t^^:9-^o^ INDIAN FOREST INSECTS AGENTS FOR THE SALE OF INDIAN OFFICIAL PUBLICATIONS. London. A. Constable & Co., lo, Orange Street, Leicester Square, W.C. P. S. King & Son, 2 and 4, Great Smith Street, Westminster, S.W, Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., 68, Carter Lane, E.C. B. QuARiTCH, II, Grafton Street, New Bond Street, W. Henry S. King & Co., 65, Cornhill, E.C. Grindlay & Co., 54, Parliament Street, S.W. T. Fisher Unwin, i, Adelphi Terrace, W.C. W. Thacker & Co., 2, Creed Lane, Ludgate Hill, E.C. LuzAC & Co., 46, Great Russell Street, W.C. Edinburgh. Oliver and Boyd, Tweeddale Court. Dublin. E, PoNSONBY, Ltd., 116, Grafton Street. Oxford. B. H. Blackwell, 50 and 51, Broad Street. Cambridge. Deighton, Bell & Co., Trinity Street. On the Continent. Friedlander & SoHN, II, Carl-Strasse, Berlin, N.W., 6\ Otto Harrassowitz, Leipzig ,- Germany. Karl W. Hiersemann, 29, Konigsstrasse, Leipzig - • Ernest Leroux, Rue Bonaparte, Paris - - - France. Martin us Nijhoff, The Hague Holland. Fro\tisi'ii:ck Inner surface of bark of _<(revn deodar {C<'(^r/fs dcO(fa>-a\ sliowiiv,'- the central e;,,r,^^-tuiinfls and offshoot lar\al _.L;a!lcries of Siolytus major, Stel). Living larvae are shuwn at the end of their galleries and some living,' female beetles on thj' hark. The bri-iit colouring of the inner bark is du- to its having been just stripped oft a living tree. Chamba. Xortli-West Himalaya, June lyoy. Drawn and painted by M. E. Stebbin'j-. INDIAN FOREST INSECTS OF ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE COLEOPTERA BY EDWARD PERCY STEBBING of the Indian Forest Service. Head of the Department of Forestry, University of Edinburgh. Late, Imperial Forest Zoologist and Member of the Forest Research Institute, Dehra Dun, India. Member of the Permanent Committee of the International Entomological Congress. Fellow of the Linnean, Zoological, Royal Geographical, and Entomological Societies of London PUBLISHED BY ORDER OF H. M.'s SECRETARY OF STATE FOR INDIA IN COUNCIL LONDON Printed by EYRE & S POTTI S WO O D E, Ltd. and Sold by the Agents for Indian Government Publications (For List see previous page) I9I4 Price Fifteen Shilliugs 4^ PREFACE The chief aim of this book is the study of the Insect Fauna of the Indian forests from the economic standpoint. It is probably the first of its kind attempted for a British Dependency. In 1898 the Government of India sanctioned the publication of a small compilation entitled Injurious Insects of Indian Forests. In this book I had gathered together the information then known on the subject of the life histories of insects of economic importance in the Indian forests.* The data included were mainly taken from Indian Museum Notes, issued from the Indian Museum, under the direction of Colonel A. Alcock, CLE., F.R.S., to whose advice during my early days in India I owe much. Since that year, chiefly through the interest and keenness displayed by officers of the Forest Department, both Imperial and Pro- vincial, in advancing the study of this branch of forestry science, and to the generous aid extended towards the department by the Government of India, considerable progress has been made in a knowledge of a subject the importance of which in the preservation of the Forest Estate cannot be too strongly emphasized. In the absence of a thorough understanding of the life histories of important pests it is impossible to attempt to prescribe remedial or protective measures. Equally undesirable, in the absence of such know- ledge, is it to take up an attitude of non possumus when considering the efficient application of measures of this kind over the large tracts with which the Indian forester has to deal. It is fully admitted that the study is only in the pioneer stage, and this book has no pretensions to be more than that of a pioneer endeavouring to indicate in some small degree the lines upon which the further study of the subject should proceed. So vast is the field opened out that almost of necessity it is likely to prove advisable to confine future publications to local' provincial brochures in which the important pests of the trees of economic value in the forest areas concerned will be treated of. In dealing with the great mass of material available to * In this work brief notes, many of them fragmentary, were given on some 130 insects. The important families Scolytidae and Platypodidae were represented by 4 and o species respectively. I am able to include here 74 and 20 species of these two families. vi PREFACE me it soon became evident that it could not be adequately compressed into a single volume if the request of the Government of India that the book should be kept within handy reference dimensions was to be complied with. I have therefore confined myself in this volume to the Coleoptera, by far the larger part, as it is the most important, of the subject. The region dealt with is the same as that covered b}' the Fauna of British India volumes, viz., India and Burma, including Ceylon. It is considered probable, however, that the work will have a wider sphere than that of India and Burma, extensive as is the area of the great continent, and widely divergent as are its botanical and climatic charac- teristics. In Ceylon, the Malay States, and the farther East, many pests identical with or closely allied to those here dealt with, and having in all probability not dissimilar habits, are either already known to exist (as the distribution of many of those included in this work sufficiently illustrates) or are likely to be discovered. The book should therefore prove of value to planters and those interested in commercial concerns connected with the growth for profit of rubber, tea, coffee, and allied industries. The chapters devoted to the Cerambycidae, Curculionidae, Scolytidae, and Platypodidae, all containing serious pests, a knowledge of whose life histories may mean a saving of considerable sums of money, will make this ex'ident. The study of the insect fauna of the Indian and other Eastern forest tracts now coming under economic forest conservancy is of peculiar value to the zoologist interested in preserving, or endeavouring at least to make an acquaintance with, those more uncommon species of the fauna which are at present unknown, and which are likely to form important links in a working classification of some of the more difficult groups. Many of these links will inevitably disappear under the conversion of the tracts of primeval forest into areas managed on commercial lines. For the forester masses on the area a greater number of healthy stems per acre than Nature attempts to do ; while endeavouring at the same time to ensure the prompt removal of all weakly, diseased, dying, and dead trees. Under such treatment it is easy to understand that large numbers of small forms of insect life now to be found perhaps in fair abundance in dying and dead stems throughout the primeval tracts of forest will disappear. Also, as is the case with the shyer mammals, so is it likely to prove with the shjer or rarer insects. The closing in and cutting up of the large tracts of forest in which they formerly roamed at will, combined with the heavy toll which the introduction of the modern rifle has exacted from their ranks, has resulted in the bison or gaur and the rhinoceros approaching perilously near to extinction in India. The former operation alone must, however, in time have brought about the same result. Similarly the changed conditions introduced with the progress of ordered forest conservancy are PREFACE vii likely to prove inimical--in a different manner, perhaps, but still inimical — to some of the rarer forms of insect life in the struggle for existence, and they will disappear. If this theory has any solid foundation on fact (and my own personal observations would seem to indicate that it has), from the point of view of the zoologist and the systematist it is of the first importance that the insect fauna of the Indian forests should be collected and classified. The spade-work that has already been accomplished affords sufficient evidence, if evidence be required, that this collection is equally necessary in the economic welfare of the Forest Estate. That the value of this work is recognized is well illustrated by the illustrious band of European savants who are so freely and ungrudgingly giving their valuable time to naming and describing the Indian collections which are coming to hand. In this volume I have dealt with Indian forest insects from two main aspects: firstly, the injurious insects, and secondly, the useful insects, such as predaceous and parasitic species. As regards classification I have followed Lefroy's arrangement in Indian Insect Life. The predaceous and parasitic Coleoptera under this treatment appear therefore in their correct positions in the system of classification. Each one, however, is dealt with again and in fuller detail m the section treating of the pest upon which it is predaceous or parasitic, its life history and other particulars following that of its host. Each insect considered in the work is dealt with, so far as possible, under the heads distribution, trees attacked, descrip- tion of the species, life history, relations to the forest, and, where practicable, remarks on protective and remedial measures for combating its attacks. The compilation of the work has proved more intricate than was at first deemed probable, and has been dependent throughout on obtaining the identification of the insects upon which it is based. Dr. A. E. Shipley, Mr. Guy A. K. Marshall, and Dr. R. Steuart MacDougall, who kindly looked through the proofs early in igi2, strongly advised my securing the description of all new species and full identifications (not merely generic ones) of every insect dealt with. This advice, which was acted upon, led to a lengthy but quite unavoidable delay in the publication of the book — a delay which, I am assured, is fully justified. Without the unstinted and enthusiastic help that has been accorded me by a large number of friends, the book, imperfect as all pioneer works of necessity must be, would never have assumed its present shape. The systematic study of forest insect pests may be said to owe its origin to Sir Thomas Holderness, K.C.S.I., Permanent Under-Secretary of State for India, at the time Revenue-Secretary to the Government of India, and the late Sir Denzil Ibbetson, K.C.S.I., Revenue Member of Council. It was due to their recognition of the importance of the study of this branch of forest science being undertaken, when the VIU PREFACE matter was laid before them by Mr. B. Ribbentrop, CLE., at the time Inspector-General of Forests, that the first foundations were laid, the Secretary of State sanctioning in igoo the first appointment, that of the Author, of a Forest Entomologist for a period of two years. This post was resanctioned in 1904, as a result of the earnest representations of Mr. (now Sir) Sainthill Eardley Wilmot, then Inspector-General of Forests, and subsequently merged in igo5 in that of Forest Zoologist in the newly created Imperial Forest Research Institute. F~or the exceptional opportunities afforded me of personally collecting so much of the information the book contains during extensive tours made throughout the whole of India and Burma, my thanks and acknowledgments are due to five successive Inspectors-General of Forests : Messrs. B, Ribbentrop, CLE. : H. Hill, CLE.; R. C Wroughton ; Sir Sainthill Eardley Wilmot, K.C.I.E.; and Mr. F. Beadon Bryant, C.S.I. To Sir Sainthill, under whom I had the good fortune to work directly during six years, I owe a deep debt for advice and assistance at all times cordially given to me. To the direct representations of Mr. Beadon Bryant, at the time Inspector-General of Forests, the department owes the fdct that the sanction of the Government of India was accorded to the preparation of the work, and that I was allowed to have free access to the collections of the Forest Research Institute at Dehra Dun. My acknowledgments are also due to the present Inspector-General of Forests, Mr. G. S. Hart, CLE. ; to the President of the Institute, Mr. L. Mercer, CLE.; and to the late Forest Zoologists, Mr. Subramarian Iyer and Dr. A. D. Imms, for the valuable assistance afforded me by the loan of such specimens, tour notes, and files as were required for the work. Allusion has been already made to the great assistance received from officers of the department. I would like to express my acknowledgments here to the Service throughout, and more especially to Messrs. J. W. Oliver, f. H. Lace, CLE., B. B. Osmaston, F. Gleadow, P. M. Lushington, W. F. Perree, P. H. Clutterbuck, C G. Rogers, S. Carr, G. M. Ryan, A. V. Monro, T. A. Hauxwell, and the late Mr. H. Slade, Conservators of Forests; to Messrs. H. G. Billson, R. C Milward, S. Cox, C B. Smales, R. S. Hole, B. O. Coventry, C E. C Fischer, C P. Percival, A. J. Gibson, T. Carr, A. E. Osmaston, and the late A. M. Long and J. Messer, Deputy-Conservators of Forests ; and to Bhai Sadhu Singh, Rai Bahadur, Pandit Gokal Dass, and Messrs. V. Subramarian Iyer, B. Sen Gupta, Rama Xath Mukerjee, the late Mr. J. P. Gregson, and Messrs. A. M. Littlewood and Young, of the Provincial Service. I'rom officers in other Services I have received great help at various times. During my work in Baluchistan in 1905 I received the greatest assistance from the Agent to the Governor-General, Mr. A. L. P. Tucker, CLE.; Lieut.-General Sir H. L. Smith-Dorrien, G.C.B., D.S.O., PREFACE ix at the time commanding the Quetta Brigade; Colonel C. Archer, C.S.I., CLE. (now Agent to the Governor-General in Baluchistan) ; Colonel G. Chevenix Trench, CLE., and Colonel C A. Kemball, CLE., both of the Political Department; Major (now Colonel) R. E. Roome, Commandant of the Zhob Levy Corps; and Captain E. H. S. James, of the Political Department. My thanks are also due to the Raja of Chamba State for the facilities kindly placed at my disposal during my tour there in igog. To the many officers in the Civil Service through whose divisions and districts I toured throughout the country my thanks are due for the cordial assistance always afforded me. I would also wish to thank here my old head clerk Babu A. T. Das, and my tour clerk Babu Nilumbar Dut, to whom. I feel I am greatly indebted. During the compilation of the work I have received valuable counsel and advice from Dr. A. E. Shipley, F.R.S., Master, Christ's College, Cambridge; from Mr. Guy A. K. Marshall, of the Entomological Research Committee ; and Dr. R. Steuart MacDougall, Lecturer in Forest Zoology at the University of Edinburgh, and a Member of the Entomological Research Committee. Mr. Marshall has added to the obligations under which he has laid me by undertaking a considerable amount of identifi- cation work besides working out the Curculionidae and describing several new species. In the Insect Department of the Natural History Museum, South Kensington, I have received unstinted help. Mr. C J. Gahan, Keeper of the Department, identified the Cerambycidae ; Mr. Gilbert Arrow some of the lamellicorns ; Mr. K. G. Blair described several new Tenebrionidae, and Mr. R. Meade-Waldo dealt with the Hymenoptera. Mr. Claude Morley kindly undertook the Ichneumonidae, describing new species. For several years past my friend Mr. G. Lewis, F.L.S., has been good enough to determine Histeridae for me. My sincere acknowledgments are also due to Monsieur P. Lesne, of the Paris Museum, who named the Bostrychidae, and to Monsieur G. Severin, Conservator of the Brussels Museum of Natural History. In Brussels Monsieur Severin undertook to get named a considerable portion of the collections, and to have drawings prepared where required. The following gentlemen, to whom my grateful acknowledgments are due, helped in this work: MM. Fleutiaux, F. Ohaus, H. Gebien, R. Gestro, A. Grouvelle, S. Schenkling, M. Maindron, A. d'Orchymont, M. Pic, M. Burr, and C Kerremans, who described a new buprestid. In connection with the work on the Scolytidae and Platypodidae, two families which occupy considerably over a fourth of the book, my intention had been to deal with the whole collection myself. My appointment as Head of the Department of Forestry at Edinburgh University resulted in my having reluctantly to give up this idea. To X PREFACE Colonel F. Winn Sampson I owe a deep debt of thanks for so kindly coming to my assistance and undertaking to deal with the identification work connected with the Xylchori and the Platypodidae for me, several new species of which he has described. To Dr. Max Hagedorn, an authority of world-wide reputation in these families, I owe thanks for his kindl}' help and advice. To Sir William Schlich, K.C.I.E., F.R.S., my old Professor of Forestry at the Royal Indian Engineering College, Coopers Hill, and to Mr. Walter F. H. Blandford, Lecturer in Forest Entomology at the college, my acknowledgments are due for the encouragement I received at their hands to prosecute my studies in this branch of forest science. I retain the liveliest feelings of gratitude to Sir William for the interest he has evinced in me, and for the praise and congratulations he has given me in my forestry career. As regards the illustrations, the frontispiece and coloured plates Nos. xxviii, liii, and Iviii are from the able brush of my wife; Nos. xi and XXV by Mr. A. Descubes ; No. xv and a considerable proportion of the figures in the text by Mr. Horace Knight, to whom my thanks are due for his excellent work. Most of the uncoloured plates were drawn by the artists J. Singh, S. B. Mondul, and S. C. Mondul. The greater number of the photographs were taken by Mr. Chitrakar, Photo- grapher to the Research Institute. Lastly, my most cordial acknowledgments are due to Mr. William Foster, CLE., Registrar and Superintendent of Records at the India Office; to Mr. H. Mitchell, Assistant Registrar; and to Mr. E. W. Jolliffe, for the great trouble they have taken in matters connected with the preparation of the book. To Mr. Foster it would be difficult to express my recognition of the cordial and unwearying interest he has taken in the work. To Messrs. Eyre & Spottiswoode, the printers, to their staff, and to the reproducers of the plates and figures I would tender an expression of my admiration and praise for the workmanlike manner in which they have dealt with the work, and for the very high efficiency of their proof-readers, EDWARD PERCY STEBBING, University of Edinburgh, i8 May 1914- ( Ni ) CONTENTS CHAPTER I. PAGE On a Study of the Distribution of the Insect Fauna of Indian Forests ... ... ... l CHAPTER II. Remarks on Injurious and Beneficial Insects ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 9 CHAPTER HI. On some Methods by which the presence of Insect Pests in the Forest may be ascertained, and their Life Histories and Modes of Attacking Trees studied 23 CHAPTER IV. On Methods of preventing Insect Attack in the Forest, and of combating those taking place 35 CHAPTER V. Coleoptera — Characters, Habits, and Classification ... ... ... ... ... ... 56 CHAPTER \T. Lamellicornia — Families Passalidae, Liicaiiidae, Scarnbaeidae ... ... ... 66 CHAPTER VH. Adephag.\ — Families Cici/idelidac, Carabidae 93 CHAPTER VIII. Polymorpha — Families Hydrophilidae, Silphidae, Staphyliuidac, Hisieridae, Nitidulidae, Colydiidac, Trogositidae, Cita/jidae, Erotylidae, Cocciiielliiiae, Endomychidat\ Dermestidae ... ... ... ... ... ... ••• ••• 9^ CHAPTER IX. Polymorpha {conti7iiied) — Families Bostrychidac, Ptiiiidae ... ... 127 CHAPTER X. Polymorpha icoHtiiuied)--Y'A\\\\\\&% Malacodennidae, Clcridae, Lymexylouidae ... 180 CHAPTER XI. Polymorpha {amtiniied) — Family Biiprestidae ... ... ... 190 xii CONTENTS CHAPTER XII. PAGE POLYMORPHA {continued) — Family Elateridae 223 CHAPTER XIII. Heteromera — Families Tenebrionidae, Cistelidae, Lcigriidae^ Monofntnidae, Pythidae, Cantkaridae ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 232 CHAPTER XIV. Phytophaga — Families Bnicliidae, Chrysomelidae ... ... ... ... ... 250 CHAPTER XV. Phytophaga {continued) — Family Ccrambycidae 268 CHAPTER XVI. Phytophaga {continued) — Family Cerainbycidae {continued) ... ... ... ... 357 CHAPTER XVII. Rhynchophora — Family Anthribidae 386 CHAl TER X\TI1. Rhynchophora {continued) — Family iUentliidac 389 CHAPTER XIX. Rhynchophora {contiriued) — P'amily Curculionidae ... ... ... ... ... 393 CHAPTER XX. Rhynchophora (continued) — Family Scolytidac [Ipidae) 457 CHAPTER XXI. Rhynchophora {^continued) — Family Scolytidae {Ipidae) [continued) ... ... ... 568 CHAPTER XXII. Rhynchophora (c-i^;///;//^^^/) — V nmWy /'/otypodidae 611 ( xiii ) . LIST OF PLATES PI. III. PI. IV. PI. V. PI. VI. Frontispiece. Scolytits major, Steb., in deodar {coloured). PI. I, I. Galleries of l^lue-pine Toiniciis, Tomiciis ribbcntropi, Steb., in blue-pine bark. 2, 3, 4. Galleries of Poly- graph us fii?ii, Steb., in blue-pine bark ... To face page 6 PL II. Bamboos tunnelled into by the bamboo-borer {Diiiodcriis tniniiiits) ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ,, ,, 14 Galleries of Coclostenia ? sp. in sandalwood ... ... „ „ 18 Larva and beetles of Hoploceravibyx spi/iicornis, Newn., in sal „ „ 26 Galleries of Capnodis indie a, Thorns., in Pitiiis longi/olia „ „ 41 Entrance-holes of Tomicits and Polygraphus bark-borers and of the saw-fly .S"/rt'.r' /;///677rt//.f in spruce bark ... ,, „ 44 PI. VI 1. Outflow of sap in a poplar-tree caused by attacks of u'EolestJies saria, Solsk. ... ... ... ... ... ,, „ 54 PI. VIII. Poiiuiana regia sitms 'g\xA\&Ahy Xyloiriipcs gideoii^hmn. „ „ 90 PI. IX. I. Diiioderiis minitti/s, F"abr., larva, pupa, and beetle ; entrance-holes of beetle and larval galleries in a bamboo. 2. Tillus notatiis, I"^lug- 3- Hectarihrum heros, Fabr. „ „ 133 PI. X. Entrance and exit holes of Sinoxyloii crassmn, Lesne, and Lyctiis spinifrons, Lesne, in Terminalia tomciitosa wood ... ... ... ... ... ... ... „ ' ,, 158 PI. XI. Psiloplera fasinosa, Fabr., a-d, beetle; <;',/, portions of Acacia arabica seedlings with the bark stripped off {coloured) ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ,, „ 198 PI. Xll. I. Capnodis indica, Thoms., larva and beetle ; i b, Pinus longifolia stem showing galleries of both beetles. 2. Anthaxia osmastoni, Steb., larva and beetle ... ,, „ 202 PI. XIII. Larval galleries of 6"/// dv/r''//'tvw rt//ascialus, Fst. ... ... ,, „ 425 Leading shoot of padauk {Pterocarpus dalbergioides) showing successful and unsuccessful girdling by the padauk weevil, Trigouocolus subfasciatus, Fst. ... ,, ,, 426 Leading shoot of a padauk sapling showing malforn^iation resulting from repeated attacks of the padauk weevil ... „ ,, 426 PI. X.X.XVl. I. Cryptorkyuclius /iraudisi, Steb., larva, cocoon, pupa, beetle, and pupating-chamber in J'iuus longifolia. 2. Cuckoo wasp. 3. Elaunoii bipartitus ... ... ,, ,, 429 PI. XX iX. PI. XXX. PI. XXXI to PI. XXX 1\ J'l. xxxw LIST OF PLATES xv PI. XXXVII. Attacks of CryptorJiyiulnis braitdisi, Sleb., in Piiiiis lo/igi/olia To face page i\,io PI. XXXVIII. Cyrtotrachclits longipes, Fabr., egg, larva, beetle, young J/<7<;(V?//;/rt: /^^zw/^z/.v/tf/V/^-.v shoot, and pupal coverings... ,, ,, 440 PI. .\XXIX. 7']andford, in Tcrmi- ualia to)nc)itosa ... ... ... ... ... ... ., ,, 47^ PI. XLl 1 1. Entrance and exit holes of Sphacrot)y pes globulus, Hland- ford, in sal bark ... ... ... ... ... ... „ „ 487 PI. XLIV. (Galleries of .S'/>/i oi Hoploccrainbyx spiiiicornis, Newn. Soutliern Shan Stntes. A 2 4 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS As a first case, a tree may have a wide distribution, and its particular pest may accompany it throughout. This is true of the tun-tree {Cedrela toona) twig-borer, Hypsipyla robusta, which appears to be as widely dis- tributed as the tree itself. I have personall}' taken the insect from twigs and branches at Changa Manga in the Punjab, in the United Provinces, Central Provinces, Bengal, and at Maymyo in Upper Burma. Similarly the two well-known defoliators of teak, the caterpillars of the moths Hyhlcea pitera and Pyrmista machaeralis, appear to be found wherever the tree exists as a forest in India, i.e. in Bombay, Central Provinces, Madras, and Burma. Or a pest may infest a variety of trees occupying very different climates, and have itself a wide distribution. Amongst the family Bostrychidae instances are common. Both Sinoxylon crassum and S. anale infest several species of trees, tunnelling into and riddling their timber. These beetles occur as a serious pest in the Changa Manga plantations, where they infest sissu {Dalbersi^ia sissoo) and Acacia viodesta. I have also taken one or other or both of the insects in sal, Terininalia tomentosa, Acacia catechu, Ano- gcissus, Pterocarpns, Albizzia, Prosopis, etc., in the forests of the United Provinces, Bombay, Sind, the Central Provinces, Assam, and Burma. Again, the genus Dinodenis includes two species, Dinodcrns pilifrons and D. niinutus, one or other or both of which are to be found infesting bamboos throughout the length and breadth of India. Caryoborus gonagra again (one of the Bruchidae) infests the seeds of a variety of trees, and appears to be equally at home in Bombay, the Central Provinces, and Madras. The common noctuid caterpillar Ingiira subapicalis defoliates the sal in Ganjam, and also in the United Provinces Terai and Oudh forests in the monsoon months. On the other hand, to come to our other case, there is an assemblage of moths belonging to the families Lasiocampidae and Noctuidae which defoliate the sal-tree in the Central Provinces and Chota Nagpur (species of Trabala, Ingura, etc.). In the sal forests of the United Provinces Terai the Central Provinces species are replaced by others {Suana, Boannia) ; whilst again in Assam an entirely different set of defoliating cater- pillars are met with on the sal, several species of Lyuiantria, DasycJiira, Leucoma, etc. To quote one more instance amongst plains insects, a genus of bark beetles, Sphaerotrypes, which infests the sal-tree, has this local distribution. S. siwalikensis is found infesting the sal of the Siwaliks and United Provinces Terai. A second species, S. globulus, is found in the Central Provinces on the same tree ; whilst a third species, S. assaniensis, infests the sal in Assam. A fourth species attacks the Anogeissus latifolia in Coimbatore in Madras. It is unnecessary here to dwell on further instances of the anoma- lies in the distribution of some of our forest species in the plains, as they will be alluded to at length later on. Turning now to the insects of the Himalayan forests, investigation has shown that the assemblage of insect pests present in the Western Himalaya DISTRIBUTION OF INDIAN FOREST INSECTS Fig ;. — Splieiioptcra ati'i'/iiiui, Kerrem. tf I natural size, d e enlarged. Serious pests, small in si2e, there differs greatly from that in the Eastern portions of the range. And this is only what might be expected, since the composition of the forest in the two localities is entirely different. In the Western Himalaya, as compared with the broad-leaved assemblage of species characteristic of the Eastern, the coniferous forests predominate, and we find classes of pests more resembling those of the European, American, or Japanese coniferous areas. Here again anomalies are found in the distribution of genera and species, and even families. The impor- tance of the families Bos- trychidae, Buprestidae, and Cerambycidae, all powerful groups in the plains, has disappeared, are in the two latter families, as witness the deodar buprestid Sphenopteni aterrinia and longicorn Trinophyllnui cyibratuni, and the long-leaved pine Nothorrhinn. But the great importance of the families as evidenced in the plains forest has been outclassed here by the Scolytidae. This family in the Western Himalaya contains an assemblage of pests who have at their mercy the whole of the coniferous species, and in every instance, so far as present investigations go, the species affecting a particular tree accom- panies it from the centre to the limits of its habitat. Another point about the distribution of some of these genera, which is known to be the case in other parts of the world, is that one or more appear to be confined to a particular species of tree. There are, e.g., three species of Scolytiis known in the Western Himalaya (S. major, S. minor, and 5. deodar a), and they all infest' the deodar. I have never yet taken the genus from any other tree in the Himala3'a, nor have I found it at all in the plains. And yet in Europe the genus is confined to broad-leaved trees ! We must look to America for analo- gous instances of its infesting conifers. There is a Polygraphits {P. major), it is true, which will also infest the deodar, Fig. i,.—Polygraphus major, Stelx x i6. but only when it is unable to find a sufficiency of its own real host, the blue pine. The important genus Tomicus, on the other hand, does not appear to infest the deodar. One species {T. ribbcntropi) attacks both blue pine (often in company with Polygraphus pint) and spruce (but not INDIAN FOREST INSECTS the silver tir) ; \vhilst a second confines itself to the long-leaved pine (Pinus longifolia) at the lower elevation at which this latter tree grows. A family of wood-borers, the Platypodidae, closely allied to the Scoly- tidae, has a similar distribution, one species being confined to the deodar, a second to the spruce and blue pine, whilst a third restricts its attacks to the long-leaved pine, whose wood it fre- quently so rid- dles with shot- holes as to render it use- less as timber. The bark- borers of the sib'er fir are, on the other hand, totally dissimilar to those of the other conifers growing either with it, as does the spruce, or in its \icinity (d e o d a r and blue pine). The curious genus Scolytoplatypus (p. 604) infests the wood of this tree; whilst the gen us Xyle- boriis infests the branches (p. 582) ; a spe- cies of Dryo- coctes infests the bast and sapwood of the spruce (p. 549)- Some of the true scolytid wood-borers and those of the Cossomdae have not this restricted distribution so far as their host-trees are concerned, for species of Hylastes and Rhyucholus infest equally the spruce, deodar, and blue pine. A genus of weevils, the well-known Cryptovhynchus, mfests Fk;. 5.- -Egg and lar\al galleries of Tomiciis loui^ifolia^ Steb., in inner bark of Piiius longifolia. North-West Himalaya. Rate I. \'%'^ ^^ J.H.Lace Photo. Photo^i'avure, Survey of India Offices. Calcutta. Mai-cli 1S03. Fi^. 1. GALLERIES OF THE BLUE PIKE TOMTCUS, T0MTCU5 RIBBENTROPI, STEB. IN BLUE PINE BARK . Figs. 2,3,4. GALLERIES OF POLYGRAPHUS PINI STEB. IN BLUE PINE BARK j5, PAIRING CHAMBER, e.EGG GALLERY; Z, LARVAL GALLERY: DISTRIBUTION OF INDIAN FOREST INSECTS 7 Fig. 6. — Nipoiiius caiialkollis^ Lewis. the Himalayan pines, but two different species of the j^eniis infest the three pines — the blue pine, lonj^^-lcaved pine, and the Vinm kliasya of Assam and Upper Burma. But whilst such marked limits can be placed u}x)n the distribution and host-plants of many of the coniferous bark-borinj,' pests in the Western Himalaya, the same limits cannot be assij^nied to the distribution of some of the predaceous pests infesting them. For instance, the clerid TJuDuisimus himalaycnsis preys equally upon all the various species of bark- and wood-borers infesting the deodar, spruce, blue pine, and long-leaved pine in the Western Himalaya, appearing equally at home between elevations of 2,500 ft. and 8,000 ft. A Niponius also (A^ canalicollis, of the family Histeridae) preys upon the larvae and pupae of these bark- borers, and is to be found not only in the above- enumerated conifers, but also in the Pinus geravdiana in the Suliman Mountains in Baluchistan, where it preys upon the Polygvaphns (P. trcuchi) which infests the pine in this locality. A curious distribu- tion, since the genus is a Japanese one. It may be mentioned that another member of this genus (A^ andrcK'Csi) is to be found preying upon the sal-tree Sphaero- trypes both in the Siwaliks and United Provinces Terai, in the Central Provinces sal areas, and again in Assam, w^hilst in Coimbatore it attacks the Spliacrutrypes of the Anogeissus. Although I would not be understood to say that they do not occur, I have not found the genera Polygraphus and Tomicus in the plains forest, their places being apparently taken by the genus Sphaerotrypes. Per contra,' I have not found that the bostrychid genera Dinoderns and Sinoxylon extend to a great elevation, beyond 4,000 ft. probably, in the Western Himalaya. A species of Sinoxylon has been reported from the Darjeeling rf/s^nc^ in the Eastern Himalaya, but the locality is not recorded, and the district extends down to the plains. These two genera appear to be particularly addicted to great heat requirements, either dry or moist. From the above brief resume of the distribution of a few of the more typical forest pests it will be apparent that it would be difficult to base a distribution of certain groups of insects or of certain families, genera, or species, either upon the species of trees they infest or upon certain classes of mixed forests in w^hich they attack the predominant species and some of those others which are normally found in mixture with it ; for it has been shown that the distribution of the particular insect may extend far beyond the limits of the predominant tree. Nor is it possible to base a distribution, in the light of our present knowledge, on particular zones of vegetation, such as a hot dry one, hot moist, etc.; for certain species 8 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS appear to be at home both in a hot dry cHmate and in a hot moist one. Finally, it is not possible to base a distribution list on the species of trees attacked. In the coniferous areas of the Western Himalaya it is apparent to some extent that certain species of one or more genera are confined to certain species of tree; in some cases a genus may be con- fined to a particular tree ; or another genus and certain species in it may infest more than one species of tree ; or, lastly, to one or two species of trees one or more species in one or more genera may confine their attacks. In the case of predaceous insects instances are known where a par- ticular species is found throughout the plains forests attacking a certain genus of bark beetles, its distribution apparently depending on the distri- bution of the genus upon which it preys. ( 9 ) CHAPTKR II. GENERAL REMARKS ON INJURIOUS AND BENEFICIAL INSECTS. L — General Remarks on the Different Methods i;v which Insects Attack and Destroy Tree Growth and the Different Parts of the Tree Affected. — Damage done to (a) Roots; (d) Stems: (i) Young Trees, (2) Poles, (3) Old Stems ; (c) Branches ; (if) Young Twigs ; [e) Buds ; (/) Leaves ; (^^) Inflorescence ; {/i) Fruits and Seeds ; (/) Timber. 11. — General Remarks on the Methods by which the Insects of Use to the Forester accomplish their Work.— («) Predators, or insects which prey directly upon injurious insects, which they consume at once as food ; {/>) Parasites, or insects which live parasitically upon injurious species, slowly killing them. I. — General Remarks on the Different Methods by which Insects Attack and Destroy Tree Growth. Specific Account of the kinds of Damage that may be don E. The tree may be injured or killed in various ways by the insect. The nature of the injury done depends upon two principal things — (i) The nature of the aggressor, whether it belongs to the great group of biting insects or to the equally dangerous section which live by suction. (2) The method of growth of the tree and the nature of its parts, whether more or less resistant to insect life or favourable for its sustenance. 1. The Nature cf the Agg-ressor. As we have seen, for our purpose insects may be divided into two groups, the biting insects and the sucking insects. It will be obvious that whereas it is a simple matter for an insect provided with a strong pair of biting jaws or mandibles to bore through the old, dead, thick outer bark of a tree to get at the cambium layer beneath, such a procedure would be quite impossible for an insect like an aphis or plant blight, which takes its sustenance through a soft tubular beak and is without strong biting jaws. Therefore, the nature of the mouth-parts present in the insect determines to a great extent the part or parts of the tree it is able to attack. (a) Biting Insects. — An insect furnished with biting mouth-parts is able to attack every part of the tree from root to fruit or seed. x\s we shall see, 10 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS insects so formed commit serious damage to the bast and wood of the roots, main stem, and branches of the tree. To mention but a few instances, members of the famihes Siricidae (Hymenoptera) ; Buprestidae (p. igo), Cerambycidae (p. 268), Scolytidae (p. 457) (Coleoptera) ; Cossidae, and ArbeHdae (Lepidoptera), do such damage either in their larval or imagine stages. Other species live in the bast or interior of the smaller branches and twigs : Scolytidae; Pyralidae (Lepidoptera), for instance ; whilst others again feed on the leaves or needles of the tree : sawflies (Tenthredinidae); Chrysomelidae (p. 253), Curculionidae (p. 393) (Coleoptera); Lymantriidae, Noctuidae, Pyralidae (Lepidoptera). Finally, other biting insects destroy the flowers or fruits : Chrysomelidae, Cantharidae (p. 246), or tunnel into the seeds, as for example members of such families as the Bruchidae (p. 250), Curculionidae, Scolytidae; Pyralidae, Microlepidoptera (Lepidoptera). (6) Sucking Insects.