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= = = ‘Guide to Lectures
= Delivered at the Biltmore Forest School
_ by ,
e A SCHENCK, PH. D.
Director
4908
FOREST PROTECTION
Guide to Lectures
Delivered at the Biltmore Forest School
by
C. A. SCHENCK, Ph. D.
Director.
1909
The Inland Press,
Asheville, N.C.
PREFACE
This book on “forest protection’’ is being printed, pre-eminently, for
the benefit of the students attending the Biltmore Forest School.
In American forestry, the most important duty of the forester consists
in the suppression of forest fires.
If forest fires were prevented, a second growth would follow invariably
in the wake of a first growth removed by the forester or by the lumberman;
and the problem of forest conservation would solve itself.
If forest fires were prevented, a second growth would have a definite,
prospective value; and it would be worth while to treat it sylviculturally.
If forest fires were prevented, our investments made in merchantable
timber would be more secure; and there would be a lesser inducement for
the rapid conversion of timber into cash.
The issue of forest fires stand paramount in all forest protection. Com-
pared with this issue, the other topics treated in the following pages dwindle
down. to insignificance.
I write this with a knowledge of the fact that the leading timber firms
in this country place an estimate of less than 1% on their annual losses of
timber due to fires:
These firms are operating close to their holdings; and if a tract is killed
by fire the operations are swung over into the burned section as speedily
as possible; and the salvage may amount to 99% of the timber burned.
These firms do not pay any attention, in their estimate, to the “Iu-
crum. cessans,’”’ nor to the prospective value of inferior trees, poles, saplings
and seedlings.
The “prospective forest’’ is the forest of the future; and this forest
is annihilated by the fires.
Merchantable trees of immediate value cannot be killed any “more
dead”’ by fires, nor by insects, nor by strom, than by the legitimate use of
axe and saw.
Where the means of transportation are ready, the damage inflicted
upon the forest and upon its owner by catastrophies may be reduced toa
minimum. ‘
In writing the paragraph on “forest insects,” I have availed myself
of many hints obtained from Dr. A. D. Hopkins. My own knowledge of
forest insects amounts to little; and on the basis of past experience, I strongly
recommend to all foresters a “lack of self-reliance’ in forest entomological
questions. Consult Dr. Hopkins before spending any money for fighting
insects!
Mr. C. D. Couden has revised and rewritten my manuscript on forest
insects, eliminating many mistakes made by a layman. My sincerest thanks
are tendered to him herewith.
4 FOREST PROTECTION
Whatever I know of American tree diseases and of timber diseases in-
duced by fungi, I have learned from Dr. Hermann von Schrenk. The
errors only which may have crept into the 7th paragraph of this book deal-
ing with fungus diseases are my own.
The graduates of the Biltmore Forest School, and all other gentle readers
are earnestly requested to assist me in the elimination of errors and mis-
takes contained in this book on forest protection.
Biltmore, N. C., October 1, 1909. C, A. ScHmenck,
FOREST PROTECTION
DEFINITION AND SYNOPSIS.
The term “Forest Protection’’ comprises all the acts of the forest-owner
made with a view to the safety of his investments.
Forest Protection as a branch of science is divided into the following
parts and chapters:
PART A: Protection Against Organic Nature.
ChapterI: Protection against man.
Chapter IT: Protection against animals.
Chapter III: Protection against plants.
PART B: Protection Against Inorganic Nature.
Chapter I: Protection against adverse climatic influences.
A-—Heat.
B—Frost.
C—Snow and sleet.
Chapter II: Protection against storm, erosion, sanddrifts, noxious
gases.
D—Wind and storm.
E—Erosion.
F—Shifting sand.
G—Noxious gases.
The English literature on Forest Protection consists, in the main, of
the following:
Dr. Wm. Schlich, Vol. IV. of “Manual of Forestry.”
Dr. A. D. Hopkins, Bulletins of the West Virginia Agricultural
Station. Bulletins of the U. 8. Bureau of Entomology.
Tubeuf and Smith, “Diseases of Plants.”
Dr. H. von Schrenk, bulletins of the Shaw School of Botany, bulle-
tins of the U. S. Bureau of Forestry and of the U. S. Bureau
of Plant Industry.
