. Bulletin of the Bureau of Fisheries. Fisheries; Fish culture. THE FISHES OF AL.\SKA. The following table exhibits the variation in tlu' dorsal and anal rays; DoRs.\L Axn Anal Fix Counts in Specimens of Theragra chalcogramma. 347 No. Localitj'. Length. Dorsal. Anal. 2918 3002 2892 2899 Skagway Inches, 12-15-18 12-14-19 14-16-18 13-13-19 13-16-18 12-14-16 12-13-16 13-15-15 13-13-18 12-14-18 11-15-16 12-15-16 18-17 17-19 21-19 18-19 18-20 18-18 18-17 18-18 17-18 17-17 18-17 18-17 Station 4292 Station 4246 Station 4250 Station 4292.


. Bulletin of the Bureau of Fisheries. Fisheries; Fish culture. THE FISHES OF AL.\SKA. The following table exhibits the variation in tlu' dorsal and anal rays; DoRs.\L Axn Anal Fix Counts in Specimens of Theragra chalcogramma. 347 No. Localitj'. Length. Dorsal. Anal. 2918 3002 2892 2899 Skagway Inches, 12-15-18 12-14-19 14-16-18 13-13-19 13-16-18 12-14-16 12-13-16 13-15-15 13-13-18 12-14-18 11-15-16 12-15-16 18-17 17-19 21-19 18-19 18-20 18-18 18-17 18-18 17-18 17-17 18-17 18-17 Station 4292 Station 4246 Station 4250 Station 4292. Cleveland Passage do do do do do do The species has been previously recorded (Bean 1882) as Pollachius chatcogrammus from Chuga- chik Bay and Refuge Cove, Cook Inlet; Pirate Cove and Humboldt Harbor, Shumagins: Iliuliuk; Chernofski; Unalaska; and Wrangell. Under the same name by Gilbert (1895), from Captains Harbor, Unalaska, and at many stations in the shallow water of Bristol Bay and around the Aleutian Islands. Unalaska and St. Paul and St. George islands (Jordan i,t Gilbert 1899). Chignik Bay (Seofield 1899). 258. Theragra fucensis (.lordaii Gilbert). This species has not heretofore been recorded from Alaskan waters, though Seofield and Seale took in Chignik Bay a specimen which seems as near T, fucensis as T. chalcogrammus. It is very probable that the 2 species intergrade, the northern specimens representing what is now known as T. chalco- gramnuis, and the southern T, fucensis. If this is so, the name T. chalcogrammus should be retained for both. Our collection contains but a single example, no. 08122, a specimen 10 inches long taken at Loring by the Albatross in Fig. 128.—Elegiuus navaga (Kolreuter). 259. Eleg^us navaga (Kolreuter). This codfish is common and at places abundant along the entire Alaskan coast. It is represented in our collections by specimens from various localities extending from Ptiget Sound to the Alaskan peninsula and across to Kamchatka


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectfisheries, bookyear19