SON SN RA RAN \ MA RRR vee aba’ vas ARAL Sa ee WON WA QQ MOY AN ‘FZ N SRA Wes i YY AS NaN RAN \' RAIN » SAAARAAA ASA . r ARRAS RAK NN \ LAR ANY . AK ‘ \ . x aw el Lauber s . A . A AUAMENRR ARE NRACLANAAN CRASS RRERRERERRRARR mbes . sh . Oi \ YON oN SN ‘ \\ \ \ ‘ NS . AN * NN) WN SON SN AN . + \ \ AY \ AN ‘ ‘*. * ~ WANS AN NAN \ . \ ‘ ‘ SN os SO Rn . Sh BS Reet NN \ SSN WY MO \ MAA \ . : ." eR ances me AANA PLATES ASAIO SN ss RAL NS at Niet nie Aa A Ne ty ine ‘ a ; ae ri NW ‘ay je te a , ay a i it } } ates 4 ray vi, : ; 7 WA Pe daw Wh ¥ \ long { i yeh a 1 oa ee * Pe esas: INSECTS AND INSECTICIDES B .Detmerg, dan TRANSFORMATIONS OF THE CELERY CATERPILLAR, PLATE I. INSECTS AND INSECTICIDES AEP RACTICAL MANUAL CONCERNING Noxious Insects and the Methods of Preventing Their Injuries BY / CLARENCE M. WEED, D. Sc. Professor of Zoology and Entomology, New Hampshire College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts ILLUSTRATED. SECOND (REVISED) EDITION pnt OF COne &R Cy voy RIGHT £3, JUN 12 1898 ep Of waster NEW YORK ‘ian ys La, ORANGE JUDD COMPANY 1895 By THE SAME AUTHOR FUNGI AND FUNGICIDES A Practical Manual Concerning the Fungous Diseases of Cultivated Plants and the Methods of Preventing their Ravages. Llustrated. Price, $1.00. SPRAYING CROPS Why, When and How. Illustrated. Third (Revised) Edi- tion. Eleventh Thousand. 150 pages. Price, 25 cents. Orange Judd Company, New York, N. Y. TEN NEW ENGLAND BLOSSOMS AND THEIR INSECT VISITORS Illustrated. Houghton, Mifflin & Co., Boston and New York Copyright 1891 and 1895 BY CLARENCE M. WEED ; PREFACE This volume has been prepared for the purpose of furnishing the farmer, the fruit grower, the floricultur- ist, and the housekeeper with a concise account of the more important injurious insects with which they have to contend, together with a summary of the latest knowledge concerning the best methods of preventing or counteracting the injuries of these pests. In its prepa- ration free use has been made of the information scat- tered through the literature of economic entomology ; and, as arule, it has been found impracticable to give to each author credit for first working out the life his- tories of the various species. In one way or another the contributions of nearly every American economic ento- mologist have been drawn upon; but especial mention should be made of the help obtained from the publications of Dr. C. V. Riley, recently United States entomologist, whose remarkable investigations during the last quarter of a century have placed him foremost among the world’s economic entomologists. Mention should also be made of the aid derived from the writings of Messrs. Bruner, Cook, Comstock, Fernald, Fletcher, Forbes, Garman, Gillette, Harvey, Howard, Lintner, Osborn, Packard, Saunders, Slingerland, and many others. The illustrations of this volume have also been gleaned from various sources. Iam under obligations to the authorities of the Department of Agriculture and various experiment stations, particularly those of Illi- nois, Cornell University, Colorado, Kentucky, Nebraska, New Jersey and Ohio,—for the privilege of getting du- plicate electrotypes. The authors to whom each of Vv vl INSECTS AND INSECTICIDES those figures that did not first appear in my own publi- cations should be credited, are indicated in the following list : : en puley :—Plates III, [V, VI, XII, and figures 1-4, 8, 15, 23-27, 36-45, 59, 61, 63, 67, 69, 70, 72, 74-76; 78a, es 81-95, 97-103, 105, 119-121, 123, 124, 127-129, 133-139, 141, 144, 146-149, 150, 155, 157-162, 164-166, 168, 170, 172-176; after Lugger, fig. 5; after Osborn, figs. 169-171; after Garman, figs. 68, 71, 104; after Bruner, figs. 13, 14, 62, 80, 145; after Miss Ormerod, fig. 167; after Howard, figs. 46-50; after Comstock, fig. 141; after Lake, plate V, fig. 28; after Goff, fig. 1382; after Smith, plate XV, figs. 9, 10, 1225; after Slingerland, plates