— The powers of the sucking insect to damage the tree are somewhat more restricted, since it is unable to attack such portions as are coated with thick bark, save where it can obtain ingress to the bast layer through wounds, a fruitful source of attack. The area of the tree open to attack is, however, still of very considerable extent, consisting as it does of the whole of the crown and the smaller roots ; and, of course, seedlings and young saplings are subject to injury in every part. In the case of some trees, all the conifers for example, the injury possible from the sucking insect is of very considerable extent. The younger roots are subject to the attacks of one of the worst families of sucking insects, the plant lice or Aphidae (Rhynchota). The roots may also be galled and consequently weakened under the attacks of Chalcidae (Hymenoptera), Aphidae, and Coccidae (Rhynchota). The stems, branches, twigs, and leaves, are subject to direct attack by tapping or suction by Aphidae and Coccidae. Or, again, galls may be produced on any of these parts by Chalcidae, Curculionidae, Aphidae, and Coccidae. Similarly the flowers and seed may be either directly tapped by the chalcid, aphid, or coccid family, or they may be indirectly affected and the seed aborted or rendered barren by the insidious tapping of the sap of the flower-bearing twigs by members of these families. 2. The Method of Growth of the Tree and Nature of its Parts. This section maybe prefaced with the remark that in nature the balance between the tree and the insect is held fairly even. A primeval forest alwa\ s contains a number of sickly and dying trees, which provide suflicient food for the insects who prey upon the particular species of tree. It is usually, not always, only when man interferes with nature's balance of power that serious insect invasions in the forests are experienced. This REMARKS ON INJURIOUS AND BENEFICIAL INSECTS ir is commonly the case when the tree is encouraged to grow pure in dense masses. Trees grow in different ways, and have in some cases acquired characters more or less resistant to insect attacks. For in- stance, the thick bark of some of the conifers offers impediments to the burrowing pro- pensities of certain Scolytidae, although others are not deterred by its presence. Polygraphias major, a scolytid beetle which attacks the blue pine {Pinm excelsa), only infests the branches and upper portions of the main stem. It is never found burrow- ing into the thick bark of the tree. Simi- larly, although it also infests the deodar {Cedrus deodar a), it only attacks young sap- lings and seedlings, and is much less happy in this tree, finding the bark and wood too hard for its purpose. Again, the thick rough bark of the Pinus longifolia serves as a deterrent to several bark-beetles which are confined to the smaller branches and twigs of the tree. The conifers when attacked or wounded have the power of exuding masses of resin w^hich are obnoxious to most mature forms of insect life, although the grubs of the same species can exist and flourish in this resin. Numbers of the smaller Buprestidae, Cerambycidae, and most species of the Scoly- tidae which infest Coniferae, are drowned in the outflow of resin put out in response to the tunnelling operations of these insects. The species alluded to tunnel down into the bast (or wood) to prepare galleries in which to lay their eggs. Healthy trees respond to the burrowing of the insect b}- an out- flow of resin which fills the tunnel and drowns the insects. It is only when a tree is so sickly that it has lost the power to answer to such attacks by an outflow of resin in sufficient quantity that the beetles gain the upper hand and kill it. Again, the thick bark of a tree or the thick shell or coat of the fruit or seed Fig. 7. — Young deodar root girdled by root-feeding caterpillar. 12 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS protects them from the attacks of the gall-making insects and from the tapping operations of the plant-lice (aphids) and coccids or scale insects, and from the attacks of the bark- eating caterpillars, which can only attack the softer parts of the tree. In many cases the thinner bark, leaves, flowers, and seeds contain substances such as unpalatable sap, oils, etc., which are distasteful or inimical to insect life, such trees proving more or less immune to serious attack. We turn now to consider briefly the damage which may be done to the individual parts of the tree. Fig. 8. — Root of .haa'a arabica tunnelled by Coelosterna scabrata. ISectle /;/ situ in pupal chamber. Berar. (a) Damage done to the Roots. — Probably greater damage is done to the roots of forest trees in India than the forester has as yet any suspicion of. The thicker roots of the sal- tree are subject to the attacks of Cerambycidae {Hoploceranibyx, p. 320) and, in the portions contiguous to the trunk, of Scolytidae {Sphaero- trypes, p. 481), whilst the bark of the smaller roots is eaten by various species of Melolonthinae (Cock- chafers, p. y^). The roots of young seedlings and saplings of another broad-leaved tree, the babul {Acacia arabica), are tun- nelled into and destroyed by a cer- ambyx beetle {Coelosterna, p. 358), whilst those of young poplar saplings are tunnelled by the caterpillar of a moth {Trochiliniii oiniiatiacfonne), and those of the sandal-wood {Santahim album) by another lepidopterous cater- pillar {Zeuzera coffaea). The roots of deodar seedlings are cut through by the coleopterous wireworm {Elater, p. 230) and the REMARKS ON INJURIOUS AND BENEFICIAL INSECTS 13 lepidopterous cutworm (Agvotis), or girdled by other lepidopterous cater- pillars (cf. fig. 7). The smaller roots of the deodar are subject to the attacks of at least one aphid, and probably other trees are infested in this way by this family, whilst the gall-making families also infest the roots. Casuarina seedlings are destroyed by the grubs of the rhinoceros beetle {Oryctes, p. 87). (b) Damage done to the Stem. — (i) Young Trees. — The stems of young trees are subject to attack in a variety of ways : The young seedling may be destroyed in toto by Orthopterous insects such as locusts (Acridiidae) and crickets {Brachytnipes) ; the green bark and bast may be stripped off them by locusts in the case of Pinus longifolia, and Coleoptera such as Buprestidae {Psiloptcra, p. 199) in the babul, and Cerambycidae [Apriona, p. 374) in the mulberry ; or it may be ringed, as, for example, Poinciana by Xylotrupes (p. 90), deodar by Scolytus deodara (p. 578), and casuarina by Arbela tetraonis. The bast may be tunnelled and destroyed by Scolytidae, examples of which are Polygraphus major (p. 501), in the deodar and blue pine; Curcu- lionidae, such as Cryptorhynchus (p. 428), in the Pinus longifolia and Pinus. khasya. The bast may be tapped by numerous Aphidae, such as the Black Aphid of the blue pine, the Aphid of the Pinus longifolia, the Chermes and Lachnus of the silver fir, the Chermes of the spruce, and the coccid Monophlebus of the sal, teak, sissu, and other trees. (2) Poles. — The stems of poles are subject to attack by many of the insects which infest young trees. Their lower parts are, however, covered by a thicker bark, and this leads to their infestation by species which will not attack younger trees. For example, sal poles may have both bast and wood riddled by cerambyx beetles {Hoplocerambyx and ^olesthes), and the bast consumed by Scolytidae {Sphaerotrypes). Teak is tunnelled by the bee hole-borer caterpillar {Duomitus) and the kulsi-borer {Stroniatium, p. 293). The bast of deodar poles is riddled by Scolytus major (p. 568) and Scolytus minor (p. 577) ; also by Polygraphus major (Scolytidae). (3) Old Stems. — The number of insects which infest the main bole of old trees is very large. The sal, in different parts of the country, has to contend against two large species of cerambycid beetles {Hoplocerambyx and /Eolesthes) which riddle the bast and tunnel deep into the hard wood of green trees; other species of the family destroy the bast only. Two or three species, of Sphaerotrypes act in the same manner. 14 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS The bast of the teak-tree is eaten by the caterpillar of Dnomitus ceramicus, the grub tunnelling into the wood to pupate ; with the subsequent growth of the tree the tunnels become enclosed in the wood, ruining it for large timber purposes. Species of the genus Xyleborns (Scolytidae, p. 582) tunnel down into the timber. Poplar and willow are killed and the wood destroyed by the grubs of the cerambycid beetle ^Eoksihcs sarta (p. 307). The bast of green deodar is destroyed by the buprestid Sphenopteva (p. 204), by the cerambycid Trinophyllum (p. 340), and by the scolytid beetles Scolytus major and S. minor, and the wood of the tree is tunnelled into by the wood- borer Crossotarsiis (p. 613). The bast of the Pinus gcrardiana is riddled and the tree often killed by the beetle Polygraphus trenchi (p. 510). To quote two more instances, the wood of the sissu, acacia, Terminalia, etc., is riddled by the wood-borers Sinoxylon crassum and S. anale (p. 152) and bamboos by Dinoderus (p. 133 and pi. ii). (c) Damage done to the Branches. — The larger branches of the tree, covered by old thick bark, are tunnelled into and destroyed by most of the insects, both bast-eating and wood-boring, which infest the main stem. Where the bark commences to thin out, the insects we have already men- tioned as infesting poles will be found to be present, and they occupy all the part of the crown up to the twigs. A little experience will show that the dividing lines between the species in- festing the areas covered by old thick bark, thin younger bark, and the green cortex-covered twigs, are very fairly sharply marked off, each having their own set of insects. There are, however, some pests which infest every part of the tree with the exception of the young green cortex- covered twigs. The branches of the sal-tree are infested by a small buprestid beetle, Acmaeodera (p. 193), and by a cerambycid, Xylotrechus (p. 347). The twigs and young saplings of the sal-tree suffer severely from the tapping propensi- ties of the Monophlebus scale insect. Fig. 9. — Larval galleries of Hoplo- cerambyx spinicortiis, Newn., in bast and sapwood of sal (much reduced). Plale U. Survey of India Offices. CalouUa.December 1909. BAMBOOS TUNNELLED INTO BY THE BAMiJQO BOBEB, , TJJNODERUS MINUTfTS ' C'a|>1_;iin A. Mo L'orinick, H . K . I'hoto. REMARKS ON INJURIOUS AND BENEFICIAL INSECTS 15 (d) Damage done to the Young Twigs. — The young twif^s have a set of pests which usually confine themselves to these parts of the tree. Some of them will also be found to infest seedlings and saplings. The smaller branches and twigs of the tun-tree are tunnelled and destroyed by the tun-tree borer (Hypsipyla) . Scolytus minor is to be found in the bast of deodar twigs, both in saplings and old trees, whilst a smaller scolytid (p. 528) is to be found mining the smaller twigs. The twigs of the spruce and silver fir suffer from the attacks of a Ciiennes (C. hinialayaisis), which forms galls upon and aborts and kills the former, whilst curling up and killing the latter. The Pinus lon^ifolia suffers from a pyralid caterpillar which hollows out the extremities of the branches and kills them. The twigs of the teak, Boswellia, Pinus longifolia, silver fir, blue pine, etc., are destroyed by tiny scoly- tid pests {Cryphalus, Pityophthorns, PP- 533> 551)- {e) Damage done to the Buds. — The buds of forest trees doubtless suffer a very considerable amount of as yet unappreciated injury from insects. The buds of the sal in Assam are destroyed by a small microlepidop- terous caterpillar. It is on the winter bud of the spruce that the Chermes \v'\ntev female feeds, and sets up an irritation which subsequently results in a gall en- closing her progeny, the bud being ■entirely destroyed. Fu;. 10. — Inner surface of the bark oi Pimis gerardiana, showing the ^gg and larval galleries of Polygraphus trenchi, Steb. i6 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS The buds of Pijius longi folia suffer from the attacks of a cecidomyid fly which causes pseudo-galls to be formed. (/) Damage done to the Leaves. — ^Everyone is acquainted with the damage done to the leaves of trees by insects. The result is commonly seen in the ragged edges of partially eaten leaves, in holes eaten out of the inner portions, in the epidermis of the upper or lower surface being eaten, or the parenchyma between the epidermis being consumed or mined by tunnels, in the leaf being "skeletonized," the parenchyma being eaten and the veins left, or finally in entirely defoliated trees. Or again a great web like a gigantic mass of spiders'-webs is seen in the branches of a tree, the leaves in its vicinity being probably mostly stripped off. This, is the home of a society of what have been called the "tent caterpillars," because they thus live together, for a portion of this stage of their existence, in a kind of immense house or tent, usually issuing out to feed at night. The insect pests which feed upon the leaves of the forest trees are legion. Some of the more important are now known. For instance, the sal-tree in Assam is at times entirely stripped of all green leaves- over hundreds of square miles of country by species of caterpillars- belonging to the family Lymantriidae {Lyniantria spp.). In the United Provinces the same tree suffers from the attacks of the looper cater- pillar Boaniiia sclcnaria, and from those of the noctuid moth Ingura subapicalis, whilst in the Central Provinces, again, the larvae of the latter and of the moths Lymantria semicincta, Trahala vishnUy and Suana sp. are the worst defoliators of the tree. The defoliation to which the teak- tree is subject from the larvae of the moths Hyblcea puera and Pyrausta machaeralis is well known. Large forests of this tree in the Central Provinces, Bombay, Madras, and Burma are at times completely defoliated,. or the leaves are skeletonized and killed by one or both of these species- working together. The deodar in the North-West Himalayan forests is occasionally stripped of its needles by a species of geometrid caterpillar {Gcometrina)^ blocks of forest being completely defoliated. The oaks {Quercns incana, Q. dilatata, and Q. seinicarpifolia) of these Himalayan areas are also defoliated by species of Tortrix and Tinea caterpillars, whilst the horse-chestnut is occasionally completely de- foliated by the caterpillars of the moth Acronycta anaedina. The looper grubs of the moth Bistria suppressaria defoliate several species of trees in the Murree hills. Again, the oak {Q. lanicllosa) of the Darjeeling forests in the Eastern Himalaya is defoliated by the caterpillars of species of Gazalina. But defoliation is not always the result of caterpillar attacks. The. sissu in the Sutlej Valley, and probably throughout the North-West Himalayan valleys, is defoliated by a small weevil named Apoderus (p. 418).. REMARKS ON INJURIOUS AND BENEFICIAL INSECTS 17 Many of the Chrysomelidae beetles feed upon leaves, such as the Podoniia beetle (p. 258) which defoliates the Spondias mangiferae and Ficus elastica ; and an Aphis so reduces the vitality of the needle-bearing twigs of the blue pine that the needles fall either wholly or in part. These are but a few instances of the serious defoliation to which trees are subject by insect pests. {g) Damage done to the Inflorescence.— It is probable that the in- florescence suffers very seriously from the attacks of insects. I have as yet but a few actually observed examples. The commonest form of attack is for the eggs to be deposited in or on the inflorescence, and for the resulting grubs to mature in and gradually destroy the developing fruit or seed. The blister beetle {Mylabris, p. 247) actually feeds upon and destroys the flowers of the Artocarpus and many shrubs such as the Hibiscus, etc. The caterpillars of the moth Boarmia selenaria devour the inflores- cence of the sal-tree in the forests of the United Provinces Terai and Siwalik areas. (h) Damage done to the Fruits and Seeds. — A great deal of investigation work remains to be carried out in the study of the damage done by insects to the fruits, and seeds of forest trees in India. Sal seed in Assam is infested by the caterpillars of several species of small moths [Conogethes, Laspeyresia, and Cacoecia), and also by a small scolytid beetle {Coccotrypes, p. 543). In the United Provinces and Siwaliks the caterpillars of other species of moths (the pyralid Dichrocosis Icptalis and Microlepidoptera) are responsible for the failure of what may promise to be a good seed year. The cones of the chief conifers of the North-West Himalayan forests, the deodar, silver fir, spruce, and blue pine, are infested by one or both of the caterpillars of the moths Phycita ahietella and Euzophera cedrella. The Quercus incana seed is infested by a small weevil, Calandra, p. 446. Small bruchid beetles, species of Caryoborus, are responsible for damage to the seed of Banhinia, Tamarindns, Cassia, whilst the small caterpillars of the moths Trachylepidea friicticasiclla and Cryptophlebia carpophaga infest the seeds in the long pods of Cassia fistula and C. occidentalis. The acorns of the oak Q. semicarpifolia are destroyed by the grubs of the hymenopterous fly Callirhytis seniicarpifoliae. (0 Damage done to the Timber. — Every forester is aware that once the tree is dead the timber is liable to a more or less rapid decay, the rapidity depending to some extent on climatic and surrounding influences. In India a variety of insects play a very important part in assisting this falling off in quality of the timber. The attacks of others lower the market value of the timber owing to the presence of galleries and holes on theouter sapwoodor in the heart-wood, as in the case of the sandalwood longicorn beetle (cf. pi. iii and p. 380). The number of timber-boring insects is very large, some of the chief pests being found in the families Bostrychidae, Elateridae, Cerambycidae, Curculionidae, Scolytidae, Platypodidae, Termitidae, Siricidae, Cossidae, etc. 9003 B i8 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS II. General Remarks on the Methods by which the Insects of Use to the Forester accomplish their "Work. The insects of use to the forester may kill either the egg, larva, pup)a, or imago stage of the host insect upon which they prey, or they may destroy more than one of these stages of their host. (a) Predators, or Insects which prey directly upon injurious FOREST insect PESTS WHICH THEY COMSUME AT ONCE AS FOOD. Investigation in the Indian forests has shown that the forester is assisted in his work of protecting the trees from injury by a variety of insect helpers. Up in the North-Western Himalaya probably one of the chief insects of importance in this category is the scolytid bark- and wood-borer predator Thanasimus himalayensis (p. i86), discovered in 1902, the imago of which feeds voraciously upon most of the Himalayan coniferous bark- and wood-boring scolytids. This insect takes the place of the well-known Clems formicarius of the German coniferous areas. The grubs of this beetle (which preys upon the scolytids outside the tree) feed upon the bark-beetle grubs in their tunnels in the bast layer. Fig. \\.— Tha- a second species of the same family, Tillus, enters the >/astmus hwia- t^jf^j-,gis of the bamboo-borer Dinodems minutus, and feeds upon ayen-Ms, . ., ^j_^^ larvae and pupae of this bostrychid {vide p. 186). prCQclCGOUS up- -T JT J •- X on Scolvtidae Another useful bark-beetle predator in these forests is in the Western the histerid Niponius canalicollis, first discovered in igoi. Himalaya. This beetle follows the bark-beetles into their tunnels, notably Scolytus and Polygraphus, and preys upon the eggs and grubs and pupae in one or more of the metamorphoses. Another species of the same genus preys in a similar manner upon the sal Sphaerotrypes beetles in the United Provinces and Assam, and upon the Sphaerotrypes of the Anogeissus in Madras. Several other histerids (Paromalus, Platysoma) prey in a similar manner upon the scolytid bark-borers Polygraphus and Tomicus, and upon the wood-borers Rhyncholus and Hylastes. Other histerids, again, species of the genus Teretviosoma (p. 104), prey upon the bostrychid wood-borers Sinoxylon crassum (p. 152) and S. analc (p 167), which infest the sissu-tree. Observations carried out over a period of ten years have, I think, estab- lished the fact that certain species of histerids have adapted their mode of life to that of the insects upon which they prey. Those species, so far as at present observed, which prey upon bark-boring Scolytidae obtain entrance to the tree by crawling down the tunnels made by their hosts. Species of Niponius, Platysoma, Paromalus, Tcretriosoma, Tcretrius, all act in this manner. This point is further referred to under the familv. I'l.All.. 111. i*.t^ .:*- Section ot a sandal-wood log showing the larval galleries of Coclostcrna ? sp. in the outer sapwood. The presence of these galleries greatly reduces the sale price of the wood. North Coimbatore, Madras, 1902. REMARKS ON INJURIOUS AND BENEFICIAL INSECTS 19 The larf^e ground -beet Ic Anthia sexgnttata (p. 95) feeds upon the cater- piUars of the hawk moth Pseudosphinx in Berar and Bom- bay, upon Sinoxy- lon (p. 173), and probably upon other insects. A species of Bothrideres (p, 112) preys upon the grubs of the cerambyx beetle Hoplo- cer aniby X in Assam, whilst another destroys the wood-borer Sinoxylon, as also do species of Alindria (p. 114) and Mclanibia (p. 114). Another c o 1 eo pt erous genus, Hectar- thi'uni (p. 116), preys upon the Sinoxylon wood- borers in the Cen- tral Provinces, upon platypid borers (p. 611) and termites in M i I u i s a and Anogeissus in Lower Burma, and upon the Di- noderus bamboo- borers (p. 140). * .^ ^^|\ T' fr> Fig. 12. — I'uiiuiii (I siein nfi dead Ihilbcrgia sp., showing the targe pupating chambers in the wood of the elater Alaus pui/iclns, and the tunnels and entrance bores of a platypid beetle in the timber. B 2 20 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS Small bast-living forms of the Staphylinidae also prey upon various scolytid bark-borers or their grubs. Many of the Coccinellidae are active predators both in the grub and beetle stage. For instance, the coccinellid Vedalia (p. 125) preys upon the sal coccid scale insect Monophlehns stcbbiugii, whilst the cosmopolitan Coccinella septempnnctata (p. 123) preys upon the Aphis of the blue pine, the Lachnus of the silver fir, and upon the young grubs of the Chermes himalayensis. The beetle Cissites (p. 248) oviposits in the tunnels of the carpenter bee, Xylocopa latipes, in pyinkadu, its grubs feeding upon those of the latter. Finally, to come to the Rhynchota, the bug Erthesina fullo feeds upon the caterpillars of the sal-defoliator Boarmia selettaria in the United Fig. ii.—Hectarthrum uni- Provinces Terai forests. fortne^ Waterh., which 5"S.-;r^iS? In (^) Parasites, or Insects which live parasiti- Tenasserim. CALLY UPON INJURIOUS SPECIES, SLOWLY KILLING THEM. The number of insect parasites, as also of that far less-known branch, the fungus parasites, of the insect world is very great. The forester, and more especially the forester in India, where the individual charges are of such vast size and the forests of such enormous extent, is very largly dependent upon the parasites which decimate and keep in check the insect foes of his trees. It is therefore of considerable importance that he should be able to recognize the presence and abundance of such valuable coadjutors in his work of protection. That this is by no means a difficult feat will soon become evident to the forest-trained eye. One has only to repair to a felling area, and carefully scrutinize felled trees which have been lying in the forest from two to three weeks with the bark on. The presence of various bark-borers will soon be noted, intent on tunnelling into the tree to eat out their egg-galleries in which to oviposit, or crawling over the bark searching for a favourable spot to start their tunnelling operations. In the Western Himalaya the predator Thanasinius may be noted flying round or running quickly up the bark, searching eagerly for the bark-beetles. Watch closely and you will see numbers of minute flies hovering about, or settling upon the bark and disappearing down the entrances to the tunnels made by bark-beetles who have already got well down through the bark and reached the bast. These flies are parasitic insects, the friends of the forester. They creep down the tunnels of the bark-borers and lay their eggs in the galleries in the bast. The young grubs, on hatching from these eggs, feed parasitically upon the grubs of the bark-borer, clinging REMARKS ON INJURIOUS AND BENEFICIAL INSECTS 21 to them as external parasites and gradually sucking their life out. Or, again, the mother fly may deposit her egg or eggs actuall\' in the grubs of the host insect through a small orifice pricked in the skin. The parasitic grubs will then live inside the host-grubs as internal parasites. Some of these parasites of wood-infesting insects are of considerable size, and may be specially furnished with a long apparatus at the end of the body termed an ovipositor. This the female inserts down through crevices of thick-barked trees such as the spruce of the Western Himalaya, so as to reach the egg or young larva of the host. An example of this class is the Rhyssa Ichneumon which parasitizes the Sirex saw-fly. It will be found to be a common rule in the case of many of these parasitic grubs that they do not immediately kill the host-grub. The latter grows on until it reaches full size and has carried out all its duties up to the preparation '"^^^ of the pupal chamber. The larva gradually grows feebler and feebler, and, finally, its work done, dies of exhaustion. The parasitic grub has by then reached full growth, and pupates in the pupal chamber of its host, the fly maturing here and escaping from the trees by various methods, which differ for different species, to seek out a mate, when the cycle is commenced over again. The large number of parasites which prey upon caterpillars live in much the same way, ^^^ i^.-^yssa persuasoria, usually as internal parasites. When the Linn., parasitic on 5'?>^,r zw/^r/ai/zj. caterpillar has reached full growth and dies ^.W. Himalaya. of exhaustion, they may pierce through its dried skin and pupate outside close by, or they may wait till the caterpillar has formed its chrysalis case. The caterpillar pupa then dies and shrivels up inside, its place being occu- pied by the now fully-grown parasitic grub (or grubs), which pupates inside the chrysalis case. A few instances of useful parasites to the forester may be quoted as examples. The order Hymenoptera contains families of great importance in this direction ; the Ichneumonidae, Chalcididae, and Braconidae, for instance. Species of Ichneumon of use in the forest are numerous. Rhyssa persuasoria is parasitic upon the grubs of the Sirex imperialis, which tunnel into spruce timber. Its grubs live as external parasites and accompany the Sirex grubs into the heart of the tree. A species of Ichneumon, a small fly, lays its eggs in the tunnels of the deodar pest, Scolytns major (p. 568), the grub also feeding as an external parasite upon the bark-borer grub. 22 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS Other species of Chalcid and Pouipilins are parasitic upon the Poly^raphm and Toinicus bark-boring beetles (pp. 519 and 556). The Ichneumon Ephialtcs viridipcnnis is parasitic upon the deodar buprestid Sphcnoptera (p. 204). Another Ichneumon, Ophion aureolatus, Cameron, is parasitic upon the horse-chestnut defoliator, Acroiiycta anacdi)ia. Species of Glypta and Pimpla are parasitic upon the caterpillars of the teak defoliator, Hyblwa puera. A species of Meteones is parasitic upon the caterpillar {Tinea sp.) defoliating the Kharshu oak, Q. semicarpifolia. Species of Chalcididae are parasitic upon Poly tcra atcvriiiia and the ccrambycid Trinophylluiii cribyatiini. Green deodar-trees were felled under the orders of the Divisional Officer, Mr. V. Monro, at the end of May igo8, and watched throu<;hout the year and up to June of the following year. The observations so made and the specimens taken enabled the life histories of these two pests to be definitely ascertained. It is now known that each takes a whole year to pass through one life - cycle (cf. p. 205 a n d p. 341), and that the beetles ma- ture and leave the trees at the end of May or in I he first fort- night of June, and lay their eggs in n e w 1 }■ felled fresh sappy trees or in standing green sickly ones. The life his- tory of an Ich- neumon fly, Ephialtes, which parasitizes the buprestid grub has also been worked out through the year (see p. 207). The impor- tance of thus in- vestigating the life histories of all the principal bark- and wood- feeding pests of' the more impor- tant trees cannot be too strongh' insisted upon. 9003 Fig. 19. — Egg and larval galleries oi SpJiaerotrypes skualikensis, Steb., on inner surface of sal bark, showing the " plan " of the galleries. 34 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS That the work is a comparatively simple one to put through will be fairly obvious from the above descriptions of the methods necessary to undertake it. Many of the head-quarter houses of the Range Officers are situated in the immediate vicinity of the forests under their charge. By felling a couple of trees somewhere close to the range house they would be able to visit the trees twice a month without any very serious inter- ruption to their executive duties. The value of the observations they would thus be able to record is almost incalculable, and would result in the local Forest Officer soon being placed in the possession of the life histories of all his more serious pests. This of course presupposes that a course of Forest Zoology is included in the education of the Range Officer. Fk;. 20. — Sphaertytrypcs sinnilikensis, Steb. X 10. A sal-tree bark-lx)ier. Siwaliks, N. India. ( 35 ) CHAPTER IV. ON METHODS OF PREVENTING INSECT ATTACKS IN THE FOREST AND OF COMBATING THOSE TAKING PLACE. 1. — Liability of Forests to Insect Invasion. It has been often remarked in India in the past, that there is Httle danger of serious insect invasions being experienced in the forests of the country — serious enough, that is, to kill off the trees over large areas. It has also Fig. 2 1. — Chilgoza pine-trees infested and killed by the bark -borer Polygraph lis trenchi, Steb. Zhob, Baluchistan. been repeatedly said that even were such attacks experienced, it would be impossible to do anything to combat the insects or save the trees. In the past I admit there was much apparent reason to support such statements. The forests had been taken over by the department for the most part in a hopeless state of mismanagement, and many had all the appearance of being ruined for good. It is not surprising that under these conditions to worry about attacks of insect pests taking place in devastated woods was, c 2 36 IXDIAX FOREST INSECTS considered an absurdity. The work of the past half-cent luy has, however, entirely changed the position of affairs and the condition and appearance of many of the forests. What formerly had all the appearance of being worthless waste lands have now become well-ordered estates of considerable and increasing value. What were once disorganized, almost disforested (so far as valuable timber went) areas are now being brought under fine normal crops of valuable timber of an almost incalculable value to the well- being of the country at large. The time, therefore, when the officers of the department could afford to regard with tranquillity the possibility of insect invasion as a danger not of their time or day is past. In the well-ordered management of the forests which has now taken the place of the chaos which formerly reigned, in the yearly increasing density of the crops per acre compared with what formerly stood there under the conditions pertaining to primeval forests and in the period which followed when many of the forests had been cut out, in the careful fire-protection instituted over large areas throughout the country, and finally with the vagaries of the Indian climate ever holding the countrv at their mercy and leading to unprecedented increases in the numbers of a pest at a few short weeks' or months' notice in the event of the occur- rence of an unusually dry season or series of dry seasons — in all these influences we see the scale turned against the forest and in favour of the insect, and it cannot therefore be too strongly emphasized that the day of immunity from insect attacks on a large scale in the forests of India is rapidly drawing to a close. What is the experience of the world ? The European forest management, that of Germany and France, has been held up to the Indian Forest Service as the ideal to aim at. But neither in Germany nor France have they been able, to reduce the science of forestry to such a degree of exactitude as to prevent serious plagues of insects from devastating the forests. And this with a sound knowledge of forestry science, and a plethora of specialists at their back. They know how to combat a serious attack in Germany and France ; they know how to recognize it in its earliest phases', and so how to reduce its effects and the resultant monetary loss to a minimum. But they cannot foretell an attack before it has actually begun, or is about to commence, any more than they can stop it taking place. America, again, has suffered serious losses from insect infestations, and these have been experienced in the past as a direct outcome of hopeless mismanagement of the forests and wanton destruction by fire and axe. But, as we have seen, well-ordered forests are equall\' liable to such invasions. Wherever there is a proper conservancy, and the nearer this conservancy approaches to a maximum of efficiency and intensity of management, the danger of insect iinasion is inevitably enhanced. An msect attack may commence after a bad fire on an area, or as a result of severe snow-break, or windfalls after severe storms. ON METHODS OF PREVENTING INSECT ATTACK 37 A storm in the Vosges Mountains in 1902 blew down over one and a quarter million cubic metres of coniferous trees in a few hours. A severe bark-beetle attack commenced shortly afterwards, the first lot of beetles being reared in the windfalls. As soon as the windfalls were too dry or had been removed, the beetles went to the green standing trees (silver fir and spruce) in the neighbouring woods, and 14,603 trees had to be cut out and barked before the attack was stamped out ; thus upsetting the working plan. And it is not only in coniferous forests that the danger is to be feared, although the trees in these forests do not so readily recover from insect attack as is the case with broad- leaved species. India has already had some first experiences of the power of the insect over its tree-host. The attack of bark beetles {Poly- graphiis and Phloeodnus) experienced in the Pinus gerardiana forests in North Zhob, Baluchistan, between 1903 and 1906, resulted in a heavy loss of valuable trees, and had it not been taken in time might well have resulted in the disappearance of the forest altogether (^fig. 21 and p. 510). The Quetta borer {Aiolcsthcs, p. 307), attack practically destroyed the major portion of the beautiful avenues of Quetta between igoo and 1905, cost a considerable sum of money to get rid of, and an addi- tional expenditure in replanting. Bark-borers {Scolytns and Tonii- cus) made their appearance in the Bashahr State in 1900, and but for the prompt steps taken by Mr. B. Ribbentrop, CLE., at the time Mr. Minniken, who was in charge of the division, a considerable number of deodar and blue-pine trees would have been killed. In the Simla Catchment Area a bark-beetle attack suddenly made its appearance early in 1908, and but for the action taken by the Divisional Officer, Mr. V. Munro, and his assistant. Pandit Gokal Dass, Extra-Assistant Conservator of Forests, would have undoubtedly developed into a dangerous Fig. 22. — Egg-galleries of shol>i, Steb., in Pinus bark from North Zhob. PJiloeosintis gerardiana Inspector-General of Forests, and 38 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS attack under which many trees would have been lost and the water supply have been to some extent endangered. In the Bre forests in Chamba State numbers of trees were killed out on an important Catchment x\rea between igo6 and igo8, without the true source of danger being understood. I inspected many of these trees in 1909, and they had all been killed by bark-borers. Deodar sowings in the nursery and out in the forest have suc- cumbed to attacks of insects on a larger scale than has been recognised in the past, owing chiefly to the life histories of the insects concerned not having been known or understood. And the same applies to the loss of young Pinus longifolia plants in plantations in the Naini Tal Division and in the district forests under the attacks of the cryptorhynchid weevil (p. 428). Heavy crops of seed of both coniferous and broad-leaved trees are almost entirely lost under the attacks of grubs of weevils, Scolytidae, and the caterpillars of small moths, thus seriously interfering with the regeneration of the forests. Other instances might be quoted, but enough has been said to endorse the contention that the Indian forests are as liable to serious infestation from insects as are those of other countries, where an efficient Forest Department is engaged in improving the forest areas entrusted to its charge. 