Lectures on game protection, on protection of forest-roads and forest-
railroads, on protection of forest industries—of vital interest to the owner
of forests—are not included in the following paragraphs. The author's
excuse for this omission lies in the word “precedent.”
Par.
Par.
Par.
Par.
Par.
Par.
Par.
Par.
Par,
Par.
Par. 11.
Par. 12.
Par. 13.
Par. 14.
Par. 15.
eC HNnNear WN HE
pt
ed
FOREST PROTECTION
CONTENTS IN PARAGRAPHS.
Protection against adverse possession.
Protection against forest fires.
Protection against domestic animals on pasture.
Protection against wild vertebrates.
Protection against insects.
Protection against weeds.
Protection against fungi.
Protection against parasites other than fungi.
Protection against frost.
Protection against heat.
Protection against snow and sleet.
Protection against wind and storm.
Protection against erosion.
Protection against shifting sand.
Protection against noxious gases.
FOREST PROTECTION 7
Part A: Protection Against Organic Nature
CHAPTER 1. PROTECTION AGAINST MAN.
Par. 1. Protection Against Adverse Possession.
Adverse possession and its consequences are best prevented by con-
tinuous, open and notorious possession of every acre of land comprised in
the property. To that end, a proper survey is necessary, coupled with de-
markation of the boundary lines by proper marks or by fences; of the cor-
ners by proper corner trees and witnesses.
Wooden stakes as corner signs are objectionable; iron “T’’ stakes, 5”
long, costing 35 to 60 cents apiece, are extensively used at Biltmore.
The exactness of the survey depends on the acre-value of the forest.
The lines of the property, established by the demarkation, must be
maintained by continuous patrolling. The posting of trespass notices and
the trimming of bushes along the lines are advisable, if not legally required.
Foremen, tenants and guards should know the lines perfectly so as to be
witnesses available in lawsuits.
In the case of disputes with neighbors, refuge to “processioning pro-
ceedings’”’ is taken.
The forester should endeavor to straighten the lines of the forest by
purchase or exchange, and to substitute natural boundary lines for arti-
ficial lines.
Squatters, with the help of state grants or other colorable title,—or
without title but with distinct boundary lines and with distinct possession—-
become owners within a few years.
In real estate law, the warrrmn word is decisive rather than the gist
of a contract.
The lessee surrenders to the lessor all claim to the property on which
he lives. ;
All deeds pertaining to a piece of property should be placed on pub-
lic record.
Suit should be brought in the federal courts, preferably.
In the distant future, the increased value of real property will forea
the stdtes to “legalize” the individual holdings after careful survey.
The administering forester must command a good knowledge of real
estate law; he should leave no means untried to ferret out the trespasser
and to secure his conviction.
The most important laws in this connection are those concerning
Destruction of corner marks
Larceny of wood and timber
Entering land when forbidden
Arrest
Proceedings at court.
8 FOREST PROTECTION
h
Par. 2. Protection Against Forest Fires.
Protection against forest fires means, practically, protection against
man who, intentionally or carelessly, causes the very large majority of all
forest fires. Fires due to lightning are of rare occurrence in the East.
A: Causzs or Firzs:
I:—Fires are intentionally set :—-
To improve pasture.
To uncover minerals for prospecting.
To gather chestnuts.
To force the owner of woodlands to purchase interior holdings.
To chase deer or turkeys.
To drive bees or coons from trees.
To improve the huckleberry crop.
To facilitate access to thick woods.
To get a job at stopping fires.
To surround farms, pastures or forests with a safety belt of burned
land.
To mask trespass by fishing and hunting.
To take revenge for supposed acts of animosity.
II:—Fires carelessly started result from:—
Locomotive sparks and cinders.
Sparks from forest cabins.
Campers’ and hunters’ fires.
Charcoal burning, rock blasting, tobacco smoking, burning ad-
joining fields or pastures.
B: Kinps or Forest Firus:
Fires are distinguished as:—
Surface fires.
Underground fires.
Top fires.
©: Damage By Firzs:
The damage done by forest fires consists of the loss of present values
or of the loss of prospective values; seedlings are killed; saplings burst open;
stool shoots replace seedling growth.
A heavy growth of weeds, frequently following in the wake of forest
fires, prevents natural or artificial regeneration. A deterioration of pro-
ductiveness is the natural consequence of deteriorated soil, due to destruc-
tion of humus.
