberdeen Bay, 70 measured from 23cm. to 41:8cm, 


of the Fishery board for Scotland. 223 


(9-162 inches), the average being 32cm., or 122 inches. The largest 
member of the group in this case might be one at 38°6cm. (153 inches), 
as in the November collections, but in that of 12th December the division 
is not so placed. In the latter, 16 measured from 31:9cm. to 42°2cm. 
(124-162 inches). 

In the Dornoch Firth, on 19th December, 41 measured from 25cm. to 
41-6cm. (93-16% inches), the mean being about 3lcm., or 127 inches. 
At Smith Bank, on the 27th December, 33 ranged from 25cm. to 37°5cm. 
(92-143 inches), the next fish measuring 45 6cm.; the average size was 
about 30cm., or 1i# inches. On 6th December, at Burghead Bay, 32 
measured from 21-4cm. to 33:2cm. (8;/;-13;4 inches), the mean being 
about 27cem., or 103 inches. In this collection, as the other tables of 
measurements show, the larger fishes of the series were not present in due 
numbers, aud the two smaller fishes, 21:4cm. and 21*8cm., may belong to 
the younger series, which is not otherwise represented. 

A large collection of this series was obtained in Burghead Bay between 
the 20th and 25th December. They numbered 179, ranging from 
22°9cm. to 39°8cm. (9-153 inches), the average size being about 30-5cm., 
or 12 inches. A small collection on the 29th of the same month in 
another year, comprised 8 specimens of this series, their sizes ranging 
from 26cm. to 39-8cem. (103-152 inches) (fig. 5, pl. XIT.). 

In January, in Aberdeen Bay, 15 of this series measured from 26cm. 
to 40cm. (104-15? inches), the mean being 3lcem. to 32cm., or 123 
inches. In the Cromarty Firth, on the 7th, 22 were from 25‘8cm. to 
39-3cm. (10;3,-154 inches), the mean being about 32cm., or 123 inches. 
A large collection was obtained off Dunbeath, on the Caithness coast, on 
17th January, and the 280 cod comprised in the series measured from 
23-1em. to 40°7cm. (93-16 inches), the average being about 31:5cm., or 
123 inches. These fish were obtained in the ordinary trawl-net, but at 
this size the fact will not affect the average to any material extent. 

No cod of this series were in the collections in February and 
March. On Ist April, 22, caught at Smith Bank, in the Moray Firth, 
ranged in length from 23:lem. to 38°8cm. (93-154 inches), Lut the higher 
limit of the series is less than it ought to be from the absence of the 
larger fishes ; the next longest to the one at 38cm. was one about 46cm. 
In May (when they were over two years old) five taken in Aberdeen Bay 
measured from 27cm. to 34cm. (103-1332 inches), and three in the Firth of 
Forth were from 25cm. to 27cm. (927-102 inches). The numbers are 
too small, of course, on which to base a conclusion. In a large collection 
made up of the cod taken in several hauls of the ordinary trawl-net in 
deep water off the Shetlands (65 fathoms) between 19th and 22nd May, 
268 belonged to this group, and ranged in size from 25:2em. to 41:2cm. 
(913-163; inches), by far the greater proportion measuring 3lem. to 
34cm. (123-132 inches), and the mean being approximately 32°5em., or 
12? inches, the arithmetic average being a little higher, viz., 32°7cm. 
(fig. 5, pl. XIT.), 

Looking to these averages and the averages in January and December, 
it appears that the cod on the east coast of Scotland when two years-of 
age measures, on the average, a little over 12 inches in length, probably 

24-124 (3lcem. to 32cm.); the range of sizes may be placed at from 
about 9 to over 16 inches. 

In the third year of life, after it has attained the size mentioned, 
growth is again rapid in the summer. I have referred to the size in May, 
when the fish are about thirteen months old. 

At Sinclair Bay, on the coast of Caithness, on 4th June, 20 specimens 
measured from 26‘6cm. to 36-3cm. (16-227 inches) when they were about 
2 years and 2 months old. 


224 Part LII-—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


At the “ Doghole,” off Aberdeen, on 30th July, 26 measured from 
29-3cm. to 46cm. (11;%-182 inches) ; on 21st August, 12 ranged from 
36°4cm. to 48°7em. (144-193 inches) ; on 3rd September, 8 taken at the 
‘““Doghole” were from 39:4cm. to 45cm. (154-173 inches) ; 5 on 31st 
October measured from 39'5cm. to 53:5em. (153-217 inches) ; 5 on 5th 
November were from 46°4em. to 52cm. (183-204 inches) ; and on 28th 
and 29th November, 33 measured from 39:2cm. to 57:3cm. (15,4-223 
inches). On 12th December, 35 measured from 43°7cem. to 61:6cm. 
(174-247 inches), the mean size being calculated at 49:-5cm., or 194 
inches, and the age at 32 or 33 months. 

Comparatively few were taken in the Moray Firth. On 12th November 
16 ranged from 44°8cm. to 6lem. (173-24 inches) ; on 19th December, 
15 were from 46cm. to 60cm. (18-233 inches); on 20th to 25th 
December, 40 measured from 40°3 to 59°8cm. (153-234 inches) ; on 17th 
January, off Dunbeath, 41 measured from 41°9cm. to 62°5cm. (163-243 
inches). 

In May, off the Shetlands, when they had begun their fourth year, 141 
measured from 41:8cm. to 61‘6cm. (16-247 inches). The mean in this 
case is about 50cm., and the arithmetical average 50°9cm., or exactly 20 
inches. 

The average size of the cod on the east coast of Scotland when three 
years old may be placed at from between 19 and 20 inches, and the 
probable range of sizes from about 16 to about 24 inches. 

The number of cod older than this in the collections was very small, 
and their distinction into groups problematical. In the haul on 12th 
November, in the Dornoch Firth, I have placed ten, measuring from 
66:4cm. to 76cm. (253-30 inches), as approaching their fourth year. 
And on 20-25th December, in Burghead Bay, six measured from 61:2cm. 
to 73°4cm. (24-284 inches), which are assumed to be about the same age. 

It is now desirable to compare the differences in the average length of 
the different groups, which represents the extent of the growth in a year 
from one annual series to the next. Considering first the means of the 
first and second series, as given in the Table, there are twelve cases in 
which this comparison can be made. The difference between the means 
varies in different collections from 14°5cm. to 19cm., and the average 
amounts to 16°57cm., or 64 inches. Some are better than others, and if 
we select the nine cases in which the number of fishes in either of the 
series does not fall below 20, we find that the variation is from 14°5cm. 
to 18-5cm., and the average of the lot is 16-2cm., or 62 inches. If the 
comparison is limited to the cases in which more than 70 fishes are 
represented in each series, and the numbers are fairly equal—and these 
cases are three in number—the differences are respectively 15cm., 15-5cem., 
and 15cm., the average being 15:2cm., or almost exactly 6 inches. 

There is another method by which comparison of the differences between 
the groups can be made, viz., by comparing the difference between the sizes 
at which the maximum numbers of fishes occur—between the maximum 
ordinates, ‘‘ modes,” or apex, of each curve. As might be expected from 
these collections, which contain only moderate numbers of fishes, the 
members of any given group are not duly represented throughout; in some 
instances the larger fishes predominate in numbers, in others the smaller, 
and soon; and thus in a single collection of this kind comparison of the modes 
or maximum ordinates of two groups may be far from showing the true 
differences between these groups, Thus, in the fourteen cases in which 
such comparison can be made between the cod in their first year and those 
in their second year, the distance between the maximum ordinates varies 
from llem. to 22cm, or exactly double, The mean of these numbers, 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 225 


however, is 16°5cm., or very nearly the figure derived from the comparison 
of the mean sizes; and if the average be made of all the instances, the 
figure is 16-lcm., or 62 inches. If the collections are selected according 
to the numbers of fishes they contain, as above described in dealing with 
the approximate means, we get in the nine cases an average of 15°33cm., 
or a trifle over 6 inches. It seems very probable, then, that the cod on 
the east coast of Scotland increases in length at this early period of its life 
by from 6 to 62 inches in the course of a year, and it is likely to be nearer 
the former figure than the latter. The particulars of the computation in 
the nine cases referred to are given in the accompanying Table :— 


Number of Fish. Sane pent trae i 
Month. Ee Sa oe Modes or 
Approximate Masini 
Ist Series. |2nd Series, Means. Ordinates. 
Cm. Cm. 
September, : 42 167 15°5 16 
October, . : is 37 16°5 14 
November, ‘ : 301 20 18°5 19 
35 : : | 38 178 18 21 
Ps Ay 78 118 15 13 
December, P : 91 179 15°35 11 
July, : ; ; 29 (oi 17 15 
August, . ; : 90 93 15 14 
5. : 2 : 46 47 14°5 15 
16:2 15:33 


In my previous paper, in which I dealt with the growth of the cod, the 
number of collections as well as the number of fishes was much less; but 
in the ten cases where comparison was possible the mean difference between 
the arithmetic averages of the two series (the method then made use of) 
was 16°7 cm., and in the five instances with the greatest numbers of fish 
it was 16‘Ocm., or 64 inches. 

With regard to the difference between the second and third groups, the 
collections in which this can be determined are much less numerous. The 
five cases are as follows:— : 


Number of Fish. Difference ee ae 
Month, between the Wodeuor 
Approximate Rea rentiin 
1st Series. |2nd Series, Means. Ordinates. 
Cm. Cm. 
November, 4 ; 178 33 16 - 
December, 3 ; Al 15 15 16 
BS : ‘ 179 AO 17'5 = 
January, . : P 280 4] 18'5 ~ 
May, . : : : 268 141 18 17°5 


| 17 16°7 

The last collection (May) represents fish a little over two and three 
years of age. In my last paper there was only one instance in which 
comparison between these groups could be made, and the difference 
(arithmetical averages) was 18°2cm.; when incorporated with the others 
given above the average remains 17cm., or 642 inches. 

It is very desirable that complete observations should be made with 
exactitude as to the average size, and the limits of size, at which the cod 
becomes mature for the first time. Until this be done it is not possible 
to be quite certain as to the age at which reproduction begins. It is 
certainly not before four years, and it may be five years, of age. 

P 


bo 
bo 
o> 


Part L11.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 
HADDOCK (Gadus eglefinus ). 


The number of haddocks measured was 6682, making, with those whose 
measurements are dealt with in the two previous papers referred to, a 
total of 28,760 specimens of this species. The collections were partly 
from Aberdeen Bay and neighbourhood and partly from the Moray Firth ; 
the measurements in one-centimetre grouping are given in the appended 
Table XX IT. 

A collection made on 15th January 1902 at the “Doghole,” off 
Aberdeen, in 57 fathoms, 802 haddocks, most of them belonging to the 
first group, or fish of the previous spawning. These numbered 775, 
measuring from 150mm. to 210mm. (53-87 inches) ; most were aggregated 
between 16cm. and 19cm., the apex of the curve formed by the measure- 
ments being at 17:5, which was also the mean, while the arithmetic 
average was 180°5. The second group was represented by only a few 
fish, from 240mm. to 324mm., or near it, and the computed average size 
was 286°8mm., or about 11% inches, the annual increment being thus 
about 4,9, inches. 

On 13th May, in the same year, another lot of 596 haddocks was taken 
on the same ground, in 52 fathoms, most of them belonging to the first 
group, now over one year of age. They measured from 145mm. to 
239mm. (53-92 inches); most were between 17cm. and 22cm., the apex 
of the curve was at 19°5cm., and the mean was the same (nearly 7? 
inches). The growth in the interval of about 118 days was thus approxi- 
mately 2cm., or # of an inch. The second group was represented by only 
a few fishes, from about 25cm. to 32cm., or more. 

On 31st October 1903 a iarge collection of 1249 haddocks was obtained 
in Aberdeen Bay, in 8-12 fathoms, and the measurements are of some 
interest, as three gronps at least are well represented, and a considerable 
number of them —all those above 27cm., and many below that size—were 
differentiated according to sex (fig. 7a, pl. XII.). It may be said at once 
that, contrary to the rule among flatfishes, the males and females are of 
approximately the same size, and thus grow at the same rate, though the 
females are in excess.as to numbers. ‘The first group, that is to say, 
haddocks approximately seven months old, ranged in length from 136mm. 
to 207mm. (53-83 inches), mest being between 14cm. and 19cm.; the 
mode was at 16cm., and the mean at 16°5cm., or 64 inches. 

The second group extended from 217mm. to 310mm. (83-123 inches) ; 
most measured from 25cm. to 30cm., the apex of the curve was at 27cm., 
and the mean was 27‘5cm., or a little above 102 inches. The division 
between this group and the third group is very distinct in curves made 
on ‘Sem. grouping, at 3lem., and it is the same for the males as for the 
females. These fish were about one year and seven months old. 

The third group extended from 3lcm. to about 38cm., the bulk of the 
haddocks were between 32cm. and 35cm., the mode is at 33cm., and the 
mean is 33'5cm., or 13} inches. This group is partly fused with the last, 
and it is to be noticed that in the ‘5cm. curves there is a slight depression 
at 34cm., both with regard to the males and the females, sugyvestive of 
two groups. 

The means of the three groups, taking the last provisionally as one, are 
thus as follows :— 


[ TABLE. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 22 


Approximate Annual 


EEA: Growth Indicated. 
Age. “3 
Cm. Inches. Cm. Inches. 
1st 7 months. 16°5 64 - - 
2nd 1 year and 7 months. 27°5 102 11 44 
5rd 2 years and 7 months. 33°5 134 6 23 


The third group will constitute the great spawning shoal in the 
following spring. 

On 29th December in the same year, 162 haddocks, taken in Aberdeen 

Bay, showed the presence of three groups. The first extended from 
146mm. to 215mm., or near it (52-84 inches); most were between 
15cm. and a little over 19cm., the apex of the curve was at 17:5cm., and 
the mean was about 17:2cm., or 6? inches. The number is not large, 
but the measurements show an increase in length of about lem. from 31st 
October. The other groups are but slightly represented ; one appeared 
to extend from 23cm. to 30cm., and the other from the latter to 36cm. ; 
there were also 7 haddocks from 40cm. to 43cm. (152-17 inches), pro- 
bably approaching their fourth year. 
_ A collection made with the small-meshed net on 29th March, 1905, 
numbered 314, and belonged to the first group. It extended from 
133mm. to 204mm. (53-8 inches); most were between 15cm. and 
18°5cm., the apex of the curve was at 17cm. and the mean about 16°5cme 
or 63 inches. A few small haddocks belonging to this haul wer., 
omitted to be measured. . 

Four collections of haddocks from Smith Bank, in the Moray Firth, 
were measured, the depth in which they were taken being usually 22 or 
23 fathoms. 

On Ist April, 1904, they numbered 885, and three groups were repre- 
sented, the first only by a few fish from 15°8cm. to 20cm. or 21cm. ‘The 
second series was well shown ; it extended from 20cm. or 21cm. to 29cm. 
(8-114 inches) ; most measured between 23cm. and 27:5cm., the apex of 
the curve constructed on the measurements was at 25cm., and the mean 
was 25:2cm. or 25'3cm, (10 inches). These haddocks were about two 
years of age. 

The next group extended from 29cm. to about 37cm. (114-14 inches), 
most of them were between 30cm. and 34cm. (113-134 inches), the apex 
of the curve was at 3lcm., and the mean was about 32cm., or 124 inches. 
These fish were about three years of age. The particulars are these :— 


Apparent Annual 


Average Size. | G@earth 
Age. hist 
Cm. Inches. _ Cm. Inches. 
25 UU Se (8 a ees = aaa ehdld 
1st 1 year old. | - - | - & 
2nd 2 years old. 25°2 10 = Z 


3rd 3 years old. 32 124 6°5 24 


228 Part III —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


On 23rd October, 1903, 306 haddocks were obtained on Smith Bank, 
representing three groups, but only the second was at all well indicated. 
The first group consisted of 8 haddocks from 115mm. to 204mm. The 
second group extended from 21cm. to 28cm. or 29cm.; most of them 
were between 22'5cm. and 26cm. (84-103 inches), the apex of the curve 
was at 25cm., and the mean was about 24-3cm., or 94 inches, The rest 
of the haddocks were insufficient to indicate the limits or average size of the 
next group. One haddock measured 49cm. (197 inches) (fig. 7B, pl. XII.). 

Another collection of 62 haddocks, on 14th November, 1903, also 
contained members of three groups, but only the second was of value as 
regards the rate of growth. It extended from 24°7cm. to 33cm. or 34cm. 
(92-13 inches); most were aggregated between 29cm. and 32cm., the 
apex of the curve was at 30cm., and the mean was about 28-5cm., or 113 
inches. ‘There was one haddock at 52cm. (204 inches). 

A collection of 756 haddocks on 12th December, 1904, belonged to 
the first group, all but one. It extended from 137mm. to 208mm. (53- 
8z inches) ; most measured between 15cm. and 18°5cm. (53-77 inches) ; 
the apex of the curve was at 16°5cm., and the mean was 16-7cm, or 63 
inches. 

Other collections of haddocks obtained in the Moray Firth, off Burg- 
head, Kinnaird Head, Lybster, and the Dornoch Firth were measured. 

Those obtained in the Dornoch Firth are small in number, haddock: 
usually not being caught there in any quantity. 

On 22nd October, 1903, 95 haddocks belonging to three or four annual 
series were measured, but none of the groups are well indicated. The 
first contained 7 haddocks, from 109mm. to 153mm. The second con- 
tained most of the fish, but its limits are not very clear. The smallest 
was 24:2cm.; most were between 26cm. and 28cm. (103-103 inches) ; 
the apex of the curve was at 27cm., and the group apparently terminated 
wbout 3lem. or 32cm. (fig. 7B, pl. XIT.). . 

In a haul on 13th November, the first and second series were repre- 
sented by 22 haddocks, and in another, on the 27th December, 42 
haddocks were taken, mostly belonging to the third series. 

At Burghead Bay, on 20th October, 1903, 248 haddocks mostly belonged 
to the second series. The first group was represented by 30 haddocks, 
ineasuring from 105mm. to 165mm. (43-64 inches); the apex of the 
curve was at 12cm., and the mean about 12°5cm., or 49 inches. The 
second series extended from 23:lcem. to about 30cm.; most measured 
between 25cm. and 27cm. (93-103 inches) ; the apex was at 26cm., and 
the mean about 25:5cm., or 10 inches (fig. 7B, pl. XII.). 

In a collection made on 29th December, 1903, 138 haddocks were 
obtained belonging to several groups. The first included 9 haddocks, 
from 150mm. to 206mm. The second group extended from 23:2cm. to 
about 30cm. (94-117? inches), most ranging between 24cm. and 28cm. ; 
the apex of the curve was at 27cm., and the mean was about 26cm., or 
103 inches. The rest of the haddocks were few in number. There were 
three very large ones, measuring respectively 60cm. (23? inches), 73°6cm. 
(29 inches), and 74cm. (293 inches). 

A haul on the witch ground off Kinnaird Head, in from 40 to 50 
fathoms, on 23rd January, 1904, yielded 199 haddocks belonging to 
several series. The first ranged from 14-3cm. to 18-8cm. (53-73 inches), 
most being between 14°5cm. and 17cm.; the apex of the curve, or the 
greatest number in the series, was at 16cm., and the mean was about 
15°8cm., or 64 inches. 

The second group extended from 21:2cm. to a point not easy to deter- 
nine; most of the haddocks measured from 22cm. to 27cm., the apex of 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 229 


the curve was at 25cm. The third group consisted of a few specimens, 
mostly between 32cm. and 35cm. (123-132 inches), and apparently 
extending to about 40cm., and no doubt represented the spawning shoal. 

A collection off Lybster, on the coast of Caithness, on 22nd October, 
1903, yielded a number of various groups. The small-meshed net around 
the cod-end was ruptured, and only contained 4 haddocks. The first 
Series was represented by 4 fishes, 12cm. and 13cm. The second group 
extended from 21'4cm to 25cm. (84-114 inches); most were between | 
25cm. and 27cm., the apex of the curve was at 26cm., and the mean was 
about 26°5cm., or 104 inches. The smaller members of the group were 
not present in normal numbers. 

The next group extended from about 29cm., apparently, to 36cm. 
(114-143 inches); most were aggregated between 3lcm. and 34cm., the 
apex of the curve was at 32cm., and the mean was about 32'5cm., or 122 
inches. 

It may be noted that in the curve of this group, as in the curves for the 
collection from Aberdeen Bay on 31st October, and for the collection 
from Smith Bank on Ist April, the descending slope is interrupted, 
suggestive of a division. It is better shown in ‘5cm., as below:— 


Cm. 32 32°5 33 33°5 84 345 35 355 36 36°5 


2 22 Ts, Pal 29 20 Die St 16 18 9 

31st October, 4 1 
Change ai, load 1G) 10a 16 7G A 8 
Cm. 29 sil BY/ 45 30 43 38 Vi, Dp 17 
Ist April . ~ Be 2a, 27; 28 Dh) AW Sark 5 
22nd October . 34 Hamee 44 ay Arig OSes 7 


At this size (reproductive) growth is slower and the fusion of the groups 
greater, and it is quite likely that the division indicated is a real one. 


WHITING (Gadus merlangus). 


Twenty-one collections of whitings were measured, most of them taken 
in the Moray Firth, the number being 8346, which, with those contained 
in my previous papers, makes about 58,000 of this species measured. 
The results as regards growth are confirmatory of the conclusions pre- 
viously reached, and the collections may be briefly referred to. 

Six collections were obtained from the Dornoch Firth, as shown in Table 
XXIII. The first was on 22nd October, 1903, and it comprised 233 
whitings, taken in from 6 or 7 to 13 fathoms. The smallest was 51mm. 
(2 inches), and the largest of the first series, to which almost all the 
specimens belonged, was apparently 176mm. (73 inches). The great 
majority of the fishes were aggregated between 9cm. and 13cm., the apex 
of the curve, or point of greatest ageregation, being llcm., which was 
also the mean between the limits named; the arithmetical average was 
about 105°6mm. ‘The average size of these whitings was thus about 4} 
inches. ‘Two specimens of 21cm. and 22cm. probably represent a second 
series, and there is a third at 36cm. 

The next collection, on 11th November, comprised 421 whitings, all 
but one (at 27cm.) apparently belonging to the same series. The smallest 
measured 58mm. (24 inches) and the largest 194mm. (72 inches); most 
were aggregated between 10cm. and 14cm., the apex of the curve being 
at 12cm., which was also the mean, while the computed average was 
approximately 120-5cm. (42 inches). 


230 Part II1—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


On 27th December, 1903, a collection of 494 whitings belonged almost 
entirely to the first series. Most were aggregated between llem. and 
16cm.; the apex of the curve was 13cm., and the mean about 13°5cm., or 
about 5z inches. The smallest of the group measured 85mm. (33 inches) 
and the largest probably 211mm., but it may have been less. 

The next collection was on the 28th December. It comprised 1209 
whitings from the small-meshed net only, the whitings obtained in the 
trawl net having been omitted from measurement. The smallest was 
76mm. (3 inches) and the largest 177mm.; most were aggregated between 
10cm. and 13cm., the apex being at 12cm. and the mean at 11:5cm., or 
about 43 inches. The low average is due to the omission referred to. 

Another collection, on 7th-December, 1904, included 496 whitings, the 
smallest being 79mm. (3% inches) and the largest 183mm. (74 inches). 
Most were aggregated between 12cm. and 15cm., the mean being 13°5em., 
or 55°. inches. 

The sixth collection from the Dornoch Firth was on 9th February, 
1905, and contained 628 whitings. Nearly all belonged to the first 
group, now approaching one year of age, and the bulk of the specimens 
were aggregated between llem. and 15:5cm., the average being 13°2cm., 
or 54 inches. 

On the south coast of the Moray Firth, at Burghead Bay and in that 
neighbourhood, another series of collections of whitings was made, and in 
most of these cases two groups were represefited. The first was on 20th 
October, 1903; it comprised only 94 whitings, 47 belonging to each 
series, and the numbers are thus small. In the first group the smallest 
whiting was 75mm. (almost 3 inches), the largest being 146mm., and the 
mean about 10°5cm. (44 inches). In the second group the smallest was 
182mm. (7 ;°; inches), and the largest apparently 299mm., or 11? inches; 
the mean size was about 23°5cm., or 9; inches. The curves for the 
measurements are a little irregular, but, so far as they go, they show a . 
difference between the two groups, both between the actual apices of the 
curves (or modes) and the means, of about 13cm., or 5% inches. 

The second collection, on 14th November, 1903, comprised 355 
whitings, mostly of the two first groups referred to. The younger group 
contained 193 whitings measuring from §1mm. to 174mm. (33-64 inches) ; 
most were aggregated between 10cm. and 14em., the apex being at 13cm.; 
the mean about 12cm. (42 inches), and the arithmetic average 121:8cm. 
The curve of the second group is less regular, the apex is at 28cm., and 
the mean about 27-5cm. (102 inches). The difference is 15cm. and 
15:5em., or 53 inches. ‘These whitings were taken further off the shore, 
in water of 30 fathoms depth. 

In a collection made on 28th December, 1903, in the same locality, in 
water of 30 fathoms, comprising 386 whitings, the first group, which 
included most of them, ranged from 75mm. to 185mm. (3-77 inches). 
The great majority were aggregated between llcem. and 15cm., the apex 
of the curve was at 13cm., or 53 inches, and this was also the mean, while 
the arithmetic average was 129mm.; the second group were represented 
by only a few, insufficient to show the limits or average size. 

Another small collection of 29 whitings was obtained on 29th Decem- 
ber, the first group ranging from 110cm. to 184cm. 

A collection on 23rd January, 1904, in 50 fathoms, off Kinnaird Head, 
numbered 131, and chiefly belonged to the first group. This group 
ranged in size from 76mm. to 165mm. Most were aggregated between 
10cm. and 13-5cm., the apex of the curve being at 12cm., and the mean 
a little less; the arithmetic average was 120‘7mm. ‘The second group 
included few fishes, most being at 24cm, to 37cm, 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 231 


At Findhorn, in the same neighbourhood, a collection of 293 was 
taken on Ist April, 1904, in 30 to 32 fathoms. They belonged for the 
most part to the second group, the sizes extending from 177mm. (7 
inches) to about 30cm. or 3lem.; most were between 22cm. and 28cm., 
the mean and average being at 25cm. (92 inches): * They represent 
whitings at nearly two years of age. 

Other collections were made on Smith Bank, in the Moray Firth, 
usually in 22 or 23 fathoms of water. The first of these was on 23rd 
October, 1903, when 420 whitings were taken, two groups being repre- 
sented, The smaller, or fish spawned in the same year, ranged from 
87mm. to 160mm. (343—63 inches) ; most measured between 11cm. and 
13cm. ; the mean was 12cm,, and the arithmetic average 128mm., or a 
trifle over 5 inches. The second series, which included 221 fishes, 
ranging from 200mm. to 292mm., were mostly between 20cm. and 24°5cm. ; 
the apex of the curve was at 22cm., and the arithmetic average was 
233mm., or a trifle over 93 inches. From apex to apex of the two 
groups, the distance is 10cm., or 4 inches; the difference between the 
arithmetic averages is 10°5cm., or 4£ inches. 

On 27th December, 1903, 147 whitings taken in the same locality 
were measured, two groups being represented. ‘The first extended from 
113mm. to 18lmm., most being aggregated under 13cm. The second 
group extended from 207mm. to, apparently, 305mm., most being aggre- 
gated between 23cm. and 25cm. The numbers are too few, and the 
curves formed on the measurements too irregular, to enable any satisfac- 
tory comparison to be made between the two groups in this case. 

Another collection of 955 whitings at Smith Bank, on 1st April, 1904, 
was represented almost entirely by one group, the second. It extended 
from 19cm. or 20cm. to 30cm. or 3lcem. or 32cm.; most were aggregated 
between 22cm. and 26cm., the greatest number being under 23cm., and 
the mean size was about 24:5cm., or 92 inches. These fish were nearing 
their second year of age. 

A small collection of 124 whitings taken in the same locality on 12th 
December, 1904, was limited almost entirely to the first group. It con- 
tained one whiting of 75mm. (3 inches), the next measuring 110mm., 
and the small fish were thus imperfectly represented. Most were agegre- 
gated between 13cm. and 16cm. 

A few collections of whitings taken in Aberdeen Bay and neighbour- 
hood were also measured. In one, on 13th May, at the “ Doghole,” or 
deep depression lying a few miles off the coast, in 55 fathoms, the 275 
fish belonged mostly to the second group, the first being imperfectly 
indicated. The smallest whiting taken measured 115mm., or 44 inches. 
The majority were between 19cm. and 26cm., most being at 22cm., and 
the mean size was 22°5cm. or 8% inches. 

In a collection of 148, on 11th February, 1905, in Aberdeen Bay, the 
smallest measured 76mm. The greatest number were between llcm. and 
14cm., most being at 13cm. (5% inches), and the mean was a trifle higher. 

On 29th March following 362 whitings were measured which belonged 
to the first group. The smallest measured 110cm. The greater number 
measured between 13cm. and 15cm. The apex of the curve of measure- 
ments was at 14cm. (53 inches), and the mean was a trifle above this. 
These were approaching one year of age. 

In a haul on 3lst October, 1905, 701 whitings were obtained. In 
the first group the smallest whiting was 56mm. (2} inches), and the 
largest i8lmm., or thereabout. As in soine other cases in autumn, the 
smaller fish formed a little semi-isolated group, suggesting a series of 
younger fishes, the -‘5cm. grouping being as follows :—- 

Cree Oe Wie Onsen eco 9) Obs 10%.” 10>. - 1L.* 115 
D cea 4 5 2 lL 4 2 14 Zl 29 «(&e. 


232 Part III —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


As I pointed out in my previous papers, these very young whitings 
have been leading a pelagic life, and now descend to the bottom when the 
seasonal change of temperature makes the water there warmer than the 
surface layers. 

Most of the fishes in this series were aggregated between 10cm. and 
l6cm., the apex being at 13cm., as well as the mean, and the arithmetic 
average was 132mm., or nearly 53 inches. The grouping of the larger 
whitings is not very clear, but most of them measured from 21cm. to 
30crm., the mean being about 25°5em., or 10 inches, a difference of about 
12-5cem., or about 43 inches from the average of the younger group. 

In a collection made on 29th December, 1903, 498 whitings were 
obtained, nearly all belonging to the first group. Their sizes ranged from 
1l5mm. to 180mm.; most were between 12cm. and 16cm., the greater 
number, or the apex of the curve, being 14cm. (53 inches), which was also 
the mean. 

The principai results in regard to the growth of the first group may be 
tabulated as follows :— 


Date. Average Size. | Smallest Size. | Largest Size. 
Cm. |Inches}| Cm. |Inches| Cm. {Inches 
Dornoch Firth, | 22nd October, . Fl 43 51 2 17°6 73 
Do., . . . | 11th November, 12 42 5'8 24 19°4 78 
Do., . . . | 27th December, 13 ay 8°5 33 21°1 8t 
Do, . . . | 7th December, 13°5 53°5 
Burghead, . | 20th October, . 10°5 4t 75 3 14°6 53 
Do., .. . . | 14th November 12 4} 8:1 34 17°4 65 
Do... . . | 28th December, 138 54 75 3 18°5 73 
Off Kinnaird, . | 23rd January, . 12 43 76 3 16°5 63 
Smith Bank, . | 23rd October, . 12°3 | 43 8:7 34 16°0 63 
Aberdeen Bay, | llth February, 13 54 18°45 BS 
Do,, 2 .«,,| 29th Mareh, | i: 14 54 1tD 4) ae 
Do., . . | 31st October, . 13 54 5°6 2} 18°1 74 
Do., . . | 29th December, 14 54 a5 a 18:0 (pe 
| ) 


The mean sizes of the second group of whitings varied as follows :— 
Burghead—20th October, 23°5cem., or 94 inches; 14th November, 27-5cm., 
or 103 inches. Smith Bank—1st April, 24:5cm., or 93 inches, Aber- 
deen Bay—13th May, 22:5cm., or 8% inches ; 31st October, 22°5cm., or 
10 inches, 


GREY OR COMMON GURNARD (Trigla gurnardus), 


The number of specimens of the grey gurnard measured in connection 
with the observations in this paper was 5495, belonging to about 50 
collections. 

Another paper in which the growth of this fish is dealt with was 
published in the Seventeenth Annual Report.* 

The spawning period of the gurnard is prolonged, extending from April 
to the latter part of August, and into September, or, according to Heincke 
and Ehrenbaum, to October; spawning is at its height in the early part 
of June. In May the duration of ‘‘incubation” is eight or ten days, but in 


*<¢On the Migratory Movements and Rate of Growth of the Grey or Common 
Gurnard,” Part III., p. 210. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 233 


June and July it is shorter, so that one may look to the period when the 
swarms of young gurnards appear as about the middle of June or a little 
later. 

The gurnard reaches maturity at a minimum length of about 8 to 83 
inches, say, 20cm. to 22cm. Thus, in 201 which were fully mature, the 
smallest of the 17 males which were ripe measured 11 inches, and the 
smallest of the 184 females was 84 inches. Of 49 males which were 
nearly mature the smallest was 9 inches, and of 273 females of the same 
class the smallest was 84 inches. 

Among 601 gurnards which were about half to three-parts mature, the 
smallest of the 172 males was 74 inches, and the smallest of the 429 
females was 8 inches. 

While gurnards may be mature at the sizes stated, it must be remem- 
bered that they are the minimum sizes, and represent only the smallest 
fishes of the group which first reaches maturity. They may spawn in 
their third year, as I stated in my former paper as the probable age of 
first-maturity, but it is possible that they may not spawn till a year later, 
at least the female fishes, when the average size is somewhat larger. 

Owing to the unusually prolonged spawning season, and the fact that 
it begins-at a time when the temperature of the water has commenced to 
rise and ends when the temperature has fallen, one might expect that 
the young gurnards from the same spawning will show much difference 
in size. 

Those which have been hatched at the commencement of the season, 
say in April or early in May, meet with a rising temperature and have the 
whole of the summer, the period most favourable for growth ; while those 
hatched in September or October meet with a rapidly falling temperature 
and the winter period, which is as a rule unfavourable to growth. 

Thus we find in September, in the tow-nets, gurnards as small as 5mm. 
to 6mm., that is to say, not very long hatched, and in October they may 
be 12mm. and 20mm. 

I have made a Table of the post-larval and young gurnards obtained 
over a series of years, both in tow-nets and small-meshed trawl nets, 
which is appended. Almost all below about 30mm. were got by tow- 
nets, and most of those larger by the trawls. The places from which the 
collections came were Aberdeen Bay (A.), the Moray Firth (M.F.), Firth 
of Forth (F.), the Clyde (C.). 


| TABLE, 


234 Part [11.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


GURNARD. 


August. September. October. November. Summary. 
cee) Te tL LE ur. | for} 1. | m. |u1.| tv. I. | 11, | UL. ren: k 3 aes 
MP. A. | C.| F, MF) A. MF. A. ©. jaF| We. Per.) O. | A. % 5 Pale E DBs 
S| 25] 24 | 20] 2 | os | BUF G5)| 10 | 29] 2995 | 26 | LZ \e\ 8 | 2/2 g 
5-6 | 10 | 1 10.) a 
78- | teh 
9-10 | 4 2 
11-12} 1 2 1 
13-14 | 2 la 
15-16 | 1 at 7 
rte 
19-20 2 | 
21-22 2 
23-24 2 
25-26 1 1 
27-28 : 2 
| 29-30 | 2 1 
31-32 He ales 3 
33-34 1 1 2 
35-36 1 
37-38 
39-40 1 
41-42 1 
43-44 
45-46 | 
47-48 | | 2 
49-50 | 
51-52 | 3 1 ale | eet 
53-54 | 3 1 
5556 bce ee ee ee a ae 
[258 | alee al ce peeniie a 625 ena 
| BOBO | cles oe RSL ccc at ese ma TON Orem ed ee 
61262" 2c | son ee ea a ee 
roam MORE (EM ee iee| Neen cr eee ogame ae) Sac TG) yi) vl 3 
Pray’ © Mm (ees ete fea hoes (oe ee ee) el | Sahih sis 
epee bce licsMh oo [er tee | eo eg eae ene 1] 2] 3 
1ETON lies cal inl eA ces eal a en erm a 1 
V1272'| scot cea) aaa eal, ta eats tel end ae a | a re eee tee 
eal 1 
5 
3 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 235 


In this Table it will be noticed, especially in the columns in which the 
various collections in each month are summed up, that these small 
gurnards were got only in certain months, viz., August, September, 
October, November, December, February, and May. _ None under 5cm. 
were got in November, and none under 45cm. in December, 
while in February the smallest was 6*7cem., and in May 7°9cm. They do 
not appear in the collections before August, and the Table shows that 
their growth at this stage is fairly rapid. 

In my former paper I gave a Table of all the small gurnards under 3 
inches which were obtained by the fine-meshed trawl-nets of the ‘“ Gar- 
land,” arranged according to months, and it may be summarised here. 
None under 3 inches (7°6cm) were caught between May and September— 
a fact also borne out by the above Table—and the greater number were 
obtained in October and September. The absence of ‘tthe small gurnards 
was not due to hauls of the net not having been made in the intervening 
months, since 27 were made in June, July, and August. The number 
caught in each month in which hauls with the fine net were ‘made, and 
the average number of gurnards under 3 inches taken per haul are given 
in the following Table :— 
| 
| Jan. | Apr. | May. June. July. Aug. Sept. Oct. | Nov. | 


| 


| 
| | 
rr Coma tesa a els a A ke We ly We a 


Number of Hauls, . | 12 | 41 | 34 | 10 | 6 | 11 | 28 | 25 | 18 
Number of Gurnards | | | | | 
under din. (7"6cm.), | 1 3 8 ~ ee 2 | 30 ee 
| | | 
i coe SE RD a es REI eee 
| | | 
Average per Haul, . | 0°08 | 0:07 | 0:23 0°0 0:0 | 0:0 | 0°09 | 1:2 1°8 | 
| | | 


The conclusion drawn from the facts was that those taken in January, 
April, and May belonged to the previous year, and that the absence of 
_gurnards under 3 inches in June, July, and August was due to the 
growth in summer taking them above that size. 

It was also concluded that the gurnards ranging about 6 inches (15cm. ) 
in length in the spring were from 18 months to 2 years old; that the 
gurnard did not reach maturity until the third year; and that there 
appeared to be annual groups differing in length by about two inches from 
each other—the measurements having been in inches and fractions of an 
inch. 

In the coilections referred to in the present paper, the early groups are 
sometimes distinctly marked off from one another, and little difficulty has 
been experienced in determining the rate of growth of this fish. | 

It may be mentioned that the difficulty in regard to the prolonged 
spawning period, and the summer or winter season for the early and late 
larvee to which reference has been made, is counteracted by a rather slow 
rate of growth on the part of this fish, and possibly by the growth 
in the winter not being retarded to the extent that is usual 
amongst other young fishes. In this respect the young gurnard 
offers a striking contrast to the young plaice or dab, which may be even 
shorter in early spring after passing through the cold winter months than 
they were at the onset of winter. In the latter case the habitat is in the 
shallow water, exposed to the changes in the air temperature and varying 
with it, whereas the gurnard is pre-eminently a migratory fish at all 
stages, and leaves the inshore waters for deeper water, where the tempera- 
ture is higher, in autumn. 


236 Part L11—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


In my previous paper | showed that an extremely close relation 
existed between the changes of the temperature of the water and the 
abundance and migration of the gurnard, none of them entering the Firth 
of Forth until the temperature reached about 40°5° F. The average 
number of gurnards taken in that Firth per haul of the net in the various 
months of the year, and the mean bottom temperature, are as follows :— 


| Jan. | Feb. | Mar. Apr. | May.|June.|July.| Aug.|Sept.| Oct. | Nov.| Dec. 


Gurnards, 02} °04) 9-29) 11-1 | 44-2 | 80-2 | 24:0 | 21°6] 18-9) 8:4} 1:1 2 
Temperature, | 42°2 | 40°6 | 40-0 | 42:2 | 45°6 | 47-6 | 50°8 | 53°5 | 53:3 | 51:4 | 48-1 | 44°8 


On the other hand, in the Moray Firth and the Firth of Clyde, where 
there is deep water, the gurnards moved out into the deeper water. Here 
are the similar details for the deep-water stations in the Moray Firth 
and for the Clyde :— 


Jan. | Feb. | Mar.| Apr. |May.|June.|July.| Aug.|Sept.| Oct. | Nov.| Dec. 


Moray Firth— 


Gurnards, . — - - — | 21:0 | 19:2 | 23°1 | 37°3 39°4)} 29°66) —- 
Temperature, | -— ~ — | 45°5 | 47:7 |50°2/52°1) - |52°6| 49:4) —- 
Clyde— 


Gurnards, ~. |13°6) 0-0 | 26°5:| 22:2 18:6) — ./ 10:6 63:6} 41:8 | 27 —) 19) (poiee 
| 


There are not complete observations in regard to the Clyde to enable 
the mean temperature to be given, but they show that in January at the 
deeper stations, where the gurnards were chiefly caught, the temperature 
is from 47-48 F., and in December it is about 6 F. higher than in the 
Firth of Forth at the same period. 

It is thus to be inferred, from what is known in regard to the relation 
between the temperature of the water and the growth of fishes, that the 
young gurnards do not cease growing in winter, but that, migrating to 
regions where the winter temperature is high, they continue to grow and 
are found to be larger in spring. The explanation is necessary to account 
for the different groups in the collections. 

In a number of Tables appended to this paper the collections of gur- 
nards have been tabulated in one-centimetre groups, but in many cases the 
limits of the groups are much better brought out by a ‘dem. arrangement 
of the measurements, and some of these will now be given. 

I have arranged in the following Table the measurements of certain 
collections from Aberdeen Bay, the Firth of Forth, and the Dornoch Firth, 
in ‘Sem. up to 34cm. The columns refer to the collections, as follows:— 


Col. I. Aberdeen Bay, Summary of July collections. 


= ia. st 2 ie September collections. 
ee MOLL, a October collections. 

ones LF Dornoch F irth, Summary of November collections. 
‘5 V. Burghead Bay, 55 September collections. 
ot, Vi Muth of Forth: [ May collections. 
ees i “5 3 July collections. 


bo 
oN) 
~T 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


Col VIII. Firth of Forth, Summary of August collections. 
IX. Summary of all July collections. 


ss >. of ie October collections. 
at a , », November collections. 
Cm. ° ie bi Me TY. Wi NAT: Vi Ville ee: X. XI. 


5 ste HN ett li = 3 : A i : 2 
3 Fil ogee eal aa aa E E p z 4 é 
5 Seen tie Di} —- i E z : 1 : 
4 = a te = Z _ at i; i a i 
5 2 Raped ia e J 3 ~ E 2 2 
5 Fea aa aa a b £ ® : E 1 2 
5 2) tot ae ae an : : & s Z 2 1 
6 eae bed t fs 2 : 3 D 
5 ee es es a : Z 3 5 
7 Bete bs icsbsis : 3 2 : 2 3 
5 2 ee ee ele 2 u Z ‘ el tal 4 
8 cS ge Rd (tee Ao EA: Z 2 : a. 20 
5 Eo Pra aes at a ss 1 3 : gu etna 
9 BS ico puree Z 4 i é a) 15 
5 He alt hen te eg 2 4 s 1 1 8 
10 Meee Sg 2 : d : 1 10 
5 HOE EI gy tiki : 2 L fio as 2 5 
(“iy 24 = 1 4 =: = 1 2 25 1 5 
| 5 es ee ae a ge * 2 6 ROE 1 [ 
psig ae a aa 3 és 6 ge ag 4 1 
5 SO et UBiat |i0sg 2 Ss iatod lin rahe eg 3 4 
| 13 ls Bebe Aocthys yd ss 1 Se lea kae (ye 12 5 
5 ee og 6 eS 2 is ae ip id 7 eas 2 
4 J a ak ae 1 1 1 9 5 7 6 
5 OCG oe ae eae a 4 4 8 On biel ls 
ee a ae ea ee 2 5 2 | mie 
5 Gl Gy 8 len k 4 2 7 ia ee | 3d 
16 ide ee eee ald A 2 4 Sruheneniow pening [lip aie 37 
5 al era ed (eee a ea 1 Bis (i 26 9, 4h, c8Ger ie PL thd 86 
17 Te Ee eas aa 3 1 9 SOM. 8c |e Foes 19 
5 iui Amines ale il A td ie is ae | thie gl tid 
18 gens sb in eal 2 6 2 9 SANTA-19 avtibetsg 
5 ene Ee a Bee ody 14591 Echt ai Serlior By fel 
19 oy OR aa ae ae Sag eas 1 5 Pio aime ail Ok 24 
“5 (od ds Sok uO ial eal Sa 3 2 3 7 or) 
20 Bressler (b.91 2 2 4 5 Sele 027 
5 Beer ate Bi bt Sat 27 1 2 3 4 dele yo? 
21 Me ee. |g 4 1 2 5 4 | 36 
5 ESRD WS BEA BOR ZO 4 1 1 3 me GkbD9 
22 Beties Brit exdew! issih 16 1 2 2 4 g | 28 
5 LS kes el ae 8 3 2 1 3 6. 1.02 
23 J ey Sache i lea ue 6 : 2 1 4 SP PIA 9 
5 Bere eeretie i tr s 16 a z 3 6 3 “bps 
24 Dethalcy Welch 9 1 1 ‘ 5 url 18 
5 0S | Se a ers fe behead ety: . 1 5 2 5 | 19 
25 je ib SoS nein all age RG F< 1 i 1 2 py 7 
ee Sp) mii) iy aeelor ects 3 1 3 2 ancl its 
26 S00 SSG Nee eee 1 2 = 1 a aT 
5 ye be 9 Aaa tin i Bev 1 i = 5 ah iad 2 
oT pees Pe Seeds gin Htyy 4 ! | 3 2 | 29 
5 BH te Hin A Wtaet bend 1 z 2 1 aif 12 
28 SR a aT ae aT 1 a 1 1 anaes g 
5 me he ee 9 2 é 1 1 Oe aay 
29 si ieear sl owhat Fy 5 : r E 2 Bi 247 
5 rai slaoFe aie Esa cd 1 i 1 2 5 | 10 
30 ‘oon ne gla 3 J 1 Sh tae 
5 2a: | a eel tal a 3 i a 2 4 9 
31 eerie exhies 20 Pedy 2 1 1 1 Agri 12 
5 Rog oe ae ae 1 2 3 2 i et 
32 Sieh or pl peng lighgll 6 2 3 a 9 4 
5 RRR) ES hg 3 1 a 2 be PROT 
33 Str ed sci) Siahetee 6 : A f Ee 8 : 
5 ee ie ck 10 é z b : 8 a 
34 ay seats ae eee 3 1 i 1 D. 3 é 


— | 


i) 


38 Part I11-—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


In many of these cases the division into groups is obvious. A few of 
them may be considered in detail, in order to make clear the rate of 
growth. 