2. Aids to Insect Increase and Depredation. There are various ways in which unpremeditated assistance is given to an insect, enabling it to increase in a forest in such numbers as finally to become a danger to the very existence of the trees themselves. (i) Pure Woods. — The first of such causes is to be looked for in the creation of pure forests as against mixed ones. The bulk of the natural forests in the country are mixed ones in which one or more predominant species occur in company with a variety of, at present, less abundant or less important ones. The danger from insect invasion in this class of forests is much less than in the case of pure forests — i.e., forests consisting of one species of tree only. In these latter the insect, finding dense contiguous masses of its food plant available, may, given favourable climatic conditions, increase in such numbers as seriously to threaten the life of the forest as a whole. As an instance, a note of warning has been already struck in the case of forests of pure deodar in the Himalaya. The tree suffers from the attacks of several dangerous scolytid pests {Scolytus), as also from a buprestid and a longicorn {Sphcnoptcra and Tvinophyllum). Already on several occasions trees have been found killed by these pests at a centre or at more than one centre in the deodar areas. Instances are not wanting to show that Finns longifolia in dense pure forests is likely to suffer seriously from the attacks of the weevil Cryptorhynchus (fig. 23), from those of the longicorn NotJwrrhina, ON METHODS OF PRE\i:XTIN(i INSECT ATTACK 39 and two bark-boring beetles. In fact, the formation of pure woods in the Western Hima- laya is, from the point of view of the great danger to which they are liable from insect attacks, to be depre- cated. Again, the pure casu- arina plantations of the east coast of Madras have suffered to some extent from the at- tacks of several insect pests, amongst the worst being those of the larva of the moth Arhela tctraonis. (2) Mixed Woods. — It is perhaps too early yet to dis- cuss the question of the formation of mixed woods in India. Natural mixtures predominate throughout the country, and our knowledge of the insect pests of the trees is as yet too imperfect to enable definite statements to be made save in one or two cases. For instance, there is a scolytid beetle (Polygraphiis) which attacks young blue pine. When the trees are too few in number to provide sufficient food for it, it will attack the deodar. Thus a mixture of a few blue pine amongst deodar is bad, since it exposes the deodar to attack from an insect which does not ordinarily in- fest it. I have seen two instances of this nature. The bark-beetle attack in the Sim- la Catchment Area of igo8 was aided in this manner. The area contains few blue Frr,. 23. — I'oition of a young Finns longifolia pole, showing the larval galleries of Cryptorhynchus brandid, Steb., in the bast layer and outer sap- wood. Near the top a larva is shown in situ in a gallery ; an exit-hole of a weevil is seen in the bark at the bottom. Kumaun, N.W. Himalaya. 40 INDIAiN FOREST INSECTS pine, and these merely served as death traps for the deodar. At Pajidhar in Jaunsar I saw a small plantation of young deodar entirely killed by this overflow of the Polygrapiius from the already fully occupied blue pine. In the same way if the casuarina of the East Coast plantations is mixed with another species of tree to minimize the attacks of the Arbela cater- pillar, care must be taken that a species is chosen which is not itself attacked by the caterpillar. For Mr. C. E. C. Fischer has shown that the larva feeds on the bark of a number of trees in addition to that of the casuarina. (3) Felling Operations. — Properly regulated forest management ordains that the forest shall be kept free of all dying trees, dead material, tops and windfalls, etc. In the large areas which fall to the charge of the executive officer in India this ideal is not at present a possibility. Something more might, however, be attempted than is at present usually the case. The annual felling operations as undertaken throughout the country are a direct source of assistance to the insect pests of the forest. The difficulty in dealing with the tops, an enormous mass of branch wood, is at present in many instances an insuperable one over large areas where the management is on the selection system. The same difficulty does not, however, apply to the boles of the felled trees, which often lie in the forest from two to three months after felling before being finally cut up and removed. In these boles thus left unbarked incredible numbers of bark-boring beetles are bred. To quote a few instances. In Jaunsar I calculated in igo2 that the trunk of a large felled deodar go ft. in length from base of butt to the first branch (diameter, 3 ft. at base and 10 in. at top) gave rise to 54,000 beetles, allowing for casualties. Again, whilst in the Goalpara forests with Mr. Perree it was proved beyond question that the larvae of the longicorn Hoplocerambyx spinicornis, which lays its eggs in crevices of the bark of newly felled or dying standing sal-trees, get down into the sapwood of the bole within a week of hatching out, and that barking subsequently to this will not save the timber of that bole from being riddled and ruined by the large tunnels of this pest. In this case not only does the felled tree breed up future beetles, but at the same time the timber itself is ruined. In a perhaps lesser degree this is true in the sal areas of the United Provinces Terai and Central Pro- vinces. The same tree if left unbarked after felling breeds out thousands of the bark beetles of the genus Sphacrotrypcs, a species of which infests the sal of the United Provinces Terai, the Central Provinces, and Assam. In fact, there is no tree in India subject to the attacks of bark beetles which if felled and left unbarked in the forest for a couple of months but gives a home to thousands of maturing beetles which on leaving it search for other similar felled trees or standing sickly ones in which to oviposit. For it must be borne in mind that these bark beetles pass through from three to five generations or life-cycles in the year. Consequently when the felling Plate V. Larval galleries of Capnodis i/uiua, Lliuins., uii llic inner surface of the bark of Piiiiis loiii^i/olia. Chamba, North-West Himalaya. ON METHODS OF PREVENTING INSECT ATTACK 41 season closes at the end of March in the plains the beetles bred out of the felled trees must seek standing diseased trees in the forest or wind- falls in which to oviposit, and failing such must infest green trees ; for fresh living bast and sapwood is a necessity for their larvae, which can neither live nor find sustenance save in sappy fresh bast and sap- wood. The point of the argument is, then, that though at present the number of beetles breeding in the tops of felled trees cannot be prevented, in the plains at any rate, it would be advisable to insert a clause in the felling contractor's agreement making it imperative that the trees he fells should be at once barked. Such a clause would do a great deal towards keeping down some of the most serious of the pests of the trees. In the coniferous forests, where the danger from bark beetles is far greater than in the broad-leaved areas, the thicker branches of the tops should also be barked, and wherever possible the tops should be burnt or at least have the outer bark carbonized so as to render it unpalatable to bark beetles. (4) Fires. — The danger to be feared from fire running through a forest is due to the fact that a number of trees, the number depending upon the intensity of the fire, are liable to become weakened in health and thus to lose vitality. In this state they afford suitable material for the oviposition purposes of bast- and wood-feeding beetles, and, under the attacks of these, trees which might otherwise have recovered in time, finally suc- cumb and die. The danger from fires overrunning a forest, so far as subsequent insect attack goes, is greater in coniferous forests than in broad- leaved ones. Present observations would seem to indicate that fires in deodar, blue- pine, or spruce forests in the Western Himalaya are, if the trees are at all scorched, almost invariably followed by an attack of the deodar Scolytu^ beetles, and the spruce and blue-pine Tomicus and PolygrapJms. In the Pimis longifoUa areas the fires which sweep over considerable tracts of the Kumaun district forests have led to the trees being seriously attacked in parts by the Cryptorhynchus weevil, the Capnodis and Anthaxia buprestids, the Nothorrhina longicorn, and the Tomicus and Polygraphns bark beetles. After a fire has occurred in a coniferous area in the Himalaya the closest scrutiny should be kept on the trees during the following two years, and those seen to be infested with bark beetles should be cut out, cut up, and the bark burnt. Similarly, when a severe fire has run through an area of young sal-tree growth, trees whose vitality has been much lowered will be infested by the Sphacrotrypes bark beetles. The timber of trees dying or newly killed by fire is at once infested by Sinoxylon and other wood-borers ; sissu, sal, Tenninalia, Pterocarpus, etc., being liable to such attack. 42 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS (5) Natural Phenomena—Windfalls, Snow-break, Frost, etc. — At present the danger from excessive windfalls taking place is only likely to occur either in plantations or in the Himalayan coniferous areas. Damage resulting from devastating cyclones, however, such as the Chittagong cyclone of October 1897, which swept a clear strip several miles in width through the forests of the Chittagong Hill Tracts, the whole of the forest being laid low, is almost certain to be followed by the increase of one or more bad forest pests. One of the results of the above-mentioned cyclone was that the )mili bamboo {Melocanna bamhnsioides) sprang up in thousands on the area cleared of trees by the cyclone, and this sudden increase in its food- plant was foUow^ed b}- the appearance of enormous numbers of the Cyrto- trachclus longipes weevil, which oviposits on this bamboo (p. 440). It is chiefly, however, in coniferous forests that the danger from windfalls, as also from snow-break, is greatest and most to be feared. Thrown deodar, blue pine, spruce, and long-leaved pine are all immediately attacked by scolytid bark-boring pests or by buprestid and longicorn ones within a week or two of their fall, unless this takes place in the winter. In the latter event the first generation of beetles to appear in the spring will oviposit in the fallen trees. The deodar buprestid Sphenoptera and the Scolytiis beetles have been found in large numbers in snow-broken deodar on many occasions. The danger from frost is probably greatest in the plains, and especially when abnormally severe frosts are experienced in areas which are usually either entirely free from frost or are only subject to light ones. Severe frosts in such localities leave a large number of trees in a more or less temporarily moribund condition. The trees will not die if they are given time to recover and are not subject to any further strain. Such trees are, however, in the condition in which they are most easily assailable by their bark- and wood-boring enemies, and these kill off many a tree which but for their attacks would have recovered itself in the course of two or three years. The great frosts of February 1905 are a case in point. Great damage was done to the forests over a large tract of country, of which records are to be found in the Indian Forester * I had an opportunity of examining a con- siderable area of the sal forests of the United Provinces Terai and Siwaliks, including Philibhit, also some of the sal areas in the Central Provinces, and my observations tabulated showed that in many places trees weakened by the frosts had been subsequently killed by the bark-borer Sphacrotrypcs and the longicorns JEolesthes and Hoplocerambyx. I made some careful notes in the Siwaliks and United Provinces Terai in 1906, 1907, and 1908 on the after- results of the frosts of 1905. I found that numbers of the younger sal-trees whose upper half had been killed by the frost were attacked below by Sphaerutrypcs siwalikensis, and that both this beetle and the /Eolesthes appeared in many of the older, thicker trees whose vitality had been greatly * Indian Forester^ vol. xxxi, pp. 337' 435, 438, 496, 569 ; xxxii, pp. 24, 34: ON iMETHODS OF PREVENTING INSECT ATTACK 43 impaired In' the frost. The forests were full of stag-headed trees or poles with their upper parts dead, and the fact that the presence of the insects was not more apparent was simply due to the large number of weakly and d}'ing trees for them to breed in. The after-effects of severe frosts in young pole forests will need very careful watching in future, since the crops on the ground are, with better and closer management, yearly becoming more dense, and thus more susceptible to insect attacks. 3. Methods of Ascertaining the Presence of Insects in the Forests and of Preventing' Damage. The abundance of particular insect pests in an area of forest may be ascertained in various ways, depending to a great extent on the life history of the individual pest. For instance, defoliating caterpillars when in abundance soon make their presence evident by stripping the leaves from the trees. A knowledge of the full life history and appearance of these insects will, however, enable the forester to be forearmed against this form of attack, for before the larvae appear in swarms sufficient to completely defoliate the trees, the moths must have previously been swarming on the wing in the forest, laying the eggs from which the larvae hatched out. Therefore, if you have the knowledge which will enable you to recognize the moth you will have been forearmed against a probable serious attack of the caterpillars. Reports have often been forwarded to me that in such a month small moths have been seen in great numbers iiying about the trees. A few weeks later these trees have been stripped bare of all foliage. The life histories of the insects being unknown, however, the knowledge which would ha^'e connected the first appearance of the moths with a probable subsequent severe defoliating attack was absent. The seed of trees is also subject to attack by caterpillars, the sal by the larvae of Coccotrypes sp. (p. 543) and the caterpillars of species of Conogethes, Laspeyresia, Cacoccia, etc., and the deodar, silver fir, spruce, and blue pine by caterpillars of the moths Phycita ahietclla and Euzophcra cedyella. If the small moths of these species are ver\' abundant in the sal forests just before the rains, it may be taken as almost certain that the seed crop the follow^ing year will be severely attacked, and will be practically a failure. Similarh', in the case of the conifers, if the moths of the two species above mentioned are numerous in the forests in September and October, the probabilities are that the cones of the following season will be riddled by caterpillars, and the production of seed be very scanty or nil. These inferences are not of course certainties, since a long, cold, wet spring in either case may result in many of the young caterpillars hatching out of the eggs laid by the moths on the twigs of the trees being killed before they have got into the interior of the seed or down into the cone. INDIAN FOREST INSECTS It is not possible, however, to obtain a previous warning in all cases. For instance, the Mono- phlebiis sal scale, which infests the ^ sal in the Siwaliks and United Provinces sal forests, generally affords, so far as is at present known, no such previous evidence of a bad attack — such attacks, e.g., as were experienced between i8g8 , I and 1902 in this region. • The forester is on safer ground when he wishes to ascertain the ;.j; abundance in the forest of the ''" bark- and wood-boring pests of his trees. It is always possible for him to keep himself posted with practi- cal certainty on this point. If you walk through a wood in Germany or France you will find felled green trees at intervals lying to one side of the road or path. These trees have been felled with the express purposeof enabling the forest officer to keep himself informed as to the presence of and abundance of the ? ' bark-boring and timber-boring in- sect pests which infest the parti- cular species of tree of which his forest is composed. By cutting off |; ; a square of bark at the period at K^ which he knows the insects will *f be on the wing in the forest, he will be able at once to ascertain their abundance. For both bark- borers and wood -borers will resort to these freshly felled trees to o\'i- posit instead of searching for sickly ■ trees or fresh windfalls in the forest itself. He will, therefore, find these ;' insects at work boring through the « bark to oviposit in the bast, or tun- nelling down into the timber to , . r ■ r . -i • hiy their eggs there. If at any Fig. 24.— Iiilenor of section of a stem, showing -^ . /^'= ■' pupating-chambers of a longicorn beetle. period he finds these trees lull ot I'iATK VI. Piece ot spruce i):irk showm- Uic (.■iitrance-holes of Tomictis and roly^raphus bark-borers on the outside of the tree. The large holes are those of the saw-fly Sirex imperialis. North- West Himalava. ON METHODS OF PREVENTING INSECT ATTACK 45 insects he will have early information that an attack on a severe scale is imminent, and will be able to take his measures in time to combat it. And to be ready for such an attack means the possibility of stamping it out before it assumes proportions against which nothing short of felling on a wholesale scale will make headway. Trees felled in this manner partake of the nature of what are called "trap trees," the use of which will be described later on. With regard to the prevention of damage from insects when we have ascertained that an attack is imminent, the measures that can be put in force depend to a great extent on the staff available. In many parts of India the staff is still so inadequate in proportion to the large areeis to be dealt with that proposals for taking action to prevent attacks are difficult to suggest. The judicious use of tire on an area where it is kncnvn that an insect is passing through its pupal stage amongst the dead leaves or humus or in the first' inch of the soil on the forest floor will be dealt with in the next section. Much might, I think, be done in this manner, provided the proper amount of attention can be given to the work. As we shall see, a number of pests are to be found in this position; many caterpillars pupate here; the sal Monophlebns lays the bulk of its eggs on the ground, and so on. In the case of the bark-boring beetle and caterpillar pests the pre- vention of attacks is easier. With the caterpillars the first beginnings of an attack are usually easily seen on the bark, and can be dealt with if the life history of the insect is understood. The first beginnings were noted with the commencement of the bark-eating Avbela attack in the casuarina plantations in Madras in 1902-3. Had the life history been known and the trees affected been cut out and the caterpillars killed, what proved eventually a disastrous infestation in some plantations might have been nipped in the bud. Bark-beetle attacks usually commence at a centre or several centres, and spread outwards. If these centres are marked down and the infested trees promptly cut out and burnt the attack will be stopped in its initial stages and the rest of the forest saved. The "trap trees," to which I have already alluded, will give the necessary warning that such an attack is imminent. 4. Methods of Combating Attacks in Progress. The methods to be put in force to counteract and stamp out attacks of pests which have assumed serious dimensions vary with the lite histories and consequent method of attack of the insects concerned. The methods required to combat the attacks in trees either standing or lying felled in the forest differ from those which must be put in force to stamp out attacks of wood-borers pure and simple in wood-stacks or piles of bamboo, whether these are standing on roads in the forest or in depots. 46 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS Again, a large number of insects pupate amongst the dead leaves on the forest floor, or in the humus layer, or in the first inch of the soil. Many root-feeding grubs, of which there are a number of pests, may also be found here. Or the insects lay their eggs here. Methods of destroying these in the forest differ from the ways in which we can attack them in the nursery and plantation. (I) Bark- and Wood-boring Beetle Pests in the Forest.— I have already alluded to the fact that serious attacks of bark-boring beetles, Scolytidae, and those of Buprestidae, Cerambycidae, and Curculionidae have already been experienced in parts of India, and practical measures have been put in force to combat them. The following proposals for combating attacks of these pests are based on the practical experience gained in actually carr}'ing out such work in India, and prove that this work is not onl}- possible, but amply repays being undertaken. The methods to be briefly described here presuppose a knowledge of the life histories of the pests which have to be dealt with. The measures apply equalK- to infestations in hill and plains forests. Assuming that a serious attack of bark-boring beetles is taking place in the forest, this may be accompanied by either a buprestid or a ceram- bycid one, or both. In some cases a weevil, such as the Cryptorhynclms of the long-leaved pine tree, may also be present. The larvae of these insects feed, for a time at least, in the bast layer. Accompanying these bast feeders you will probably find at least one species of wood-boring scolytid or a bostrychid. These will bore straight into the wood and oviposit there. The beetles may be attacking the trees in any one or all of the following conditions : — (a) Newly felled or fallen green trees (wind- or snow-breaks). {b) Standing sickly trees. (t) Standing green trees in the neighbourhood of a "centre" of infection. Accordingly the first step to be taken is to mark down all infested trees,, whether felled or fallen, standing sickly, or standing healthy trees. (a) Neudy Felled or Fallen Trees. — The first of these are known and can be easily marked down. The second should be searched for and marked down. This will involve going over the whole area carefully. (b) Standing Sickly Trees. — The whole area must be gone over and all infected trees found should be noted and marked with a tar ring. It is not to be expected that the whole of these trees will have been found in time to catch the next generation of the beetle to issue after the attack was first discovered. If this generation is not caught it should be possible to mark all the trees down in time to catch the larvae of the second or third generation. In the case of (a) and (b) the stems or trees will be left in the forest until thev are known to be full of grubs according to the data given under ON METHODS OF PREVENTING INSECT ATTACK 47 the life history, {b) should then be felled, and (^0 and (6) barked and the bark turned up so as to expose it to the rays of the sun. This will be strong enough to kill off the larvae. All saplings or branches which are too thin to be barked should be burnt. If, however, {b) are not badly infested with the beetle they should be left standing to serve as "trap" trees for succeeding generations. (c) Standin>y Green Infested Trees. — It will be found that newly attacked green trees are much more difficult to deal with, as their removal must depend entirely on the degree to which they are attacked and on their nearness or otherwise to "centres" of infection. It will also be found very difficult to discover them until they are commencing to fade, when the bright yellow needles of the conifers or the drying shrivelled leaves of the broad-leaved species attract attention to them. It may prove advisable to leave those discovered, when but slightly attacked, standing over one, two, or even three generations of the insect, since there is a likelihood of their serving as an attraction to further beetles to lay their eggs in. They thus serve as "traps," and if used as such properly they may attract a large number of beetles which would otherwise oviposit elsewhere in uninfested trees. In all cases where such trees are not very seriously attacked they should not be felled before the larvae of the second generation of the beetle after finding them are reaching full growth. They will thus serve the purpose throughout the area of "trap " trees. ''Trap'' Trees. — In order to ascertain the extent and intensity of an attack suitable green trees should be chosen here and there in the forest, pre- ferably along a road or footpath, and felled. These trees should be felled just before the periods at which the beetles are to be expected on the wing in the forest. It will be found that the beetles will resort to these felled trees to oviposit, and the trees will thus serve as "traps." As soon as they are full of fully grown larvae they should be barked and the bark exposed to the sun or burnt, as may be deemed most advisable. If a " trap " tree is not seriously infested by the generation of the beetles issuing soon after it has been felled it may be left for a following one. The trees should be so felled as to lie in a position sheltered from the sun during the hottest portion of the day. They must not, however, be felled in dense shade, as the beetles will not resort to such trees to oviposit. In choosing these trees it should be borne in mind that they must be healthy and full of sap. It will be useless felling nearly dead trees for such a purpose, as they would rapidly dry and would not be sought out by the beetle. The beetles require fresh sappv cambium to lay their eggs in. The periods at which the "trap" trees and the sickly standing trees should be felled and the bark stripped off and burnt will depend upon the life histories of the pests you are combating. The time at which the trees should be felled is at the period when they are full of completely developed grubs and newly changed pupae. The latter must not be allowed to mature into beetles, or the earliest maturing ones will either escape from the tree before you fell, or fall out of their pupal chambers when th6 48 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS bark is stripped off, and fly off and infest fresh trees in the forest. The periods will, of course, vary with elevation, aspect, etc., and be a little later in wet cold seasons ; but the time can always be accurately determined by stripping off a piece of bark and examining the larval galleries on the inside to ascertain whether they have nearly reached their normal length. If they have, the full-grown larvae or pupae will be found at the end or in the sap- wood beneath, and the time has come to bark the trees. In the case of the bark-boring Scolytidae, stripping off the bark and burning it will be sufficient to destroy the insects, as they mostly pupate in the bast or partly in the bast and partly in the sapwood. The fact of taking off the bark and exposing them to the heat of the sun or cold at night is sufficient to kill the larvae and pupae, although it will not kill immature beetles. The buprestids and cerambycids tl jT* L pupate in the sapwood, and the wood- ■ K I boring Scolytidae, etc., oviposit here or Ml ^1 right dow^n in the heart-wood. To get rid of these the trees must be logged and the logs burnt. I (2) Wood-borers in Timber Stacks, Fuel Stacks, and Bamboo Piles in Depots. Wood stacked in depots or out on the IJP i I forest roads and rides, if left for any time, t, |l| i 7 ^^ subject to the attacks of various boring ^M beetles, of which species of Bostrychidae I I are amongst the worst in India. Some of ■ ^- ' the Scolytidae also do damage in this way, and a few Cerambycidae. As instances of damage of this nature, the genera Sinoxylon and Dinoderiis in the first family, Xylcborns in the second, and Stromatinm amongst the Cerambycidae, may be quoted. The females of all these insects tunnel down into wood, usually when the first sap has dried out of it, to lay their eggs. On hatching out the grubs feed in the wood, reducing its structure to powder. Or in the case of some Scolytidae the damage is solely due to the wood becoming excessively "shot-holed" from the number of the beetles boring in to oviposit, and thus ruined for timber purposes. Finally, in the case of some of the cerambycids who lay their eggs on green trees, the grubs may have tunnelled into the heart of the timber to pupate, and be there or engaged in this operation after the timber has left the forest for the depot {/Eolesthcs, Hoplocerambyx). Fig. 25. — Pupal chambers of Hoplo- ceratnliyx spiiticortiis in heart- wood of sal-tree (much reduced). OD '- A >' ":/^ i y Fig. 26. — Three lengths of a young deodar sapling infested by Scolytus major, Steb., and S. fninor, Steb. The middle one shows the entrance-holes of female beetles on the bark ; the left-hand one the long vertical zigzag egg-galleries on the sapwood ; and the right the whole sapwood scored by the larval galleries, the shot-holes being the pupating chambers of the grubs. It forms a typical example of the capacity exhibited by this bark beetle for the destruction of young sapling and pole growth. N. W. Himalaya. 9003 P, 50 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS In all cases the result is the same. The value of the timber, firewood, or bamboo is greatly reduced, or the material is so riddled as to be useless for all purposes save that of inferior firewood. Considerable loss has occurred in various wood depots throughout the country, and especially at the fuel depot of the Changa Manga plantations, in days past. Fuel stacks seen here consisted principally of masses of wood powder owing to the severe infestations by the two beetles Sinoxylon crassuui and S. anale (fig. 27). In cases of bad infestations of this nature the only chance left of thoroughly clearing the depot is to burn completely the whole of the infected material, and this must be done at the period when the insects are in their larval and pupal stages in the wood, and not at the periods when the insect is on the wing in the depot. In the former case you will get rid of the pest in one operation, or so reduce its numbers that it will not assume the importance of a pest for some time to come. (3) Insects which Oviposit or Pupate amongst Dead Leaves on the Forest Floor or in the Humus or First Inch of the Soil.— A number of insects are now known which pupate on or a little way beneath the upper layers of the forest floor, amongst the dead leaves, in the humus, or in the first inch of the soil. To mention a few : The teak defoliators Hyblcea puera and Pyrausta machaeralis act in this way, so does one at least of the conifer cone destroyers {Enzophera and Phycita). The deodar defoliator {Geometrina? sp.) acts in the same manner, as also the Boarmia defoliator of the sal-tree in the United Provinces Terai. Again, almost all the seeds of forest trees at present known to be infested by insects fall to the ground from the trees when the grub has nearly or quite reached full size. The grub then either leaves the seed and burrows into the humus layer, or pupates within the seed. The latter, however, is now on the forest floor ! Examples of such are : — The sal-seed destroyers {Conogethes, Laspeyresia, etc.) ; also the Alcuics weevil of the walnut, the Callirhytis fly of the kharshu oak {Q. scmicarpifolia), and the Calandra weevil of the ban oak {Q. incana). The weevil sissu-leaf defoliators (Apoderns) also pupate amongst dead leaves on the soil, the little leaf-roll in which the larva feeds falling to the ground. Again, some insects oviposit amongst the dead leaves on the ground or amongst stones, pieces of fallen wood, etc., on the forest floor. Of such is the MonopJilebiis scale of the sal-tree. This insect lays over six hundred eggs in a loose silken sack on the ground amongst leaves or beneath stones, pieces of wood, etc., and lays them at the very period (April and May) when the sal-defoliating Boarmia is pupating in the soil. Thus we have two serious pests in a quiescent stage in a place where they can be got at at the same time. And there is another class of pest in these forests, several species of melolonthid grubs {Lachnosteyna, Hdcroplia, p. yj), which is to be found feeding on the roots of the sal-tree or in the pupal stage within the first inch of the soil layer at this period. ON METHODS OF PREVENTING INSECT ATTACK 51 My suggestion for destroying these pests is to attack them when in their quiescent stages, and to attack them with fire. I would run a leaf fire through the infested forest and take care that it was kept a leaf fire, cutting down areas of long grass or fire-tracing them. In the days before the Forest Dt^partment, and for some considerable period afterwards, there was no fire protection. The annual fires did a great deal to keep the insect pests in check. These pests now breed unhindered from year to year, and the only possible outcome must be severe visitations. Instances of such may be quoted. Deodar areas in pxirts of the Western Himalaya are defoliated year after year. Areas of sal are completely defoliated or the tree is infested for several years together by a scale like the Monophlebus, and nothing is done to endeavour to diminish the pests or deal a heavy blow at them when they are really numerous. That fire is effective two instances would seem to prove. With the permission of the Conservator (Mr. B. B. Osmaston), Mr. R. C. Milward had a small area in the Garhwal forests, in which the sal Boarniia w'as pupating, fired for me in May igo8, and sent me the materials in the way of larvae, pupae, etc., collected after the firing. I examined the mass carefully, and was of opinion that the firing had resulted in practically killing off the majority of the pupating caterpillars— and they were in thousands in the soil, or on their way there from the trees overhead, at the time of my visit. Those which appeared still to have some life in them and the pupae came to nothing, and not a single moth issued. A week or two later in that year I was at Horai in the Kumaun Division. A fire of some severity had overrun three compartments just previous to my arrival. I made a careful examination in the burnt area for pupating caterpillars, and also ascertained the result of the fire on the cockchafer grubs. I found no instance of a living grub or larva in the soil, though my men and myself took numbers of dead and often charred ones. The fire had not killed nearly mature cockchafer beetles, which proves how necessary it will be to fire, if fire is made use of, when the pest is in its larval or pupal stages. These stages will be known from its life history. (4) Root-feeding Insects. — I have already dealt with root-feeding grubs in the forest. In the nurser}- and in patches of sowings in the forest and in plantations there are one or more methods of destroying them which may be tried. In the young conifer nurseries and sown areas in the Himalaya (deodar and cryptomeria), in the babul plantations in the United Provinces and Berar, in those of poplar in Baluchistan, and in casuarina plantations in Madras, trouble has been experienced from the attacks of both internal and external root-feeding insects. In the former class comes the Coclostcrna longicorn in babul (fig. 8) and the Trochilium caterpillar in poplar, whilst in the latter are the Melolonthinae (see pp. 77-81), the Elateridae (p. 230), and the A gratis cutworm. Crickets also occasion harm, Bnichytynpcs achatinus having destroyed Ficus elastica seedlings in nurseries. These latter insects D 2 52 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS live at the bottom of holes in the nursery beds or somewhere closely adjacent. To combat the attacks of the internal root-feeders dig out and burn in toto all young plants which show signs of flagging. Collect the mature forms of the insect when it appears on the wing. For the external root-feeders the methods advocated are the following: Before making sowings in patches out in the forest, it is advisable to turn up the soil for a couple of feet in selected spots to ascertain whether these root-feeding larvae are abundant on the area or not. If they are so, it is almost useless endeavouring to restock the area by means of sowings. In nurseries, bundles of some succulent crop plant poisoned with Paris-green water or dilute kerosene may be placed on the seed-beds "before the young plants come up. Caterpillars such as the Agrotis will resort to these and be killed. Birds should be attracted to the nursery so far as possible by affording them nesting facilities. If the nursery beds are infested with root-feeding grubs, a good plan is to flood them. This will bring the grubs to the surface, when they will be devoured by the birds. Dusting the plants in the evening with a mixture of quicklime and ashes is also effective. If you find the nursery pitted with holes, these should be dug up and the larvae or crickets, etc., found be killed. Finally watering the beds with a solution of copper-sulphate is sometimes productive of good. In plantations where the young seedlings are seen to be withering and dying off, employ women and boys to remove the soil round the roots. The grub or grubs will be found at the roots, and should be taken out and killed. Or, as in the nursery, if feasible, flood the plantation for several hours. Another method, which can be employed against the crickets, is to provide boys with a length of bamboo containing water and send them into the area with instructions to pour water down each hole they come to. This will bring up the cricket or crickets, for there may be two or more at the bottom of the hole, and these should be caught and killed. It is desirable when employing labour in this way to insist on the insects caught and killed being brought in, and it is often best to pay by results achieved. 