A Report on the Insects of Massachusetts, Injurious to VegetationFolsom, Wells, and Thurston, printers to the University, 1841 - 459 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 99
Page 5
... hatched , will find a plentiful supply of food immediately within their reach . Most insects , in the course of their lives , are subject to very great changes of form , attended by equally remarkable changes in their habits and ...
... hatched , will find a plentiful supply of food immediately within their reach . Most insects , in the course of their lives , are subject to very great changes of form , attended by equally remarkable changes in their habits and ...
Page 14
... hatched intruders , and are consequently starved to death . The wood- wasps ( Crabronida ) , and numerous kinds of sand - wasps ( Larrada , Bembicida , Spegida , Pompilida , and Scoliada ) , mud - wasps ( Pe- lopaus ) , the stinging ...
... hatched intruders , and are consequently starved to death . The wood- wasps ( Crabronida ) , and numerous kinds of sand - wasps ( Larrada , Bembicida , Spegida , Pompilida , and Scoliada ) , mud - wasps ( Pe- lopaus ) , the stinging ...
Page 16
... hatched from these eggs live till they destroy their victims . And finally others ( Anthracida and Volucella ) , drop their eggs in the nests of insects , whose offspring are starved to death , by being robbed of their food by the ...
... hatched from these eggs live till they destroy their victims . And finally others ( Anthracida and Volucella ) , drop their eggs in the nests of insects , whose offspring are starved to death , by being robbed of their food by the ...
Page 24
... hatched , in the space of fourteen days , little whitish grubs , each provided with six legs near the head , and a mouth furnished with strong jaws . When in a state of rest , these grubs usually curl themselves in the shape of a ...
... hatched , in the space of fourteen days , little whitish grubs , each provided with six legs near the head , and a mouth furnished with strong jaws . When in a state of rest , these grubs usually curl themselves in the shape of a ...
Page 27
... hatched , by the la- bors fa single family of jays . It is by reasoning in this way , that we learn to know of what importance it is to attend to the economy of nature , and to be cautious how we derange it by our short- sighted and ...
... hatched , by the la- bors fa single family of jays . It is by reasoning in this way , that we learn to know of what importance it is to attend to the economy of nature , and to be cautious how we derange it by our short- sighted and ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abdomen Angoumois antennæ appear band bark beetles belong beneath black spots blackish body borers broad brood brown brownish burrow called canker-worms caterpillars Cecidomyia chrysalis Cicada cocoons color covered cylindrical devour dots dusky edge Entomology Fabricius feelers female flies fore-wings forepart fully grown genus grain gray ground grubs habits hairs hatched head Hemiptera Hessian fly hind hind-wings hinder hindmost holes horse-flies Hymenoptera inch and three inch in length inch long injurious insects July June kinds larva larvæ latter lay their eggs leaves legs Linnæus live locust-tree locusts maggots males Massachusetts middle moths narrow nearly numbers ochre-yellow Orthoptera oval pair pale plant-lice plants punctures pupa ravages reddish resemble ring saw-flies seen short skin slender sometimes species spines stripe swarms tapering tenths thick thorax transformations transparent transverse trees trunks under-side warts weevils whitish wing-covers wings expand yellow yellowish young
Popular passages
Page 176 - Printing-House, between the hours of ten in the morning and two in the afternoon, to preach eight Divinity Lecture Sermons, the year following, at St.
Page 63 - Would it be believed that the larvae of an insect, or fly, no larger than a grain of rice, should silently, and in one season, destroy some thousand acres of pine trees, many of them from two to three feet in diameter, and a hundred and fifty feet high...
Page 90 - Notwithstanding the pains that have been taken by some persons to destroy and exterminate these pernicious borers, they continue to reappear in our orchards and nurseries every season. The reasons of this are to be found in the habits of the insects, and in individual carelessness. Many orchards suffer deplorably from the want of proper attention ; the trees are permitted to remain, year after year, without any pains being taken to destroy the numerous and various insects that infest them ; old orchards,...
Page 258 - The wings are roofed when at rest; the antennae are long, with a double, narrow, feathery edging, in the males, and a double row of short, slender teeth on the under side, in the females; the feelers are longer than in the other Arctians, and not at all hairy; and the tongue is short, but spirally curled.
Page 390 - An old elm-tree in this vicinity used to be a favorite place of resort for the Tremex Columba, or pigeon Tremex; and around it great numbers of the insects were often collected, during the months of July and August, and the early part of September. Six or more females might frequently be seen at once upon it, employed in boring into the trunk and laying their eggs, while swarms of the males hovered around them. For fifteen years or more, some large button-wood trees, in Cambridge, have been visited...
Page 234 - ... of the tree, from injury. Remove the earth around the base of the tree, crush and destroy the cocoons and borers which may be found in it, and under the bark, cover the wounded parts with the common clay composition, and surround the trunk with a strip of sheathing-paper eight or nine inches wide, which should extend two inches below the level of the soil, and be secured with strings of matting above. Fresh mortar should then be placed around the root, so as to confine the paper and prevent access...
Page 167 - It is to be observed, that the spring before this sickness, there was a numerous company of flies, which were like for bigness unto wasps or bumblebees ; they came out of little holes in the ground, and did eat up the green things, and made such a constant yelling noise as made the woods ring of them, and ready to deafen the hearers...
Page 87 - July, soon become pupae, and are changed to beetles and leave the trees early in September. Thus the existence of this species is limited to one year. Whitewashing, and covering the trunks of the trees with grafting composition, may prevent the female from depositing her eggs upon them ; but this practice cannot be carried to any great extent in plantations or large nurseries of the trees.
Page 127 - ... two or three distinct notes almost exactly resembling articulated sounds, and corresponding with the number of times that the wing-covers are opened and shut ; and the notes are repeated at intervals of a few minutes, for hours together. The mechanism of the taborets, and the concavity of the wing-covers, reverberate and increase the sound to such a degree, that it may be heard in the stillness of the night, at the distance of a quarter of a mile. At the approach of twilight the katy-did mounts...
Page 262 - The females are of a lighter gray color than the males, their bodies are very thick, and of an oblong oval shape, and, though seemingly wingless, upon close examination two little scales, or stinted winglets, can be discovered on each shoulder. These females lay their eggs upon the top of their cocoons, and cover them with a large quantity of frothy matter, which, on drying, becomes white and brittle. Different broods of these insects appear at various times in the course of the summer, but the greater...