In the Firth of Forth, in May, from 9th to 13th, a number of gurnards 
were taken, belonging to at least five annual series (pl. Xur). The 
smallest, representing ‘the fishes from the previous year’s spawning, and 
being therefore from seven months to fully a year old, and principally 
about eleven months, numbered 21. They varied in size from 79cm. to 
13-lem. (32-6% inches), a range or difference of 5:2cm.; the maximum 
number measured about 9cm. (the apex, mode or maximum ordinate, of 
the curve), the mean was about 10°5cm., and the arithmetical average 
O-lem., or 4 inches. 

The next group numbered 32, varying in size from 14cm. to 19:lem. 
(53-74 inches), and were a year older, on an average about 1 year and 11 
months. The maximum number were at 16°5 5cem., the mean was 16cm., 
and the arithmetical average 16°21lem., or 63 inches. The growth from 
the previous series was thus about 6: lem., or 22 inches, which represents 
the increment in a year. 

The third series numbered 20, the range was from 19°6cm. to 24:lem., 
(77-94 inches), the maximum number were at 2lcm., the mean was 
21‘3cm., and the arithmetical average was 21:54em., or 84 inches. These 
fishes were very nearly three years old, and the evowth indicated in a year 
from the preceding group was 5'3cm., or 2,/¢ inches. 

The fourth series numbered 14, varying in length from 25:2cm. to 
28°9em. (913-113 inches); the maximum number were at 27cm., the 
mean was 26'dem., and the average 27cm., or 103 inches. The indicated 
growth in a year amounted to 5:46cm., or 23 inches. These gurnards 
were approximately four years old. 

A fifth series consisted of 13 fish, varying from 29°7cem. to 32‘5cm. 
(11-132 inches) ; the maximum number were at 30cm., the mean was 
3lem., and the calculated arithmetical average was 30°97cm., or 12% 
inches. The growth from the previous series was about 14 inches, and 
the age of the series nearly five years, 

Towards the end of J uly another collection from the Firth of Forth was 
examined (pl. XIII.). The first series of 32 varied from 1lem. to 13:7cem. 
(42-53 inches), and was obviously incomplete by the absence of many of 
the smaller gurnards, the range of sizes amounting to only 2‘7cm. The 
maximum number were at 12'5cm., the mean was the same, and the 
average 12‘4cm., or 442 inches. These fish were probably rather over one 
year of age. 

The second group was represented by 107 gurnards, ranging in length 
from 14*3cm. to 20°2cem. (53-742 inches) ; the maximum number were at 
16‘5em., the mean was l7cm., and the average was 17:lem., or 6? inches. 
The indicated growth from the previous generation was 4-7em., which is 
too small, owing to the reason stated—the absence of the smaller fishes. 

The next group numbered 12, varying from 21cm. to 26°5cm.; the 
maximum number were at 22'5cm., the mean was 23°5cm., and the 
calculated average 23:3cm., or 9,8, inches. These fish were about three 
years of age, and the growth indicated from the previous series was 6°2em., 
or 2,', inches, which is too great. 

In the August collection (pl. XIII.), the first series included 78 gurnards 
from 10°8cm. to 15°6cem. (43-52 inches); the maximum number or mode 
was about 13cm., which was also the mean, while the computed average 
was 13:14cm., or 53 inches. These fish were about 13 or 14 months old. 

The second series numbered 33 fishes, the sizes ranging from 16:4cm. 
to 22°6cem. (64-82 inches); the maximum numbers were at 20cem., the 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 239 


mean was 19cm., and the average 19°26cm., or 73 inches. The growth 
indicated in a year, from the former series, was 6°12cm., or 2; inches. 
These fishes were over two years of age. 

In this collection there were also a few of larger size, but their number 
is not sufficient to indicate grouping. 

From Aberdeen Bay a number of collections were also obtained, some 
of which may be referred to (pl. XIII.). 

On the 5th July, the first series was represented by 109 gurnards, 
measuring from 9°7cm. to 13°8cm. (312-54 inches); the greater number 
measured about 11*5em. to 12cm., the mean was 12cm., and the computed 
average 11‘56cm., or 4,%, inches. These fish were about a year old. 

The next series included 61 gurnards from 14*2cm. to 19°9cem. (53-73 
inches), The maximum number were at 17cm., the mean size was also 
17cm., and the computed average 16°90cm., or 62 inches. The amount 
of growth indicated in a year from the preceding series was thus about 
5'34cem., or 23 inches. 

On the 30th and 31st July, the first series comprised 12 gurnards from 
11*2em. to 15:lem, (43-6 inches). The maximum number were at 14cm., 
the mean was 13cm., and the average 13:49cm., or 5,2, inches, which is 
about lem, greater than it ought to be, owing to the absence of small 
fishes. 

The next series consisted of 33 gurnards, measuring from 16‘7cem. to 
21-4em. (6,°-8,% inches), The maximum number were at 18°5cm., the 
mean was the same, and the average was 18°73cm., or 73 inches. These 
fish were over two years old, and the amount of growth indicated in a 
year from the preceding series was 5'24cm., or 2 inches, which is rather 
under the normal, owing to the absence of small fishes in the preceding 
series, 

On lst September the young gurnards are represented in the collection. 
On that day 17 were taken, measuring from 32mm. to 71mm. (14-22 
inches) ; the maximum number were at 5cm., which was also the mean, 
and the computed average was 54:lem., or 24 inches. The age of these 
fishes was probably 3 or 4 months. 

On the 20th September five of this series were got, measuring from 
5°3em. to 9°7em., but the October collection shows that the smaller fishes 
were not present. 

The second group numbered 52, varying in length from 1|1:6cm. to 
16‘7cm. (4,°,-6,% inches); the maximum was l5dcm., the mean 14cm., 
aud the average 14:57cm., or 52 inches, the probable age being about 
16 months, 

In the third series there were 37 gurnards, ranging from 17:2cm. to 
22cm. (63-82 inches) ; the maximum number were at 20°5cm., the mean 
was 19°5cm., and the average 20°02cm., or 7% inches. The growth of 
this series, about 2 years and 4 months of age, was apparently 5°45cm., 
or 24 inches in the year. 

A collection on the 13th October contained 24 gurnards of the first 
series. They varied in length from 2°lem. to 8cm. (3-34 inches) ; the 
maximum number were at 6em., and the mean was 6cm., the computed 
average being 4°65cm., or 112 inches, which is too small, owing to the 
smaller fishes being over-represented. 

The next series included 18 gurnards, from 12cm, to 16°8cem. (43-63 
inches) ; the maximum number were at 14°5cm., the mean was the same, 
and the average 14°63cm., or 52 inches. These fish were about 1 year 
and 4 months old. 
sae third series comprised only two fishes, 19°3cm. and 22-8cm. in 
_ length. 


240 Part IL1—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


On 8th October another collection contained four of the first group. 
They varied from 5°7em. to 85cm. The second group consisted of 15 
fishes, from 10°9cm. to 17-4em. (4,°,—-6% inches); the mean was 14-5cm., 
and the average 14°49cm., or 5? inches. 

A third series was represented by five fishes, from 21°3cm. to 22°7cem., 
the average being 21°72cm., or 8;% inches. The smaller fishes of the 
series were not present. 

Another collection, from the Dornoch Firth on 5th and 11th November, 
may be referred to. The first group contained 82 gurnards, from 5:9cm. 
to 11:3cem. (25;9;-4;% inches) ; the maximum number were at 8cm., the 
mean was about 8:3cm., and the average 8:-44cm., or 3,°, inches. 

There were eleven gurnards in the next group, the sizes ranging from 
12‘lem. to 18:5cm., (4#-75°, inches); the mean was 15cm., and the 
average 14°98cm., or 542 inches. The apparent growth in the year from 
the preceding generation was thus 6°54cm., or 2,% inches. 

The third series contained ten fishes, from 19°2cm. to 21'5cm. (77%,-8,% 
inches). The maximum number were at 2lcm.,.and the average was 
at 20°62cm., or 83 inches. These fishes were in the middle of their third 
year; the apparent growth from the previous series was 5:°64em., or 2; 
inches. 

The other groups were represented by a few fishes. An examination 
of the figures in the Tables appended will show that the growth in the 
Firth of Forth in 100 days, from the early part of May to the middle of. 
August, amounted for the first group, that is, fish about a year or more of 
age, to 3cm., or 1;%, inches. Precisely the same amount is indicated for 
the growth of the corresponding series in 100 days, from the beginning of 
July to the middle of October, in Aberdeen Bay. The older group, fish 
about two years or over, increased also by 3cm., in the 100 days in the 
Forth, and by 1:83cm. in 25 days and 1:29cm. in 76 days in Aberdeen 
Bay. 


SERIES I, SERIES II. 
Number 
Date and Place. at 
she ee | Increase. eee Increase. 
Cn. Cm. Cm. Cm.. 
ABERDEEN Bay. 
Sumner. 
5th July, . : p : - 11°56 - 16°90 = 
30th-3l1st July, . : , 25 (13°49) 1:93 18°73 1B.) 
20th September, . : : 76 14°57 3°01 20°02 1-29 
13th October, : ; : 100 14°63 3°07 - ~ 
Winter. 
5th July, . j : ‘ 265 16:90 227) - - 
FIRTH OF FORTH. 
Summer. 
9th-13th May, . : . = 10°1 _ 16°2 - 
23rd July, . : ‘ : 73 12°40 2:29 Lf" 0:9 
16th-21st August, ; : 100 13°14 3°03 19°26 3°06 


Winter. 


9th-13th May, . ‘ F 265 16°21 3°07 21°54 2°28 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 241 


About half the growth thus takes place during the few months in 
summer, the growth in the 100 days being almost exactly the same as in 
the remaining 265 days, which include the winter months. 

If the differences between the averages of the successive series are 
considered, as in the following Table, it will be found that between the 
first and second groups the differences vary from 5°24cem. to 9°98cm., and 
the mean of this is 6°40cm., or 24 inches. It appears, however, to be a 
trifle too high. The best collections, in which the series are most equally 
represented at the different sizes, indicate a very slightly smaller rate of 
growth. It may be said that the gurnard in the early generations grows 
about 6°Ocm., or 23-22 inches, in a year. 

In the later generations growth is slower. In some of the collections 
five or six series belonging to different years can be made out. 

In some large collections made during the spawning period, in Sinclair 
Bay, Moray Firth, the sexes were determined and separately measured, 
but the tables of measurements and the curves constructed on them did 
not show the grouping very clearly. The clue furnished by the study of 
the smaller collections above described enables the divisions between the 
earlier serizs to be indicated, and it will be seen they agree with the 
statements made as to the grouping and the rate of growth. These 
collections from the northern part of the Moray Firth show that at least 
eight or nine generations are present. 


GURNARD. 
) 
= Arithmetic |Approximate| Apparent 
Range of | & Average. Age. Growth from 
Date and Place. Group] No. Size. Pe pine ae @ ee ee Preceding 
A 1Z€. m. Series. 
Cm Gan Cm. | Inch. |Years | M’ths 
3 Cm. | Inch. 
FIRTH OF FoRTH— 
May 9-13, 1901, - : I 21 79-131) 5:2 9 10°5 | 10°11) 4 ae 15 


II. | 82 |.140-191] 5:1 16°5 | 16 16°21} 63 1 1 61 25 

III. | ZO | 19°6 2471] 4°65 21 21°3 | 21:54} &% 2 

Ven ele 25°228°97|, 357, 27 26°5 | 27:0 | 103 3 11 5°46 | 24 
4 


Velde 1 2977-825. 28 30 31 30°97 | 12} 11 3°97 
3 | 34°3 


July 23,1901, - - Bie S25 Tf Ut-Ont3 "7" 2°7 125: |} 125 | 24) 4uayy; CL 1 
; EE 107 9 14°3:202 b) 6O)]> 165) | Tein V17de | GF 2 ey ET 14] 
III. | 12 | 21°0-26°5| 5°5 29:5 | 23:5 | 23°3 | - 9,3; 3 SG Ieee 


eS OO Se Ss | ———_ |---|) | 


August 16-21,1901, -| I. | 78 | 108-356] 4:8|/ 13 | 138 |1314] 58 LP 12 
II. | 38 | 164-226] 62]/ 20 | 19 | 19°26] 7§ 2} 1-2| 612) 2% 


ABERDEEN BAY— 
July 5, 1901, - - I. | 109 9°7-13'8| 4:1 | 11°5-12] 12 11°56} 4,5 
II. 61 | 14°2-19°9| 5°7 17 17 16°90} 68 


mm Fe 


5:34. | 2} 


242 Part II] —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


GURNARD— continued. j 


} 
o 
5 eee Seite wits : 
Range of| § | yfoaal | M verage. ge. rowth from $ 
Date and Place Group| No. Size. = aie gal pom Preceding 
igs = Size: =| Cin) |= eee 
Cm. Cm Cm. | Inch.| Years |M’ths. 
; Cm. | Inch. } 
Aberdeen Bay—contd. 3 
Joly 80-31, = = sis}, bp edS hI S1e1) (Sel) Re: she sidese sie 891. a 1 


II. | 33 | 16°7-21°4| 4°7 18°5 | 185 | 18°73| 73 2 1 5°24) 25 


i | | | | | | | | | LL | 


September 1, - - 1b 17 S:2= 01) 39 5 5 54°1 21 2s 3-4 


September 20, - - 1e 5 5°3- 97 | 474 & dh ae oe E 4 
II. | 52 | 11°6-16°7| 571 15 14 14°57 | 53 1 4 ee 
III. 37 | 17°2-22°0| 4°8 20°5 | 19°5 | 20°02] 7% 2 4 5°45 | 2} 
October 13, - - : re), a24 21-80} 59 6 6 4°65 
II. | 18 | 12°0-16°8| 4°8 14:5 | 14°55 | 14°63} 53 1 4 
III. 2 | 19°3-22°8 


— = | | 2 | | | | | | | | 


October 8, - - : ib 4 5'7- 85 | 2°8 +: a se on we 4 
1. 15 10°9-17 °4 6°5 Se 14°5 | 14°49 53 1 4 
WOE 5 21°3-22°7 1°4 oa ats 21°72) 8 2 4 


DOoRNOCH FIRTH— 


November 5-11, 1901, - I. | 82 5°9-11°3 | 54 8 83 | 844) 35 


or 


HW. | 11 >} 12:1-18'5| 64 $3 15 14°98} 533 
III. } 10 | 19°2-21°5| 2°3 21 -. | 20°62] 8} 2 5°64} 2,', 


Le 3 |27°0,28°0,29°4 


o ol 
A 
oO 
~ 

; Aas ae cn aoe 
2 Gye 


an 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. _ 243 
T.— PLAICE, LOCHFYNE, 1901. 


PUSH-NET. 
(1) JULY. (2) AuGusT. 

Col. I. Big Harbour, - - Ist and 8rd | Col. I. Big Harbour,’ - - 28th, 29th 
a LL. Salen, - - - 2nd », LI. Salen, - - - 29th 
jet wetrachur,,. = - 4thand 5th | ,, III. Strachur, - - - 30th 

», LV. Inveraray, - - - 4thand 5th | ,, IV. Inveraray, - - - 80th, 31st 
» ¥. Lochgilphead, - - 2nd 

» VI. Cairndow, - - - 6th 

JULY. AUGUST. 


MMe |. 1. Pr EE LV. Val) Vi Rotale |) oir EE.) |) Til. iTV.) |Petal. 


11 - - - - - - - = - = = = 
12 5 - - - ~ 5 - = = = 
13 5 ~ - - ~ - 5 - - = = = 
14 6 1 - ~ = = 7 = rs = = = 
15 9 - - - - ~ 9 - = = = 

16 8 p 1 - - - 10 - = = = = 
17 3 3 - - - - 6 - - = = = 
18 11 3 4 - - - 18 ~ - - - = 
1 11 8 8 1 - - 28 - - = = = 
20 16 22 10 - - - 48 - - = - = 
21 23 25 10 - - - 58 - - = = = 
22 31 51 25 - ~ - | 107 - = = = : 
23 39 70 36 5 ~ - | 150 - = - = = 
24 54 80 54 4 1 - | 193 - - = < = 
25 76 «| 114 52 8 1 - | 251 ~ - = = = 
26 75 97 | 42 3 1 - | 218 - = = = 
27 86 89 69 14 - — | 258 - - = ~ - 
28 67 70 64 18 2 1 | 222 - - - - = 
29 67 62 59 42 3 1 | 234 - - - = = 
30 56 44 46 68 1 2 | 217 = - = = = 
dl 49 18 44 78 - - | 189 - - - - - 
32 39 10 27 91 5 Bul iis - ~ - _ - 
33 15 8 25 82 4) - | 185 - ~ = = = 
34 16 5 14 92 2 - | 129 1 - 2 - 3 
35 10 4 11 94 2 - | 121 - ~ 2 - 2 
36 7 6 17 86 2 2 | 120 - - a - 1 
o7 8 5 12 81 2 2 (plo 1 ~ 3 - 4 
38 7 E 10 71 3 - 92 - - 3 - 3 
39 6 1 r/ 55 1 = 70 2 - 7 = = 
40 4 2 6 49 5 - 66 3 - 4 - fi 
41 2 2 2 3l 2 1 40 i 1 5 - 13 
42 1 - 3 31 3 : 38 10 3 5 - 18 
43 2 1 1 26 2 ~ 32 4 ~ 5 - 9 
44 1 - 2 22 = - 25 10 1 4 - 15 
45 | - 1 22 4 J 29 10 2 t - 13 
46 - - i 18 5 - 24 6 3 Z - ll 
47 2 = 2 15 ~ - 19 17 3 2 - 22 
48 1 - 1 9 2 - 13 15 3 2 1 21 
49 1 2 - 8 - 1 12 16 8 1 - 25 
50 t - 1 10 1 - 13 15 4 2 - 21 
51 1 I H 8 I ~ 12 14 7 1 £ 23 
52 = - = (i! I 1 9 21 1 - - 22 
53 - - = 3 - - 3 13 3 1 - 17 
54 - - - 2 - - 2 16 3 - - 19 
55 - - - 3 - - 3 17 2 1 2 22 
56 - - - 2 - - 2 14 3 - 1 18 
57 = - - 3 - - 3 12 2 - d 18 
58 - - - 1 - - fi 9 - - 1 10 
59 - - - - ~ - - 8 1 2 4 N 
60 ~ - - - - - - 10 u 1 8 20 
61 - - - - - - ~ 8 - 1 5 14 
62 - ~ ~ - - - - 5) - - us 14 
63 - - ~ - - - - 3 - 1 12 16 
64 - - ~ - - - - 5 - - 6 Da 
65 = - - - - - - 2 ~ - 9 11 
66 - - - - - - - ze ~ - 6 8 
67 - - - = - - - k ~ I 9 ll 
68 ~ - - - ~ = - - = 2 5 7 
69 - - - - - ~ - 4 ~ 1 5 10 
70 - - - - - ~ - 1 - - 8 9 
71 - - - - - - - 2 - ~ 3 5 
72 - - - - - - - 2 1 - 7 10 
73 - - = - - - ~ - - 2 3 5 
74 - - - - - - - u - 1 2 4 


244 Part III. —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 
I.—PLAICE, LOCHFYNE, 1901—continued. 


JULY. AUGUST. 

MM. I, Th. -)) eho aE Vv. Vix | "Potal:|| °F. i, Ill. | TV. 4-Total. 
75 - - - - - - 2 - 3 o 10 
76 ~ - - - | ~ - - - - I 1 2 
77 - - - => wif - tee - - 1 - 1 3 5 
78 - - - - - ~ - 1 ~ - 1 2 
79 - - - ~ - - - 51 - 1 4 6 
80 - — - - ~ - - - - - 2 2 
81 - - - - = ~ - - -. 1 - 1 
82 ~ - - - - - - ~ - 1 2 3 
83 - - - - - - - 1 - 1 - 2 
84 - ~ - - - - ~ - - if - i 
85 = - - - ~ - ~ - - - 1 t 
86 ~ ~ - - - - - 1 - ] - 2 
87 - ~ - ~ - - - - - 1 1 2 
88 - - - - - - ~ ~ - 1 ~ 1 

§22 | 806 | 668 1163 Ds 13 (8529 292 52 79 | 133 |} 556 

Il.— PLAICE, LOCHFYNE, 1908. 
PUSH-NET. 
LocH 
INVERARAY. STRACHUR. Bic HARBOUR. GILP- 

MM. HEAD. eae: eee 

July une | July 
June 22 10-11 Jnne 24} July 13 | June 25} July 13 | June 26 

14 ~ - - - ~ - - - - 
15 ~ ~ 5 = - - - 5 - 
16 - - 9 ~ - - - 9 - 
17 1 1 12 ~ 1 - 1 15 i 
18 1 2 it - 1 - - 13 2 
19 1 2 12 1 3 3 1 17 6 
20 4 2 15 4 2 4 1 18 10 
21 5 - 6 3 2 D 2 15 8 
22 5 3 6 5 3 6 - 14 14 
23 8 4 5 6 4 6 - 17 16 
24 5 8 6 4 6 h2 - 17 24 
25 5 7 3 4 kL 19 - 9 30 
26 2 8 4 3 1 27 - 7) 38 
27 3 7 3 5 - 27 - 6 39 
28 8 4 - 5 1 30 a 10 39 
29 6 5 1 2 - 26 1 8 33 
30 8 6 - 1 - 29 - 8 36 
31 4 9 - - - 24 V 5 33 
32 i. 8 - ~ - 17 - 7 25 
33 3 8 - 1 - 17 - 3 26 
34 2 6 - - = 7 if 3 13 
30 2 3 - - - 7 - 2 10 
36 1 3 ~ 1 - 6 1 2 10 
37 i 1 = 1 - 4 4 ie 6 
38 - 1 - - - 5 - - 6 
39 1 1 - 1 - 2 - 1 4 
40 - 2 - - - ~ - - 2 
41 - - - - - 2 ~ - 2 
42 1 - - - - 1 1 2 qj 
43 - - - - - 1 } 1 1 
44 2 1 = = = 2 a 2 3 
45 - - - o - - - - - 
46 - ~ ~ i: - 1 1 1 2 
47 1 1 - 1 - - - 1 2 
48 - 1 - - ~ 2 - - 3 
49 - - ~ - - - - - - 
50 - 1 - - - - - - 1 
51 - - - - = Tl 1 = - 1 
52 = = . a Ze * NP i 4 = x 
53 - - ~ - - | - - = = 
54 - - - - | - - - - 
55 - - - - - - - - - 
56 - - - - = - - - - 
57 - - - 1 - - - ~ 1 
86 105 94 50 25 293 13 218 448 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 245 


TII.— PLAICE, LOCHFYNE, 1901. 


PUSH-NET. 
(Preceding Table arranged in '5 Centimetres.) 

(1) JULY. (2) AUGUST. 
Col. I. Big Harbour. Col. I. Big Harbour. 

II. Salen. » 1. Salen. 
:. III. Strachur. " III. Strachur. 
», LV. Inveraray. IV. Inveraray. 
 _V. Lochgilphead. © 
» WI. Cairndow. 

JuLY 1-6. AvuausT 28-31. 


CM. lig bE he DER, LV. Ve WeoWrs | Potal. | I: IL. (Il. | IV. | Total. 


1 5 = = = = - 5 - - - - = 
5 ol 5 | = - - 37 - ~ - - = 
2 92 109 57 1 ~ - 259 - - - - - 
Dt) oat 450 253 34 3 ~ 1070 - ~ - - = 
3 278 | 204 | 240 297 11 5 1035 - ~ - = = 
5 56 28 79 435 to 4 615 2 = 8 = 10 
4 20 6 28 237 14 1 306 22 4 24 _ 50 
» 6 7 103 11 1 129 47 9 14 - 70 
5 r 3 3 42 5 2 59 81 23 6 2 112 
3) - - - 13 - - 13 ip” 13 2 7 94 
6 ~ - - 1 - - 1 38 2 4 29 73 
7) ~ 2 os 3 a = =|\ i z Qi |i AD) | 67 
i ~ - = = = = - 9 1 3 28 41 
5 2 ~ be a = = 2 4 = 8 14 26 
8 = = = se a a & 2 = 3 9 14 
5 = a be f = = 2 a 4 2 8 
9 = = = 5 = = = = - 1 = 1 
822 | 806 668 /|1163 57 13 {3529 292 52 79 133 556 
| 
1903. 
JUNE 22-26. JuLY 10-18. 
CM, I II lil IV Total I II Iil Total. 
1 Me ie a ed 3 ot o = a 
5 1 26 1 i 29 1 a = 1 
2 16 46 11 4 He! 9 13 18 40 
9) 23 21 12 = 56 34 22 91 147 
3 33 it 1 3 38 382 8 126 166 | 

5 8 = a 2 10 21 3 41 | 65 
4 2 = - 1 3 4 1 10 11 
*5 3 ~ - 2 5 2 2 4 8 

5 - _ = = - 2 ~ 3 5 
3) ~ = ~ = z = 1 — il 

86 94 25 13 218 105 50 293 448 


I - - - - - _ < I * Le pe I {i = = = - - - if - - a sg, 
9 - - = I = - E G g Z - - - = _ \! ~ . = - ~ ~ - af 
i ~ - - - = - = I = I = i I = a = a I = in = =e ge 
8 = = = I = = it ! g b - - - = = I r - is ~ - - ~ hs 
ZL | - - = = = = = Zl l g - g g = = = . < = = = I = |G 
Li — - = g = = g I l 9 I g 7 I = = I = = - - - 91 
aT = = = Z * I I 21 L G 7 g I Z = = = I ~ - - - Social: 
Le = p g = Ye I OL 6 I P g g = = = - = = - - - ~ cI 
me C2) Let I - p = Z Z 0% Il 6 ZL = 3 ms = = - - - - - me Se 
= a I z 9 = T G GGack ale slat i g z I - - - - - ~ ~ - - al 
& me i iL g ? p = Z z Se STL 0t 8 p g I = ~ - - - - - - = ol bay 
Re ze | SL L 8 9 = i g Il p J! SI g id I = I = = ~ - - ~ el 
Oe OS an ofa es ~ 9 Sj 61 8 rye 8 r. = = = = = - - - - - = Pg, 
8 6h | ag ie ce Hee =: Sj g ral G )) 9 I = I = Z = = = = I = z Zl 
S cg wS | 0%. |. 58 ji] (eg 9 G 0c | 6 Il 9 = = = I = - - ~ I - - - |q¢ 
s OL | OF Sle! bb SE - 6 g SI 8 OL I l I = = I - - I = - - - rie 
x OF) & FP reel Te 1 FL = L l SI OL 8 g = - - - - - ~ - - - - - lc. 
to 8 2 | See) FI 83 = cl SI 61 [T=i-8 g = - - - - - - - ~ - - ~ OL 
Pe or tee | See PE 1 06. .| = Zl 8 9I | ¢ Le = = = I = = - - - ~ 1 - |a@ 
= te Ge lak. |: 6 11 Pe 9 It | 8 if he GT I i 2 g = = I i Z i = I 6 
Ss 9g | JI ial g id Se i 8 9 G Z g OG obs == i Z - - - 7 - - - =e g 
ice Ze: hb. Oly beg g 6l | - 8 IL | ¢ Z I zo | - - ~ ? I Z - - @ ~ - 8 
=> ce It 6 Zi OG a= 8 ZL P I g gg J - = 3 v = = = = Z g = ‘oul 
= &Z Il 6 (A Gris 8 g I ie = WO ans = = 7 I a - - - I - - f 
S 91 | ¢ 7 I 8 Z g g g Z I 68 = = = 8 ji = = = 5 p I Ge Gs 
i PL g g = IL L g il - 7 ‘: 0g 1 = = = p = = g I = I = = 9 
| We | ae | = 1g Le VAS I G Z g l = = = Or. = it I = = I = E. \ec: 

§ 06 | @ z = G) g) = Z SI ! 9 I = = = v - = - - - I - g G 
mS e¢ | I I = cp | op | - = il j G = = = = I {I I - - - - ~ ma, 
% v = =; = g g = = I = il - = Zs = - - - ~ - - - - - p 
<~ e = i bo ome bo 
TRIOL | “OTP | “eq FeO, & | 9° | “Woy feos, | ‘arey | ‘wo ee PCO], | ‘oyeyq | ‘we mA 2 i ca ae > co oo ea 
= wate ee Pe APPL, ew A P1107, | “OTe a ne [%}O], | “Ole A 3B as ee eel oS | of] oS] 28] oe 

TejoL} . ie te ; Fie es Sas ' eae | lee : i Pa] Pe] ep => Bb | RE 
FOBT ‘dy yIgz POGT ‘Ady p1gz FOG ‘dy WIZT S& | ‘PO6L ‘Worry STE S Q oe oe & 3. Salons e | WO 
eee tee Re ieee SE 8 Ce el i Ra 3 ase CN ens dasa = ee) gl ag 
"NVNNV “HIMIA HOONYOd ‘(NOLLVLG ONIHLVG OL HLQONNOG) AVE NATAYAGY 


| 
BN re es Ee ee a ee ee ee ee ee ee 
ee OE Adlaa A 


246 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


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th 
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EEE 
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ra 
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re 
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re 


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m1 IANA I I PRAWN I E 


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rei 


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Be Si cliad aia pscdion & aiden =H 
BH ANNANNNANNAN DM 


247 


248 Part 11L.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


V.—PLAICE. 
BURGHEAD BAY, 6th December 1904. 


Cm. Haul 1. Haul 5. Haul 6. Hauls 1, 5, 6. 


Fem. | Male. | Total.{ Fem. | Male. | l'otal.{ Fem. | Male. | Total.| Fem. | Male. | Total. 


Se —— ee ee ee ee eee 


bo 

oo 
OPO! 1 ee 
Omen ibe | | 
Orme boi | i lt i 
Lepet | | 
Pree! I lt il 
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Ve eee I ST SL a SE SUE TTS TP Tiers a ESI hele Te alae — Pal 


Wie ik ts LLP’ | bane Pea fle (et WE a) Je Mt) SS Ub Ge i SL | 


370 | 375 | 745 | 360 | 447 | 816 73 | 103 | 176 | 812 | 925 {1737 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 249 


VI— PLAICE. 
BurRG- 
HEAD DORNOCH FIRTH. 
Bay. 
Y ; . a Bin ; 
cn) S| Budeite 4.16 «| asfsil ae 7th December 1904. 
een hes 22.88, | Ae ee ee 
for) oO lo) 
s ie ao 3 = s a |e Ss 3 r+ {| Fem.|Male.| ? Total. 
N N re al re N 
5 a ye x a e B a, ek ES 
6 - - - - - . - i 1 
< - - ~ - - - - - 5 5 
8 - - ~ - - - - I. ri 8 
9 - - - ~ - - - = 4) 5 
10 ~ - - - - ~ - ~ - - 
11 - ~ - -~ ~ - - - ~ - 
12 - ~ ~ - - - - - 3 3 
13 - - - - - ~ ~ - 6 6 
14 - - i ] 2 1 - 1 3 4 
15 - 5 - if i 3 - - - - 
16 ~ 2 - 1 i 1 = - - - 
17 1 6 ~ - - 1 1 - ~ 1 
18 - 5 - - ~ - - 1 - 1 
19 1 2 - ~ - - 1 ~ - 1 
20 - 3 ~ 1 i! ~ 2 - - 2 
21 3 TD i! 4 5 - 1 il - 2 
22 5 28 3 4 7 3 2 gl - 13 
23 14 34 3 8 11 - 2 4 - 6 
24 22 dl 2 8 10 2 | 6 - 10 
25 25 38 6 12 18 1 3 5 - 8 
26 35 35 2 10 12 1 5 7 - 12 
27 19 28 15 20 35 ul 6 - ~ 6 
28 15 18 10 22 32 4 2 5 - 7 
29 10 25 10 20 30 8 4 3 - i. 
30 9 8 13 23 36 8 6 10 - 16 
31 16 10 8 22 30 mt 6 10 - 16 
32 12 15 5 19 24 11 5 5 - 10 
33 7 14 i! (i 8 9 1 6 - 7 
34 Zi 6 7 14 21 9 5 4 ~ 9 
35 8 8 2 6 8 8 3 3 ~ 6 
36 6 6 2 8 10 10 1 - ~ 1 
37 4 6 2 8 10 8 - 5 - 5 
38 3 2 3 3 6 9 - - - - 
39 3 1 - ~ - 2 - i - 1 
40 2 6 1 2 3 2 Ji - ~ 1 
4] - 2 2 ~ 2 1 i! ~ - 1 
42 ip 1 - = - 1 - ~ ~ - 
43 1 ~ ~ 1 1 2 - ~ -- - 
44 - 1 - - - - - - - ~ 
45 ~ ~ ~ ~ - I - - - - 
46 - ~ - 1 il - - - - - 
47 - - - - ~ - 1 ~ ~ 1 
48 - - - - - - = - = - 
49 - = - t 1 1 = - - - 
50 - - - - - ~ = - - - 
51 1 1 - - - - - - ~ ~ 
52 - - - ~ ~ - ~ - - ~ 
53 1 J ~ - ~ - - - ~ = 
54 1 ~ ~ - - ~ - - ~ - 
55 ~ - ~ - ~ ~ - - - ~ 
56 1 - - - - ~ - - - - 
233 363 99. 227 | 326 121 89 30 182 


Part 1II.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


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s i> fe NOseet tri = |= |= [82 eter tect |= ha} - | POF 1 08.) Or | = 
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NR NR Sa se |e Sc Ul a a ca Hg Pale state 19 
= |= |= J='|- f= |= y- |= 4- |- 1- [- aelies or] = 99 
Tes oe) Tee ales t= el = oh es “9 
-|- |- |- |- |- |- |- }- |- |- |- [- | a] ol +9 
-j-J-]t]- |r ]-[-4= 14+ |- |-4- Pale Wee £9 
SS ee lat Sas aS al sh = Sel fe Z9 
-f- |- }- |- |= }- 1- J- |-4- 1- ]- Seale les 19 
SS Se SoS | Sel ae ae Se ae eo = = |e Nae Bh Ss 09 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


i 
oo As AN 
| 
| 
| 
' 
| 
| 
| 


Part 1II.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


VIII—COMMON DAB, ABERDEEN BAY. : 


. Off Ythan, 13th Nov. 1900. Shrimp net, 6-9 fathoms. 

. Off Ythan, 19th Nov. 1900. Shrimp net, 2-10 fathoms. 

. Donmouth to Bathing Station, 8th April 1904. Shrimp net, 4-6 fathoms. 

. Donmouth to Bathing Station, 16th April 1904. Shrimp net, 4-6 fathoms. 

. Donmouth to Bathing Station, 26th April 1904. Shrimp net, 4-6 fathoms. 

(. Totals of JIT.-V. 

. Donmouth to Bathing Station, 4th May 1904. Shrimp net, 3-7 fathoms. 

- Donmouth to Bathing Station, 12th, 18th May 1904. Shrimp net, 3-7 fathoms. 
. Donmouth to Bathing Station, lst Sept. 1904. Shrimp net, 4-9 fathoms. 

. Off Quarries, 11th Feb. 1905. Small-meshed net, 8-12 fathoms. 

. Donmouth to Black Dog, 27th March 1905. Small-meshed net, 5-10 fathoms. 
. Donmouth to Black Dog, 30th Jan. 1906. Small-meshed trawl, 8 fathoms. 


HH. | 49 pee ee a Ko Ee ae 


= & = = es Le = 1 a = = 
=) aa 5 3 | 26 2 = Wea x = 1 
<A lic etc cella a 3 2 | 43 1 4 ae 
6 |104 | 55 | 54 | 213 | 10 So 5 4 7 | 99 
Eee ee ee eee? ee Ey ee eb Oe ee 5 | 11 | 105 
2 | 22 | 66 |. 36! | 124 9 | 25 | 51 4 | 24 | 46 
96 «| 43-obibde lI <4. G8 ie oe ee ee 1-} 28 -poae 
23 & [P17 1 | 22 = 4 6 eae 8 
1 ee eet Se dona = 1 1 — ag 

6 1 4 2 5 a Z ¥ i. 1 
1 = 1 1 2 z zs 2 s 5 = 
E $ 1 2 3 = . - A 2 I. 
1 = 2 7 9 = = = E = “ 
E I a 1 1 a z a a = 2 
eae * as = = " = 1 = = fs 
Ld A =! = a =A ae 2 be = m 
1 = = ag We se = = 2 = = - 
x Bs = i = = = 8 1 = 2 
2 e =a 1 1 = > 9 = = . 
= Le a 2 2 Es a 7 = & = 
= . % 3 3 = = 7 = ~ = 
1 = iM 8 8 2 = 3 = = = 
" 1 | ydOr | wt = i 5 = = ee 
ss : = 6 6 bs S 4 s = E 
= et 3 5 5 = 5 z e r: 
= 2 = 6 6 = fe 2 ti 2 ‘ 
= z 1 3 4 ts % 4 = e + 
é a a 2 2 e - 1 - 2 2 
1 z 2 3 3 2 = = = 3 x 
a a s 1 1 2 e 2 1 = = 
is, a ad Z i e % 1 E vi z 
= ss - af - iS = 1 = = = 
a r. 2 1 1 z = 3 =. = = 


ee | | ef | | | 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 253 


IX.—COMMON DABS. 
DORNOCH FIRTH—MORAY FIRTH. 


Col. I. 9th February 1905—63-10 fathoms. Col. V. 7th December 1904, 
» II, 31st March 1904. » WIL. 27th December 1903. 
», IIL. 8th June 1903—10-11 fathoms. 5, WII, 28th December 1903. 


», LY. 22nd October 1903—8-13 fathoms. 


VI. VII. 


Female.| Male. | Total. | Female.| Male. Total. 


| - S| |) | | YE | | tT | FS 


2 x 3 2. = ei oe =: 2 y = a 
a) - = - - 4 - - - - - i) 

5) 14 = = = 30 = ~ ~ - - 3 
5 34 = = - 86 - = = ~ = = 

4 66 a = = 60 = = - - - 2 
"5 83 - - - WW, = - - - - i 

5 72 1 - - 8 - - = - - - 
5 48 1 - = 7 = 3 = = = = 

6 33 1 - ~ 3 - - - 1 1 2 
at) 17 = = = 2 - - - 2 3 5 

7 8 ~ 1 1 - - - ~ 3 2 5 
5 2 - 1) - = ~ - - 2 - 2 

8 2 ~ 2 - - ~ - - 1 1 2 
5 2 1 - 3 - - - - 3 1 4 

9 4 = = 6 1 - 1 I. 4 7 11 
5 6 - 2 75 = 7 3 10 15 39 54 
10 17 = - 98 2 9 9 18 43 59 102 
5 23 ye 1 9 ie Bo 6 Ly iLL 28 71 50 121 
11 22 2 i! 85 9 12 14 26 49 38 87 
5 15 2 - 69 6 16 6 22 ol 25 56 
12 4 1 - 4] 3 7 3 10 aly, 16 30 
5 3 - - 24 2 6 4 10 11 9 20 
13 8 2 1 8 2 5 3 8 6 9 15 
5 10 iL 2 14 iE 3 5 8 6 9 15 
14 5 3 - 9 3 3 5 8 5 Lt 16 
5 5 5 1) 14 2 7 6 13 7 8 15 
15 7 - 1 11 1 1 4 5 3 5 8 
, 5 - 3 u 14 E 5 3 8 10 9 19 
16 4 3 il 3 - 5 1 6 5 3 8 
45) il 5) - 9 - 4 - 4 2 2 4 
17 i 3 - 6 = 3 - 5) 6 4 10 
D 1 5 i 5 - 1 = 1 2 1 BS) 
18 - 3 - 3 - 1 - 1 1 i! 2 
"5 - it - 12 - 1 - 1 1 LE 2 
19 - 2 - 3 - - ~ - 2 ~ 2 
D - 1 - 3 - - - = 1 - 1 
20 - 3 - 5 - 1 ~ i ~ il i 
21 - - - 4 - - ~ - it - 1 
22 = - 3 - - - - - - - 
23 - 1 - i - - - ~ 1 - i 
24 - = - 3 - - - - - - - 
25 - - - 4 ~ - - 2 - - - 
26 - = - 2 - - - i - - - 
27 = - - 1 - ~ - I - - - 
28 - = - 1 ~ ~ - 3 = - - 
29 - - - ~ - - - ~ - - - 
30 - = - 1 - ~ - 1 - ~ - 
31 - = ~ i - - - . - - ~ 


254. Part LII.--Twenty-fourth Annual Report 
X.—COMMON DAB. 


WitcH GROUND, Moray Fiera. BURGHEAD BAY. 
Col. I. 14th November 1908, Col, I. 20th October 1903. 
,, Ll. 28th December 1903. », Ll. 6th December 1904. 
» III. 28rd January 1904. 
SMITH BANK. 
Col. I. Ist April 1904. OFF FINDHORN. 
», Il. 23rd October 1908. Col. I. 1st April 1904. 
», Ill. 12th December 1904. 
5, LV. 27th December 1908. 
Burcueap | OFF 
WitcH GROUND (off Cromarty). SMITH BANK. Bay FIND- 
; HORN 
Cm. III. IV. 
I il I TT IT; I II I 
Fem. | Male. | Total. Fem. | Male. | Total. 
2 = : = rm nt be * - pa = = - rf a 
6 ~ - - - - - 1 - ~ ~ 10 - - - 
g) = a 2 = = z 7 e = Soil gO . es 
“5 ~ - - - = ~ = - - ~ 8 - - - 
4 - = = - = = - - - - 5 - - - 
58 - - - - - = - _ ~ - 3 - - - 
5 - = - = - = = _ - - 2 - - - 
‘5 - - - = = - - - - - 5 - - - 
6 - = = _ = = - - - ~ 3 - - - 
5 a a wt a 2 he # a x E) = = £ ns 
7 - ~ - - - = = - - - 3 - ~ ~ 
5 : a us 2 S £ si &: a bs £ = 2 ¥ 
8 > a i = 2 + - be BS Es a “a a = 
Fy - = - - = - 1 2 il 1 - - - 
9 - 1 - ~ - _ 2 2 3 2 5 1 - - 
5 | 1 9 Es z # le 48 8 flea3 20 Be 4 + - 
10 1 8 - 1 1 2 25 28 22 19 4] 12 - ~ 
“5 4 18 3 2 5 i 47 85 31 42 73 12 - = 
11 5 4 3 8 ll 5 66 3 111 48 55 | 108 8 - - 
¥) if J 4 ik 11 10 82 | 124 75 44 | 119 14 ~ 1 
12 12 1 5 12 7. 8 54 99 59 37 96 10 - 2 
‘D4 22 9 10 19 29 11 81 91 56 36 92 26 - - 
13 it 3 al 34 45 3 68 87 35 34 69 16 - - 
ol W5 1 21 90 | 111 5 17 | 123 4] 26 67 24 - 2 
14 6 1 23 | 116 | 1389 7 70 4) 109 36 20 56 20 - | 
“5 9 6 41 184 | 175 8 89 | 118 42 22 64 18 6 5 
15 5 2 44 | 115 | 159 10 63 ; 114 34 14 48 15 q 2 
us 8 6 43 | 115 | 158 i) 66 92 32 9 41 27 - = 
16 7 5 24 85.) | 1109 4 30 83 26 8 34 16 1 2 
B 4 6 37 7 115 4 36 56 25 4 29 21 3 1 
17 5 5 24 62 86 2 29 34 18 2 20 14 6 4 
5 5 7 23 61 84 3 22 45 14 - 14 15 8 7 
18 1 5 19 33 52 - 16 25 7 - 7 7 2 1 
“5 2 8 24 18 42 3 9 22 6 1 a 16 6 6 
19 5 2 20 21 4] 1 5 14 8 - 8 4 6 4 
“5 2 5 8 14 22 1 6 14 5 1 6 4 é 4 
20 4 5 20 i 31 - - 13 3 2 5 16 14 6 
21 2 6 11 7 18 1 - 15 2 1 3 15 14 2 
22 1 5 11 2 13 i ~ a 2 1 3 2 10 4 
23 - 3 4 i 5) - - Pn 2 - 2 1 9 - 
24 - 3 7 2 9 - - 3 il - 1 - 6 - 
25 - 2 1 - 1 - - u 1 - 1 i 14 - 
26 - 2 3 - 3 = ~ 1 - 1 1 - 7 - 
27 - 2 1 1 z - - 1 - - - - 9 = 
28 - = - = = = = 1 - - - - g - 
29 - il 1 - 1 - ~ 2 - - - - 14 - 
30 ~ = = = = = = = = = ~ - 13 - 
31 - - 1 - 1 - - - - - - - 8 - 
32 = - 11 ~ 1 - - - - - ~ - 15 - 
33 - = = = = d = = = - = - 5 - 
34 - - - = = = “= = = = = - 3 - 
35 = - - = a= = = * ES a < es ) wo 
36 - _ = 7 = = iS gr a = = af 4 = 
37 = = = a es = - = = = = = 1 - 
38 - _ = = = = s a = & = eS 1 = 
39 - = = = ke te s be a a = es 1 = 
40 - = = = = = = zs = ws = a 1 e 
45 - - a = = ef mS y re e = 1 = 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 255 


XI.—FLOUNDER. 


Col. I, Lochfyne, Sth July 1901. Push-net. ® 

re re. Ks 10th Sept. 1900. * 

Sain shks oe 27th March 1901. 5 

4 By. 36 16th April 1901. - 

- ve - 23rd June 1903. Me 

a VF. : 13th July 1903. FP 

aa DES as dlst Aug. 1901. 5 

», VIII. Dornoch Firth, 25th May 1901. 

9 TX, Annan, 23rd April 1900. Shrimp- -net. 
if x 24th May 1900. - 

- XI. Dornoch Firth, 30th Mar a 1904. Otter-trawl. 


XI, 
Cm. | I. a ee TV. Ve VES EV EE ee X. 


Fem. | Male. | Total. 


_ 


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Part III.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


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of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 257 


XIII.--LEMON DAB. 


I. Moray Firth and Aberdeen Bay, 8th-13th October 1900. 
is 81st October-9th November 1900, 


III. Totals of 1: and II, 
IV. Near Fair Isle, October 1900. 


V. Aberdeen Bay, 8th October 1900. 
VI. Os 31st October and Ist November 1900, 


Vil. 5 23rd October 1900. 
VI. ae November 1900. 


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1S eaanLSS ut et TS feist Vc ev Smead |e |g 8] i ray —— Sea 

Noe fen HON) at aed eg eae roy rat Ui hae) foye cia Let Ue St be tg [et as ar ais Ada st 5 fC. bc VT Hg Kal P-GP Fa Ten ac! a Im Aa fet foe 
)eolhiepihie nl ales): aa) les te i vl ate aetna A ST ie ete ily Tl Sit) Soe (eee ie tiem 


UE TNT aac MEST Yet (Peel FS PR) ee YP 


Ne aU MTS ALE Das oi) eo) SE-arT 2 b a Fa 


— 
=) 
—o 


eS) 
ie 
ie 6) 


Part IT1.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


XIIL—LEMON DAB—continued. 