5. Methods of Protecting Station and Cantonment and Valuable Orchard Trees. It is often possible and desirable to incur a greater expenditure on the protection of the trees of the station or cantonment, or valuable orchard trees, than is justifiable in the forest or plantation. Forest Officers are often asked to suggest a possible treatment in cases where damage of this nature is taking place. The avenue and trees of the station compound are all liable to insect attack, and more especially is this so in the drier parts of the country. The longicorn-borer attack in Quetta (yEolesthes, see p. 307) is an evidence of the state to which careful planting work can be reduced if the insects preying upon the trees are not known and watched. ON METHODS OF PREVENTING INSECT ATTACK 53 The first protective step, which will greatly tend to diminish danger of this nature, is to plant avenues with several different species of trees alter- nating with one another. It is the pure avenues— i.e., avenues consisting all of one species— which are liable to suffer most seriously from insect damage. I inspected a tun-tree avenue in Bengal some years ago. It was pure, and there was scarcely a tree worth maintaining on the ground, so badly had the crowns been attacked by the tun twig-borer {Hypsipyla). The Fig. 27. — Section of stem of a l>a//>,-rj^i'a sissoo tree, showing the sapvvood riddled and destroyed by the wood-borers Suio.vylo?i crassum, Lesne, and .?. anale. Changa Manga. crowns were thin and straggly, and afforded little shade, besides being very unsightly, and the owner (the avenue was on a tea plantation) had the whole thing cut down and replanted. It is best, therefore, to avoid planting pure avenues; but if such are desired, choose a tree which is not liable to be attacked by some of the common insect pests. Fruit trees are often used in this manner with a view to obtaining a yearly revenue from the fruit. These trees require watching just as they do 54 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS in the orchard, for they are liable to insect attack. Mango-trees are badly infested by several longicorns {Batocera, p. 367, Plocaderm, p. 295, etc.), and by a buprestid {Belioiota, p. 217), these beetles killing off large branches or the whole tree, as was evidenced in a bad attack of these borers at Chicacole in Ganjam. Fig-trees suffer in Baluchistan from a longicorn borer {Batocera, p. 362). The small branches of the mango suffer from the attacks of a bostrychid (p. 129) and a scolytid (p. 542), and the whole crown from a Monophlebus scale insect. Loquat-trees suffer in their leaves, flowers, and fruit from the attacks of caterpillars. Palms of various kinds are infested throughout the country by the rhinoceros beetle {Oryctes, p. 87) and the palm weevil {RhyncJiophorus, p. 444) and so on. These trees may be tended and treated for these attacks in various ways. Really badly infected trees, infested by borers and large bast-feeding pests, must, if the insects are in the main trunk, be cut out and burnt in toto. If left they merely form centres from which other at present healthy trees will become infested. If only branches are attacked these should be cut off near the main trunk and burnt, and the pruned spot thickly coated with tar. Whenever a tree is pruned the place from which the branch has been taken should be thickly tarred. When small branches and twigs are seen to be drying and dying they are probably infested with a bostrychid or scolytid pest, or a small longicorn and buprestid borer. These branches should be collected and burnt. This will prevent the next generation issuing from the trees and infesting fresh ones. The case of bark-boring beetles in the main stems, as also that of the bast- and sapwood-feeding caterpillars, is more difficult. Often their presence may be detected either by shot-holes on the outside of the bark with sawdust below them, or by masses of resin or "tears" of resin dripping down the bark on the outside, or in the case of the caterpillars by outside galleries composed of silk and excreta corkscrew- ing round the trunk. In the latter case the grub may be found in the tunnel, though more often during the daytime it conceals itself beneath the bark in a cavity made in the bast and sapwood and only issues to feed on the outer soft bark at night-time. He can, however, be traced back to the opening leading to his shelter if the silken tunnel is pulled off the outer bark. A thick patch of tar placed over the opening and jammed into it may kill him. In the case of broad-leaved trees, such as the poplar, an outflow of sap from the hole will be seen on the bark (pi. vii). Another plan is to paint the bark with a mixture of kerosene and tar and set fire to the area. This will kill all the insects in the bast and outer sap- wood. Only the area affected will be burnt, and the burnt portion should then be thickly coated with tar, especially at the edges where it meets the unburnt bark. This mixture was tried by Captain H. S. James on the chilgoza-trees in the Zhob forests, which were infested with bark-boring beetles, after he had experimented with several other materials, and found to give excellent results. It would probably only be applicable to thin- barked trees. Pl.ATK VI 1. A poplar-tree infested by the grubs of ^Eoh'sUws sartcx, Solsk. The he;L\y oiitliow ol sap caused by the attack is seen dripping down the bark. Ouetta, 1905. ON METHODS OF PREVENTING INSECT ATTACK 55 Finally, to prevent pests such as caterpillars moving from tree to tree up or down the trunk, bands composed of a thick greasy material or of a sticky material such as molasses should be painted on the tree, the band being at least eight to twelve inches deep. These bands can be utilised efficiently against another pest in the case of mango-trees. The Mono- phlcbns scale insect which sucks the sap from the leaves and later from the twigs of the tree, often thereby spoiling the fruit crop, when intent on egg- laying crawls down the tree-trunk to oviposit in the soil below. It does not appear to oviposit on the trees. Therefore, if in a severe attack broad sticky bands are painted on the trunks about four to five feet above the ground, the insects will be caught on these as they crawl down the tree, and another bad infestation of the pest may be prevented the following year. Care must be taken to scrape down inequalities of the bark at the point where the bands are put on, otherwise deep crevices may not be properly coated with the stuff, and insects finding them will escape through the band to oviposit below. Aphidae and Coccidae such as Clieruies, Lachiiiis, Coccus, etc., occasionally prove serious pests to trees. In the case of valuable avenue, garden or park, and orchard trees, methods of treatment inapplicable in the forest are possible. For instance, in cases where the eggs are deposited in crevices on the bark of the main stem and large branches, it is often effective to brush them down with hard bristle brushes dipped into a paraffin emulsion, or to spray these parts with the mixture. A good emulsion consists of paraffin, 2 gallons ; soft soap, lilb. ; caustic soda (98 per cent.), 6 lb.; water, 28 gallons. Dissolve the soap in a gallon of boiling water, add the paraffin, and churn thoroughly till a cream-like mass is obtained. This thorough mixing is essential. Dissolve the caustic soda in 27 gallons of water and pour into the paraffin emulsion, and mix the whole intimatel}-. The mixture should be used as soon as made. The emulsion should not be applied to the green parts of trees or to unripe wood, nor should it be allowed to get on to the skin of the operator. f% C?-yptorhyiic]uts bra)uiisi,'5>X.€b. rt, larva ; /', pupa ; f, weevil from Piiius khasya. Shillong, Maymyo, Upper Burma. ( 56 ) CHAPTER V. COLEOPTERA. {Beetles.) Brief Synopsis of Characters of the Order. The Coleoptera or beetles are insects furnished with a biting mouth, the biting jaws being known as mandibles; the lower lip is divided medianly. The insects appear to be hard, horny, scale-like closely together down the membranous wings are distinguished from other of the insect is covered with this enclosing the insect as Fig. 28.— Longicorn beetle {Batocera). Dorsal view with wings out- spread. 7', vertex ; 0, occiput ; a^ to a", joints of antennae ; n^ '^ * prothorax, mesothorax, metathorax ; tV, elytron ; 2c, wing ; sc, scutellum ; i, 2 to 7, abdominal segments ; py, pygidium. wingless, the back being covered by structures termed the elytra, which fit centre. Beneath these elytra a pair of usually present. Beetles are readily insects owing to the fact that the whole a hard horny substance known as chitin, it were in armour. The general shape is spherical, flat or otherwise, to long linear. On the head the mandibles are usually well developed ; the eyes are com- pound, and often divided into two parts, or they may be reniform in shape ; the anten- nae are eleven (or fewer) or twelve jointed, the joints varying in shape and length. At times, as in the Buprestidae, the faces of the joints may be set with porifer- ous pits. The antennae are of importance in the classifica- tion of the order, as are also the COLEOPTERA— CHARACTERS, HABITS, CLASSH^^ICATION 57 gilt --- various hard chitinous parts of the insect. Behind the head comes the prothorax, which is capable of a certain amount of movement of itself. It varies in shape — round, angular, square, trapezoidal, etc. The other parts of the thorax, the meso- and metathorax, are hidden be- neath the ely- tra and are not visible from above. The mesothorax i s small, the meta- thorax being very large in the winged forms of Coleoptera. In the figure the dif- ferent parts of the thorax and the other simpler por- tions of the ex- ternal surface are named. For full details on the sub- ject the reader should consult a text-book on en- . tomology. The elytra when closed cover nearly all the mesothorax and the whole of the metathorax, lower wings, and abdomen. The upper portion of the mesothorax may be visible in the shape of a triangular or square, etc., shaped piece known as the Fig. 29. — Longicorn beetle {Batoccra). \'entral view, legs removed on one side, c, eye ; cx^ ^ ^ coxae of front, middle, and hind leg ; ^;-i 2 3 trochanter of ditto ; fem^ - ^ femora of ditto ; tib^ - * tibiae of ditto ; iar^ ^ ^ tarsi of ditto ; st^ '^ ■' prosternum, meso- sternum, metasternum ; trn'^, trochanter of middle leg ; epm^ '^ " epimera of prothorax, mesothorax, and metathorax ; eps'-, epister- num of mesothorax ; eps^, episternum of metathorax. Front of head : — e, eye ; /r, front ; fr.s, frontal suture ; aci, ante clypeus ; cl, clypeus ; //', labrum or upper lip ; md, mandible. Under- surface of head enlarged : — gul, gula ; gen, gena ; ni, mentum ; sm, sub-mentum ; w^, mandible ; /, labium ; mx, maxillae. 58 INDIAN FOREST INSECTS scutellum. Occasionally the elytra leave a few of the posterior segments of the body visible, which are known as the pygidium. The elytra are always present in beetles, even in cases where there are no lower wings to protect (as e.g. in the longicorn Teledapus, p. 280). In the latter case they are often joined together down the central suture and are immovable. This central suture, however, is always perceivable. When the beetle wishes to fly, the elytra part down the suture and open out laterally and upwards to allow of the lower wings being expanded. In some instances, as in the rose-chafers (p. 91), the elytra are joined together in this way though under-wings are present, and they are then raised as one piece to permit the lower wings to be expanded when the beetle takes wing. The elytra are occasionally sculptured in curious fashion, and may have bunches of hairs protruding in parts as in the case of Thysia wallichii (fig. 17). The second pair of wings when not used in flight are folded up beneath the elytra. They are membranous and set with well-marked nervures or veins which are broken across at certain points to permit of the wings being folded up when the insect is not on the wing. These veins are used in some instances in classification. In the legs three to five visible tarsal joints are present, and some of these joints may be bilobed. The tarsi are set with a spongy felt-work of hair which enables the insects to walk about on bark, plants, etc. The last tarsal joint ends in a pair of claws. In the abdomen five to six seg- ments are visible on the ventral surface. There is often a considerable difference in the appearance of the two sexes in the Coleoptera. The females are sometimes larger than the males, and the antennae in the male may be much longer than in the female, or the tarsi may vary in size, or the number of tarsal joints may vary in the two. Individuals of the same species also vary very greatly in size, as is shown in the four individuals of the longicorn beetle Hoplocerambyx spinicornis, shown in fig. 32. Some beetles are capable of producing sound by having parts of their structure set with file-like processes which are rubbed over one another. The result produced is a squeaking noise ; several Cerambycidae produce sounds of this nature, such as Hoplocerambyx, Molesthes, etc. In the glow-worms and fire-flies, which are beetles, light is produced by the oxidation of proteid matter in the abdomen. The eggs of beetles are in forest forms mostly soft globular or elliptical bodies, semi-translucent or opaque white. These may be deposited in crevices in the bark, or the beetle tunnels into the tree and deposits them in prepared receptacles in the bast or wood. In the cases where the eggs are laid in the open they are hard externally, and usually whitish or greyish in colour. The larva is grub-like, having a distinct head and jaws. It is sometimes furnished with antennae, and may have three pairs of feet on the front portion of the body. The different families vary in this respect, however, as shown COLEOPTERA— CHARACTERS, HABITS, CLASSH^ICATION 59 in the various coleopterous larvae figured here. In some cases (nearly all Adcphaga) the tarsi are two-clawed. The body occasionally ends in anal cerci. No special boring apparatus is present in the grubs, merely a pair of stout mandibles in most instances. The body may have series of tubercles arranged in definite parts on it and breathing spiracles on the sides (cf. Hoplocerambyx larva), and hairs either singly or in tufts. The pupa is characteristic, usual- ly white or yellowish- white in colour in tree forms, and is at first a rough carica- ture of the future bee- tle. Its shape varies, as shown in the fig- ures (fig. 31), accord- ing to the future shape of the beetle. When the latter has attained its full de- velopment it remains quiescent in a resting stage whilst its outer hard chitinous parts ^^^- 30.-Coleopterous larvae, a, Scarabaeidae ; /^ Cleridae ; . ^ c, Buprestidae ; a, Elateridae ; e, Cerambycidae : /, bcoly- are solidity mg. tidae : g, Curculionidae. Characteristics and Habits of the Order. The order Coleoptera may be considered to contain collections of insects which are perhaps more injurious to trees than any similar series of insects belonging to the other great orders of the Insecta. Whilst other great orders can show families or series of families containing insect predators or parasitic insects of high economic importance to the forester as assisting him in protecting his forests from pests, the Coleoptera, so far as is at present known, offer few instances of insects beneficial 6o INDIAN FOREST INSECTS to man, most of the families consisting of pests whose whole sustenance is derived from the tree, or who look to the tree to provide food for their offspring. This would be serious enough, having regard to its connection with that portion of the forester's work which deals with the disposal of his produce, if the insects only confined their attentions to the tree after it had died in the forest or been felled for sale purposes. For there are a number of pests who do so restrict their attentions, which are able to destroy very quickly the marketable value of the timber if they are given an opportunity of doing so. A much more serious phase of the life histories of Coleoptera is connected, however, with the large number of beetles who can only derive their sustenance from the green tree, and who require such trees to lay their eggs or oviposit in. Whatever be the attribute, whether due to instinct or some other acquired sense, these insects will never oviposit in dry trees, nor in trees that are in such a condition that they will become dry before the offspring hatching from the eggs laid by them have reached full development as grubs. It is often said that beetles, e.g. bark beetles, never attack a green health}- tree standing in the forest. This is a complete fallac^^ In the ordinary balance of nature, in the primeval forest, the bark beetle, whose offspring depend for their sustenance on the green bast or green timber, will not attack a healthy tree. There is no necessity for it to do so. The balance of power is kept even in nature, and the insect can always find a sufficiency of sickly trees, whose death it hastens, or of green windfalls which provide the necessities of life both for itself and its future offspring. The forester's business is, however, to remove all such blots from his forests and to keep them clean. Also to raise per acre the largest number of trees possible. Given a year favourable to insect life, or a series of favourable years, and the numbers of a particular bark-beetle pest in the forest become so great that they are bound to attack the green standing crop, seeking out, of course, the weaker trees to commence with. Vast numbers of the insects are killed off by the outflow of resin or sap with which the healthy trees respond to the attacks. This very output, however, reduces the vitality of the trees, which gradually succumb to the enormous numbers of the foe attacking them, and the trees are in the end killed just as surely as if they had been girdled or felled by the forester. The order Coleoptera, to a degree unusual in other orders, contains a number of pests, to be found principally perhaps in the great families Buprestidae, Cerambycidae, Curculionidae, Scolytidae, and Platypodidae, which demand for their sustenance green bast, green sapwood, or green heart-wood. It is for this reason that the order must be considered as one of the most important, perhaps the most important, to the forester. The Coleoptera feed upon the tree in a variety of ways, some infesting the roots, as e.g. species of Melolonthinae, such as Serica (p. 76) and Lach- nosterna on the sal-tree, and Coelosterna on the Acacia arabica. Others, again, and perhaps by far the most dangerous, infest the bast COLEOPTERA— CHARACTERS, HABITS, CLASSIFICATION 6i layer of the main stems or larger branches. Examples of such are some Buprestidae, e.g. Sphenoptera in the deodar; several Cerambycidae — Trinophyllum in the deodar, Hoplocerambyx and ^olesthes in the sal ; numerous Scolytidae — Scolytns in the deodar, Polygraphus (p. 501) in the blue pine, long-leaved pine, and Pinns gerardiana, Tomicus (p. 552) in the spruce, blue pine, and long-leaved pine, Sphaerotrypes in the sal (p. 476) and Anogeissiis latifolia, etc. The Brenthidae also are to be found, so far as present investigations go, in the bast and outer sapwood, the grubs, who may be semi-predaceous, pupating in the latter. Species of Ceocephalns and Proplithal- mus have been taken in trees in the Dun, Himalaya, and Assam (p. 389).- Other Coleoptera confine their attention to the upper part of the crown, where they are not particularly harmful in old trees. Man}' beetles found, how- ever, in this position also infest young growth, and they may then prove serious pests. In- stances are to be found in the case of a species of Polygraphus infesting the deodar and blue pine ; Scolytns in the deodar ; Pityogenes in the deodar, blue pine, spruce, and Pinns ge- rardiana (p. 562); Apriona (p. 374) in the mulberry and the buprestid Psiloptera (p. igg) in the Acacia arabica ; and in the Cryptorhynchus\n{e?,tmgih.e Pinns longifolia (p. 428) and the Pinns khasya, etc. Others, again, destroy young seedlings. The grubs of the rhinoceros beetle Oryctes (p. 87) destroy young casuarina plants in this manner, whilst cryptomeria seedlings are destroyed by a species of Lachnosterna (p. 80), and deodar seedlings by species of Melolontha (p. 82) and Elater (p. 230). A species of scolytid, Dianierus (p. 472), kills young Ficns elastica seedlings by girdling them. Damage is done to the leading shoots by the girdling propensities of some beetles, such as the deodar girdler Scolytns deodara (p, 57S) and Xylotrupes (p. go), which girdles young Poinciana trees in Burma. Other beetles defoliate the tree, either feeding directly on the leaf as some Chrysomelidae {Podontia, p. 258) and Curculionidae (p. 405), or twisting Fig. 31. — Coleopterous pupae, a, Bostrychidae ; l>, Buprestidae ; c, Cerambycidae ; urm. References. -Burm. Handb. iv, 2, 314; Gem. Har. Cat. Coleop. iv, 1168; Cotes, Ind. Mus. Not. i, 59; id. Tea Insectx, iii, .(, p. 5 ; Barlow, ib. iv, 261. Habitat. — Darjeeling; Sikkim, Tree Attacked. — Tea {Camellia thcifcra). Sikkim. Beetle.— Stout, elongate, brown, rather shining, punctate. Prothora.K wider than long. Scutellum heart-shaped. Elytra broadest in apical fourth, where they are much broader than prothorax ; apices separately rounded, suture often slightly gaping at apex ; pygidium exposed ; tibiae spined. Length, 20 mm. to 25 mm. Larva.— White, curved, crmkled, with prominent head, stout mandibles, and three pairs of rather long legs. This insect is very abundant in the Darjeeling forests and tea gardens, and is found throughout the Sikkim forests in the Life History. Kalimpong Division. The beetle appears on the wing from the end of March through April into May. The larva feeds on the roots of the tea and garden plants, and not improbably on the roots ofseedlings of forest trees as well. In 1883 the grubs committed great havoc in the public gardens at Darjeeling, over two and a half millions of individuals having been collected. In i8gi the insect again made its appearance in the Darjeeling district, and killed off a large number of plants in the tea-garden nurseries. The full life history does not appear to have yet been worked out, but it is improbable that it passes through more than one life-cycle in the year. Heteroplia. Heteroplia varians, Oliv. Reference.— Oliv. Ent. i, 5, p. 78, t. 10, f. 123, a, b. Habitat. — United Provinces Terai. Tree Attacked. — Sal {Shorca robnsta). Kumaun. Horai, Beetle. — Stout, elongate, yellow, moderately shining ; the head black, shining, margins of prothorax, scutellum, and elytra black ; legs and antennae brown. Head small, Description. punctate. Prothorax wider than long, sides rounded ; smooth, very finely and lightly punctate. Scutellum large. Elytra broadest about middle, where they are broader than thorax, apex rounded, suture slightly gaping apically : surface smooth, very finely punctate ; pygidium yellow ; tibiae spined. Length, 18 mm. 9003 Fig. 45. — HctcrvpUa varians, 0\\\. Kumaun. 82 FAMILY SCARABAEIDAE Mature and immature specimens of this beetle were obtained in the Horai sal forest in the United Provinces in the middle Life History. of May igo8. The insect was found in the soil at the roots of sal-trees in a manner similar to that in which I took Lachnostcrna problematica and L. clypcalis described above. Melolontha. Melolontha ? sp. (The Deodar Cockchafer Grub.) References. — Stebbing, Depart. Notes, i, 87 ; Ins. Pests of Coniferae of Himalaya, Ind. For. Mem, Zool. ii, p. 63. Habitat. — Western Himalaya. Tree Attacked. — Deodar {Cedrus deodara). Jaunsar and Bashahr, Western Himalaya. Beetle. — Unknown. Larva. — The larva is a large, heavy, yellowish-white curved grub with a light brown head bearing two antennae and a pair of long curved very powerful mandibles. The body is thick and curved, the anterior segments being much corrugated, whilst the posterior three segments are swollen up in a bag-shaped manner, and are black in colour. Length, li in. to 2 in. So far as is at present known it is the larva of this cockchafer beetle which is dangerous to deodar growth. The grub cuts Life History. through the roots of seedlings and young plants, or more often gnaws away the bark all round, thus girdling them. Grubs apparently full-grown were found engaged in this manner in some patches of deodar sowings in theTaranda Forest, Bashahr Division, in June-July 1902. In June 1909 a report was received from Mr. Bill- son, Divisional Forest Officer, Jaunsar, that patches of young deodar seedlings were suffering from grubs in a similar manner. The grub proved to be a melo- lonthid one, and not improbably identical with the one I found in Bashahr in 1902. Fig 46 — 1/'/ lo tha '^^^ '^^^^ °^ ^^ ^^^^ history of this insect has yet grub of deodar. N.W. to be studied. It is probable that the beetle will be Himalaya. found on the wing some time during the summer months, and it may be that the larvae pupate at irregular intervals through- out the summer, so that some beetles will always be found between June or July and October. This point has to be definitely ascertained. So far as ol)servations have yet gone this insect is only destructive to Damage Committed seedling and perhaps very young sapling growth, and in the Forest. the damage is done by the larva only. Regeneration of the deodar has been carried out in the past to a con- siderable extent by sowing the seed in patches, and it has been a common FAMILY SCARABAEIDAE 83 experience to find that the whole of these patches fail. The seed may germinate and the young plants come up and then apparently damp off. This apparent damping off is very often entirely due to the attacks of this cockchafer grub or the other root pests to be described in this work. In the past it has, however, almost invariably been ascribed to drought or frost or bad seed. The following description of a patch of deodar sowing examined by myself is typical of what occurs and of what took place in Mr. Billson's infested sowings: — There were probably twenty-five seedlings originall}- in the patch. At the time of inspection five green unattacked ones were all that remained standing in the soil. Of the rest a few dead ones remained standing, and these came away in the hand, being cut through below the surface, or the roots came away with the dead upper part and were seen to be girdled. The rest had been cut ofi:' either at the apex of the stalk just beneath the crown of needles or below in the stem somewhere above-ground. This latter work was that of the A gratis caterpillar, which was also present here. The work below ground was mainly that of the Mclolontha grub, though an elaterid larva (see p. 230) was also found. The girdling of the young plants is a serious matter, especially where several of these large larvae infest a patch of seedlings. Their presence practically means that the whole of the patch is doomed. Before making sowings of seed out in the forest it is advisable to turn up the soil for a couple of feet in selected spots to Protection and ascertain whether these root-feeding larvae are abun- Reraedial Measures, dant on the area or not. If they are very abundant it is almost useless endeavouring to restock the area by means of sowings. In nurseries- matters are simpler, and Mr. Billson introduced with success one or more of the following remedies in the attack experienced in Jaunsar in 1909. Under certain circumstances one or more of the remedies might be attempted in the forest : — (i) Before the young seedlings have come up place bundles of anv succulent crop plant which may be growing in the neio-h- bourhood (in America cabbage, turnips, and clover have been found most effective) at intervals on the seed-beds, first sprink- ling the bundles wuth paris-green water. The young larvae will feed on these and be killed off before the seedlin"^s come up. (2) Crows, mynas, starlings, the cattle egret, and many other nesting birds all eat the grubs whenever they can find them, and they are particularly active in this respect in damp weather and after irrigation. Thus, whenever possible, the beds attacked by the pest should be flooded with water in the daytime. The water will fill the tunnels and force out the insects, which, if birds are F 2 84 FAMILY SCARABAEIDAE plentiful, will be picked up and eaten hx them. If birds are not numerous hand-pickinp[ must be resorted to. (3) Another good method of checking the pest is to dust the plants over a few times in the evening with a mixture of quicklime and ashes, or better still, add the arsenic compound paris-green to the two in the following proportion : One ounce of paris-green with one ounce of unslaked lime and 3 lb. of ashes. Powder the sub- stances together very finely, put them into a calico bag, and dust over the plants, loosening the soil around them first. (4) In nursery beds already attacked the surface of the soil should be carefully inspected, and all holes containing portions of leaves, stalks, etc., should be dug up and the larvae at the bottom killed. This was the method resorted to at Gora Gali by Mr. B. O. Coventry, and gave good results. (5) Water the beds with a solution of copper sulphate. This pene- trates to the roots and often kills the grubs. It should be borne in mind, however, that our efforts should be in the direction of preventing the attack commencing, or at any rate from becoming serious. With this object numbers (i) and (3) of the above remedies are recommended. The former would be well understood, since the practice of poisoning jackals and porcupines is a ver}' common one amongst the natives of India. EUCHIRUS. Euchirus macleayi, Ho. Reference. — Ho. Ann. Nat. Hist, iv, p. 300 (140). Habitat. — Naini Tal, Eastern Himalaya, and Assam. Tree Attacked. — Oak [Quercus sp?). Naini Tal (R. C. Thompson). Beetle. — Large, easily recognized by the enormously prolonged anterior legs of the male, several inches in length and spined. Head and prothorax green, shining ; elytra black mottled with brown, red, or orange spots and markings. Head small, Description. front concave. Prothorax convex with a deep longitudinal median depression, broadest posteriorly; widest in posterior third; sides rounded. with serrate edges ; densely punctate save for shining areas on disk. Elytra smooth, pygidium and under-surface densely clothed with a very long whitish or yellowish pubescence forming a thick wool. Tibiae of all legs heavily spined. The long legs in the ^ may be 3J in. in length, very thick, with long tibiae and tarsi. Length (without legs), 50 mm. to 75 mm. This insect is commonly supposed to be chiefly found in the Eastern Himalaya and Assam. Thompson, in his Report on Destructive Insects, has the following note on Euchirus, and shows a photograph of the beetle in question, which would FAMILY SCARABAEIDAE 85 seem to preclude the possibility oi a doubt that the insect was taken at Naini Tal : — " Of the liucJiirus tij^ured I am not able to report from personal experience of its habits, but I have been informed on good authority that its habits are similar to its convener the Stag Beetle or Lucanus cervus (L. lunifer). The present specimen of the Euchirus was obtained at Nynee Tal, where it had issued out of an oak stem." This is the only record I can find on the subject of this insect infesting this tree. The oak would probably be either Quercus incana or Q. dilatata. Fig. 47. — Encliiriis macleayi, Ho Fig. /^?>.—E/tchirns tnacleayi, Ho. $ RUTELINAE. The beetles of this sub-family greatly resemble the last. Some are dull-coloured, but others are more brilliant, and greens and blues are obtained as well as browns. The claws of the tarsi differ in size. 86 FAMILY SCARABAEIDAE Anomala. Anomala grandis, Fabr. References. — Fabr. Syst. Ent. p. 34; Burm. Haudb. iv, i, p. 275; viridis, Ind. Mus. Notes, ii, 39, 1891. Habitat. — Darjeeling Forests. Tree Attacked.— Utis {Alnus nepalensis). Darjeeling (C. G. Rogers). Beetle.— Large, bright green, shining ; under-surface brilHant coppery with a greenish reflexion; eyes yellow, antennae coppery, legs coppery or greenish coppery. Head small, finely punctate, eyes yellow, front rugose. Prothorax narrow in front. Description. widest behind, finely punctate. .Scutellum large, anterior edge trun- cate. Elytra truncate, hnely punctate with a raised blunt point or tooth medianly at a short distance from apex ; pygidium finely, irre- gularly, and trans\ersely rugose-striate. Under-surface punctate. Length, 22 mm. to 30 mm. This beetle was forwarded some years ago to the Indian Museum, Calcutta, by Life History. Mr. C. G. Rogers. Mr. Rogers stated that he took the beetle stripping the leaves from the utis-tree (Alnus nepalensis) in June at elevations of 5,000 ft. to 6,000 ft. in the Darjeeling forests. Nothing further appears to have been recorded on the subject of the life history of this insect. Adoretus. Fk;. 49. — Ancunala <^7-a/tdis, F'abr. Darjeeling. Adoretus caliginosus, Burm. Referen'CE. — Burm. Handb. iv, i, p. 471. Habitat. — Gorakhpur, United Provinces. Tree Attacked. — Sissu (Dalbergia sissoo). Gorakhpur (A. E. Osmaston). Beetle.— Elongate, small, yellow, the elytra lighter-coloured than thorax. Head black, shining, densely punctate, covered with a short white villosity ; eyes large, placed at sides at base. Prothorax wider than long, sides rounded ; finely and densely Description. punctate, and covered with the short white pubescence. Scutellum large. Elytra wider than thorax, widest ill apical third, thence constricted and conjointly rounded. \ "/ Moderately strongly punctate, and weakly striate ; the tiliiae strongly spined. Length, 9.1 mm. ;,^- This beetle was taken by Mr. A. E. Osmaston, I.F.S., on the sissu at Pakri in Life History. the Gorakhpur Division. He fomid the insect in numbers de- foliating the trees in the first half of May, both old trees and saplings suffering from the attack of the beetles. No further observations on its life history appear to have been recorded. Fig. 50. — Adoretus ca/igi/iosus, Purni. Gorakhpur. FAMILY SCARABAEIDAE 87 Adoretus caliginosus, Burm. var. bicolor, Brenske. This variety has the head wholl}' fuscous and the pygidium slightly pubescent. The insect is said to be widely distributed throughout India. It was reported as defoliating rose-bushes in the Botanical Gardens, Bangalore, in company with A . bangalorensis. Adoretus bangalorensis, Brenske. Reference. — Brenske, Iiid. Mus. Notes, v, 38. Habitat. — Bangalore. Tree Attacked. — Rose-bushes. Beetle. — Head large, brown, slightly metallic ; clypeus round, front small ; posterior angles of prothorax rounded ; elytral costae fine, uniformly pubescent ; tarsi small, the joints close together ; pygidium densely pubescent, apex slightly black. This beetle has been reported as defoliating rose-bushes in the Botanical Gardens at Bangalore. Adoretus cardoni, Brenske. This insect (Brenske, described in Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg. vol. xxxii, 1893) has been reported as defoliating roses, cannas, etc., in Calcutta. DYNASTINAE. The forest species at present known as important are large bulky insects, the males furnished with a horn on the head and a prominent projection on the prothorax. The colour is most usually black, but sometimes the insects are brownish. The grubs are large, thick, soft, and much curved, the posterior part of the body being swollen and bag-like. They commit damage to trees, more especially to the roots of young seedlings. Orvctes. Oryctes rhinoceros, Linn. {Tlic Rhinoceros Beetle.) References.— Linn, Syst. Nat. ed. 10, 346 (1758) ; Stabbing, Depart. Notes, i, 346 (1906). Habitat. — Throughout the plains of India. Tree Attacked. — Casuarina {Casuarina eqnisetifoUa) ; Pithecolobium dulce. Madras Plantations. Also palms of various kinds throughout the country. 88 FAMILY SCARABAEIDAE Beetle.— Black, shining, massive, and large, with a prominent horn which curves back- wards on the head, from which it gets its name of rhinoceros beetle. The elytra are very- convex above, the insect being flat beneath. Shanks (tibiae) of Description. legs armed with spikes, the front ones having each three spikes on their outer edges. A large roughly heart-shaped depression on front portion of thorax. A series of broad striae and punctures on elytra. Dark rufous beneath, with hair of same colour in parts. The beetle is easily recognizable by its form, by its antennae ending in a series of terminal plates, by its spiked tibiae and five-jointed tarsi, and by its great size. Length, 43 mm. Breadth across elytra, iS mm. Larva.— A large, stout, curved grub. Head flat, purplish-brown. Mandibles brownish to black, large, and stout ; antennae five-jointed, basal joint enlarged. On first three seg- ments behind head are three pairs of light-brown, stout, long, three-jointed legs. Body yellowish white, last two segments blackish. The head is smaller in transverse diameter than the rest of the body. Body is very thick, corrugated, curved, and swollen out so as to be almost bag-shaped behind. On each side of the third to tenth segments is a large dark- brown spiracle. Body above and below is thickly covered with brown spiky hairs except on last segment, where they are small and scattered. Length, taken round curve, 96 mm. Breadth, 18 mm. The beetle is to be found on the wing during the greater Life History, part of the year. It may hibernate either as a larva or pupa, or perhaps beetle, from November to about March, remains in the soil through the winter in the resting stage, and appears first on the wing towards the end of March, remaih- >^-' ing as late as the beginning of November. The adult a, larva; b, pupa ; insect spends some time in f, imago (male) ; d, lateral aspect of head and thorax ; this state, and apparently e, end of body of male ; /, end of body of female. j -,1 1 -4-4-1 c^ a ;„ ,\r. , ■ T- jy T\ can do with little rood in (After Arrow in r. B. I.) this stage of its existence, as beetles have been kept alive for over two weeks without food of any kind. The insect lays its eggs in the soil or in masses of palm and other refuse situated in or near palm topes. The grubs on hatching out feed in the decaying trees or in adjacent refuse-heaps, and evidently also con- FlG. i\.