VII, X, figs. 30-34, 52-57, 60, 77, 78, 130, 131; after Marlatt, fig. 29; after Saunders, figs. 51, 116; after Packard, figs. 7, 22; after Lintner, figs. 16, 58; after Popenoe, fig. 108; after Gillette, plate VIII, fig. 66; after Bailey, fig. 19; after Galloway, fig. 18 ; after Forbes, figs. 64, 65, 143, 152-154; from Insect Life, figs. 12, 73; after Taschenberg, plate II, figs. 109-112. All the figures are natural size unless otherwise stated, and wherever a straight line occurs beside a mag- nified drawing, it representa the ge of the specimen figured. I have attempted to make the discussions of life histories and remedies as plain and simple as possible, omitting, so far as practicable, all technical terms, and have included only such details as are necessary to a prac- tical understanding of the subjects treated of. In the present second edition the book has been thoroughly revised to date, and the latest available information - incorporated. C. i ie New Hanipshire College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. DURHAM, NEW HAMPSHIRE, April, 1895. CONTENTS Page. MEAG CUINGUL OM Seracicnic ccc cieccie o's b sie(ewielevcltelaemiten ssiee splemeeaeeaeieewecscnsees 19 PARTE INSECTS AFFECTING THE LARGER FRUITS PAID Leer chsesty orsiaielersaaesietiel= eloua eee ois Givr SEUUE ANN cessatsts onze, octet hate ate piel rare etaeiant 113 REN Nate: eine aias! Give eis nine 8 # SbisGeike.e GAP OC LN sre:cas. syeleroverntoten/aietas ote e aba ciation a 121 MOE seis o cys aeiiaie'e oy tales’ ste i’a fortes a1 oy rateranearoraicl oats, Aan v:8iya Reve win vis sieve MeianSield ches 128 PART on INSECTS AFFECTING SMALL FRUITS PU IETY crsy cela: fe on 4 zee th va) oe Siw 1387 Raspberry and Blackberry..... 159 Currants and Gooseberries..... TAR GRAD: ots. tolsiatc dons side ssc eerie 167 PART TLL INSECTS AFFECTING SHADE TREES, ORNAMENTAL PLANTS, AND FLOWERS Shade Trees...... sia Rnttarasstonds ale MRO IRE CVS Cota Sclar aretovk aie 3:8 eiaraiel acutely sie vevees icvare 215 PHENOM Ejeet ation wes’ $16 eo ee s.eas Sede a TT Ma aero aie elas aha bacwie set oa Piao soa 218 PARTLY IWSECTS AFFECTING VEGETABLES BURDEN EAINHs ststatanatsseie ais ies eresatal’s ard asancialancd 6 PAD RAGE AN ANG PEA iecisoadiscwcccsine oe 242 Oe OO goss nine piece) ere Riaieisiare ete DURGA ANODE O antag cs telaisiaelen se sinle sleteialeta eye 245 (CHALE sce Re ACR TOROS, ane foarte Passe CO atIOy OE Aa ed asnicioe AIO BEOOWIe cc 261 Squash and Cucumber.......... SEAS) UCU ONULSS orc ae 518 aie w x/eies s.c/e,0: oi wleiatane 263 PART Vi INSECTS AFFECTING CEREAL AND FORAGE CROPS lingo fitch atl Chop a OR they Ae Seer POCO WET sacra e Kole fe cater eievia wale wsleie eae 292 Meharry ic seem Geet onivacereis acitetele's DT Rett AGS ig waters swe oe Wotan ae cb eteins 299 PART VI INSECT PESTS OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS AND THE HOUSEHOLD INSeCis Atechine DOMESTIC AMIMAIS .(. ccc cc sccescvsicccovees cacucewa 313 THSCCTALCStSIOL DNC FLOUSCHOIG oy sv ciecccevicnee ceccvcce veces a MMSE D'S Fauci sinate 326 INSECTS AND INSECTICIDES IN’TRODUCTION None of the changes modern civilization has made upon the earth is more evident to the American farmer than that of the increased difficulty of saving his crops from the ravages of noxious insects and parasitic fungi. Many of us have heard from our fathers and grand- fathers of the apples which once grew in abundance in yards and along highways, strangers alike to the codling moth, maggot or scab; the luscious peaches free from worms and rot; the plums unmarked by the cur- culio, and the pears that had yet to learn the secret of becoming dwarfed, gnarly and cracked; of the grapes that knew not how to rot and the potatoes whose leaves had neither been blighted nor bitten by the Colorado beetle. Now all is changed: every crop has foes that often gather the lion’s share of the harvest. The enemies have come from the