Trees weakened by fires cease to resist the attacks of insects and fungi.
Trees burned at the stump are subject to breakage by sleet or snow.
FOREST PROTECTION 9
D: Tse Facrors InruvEencine Tam AMOUNT OF DAMAGE ARE!—
The age of the woods.
The aspect of the slope.
The severity of the wind, and the uphill or downhill direction of the wind.
The season of the year and the preceding duration of drought.
The silvicultural system.
The amount of débris and humus on the ground.
The species forming the forest (conifers have less reproductive power;
light demanders usually have fireproof armor of bark; thin or thick
layer of sap wood.)
E: Tue Measures Taken Against Forest Firms arp Erruer or a PRE-
VENTIVE OR OF A RemeviaL NAarTurR:
I.—Preventive measures:—
Education of the people and of the legislature through the news-
papers and from the pulpit.
Friendly relations with all neighbors.
Securing proper fire laws and publishing notices giving the essence
of such laws.
The purchase of all interior holdings.
Settlements of tenants within the forest.
Telephone connection in the forest.
Fire lanes (in India up to 400’ wide) kept clear from inflammable
material. Such lanes exist along all European railroads. In
America the main advantage of a fire lane lies in the possi-
bility of back firing with the lane as a basis.
Trails or roads, further strips of pasture along the ridges and strips
of farmland along the creeks form the most useful fire lanes.
Burning all around the forest at the beginning of the dangerous
season,
Burning débris after lumbering—a measure of doubted expediency.
Removing débris from the close proximity of valuable trees.
Proper contracts for all work in the woods by which the liability
for damage caused by fires is thrown upon the contractor.
Annual burning of the woods intended to prevent the accumu-
lation of vegetable matter or mould. (Pineries of the South).
Removing duff from the close proximity of turpentine boxes.
Stock law.
Associations of forest owners, as in Idaho, Washington and Oregon.
Pasture by cattle and hogs to cause a more rapid decomposition
of the vegetable carpet.
Unceasing patrol of the forest during the dry season or during dry
spells, day and night, by an increased staff of watchmen, thor-
oughly acquainted with their beat and with the people living
in the neighborhood.
10 FOREST PROTECTION
II.—Remedial Measures :—
a.—Main principles:—
Have one man in full charge and hold him alone responsible.
Have helpers and relays for helpers ready in the various ranges
(scatierong the work) during droughts, employing them in
lumbering or in silviculture until their help is required
at a fire.
The foreman, upon arrival at the fire, must first ascertain the
speed of the fire and the length of the line of attack; fur-
ther, the distance from the next fire lane (trail, brook,
pasture), and the amount of help locally available.
The foreman must not hesitate to abandon the burning dis-
trict, up to the next or second next fire lane.
Food and water for the fire-fighters must be provided.
The fire is subdued only when the last spark is extinguished.
The edges of the burned area must be watched for 24
hours succeeding the fire.
b.—Tools:—
The axe, hoe, spade, shovel, rake (preferably wooden teeth);
brooms; plows on abandoned fields; water buckets and
sprinkling cans; pack-train, or railroad-velocipedes prop-
erly equipped; fire extinguishers.
c.—Actual Work:
(1) Underground fires can be stopped only by digging ditches
and by turning water into them.
(2) Surface fires are stopped
By plowing or digging a furrow around the fire.
By beating the fire out with brooms or green twigs.
By removing the humus and débris from a narrow line
in front of the fire by hand or rake.
By throwing dirt on the fire.
By sprinkling in front of the fire,
By the use of extinguishers against the flame itself.
By back-firing from the next point of vantage with due
regard for the speed of the fire—the best and only
remedy in the case of heavy conflagrations.
(3) Top fires can be stopped only by providing broad fire
lanes on which the trees are cut, and by back-firing from
such lanes.
(4) Stem fires burning in hollow trees are stopped by filling
the holes in the trunk with dirt or by cutting the tree
down.
Fires going down hill, against the wind and in the hours following mid-
night are the easiest to subdue.
For the history of some famous forest fires, see Pinchot’s Primer, Part I.
