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Proceedings and papers of the National fishery congress, held at Tampa, Florida, January 19-24, 1898

By National Fishery Congress, Tampa, Fla., 1898

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Book Id: WPLBN0002398076
Format Type: PDF eBook:
File Size: 23.49 MB
Reproduction Date: 2012

Title: Proceedings and papers of the National fishery congress, held at Tampa, Florida, January 19-24, 1898  
Author: National Fishery Congress, Tampa, Fla., 1898
Volume:
Language: English
Subject: Biological laboratories, Fisheries, Laboratories
Collections: Canadian Libraries Collection, U.S. Government Historic Document
Historic
Publication Date:
1898
Publisher: Washington, D. C.; United States Government Printing Office

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Fishery Congress, Tampa, Fla., 189, B. N. (1898). Proceedings and papers of the National fishery congress, held at Tampa, Florida, January 19-24, 1898. Retrieved from http://gutenberg.cc/


Description
Supplemental catalog subcollection information: Canadian Libraries Collection; U.S. Government Historic Document; Canadian University Library Collection; Candian History; Extracted from U.S. fish commission bulletin for 1897.; Proceedings of the congress. Methods of plankton investigation in their relation to practical problems, by J. Reighard. The importance of extended scientific investigation, by H.C. Bumpus. The utility of a biological station on the Florida coast in its relation to the commercial fisheries, by S.E. Meek. Establishment of a biological station on the gulf of Mexico, by W.E. Taylor. Some notes on American shipworms, by C.P. Sigerfoos. An economical consideration of fish parasites, by Edwin Linton. The fish fauna of Florida, by B.W. Evermann. The lampreys of central New York, by H.A. Surface. The protection of the lobster fishery, by F.H Herrick. The Florida commercial sponges, by H.M. Smith. On the feasibility of raising sponges from the egg, by H.V. Wilson. The Hudson river as a salmon stream, by A.N. Cheney. A plea for the development and protection of Florida fish and fisheries, by J.A. Henshall. International protection for the denizens of the sea and waterways, by B.W. James. The restricted inland range of shad due to artificial obstructions and its effect on natural reproduction, by C.H. Stevenson. The green turtle, and the possibilities of its protection and consequent increase on the Florida coast, by R.M. Munroe. Some factors in the oyster problem, by H.F. Moore. The oyster grounds of the west Florida coast: their extent, condition and peculiarities, by F. Swift. The oysters and oyster-beds of Florida, by J.G. Ruge. The Louisiana oyster industry, by F.C. Zacharie. The oyster-bars of the west coast of Florida: their depletion and restoration, by H.A. Smeltz. Notes on the fishing industry of eastern Florida, by J.Y. Detwiler. Oysters and oyster-culture in Texas, by I.P. Kibbe. The methods, limitations, and results of white-fish culture in lake Erie, by J.J. Stranahan. A brief history of the gathering of fresh-water pearls in the United States, by G.F. Kunz. The red snapper fisheries: their past, present, and future, by A.F. Warren. Some brief reminiscences of the early days of fish-culture in the United States, by L. Stone. The relations between state fish commissions and commercial fishermen, by W.E. Meehan. Possibilities for an increased development of Florida's fishery resources, by J.N. Cobb. The utility and methods of mackerel propagation, by J.P. Moore. The large-mouthed black bass in Utah, by John Sharp. Florida fur-farming, by J.M. Willson, jr. Index

Summary
Contributor: Gerstein Library, University of Toronto. The digitalization of this book was sponsored by MSN Live Books. ; Additional Subject Descriptions: Biological laboratories; Fisheries

 
 



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