-Oi-yctcs rhinoceros^ Linn. FAMILY SCARABAEIDAE 89 sume the roots of seedling plants. Mr. C. B. Dawson, District Forest Officer, Kistna, reports that the large grubs feed upon young casuarina seedlings, being attracted to them owing to the moisture in the sand in which they are planted. These young seedlings are watered whilst in the nurseries, and thus the moist layer of sand filled with the young roots would quickly attract grubs of this kind. It is not known whether the beetles lay their eggs in the nurseries, but as the eggs are laid in the soil as well as in the refuse-heaps in the palm topes it is not improbable. In some parts of the country the beetle appears as early as March,. and may even leave the soil in the latter part of October. Larvae are also' to be found at other times in Madras. Ranger P. V. Modiliar, in charge of the Coast Range, Nellore Division, took a number of the grubs, some full-grown, others partly grown only. They were feeding on the roots of young casuarina and Pithecolobiuni dulce in the plantations. The grubs cut through the roots just below the surface level, thus killing the young plants. The grubs are also present in older plantations. The beetle is a serious pest in palm topes. It bores into the soft parenchyma of the top of the growing shoot of the trees, burrowing down- wards through the folded leaves, which on opening out show tattered holes w^here the beetle has pierced them in tunnelling. In this way the bud is often killed and the palm dies. The following are remedies which have been already recommended for trial : — Protection and it 1 u j. r n ^1 Remedies. Lmploy boys or women to remove carefully the soil round seedlings which are seen to be wilting, and take out and kill the fat grubs found at the roots. This should be done when seedlings are seen to be dying off in any considerable number, even at the expense of killing adjacent young plants by thus disturbing their root system. The grubs move from one plant to another, and one grub may thus destroy a number of seedlings. 2. If feasible, a simple and effective plan is to flood the plantation for a few hours so as to drown all the grubs in the soil. Those that come up to the surface should be collected and killed. 3. Remove all diseased, dead, and decaying date and coco-nut palms in the vicinity of nurseries and young plantations. Also — and this is an important point — all refuse-heaps of rotting vegetation, etc. If, in the- formation of the nursery, special soil-pits of manure, litter, and leaves are prepared, they should be carefully inspected for these grubs, as the beetles will be certain to lay in such places. A good instance of this kind of danger was noticed in a Calcutta garden in June 1903. The heap of rich soil and humus used for manuring the flower-beds contained numbers of the larvae of this insect which were spreading from them into the beds of young seedlings, whose roots they were devouring. There were palm-trees- close by. 90 FAiMILY SCARABAEIDAE Xylotrupes. Xylotrupes gideon, Linn. References. — Scambaeus gideon, Linn. Syst. Xat. 12th ed. i (2), 1767, p. 541 ; Burm. Handb. Ent. V, 1847, p. 266. Habitat. — Burma, Assam. Tree Attacked. — Poinciana ve^ia. Pyinmana, Upper Burma (C. B. Smales). Fk;. 52. — Xylotrupes gideon, Linn. ^ (natural size) with outline of female {a)^ and outlines of anterior part of males of maxi- mum (/'), intermediate ((), and minimum {d) development. (After Arrow in /-'. B I.) Beetle. -Shining black or brownish, massive, the elytra occasionally lighter-coloured ; under-surface of pro- meso- and metathorax, especially the two latter, clothed with a long dense yellowish pubescence. Abdomen and under-surface of two hind Description. pairs of legs shining brown. $ easily distinguished by a long l)ifurcate horn projecting from the vertex of head, which curves upwards and backwards towards a thick bifurcate horn on the prothorax, which curves down- wards and \aries in length, at times being much longer than the one on the head. In the $ the horn on the head is longer than that on the prothorax, the latter being sometimes a mere blunt knob. Length, 36 mm. to 50 mm. I'l.ATK VIII. Portions of stems of Poiiuiana rcgia seedlings girdled \i\ Xvloiriip, Pyinnmna, Upper Burma. i!;idLi>i!. Linn. FAMILY SCARABAEIDAE 91 This insect, both male and female, was taken by Mr. C. 1]. Smales, I.F.S., in Pyinmana in Upper Burma. The beetles were found Life History. t^irdlin^ young seedlings of Poinciana regia in a nursery, thus killing them. The plate shows portions of the stems of these young trees completely girdled by the beetles. CETONIINAE. Rather flat beetles, often of brilliant coloration, and not of particu- larly large size. The colour may be brilliant green or blue or brown, with white or yellow markings and spots. The sexes are similar to one another, the male being without protuberances on the head or thorax. The beetles are many of them diurnal, flying about in the sunlight, and being found on leaves and flowers in the daytime. They are commonly known as the rosechafers. It is in this sub-family that the elytra are joined down the middle suture, and so are elevated as one piece to permit the lower wings to be spread for flight. Trigonophorus. Trigonophorus hookeri, White. Reference. — White, Proc. Zool. Soc. p. 14, t. 41, f. i (J ; 2 $ (1856). Habitat. — Assam Duars. Tree Attacked. — Khair (Acacia catechu). Assam. Beetle.— Shining green or blue, tibiae and tarsi brown, latter darker. Head small, a small depressed bifurcate horn on vertex and another smaller horizontal bifurcate horn on front. Prothorax much wider than head, widest behind, finely Description. punctate. Scutellum very large, triangular. Elytra widest at base, constricted l^ehind humeral angles, apex rounded, pygidium exposed, finely punctate. Under-surface shining, smooth. Length, 20 mm. to 25 nmi. I took this insect very plentifully towards the end of May igo6 in areas adjacent to and Life History. between the Sunkos and Reidak rivers near their debouchment from the Bhutan Hills. The beetles were engaged in defoliating the khair, many of the trees being loaded with insects. Fig. 53. — Trigotw- w^hilst others were entirely leafless. tif''.'" hookeri, 111 r " mX.&. Assam 1 do not know on what the larva feeds. Duars. 92 FAMILY SCARABAEIDAE OXYCETONIA. Oxycetonia versicolor, Fabr. Reference. — Fabr, Syst. Ent. 1775, p. 51 ; Schaum. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1849, p. 264, Habitat. — Dehra Dun. Common in the plains. Tree Attacked. — Rose-bushes. Beetle.— Shining, small, reddish coppery ; margins of thorax, elytra, also along the suture of the elytra, green ; dorsal surface of the insect covered with small white spots, being especially numerous on the elytra. Length, 18 mm. Not very much appears to be known about the Life History. life history of this insect. The beetle is very common in July and August Fig. ^j.—O.iytt'- in IJehra Dun, when it feeds upon the Fk;. 55.- C.rj'f,?- r^/.. ,ro^ o petals ot roses and occasionally the ; t coiof% var. a. t^ -J color, var. d. {¥\om F.B.l.) Hibiscus. (From F. B. /.) Oreoderus. Oreoderus gravis, Arr. Reference. — Air. Faun. Br. Ind. Lamell. i, p. 288. Habitat. — South Coimbatore, Madras. Trees Attacked. — Bamboos {Dendvocalauius stvictus and Bauihusa arun- dinacea). Mount Stuart, South Coimbatore. Beetle. — A small bulky weevil. Black, corrugated and crinkled, the elytra flat on disk. Head concealed beneath the deeply chan- nelled and coarsely rugose prothorax ; Description. latter broadest behind the basal margin medianly produced. Elytra mucli broader than prothorax, flat on top, vertically depressed downwards laterally; apex truncate, leaving exposed a short broad pygidium ; depressed and rugulose in middle, elevated laterally into a prominent ridge which is prolonged into a short tooth at apex. Pygidium and under- surface black, the body thick, legs rather elongate and slender, the anterior tibiae with two large teeth on outer edge. Length, 9 mm. Fig. 56. Oreoderus gravis^ Arr. South Coimbatore. I took a specimen of this weevil on a thicket of young bamboos at the end of August 1902 at Mount Stuart in South Coimbatore. It is the only individual of the species I have taken. ( 93 ) CHAPTER Vir Fig. 57. — Cicindela sexpitnctata. ADEPHAGA. Tarsus of all legs five-jointed. Joints of antennae simple. Larva with two-jointed tarsi. Family CICINDELIDAE. (Tiger Beetles.) This is a family of predaceous beetles provided with powerful curved mandibles and long Beetle. legs adapted for rapid running move- ments. The tiger beetles are easily recognizable from their general shape and the fact that the clypeus stretches laterally in front of the insertion of the antennae, whilst the maxillae end in an articulated joint. The insects are often brilliantly coloured, either uniformly throughout or wath bands and spots on them — greens, blues, browns, or blacks predominating, with white, yellow, red, or other coloured spots. The elytra are broader at the base than the prothorax, having shoulders to them, and are smooth. The beetles are never very large, half an inch to a little over an inch usually. Some forms are wingless. The larva is a curious whitish elongate grub, with a largely developed head armed with stout curved mandibles, an enlarged prothoracic segment, the remaining segments and those of the abdomen being of much less width. The seventh from the head is furnished dorsally with a curious ^^/^ projecting hump. There are three pairs of legs on /^ the thoracic segments. -'®- •• The members of the family as a whole feed upon insects of all kinds, and many are diurnal, flying or running rapidly about in the sunlight. The importance of the tiger beetles in the forests has yet to be definitely decided. Blue forms of the genus Collyris are often to be found on the bark of trees, and not improbably may be found to prey upon wood- and bark-boring beetles. This point has yet to be established, as also where the larvae of the forest-living forms dwell. „,...,; , The larvae of the members of the flimily which Fig. 58. — LicitiaeLa octo- - . notata, Wied. Assam, live in the open country usually construct vertical Larva. sesfment counting 94 FAMILIES CICINDELIDAE AND CARABIDAE tunnels in wet sand or soil near rivers and streams, and live in these, preying^ upon such insects as come near them. The bright-coloured insect Cicindela octonotata, Wied., is common on the stony river-beds and banks of the Sunkos, Reidak, and other rivers in Assam, where I have taken it in numbers in the latter part of May. C. sexpiinctata is a common little cicindelid found in the rice fields and often on the borders of the forest. Family CARABIDAE. {Ground Beetlea.) The Carabidae are a predaceous family of beetles closely allied to the Cicindelidae, and having the long curved biting man- Beetle, dibles of the latter, from which they may be distinguished by the fact that the clypeus does not stretch laterally in front of the insertion of the antennae and the maxillae are not hooked. The tarsi are five-jointed and the antennae are filiform, and thus the insects can be distinguished from the Tenebrionidae (p. 232), which in their dark colouring and shape they otherwise to some extent resemble. The beetle is compact in form, with close-fitting elytra, often more oval than in the cicindelids. The elytra are occasionally, as in tenebrionids, soldered together, with no wings for flight below. In many forms the legs are long and adapted for running, in others short and fitted for digging. The colours are usually dull black, brown, or greyish, with occasionally spots of yellow or white. Little is known about the larvae of the family. They are supposed to be uniformly predaceous, furnished with a large head and Larva. powerful mandibles, the rest of the grub tapering pos- teriorly, dull brown or black in colour, the last segment ending in a pair of cerci : three pairs of walking legs are present on the thoracic segments. The habits of some of the beetles are known, the insects preying upon other insect life either during the daytime or at night. Some forms have been found under the bark of trees feeding upon bark- and wood-boring beetles, etc., and the whole life of these species may be passed within the tree. Others have been found in the soil. Calosoma orientale, Hope. Reference. — Hope, Trans. Zool. Soc. i, p. 92. Habitat. — Peshawar and elsewhere in Northern India. Fig. s9.~Ca/oso;m! orien- Habits.— This carabid has been reported to prey tah', Hope. N. India. upon the young of the locust Schistoccra percgrina. FAMILY CARABIDAE 95 Anthia sexguttata, Fabr. Reference. — Fabr. Sysi. l-'.tit. p. 136. Habitat. — Changa Manga, Punjab; Berar. Common in the plains of North and Central India. Habits. — In Berar in July igoi I found this large carabid attacking the caterpillars of the large hawk-moth {Pseudosphinx discistriga), which happened to be very abundant defoliating the leaves of the teak-trees in the Melghat Forest. The beetle itself was in some numbers, running up the main trunks and on to the branches of the trees, and there could be no doubt of its carnivorous activities at the time I observed it. I have never since found it preying upon caterpillars. At the Changa Manga Plantation near Lahore in the Punjab I took the insect feeding upon the wood-borer Sinoxylon analc, and think it was also attacking the species of Alindria and Melamhia which were themselves preying upon the Sinoxylon. I took several specimens of the carabid at various heights on a large standing sissu-tree, and saw others right up the bole just beneath where the crown commenced. This tree was very badly attacked by the Sinoxylon, which was tunnelling into it to oviposit. The carabid was searching for the beetles which had partially disappeared intO' the bark, seizing such when found and dragging them from their partly formed holes and devouring them {vide p. 173). Macrochilus bensoni, Hope. Habitat. — United Provinces Terai, North India. Habits. — This is a common carabid, appearing in numbers at the com- mencement of and throughout the rains in North India. I took pupae and beetles, some of the latter mature, in the soil at the foot of sal-trees in the Horai forests of the Kumaun Division on 11 May igo8. The insects were predaceous upon the larvae of the cockchafer beetles Lachnosterna problematica, L. clypealis, and Hetcroplia varians (p. 79). I have also taken specimens of this insect or a closely allied species- from beneath the bark of a dead stump of a Homalium tomentoswn tree on the Sal ween River in Tenasserim. The insect was active and numerous in the stump on 8 March 1905,. and was feeding upon a termite which was riddling the wood. Scarites bengalensis, Dej. Reference. — Dej. Spec, ii, p. 468. Habitat. — Changa Manga, Punjab. Habits. — This beetle is predaceous upon the sissu wood-borer Sinoxylon analc. It was taken from beneath the bark of a sissu-tree badly infested by •gG FAMILY CARABIDAE the Sinoxylon in company with species oi Alindria (p. 114) and the carabid Morio subconvexiis. I have not taken the larvae of the beetle. It is probable that they also live beneath the bark of the tree, and possibly enter the tunnels of the bostrychids and prey upon the larvae of the latter (p. 174). Morio subconvexus, Chand. Habitat.— Changa Manga, Punjab. Fig. 60. — Scarites bengalensis, Dej. Changa Manga. Habits.— The beetle preys upon the bostrychid wood-borer Sinoxylon anale. I took the insect in company with other predaceous beetles beneath the bark of a large sissoo-tree badly attacked by the Sinoxylon. I have not taken the larvae, but imagine that they will be found in the burrows of the bostrychid larvae (p. 174). Amblystomus magnus, Bates. Habitat.— Katha, Upper Burma. Tree Infested.— Teak {Tectona grandis). Mohnyin Forest, Katha, Upper Burma. Beetle.— Small black, very shining, with a striped pygidium. Legs and antennae brown. Head and thorax very finely punctate. Elytra striate, the intervals smooth. Length, 5 mm. I took a specimen of this carabid from beneath the bark of a large girdled standing teak-tree in the Kadu depot in the Mohnyin Forest up in Katha. It is the only Fig. 6\.—Aml>lysto- specimen of the insect I have taken. miis magHJis, Bates. Katha. Tachyta nietneri, Schaum. Reference.— Schaum.BerL Zeit. p. 88 (1863). Habitat.— Tons Valley, 2,300 ft., North-West Hima- laya ; Tharrawaddy, Lower Burma. Trees Infested.— Chir V\ne{Pinuslongi folia) : Thadiar, Tons Valley; Anogeissus latifolia : Konbilin Forest, Thar- rawaddy, Lower Burma. Beetle.— Very small, dark brown, shiniijg ; head triangular, with long curved black mandibles. Thorax smooth, with a longitudinal medium impression. Elytra smooth, finely striate. Legs and antennae brown. Length, 2 mm. to 2.2 mm. Larva.— Twelve segments, yellow in colour except first, which is brown, and the anterior portion of second, which is yellowish brown. Head square, large, black, provided with a pair of stout calliper- FiG. 62. -Tachyta iiietneri, Schaum. N.W. Himalaya ; Burma. FAMILY CARABIDAE 97 like mandibles. Thoracic segments with three pairs of legs. Posterior segment terminates in two corneous processes, calliper-shaped, tiie under-surface of segment forming a kind of pseudo-pod. Length. 5 mm. I first took specimens of this very active beetle from beneath the bark of a dying chir-pine log in the Tons Valley. The insect Life History. was found in large numbers in the tunnels and galleries, and appeared to be predaceous upon the wood- and bark- infesting insects of this tree. These specimens were taken on 8 June 1902. The tree was attacked by the Tomicus and PolygyapJius bark-borers and the Platypus wood-borer. The larvae of the carabid were also numerous. They are rapid walkers, using the thoracic legs and the pseudo-pod. Their jaws are e.xtremely powerful, and they are very tenacious of their grip once having got a firm purchase. When they had seized a piece of stick with which I poked them about I could lift them clean up by their jaws, as they refused to let go (pp. 527, 561). On 22 January 1905, in Burma, I again took specimens of a minute carabid, which has been identified as this species of Tachyta, from beneath the bark of a large felled Anogcissiis latifolia tree. This tree had been cut down in a tounggya clearing in the Kadin Bilin Forest in Tharrawaddy. I again on this occasion recorded a note to the effect that the insect was exceedingly active and appeared to be carnivorous. Here it probablv attacks the Platypus rectangulatus (p. 623) of the Anogcissus and other bark-borers. Omphra ? sp. Habitat. — North-West Himalaya. Habits. — This carabid is predaceous upon the caterpillars of the deodar geometer moth. These " looper " caterpillars seriously defoliate the deodar in parts of the North-West Himalaya in June-July, sometimes entirely stripping all the needles from the trees. In July 1901 Mr. E. M. Coventry, of the Indian Forest Service, found this carabid feeding upon the caterpillars in the Kalela Forest of the Simla Division. The greater part of this forest was entirely defoliated that year. 9003 ( 98 ) CHAPTER VIII. POLYMORPHA. Tarsus of legs variable. Joints of antennae clubbed or serrate. Family HYDROPHILIDAE. The family may be recognized by the curious antenna, which consists of a long basal joint, the rest of the joints, except from one to three very short ones, forming a club of which the apical ones are widened out and pubescent. The beetles are shining black or dull in colour, the head, prothorax, and elytra fitting closely together, as shown in fig. 63. They are of small size. The family consists principally of aquatic forms. One forest-living beetle, a species of Regimbartia, is described briefly below, but I have not taken its larva. Regimbartia aenea, Benth. Habitat. — Goalpara, Assam. Tree Infested. gaon, Goalpara. -Sal {Shorea robnsta). Kachu- Beetle. — Elongate-o\-ate. Black, with a shining yel- lowish luslre. Head depressed, impressed medianly ; the eyes large, placed laterally, and yellowish Description. in colour. Prothorax convex, de- pressed in front, wider than long, anterior margin and sides rounded ; disk smooth and very finely punctate. Scutellum elongate, heart - shaped, very finely punctate. Elytra elongate, \'ery convex, depressed apically, the sides rounded to posterior coxae, and thence rather sharply constricted ; apices separately rounded ; very Y\c,. 63. Re<^imbartia aenea finely punctate. Under-surface dull black. Legs shining Benth. Assam. black. Length, 5 mm. This beetle in its mature state is probably a sap-feeder. During a visit to the Kachugaon sal forests in Assam in May Life History. igo6 Mr. Perree had a large green healthy sal-tree felled for me on the 13th. Between the i6th and 19th of the month this beetle was found beneath the bark of this tree HYDROPHILIDAE, SILPHIDAE, AND STAPHYLINIDAE 99 in the cambium layer, which was full of sap, upon which it appeared to be feeding. The tree was visited on the 14th and 15th, and portions of the bark stripped off, but the insect was not observed in it before the i6th. It had apparently been attracted to the tree by the presence of the oozing sap. Family SILPHIDAE. Present investigation has not shown this family of beetles to be of importance in the forest. It is chiefly of interest owing to the habit of some members termed " burying " beetles. These insects bury the bodies of small mammals by removing the soil below the bodies so as to cause them to sink into the ground ; the beetles then feed and oviposit in the decom- posing mass, in which their grubs are also reared. This habit has not yet been observed in the case of the Indian forest species, whose life histories are little known. The beetles of the family vary in shape and appearance, and may be recognized by having the conical-shaped coxae of the front legs placed close together, the antennae being usually clubbed. They are supposed to be similar in habits to the Staphylinidae, and some may be predaceous. A common Indian species is Silpha tetraspilota, a squarish, flat beetle, with a broad prothorax, and broad elytra marked with a few prominent longitudinal ridges. Family STAPHYLINIDAE. {Rove Beetles.) The beetles are easily recognized by the short truncate elytra which only cover the base of the abdomen, and leave exposed this latter, which is more or less long and flexible. The under-wings are folded up and tucked away under these short elytra. The shape varies from elongate and narrow^ to oval or elongate-oval forms, shining-black or brown or dull yellow-brown in colour. The elongate forms have a superficial resemblance to earwigs (Forficulidae), from which they must be distinguished. The legs are short, and have a tarsus with a variable number of joints. The beetles run rapidly, and have the power of curling up the abdominal segments over the back. The mouth is usually provided with stout mandibles, which are often specially prominent in the larval forms which live under the bark of trees. In other respects the larvae often resemble in form the beetles, save that the wings are absent. The beetles and larvae of the forest forms of this family are in many cases predaceous, feeding upon bark- and wood-boring insects, or on species G 2 100 FAMILY STAPH YLINIDAE which live under the bark of trees, feeding upon the sap or decaying matter. It is probable that some of the staphylinids found in trees also feed chiefly on decaying matter. The few species I have been able to observe appeared, however, to be predaceous in character. Many of the forms living under the bark of trees have a general resemblance either to the common staphylinid found in country lanes in England, the "devil's coach-horse," or to some of the commoner histerids found- beneath the bark of trees. Species of both these types are to be found in coniferous trees preying upon scolytid larvae in the Western Himalaya; whilst a third, resembling the histerid type, but with a more elongate abdomen, giving the insect a torpedo-shaped appearance, is to be found blue ^il"^f 6^''' NAV." beneath the bark of trees. Himalaya. Amongst the trees from which I have taken these small forms of staphylinid beetles may be mentioned the deodar, blue pine, spruce, long- leaved pine, and the Quercus incana, in the Western Himalaya ; Bamhusa polyinorpha, Millctia brandisiana, Garntga pinnata, and pyinkadu, in Tharra- waddy ; teak, Monis laevigata, Schiina noronhae, and Eugenia grandis, in Katha in Upper Burma ; Honialium tomentosum and Miluisa velutina in Tenasserim ; in Assam, Ficiis elastica, various species of trees in the Evergreen Forests in North Darrang, Piniis khasya in Shillong, and sal in Goalpara ; and in the sal in the Mandla forests in the Central Provinces, where the staphylinid appeared to be feeding upon the wood-borer Sinoxy- lon crassujn, and perhaps on H ectarthnim heros, which is predaceous upon the borer here. Holosus ? sp. Habitat.— North -West Himalaya. Habits. — This small, elongate, shining-black staphylinid is predaceous upon the smaller bark-boring scolytids of the blue-pine in Jaunsar. It attacks Polygraphus pirn, Stebbing, Crypturgus piisillus, and, I think, Pityogenes coniferae, Stebbing, and possibly the grubs of Tomicus ribhcn- V / •- ^^ tropi, Stebbing. I have also taken it from spruce and deodar. Leucocraspedum ? sp. Habitat. — North-West Himalaya. ^"'''■- 65- Habits. — This small, oval, elongate, black, Leucocraspc- Holosus i-- i.ui--j-f ir-i i- diim'fiv,. ? SD snuiing staphylmid is round rairly commonly m N.W. Himalaya. (E.P.S.) felled and girdled blue-pine infested with the FAMILIES STAPHYLINIDAE AND HISTERIDAE loi Polygraphus pini and Crypturgus pusillns beetles in Jaunsar. The beetle has a superficial resemblance to a histerid (Parumalns, etc.). The insect is predaceous, feeding on the scolytid f^rubs and perhaps on the pupae. I have also taken it from spruce. Family HISTERIDAE. The forest histerids are for the most part easily recognizable beetles, being short, hard, and compact, the parts fitting Beetle. accurately together ; usually black, occasionally brown, in colour, and shining ; but some considerable metallic colouring occurs in the family. The elytra fit very closely together, are very hard, with their apices usually truncate, leaving exposed two segments of the abdomen ; the prothorax is often incised on the anterior edge, the head fitting into the incision ; in some divisions of the family the head is retractile ; the antennae are elbowed, eleven- jointed, the basal joint being long and the terminal three forming a club. The beetles vary in shape, some of the bark-living forms being thin, flat, and squarish, whilst others are compact cylinders, resembling in section the bark- and wood-borers upon w^hich they prey. The legs are short, the tibiae often flattened and spined, and perhaps aid the beetle in making a way through tunnels and galleries filled with wood-dust. The mandibles ^ig. 66.—Hololepta are strong and powerful, and in some species long. baunlyi, Mars. Siwaliks. The type of Niponius larva is an elongate pinkish-yellow or whitish- yellow grub, with stout, well-developed mandibles, a Larva. pair of jointed processes or cerci to the end of the abdomen, a well-developed thoracic segment with a hard chitinous plate dorsally, followed by two narrow segments. The median abdominal segments are the broadest. The under-surface is usually paler than the upper, and often translucent. I have never actually reared either of the Niponius beetles described below from their grubs. A smaller type of grub is that of the genus Teretriosoina, which has the abdominal segments narrower, the median ones not much broader than those anterior and posterior to them. The Niponius pupa, w^hich is the only one I know, is elongate, straight, and white, with a vertical head and free limbs, wings, Pupa. etc. The Niponius egg is large, spherical, and pale translucent. The histerid family is a most interesting one to the forester in India, owing to the fact that it contains a number of very important predators on 102 FAMILY HISTERIDAE forest pests. As a whole the family are found either beneath the bark or wood of the stems, roots, or branches of trees, in decaying animal or vegetable matter, or in fungi "puff-balls." They are not for the most part diurnal insects, and therefore during the daytime they must be searched for in their homes. Some species are to be found under stones, logs, and other debris in the forest during the daytime. Here, however, we are more particularly concerned with the members of the family who live in and breed in the trees. Of their habits something has already been learnt, but much remains to be done in the study of their exceedingly interesting life histories. That some of the species whose habits have already been investigated are of the first importance in the forest, the life histories of the two species of Niponius, to mention but one genus, will show; and yet the first of these, xV. andrewesi, of the plains forests, was described as a new species in 1893, the other, N. canalicollis, of the Himalayan coniferous areas, in 1901. In a previous chapter I have already dealt with the importance of these predaceous enemies of the bark- and wood-boring beetles. Mr. G. Lewis, F.L.S., has suggested * that the striae on the elytra might be of use as guiding lines in the case of species such as Niponius, assisting them to follow wood-boring Platypi down their tunnels. My ten years' investigation work in various parts of India would seem to show that the genera Niponius, Platysoma, Cylistosoma, and Paromalus seek out the sub-cortical Scolytidae, such as Scolytus, Toniicus, Polygraphus, Sphacrotrypes, etc., obtaining access to the tree through the entrance bore- holes of the beetles, and crawling down these to reach the partially or fully formed egg-galleries in the bast layer. In the case of some genera, e.g. Niponius, the eggs are laid in these latter galleries. Niponius. This genus was founded on some Japanese species. The three Indian species known were described in 1893 (2) and igoi. Niponius andrewesi, Lewis. References. — Lewis, Ent. Mag. xxix, p. 183 (1893) ; Ann. Xat. Hist, xiv, p. 151, pi. 6, f. 3, 3rt (1904) Habitat. — United Provinces, Central Provinces, Assam, Madras. Also reported from Bombay Presidency. Habits. — This insect {vide fig. 317) is predaceous upon all the species of Sphacrotrypes bark-borer of the sal-tree in India. The beetle is of cylindrical shape, of about the same diameter as the Sphacrotrypes, and enters their tunnels and oviposits in the egg-gallery of the bark-borer, two or three large, spherical, pale-whitish, translucent eggs being deposited. The grubs feed on the bark-borer grubs. * Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. June 1892 ; Eni. Monthly Mag. 2nd ser. 183 (1893). FAMILY HISTERIDAE 103 I have taken this Niponius in the galleries of Sphaerotrypes siwalikensis in the sal in the SiwaHks and United Provinces Terai forests; in those of Sphaerotrypes coimbatorcnsis in Ano<^eissus latifolia in Coimbatore, in Madras; again in sal, attacking S. assaincnsis, in Assam, and S. globulus in sal in the Central Provinces. Writing from a knowledge of the habits of this insect, but without having been able to verify my opinion, it will probably be found that in the Bombay Presidency this insect is present in Anogeissus latifolia, feeding predaceously on S, globulus in that tree (vide p, 480). Niponius canalicollis, Lewis. References.— Lewis, Atin. Nat. Hist, viii, p. 370 (1901); Stebbing, Depart. Notes, p. 248, pi. 13, f. 6 (1903); Lewis, Ann. Nat. Hist, xiv, p. 151, pi. 6, f. i (1904). Habitat.— North-West Himalaya; North Zhob, Baluchistan; Sulieman Mountains. Habits. — Next to the clerid Thanasimus himalayensis, I look upon this Niponius {vide fig. 6) as the most important of the predaceous foesof the bark- boring beetles of the conifers of the North-West Himalaya, and the forests clothing the mountainous region in the North of Zhob and the Sulieman Mountains. The distribution of the insect, so far as my personal observations have gone, extends from Kumaun in the Himalaya on the east to the Sulie- man Mountain Range on the extreme west. Within this area I have taken the insect in the Pinus longifolia in Kumaun, Jaunsar, Tehri Garhwal, Simla, Bashahr, and Chamba ; in the deodar, blue pine, and spruce in Jaunsar, Tehri Garhwal, Simla, Bashahr, and Chamba ; and in the Pinus gerardiana in the North Zhob and Sulieman Mountain forests. Mr. G. Lewis suggests* that the Zhob Mountains are " probably the western geographical limit of Niponius as Japan is of its eastern boundary." The insect feeds predaceously upon the following scolytid bark- and wood-borers : — ■ In Deodar: Scolytus major, Scolytus minor. In Blue Pine: Polygraphus major, Polygraphus pini, Tomicus ribbentropi. In Blue Pine and Spruce : Hylastes himalayensis, Rhyncholus himalayensis. In Pinus longifolia : Tomicns longifolia {vide p. 507). HOLOLEPTA. Hololepta baunlyi, Mars. Refeken'CE.— Mars. Mon. p. 399, pi. 10, f. 9 (1857). Habitat. — Siwaliks, North India. Habits.— Specimens of this histerid (fig. 66) were taken by Student B. C. S. Gupta, of the Imperial Forest School, Dehra Dun. He found them under the bark of a dead Lagerstromia parviflora tree at Bulawala, in the Dehra Dun, on 17 February 1902. =* Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 7, vol. xix, April 1907. 104 FAMILY HISTERIDAE Fig. 67. — Hololepta indica, Erichs. x 2. Siwaliks. Hololepta indica, Erichs. References. — Erichs. Jahrb. p. 90(1834); Mars. Mon. p. 152, pi. 4, f. 10 (1853); batchiana, Mars. I.e. p. 588, pi. 11, f. 2 (i860) ; Lew. Ann. Mus. Genova, xii, p. 631, (i8gi) ; aequa, Lew. Ann. Nat. Hist, xvi, p. 204 (1885). Habitat. — Siwaliks, North India. Also reported from Assam, Java, New Guinea. Habits. — This insect was taken by Student B. C. S. Gupta, at Bulawala, beneath the bark of Lagerstromia parviflora in company with H. haunlyt, as above described. Teretriosoma. Of the three Indian species known, the first was described in 1870, the other two in igoi. Teretriosoma intrusum, Mars. References. — Mars. Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg. (Tereti-ius) xiii, p. 121 (1870); Stabbing, Depart. Notes, p. 20 (1902). Habitat. — Changa Manga, Punjab ; Sukkur, Sind ; Seoni, Central Provinces. Habits. — This insect is predaceous upon the wood-boring beetles Sinoxy- lon crussuui and S. anale. It has been taken in the galleries of the beetles in sissu wood at the Changa Manga Plantation ; in Prosopis spicigera in Sukkur, Sind ; and in Tcrininalia toinentosa at Seoni, in the Central Provinces {vide p. 164). Teretriosoma stebbingi, Lewis. Reference. — Lewis, Ann. Nat. Hist, viii, p. 380 (1901) ; Stebbing, Depart. Notes, p. 19 (1902). Habitat. — Changa Manga Plantation, Punjab. Habits. — The insect has been taken in compan}- with T. intmisum, predaceous upon the wood-borers Sinoxylon crassum and 5. analc, in sissu wood at the Changa Manga Plantation {viilc p. 164 and fig. 108). Teretriosoma cristatum,* Lewis. References. — Lewis, Ann. Nat. Hist, viii, 381 (1901); Stebbing, Depart. Notes, p. 19 (1902). Habitat. — Changa Manga Plantation, Punjab. Habits.^Predaceous upon Sinoxylon crassum and S. analc in sissu-trees at the Changa Manga Plantation (p. 164). Teretrilis. The only Indian species of the genus mentioned in Lewis' Catalogue* was taken at Seoni in the Central Provinces. A second species from the Punjab was described in 191 1. * According to Sharp (if;//. St>c-. p. 513, 191 2) cristatum is the female oi stebbingi. FAMILY HISTERIDAE 105 Teretrius Indus, Lewis. Referench. — Lewis, Ann. Nat. Hist, x, p. 277 (1902). Habitat. — Seoni, Central Provinces. Habits. — I took specimens of this insect from the tunnels of Sinoxylon crassuni in a Terminalia tomentosa post taken from the roof of a bungalow in Seoni, in the Central Provinces. The insect proved to be new to science, and this was the first discovery of the existence of the genus in India {vide p. 164 and fig. io8a). Teretrius mogul, Lewis. Reference. — Lewis, Ann. Nat. Hist. ser. 8, viii, p. 78 (191 1). Habitat. — Changa Manga, Lahore, Punjab. Habits.— I took this insect associated with Tcretviosoma intriisuui in the galleries of S. crassum in Dalbcrgia sissoo at Changa Manga, near Lahore (p. 164). Platysoma. Platysoma rimarium, Er. References.— Erichs, Jahrb. p. 112 (1834) ; Mars. Mon. p. 149, pi. 3, f. 9 (1861). Habitat. — Siwaliks, North Lidia. Habits. — In January igo2 I took specimens of this histerid from beneath the bark of a dead felled sal-tree at Dholkhand, on the south side of the Siwaliks. The dead tree was infested by the beetles Carpophilns flavipes a.nd Ecnoinaens (pp. 109, no), and it is possible that the histerids may have been predaceous upon these latter. Towards the end of February of the same year, Mr. A. Littlewood, of the Madras Provincial Service, at the time a student at the Imperial Forest School, took further specimens of the beetle from beneath Flaiys^ma rLanum, Patches of rotting bark on living sal-trees at Karwa- Er. Siwaliks. pani, in the Dun. Platysoma rimae, Lewis. Reference. — Lewis, Ann. Nat. Hist. ser. 7, vol. xvi, p. 343 (1905). Habitat.— North- West Himalaya. Habits. — A common histerid, to be found in the galleries of many of the coniferous bark- and wood-borers in the Western Himalaya, upon which * 'A Systematic Catalogue of Hisieridae . G. Lewis, F.L.S, (1905). io6 FAMILY HISTERIDAE it feeds. I have taken the beetle in the galleries of Tomicus Ribbentropi and Rhyncholus in blue pine, in those of the two Scolyti in deodar, and in Rhyncholus and Hylastes hiinalayoisis galleries in the spruce (vide p. 576). The insect may prove to consist of two distinct species. An insect taken from a Tomicus gallery is figured on p. 557 ; one taken from a Scolvtus gallery on p. 576. Platysoma ? sp. Habitat.— North-West Himalaya. Beetle. — Black, shining above and below ; very flat and some- what elongate. Head with a stout pair of long mandibles. Length, 3.9 mm. Habits. — I have taken specimens of this insect from beneath the bark of girdled dead ban oak {Q. incana). The insect is a carnivorous one, and probably preda- ceous upon some of the Coleoptera found beneath the bark of this tree (p. S45). I'^'g. b^.—Platysoina sp. in Quercus incana. X 5. N.W. Himalaya. Platysoma ? spp. Habitat. — Assam . Habits. — I took two histerids sparingly in the Kachugaon forests in Assam. They are predaceous upon Sphaerotrypes assainensis, Steb., and Diapus furtivtis, sp. nov., Sampson (vide pp. 487 and 631). CVLISTOSOMA. Cylistosoma dufali, Mars. References. — Mars. Abeille (Platysoma), i, p. 310(1864) ; scitiilum, Lewis, Ann. Nat. Hist, iii, p. 280 (1889); Stebbing, Depart. Notes [Platysoma), 351 (1906). Habitat.— North-West Himalaya. Habits. — This histerid is predaceous upon Tomicus ribbentropi, and perhaps on Polygraphns pini, in blue pine (p. 556). Carcinops. Carcinops sp. Reference. — Determined by Mr. Lewis as an undescribed species of Carcinops. Habitat.— North- West Himalaya. ^^^^^^^^ Beetle. — Elongate, torpedo-shaped, and very flat ; reddish brown ^2^^^^^^^^^^ in colour, shining. Length, 2.3 mm. ^ ^¥^ Habits.