north and the south, the east and the west, from Europe and the islands of the sea, and in our own midst they have flocked from the forest to the field, deserting a wild plant for its cultivated congener or changing their habits to conform to a new environ- ment.. This increase of noxious insects, however, is the natural result of the changed conditions of things. Among the principal factors tending toward it may be 2 INSECTS AND INSECTICIDES mentioned (1) the massing of crops in limited areas ; (2) the facilities for transporting insects long distances by vessels and railways carrying agricultural products ; (3) the abandoned farms and orchards that serve as breeding grounds; and (4) the destruction of forests and the cultivation of prairies. Considering each of these factors briefly, we find that the tendency of the first—that of the massing of crops in limited areas—toward increasing our insect pests rests upon the biological law that the increase of any animal is limited by its food supply. Under the natural conditions existing on this continent before the advent of the white man, those insects which fed on wild plants had as a rule only a limited food supply. The apple maggot or railroad worm for example is supposed to have bred originally in the wild haws of the woods. The parent fly had then usually to find here and there an isolated tree bearing the fruit in which it deposited its eggs. Its chances of being caught by a bird or entrapped in a spider’s web while on this search were very good, so that the scarcity of the food supply not only directly limited the number of individuals that could be produced, but by being scattered it increased the chances of the adult insects falling a prey to enemies. But in a modern apple orchard all this is changed: the food supply is almost unlimited, and is so massed together that the insect runs little risk in passing from fruit to fruit or from tree to tree. Hence it can multiply indefi- nitely unless there is some means of checking it. The same line of reasoning applies to a large proportion of our injurious insects. We are indebted to our commerce on sea and land for many of the most noxious insects. Brought to our shores from Europe, Asia or Australia by ships, many of these pests have found a land which for them was flow- ing with milk and honey, and in which their hereditary INTRODUCTION 3 enemies had not yet gained a foothold. Consequently they have multiplied without let or hindrance; and by natural and artificial means—notably the railroad trains— they have rapidly overrun the country of their adoption. ~The abandoned or neglected fields and orchards all over the United States have proven a prolific breeding ground for many insect pests. ‘Too often the efforts of painstaking farmers have been rendered unavailing by the proximity of such sources of infection. An orchard that has outlived its usefulness had better be converted into firewood than left to die uncared for. The destruction of forests has compelled certain in- sects to resort to cultivated crops for subsistence ; and in some cases a decided change in feeding habits has re- sulted. So also the bringing of the prairies into culti- vation has caused many insects which originally fed on wild grasses to resort to pastures and meadow lands. The operation of these various causes, together with the enormous powers of multiplication possessed by the insects themselves, have led to a constantly increasing injury to cultivated crops, until to-day these tiny foes exact a tribute of ten per cent. of the crop products of American agriculture. ‘‘ They form an omnipresent host of taxgatherers, taking possession of the farmer’s crops and enforcing their onerous demands without process of law,-unless preventive measures are vigorously prose- cuted. They are no respecters of persons: like the rain they fall upon the fields of both the just and the unjust. «