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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


New England Salmon Hatcheries and Salmon Fisheries in the Late 19th Century

Various

English



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Below is a summary of New England Salmon Hatcheries and Salmon Fisheries in the Late 19th Century


E-text prepared by Ronald Calvin Huber
while serving as Penobscot Bay Watch, Rockland, Maine,
with technical assistance from Joseph E. Loewenstein, M.D.









New England Salmon Hatcheries
and Salmon Fisheries
in the Late 19th Century

A Collection of Articles from
the Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission




CONTENTS


ARTICLE 
I.  Some Results of theArtificial Propagation of Maine and California Salmon in NewEngland and Canada, Recorded in the Years 1879 and 1880
II.  Sketch of the PenobscotSalmon-Breeding Establishment (1883)
III.  Penning of Salmon inOrder to Secure Their Eggs (1884)
IV.  Memoranda Relative toInclosures for the Confinement of Salmon Drawn from Experienceat Bucksport, Penobscot River, Maine (1884)
V.  Report on the SchoodicSalmon Work of 1884-85
VI.  Methods Employed atCraig Brook Station in Rearing Young SalmonidFishes (1893)
VII.  Notes on the Captureof Atlantic Salmon at Sea and in the Coast Waters of the EasternStates (1894)







ARTICLE I

Some Results of the Artificial Propagation of Maine and CaliforniaSalmon in New England and Canada, Recorded in the Years 1879 and 1880

Compiled By The United States Fish Commissioner



Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission,Vol. 1, Page 270, 1881


New Bedford, Mass May 20, 1879.

Prof. S. F. Baird:

Sir: I have justbeen in the fish market and a crew were bringing intheir fish from one of the "traps." A noticeable and peculiar featureof the fishery this year is the great numbers of young salmon caught,especially at the Vineyard, although some few are caught daily atSconticut Neck (mouth of our river). There are apparently two differentages of them. Mostly about 2 pounds in weight (about as long as a largemackerel) and about one-half as many weighing from 6 to 8 pounds;occasionally one larger. One last week weighed 33 pounds and one 18pounds. The fishermen think they are the young of those with which someof our rivers have been stocked, as nothing of the kind has occurred inpast years at all like this.

John H. Thomson.

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