The American Entomologist: An Illustrated Magazine of Popular and Practical Entomology, Volumen2Hub Publishing Company, 1870 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 83
Página 4
... observed by Dr. Packard , has the prickles smooth and not sprangling . In the genus Phys- onota , to which belongs a new species figured herewith , the Five - dotted Tortoise - beetle ( Ph . quinquepunctata , n . sp . , Fig . 3 , b ) ...
... observed by Dr. Packard , has the prickles smooth and not sprangling . In the genus Phys- onota , to which belongs a new species figured herewith , the Five - dotted Tortoise - beetle ( Ph . quinquepunctata , n . sp . , Fig . 3 , b ) ...
Página 14
... observed that the species shows a decided preference for the gooseberry , always attacking that plant first when growing side by side with the currant . Hence we have given it the English name of the " Gooseberry Span - worm , " to ...
... observed that the species shows a decided preference for the gooseberry , always attacking that plant first when growing side by side with the currant . Hence we have given it the English name of the " Gooseberry Span - worm , " to ...
Página 16
... observed at the first glance , form any exception to the rule . Indeed , as with two other Sawflies that devour the foliage of our Pines and Firs ( Lophyrus Abbottii and L. abietis ) , the body of the male is almost entirely black and ...
... observed at the first glance , form any exception to the rule . Indeed , as with two other Sawflies that devour the foliage of our Pines and Firs ( Lophyrus Abbottii and L. abietis ) , the body of the male is almost entirely black and ...
Página 19
... observed - our Currant Worm Fly lays its eggs upon the surface , and not in the interior , of the leaf , glueing them thereto by some adhe- sive fluid which it secretes for that purpose . And we may add that there are a few other ...
... observed - our Currant Worm Fly lays its eggs upon the surface , and not in the interior , of the leaf , glueing them thereto by some adhe- sive fluid which it secretes for that purpose . And we may add that there are a few other ...
Página 21
... observed , a fig- ure of one would give scarcely any idea of the other . The larva of the Native Currant Worm Fly ( Fig . 11 , a ) is of a uniform pale green color , without those black dottings which are always found except after the ...
... observed , a fig- ure of one would give scarcely any idea of the other . The larva of the Native Currant Worm Fly ( Fig . 11 , a ) is of a uniform pale green color , without those black dottings which are always found except after the ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The American Entomologist: An Illustrated Magazine of Popular and ..., Volumen3 Vista completa - 1880 |
The American Entomologist: An Illustrated Magazine of Popular and ..., Volumen3 Vista completa - 1881 |
The American Entomologist: An Illustrated Magazine of Popular and ..., Volumen1 Vista completa - 1869 |
Términos y frases comunes
abdomen AMERICAN ENTOMOLOGIST antennæ appearance apple attacks beautiful beetle belonging black oak body Borer botanical bred brood brown Bruchus bugs bushes butterfly caterpillars Cecidomyia cells Chalcis chrysalis cocoon Coleoptera color common coxæ Curculio Currant dark deposited described destroyed distinct eggs entirely entomological Entomologist Fabr fact feeding female femora Figure Fitch flowers front wings fruit gall Gall-fly gall-maker genera genus Gordius Grape-vine grass green ground growing habits hatched head horse-flies Illinois inch long infested injurious insect joint known larva larvæ leaf leaves legs male moth natural nearly never observed orchard pale parasite perfect Phylloxera plants plum Plum Curculio Potato pupa Quercus Sawfly scientific season side species specimens spongifica spots spring surface thorax tibiæ tion transverse trees twigs variety vegetable vines Walsh whitish wood worm yellow young
Pasajes populares
Página 383 - That for many years it has been one of my constant regrets that no schoolmaster of mine had a knowledge of natural history, so far at least, as to have taught me the grasses that grow by the wayside, and the little winged and wingless neighbors that are continually meeting me with a salutation I cannot answer as things are.
Página 383 - Why didn't somebody teach me the constellations, too, and make me at home in the starry heavens, which are always overhead, and which I don't half know to this day...
Página 292 - As soon as vegetation starts in the spring, the mature bugs which winter over in all manner of sheltered places may be seen collecting on the various plants which have been mentioned. Early in the morning they may be found buried between the expanding leaves, and at this time they are sluggish, and may be shaken down and destroyed ; but as...
Página 76 - This is of a pale-green, and sometimes of a white color, regularly and finely dotted with black; the sides of the body are angular, the head is surmounted by a conical tubercle, and over the forepart of the body, corresponding to the thorax of the included butterfly, is a thin projection, having in profile some resemblance to a Roman nose.
Página 22 - They possess the additional bad habit of gnawing into the stems of the clusters of the grapes, which either wilt or drop off. The eggs, which are 0.05 inch in diameter, perfectly round, and of a uniform delicate yellowish-green color, hatch Fig. 44. — Ampelophaga myron Cram., caterpillar. After Riley. into pale green worms with long and straight horns at the tails. After feeding from four to five weeks they reach their full size, and the horns look now comparatively short, with a posterior curve....
Página 44 - In 1860 — the year of the great drouth in Kansas — the corn crop in that State was almost entirely ruined by the Corn-worm. According to the "Prairie Farmer," of January 31, 1861, one county there which raised 436,000 bushels of corn in 1859, only produced 5,000 bushels of poor wormy stuff in 1860, and this, we are told, was a fair sample of most of the counties in Kansas. The damage done was not by any means confined to the grain actually eaten by the worm; but...
Página 80 - I have preserved my 434 cabbages, but I have visited every one of them daily now for four months, finding on them from thirty-five to sixty full-grown insects every day, some coupled and some in the act of depositing their eggs. Although many have been hatched in my garden the present season, I have suffered none to come to maturity; and the daily supplies of grown insects that I have been blessed with, are immigrants from some other garden. " ' The perfect insect lives through the winter, and is...
Página 361 - Under these scales 1 have repeatedly met with a small maggot, three-hundreths of an inch long, or frequently much smaller, of a broad oval form, rounded at one end and tapering to an acute point at the other, soft, of a honey-yellow color, slightly translucent and shining, with an opaque brownish cloud in the middle, produced by alimentary matter in the viscera, and divided into segments by faintly impressed transverse lines.
Página 131 - Having taken a strong hold on the fruit the female makes a minute cut with the jaws, which are at the end of her snout, just through the skin of the fruit, and then runs the snout under the skin to the depth of one-sixteenth of an inch, and moves it back and forth until the cavity is large enough to receive the egg it is to retain. She next changes her position, and drops an egg into the mouth of the cut...
Página 262 - After the first moult, they are characterized principally by two pale-yellowish subdorsal lines, which border what was before the dark line above described. After the second moult, which takes place in about a week from the first, the characteristic pale spots on the back appear, the upper pale line becomes yellow, the lower one white, and the space between them bluish: indeed, the characters of the mature larva are from this period apparent. Very soon they undergo a third moult, after which the...