————— | | SSS. | | | | | | | | | | | SS SS 


Vv VI VII VIII 
Cm. I IT I Me) ee (a Le te ee 
39 15 E 9 es) = tlites =e = al eae 
5 7 1 8 repre mre, a nea eS FSS a OR IES 
40 10 se hema 4 mt me hae Sf heal Ba Nin 
5 5 1 6 By hea a ee ea) en | 
41 1 ~ 1 Boil ce] peel] ca ae Ere eee pl eae 
5 3 * 3 rae eee Wa ae Coan Sam cole ek oe Re ls ea eee Were ta 
42 6 = 6 Tadeo hee ib. b= hp plea ea oe) eet 
5 5 1 6 AP RSA LTE ET spel Ea eee 
43 1 1 2 Bo fssielo|nn lh nlc nl eas Nae hem eee are een 
5 = % a fol ke} BP EB Se eo Se ae 
44 = x x3 Oa Ef. Pea) sl a ee ae 2 
5 1 = 1 ea oe ae ee ee Oe ee ee 
45 = i zs Os) a Ba Bah: Bed) a ee ere) na ee ee 
“5 m es » ee Ce eB ee ee ee 
46 : . * We coal babs bulla Gl» bald aN Beeeia) te aie 
5 x = De eres ee ee Ce ee Mee eos eT aE Py 
47 y : a ea a! Ee eae a eee 29 Sa 
5 “ ee = ae es eee ee ee ee ee ee ee Re 
12 | 227 620 182 9 | 8-424 .14-+ 64 20-4, 18.1.49) 20 ut aa aa 7 
XIV.—LEMON DAB. 
Col IX. Aberdeen Bay, 6th June 190]. | Col. XVII. Firth of Forth, I[]., 23rd July 190]. 
a X. tw 30th July 1901. ot VLE. = V., 24th July 1901. 
ee ah vi 31st July 1901. Feet eae, & V., August 1901. 
o, epX It ¥ 21st August 1901. Loe es XX. Smith Bank, Moray Firth, 23rd Oct. 1901. 
Lee nut: « 10th September 1901. | 7, XXI. = ; 8th Nov. 1901. 
pe exe ‘ 28th November 1901. pSeieericme. ©: R: 27th Dec. 1901. 
Bees, OWE 17th Deeember 1901. | 5, SALI, Dornoch Firth; .~ ,, 22nd. Oct. 1903. 
” XVI. Firth of Forth, III., May 1901. | 
| | XVI is m 
_ — _ _ 
Cm bel fs Steel Re a 3 = — bd rs — = =_ 
epee Rates Slate lole |Z] 1 eR) e) Rae ie 
| MEP Pee Pola ee | 
| | 
9 a ss » eee - : a | OW. SSF bes e oo ee = = a 
7) = = zee ey Ot fee EE = EE ze me &, ss ae ae = we a5 tA 
WO | pcp ee be A Ee De a el ag a 
en ee) ee ee ee een er ae ene en ee oe ee he UU 
s 6 ae i ed is a eta Ce A Nace ee Care ee MR: Pe Seer ee 
6B | tc be tS pray h acy BOS oP Side he Dee) ied) Ee 
- 12 oe PST oy ee) Pg PS ae) 2 ee 
Bo) sya | a SP Sa ee eh. ht ae ae 
13 St dd a a EM eS ae ea he SI Se 
6S |e pe Ph bbw) eS pe ya Sead Oa) =) ee 
1 feta al ee So foe = a 
5 | tp et ibsep al yea) erp ey Tipe Sa aes eS) a oT ie 
15 Sih: Soap Meats: tty? yeti Wie Be Sper ie) PIES hoe) te hGpa Sar ad | 1 i | 4d Se 
s) eR Hai dia] el) See doe ea See 
16 oe eee Coa es ee ee ey ee ee a eee ee ebee rh Pee ok 
5) el ee" | Peete ee Pat ee aicke Boeke) ck (@paheoS ef} caps 2a peas 
17 oe ree ae ed ee ee ees el ee a eet 
6 | ed ein P 4ir a] Fee bag ee 2 ae Sak St ee 
18 ate 6 | ay as |i «ine ic fea a hae a | 9 oe} 
i i i ae | Pa] epi Pad el) =) Med 1g) =) a Lee ees 
19 44 2 )s tT dae eo cape yet 27 Be eS aan 
5434 & | 4 | - } ep so 2S PPS a) Glo Gt =F) eo oe ae 


259 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


XIV.—LEMON DAB—continued. 


ml DU DONE | Tie ime Cem es etn Cl eyo atte easel tem ie em iemevtmtee Ve tes tit, Meds Steril I NN Sta We Mh 8 PPh ee oe ee 
i 


TIX | Tote teat ete ol lo MAN ieee) foes tb hl tase Set et ee ror 


} 


BIEXOXe | CY Watton Se L Yor Wr Lec Vet fel Vat lol Ps na Iie Se Yel lc Ine ma ae lar-al Jel fod acme am rw ear enue (el laa | cz sal Seat al a] ingal adsSeae al esa Seen al lee ia ge cad toe ema mace eect 
I 


DOK | FP RPI Tf TT OEP Sa Verda Jl Le eet ed eal lene matdoan ts (] Recast le Ray est fe ely Yn ie Jest (eR We] Clie ee! ea fel (ee Veo ome It Ve) Ua Ne = ie 


soa 


COMINGS COMO lel eet le et ert etl late totes Wat Tt 20" Pate ee te Pe Pea er Pe ech ie ie De te 


SULLA | [eee nie I eee enn eee lords ol al Weaiseteel et Vet Tein i Te ST ESS eae eT 


| 
AMUSE | Sh OAe VEie Wae E  E E e e  eae ae ea  e: 


} 
(IAN Ao CoremNNe  Hrerrrrrrreter rr errr ert Le 


{ 
SS ee EE 


"1840, | 
ae 


i 
ee eee ee ee ee ee 
J 


yA 


ee re a SS SR RE SOA EY YR ECE SS RSE a Yn RT Ea TS SE 
“AX | (ak es ee [Se Reale sch ieb shail Velie ie Me ier tg ties ial t Teil Ib JAMS Wao). |= 
} 
| 
ATX th (1h eCorent Metett sat Capen) at diet teh meh terete Val clmh ervey ot les 
i 
IITx | fee fot ed ee lel ree ae ea etentteeie clap i client al aeta tte dent lyemtes loale V Mombe welt Wh dt nt elle ocd | S 
{ 
\ co 
IX ROOOAANAAANDSADOMONA OIA reomaAi iets eet t tiers ryt |e 
i] 1 
1 
je | a ee ai es ce eit ee ree Nah ed tC | Vo 
| 
| 
x | AL ELL TENE LED LOAN AOA LAMAN NNeD Sree IA OVI | reel |g 
| 


: | 
XI | Rae aT OCA Le led ch ol Shed Ae oh Giga matt es Da Pee bell oh Rist font ahal tf dl Dad ees 
I ' 


260 Part L11.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


XV.—LEMON DAB. 


Col. XXIV. Dornoch Firth, Moray Firth, 11th November 1901. 
XXV. Off Lybster, Bind —~;; 1903 
R! XXVI. Firth of Clyde, 5th September 1899. 

5 SL “4 4th October 1899. 
5 VEE, 


29 5t. ? ”? 


XXXVI. XXVIIT. 


Fem. |Male. ? | Total. 


Fem. | Male. ? Total. 


29 


Iho Hes mfr eke ba(defiaoid e enotf lil geal olf nd gfe 


Nal F PS Seth ae | 


LP SBET eT ass Mal ether Tae! aS RIES] MR Pas er ae TE coal ea Fic Pf] ta Ra Fe Vm] al fl Po eg Fat Ta] GE 


5 - = 5 x “ = 1 x a - 
9 s 4 a Ee pe eS 2 E z = = 
5 = a . = z = 2 S: = - = 
10 a = ‘a = s se z b ES zs 
5 & 3 3 is as “= a £ E 4 = 
11 - = - - 1 1 - - = = - 
5 = - = ~ 1 1 - - = : - 
12 = - 1 2 1 2 2 : . = S 
5 = - 1 1 ‘ 2 - - 1 2 1 
13 = 2 2 1 5 - - 3 = 3 
5 - _ 6 3 7 as 2 : 1 1 2 
14 = - 2 2 = ad - 2 4 = 6 
5 i - i 1 1 3 - 2 = 1 3 
15 - - 5 = : 5 - - 2 a 2 
5 1 - 2 1 1 4 - - 1 2 1 
16 1 = 6 3 ~ 9 - 1 4 1 6 
5 2 = 5 2 - 7 - 2 = 1 3 
17 - - 7 = - if ~ 1 . a ] 
5 - 1 1 = 2 - 2 1 = 3 
18 1 ~ 2 = = 2 ~ 3 Z = 3 
5 ~ - = 1 2 1 - 3 1 = 4 
19 ~ - - = - ~ = 4 - 4 
5 ns 4 5 = 2 a z f é 4 % 
20 1 : y) = 1 3 - - 1 Y 1 
5 Fs q ; ‘ = : e E es a d 
21 . - 2 1 - 3 - 1 = 2 1 
“5 Es - 4 _ oe a = - - = = 
22 - = 5 . = ss = - = = - 
5 ~ - - 1 1 - - ~ - - 
23 -- - = 1 1 ~ . - - 
5 ~ = : . e - 1 zs 1 
24 ~ - = . = : 1 1 
5 ~ | = E = - 1 = 1 
25 - = = - - = - 
5 - 1 Z - = 1 1 
26 2 2 e i 3 2 
5 1 . . is : e 
27 - = = - - = 
5) = a ~~ = 3 = 
28 - : “ ~ - - - 

5 = il = = Ss as = 

5 1 = = E a . 
30 : is g 3 a = 

5 2 LJ s 2 = = 
31 : 2 = = 2 ~ 

5) = is — = ets = 
32 ~ 1 ~ ~ ~ ~ = 

5 2 a, a a £ uy = 
33 2 é s e i E 3 eZ 

5 ~— = pad as pet = oes = 
34 2 : es is a E is & 

5 = ae =% =f a = Sey » — 
35 ~ 2 : E ~ ~ = - - 

5) = = Zk = i = = 
36 = :. x = -- 2 - - 

79) pe fx = = =e aS = = J 
37 - ~ - ~ - - - ~ = 

75) = ed “a & ES a i 7 
38 = 1 2 = = = = - - 

9) _ 1 * = = ss — 


6IL | 2g gig | 29 } I1@ ) $8 eqt | $22 | 869 ) ZOE ) FS | ZOT GOL a ie 7 ee ee go | 
N oe ee | a ee eS] Ss Ss a |e | ee a eee | | Ooeal eeeone [hs Sa ae | ee eat Ag es ee NS (a ee So eee ros Fe 
ee aa ad bas a a ii cf l I Fi er <i =" ed - — — | c 
- - - - - 5 : ‘ I T = 2 - - - - - - ie: 
I 7 I : g = - : - . I r x : " J |g 
: : - . i : I = = - - 2 : z i 7 | oe 
7 oe a = 7 inal is ae {i il > oad = _- — _ a _ = ¢ 
I vr = je lt r | ad l I 7A 73 = - - _ = ~ = | PZ. 
I ; I I : I I i - - i E : : ‘ L Sr lh mp 
t F 7 t = = - es G G = rm 2 if : I 2 : - | G%, 
a f 3 = G Z ¢ g G G F z I G = z : errinrs ¢ 
a7 eo = P G - = G G G = = I - = = I P= I | 7, 
G = ‘ z ‘ L i G F = ~ Z I E I E ae de 
L : : L nt Ne z z 6 6 " - r z a Z a = | 
¥ ; - v G a x ¢ g ¢ = * c 7 - t I _ I | ¢. 
I ; = IL i . ; b G q . ¢ I i I - é i 0z 
at ig 5 Al 6 f i b 9 9 ; : q al I II 9 9 ¢ 
Gé i U 1G el ! I d L z i IL OL I 6 p be epee Wes eee 
Gf j L Ie or é é OF oT oT i : 6 II I OL P ee ae ¢. 
eS ae : G 1 al ; z a 8 8 : I OL z 8 p i g 81 
s | 68 E = He aE i E nN 8 8 5 ; 1Z PI 6 ¢ z I [ q. 
=~ SF : ¢ oF G6 Z 6 06 L : ‘i = ZL 06 OL OL g i z AI 
S |. 8 ‘ L 6F EL = = a ot 91 = ‘ 91 9% gT I ¢ ea AE ¢. 
A alee - a W eI ‘ U a 8 8 : : PL a I 8 8 a Nas gL 
. 09 : Be 88 Ca g a1 PL PL = - 0Z 0g GZ G G Guar 6. 
Syst E OF as 61 Z 9 g1 8 8 2 z 1Z 8% GT el II Lene GT 
ae 99 ; ch IZ al : g II gI LL I : 0g ge 01 & G ; I c. 
= gl : ag &% AL = L OL =) L ¢ I ihe ez 9 IT 7 - z ‘1 
Sia we : 99 aT eI a t 9 8 g g . él 9% OL 91 G I I ¢. 
mx 19 i LG Ol 8 ; L l ol q g OL PL OL P 8 P b 1 
eg ‘ GF 8 Zl 5 9 9 61 q g I 8 L i g Ti b l ¢. 
or ee : at a ST - L I qT 9% z . ¢ I b ¢. 
Ry GL 7 Gg OV && E- Ww GG TIL I = i F T e e 
© 69 i OF 91 OP | = 6G HL 601 = = - = es 4 OL 
~ 0g - 91 PL 8h z Gg g1 68 - 1 1 : 2 3 ‘. 
Se IL x 8 g 1 “x GL if GE g o I =~ Ee = 6 
ey a i : ‘ See eee z _ L € I z = = 2 2 
Z 7 bs 2 m F z p - I I z 5 ; ¢. 
: : = 2 g | g : ns : i 2 2 L i J ! 
g ¢ : : eran aaa i : - a = 2 2 E ri Z 
OT OT 5 2 0g 0g : i I 3 z 2 2 y é 9 
G% a : : Le Le 4 ; 9 z F 3 & E i c. 
8 8 = = 9 9 : z I : : z a 2 3 
g G = a I I = a i = = = 


“AON YIF1 ; 
‘Kqavut0d) ‘ZO6T API UIST 


FOGLE teumeson. PAs ‘ZO6T Arenuee YC 
suoYyzey OG ‘FO6L dy 4ST 

‘avay ‘NHOHGNIY ddO 

CUIVNNIY dt0 ‘ANNOU) HOLIM 


“SO5T LOQUUODEq 448z 
‘SULOYPET OF 
‘avaHoung A40 ‘ANNOUX HOLIM 


g 
2 be = G. 
= = = F 
‘TROL é ‘OTe | eTeUeg | 1TeIOL é PIE | ere ueg ‘OTP | O[VUle “SO6T ‘TPI07, | “OTP |Oleulogy | “TejJoL, | “ee | eeued 
‘aNnnouy ‘NHaaUAdY ado “AIOH DOG 


a 
3. 


262 Part III.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


XVII.—TURBOT. 


Col. I, Aberdeen Bay, 18th September 1901. Push-net on beach. 
a II, Annan, 27th November 1900. Shrimp-net. 
? Ill. .. 23rd April 1904. Shrimp-net. 
»» IV. Montrose, May 1891. Stake-net. 
” V. ”? June ,, ” 
’ . ” July ,, y 
, WII. Aberdeen Bay, October 1901. Small-meshed net. 
», WIII. Burghead Bay, Moray Firth, 9th, 10th November 1903. 
eee eed a a 26th December 1903. 
_ X. A m a 21st, 29th November 1904. 
oe init aes se A. ‘6 6th, 12th December 1904. 
», AIT. Totals of X. and XI. 
», XIII. Burghead Bay, Moray Firth, 6th, 7th February 1905, 


Cm. 1s i) ey NG Ve By ka, ap NCEE A) VOL een eae aa XI.” |) XU. eee 


0 | ee | | Ss | Ss | 


Se ee 
Tn PF OW NY HO OD DO ND OP 
oS) >) SS oo 
(hoe th ath ath 
1 tet AE Pa eee ee ah tet eal (cate te at 
Os oeiecieate ate 


[JOSS issn (aie Ccae WlesYQant Gn | UE Her Si) Ca iT) UY Ue 3] PP ne ee (an Reed Jot Ac Ce Lie aldeet lie SU Ate ee ie AL 


"1 = = = = Ke: 5 be 

= 3 = = = = == * 

= 3 j eS F os 7 a 

2 7 1 S = - = = 

4, 5 1 zs = 2 es 2 

a 2 1 cs Bs s - RS, 

a 1 es 2 a = es 2 

é 3 2 Mg 2 2 ‘ Z 

= ) a = = » = J 

BN 7 e A - ES s = = 

5 Ba i a vi ae a ey a af 
16 a 1 2 e a : “ = = 
5 = = 3 = e 2 = E. = 
17 a 3 = x . A = x 
5 x B: as th ¥ a 7: A = 
18 z - 3 * 2 ie ee é = 
5 i = i ~ ~ “i aM rae x 
19 2 2 : 5 = = 7 = = 
5 e Z 1 . e » E 2 ~ 
20 a 2 2 = is st 2 a = 
5 “ i = = ou at ik = a 
21 = = = . e: = = o ane 
5 fs cS te = es ¥ 74 = ms = 
22 » : = 2 ti 2 e ‘- a 
5 is e a ed bis te E¢ 3 ee se 
23 A 1 z Srl 7 = a e = 
5 = 1 vA - @ s 2 1 1 :: 
24 iu sek Bl ie a a : = = E e 
5 a © as s “ =: s = as pa 
25 2 é = = = es = a 
5 = 1 2 = :. é: . . “ = 
26 e é : a : ni e : S 
5 he ne 5. ba a = a an a x Le 
Qi 3 d = EZ Z s s 2 - = -- 
5 : = z = 2 = e = 2 = th 
28 = 1 + e 1 & = : Z = 
5 Sod ee = . 1 z = - 2 - E 
29 = = S z: 2 = a “ =e PA = 
. =z ats = = 2 = — eS = ae = 
30 = = 2 . 9 . S = 2 5 2 
29) — os = say = ae Es <b. = = —_ 
31 a = 2 . 1 “ = a _ = = 
+5 - = fe = “ = = = es ey i * 


i a a = 


of the Fishery Bourd for Scotland. 263 


XVII.—TURBOT—continued. 


—_———S=}]|§ | | | | | 


Tee Naame fo 3 onal Yeh || 


oa ree Fs eae Macs he = Tt SS Sa feel fa food Jig 


SU Me eames er aed teehee ord et 
NOM eS | MoOpc$§eH! | ee! I 


[es Pastels] 


facie! esc] Fakta Tham emt Ue lemme! Gr lV Vii Nag te LL ni anf YY Pc 1mm rel TG Ft Hr YE cl FR 


[fav ary ieee Os (art Cae Cae VPC eur mer Qreec ece. [LASHES rede Co ante Sy ois Te 


be dito eNO e Raia lee eh oN ICSE ee 


Veh ETE ATIS TAS eT Sit Tae ts ei Pam Ute tT THs SPH Te ieee SST Stier cates the tT 


|e (eset Ge! fais Pigs Feat Viet Tis Vinee <n aa coe fie VF De fig Lem Tet St NSDL ASOT ——" ut nf st mL ft Bl tom elfen a! 


{Tet Ta ORR TF Yam Vt |S Fa Ce Pe ee ee eee 


[ea] htt lion 


eae 


| 
a NaS et eee ia 


Oe et oor Tie eure airy ee Glern Mev ste Tne te ates tae Mr Pe Afi Jtcas sae co lla len TWeod tte! Ome tS gl est Amar iaea De wil eso th 3 {tha il 


‘ 
ty 


CPATT ei PeT DoT eae foe ny Teed oie eee Veet > nV ot Le Tet Tae aint TU Koage| Lae NSS er 
ieee Meteo set eile al be Ae mics niente Ae Uy AL Ws tt ad al tee Wiis Ui a et Ll eee Ue Ul 


Flees Pa Yee J YW SV Ve =— a el fee ae Jue ol Vet tt il ao Te LaDy Yot==T——W= o] JE O = O P  P i STSLIR SeWES SCTR S — T] TTSU—T a 


or 
— 
"Sot lene] fecal Greet ee Vessel Pel erate Vet eee Lie! er Fac cs lesa Tae Pac! Drm Fe 1 Vn Perse it et es asm lca el omc ew Tr gl Emr i el oe Vet Me ome a Vast Wl i ae, JUTE Rta eH SDT ee (PSG rse Toth 


Per Tame Wer Vn Per} oo hes ae (tT erst es Tunes tape en fer ito et cv Peeat aM Pact itaT act uns swt este "NST Rae Gea SO PeT Rag Be So — gl WBS FT = eh 


rn Peer Pr PR [eo ea [Peed Referee [Pel —— fom eo) (cme ae (BM Pe | eo] GO Somer cd alte eels ow Nant il 


tera 


MIUINUIAAAROMH 
WH ODM 

| ee ee eae te 
Rain ee ieee eens 
i 
eae eee e Oecer, 
Ean tsetse 
Jerre ee 
' 
ee eee ee 
irene nen crete 


64 


TL: | O14 FO.) TV. 1 Ve | Vi. | VEL Va xX. OX, a | ee 


ee a ee ee ee 


Vea et (me tee fe NT el fee o(ly. ol fees fal Ml [ve Lem PINE) eT au Peat Vu oti (pL oe] cal fer sane afoot s alto wmdts Lie al) occ LTesle w ewl feels tim cies tle ay Wi bees el) LMSC jG 


X. Totals of VIIL. and IX. 
. Burghead Bay, Moray Firth, 6th and 7th February 1905. 
. Dornoch Firth, 


Part [11,—-Twenty-fourth Amual Report 


XVIII -—BRILL. 


a3 June. 5 
July. 


. 99 iy) 
. Burghead Bay, Moray Firth, 9th, 10th November 1903. 


25th, 26th December ,, 
21st-27th November 1904. 
6th-12th December 1904. 


99 29 99 
99 99 9 


A; 9th November 1901. 
10th, 11th November 1903. 
25th, 26th December _,, 


»? 9? 


. Aberdeen Bay, 6th, 7th June 1901, 


eM AD PSUS icp Us i 


To AN gets TT ee eT aah ae SD ees TU a Sake Ot et aa 


Lt TT TS Vie? TS PS ol al BS) Dt 
| Pema [my [oe Fs He Yael em Fm Ym | my] YP) gS Fs] Joe a tp et 


Gn ROY Se ea a 


Fr) ager rr Ves VT Vc Fa in er SSS ae te) Aiea ee (lite NOM SMe UNOS al UP UE LF We Sills “L 


ae WW ee A Te ae IP Ob a ae SS ee 


Past} tf Ah I th SSP deat SS) 
RT Wr WW fe eae ee Eee Ne Pe 


= See Sea Th NIN Sie 
AE ibe the AD tS de ton 


Perm ess) Vcd eels alY? cc] Qetatl mc tend ee) HM) floen| Jc) Vest Mar rma Pst ad aD Js Sl Rat Pc Ue nt K d UT  Ml LicglSaA PSI) PSG) CU Vom Leal Wal Head YP ol fh ed | fo Jah 


aR Sta hw easter ClSe te elan lial Ted ol ea a) salah Te ital 

ne eS ee SG GV (eo Qe YU 

PERO Ot de a i enioiediesiRO Ty Te NT Sea at 

1 wr 1 wo] Hee Pa RSS SPC PR ae Tat te ah aa I lth ae Tse Wu te i ie 

foe Py iel Teel To Te TTY tie UMP aT Rave" NG oh” sC=Sm Veet Coa PT oA Vise acm Fed ca Vode alt TMP yt alr eee eam ent Saal Te alee eaLs amelie Ue eka Ih ale ool ba lia A af <0 


Pa a ee Ie Si eon ip ale I 


Sinwwoe =i Ff ttt 1 ii) Pit to it 1 4 


. Aberdeen Bay, 18th September 1901. Push-net on beach. 
. Annan, 30th April 1900. Shrimp-net. 
. Montrose, May. Stake-nets. 


Pea TNE ame 1 Peek deal well ct Ble Nig Vie Wa hap Mw Wonthe Wie elllge mle Teil De ie IU sPtO icc) kay Ula Lag carl Ee | Et PSR 


Hh ot} Ue Ue eS al 


We Tot yema( le det doen clit teal > hat [dtl nef Toul, ide Aes Ve! Wn fit aT 6 Ug Nat [fA tT il Lis Nast) el a iad Pa)" a 


Pert AT = =e ae fame ee Ped fon Pome et eee feeed pod fe Action iui hewclemmdf oats otfeeqle clined iraeltamatis Lig eeu pur timprti salud Um adtoowiice Udi Lal ie eel fim fesse IS elle UR ten al] 


oe Yea He Dsl fer hes Hee Samra Mace Pt fea Kg 


Ws lies Ge! We pes res fet id Qe Ue 9 Ft Pa Fe Pees Lae ef ol a Pl DL al 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 265 


XVIII.—BRILL—continued. 


Cm. ree eek ey, ve) VE | VET. VEL.) EX. | Roo AE PIL ATV. AY. 


oo 
=) 


Ee Eh EMG RSS re Um Os ade col Pera ne 
tesa ees toh 7 | Leo oh a eatatan bly Bl — 
31 i aoe. bi eat oa ogra eerigl ec tleimmund et ely ee 
ne err Fg | oa | I eh Lr Ino eile peek 
39 eee ree ee Oe coma aah Tivo ie eke 2 
Pees ree el et eo Tk BAL Aah dalya— ie ale 
33 ee ers | eo bor Maes ener! ol Goel he oe 
Ce ee ie LA om ye A oe idl, dy, & tie beieye te & 
34 ees A eee ele shor. dll, hia wtih. 
er i ree ie OMe od kh Phy Ble & 
35 ae EPS RH BS ah Se (aml a ae mn 
eee | ee em erate Sel a leg Pg te | pl eg 
36 erie ot ema ee) et 8) ie iii wl &) 2] 24 la 
See ee ees ee oth ig ba) ao lth al =|, a} 
37 rae se ere eee ee io) lg: kos) ee Oh pb 2 eS 
ge epee eS Se gea |) 7 i 6 | 98) ol al: -| 4yi-'4 
38 8 ye |i eclectic pean a ic ee eV 
Pre nee Ciao) ol) iz 8) oe) as £1 |i) fe 
39 See eer a iz he | 8) idk Br =| a) 4 
eae te Ah hs Bile bool i10+b48 | be a | in Sine ae 
40 eee Pee et a) one is | 95 | aaieeg | | ot K 
Pee re wee Sh hoa Wh gl og yl) als i) 21 oe 
41 | OE RS Oe Be a | Toms G6 niga Shee 3) ae 
Peete Sei 7] oh sl a1 ig) LL) ab a Pe 
42 ae ate ey Sliln dc |b 2 & = | Bolte lb BS lm Qife Mele echoes) it 
een See od oa al ao Bot Lee SS 
43 re tee as od ee i te a ae ay bP col aes a) 
eee ee a a SP Oo Ah ot El S| S| te 
44 eee ec ioe ol Ee a ee Ll at 
Paneer Westie ig hoe | as od, 2 lv eshe ap lS 
45 ete moe a) Par ao | BR al Ey a 
46 ee et ge tn Pe ae Pine be] ale gta) = 
47 eee re eee a | ea Gal | £ ie ts 
48 eye ee eee a ag ee pk La ay fe 
49 ee ore ee ea Bay i ae a 
50 ee ee eo Sea lo ey ey 
51 ee eee tees eter AR a) ee hyd) fo fe tat hy le 
° meee seme es | Be RP at 
53 Meare pert eee sie is be RAP og hee Pp 
5A is x 6 SS io a z: ie es a 2 2 = Ee = 
BB ee re ed ee a ee) Oo er le 
56 fs ewe ere ig ta elt his ee tela ob fe 
57 eee eee ee i ey EP de 
58 2 ey coal Se SE TES Tie | ee Oe ee ee ee 
59 ee aA SEES BS RS UE) (ACN | ecg Se eae (ee en a a 
60 ee eee ee Fe ee ea Eee 
61 e oa eee Pm | PET 8 are ee ae ee eee 
62 ee eee see ee a aed Be ae 
6 2! 30) 16 | 7 | °85 


20 | 212 | 156 +368 [171 | 30 8| 47/ 18 


266 


| 
cS Weasel 
ae ee ee ee te 
S| Leg wipe tee 
See ed) be 
je ergs) ees eae a ee a 
ele Sy ae, Ba 
US| SCM he atiia 2) ae 
fae ee ese ease ieee 
a TT Ps i [be 
61 38 ae 1 ea-3 
21 84 6) 14 ten ohh 
Pal 6 3 44 er ab 
2! of 7| 1] 8419 
1/ 2] 7| 6/139 15 
il ail 3) 32 omnes 
= 4} 4| 8] 12 
=1 A aa) te tae 3 
=| Si 255 aah 
4 ee aD a 
ea ieee fe mene se 
= if 1 An Sat) loan 
SN | ste aah By bes 
20 eo en pal eae 
2 Sa ae Ea ea a 


Part ITI.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


XIX.—COD—ABERDEEN BAY. 


15th January 1902, 
llth February 1905. 
29th March 1905. 
13th May 1902. 

13th June 1901. 
28th June 1901. 
30th July 1901. 

31st July 1901. 

VII. and VIII. combined. 
21st August 1901. 
3rd September 1901. 
4th September 1901. 
4th September 1901. 
4th September 1901. 


XVII 
XIX, 
XX, 
XXI, 
XXII, 
XXIII. 
XXIV. 
XXV. 
KA VAS 


~ Xt 


XIL.-XIV. combined. 
10th September 1901. 
18th October 1901. 

3lst October 1903. 

5th November 1901. 

6th November 1901. 
XIX. and XX. combined. 
28th November 1901. 
29th November 1901. 
XXII. and XXIII. combined. 
12th December 1904. 
16th December 1901. 
29th December 1903. 


267 1] 4+ 
22q -]} Il 
PAI (ae he? 
1Z2— -| 3 
D2 a at 


— -_ . 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 267 


XIX.—COD—ABERDEEN BA Y—continued. 


AXVII. 


| 

I 

! 

| 

| 
— 

} 

| 

i 
~ 
or 


rl | \ \ | | { | | fh eT \ | | 1 { \ { | rm | 1 w t ow | xxvi. 
1 


72 | 33 |104 §120 17 | 24 | 30 | 68 f 48 |114 | 40 | 27 |301 [328 | 56 |193 |249 | 51 | 89 | 5 


268 Part II].—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


XX.—COD. 
DorNOCH FIRTH. SMITH BANK—continued. 
Col. I. 9th February 1905. Col. ITI. 8th November 1901. 
» IL. 22nd October 1903. » IV. 27th December 1903. 
,, Ill. 9th, 10th November 1901. B RB 
,, LV. 12th November 1903. : Ren Ess 
, v. 7th December 1904. Col. I. 7th September 1901. 
», WI. 19th December 1901. » Il. 20th October 1903. 
» Il 6th December 1904. 
SMITH BANK. », LV. 20-25th December 1901. 
Col. I. 1st April 1904. 55  V. 29th December 1903. 
» LI. 28rd October 1903. 
DoORNOCH FIRTH. SMITH BANK. BURGHEAD Bay. 
Cm w bh 
I Te aa Wh a ae Te RL. av ed IJ. | Tl.) fee 
4 3 = A fr = = 2 é 2 a FS rs a 
5 a a 4 2 zs: ss £ Fs = ze = = Vie 4 
6 A Pg ibe BBE wt al hem dae eee ee 
7 - - - - 2 - — 2 = - - - = = 
8 1 = = - 3 = = i | ~ - = = = 
9 2 2 - - 5 _ ~ ~ 1 — _ - - aes 
10 2 - 5 - 2 = - - i] = 1 1 - 1] - 
11 - =f 41s - 1 = = - _ = - 1 = 3) = 
12 - -| 18 1 - - i 1 1} ee - i! - ie 
13 if i ks - -- - 1 - al ic = = - 8 - 
14 - 8 - ~ - - ~ sul macs ~ - -| 13 ~ 
15 - - fe) 1 - - 1 - ~ = - 1 =| w22 = 
16 el Pe Pc Pcl D eh ED ao Bal BZD 0 AlN gy Reel nce ee 
17 - - 2 1 - = - - - ~ -- - - it = 
18 - - 1 - ~ = - - - = - - 6 = 
19 ae ee ea Pb at 2] (2 |. a Ba) 20 ee 
20 - - 1 I - = 1 - = = 1 1 os 3 a 
21 - 1 2 ~ - 3 - - = = - 2 2 4 = 
22 — ~- 4 - - : = ~ = 2 - = 1| - 
23 - - 8 - = ? 1 ~ - 5 - 3 5 = 
24 - -| 12 - - = 2 - - 7 2 4/1 13 = 
7a -| 18 1 ] 1 2 1 il 2 8 2 5 | a0 “ 
26 - = 10 le F - a - 1 3 3 3 3 4) 22 oe 
27 - - | 10 - 1 I 4 - 2 5 1 - 4} 21 Z 
28 - - 8 1 - 2 5 = 3 4 3 3 4 13 if 
29 = - 9 il - 2 i - 7 3 i 2 2 19 2 
30 - -| 14 - 6 = 1 5 5 1 ~ I | Ag = 
3] — 1 4 1 - 5 il - 5 3 1 ~ = aa 2 
Bs - - 4 = 4 i - 5 4 1 - 2 5 a 
33 = - 2 1 8 = - 5 2 ~ 1 8 pe 
34 = = 4 1 4 1 - 1 2 ~ - - 7 Pe 
35 - = 1 ~ = 2 = - 1 1 - - =~ | 40 FA 
36 - - 2 - = 1 2 1 1. - - - - z a 
37 = - - - — - - - il 1 - = : 4 = 
38 - - ~ - - 1 - - - - = 4 et 
39 = - = - 2 ze 1 1 = = = 2 2 Dy) 
40 E. = - = = 1 2 - i = - 4 1 “3 
41 ee es een resis ~)) | 2) (72) 
42 3 ] = = S = = - : = e 2 2 
43 = = il = =A is = = - - = - = 3 1 
44 i (eee ee 1 Sh, eons - =| =f =| =|) =) Se 
4] =} aj capes) af 2) ee) el a) i) ee 
46 = = - = = i. nt - - i - - - 3 = 
47 Ss 1 - = - il - - - - - - 1 = 
48 = - ~ 1 - 3 1 - - - ~ 1 ~ 3 = 
49 i - 1 2 = 3 - ~ 1 = = = = 3 = 
50 = = it ~ = = - - - 1 - - = 1 = 
51 < = |e 1 1 = =| =| = 0-] =4) Se 
52 = = 1 3 - il 1 - - - - - - 2 - 
53 Es = - 1 = i - - - - - - - 3 -- 
54 = = - - “= 1 - ~ ~ - - - - - ~ 
55 he = 1 ay 3a, ale ba Sel basta - 
56 = = 4 1 = 1 = = = Ss = = & 3 ze 
57 ~| =) =] 1) =) 9o Ae 24) ate 2 ha ee 
58 = - - 1 = - 1 _ - = ~ = = 1 = 
59 “= = - 1 = - 1 - _ - - = 1 ce 
60 = = = = z 1 = = = = = Ss = Z = 
61 = = = 2 a a = ss = = = = af 9 iM 
Siemeeee tele | aici 
4 8/192! 961 15) 5661] 88) KO] 47 | 360735) 21) aa | Sika at | 
( 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 269 


X XI.—COD. 


CROMARTY FIRTH. OFF DUNBEATH. 

7th J 1901. Col. I. 17th January 1902. 
schon teal », Il. & II. 18th January 1902. 
,, LV. I.-III. combined. 


FirTH OF FORTH. 
Col. I.—Station III. 13-16th May 1901. 
phyla be 5 23rd July 1901. 
OFF LYBSTER. oa Be 5 22nd August 1901. 
-ot tat e 
Goh EH) 22nd October 1903: ,, 1V.—Station V. 16th August 1901. 


», il. 8th November 1901. OrF SHETLAND. 
19-22nd May 1901. 


SINCLAIR Bay. 
4th June 1901. 


oe Orr Du FIRTH OF FORTH. 
LYBSTER. FF DUNBEATH. bes See re ae ee od 


Stations IT]. We 


SINCLAIR 


) 
5 
CROMARTY 
FIRTH 
OFE 
SHETLAND. 


ak 
ttt Npoostee 
a 
(=) 


Coe ot ot od 
feof | ee 


Sethe ie se er aI 


ft 
Dre 
( 


— 
co 
| 
ae ate atte |e Ube) 
Le 


{ 


e 
ine 
Te TY ON aA Te SP axceat a 


fae fies (ees em Joes (eee (ee Vee mel et 
FSeweel ED =P Le Ui Ct DI at VTP StF 


bt et 
(SNS laal 


1btt dt bt tt t HAR EW PWNWRERANDRHFOAMHNI! ' 1 


A ed et Ves Lo eel oe 


mepol eit lt i 
pa 
[SH Pre ere 09W WOE Fe 


Omer ol wl I el 


[sae bee [ee [men ea ee ey Fe | 


— 


INO) RK RENN HP WWH WH POWAIMDOF DONNNE | 
SURI et oe ee 


fot — eR Kw w POO 


bo 

ie) 

oN 

(oe) 

| 
eS Solis tisttes k\ibtos | CONS FOOLS a | 


bo 
Je) 
lt HbR HwreHwn!l wMmre!l ef | PONDwrre | 


Fee: Se Rowe test aac MRR VSR SST aes Lie 


— 


— 
KH PANO AAONINIDOOMOMNDOHOOQDHENOD 


SS Te TT TT ee rls TSS TESTES (oo) SS) ROH OC SIS Ti tL WE Wt 
— 
4 
bo 
e 


(MT Tle yt he lee fees ied ieee Ve ey Vee em CY Gm ese Ve Vaal TEs act =f Nt aI hi hal laa 
tod 


| 
[Pied Joee | Al BRAT ot Bt Fee) DSL et eae la 


i 
bo 
| 
Py aie et) et) el Lobe ewwrtHwowsé 


= 
[Wage ol Vel Va) Jana (eet “ai cart foot et Gon etl eat Oc Veet ge ALR oe 
TRS Tat ME SIPS TTT Ta ROTTS Si Gee get Fo Tl ieena (iat eat 
Me 2) Net FM a The St Jao Fy ime Os Hemet UP] Ti Ct (Cl Vo (i Sia 
ee FP yh TEST TESST 10 [| 7 re oe efi fame jo eae joe) fe] HI Pa ee iit fm 


do} | WWwrRR |] WNReEO 


| hE SO UE OS -———— |qq“—\ ——q 


v— 
jm, 
bo 


270 Part I1I.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


XXII. HADDOCK. ; 
ABERDEEN Bay. DoRNOCH FIRTH. 
Col. I. 15th January 1902. (Doghole) 57 fms. Col. I. 22nd October 1903. 
Il. 29th March 1905. », LIL. 138th November 1903. 


n Ill. 13th May 1902. (Doghole) 55 fms. », Ll. 27th December 1903. 
», IV. 29th December 1903. 


V. 81st October 1903. WiTCH GROUND, OFE KINNAIRD HEAD. 
23rd January 1$04. (40-50 fathoms. ) 


SMITH BANK. BURGHEAD Bay. 


Col. I. Ist April.1904. (22 fathoms.) 


Col. I. 20th October 1903 
,, IL. 22nd October 1903. ; ; 
” Ill. 14thNovember 4903. » IL. 29th December 1903. 
», IV. 12th December 1904. (19-22 fathoms.) OFF LYBSTER.—22nd October 1903. 
BuRG- a 
| ABERDEEN Bay. SMITH Bank. pearaen -| HEAD | 2 
mm |e] Bay |e 
io) . i. 
=>) a) | 
a} al 
> & 4 
00. 0) OF, 4 IL. |TTJ" O71. | W]e | 
| = 
| H 
Te | = So ee a Pe he 2 eet ee 
Wye | = Red SP ee Pee) pe 2 ia a) Sa ee See 
12 s))=*] see Sa | a a 2 ee 
13 4e—) T)e=4) A] ee] 2) Pe) SA a ele =) ae 
14 ek a a 8 ed 2) ee 34-04) Se 
16 | 26; 43 |°1) 10° -|- | 67) 67.) 1)-1) —| 88) 1] 1| |} Igy ae 
16° 4396") 62 1+7 17) =) — (221 9970 °3 | - 1) Slane be) 3 ea Se 
17 (24171104 | 31). 26) —-|°—} 941 O44 5) —| — 12624 —|°-) £190 ee 
18 1248) 61/95} 23t -| =| 41) 414 8).-| 1198 1.-— | 1] 2a oi eee 
19 (139°) 16 1163 | 14 -|-}15 | 959 2) -1\ -) 148 |°s) Ea Se 
20 '24°) 4 1147) OF =) 26) bP 29 lf 49.24 =) 2 Se 
21 1.1) -1 87 | 33 =lo=-1. 38) $ 8a 812) 2) Stag 2s) 2a ee 
22° (i —| = |95),) 27 =))-= 1 81.8204 a7 |) = Sale ye eee 
Dea Pe OF ie dT b= ps 4” Baal 40s) 304) or) ea ee ee 13 | sn Ss 
229 dal 1 ATO O38 80) 42 AFG) BR | SL ae 26 | 13 | 33 
D5 9) ol a ETO O94) 55 268) 50 1) Ae) | Soe Seen 41 | 20 | 60 | 
26 “RAG = ).97 1 ON 52 1417 P17) BeOS | 82+) agi To oe 43 | 27 | 78 | 
27° | 2)-~1 3) 3465122) 6 | 92151) 4915) =[21 | 6 | Bie ae 
7 | 8) -| 3] 5965126] -) 914-831 491) 51 =799) 1.1 £0 Bae 
29 |, 4] ~| 3) 5143/17] -| 608380) 10) 7] -4. 8) 1] 2). S900 
305)'2) -|°2) 14 389)16) =) 5ba-46 > 41 |) On 204 | 1) 6 See 
31 25) =) '2)) 2 9812 PH  AOAGR I .8 egal o=aneo) i 20 1155 |) Sage 
82°) 1) -| 1). 4446)414] -) 60957 | 57 |\ 7 =1e2) -| 82) Bae 
| 33 by) 1°21 39561 26 | —7 SOu4e a6 ll oy Sie es 61°63) 24% 
a4-| -4 = 1°12] $347 196) =) 734-48) 4 |i Oo) 2458 | 2) 2) eee 
35 |. 11 =) 2) 1947118) =) GOP) 11; 13 Sie 1) 8 eee 
36 | —4 =1.°72] —) 97,72 * =) BOI) 11) -a 2408) 1) 8 See 
B87 114 441-2] -4§ 11) Sp =) - 964 80 4) 20 2 ha Se 
88} St S11) 21a es) abo} 4) <4 2a) 2) eee 
39 to) ice aS ae ed 6d oie ae) ee eee 
4002) =D ae Bh = Pee Be ae a et a ee 
41) 2) [Sy 84 She Rod ta oe Se oo) ee 
42 |'=) S)=1, 99 1) a ies) bee ea 20S a ee 
48 | -| -; -| 17 -| -| -}t -] -| =| 1) =,-1} -| =-) =3)==ea 
CE ge ae tee eng, | =f =| =|) 24 20-2) =) 2 ee 
oe. ee en ee es oe eee ee eee 
464 bea) 1 2d) a Ce Peed ea ae cS) Se a ee 
re oe es res ee | ee ee eee ee 
ag bey a) a a BP) a ee ee ee 
AG Aa YH PS ed SE a hs Sn 
50 =) ooh a a ee ee =F res ee Le) Oe ee) 25 4 See 
bi be) a a 19 =] =) =) 2,2) =| 2) sie 
BP fa SP ed ee et a eee 
68 | -| -| -| -] -]| -| -| -} -| -| -| -B 12] -| -?> be] - | 
802 |314 |596 162 563 (221 465 |1249 [885 |306 | 62 |756 | 95 | 21 | 42 | 199 248 |138 [807 | 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 271 


XXII[.—WHITING. 