FOREST PROTECTION il
For a number of tree species (notably Douglas fir, Yellow pines, Jack
pine, Lodgepole pine, Aspen) fire must be considered as an excellent silvi-
cultural tool or as a means of securing regeneration.
F:—TreatMenr oF InsuRED Woops.
The treatment of injured woods differs according to species, age of
woods, market facilities and severity of damage inflicted.
I-——-Thickets of broadleaved species it is best to coppice, or else to clip
down with the help of long handled pruning shears.
Thickets of conifers are either so badly damaged as to require re-
generation anew or are so little damaged as not to require any help.
II—Pole Woods.
Pole woods of broadleaved species are most severely damaged by
spring fires, and should be cut where salable.
Pole woods of conifers, if apt to die, should be made into money
immediately, where possible.
If coniferous pole woods are apt to live, careful trap-tree prac~-
tice will tend to avoid more severe injury from insect plagues.
III.—Tree Forests.
Broadleaved tree forests are not apt to be injured by surface fires
sufficiently to cause the death of the trees. Hence, usually, the
trees are allowed to stand. If, however, a majority of the trees
are killed, speedy utilization is necessary.
In coniferous tree forests, trees are either at once killed by
the fire, requiring immediate removal, or else not sufficiently touched
to be doomed. In the latter case, the use of trap trees is required
to prevent insect plagues from developing.
The presence of permanent means of transportation connecting
the forest with a ready market is, under all circumstances, the most
important factor in preventing materral damage from striking the
owner of merchantable forests killed by conflagrations.
12 FOREST PROTECTION
CHAPTER II: PROTECTION AGAINST ANIMALS.
Par. 3. Protection Against Domestic Animals on Pasture.
A-—INTRODUCTION.
Forest pasture is a legitimate forest Industry. The waste pro-
duction of the soil, in addition to shoots and branches of trees, are util-
ized by pasturing stock. Vegetable matter transformed into flesh or
wool adopts a more marketable and a more profitable shape.
Forest pasture is, obviously, best adapted to woods of low stump-
age prices; of difficult access; of scant timber production (East slopes
of the Cascades; ridge between Pisgah and Balsam mountains).
Forest pasture plays a role in the forest similar to that which field
pasture plays on the farm.
Whether forest pasture pays better in connection with tree growth
or regardless of timber production,—that is a financial question to be
answered by every land owner on the basis of local experience and of
individual forecast.
Abroad, since times immemorial, forests have been pastured and
are still pastured to a surprising extent.
Pasture frequently acts as a silvicultural tool; hogs are used to
break the soil and to destroy insects; cattle or sheep driven over seed
plantations or through the woods after seed-fall imbed the seeds to a
proper depth; they destroy rank weeds overshadowing valuable seed-
lings.
B—Tue DamacGEe BY Pasture In THE Forest 1s THREEFOLD:—
I.—To soil. Pasture hardens hard soil and loosens loose soil.
Ii.—To trees. This damage consists of:
a.—Browsing on buds, leaves and shoots.
b.—Eating seeds and uprooting seedlings.
c.—Tramping down seedlings and over-riding saplings.
d.—Tossing-off the tops of saplings.
e.—Peeling hardwood poles in spring.
III.—To roads and road drainage.
C.—Factrors oF DAMAGE ARE:
I.—Species of trees: Those most exposed are ash, maple, locust, chest-
nut, linden, elm; less exposed are yellow poplar, willows, oaks
(horses like oaks), birch, fir, hickory and walnut; least endangered
are larch, spruce, pine. Practically safe is red cedar.
Il.—Age of trees: The seedling stage suffers most.
III.—Silvicultural system: Systems in which the age classes are mixed
suffer most, notably selection system and group system.
FOREST PROTECTION 13
IV.—Loceality: Steep slope, loose soil and shifting sand suffer severely.
V.—Species of animals: The animals may be arranged in the follow-
ing schedule, placing the damage done by a horse at 100:
Horse or mule foal................00000ee .150
Horse or mule. ......... cc ca cee eee cece 100
Yearling cattle... 0... kee eee eee 75
Grown cattle... 00... ce ce ccc ee ec cee 50
GoatS .... ccc eee eee eee ene neeeas 25
Sheep .... 0... cece eee nee be eee 10
Since a goat weighs 80 lbs. and a horse 10 times as much, the dam-
age done by the goat is relatively great. In addition, goats prefer
woody shoots and buds to mere grass.
