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Renew online by choosing the My Account option at: http://www.library.uiuc.edu/catalog/ '4P't'<4fc-, s^C^j-M'l . ^JFLxM) *O UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS Agricultural Experiment Station BULLETIN No. 112 BY S. A. FORBES STATE ENTOMOLOGIST URBANA, JANUARY, 1907 SUMMARY OF BULLETIN No. 112. 1. History of the cottony maple scale in Illinois, and especially recent history in and about Chicago. Page 343. 2. Injurious effects of infestation of trees. Page 345. 3. Trees most likely to be injured are the soft maple, box-elder, and the basswood. Other trees and shrubs liable to injury. Page 346. 4. L/ife history of the insect. Single brooded. Males perish before win- ter; females survive, partly grown, on twigs and smaller branches. Page 347. 5. The hatching period is from June 15 to July 20; the beginning varies as much as two weeks, according to latitude and weather. Page 349. 6. Summer experiments with kerosene emulsion. One application of 10 per cent, emulsion, at middle of hatching period, killed about two thirds of the scales, and two applications, at middle and end of hatching period, killed about four fifths. Page 349. 7. Winter insecticide measures more effective, a single treatment with 19 or 20 per cent, emulsion killing from 86 to 91 per cent, of the insects. Page 353. 8. Diseased or weakened trees liable to serious injury by the kerosene sprays. Page 355. 9. Protection of roots against excess of insecticide suggested. Page 356. 10. Successful use in Colorado of a winter spray containing only one sixth of kerosene. Page 356. 11. Insect enemies of the scale which have been found most effective for its destruction. Page 357. 12. Summary and general discussion. Page 358. PLATE 1. SOFT MAPLE TREE SPRAYED WITH 20 PER CENT. KEROSENE EMULSION JANUARY 19, AND PHOTOGRAPHED JUNE 23, 1906. ORIGINALLY A SOUND TREE. THE COTTONY MAPLE SCALE IN ILLINOIS. The cottony maple scale* is a native insect parasite of the soft maplef , rarely if ever injurious to the scattering- trees of this species growing in natural forests, but so destructive to them, and to other ornamental trees as well, where these are grown in rows or groups along streets or in parks and on private lawns, that its control has become an object of primary importance to all owners and lovers of some of our most beautiful and popular American trees. In and about Chicago especially, it has destroyed, within the past five years, thousands of trees, beautiful and valuable in themselves, and still more highly valued because of the associations attached to them. To do our best to save these noble but helpless products of nature from a slow and unsightly death by parasitic disease, must be the welcome duty of all who appreciate the significance of trees in the life of the people, and especially of those who live in our larger cities. The history of this insect in Illinois since 1867 exhibits succes- sive periods of abundance and of scarcity, each averaging about four or five years for the state as a whole. That is, throughout some considerable part of the state, and often over most of it, the maple scale has been injuriously abundant once in eight or ten years, and its period of abundance has lasted, as a rule, about half this time. In any given locality, however, it has usually been injurious for a much shorter time, often for not more than one or two years. The cessa- tion of its injuries and its virtual disappearance from the trees in- fested by it have seemingly been clue almost wholly to the agency of its insect enemies. . An exception to these statements is presented by the existing outbreak of this insect in northeastern Illinois, and especially in Chicago and its suburbs to the north and west. Here, as shown by observations of assistants of the office who have been repeatedly sent through the park and boulevard systems of Chicago for an investi- gation of insect injuries to shade trees and other ornamental vegeta- tion, it has certainly been destructively numerous since 1901. Indeed, according to information locally given to Mr. H. E. Weed, of Chicago, it has been continuously injurious over some parts of this area since 1886. This general persistence of an injurious in- festation within the same district for so long a period is due to the *Puh'iHaria iniiinncrabilix. ^ Acer saccharinum. 343 344 BULLETIN No. 112. [January, FIG. t. A Soft Maple Twig- badly infested with adults of the Cottony Maple Scale. About natural size. (J. B. Smith.) 1907.] THE COTTONY MAPLE SCALE IN ILLINOIS. 345 failure of the insect enemies of this scale to multiply at a sufficient rate to check its rapid increase, and this is possibly the consequence of an unfavorable effect of a city environment, although there is some reason to suppose that the cottony maple scale has here ex- tended northward into a latitude more favorable to itself than to the insect enemies which commonly hold it in check. Although no attempt has been made to define the present area of destructive infestation in Illinois, this scale was reported to me dur- ing 1905, in the current correspondence of the office, as locally abundant in fifteen counties, namely, Winnebago, Lake, McHenry, Cook, Dupage, Kane, DeKalb, Ogle, Bureau, and Henry in northern Illinois; Woodford, DeWitt, Sangamon, and Montgomery in cen- tral Illinois ; and Marion in the southern part of the state. Doubt- less the actual area infested by it was much more general than this list would indicate. The injurious effect of a severe and long-continued drain by the cottony maple scale on the vitality of trees infested by it is unques- tionable. Many thousands- of soft maple, linden, box-elder, and elm trees in northeastern Illinois are now dead or dying, or have been disfigured