Page:The Zoologist, 4th series, vol 3 (1899).djvu/371

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MIMICRY.
343
Name of Fish. Weight of Fish. No. of Eggs.
  lb. oz.  
Jack 28 0 292,320
,, 32 0 595,200
,, 4 8 42,840
Roach 0 12 480,480
Conger Eel 28 0 15,191,040
Smelt 0 2 36,652
Lump Fish 2 0 116,640[1]

The Codfish (Gadus morrhua) is a good example of survival through fecundity. In a specimen weighing thirty pounds, with a roe of only four pounds and a quarter, it has been calculated that there were as many as 7,000,000 eggs, and in some cases the number may be 9,000,000.[2] Here, besides other natural enemies, man again is a great destroyer. Describing the Codfishing off the coast of Labrador during the time of his visit (1833), Audubon writes:—"As there may not be less than one hundred schooners or 'pickaxes' in the harbour, three hundred boats resort to the bank each day; and, as each boat may procure two thousand Cods per diem, when Saturday night comes about six hundred thousand fishes have been brought to the harbour."[3] According to Prof. Seeley:—"The banks of Newfoundland and adjacent coasts have been fished since the year 1500. Here one man may take upwards of five hundred fish in a day, and in a year he is reckoned to capture ten thousand, though sometimes fifteen thousand may be caught in a single voyage."[4] As regards the wholesale destruction of the spawn of this fish, a single instance will suffice. In one bird colony alone on the wild coast of Norsk Finmarksen—that of Svaerholt-Klubben—are "millions upon millions" of the small Gull (Rissa tridactyla). The food of these multitudes of birds during the summer months consists for

    thousand have been taken from a fish of half a pound in weight" ('Royal Nat. Hist.' vol. v. p. 336).

  1. 'Life of Frank Buckland,' by G.C. Bompas, 2nd edit. p. 252.—"A Turbot of 8 lb. carries 300,000 eggs; a Sole of 1 lb. 130,000 eggs" (Ibid. p. 263).
  2. It has been suggested that the greatest loss to the succeeding generation takes place at the very earliest stage of the egg, in that a large proportion of the ripe eggs discharged in the water are not fertilized by the spermatozoa, and hence perish (Mcintosh and Masterman, 'The Life-Hist. Brit. Marine Food Fishes,' p. 236).
  3. 'Audubon and his Journals,' vol. ii. p. 422.
  4. 'Cassell's Nat. Hist.' vol. v. p. 59.