\BERDEEN Bay. SMITH BANK. 
Col. I. 31st October 1903. Col. io i ree ae 
,, IL. 29th December 1903. r i ee 
», III. 12th December 1904. 
», Ill. 11th February 1905. IV. 27th December 1903 
., IV. 29th March 1905. v2 ee . ; 
., V. 13th May 1902 (Doghole). Deaeoceteins: 
Col. I. 22nd October 1903. 
BURGHEAD Bay. | ,, Ll. 11th November 1903. 
,, II. 7th December 1904. 
Col. I. 20th October 1903. ,, IV. 27th December 1903. 
», II. 14th November 1903. »  V. 28th December 1903. 
,, III. 28th Decemker 1903. », WI, 9th February 1905. 
» LV. 23rd January 
», W. 29th December 1903. OFF FINDHORN.—I1st April 1904. 
| ABERDEEN BAY. | BURGHEAD Bay. SMITH BANK. DORNOCH FIRTH. z 
ae Pr ee ms ze 
r= 
By EL nav Ls) De . W Mot RPE Perry, fF tT 10. NEVE eh Ve ME s 
—_-_s. |) Pitre A tees Pl oie h ost bali 
me) G)}.-}] -| - See, ee aera oe eres im a aa - 
oy. 9} -} —} - =|--- =} =| =f -} -|--|. -7— 5] =).-] -] 1] - 
7 | Reco 8 oe eee ee tl Wy Se he Se Ue apie See 
eee fF | AP) 2) - | 2) ik sh iey ar} 5) 2) sl) ap = 
eee Bee) -F il) 11 || 8) -] -| 2) -| =] 24] 25/15) 1 foe) 7} - 
Mee | | th is | at) a) |) 7) -— | 46 | 89 | 35 | 17 [179 | 25 | 
Lee Get Se) Te) 2 ~ | 10 | 82 |.50 | 12 3 P-Pal be k 3 | 52 | 82 | 381 | 48 (254 | 49 = 
12 | Gf | ot | 28.13 | 1 ae 40°) GF |) IS 4 2 Ze |. 8) 12-9 47-1 95 | 69 |. 90: 1310 119i) — 
13 1106 [138 | 39 | 96 | 10] -4 | 49} 82115) 6] 2 | 47 | 20 | 27 |: 19 | 52 |133 |107 1177 |192 | - 
14 | 88 |168 | 28 |144 7 2) 2 |) bee EG 7 — | 20 | 27 3 5 | 35 |124 | 81 | 64 /189 — | 
15 | 40 |106 | 19 | 88 | 11 —- | 12} 31 Delta tee hoe ee la fra) a2: | 70-162) 30 70 | = | 
16 Peso L1G) OF -|-4 6] 2) 1 Se bev. (LF Zh Lb | 18 25 | 36.) 12 | 19 }- = | 
yy 6S | 1 Ana iwop =) Sl 8) =) at Sp oie) 2F 210} Gye r9 6; 2 
Beep es) OF 2i-- 1} | ES) He Lif -4} 5 Bic liak 4 
Cees Se ee a | | a | 2h) ey =) a} 2 
Pails ea: ao i | =T2on bye |-- 2 ee ee ea Zh bh Chet SH KH oie) I 8 
at) 26 =| 6 | Peo eae ai kf Sb ee POP } 46) (=F 1 1 St fica es WEE 
22 |26| - ~ I} 41 9 2 I! 4} 1 7108 | 52 ~ | 10 1 - - 6 =a poe 
Cte ones eh a bo) as 5p) 85 | ol icld bs - |) =f =] =) e- |. 1.87 
a eee | — | i-P2on 4112) 3) 7} - 145)26) 1/1} -| -}| -}| 2) -7|] =| 40 
eee — |) | oe ee 14 bt 8) C= 129 | BS 1 |) 14 pe —) =} 2h eH | t=} 46 
26 | 17 -~}| -}| -|!| 10 4 9 ~ 8 <= $123" 10: |. - =). 5 - -| - - ~ 31 
wee} e- | OP 47 la KF KS) RK 7A 7 Ra oe = 1 ={>-f =—| -— | 26 
wae =~ b= =| 8h el | 29 |. - 4 a= 4O a peat 2h Hh = foal = be eS 22 
29 | 13 1 - =i 2 2.24 1 o| —729| 2) - 1 —-| -|] - ~ il - | 10 
30 |16; -| -| - 4 -/|14] - 5 ~ 715 -~| —-| 2] -7 - —~}o = - - | 14 
Sti 8) - — ioe — itor =) of = bia] =). =) =f = -/| -}] -] - -| 7 
ere Sty 1G bop bee] | 4g |e - em Sey el ee 
oe Siege bie a bl Sb eb ele ote) a 8 
we toe Ke a | St KP LP eH] =] He) HP ef RP ep ate ayp aPF 1 
copie —} —) —}| —| -f -| 2): -bh -4 = 1 -| = 1 -} - -| - =) 2 
eee ft =| —| 21 Pe eR ee 0 ee ee ee a -{| -| -}] -] -] - 
ari =) —} -) —-| ~F -| —-]} -t -—| =F 2] -} -) -P -ft —| -] -f -- > -f 2 
Ba at. I pe are ee i eh Pe aif tS 
eee fF —)| —} —f —~) —| =| =] —f =|. -/ -] -f =] =) =-- -] -| -7 2 
eee el ee i oh al Se | a bosli eed ah = 
ees ese ee Oe Py Pe Cy ed) SOT op a 
er eee eso fee Se SSS Ke Sh Sk eal ape |-sh 
ES Ey A Re ee ee ee eee ed ee ee ee ee ee ee ee 
re ene eee est a i SA else LH a) ) i eta 3 
ees eee ee ee ea ah | ee | eee ft =f fs 
renee teh tere hh AY 8 ey eee ieee elie so eh oa os 
lpalushin sane eaussaaees 
701 ' 498 | 148) 364 | 2751 94 13551386'181) 29 '955 | 420 ' 124 | 1471238 ' 421 | 496 | 494 '1209| 628 [293 | 


| IV. 


AB 
a 


Part I11.— Twenty-fourth Amnuual Report 


ERDEEN Bay. 


llth February 1905. 
30th May 1901. 

13th June 1901. 

Sth July 1901. 

30th July 1901. 

31st July 1901. 

lst September 1904. 
4th September 1901. 
20th September 1900. 
13th October 1900. 
8th October 1901. 
3lst October 1904. 
5th November 1901. 
17th December 1900. 


ABERDEEN Bay. 


| 


ome Be Mies eS 
EP YSe ps lett 
= 2 — = af = = 
= 2 os = i = = 
gO) he es re | Re he Ba Oe 
Jif Poahe = eee a Riches 
SIT = Ah Ves al Cate lores 
Sit iol = ih oie a al a, fc 
Eo) Sora Sst) Reale all 
Si faa) 6 ir Pee fea Noe 
1 eg ee er te ise 
S| es ee lezen oul ts ot 
7) aa a aieae | Seay ee 
Bal a= ae ts thai BRA ee 
ot rey EM Syalea |” 4 staas 
rig) ee) ee | Bale BS 
63) a eee 12 
Telit Es SE | RSS es 
5 - = 9 1 acs Be 
Arsh ce ys Seg omn Fe ee 1b 
Mle ee a OM ee eles 
7 =e 7 Wee as Gast Ps 
De et) ee meee me a 
7a Nae ye | ae: By | 
— = 2s it = — = 
tS est uiseett a Mec oor oe 
oe i oes 2s [A em (eae | = 
Be = (hie yazan ee pean 
a Seat > nil LL) eal eal 
Gf | ge S| haeray | [ee 


| 


XXIV.—GURNARD. 


DorNocH FIRTH. 


Col. J. 9th February 1905. 
» Il. 3rd June 1901. 
» III. 8th June 1903. 
» LV¥sef@ July 1901, 
» Vv. 5th August 1901. 
», VI. 22nd October 1903. 
», WII. 5th November 1900. 
,, VIII, 11th November 1901. 
,» IX. VII. and VIII. combined. 
», X&. 7th December 1904. 
,, XI. 27th December 1903. 
SMITH BANK. 
Col. I. 5th June 1901. 
» II. 8th November 1901. 
,, III. 12th December 1904, 
DorNocH FIRTH. 
aE |e ee ee 
=| = be eel baa ee 
-{| -| -] -] - 5 | 5 
== | SS Sat Ball oars 
-| =| =f =] @i asa) oF 
| 
=H) 2 Ws aes 
Zoi = | a2 Pal 23) ese 
2 = J = = 5 5 
-| - 1 1 Snipe 4 
65 — [= EE 1; - i 
Wily | eh od eas 
A. = |) = |S (=i) ae 
toy Ifiead al] 1 Lo) eal 
8 | 63 | = Sil Sie area 
4) 4]7 =|-> 3) 2 =<) 
6) a |e See Sa Bz Fal 2 
if - Ih - 4 e| 4 
2 32 ala PS ae 4 
i i 2 Pe ie |= 
1) 4) =|) 2) 2 ee 
_] ol 21) 2) 52 
eo ae eae) es | = 
254 yh = pe ea ee 
~ | f3.|) ae) Ge 
stood!) =o] | sub thee wee 
= |) 2249)| 9 al =| 2) =s\e 
at at Qe) eS 


ABERDEEN Bay, 


His 
> |S 
2 = 
5 = 
H | = 
1 3 
a = 
60 | 17 


WALT 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


XXIV.—GURNARD—continued. 


DornocH FIRTH. 


VUE. 


273 


SMITH 
BANK. 


_— 


~~ 


eee 


274 Part I11—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


XXV.~—GURNARD. 


BURGHEAD Bay. SINCLAIR Bay. 
Cole Feist ph nate 3rd and 4th June 1901. 
» I. 6th, 7th September 1901. 
, IL. 20th October 1903. FIRTH OF FORTH. = 
5, LV. 14th November 1903. Col. I. 9th, 18th May 1901, Station ITT. 
», V. 25th December 1901. » Ll. 2ord July 1961; do. 
» Ill. 19th August 1901, do. 
Moray FIrtH. ,, IV. 10th May 1901, Station V. 
Col. I. Several Hauls, October 1900. » Vv. 16th, 21st August 1901, do. 
,, Il. Several Hauls, November 1900. 


,, Ill. Off Lossiemouth, 3rd November 1901. CLYDE. . 


,, LY. Station VIT., 12th June 1900. Off Ailsa Craig, 4th October 1901. 
» V. Witch Ground, off Burghead, 


14th November 1903. OFF SHETLAND.—October 1900. 


a 
BURGHEAD Bay. Moray FIRTH. SINCLAIR Bay. FIRTH OF FORTH. o 
4 
= = ae <e . 
Cm. U ] = 
a RS eh. 3rd June | 3rd June | 4th June Total n 
SSS tal SiS a tea 10. 1901. 1901. | (3 Hauls). eS 
| 

F.| M.|Tl : fo) 

si IM. Ti. F. Mi.) F. van tM./ 31. DF. | M.! 
i ee ee = ly Snes ae ER he) |) | ee. 2 ee |e - - 
ie || a 1] 3] = colts cap Piasth oss zh ae ee a ee Sh Pek = = - 
s}+- 7-7 - - Sat el SE Be) oh ee Seite Bi ae: ~| 2 ess 1 - 
Po ES Re WARE es ee SN Ales fe =)..42 Fs 2p al ela ele = Ps Bh eye 4 ~ 
es ee es a aN a ey Pe lee ee a eS = es aa i | (es tie = 1 - 
oe), eS ee ae is ee ee oe ee ae ee =| sd =| | Sah 1 - 
ay eat eel ee ca SE ot | Root west ea weal aul, Gains SS ea, “aie 2 - 
matte ol St Sh Dt ee Bi al alle E. ee a | =| t} apg bi - 
Pe tl) ah =| al -) oS 7| 15) 1| 10 gees ee pe se ade ees 1} 1) 2] 5 3 - 
fet al Bb 9) Al Al ve 11| 49) 2] 5 he Sl gt ye ly aa Bee ee ri BR | 1) ob 1 - 
i ta) 2) 3l 1) 22 12) 541 2| - 2210 aah BPD lee cll PAU a et a Z|. A) —-) “al “5 somes = - 
Pe) Si 4) 7| .2| <= 7| 29) 9) - af reel can Ste Be oth Alain ee 2) "Aa 26: Sea 1 - 
18} 1] 15] 12] 27) 2) 6 1| 29) 9} - Seek aie i Seah ace eel =| 3h) 2) 4) a) Shea = - 
19 | 1) 33] 21| 54] 2! 9 tomtom) 1 El, eet a cathe tees Rat Aaed 1) “HA tl See 2 - 
20 | 3] 36] 12] 48} 1) 4 10] 51] 32) - O19) axa All el a a 1 @ 3-4 a2 = - 
21 | 5| 27| 3] 30] 1] 5 4| 45| 44] - | leo tol = 2) Sele Si a 3 5) val> =| eae 2 - 
92} 4117] 7| 24) 1] 8 Si selistle = 12) 2/14) 7| 2| of 4} 2] 6 6| 209 1) 2) -| 3I 4 1 3 
231 5116] 6 22) 1] 6 Al Sion) | = 25} 1| 26] 6| 2| 8] 15} 3/18 6) ba | --) ee = 6 
24 | 1] 26] 11) 37) 3] 4 1| 28] 44] - 27| 9} 36} 10} 2] 12) 16) 5] 21 16) <. 684! (> ae = 7 
25 | 3] 23] 16 39] 1] 1 1| 27] 47] - 45| 13| 58| 11] 4} 15] 27] 10] 37 27). 1108 3) =) coleeoieee I 1 
26 | 5| 29] 4] 33] 1) 5 -| 23] 36) - 63| 10] 73} 38] 1] 9} 27] 5} 32 16| 1148 a) =|) 2) ee 1 4 
271 7 291 5] 34] 21 2 1 27| atl = 66| 10] 76| 10] 1] 11] 30} 9] 39 20| 126) 2| 2| -| 4| - 1 5] 10 
28 | 6] 16] 6] 22) -| 1 3] 19] 25) - 73) 14] 87| 8] 3] 11] 42] 5] 47 99/4458 9) 1) =) aie = 4) 4 
99} 61 17) 2] 19) 2) - 4} 20; 4| - 63| 8] 71| 12} -| 12] 32] 2i 34 10| 24. 2) Ss See = 1] 4 
30 | 3] 20) 3) 23) 3) 1 lett YSl B4| 4] 58] 61 1] 7| 25] 1! 26 6) ol Bi At = Bh = 3} 4 
31 | 3] 16) 3/19] 3] 4 Sida) 3) = 38] 6] 441 9] 2] 11| 35} 2] 37 10) 928 3) =|" =) Sota = 3} 2 
32| 2| 9| -| 9] 2] 4 10). GA ala 3) 5) S60 Fea! 7 19) 1198 5| 68 3) 2 Sie - 3} 7 
33 | 10| 10] 1/11) 2] 2 15/10) “Bl 29| 2] 311 2] 2] 4! 20; 3} 23 ries epee So = - 3} 2 
Ben ol 2) (=| 1a) 3) 9| 9 A 29} 2| 311 9] -| 9] 22) -| 22 9| <6c8 A) 2h eee = 1) 4 
a si 6) = 6 4) = Gira) 8) Bal Tieo5| 4S) Fal V7) S117 11 4a 2 =) Ss ee 2 1} 5 
wen 6) 7) 1) Blea a Gite l= 12 eae) ee 2S PaaS =| 38 =.=) ae - 1) 2 
a OT) 0) Al Ss Sort! all <= D5) Sab a) 20) aie T). O70 se!’ =) e= bee - (bes 
a 6) | =) 2b| | = els) a = Ts) Ta) 8h CSS ro) 0 =| 24 44) ee - -| 1 
es ee ec ee te EN plastica 6h. at gah spare eal oat a eee ee a -| - 
77, Ne ee ee ee A gl “al ala ae a 4) jo | See = -| - 
ate Eh} hl oe) od Se 6) en P| aC ele | eect cl are Ee Sere ae - -| - 
PT ae ie ee Os ae ee ae aaa ea Saale aa = os Sh aS - 4 5 
CE) | ier gees (a | ae Se ai ee a eat Sa) eat) ag at e ee eee - -| 1 
| i ee fe lie | A) BL | eet eye = | S\ See - a 
TS a es ee | SH al Cay SPSS Gals sate at pet i | | Sie - -| - 
46 he 51] or at soe crete Sree age | eee zs 7 
oy = a ab 2 AN il eel ee a) Ze 2 a - 
----+--}--+--} |---| ------5- 
110)394 121/515] 51| 67| 1149/671/415| 18] 49 355 30/744 121] 21/142 281] 51/432 ns7|161 1318 3 22) 19] 78/154 02} 69 

J } 


40 


30 


120 


Fig. 4. 
Plaice. Plaice. 
(ee oes, Dornoch. Dornoch. 
A. 9th February 1905 B. 3lst March 1905 
(355 fish). (30 fish). 
110 4 Santa aan 
8 + ial 
——+—_ 7 
6 | 
5 1+“ ——— 
4 
3 
2 =r 
1 ——] 
5) 1 13 15 V7 19 21 
If 
12 
9 i 13 15 “i 19 a1 


Fig. 5. 


PLATE XIl. 


Cod. 
A. Firth of Forth, August. 


B. Burghead Bay, 6th-29th December. 
C. Off Shetlands, 19th-22nd May. 


Plaice. 


Lochfyne, 1901. 
A. July (3529 fish). 
B. August (656 fish). 


— 


90 
Fig. 2. Fig. 3. 
- 80 
Plaice. 
st Lochfyne, 1903. 70 
A. June. 
B. July. 
60 
60 
40 
30 
20 
+ 10 
1 2 8 4 5 
Fig. 1. 
| a a Se A 7 


120 


110 


100 


Haddock, 
A, (Red) Aberdeen Bay, 31st October 1903. 
B: (Black) Moray Firth (Smith Bank, Dor- 
noch, Burghead), 20th-22nd October 
1908. 


90 


Cod. 
A. Aberdeen Bay, 21st August-10th September 
B. Dornoch Firth, 9th, 10th November. 


60 


| 30 


| 
1 | 
a =) 
i 
Le 
+ 
li | 
1 
40 M4 46 48 50 62 oA 


{ooo & 
Pe ee 


\ 


PLATE Xiltl, 
= » = ” 


a 

\ 

c 
fa te 


7 
aerate 


\ 


\ 
Via a 
AeeaS 


: 


BRRREERAREREREEDA CUCU if 
PCC CCC CCE 
SRE =285250 


aoe Pe po RELLY 
| (Se CA ee 


Ot 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 27 


IX.—NOTES ON NEW AND RARE COPEPODA FROM THE 
SCOTTISH SEAS. 


By Tuomas Scott, LL.D., F.L.S., Mem. Soc. Zool. de France. 


(Plate XIV.) 


PRELIMINARY Note. 


The following are a few notes and drawings of rare Entomostraca that 
have been held over from previous papers on Scottish Crustacea, published 
from time to time in the Reports of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 

I am indebted to my son, Mr. Andrew Scott, A.L.S., for the drawings 
with which these notes are illustrated. 


Genus Amphiascus, G. O. Sars (1895). 
Amphiascus Catharine, T. Scott, sp. n. Pl. xiv., figs. 1-9. 


Description of the female:—Body robust, somewhat similar 
to Amphiascus minutus (Claus); Rostrum moderately elongated 
(fig. 1); length, ‘74mm. (34; of an inch). 


Anterior antenne slender, reaching to about the end of the cephalo- 
thoracic segment, and composed of eight joints; the first, fourth, and last 
joints of moderate length, the others small, as shown by the formula (see 
also fig. 2), 


Proportional length of the joints, 16°18 °9,:14°4:7°6°1 
Numbers of the joints, - - SG SS a ly a 


Posterior autenne stout, two-jointed, and furnished with a moderately 
elongated and three-jointed outer ramus (fig. 3). 

Mandibles tolerably stout, apex trnncated and armed with several teeth 
of unequal length ; palp well developed, basal part moderately stout and 
setiferous, and provided with two small branches, as shown in the 
drawing (fig. 4). 

Second maxillipeds small, second joint moderately narrow and fringed 
with minute sete; the end joint very small but armed with a tolerably 
large terminal claw (fig. 5). 

First pair of thoracic legs slender, both branches triarticulate, inner 
branch with first joint narrow, considerably elongated, and apparently 
with only a few minute setz near the proximal end of the inner margin 
and a small hair near its distal extremity ; the two end joints very short 
and armed with a stout terminal claw and a tolerably large seta; there are 
also a few smaller setz, as shown in the drawing. Outer branch about 
two-thirds the length of the first joint of the inner, the middle joint is 
rather longer than the first and fully twice as long as the third ; these 
joints have the outer margin setiferous and are also furnished with lenge 
spines on the outer distal] angles (fig. 6). 


276 Part 111 —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Both branches of the other three pairs are also three-jointed, elongated 
and slender, the inner branches being rather shorter than the outer, as 
shown in the drawing which represents the fourth pair (fig. 7). 

Fifth pair tolerably large and foliaceous; basal joint somewhat 
triangular in outline, the distal half of the inner margin which slopes 
towards the apex is provided with three stout sete, the inner margin is 
nearly straight and terminates in an angle, and immediately posterior to 
this angular tooth are two apical sete, which are separated from the 
lowermost of the three on the inner margin by a distinct hiatus, as in the 
drawing. Secondary joint subquadrangular, its width being equal to 
nearly two-thirds of the length, the outer and inner margins are nearly 
parallel at the proximal end, but they taper from about the middle of the 
joint towards the apex and there are three setz on the outer margin, one 
on the lower inner margin and two on the apex, as shown in the drawing 

fig. 8). 
ae joints very short (fig. 9), Principal tail sete slender. Two 
ovisacs. Male unknown. 

Habitat.—Granton, Firth of Forth ; dredged in an old quarry ta which 
the tide has access. Apparently rare. 

Remarks.—In some respects Amplhiascus Catherine comes very near 
Amphiascus (Dactylopus) minutus, Claus., as described and figured by G,. 
O. Sars,* but the form and armature of the fifth pair of thoracic feet are 
totally different. Other but less obvious differences are also noticeable, 
as, for example, in the form and armature of the mandible-palp, the 
armature of the outer and inner branches of the fourth pair of thoracic 
legs and in the hirsute character of the first two abdominal segments. 
Unfortunately I have been unable to obtain the male of this form, but 
owing to the differences mentioued I prefer meantime to regard this as a 
distinct form from A. minutus. 


Genus Dactylopusia, A. M. Norman (1903). 
Dactylopusia brevicornis (Claus). Pl. xiv., figs. 10-18. 


1866. Dactylopus brevicornis, Claus., Die Copepoden-fauna von 
Nizza, p. 29, Taf. iii., figs. 20-25. 


1905. Dactylopusia brevicornis, G. O. Sars, Crust. of Norway, 
vol. v., p. 130, pl. Ixxx. 


The female of this species, like that of some others of the same group, 
has the cephalothorax depressed and broadly ovate, but the abdomen is 
comparatively narrow (fig. 10). Rostrum short, with a broadly rounded 
apex. Length ‘77mm. (z4, of an inch). 

Anterior antenne composed of five joints, very short and stout; the 
first three are more robust than the remaining two joints, the end joint is 
fully twice as long as the penultimate one (fig. 11), The formula shows 
the proportional lengths of the various joints as follows :— 


Proportional lengths of the joints, - 18°12°16°6°:17 
Numbers of the joints, = - - es RP ee 
Posterior antennz stout, two-jointed, with a short three-jointed outer 


ramus (fig. 12). am 

Mandihles stout, with an obliquely truncate apex, which is armed 
with a few large and several small teeth. Mandible palp with a dilated 
basal part bearing two very short uniarticulate branches (fig. 13). 


* Crustacéa of Norway, vol. v., p. 154, pl. xevi, (March 1906). 


0, ll 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 277 


Second maxillipeds short, stout, with a strong terminal claw (fig. 14). 

The first pair of thoracic legs stout, both branches three-jointed ; the 
first joint of the inner branch is as long as the entire outer branch, while 
the second and third joints are very short; a long plumose seta springs 
from near the middle of the inner margin of the first joint, but the outer 
margin is fringed with small spines, the inner branch bears two strong, 
but unequal, terminal claws; the first and second joints of the outer 
branch are subequal, and are each furnished with a stout elongated spine 
near the outer distal angle, the second joint being also provided with a 
long plumose seta on the inner margin, the end joint is tolerably short 
and is armed as shown in the drawing ; a stout spine also springs from 
both the outer and inner angles of the second basal joint (fig. 15). 

The next three pairs of thoracic legs have also both branches three- 
jointed, the inner being the shorter one; both branches have their outer 
margins fringed with spines. In the fourth pair (fig 16.) the inner 
margin of the first joint of the inner branch caaries one seta. The second 
two sete, and the end joint four sete. A short spine also springs from 
the outer distal angle of the third joint. 

The fifth pair foliaceous, basal joint broadly triangular, with a 
truncated and broadly but irregularly rounded apex which bears five stout 
setee of various lengths. Secondary joint broadly subquadrangular, proximal 
half of the outer margin nearly parallel with the inner, but the distal 
half tapers towards the apex and carries three sete, other three sete 
spring from the apex and lower part of the inner margin (fig. 17). 

Furcal joints very short; the inner of the two principal tail sete with 
the base slightly dilated (fig. 18). 

Habitat.—Collected in an old quarry, open to the sea, at Granton, 
Firth of Forth. 

Remarks.—The form described here under the name of Dactylopus/a 
brevicornts, Claus, undoubtedly belongs to that species. The drawings, 
though only now published, were prepared a number of years ago from 
specimens collected in an old quarry at Granton, Firth of Forth, to which 
the tide has access. 

The abbreviated length and massive structure of the antennules ; the 
structure of the mandibles, the stout first pair of thoracic feet, and the 
form of the fifth pair are sufficiently characteristic of this particular species. 

The following list of some of the rare and interesting species that have 
been obtained in the old quarry at Granton just referred to may be of 
interest, as indicating the remarkable variety of organisms present in this 
small body of water. The species are arranged alphabetically :— 


Acartia bifilosa, Giesb. 
Ameira longicaudata, T. Scott. 
Beatricella mimica, T. Scott. 
Canthocamptus parvus, T. Scott. 
Canuella perplexa, T. and A. Scott. 
Cletodes similis, T. Scott. 
Dactylopusia brevicornis, (Claus). 
5 Jinmarchicus, (T. Scott). 
aM vulgaris, G. O. Sars. 
Kictinosoma curticorne, Boeck. 
Enhydrosoma incurvatum (B. & R.). 
Euryte longicauda, Philippi. 
Halicyclops cequoreus (Fischer). 
Harpacticus obscurus, T. Scott. 
Idya furcata, Baird. 
» gracilis, T. Scott. 


278 Part [[I.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Idya minor, T. Scott. 
Laophonte curticauda, Boeck. 
gracilis, T. Scott. 
hispida, B. & R. 
inopinata, T. Scott. 
entermedia, T. Scott. 
littorale, T. and A. Scott. 
longiremis, T. Scott. 
a thoracicu, Boeck. 
Longipedia Scotti, G. O. Sars. 
Nannopus palustris, G. S. Brady. 
Parathalestris hibernica (Brady & Robertson) 
Platychelipus littoralis, G. S. Brady. 
Pontopolites typicus, 'T. Scott. 
* Pseudothalestris major, T. and A. Scott. - 
Stephos Scotti. G. O. Sars. 
Tachidius dicipes, Giesb. 
7 littoralis, Poppe. 
Zaus spinatus, Goodsir. 


9 


Genus Pseudodiosaccus, T. Scott (1906). 
Pseudodiosaccus propinquus (T. and A. Scott). PI. xiv., figs. 19-29. 


1893. Duiosaccus propinquus, T. and A. Scott. Ann. and Mag, 
- Nat... Hist., sev. 6, vol. xi, (Oct. 1893), ‘p. 237, 1am 
figs. 1-6. 


1906. Pseudodiosaccus propinquus, T. Scott. Ann. and Mazg., 
May, 1906, p. 465. 


This species was obtained in the Moray Firth, a few miles to the 
northward of Kinnaird Head, where the water is very deep; the parti- 
cular part where this species was obtained gave a sounding of 130 
fathoms (240 metres), the dredge line hanging free, and straight up and 
down. As the species appears to be rare, and as the number of drawings 
used to illustrate the description were only sufficient for its identification, 
I propose to supplement the original description with some additional 
remarks and drawings, especially as it has been considered necessary to 
remove the species from the genus to which it was first ascribed. 


* Professor G. O. Sars. in Vol. V. of his great work on the Crustacea of Norway, at 
present in course of publication, deals with what is probably the most difficult as well as 
the most interesting group of the Copepoda, viz.:—the Harpacticoida. In this volume, 
at p. 142, the learned author is inclined to regard Pseudothalestris major, T. and A. Scott, 
as identical with Westwoodia minuta, Claus. ‘The description and figures of this form 
given by Dr, Claus are meagre—they are not only limited and indefinite, but it is only 
the male that he describes. On the other hand, Professor Sars’ description and figures 
of what he believes to be the female of Claus’ species are full and clear, like all that 
author’s work, and they no doubt show a certain close resemblance to the female of 
Pseudothalestris major. But there is at least one point where an important difference 
occurs. The author describes the antennules of the female as composed of six joints, 
whereas those of the female of Pseudothalestris inajor are eight-jointed, the first four 
being moderately elongated and the other four shorter. There appears also to be some 
difference in the structure of the posterior antennee. 

It may also be noted that the same author makes Pseudothulestris Brady, a synonym 
of Westwoodia, Baird, but as the small group of species that have been arranged under 
the genus name Pseudothalestris are clearly distinguishable from Westwoodia by the 
difference in the structure of the first pair of thoracic feet, I prefer to keep them separate 
under the genus instituted by Dr. Brady. The fact that ad/ the species belonging to the 
group hitherto arranged together under Pseudothalestris are similarly characterised by 
the peculiarity in the structure of the first pair of feet that distinguishes them from the 


typical Westwoodia is, I think, a valid reason for keeping them separate from that genus, 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. aTe 


The female of this species, as already described, resembles to some 
extent that of Diosaccus tenuicornis, Claus, in its general appearance, but 
is probably somewhat larger. It measures about linm. (or = of an 
inch) in length, exclusive of the tail setze (fig. 19). 

The antennules (anterior antenne) are moderately elongated, and com- 
posed of eight joints; the first four joints are moderately large, and are 
together considerably longer than the entire length of the last four. ‘The 
fifth joint is little more than half the length of the preceding one and 
about two-thirds of the length of the sixth joint. The end joint is about 
equal in length to the fifth, but the penultimate one is considerably 
shorter, as shown in the drawing (fig. 20). 

The outer and inner rami of the posterior antenne are both of them 

biarticulate. The outer ramus, which has the joints subequal, is short, 
and furnished with about three short sete. The inner ramus is moder- 
ately stout (fig. 21). 
_ The mandibles are stout, and possess a broad and somewhat obliquely 
truncated biting edge, which is irregularly but distinctly dentated. 
Mandible palp of moderate size, and provided with a single terminal uni- 
articulate branch (fig. 22). 

The maxillz are moderately stout and compact, and the masticatory 
lobe, which is short, and obliquely truncated, is armed with a number of 
tolerably strong spines of varying lengths; the palp is fairly well 
developed (fig. 23), and consists of several lobe-like processes as shown. 

Second maxillipeds robust, and armed with a stout elongated terminal 
claw (fig. 24). 

The first pair of thoracic legs have both branches three-jointed; the 
first joint of the inner branch is considerably elongated, but the second 
and third are very short and subequal, and the end one is armed with 
two terminal claw-like spines, one being moderately long and one short; 
a small seta also springs from near the distal end of the inner margin of 
the first joint. The outer branch is little more than half the length of 
the inner one; the first two joints are subequal, but the third is short, and 
furnished with several spiniform sete, as shown in the drawing (fig. 25). 

The second and third pairs, which have also both branches three- 
jointed, are moderately stout, and the outer and inner branches are of 
nearly equal length. In the second pair the first joint of the inner branch 
is rather shorter than the second, and it carries a single seta on the inner 
margin; the second joint carries three sete, and the end joint one seta, on 
the inner margin ; the end joint is also provided with three terminal setz, 
but the outer one is short. The outer branch has the end joint rather 
longer than the preceding one, and furnished with two elongated setz on 
the inner margin, two moderately long spines on the outer margin, and 
three apical setz of different lengths; the first and second joints are each 
furnished with a moderately long spine on the outer distal angle, and an 
elongated seta on the inner margin (fig. 26). 

In the fourth pair the outer branch resembles that of the second pair 
in stoutness and armature, but the inner branch is slender and short, and 
composed of only two joints; the first joint, which is narrow and shorter 
than the second, bears a seta on the inner margin; the second joint 
scarcely reaches beyond the end of the middle joint of the outer branch, 
and carries five sete round its distal extremity (fig. 27). 

In the fifth pair the outer and inner margins of the basal joint are 
nearly parallel; the distal end is obliquely truncated and slightly convex, 
and bears four moderately long marginal set, so arranged as to be nearly 
equidistant from each other, The secondary joint is broadly oval in out- 
line, and extends considerably beyond the end of the basal joint; it 


280 Part Ill — Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


is provided with six setee, which are arranged as follows:—One small seta 
on the upper half and another on the lower half of the outer margin and 
situated considerably apart, and four sete round the distal extremity; the 
outermost and innermost seta is moderately large and plumose, but the 
two intermediate ones are small and close together (fig. 28) 

Furcal joints as long as the last abdominal segment (fig. 29). Ovisacs 
two. Only three specimens—all females—were obtained. 

Remarks.—This species, as already stated, has some resemblance to 
Diosaccus tenuicornis, Claus, but the structure and armature of the 
mandibles, maxillee, and fourth pair of thoracic legs are so distinctly 
different that though the species was at first ascribed to that genus it 
cannot be retained there, and a new genus, Psewdodiosaccus, has therefore 
been instituted for its reception, as indicated above. This genus appears 
to partake of the characters of both Diosaccus and Amphiascus, but in the 
structure of the fourth pair of thoracic legs it agrees with neither of these 
two genera. 

It ‘resembles Diosaccus in the structure of the posterior antenne, of the 
mandible palp, and to some extent in the structure of the first and fifth 
pairs of thoracic legs; while in the maxille, second maxillipeds, and the 
second and third pairs of legs it resembles Amphiascus. 


PLATE XIV. 
Amphiascus Catharine, T. Scott. 


Fig. 1. Female, side view. 

Fig. 2..Antennule. 

Fig. 3. Antenna. 

Fig. 4. Mandible. 

Fig. 5. Posterior foot jaw. 

Fig. 6. Foot of first pair. 

Fig. 7. Foot of fourth pair. 

Fig. 8. Foot of fifth pair. 

Fig. 9. Abdomen and furcal joints. 


Dactylopusia brevicornis, Claus. 
Fig. 10. Female, dorsal view. 
Fig. 11. Antennule, 
Fig. 12. Antenna, 
Fig. 18. Mandible. 
Fig. 14. Posterior foot-jaw. 
Fig. 15. Foot of first pair, 
Fig. 16. Foot of fourth pair. 
Fig. 17. Foot of fifth pair. 
Fig. 18. Abdomen and fureal joints. 


Pseudodiosaccus propinquus, T. Scott. 
Fig. 19. Female, side view. 
Fig. 20. Antennule. 
Fig. 21. Antenna. 
Fig. 22. Mandible. 
Fig. 23. Maxilla. 
Fig. 24. Posterior foot-jaw. 
Fig. 25. Foot of first pair. 
Fig. 26. Foot of second pair. 
Fig. 27. Foot of fourth pair, 
Fig. 28. Foot of fifth pair. 
Fig. 29. Abdomen and caudal furca. 


a B. | REPORT, 1906. , i 
~ | aati = ne th PLATE XIV, 


i : 
Fics. 1-9. Amphiascus Catharine. Fies. 10-18. Dactylopusia vrevicornis. Fias. 19-29. Pseudodiossacus propinquus. 
: : ~ F f { 
i 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 281 


X..—ON THE SPAWNING AND FECUNDITY OF THE PLAICE 
(PLEURONECTES PLATESSA).. By T. Wemyss Futon, 
M.D., F.R.S.E., Superintendent of Scientific Investigations. 


The spawning period of the plaice has been very well determined for 
various parts of the North Sea. On the east coast of Scotland it extends 
from the end of December in some years, but more usually from the early 
part or middle of J anuary, to the early part or middle of May, one chief 
spawning taking place in March. 

The records of the Marine Hatchery at Aberdeen furnish some details 
of interest as to the length of the spawning season and the intensity of 
spawning in the various months, Thus last year eggs were obtained from 
the spawning pond for 117 days, from 20th January till 16th May. The 
number of eggs obtained in the various months during the last three 
years, and the percentages of the total, are as follows :— 


i 60 

Number of p neo 
Eggs. ercentage, 

January, : 1,980,000 ais) 40 
February, . | 31,402,000 22°3 

March, . . | 78,595,000 53°5 is 
April, . . | 31,911,000 21°3 

| May, .. 1,762,000 1°2 | | | 


The curve (Fig. 1) formed by these figures is very regular, and, as will 
be seen, the spawning is at its height about the middle of March. 

It has not yet been shown, however, over what part of the period a single 
female continues to discharge her eges. It is well known that most or all 
fishes producing isolated pelagic eggs do not get rid of them at once. 
They are spawned in relatively small quantities at a time and over a 
longer or shorter period. As I have elsewhere shown,* this is a physical 
necessity, since a female cannot hold all the eggs at the size they possess 
when mature, and they must ripen gradually and in succession. 

It was in order to determine the duration of the spawning in a single 
female, and some other points in connection with spawning, that the 
following experiments were chiefly made. But another object I had in 
view was to ascertain the number of eggs actually shed into the water, 
t.e., the real fecundity. This has been approximately determined for the 

“The Comparative Fecundity of Sea Fishes,” Minth Annual Report, Part IIL, 


abe. ‘*On the Growth and Maturation of the Ovarian Eggs of Teleostean Fishes,’ a 
Sixteenth, Ibid., p. 88. 


282 Part III.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


plaice already in one of the papers above alluded to, but by a different 
method, viz., by counting the eggs in a given portion of the ovary after 
the death of the fish, and then computing the total numbers. 

The experiment consisted in keeping two female plaice, which were 
nearly ready to spawn, in separate tanks, with one or more mature males 
with each of them, until spawning was quite concluded ; to collect all the 
egos daily and ascertain their numbers. 

The tanks in which the experiments were made are similar in all 
respects. Each is 6 feet 4 inches in length, 4 feet 3 inches in breadth, 
and 3 feet 6 inches high, and the water was kept at a level of 28 inches 
throughout the period. The quantity of water was thus about 62 cubic 
feet, or 385 gallons (1749 litres). The flow through it amounted to about 
80 gallons per hour. The glass front of the tank was covered over with 
an old sail, and light was admitted from the top, but it was not very 
strong. The water entering the tanks was filtered through close and 
thick flannel to obviate the chance of eggs getting into them in that way ; 
and no other fish or organisms were in the tanks—nothing but the plaice. 

The overflow from each tank was carried into two boxes, each about a 
foot square, the bottoms of which were covered with fine silk-netting, so 
that all eggs might be retained ; these were partly immersed in order to 
keep the eggs living, and the water passed from one of the boxes into the 
other, being thus twice filtered, an arrangement adopted lest the fine 
apertures in the silk gauze in the first box should get clogged up during 
the night. 

The method of dealing with the eggs was as follows :—Each collection, 
daily, or, usually, twice a day, was preserved in sea-water with a little 
formaline. The eggs were then strained off and spread on blotting paper, 
and as much of the water and moisture as possible removed. They were 
then added to a long burette, graduated to tenths of a cubic centimetre, 
in which a certain measured quantity of water had been placed. The 
difference between the readings before and after the eggs were introduced 
gave the volume of the eggs in cubic centimetres. Some were also 
weighed on a Sartorius balance. A portion of the eggs in each collection 
were treated in a similar way and, after the volume had been determined, 
were counted. The number of eggs per cubic centimetre, and the 
total quantity of eggs in the collection, were thus estimated. 

Two suitable female plaice were selected from those in the spawning 
pond (used in connection with the hatchery), ¢.e., which had swollen 
ovaries and obviously would soon spawn, but which contained no ripe eggs. 
This was ascertained by pressure in the ordinary way. On the other 
hand, males were taken from which spermatic fluid was already oozing, in 
order to provide that the eggs should be fertilised, and to furnish such 
psychological stimulus to the female as might be necessary and natural. 

On the 19th February the following plaice were put into the tanks :— 
In No. 5 a female measuring 47cm. (184 inches) and weighing 1324 
grammes (2 lbs, 14? ounces), and a male of 43cm. (17 inches) and weigh- 
ing 842 grammes (1 lb. 132 ounces). In tank No. 2 the female measured 
46°5cm. (187 inches) and weighed 1536 grammes (3 lbs, 6 ounces), and 
was thus heavier than the other. Two males were put in with her, 
measuring respectively 38:6cm. and 40cm. 

In the course of the experiment, when a pause occurred in spawning, 
the males were sometimes replaced by fresh ones taken from the pond, as 
mentioned later. 

No eggs were obtained from either tank until 19th March. During the 
interval the males and females lay auiet in a corner of the tank. In No. 
5, for example, the female lay with her snout as far as possible into the 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 283 


corner, the male snuggling up close beside her, between her and the wall. 
They were never observed swimming about, and only rarely shifted their 
position, They did not take any food; the mussels thrown in one day 
were removed on the following day. The male in No. 2 was ouriously 
coloured. Along the sides, near the base of the fins, there were six equi- 
distant and subequal spots of chalky white, from 4-2 inch in diameter ; 
there was a similar spot at the root of the tail and another near the base 
of the pectoral fin. Between these were single dullish-red spots, by no 
means conspicuous; white rings were not observed around them. Similar 
red spots were scattered over the surface. The female was dull-coloured 
and her spotting not very noticeable. 

The particulars as to the spawning of each female from day to day are 
given in the following Table, and also in the diagram on the opposite 
page, the numbers in the first column representing 1000’s of eggs. 


|TABLE, 


284 Part (I].—Twenty-fourth Annual Report. 


Eggs Quantity taken for 
! Collected. Computation. 
Time of » Number per Estimated Temperature 
Collection. : ait C.C, Total Number. of Water. 
.C; C.C, Number. 
Be Hours; 2 5 2 5 2 5 Waa 5 2 5 Z 5 
Mar. 19 , AE ORR PPE SLR 1 EEE Boge FINE Teg B 9 Anos 
Vaal ~Picsk, {Bes Altes aul ccc el bcos eae tesa eet Me dae 
5 esa res caren Ot cee? on cae 
» 26-| ... | 28-98} 62-8) 1-08] 4-3 | 237 | 1085 | 219°4| 262-3| 6,359 | 15,846 
1, g7j 7.10a} 8-5 | 22:5) 85 | 82-5 | 1796 | 5542 | 211°3 | 243-6) 1,796 | 5,542 
tee 2.20] 7-1 | 18-7 | 7-1 | 88 | 1816 | 2155 |185-35| 244-8 | 1,316 | 38,863 
,, 29 | 2.30p] 11:09} 70 | 238] 70 | 542 | 2608 | 227-7 | 260°8| 2,525 | 2,608 
,», 30 | 8.30p} 16°15] 9:2 | 1:45] 2-2 | 324] 612 | 223-4| 277-7) 3,609 | 2,655 
2 He L15pl a5 584 oe S DDh oe nal DTA WIGS. | O08 he a Sone 155 
a a 490 215 490 | 88° 227-01" OV 11, 167 88 
1», 3B | 2'30p] 28-9 1°6 385 | ... |240°6| ... | 6,954 tt 
» 4 | 8p | 28°87 ere ADD | eo dl 23824) ae 6 Sea 
» 2) | ep on 2es 12 985)". 937754. ego 
»» 76 | Bp’) 88-45 1°65 B81) 8/2309 hs 8878 * 
», 7 | 9.80a} 30°45 1-45| 24 | 335 | 626 | 231°8| 260:8| 7,035 | 11,868 
», 8 | 10a | 10:86] 39:4] 0:66] 7:5 | 185] 458 | 280°3 | 305:3| 3,044 | 12,030 
g ¢| 7-808) 50°35 | 92-15] 3-15) 32 | 808] Sug | 256-5 | 259°4| 12,915 | 23,899 
» 450p) 3:8.) 2) 50-99 236 teh i DBSk ees 906 Res 
10 §| 7-10a] 24°89] ... | 1-69 427 252°7 6,288 a ae 
” 4A5p| 3:5°| .. | 8:5 W021 4 20061" - 702 hy i ae 
11.f| @-15a] 229°) 2) | 10 255°} ..,°° 1 255 ... | 5,840 . | 454 | 44:8 
, 4.45p| 6°95| ... | 0°75 190 he) 5) AQ65S ance a eae 8 a é 
. { ibs QV 56 i nal 1:81 316.1... 12601 > we Ieee . | 454 | 4-1 
99 a wae eee eee eee a iata eee eos eee eee eee eee 
13 §| 7-10a] 22'85| ... | 4:75 1281-4 6.4) 2592) «..05 |, 922 .. | 468 | 46:4 
r 4,45p| 3°91] ... | 1-21 9801. Onis 905 a Wate a 
14$| 7-10a} 15°98}... | 1°68 482° )- ... 1 965°07—.,.. |) 4,285 .. | 46:2 | 45-7 
AGT ie2Op) Segal nea SBAPG al. |e Reerl Tre a Oper gee. 766 es Srey oe 
Ml ol 243 |134:75| 1-7 | 3:25) 489 | 1186 | 287-6 | 364:9| 6,989 | 49,170| 47-1 | 46-1 
710p) 38"l Vee | 20N- 4) BOY) 3, Oe eg. eae Lae | ee 
, 164| a5 
7 7.10a| 53°35| ... | 21 586 279 14,887 ee ee. 
4.45p| - A> ‘90 B08 Wai 4 B49 is .. | 442 | 46-2 
7.10a| 15°30)... |) 55) = | B08... See ce 4) aoe .. | 45°3 | 45-0 
i) 18 4.45p : ; 
19 7-108 9-7 |204:36| ‘*75| 685) 169 | 2155 |212 | 324-6) 2,056 | 32,828| 40-8 | 41-2 
LST ig A nen SOE RSME Ro) Et ae ee cae ee Be .. | 42:3 | 49-1 
20 {| 4,.30p|_ ... f; un oe iS ra Fan = ah ee. os ge 
aa | ea ” ew Grier! by een Ue r i oe | 4527 | 2a 
_ 22 | 9,15al 28-6 | 54:2] 2:0 | 2-7 | 462] 941 | 231 | 348-5| 5,452 | 18,888] 45:0 | 45°0 
23 { ee 10°8 | 38:0) 11 | 92 | 484] 660 |394:5|314-3| 4,261 | 12,943) 42°8 | 42-8 
7 Sees ee bs Gar ey Bare at ca Mr te gr Oe ee pee a .. | 40°6 | 42:0 
25 {| ae st eae Bete as ey beet ahs: apes hn a a . | 40% | 41:2 
26 J 7-15. | eo:g| | aiag| 2 | node | | 806 | | 16,587) 42°8 | 484 
Giada ends oe ee ae el on ee cena See he .. | 43:9 | 43-8 
27 | AAG Mel eee x aoe fe 5 fe *; 
eon a: 44:2 | 43-9 
tie 53 | io 
LS jpBO aL se Maa 
f 4.45p ae sak 
May 1 | 7a 44°6 | 44°6 
ge Ral 44-4 | 44:8 
1 
Le gr so Siena ae SN > EP Mati cae . | 46:8 | 46-0 
yt Abdo T B0a| sec eh od sett Tw eet ce ei = eee | Are 
oe Boal LEB. hyo Se Gl wie. Sy) aoe Olale Reet eal | 348 pe 10,907 | 46°9 | 46°8 


| | | | | | | | I] | | | 

| 4 Hee | a aes | Pi pS dE | | O 

ae) Beeiiae | 

aa: (readme SIA ln 

omega ele St eal hing call ale) eee ees | a aol rae eae rage aera |r) | esate fae) (roar heel a aie eel aI ge rr oer epee|( | mmm 3 

| | ¢ N Vid | | 

EAS 2) ag a PN eS ti PN nal fanaa Ps ea eae ty SN evr Ore ef a I A al | Md ere feed Pe oP ape cee, 

“SRSHSE ate SHER: 

| Sa | ty | | | | : | | 3 | | Fe a | 

Mesos Ley nis Bie : 
eR He a 
feeese S| ae | 
Se ae Meese ig a CS eS el gee el eae eee eaeie (Se oe 2 ae | ae 
| | | 
| | | 
2) a aes fe fer i RE Paveat See irieiicd atl tee os tal cee es 08 
G | “ON Id 
S| | | | | Cops aert! e-calpar i aed Cama RR pear BE SIRS ce Pale eee BPS tee 
| : 

lela) tf oelee! also [s|se| ele] te loclorjerferfolorl wlerler)wlorl el s(alelalyielely wloelcls[alac| 

“LOT | ‘Tady “yore 000‘T 


286 Part III.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The quantity of eges obtained from No. 2 on 19th March was small, 
and there was a pause until the 26th, when the spawning began in reality. 
In the case of this fish the emission of eggs went on very steadily until the 
19th April, eggs being got daily. From 19th to 22nd April spawning was 
interrupted, and the last eggs were obtained on 23rd April. The spawn- 
ing of this female thus extended over a period of 36 days from first to 
last, but was chiefly limited to the interval from 26th March to 23rd April, 
or 28 days; only on three days in that time were no eggs found to have 
been spawned. 

