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ee er oo ae OnN Or SrSies 
ISSUED» BY p aurora MUSEUM 


PAPERS OF THE CONFERENCES 


Held in connection with 


e Great SNTERNATIONUL 
ISHERUES XHIBITION 


THE 


FISHERIES OF CHINA 


BY _ 


Jd. DUNCAN CAMPBELL 


COMMISSIONER FOR CHINA 


ie LONDON 
1972) WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, Limrrep 
13 CHARING CROSS, S.W. 


PRICE SIXPENCE 


PAPERS OF THE CONFERENCES 
Held in connection with the GREAT INTERNATIONAL FISHERIES EXHIBITION. 


Demy 8vo., in Illustrated Wrapper, Price Sixpence each. 
INAUGURAL MEETING: ADDRESS. By Professor Huxtry, P.R.S. 
H.R.H. the Prince or WALEs (President of the Commission) in the Chair. 
NOTES ON THE SEA FISHERIES AND FISHING POPULATION 
OF THE UNITED KINGDOM. By H.R.H THE Duke oF EpinpurGu, K.G._ 1s. 

THE FISHERY INDUSTRIES OF THE UNITED STATES. By Pro- 
fessog Brown Goong, M.A. : 
OYSTER CULTURE AND OYSTER FISHERIES IN THE NETHER- 

LANDS. By Professor HUBRECHT. : 
PRINCIPLES OF FISHERY LEGISLATION. By Right Hon. G. SHaw- 


LeFevre, M.-P. 


P. 
ON THE CULTURE OF SALMONIDAE AND THE ACCLIMA- — 


TISATION OF FISH. By Sir James Ramsay Gipson MAITLAND, Bart. 
FISH DISEASES. By Professor HUXLEY, P.R.S. 
ECONOMIC CONDITION OF FISHERMEN, By Professor LEONE LEVI. 
THE FISHERIES OF CANADA. By L. Z. Joncas. k 
PRESERVATION OF FISH LIFE IN RIVERS BY THE EXCLU- 
SION OF TOWN SEWAGE. By the Hon. W. F. B. Masszy MAinwaRInaG. 
MOLLUSCS, MUSSELS, WHELKS, &c., USED FOR FOOD OR BAIT. 


By Cuarves Harpinec. 
COARSE FISH CULTURE. By R. B. Marston. 
ON THE FOOD OF FISHES. By Dr. F. Day. 
THE HERRING FISHERIES OF SCOTLAND. By R. W. Durr, M.P. 
LINE FISHING. By C. M. MunpDAHL. 
FISH TRANSPORT AND FISH MARKETS. By His Excellency SPENCER 


WALPOLE. 

FOREST PROTECTION AND TREE CULTURE ON WATER 
FRONTAGES. By D. Howi7z, Esq. 

SEAL FISHERIES. By Captain TEMPLE. 

FISH AS FOOD. By Sir Henry THompson. 

STORM WARNINGS. By R. H. Scort. 

ON THE DESTRUCTION OF FISH AND OTHER AQUATIC 

ANIMALS BY INTERNAL PARASITES. By Professor Copsoxp, F.R.S., F.L.S. 

SCIENTIFIC RESULTS OF THE EXHIBITION. By Professor E. Ray 
LANKESTER. 

A NATIONAL FISHERY SOCIETY FOR GREAT BRITAIN. By 
C. E. Fryer. 

CRUSTACEANS. By T. Cornisn. 

TRAWLING. By ALFRED ANSELL. 

THE BASIS FOR LEGISLATION ON FISHERY QUESTIONS. By 

Lieut.-Col. F. G. Sova. 

MACKEREL AND PILCHARD FISHERIES. By T. Cornisu. 

ARTIFICIAL CULTURE OF LOBSTERS. By W. SaviLLeE KENT. 

FRESHWATER FISHING (other than Salmon). By J. P. WHEELDON. 

SALMON. AND SALMON FISHERIES. By Davip MILNE Hom, F.R.S.E. 

THE FISHERIES OF IRELAND. By Jj. C. BLoomFIELp. 

ON IMPROVED FACILITIES FOR THE CAPTURE, ECONOMIC 


TRANSMISSION AND DISTRIBUTION OF SEA FISHES, AND HOW THESE 
MATTERS AFFECT IRISH FISHERIES. By R. F. Watsu, of Kinsale. 


NOTES ON THE FISH SUPPLY OF NORWAY. By Freprik M. WALLEM. 
THE FISHERIES OF SPAIN. By Lieut.-Col. FRANcisco GaRcIA SOLA, 
THE SWEDISH FISHERIES. By Professor F. A. Smitt. 


A SKETCH OF THE FISHERIES OF JAPAN. By Narinori OKosHt. 