The rates charged for forest pasture in Pisgah Forest correspond
more or less with this schedule, viz:
Horses ........... $0 cents per head per month
Cattle ......... . 50 cents per head per month
Sheep. 10 cents per head per month
In the pineries of the South, the lease receipts from pasture offset
the taxes frequently. Foals destroy pasture more by their mere
frolics than by their appetite. After Hundeshagen, 10 to 12144
acres of forest are required for the pasture of one head of cattle.
ViI.—Season of the year. Spring pasture is more destructive than
summer or fall pasture.
D.—Crosep Time.
In Central Europe young woods are closed to pasturage for a number
of years.
AGE OF WOODS WHEN PASTURE BEGINS, IN YEARS.
SPECIES OF HIGH FOREST, HIGH FOREST, COPPICE
ANIMALS BROAD LEAF CONIFERS FOREST
Horses . 18 to 24 | 12 to 20 6 to 14
Cattle ... 14 to 18 | 9 to 16 4to 10
erepenmeteneetet
K.—DUuRATION OF PastTURE
In Western North Carolina, cattle are pastured in the woods from May
Ist, to October 15th, whilst sheep and hogs are kept on pasture dur-
ing the entire year, fed only slightly after a heavy snow fall.
In the pineries of the South, cattle. sheep and hogs are kept in the woods
during the entire year. Cattle are fed slightly, in addition to the pas-
ture, during the four winter months. The much disputed pasture in
the Sierras and Cascacles is used only curing the three summer months
when the pasture in the lowlands dries out.
14 FOREST PROTECTION
F.—PastTure IN THE NaTIONAL ForEsSTS:
The pasture of sheep and goats is generally prohibited; cattle pasture
generally allowed.
Sheep ranges and cattle ranges are kept strictly apart.
The Secretary of Agriculture determines annually the amount of pas-
turage permitted for each forest, viz:
a.—The number of horses, cattle, sheep and goats to be admitted;
b.—The beginning and the end of the grazing season;
c.—The ranges actually to be grazed.
The stock of residents owning holdings within the forests is given pre-
ference over “neighboring stock.” Only citizens of the State are en-
titled to grazing privileges.
Under any circumstances, permits must be obtained through the super-
visor by stock owners intending to pasture on the reserve (the stock
of travelers and prospectors excepted). Sheep must be herded by a
herdsman.
The sheep ranges are allotted separately, usually according to the re-
commendation of the local Wool Growers’ Association. Promiscuous
sheep grazing is strictly prohibited.
Permit holders are required to prevent and to fight fires without com-
pensation.
G.—Prorscrive Measurns Meant to Sarecuarp THE TimBer INTERESTS
or THER Lanp OWNER:—
T.—Animals:
a.—Limit the number of animals admitted.
b.—Exclude goats.
c.—Prevent cattle from following sheep.
II.—-Time:
a.—Prevent pasture in early spring.
b.—Insist on close time during regeneration and up to the thicket
stage.
c.—Close forest pasture periodically so as to allow tree seedlings
to escape the mouth of browsing animals.
TII.—Fencing:
For cattle pasture, two or three strings of barbed wire are suffi-
cient. For sheep pasture three or four strings. 100 lbs. of barbed
wire form a string 1,600 to 1,900 feet long.
Individual trees or seedlings, like orchard trees, are sometimes
protected by screens placed around the tree.
IV.—Seedlings should be planted within the “bays’’ of tree stumps
after clear cutting wherever artificial regeneration is resorted to.
Seed planting should be avoided.
FOREST PROTECTION 15
Par. 4. Protection Against Wild Vertebrates.
Amongst the wild animals preying upon the forest the mammals figure
as well as the birds. The role played by the vertebrates in the “house-
hold’’ of the forest is little known.
Birds and mammals may injure the forest directly—by eating vege-
table matter produced in the forest,—or indirectly—by killmg the
friends of the forester. Utility of a wild animal is frequently combined
with noxiousness, e. g. in the case of the crow, blue-jay, fox.
Useful animals may help the forester either directly—by seed distri-
bution,—or indirectly—by killing the enemies of the forest.
A.—Protsecrion AgAarnst Mammats ForMING tHe OxsJect or CHASE.