The characters of the spawning of this fish were a eae small or 
moderate, quantity of eggs on each day. The average number emitted per 
day for the 25 days that they were emitted was 6542; the largest on any 
one day was 15,195 on 17th April, the next largest being 13,832 on 17th 
April; the smallest was 2056 on 19th April, and 2525 on 29th March. 

The other female, in tank 5, offered a striking contrast to the above. 
Its spawning extended over a period of 41 days, viz., from 26th March to 
5th May; but eggs were spawned on only 16 days during that time. 
There were thus long intervals without any eggs being obtained ; as much 
as nine days. As the Table shows, it spawned most regularly at first, 
each day from 26th March to 2nd April (no collection was taken on the 
28th or Ist). It will be noticed that the quantity of spawn emitted on 
the second day was very large, and it then diminished, only 155 eggs being 
found on the 31st March, and only 88 on 2nd April. The ovaries were 
greatly distended when spawning began, and the figures show that the 
fully mature eggs which had collected were got rid of in about five days, 
after which a rest for some days occurred. 

This female spawned again on the 7th April, and for the next two days ; 
then not again until the 15th; then on the 19th, 22nd, and 23rd; then 
on the 26th, and finally on 5th May. The seven “bursts” of spawning 
were as follows :— 


Number of Ratio per 
Dates. Kggs Spawned. 1.C.C. 
1 | 26th March-2nd Ape ; 65,657 255°64 
2 | 7th-9th April, . 47,797 272°2 
3 | 15th April, : : 49,170 364°9 
4 | 19th April, ; : 32,828 3146 
5 | 22nd, 23d ‘April, ; 30,831 331°4 
6 | 26th ‘April, : . ‘ 15,587 306‘0 
7 | 5th May, . : ' 10,907 318°0 


The largest numbers on any one day was 49,170 on 15th April, and 
44,405 on 27th March; the smallest daily amount was 88 and 155, which 
might almost be considered accidental, the next being 2555. The average 
per day for the 15 days on which spawning occurred was 16,852 eggs. 

The aggregate quantiiy of spawn from No. 2 over the whole period was 
654:29 cubic centimetres, and the estimated number of eggs was 163,557. 

The aggregate from No. 5 was 856:79 cubic centimetres, and the 
estimated number of eggs was 252,777. 


| ‘TABLE. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 287 


The quantity and numbers for each month were :— 
No. 2. No. 5. 


C.C. No. C.C No. 


March,. | 71°82 | 15,605] 263-2 | 65,414 
April, . | 582:47 | 147,952 | 559-29 | 176,456 
May, . = 2 34:30 | 10,907 


The quantities taken for enumeration were 84°94 cubic centimetres for 
No. 2 and 77:04 for No. 5, or about 13 and 9 per cent. of the totals; and 
the numbers of eggs counted were 19,075 of No. 2 and 21,400 of No. 5, 
the total being 161-98 cubic centimetres, and 40,475 eggs. 

With regard to the fecundity of the fishes, these results agree very well 
with those deduced previously from weighing part of the ovary and 
enumerating the eggs. Thus, in the paper referred to in the Vinth Annual 
Report, I describe a female of 174 inches, and weighing 2 lbs. 10 ounces, 
with an estimated number of 148,470 eggs, and another of the same size 
and weighing 3 lbs. 04 ounces, with 223,497 ; the average for the five 
plaice there dealt with being 19-9 inches in length, 3 lbs. 102 ounces 
(1664 grammes) in weight, and 301,394 eggs. 

Before referring further to the facts brought out in the Table, I may 
describe some of the occurrences in regard to the fishes and their 
treatment, 

On 31st March a fresh male quite ripe was put into tank No. 5, The 
female was observed to be lying apart from the males, all of which had 
conspicuous red spots, but not nearly so bright as one often sees on 
plaice brought to deck at the fishing grounds at other times of the year. 
The ovaries were sometimes enormously swollen, so much so that I was 
afraid that the ‘“‘egg-bound” condition was about to supervene. It 
appears, however, to be natural, and a certain distension occurred before 
the eggs were allowed to run from the oviduct. After a ‘‘burst” of 
spawning they were notably reduced in size. 

On the 6th April, a fresh ripe male was put with No. 5, and the 
spawning, which had been interrupted, began on the same night. On 
the occasions when No. 5 stopped spawning, she was usually observed to 
be lying away from the males. The latter, it may be remarked, appeared 
to have no contests for the privilege of fertilising the eggs, as with the 
lumpsuckers in an adjoining tank. They were always lying quietly, and 
often, or even usually, together. 

The ovaries of No. 2 were, as a rule, more swollen than those of the 
other female. 

On 13th April two ripe males were put into No. 5, and she spawned 
again on the 15th. 

With regard to food, mussels were only occasionally eaten, probably 
by the males; only on one occasion was any slimy matter which might 
have come from the intestines observed in the overflow, and in pressing 
the plaice taken from the tank to select those for the experiment, no 
excrements were pressed out. 

After No. 5 stopped spawning on the 26th, she was observed to be 
adhering to the vertical side of the tank, a position she occupied for a 
day or two, as if desiring to be freed from the attention of the males. 

Spawning was never actually observed, but the Table shows that it 
takes place usually at night, though it does not always do so (see 27th 


288 Part III.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


March), Asa rule, however, very much less spawn was collected in the 
afternoon than in the morning, and part may have been derived from the 
spawning during the night. 

The difference between the two females was not confined to the 
spawning. There was a noteworthy difference in the eggs, not merely as 
to quantity but as to size. After some experience in the enumeration, it 
was possible to tell whether a collection was from No. 2 or No. 5, owing 
to this difference. Those from No. 5 were smaller. 

Thus the mean number per cubic centimetre of the eggs from No. 2 
was 250 (249°98), while the mean number from No. 5 was 245 per 
cubic centimetre, a difference of 45 per cubic centimetre. In other 
words, the eggs of one plaice were about 18 per cent. smaller than those 
of the other. With one exception (23rd April) the number per cubic 
centimetre was always greater in the second plaice, No. 5, that is to say, 
its eggs were smaller. 

The ratio of number of eggs to 1 cubic centimetre in No, 2 was 185:35 
at the beginning of spawning, and 394°5 at the close; in No. 5 it was 
243°6 at the beginning, and over 300 later, the highest being 364°9 on 
15th April. 

This difference was partly due to the fact that in No. 2 there was in 
almost every collection a proportion of the eggs much larger than others ; in 
some of the collections this was very noticeable. They graduated from 
very large ones, swollen, and, it might be said, hydropic, to small ones ; 
the range of size being considerable from the smallest to the largest. 

The eggs spawned by the other female (No. &) were much more uniform 
in size. Whether differences of this kind occur under natural conditions 
I do not know, but such large hydropic eggs of the plaice are sometimes 
taken from the spawning pond, and on one or two occasions led to the 
suspicion that they might belong to some other species. They appear to 
be produced by an excessive imbibition of the watery saline solution that ~ 
enters the egg at the last stage of maturation.* Whether they are 
fertilised and behave like the normal egg was not determined. Now and 
again a single egg was got stained bright yellow, no doubt from the bile ; 
and several were blue, for what reason I did not discover. 

It may be seen from the Table, moreover, that as spawning proceeded 
the size of the eggs tended to become smaller. 

The fact may be seen from the averages for No. 5 given in the Table 
printed above; and, taking the mean of the first five averages (number 
per cubic centimetres) and the mean of the last five averages, we have 
the following :— 


No. 2. No. 5. 
26th-30th March, 213°43 26th—30th March, 255°84 
17th-23rd April, O9TO1T 19th April—-5th May, 320:28 


The increase in the number with the first female was thus 83°74 per 
cubic centimetre, and in the second, 65°04 per cubic centimetre, the 
reduction in size amounting to 39:2 and 25:4 per cent, respectively. 

The fact is of some interest, and is in all probability due to the com- 
parative exhaustion of the water-secreting function of the ovary, water 
being, so far as volume is concerned, the chief product of that organ. It 
might, however, be owing to the eggs spawned later containing less 
yolk; a less probable explanation, for several reasons. 

I may add that the mean of a number of fertilised plaice eggs taken 
from the large spawning pond at the same time was 307 per cubic 
centimetre, two samples varying from 312°27 to 301°63. 


*Vide Sixteenth Annual Report, Part IIL., p. 89. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 289 


I have elsewhere shown* that at the last stages of the maturation of 
plaice eggs in the ovary the absorption of water by the eggs is enormous, 
amounting to at least two-thirds of the volume of the contents. Thus, in 
the 654 cubic centimetres of eggs produced by the female, No. 2, at least 
536 cubic centimetres is represented by water absorbed not long before 
the eggs are extruded, and which is secreted by the fish. So in the other 
case ; about 572 cubic centimetres of the 857 cubic centimetres of eggs 
‘represents water absorbed. 

Both the plaice were kept in the tanks after the conclusion of spawning. 
On 9th May, no further eggs having come from the plaice in No. 2 since 
the 23rd of April, and spawning being clearly over, she was killed and 
examined. The length was the same, 46°5cm., and the weight was 2]bs. 
8i0z. (1139°8 grammes), showing a loss of 140z., or 396 grammes. 

At the same time, the other plaice (No. 5) was also weighed. It was 
2lbs. 60z. (1083 grammes), showing a loss of 8j0z., or 234 grammes. 
The measurement was a little less, viz., 46°7cm. 

This fish was put back with the males into the tank, but no further 
spawning occurred. On 13th May she weighed 1119 grammes, and was 
still 46-7em.; on 21st May the weight and length were the same, so that 
recovery was slow. 

The loss in weight above referred to does not represent anything like 
the weight of the eggs spawned. Among those of No. 2 it was found 
that 56 cubic centimetrea weighed 53 grammes, so that the total weight 
of the 654 cubic centimetres spawned would be about 619 grammes, or 
223 grammes more than the loss of weight of the fish. 

In the other plaice (No. 5) 6°7 cubic centimetres of eggs weighed 6°65 
grammes, and the total weight of the whole quantity of 857 cubic centi- 
metres would be about 850 grammes, or 616 grammes in excess of the 
loss of weight of the fish. 

The difference is accounted for by the water secreted and absorbed 
as the eggs mature ; also, no doubt, by the absorption of water by the 
muscles aud tissues of the fish after spawning, the increase of weight in 
No. 5 after the 9th May being probably due to this, since no food was 
eaten. 

When the first plaice (No. 2) was killed, on 9th May, the ovaries were 
found to contain a large quantity of spawn. When put into sea-water 
all went to the bottom within a few minutes, and the disc was chalky 
white, and in many cases wrinkled and irregular. They represent the 
eggs which the fish is unable to get rid of at the end of spawning, and 
which disintegrate and are absorbed. The quantity amounted to 43:95 
cubic centimetres, of which 3°75 cubic centimetres contained 1482 eggs, 
or 395°2 per cubic centimetre. The estimated number of eggs thus 
retained in the ovaries and destroyed was 17,369, or over 10 per cent. of 
the number spawned, which indicates a very considerable loss. 

The ovaries of the other plaice were in the same condition, slightly 
swollen, tumid, and soft. 


* Ihid., p. 14. See also p, 145. 


290 Part I1.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


XL—ON TWO CASES OF HERMAPHRODITISM IN THE COD 
(GADUS CALLARIAS). 


3y H. Cartes Wititamson, M.A., D.Sc, Marine Laboratory, 
Aberdeen. 


(Plates XV., XVI.) 


Several cases of Hermaphroditism were noticed among the cod landed 
in Aberdeen during March, 1906. Two of these were secured from local 
fish-curing yards for the Marine laboratory. A third was reported to the 
Fishery Board from Whitehills; and a fourth is known to have been 
observed in Aberdeen. 

The specimens here described were examined after having been two 
months in formaline solution ; they exhibit two different arrangements 
of the ovaries and testes. In one case, fig. 1, pl. xv. and xvi., a fully 
developed female reproductive organ bears at the anterior extremity of 
each ovary a small testis, forming a symmetrical hermaphrodite organ. 
The other example (fig. 2, pl. xv. and fig. 4, pl. xvi.) shows a single roe 
of large size united to a full-sized testis. The organ on the right side is 
female, that on the left is male. 

The symmetrical roe weighed about 53 lb. It contained transparent 
eggs, showing that the roe was nearly ripe. ‘The testis contained some 
ripe sperms, but there were none in the vas deferens. The testis, though 
well developed, was considerably short of being ripe. The main blood- 
vessel, b.v., of the ovary reaches that organ at its anterior extremity. It 
is continued over the dorsum of the ovary along the base of the mesentery 
(after giving off a large branch to pass down on the inner surface of the 
ovary) to unite at the junction of the two ovaries with the corresponding 
vessel of the opposite organ. Before it reaches the ovary this large 
vessel gives off two branches b!.v!. and 6?.v?., one to each end of the 
loop-formed testis (fig. 2, pl. xvi.). Between the branch blood-vessels and 
the frill of the testis lies the vas deferens. This duct is closed at one 
end of the testis loop, viz., at VD, and it opens by its other extremity, 
Vip", into the ovary, by three small openings. These openings were not 
so guarded as to prevent the eggs from getting out into the vas deferens, 
but the eggs found there were small yoked eggs, and they may have been 
forced out by the handling to which the roe was subjected. A fully ripe 
egg would probably not pass through the apertures. The general form 
of the testis is that of a loop; it is shown diagrammatically in fig. 3. 
The great development of the testis-frill on so short an extent of vas 
deferens has formed it into a compact mass, wherein the vas deferens is 
not to be seen until the folds are forced apart. The large blood-vessel cf 
the ovary is accompanied by a thick walled vessel (v.) having a very 
small lumen. 

The asymmetrical organ weighed 3? lb. The ovary contained trans- 
parent eggs. Some ripe sperms were present in the testis; but there 
were none in the vas deferens. In this case a normal ovary is accom- 
panied by a normal testis (fig. 4). The two unite in the anal region 
just as two ovarics or two testes do, and their ripe products escape by the 


of the Fishery Bowrd for Scotland. 291 


one genital aperture (g.-ap.). In the cod each ovary or testis is supported 
to the roof of the abdominal cavity by a mesentery, which is attached 
longitudinally to the swim-bladder. The stomach and gut are similarly 
supported by a mesentery that hangs between the genital mesenteries. 
All three mesenteries are together connected to the union of the two 
ovaries (or testes). The rectum is supported by mesentry to the inferior 
part of the united ovaries. The two ovarian mesenteries are continued 
posteriorly as a single mesentery joined superiorly to the roof of the 
abdominal cavity, and extending to the hind extremity of the post- 
abdomen, where it unites with the peritoneum. The hind lobes of the 
ovary are attached, one on each side, to the mesentery. ‘This mesentery 
also includes the ureter and urinary bladder, and binds them to the floor 
of the post-abdomen. The post-abdomen is thus divided longitudinally 
into two quite separate compartments. 

This arrangement was found to hold exactly in the case of the second 
hermaphrodite specimen. The mesenteries were arranged quite normally. 
Since they are similarly arranged in both sexes, the substitution of one 
half of the ovary by a testis did not involve any obnormal arrangement 
of the mesenteries, 

When the wall of the ovary near the genital aperture was dissected off 
it was seen (fig. 5) that the vas deferens from the hind part of the testis, 
viz., V1.D!., and that from the main testis, V.D., opened into a common 
chamber, marked sm. in the drawing. The wall of this chamber is 
smooth ; it is open below to the eggs in the ovary. Alongside the base 
of the ventrally descending portion of the testis the tissue is deeply 
honeycombed, and divided up with a network of stout fibres (h.-c.). 
The passage of the sperms to the exterior appears to be as follows :—They 
pass from the upper smooth part to the honeycombed region, which pro- 
bably acts as a sort of seminal receptacle, and from thence pass out along 
the smooth lower wall to the genital opening (g.ap.). The wall of the 
ovary near the genital aperture is smooth on the inside, whereas all the 
remaining wall bears the ovarian folds, The smooth part forms a gather- 
ing place for the ripe eggs, where they may collect away from the develop- 
ing eggs, and when they may lie ready to be expelled. The smooth part 
of the skin of the ovary is shown in fig. 1, sm. In fig. 5, which shows 
the dissection of the hermaphrodite roe, the deflected sides are shown to 
be on one side partly smooth and in part covered with ovarian folds (ov,f.), 
and on the anterior side smooth (sm.). The smooth parts are the 
oviducal part. : 

It is clear that in the asymmetrical hermaphrodite both male and 
female organs will be functional, but it is also evident that they will not 
be simultaneously ripe. In this case the testis is much further from 
ripeness than is the ovary. Even although they should be ripe simul- 
taneously, it is possible that the elements might not mix much, because 
there is room for the ripe eggs to collect on the opposite side of the ovary 
to that on which the testis is. 

In the first case, where the testis is attached to the anterior end of the 
ovary, the former was farther from being ripe than was the ovary. It is 
not likely that the sperms would be able to penetrate the ovary so long 
as the ovary is large and distended. And as the facts indicate that the 
ovary will be ripe first, it is conceivable to regard the ovary as function- 
ing later in the spent condition as a vas deferens. 

Masterman* described two cases of hermaphroditism in the cod in the 
Thirteenth Annual Report of the Fishery Board for Scotland, Pt. IIL, 
p. 297. He also cites a number of other cases. In none of these wasa 
condition found similar to either of the specimens described above, In 


292 Part ITI.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


only one case was the hermaphrodite organ symmetrical—that was a case 
described by Weber, in which a testis was attached to the posterior end 
of each ovary. In no case was the united organ composed equally of one 
testis and one ovary. The connection of the vas deferens with the ovary 
was similar in Howe’s, Masterman’s, and the present instance, except 
that in Howe’s a well-marked valve structure prevented the back passage 
of ova into the vas deferens. A somewhat similar arrangement appeared 
in Masterman’s specimen. 

Kylet describes a case of hermaphroditism in the ling (Molva vulgaris). 
The testis was in four parts ; a very large part much larger than the ovary 
was attached to the anterior end of each ovary, aud a smaller part was 
connected with the hind end of each ovary, that connected to the right 
ovary being very small. A small portion of the left ovary was separated 
from the ovary posteriorly. Anteriorly each testis opened into the ovary 
by a small aperture guarded against the issue of the eggs by a valve-like 
fold of fibrous tissue. Posteriorly the left testis opened by its vas cleferens 
into the oviduct. In this specimen, then, we have a combination of the 
two conditions described above— viz., (1) the ovary functioning as a vas 
deferens, and (2) the common use of the oviduct for the issue of both 
eggs and sperms. The eggs were nearly ripe, and the testis was well 
developed. The specimen was secured in May. 


Plate XV. 


Fig. 1.—Symmetrical hermaphrodite reproductive organs of Gadus 
callarias. 

Fig. 2.—Asymmetrical hermaphrodite reproductive organs of Gadus 
eullarias. 


Plate XVI. 
The Figures are not drawn to Scale. 


Fig. 1.-—Symmetrical hermaphrodite reproductive organs of Gadus 


callarias. 
Fig. 2.— Dissection of connection between the testis and the anterior 


end of the ovary in the symmetrical organ. 
Fig. 3.—Diagrammatic sketch of structure of testis of preceding. 
Fig. 4.—Asymmetrical hermaphrodite reproductive organs of Gadus 


callarias. 
Fig. 5.—Dissection showing connection between vas deferens and the 


oviduct in the asymmetrical organ. 


Lerrers USED. 


a.—anus. | ov.f.—ovarian folds. 
b.v.-—blood vessel. | ov.int. —interior of ovary. 
gn.ap.—genital aperture. sm.— smooth area. 
yn.me.—genital mesentery. PAS esis: 

gt.me.—gut mesentery. ur.—ureter. 
h.c.—honeycombed region | ur.bl.—urinary bladder. 
me.—mesentery. v.—vesse]. 

ov.— ovary. 


*Masterman: ‘On Hermaphroditism in the Cod.” 'hirteenth Annual Report of the 
Fishery Board for Scotland, Part III., for the year 1894, p. 297. } eit 

+ Kyle: ‘‘ Note on the Reproductive Organs of an Hermaphrodite Ling.” Fifteenth 
Assnual Report of the Fishery Board for Scotland, Part I1I., for the year 1896, p. 396. 


PLATE XV 


Symmetrical 


10n 


Hie. 1: 
t 


i 


Fic. 2,—Asymmetrical Cond 


ion 


t 


i 


Hermaphrodite reproductive organs of Gadus callarias. 
Cond 


F. B. REPORT, 1906. 


F. B. REPORT, 1906. 


H.C. W. 


HFRMAPHRODITE REPRODUCTIVE ORGANS OF Gadus callarias. 


PLATE XVi 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 293 


XII.—ON THE GROWTH AND AGE OF THE HERRING 
(CLUPEA HARENGUS). By Dr. T. Wemyss Fuuron, F.R.S.E., 
Superintendent of Scientific Investigations. 


(Plates X VII-XIX.) 


CONTENTS. 

PAGE. 

1. Previous Opinions and eens he A, ae 293 
(a) English Authors, ba ts. af. 293 

(b) Scandinavian and Dutch, ae an, on 294 

(c) Meyer and Jenkins, Bec ee aa ap 295 

(d) Masterman and Cunningham, Si. se 298 

2. The Size of the Herring when it first attains Maturity, ie 299 
3. The Maximum Size attained by the Herring, ... is 301 
4. The Spawning-Periods of the Herring, safe a 302 

5. The Duration of ee a Development: Relation to 

Temperature, } a 303 

6. A Criticism of Meyer's s Conclusions and Observations, a 304 
7. The Scottish Collections, * ane as sath 307 
(a) Larval and Post-larval Stages, te bed le 308 

(b) The Annual gs 6 ni tres 323 

8. Conclusions, Ss. yy. 4: re 334 
9. Literature, ... a ahs as oe 338 
10. Description of Plates, Se fat ai cat 338 


1.—PREVIoUS OPINIONS AND OBSERVATIONS. 


The investigation of the rate at which the herring grows is more 
difficult than similar investigations with other fishes. The fact that 
herrings spawn twice in the year, and that spawning may take place, 
more or less, over many or most of the months of the twelve, offers one 
difficulty, and a great one, since the post-larval and young stages derived 
from one spawning cannot readily be distinguished from those derived 
from the other, though metamorphosis may occur at a different length. 
The conditions are complicated by the circumstance that the early stages 
of the sprat, which spawns in early summer, can hardly be separated with 
any certainty from the corresponding stages of the herring. 

Many writers have expressed their opinion as to the rate of growth of 
this fish and the size and age it attains when it first becomes mature and 
reproduces ; and authors are by no means in agreement on these points. 
It is probable that the divergence of view is in part explained by the 
herrings of widely-separated localities growing at a different rate, and 
coming to maturity at a different size; partly from the very smallest and 
exceptionally mature individuals having been fixed upon; many of the 
Opinions, moreover, are based upon general considerations rather than 
on definite evidence. 


(a) English Authors. 


Huxley, in the report of a Commission on the Scottish herring fishery 
(l. p. 27) stated that it was difficult to obtain satisfactory evidence on 
the point, some fishermen believing that the herring took three years 
and others that it took seven years to reach maturity. His own view was 


294. Part [II,—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


that there was no good evidence against the supposition that it reaches 
the spawning condition in one year, a view which was also held by the 
old Dutch naturalist Leuwenhoek. But it might be well, he said, to leave 
the question whether the herring attains its maturity at 12, 15, or 18 
months open, in the tolerably firm assurance that the period last named 
is the maximum. Later, he modified his opinion, agreeing rather with 
Mitchell (2, p. 30) and Yarrell (3, ii., p. 190), that it attained maturity 
when about one year and a half old—a somewhat odd conclusion, since it 
implies that the summer-spawners of one year give rise to the winter- or 
spring-spawners of the next year but one, and vice versa. 

De Caux, who wrote a book on the herring and its fishery, stated his 
belief that herrings arrived at maturity well within twelve months (4, 
p. 50). 

Mr. George Sim did not agree with the supposition that the herring 
grew so fast. From the examination of large numbers of herrings, he 
thought that it grew in its first year six or seven inches, and that it did 

not spawn until the end of its second year (5, p. 46). 


(6) Scandinavian and Dutch. 


On the Continent, and especially in Sweden and Norway, much atten- 
tion has been given to the question. 3 

Ljungmann (6, 6a), as the result of the measurement of a large number 
of herrings in May from the west coast of Sweden, came to the conclusion 
that the herring grew much more slowly than the above statements would 
indicate. 

On the coast of Bohusliin, where the small herrings come in May, they 
grow rapidly with the high temperature, and measure 80mm. to 100mm. 
He measured a great many herrings in the latter part of November on 
the northern part of the Swedish coast, and found that the length of 
these one-year-old fish varied from 78mm. to 109°5mm._ In the latter 
part of spring he also measured many herrings on the Bohuslan coast, 
and came to the conclusion that the majority could be divided into three 
groups, (1) about 120mm. (4? inches), or one year old; (2) 170mm, to 
175mm. (63-62 inches), or two years old; (3) 200mm. to 210mm. (7g- 
8; inches), or, presumably, three years old, and with fully-developed 
reproductive organs. 

Ljungmann occasionally found herrings as small as 18-5em. (77 inches) 
with fully ripe eggs; on the other hand, many herrings from this size up 
to 20cm. (74 inches) could not possibly spawn the same season. While 
he thinks the herring spawns first at three years of age, he says some may 
not do so until four years old. Fish of about 23-5em. (9} inches) he 
regards as four years old. 

Widegren (7), who assigned a length of 75mm. (3 inches) to a one- 
year-old herring, and a length of 150mm. (6 inches) to one two years of 
age, stated that herrings two months old had a length of 25mm. (1 
inch) and at three months a length of 37mm. (1,/,; inches). The size 
at maturity he placed at 20cm. (8 inches) and the age at three years. 

Axel Boeck (8), with special reference to the Norwegian spring herring, 
puts the average length when maturity is reached at 25cm. (9 inches), 
and the average age at three to four years; while Sundevall (9), dealing 
with the strémling of the eastern coast of Sweden, supposed them to 
attain maturity when three or four years old, and about 20cm. (8 inches) 
in length. He states that the young herring reach a length of 25mm. 
in about two months; 36mm. in three months; 50mm. in four months; 
75mm. (3 inches) when one year of age, and from 125mm. to 150mm. 
(5-6 inches) when two years old. 


‘of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 295 


The opinion of Ekstrém (10, 10a) was that herrings 10-12 inches in length 

were about 4—5 years of age. He found young herrings on the coast at 
Morké to reach a length of 25mm. in one month, 50mm. in three months, 
75mm. to 100mm. in December, when they were nearly one year old, and 
about 100mm. (4 inches) when one year of age. He believes that 
maturity is reached at a length of 7 to 8 inches. 
_ Nilsson (11) states that the young of the autumn-spawning herring 
measure about 75mm. (3 inches) in the following May ; and, according to 
the views of the fishermen on the Bohuslin coast, the young of the 
spring herring reach a length of 25mm. in May, 50mm. about the middle 
of August, and in the autumn of the following year, when they are about 
one year and a half old, they are from 75mm. to 100mm. (3-4 inches). 
It was held, moreover, that the herring did not spawn until it was five or 
six years of age. 

G. 0. Sars (12) followed Nilsson in believing that the herring reaches a 
considerable age before it reproduces, fixing it first at 4 to 5 years, and 
later at 5 to 6 years. 

Another author specially qualified to speak of the herrings of the 
Bohuslin coast assigns to them a very slow growth. A.W. Malm (13) states 
that those of 85mm. to 95mm. (33-332 inches) are almost two years old, 
and he thinks that herrings from 19cm. to 22cm. (74-82 inches) are in 
their fourth year, and those of 30cm. (11? inches) upwards of six years 
of age. 

Hoek (14), who carried on a series of careful observations on the 
herrings of the Zuiderzee, which spawn in April and May, states that the 
ripe herrings measure between 24mm. and 27cm. (94-102 inches) their 
weight being from 110 grammes to 143 grammes, and the weight of the 
reproductive organs from 23 grammes to 27 grammes. 

He gives a number of measurements of the post-larval and young 
herrings taken at various periods throughout the year. in July the 
smallest ones were 37mm. to 42mm. (about 14 inches), and there were others 
between 57mm, and 80mm. or even above 90mm. _ In the following 
February most measured between 88mm. and 95mm. (3;4-32 inches), in 
March between 85mm. and 95mm., while others were 49mm. to 75mm. 
(112-3 inches), others 70mm. to 78mm., and some 83mm. to 114mm. In 
April a few specimens were taken which measured about 90mm. (34 inches). 
He thinks that when one year old they are about 115mm. (4% inches) ; 
but his Tables allow a smaller size to be inferred, especially as young 
herrings are known to enter the Zuiderzee from the North Sea. 

In another work (14a, p. 298) Hoek describes the characters of young 
herrings of the Hollandsch Diep and Haringvliet. Large numbers were 
found in the Hollandsch Diep at the end of March, measuring 45mm. to 
48mm. (13-17 inches), which he assigns to the North Sea so-called winter 
herring, which spawns from the beginning of August on; others from 
21mm. to 28mm. (42-83 inches), found in the latter part of June, he 
attributes to the coast herrings which spawn in spring. 


(c) Meyer and Jenkins. 


A series of observations on the growth of the herring of Kiel 
Bay was carried on by Dr. H. A. Meyer (15, 15a), whose results are 
well-known and have to a very large extent guided opinion subsequently 
as to the rate at which the herring grows. In 1874 he found numerous 
larval herrings at the mouth of the Schlei, where spawning takes place 
in March, and especially in April and May, measuring 25mm. to 29mm. 
On 10th June they measured up to 33mm. ; on 23rd June up to 43mm., 


296 Part IIL.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


but the great bulk of them had at this time a length of 25mm. to 
28mm. (1-13 inches) ; they could not be older than three months, showing 
a rate of growth of at least 13mm. a month, while the majority could 
scarcely be older than six weeks. By the end of July they were trans- 
formed, and then measured 45mm. to 55mm. (13-2 58; inches). 

It is important in considering these results to note the temperature 
prevailing in the locality, and I append here a table compiled from those 
in Meyer’s paper, for the ten months given ; up to and including July 
they refer to Schliewasser, and are the mean of three years, 1875-77 ; 
for the rest they refer to Kiel Bay and are the mean of two years, 
1875-76. They are all surface temperatures, and are tn F. 


Mean. Maximum. | Minimum. 
March, .. + 35'6 41:9 32°0 
(A wYil» te) hs 44-2 50:0 39°2 
May sy ved: a 51:2 57°2 42°8 
June, .. 4 62:2 70°9 51°8 
daly. of. vey 66°2 12-3 57:2 
August, ne 67:1 (ees 58:1 
September, .. | 61:5 66:9 52°5 
October, Le 54°5 o9°% 44:2 
November, Ne 43°3 50:7 34:9 
December, ue 36°9 44°2 320 


On llth June, 1874, Meyer put into a floating box at Kiel a number 
(not stated) of transparent post-larval herrings, measuring 25mm, to 
28mm., the growth of which is shown as follows :— 


Mean Approximate 


Date. No. of Days. | Length. | Increase. Growth per Day. 
Mm. Mm. Mm. 
June 24, 13 31-33 4-7 "42 
July 6, 25 (12) 37-38 56 cp 46 
os aL, 40 (15) 41-43 4-6 “30 
August 1, 50 (10) 45-46 3-4 "BD 


The transformation of these spring herrings was completed when they 
were 41mm. long; and the total growth in the 50 days was about 
15mm. to 17mm. (3-14 of an inch), or about 10mm. a month. 

This experiment was a good one, and it would have been improved if 
the numbers at the different sizes had been noted. It will be seen that 
growth became somewhat slower towards the end of the experiment. A 
growth of about 10mm (2 of an inch) per month at this period, and with 
high temperatures prevailing, is not perhaps excessive. 

At the end of August and beginning of September, Meyer also 
measured the young herrings in the neighbouring bays, after they had 
left the mouth of the Schlei and were mixed with other and larger 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 297 


herrings. To obviate as far as possible the risk of confusion, he measured 
only the smaller herrings at the various periods (the numbers are not 
stated) with the following results .— 


Mm. Inches. Increase. 
Mm. 
14th November 1876, ... 5 ow 84 37; 
End of November 1876, ... sone 90 339, 6 
;,5 December 1876, ... . 100 345 10 
woo vanuary 1877, .. ‘< 110 45. 10 
» February ,, as 114 4) + 
>. March <a at ie) 135 5°. ail 
, April “e d 48 138 57 3 
54 


Thus, the total growth in about 167 days, over the winter, according 
to these observations, was approximately 54mm, (24 inches), or at the 
rate of ‘32mm. per day, or about 96mm. per month; that is to say, at 
about the same rate as the average growth of the smaller forms in the 
height of summer. 

This does not agree with my experience as to the growth of other 
fishes, in which growth is much retarded or completely arrested, it 
may be, in winter, and which grow fasiest in the younger stages. 

Some experiments were made by keeping herrings in confinement. 
Two, taken on 12th August among a lot which measured from 50mm. 
to 55mm., were respectively 106mm. and 96mm. 44 months later. The 
srowth thus amounted to about 48mm., or about 10°7mm. per month. 

Three of a medium size of 75mm. on the 24th October, kept in an 
aquarium, measured 100mm. on 28th December, 65 days later, or an 
increment of nearly ‘4mm per day ; at the end of January they measured 
110 mm. (an increase at the rate of almost ‘3mm. daily), the total 
increase in a little over three months being 35mm., or approximately 
11mm. per month. 

Meyer concluded that the spring herring of tne western part of the 
Baltic reach a length of from 130mm. to 140mm. (53-53 inches) at the end 
of their first year; that a month after the fertilisation of the eggs the 
mass of larve, in water over 12°C. (53°6°F.), measure from 17mm. to 
18mm. ; in two months, from 34mm. to 36mm., and in three months from 
45mm. to 50mm., growth thereafter for the remaiming months of the 
twelve being approximately at a similar rate of 10mm. or 11mm. per 
month. 

Ripe herrings, both spring and autumn, were found at 20cm. (7% 
inches); these were the smallest, more commonly the size at first- 
maturity was 210mm. to 220mm. (8 to 83 inches), and he states that they 
are got in the Baltic from 160mm. to 200mm. His conclusion is that the 
herring does not reach sexual maturity before the end of the second year, 
but this conclusion is pieced together from various considerations that 
appeared to him probable, and was not attained by direct evidence. 

A few years later, Meyer made a number of observations on the 
growth of young herrings from artificially fertilised eggs (15a). The 
eggs were fertilised on 26th April, and before hatching they were placed 
in a wooden vat supplied with fresh supplies of water daily. Hatching 
occurred in from 14 to 15 days, the temperature being 51°8° to 53°6°F.; 
later in the summer the temperature of the water was about 68°F. 
After a few days some showed a considerable increase in size, measuring 


298 Part ITT.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


92mm. and 93mm. Counting from the fertilisation of the egg, the sizes 
at different ages were as follows :— 


Mm. | Increase. eae 2 Ape 
| Mm. Mm. 
One Month, ad LOR a = 17-18 
Two Months, ae 17-19 7-8 34-36 
Three ,, ag 30-35 13-16 45-50 
Four ,, me 48-54 | 18-19 55-61 
Five 907; ie 65-70 | 17-16 65-72 


The small growth in the early stages was ascribed to deficient food, 
and when the arrangements were modified growth was quicker; and at 
the end of the five months those artificially reared were of the same size 
as those under natural conditions. 

Another work dealing with the growth of the herring, especially of the 
Baltic, is by Travis Jenkins, (16), and his conclusions were founded on 
the examination of the otoliths of over 300 herrings, almost all from 
Kiel Bay, like those of Meyer. These conclusions are as follows :— 


—_ 


, : Growth in Each 
Age. Total Length. Weight. Veur 

Mm. Grammes. Mm. Gm. 
One Year, .... 1935121: 8 117 8 
Two Years, .:. 156-164 30 | 48 22 
Whreew 5 us: 190-198 50 34 20 
Heures (66 hes 217-225 70 27 20 | 
BiMGies. fos rey Od 237-245 90 20 20 | 


With regard to the age at which the herring attains maturity, Jenkins 
places it at three years, when it has a length of 190mm. to 198mm. (74 to 
712 inches). Jenkins found that in the Windebyer Noor, a small piece 
of water at Eckernforde, which has scarcely any communication with 
the sea, and is very brackish, the mature herrings were remarkably small, 
though three years of age, according to the otoliths. They measured 
from 127mm, to 150mm. (5-6 inches), and furnish good examples of the 
probable effect of diminished salinity on growth, although there are 
other conditions in this case which may have an important influence. 


(d) Masterman and Cunningham. 


Another paper on the growth of the herring must be referred to, viz., 
by Masterman (17), who assigns a very moderate rate of growth to the 
early stages, but comes nearer the truth than some of the others whose 
conclusious have been quoted. 

His investigation was made on a very large collection of young herrings 
from newly-hatched Jarve and upwards, accumulated by Professor 
M‘Intosh at St. Andrews. They comprised both spring and autumn 
spawners. Enormous numbers of young herrings, just emerged from the 
egg, occur in St. Andrew’s Bay at the beginning of March, sometimes a 
little earlier and sometimes a litile later, and last in great abundance 
through April and May. Their average length is about 7mm.; when 
about 10mm. long they leave the bottom for mid-water, and when some 
20mm, to 25mm. in length reach the surface or near it, and then migrate 
shorewards, frequenting the mouths of rivers. They can be traced in 
the same localities till mid-winter, when they have a length of some 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 299 


50mm. They are not found in the spring or summer, but recur in the 
autumn, with a length of about 80mm., which is increased to 100mm. 
by the end of the year. When one year old Masterman thinks they are 
probably about 60mm. (22 inches) long. 

In the case of the autumn herrings, the occurrence of newly-hatched 
larve extends over August and. September, the spawning period being 
thus of shorter duration. The larve are somewhat shorter than the 
spring ones, averaging between 5mm. and 6mm. 

The following Table gives Masterman’s estimate of the growth from 
month to month of the spring and autumn herrings, after hatching :— 


Month. | Spring. | Autumn.| Month. | Spring. | Autumn. 


Mm. Mm. Mm. Mm. 
r 15 14 8 AT 43 

2 20 19 9 50 AT 
3 iH pas: 10 54 5? 
4 30 oA 11 58 57 
5 35 30 1 62 61 
6 40 34 18 87 88 
i 44 38 20 98 a 
24 iy 113 


i 


Thus, according to Masterman, the autumn herring at two years of 
age is rather smaller than the one-year old spring herring of the Baltic, as 
Meyer has determined it. The rate of growth of the spring series is 
about 4mm. to 5mm. per month, while in the winter months the growth 
of the autumn herring in the early stages is retarded (3mm. to 4mm. per 
mouth). The largest specimen in the collection measured 134mm, (57 
inches), which would be about 274 months old and belong to the autumn 
brood. In his later work in conjunction with M‘Intosh (17a, p. 422) 
rather a different opinion is expressed. It is there supposed that the 
herring attains sexual maturity at a length of 8-9 inches and probably 
during the third year; and it is stated that 3 inches and 5 inches may 
be taken to represent a rough average of the size of a herring when one 
year and two years of age respectively. 

The growth of the herring on the Scottish coast has also been considered 
by Cunningham (18, p.162). He is of opinion that the herrings 33-5; inches 
long (82mm.to 133mm.) taken in considerable numbers in December, in the 
sprat fishery in the Firth of Forth, are derived from the spring herrings 
that spawn at the Isle of May, which would give them an age of about 
nine months. 

At Plymouth, a large number of small herrings from 4°3 to 5°5 inches 
long, taken in May, are supposed by Cunningham to be year-old fish, 
derived from the spawning in February and March in the previous year. 

From the above review, it is apparent that very different opinions 
are held as to.the rate of growth of the herring and the size and age 
when it reaches the mature condition. 


2.—TuHE Size oF THE HERRING WHEN IT FIRST ATTAINS MaTuRITY. 


The observations made by myself as to the size when maturity is 
attained lead to the conclusion that the herring on the coast of Scotland 
does not spawn until it has reached a larger average size than most of 
those given above. 


300 Part III.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Mature herrings, both male and female, are indeed occasionally taken 
which have a length of about 8 inches (20cm.), or even slightly under 
that size. I have found a few of this size at Ballantrae Bank in March 
with fully developed reproductive organs, but they were exceedingly 
exceptional. They were not quite so rare between 8 and 9 inches (20°3cm 
to 22°&cm.),but the great majority of these small herrings were immature. 

Matthews (19, p. 96) records ripe herring from Lochfyne in February, 
between 19cm, and 20cm. (74 to 8 inches), and he mentions one that he 
examined (place and date not stated), which measured only 7} inches 
(18:4cem.) ; it was the smallest among about 3000 young herrings he 
examined over a period of two years. 

Among several thousands examined by myself, the smallest fully 
ripe herring measured 21-lem. (84 inches). There were two of this size 
among 2178 landed in February and March, 1904, at Anstruther, in 
the Firth of Forth. They were thus spring herrings, and formed part of 
the spawning shoals which habitually visit the mouth of the Firth in 
spring to spawn. They were ail mature fish, the spawn and milt flowing 
from them in February (16th), when none among the 1023 measured 
were spent; but on this occasion the smallest were :—Males, one at 
21:8cm., three at 22°3cm., two at 25cm., two at 26cm., and altogether 
from 22°5cm. to 22:‘9cem.—21 males; females, one at 22:5cm., one at 
22-6em., three at 22°7cm., and altogether between 22°5cm. and 229cm. 
(8% to 9 inches)—there were 15 females. 

In March, when 1155 were measured, 40 of the females and 43 of the 
males were spent ; the smallest of these was a female measuring 21.5cm. 
(84 inches), the next spent female being 22°8cm.; the smallest male was 
23cm. Among the fish still spawning, the number of each sex at the 
smallest measurements were these :— 


211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 


Male: +#erek® { aL. = ] 1 1 3 3 3 3 3 817880 Ory 
Female ee | - - = 1 2 1 = A 5 5 7 8 rd 


Moreover, among many hundreds ef autumn spawners from various 
parts of the east coast, examined in July and August, the smallest ripe 
female in the latter month was 9 inches, or 23cm., the weight of the fish 
being 92:3 grammes, and the ovaries 13:1 grammes. It was quite an 
exception. The smallest male that was mature measured also 9 inches, 
the testes weighing 12°5 grammes. 

Other particulars regarding these small herrings may be summarised. 
A male at 9 inches (2 3em. ie and weighing 110°3 grammes, was approaching 
ripeness, the testes weighing 9°2 grammes. One at 9,3, inches (23 6cm.) 
was fully mature, as were other two at 23:5cm. and 23:8cm. One male 
at 84 inches (21‘5cm.), weighing 90 grammes, had testes which weighed 
9°5 grammes, and was judged to be about half ripe. 

Among small female herrings, some measuring 23-9em. (102 grammes), 
25cm. (106 grammes), 24:lem. (128°4 grammes), 24cm. (105 grammes), 
and with roes weighing from 16 to 22°6 and 25 grammes, were 
judged to be approaching maturity. On the other hand, some females 
from 87 to 10 inches (21cm. to 25°5cm.) were immature, their weights 
ranging from 93 to 133-7 grammes, and the weight of the ovaries from 
2°3 grammes (in the one at 10 inches) to 1°6 and 6°4 grammes. 

Besides these, there were many whose sex could not be distinguished 
by the naked eye. They ranged from 7? to 103 inches (19°5cem. to 26cm.) 
and from 55°5 grammes upwards, with reproductive organs from under 
1 gramme in weight to 2‘7 grammes. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 301 


Almost all the autumn herrings which were above 10 inches in length 
were ripe or approaching maturity ; and it must be remembered that this 
was the chief spawning time. 

Some particulars of other cases may be given. In the collection from 
the Dornoch Firth on 12th November, 1903, thirteen were examined. 
They ranged from 176mm. to 197mm. (7-77? inches), and their weight 
from 37.5 to 57 grammes. In all cases the reproductive organ was 
extremely minute and immature, the heaviest (from a male) weighing 
0:03 grammes. These herrings were extremely fat, and there was a large 
quantity of fat in the abdominal cavity. This fat, as I have elsewhere 
suggested, is probably used up, not only in connection with the develop- 
ment of the reproductive organs, but also for the production of energy, 
in tiding over the winter, when growth, and even the power of digestion, 
is to a large extent in abeyance. 

Other herrings, taken in Aberdeen Bay on 29th December, measuring 
148 and 153mm. (6 inches) were quite immature and were also full 
of fat. 

In the spring herring from the Forth, as will be seen later, two series 
are represented, tho average size of the smaller, but fully mature, fish 
being about 92 inches, and the range from 8} to about 10 inches. 

I think there is little doubt that these herrings represent shoals spawning 
for the first time, and that the average size of the winter or spring 
spawner on this part of the coast, when maturity is first reached, is about 
23*5em. (97 inches), while some may spawn when about 21cm. to 22cm. 
(82 to 8? inches), and others probably not till they are 26‘5cm. or 28cm. 
(10 inches), agreeing in respect of variation in size with what obtains in 
the first mature group among other fishes. In all cases the fish in a 
group of the same year exhibit considerable variations in length, and it 
is the average rather than the extremes that have to be considered. 

The mean size [ have assigned to the spring herrings when they first 
spawn is nearly the same as has been given by Hoek for the herrings 
of the Zuider-zee (supra), viz, 24em. to 27em., and by Boeck for the 
Norwegian herring, viz., 25cm. 

It is of some importance to establish the size at first maturity in 
connection with the consideration of the growth of the fish and the 
number of annual series which precede the reproductive one. 


3.—MaxIMuUM SIZE ATTAINED BY THE OERRING. 


It is also desirable to say something as to the size to which herrings 
grow. In our waters few are caught over 12 inches (30°5cm.) in length. 
In those examined at Anstruther, above referred to, two were 12? 
inches (324mm. and 325mm.), and only 33 were above 11 inches. 
The largest herring that came under the observation of Huxley during the 
enquiry in Scotland measured 12,5, inches (32cm.), and the smallest full, 
it may be said, was 102 inches (26'5cm.); but he mentions that the 
Fishery Officer stated that it was not uncommon to get Orkney herrings 
that measured 14 or 15 inches long, and he had got one of 17 inches 
(43°2cm.), a size mentioned by Buckland as the largest for a herring on 
record. 

At Aberdeen the longest observed by Sim was 12} inches (31:2cm.), its 
weight being 93? oz.; Matthews (19) got one 33-5cm. long, and another, 
33°3cm.; while Brook (20) states that in Lochfyne he has seen herrings 
in August ‘‘ quite 15 inches long,” or 37cm. 