NEWFOUNDLAND; ITS FISHERIES AND GENERAL RE- 
SOURCES. By Sir AmprosE SuHeEa, K.C.M. ; 


G. 
WEST AFRICAN FISHERIES; WITH PARTICULAR REFER- 


ENCE TO THE GOLD COAST COLONY. _By Captain C. A. Moroney, C.M.G. 
RIVER POLLUTION BY REFUSE FROM MINES AND MANU- 


FACTORIES, TOGETHER WITH REMEDIES PROPOSED. By V- B. BarRINGTON- 
Kennett, M.A., LL.M. 


THE FISHERIES OF CHINA. By J. Duncan CAMPBELL. 
FISH PRESERVATION AND REFRIGERATION. By J. K. Kitpourn. 
PRACTICAL FISHERMEN’S CONGRESS, under the Presidency of Mr- 


Epwarp BrrKBEck, M.P. 
THE FISHERIES OF THE BAHAMAS, By Avucustus ADDERLEY. 


pated ON THE FOOD FISHES OF NEW SOUTH WALES. By 
u. ©. AMSAY, 


SAVING LIFE AT SEA. By Ricuarp Roper, C.E., F.S.A. 
TEACHINGS of the FISHERIES EXHIBITION, By A.J. R. TRENDELL. 


WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED, 13, Charing Cross, S.W. 


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C183 Luternational Fisheries Exhibition 


{2g LONDON, 1883 


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FISHERIES OF Si 


BY 


J. DUNCAN CAMPBELL 


COMMISSIONER FOR CHINA 


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Paar i bo 
LONDON 
WweELAM CLOWES AND SONS rier ep 
13 CHARING CROSS, S.W. 
1883 


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International Fisheries Exhibition, 
LONDON, 1883. 


CONFERENCE ON WEDNESDAY, OCT. 24, 18383. 


SIR AMBROSE SHEA, K.C.M.G., took the Chair. 


Piste RIES OF CHINA: 


AFTER the thousands of years that China has spent apart, 
the gulf of separation has now been fairly bridged over. 
Commercial treaties have opened the most important 
seaports and the interior under special regulations to 
foreigners, and the Chinese Government, while objecting 
“to have its hand forced,” is watching and testing various 
foreign appliances, in order to judge how far they may, 
with advantage, be grafted on existing institutions. Thus, 
an Imperial College has been established at Peking for 
the study of Western languages and sciences; the coasts 
and the great river Yangtsze have been lighted with 
the most improved apparatus; steamers are taking the 
place of junks; mines are being worked by foreign 
machinery ; and the telegraph now brings Peking within 
a few hours of London. The appointment of Chinese 
Ministers abroad, of distinguished officials like the Marquis 
Tséng, and the co-operation of China in the international 


exhibitions of foreign countries are significant proofs of the 
[40] B2 


4 


importance that China attaches to the maintenance and 
extension of friendly relations and intercourse. 

This is the sixth great International Exhibition in which 
China has taken an official part, viz., Vienna, 1873; Phila- 
delphia, 1876; Paris, 1878; Berlin, 1880; Amsterdam, 
1883; and London, 1883. On each of these occasions 
(excepting Amsterdam) the work has been entrusted by 
the Chinese Government to Sir Robert Hart, as the 
Inspector-General of Customs, and it has been executed 
under his directions by this important department of the 
Chinese Government, which employs about five hundred 
foreigners of various nationalities besides two thousand 
Chinese. 

The Introductory Note to the Official Catalogue of the 
Chinese exhibits [China: Imperial Maritime Customs, 
Miscellaneous Series, No. 11] explains that the invitation 
to take part in the present Exhibition arrived too late for 
any extensive collection to be possible, but that steps were 
taken to procure specimens from Swatow, Ningpo, South 
Formosa, and Ichang, which is a river port in the centre 
of China and about one thousand miles from the mouth of 
the Yangtsze. The gentlemen in the Customs Service who 
assisted in the preparation of the collection were Mr. 
Neumann (German), who had the general management 
and brought the collection to London as Secretary to the 
Chinese Commission ; Mr. Morgan (English), Acting Com- 
missioner of Customs at Ichang; Mr. Drew (American), 
Statistical Secretary of the Inspectorate-General ; and Mr. 
Novion (French), Commissioner of Customs at South 
Formosa—thus showing the international interest taken by 
the Chinese Customs Service in furthering the objects of 
the Exhibition. 

The distance of China from the scene of exhibition, the 


‘) 

shortness of notice received by China, and the difficulties 
of collection and transport must be taken into considera- 
tion in any comparison, if a comparison can be made, with 
countries accustomed to these competitions, possessing 
professional experts, public museums and private collec- 
tions, and able, moreover, from proximity to London and 
facility. of communication, to place their contributions zz 
sitt at a very much less expenditure of time, money, and 
trouble than was incurred by China to do justice to the 
International Exhibition. 