I.—Dzzr,
a.—The damage done consists in:—
Eating fruits.
Browsing on shoots and seedlings.
Peeling the bark of saplings and poles (notably of spruce,
oak, ash).
Rubbing off the bark when freeing the antlers of velvet.
Tramping down plantations or natural regenerations.
The objects of damage are, above all, the rare species, or species
arousing the curiosity of the deer.
b.—Protective measures are:—
Proper regulation of the number of deer. Compatible with
the objects of silviculture are, per 10,000 acres, 50 head of
elk or 150 head of Virginia deer, provided that nurseries are
fenced.
Feeding during winter by cutting soft woods or by providing
hay stacks. Mast-bearing trees should be encouraged; grass
meadows should be maintained; a few patches should be planted
in turnips, potatoes, clover, etc. Maintah ing salt licks, es-
pecially with a view to preventing bark peeli'g in spring.
Hohlfeld’s game powder is said to answer the purpose still
better. Fencing nurseries ard young gr wth
Sprinkling seedlings with kerosere, liquid u~ ure, blood.
cotton residue or, better, covering the fall shc« s exclusive of
bud, with coal tar. (Coal tar is especially eliective im the case
of fir and spruce. Thinnings should te del yed as lorg as
possible. Planting is preferable to sowi' g, «ry ecielly to sow-
ing in the fall.
II.—Wirp Boar. Boar are particularly disastrous tc urseries, 1 at-
ural regenerations and plantatiors. The orl ret ¢ ies are strong
fences.
16 FOREST PROTECTION
IIJ.—Hares anp Rassirs. The damage done consists in the biting-
off of top shoots (notably of oaks, maples, firs, but also of pine);
further, in gnawing-off the bark of locust, crateegus, cherry, hard
maple, linden.
At Biltmore, rabbits feast especially on the shoots of the Buffalo
nut (Pyrularia). The seedlings of Pinus echinata, in certain years,
were bitten-off in the nurseries.
Plantations of acorns at Biltmore have been annihilated by the
rabbits, the shoots being clipped year after year. Thus the oak
seedlings were prevented from successfully competing with the
weeds (broom sedge). Nurseries require a fine meshed fence.
Remedies lie, above all, in the protection of the fox, ’possum, skunk,
marten, weasel, hawk, coon, mynx.
In addition, sprinkling with coal tar (not on buds!) and wrapping
of top shoots in cotton waste is recommended.
The planting of rabbit-proof species (notably Picea pungens and
Picea Sitchensis) is advisable.
B.—Protectrion AGAINST MaMMALS WHICH DO NoT ForM THE OBJECT OF
THE CHASE.
Obviously, all carniverous animals are friends of the forester, whilst
most herbivorous animals appear as his enemies. Amongst the plant
eaters, the rodents excel in the amount of harm done.
I.—SQuirreELs.
a.—Damage done.
Squirrels eat the seed on the tree as well as the seed planted
by nature and man, preferring sweet oaks, beech, chestnut,
walnut, cucumber-tree, hickories, pines. They eat the coty-
ledons, buds and cambium of young shoots and destroy the
nest brood of some useful birds. In the Pink Beds, the top
shoots of white pine are cut off by the squirrels. Plantations
of the heavy seeded broad leaved species have been destroyed
at Biltmore repeatedly.
b.—Protective measures.
Protect the fox, marten, skunk, coon, o’possum, hawk, owl,
cat (wild and tame) and all other enemies.
Remove hollow trees forming the hiding and nesting places
of the squirrel.
Plant seedlings or, possibly, nuts after sprouting, and if seeds
must be planted, resort to spring-planting of the same.
c.—Remedial measures.
1—Shoot the squirrel.
2—Poison it by bathing the seeds in strychnine before plant-
ing, a means found ineffective at Biltmore.
II.—Curpmunxk. Similar damage and same remedies as for the squirrel.
Its main enemy at Biltmore is the black snake and the rattlesnake.
FOREST PROTECTION 17
ITI.—Mice.
a.—Damage done.
The mice live on buds, seeds, seedlings and the cambium layers
of seedlings.
