been
so common in the past will not recur to the same extent. But the
operations necessary to that end are of a highly technical and
experimental character, and I am very doubtful whether any machinery
which could be set in motion by the Government would be suited to
develop processes at once so doubtful and so delicate. In twenty years'
time the Colonial Government will receive back the fishery, not only
intact, but in the most perfect state to which commercial enterprise
and scientific methods can raise it, and, in the meanwhile, a regular
and substantial payment is assured. Twenty years are no doubt a
considerable period in the lifetime of individuals ; but if within that
time all the resources that science can contribute toward systematic
development of the fisheries have been applied and thoroughly tested,
the period will not, I think, be regarded as excessive or unfortunate
in the history of a fishery which has lasted for more than two thousand
years.1
The
Ceylon Company of Pearl Fishers, Limited, with a paid up capital of
£165,000, has just entered into possession of its lease, and it is
uncertain what changes will be made in the methods of the fishery or
what measure of success will follow the attempts at pearl
oyster-culture and the growth of pearls. The attention of the pearling
interests of the world is now directed to the work of this company in
the development of its magnificent leasehold, and it seems not unlikely
that greater changes will be made in the methods of the industry
during the ensuing decade than have occurred in the whole of the last
ten centuries.2
A curious fishery, with the Placuna placenta for
its object, exists in Tablegram Lake, a small bay in northeastern
Ceylon adjacent to the magnificent harbor of Trincomali, which Nelson
declared to be "the finest in the world." At intervals during the
nineteenth century, the Ceylon government leased the Tablegram Lake
fishery to native bidders for a period of three consecutive years. In
1857, Dr. Kelaart visited the place and calculated that in the three
years preceding, eighteen million oysters had been removed.3
Owing to scarcity of the mollusk, no fisheries have existed since 1890,
but from 1882 to 1890 they were regularly leased at an average of
Rs.5000 for each term of three years. Prof. James Hornell, who made a
careful examination in 1905, reported that if the business were
carried on providently and systematically, "it should become the
source of a fairly regular annual revenue to Government of from Rs.
10,000 to Rs.12,-000, possibly even more."4
1 "Ceylon Sessional Papers," 1906, p. 650. * Kelaart, "Report on the Tablegram Pearl-
1 The Government Commission has inter- Oysters," Trincomali, 1857, 6 pp.
dieted the fishing for this year (1908), as * Hornell, "Report on the Placuna placenta
experts have reported the pearl-oysters were pearl Fishery of Lake Tampalakamam,"
not plentiful enough and were also immature, Colombo, 1906.
being only five years old. The next fishery
will be in 1909.