No doubt there is much superiority in scientific and 
practical interest, as distinguished from the element of 
popular attraction, in the contributions from the United 
Kingdom, the United States and Canada, and the Scandi- 
navian and other countries, as compared with China ; but 
the chief points of interest and instruction in the Chinese 
contribution consist in the types and models, the nets 
and other implements of distant antiquity, preserved and 
used to the present day, and shown to be adaptable with 
the latest resources and developments of science and 
practical sagacity in relation to the subject matters of the 
Exhibition. 

‘The following is a short summary of some of the prin- 
cipal points or features in the Chinese exhibits, taking them 
in order of their classification in the Official Catalogue. 

Ist. Zhe Lamboo.—Of all the materials used by the 
fisherman, the bamboo is the one that deserves the first 
notice. Its cheapness and durability, as well as the variety 
of purposes for which it is used, entitle it to the highest 
rank in domestic economy. The use of the bamboo is 
largely illustrated in the Chinese Collection. There are 
the catamarans or surf-boats of South Formosa, fishing- 


rods, supports for nets, crab and prawn pots, fish baskets, 


6 


&c., &c. Williams, in his ‘Middle Kingdom,’ designates 
the bamboo as the national plant of China, and says :— 
“Tt furnishes the bed for sleeping and the couch for re- 
clining, the chopsticks for eating, the pipe for smoking, 
and the flute for entertaining; the chair to sit upon, the 
table to dine from, food to eat and fuel to cook it with, are 
alike derived from it; ‘the ferule to govern the scholar 
and the book from which he studies,’ the warrant to arrest 
the criminal, and the rod to punish him, all ‘originate here’ 
—from this magnificent plant, whose graceful beauty when 
growing is comparable to its varied usefulness when cut 
down.” 

2nd. Mets——The Chinese nets are all hand-made from 
hemp, cotton, or silk ; and, after being boiled in a decoc- 
tion of mangrove bark, are steeped in pig’s blood or wood 
oil to strengthen and preserve them. Silk nets, which for 
centuries have been used in China, are now being employed 
in European countries, but for cheapness they cannot 
compare with the Chinese models. There is an immense 
variety of nets in use by the Chinese fishermen, and 
amongst the specimens in the Chinese Collection are 
several deserving notice, some of them being similar to 
those used in western countries, such as the dip-net, 
casting-net, trawl-net, etc. 

3rd. Fishing-boats—If China contains as many millions 
of people as there are days in the year, and if at least 
one-tenth of the population derive their food from the 
water, xecessity will have caused them to invent many 
ingenious ways for securing the finny tribes (Williams’ 
‘Middle Kingdom.’) Among such devices the “Cor- 
morant” boat (p. 46 of Catalogue) deserves mention as 
exhibiting in a remarkable degree the shrewdness, skill, 
and patience of the Chinese fishermen. The “ Moonlight ” 


7 


Fishing-boat (pp. 20 and 45 of Catalogue) is another 
device, which is found also in India and Siberia. There 
are models, in the Chinese collection, of the fishing-boats of 
Swatow, Ningpo, South Formosa, and Ichang. In spite 
of their apparent clumsiness they turn as on a pivot and 
promptly answer the helm. They are good sea boats, and 
are built in watertight compartments, or rather in com- 
partments zxtended to be watertight. The wonder is that, 
in the ages of the “Ark” and the “Argo,” the Chinese 
should have possessed such practical and efficient vessels ; 
for it is evident, from old books and drawings, that this 
was the type of boat then in use. 

4th. Harbours, etc.—All along the coasts and the great 
river Yangtsze, the fishermen have seen the gradual yet 
rapid extension of the Lights that have been erected by the 
Customs department of the Chinese Government during 
the last twenty years ; and they cannot but appreciate the 
benefits that the Lights have conferred in aid of their 
industry and in the protection of their property. Quoting 
from the Z7zmes of 15th May last :— 


“Conspicuous at the end of the Court are two large maps of 
the Celestial Empire, one showing its physical configuration and 
the other its provinces and towns, &c. The activity shown by 
the important Chinese department of State over which Sir Robert 
Hart presides, is exemplified by the many red discs on the 
China coast which indicate the lighthouses and lightships erected 
since he became Inspector-General of Customs at Peking in 1863. 
At that time there were but two small lights in the Canton district 
and a lightship at Shanghai. Now there are 73 lights, 4 light- 
ships, 54 buoys, and 50 beacons, and it is the ambition of the 
head of this department to see the dangerous coasts of China at 
least as well lighted as the shores of the British Channel. Of 
one of the most important lighthouses—that on Breaker Point in 
the Swatow district—a model is exhibited. It is an iron tower 


8 


120 feet in height, which was constructed on a new plan by 
Sir W. G. Armstrong and Co., and so strongly braced and sup- 
ported by exterior iron rods that it has withstood the shaking of 
two earthquakes and the force of several typhoons.” 