De Caux (4) records one of 153 inches (39'4cm,), and Murie (21) 
another of 144 inches (36:lem.) The largest obtained by Ljungmann (6) 


302 Part ITI.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


measured 37*5cm., the largest mentioned by Collett was 36-4cm., and a 
herring measuring 34'4cm, was the largest found by Lundberg (22) in 
the Royal Museum. 

Specimens of a very large size were obtained by Trybom in the course 
of investigations on the west coast of Sweden, and he gives very full and 
detailed measurements of them (23, 23a). Samples were selected from 
the catches of various kinds of net, and from his Tables the following are 
extracted. In the catches of set-nets (sdéttgarnsfangst) the largest 
measured 38:5, 37:0, 35:2, 34:8cm., z.e., up to 15} inches. Here are the 
sizes of ten herrings from such a catch obtained at a place near 
Marstrand on 11th November, the meshes of the net being 35mm. (12 
inches) from knot to knot :—38°5, 35-2, 33-4, 33°4, 32°8, 39:7, 32°6, 32°5 
32-2, 32:0cm., none being under 123 inches. With mackerel nets the 
sizes of the larger herrings were 36, 35°8, 35°3, and 35:2cm.; with 
seines (vadfangst) the larger measured 37:2, 35.8, 33°8cm; with purse- 
seines (snérpvadsfangst) the largest were 34°4, 34, and 33°8cm; with 
drift nets, (drzfgarnsfangst) the meshes going up to 33mm. (1;°, inches), 
herrings of the following dimensions were caught :—35°8, 35°5, 35:1, 35, 
34°8cm., &e. 

The largest herring of which I have found a record (24) is one which 
was said to have been taken by a Dutch herring boat (De Dankbaarheid) 
in the North Sea, about 57°23’ N. Lat., on 23rd October 1863. This 
giant measured 48-5cm. (a trifle over 19 inches); but it was probably a 
shad, specimens of which are not uncommonly recorded by the unin- 
structed as extraordinarily large herrings.* 

The largest obtained by me in Lochfyne measured 133 inches 
(33'4cem.), but many were 137 inches. I have also received a herring 
from the Firth of Forth of this size. 

From general considerations I think it very probable that herrings of 
14 and 15 inches represent the usual maximum size attained, and it 
must be borne in mind that on our east coast the herrings are all taken 
by drift-nets, which is selective. and that the size of mesh is small 
compared with those used by Trybom. In Lochfyne and the Clyde they 
are taken mostly by seine-nets. 


4.—THE SPAWNING PERIODS. 


There are two well-marked periods of spawning on the coast of 
Scotland, one in spring and one in autumn. The former is chiefly in 
March and February, as at Ballantrae Bank in the Clyde, and at the 
mouth of the Firth of Forth ; the latter is chieflyin August and September. 

Mr. Jeffrey, the Fishery Officer at Peterhead, who has had great 
experience, tells me that on this part of the east coast (Aberdeenshire) 
the autumn and summer spawning season varies very little, and that the 
principal time may be safely set down as extending from the middle of 
August to the end of the first week in September, though small shoals 
may spawn a little before and a little after the period stated. With 
regard to the winter or spring fishing, very little is done on the Aber- 
deenshire coast, but the fishermen agree that the herrings taken in January 
and February are well developed, and that they spawn in March. 

This is also the experience at Ballantrae and the Firth of Forth, and 
I think March may be set down as the chief spring month for spawning, 
though it extends from the latter part of January into April. It is 
probable that the height of the spring spawning is separated from the 
height of the autumn spawning by something less than six months, 

* Dr. Redeke, Scientific Adviser on Fisheries to the Dutch Government, kindly informs 


me there is no evidence that the fish was examined by a competent person, and he does 
not attach any value to the record. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 303 


and the latter from the spring spawning in the following year by 
rather more than six months. 

Too much stress perhaps is laid on the fact that spawning herrings 
may be obtained in most months of the year. There is evidence to show 
that among several other fishes individuals may be found fully mature 
at times more or less remote from the spawning period. On some parts 
of the coast, moreover, the limits of the normal spawning period of the 
herring may be earlier or later than what I have stated. But that the 
spawning season is a brief one, both in spring and autumn, is shown by 
the separation of the age-groups, contrasting in this respect with most 
other species. 


5. —THE DuRATION OF EmBRYONIC DEVELOPMENT: RELATION TO 
‘TEMPERATURE. 


The period of ‘‘incubation,” from the deposition and fertilisation of 
the eggs until the young herrings hatch out, varies according to the 
temperature of the water, which appears to be by far the most mportant 
factor. It is desirable to consider the point, because it furnishes a clue 
to the period when the mass of the larva escape into the water and begin 
independent life and growth. 

Many observations have been made as to the hatching of the eggs of 
the herring at different temperatures, and I append a Table in which I 
have set down a number of them. 


| | 


a alee. tl Naber of 
Place. Season. Ge teen Days to Authority. 
; Hatch. 

Firth of Forth, . | February, March, . (40-41) 25-30 Allman. 
Clyde, . F . | March, ia} yh 44 18-22 Ewart. 

ee 3 . | March~ April, | (40-45°5) 26 Dannevig, 
Plymouth, . . | January, : : 48 12-14 Cunningham. 
Zuiderzee, . SADE. ; sia al 48°9 12 Hoffmann, 
Bohuslin, . ; Spring, . ; sal — 24 Malm. 
Norway, : .. 1. Spring, . , rit _ 24 Boeck. 
Stockholmlin, . —- , : ' _ 14 Sundevall, 
Mork, . : — . ; 2 $4 — 14 Ekstrim. 
Northumberland, , August, : | 52-58 8 9 Cunningham. 
Denmark, . : —- , ; at — 8-10 Kroyer. 
Clyde, . ; : September, . ‘ 54 8-10, 13 Ewart. 
Sinck holmian, <> | Auptistee!« : 57-59 6-8 Sundevall. 
Kiel, . ;  LAntuMnS< .. : 50-51 i Meyer. 

E : Spring April, : 64°4-68 8-10 At 

‘ 2 : 4; Sy ‘ 51°8-53 6 11 4 

9 , ; ; 46 2 ; 30°6 28-34 - 

his hems 82 47 . 


The last entries refer to experiments by Meyer. 

It is obvious from the Table that the period of ‘‘incubation” varies 
greatly, and that in the case of spring or winter spawners the duration is 
much longer than with the autumn-spawning fish, 

At the spawning-grounds near the mouth of the Firth of Forth the 
temperature of the bottom water in the various months is as follows :— 

Jan. Feb. Mar. April. May. June. July. Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. 

Surface, . 41:6 40°9 40°1 431 46°8 51-2 54:1 55°l 54*h 5Ee3 478 44-4 

Bottom, . 42°83 41°0 39°9 41°9 44°38 46°6 50°0 52°99 53h 51:4 486 45.2 

It has been mentioned by Huxley (1) as a point of interest that he 
met with no case of full or spawning herrings during the solstitial months, 
viz., June and December ; but it is perhaps of more interest to note that 


304 Part ITI.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


the spring herrings spawn when the bottom water is the coldest of the 
year and the autumn spawners when it is the warmest of the year. 

The effect of the difference on the rate of development in the eggs must 
be considerable. From the Table given above it may be inferred that the 
eggs of the spring fish take from about 25 to 30 days to hatch in 
February and March, while the eggs of the autumn spawners hatch in 9 
or 10 days, or approximately in a third of the time. One must therefore 
add these numbers to the date fixed for the maximum spawning in order 
to determine the period when most of the larval herrings appear in the 
water. In the case of the spring fish the period is about the middle of 
April, and in the case of the autumn fish it is about the second week of 
September, 

The advantage to the autumn herring in respect of the quicker develop- 
ment in the egg is, however, compensated by the difference in the tem- 
perature to which the young growing herrings are soon exposed. With the 
spring fish the temperature is a rising one, favourable to growth, for many 
subsequent months, while with those hatched in autumn, the temperature 
is a falling one, especially at the surface, and thus less favourable to 
growth. 

How long it may take in some instances for the young of the spring 
herring to reach even a small size is shown by an experiment of Mr. 
Harald Dannevig. On 13th—14th March he fertilised some herring eggs 
and brought them to the Marine Laboratory at Aberdeen, where they 
hatched on 9th April, after an “incubation” period of 26 or 27 days. 
The larvee then measured 8mm. in length. The yolk was not absorbed 
until 9 days later, and 23 days after hatching the post-larve measured 
only 10mm. _ In this case 49 or 50 days elapsed (viz., 13th—]4tii March— 
2nd May) before the young herring measured 3-ths of an inch, thus 
offering a great contrast to the results of Meyer, but in the latter case the 
temperature during the experiment was not the same as at Aberdeen. 
Much stress cannot be put upon the experiment, but Mr. Dannevig 
is skilful in rearing post-larval fishes, as his success with the plaice 
shows. 

The difference in temperature between the bottom and surface water, 
above shown, no doubt explains the fact that the larve in spring soon 
seek the upper layers, while in autumn they do this to a very small 
extent, the later larvee, as Masterman says, appearing never to leave the 
bottom, but to migrate shorewards at once, without an intermediate 
journey through the mid-water and surface layers. 

The young herring when it is hatched is of a length ranging from 
5‘2mm. to 8'8mm. (4-2 inch), and the yolk disappears in from three or 
four days to a week ; traces may be found in larve measuring over 9mm. | 

It may be mentioned that the larva of the sprat is 3-3°7mm. when 
hatched, and, according to Ehrenbaum, the length when the yolk is 
absorbed (in about a week) is 4°‘7mm. They may thus be easily 
separated in some collections. 


6.— A Criticism or MryeEr’s CONCLUSIONS AND OBSERVATIONS. 


Before dealing with the collections of herrings given in the Tables 
appended to this report, it may be well to consider some general results 
as to the growth of fishes deduced from my researches with a number of 
other species, and how they bear upon the statements concerning the 
growth of the herring above quoted, and more especially those of Meyer 
aud Jenkins. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 305 


Meyer, as we have seen, came to the conclusion that the herring at the 
end of about six months reached a length of approximately 70mm.to80mm.; 
at the end of the first complete year a length of 130mm. to 140mm., and at 
the end of the second complete year, when he supposed i% to attain to 
maturity, a length of 160mm. to 170mm. 

The amount of growth in length in the first year was thus 130mm. to 
140mm. (54-54 inches), while in the second, and, be it noted, before sexual 
maturity, it was only 30mm. (1,% inches). In other words, about 82 
per cent. of the growth in the period anterior to sexual maturity is 
represented as occuring in the first half of the period and only 18 per 
cent. in the second half, a result totally opposed to what happens with 
other fishes. 

Jenkins, as we have seen, also working on the herrings of Kiel Bay, 
by studying their otoliths, reduces somewhat the rapidity of growth 
as brought out by Meyer. He makes the sizes of the annual 
groups somewhat less than Meyer, and puts the period of maturity at the 
third year instead of the second, increasing the size at first maturity by 
some 30cm. He also gives the annual sizes up to the fifth year, when 
the herrings are between 9 and 10 inches in length. Thus, taking the 
average sizes as given by Jenkins, we have the following increments per 
annum before maturity. 


Year. Mean Size. Increment. Hib clay oa nay. | 
ee | Mm, |... Mm. 
1 117 | 117 60:3 
2, feo 43 22-9 
3, 194 | 34 175 | 


Again, if we consider the growth each year as related to the total 
growth in the five years as given by Jenkins, we have the following :— 


Percentage Increase on | 
Year Mean Length. anol | eet Total Length at 5 | 
ment. 
Years of Age. | 
Se" ae el Mm. Mm. erase rarely 5 
if 117 117 48-5 | 
2, 160 43 17°8 | 
3, 194 34 14-1 | 
| | 
4, 221 27 11-2 
5. 241 | 20 | 8-3 


Thus, according to these results, the herring grows in its first year 
(though not sexually mature till its third year) almost half of the total 
length it attains at the end of its fifth year. 

The conclusion, I think, is obvious, that both Meyer and Jenkins have 
jumped at least a year, and that the herring at 135mm. or 117mm. is 
much more than one year old. 

We are now tolerably well acquainted with the growth of several 
species of fish, and in all of them the growth in each year anterior to the 
occurrence of sexual maturity is fairly comparable in extent ; very often 
theamount of growth in the first year is somewhat greater than in the 
others, and it diminishes slightly with each successive year ; though 


observers do not always agree about this, 
Vv 


306 Part I1l.——Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The difference referred to may be brought out by the following 
diagram, showing in proper relation the annual growth of the long rough 
dab and whiting up to sexual maturity, and of the herring according to 
Meyer and Jenkins up to the same period. 


if 2 
| 1 | * Herring (Meyer). 
s 

il 2 3 
| | | | Herring (Jenkins). 

1 2 
i | | Whiting. 

1 2 3 

I | | I Long Rough Dab. 


Meyer’s methods of determining the size of the herrings living 
naturally in the sea were unsatisfactory, and were unlikely to furnish a 
just estimate of the average size or of the true rate of growth, and his 
experiments are subject to important reservations, since only selected 
results are given, and not full details or numbers; and, moreover, too 
much stress was laid on the amount of growth in the summer months as 
a factor in computing the amount of growth for the whole year. 

Thus, the growth of the herrings in the Schlei, as determined by him 
for comparison with his later rearing experiments, amounted to only 
48-54mm. (14-23 inches) over the five summer months, or an average of 
just 10mm. per month, and the herrings which he reared grew to a 
similar extent over the period. But the temperature in these months is 
the highest in the year, the means ranging from 51:2 F. for May to 67:2 
F. for August, and in no other month, except May, was it under 61°5 F. 
Then, again, in the best of his experiments, in which the young herrings 
were kept in a floating box for 50 days, the growth was at the mean rate 
of 96mm. (2 of an inch) per month, but the months were at the end of 
June and July, the mean temperature in the latter month being 66:2 F. 

Compare these reasonable results with his results in winter, derived 
from the comparison of herrings from the sea, as shown in another Table. 
We find that from the end of November to the end of March (when with 
many fishes growth is quite arrested and always very slow) the indicated 
growth in the four months, December to March, amounted to 48mm., or 
12mm. a month, which is higher than in summer, a result that is 
obviously fallacious. -And yet the average size when a year old is placed 
at 135mm., a size which appears to have been inferred from five months’ 
growth at 10mm. per month and seven months’ growth at 12mm. per 
month. 

In point of fact, as shown in my various papers on the rate of growth 
of fishes, as in the one in the present report, growth in summer greatly 
exceeds the growth during the rest of the year, while it is extremely 
small in the period from October-November to February—March.* 

* Here are afew examples. The growth of young haddocks from 31st July to 10th 
September (41 days) amounted to 38°6mm., or at a rate of ‘94mm. per day, or 29mm. 
per month; from 31st July to the 18th October (79 days) they increased by 61:I1mm., or 
at a rate of ‘77mm. per day, or about 24mm. per month ; over part of winter, from 28th 
November to 15th January (48 days) the increase was 3°7mm., or at a rate of ‘08mm. per 


day, or 2°4 per month. Another series increased by 28°6mm. in the 41 days from 24th 
July to 8rd September, the rate being “7mm. per day, or 2imm. per month. Over winter 
and spring another series increased in 164 days, from 18th December to 30th May, by 
33°9mm., or at a rate of ‘2mm. per day, or 6'4mm. per month, and the period included 
April and May, which is one of the most favourable months. 

With the young whiting, whose habitat more nearly resembles that of the young herring, 
the retardation in winter and the rapid growth in summer are marked. From June to the 
middle of September one set of observations shows a growth of ‘5mm. per day, or 15*8mm. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 307 


In the shallow waters on the beach, it may be entirely arrested, as with 
small flat-fishes, while the growth of young whiting is very greatly 
diminished—it grows at least fifteen times faster in the summer months. 
Young herring inhabit the same coastal waters, and must be affected in 
a similar way; and an estimate of the average size of the one-year old 
herring from Meyer’s own observations above referred to, qualified by 
these facts, would reduce the size very materially. 

I think there is little doubt, at all events, that Meyer’s conclusions as 
to the rate of growth of the herring, which have so long held the field, 
are fallacious. 

Jenkin’s results are based on a study of the otoliths, which, as he says, 
cannot tell the precise age of a fish, but only within certain limits. So 
far as my somewhat limited experience goes as to the utility of the 
markings on the otoliths of the herring as a clue to the age of the fish, it 
has led me to the belief that there is considerable scope for erroneous 
conclusions, especially with the younger forms. It appears to me 
probable, on the above grounds alone, that Jenkins has not succeeded in 
separating the first year’s fish from the second year’s, and that the size 
he gives as approximately that of a one-year-old (117mm.) is nearer the 
size of a two-year-old herring. 

His observatious on the older herrings are valuable, and it is of interest 
to note that he makes a herring of 21-7cm. to 22°5cm. (84 to 8% inches) 
approximately four years old, and one of 23°7cm to 24:5cm (93 to 92 
inches) approximately five years old 

He gives an interesting diagram (16, p. 95) of the curves based on the 
determinations of different observers. ‘The point alluded to, the exaggera- 
tion of the first year’s growth, is well indicated, and the curve exhibiting 
Meyer’s results shows a deflection at the end of the first year which 
would not apply to any other fish. 

The curves of Ljungmann (whe calculated the year-old herring to be 
from 65cm. to 90cm in length) are devoid of this, except between the 
second and third year, and it is noteworthy that the prolongation of the 
curve of Ljungmann and of the curve showing Masterman’s conclusions 
meet Jenkin’s curve in the fourth year. 


7.—TuHE ScotrisH COLLECTIONS. 


The collections have been made during the last five or more years at 


various seasons, and mostly in Aberdeen Bay, the Moray Firth, and the 
Firth of Forth. 


The measurements arranged in °5 centimetre groups are given in Tables 
I.-II1., appended to this paper. 


per month ; another from 30th May to the early part of October show increments of 
‘Dmm. per day, or 15°8 per month; another in July and August show increments of ‘9mm. 
per day, or 28°5 per month ; a fourth set show increments in June and July of ‘66mm. 
per day, or 20°5 per month. On the other hand, in the winter and spring, we have the 
following :—From 21st December to end of May an increase of 17‘l1mm., or at a rate of 
"107mm. per day, or 3°4mm. per month—most of this, no doubt, in May ; 18th October 
to 15th January, ‘045mm, per day, or 1‘'4mm. per month; 6th November to 17th 
December, 1‘5mm., or ‘037 per day, aud 1‘lmm. per month ; 29th November to 15th 
January, 2°3mm., or ‘048mm. per day, or 1'4 per month. These observations are based 
on the measurements of many thousands of fish. 

In the deeper water it may be shown that the growth in the early months is less 
retarded, as with haddock, whiting, and witches, and no doubt also with mackerel and 
other fishes, which withdraw to the deeper and warmer layers in winter, but, as elsewhere 
remarked, there are not yet sufficient temperature observations with which to correlate 
the observations on growth, those taken on the Quarterly Cruises in the International 
Investigations being useless for fishery investigations such as these, 


+ Due to misapprehension of his measurements, a mistake also made by Meyer, whe 


took Ljungmann’s measurements as measurements of the total length, whereas they 
excluded the caudal fin. 


308 Part III.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


(a) Larval and Post-Larval Stages. 


Considerable collections of larval and small post-larval clupeoids and 
herrings were obtained by the ‘‘Garland” during the years she was 
eugaged in the Forth and adjoining waters, which have been tabulated in 
the Board’s Reports* by various workers. In Professor M‘Intosh’s 
tablest referring to the pelagic fauna of St. Andrews Bay, various young 
clupeoids are tabulated, and a large number also in the paper by Master- 
man previously mentioned. 

It is important to determine the rate of growth of the herring in the early 
stages, first of all, and I have therefore brought together in the table 
subjoined most of the measurements contained in the lists referred to, 
those given by Masterman in his paper and by M‘Intosh in his tables, 
as well as those in the later collections of the Fishery Board. M‘Intush 
states that towards the end of March myriads of young clupeoids, 
apparently herrings, throng the lower part of the water in St. Andrews 
Bay. They had probably only escaped from the eggs, though the 
absence of the yolk-sac in many, and the presence of well-marked 
embryonic fin-rays, showed that they were some days old. He also 
states that in this month numerous young sprats, from 12 to 1? inches 
(34mm. to 45mm.), were captured in the mid-water net. 

A précis of the coilections examined by Masterman shows the 
following :— 

In January (19th, 20th) eleven herrings measured from 42mm. to 
56mm., the average size being 48mm. to 49mm. (14 inches). According 
to Masterman’s tables showing the increments of growth per month, these 
are much too large to be the autumn herrings of the year before, which at 
the period would measure, on his scale, only about 30mm., or less; and 
they correspond rather to the spring herrings of the previous year, which 
at nine months would be about 50mm., and this would take them back to 
May ; if referred to April, they ought to be about 54mm. They cannot 
be sprats, for, apart from diagnosis at that stage, the sprats in March, as 
stated above, measure only 34mm. to 45mm. The evidence obtained 
by myself supports the view that they are the herrings of the previous 
spring. 

In February (19th) nine herrings from 35mm. to 41mm. (12 to 13 
inches), and with a mean size of 373mm. (14 inches), were caught. 

On lst March eleven, from 33mm. to 39mm.; on 7th—21st, ten, from 
26mm. to 44mm.; and on 3lst, one of 40mm., were taken, making 
altogether for the month, 22, from 26mm. to 44mm., with a mean of 
about 35mm. (12 inches). 

In April (2nd—18th) twelve measured from 32mm. to 49mm. (all but 
the two smallest on 18th), the average being 42°3mm. (1}} inches). 

All these were quite distinct from the young herrings that appear 
about this time, to be referred to below, and with these we have the 
following larger forms, viz.—(1) 14th to 3lst March, seven herrings, 
from 79mm. to 103mm., with an average length of 95°-6mm. (32 inches), 
and on 29th April one at 110mm. (42 inches). 

In January-March we have thus three groups of these older clupeoids 
—(1) Those in January, with an average of 48mm. to 49mm., belonging 
to the previous spring; (2) in February, March, and April, a group 


* 8th, p. 270; 9th, p. 334; 10th, p. 300, by Professor M‘Intosh ; and the others in 
the llth, p. 250; 12th, pp. 298, 300; 13th, p. 258; ldth, p. 223; 15th, p. 246, by 
Masterman, Tosh, Williamson, Wallace, and Kyle, 

+ Jbid., 7th, p. 267 ; 11th, p, 284, 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 309 


from 26mm. to 49mm., derived from the previous autumn; and (3) in 
March a group from 79mm. to 103mm. 

According to the rate of growth deduced by Masterman, the larger 
herrings, measuring about 96mm., would be approximately 19 to 20 
months old, which would refer them back to the autumn fish, two years 
before. 

In March, as mentioned above, the larval herrings begin to appear. 
The earliest in the tables is 3rd March. From 3rd to 7th, five measured 
5mm. to 8mm.; on 14th, 135 measured from 6mm. to 9mm.; from 
26th to 31st, 5804 measured from 6mm. to 11mm., the range during the 
month being from 5mm. to llmm._ Great hauls were taken on 30th 
March 1889, so much so that the bottom-net had to be disused. In April, 
from 2nd to 11th, 716 measured from 6mm. to 11mm. ; from 11th to 21st, 
108 were from 7mm. to 14mm.; from 21st to 28th, 39 were from 5mm. 
to 16mm., the progress in growth being shown by the larger sizes, the 
maximum for the month being 16mm. (2 inch), and the range from 5mm. 
to 16mm. In this month, however, a complication is introduced by the 
appearance of larval sprats. 

Up to April, and well into that month, there seems to be little or no 
difficulty, owing to the limit of the spawning period of the sprat. 
Masterman, in describing the pelagic eggs collected by the ‘‘ Garland” 
over a series of years,* states that the extreme limits of the spawning 
period of this fish, as inferred from the eggs obtained, were from 23rd 
March to 19th August, both in the same year (1891). The earliest dates 
in other years were 6th, 14th, 17th, 24th April, and at first very few 
were got. The chief spawning time is from the middle of May on 
towards the end of June. 

It would be remarkable if all the early post-larval sprats were 
separated from the early post-larval herrings, and from the latter part of 
April the possibility of this disturbing factor has to be considered. From 
the Table given below, however, it appears that this disturbance cannot 
be serious, for in the months when sprats ought to be appearing in 
greater numbers (June-July) clupeoids are remarkably scarce. 

On May 2nd five clupeoids measured from 10mm. to 17mm. (2 to 
+4 inches), and are clearly herrings; in the period 14th to 31st, 28 
measured from 5mm. to 25mm., but there appear to be again two groups, 
viz.—13 from 5mm. to 8mm., and 15 from 13mm. to 25mm., which 
show the continued growth of the young herring; at the end of May 
the herrings are 17mm. to 22mm. (up to Z inch), and as the one at 
25mm. was taken on 16th, it is probable the limit is greater and slightly 
exceeds one inch. 

The herring at this period and size may be approaching three months 
of age. At a nearly corresponding stage, Meyer’s Baltic herrings (but at 
the end of July, with higher temperatures) were 30mm. to 35mm. (1,3; to 
12 inches) ; those in the sea, as he inferred, being 45mm. to 50mm. 

In June (9th, 10th) only three were got; one at 13mm., the other 
two measured 20mm. 

In July (9th) two alone of the smaller were caught, measuring 16mm. 
There are, however, a series of 25, extending from 28mm. to 37mm., the 
average size being 32°lmm (lj inches). These can only be regarded as 
the spring herrings, now over three months, and it may be four months 
old—months, too, very favourable for growth. 

There are four other herrings which were taken on the same date, viz., 
one 5/mm., two 59mm., and one 75mm., the mean being 62°5mm. (2} 
inches). They probably do not belong to the same group, and it is 


* Fifteenth Annual Report, Part III., p. 233. 


310 Part III.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


worth considering their origin. They could scarcely belong to the spring 
fish of the year, whose growth, as we have seen, is much slower ; the two . 
smaller might be referred to the previons autumn, and would thus be 
approximately ten months old; the one at 75mm. (almost 3 inches) is to 
be referred to the spring of the preceding year. According to the rate of 
growth given by Masterman, herrings of that average size, if spring 
herrings, would be almost exactly twelve months old, and if autumn 
herrings, all but twelve months old (61mm.). 

It is, however, to be remarked that herrings of this size and larger 
are likely to escape from tow-nets, especially when used in daylight, and 
even from the slowly-towed and larger midwater net; and thus the 
average size of the herrings, except the smaller ones in collections 
obtained in this way, may be expected to be somewhat under rather than 
to exceed the true natural size for the group. 

If the two emaller belong to the same group as those which had an 
average length of 42°3mm. on 18th April, the increment in the 82 
summer days would amount to 15:'7mm., or a mean of ‘19mm. per day, or 
5°9mm. (7; inch) per month. 

In August we come again on the larval clupeoids. M‘Intosh mentions 
them under date 2nd, from 5‘6mm. to 8mm. In Masterman’s tables, 
seven from 5mm. to 11mm. are entered between 3rd and 9th ; also two 
at 15mm. and oneat 20mm. From the 22nd to the. 30th, 71 measured 
from 4mm. to 12mm., and one was 19mm., possibly to be referred to the 
spring series. Omitting the larger, the average for the 71 at the end of 
August was 6‘7mm. This may be taken as the size at which the 
autumn herring starts the beginning of September. 

In September M‘Intosh notes the appearance of clupeoids from 7mm. 
to 13‘5mm., the latter size only after the middle of the month. In the 
table of Masterman, 184 are entered between the 4th and 7th, of which 
181 measure from 4mm. to 9mm., and are mostly 6mm. ; one is 13mm., 
and two are 44mm. (13 inches), and no doubt represent the herrings 
hatched in March or April. 

From 13th to 30th there are 70 in two series, (1) 64 from 5mm. to 
18mm. and mostly about 11mm., (2) 6 on 17th from 36mm. to 40mm., 
the average being 39:0mm.; if these are combined with the two taken 
earlier, the range is from 36mm. to 44mm., and the average size 40°2mm. 
(12 inches). 

These are no doubt the spring herrings, which show an increment of 
8‘lmm. (under 3 inches) in the 68 days (approximately) from the series 
of 9th July, or only "12mm. per day. 

On the 7th September two other larger herrings were taken, measuring 
75mm. and 80mm. (3, 3} inches), which no doubt represent the older 
series taken in July. 

In October, from the 1st to 9th, 34 measuring 7mm. to 19mm., and 
mostly about 13mm. to 14mm, are entered; from 11th to 19th, there 
are 82, in three groupings, (1) 4 at 6mm.—indicating a late spawning— 
(2) 66 from 12mm. to 20mm., most about 17mm. (}4 inches) repre- 
senting the average size at this period, and (3) 12 from 32mm. to 4]mm., 
taken on the 16th and 18th, the average length being 33°2mm. 
(1,5, inches), or less than those taken a month earlier. These probably 
represent the spring herrings. 

In November, the number is greatly diminished. From the Ist to the 
8th, 14, from 14mm. to 24mm., and averaging 17°3mm. were taken ; 
and from the 16th to the 24th, other four, from 19mm. to 26mm., the 
average length for the 18 specimens being 183mm. (barely $ inches), 
which approximately represents the size of the autumn herring in 
November, some specimens, however, attaining a little over 1 inch. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 311 


In December, only four of this series were taken, viz., on the 3rd, and 
they measured 15mm, and 17mm. There were also four at 37mm., or 
almost an inch and a half, probably spring fish, as well as one at 
100mm., and another at 134mm. 


It seems probable, therefore, from these observations that towards the 
end of the year the average size of the young autumn herring, when three 
to four months old, is under 20mm. (2 of an inch), and probably not much 
over 3 of an inch ; some measure 26mm., or slightly over one inch. 

The spring herring, which is, however, 1mm. to 2mm. longer when it 
issues from the egg, grows quicker, and may even reach, as we saw, a length 
of an inch at the end of May, when they are relatively younger. This is 
associated with a favourable and rising temperature, and probably better 
food supplies, since M‘Intosh found traces of diatoms in them in March 
(25 g, 267), and also Dr. George Murray (26), who found Coscinodiscus 
abundant in small post-larval clupeoids. 

From these tables of Masterman it would appear that the growth of 
the herring in its post-larval stages is much slower on the east coast of 
Scotland than Meyer found it to be at Kiel. 


“GARLAND’S” COLLECTIONS OF CLUPEOIDS. 


: oe 6 : ma Rares ee oe : 
Mm g|¢ = April. | May. | June. | July. |August.| Sept. | October.} ¢ 9 
0} 132 ms Zi A 
bs 
4-5 2 3 2 : ay 
x x aK > Tlie SU lpic Boke 
x x SS : E u 
6-7 A x XXX XX x >.) >. ep. Ge. AD. <a> ©. 4 x 
XXXX . cX x 
Ot XK x XX X XX X XX 
8-9 >. 8.0.4 Xxx XX >. Wi |. @., D. ©. Gl b-99.@. 6 x 
XXKX x 
x PeEX X |XX XXX |X X cx 
10-11 KCK eae BXGSKOEKONT KOR KORG 
XXX aee SSOP KEN KORO [PRT OK 
12-13 Xxxx|* x XX} XXXX|,  y 
alt X X|X XXXX/- oY 
ty XX x eo eee ed ee 
x: 3 x Dede wD. a KOREN KOK: = 
16-17 a8 x x ex Xxx [DXXXXXXX = 
+ x >.< — XXXXXXXX] | 
18-19 x x. |XXXXXXXX] 5 
x XXXXXXXX]} yy 
20 21 XX oe xem 
x XX XXX é 
22-23 xX Xxx Xx as = 
x XXX 2G eee 
24-25 B x x x val ae nd 
26-27 | : Pa ae renter 
= x x x z 
x 
28-29 < x x x x 
eo} xx 
>. x x 
30-31 x ; : x 
cay ade De : 
; x x a | 
32-33 x <a = 
= x x ».< 
34-35 x 
x x x x 
36-37 x : = sa - 
x ) 
38-39 x 2 x a : 
ee | x A 
40-41 x - - x 
x = 
42-43 x 
44-45 = x 
x | 
46-47 
| 
{ 
48-49 xX 
| 


3 
On 
ee 
rr ee re rr ee ee 


mm 


312 Part ITI.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


The Table embodying the references to the collections of the Garland 
and the above measurements shows generally the same features. 

One sees the various groups, the spring series and the autumn series, 
as well as the older ones(B). At A, there is no doubt about the clupeoids 
representing the herring, but later, as at C, the sprat is doubtless present, 
and the smaller fishes represented in July may also be sprats. 


In the Tables and curves appended to this paper (Tables I.-III., Plates 
XVII.—XIX.) it will be seen that the groups of herrings are well 
separated from one another, comparatively little admixture of the spring 
and autumn herrings taking place—though it does occur—and the eluci- 
dation of the rate of growth of the herring would be an extremely simple 
matter if it were not for the existence of these two series, one derived 
from spring and the other from autumn. 

In dealing with the post-larval herrings, I have had the advantage of Dr. 
Williamson’s experience in their diagnosis, and I have to thank him for his 
assistance in this respect and for measuring a number of these collections. 


: P g Average Size. 2 
Place and Date. | 2 | # | 32 %¢ 5 —£ | 38 
a i = gn = Modal. | Mean Arith- Inches = == 
a os a oI la) : metic. ie Au 
Kms. Mm Mm Mm. Mm Mm | Mths 
Aberdeen Bay. 
lith Feb. 1905 . | 8-12 | III. 3 | 100-115 
29th March 1905. |18-25| V. 1 | 125 | 
3 | 165-195 ed ie x a | 
24th April 1906 . | 4-6 | II. 157 41-46 5 43°5 43°5 43°5 13 A 8 
30th May 1901 . | 12-16] IV. 598 | 142-186 44 159 164 162 63 8 385 
3 | 196-228 cS Bs ‘ e r. s 50} 
June1904 . 2 | .. Il. 24 50-60 10 55 55 55°38 23° 
19th June 1900 . 1 II. 15 55-65 10 60 60 Bb 23 
13th June 1903. | 8-10 | IV. 523 | 118-163 45 138 140°5 | 141°8 58 A 33 
m8 V. 30 | 164-182 2 ma * Pe ; Ss 
4 | 208-234 
28th June 1901 . | 122 | IV. 650 | 148-192 44 167 170 168'9 61k 8 394 
Sth July 1901 —.;. 10 | DV. 8 | 140-164 24 140 150 149°2 5g 
Sone ‘oe ae ARO fete ||} | — | — 
18th, 20th Sept. 00} 2-3 | I. 194 21-44 23 33 32°5 34:3 1,, 8 6 
2nd October 1901 10 I. 297 9-20 11 i. = 15 g A | jd- 
3rd October 1901 s it 334 8-27 19 17 175 | 16% | }4 A | 1-1} 
18th October 1901 | 7-10] II. 1 85 
III. 429 | 96-141 45 115 115 117°5 4d A 25 
IV. 14 | 143-187 44 | 


S=Spring. A=Autumn. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 313 


Average Size. 


o 
AG S| iS QY 
=) S . 
Place and Date. s vi 2 ve x TOT GT tee Fr: a 
= g ae te Modal. | Mean Arith Inches i Ae 
a & = PS Pay : * | metic ° Au 
Fms. Mm. Mm. Mm Mm. Mm Mths 
Aberdeen Bay—con. 
31st October 1900 8-10 | II. 650 52-95 43 80 73 77°8 375 A 14 
III. 179 96-143 47 100 
if 157 
6th November 1903 | 54-12] I. 181 12-25 13 18 17 "5p | e182 1} A 2 
6 132-143 11 137°5 
2 185-188 
6th November 1901 | 6-13 | II. 3 86-95 90°3 
III. 24 | 102-132 30 | 110 110 | 116-2 4,9, 
9th November 1900} 9 Il. 4 75-100 85°7 38 
III. 18 | 116-143 132°6 53 
23rd Dec. 1903 I. 6 | 28-86 13 29°5 ly’s | A 39 
ae | pe des Shh SY a | ee ST | as > 9 OS ne ee Pe 
12th Dec. 1903 5-10 if | 15 42-50 8 45 46 46°5 143 Ss 9 
6 97-124 27 110°5 | 109°3 42 
17th Dec. 1901 94-15! III. 47 103-147 44 122 125 UDI 443 A 27 
| 3 | 146-157 
18th Dec. 1900 8 oe 4 109-112 
LEY. 405 114-161 47 141 187°5 135°9 52 8 33 
1 165 
19th Dec. 1900 6-8} | II. 6 78-95 17 90°5 31°s 
5 110-131 21 120 4} 
29th Dec. 1903 5-12 | 16 108-154 46 124 131 128°8 57; 
Dornoch Firth. 


9th Feb. 1905 63~12| III. 8 | 104-122 18 113 113 112°4 43 24 
31st March 1904 . | 5-10 | TIL. 16 | 106-136 30 112 121 i176 48 8 24 
13th Nov. 1903 I. 156 13-26 13 20 19°4 19°5 3 A 24 
eS Ee ee ee ee a EE eS I |e (Oe eS (Ee er | ere tl eed 
21st Oct. 1903 S213) bE. |) £28 14-20 6 17 17 16'8 +t A 2 
bth Nov.1900 ~". | 7-10'| IT. 48 73-97 24 93 85 90 3y5 
III. 544 98-141 43 115 119°5 | 1144 4} A 26 
| 9 | 144-162 
Ae = eet S10 ART OE 9 GO aban ee 2 8 cee ag i may 
11th Noy. 1903 . | 6-12/| I. 48 13-25 12 19 19 186 | 3 A 2h | 
U. 99 79-109 30 95 94 94°3 33 
if * 11 | 112-124 & +. 8 os oe cs » 
} 
(ate DELS © SOUS I A ee ee ea ee ee A 


S=Spring. A=Autumn. 


314 Part ITI.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


ie s g Average Size. ° 
: o . o 4 fo} 
Place and Date. 3 E : 0 B 5 an =A a & 
a 2 5 S S Modal. | Mean. ee Inches. = é 
Fms. Mm. Mm. Mm. Mm. Mm. Mths. 
Dornoch Firth—con. 
12th Nov. 1903 . 6-10 Aes 6 79-83 
Ill. 1228 84-133 49 105 108°5 105°4 41 A 26 
15 | 184-152 
87 162-198 36 175 180 17971 Te 
26th Dec. 1903. ae I. 51 14-34 20 19 24 22°3 z A 3h 
a a ae a ff a | 
25th Dee. 1900 . 12, DE: 1769 98-144 46 119 121 122°4 42 A 27 
Iv. | 172 | 145-178 33 161°5 | A | 39 
41 182-217 35 196 he 190°8 7k 
Burghead Bay. 
29th Dec. 1903. 5-12 1 56 15-33 18 20 24 23°5 48 
UH 3 | 130-140 AS ie wa sé be 
25th Dec. 1901 . | 73-18] IV. 19 | 139-182 44 Re 161 162°4 63 A 39 
68 | 186-223 BY) 198 204°5 201 ree A 51 
28th Dec. 1903 . | 5-13 | II. 2 81-88 
12 97-127 cen a 112 113°3 4} 
2S Coe SSS ee ee | eee ee ere Sore eee Ce See Soe ee Se ee OEE Se 
Findhorn. 
IV. uy! 123-169 46 a 143 150°8 5+2 
1st April 1904 . |30-32] V. 478 | 177-228 jl 200 202°5 203-2 8 Ss 48h 
8 | 230-245 
Cromarty Firth. 
10th Jan. 1901 . xe ITI. 30 89-132 43 120 110°5 1021 4 
3 | 140-149 
1st June 1901 . 8 II. 1 104 
Ve. 65 | 111-155 44 135 133 129-7 5h A 3 
3 es, Uz. 
197 
ose Loe a S| SS eS a 
Firth of Forth. 
9th May 1901 - 7-11 II. 1 71 
Ill. 154 94-139 45 112 116°5 114 44 Ss 26 
6 | 142-149, Ss 
187 
10th May 1901. 22 be 9 | 117-135 RS be a ae By s 
13th May 1901 _ . 7 III. 114 97-133 36 114 115 112°3 4y5 Ss 26 
Combined . ae II. 1 41 bg s Lv es Bd S 
III. 277 94-139 hd 113 116°5 LIS 7 Ak S 26 
6 | 142-149, ue e 5S ae Fad S 
H 187 


S=Spring. A=Autumn. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


® Average Size. a 
™ & Ss ‘ = 
) ie A 
Place and Date. ~ ra 4 2.5 E ee | SS 
2, 7 Si tte rith- 2 a od 
3 3 re a = 5 Modal. | Mean. | jnotic, | Inches. EE 
ripe Fms. van. Mm. Mm. Mm. Mm. Mths 
Firth of Forth—con. 
28th May 1901 7s 31 17-24 it 20 20°5 20°4 33 s 21 
23rd July, 1901 8 109-137 28 123 125°4 418 
4th Sept. 1901 48 6-13 7 10 9 9°7 3 A 
(Isle of May.) Years 
16th Feb. 1904, fe VI. 215 225-250 25 244 237°5 239°9 93 tS) 5 
(26°5) (40) (245) 
3 VI. | 256 | 218-250 32 | 237 234 2367 | 9% | S 5 
34 VI. 471 218-250 32 238 237°5 Dete t 93 Ss 5 
2 Vil 248 251-281 30 257 266 262°1 107°; S 6 
(240) (42) (261) 
3 Vil 282 | 251-281 30 | 257 2660 | 261:0 | 10,8; | S 6 
eis Vil 530 | 251-282 31 257 266 261°5 10,5; s 6 
2 10 283-305 22, 
3 12 | 283-304 21 
i: 22 283-305 22 
15th March, . VI. 256 911-244 33 230 227°5 232°8 9,35 S 5 
(254) | (48) (232-5) 
VI. 319 211-244 235 227°5 232°2 9,75 Ss 5 
VI. | 575 | 211-244 33 | 235 | 207-5 | 2325 | 97 | S 5 
2 Vil. 252 | 245-277 32 250 261 254-1 10 S) 6 
(235) (42) (256) 
) VII. 317 | 245-277 32 250 261 252°7 10 Ss 6 
569 245-277 32 250 261 253°5 10 bs} 6 
2 VII. 4 | 281-288 s 
3 5 | 278-804 S 
2 | 2 | 324, 325 
S=Spring. A=Autumn. 


The smaller groups in the collection are as follows, those from Aberdeen 
Bay being first considered :— 

On 21st and 22nd August, 10 miles off Aberdeen, at the ‘“ Doghole,”’ 
22 small clupeoids were obtained in the tow-net, which may be referred 
They measured from 8mm. to 1lmm., the 
average being about 5° of an inch. 

About a month later, on 18th and 20th September, 194 were taken in 
shallow water (up to 3 fathoms) in Aberdeen Bay. They measured from 
21mm. to 44mm. ({-1? inches), the size of greatest frequency (modal 
size) being 33mm., or 1,°, of an inch, and the arithmetic average 


to the autumn spawning. 


316 Part ITI.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


343mm. They were thus about 24-25mm., or 1 inch, longer than the 
group in August, and clearly belonged to another and earlier spawning, 
that is, to the spring series. 

Two of them, however, which measured 21mm., might possibly belong 


to the autumn herrings. The numbers in 2-millimetre grouping are 
these :— 


20-1 22-3 24-5 26-7 28-9 30-1 32-3 34-5 36-7 38-9 40-1 42-3 44-5 
2 I 8 6 15 19 a0° Ss (23 pas 20 #8610 1 


These young herrings would thus be about 5-6 months old. 

The autumn herrings are well represented in some collections procured 
later in the year. Thus, on 2nd October, 297 measured from 9mm. to 
20mm., the average size being about 15mm. On 3rd October, 334, also 
taken in Aberdeen Bay, measured from 8mm. to 27mm. (;,-l, inches), 
the size of greatest frequency being 17mm., the average 16°2mm., and 
the mean size 175mm. (44 of an inch). Two of these herrings, again, 
probably belong to the spring series, measuring respectively 26mm. and 
27mm. The sizes, arranged in 2-millimetre groups, are these :— 


11-12 13-14 15-16 17-18 19-20 21-22 23-24 25-26 27-28 
28 54 85 107 47 10 - 1 1 


The age of these may be estimated at from one to two months. 

The same group is again well represented about a month later, when 
181 were taken on 6th November, but in a different year. They 
measured from 12mm. to 25mm. (4-1 inch)—the maximum size rather 
supporting the suggestion made above, that the two at 26mm. and 27mm. 
in the October collection belonged to the spring group—and the modal 
size or mean was about 18mm., the average size being 183mm. (7 inch). 
The arrangement, in 2-millimetre grouping, is as follows :— 


12-13 14-15 16-17 18-19 20-21 22-23 24-25 
6 17 42 57 40 15 = 


On the 23rd December six herrings were taken, whose measurements 
were as follows:—23mm., 24mm., 25mm., and 32mm., 33mm., 36mm. 
(from 4+3~-1,', inches), and they possibly belonged to two series. 

On the 12th of the same month, and in the same year, another collec- 
tion in Aberdeen Bay numbered 15, their sizes ranging from 42mm. to 
50mm. (111-2 inches), the size of greatest frequency being 45mm., 
while the mean was 46mm., and the average 46°5mm., or nearly 1Z inches. 

These probably represent the spring herrings, whose average size in the 
September collection was 33mm., the growth over the twelve weeks 
amounting to about 14—15mm. (3 inch). 

The sizes and increments of these post-larval autumn herrings may be 
thus summed up :— 


| Size 
Date. Increase} Days. 
| Range. | Average. 
| Mm. | Mm Mm 
| ist, 22nd August, 8-11 9-0 - ~ 
| 
Qnd October,- -| 920 | 15° | 6 42 
8rd October, — -| 822 | 7 i of8 43 


6th November, -| 12-25 | 18 | 9 | 77 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 317 


The next collection of small herrings from Aberdeen Bay was on 24th 
April, in another year. They numbered 157, and ranged in size from 
41-46mm. (13-11% inches)—the modal size, the mean size (calculated on 
the base-line of the curve) and the arithmetical average, all agreeing at 
43-5mm., or 1? inches. 

These herrings are clearly not those from the previous spring series, 
but from the preceding autumn, and they are approximately seven or 
eight months old. 

Small herrings were also obtained in June in Aberdeen Bay in two 
separate years. In 1900 a shoal appeared in the Bay of Nigg, apparently 
driven in by coal-fish (of which a large number were got in the salmon 
stake-nets) ; fifteen of these, taken on the 19th, were measured by Dr. 
Scott, who determined the contents of the stomach.* They ranged 
between 55cm. and 6‘5cm. (24-2,%, inches), the mean length being about 
60mm., or 22 inches; but it is, of course, quite uncertain if they were 
representative of the shoal. 