by the death of large branches, because of injuries by this insect, and large numbers of such trees have been removed. Pri- vate citizens, town boards, and park commissioners have become deeply concerned, and numerous inquiries and appeals for aid have come to this office during the past three years. A lack of available funds has, however, prevented as active a participation in the work of practical experiment and insecticide operation as might reason- ably have been expected of the Entomologist's office, and I have been obliged to content myself, in the main, with improving the opportunity to observe, and incidentally to assist, the work of official bodies and private parties for the control of this pest. I am particularly indebted to Mr. Reuben H. Warder, Superin- tendent of Lincoln Park, who has kept me acquainted with his work against this and other scale insects, and has made it possible for us to follow his operations in detail to their final results. I am also under obligations to Mr. O. C. Simonds, Superintendent of Grace- land Cemetery, for similar privileges. Our field observations have been mainly made by Dr. J. W. Folsom, Associate in Entomology at the University of Illinois, and by Mr. E. O. G. Kelly and Mr. C. A. Hart, serving as assistants to the State Entomologist. Dr. Folsom also managed a small spraying experiment for me at Grace- land Cemetery in 1905. The present article, in the preparation of which I have had the valued assistance of Mr. Hart, is intended to give a brief account of 346 BULLETIN No. 112. [January, the insect, to review the attempts made to destroy it by means of summer and winter sprays, and to present practical instructions for its mastery where it is still present in destructive or threatening numbers. A comprehensive article on the insect, prepared by Dr. L. O. Howard, appeared in 1900 in Bull. 22 of the U. S. Bureau of En- tomology, and Circular 64 of that Bureau gives a brief popular account of it and of measures to be taken for its destruction. This paper was prepared with special reference to the Chicago situation of 1905. In Bull. 52 of the Bureau, published in 1905, is a paper by Mr. H. E. Weed describing his experiences in spraying against this scale in Chicago, and Mr. S. A. Johnson has reported on some experiments in Denver, Col., with a winter insecticidal treatment. The last-mentioned author has this year made the species the subject of Bull. 116 of the Colorado Agricultural Experiment Station, in which a summer treatment is especially discussed. FOOD PLANTS. The soft maple (Acer saccharinum} is the tree most generally and heavily infested by this insect. The hard maples, on the other hand, are infested but slightly if at all. The box-elder is also greatly subject to injury, and next to this, perhaps, the linden or basswood. Among the other trees and woody plants often more or less injured, are the elm, honey-locust, black locust, black walnut, sumac, willow, poplar, beech, hawthorn, bittersweet, grape-vine, and Viriginia creeper. Dr. Folsom found mature egg-laying females on the horse- chestnut, honeysuckle, dogwood, trumpet-creeper, mulberry, snow- berry, smoke-tree, Spiraea, false syringa (Philadelfchus'), and Wis- taria. Oak, ash, and catalpa are not infested in northern Illinois, but injury to oak is reported from Georgia. According to S. A. Johnson, the pear is most liable to injury among the fruit-trees, and apple, plum, and peach are sometimes infested. Serious damage to fruit-trees is, however, very unlikely. The migrating young, which are often washed from trees by rain, or blown off in considerable numbers, may maintain themselves for a time on a great variety of woody and herbaceous plants, those on the latter, of course, per- ishing with the advent of frosts. 1907.} THE COTTONY MAPLE SCALE IN ILLINOIS. 347 THE LIFE HISTORY OF THE INSECT. In early summer this scale, when very abund- ant, coats the under side of heavily infested limbs with a thick layer of cotton-like waxy masses (Fig. i, 2), each projecting from beneath a brown cap or scale — the flat body of the mature fe- male. This "cotton" is secreted and the eggs are deposited within it in late May or early June in the latitude of central Illinois, but usu- ally one or two weeks later in the Chicago district. Something over 3000 eggs are usually laid by each female, the number ranging, in our counts, from 2856 to 3863, with an aver- FIG. 2. The Cottony Maple Scale, adult females on twigs. Natural size. (Howard, U. S. Department of Agriculture.) ••• ^^ FIG. 3. The Cottony Maple Scale, immature stag-es: a, newly hatched young1, underside; 6, c, young female, top and side views; d, young male; e,f, young on leaf and leaf-stem. Natu- ral size shown in e. (Howard, U. S. Department of Agriculture.) age of 3410. These eggs ordinarily hatch in June in central Illi- nois, in early July in the northeastern part of the state, or later if the weather of the time is unfavorable. Virtually all are hatched, as a rule, by the end of July. The young insects may crawl out on the leaves and establish themselves beside the principal veins on both 348 BULLETIN No. 112. [January, surfaces of the leaf, but most abundantly beneath, or else may locate upon the twigs. At this season (Fig. 3) they present the appear- ance of small, inconspicuous, waxy, elongate-oval scales, applied closely to the leaf. They are usually motionless, but have never- theless minute legs still capable of service, but in- visible unless the insect is turned over. Inserting their tiny beaks into the tissue of the leaf, they suck out the sap, and when the supply of food is large they give off the excess in the form of a sticky fluid, the so-called "honey dew,' which moistens the surface of the < >B^ *f>fvAw~ ^kK, 61*^1^ _j ^wtfSBSA^'A? ; ^ sey