Such progress in the lighting of the coasts of China is 
perhaps without a parallel in the history of the cares and 
precautions that a Government can take for the protection 
and advantage of its fisheries and fishermen as well as the 
maritime commerce of the world. The work itself will 
be a lasting record of Sir Robert Hart’s administration : 


“ Famam extendere factis, 
Hoc virtutis opus.” 


sth. Boats in general.—“ The original model of the junk ” 
(according to Williams) “is said to be a huge sea monster ; 
the teeth at the cutwater define its mouth, while the long 
boards on each side of the bow form the armature of the 
head, the eyes being painted on them; the masts and sails 
are the fins, and the high stern is the tail frisking aloft.” 
As regards the eyes, which are so conspicuous on all 

hinese junks, most of the foreign steamers trading on the 
coast have them painted on their bows or paddle-boxes, as 
a concession to Chinese ideas ; their use being defended in 
the picturesque dialect known as “Pidgin English” by 
the remark— 

“Spose no got eye, how fashion can walkee !” 

The large trading junks, of which there are some fine 
models in the Chinese Collection, are finding important 
rivals in the steamers of the China Merchants’ Steam Navi- 
gation Company, which, commencing in 1872 with two 
vessels of 1,168 tons, had in 1880 a fleet of twenty-nine 
vessels of 20,747 tons; and considerable additions have 


since been made. 


S) 


6th. Economic condition of Fishermen.—The Chinese 
fishermen are very frugal. In the Chinese Catalogue 
(pp. 4 & 5) are given some interesting particulars relating 
to their condition, earnings, guilds, etc. Without any 
knowledge of political economy or the laws of capital and 
labour, they have solved the question of distribution of 
profits in a practical manner and to the satisfaction of all. 
They are very charitable and help each other in times of 
distress, there being no benefit or insurance societies. In 
the Chinese Collection there are specimens of the garments 
worn by successive generations of Chinese fishermen, and 
proved by long experience to be the best adapted to the con- 
ditions of their work. There are also models of their huts, 
and of their Guildhalls and temples, showing not only the 
domestic economy but also the civil and religious organisa- 
tion of the craft, and illustrating in a striking manner one 
curious line of connection between East and West—from 
the Guildhall of the fishermen at Haimén to the Fish- 
mongers’ Hall in London—from the fishermen’s temples 
with their annual festivals on which large sums are ex- 
pended, to the religious processions and services on the 
western shores of France. 

7th. Corals, etc.—Shells of'all descriptions are plentiful in 
China, and are used in various ways :—for windows, fog- 
horns, ash-cellars, necklaces, scoops, flower vases, etc., of 
which there are several specimens in the Chinese Collec- 
tion. The unique Buddha shells (p. 49 of Catalogue), 
which have attracted the observation of visitors, constitute 
a very important and successful industry at Hangchow. 

The cultivation of oysters is on a very large scale, and 
dates from a remote age. A model of an oyster bed is 
shown in the Chinese Collection, and a description of the 
oyster fishery is given at pp. 13 and 59 of the Catalogue. 


IO 


Notwithstanding the enormous consumption of oysters 
from time immemorial in China, there appears to be no 
diminution of the supply. Inthe north on the shores of 
the Shantung promontory, at the mouths of the Yangtsze 
and Ningpo rivers, all along the coasts of the Fohkien 
and Kwantung provinces, and on the seaboard of Formosa, 
the cultivation of oysters is carried on with much skill and 
success. Considering their dearness and scarcity in Europe, 
a thoroughly scientific inquiry as to the methods pursued 
by the Chinese would undoubtedly yield important results. 

8th. Fish-markets—Appliances for Transport of Fish, ete. 
—A model is shown of a Ningpo ice-house (p. 48 of Cata- 
logue), which is used not for purposes of refrigeration, but for 
storing ice during hot weather. The ice is principally used 
for the preservation and transport of fish, and is supplied 
to the fishing grounds by ice-boats specially constructed. 
These ice-houses are of very primitive construction but are 
most effective, and are capable of preserving ice for a period 
of three years. There are also some interesting models of 
saltpans, and the manner of their use is described at 
page 11 of the Catalogue. 

oth. Fisk Breeding.—In the district of Swatow there is 
no regular system of pisciculture, and the only approach 
to it consists in fish-ponds that are described at page 11 of 
the Catalogue; but Monsieur Dabry de Thiersant in his 
important work, ‘La Pisciculture et la Péche en Chine,’ 
enters very fully into the matter, and gives China the 
credit of having been the first to practise this art at 
a very remote age. In Land and Water there is also a 
very interesting Paper, written by Mr. Kopsch, Commis- 
sioner of Chinese Customs, on Pisciculture in Kiangsi. 

loth. /2sh—Natural History.—There is a valuable article 
on the ichthyology of China, by Sir John Richardson, in the 


II 


Report of the British Association for 1845, but there is no 
foreign work on the fishes of China like Dr. Day’s exhaus- 
tive treatise on the fishes of India. 