Two of the herrings belonging to the shoal were placed by me in 2 
large glass carboy, containing about 18 gallons of water, and a circulation 
maintained. These herrings were not attempted to be measured until 
15th August, when one was found to be approximately 73mm. (24 
inches) and the other 83mm. (33 inches) ; they were placed in a narrow 
tube full of sea-water while being measured. On the 28th September 
another attempt was made to measure them, and one was found to be 
83mm. (33 inches) ; but it showed such signs of collapse that I refrained 
from measuring the other herring, and both of them were lost some time 
afterwards. 

If their size was about 60mm. on the 19th June, the indicated growth 
in the two months would be approximately 13-23mm, (3-48 inch), and 
the growth of one of them, assuming it to be the smaller measured in 
August, from the latter period to 28th September would amount to 
10mm. for the 44 days. These data are obviously slender and uncertain. 
At all events, the remark was a common one at the time, that the herrings 
were growing very slowly.T 

In June of another year a series was represented by 24 specimens, 
measuring from 50mm. to 60mm. (2-22 inches), the modal size being 
55mm., and the arithmetic average 55'8mm. (2,3, inches), 

On 18th October, in a large collection, there was one measuring 85mm. 
(3% inches), the next, part of a large group, measuring 96mm. The 
former was certainly in its second year. 

Turning now to the collections of small herrings from other parts of 
the coast, we find corresponding series. 

In the Dornoch Firth, on 21st October, 28 post-larval herrings were 
taken in a tow-net. They measured from 14mm. to 20mm., the modal 
size and the mean being 17mm., and the arithmetical average 16-8mm. 
(44 inch). These were from the autumn spawning. 

On 11th November, 48 were caught in a tow-net, which ranged in size 
from 13mm. to 25mm., the mode and the mean being 19mm., and the 
arithmetic average 18°6mm. (? inch). On 13th November, in the same 
year, 156 were caught in tow-nets, measuring from 13mm. to 26mm. 
(4 to slightly over 1 inch); the modal size was 20mm., the mean 
19°4mm., and the average 19°5mm. (? inch). On 26th December, in the 
same year, the series is, perhaps, represented by 51 specimens, measuring 


* See Twentieth Annual Report, Part III., p. 530. 

+ A small rockling kept in the same vessel, lurking among stones and weed at the 
bottom, offered a striking contrast to the herrings. On 15th August it measured 57mm., 
on 28th September 89mm., and on 14th November 97mm, _ It was fed with mussels. On 
the other hand, the growth of the common pipe-fish (Syngnathus acus) was very slow. 


318 Part I[I.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


from 14mm. to 34mm. (,9;-14 inches), the modal size, or size of greatest 
frequency, being 19mm., the mean 24mm., and the average 23:3mm., or 
tT of an inch, 

The collection seems to include more than members of one series, 
however, the numbers under each millimetre being as follows :— 


14°15) 162174 18" T9"° 20. 2b" 2225. 24 25" 26" 27 28 ee ee ol ee oo oe 
Lio Sia Gia, Si sG8 BeOwgd HORS a aa pi ee ee eee ae 


The growth is thus very slow, the increments being as follow :— 


| Size. 
Date. SS ll eases Days. 
Range. | Average. 
Mm. Mm. | Mm. 

21st October, ... ee st | 14-20 17 
11th November, an 18. ... | 18-25 19 2 21 
15th November, 42 13 ... | 13-26 19°5 2°5 25 
26th December, eas = ... | 14-84? 22°32 5:3 2 66 

| [14-26 ? 20 3°0 66] 


The sizes, it will be seen, agree very well with the post-larval herrings 
from Aberdeen Bay at corresponding periods. 

For the reason stated, it is probable that the average, and therefore 
the amount of growth in the December series, is too large. 

Near Burghead Bay, on 29th December, 1903, 56 post-larval clupeoids, 
measuring from 15mm. to 33mm., were taken, the modal size being 
20mm., the mean 24mm., and the arithmetical average 233mm (+2 
inch). The arrangement of the measurements under the various milli- 
metres is as follows :— 


15 16 If 18.19 20 21 -22 23 24 25 26 2% 28 29 30 Sl aaeaee 
Pn 2 OO Ob 6 ns ae hs a oe oe 


There are some reasons to suspect that these clupeoids may be sprats ; the 
diagnosis is therefore uncertain. 7 

On May 28, a compact series, numbering 31 specimens, and 
measuring from 17mm. to 24mm. were taken in the Firth of Forth. 
The modal size was 20mm., the mean was 20'5mm., and the average 
20'4mm., or 72 of an inch. ‘These represent the spring herrings, 
approximately two months old. 

The autumn herrings are represented by a collection taken at the 
mouth of the Forth on 4th September, in the same year. There were 
48, measuring from 6mm. to 13mm., the modal size being 10mm., the 
mean 9mm., and the average 9'7mm., or 3 of an inch. ‘The arrange- 
ment of the measurements of these two collections in millimetres is as 


follows :— 


6.7 8 9 10-11. 12 A3e44 35. 16.17/18 19 20.2), 22 .c8mee 
NR ANODE nea RI Ry OT nes 
(eyed. li ggesup ae rete ght ARE OS CR 


In the Forth collections, the next older series is represented by one 
herring, 71mm, (212 inches)- long, taken on 9th May, and by one of 
85mm., caught on 19th June. 

In some collections from the Firth of Clyde, the series is well 
indicated, Thus, on 17th October, the shrimp-trawl, working in from 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 319 


37 to 53 fathoms, took 91, measuring from 2} to 33 inches (57mm. to 
82mm.), most measuring from 27 to 22 inches (63mm. to 70mm). The 
measurements were carefully made to fractions of an inch, as follows :— 


24 a4 98 3 3} 3h 
6 35 aoa), 12 3 is 


One at 23 inches (70mm.) was caught in the same neighbourhood on 
the same day, and another of 70mm. at the mouth of the Clyde on 23rd 
November, while in December, on the 17th and 18th, 20 were taken in 
Lochfyne, measuring from 5°5cm. to 9em., as follows :— 


55 6 65 7 79 8 85 9 
2 4 4 4) 3 1 - 1 


Some of the herrings taken in the Firth of Forth in previous years 
by the Garland, which are included in the Table at the end of the paper 
(III.), and shown on Plate XIX. by dotted lines, belong to the same 
series. They were measured by Dr. T. Scott in fractions of an inch, 
and grouped together, and thus in some cases it is not easy to separate 
them into groups. In some instances, however, the distinction is easy. 
They were all taken in a fine-meshed shrimp trawl net. 

The number of hauls made was 135, apportioned to the various 
months as follows—the depths are in fathoms :— 


1889. 1890. 1891. 1892. 


No. | Depths.| No. |Depths.| No. |Depths.| No. | Depths. 


February, — = 
March, - - 
April, - - = 
May, - - 26 of 
June, - —- 14 4- 
4 
5 


Tee ae 
POs ae I tere 
te 


~J 


pt 


tt A St ai Wericiesyter) 
gh Se E Ss) 


August, - - 
September, 33 
October, - 11 
December, ~ 


LST Sl ASEH | th =a} 
io ofo) H~ bt 
ts 
Gi 
Le TE Tee fhiet me ats Le 4) 
bo 


Cry] 
1 


The particulars in regard to the herrings taken are given in the 
following Table, the ordinary figures referring to the length in inches, 
and those in brackets to the corresponding length in millimetres :— 


| TABLE. 


Date Depth Herrings 
| Ems. 
21st February 1890 . 24-27 1 at 4 (100). 
| 17th . ee Ae 63-9 12, 34-5 (90-127). 
| 20th a ile obte 11-14 3, 43-5 (115-127); 2, 3 (76). 
6th 35 1892 . a 240, 13-3} (45-69). 
| 19th March 1890 : 20-27 21, 45% (102-140). 
| 18th? 4 2 i 18-28 2, 44-54 (115-140). 
| 21st * C 94-14 29, 4-5 (102-127); 2, 34 (89). 
| 21st ae ~ : 4h 1, d(H): 
| Sind? <5 a ; 5-6 5, 44-55 (115-140); 158, 24-34 (63-89). 
ee a is : 4-6 11, 44-52 (115-133); 169, 24-34 (63-89). 
| 22nd .,, i 3-4 16, 4-44 (102-115); 14, 3-34 (76-89). 
| 20th April 1892. iyo 7-8 316, 13-3} (45-82). 
| 26th ,, 1890. . 4 767, 2- ay fons 1, 5 (140). 
31 | meee ae 18-20 6, 4-5 (102-127). 
| 29th ,, aoe : 17 1, 35 (140); 8, 5° (127) 5" 15 See 
(70-102). 
| 29th: 4; 3; te : 6-15 37, 6 (150); 219, 34-4 (90-102); 786, 
13-3 (45-76). 

| 29th : ; 8-10 6, 3-34 (76-89). 

9th May 1889 . 5 4 1, 7 (77); Y24, 4-5°(102-127)- "7, SS 

(76)3. “24, 2e"(63); “SOP raitan). 

i0ch<. ee 6 wn ll Sri Tey 
| SPRUE a3. oases kate 11-12 1, 7 (177); 1, Gh (165) 5. 3) 420 
| 4b eee : 15 Ly 42015): 
| TSGh 8 pee os ; 5 3, 24 (63). 

7th ,, 1890. 9 6, 43 (115) 

So ot AE 5-9 2, 4 (102). 

9th 20 De Ae). 

5th August 1891 ‘ 6 3, 32 (95). 

3rd September 1889. 5 118, 24-34 (63-89) 

4th 3 pas 15 i, ab): 

4th if a as 29 Bo 70): 

5th Be me aa 5 14, 2-235 (50-63). 
| 5th 3 ra 6 2294, 24-31 (63-89) 
| 12th 4, ‘oo 26 | oo 76): 
| 13th a oe 22 te ies. 1 Te ian) 
_ oth October 1889 5 8). 2 {7a 
| 10th a _ 5 2, 44 (115); 4, 34 (89); 9, 3 (76) 
| 10th rs . ay 12 22, 4-44 (102-115). 
| 16th 5 | 12 | 2, 32% (89). 
| 9th December 1892 .| 13-15 | 6, 34-4 (89-102). | 
10th oe oy ate 11-14 3, 44-5 (115-127) 


At least three annual series of herrings are represented in these Forth 
collections. From what has been said above as to the slow growth of 
the post-larval herring, it is clear that none of them belong to the year 
in which they were caught, but that the smallest of them are in their 
second year. 

The measurements in fractions of an inch, and the slumping of lots 
together, are less accurate than the separate measurements in milli- 
metres, and two separate series may be mixed up together, but it 
appears, on the whole, probable that the smaller herrings in spring 
represent the spring herrings and not the autumn fish. In February, 
March, and April their sizes range from about 45mm. to about 89mm. 
or 90mm.; the smaller sizes would suit well enough the supposition 
that they were autumn herrings, but the larger are much too large for 
that class at that time of year, and if they are all regarded as belonging 
to one group, the group must be looked upon as spring fish nearing one 
year of age, though the larger sizes are too large for this interpretation. 
This must be said, on the balance of evidence, even regarding the large 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 321 


collection on 29th April and the collection on 9th May, measuring in 
the former from 45mm. to 76mm. approximately, and in the latter from 
50mm. to 76mm.; but what has been said as to the method of measure- 
ment and recording must be borne in mind. 

On the other hand, it appears probable that the bulk of those obtained 
in September, measuring from 50mm. and 63mm., are autumn herrings 
of the year before, and thus about one year of age. The important 
point established, however, is that all these small herrings are in their 
second year and are not derived from the spawning of the same year. 

The next group, extending from about 90mm. to 127mm. or 130mm., 
are one year older, that is to say, they are in their third year. It is 
possible that in spring they may go as high as 140mm. (54 inches), a 
limit included in the above Table, but it is not probable, judging from 
the other collections, although in autumn the size would be in accord- 
ance with the collections referred to. 

It will be noticed that none of these small herrings were taken in the 
shrimp-trawl in the latter part of May, or in June. It is not unlikely 
that they leave the bottom for the most part in the early part of May. 
I may add that no herrings were obtained in fifteen hauls of the same 
net in the Moray Firth in June and July. 

A few small herrings were also obtained from the shrimp-nets used 
in the Solway Firth. On 30th July, nine were got, seven measuring 
from 60mm. to 75mm., one 83mm., and one 90mm. The average for 
the nine fish, if taken together, is 72-°9mm., or 24 inches. On 28th 
September three were taken, which measured 60mm., 72mm., and 
78mm., the average being 70mm. (22 inches); on 31st October, three 
taken measured 50mm., 64mm., and 8lmm., the average being 65mm., 
or a little over 23 inches. 

A summary of the range of sizes of the herrings, both of the spring 
and of the autumn series, is given in the following Table, arranged 
according to the data furnished by Masterman (M.) and also by the 
collections of the Fishery Board (F. B.). 


| TABLE. 


322 Part ITT —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Spring. Autumn. 
M. | ee Es M. F. B. 

Mm. Mm. Mm. Mm. 
February, . ; ne ne 
March, é 5-11 7-11 
April, . 5-16 6-17 
May, . : 5-25 75-24 
June, . : . 13-20 15-26 
July,’ . , 16-37 16- zis wptce 
August, [11-20] - 5-12 —6«66-14 
September, . 36-44 21-44 * 4-18 6-18 
October, . ; 32-41 5 be 6-23 8-25 
November, . : a Roel 14-26 12-29 
December, . wal [37] 39-50 15-[37] | 14-34, 36 
January, . : 42-56 Ae A 27 
February, . ; 4] 45-69 35-37 ol, 32 
Maxch, ; : 44, (63)-(89) | 26-40 a 
April, . . | se (45)-(82) 32-49 41-46 
May, a ip Ay, 50-63 


In the Fourth Annual Report of the Fishery Board for Scotlund Mr. Duncan 
Matthews described the young herrings found in various samples of whitebait from the 
Thames. His results may be thus summarised, the words in brackets indicating my 
interpretation of the derivation of the herrings, which thus differs from that of Cunning- 
ham, who dealt with the same observations of Matthews (18, p. 162). 


Number 
Month. Herrirgs Remarks. 
Examined. 
February, 5 98 Some under 2 inches (50mm.) and only partially scaled 
(probably spring-herrings of previous year). 
March, . 5 60 Some reached nearly 4 inches (102mm.) (autumn 
herrings in third year). 
Apri? ; ; 112 14 under 14 inches (88mm.) (autumn herrings of 
previous year). 
May, : : 180 72 were 2 inches (50mm.) fully scaled (autumn 


herring) and 108 from 14-1? inches (88mm,-44mm. ) 
and only partly scaled (autumn herrings). 

June, ; 696 417 fully scaled, 2-24 inches (50mm.-57mm.) (autumn), 
279, from 1 to 15 inches (25mm.-38mm.) partially 
scaled, or entirely scaleless (spring herrings of year, 
but possibly two series). 


July, : : 450 14-24 inches (88mm.-63mm.), of these, 360 under 2 
inches (50mm.) (probably two series—spring and 
autumn). 

August, . : 260 2-3 inches (50mm.—76mm.) (autumn). 


The usual difficulties involved in measurements in fractions of an inch, and slumping, 
is encountered here, though in most cases the derivation of the series seems clear. ‘To 
suppose that herrings of 63 or 55mm. in July, were derived from the spawning in the 
previous spring would be contrary to the facts referring to the Scottish collections. The 
spawning-seasons may differ to some extent off the mouth of the Thames. 

The observations of Hoek on the small herring in the Zuiderzee (14), previously 
referred to, would be valuable for comparison, but it is clear that different series have 
been included together in some of the groups. A summary of his measurements, in 
millimetres, is as follows:—February, 73-100, most between 88 and 95: March, 49-75, 
70-78, 83-114, 77-100, most between 85-95, 67-106: April, 67-102, ‘‘ most part about 
80”; a few days later, ‘‘most of them 75,” a few about 90: May, many about 90, four 
55: June (29th), a few 37: July, 37-42, 57-60, 75, 80, 98: August, 56-81, 60-68, and on 
31st, 40-50, 60-70: September, 58-75, 76-83, 65-95 : October, 81-90, 65-80: November, 
one 75, many 85-90, 100-112°5 : December, many 80-100. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 323 


(0) The Annual Groups. 


In dealing with the numerous collections of larger herrings, it will 
~ not be necessary to refer to them all in detail. The method I adopted 
in elucidating the rate of growth and the age of the herrings in the 
various collections was as follows. After determining the rate of growth 
and the sizes for the first and second year, I set down on a very large 
and long sheet, divided into centimetre and millimetre squares, all the 
other collections, showing the range of sizes and the average or modal 
size, that is, the size at and around which the great bulk of the herrings 
in a collection were aggregated. Very little consideration was required 
to allot almost all the collections in a particular month to the proper 
year, and in the accompanying able I have represented the modal sizes 
of the collections in this manner, and also in some cases (by a cross) the 
sizes of individual herrings or small collections. 

There are a few general considerations that may be referred to. The 
collections were in nearly every case made by means of a small-meshed 
net fixed outside the cod-end of an ordinary large otter: trawl, which was 
dragged along the bottom for an hour and more. Several miles of 
bottom were thus trawled over, and this is probably the explanation that 
a mixture of herrings of different series occurs in a few of the collections. 
In most instances this has not happened, the groups being very distinct; 
but in some there are a few, or many, herrings either larger or smaller 
than the limits of the series, and in one or two collections the spring and 
autumn series seem to be more or less blended. They are referred 
to below. 

The larger fully adult herrings are not well represented in the collec- 
tions, probably from their more pelagic habitat. The small herrings in 
their second year are also not very fully represented until the winter, 
doubtless due to the fact that they were able to escape through the 
meshes of the net. They are well shown, however, in the collections 
made in the Firth of Forth by the Garland, with a fine-meshed shrimp- 
trawl, and also in Lochfyne, as above described. 

In May certain collections of small herrings were obtained in the 
Firth of Forth with the small-meshed net around the otter-trawl. On 
the 9th, in from 7 to 11 fathoms, 161 were taken. The smallest was a 
single herring measuring 71mm. (2432 inches), representing the herrings 
in their second summer, and about one year old, more or less. The next 
measured 94mm. (314 inches, and was the smallest of a group of 154 
herrings, apparently the largest of which measured 139mm. (54 inches). 
The modal size was 112mm. (4,% inches), the mean 116°5mm., and the 
arithmetic average 114mm. (43 inches). There were other four herrings, 
from 142mm. to 149mm., and a single one at 187mm. The four referred 
to might belong to the group; but the indications of other series are 
against this view; the series might, on the other hand, so far as the 
millimetre table indicates, have stopped at 130mm. or 133mm. In 
either case, the modal size is unaffected, and the average but slightly. 

On the 10th May, twelve herrings were taken, nine of which were 
from. 117mm. to 135mm. in length, and three from 140mm. to 153mm. 

On the 13th, the collection contained 114 herrings, forming a compact 
series from 97mm. to 126mm., there being another at 133mm., which is 
taken as the end of the group. The modalsize was 114mm, (44 inches), 
the mean 115mm., and the arithmetic average 112°3mm. 

If the herrings in this group in the three collections are combined, 
the number is 277, the apparent range of sizes from 94mm. to 139mm. 
(34% to 5,°, inches), the modal size 113mm., the mean 116°5mm., and 
the average 113°7mm. (44 inches). 


324 Part III.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


January, . 


February, 5: 

March, xc 

April, ne 

May, 1 

June, Le x oe 

July, : ae =- 46 
August, . 1 x a 
September, Lie 1 
October, . | 1 11}1 e 
November, 1111 Mf re 
December, ial a a 1 


January, . ; ae at ee aC 
February, oe ote 48 Ac 1 


ye x 
March, . ad at at & + fs 1 
April, : se és 3¢ 1 ate 1 1 1 
May, : ats ee ae Or “6 1 xX 
June, : cs as ut ae DT ee : 
July, acd 
August, or ae e iM oe 43 ee nic 
September,| .. a ee ac ais 34 Lat ae ae 
October, . ae ais ae ae a3 1 ae 2! Be aL 
November,| .. os Me We es HS x By, Mal 1 
December, a ae Bs ar ae ieee: we a 1 
January, .« oF Be an ae Be 56 Fc a 46 1 
February, A ae a6 510 ore = As *|io-95' 1 1 
March, 7: Bre ve ds ae a te ae ac a <8 1 
April, at 35 I 3 94 te “ic 56 Be ss ss 
May, i 35 oie wie ha ae atte AA ae ere x 111 
June, fs AC axe oh 55 he ays AE se a Ar 
July, 
August, 
September, 50 is ae sig if, ie Ks x ES. ae 
October, . Acs te ae xe one sts ae A Me ae 1 
November,| .- 5c ifs sxe oe his ane aD Fc EE u 
December, ae Be ays eis 54 oe hy ie age we a ell 


January, . 
February, 
March, 
April, 
May, 

June, 
July, 
August, 
September, 
October, . 
November, 
December, 


January, . 
February, 
March, 
April, : bs 3p or big Bs ae by i 
May, ; a we a = ve x a a beet | 
June, 
July, 
August, . 
September, 
October, . 
November, 
December, 


January, . 
February, 
March, 
April, 
May, 
June, 
July, 
August, . 
September, 
October, . 
November, 
December, 


January, . 
February, 
March, 


5 6 4 8 9 10 11 


of the 


| | ef | | 


Fishery Board for Scotland. 


=e Se 
SS TSS LS Se 


xx xx xx oe x x 


SEES CEES SE SEED SE SOS ere SS 
EES EEE qeuEEE GEE oS SS SSS 
1 
L : 
XXX XXX 


January. 
February. 
March. 
April. 

May. 

June. 

July. 
August. 
September. 
October. 
November. 
December, 


January. 
February. 
March. 
April. 

May, 

June. 

July. 
August. 
September. 
October. 
November. 
December. 


January. 


August. 
September. 
October. 
November. 
December. 


January. 
February. 
March. 
April. 

May. 

June. 
July. 
August. 
September. 
October. 
November. 
December. 


January. 
February. 
March, 
April. 
May. 

June. 

July. 
August. 
September. 
October. 
November, 
December. 


January. 
February. 
March. 
April. 
May. 

June. 

J uly. 
August. 
September. 
October. 
November. 
December. 


January. 
February, 
March. 


326 Part IT. — Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


These herrings, as the other collections and measurements show, are 
es their third summer, and are spring herrings a little over two years 
of age. 

To this series also belong nine herrings taken by the Garland on 16th 
May, measuring from about 9em. to 12cm. 

In July in the same year a small collection of herrings was secured. 
There were only eight of them, ranging in size from 109mm. to 137mm., 
the mean being 123mm. and the average 125-4mm. (414 inches). 

In Aberdeen Bay some large collections of herrings at a corresponding 
stage were obtained. On October 18th they numbered 444. There was 
one at 85mm. (33 inches), the next being 96mm.. and the group to 
which the latter belonged extended to about 141mm. It contained 429 
herrings, the modal size of which was 115mm., the mean was also 
115mm. (43 inches), and the average was 117:5mm., or 42 inches. These 
herrings were thus of almost the exact size of the group caught in the 
Forth in May, and may be referred to the autumn series, somewhat over 
two years old. The group might terminate ata slightly smaller size 
than that indicated, ¢e.g.,137mm.; on the other hand, there were five 
herrings measuring 143mm. to 145mm., three from 151mm. to 154mm., 
and one at 164mm. It is possible that the first five belong to the 
group, but the balance of evidence is against the supposition ; in any 
case, the mode and average would not be appreciably affected. All the 
herrings referred to probably belong to a group, extending in this case 
from 143mm. to 187mm. 

Another large collection obtained on 31st October, but in the previous 
year, was made up of younger herrings. The curve of tne measurements 
(see Plate XVIT.) is slightly irregular, there being a small depression at 
about 7'5cm., and two slight cusps at 7em. and 8em. Consideration of 
other cases shows that the group extends to about 9-5em., and is really 
one. The 650 herrings contained in it extend from 52mm. to about 
95mm, (2,), to 32 inches); the chief mode is at 8cm. (32 inches), the 
mean at 73mm. (23 inches), and the average at 77°8mm., or 3,); inches. 
These herrings are obviously those of the year before, and autumn 
herrings, so that they would be about 13 to 15 months old. The 
difference between this group and the group of the 18th (in the following 
year), both of which are supposed to be autumn herrings, is, on the 
modes 35mm., on the means 42mm., and on the averages as computed 
39°7mm., the mean of the three being 38:9mm. (1,%, inches). The mode, 
as we have seen, is not regular in the collection of 31st, and is better at 
7‘5em., which would make the difference 40mm. and the mean of the 
three comparisons 40°6mm., or 13 inches, representing a year’s growth. 

The next group consisted of 179 herrings from about 96mm. to 
143mm., but the larger individuals are not well represented. They 
appear to belong to the corresponding group so well shown in the 
collection of 18th October. There was a single herring at 157mm. 

On November 6th and 9th, in three different years (1900, 1901, 1943) 
small collections were obtained, which may be combined and sum- 
marised. Seven measured from 75mm. to 100mm., the computed 
average being 87'7mm. (3,% inches); 48 ranged from 102mm. to 143mm. 
(4 to 53 inches), the computed average being 125mm. (41% inches). 
There were also two herrings 185mm. and 188mm. 

On 12th December, six herrings measured from 97mm. to 124mm. (3}2 
to 4% inches), the mean size being 110°5mm. and the average 109°3mm. 

On 19th December, six, measuring from 78mm. to 95mm. were 
caught, the average size being 90°5mm., or 3,4 inches; there were also 
five ranging from 110mm. to 13lmm., the average being 120mm., or 
42 inches. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 327 


On the 18th December, a collection of 410 herrings varied in size 
from 110mm. to 165mm. (43 to 64 inches), the range being thus 56mm. 
The mean was 137mm., the average 137°5mm., and the mode 141mm. 
(a little over 52 inches). An examination of the millimetre table, or of 
the curve (Pl. XVII.) shows that there is in this case a slight fusion of 
two groups, and that the beginning of the large group is probably about 
ll‘5Sem. The 2-millimetre arrangement of the measurements is as 
follows 

109-110 111-2 113-4 115-6 7S 119-20 121-2 123-4 
| 3 t 3 5 8 9 17 


At the end of the series the 2-millimetre arrangement is this :— 


150-1 152-3 154-5 156-7 158-9 160 1 162-3 164-5 

ll 12 3 4 3 4 - 1 
the mode being 141mm., the mean 137:5mm., and the computed average 
135‘9mm. The mode (5;°, inches) probably best represents the group. 
These herrings are spring herrings about 2 years and 8 or 9 months 
old ; those taken on the 17th appear to be the autumn series, about 2 
years and 3 or 4 months old, On the 29th December, 16 herrings were 
taken, from 108mm. to 154mm. 

A series of older herrings than these were caught in Aberdeen Bay in 
May and June, 1901 and 1903. 

On the 30th May, 1901, the collection numbered 601, ranging from 
142mm. to 228mm., and forming two series at least. The first contained 
598 herrings, from 142mm. to 186mm. (5% to 73 inches), or it might be 
182mm. The modal size was 159mm. or 160mm., the mean 164mm., 
and the computed average 162mm., or 63 inches. These herrings are 
in their fourth year, and, judging from their position in relation to 
other series on the synthetic table, they are spring herrings, and thus a 
little over three years old. 

There were other three herrings, measuring respectively 196mm., 
207mm., and 228mm. (9 inches). 

Two collections were obtained in June. The first, on the 13th (1903), 
contained 557 herrings, and three series were present. The curve 
(Pl. XVII.) and the millimetre table show that the first great group is 
not pure, but is slightly mixed with the next group of larger herrings, 
represented on 30th May and on 28th June, and the measurements ex- 
tend from 118mm. to 182mm.,a range of 64mm., which is too large. 
The first series begins at 118mm., and apparently extends to 163mm. 
(45 to 6 inches), but it might go to 167mm. The 2mm. arrangement of 
the measurements at this part is as follows :-— 


156-7 158-9 160-1 162-3 164-5 166-7 168-9 170-1 
19 7 13 6 9 4 6 5 


The modal size of the group is 188mm. or 139mm, (5$ inches), the mean 
is 140°5mm., and the computed average 141‘8mm., or 53 inches. This 
group is thus about 2cm. (2 inch) less than the group on 30th May, and 
I take it to represent autumn herrings in the fourth year, that is, which 
want about three months of being three years old. The group of 405 
spring herrings, taken in Aberdeen Bay on 18th December, above 
referred to, were of about the same age (2 years and 9 months) and of 
the same size as these. 

The spring herrings mixed with them number about 30, and range 
from about 164mm. to 182mm. There were also four herrings measur- 
ing 208mm., 223mm., 225mm., 234mm. 

On the 28th June, fifteen days later, but in 1901, 650 herrings were 
taken at Lunan Bay, a little further down the coast, in 124 fathoms. 


328 Part ITI.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


They formed a compact group (Pl. XVII.) ranging from 148mm. to 
192mm. 543 to 7,% inches), the modal size was 167mm. (6,°, inches), the 
mean was 170mm., and the computed average 168-8mm., or 61% inches. 
These herrings were obviously the same series as those taken on 30th 
May, that is, herrings in the fourth year, and thus, in all probability, 
spring herrings somewhat over three years of age. 

The increment of length in the 29 days is, on comparison of the 
modes, 7mm. to 8mm., on the means 6mm., and on the averages 6°9mm., 
or a little over j inch. The rate per day, taking the increase at 7mm., 
was 0'24]mm., and per month about 7‘5mm., and this in the best period 
for growth. If a similar rate is assumed for July and August, the 
increase in the three best months of the year would amount to a little 
over 22mm. (% inch), which contrasts with the growth of the whiting, as 
indicated on a former page. 

If the group taken on 13th June is contrasted with the small herrings 
got in the Bay of Nigg, Aberdeen, on the 19th June, referred to 
previously, whose average was about 60mm., and which were also judged 
to be autumn herrings, the growth in the two years is seen to amount 
to about 80mm. (3,% inches). If, moreover, the herrings taken in 
Aberdeen Bay on 30th May are contrasted with those taken at the 
beginning of the same month (and year) in the Firth of Forth (both 
being judged to be spring herrings, and the latter about thirteen months 
younger), the differences are as follows:—On the modes 46mm., on the 
means 47°5mm., and on the computed averages 48°5mm., showing a 
mean difference of about 47mm. (17 inches), or at the rate for the whole 
period of 385 days of about ‘122mm. per day, or 3°7mm. per month. On 
Sth July, 1901, eight herrings were taken in Aberdeen Bay, measuring 
from 140mm. to 164mm. The modal size was 140mm., the mean 
150mm., and the computed average was 149°2mm., or 5£ inches, They 
belonged, no doubt, to the same series as that of 13th June. 

Some good collections of herrings were obtained in the Dornoch Firth. 
On 9th February 8 ranged from 104mm. to 122mm., the mode and the 
mean were 113mm., and the average was 112°4mm., or 43 inches. The 
position of these is in February of the third year, 7.e., nearly two years 
old, if spring herrings, as they probably are. 

Sixteen obtamed on 31st March ranged from 106mm. to 136mm. 
(4,8; to 52 inches), the mode being 112mm., the mean 121mm., and the 
computed average 117-6mm., or 42 inches. No doubt they represent 
the same series as in February, and are about two years of age. 

Several collections were obtained in November. On 5th November, 
1900, in from 7 to 10 fathoms, 4784 herrings were taken in a haul of 
1} hours’ duration, of which 601 were measured. The smallest noted 
was 73mm., and the largest 206mm., and the great maiority ranged 
about llem. to 11'5em. The first series is not fully represented, 
probably because of the escape from the net of the smaller fishes. It 
extended from 73mm. to about 97mm.; it might be 99mm.; the mean 
was 85mm., and the computed average 90mm., but the herrings repre- 
sent only part of a series (in their second year). The 2mm. arrangement 
of the measurements at this place is as follows :— 


86-7 88-9 90-1 92-3 94-5 96-7 98-9 100-1 102-3 104-5 106-7 108-9 
5 7 7 9 8 3 5 7 6 17 19 36 


The next series is taken as extending from 98mm. to 141mm. 
(32 to 5,% inches), but it may end about 13cm. or 135cm. The 
arrangement of the 2mm. measurements is as follows:— 

124-5 126-7 128-9 130-1 132-8 134-5 186-7 138-9 140-1 142-3 144-5 

21 16 . 2 4 3 d 2 1 - 2 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 329 


This series comprised 544 herrings, the mode was 115mm., the mean 
119'5mm., and the computed or arithmetical average 114'4mm. 
(45 inches). These were probably autumn harrings over two years of 
age. There were also 9 herrings from 144mm. to 162mm. 

On the 11th November, 1903, in from 6 to 12 fathoms, 110 herrings 
were caught. Of these 99 ranged from 79mm. to 109mm., the mode 
was 95mm., the mean 94mm., and the average 94°3mm., or 32 inches. 

On the following day (12th) 1336 herrings were taken in from 6 to 
10 fathoms, and all measured. The first series, comprising 1234 herrings, 
apparently ranged in length from 79mm. to 133mm. (3% to 57 inches) ; 
the series might, however, terminate about 133mm. or 136mm. or 
138mm. The above range (54mm.) is greater than usual. On the 
other hand, the series might not begin till about 83mm. or 85mm. 
There is not uncommonly a difficulty in assigning the position of the 
odd fish at the beginning or end of a series, which may belong to 
different groups, but the influence on the average size is quite unappre- 
ciable, while the mode is unaffected. The 2mm. arrangement at the 
beginning of the series on 11th and 12th November is as follows :-— 


79-80 81-2 83-4 85-6 87-8 89-90 


llth. ‘ 1 = i) 9 9 9 
12th. ‘ 2 2 3 9 15 22 


The most appropriate interpretation is that the series begins at 84mm. 
and extends to 133mm. (32 to 54 inches). The modal size is 105mm,, 
the mean 108°5mm., and the average 105°4mm., or 44 inches. These 
herrings are doubtless autumn herrings, two years and a few months old. 

Most of the remaining herrings in the collection, viz., 87., measured 
from 161mm. to 198mm. (63 to 7}? inches), the mode being 175mm., 
the mean 180mm., and the computed average 179:'1mm., or a trifle over 
7 inches. The group is only partially represented, but as the difference 
from the other and younger group amounts to over 70mm., it is evident 
that they do not represent that series when one year older. They are 
apparently spring herrings, about three years and seven months old, 
members of the group present in the collection from the Dornoch Firth 
on 15th December, and in that taken at Burghead Bay in December, 
referred to below. 

The herrings between 133mm. and 162mm. numbered 15, from 
134mm. to 152mm., and they belong to another group, viz., that shown 
in the December collection from Aberdeen Bay. 

A large number of herrings were taken on 25th December in the 
Dornoch Firth in another year. The youngest series comprised 1769 
fishes, measuring from 98mm. to about 144mm. (37 to 544 inches) ; the 
modal size was 119mm. (41% inches), the mean was 121mm., and the 
computed average 122°4mm. (4132 inches). 

These are autumn herrings, two years and some months old. The 
size of the corresponding group taken on 12th November, and described 
above, was 105mm., while here, 43 days later, it is above 14mm. higher. 
The amount is too much to be accounted for by increment of growth 
in the interval; and the explanation is probably to be found in the fact 
that the collections belong to different years (1900 and 1903) there 
being, doubtless, as with other fishes, a variation in the growth in 
different years. 

Only a few belong to the second series (represented in Aberdeen Bay 
in the same month), viz., 172, ranging from 145mm. to 178mm. 

A third group is better indicated by 41 herrings from 182mm. to 
217mm., the modal size being about 196mm., and the average 190°8mm., 
or a little over 7 inches. 


330 Part 111. —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


On 25th December, 1901, a collection of 87 herrings was obtained at 
Burghead Bay, in from 7} to 18 fathoms. Two series were present, the 
first consisting of 19 fish, ranging from 139mm. to 183mm. (53 to 75% 
inches) the mean being, 16lmm., and the average 162°4mm., or 62 
inches. These are apparently »utumn herrings over three years of age. 

The second series consisted of 68 fish, ranging from 186mm. to 
223mm. (73% to 83 inches); the modal size was about 198mm., the 
mean 204°5mm., and the average 201mm., or 742 inches. These also 
were autumn herrings over four years of age. 

The numbers are not large, but comparison of the sizes of the two 
groups shows an increment in the year of 39°6mm., or a little over 14 
inches. 

On Ist April, 1904, off Findhorn, in the same neighbourhood, 497 
herrings were obtained, the depth of the water in this case heing from 
30 to 32 fathoms. They were the largest herrings got in any of the 
collections by means of the otter-trawl. (Plate XVIII.) 

Kleven of them belonged to one series, and ranged from 123mm. to 
169mm., the mean size being 143mm., and the average computed 
150°8mm., or about 512 inches. 

The next group consisted of 478 herrings, ranging from 177mm. to 
228mm. (7 to 9 inches), but the series might stop about 223mm. The 
modal size was about 200mm., the mean was 202°5mm , and the com- 
puted average was 203°2mm. These herringe were therefore about 
8 inches long, and they were spring herrings, as their position in the 
synthetic table shows, a little over four years of age. 

Another collection from the Moray Firth was obtained in the 
Cromarty Firth on Ist June 1901, and of the 70 taken, 66 measured 
from 111mm. to 155mm. (43 to 63 inches); the mode was 135mm. (5;°5 
inches), the mean was 133mm., and the computed average 129-7mm. or 
53 inches. 

These were autumn herrings approaching their third year of age. 


The next largest herrings measured by me consisted of a “ eran” of 
spring herrings, caught by drift-net, in the ordinary way, on 16th 
February 1504, in the neighbourhood of the Isle of May, at the mouth 
of the Firth of Forth, and landed at Anstruther. They were actually 
spawning, and it was thus a simple matter to separate the sexes and 
measure them apart, a task in which Mr. William Keir, the Fishery 
Officer of the district, was good enough to assist me. ‘The measurements 
will be found in Table III., and the curves on Plate XIX. 

A glance at the peculiar curve is enough to show that the herrings 
do not form a homogeneous group. The range is too great for one 
series, viz.,over 70mm. (2? inches); the oblique line on the synthetic chart 
connecting the extreme limits of the spring herrings of various ages, 
when prolonged, goes through the middle of the collective measure- 
ments; and consideration of the millimetre table and the curves shows 
that two groups are present. The males and females were measured 
separately in two lots each, or four in all, and when curves are made 
of these separate measurements, they all agree in having two cusps, or 
modes, with a depression at about 25cm. The following Table shows 
the grouping in each of the four measurements, in ‘5cm., and also the 
arrangement of the 2mm. grouping at the critical place:— 


|TABLE. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 331 


CENTIMETRES. 
| 
21-5} 22 | 22-5) 23 03.51 24 24.5 25 | 25-5) 26 26-5 27 27-5 28 28.5 29 | 29-5} 30 | 30-5 
= np cathe Bog hl lA eld A A le Ge cl a i SP 
| | 
Bimbo eet 21591) 25.135 | 24.193.) 32 85. 40 | Bb} 147 oS he BHO Ld fo ble 
| | 
oy Ale} = 1 12 | 20 | 35 | 28 | 32 | 23 | 36 | 27 | 19 | 14! 7] 1 1 Mae |e ea | 
| 
| } | 
Total 1} 3 | 21 | 45 | 70 | 52 | 55 | 55 | 71 | 67 | 54 | PASTY AUEURI SR See| eWay Feed Lay ie bevel a, 1 
ee EE see ae AOE nes Ry so Sc laa ed tel elle ne RN el eA i 
| ee 
Females,I. —| —| 11} 19 | 27 | 32 | 34 | 29 | 42 | 34 | 31 | 15 OnieeZ 2 Bt = 1 = 
Sei | ~| —| 4] 12] 25 | 23} 21 19 | 23 | 21} 14}| 8 | Aes Deeley = Nh eel 
ae aria ho bat A eee (Se (cau cauamerle tena nial aaa aa ee 
| | 
Total, -; -—| -| 15 | 81 | 52 | 55 | 55 | 48 | 65 | 55 | 45 | 23 | 16) 4 4 lamest) ad! 1 
J J 
MILLIMETRES. 
| fisiis ay | 
235-6 | 237-8 |239-40) 241-2 | 243-4 | 245-6 | 247-8 |249-50) 251-2 | 253-4 | 255-6 257-8 
| 
Males, I.| 14 16 10 i 8 11 9 8 9 18 Lan he LG 


ay Pl 15 13 12 9 15 14 a 8 11 14 16 


23 13 16 25 26 29 


Total, - 


46 | 55 43 43 42 | 52 46 28 33 54 


The younger herrings show the following: - The females, 215 in 
number, extend from 225mm. to 250mm. (81 to 91 inches), viz., to the 
point where fusion takes place with the older group; but if the curve 
is continued into the second group, as it ought to be to give the true 
limit, then herrings of this series will extend to about 26° 5em., or 103 
inches—perhaps more. The modal size is 24°25cm., according to the 
‘Sem. arrangement of the measurements ; according to the millimetre 
table it is at 244mm. (93 inches) ; the mean size is 237° 5mm., or on 
the extension of the series to 26:5em., it is 245mm., and the computed 
average is 239°9mm., or nearly 94 inches. 

The males number 256, ranging from 218mm. to 250mm (83 to 92 
inches, or further, as described for the females); the mode is 23°dcm., 
according to the ‘5cm. arrangement, and according to the millimetre 
table 237mm. (93 inches); the mean is 234mm., or, if the group is 
extended, 241'5mm. (9+ inches), and the computed average is 236°7mm., 
or 95°; inches. 

The figures for the two sexes grouped together are 471 herrings, 
ranging from 218mm. to probably 26°5cm. (83 to 103 inches), a range 
of 47mm. The modal size is 238mm. (9% inches), “and the average 
237°'T7mm., or the same. 


332 Part ITT —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


These spring herrings are five years of age, and they appear to be the 
first annual series which attains maturity. 

The second group of herrings comprised 248 females and 282 males. 
The beginning of the series is where the fusion with the younger series 
occurs, at 25lmm., but it probably extends back to about 23-5cm. 
(93 inches), judging from the form of the curve. The place where it 


ends is not so immediately clear. The following shows the arrangement 
in 2mm. groups :— 


270 272 274 276 278 280 282 284 286 288 290 292 294 296 298 300 302 304 306 308 
Fengter iy ia oe een ren eee 
Male, © 14°12 7-58 8 oP eae Se Se ee 

Zech ks Cee ee EC eens en Ma esl es ayo = 2 


And the measurements under the millimetres are these :— 
276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 


Female, 3 2 4 1 2 1 - 1 - 2 1 1 ~ - 2 - 
Male, - 3 5 2 2 1 1 - 2 2 2 22 2 - - il - 
6 7 6 3 3 2 = 3 2 4 3 3 - - 3 = 


It appears from this that the group terminates at 281mm. (11,5 
inches), the rest of the herrings belonging to, at least, one older group. 
The modal size is 257mm. (102 inches), the mean is 266mm. (or 261mm. 
on the extension of the group back to 240mm.), and the average as com- 
puted is 262-lmm. (10,5, inches). 

The males begin and end like the females, have exactly the same 
modal size, while the computed size is 261mm. 

The group comprising both sexes contains 530 herrings, with the 
same range, modes, and means, the computed average size being 261‘5mm. 
These herrings are six years of age. 

The rest of the herrings numbered 10 females and 12 males; the 
former ranged in size from 283mm. to 305mm. (114 to 12 inches), and 
the latter practically the same, 283mm. to 304mm. These herrings are 
seven years old, and although the range of size shown is only 22mm. 
and 21lram., it is probable, judging from the 2mm. table given above, that 
the three herrings at about twelve inches (300mm., 304mm., 305mm.) 
ave at least a year older still. Growth in length, as is well known, is 
much retarded when the fish attain to maturity and afterwards, as is 
shown, indeed, by comparing the modal sizes of the two series under 
discussion, the growth indicated in a year being only about 19mm. 
(2 inch). 

It will be noticed that in both series the males are more numerous 
than the females, and that, while in the second or older series the size 
of the males and females is the same, the males in the first group are 
appreciably smaller than the females. In both lots of males of this 
series measured, the mode in the ‘5cm. curves is at 23°5ecm.; in the 

.older group one of the modes is at 25°5cm.; and the other at 26cm. 
When all the males are considered together, the mode in the ‘Sem. curve 
is at 23°5em. in the younger group and at 25:5em. in the older group. 
In the two lots of females, the cusp in one case in the younger group 
was at 23°5em., and in the other at 24:5cem.; in the older group both 
the cusps or modes were at 25:5cem. 

There was thus a greater number of small males than of small females 
in the younger series, but this does not necessarily denote that the 
male reaches maturity at a smaller size than the female. 

In March, another lot of these spring herrings from the Forth were 
measured. They were forwarded to the laboratory, and placed in weak 
formaline solution for a time; they were measured by the laboratory 
attendant, who also determined the sexes in most of them by opening 
the fish ; doubtful cases were determined by myself. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 333 


The herrings numbered 1155, of which 514 were females and 641 
were males. Most of them were spawning, but 40 females and 43 
males were spent. The herrings as a whole were smaller than those got 
in February. Whether this was due to any extent to their having beat 
soaking in weak formaline solution is doubtful; my experience with 
other fishes is that they do not appreciably diminish in length under 
such circumstances. The fact that they were measured by another 
person has to be kept in view, but, making all due allowances, I think 
it may be assumed that these herrings were on the whole Sates than 
those in the previous month. 

The table of measurements and the curve (Plate XIX.) show that the 
bulk of the herrings was composed of two annual series, but it is not 
very clear where the division occurs in this case. Theor etically, it 
should be about 24°5cm., and a consideration of the curves and tables 
suggests that it should ba placed at 244mm.; but the division is some- 
what arbitrary. The separate curves for is sexes does not help much, 
except in the case of the males, where there are cusps or modes ae 
23cm. and 25cm., the depression being at 24cm. 

To this series belong 256 females and 319 males. Both have a similar 
range, from 211mm. to 244mm. (but the latter is no doubt greater, and 
possibly goes to over 25cm.); the modal size for each may be put at 
23°5em. (97 inches); the means are 227°5mm. (or, if the series is 
extended to 254mm.—a eta proe more—it is 232'5mm.); the computed 
average sizes ave, for females 232°8mm., and for the males 232°2mm. 

Combining aan sexes, the ae of B75 herrings have the same range 
as above, aa same Ee and means, and the avarage size is 232: 5mm, 
or 955 inches. 

The second series of herrings begins about 245mm., or, if extended 
for lem. backwards, at 235mm. “(92 inches), Where it ends is not so 
clear. The 2mm. grouping is as follows :— | 


267 269 271 2 7 
18 14 13 12 5 4 2 2 1 - 2 1 = 


271 272 ath Zinc OOM Ae 20 2. OcSOn, e2el  287n 983s oR4 ORr 
8 : 2 ? a oe Wes? aE 


It Hos end at 28]mm., or 274mm., or at 277mm., and I take the latter 
(10142 inches). 