— I took this histerid beneath the bark of a girdled ban oak-tree {Q. incana) at Kathian, in Jaunsar. Fig. 7o.—Carc/n<>^s ^^^ j^^^ ^^ ^^^^^^^^ -^^ ^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^ ^^ ^^^ sp. X 10. I\.\V. Himalaya. Platysoma, and is undoubtedly predaceous. FAMILIES HISTERIDAE AND NITIDULIDAE 107 Pakomalus. Paromalus sp. nov. Reference.— Determined by Mr. Lewis as a new species of Paromalus at present undescribed. Habitat.— North-West Himalaya. Habits.— The insect is predaceous upon the conifer wood-borers Rhy^i- cholns himalaycnsis and Hylastes himalaycmh of the spruce and blue pine. This histerid is an active one, and is fairly common in the Western Himalaya (p. 453). Paromalus sp. Reference.— At present undescribed. May be identical with Paromalus sp. nov. above. Habitat.— North-West Himalaya. Habits.— I found this insect in numbers beneath the bark of newly felled and standing green Pinus longifolia trees at Jermola and elsewhere in Jaunsar and Tehri Garhwal in October 1906. The histerid is predaceous upon the bark-borers Tomicus longifolia and Polygraphus longifolia (p. 560). Family NITIDULIDAE. This is a family of small beetles, of which some species are commonly met with in the forests beneath the bark of trees or feeding at the oozing sap of the newly cut surfaces of stumps. The insects are of small size, flat, and brown or yellow-brown in colour. The antennae have a three-jointed club, all the coxae Beetle. are separated, and each has an external prolongation ; the tarsi are five-jointed, the fourth joint being the smallest ; the abdomen with five visible ventral segments, and the elytra very often truncate. The beetles resemble some forms of Staphylinidae and Histeridae. The larva in some forms is elongate, slightly curved, with a well- marked head, dorsal shield to the prothorax, and three Larva. pairs of jointed legs on the thoracic segments; the body segments taper posteriorly. As a family the insects feed, perhaps, chiefly on sap, but also on decay- ing vegetable and animal matter. The beetles are often found on or in flowers and in dried fruits or seeds. They are also commonly found in the tunnels of wood-borers in wood and bamboos, in the decaying fibres of bark, etc. The common beetle Carpophilus hemipterus has been found in many situations, as will be described. The family is probably of small economic importance in the forest. ioi> FAMILY NITIUULIDAE CARPOrHILUS. Several minute species of the s^enus are commonly found in trees and bamboos in the forests. Carpophilus hemipterus, Linn. var. Reference. — Linn. Syst. Nat. i, 2, p. 363. Habitat. — Dehra Dun and North India gene- rally. Mandla, Central Provinces. Trees Infested. -Bamboo {Dcndrocalamus stric- tiis), BiicIuDianiii latifolia : Dehra Dun: Sal {Shorca rohusta) : Mandla. Beetle. — Small. Head black ; piothorax and pygidium brownish black ; elytra yellow with a brown patch in centre of each. Head and prothorax punctate. Scutellum large. Elytra short, leaving exposed se\eral segments of body : finely punctate. Length. 4 nun. Fig. 7 1 . — Carpophilus hemipterus, var. N. India and Central Provinces. Larva. — Elongate, curved, but slightly corrugated, with a fairly-developed head and a dorsal prothoracic shield, three pairs of jointed legs on the thorax ; abdominal segments taper posteriorly, the last ending in two processes. Student Littlewooil, of the Dehra Dun Forest School, took a number of these beetles sucking the sap oozing from newly blazed Life History. places on Buc]uxnania latifolia trees in February 1902 in the Dun forests. In April 1909 I found the beetle feed- ing on the sap at the cut surfaces of logs and stumps of newl}' felled sal-trees in Mandla, in the Central Provinces. This beetle is also often found in drying or dead fruits and seeds of trees, and in the tunnels of Sino.xylon and other bamboo-borers, whilst the grub is a common occupant of the inner surface of the spathes of the Dendrocalamus bamboo in North India. Carpophilus mutilatus, Erichs. Reference. — Erichs. Deutsche Zeitschr. iv, p. 258. Habitat. — Siwaliks, North India. Tree Infested. — }hicha>ia)iia latifolia. Dun Forests. Beetle. — Elongate. Brown, shining. Head naiTOwer than prothorax, punctate. Prothorax ^vider than long, finely and irregularly punctate, with depressions near basal edge. Scutellum large. Elytra short, truncate, leaving several abdominal segments exposed ; punctate, sparsely clothed with short golden hair ; pygidium punctate, the basal part of last but one and last segment clothed with a short pubescence. Length, 3.5 mm. to 3.9 mm. This insect was taken by Mr. Littlewood in company with C. hemipterus feeding at sap on Buchanania latifolia. FAMILY XITIDULIDAE 109 Carpophilus foveicollis, Murray. Reference. — Murr. Mon. Trans. Linn. Soc. xxiv, 3, p. 344 (1864). Beetle. — Klongate, constricted behind. Shining black, elytra and pyg-idiimi l^rown, under- surface lighter coloured, legs yellow brown. Head small, punctate. Prothorax convex, shining, wider than long, anterior margin straight, sides curved ; punctate. ' Elytra flat, highly punc- tate ; three abdominal segments fully exposed, these highly punctate. Length, 5.5 mm. to 5.9 mm. Lefroy, in Indian Insect Life (p. 297), mentions that he has taken this insect, in company with C. hemipterns, " under the sheathing leaves of bamboos, where their larvae live ; and the latter (C. foveicollis), with other species, breeds freely in dried fruits in stores and godowns." Carpophilus flavipes. Murray. Reference. — Murr. Mon. Trans. Linn. Soc. xxiv, p. 359 (1867). Habitat.— Siwaliks, North India. Tree Infested. — Sal {Shorea robusta). Dholkhand, Siwaliks, Beetle. — Small, black, moderately shming, highly punctate. Pro- thorax not much wider than long, convex, anterior angles produce! slightly forward, highly punctate. Scutellum large, punctate. Elytra short, truncate, convex ; pygidium clothed apically with a fine pubes- cence. Legs yellowish brown. Length, 4 mm. Fig. 72. — Carpo- ph ilns fla vipes. Siwaliks. I first took specimens of this small Carpophilus from beneath the bark of felled sal-trees near Dholkhand in the Siwaliks Life History. towards the end of January 1901. I have since taken the beetle, often in similar positions, in the winter in the Siwaliks. The imago feeds on sap. Fig. 73. Ills 't sp. CarpopJii- .Siwaliks. Carpophilus ? sp. Reference. ^ — Determined doubtfully as a species of Carpophilus. Habitat. — Siwaliks, North India. Tree Infested.— Sal (Shorea robusta). Dholkhand. Beetle.— Resembles flavipes. Anterior angles of prothorax not produced, anterior margin straight, sides curved ; elytra with sides nearly straight, as wide apically as at base ; pygidium more constricted behind. I have taken this insect, in company with C. flavipes,. in the sal in the Siwaliks forests in similar positions to those occupied by the latter species. Carpophilus obsoletus, Erichs. Reference. — Erichs. Deutsche Zeitschr. iv, p. 259. Habitat. — Siwaliks, North India. Also reported from Madras, Ceylon. Tree Infested. — Buchanania latifolia. Dun Forests. no FAMILY NITIDULIDAE Beetle.— Larger \.)^7^nJlav^pes. Black, moderately shining, highly punctate. Head small, punctate. Prothorax large, convex, highly punctate, sides rounded in front, straight behind. Elytra short, truncate, leave exposed two full and a partial third abdominal segments. Legs blackish brown. Length, 3.8 to 4 mm. Taken by Student Littlewood feeding at sap on blazed Buchanania latifolia trees in the Dun forests. Tetrisus. Tetrisus sp. Reference. — Determined as a species of TetrisJts by Monsieur A. Grouvelle. Habitat. — Goalpara, Assam. Tree Infested. — Sal {Shorea robusta). Kachu- gaon, Goalpara. Beetle.— Flat, light brown in colour. Upper surface very finely punctate. Prothorax wider than long, sides rounded. Scutellum large. Elytra short. Hind coxae large transverse. Length, 3 mm. to 3.2 mm. I found a number of this nitidulid at Kachu- gaon on 16 May igo6 feeding Life History. on the sap oozing from the bark at one end of a felled green log cut a couple of days previously. During the next few days I found other speci- mens of the insect engaged in the same way. possess the instinct which enables them to discover felled green trees •with the sap oozing from the fresh-cut surfaces as quickly as do their cerambvx and scolytid companions. Fig. 74. — Tetrisus sp. Goalpara, Assam. The beetles seem to ECNOMAEUS. Ecnomaeus haroldi, Reitt. Reference. — Reitt. Verh. Ver. Brunn. xii, p. 182 (1874). Habitat. — Siwaliks, North India. Tree Infested. — ^Sal {Shorea robusta). Dholkhand, Siwaliks. Beetle. — A tiny, iiat, elongate, reddish-brown beetle, the elytra leaving exposed two seg- ments of the body. Prothorax wider than head, anterior angles produced, sides rounded, base truncate. Elytra nearly as wide as thorax at base, wider behind, apex truncate, finely punctate ; pygidium finely punctate, fringed with hairs. Legs lighter-coloured. Length, 6 mm to 8.5 mm. I took specimens of this nitidulid from beneath the bark of a felled sal- tree at Dholkhand in the Siwalik Division towards the end of January. Ecnomaeus waterhousei, Grouv. Habitat.^SiwaHks, North India. Tree Infested.— Sal {Shorea robusta). Dholkhand, Siwaliks. FAMILIES NITIDULIDAE AND COLYDIIDAE iii Beetle.— Elongate, flat, much nanower than haroldi. Shining brown. Head elongate, concave on top. Eyes black, large, placed at base of head on either side. Prothorax slightly wider than long, margins channelled, punctate. Elytra elongate, slightly convex on disk, punctate ; apex truncate, leaving exposed three abdominal segments which are punctate. Under- surface and legs lighter-coloured. Length, 'j.'j mm. I took a specimen of this beetle from beneath the bark of a felled sal- tree at Dholkhand, in the Siwaliks, in January 1902. Life History. The insect proved new to science, and forms the type of the species in the British Museum collections. The species was taken in company with E. haroldi. Family COLYDIIDAE. The minute beetles of this family are fairly plentiful throughout the forests of the country, and for many reasons they may to the uninitiated be easily mistaken for serious bark-boring pests. Investigations seem to show, however, that this family does little, if any, damage in the forest, whilst some of its members are of high utility as predaceous foes of the tree pests. The beetle is elongate or squarish in shape, and in the case of the bark forms flat. The antennae are clubbed at the top, and Beetle. the tarsi four-jointed, with five ventral segments of the abdomen visible. The elytra have often plainly marked series of raised longitudinal striae down them, and the thorax is sometimes channelled or sculptured. The colours are browns, yellow-browns, and greys. Perhaps the commonest predator beetles of the family met with in India are the species of Bothrideres which are predaceous upon the Sinoxylon and Dinoderus borers of wood and bamboo. These are the small, elongate, brown, flat beetles which are commonly found in the tunnels of the borers, and may be easily mistaken, and in fact have often been mis- taken, for the authors of the damage themselves. Investigation has shown, however, that the insects are predaceous upon the beetle-borers, and lay their eggs in the galleries of the latter. I have at times taken various larvae which I have placed as colydiid ones, and in the hope that investigations may be carried Larva. out in this direction a description of one of these forms may be attempted here. The notes were recorded on the grubs at the time they were taken from the trees. Larva taken from bark-beetle galleries in blue-pine trees in the North- West Himalaya: Head black, with three-jointed antennae, the upper joint longer than other two. Twelve segments follow the head, the first and last orange-yellow ; rest black, each with a median dorsal orange spot ; the segments are flat and broadish medianly. The posterior segment terminates in two black-pointed stout cerci jointed and curved inwards. Legs two- 112 FAiMILY COLYDIIDAE jointed, yellow at base, last joint black. Ventral surface yellow, edged with black on segments two to eleven inclusive. The twelfth segment^ is pro- vided with an abdominal sucker leg ; the upper functional part divided into two surfaces. I endeavoured to rear the beetle from this grub, but failed. I have taken colydiid beetles in a number of forest trees throughout the countrv, amongst which may be mentioned most of the conifers and oaks of the Western Himalaya, and the sal, teak, pyinkadu, Anogeissus, Lager- stvomia, Erythrina, Dalbergia, Wendlandia, Moms, Biichanania, etc. BOTHRIDERES. Species of this genus are known to be predaceous upon bark- and wood- borins: beetles in trees. Bothrideres andrewesi, Grouv. References. — Stebbing, Depart. Notes, p. 21 (1902). Habitat. — Changa Manga, Punjab. Habits. — This beetle is predaceous upon the wood-borers Sinoxylon crassum and S. analc. It is a fairly common insect in the galleries of the borers in sissu at the Changa Manga Plantation near Lahore {vide p. 165). Bothrideres vallatus, Grouv. Habitat. — Siwaliks, North India. Habits. — ^Specimens of this beetle were taken from under the bark of a dead Lagerstromia parviflora tree and from tunnels in the cambium la3'er of a newly felled dead Erythrina snberosa. The beetles were taken by Student B. C. Sen Gupta in the middle of February 1902 at Bulawala in the Dun forests. I also took specimens of this or a closely allied species of Bothrideres from beneath the bark of sal-trees at Dholkhand in the Siwaliks in January 1902. Bothrideres ? sp. Habitat. — Goalpara, Assam. Habits. — I bred out a specimen of this beetle from a pupa taken from a partially complete pupal chamber of Hoploceramhyx spinicornis in sal, in Goalpara, in igo6. The shrivelled skin of the cerambycid grub lay in the chamber beside the colydiid beetle (vide p. 334). FAMILY COLYDIIDAE 113 Tkachypholis.. Two species of this genus have been taken in the Burma forests. Trachypholis hispida, Weber. Reference — Weber, Obs. Ent. i, p. 38. Habitat. — Upper and Lower Burma, Tenasserim. Trees lYif^si^d.—Anogeissus latifolia (Tharrawaddy) ; Teak {Tectona grandh). Mohnyin Forest, Katha ; Wutgyi, Salween River, Tenasserim. Beetle — Ovate, flat, the edges of thorax and elytra set with a spiny fringe of hairs. Black. Prothorax wider than long, depressed laterally and margined ; rugose-punctate. Elytra with sides straight to apical fourth, thence constricted and conjointly rounded ; surface broadly striate and strongly punctate, the punctures large. Length, 6 mm. Habits. — This beetle was first taken on 22 January 1905, beneath the bark of an Anogeissus latifolia tree in Tharrawaddy which was badly infested by several bark- and wood-boring beetles, the chief of which was Platypus rectangulatus (p. 623). The insect is undoubtedly predaceous, and probably chiefly on the Platypus, in whose tunnels it was taken as well as beneath the bark. The beetle is very active and a quick runner. The following month (19th) I took the insect beneath the bark of a large standing girdled teak in the Kadu depot in Katha in Upper Burma. Here I noted that the pupal chambers of the beetles appeared to be in the inner bark of the tree. On 7 March following I again took the beetle from beneath the bark of a dead felled teak in a paddy clearing at Wutgyi on the Salween River in Tenasserim. The Trachypholis is apparently pre- daceous upon more than one species of insect. Fig. 75. — Trachypholis his pida, Weber. Burma. Trachypholis decorata, Grouvelle. Habitat. — Katha, Upper Burma. Tree Infested. — Wendlandia tinctoria. Mohnyin Forest. Beetle.— Larger and broader than last. Black with small tufts of yellowish pubescence forming spots on thorax and elytra. Sides of thorax are more Description. rounded ; the apical fourth of elytra more sharply constricted, the apex truncate ; elytra slightly convex on disk ; punctate, the punc- tures arranged in longitudinal rows. Length, 8 mm. Habits. — I took a specimen of this beetle from beneath the bark of a large felled Wendlandia tinctoria tree in a clearing on Kadu Hill in the Mohnyin forests in Katha. The beetle was fully ^^^ mature, and appeared to be hibernating in the r, . -r , .1 ,■ ^ . T^L ^ -rxji 1 ■ -, , . . ^'*^'- 70- — irachvpholis deco- + — 1 he tree was infested by platypids (p. 627). rata, Grouvelle. Burma. 9003 H tree. 114 FAMILY TROGOSITIDAE Family TROGOSITIDAE. Some of the forest forms of this family are readily recognizable owing to their elongate black form, with the large square prothorax and prominent head and mandibles. Others are not, however, so easy to distinguish. The antennae have often the terminal joints expanded to one side, thus rather resembling the lamellicorn antennae ; the eyes and Beetle. mandibles usually well developed ; the elytra, which wholly cover the body, are often prominently striate- punctate, and the legs short with four-jointed tarsi (there are five joints, the first being very small). The grub of this family is elongate, white or yellow (so far as is known), with a black or brown head and prothorax, with well- Larva. developed mandibles, and a pair of calliper-like processes terminating the last segment of the body. The forest species of the family known are predaceous in both the larval and beetle stages, and the importance of some of the species in keeping down the numbers of wood- and bark-boring pests is very considerable. The family will well repay a close study on the part of the forester. Alindria. Alindria onentalis, var. parallela, Leveille. Reference. — Lev. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. (6) viii, p. 411 (1888). Habitat. — Changa Manga Plantation, Punjab. Habits. — Predaceous upon the wood-borers Sinoxy- lon crassuni and 5'. anak (vide p. 165). Alindria orientalis, Kedtenb. Referenxe — Redtenb, H'ugel, Kasch. iv, 2, p. 549. Habitat. — Changa Manga Plantation, Punjab. Habits. — Predaceous upon j the wood-borers Sinoxylon I crassiini and S. analc {vide I p. 165). Fig. J7. — Alindria orientalis, Redt. ChaiiK^a Manra. 78. — Mela)iihia cretii- collis, Gnev. Siwaliks, Mandla. Melambia. Melambia crenicollis, Gnev. Reference. — Gnt-\-. Ic. Retineanim. p. 199, t. 41. f. 12 {1846). Habitat. — Dholkhand, Siwaliks, North India; Mandla, Central Provinces. Habits. — Feeds predaceously on Sinoxylon crassum in sal and Terminalia chebula {vide p. 166). FAMILIES TROGOSITIDAE AND CUCUJIDAE 115 Melambia sp. prox. memnonia, Pascoe. Reference. — Pascoe, Journ. of Knt. i, p. 320, 1862. Habitat. — Changa Manga Plantation, Punjab, Habits. — -Predaceous upon the wood-borers Sinoxylon crassiun and S. anale {vide p. 166). Tenebroides. Tenebroides (Trogositita) rhizophragoides, Walker. Reference. — Walker, Ann. Nat. Hist. 3rd ser. iii, p. 53 (1S59). Habitat. — Seoni, Central Provinces. Habits. — Feeds predaceously on Sinoxylon crassum in Terininalia tomen- tosa in the Central Provinces {vide p. 166). TiMNOCHILA. Timnochila coerulea, Olivier, var. Reference. — Oliv. Ent. ii, ig, p. 6, pi. i, fig. i. Habitat.— North-West Himalaya. Habits. — This elongate blue-black large trogo- sitid is predaceous upon the bark-borers Tomicus longi folia and Polygraphus longifolia in the chir pine (Piniis longifolia). I first took specimens of it at Jermola in Jaunsar in the Western Himalaya. It may also attack the cryptorhynchid weevil of this pine, but that I have not personally observed. The insect is a most useful one in the forest {vide p. 561). Fig. 79. — Ti)nuocliila coerulea., var. N.W. Himalaya. Family CUCUJIDAE. The forest members of this family vary considerably in appearance. Some have the small flattened, rounded, or squarish Beetle. forms and brown or yellow colour which is commonest in the family. Others, however, differ entirely from this type, having elongate black shining forms with heavily jointed and knobbed antennae (e.g. Hectarthrum). The tarsus in the family is apparently four-jointed, and the antennae are long, often with a clubbed top to them. The larva is an elongate grub with jointed antennae on a large head, three pairs of jointed legs on the thoracic segments, which are not much wider than the abdominal segments, the last three or four of which may taper posteriorly, the last being small, or the abdominal segments may increase in size and width posteriorly, the last being large emd terminating in small processes. Some of the members are, as mentioned alread\', easy to distinguish ; but the majority perhaps are by no means easy to recognize. H 2 ii6 FAMILY CUCUJIDAE This family of beetles contains representatives having totally dissimilar habits in the forest. Some, such as Silvanns, feed on dry or decaying materials ; in one case a species of this genus appears to produce curious excrescences or galls on the leaves of the teak-tree. Species of Loemophloeus are commonly found in decaying bark and other parts of the tree. Laemotmetus, on the other hand, are found feeding at the sap of cut stumps and wounds on trees, the beetles being often confused with bark beetles, although in reaUty of course they do no or little harm in the forest so far as is yet known. Yet another genus, Hedarthrum, has quite dis- similar habits, as the members at present known in the forest are all predaceous, feeding upon various kinds of bark- and wood-eating beetles. Hectarthrum. A genus of elongate, narrow, shining black beetles with prominent antennae, mandibles, and more or less deeply channelled and punctate elytra. The insects are predaceous. Hectarthrum heros, Fabr. Reference. ^Fabr. Syst. Eleuth. ii, p. 92. Habitat. — Central Provinces, Burma. Habits.— The beetle has apparently a fairly wide distribution in India. I have taken it in Seoni and Mandla in the Central Provinces and also very plentifully in Tharrawaddy and Tenasserim in Lower Burma. Lefroy {Indian Insect Life) mentions it as common under the bark of trees without giving any localities. I have found this Hectarthrum predaceous upon Sinoxylon crassum in Terminalia toinentosa and T. chebula in the Central Provinces (p. 166). In Burma it would appear to feed upon a variety of wood- and bark- boring insects, including termites. I took it in Adina sessilifolia feeding upon the Platypus suffodicns which riddles the wood of this tree (p. 621), and in Anogeissus latifolia feeding on termites and other bark and wood insects, both in Tharrawaddy. I also took it in pyinkadu on the Salween River feeding on the pyinkadu platypid (see p. 634). Hectarthrum trigeminum, Newm. Reference. — Newm. Ann. Nat. Hist. p. 393 (1839). Habitat. — Siwaliks, Dehra Dun. Habits. — Student B. C. S. Gupta (now of the Bengal Provincial Service) took specimens of this insect under the bark of a dead Lagerstromia parvi- FiG. %o.^HeciaHhnon tri- P^^' tree at Bulawala in the Siwaliks on 17 Feb- ^eminum, Newm. Siwaliks. ruary 1902. The insect is probably predaceous. FAMILY CUCUJIDAE 117 Hectarthrum uniforme, Waterh. Habitat. — Salween River, Tenasserim. Habits.— I took some specimens of this beetle from beneath the bark of a large dead standing Miluisa velutina tree on Kowloon Island in the Salween River on g March 1905. The tree was infested and the sapwood riddled by a species of termite, a few wood-boring larvae being present. The Hcctarthniju was feeding upon the termites. The insect is shown in fig. 13. Laemotmetus. Laemotmetus insignis, Grouvelle. Reference. — Grouvelle, Ind. Mus. Notes, iii, i, p. 22. Habitat.— Thana District, Bombay. Tree Infested.— Terminalia bclerica : Thana District (F. Gleadow) ; Terminalia toincntosa : Seoni, Central Provinces. Beetle.— Elongate, shining, red-brown. Head depressed, a median cleft in front, finely punctate. Eyes placed at sides on under-surface near base. Prothorax convex, constricted, and rounded behind, anterior edge straight ; punctate. Elytra elongate, parallel, conjointly rounded, strongly striate, and finely punctate. Under-surface shining, punctate ; legs lighter- coloured. Length, 8.5 mm. to 9 mm. Specimens of this small beetle were sent to the Indian Museum, Calcutta, in February 1891 by Mr. F. Gleadow, I.F.S. Life History. Mr. Gleadow reported that he found them infesting the Terminalia bclerica in the Thana district in company with a wood-boring Sinoxylon beetle. In September igoi I obtained specimens of the insect frotn galleries ot Sinoxylon crassum in a Terminalia tomentosa pole sent me from Seoni, in the Central Provinces. Inopeplus. Inopeplus sp. Habitat.— Katha, Upper Burma. Tree Infested.— Sc/i/;7?a noronhae. Kadu Hill, Katha. Beetle.- Elongate, narrow, flat. Ijright copper-coloured, with abnormally long antennae. Head and prothorax small, nairow, punctate. Elytra much broader, sides parallel, apex rounded, striate-punctate. Length, 8.ro mm. I found this beetle in numbers beneath the bark of a felled Schima noronhae tree, in the teak forest on the Kadu Hill, Life History. Katha, towards the end of February 1905. The bast and sapwood of the tree were fresh, and the beetles may be sap feeders. IIJ FAMILY CUCUJIDAE Platycotylus. Platycotylus inusitatus, Olliff. Habitat. — Sivvaliks, North India; Seoni, Central Provinces. Also reported from Andaman Islands and North Borneo. Trees Infested. — Lagerstrdmia parvifJora and Erythrina suberosa : Bula- wala, the Dun Forests (B. Sen Gupta) ; Terminalia tomentosa : Seoni. Beetle. — ^Elongate. Shining. Head and prothorax dark brown ; elytra red or crimson brown, darker along the suture ; antennae brown; legs brownish yellow. Head small, punctate. Prothorax wider than head, anterior angles produced, sides rounded, base truncate, shining, punctate. Scutellum elongate. Elytra strongly striate-punctate, slightly constricted behind, apex rounded, pygidium yellow. Under-surface light reddish brown. Length, 6.5 mm. Specimens of this insect were taken about the tniddle of February igo2 by Student B. Sen Gupta from beneath the bark of a Life History. dead Lagerstvumia pavviflora tree. Mr. Gupta subse- quently found others in the rotting cambium of the inner bark of a dead recently felled Erythrina suberosa. The insect was in the imago stage. In September igoi I obtained specimens of this insect from the galleries of Sinoxylon crassum in the wood of a Terminalia tomentosa obtained from Seoni in the Central Provinces. Fig. 81. — Laemophloens test ace its, F, Siwaliks. Laemophlokus. Laemophloeus testaceus, Fabr. Referenxe.— Fabr. Mant. I. p. 166. Habitat.— Siwaliks, North India. Tree Infested.— Sal (SJiorea robusta). Dholkhand, Siwaliks. Beetle. — Very small, with elongate brown an- tennae. Light brown, shining, the elytra yellowish brown ; legs yellowish. Description. Head finely punctate. Pro- thorax smooth, square, I with a longitudinal lateral depression near each edge. Scutellum large. Elytra elongate, sides straigl.t, apex rounded ; surface smooth. Hind femora rather broad, smooth, shining. Length, 2.1 mm. I took specimens of this small cucujid from beneath the bark of a felled sal-tree at Dholkhand in the Siwaliks in January. The insect appears to feed on the dead cambium of the tree. FAMILY CUCUJIDAE 119 PSAMMOECUS. Psammoecus trimaculatus, Motsch. Habitat.— South Coimbatore, Madras. Tree Infested.— 15;unl)oo {Dendrocalainus strictits). Coimbatore. Beetle.— Small, elongate, yellow to yellowish brown, covered with spiny hairs; under - surface darker - coloured. Head Description. small, punctate. Prothorax convex, the edges with seve- lal sharp teeth, largest medianly ; disk punctate. Scutellum small. Elytra broader than thorax, base straight, humeral angles rounded, widest at posterior coxae, constricted apically and rounded ; longitudi- nally and finely striate and punctate. Antennae and legs set with spiny setae. Length, 2.4 mm. to 2.8 mm. I cut out some specimens of this small beetle from galleries in the wood structure of bamboos (D. stridiis) in the forests round Mount Stuart in South Coimbatore. The beetles were taken at the end of July 1902. Mount Stuart, South Fig. 82. — Psammoecus irimacu/a/ us, Motsch. Coimbatore, Madras. SiLVANUS. Silvanus surinamensis, Linn. References.— Linn. Syst. Nat. i, 2, p. 565; Lefroy, Ind. Ins. Life, p. 300 (1909). Habitat.— Northern India. Tree Infested.— Mohwa (Bassia latifolia). Western India (Lefroy). Beetle.-Elongate, smoky brown, dull. Head large, punctate ; eyes placed at sides a little above base : antennae long and clubbed. Prothorax longer than wide, with three promi- nent longitudinal ridges, one median and two lateral, bounding two Description. elongate depressed channels, the sides toothed. Elytra elongate, parallel, slightly constricting at apex, striate-punctate, the striae most prominent at base. Under-surface brown, legs lighter-coloured, abdominal segments clothed with a fine golden pubescence. Length, 4.3 mm. Larva.— Elongate, whitish yellow, with prominent head and prothoracic segments. Antennae and three pairs of legs jointed. Abdominal segments but slightly smaller than thoracic, save last four, which taper, the last being small. Length, 6.5 mm. This insect passes through several generations in the year. Lefroy in Indian Insect Life has the following note on its Life History. habits : — " The larva Hves in dried fruit, flour, dried mohwa (the calyx oi Basmi latifolia), and similar vegetable matter. The complete life history occupies about seven weeks ; the eggs are laid in the food, the larvae feed inside or between two pieces, and pupate in a chamber closed m 120 FAMILY CUCUJIDAE with bitten pieces of their food. This insect causes considerable annual loss in India, attacking mohwa, for instance, during the rainy weather and breeding in it steadily till much is lost." Silvanus lateritius, Reitter. Habitat.— Siwaliks^ North India. Trees Infested. — Lagerstrdinia parviflora and Erythrina suberosa. Bula- wala, Siwaliks (B. Sen Gupta). Beetle.— Flat, elongate, narrow, brown. Head triangular, punctate ; eyes large, black, placed at sides near base of head. Prothorax longer than wide, narrower behind, flat ; a raised longitudinal median ridge on disk, with a depression on each side. Description. highly punctate. Elytra elongate, constricted to ape.x, where they do not quite cover abdomen ; strongly punctate-striate. Legs with thickened femora, and tibiae thickened at upper end. Under-surface darker in colour. Length, 5.5 mm. Specimens of this beetle were taken from beneath the bark of dead Lagerstrumia parviflora and Erythrina suberosa trees at Life History. Bulawala in February igo2 by Student B. Sen Gupta of the Imperial Forest School. The beetles were either hibernating or feeding on the dead cambium layer. Silvanus advena, Walth. {Teak Leaf Gall Maker.) Reference.— Walth. Fatcnus, i, p. 169 (1832). Habitat. — Central Provinces, Berar, Madras, Bombay. Tree Attacked. — Teak {Tectona grandis). Damoh, Central Provinces; Melghat, Berar; Poona ; Coim- batore. Beetle. — Elongate, very small, with clubbed antennae. Light brown, the elytra yellowish brown. Head flat, punctate ; eyes black, placed at sides. Prothorax wider than long Description. rather square, moderately convex medianly, punctate. Elytra with sides straight to apical third, thence constricted and conjointly rounded ; surface smooth, very finely punctate. Under-surface darker red-brown, punctate. Length, 2 mm. Larva.— Dark orange in colour. Fig. 83. — Silvanus advena, Walth. Central Provinces. The leaves of the teak throughout India (Central Provinces, Bombay, and Madras) are attacked b}' a small Silvanus grub Life History. whose operations cause the tissues of the under-surface of the leaf to swell up into a small gall. This gall consists of a small round yellowish lump on the under-surface of the leaf CUCUJIDAE, EROTYLIDAE, AND COCCINELLIDAE i2r covered with a furry coating, this pubescence being at times quite long.. The leaves are often entirely covered on their lower surfaces with these galls. Later on the upper surface of the leaf turns black and decays and the leaf drops. The damage done therefore amounts to partial or complete defolia- tion. The life history of the insect causing these galls is still incompletely known. From galls containing partially grown larvae taken in the Uamoh forests- of the Central Provinces in the middle of August I bred out this insect in Dehra Dun on the i8th of the following September. The mature beetles therefore issue from the galls towards the end of the monsoon season and before the leaf drops from the tree. On several occasions Mr. G. Ryan has sent me specimens of teak leaves attacked by this insect from Thana and elsewhere in the Bombay Presidency. Family EROTYLIDAE. Elongate beetles, often brightly coloured, the an- tennae with a club of three or four joints and an apparently four-jointed tarsus. The elytra of some p^^, "g S^i^an^i/ria. forms found in the forest are brilliantly coloured, and zyanea, Hope. often metallic. The insect figured here, Langnria N.W. Himalaya. zyanea, as an example of the family, is not uncommon in the Western' Himalaya in July. The larvae feed in the stems of plants, tunnelling up the centre. No forest species have been observed to act in this manner,, but little is known about the family in the forest. Family COCCINELLIDAE. (Ladybird Beetles.) The ladybird beetles are for the most part easy of recognition, owing^ to their rounded or oval shape and to the apparently three-jointed tarsus of the feet ; the antennae are short and not clubbed. The beetles are often brightly coloured, or have patches, stripes, or spots of briUiant colour on a duller-coloured ground. The colouring is the common red or brown, yellow or black. The beetle is usually of small size, having perhaps some resemblance to the chrysomelid beetle, but can be distinguished Beetle. from the latter by the three-jointed tarsus (instead of four). The prothorax is small, almost covering the head, and with the elytra forms a perfect curve on the outside. The dorsal surface is usually convex, the ventral flat. The antennae are not very long, the legs short. Length, up to a little over one-fourth of an inch. 122 FAMILY COCCINELLIDAE The grub is an elongated, six-legged, active grub, gre}' or black, at times yellow or red, in colour ; the body is usually Larva. widest across the middle and tapering to either end, the head being small and inconspicuous, w^hilst the tho- racic segments are large and, with the abdominal segments, bear spines and tubercles. The last segment is provided with a swelling or protuberance, which is used by the grub in moving about. The grub pupates in the open on the plant, fixing itself to a leaf or twig by means of the anal foot. The larval skin Pupa. splits down, disclosing the oval-shaped pupa, and often remains partly surrounding it. Most of the Coccinellidae are predaceous insects, though a small section of the family are vegetable feeders. The predaceous forms feed chiefly on plant blights, Aphidae and Coccidae, and all the species known to be of importance in the forest feed in this manner. The life history is simple. The grubs and beetles prey upon the host, the grubs being the most voracious, spending several Life History. weeks on the trees and plants in pursuit of their pre}-, which they puncture, and then suck out the juices of the tissues, leaving an empty skin behind. The pupal stage is short. The beetle, on maturing, also feeds, for a time at least ; in the case of some species, the Vcdalia of the sal Monophlebus, for instance, this is so. The insects then pair, and either lay eggs on the tree on which their host lives, as I have myself observed, or, according to Lefroy (Indian Insect Life, 305), " remaining for long periods without food, awaiting the proper conditions of egg-laying." The eggs are laid in clusters on the leaves or twigs of the trees, in shape being elongate and resembling a soda-water bottle. There is little doubt that the insects are of high economic importance in the forest. To quote but one instance : the Vedalia, which preys upon the Monophlebus scale insect of the United Provinces sal forests, undoubtedly plays an important part in keeping this pest in check, and in generally bringing a bad attack to an end. HiPPODAMIA. Hippodamia variegata, var. doubledayi, Muls. Reference. ^Muls. Spec. p. 38 (1850). Habitat.— Siwaliks, North India. Habits. — I have taken this insect feeding upon the common aphis of the peach tree, in gardens in the Dun Plateau in North India. The insect may be taken in abundance in the hot weather. FAMILY COCCINELLIDAE 123 Hippodamia constellata, Crotch. References.— Crotch, Rev. Coccinell. p. 97 (1874): Coccinella constellata. Laich. Ins. Tyrol, i, 121, 6 (1781); Coccinella mutabilis, Scriba, J. F., Ent. i, 183, 141 (1790); Adonia muiabilis, Muls. Secur. p. 39, i; A. doubledayi, Muls. Spec. p. 38. i (T.) ; Hippodamia ripicola, Muls. Mon. p. 13, 10 (1866), T. ; Adonia Corsica, Reiche, Ann.fr. ii, 299 (1862); A.bi/urcata, Muls. Voh. p. 28, 3; A. kriechbawnii, Muls. Mon. p. 30, 4. Habitat.— North-West Himalaya. Crotch ^nves the distribution as India, Central Asia. Habits.— I have taken this species commonly in the North-West Himalaya in May-June at elevations of V'"ia '^^o^sh'Uata 7'°°° ^^' ^° 9'°°° ^^- ^^ ^^ predaceous upon the spruce ""''"'crotdi!' '' "' and s\\\er-^v Chermes himalayemis, Stebbing, and upon N.W. Himalaya, the blue-pine aphis. Coccinella. The common European seven-spotted ladybird beetle is widely distributed over Northern India, and occurs sparingly further south. It is found up to 11,000 ft. in the Western Himalaya. Coccinella septempunctata, Linn. REFERENCES.-Linn. Syst. Nat. 365, 8 {1758); Muls. SScur. p. 79, 3 (1846); divaricata, Oliv. Ent. vi, p. looi, 21, pi. V, 67 (1808); Muls. Spec. p. 112, 21 (1850). Habitat.— Himalaya, North India. Habits.— Predaceous in larval and beetle states on Chervies himalayensis, Stebbing, on the spruce and silver-fir, and on the blue-pine aphis {Aphis ? sp.) on the blue pine, both in the Western Himalaya. COELOPHORA. Coelophora sauzeti, Muls. Reference. — Muls. Mon. p. 281. Habitat.— Dehra Dun Plateau, North India. Habits.— I have taken both larvae and beetles of this ladybird feeding upon the common peach aphis on peach-trees in the Dehra Dun Plateau in May. Chilomenes. Chilomenes sexmaculata, Fabr. References.— Fabr. (Coccinella) Sp. Ins. i, 96, 20 (1781) ; Muls. Spec. p. 444. 