The collection of fish from Swatow, consisting of about 
170 different specimens, were wrapped up in linen and 
packed in cotton saturated with spirits of wine, and 
arrived in perfect condition. Coloured drawings of the 
specimens were made by Chinese artists, immediately 
upon the fish being taken from the water, and these 
specimens form a kind of picture gallery in the 
Chinese Court. Similar drawings on a smaller scale 
were taken of the fish of South Formosa, of which there 
are ninety specimens exhibited. Nearly all the fish 
enumerated in the Catalogue (pp. 32 to 40) are fit for 
food, and amongst them are soles, eels, mullets, perch, 
and many other kinds that are familiar to us here. The 
salmon and trout are missing, but Mr. Wilmot, the Cana- 
dian Commissioner, is confident that they can be success- 
fully introduced and reared in Chinese waters. There is 
also exhibited a variety of crabs, nearly all of which are 
used for food, whilst the shells are turned into scoops or 
other useful domestic articles. 

11th. History and Literature of Fishing—The Chinese 
possess very old works relating to fish and fisheries, as 
well as scrolls, mottoes, tablets, &c. Some of these are 
displayed on the sides of the Chinese Court. They 
carry the literature backwards into remote antiquity—to 
centuries before the dawn of Western literature on 
the subject. The Chinese Commission for the Fisheries 
Exhibition had, moreover, the advantage of securing 
the personal co-operation of the Chinese Minister in 
England, the Marquis Tséng, and His Excellency himself 
contributed two large scrolls and various characters, written 


2 


by himself, containing historical and poetical allusions to 
fishing, which are described in the supplement to the 
Catalogue. 

It may here be stated that the Catalogue of Exhibits 
and the List of lights on the Chinese Coast, are specimens 
of Chinese Customs’ publications, printed at the Customs’ 
Press, Shanghai, by Chinese compositors under a foreign 
superintendent. 

12th. -ixe Arts—Reference has already been made to 
the drawings of fish painted by Chinese artists, and there 
are other pictures, in the shape of scrolls, showing the 
various modes of fishing. Such pictures are very common 
in Chinese dwellings. But the chief decorations of the 
Chinese Court consist in the allegorical productions of the 
Chinese artist, Téh-Ah-Kew, whose freehand drawing and 
brilliant colouring give point to the motto, “ Ea Oriente 
lux.” 

13th. Fishes of Commercial Value—No country shows 
the commercial value of fish in a stronger light than China. 
As an almost universal, or at any rate as a widely dis- 
tributed article of food, fish isa more important staple in 
China than in any other country, and her exhibits may be 
considered as indicative rather than exhaustive evidences 
in this connection. The whole country displays an extra- 
ordinary development of industry and commerce in marine 
and fresh-water fish. The latter is cultivated in rivers, 
lakes, and ponds, and made use of as a common article of 
food throughout the empire. Fishes of a kind which in 
Europe are scarcely deemed worthy to be caught, and 
then for sport rather than food, are in China utilised and 
form the subject of an extensive commerce as the staple 
food of a large section of the inhabitants. Even the re- 
pulsive and hostile shark of the Western Nations becomes 


KS 


an article of commercial value in China, and is habitually 
treated as an article of food for the million without dismay 
by the ancient Oriental wisdom. 

In conclusion, attention may again be drawn to the 
peculiar nature of the Chinese Exhibit. Of necessity 
hastily gathered together from remote quarters, with no 
aid from public museums or private collections, the Chinese 
Exhibit does not compete with those of other nations. 
The Chinese fisheries, as now carried on, date from and 
have a succession of thousands of years, and the Exhibit 
ought therefore to be judged by way of contrast rather 
than comparison. It is by reason of this very differ- 
ence from the general routine of the exhibits from other 
countries—introducing, as it does, some new and pic- 
turesque features characteristic of the nation—that the 
Chinese Exhibit has been so attractive to the public. But 
it is hoped that, beyond its popular attractions, it has also 
been a source of interest and instruction to the practical 
minds of those most conversant with the varying systems 
of fisheries throughout the world. 


DISCUSSION. 


Mr. WILMOT said that as his name had been mentioned 
in the Paper he might say briefly he had no doubt the 
salmon could be introduced to any part of the world where 
the water was of such temperature and clearness as to suit 
their habits of life. When they found that through the 
operation of pisciculture salmon had been introduced from 
Great Britain to waters below the Equator, where they were 
not indigenous, he saw no reason why it should not be 
equally possible to introduce them elsewhere, particularly 
in a country like China, some of the rivers of which he was 


14 


strongly inclined to believe were frequented by salmon, but 
even if that were not the case he was quite sure that many 
of her more northerly rivers were adapted to this fish. It 
was a mere question of temperature and limpidity. The 
Sacramento river in California, where the atmosphere 
sometimes rose to 120° in the summer, was at one time 
overflowing with salmon, though it had been to some 
extent reduced by over-fishing now. 