To this group belong 252 females and 317 males. Both have the 
same range, 245mm. (or 235mm.) to 277mm.; the modal size is about 
25cm. (97 inches) ; the means are 261mm. (or 256mm.); and the com- 
puted averages are, for the males 252°7mm. (almost 10 inches), and for 
the females "O54: ipa (10 inches). The group of 569 herrings has 
the same range, mode, and mean as described, and the computed average 
is 253'Dmm. 

The difference between the first and the second series in the March 
herrings (on the averages) is, for females’ 21-3mm., for males 19-9mm., 
and for the series combined 21:Omm. 

There were other eleven herrings of larger size in the collection, WIZ. 
six females, measuring 28lmm., 283mm., 237mm., 288mm., 324mm., 
and 325mm.; and five males, measuring 278mm., 279mm., 280mm., 
287mm., and 304mm. 

These obviously belong to different annual series. It is very probable 
that the herring at 304mm. represents an older group than those smaller, 
while the two large females (12# inches) must be some years older. 


334 Part ITI.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


With regard to the spent herrings, it may be noted that 13 females 
and 8 males belonged to the first series, and 24 females and 35 males to 
the second series. The two large females were spent and another at 
288mm. The grouping of the spent fish in ‘5em. is as follows :— 


91°5* *92." 45) 8S 6, BF 2b 25. be BE Sah. Se Sb as ee oOl eg Oey iad een cpa 
Males, 1 = AQ VB Sgr 4B YAR ee ee SS aa ee ee ee ee 
Females, - s 5. 200) of, 418 To - Sank. tek oe) Sees 
1 Sy nT ete DD. A 7 by a 5 eT a 


8. CONCLUSIONS. 


It is evident from the above account that the herring grows slowly, 
and that those authors who supposed that it might reach the mature 
condition in a year or eighteen months were very wide of the mark. 

At the end of the year in which it was born, that is to say, in 
December, the spring herring rarely exceeds 50mm. (2 inches), and the 
great majority are much smaller; at the same period, the autumn 
herring may be as small as 14mm. (a little over 3 an inch), and is rarely 
over 13 inches, or 35mm. ‘This difference between the spring and 
autumn herring, it may be said, persists throughout. There is nothing 
to indicate that the rate of growth is greater in one than in the other, 
an interval of about 1*5cm.-2cm., or a little more, separating the mean 
sizes of the two classes at the same date. This is what might be 
expected, since an interval of five or six months intervenes between the 
spawning periods, and the difference in size between the spring and 
autumn herrings thus represents about half the amount of the growth 
in a year. 

While both autumn and spring herrings are included in the collec- 
tions with which I have dealt in this paper, those of the latter are the 
most complete; and I have set forth on the accompanying table the 
particulars regarding a number of the collections in order to show, in 
collective fashion, the rate of growth and the age at different sizes. 
Though these collections belong to different years and to various 
localities (but all on the east coast of Scotland), it will be seen that 
there is a very considerable uniformity of results. 

The monthly rate and the annual rate of growth, it may be said, are 
calculated from a larger number of decimals than the rate per day, and 
the age is computed from the middle of March. It will be observed 
that the growth in the summer months is much more rapid than in the 
colder part of the year; and the mean annual rate of growth in the 
four best cases, where the period is long and the numbers of herrings 
considerable, is 43:4mm., or about 1# inches. If the rate between 
January and May is included (49°6) the mean rate is 44°6mm. 


| TABLE. 


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< | 9-001 88-8 913 62 8 18-25 $9 JOhe SPIGIHShL N.0G9' “sls St Avg wana) SS OL Paes 
= 0-0F 68 60T- POL 81 als © £9 6ST | 981 SPI 86g - + ‘vquseprqy |: °° * “fo6t Ae 4108 
D 8-OF 06-8 SZI- 81z 8% 6 Saas IPL IOT-FIL | OF " + Keg wooproqy | °° —* “Q06T tequieseq WAST 
& 9-6F PLP oe LLY CO tie = Gear SII | 681-46 16 |° * “Gog Joust |* * * “To6T 4eW UIEI-46 
= 2 (63-1 ($F0:) z8 (¢.8) a eA £6 | (4.09) | (94)-er Goh, 2 "5 tuaroq oats) “> ° So - S6RT Ty Wh6Ge 
6S : (0-9) | (00¢-) st Go. | fore | ere (4e) |(69)-ch | or | °° “UMeqgouaE | * °° “CERT Arvnaqed 449% 
= are OF-Z 610- 8 0-8 Ole pak SP 9S-GF IL 3 ‘eq smorpuy yg | °° + SKaenuee 430% “UI6T 
= — €8-F 6S1- G8 (oH Sa NT ewe a Gh OGAZF) | GT ' + ‘Kugq ueepreqy |*  - ‘S06 toquieceq, YIZT 
= 68-5 FFT: (06) SI eae TL | G2 | Pr-1G ver | °° ‘keg ueaproqy | * —“006T toquieydag 430 “UI8T 
= ‘= = = : = Ne aes E (¢-61) | 96-81 = See eee eee ESO om * ae ee oO Se eee 
- a “3 - e i ere 3 - LI-9 Sa ge ie OTE A Ss oe Se Re name 
“ULTAL “WL “UY “ULTAL “SOT “SAA ‘soUypouy “UY “UWYAL 
"IVOK dog yop s9g| “Avq 109g ce ‘ywaroquy|‘asy aye} *Aouenbeay re ‘s8uL 
z litem hea lors acy atone: | Bop ee ow ETA yo a eG ee 
‘asevaIoUuyT JO 94Vyy JO ON | 


ne a cS le | er NS ee eS eel = eae ey Oe Se ES, So" ee ee 


336 Part II1.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Growth in length, however, as with most fishes, is somewhat more 
rapid in the early stages, and diminishes with age, at first very slowly, 
and then on the occurrence of sexual maturity with great and marked 
rapidity. 

The following gives the main features of the growth of the herring, 
according to this investigation :— 


Increase in Length 


Approximate Age. Length. from Breas ee 
Mm. Inches, Mm. Inches. 
1 “Year: >. ; ; : : ‘ 60°5 23 - - 
2 Years, . : : : : : 113 4G 52 25 
3 oe 159 6} 47 1Z 
4 5 200 15 41 18 
5 . 238 93 38 13 
6 257 104 19 } 


The herring, both male and female, appears to attain the mature 
condition, and to reproduce for the first time, when it is five years of 
age. 

If the same rate of growth as is indicated above between the fifth and 
sixth years be assumed to continue during the next few years, the 
approximate average sizes of older herrings would be as follows:—7 
years, 276mm. (102 inches); 8 years, 295mm. (113 inches); 9 years, 
314mm. (1232 inches); 10 years, 333mm. (134 inches). It is certain, 
however, that the growth in the later series of larger herrings 1s not 
nearly so rapid as this, and herrings over 12 inches are probably more 
than ten years old. The larger herrings of 13 to 15 inches, such as are 
referred to on a former page, must be very old; the latter probably 
from fifteen to twenty years. 

It may be of interest now to compare briefly the results as stated 
above and those obtained by Jenkins and Masterman. The research of 
the former, as previously mentioned, was made on the otoliths of spring 
herrings of the Baltic, and the precise age could not, therefore, be deter- 
mined with certainty, not within several months. The research of 
Masterman was on both spring and autumn herrings at St. Andrews, 
but was confined to specimens taken in tow-nets—to larval and post- 
larval forms, and to small numbers of young herrings obtained in the 
same way—and so far as his research was carried it agrees well with 
my own. He did not attempt to deal with the growth of the older 
series of herrings, except in a few cases, but made certain calculations 
as to the rate of growth per month. In the following Table I give a 
summary of the results of Jenkins (as amended by the intercalation of 
a year, so as to make his annual series a year older than he represents 
them), and also of the results of Masterman on the spring herring, as 
far as they go, and the approximate sizes of the older series as calculated 
on the basis he gives, viz., a growth of from 4mm. to 5mm. per month. 
The latter is quite accurate for the early stages, but it is rather wide of 
the mark for the older herrings, owing to the diminution of the rate of 
growth with age that actually takes place. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 337 


r. Il. IH. 
Year 
of Computed. 
Age. | Year. Range. | Mean. Range. jObserved. 
Min Max Mean 

1 45-76 © 62 
2 (1) | 113-121 117 94-139 112 110 122 116 
3 (2) | 156-164 160 142-186 os 158 7 164 
4 (3) | 190-198 194 177-228 ee 206 218 212 
5 (4) | 217-225 229 218-265 a: 254 266 260 
6 (5) | 287-245 241 240-257 tht 302 314 308 


Column I. shows Jenkins’ results, Column IJ. shows my own results, 
and Column IIT. shows the results obtained by Masterman, and the 
size at the later stages, computed at the mean rate of increase of 4mm. 
to 5mm. It will be observed that my results and those of Jenkins 
agree remarkably well, when a year is added to the age he assigns to 
his various series. 

In the later work of Masterman and M‘Intosh (17a) it is suggested 
that 3 inches (76mm.) and 5 inches (127mm.) represent a rough 
average of the size of the herring when one year and two years of age 
respectively ; and that sexual maturity is attained when it is between 
8 and 9 inches (203—228mm.) in length and probably three years of age. 
This, however, involves a more rapid growth than the facts warrant, and 
is not consistent with the results of Masterman’s own earlier paper. 

The earlier authors referred to at the beginning of this paper asa 
rule under-estimated the rate of growth of the herring. ‘The most 
correct are those of Malm, Sars and Nilsson. It is interesting to 
observe that the estimate of the fishermen of Bohuslain, Sweden, as 
given by Nilsson, is accurate; and that the estimates of the Scottish 
fishermen (three or seven years) was much nearer the truth than those 
of the naturalists. 

The elucidation of this question of the growth of the herring has an 
important bearing on several fishery problems. Compared with most 
fishes caught by lines or trawls, it is clear that the herring, caught by 
drift-nets, has a great advantage, inasmuch as no immature herrings 
are caught in this way, no less than four generations of undersized or 
immature herrings escaping through the meshes. 

It may also help to explain such problems as the presence every 
summer for a period of years of large herrings in the deep water of 
Upper Lochfyne, and their absence for a period of years. It is quite 
possible that these herrings belong to one and the same shoal, which has 
accustomed itself to the route of migration and the locality, and which 
is ultimately fished out or destroyed. It may also serve to explain the 
presence in the loch of small herrings in autumn and winter without 
supposing that they were spawned there. Such little herrings are one 
year old and more, and could therefore easily make their way into the 
loch from the spawning grounds in the outer part of the Clyde. 


338 Part L11.— Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


LITERATURE. 


1. Huxury, T. H.—‘* Report of the Royal Commission on the Operation of 
the Acts relating to Trawling for Herring on the Coasts of Scotland.” 
1863, p. 27. 

la. .—‘* Nature.” XXXI. 1881, p. 607. 

2, Mircuenn, J. M. ‘‘The Herring: Its Natural History and National 
Importance.” 1864. 

3. YARRELL, W.—-‘‘ A History of British Fishes.” 1859. 

4. De Caux.—‘‘ The Herring and the Herring Fishery.” 1881, p. 50. 

5. Sim, G.—‘‘ The Natural History of the Herring.” 1883, p. 46. 

6. Launemann, A. V.—‘‘Om _ ssillens och skarpsillens fortplantning och 
tillvixt.” 1879. Nordisk Tidsskrift for Fiskeri. V. 193. 

6A. . — Bidrag till kinnedomen om sillens lefnadsférhallanden.” 1880. 

7. WIDEGREN, H.—-‘‘ Nagra ord om sillfiske samt om sillens eller Strémmingens 
ratta beredning till handelsvara.” Tidsskrift for Fiskeri, 6 Aarg., X., 1871. 

8. Borcx, A.—‘‘ Om Silden og Sildefiskerierne,” p. 13. 

9. SUNVEVALL, C. J.—‘‘ Stockholms liins K. Hush. Sallsk. Handl.” VI., p. 105. 

10. Exstrom, C. U.—‘‘ Praktisk Afhandling,” p. 10. 

10a. ——.—‘ Danmarks Fiske,” III., pp. 170, 171. 

11. Nixsson, 8.—‘* Handlingar rérande Sillfisket,” p. 45. 

12, Sars, G. O.—‘‘Indberetning til Departementet for det Indre,” 1870-73, 
pp. 38, 39. 

13. Matm, A. W.—‘‘ Géteborgs och Bohuslins Fauna.” 1877, p. 581. 

14. Horx, P. P. C.—‘* The Fishes of the Zuiderzee” (Tijdschrift der Neder- 
landsche Dierkundige Vereeniging (2), III. Afl. I. 1890). 

7 .—‘* Bericht iiber die Fischerei mit Steerthamen.” (Zbid. Suppl. Deel 

. 1888). 

15. Mrnyrer, H. A.—‘‘ Biologische Beobachtungen bei kiinstlicher Aufzucht des 
Herings der westlichen Ostsee.” 1878. 

.—‘* Beobachtungen uber das Wachstum des Herings im westlichen 
Teile der Ostsee” (Jahresbericht der Komm. z. wiss. Untersuch. der 
deutschen Meere in Kiel, 1878, 227). 

16. Jenkins, J. T.—‘‘ Altersbestimmung durch Otolithen bei den Clupeiden.” 
(Ibid. Neue Folge, 6th Bd. Abtheil., Kiel., p. 83). 19€2. 

17. MastrrmMan, A. T.—Fourteenth Annual Report, Fishery Board for Scotland, 
Part ITI., p. 294. 1896. 

174. M‘IntosH anp MasteRMAN.—‘‘ British Marine Food Fishes,” pp. 420, 422 
(1897). 

18. CunnincHAM, J. T.—‘‘ Marketable Marine Fishes of the British Islands,” 
p. 162. 

19. Marrumws, J. D.—Fourth Annual Report, Fishery Board for Scotland, 1886. 

194. ——.—Fifth, ibid., 1887. 

20. Brook, G.—-Fourth, ibid., p. 48. 

21. Murin, J.—‘‘ Kent and Essex Sea Fisheries Committee—Report on the Sea 
Fisheries, &c., of the Thames Estuary.” 1903. 

22. LunpperG, R.—‘‘ Bidrag till kinnedomen om Strémmingen i Stockholm- 
skirgard.” 1875. 

23. Tryspom, —.—‘‘ Iakttagelser vid Sillfisket i Bohuslan.” 1883. 

23a. ——.—‘‘ Sillundersékningar vid Sveriges Vestkust.” 1889. 

24. ‘‘ Verslag van den Staat der Nederlandsche Zeevisscherijen over 1863,” p. 15. 

25. M‘Intosu, W. C.—‘‘ Seventh-Twelfth Reports of the Fishery Board for Scot- 
land, Part III. 

26. eee ts i ee an Annual Report of the Fishery Board for Scotland, 

art ; 


144, 


15a. 


EXPLANATION OF PLATES XVII.-XIX. 


The diagrams shown on the plates represent the measurements of the 
various collections of herrings dealt with, the measurements being 
shown in ‘Dem. groups, 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 339 
TABLE I.—ABERDEEN BAY. 
June October. November. December. | 
om. |11, | 29, | 24, | 30, 13, D5, | 2h | 18 3. 18; 31, 6, | 6, | 9, 123, | — | 12, ] 18, | 17, | 19, | 29, 
1903 1901}1901| 1901/1900) 1901'1901/1900}1963' 1901|1900}1903 1900/1903 1900 1901|1900/1903 
an 4s See Spe | (Ee. | PEMA GRE. 4 FRG adey Fam ape RRR a ee (ee 
5 - C2 Sh SO Se a ai ag a a 
2 - Gries: — |) Stes) =F 2) | =) = -| - 
‘5 = 33 | -| -7>58/ -| -— 1] -| -| -| -| -|[ - 
3 - PN hal | a8 [00 | ne arc | (A (ee ig cee ee Ba 
5 - Sat Se ae Si tel Sih =a) =) a= | 
f a ei A S| oee (alert lg tle guint elie oe cals 
i) - ee Sal aie sl el ee ele eae ee 
= ~ = 1 = as 2 = = 1 = as = = 
3) - sh Ai pay S| (PE RO lec ae | | ee Vane Nome | emer Lge 
6 - ee A Shae ei el Sa Si Se ee ee 
-) = -| -|104— -| -| -— -/| -| -]}] -] -] -] - 
7 - Silt aR OME <a tale iis Sollee a ena ey 
5 - =|.=| 929 -—|. -| 1f--/--|--]| -| = [1] = 
8 = STOP el ant TE Sal =a) a a 
"5 - Sails Uy OS ier le alee eB Set ah es (ee a 
9 = =| =| 708 =| Li ap jh]. =1,.3] = 
5 ~ i Bey 43cp =i) I) sa aah = 2 al Say = 
10 - Sele bate ly Ae tet Sol all ee te a 
B - =e be ABr te =|. Gli 1 le Tele Ep 4 = 
11 - a lOge | 2t bl ORE aie —F |, =a) 2 4 Bel ia 
5 1 AOR) Wee tee =|) Belo eBne = |) lo = AON TONG Ot 2 
12 12 =F be Weta =e 2h Pan a = le We SPD Tae eS 
5 42 i aoe ep CS Oe le = 391) BL 8 
13 72 S20) ie Se ot, Sh sae Ble beh al) By FT 
5 103 Slee Ae Die aie Ah al 4. | 72 | aol ah 2 
14 96 a Ge Bia Be al EP = 1-8] =) Soe 
ss) 75 = See ni elie he | tc =) GOR. Sulg elie f 
15 54 eee te tie =) i 1. ne eT 
3) 49 SS te Geta ee ti, i) te 3) =) Sie mele ae 
16 25 = ie Se rest [es = 1 x 4 Zl EM) ge 
13 |e tle ee ht |p CA (ea (a im Cee | Ce | ee 
17 9 = {ioe tt auas hae eee Fe ee (a Se nme | PR | Ae 
1 = ea alee! See a ee ae ete: (0a (ee gel Bey Sa 
18 1 z it 2 z = = a = sf = E = 
= Et y) ~ 2 = = = eS =: a xi a 
19 - sh = Sh =|) = -} -} -| -]| -]| -[ - 
20 E eee Me ade |S ae ee We ey faker | ae 
1 Sh Se SS ee ota oh Ve peered) ae | are 
21 = ever ce ea es SS Sk SS see at 
22 1 a Sea ee te |, a See ee 
I = = = & ~ ae = = = = = = 
23 1 oh ae eae Sh aS = 
3! 4 [157 leo | - | 24 [557 (e501 8 | 22 9a “354 (44a lego iso | a8! a2 f 6! 5! ‘nol 47 ‘a0 16 | 


*10 miles off. 


340 Part I1L—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


TABLE IJ.—MORAY FIRTH. 


Dornocn Firru. BURGHEAD Bay. os ‘ 
2 | 38 | 8 November. December. December. April.{ Jan. | June. 
. = he 
m PaPSED fied! Dai! Ae, Sees (BE Me A: es 
9, [81,121 = 1c 1 6.) ak tie = 26, | 7, | 25, | 28, | 6-7,| 25, | 29, | 28, 10, fF & 
1905]1904/1903/1903!1900/1900!1903!1903'emb/1903 1904/1900 1903#1904/1901]1903 190 
he ne eee = es x. 
1 =} 2/3 me Poe el ees 1 | a a a 
5 = 1 96 1 P44 -= ft ee ee 18 | 2 Re — 16 3 
2 1197 = aed 17 | = 17 = 
5 = ae es eee 9 | = 13 = 
3 a = eS = SS = 
5 = J =e = <3 ae ps =i = 
4 = pS = oF — =a = — — = = i 
5 ad ad << — — — — er | = ~ 
5 -| - = aa ae {| = = 
5 iS saa) ate ee ale esd)? Seat ee = 
6 : = = = = i ae = 
9) = ~ - =a - - 
7 = a ee ee ees es ie eee = 
5 = a eel Si a eae = 
8 - =.) t= 456] £0.) Soe Pets rs 1 2 = 
i eae -| -|15] 1] 22] 31] 53 = |= 1 1 = 
9 =] -= 449 4:4) 29 1298 [2p b = = oe eed 4 es 
5 == 4 *—1) 43 4 91 |) 93 Gone jigag | = | T3 OF ia hess 5 = 
10 = ih 200 | -| 12 \957 209 | -| -| 9 ote Pa 2 1 
$B 3 || ie 66 | - | 13 |244 |257 =a 3 | 91 |e jp 3) 2 = 
| 
11 — 6) -} =42791) -—] 8.158. 1981 4 */296 = hae 4 2 
- | 81-3) °- |-- (157 | 11-6 [ite |e | 1 {411 a hor 1 6. 
12 Bi eae se gt Gea re tg eS 343 Ese 6 8 
oe ee —H. 345. — i) Aa) og3 tag 257 5 ee 4 | 10 
ae pee 8 -/12|12] -| ~ [150 ei 
i he ad 4 ibe 139 fe = Uae = bogs 
| 
14 - —ghou~ ti eee gee Nee 2 9 
| ee oe —3 St ee 84 1 6 
15 = oa 98) 2 Bao 1 | 48 3 
5 SS ee epee foes |e — | 25 | = 2 
16 2 a ee eae | eT) es) | oa | 9 | 1 G\ = 1 
5 -| -|--|10]10] -| -]| 2 ey eee - - 
17 -| -| -| -| --] =} -| 18] 18 | 1 ee Se 7 1 
es ee! en | ee ee -|16 | 16 Bi 7 een eee = 
18 Ss eh 15 | 15 =e =i ee | a S. = 
5 2\8 = Bet 15°) 16t) <a ne | OF; ses = q 
19 = HH cage 7el Paani | 1} =1 = = 2 
5 = ~~ cpl ap leatien 21 eg | i7iltewy =e ink 
20) -| - x Sh [p85 <p Bell =5/ he a 4 
> x| 2 = 4 ey 
21 =f) ee a el ee ea os aH ack 
5 a ae ee tet Ds aes ie tame pe? | 3 
22 | a ape | et | ae Ben ale 
'B | -| - = = a Oo | 
23 = es “ Bl Ss ae 
5 = = a = wu = mes = — = 
me. ||eete ihe ts blo a) ee et 
5 = = = = = = eo | am, aa 
‘8 | 16 | 28 |156 on 15 {158 |1336/1446| 51 | 10 os 4 


* 30 Fathoms. + 30-32 Fathoms. 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 341 


s a3 TABLE III.—FIRTH OF FORTH. 


2S February. March. 
n 16, 1904. 15, 1904. 


July. 


l7-| ¢ ee aia eae Weseetes| & Voe bro: baa, bac) bos, bon 
21,| & | 99, | 99, | 20 »| 7-95) 5, Hoh pa ter | 28, EC | 28 28, 


3, 
1890} 1892 | 1890 | 1890 | 1892 | 1889 |1890/1891) 1889 |1889/1892§1901/1901)190 com 1901/1901/1901 


0 eS a Se ———— 


Spawning 
and Spent. 


Spawning. 


q 2) ss ¥ + = = 7 
a i i K ‘8 | 4 


ie ices ley) 5 Be ek he ele Ae ih NG ee 
meri 4 oS Fee Se eee de aie ee Soe eee ee 
eee) i) iy | HS 8 eles Se ae 
sol tak | Gall J Bek a eros 2 ee 2] 
mete) i. |) Bere) oh ae 
im | eam - ca || BAe Me et illest sh) | 
mee | - = 312! | Bae ta lhe Ws = |e a 
ee || Tee 
mi | mee cet ah = Wo bl =, a 
Me si) —lsesh || | ee alee |) 2 
ot | 
Meme |} i} | 7 <7 )\0 ee a ee alee | a ta 
man iy P| eas] - | BR Hone fe) Sh fae et ee 
aes | Ft Bas ios le == =| a ee 


| 
| 
| eee es | = Sh aM op eee ee fa SP es 
| 14 ees ee | | oy dca na in| a a La ae i aa otc 
oS oe or EAR ee rhe ly ete ek ee he ee ee 
| eee =) | s7| -| - Bee de oad ed ead eee pe ven | 
| 2) - - = = = = us = = pet a | = _ a = = 
Fe ee a ee CPE We SL Salt in oct tS an es 
oh) SG Sn en Oy iis aed ee | a ee ee eo 
ES ae a ee ves eee ee, ee ke ee De 
aa a 2 oz z be 9 wae tity A Ee ee, ie a ee a ae 
EE oW Loles Peas te eee ps Pye sn 
ee a ce Pe ese. We fury a a 
SS a ee ee ey ed Sp ed eae |e Co ae CB foe 
SS cae ae ed ee OR ae ee oe 
Th s : of a = erg Ge A ES Ae ee Gee ng ey ee 


34.2 Part I1I.—Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


TABLE III.—FIRTH OF FORTH—continued. 


February| Mar.| April. May. 


Aug 
Sept. 
Oct 


May. = 4 February, March, 
pity s/ 2a |e|e 5 | a | 16,1904. | 15, 1904. 
Onn g, a Sj 20, | 9-15,] 7-9,1 5, | 8-5, |39° | 49,1 9% | 10, | 13, 10; | 98, | 23, | 4, eae shonin 
1890} 1892 1890 | 1890 | 1892 | 1889 |1890|1891] 1889 |1ssoltgoa{1901\1901|1901\com|t901|1901|1904, «| BG Spent. , 
Pa anes Seeker 
ot ae cea Pea oe By ee eee al Bees lp =) || =| =) 
= Ho a Peele cee pe eave | | aa -| -|\/=)) 2) 2) 97a eae 
aa ee Sa ieat lad gs SUES os Beh hen emia -| ~| =| #34) i81'9o8) eons 
ae ss ib Pee aL ee ele paeaie Pg (een Oe -| -| 15 | 21 | 36 | 49 | 57 |106 
as | ne Best od hee EY Oe eae ch] Re aca ene -| -| 31] 45 | 76 | 48 | 73 |121 
ey es Au tale are 24 py ah eH ish Ge -| -| 52 | 70 |122 | 57 | 67 |124 
Santee Sal te nie a id GE le ag i |e Ue -| -| 55 | 52 |107 | 62 | 66 |128 
A |e See heres eee ei eh aAea Pa A ee - | -| 55 | 55 {110 | 61 | 72 |133 
Se ee Pa Iie oars ae Ee Saeco By hones - | -| 48 | 55 [103 | 55 | 80 {135 
5 ee mia he || ae eg a eae aie kd | a -| -| 65 | 71 [136 | 56 | 68 |124 
5a i Pe | ed |e ee het ta + i ig -| -| 55 | 67 |122 | 39 | 54 | 93 
ae Whe: oe lees (laa ted Sg kl) Be | aides -| - | 45 | 54 | 99 | 24 | 95 | 49) 
ce |e Na es gees |g ES gene ord ag a -| -| 23 | 28} 51 | 13 | 15 | 28 
es 28 Pea ie Philp gael bys | od Beal oes =| -|| 16 | 24 40307) Saas lien 
a ee 24) Viola ah oes Atay erg eee Pp ~| — | 4 | 56 Onl eee aenet nes 
ae wll oieaNiage Aimee By)" Men ie RS Ee = |-+ | aa) (6 76) eae nee 
29 «| - Sy all gece pk - -| - -| -| =| - -| -| B| 1] 4] =} =| 
5 | - -| -| -| - -| -| - =| Me) Sh -| =| =|.=) =) =) = 14m 
20 = Be cates aap eae A Fie ee te -|.-| 2) hea 
5 | - Subse Mea ee - -| - -| -| -] = -| —) 2) Be ae a 
31 e i ce ely ae = yh es Seow ee =). =). alg ee 
Pate Sees es Oe Pee be 2 ee _|--| =| eee 
39 = = = « = = =|) = =| ois =f. -d =) Sle Sal Sie 
se Wie! fe he ae: |e! Les ee Yo Nei Fae |. -| &) eee 1 
19 | 240 | 449 [1075 | 312 | 194 | 13 | 3 | 2428 | 47 | 9 fuer | 12 |114 [287 | 31 | 8 | 48 [473 |550 |1023)514 Jea1 [11 


. 
in 
Ki 
4 
i 
\ 
| 
| 
% 


Herring. I. Aberdeen Bay. PLATE XVII. 


4 5 6 7 8 9 1 ol is__18 uM 16 WW 18 19 2) lB 


is 
—e 


September. 
| 
i] 
| 
| 
4 


100 — — +\— ; 
3 = 
ic =ilfics all areas lif ua a SN Oe 7) fastisor 
38 0 be A 
| i 
\ 
_| 40 en be = aft = epee acess 
T * 
Alf ( 1 
wt tt eee 
|e yf \ 
~ 7 
at 
: ey eal | 
5 5 
ete el 
oO 
4 = 4 -t + { 
ia 11/1901 
| Al 971900 
— 
| | i 


42/1903 i, 


12/1903 L009 
4 | 
ea | 
7 
4 | 23h} 17, 15/1900 ul) 
i AN 1 
/ fi \ 
uu 
10/1008, ‘ 
80 
g | | | 
3 60 —— 
i 10 —-+ 
20 


1 2 & 4 a 6 7 S: a fae 6 em CY TSE OB. 16 SF) TR: 610) SD SE ae 


PLATE XVIII. 


Herring. II. Moray Firth. 


EUBe, 
BiaMAvis 


oS eae 
Beer 


> ae 


“‘qoouroq 
“Areniqe,, 


“qoouLog 
“Wore 


“AVIBUIOID 
“LOI 


“kyxeuI0r1p 
‘oun 


2 


“qoouroq 
“IOQUIGAO NT 


‘qoou1og 
“raquieoed 


“‘peoyqsmg 
~raquieoeq, 


March. 


April. 


May. 1889, 1890. 


May. 1901. 


October. September. July. 


December. 
9, 10/1892. 


Herring. III. Firth of Forth. PLATE XIX. 


(287) 


ah 
9, 13/1901 


_/\@428)| j 


7 


i 


-! 


3, 5/1889 


Bete 


\ 


3233 


27 28 «629 30 31 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


343 


INDEX. 


ABERDEEN Bay: Trawling investigations 
in, 25. 

Acartia bifilosa, 277. 

Age of Herring, 293. 

Brill at maturity, 209. 

—— Herring at maturity, 332, 336. 

Lemon Dab at maturity, 196. 

— Turbot at maturity, 203. 

Ameira longicaudata, 277. 

Amphiascus Catherine, 275. 

—— minutus, 275. 

Angler (Lophius siscatorius) : 
of, 57. 


Otoliths 


Argentine (Argentina AD Sheed Oto- 
liths of, 76. 
BAuLaN Wrasse (Labrus bergylta): Oto- 


liths of, 61. 


Beatricella mamica, 277. 

Bib: see Brassy. 

Black Sole (Solea vulgaris) : Otoliths of, 
75. 

Blue-mouth (Scorpena dactyloptera) : 


Otoliths of, 55. 
Brassy (Gadus luscus) : Otoliths of, 63. 
Reproduction of, 130. 
—— Ripe eggs of, 131. 
Specific characters of, 116, 133. 
Brill (Rhombus levis): Age of, at ma- 
turity, 209. 
Growth of, 203. 
Butter-fish (Pholis gunnellus) 
6f 59: 


: Otoliths 


Canthocamptus parvus, 277. 

Canuella perplexa, 277. 

Cat-fish (Anarrhichas lupus) : Otoliths of, 
59 


Cletodes siinilis, 277. 

Coal-fish (Gadus virens) : 

Cod (Gadus callarias) : 

Growth of, 209. 

— Growth of, at Iceland, 211. 

Hermaphroditism in, 290. 

Commercial trawlers: Employment of, 
17. 

Composition of Herring, 83. 

— of muscles and ovaries in Herrings, 
99. 


Otoliths of, 65. 
Otoliths of, 61. 


of muscles and testes in Herring, 
100. 

Conger (Conger niger) : Otoliths of, 79. 

Copepoda : Rare, from Scottish seas, 275. 

Couch’s Whiting (Gadus poutassou) : Oto- 
liths of, 64. 

Cunningham, Mr. J. T., on growth of 
Herring, 298. 


Das, Common 
Otoliths of, 74. 

Growth of, 189. 

Dactylopusia brevicornis, 276, 277. 

Jinmarchicus, 277. 

vulgaris, 277. 

Description of new fish-hatchery, 108. 

Differences between male and female 
Lumpsuckers, 170. 

Diosaccus propinquus, 278. 

tenwicornis, 279. 

Dragonet (Callionymus lyra) : 
of, 58. 

—— Spotted (Callionymus maculatus) : 
Otoliths of, 58. 

Duration of embryonic development in 
the Herring, 303. 


(Pleuronectes limanda) : 


Otoliths 


KARSTONES : see Otoliths. 

Hetinosoma curticorne, 277. 

Kel, Common (Anguilla vulgaris) : 
liths of, 79. 

Eggs of Lumpsucker : Paternal guardian- 
ship of, 169. 

Enhydrosoma incurvatum, 277. 

EHuryte longicauda, 277. 


Oto- 


Fat: Utility of storage of, in fishes, 181. 

Fish-hatchery : Description of, 108. 

Fishes: Rate of growth of, 179. 

Utility of storage of fat in, 181. 

Fecundity of Plaice, 281. 

Flounder (Pleuronectes flesus) 
Of; 73: 

Growth of, 191. 

Food value of Herring, 83. 

Four-bearded Rockling (Onos cimbr dus) : 
Otoliths of, 67. 


: Otoliths 


GADID species: Key to diagnosis of, 138. 
Gadus esmarkit : see Norway Pout. 

— luscus: see Brassy. 

minutus ; see Poor-cod. 


Goby, Black (Gobius niger) : 
58 


Otoliths of, 


—— Speckled (Gobius minutus) : Otoliths 
of, 58. 

Greater Fork-beard (Phycis blennoides) : 
Otoliths of, 66. 

Weaver (Tvrazhinus draco) 
oy eye 

Grey Gurnard (Vrigla gurnardus) 
liths of, 55. 

Growth of, 232. 

Relation of temperature to migra- 
tions of, 236. 

Growth of fishes, 179, 


: Otoliths 


: Oto- 


344 


Growth of fishes: A law of growth in 
relation to maturity, 182. 

Influence of external conditions on, 

181. 

Influence of temperature upon, 182. 

—— Modification of, in deeper parts of 
North Sea, 182. 

of Brill, 203. 

— of Cod, 209. 

— of Cod at Iceland, 211. 

— of Common Dab, 189. 

—— of Flounder, 191. 


of Grey Gurnard, 232. 

of Haddock, 226. 

of Herring, 293. 

of Herring: Various opinions on, 

293, 294, 295. 

of Herring, male and female, 332. 

—— of Herring in larval and post-larval 
stages, 308. 

of Herring : Conclusions as to, 334. 

—— of Herring, spring and autumn, 334. 

— of Lemon Dab, 192. 

—— of Long Rough Dab, 196. 


of Plaice, 184. 
of Turbot, 199. 
of Whiting, 229. 


Happock (Gadus cglefinus): Otoliths 
of, 62. 

Great catches of small, 29, 31. 

Growth of, 226. 

Hake (Merlucius vulgaris): Otoliths of, 
66. 

Halibut (Hippoglossus vulgaris): Otoliths 
of, 69. 

Ffalicyclops equoreus : 277. 

Harpacticus obscurus : 277. 

Hatchery, Bay of Nigg, Aberdeen: 
Report on operations at, 108. 

Hatching of Plaice, 110. 

— of eggs of Lumpsucker, 177. 

Helmsdale Herring: Chemical composi- 
tion of, 93. i 

Hermaphroditism in Cod, 290. 

Herring (Clupea harengus): Age of, at 
maturity, 332, 336. 

A criticism of Dr. Meyer’s obser- 
vations on growth of, 303. 

-—- Chemical analyses of, 83. 

— Chemical composition of Helmsdale, 
93. 

— Chemical composition of Lochbois- 
dale, 95. 

Chemical composition of Lochfyne, 

86, 104. 

Composition of muscles and ovaries 

in, 99, 

Composition of muscles and testes, 

100. 

Conclusions as to growth of, 334. 

Duration of embryonic development 

in, 303. 

External differences from Sprat, 
167. 

— -Food value of, 83. 

— Growth and age of, 293. 

—— Growth ot, in larval and post-larval 
stages, 308. 

—— Growth and age of, 293. 


Part II]. —Twenty-fowrth Annual Report 


Herring, Growth of males and females, 

32. 

—— Growth of spring and autumn fish, 
334. 

—— Maximum size attained by, 301. 

—— Notes on natural history of, 165. 

— Numbers taken in Sprat fishery, 
161. 

— Nutritive value of, 
periods, 83. 

-— Nutritive value of spent, 103. 

—— Otoliths of, 77. 

—— Proportions of sexes of, 332. 

-—— Relation of temperature to growth 
of, 306. 

Relation of temperature to spawn- 

ing periods of, 303. 

Size of, at maturity, 299, 232. 

—— Spawning periods of, 302. 

— Variation of fat in, 101. 

—— Variation of fat in ovaries of, 102. 

—— Variation of proteids in, 101, 


at different 


Idya furcata, 277. 

gracilis, 277. 

—— minor, 278. 

Immature fish caught by trawl, 29, 31. 

Influence of external conditions on 
growth of fishes, 181. 


Jaco’s Goldsinny (Labrus rupestris) : 
Otoliths of, 61. 

Jenkins, Dr. Travis, on growth of Her- 
ring, 298, 307. 


Laophonte curticauda, 278. 

—— gracilis, 278. 

hispida, 278. 

tnoprinata, 278. 

intermedia, 278. 

— littorale, 278. 

—— longiremis, 278. 

thoracica, 278. 

Lemon Dab (Plewronectes microcephalus) : 
Age at maturity, 196. 

—— Growth of, 192. 

Otoliths of, 73. 

Lesser Fork-beard (Raniceps raninus) : 
Otoliths of, 68. 


-—— Sand-eel (Ammodytes tobianus): - 


Otoliths of, 69. 

Weaver (Trachinus vipera): Oto- 
liths of, 57. 

Ling (Molua molva): Otoliths of, 67. 

Lochboisdale Herring: Chemical com- 
position of, 95. 

Lochfyne Herring : Chemical composition 
of, 86, 104. 

Longipedia scoiti, 278. 

Long Rough Dab (Drepanopsetta plat- 
essoides): Otoliths of, 69. 

Growth of, 196. 

Lumpsucker (Cyclopterus/umpus) : Hatch- 
ing of eggs of, 177 

— Habits of, 171. 

—— Differences between 
females, 170. 

=—— Otoliths.of, 59: 


males and 


of the Fishery Board for Scotland. 


Lumpsucker, Paternal guardianship of 
the eggs of, 169. 

Rivalry of males, 172. 

—— Spawning of, 169. 


MACKEREL (Scomber scombrus) : Otoliths 
of, 57. 

Marine fish-hatching: Report on, 108. 

Masterman, Dr. A. T., on growth of 
Herring, 298, 308. 

Maturity of fishes: Remarks on, 24. 

Maturity : Size of Herring at, 299, 

Maximum size attained by Herring, 301. 

Megrim (Lepidorhombus whiff) : Otoliths 
of, 71. 

Meyer, Dr. H. A., on growth of Herring, 
295. 

Migrations of Grey Gurnard: Relation 
of, to temperature, 236. 

Milroy, Professor T. H., on the food 
value of the Herring, 83. 

Moray Firth: Trawling investigations 
in, 18, 27, 31, 34. 

Muller’s Top-knot (Zeugopterus puncta- 
tus): Otoliths of, 71. 


Nannopus palustris, 278. 

Norway Haddock (Sebastes norvegicus) : 
Otoliths of, 54. 

Norway Pout (Gadus esmarkiz) : Otoliths 
of, 64. ° 

Maturity of, 131. 

Specific characters of, 116, 134. 

Notes on natural history of Herring, 165. 

Notes on natural history of Sprat, 165. 

Notes on new and rare copepoda, 275. 

Nutritive value of spent Herring, 103. 


OroxiTHs of Angler, 77. 

of Argentine, 76. 

of Ballan Wrasse, 61. 

of Black Goby, 58. 

of Black Sole, 75. 

of Blue-mouth, 55, 

of Brassy, 63. 

of Brown Trout, 76. 

of Cat-fish, 59. 

of Cod, 61. 

of Coal-fish, 65. 

of Common Dab, 74. 

of Common Sea-bream, 54. 
of Conger, 79. 

of Couch’s Whiting, 64. 
of Dragonet, 58. 

of fishes: Observations on, 48. 
of Flounder, 73. 

of Greater Fork-beard, 66. 
of Greater Weaver, 57. 
of Grey Gurnard, 55. 

of Halibut, 69. 

of Haddock, 62. 

of Herring, 77. 

of Jago’s Goldsinny, 61. 
of Lemon Dab, 73. 

of Lesser Fork-beard, 68. 
of Lesser Weaver, 57. 

of Ling, 67. 

of Lumpsucker, 59. 

—— of Mackerel, 57. 

- — of Megrim, 71. 


POGRerrr rene er) Par eLF: 


| 


| 
| | 


345 


Otoliths of Muller’s Top-knot, 71. 
of Norway Haddock, 54. 
—— of Pike, 77. 

—— of Pilchard, 78. 


| —— of Plaice, 72. 


of Pollack, 66. 

—— ot Poor-cod, 64. 

—— of Red Gurnard, 56. 

of Red Mullet, 54. 

—— of Roach, 77. 

of Salmon, 76. 

— of Sand Smelt, 60. 

——- of Sapphirine Gurnard, 56. 
— of Scald-fish, 72. 

—— of Sharp-tailed Lumpenus, 60. 
—— of Solenette, 75. 

— of Speckled Goby, 58. 

— of Spotted Dragonet, 58. 

-—— of Sprat, 78. 

—— of Streaked Gurnard, 56. 

of Striped Wrasse, 61. 

— of Thick-lipped Grey Mullet, 60. 
—— of Three-bearded Rockling, 67. 
—— of Turbot, 70. 

of Variegated Sole, 75. 

— of Viviparous Blenny, 60. 

of Whiting, 65. 

—— of Witch, 74. 

— of Worm Pipe-fish, 79. 


Parathelestris hibernica, 278. 

Paternal guardianship of the eggs of the 
Lumpsucker, 169. 

Perch (Perca fluviatilis) : Otoliths of, 53. 

Pike (Hsow luctus): Otoliths of, 77. 

Pilchard (Clupea pilchardus): Otoliths 
of, 78. 

Plaice (Pleuronectes platessa): Artificial 
propagation of, 110. 

Duration of spawning of female, 281. 

—— Eggs of, 288. 

—— Fecundity of, 281. 

Growth of, 184. 

=——. Qftoliths of, 72. 

-—— Spawning of, 28). 

—— Spawning period of, 111, 281. 

—— Variation of growth with locality, 
184, 

Platychelipus littoralis, 278. 

Pogge (A gonus cataphractus) ; Otoliths of, 
56 


Pollack (Gadus pollachius) : Otoliths »1. 
66. 

Pontopolites typicus, 278, 

Poor-cod (Gadus minutus); Otoliths of, 
64. 

—— Reproduction of, 130. 

—— Ripe eggs of, 131. 

—— Specific characters of, 116, 133. 

Powan (Coregonus lavaretus): Otoliths of, 
76. 

Proportion of marketable and unmarket- 
able fishes, 17. 

Proportion of sexes in Herring, 332. 

Pseudodiosaccus propinquus, 278. 

Pseudothalestris major, 278. 


Rate of growth of fishes, 179. 
Red Gurnard (Trigla pint): Otoliths of, 
56. 


346 


Red Mullet (Mullus barbatus) ; Otoliths 
of, 54. - 

Reproduction of Brassy, 130. 

Reproduction of Poor-cod, 130. 

Rivalry of male Lumpsuckers, 172. 

Roach (Leuciscus rutilus) : Otoliths of, 77. 


SaLmon (Salmo salar): Otoliths of, 76. 

Sand Smelt (Atherina presbyter): Otoliths 
of, 60. 

Sapphirine Gurnard (TVvrigla lucerna) : 
Otoliths of, 56. 

Scald-fish (Platophrys laterna) : Otoliths 
of, 72. 

Sea-bream, Common (Sparus 
dontus): Otoliths of, 54. 

Sea Scorpion (Cottus scorpius): Otoliths 
of, 55. 

Sharp. tailed Lumpenus (Lumpenus lam- 
pretiformis): Otoliths of, 60. ' 

Size of Herring at maturity, 299, 332, 
336. 

Solenette (Solea lutea): Otoliths of, 75. 

Spawning of Plaice, 281. 

—— of Plaice: Duration of, in females, 
281. 

of Lumpsucker, 169, 176. 

— Period of Plaice, 111, 281. 

Periods of Herring, 302. 

Specific characters of Brassy, 116. 

characters of Poor-cod, 116. 

—— characters of Norway Pout, 116. 

Spent Herring: Nutritive value of, 103. 

Sprat (Clupea sprattus): External differ 
ences from Herring, 167. 

—— Notes on natural history of, 165, 

— Otoliths of, 78. 

Fishery in Tay, 1905-6, 159. 

—— Fishery in Tay: Fish caught in, 
160. 

Stephos scotti, 278. 

Streaked Gurnard (J'rigla lineata): Oto- 
liths of, 56. 

Striped Wrasse (Labrus miatus): Oto- 
liths ot, 61. 


centro- 


Part LIL —Twenty-fourth Annual Report 


Tachidius dicipes, 278. 

littoralis, 278. 

Tay: Sprat fishery of, 159, 

Teleostean fishes: Otoliths of, 48. 

Temperature: Influence of, on growth of 
fishes, 182. 

Relation of, to embryonic develop- 
ment of Herring, 303. 

a Relation of, to growth of Haddock, 

06. 

—— Relation of, to growth of Whiting, 
306. 

—— Relation of, to migration of Grey 
Gurnard, 236. 

—— Relation of, to spawning periods of 
Herring, 303. 

Thick-lipped Grey Mullet (Mugil chelo) : 
Otoliths of, 60. 

Three-bearded Rockling (Onos tricir- 
ratus): Otoliths of, 67. 

Trawling investigations, 17. 

—— investigations in Aberdeen Bay, 25. 

investigations in Moray Firth, 18, 
27, 31, 34. 

Trout, Brown (Salmo fario): Otoliths of, 
76 


Turbot (Bothus maximus): Age at ma- 
turity, 203. 

Growth of, 199. 

—— Otoliths of, 70. 


VARIEGATED Sole (Solea variegata) : Oto- 
liths of, 75. 

Viviparous Blenny (Enchelyopus vivi- 
parus): Otoliths of, 60. 


Westwoodia minuta, 278. 
Whiting (Gadus merlangus) : Otoliths of, 
65 


Growth of, 229. 

Witch (Pleuronectes cynoglossus): Oto- 
liths of, 74. 

Worm Pipe-fish (Nerophis 
Jformis) : Otoliths of, 79. 


lumbrici- 


Zaus spinatus, 278. 


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