'l Crotch, Rev. Coccinell. p. 180 (1874). Habitat.— Dehra Dun Plateau, North India. x\lso reported from Cal- cutta (Sibpur), Behar (Pusa), Ranchi. Said to be common throughout India. Habits.— Predaceous upon the peach aphis in the Dehra Dun Plateau. 124 FAMILY COCCINELLIDAE Chilocorus. Chilocorus circumdatus, Schon. References. — Schon. (Coccinella) Syn. Ins. ii, 152 (1808) ; Muls. Spec. p. 454, 2; nigromayginatus, Mots. Et. Ent. viii, 170; Ind. Mus. Notes, ii, 6, 154; vi, 4, 218. Habitat. — Nilgiris, Madras; Ceylon. Habits. — This coccinellid is predaceous upon the brown bug Lecaniuin caffeae, of coffee, and is said to be of considerable value in this way. Fig. 86. — Briimits sutiiralis, Fabr. Dehra Dun. Brumus. Brumus suturalis, Fabr. References.— Fabr. (Coccinella) Suppl. Ent. Syst. p. 78 (1798) ; Muls. Spec. p. 494, 2. Habitat.— Dehra Dun Plateau, North India. Also reported from Madras, Habits. — Predaceous upon the peach aphis in the Dun Plateau. Platynaspis. Platynaspis luteo-rubra, Goeze. References.— Goeze {Coccinella) Ent. Beyt. i, p. 247 (1874) ; villosa, Muls. Secur. p. 216, i (1846); Fourc. Ent. Par. i, 149, 22 (1785); Ind. Mus. Notes, iii, 5, 50; v, 3, 63, pi. ix, fig. 3 (imago). Habitat.— Calcutta. Habits. — This insect is predaceous upon the scale insect Icerya aegyptiaca, which feeds upon the teak. SCYMNUS. Scymnus rotundatus, Mots. References. — Mots. Et. Ent. viii, p. 170 (1859) ; hid. Mus. Notes, i, 6, 154; iv, 4, 218. Habitat. — Ceylon. Habits. — This insect is reported in Ceylon to be predaceous upon the white bug of coffee bushes, Pseudococcus adonidum. Scymnus sp. Reference. — Ind. Mus. Notes, iii, 5, 50. Habitat. — Calcutta. Habits. — Reported as having been found preying upon the scale Icerya aegyptiaca in the compound of the Indian Museum in Calcutta. Vedalia. This genus includes an important species which preys upon the pernicious sal scale insect Monophlebus. FAMILIES COCCINELLIDAE AND ENDOMYCHIDAE 125 Vedalia gu6rinii, Crotch. References. — Crotch, Rev. Coccinell. p. 282 (1874); Coccinella sp. Stebbing, Depart. Notes, p. 324. Habitat. — Siwaliks and United Provinces Terai areas. Also reported from Pondicherry (Guerin). Habits. — This Vedalia preys upon the sal scale insect Monophlebus stehhingi, which infests the sal-trees in the Siwaliks and United Provinces Terai forests. The Vedalia swarms in large numbers when the scale insect is abundant in the trees. The egg, larval, pupal, and beetle stages of the coccinellid are known. Vedalia fumida, var. roseipennis. References.— i?ocio/ia/Mmic/rt, Muls. Spec. p. 904, 4; Epilachna arethusa, Muls. Op. iii, p. 126; testicolor, Muls. Op. iii, p. 127; Rodolia roseipennis, Muls. Spec. p. 904, 5; Rodolia chermesiana, Muls. Spec. p. 905, 6; Crotch, Rev. Coccinell. 1874; Ind. Mxis. Notes, iv, i, 27 ; 4, 218. Habitat. — Siwaliks, North India. Also reported from Bengal (Deyrolle). Habits. — This beetle is found in company with Vedalia gneriuii, preying upon the Monophlebus stehbingi scale insect in the Siwaliks sal forests. It is not, however, so abundant as its companion. It has also been reported as feeding upon the scale I eery a aegyptiaca. Vedalia sp. Reference. — Stebbing, Ind. Mas. Notes, vi, p. 62. Habitat. — Lahore, Punjab ; Bareilly. Habits. — This coccinellid has been taken preying upon the scale insect Monophlebus stebbingi, var. mangiferae, which infests the mango-trees in the Shaliman Gardens at Lahore, in the Punjab, and in the Bareilly Gardens. It may possibly be identical with Aulis bestita, Muls., found feeding upon Monophlebus on mango-trees, and reported by Lefroy in Mem. Agric. Dept. India, vol. ii, no. vii. Family ENDOMYCHIDAE. A family of curiously shaped beetles with rather long antennae, which end in a comparatively large three-jointed club. The tarsi appear to be three-jointed, the last two joints being broad. The beetles are sometimes brightly coloured, or have bright-coloured spots and markings on them. The insects are said to feed on fungus growths and lichens. Little is known about the habits of the family in the forest. On one occasion I took a mature beetle beneath the bark of a tree, and I found another in the Charduar Rubber Plantation in Assam. 126 FAMILIES ENDOMYCHIDAE AND DERMESTIDAE EUGONIUS. Eugonius gratus, Gorh. Reference. — Gorh. Ann. Soc. Eat. France, Ix, 399 (1891). Habitat.— Katha, Upper Burma. Tree Infested. — Teak {Tectona grandis). Mohnyin Forest, Katha. Beetle. — Elongate, ovate. Black, shining, with four transverse irregular-edged orange or yellow patches on the elytra. Head small, punctate ; antennae long, clubbed. Pro- Description, thorax with anteiior edge deeply incised for insertion of head, the lateral margins channelled ; disk convex, with a longitudinal median line and fine scattered punctures. Elytra convex, widest about middle, constricted apically, leaving a small pygidium exposed ; finely punctate, the orange maikings one on each side near base, the other in apical third. Femora thickened anteriorly. Length, 9.2 mm. I took a mature specimen of this endomychid from beneath the bark of a standing Life History. girdled teak-tree in the Mohnyin ^ „ ^ . Forest in Katha on 20 February Fig. 87. — Engounis . . oratHs Gorh. IQOS- Beyond the fact of taking the beetle in this Upper Burma. curious position, I have no record of its habits. Family DERMESTIDAE. A family of small beetles with retractile heads, short clubbed antennae, and five-jointed tarsi, the upper and lower surfaces of the beetle being often clothed with pubescence. The larva is elongate and cylindrical, tapering posteriorly, where it ends in two hooks ; the body is clothed with stiff hairs, giving the grub the appearance of a small caterpillar. Some members of the family are found under the bark of trees, but little is at present known about them. It is probable that some of them are pre- daceous upon bark- and wood-eating beetles, and so of use to the forester. The two commonest beetles the forester will meet with are : (i) Dermestes vulpinus, F. — The grubs of this beetle feed upon the pupa of the silkworm moth, gnawing through the silk cocoon to get at it. In this way they do serious damage to silk in India. (2) Anthrenus vorax, Wat. — A common silvery-greyish, oval, thick beetle, with darker patches on the upper surface and silvery-white beneath, which is such a pest to the sportsman. This is the insect which destroys his skins and horns unless they are properly cured. ( 127 ) CHAPTER IX. POLYMORPHA {continned)— Family BOSTRYCHIDAE. The Bostrychidae are a family of small elongate cylindrical beetles of circular section who in their ovipositing operations make pin-holes and "shot "holes in wood and bamboos. Owing to this habit of the beetles their work is probably better known to the public throughout India than is that of most of the other Indian forest insects. Whether the beetles themselves actually derive sustenance from the wood has not yet been proved. Their habit of tunnelling into it is at any rate primarily to oviposit in the interior, the larvae being entirely wood-eaters. Most of the Indian bamboos and the wood of a variety of trees are made use of for this purpose. Some of the beetles are well known owing to their making their appear- ance in numbers in the bungalow at the periods at which they mature and swarm, either from neighbouring forest trees, or from the roofs, walls, and floors of the bungalow itself. They also issue from the furniture, especially bamboo-made articles. Many of the species appear to fly equally readily by day or night. In spite of their small size, the largest being about one-third of an inch' in length, they are easily recognizable, owing to their cylindrical form and' dark brown or black colour, and to the hooded prothorax, which is often, serrated and rasp-like on the anterior surface. The beetles greatly resemble and are often mistaken for Scoly-' tidae, the bark beetles. From these they may be- Beetle. distinguished by the afore-mentioned tuberculate- and rasp-like prothorax, by the straight instead of elbowed antenna, which has a three-jointed club at its end, and by the five-jointed tarsi, the first or basal joint of which is small, the second and fifth being long. The outer integument or covering of the beetle is very hard, all the parts fitting well together, as is usually the case with wood-boring insects. The prothorax is occasionally furnished with hooks or frontal teeth in addition to the enlarged tubercu- lations, whilst the body is provided with one Fk;. U.-Heterobostrycfms aequalis. or more tubercles, probably used by the Waterhouse. x 5. India and beetle in moving in its tunnel in the wood. Uurma. The legs have broad femora and tibiae, the latter sometimes toothed on, one edge. 128 FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE The males and females in some species differ from each other, and also have curious modified characters which distinguish one male or female from another of the same species, due to modifications in the hooks and teeth of the prothorax and tubercles of the body. The larva is white, curved, corrugated, soft and flesh}', furnished with powerful mandibles and a pair of four-jointed Larva. antennae, and three pairs of legs on the thoracic sections. The pupa (fig. 31, a) is soft, white, with a well-developed hood-like prothorax, the antennae, legs, and wings being pressed Pupa. against the chest. The modus operandi of the beetle is to tunnel through the bark down into the sapwood (or in the case of the bamboo into the wall), eating out a gallery of irregular length in which the eggs are laid at intervals. The larvae on hatching eat out irregular galleries running more or less in the long axis of the wood, pupating at the end of the tunnel when they have reached full growth. On maturing the beetle bores through the wood until it reaches an empty egg-tunnel, up which it crawls and escapes to the outside. From a utilitarian point of view the family is one of the most destruc- tive in the country, owing to the large amount of harm it does to felled timber and bamboos. This damage is well known, and timber contractors soak their cut bamboos and poles in water and then smoke the former to prevent the beetles from infesting them and reducing them to powder before their sale. This is done throughout the tropics. Also timber contractors will not cut bamboos and poles when the moon is full, as they hold the opinion that bamboos felled at this period are more subject to attack. Elsewhere this subject is discussed in detail (p. 140). That the damage done by the insects throughout the country to constructive material must run into very large figures is borne out by the fact that buildings which include bamboo and pole materials require continual attention and repairs in parts of the country. During the year 1903, whilst officiating as Superintendent of the Indian Museum, I carried out a series of experiments in conjunction with the Head of the Telegraph Workshops at Alipur, which proved that soaking the bamboos in crude rangoon oil rendered them immune to the attacks of Dinodcrus, and bamboos so treated which were used for a light field telegraph on the Tibet Mission, 1904-5, stood the test well and remained unattacked for years afterwards (p. 137). It has long been supposed that the bostrychids were wood-borers pure and simple, and did no damage to standing trees. Observations have shown, however, that species of Sinoxylon will attack and oviposit in sickly standing green trees. A worse habit in the case of one species, Sinoxylon crassum, has received some investigation. In February 1902, Mr. A. M. Littlewood, a student of the Imperial Forest School at Dehra, found an insect tunnelling FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE 129 into the leading and side shoots of sal saplings and coppice shoots. This beetle proved to be 5. cyassuui, which hibernates in the hollowed-out shoots. The beetles so taken were fully mature and alive, and were evidently hibernating. This observation I have been able to confirm bv subsequent investigations (p. 156). In April 1901 I made the first of a series of investigations I have carried out on the subject of the insect predators of the bostrychids — the first, so far as I am aware, that had been made. I discovered a species of Bothrideres and several Teretriosoinas preying upon Sinoxylon crassniii and S. analc. This discovery I subsequently communicated to Mr. G. Lewis and Monsieur P. Lesne. Further investigations have shown that a variety of insects follow the bostrychids into their tunnels in the wood, and either prey upon them there or lay their eggs in order that their larvae when hatched may feed upon the bostrychid larvae. This observation, which has been now authenticated by a number of observations and experiments, has an analogy in the case of the Scolytidae and Platypodidae, in which a similar state of affairs exists. In the case of the bostrychids, predaceous species of Tillus, Teretriosoma, Teretrius, Alindria, Melambia, Tenebroidcs, and Hectarthrum are known to have habits of this kind. The family is divided by Lesne into four divisions — I. Psoinae. II. Polyocaninae. III. Dinoderinae. IV. Bostrychinae. Classification. Of these only the Dinoderinae and Bostrychinae contain, so far as is known at present, species of forest importance in India. The following characters serve to distinguish these two divisions. Dinoderinae. — Tarsi shorter than the tibiae ; last tarsal joint as long as or longer than the rest of the joints together. Prothorax convex, anterior margin rounded, with the median teeth the most prominent. Bostrychinae. — Tarsi as long as or longer than tibiae ; last joint shorter than the rest of the joints together ; prothorax strongly tuberculate, the anterior margin with the lateral teeth more prominent than the median ones. I. DINODERINAE. This division includes the important genus Dinoderus, containing several species, two of which, D. pilifrons and D. niinutus, are of high economic importance. Dinoderus. Second joint of antennae shorter than first. Posterior portion of pro- thorax punctate. Dinoderus distinctus, Lesne. References. — Lesne, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. Ixvi, 325 (1S97) ; Stebbiug, I;td. Mus. Notes, vi, 20 (1903). Habitat. — Dehra Dun Plateau, North India. Tree Attacked. — Mango (Mangifera indica). Dehra Dun Plateau. 9003 1 130 FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE Beetle. — Brown, with a reddish tinge at base of elytra. Front of head and funiculus without long erect hairs. Antennae ten-jointed, second joint of club less than one and a half times as wide as long. Prothorax evenly round in front, widened Description. near base, its sides not parallel ; the lateral suture joined in front with the marginal teeth of the rasp-like anterior surface; these teeth being small, almost contiguous, rounded, the two centre ones the largest. Posterior part densely punctate, strongest so medianly, the median foveoles being absent. Elytra slightly widened behind, more than twice as long as prothorax ; deeply punctate, the punctures not coalescing in the dorsal region, but coalescing on the elytral declivity ; suture of the declivity not gaping. Erect hairs' on elytra very short. Length, 3.5 mm. The beetle appears on the wing about the first week in May, and oviposits in the smaller branches and twigs of the Life History. mango-tree. It infests only dying and dead wood. Both sexes are to be found in the twigs at this season, the beetles having entered the branch by the same entrance-hole. This entrance-tunnel is bored vertically down to the centre of the branch, and the egg-gallery is then taken up the branch approximately at right angles to the former direction. This egg-gallery curves slightly, both male and female beetles helping in its preparation. Two beetles are usually to be found in it at work. Several pairs of beetles attack the same branch or twig, three couples being cut from a small twig on 11 May 1902. The larvae on hatching from the eggs feed on the wood of the branch, completely riddling it. The result of this attack, when the insects are numerous, is that the smaller branches and twigs of the tree are killed and drop off, thus heavily pruning the crown. When such an attack is noted, all infested branches should be cut off below the point at which they are attacked by the insects, and burnt. Dinoderus pilifrons, Lesne. {The Bamboo Shot-borer Beetle.) References. — Lesne, Ann. Soc, Ent. Fr. p. 170 (1895); Dinoderus sp. Ind. Miis. Notes, vols, i and iv ; Stebbing, Depart. Notes, i, p. 168; Ind. Mus. Notes, vi, p. 21 (1903). Habitat. — Dehra Dun, Belgaum, Calcutta. Tree Attacked. — Bamboo {Dendrocalanius strictus). Siwaliks, Dehra Dun. Wood of various kinds in Calcutta. Beetle.— Reddish brown, the appendages and lateral edges of the abdomen lighter-coloured. Front, clypeal region, and inner margin of eye fringed with long light red stiiif hairs, as Description. is funiculus. Antennae ten-jointed ; second joint of club rounded on inner edge. Pro- thorax rasp-like anteriorly, the anterior margin with eight to ten more or less sharp teeth, of which the two middle ones are largest. Posterior surface finely punctate ; median foveoles obsolete. Basal portion of elytra finely punctate, punctures more marked on elytral declivity. y . o Suture slightly gaping and keeled on declivity. Length, 3.33 mm. Di„oderus piUfrotis, to 3.75 mm. Lesne. North India! FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE 131 F'k;. 90. — Entrance and exit holes (' shot-holes') of the Bamboo Beetle Dinoderiis pilijroiis, Lesne, in Dcndrocalavitis strictus. North India. I 2 132 FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE Larva.— Vcllowish-white, corrugated, curved. Mouth parts brownish, mandibles black. Thoracic segments greatly enlarged, swollen, forming almost a hood over head anteriorly. Three pairs of thoracic legs, anterior pair three-jointed, robust and long ; posterior pairs less stout. Abdominal segments not swollen, narrower than thoracic ones, forming almost a "waist ■' where they join thorax, but slightly broadening behind. Length, 3.2 mm. Pupa.— Prothorax large, the head bent right over and under prothorax, the mouth parts lying pressed against the hind thoracic and anterior abdominal segments. Head and prothorax dirty white ; the ten-jointed antennae and legs distinguishable. Abdominal segments yellow, wings white, bent round on underside of body. Length, 3 mm. This beetle has three, four, or more broods in the year, and these generations overlap to some extent. Eggs appear to Life History. be laid by the beetle in the cold weather in December or January, or perhaps in November, the colder months of the year being passed in the egg stage. The female tunnels into the bamboo for egg-laying purposes, and pairs with the male inside the bamboo. The larvae hatch out in March in North India, probably earlier in the hotter and damper parts of the country, and feed upon the woody tissue of the bamboo, mining up and down in the interior and converting the woody material into a mass of sawdust. When full-fed the grub eats out a little cradle in the woody tissue and pupates in this. On maturing the beetle either crawls out of the bamboo through one of the entrance-tunnels of the parents, which it may enlarge if necessary, or it tunnels out by the most direct way to the outside. This first generation of the year issues from bamboos some time in May in North India and late in April in Calcutta ; a second generation issues in July (June in Calcutta); a third early in September (August in Calcutta); a fourth in November (October in Calcutta), and a fifth in Calcutta and similar localities towards the end of November or first half of December, D. pilifrons is the common bamboo-borer of the northern part of India. Series of experiments were carrried out on several occasions with bamboos cut in the forests of the United Provinces. Thousands of beetles were bred out, in every case proving to be D.pilifyons. The work of this insect is very similar to that of its ofttimes companion or replacer D. minutus, the next species, and the damage done, etc., will be discussed under that insect. Tarsostenus uniYittatus, Rossi (p. 188) — Elongate, narrow, rather flat. Black, shining; elytra crossed just above the middle by a trans- verse half-moon shaped band which does not Predaceous Insects. quite reach suture. Head finely punctate. Pro- thorax rather flat, impressed medianly, the punc- T, ^ tures lari^er than on head, but rather scattered. Elytra with sides parallel, r IG. 91. . . r ' Tarsostenus u>ii- 'ipices separately rounded, pygidium exposed ; the basal half impressed,^ vittatus Rossi, with rather deep punctures arranged in longitudinal parallel rows ; the Dehra Dun. apical half very finely punctate. Length, 7 mm. to 13 mm. Plate IX X12 1 M'^^t »«AI XO i\ .itx I. DiHodcnix miinilus, Faljr.— rt, larva : /', pupa : c, beetle ; d, bamboo showing entrance-holes on outside and larval and beetle galleries inside. 2. Tillus ,iotatHs, Klug. : 3. Hectarthnim hcros, l-abr., both predaceous upon Dinodenis jiiiiiiihis. Calcutta, 1903. FAMILY BOSTRVCHIDAE 133 Life History. — A specimen of this clerid beetle was taken from a thatched roof of a building in Dehra Dun badly infested by Sinoxylon crassum and Dinodcnis pilifrois. The insect may be predaceous upon the Dinodcncs. Tillns notatiis, described below, likewise attacks this insect. Also Tribolium confusiDii (p. 238). Dinoderus minutus, Fabr. {The smaller Bamboo Slwt-borcr Beetle.) References. — Fabr. Syst. Ent. p. 45 (1775) ; substriatus, Stephens, ///. Brit. Ent. iii, p. 352 (1830) ; sictdus, Baudi, Berl. Ent. Zeit. xvii, p. 336 (1873) ; bifoveolatus, Zoufal {non Wollaston), Wien. Ent. Zeit. xiii, p. 42 (1894); Dinoderus sp. Ind. Miis. Notes, i; Stabbing, Ind. Miis. Notes, vi p. 23 (1903) ; Depart. Notes, 172 (1903). Habitat. — -Bombay Presidency (Andrewes) ; Calcutta, Burma, Carin Cheba, 2,800 to 3,500 ft., Teinzo, Bhamo (Fea). Lesne states the species to be cosmopolitan in tropical regions. It is at times found in ports and large towns in temperate climes. Trees Attacked. — Bamboo (Dendrocalamus strictus) : Calcutta, etc. ; Bambiisa spp., Smilax borbonica : He de Reunion ; Lianas (Brazil). Beetle. — Brown, shining, with black head and thorax, the bases of elytra liyhter-coloured, occasionally almost reddish. The stiff hairs on the front clypeal region always few in number and very short. Antennae ten-jointed, the funiculus not fringed with Description. hair ; the second joint of club less than one and a half times as wide as long. Teeth of anterior margin of prothorax more or less pointed, not set very close together, the middle ones most prominent ; sides posteriorly strongly and densely punctate, median foveoles well marked. Elytra set with short stiff reddish hairs, densest on the declivity ; thickly and densely punctate, punctures most prominent on basal portion ; suture of declivity not prominent. Length, 2.5 mm. to 3.5 mm. PI. ix, tig. i, c. Larva. — Pale canary-yellow, opaque, curved, corrugated, the thoracic segments swollen, the prothorax tapering sharply anteriorly to head. Latter small, orange-brown with black mandibles, three pairs of longish three-jointed legs on thoracic segments, the lowest joints clothed anteriorly with scattered yellow bristly hairs, the legs ending in a claw. Body tapers posteriorly to a blunt rounded point. Length, 3 mm. to 3.75 mm. PL ix, fig. i, a. Pupa. — Resembles that oi fiilifrons, but is smaller. PI. ix, fig. i, b. Dinoderus minutus was for some time consistently confused with D. pili- frons in India, with the result that the literature con- Life History. nected with the two species became so indefinite that it was impossible to say what the real life histories of the insects were. D. minutus was known to infest bamboos, and it was thought to accompany pilifrons very often in this connection. The insect had also been reported as infesting other plants. Two points would seem to have been established. The large series of beetles reared at Dehra Dun from bamboos cut in the Siwaliks and neigh- bouring United Provinces forests consisted entirely of pilifrons, whilst the hundreds of beetles bred from bamboos in Calcutta during the year 1903 were entirely minutus. D. pilifrons exists in Calcutta, as I took it on wood stacks of miscellaneous species of trees in the Botanical Gardens towards 134 FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE the end of April. It is not, however, the common bamboo beetle of Calcutta, and was probably imported there in bamboos or other woody material cut in the North of India forests during the preceding cold weather. The life history of minntns in Calcutta was worked out at the Indian Museum by myself between April and November 1903. The beetle and its grub attack the internal woody structure of the bamboo in a manner similar to that of pilifvons. D. niinntm, however, passes through a greater number of generations in the }ear in the hotter moister climate of Bengal, the number of life-cycles being from five to seven, the generations overlapping to some extent. Both male and female beetles tunnel their way into the bamboo, and after pairing the female lays its eggs in the interior, each beetle laying about twent}'. From these eggs small white roundish dots of grubs issue within a few days of their being deposited. These tiny larvae burrow up and down in the interior of the bamboo, and reduce its structure to powder. About four weeks are spent in this stage, and the grubs then enlarge the ends of their burrows and change to pupae, which, after some eight days or so, turn into the beetles. On becoming mature the beetles bore their way out of the bamboos, and thus add further to the tunnels already made in them. On emergence the insects fly off to attack fresh bamboos, or they may bore into the one in which they have themselves matured. There are thus three separate forms of attack : — (a) The female beetle bores into the interior of the bamboo and lays its eggs there. This is the flrst attack on the bamboo. {b) From the eggs hatch out little grubs which feed upon the wood of the interior of the bamboo, and thus undermine its strength. (c) The beetles on maturing from the grubs bore their way out of the bamboo. The mature beetles issue either all from the same exit-hole or from one or two only, these being often the former entrance-holes of the mother beetles, which are considerably enlarged. Beetles of the new generation appear also to make use of these old holes to enter the bamboo to egg-lay, boring away from the old gallery when they have got inside. When bamboos are in lengths it will be found that the beetles tunnel in them parallel to the long axis and form galleries which open at one of the ends. The bamboo is thus often completely hollow in parts without there being much outward evidence of its having been badly attacked. This is more especially the case when the beetles have entered and left by the same holes made at one of the ends of the bamboo (cf. the lengths of bamboo shown in pi. ii). A feature which greatly adds to the insect's power of doing serious damage is to be found in the fact that in the warmer parts of the country it passes through at least five, and perhaps more, generations or life-cycles in the year. It FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE 135 has been shown that the insect lays about twenty eggs, and therefore one female beetle may produce the following progeny in the year, on the supposition that only five generations are passed through : — One Female Beetle. 1st generation I X 20 = 20 beetles, say half males and half females (the latter are, ho\ve\er, usually in excess of former). 2nd „ • 10 X 20 = 200 beetles, say half males and half females. 3 id 100 X 20 = 2,000 „ ,. 4th 1,000 X 20 = 20,000 ,, ,, 5th 10,000 X 20 = 200,000 „ ,j 2,000,000. Taking only 50 per cent, of the fifth generation beetles as maturing and laying eggs, we still have 100,000 insects as the progeny of the one mother beetle in the spring. This great prolificness easily explains why bamboos suffer so greatly from the shot-borer's attacks throughout the country. The result of my observations in Calcutta showed me that at least five generations of the beetles issued between the last week in April and the end of October as follows : — The first taking about seven weeks, from end of April to the third week in June, to run through all its stages ; the second about four to five weeks, from the third week in June to near the end of July ; the third four weeks, from the end of July to the beginning of September: the fourth less than four weeks, from first week in September to end of the month; the fifth from end of September to end of October. It is probable that manv of the beetles of this generation were caught and killed off by the cold snap experienced towards the end of the month. I have detailed at length in three pamphlets * dealing with this bamboo- borer the series of experiments carried out by myself at the Indian Museum, Calcutta, during my tenure of the Superintendentship of that Institution in 1903. As described in the monographs in question my experi- ments were inaugurated to enable me to advise the Superintendent of the Government Telegraph Workshops (Mr. Williams) as to the economic value of experiments he was conducting with a view to protecting from the attacks of the beetle bamboos which he was converting into poles * (i) A Note on the Preservation of Bamboos from the Attacks of the Bamboo Beetle or Shot-borer, App. Series hid. Forester, xxix, no. 12 (1903) ; (2) Ibid. 2nd edition, revised and enlarged. Forest Patnphlet no. 15, Supt. Govt. Printing, Calcutta (19 10) ; (3) A Further Note on the Preservation of Bamboos from the Attacks of the J3amboo Beetle or Shot-borer, Ind. Forester, vol. xxxi, p. 249 (1905). 136 FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE for use as a field telegraph during the approaching Tibet Mission. It was imperative that the bamboos so employed should remain immune to the attacks of the beetles, which would otherwise reduce them to powder within a comparatively short period, and long ere they reached an elevation where the temperature would either kill the beetles or (more probable) so lower their \itality and that of the grubs as to reduce very considerably their activity. The experiments carried out consisted in placing in beetle-proof boxes a number of lengths of infested bamboo taken from the workshops either untreated or thoroughly soaked in water for several days, soaked in water and then in a solution of copper sulphate, and lastly soaked in water, copper sulphate, and Rangoon oil, the latter from twenty-four to forty-eight hours, and watching the effects of the beetles' attacks on them. Lengths of bamboo thoroughly soaked in water, copper sulphate, and Rangoon oil were also placed amongst lengths of badly infested bamboos in the open, with a view to further testing their immunity from attack. The following deductions may, I think, be considered as established by the above experiments : — Results of (i) That neither the tive days in water nor that followed by a Treatment. further five days in CUSO4 are of any use as a protection against the beetles. It is true that Experiments II and III seemed at first to prove that these soakings were effective, since the bamboos in these boxes remained un- attacked. I attribute this, however, solely to the fact that the pieces of bamboos, selected at haphazard in the Telegraph Workshops, and placed in the closed boxes in April when the beetles were egg-laying, did not happen to have had eggs deposited in them, and consequently when they were placed in the beetle-proof boxes and protected against any future depositions of eggs in them they showed no attacks. All the subsequent experiments with these classes of treatment showed that they afford no protection against the beetles. (2) That the bamboos which had gone through all the stages of the treatment and had received a proper soaking in the oil tank remained unattacked, and in addition were proof against further attacks by the beetles. (3) That at least five generations of these beetles issued between the last week in April and the end of October, as detailed above. (4) That bamboos cut in the forests between December and February can, even if not treated till two or three months have elapsed since cutting (by which time it is probable that many of them will contain eggs), be preserved by the oil treatment from further attacks of the beetle-borer. Bamboos unprotected by the oil treatment are tunnelled into by the April, June, July, September, and October generations of beetles, each of which attacks means their subsequent riddling by the larvae arising from the eggs laid by the beetles. (5) That the oil treatment therefore considerably prolongs the period of usefulness of the bamboo, this period being, as far as the experiments at present show, at least a year. [a) I am inclined to recommend that the soaking for five days in water should be continued, since a thick, shiny, gelatinous substance exudes Recommendations. from the bamboos during this process, and this exudation prob- ably enables the bamboo to absorb a larger quantity of oil than would be otherwise the case. FAMILY H0STRYCHI1)A1<: i37 {h) That the soakinj,^ in the copper sulphate solution be discontinued, since the experiments have shown it to have no preservative effect against the beetles. {c) That the bamboos be allowed to dry in a covered shed for several days after the water process. {(i) That, after drying, the bamboos be soaked for forty-eight hours in common Rangoon oil. The Superintendent of the Telegraph Workshops informed me that the cost of the treatment as carried through by him, i.e. five days in water, five days Cost. in CuSO^, followed by several days' drying and then two separate soakings (at an interval of a couple of months) of twenty-four hours ■each in Rangoon oil, amounted to Rs. 3 to Rs. 5 per 100 6-ft. lengths, or 6.3 pies per length. This includes the labour. Omitting the CUSO4 treatment and a second soaking in the oil, together with the additional handling involved, should effect a saving in this price, although of course the longer period of soaking in oil will enable the bamboos to absorb more of this commodity than they would in the shorter one of twenty-four hours only. In 1905 a visit was paid to the Telej^raph Workshops with the object of ascertaining how the treated bamboos which had Summary of Observa- been converted into telegraph posts had fared, and ''""'raadl^hS*.'"^"* especially how those which had been sent on service with the Tibet Expedition had faced the ordeal and in what condition they had returned. At the workshops" I found that it was easy to trace the history of the bamboos treated in 1903, all of which had been converted into field telegraph posts, a stage further in their career. The evidence collected both in the use of the posts in the field and, equally important, by their storage in an open shed in the workshop yard in Calcutta without any special protection being afforded to them points to the wonderful efficacy of the oil treatment. Some of the bamboos converted in 1903 and sent up that year for service with the Tibet Mission were returned to store in Calcutta about the beginning of 1905, and Mr. L. Truniger, CLE., who was in charge of the Field Telegraph with the mission, has stated that they had fully answered expectations. The returned posts were inspected by the writer in the yard at Calcutta towards the end of March 1905. Although it was two and a half years since they were cut in the forests of Upper India, and close upon two years since they were treated with the oil, they showed no trace of attacks by the Dinoderus bamboo beetle. It may be contended, and justly, that throughout 1904 these posts had been at an "^altitude greatly above that at which either of the shot-borer beetles could or do live, and that they were thus safe from their attacks. This was so, but the same argument does not hold good when we come to consider those converted bamboos which remained throughout the year in store in Calcutta. An inspection of these has shown that they had remained equally immune from the pest. Those who use it are aware how short is the life, economicallv, of the bamboo after it has been cut. To the Public Works, 138 FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE Military Works, Forest Department, and many other minor departments it means a constantly recurring annual expenditure on petty works; and many also know the difficulties which stand in the path of the lance, the tent- pegging, and hog-spear purveyor. The results that attended the treat- ment of the 9,000 bamboos in 1903 are well worthy of the consideration of all of these, for on present observations it has been shown that the impregnation with the oil leaves the bamboo strong and serviceable two and a half years after it has been cut. That the Telegraph Department has the fullest confidence in a discovery the full credit of which chiefly belongs to it is borne out by the fact that an additional 30,000 bamboos were put through the treatment and converted into field telegraph posts in 1905. The treatment consists in first soaking the bamboos in water for five days (this is very necessary, for reasons previously given), allowing them to dry for several days, and then resoaking them in the Rangoon oil (crude petroleum), this latter, as used in the workshops, having the consistency of treacle. That the use of the bamboo as a field telegraph and telephone post has a great future before it was proved by the Japanese in the Russo-Japanese campaign. The following note upon the subject appeared in the Allahabad Pioneer : " Every general of brigade in the field is 'at the end of a wire' which his divisional commander controls, and the generals of divisions are in touch by telegraph or telephone with the corps commander. The engineers run wires after the columns with marvellous rapidity. Firing is heard somewhere at the front. A detachment of engineers emerges from head-quarters, pack ponies carrying bundles of light bamboo poles, while coolies and carts follow them with coils of slender copper wire. The poles, which have pointed ends, are quickly planted, the wire spreads out as fast as men can uncoil it, and a field telephone is at work." As having a bearing upon the experiments and results attained in India, Mr. Y. Hara, Chief of the Japanese Forest Bureau, was addressed with the object of ascertaining whether the bamboo field-posts used by his countrymen were subjected to any treatment. His reply would seem to show that in this matter Japan is in the position occupied by India before the discovery of the oil treatment. He wrote : " In answer to your inquiries with regard to protection of our bamboos, 1 would state that although the method of preserving bamboos in the field is not well known, there are three processes of treatment generally adopted by our people — (i) The season of cutting — September and October. (2) The fumigation in sulphur. (3) Application of both of these processes." In reply to a reference on the subject the Superintendent of the Telegraph Workshops wrote as follows on 20 Sep- The Treated Bamboos ,1 (^ t l. a xiio x»ca^c^^^^ tember 1909 : In 1904 some 15,000 posts were made (i.e. soaked in water and Rangoon oil), the majority of which were afterwards stored in a heap in an open shed in this yard until quite recently. It was found that wiping them over once a year with earth oil gave absolute protection from the borer." Now, the yard in which these bamboos were stacked may be said to be situated in the heart of an area infested by the beetle borers. In the neigh- bourhood are native depots containing hundreds of thousands of bamboos in which the beetles are to be found in millions. FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAK 139 I think no further argument in favour of the enormous value and efficacy of the water and oil treatment can be required than is afforded by these 15,000 bamboos which have remained immune to the beetle-attacks for a period of five years and are as good and sound to-day as they were when the}^ were treated. I. Tillus notatus, Klug.