Mr. CHARLES FRYER proposed a vote of thanks to Mr. 
Campbell. He thought it was a very good omen that 
they had just had a Paper read on the fisheries of New- 
foundland, with the Secretary of the Chinese Legation in 
the chair, whilst now they had had a Paper on the fisheries 
of China with the representative of Newfoundland in the 
chair. Sir Ambrose Shea had taken occasion to illustrate 
the proverb that blood was thicker than water, by referring 
to the undoubted loyalty of the colonists, but he might 
remark that water had something to do besides separating 
nations; they so far united them that all nations were 
agreed in recognising the importance of the fisheries: the 
concluding words of this Paper fully exemplified this point, 
and showed the lesson which might be learnt from the 
exhibits furnished by different countries. With regard to 
the fisheries of China, and to the enormous capture of fish 
there, he should like to ask whether he was right in thinking 
that the Chinese captured not only mature but immature fish 
at all times and in every possible manner. He understood 
that the Chinese in California surprised the Americans 
by the wonderfully small fish which they caught and ate, 
and if the same habit prevailed with the three hundred 
millions of Chinese in their own country, and they were 
continually catching these small fish in season and out of 


season, it afforded a strong argument against the possibility 


T5 


of depleting the waters. With regard to fresh-water fish, 
China was far ahead of any other country in fish culture, 
and made up for the great drain on the resources of the 
rivers in this way, but so far as the sea was concerned he 
was not aware that fish culture was carried out. If the 
small fish were continually destroyed it was a strong argu- 
ment against any interference, unless absolute necessity for 
it were proved, with modes of fishing that might unfor- 
tunately destroy small fish, if, as seemed often to be the 
case, this was unavoidable in catching the large ones, 

Mr. SAYER, in seconding the vote of thanks, said that 
Englishmen ought to be very thankful for the know- 
ledge which was now brought to them by gentlemen who 
contributed these Papers as to the fishing industries of other 
countries. 

Mr. WILMOT said he could not allow Mr. Fryer’s remarks 
to pass without a word or two. Being a strong advocate 
of the artificial propagation of fish, and of their protection 
generally, he felt bound to point out that the temperature and 
climate of China was very warm, and consequently the fish 
there produced their young in very warm water. They 
knew that under such circumstances fish were hatched in as 
many days as it took months in colder climates, and thus 
the propagation and natural increase of fish there would be 
a thousandfold greater than in England or in Canada. The 
salmon family took from three to six months for the eggs 
to incubate, whilst some other descriptions that laid their 
ova in the hot weather would hatch out in from sixty hours 
to six days. There was therefore no foundation for the 
idea put forth by Mr. Fryer that because protective laws 
might not be in operation in China they were equally 
unnecessary elsewhere. 

Captain CURTIS, R.N., said the Yellow Book stated that 


16 


the Chinese caught small fish, with fine nets made of silk ; 
those with which they caught them were to be seen in the 
Exhibition ; but he understood that they were then trans- 
ferred to ponds, and also, that when the water was cold 
they lit hanging fires to warm it, so that the young fish were 
taken care of—not destroyed or eaten when small ; in fact 
they catch the fry in shallow waters, and transfer them to 
ponds and lakes ; they are then sold alive. 

Mr. FRYER said the fact that young fish were preserved 
and reared did not prove that small fish were not also very 
often eaten ; but the fact of fresh-water fish-culture did not 
touch the question of the sea fisheries to which he par- 
ticularly referred. 

Captain CURTIS added that the Chinese were to be 
congratulated on using luminous paint, which was not 
much employed in this country at present. As a seaman, 
he must bear testimony to ihe excellent qualities of the 
Chinese junks and their fishing-boats ; in fact, he thought 
naval architecture had not much improved the sea-going 
qualities of ships in this country ; he would sooner be in a 
Chinese junk than in an ironclad, as the junk would ride 
over the sea in a gale, whereas the sea would wash over 
the ironclad. 

Mr. HERBERT E. HOUNSELL thought the remarks of 
Mr. Fryer ought not to go forth uncontradicted unless they 
were more fully substantiated. The idea he had thrown 
out that the Chinese caught small fish all the year round 
and ate them, had not yet met with any support. 

It was a mistake to suppose that there were no kinds 
of fish which could be destroyed by over-fishing, which 
some people might fancy to be Mr. Fryer’s opinion, though 
he did not believe such was meant by his remarks; they 
had only. to bear in mind the great decrease of soles within 


17 


an area of three or four miles from the coast. To corro- 
borate this opinion, he could speak of their almost total 
disappearance from the West Bay, and also the disap- 
pearance of shoals of mackerel off Folkestone, and Kings- 
down, near Deal; the population used to live on catching 
mackerel during the summer months, but within twenty 
years the constant increase of mackerel boats had broken 
up the shoals, and, although they were not destroyed, they 
were so much lessened that it no longer paid to catch the 
fish. He could also quote an instance of a trout-stream 
which was depopulated by over-fishing, and the Angling 
Society were compelled to forbid any fishing for three years. 
It was a matter of common sense that if too large a propor- 
tion were caught, although the powers of reproduction might 
be enormous, still there must be a fatal result. He hoped 
that at the close of the Exhibition the scientific men 
connected with it would still prosecute further inquiries 
into the habits of fish, in order to determine how far regu- 
lations were required for their protection. 

Mr. FRYER said he certainly did not intend to express 
the opinion that it was impossible to destroy all fisheries. 
On the contrary, he had shown over and over again, that it 
was possible for certain inland and other fisheries to be 
exhausted. What he wished to state was, that before any 
hasty steps were taken to prevent the capture of fish, they 
should be quite certain that those steps were necessary ; and 
it seemed to him that the case of China afforded an instance 
which should make them pause before any hasty steps 
towards legislation were taken. 

Mr. NEUMANN said it was satisfactory that the Paper 
which had just been read should have called forth such a 
lively discussion. The question raised by Mr. Fryer was 
one which had sprung up at all the conferences that had 

[40] C 


18 


been held; and, before the advocates of complete freedom 
of fisheries or those in favour of protection, or rather the 
interference of Government, could avail themselves of any 
data furnished by China it would be necessary for scientific 
men to make a thorough inquiry into the state of Chinese 
fisheries. 

Surgeon-General GORDON, C.B., said it might be @ 
propos to the question under discussion to state that a 
few years ago, when travelling through Burmah, he found 
that the natives carefully protected the young fry of fish, 
using such implements as enabled the smaller fish to escape ; 
and he was informed that there was a law absolutely 
prohibiting the capture of fish under a certain size. 

The vote of thanks having been passed unanimously, 

Mr. CAMPBELL, in replying, explained that the Paper 
he had read was not so much on the Fisheries of China as 
on the Exhibits from China to the Fisheries Exhibition ; 
and one object of the Paper was to state a few facts that 
were not generally known, but which, when known, might 
add to the interest of the Chinese Court and Collection. 

Mr. FUNG YIH, Secretary to the Chinese Legation, pro- 
posed a vote of thanks to the Chairman. With regard to the 
bamboo which had been referred to in the Paper, it might 
be interesting for them to know that it had recently become 
a source of industry in England, one of the daily papers 
being made of it at, he understood, a reduction in cost of 
two-thirds. The motion was seconded by Mr. Hounsell 


and carried unanimously. 


INDEX. 


ACCLIMATIZATION. See Fish Culture. 

Appliances for transport of fish, &c., 10 

Appointment of Chinese ministers abroad, benefits derived from the, 3 
““ Argo,” the, 7 

** Ark,” the, 7 


BaMBoo, the, 5, 6, 18 

Breaker Point Lighthouse, 7 
Buddha shells, 9 

Burmah, protection of fry in, 18 


CASTING net, 6 
Catamarans, or surf-boats of South Formosa, 5 
Chinese Customs Service, 4 
Chinese Customs Publications, 12 
China Merchants’ Steam Navigation Company’s fleet of steamers, 8 
Chinese ministers abroad, 3 
Commercial treaties for opening seaports and interior, 3 
$3 value of fish, 12 
Contributions from China to International Fisheries Exhibition, 5 
Corals, &c., 9 
“*Cormorant ” boat, 6 
Crabs, 11 
Crab and prawn pots, 5 
Cultivation of oysters, 9 
Curtis, Captain, R.N., remarks by, 15, 16 


Day, Dr., Treatise on Fishes of India, 11 

Development of industry and commerce in marine and freshwater fish, 12, 13 
Difficulties attending collection and transport of specimens, 5 

Dip-net, 6 

Discussion on paper, 13-18 

Drew, Mr., Statistical Secretary of the Inspectorate-General, 4 


ECONOMIC condition of fishermen, 9 
Eels, 11 


20 THE FISHERIES OF CHINA. 


FINE Arts, 12 
Fish baskets, 5 
», breeding, 10-15 
»» Markets, 10 
»» natural history of, 10, 11 
95 culture, II, 13, 15 
Fisheries, 3-18 
Fishermen, civil and religious organisation of, 9 


7 earnings, guilds, &c., of, 9 
55 economic condition of, 9 
.; frugality of, 9 

op garments worn by, 9 


“5 guildhalls and temples of, 9 

Fishes of India, treatise by Dr. Day on, 11 

», of commercial value, 12 
Fishing boats, 6, 7, 16 

a rods, 5 
Freedom of fisheries, 18 
Freshwater fish, culture of, 15-17 
Fryer, Mr. Charles, remarks by, 14-16, 17 
Fung Yih, secretary of the Chinese Legation, 18 


GORDON, Surgeon-General, C.B., remarks by, 18 


Harbours, &c., 7 

Hart, Sir Robert, Inspector-General of Customs, 4, 7 
History and literature of fishing, 11, 12 

Hounsell, Mr. Herbert E., remarks by, 16 


IcE houses and ice boats, Io 
Ichang, 4 
fishing boats, 7 
Ice-houses, 10 . 
Ichthyology of China, by Sir John Richardson, i1 
Imperial college at Pekin for study of western languages and sciences, 3 
Importance of fish as an article of food, 12, 14 
Industry in marine and freshwater fishes, development of, 12, 13 
International Exhibitions, co-operation of China in, 3, 4 


Junks, 8, 16 
KopscH, Mr., Commissioner of Customs, paper by, 10 


La Pisciculture et la Péche en Chine, by M. Dabry de Thiersant, 10 
Lighthouses and lightships on the coast of China, 7 


MACKEREL, 17 
Maps of the Celestial Empire, 7 


INDEX. 