(p. 186).— The beetles are slim and slight in l)uild, and exactly fit the gallery of the Dinoderus minutus beetle. The head, antennae, and margin of prothorax are bhick, shining ; three basal joints of antennae red-yellow, rest black, Predaceous Insects. Rest of prothorax dark orange-red ; basal fourth of elytra orange, rest yellow, the apices black ; a transverse black band, broadest on outside margin, crosses the elytra medianly, and a broader one occupies the major part of the apical half. Under-surface yellowish, abdomen black. Head and prothorax finely punctate ; elytra coarsely striate-punctate in basal half, finely punctate apically. Length, 8 mm. to 13 mm. PL ix, fig. 2, shows the beetle. Pupa. — Elongate, narrow. Yellowish-white. The wings and legs pressed against the chest, the antennae to the sides. 1 have taken several pupae from the larval galleries of Dinoderus minutus. They exactly fit the galleries, and wriggle about a good deal when disturbed or removed. Life History. — This beetle is predaceous upon the Dinoderus minutus larvae and pupae, and perhaps beetles. Whilst engaged in investigating the attacks of this bostrychid in bamboos in Calcutta in 1903 I first dis- covered this Tillus in the galleries of the Dinoderus inside the bamboos. Towards the end of May I cut out a number of the beetles which had all entered the tunnels, whose circumference their bodies exactlv fit, to prey upon the Dinoderus. I first took beetles on 25, 28, and 30 May. Thev lie up in the longitudinal galleries bored by the beetles and Lirvae. The Tillus is extremely active, and runs and flies well. During May and a part of June I made some experiments with this predator with the object of discovering whether it attacked the beetles or larvae for its food. In the cases where the beetles only were placed in a box with the Tillus they remained apparently untouched bv the latter. Between 26 and 31 May not one beetle was attacked. On i June I placed some living Dinoderus larvae and pupae in the box, and these were at once attacked by the Tillus. In the case of the larva the clerid beetle invariably attacked it at the posterior end, slightl}- to one side on the tenth or eleventh segment, and appeared to suck out its contents, first firmly clasping it with its mandibles. Now, Thanasimus himalayensis (vide p. 508) devours the scolytid beetles it preys upon outside the tree, and does not feed upon the larvae or pupae or enter the tree. It would appear probable, therefore, that the Tillus does not attack the Dinoderus beetles, the hard exterior chitin of which its small mandibles do not appear powerful enough to pierce through, but enters through the beetles' entrance-holes into the bamboo, and then pushes its way through the wood-dust and excreta in the larval galleries inside in search of the larvae and pupae. 140 FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE The clerid beetle would appear to pass through as many generations in the year as its host. Its larvae evidently feed predaceously on the bostrychid ones in the bamboo, and pupate in their galleries. 2. Hectarthrum heros, Fabr. (p. ii6).— This black predaceous beetle feeds in both its larval and beetle state on the Dinodevus. 3. Tribolium castaneum, Herbst. (p. 239).— I took this small brown Triboliuin from the galleries of Dinoderus ininntns in the bamboos kept under observation in Calcutta in 1903. It feeds semi-predaceously upon the grubs of the Dinodevus beetles. I bred out the beetles late in May, and know nothing further about its life history, THE EFFECT OF THE MOON'S PHASES ON THE PERIOD OF FELLING BAMBOOS.* It has been a matter of common knowledge for some decades past amongst those who have had any connection with the cutting and export of bamboos in India, and to a certain extent of poles as well, that the natives have long held a superstition that neither the one nor the other should be felled when the moon is full ; they argue that the sap is then very abundant, and unless the bamboos are well soaked in a tank and subsequently preserved with plenty of smoke they will be rapidly destroyed by boring insects {cootee). The most serious of these pests are the bostrichid beetles Dinoderus pilifrons and D. niiniitiis. This curious theory is held so commonly throughout the country that I have been for some years past endeavouring to ascertain the causes which have given rise to it, the reasons upon which it is based, and whether any scientific facts can be adduced in its favour. One of the explanations put forward is to the eftect that the cootee, like many other wood- boring insects, prefers to lay its eggs in wood which has commenced to wither and which consequently no longer has a healthy flow of sap to interfere with the insect in its burrow. This being so, the time immediately after the bamboo is cut down would be the most likely one for it to be attacked. It seems to be a generally received idea that soaking the bamboo, as also other timber, in water for a considerable time immediately after it has been felled, makes it less liable than it would otherwise be to suffer from boring beetles of all kinds. It is supposed that not only does the water prevent the beetles laying their eggs during the time the bamboo or wood is immeised in it, but that it also drowns insects already at work and dissolves much of the nutritive matter on which they otherwise feed. That bamboos, once sickly and dying or dead, suffer largely from the attacks of beetles must be obvious to the most superficial observer who glances over a bamboo clump or examines furniture, houses, fences, etc., entirely or partially built of bamboos. We are not here concerned, however, with this aspect of the question ; our purpose being to discuss the information at present available as to the effect the felling of bamboos and posts at different phases of the moon has upon their subsequent immunity or otherwise from the attacks of boring pests. In their Forest Proccediiigs\ \.\\& Madras Board suggested in 1898 that investigations should be carried out in this matter ; and the experiments initiated as a result, although made in a few divisions in Madras only and in a manner which leaves room for improvement, are of very considerable interest as serving to show that the so-termed superstition of the natives of the country has perhaps some substratum of solid fact to rest upon. Before detailing the various experiments made in this country I will first refer to a paper read by Ernest R, Woakes before the American Institute of Mining Engineers + in which the * I published this note in the Indiati Forester^ November 1906 (vol. xxxii). t Board's Resolution, Forest Proceedings no. 255, dated 24 June 1898. + This paper was reprinted in the Tropical Agriculturist for October 1899. FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE 141 author stated that in South America (Cohmibia) not only Ixiffiboos but all trees are felled during the waning moon only, and not during its increasing phases. It would appear that in that country the effect of the moon's phases is treated as an accepted fact. Mr. Woakes states from his own experience that he has often seen the sap running out of stumps during the increasing moon which were absolutely dry during the waning moon. In a letter * on the subject Mr. A. W. Feet, Acting Conservator of Forests, Central Circle,. Madras Presidency, made the following remarks in 1899 : — " As regards bamboos I expect that the question of durability depends to a great extent on the question of sap, but the problem seems to l)e complicated by the doubt whether we are to reckon with the effect of the moon's phases, as well as with the period of the year at which they are felled. I doubt if even the borer can subsist without the elements of the sap on which to feed, and the principle of soaking bamboos is, I think, useful chiefly because it tends to dissolve the fermenting constituents. Heating and smoking bamboos are additional pre- cautions generally adopted. " The point, however, which I wish to emphasize here is whether we should not primarily consider the period of the year at which bamboos are felled, and only secondarily the period of the month. There seem good grounds for paying attention to the latter, if we can only determine definitely the number of days in a month in which bamboos can be felled with confidence, and I will revert to this point. However, I think that unless strong evidence is adduced to the contrary, we shall treat bamboos like other vegetation and assume that the period when the sap is most vigorous, and therefore the fear of fermentation most pronounced^ is in the spring, and that this season should be avoided for felling if durability is of importance; and it may even be a question whether the root stocks will not be more injured during this period. " In order to test this presumption 1 lately questioned a bamboo contractor, without giving him any leading questions, and he told me that he believed that there was something in the waning moon theory, but that he had come to the clear conclusion that bamboos felled during March and up to the end of July had less durability than those felled during the other months of the year. "As regards the phases of the moon a hill man told me that he considered that bamboos might be felled safely during the seven days before new moon, and the se\'en days after ; but on being pressed as to what he considered absolutely the best period he said during the seven days before. His theory of the seven days after would seem to conflict with Mr. Woakes's theory. " The experiments carried out in Madras, although they cannot be considered to have been as definite as is desirable, are still of very considerable interest. They were initiated in four separate localities, viz., the Nilgiris, North Coimbatore, South Coimbatore, and South Malabar,, and the following summarizes the observations made : — • Nilgiris, ■}^oJune 1899. — Bamboos were cut in all the ranges except Ootacamund a few days before and a few days after new moon and full moon, and kept separate from each other. Some were smoked and others were soaked in water. It was found that bamboos cut on dark nights and immediately soaked or smoked for a period of two months were not attacked by the borers. From the experiments conducted in the various ranges it was observed tha bamboos felled during moonlight nights were more severely attacked than those felled during dark ones, and that soaked bamboos fared much better than unsoaked ones. As a result of the experiments the recommendation was made that as soon as felled the bamboos should be fully immersed in water for some time or properly smoked in a shed, or otherwise they were liable to be attacked by the borers. As 1 have shown, however, in my previous papers on the preservation of bamboos from the borers, neither immersion in water nor smoking is to be depended upon as a safe preventive. * No. 454, dated Madras, 25 October 1899, to the Commissioners of Land Revenue Madras. 142 FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE North Coi.MBATORE, 24 Ang-ust 1899. — A series of experiments were conducted in the Satvamangalam Depot at the foot of the Ootacamund Hills. During each week of the month one head load of twenty-five bamboos of two kinds (dry solid bamboos known as " Karanai " and green hollow bamboos known as " Varar") were set aside and marked. It was observed that dry bamboos appeared to withstand the attacks of the borers better than the green. In every case the insects attacked the bamboos in the inside of the bundle first, i.e. those not exposed to light. This is a general rule amongst these boring beetles, who very generally, although by no means always, attack in the shade in preference to strong light. As a result of the experiments conducted here it was held that the phases of the moon had no eftect on the felling season. It was noted, however, that bamboos exposed to light and air are less liable to attack than those not so exposed. South Coimbatork, 18 Fcbi-uary 1899 a)id i November 1899. — A series of experi- ments were made on two occasions at Mount Stuart, one from 2 August to i September 1898, and the second from 10 March to 12 April T899. On each occasion ten large bamboos (Bajnbiisa a?-iiniacea) and ten small {Dendrocalamus strictus) were cut daily. Each bundle of ten was labelled, and the bundles were all laid out in a row. Those cut on the first occasion were examined one by one on 2 February 1899, with the result that the influence of the different phases of the moon did not appear to have any bearing upon the presence or absence of the borers. On the second occasion one-half of the length of each bundle was covered with mats, the other being left uncovered. This was done in order to observe the effects of shade as a protective influence or otherwise to the bamboos. The bamboos so treated were examined at the beginning of October. It was found that the portions of the bamboos covered over by the mats had at work in them double the number of boring insects that were to be found in the uncovered portions. Thus the insects attacked bamboos stacked in the shade twice as heavily as those stacked imder the full rays of the sun. The following were the percentages of attack observed in the case of the two species of bamboos experimented with : — Bamboo. Percentage attacked by borers on the first occasion. Percentage attacked by borers on the second occasion. Bambusa arundinacea Dendrocalamus strictus 50-53 39-47 1 1 34-33 41.66 It will be noted from the above that the percentage of attack in the case of Bambusa arundinacea varies considerably, being much higher in the case of the bamboos cut in August than in the case of those cut in March-April. In the case of Dendrocalamus slrictus, however, the percentage of attack differs but httle, the increase inclining to those cut in the spring months of the year. To be conclusive, further experiments with a larger number of bamboos should be carried out in this Division. .S(JUTH Malabar, 4 October 1899.— A series of experiments were made from 2 August 1898 to 7 April 1899, both at the full moon and new moon periods. On each occasion a bundle of twenty-five bamboos was soaked in mud and water, whilst a second bundle was merely stacked. The experiments seemed to show that neither the soaking nor felling at any particular phase of the moon had any marked effect in preserving the bamboos from the attacks of the borers. It was noted, however, that the bamboos felled during the months of January, February, and March were not attacked by the borers, stacked bamboos felled at •other periods being invariably attacked. FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE 143 The above summarizes the experiments as far as they appear to have i^een carried in Madras. They support and confirm observations of my own on two points : — (a) That the cold-weather months are the Ijest ones in which to fell, although felling at this season does not guarantee immunity to the bamboos from the attacks of the borers. {/A That bamboos stacked in the shade or covered up in such a manner as still to allow of the beetles getting at them will be more severely attacked than those stacked in the open. The question as to the I)est time in the month to fell requires a more detailed series of experiments to be carried out before we can finally say that the belief so commonly held in India is a mere superstition. It will be noted that in the Madras experiments the bamboos kept under observation were either stacked together or the bundles svere placed in rows adjacent to one a>wther. Now this procedure greatly detracted from the value of the experi- ments carried out, since it is possible, if not probable, that the bamboos cut at a certain period of the moon's phases first attracted the beetles which, appearing in numbers too great to find accommodation in the bamboos in the condition they preferred, overflowed on to and attacked neighbouring bundles which otherwise might have escaped. If the experiments are to be reliable, it is necessary to cut bamboos at different periods in the month from the same clump or forest and to stack the lots cut on different dates at considerable distances apart, so that the danger of the lot in the condition preferred by the beetles attracting the insects to the others will cease to exist. A study of the life-history of these insects will show that the beetles do not appear on the wing in December and January at least, in the more southern portion of the Continent, and for an e\'en longer interval in the northern portions. This therefore accounts to some extent for the immunity of bamboos from attack at this period. Mr. A. M. Smith, of the Peradeniya Botanical Gardens, Ceylon, in discussing the above paper, appears to hold the theory that the amount of moisture present in the atmosphere at the period of felling may be intimately connected with the question. He thinks that it is possible that the atmosphere may contain more moisture in it on dark nights than on moonlight ones. In fact, that the moon may have something to do with the matter, since bamboos contain a far greater amount of moisture on dark moist nights than on drier ones when more of it is transpired from the leaves. In order to settle the question of the effect of the phases of the moon on the period of felling, series of experiments are required on the following lines : — {a) Bundles of bamboos to be cut weekly, each week's felling to be numbered and stacked separately as far apart as possible (at least a mile). {b) The phase of the moon at the period of felling to be accurately noted. {c) Particulars as to locality, elevation, etc., to be noted for each bundle cut. id) The bundles to be inspected zveekly and rough notes as to the percentage of each bamboo attacked to be noted down for each week. {e) The species of bamboo experimented with to be accurately noted. (/) My own theory at present is that bamboos felled during November and the first half of December and immediately piled ox stacked in the open will not be attacked by the borers. Experiments carried out in different parts of the country are necessary to prove this. Dinoderus brevis, Horn. Reference. — Horn, Proc. Ann. Phil. Soc. xvii, 550 (1878). Habitat.— Dehra Dun, North India; Calcutta. Also reported from Teinzo and Rans^oon, Burma, Indo-China, Philippines. Trees Attacked. — Bamboo (Dendrocalajiius strictus) : Dehra Dun and Cal- cutta; ? Sal {Shorea robusta) : Dehra Dun. 144 FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE Beetle.— Greatly resembles D. niinutus. Differs in its more convex form and eleven- jointed antennae. The dorsal punctures of the elytra are less dense than in minutus. The erect hairs on the apical declivity of the elytra less dense and slightly Description. longer, cylindrical or sub-claviform, not pointed. In the female the two median teeth of the marginal row of the rasp-like arterior portion of the prothorax are larger, wider apart, and more prominent than in the male. I have taken this beetle in July infesting bamboos in the roofs of bungalows in Dehra Dun, and also a few individuals Life History. from bamboos at the Indian Museum in Calcutta, in October 1903. The life history of the insect is very similar, so far as my present observations have been carried, to that of D. mimihis. I think it is probable that the insect also infests sal posts used in bungalow roofs in Dehra Dun. L. Fea took specimens of this insect at Teinzo in Burma in May, and in Rangoon in May-Julv. Horn obtained a specimen which he saw issue from the bamboo handle of a Japanese fan. II. BOSTRYCHINAE. Tarsi as long as, or longer than, the tibiae, last joint shorter than the rest of the joints together ; prothorax strongly tuberculate, the anterior margin with the lateral teeth more prominent than the median ones. This division contains the groups : Bostrychines, including the genera Schistoceros, Hcterobostyychus^ Bostrychopsis, Xylopertha, Xylodcctes, and Xylothrips ; Apatines, one species of the genus A pate ; Sinoxylonines, including the important genus Sinoxylon, which contains the wood-borers S. crassnui and 5. anale. Schistoceros (Caenophkada). Schistoceros (Caenophrada) anobioides, Waterhouse. References. — Waterhouse, Ann. Nat. Hist, i, 350 (female), sub Caenophrada (1898) ; Lesne, .-inn. Belg. p. 18 (male; (1897) ; id. Ann. Fr. p. 519 (1898) ; Bostrychus jesuita, Stebbing, Inj. Ins. Ind. For. p. 42 (1899); Bostrychopsis jesuita, S:ebbing, Ind. Mus. Notes, vi, 35 (1903). Habitat. — Singbhum, Chota Nagpur, Calcutta. Also reported from Dinapur, Hazaribagh in Bengal, Saugor, Belgaum, Kanara, Sind, Madras, Burma, and Ceylon. Trees Attacked. — Sal {Shorca rohusta) : Singbhum ; Guava {Psidium guava) : Hazaribagh (Ind. Mus. Notes). FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE 145 Beetle. — Of considerable size ; dark brown to black ; anterior edge of the protliorax covered with a bright red pubescence ; under-surface covered with a dense rufous pubescence. Front Description. of head very finely punctured. Prothorax not as wide as long, and markedly narrower in front, rounded on sides and at the posterior angles ; covered posteriorly with imbricate scales {^) or flat granulations ($). Apical declivity of elytra with two marginal tubercles on each side, less marked in female, in which the elytra occasionally develop rasp-like prominences between the punctures ; elytra in both sexes covered with a very line and short rufous FiG. 92. pubescence. Length, 12 mm. to 18 mm. Schistoceros ano- T-,-,, 1-1- • ^-fii J Inoides, Water- 1 nis l)ostrycnid is a common insect in Smf^bhum, and house India. indeed throughout Chota Nagpur, where Life History. it tunnels in compaii}' with Sinoxylon analc into sal timber. In 1895-7 ^ noticed that the green sal beams, rafters, and other materials used in the construction of the new rest-houses being built in the forests were very seriously riddled by these insects. The beetle bores into the timber to oviposit, the grubs eating out ramifying galleries in the heart of the wood, and pupating at the end of them when full-grown. The beetles, when mature, either leave the tree by a hole tun- nelled out by a companion, or tunnel one to the outside for themselves. Observations made during" 1895-7 showed that in Singbhum the insects commence work early in March, and they, or their grubs, are to be heard operating in the wooden beams, etc., of the bungalows from that month to the beginning of the cold weather. Under their operations, tables, chairs, and floors were constantly covered with particles or little mounds of saw- dust dropping down from the roof. I noticed that most of the work w^as done in the early morning, evening, and during the night, the sounds ceasing and the insect resting during the heat of the dav. The beetle has been taken on the wing in Belgaum in March, and I have taken it between March and June in Chota Nagpur. There is probabl}- more than one life-C3'cle in the year. From an imperfect identification of this insect, I ha\e previousl}' alluded to it as BostrycJiopsis jesnita. This latter is an Australian species, and it is improbable that it will be found in India. BOSTRVCHOPSIS. Bostrychopsis parallela, Lesne. References. — Lesne, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. p. 534 (1898); Bostrychus parallelus, iLesne, .Inn. Soc. Fr. p. 174 (1895) ; Stabbing, Depart. Notes, i, 174 (1902). Habitat. — Raipur, Central Provinces {A. M. Long); Calcutta. Also reported from the Deccan, Bengal, Assam, Indo-China, Formosa, Sumatra, Philippines. Trees Attacked. — Bamboo {Dendrocalainns strictns) : Raipur ; Siuilax sp. (Guerin-Meneville). 9003 K 146 FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE Beetle. — 5 The front is finely and densely pubescent in the centre, and not gibbous ; prothorax smaller than in (J, nearly square or rounded ; dorsal punctures of elytra well marked, becoming Description. elongate near suture, and slightly denser on apical declivity. (J Three kinds of ^ are found : I. Normal heteromorphous (J, anterior angles of prothorax pro- longed into horns which are curved downwards and have a glabrous outer surface ; apical declivity of elytra with four marginal costiform callosities. Fig. 93. 2. A (J having a mixture of the female and male characters. The Bostrycliopsis prothorax is without horns, the latter being replaced bv two teeth ; the tarallela, Lesne. ^^^.^^.^ ^^-^^^^^^^^ marginal callosities. Central rrovmces, ' 3. The horns of prothorax are replaced by teeth, of which the inner one is often absent ; the marginal callosities are present, more or less prominent. Size of insect is variable, the length being from 6 mm. to 15 mm. Specimens from Raipur measured 9.13 mm. Specimens of this insect were sent to me in igoi by the late Mr. A. M. Long, of the Indian Forest Service. He found them Life History. tunnelling into dead stacked bamboos {D. strictus), in the middle of June, in the Raipur forests. The beetles were taken from the interior wood-tissue, where the insect appeared to be engaged in egg-laying. I have since taken the insect both in the Central Provinces and in Bengal. The eggs are laid in the wood-tissue of the bamboo, and the grubs, on hatching, feed on this wood, eating out irregular galleries which more or less coalesce. On maturing, the beetles leave the bamboo generally by one orifice, either the entrance-hole of the female beetle or one eaten out by the first beetle to mature. Whilst acting as Superintendent of the Indian Museum in Calcutta, in 1903, a live specimen of a male was brought to me, taken in one of the streets in the middle of May. The beetle often infests bamboos in the thatched roofs of bungalows, in company with the species of Dinodcrus already described. Heterohostrychus. Articulations of antennal club without well-defined velvety patches. Prothorax narrower in front, slightly hollowed out medianly near anterior edge. The beetles tunnel into the timber of fallen and felled trees, and also into converted timber. Heterohostrychus unicornis, Waterhouse. References. — Waterhouse, Dostrychus unicornis, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. 5th ser. iii, p. 361 (1879); F'airmaire, yl««. Belg. p. 539(1893); Lesne, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. p. 558 (189S). Habitat.— Goalpara, Assam. Also reported from Kanara (T. R. D. Bell), Calcutta, Madras, Rangoon, Andaman Islands. Tree Attacked. — ? Sal {Shorca rohusta) or Bamboo (Doidrocalaniiis strictus). Kachugaon, Goalpara. FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE 147 Beetle. — Long parallel ; dark brown, with tlie femora sliL;hlly reddisli and the antcnnal chili rufous. Elytra glabrous. $ Front of head furnished with a tubercle, Description. densely hairy and arc-shaped, which does not occupy a cjuarter of the inter-ocular space ; finely and densely punctate. I'rothorax as wide as long, greatest width in the middle, sides slightly rounded, anterior margin slightly indented, the indentations bounded on each side by an erect but not prominent tooth, posterior angles rounded ; middle of posterior area covered with tine and dense flattened granulations. Elytral punctures well marked, but not in regular rows ; apical declivity depressed on either side of suture, latter not ^ 'f'" 9"^" prominent; apex of elytra slightly turned up. Intercoxal lobe of the ^- ■' ,,' , • , r ,•.,,,,-, - , , mncornis, \\ ater- mesosternum with a nne median keel. Abdominal segments finely and house Assam etc densely punctate, with a very fine pubescence. $ Head as in J. Elytra furnished on either side of the apical declivity with two tubercles, the outer simple, the inner larger and prolonged into a robust horn, curved inwards. Length, 95 mm. to 1 15 mm. I took a male and female of this insect in the bungalow at Kachugaon, in Goalpara, Assam, on 23 May 1906, at night. I was Life History. of opinion that they had come either from the sal or the bamboos of which the bungalow was constructed. Both the sal and bamboos were pitted with the circular entrance and exit holes of wood-boring insects. The insect has been taken by Mr. T. R. D. Bell, of the Indian Forest Service, in Kanara, in the Bombay Presidenc\-. Heterobostrychus pileatus, Lesne. Reference. — Lesne, Ann. Soc. Em. Fr. p. 559 (1S98). Habitat. — Singbhum, Chota Nagpur. Also reported from Kanara, Bombay Presidency, Cochin, and Tharrawaddy, Burma; Seven Pagodas, Tonkin. Tree Attacked.— Sal (Shorea robusta). Singbhum. Beetle. — $ \'ery similar to u)iicoi'nis. The frontal tubercle occupies transversely more than a third of the interocular space, and is much larger than in iinicontis. The prothorax is longer than wide, widest behind the middle, narrower than in Description. unicornis. Anterior angles less well defined, posterior angles more widely curved. (J Heteromorphous, head and prothorax larger than in $. Front simple, smooth, shining. Anterior angle of prothorax furnished with a prominent hook. The lower marginal tubercle of apical declivity of the elytra only slightly developed, the upper tubercle larger, pro- longed into a horned prominence curved inwards and downwards. In the homeomorphous $ the front of head is similar to that of 5, whilst the prominent hook of the anterior angle of prothorax is replaced by a simple upturned tooth. Length, g-i r mm. This insect has been taken in the Singbhum forests in Chota Nagpur, where it was found tunnelling into the sal poles and Life History. beams of which the forest rest-houses are constructed. The only individuals I obtained were taken in May 1897, at which time the insect appeared to be issuing from the timber for pairing purposes. The life history is, doubtless, somewhat similar in character to that of Schistoceros anobioides, already briefly described. K 2 148 FAMILY HOSTKVCHIDAE Heterobostrychus aequalis, Waterhouse. References.— Waterhouse, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. p. 215, pi. xvi, fig. 3 (2) (2) (1884); imcipennis, Lesne, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. p. 173 (^2) (1895); ? papuensis, MacLeay, Proc. Limi. Soc.N.S.W., 2nd ser. p. 154 {$) (1886); Bostrychus aequalis, I.M.X. v, i, 34, pi. iii, fig. 7; Lesne, Ann. Fr. 560 (1898). Habitat.— Dehra Dun, North India: Calcutta; Calicut, Madras (Thurston). Also reported from Sutlej, environs of Simla, environs of Chakrata (A. J.Gibson), British Bhutan; Maria Basti ; Bhamo ; Tharra- waddy. Trees Attacked.— Sal (Slwrca rohusta): Dehra Dun ; Semul {Bumhax m al ab civic urn) : Calicut; Poinciana t'/a^a : Calcutta (I. H. Burkhill). Beetle.— Parallel, very slightly depressed, dark brown, often rufous-glaljroiis. Front of head similar in both sexes, rasp-like, without the tubercle present in above- Description, described species ; pubescence short and not thick. Prothorax with pos- terior angles often lobed, and posterior surface showing deep- impressed punctures, the disk with a more or less defined sculpture resembling imbricate scales. Elytra strongly and densely punctate, the punctures arranged in fairly regular rows of striae ; punctation of apical declivity variable ; apical margin turned up with a thickened border laterally, and with marginal tubercles, the inner of which may be hooked. Abdomen with a very dense punctation, rasp-like. Second tarsal joint of hind legs much shorter than the last. Length, 6-13 mm. Figs. 88, 95. Variations occur in size and in the elytral teeth and callosities in the various forms of the males and females. Larva. — White, curved, constricted posteriorly, with a i)rownish-black head, and three pairs of jointed legs on the thoracic segments, the abdominal segments corrugated. Fir;. 95 . — Heterobostyycli 11.^ diU/ualis, Waterhouse. x 5. India and Burma. In the year i8g8 some specimens of this insect were forwarded to the Superintendent of the Indian ^Museum, Calcutta, by Life History. Mr. Edgar Thurston, CLE., Superintendent of the Central Museum, Madras, with the information that they committed a good deal of damage by tunnelling into semul (Bombax mala- haricum) timber at Calicut. As this timber was converted into tea-box planking (as is the case also in Assam), the destruction committed was of considerable importance. The adult beetle is found on the wing at Calicut in May-June. Between the years 1902 and iQog I took this insect commonl}- in Dehra Dun in July. The insect tunnels into sal timber in this locality, and is a common pest in the sal rafters of the thatched bungalows in the station. Every July between the years 1905 and 1909 specimens were taken in my thatched office in the grounds of Sikander Hall, where they issued from the sal timber in the roof. I also took individuals in August and September, FAMILY HOSTRYCHIUAE 149 but have not definitely ascertained whether the insect passes throuj^h more than one generation in the year. The insect oviposits in the timber, the grubs eating out irregular galleries in the wood, and, when numerous, gradually reducing the latter to powder. They are commonly associated with one or more species of Siiioxylon in this attack. The beetle was sent to me from the Economic Section of the Indian Museum in Calcutta by Mr. I. H. Burkhill, Officiating Reporter on Eco- nomic Products, in September 1905, with the information that it had been taken issuing from specimens of Poinciana data timber (origin unknown) in the museum. Whilst acting as Superintendent of the Museum in 1903 I took the insect on the wing in the museum compound in June. In 1908 Mr. A. J. Gibson, Imperial Forest Economist at the Research Institute, Dehra Dun, obtained specimens of the beetle in the environs of Chakrata, in Jaunsar. Heterobostrychus hamatipennis, Lesne. Referenxes. — Lesne, .4;n!. Spc. £;ti. Fr. p. 873 ((J 2) (1895); id. /Iwn. Fr. p. 562 (i8g8) ; 7iiponeiisis, Lewes, Ann. Nat. Hist. ser. 6, vol. xvii, p. 339 {$) (1896). Habitat. — Kumaun Terai. Also reported from the Jhelum Valley ; Sikkim ; British Bhutan ; Maria Basti ; Sylhet ; Ceylon. Tree Attacked. — Acacia catechu. Jaula Sal, Kumaun. Beetle. — Parallel, fairly large, robust, dark brown, with femora reddish at times ; upper surface covered with a rufous pubescence, very short and sparse, denser near the anterior edge of the prothorax and in the $, on the apical declivity of the elytra. Description. which often appears as if covered with a yellowish pulverescence ; the pubescence on the scutellum is dense, and often appears as a well-marked light-coloured blotch. Ventral puljescence less short and more abundant than dorsally. Head large, the profile of the upper part forming a regular curve in both sexes ; front not depressed, punctate, or rasp-like. Posterior angles of the prothorax straight or obtuse ; sculpture of posterior surface fairly large, rasp-like, consisting of scaloidal tubercles, more prominent in the J. Apical edge of the elytra not retlexed ; the punctures well marked, dense, and arranged in regular series. $ Eyes larger ; anterior angles of the prothorax furnished with only one large erect tooth ; apical declivity of elytra with a marginal callosity on either side. $ Anterior angles of the prothorax prolonged into upturned horns ; posterior surface covered with scales medianly ; apical declivity less strongly and less densely punctate than dorsal surface of elytra, and has on each side a marginal sub-cylindrical apophysis obliquely truncate on top. Length, 9 mm. to 15^ mm. I found this beetle in April boring into the wood and large branches of khair {Acacia catechu) trees felled in the Jaula sal Life History. forests in Kumaun the preceding cold weather. The beetles were egg-laying. For this purpose they tunnel down into the wood about :^in. to j in., and then eat out a tunnel at right angles both to right and left of the entrance-tunnel. Small ridges and 150 FAMILY BOSTRYCHIDAE unevennesses are left in this lon^ tunnel, which is the egg-tunnel, and is carried round the stem parallel to the outer surface. In this tunnel a pair of beetles were usual- ?/,i'/^^<^^y^ii?:^?^^^m^'2^,. "IL.,, .j. ^^Ucr^ .k '^r- Fig. 96. Galleries oi Hetci-obostrychiis hatnatipciniix in Acacia catechu. United Provinces Terai. (E. P. S.) ly found, apparently the