** Moonlight” fishing boat, 7 
Morgan, Mr., acting Commissioner of Customs at Ichang, 4 
Mullet, 11 


NETs, 6 
Neumann, Mr., Secretary to Chinese Commission, 4, 17 
Ningpo, 4. 
+3 fishing boats, 7 
Novion, Mr., Commissioner of Customs at South Formosa, 4. 


OVERFISHING in China, 14-16 
Oysters, cultivation and consumption of, 9 


PERCH, II 

Pisciculture in China, 10 

Propagation of fish. See Fish Culture. 
Protective Laws, 15 


SACRAMENTO River, 14 
Salmon, introduction of. See Fish Culture. 
Saltpans, 10 
Sayer, Mr., remarks by, 15 
Seafish, culture of, 15, 16 
Sharks, 12, 13 
Shea, Sir Ambrose, 14 
Soles, II, 17 
South Formosa, 4 
- om catamarans or surf-boats of, 5 
on »,, fishing boats, 7 
Steamers of the China Merchants’ Steam Navigation Company, 8 
ae substituted for junks, 3 
Supports for nets, 5 
Swatow, 4 
55 fishing boats, 7 


TEH-AH-KEw, Chinese artist, 12 

TELEGRAPHIC communication between China and London, 3 
Temperature and climate of China, 15" 

Trawl-net, 6 

Tséng, the Marquis, 3, II, 12 


WATERTIGHT compartments, fishing boats with, 7 
Williams, Dr., Middle Kingdom, 6, 8 


Wilmot, Mr., Commission for Canada, 11, 13 


YANGTSZE, the river,°3, 7 


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THE FISHERY ase VT Wve wy 2 nevenien + —_ *taeeee 
Law, M.A. (Oxon.), Hon. LL.D. dene: Corpus Christi Professor of Juris- 
prudence in the University of Oxford. 

ZOOLOGY AND FOOD FISHES. By Gerorce B. Howkss, 
Demonstrator of Biology, Normal School of Science, and Royal School of Mines, 
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BRITISH MARINE AND FRESHWATER FISHES. 
(Zilustrated.) By W. SAVILLE KENT, F.L.S., F.Z.S., Author of Official Guide- 
books to the Brighton, Manchester, and Westminster. Aquaria. 

APPARATUS FOR FISHING. By E. W. H. Hotpswortn, 
F.L.S., F.Z.S., Special Commissioner for Juries, International Fisheries 
Exhibition ; F Author of ‘Deep Sea Fisheries and Fishing Boats,” ‘‘ British 
Industries—Sea Fisheries,” &c. 

THE BRITISH FISH TRADE. By His Excellency SPENCER 
WALPOLE, Lieut.-Governor of the Isle of Man. 

THE UNAPPRECIATED FISHER FOLK. By James G. 

_ BERTRAM, Author of ‘‘ The Harvest of the Sea.” 
THE SALMON FISHERIES. (Wlustrated.) By C. E. FRvER. 


Assistant Inspector of Salmon Fisheries, Home Office. 


SEA MONSTERS UNMASKED. (//ustrated.) By Henry Lez, 
F.L.S. 


THE ANGLING CLUBS AND PRESERVATION SO- 
CIETIES OF LONDON AND THE PROVINCES. ByJ. P. WHEELDON, 
late Angling Editor of ‘‘ Bell’s Life.” 

INDIAN FISH AND FISHING. (J///ustrated.) By Francis 
Day, F.L.S., Commissioner for India to International Fisheries Exhibition. 

A POPULAR HISTORY OF FISHERIES AND FISHER- 
MEN OF ALL COUNTRIES, FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES. By 
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‘Zenobia : a Tragedy, and inventor of the Ccelometer. 

FISH CULTURE. (//lustrated.) By Francis Day, F.L.S., Com- 


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SEA FABLES EXPLAINED. By Henry Lez, F.L.S. (///ustrated.) 
ANGLING IN GREAT BRITAIN. By Witt1am SENior (“ Red 


Spinner” 


FISHES OF FANCY: their Place in Myth, Fable, Fairy- 


Tale and Folk-Lore, etc. By PHIL ROBINSON. 


LITERATURE OF SEA AND RIVER FISHING. By 
J. J. MANLEY, M.A. 


IN THE PRESS. 


THE PLACE OF FISH IN A HARD-WORKING DIET. 
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