The field mice undermine the ground in nurseries and planta-
tions following the rows of plants and cutting the roots about
one inch below the surface of the ground. Frequently they
seem to follow in mole mines. The damage done by gnawing
is conspicuous in plantations of locust and black cherry. In
seed plantations on abandoned fields at Biltmore, mice have
done enormous damage to oaks and hickories. Planted locusts
are bitten-off below ground. In the Biltmore nurseries, oak
seed beds have suffered severely by the mice cutting the roots.
Transplanted white pines were severely decimated, by gird-
ling, in February, 1909.
b.—Protective measures.
Avoid autumn sowing.
Plant seeds broadcast Instead of planting in rills.
Have nurseries far from grain fields and from abandoned fields.
Keep deep and clean pathways between the beds. Surround
nurseries by deep and steep-walled trenches. Insert pit falls
in the bottom of such trenches. Work the nurseries contin-
uously. Do not cover the nurseries with mould or moss form-
ing hiding places.
Keep the sedge grasses and weeds down in nurseries and re-
generations, possibly by pasturing with cattle and sheep, thus
disturbing the mice and tramping down their mines. Burn
abandoned fields before planting.
Pigs admitted to the woods just before a seed year destroy
the mice whilst preparing the soil for natural regeneration.
Protect the mouse-eaters, especially those which are fond of
voles as owls, crows, fox, o’possum, cats.
c.-—Remedial Measures.
Kill the mice by trapping or poisoning. In this latter case,
place grains of wheat poisoned by immersion in strychnine,
arsenic or phosphorus into drain pipes so as to check the possi-
bility of accidentally poisoning singing birds or quail at the
same time. Comp. Farmers bulletin No. 369, Biological Survey.
The root of certain Scylla species, chopped into sausages, kills
the mice by causing their bladders to burst. Gypsum is said
to have a similar effect, solidifying in the stomach. The lat-
ter remedies are not injurious to the mouse-eating animals
which are frequently poisoned by catching the poisoned mice.
The vaccination of the mice with the so-called “typhoid dis-
ease’? has not been sufficiently successful so far.
18 FOREST PROTECTION
d.—Treatment of injured plants.
Broad leaved seedlings merely chewed above ground should
be clipped back, Oak seedlings, cut off below ground, have
been successfully transplanted at Biltmore and have replaced
the lost tap-root by a multitude of rootlets.
TV.—Grounpn Hog or Woop Cxuckx. Dr, Fernow reports that his
coniferous nurseries at Axton were badly plundered by woodchuck.
After Schaaf, white oak saplings are peeled by woodchucks up to
five feet from the ground, near fields. Stomach analysis at Bult-
more show only ferns.
V.—Porcurine on Heperxnoc. It peels the bark, especially that of
spruce, basswood and hemlock, close to the base of the tree, pre-
ferring saplings up to 5’’ in diameter.
VI.—Buaver. It is now so rare that the damage done to the forest
is insignificant.
C.—Prorncrion Acarnst Brirps.
I—Grovuss. The grouse bite-off buds and cotyledons, and eat the
fruit of certain tree species (buds of birch, maple, cottonwood;
seeds of red cedar, beech, witch hazel, calmia and rhododendron).
On the whole the damage done by grouse is inconspicuous.
If.—Witpv Turxsy. The turkey is useful by eating some noxious in-
sects and by scratching the leaves, thus burying certain tree seeds.
At Biltmore, however, on Ducker Mountains, plantations of scarlet
oak acorns have been practically destroyed by the turkey. In
forest nurseries, as well, the turkey is apt to do considerable harm
during the winter.
JIJ.—Piezons anp Doves. Pigeons live during spring and winter
on coniferous seeds, beech nuts, buds and cotyledons.
Remedies in nurseries are lath or wire screens or coverings of thorny
branches. Pigeons may be shot at anise licks.
IV.—Crows anp Biuzsays. These birds live on large seeds (acorns,
beech nuts, chestnuts) and are especially dangerous in nurseries.
They plunder the nests of useful birds. On the other hand, they
may assist the forester in destroying mice and noxious insects;
they underplant whole forests with acorns, beech nuts, hickory
nuts and chestnuts.
V.—Fincpzs anp Cross-situs. The damage done consists in the de-
struction of seed plantations of conifers made in nurseries or in
the open. It occurs during the spring migration of the birds when
they appear in large swarms.
The cotyledons are bitten off and eaten as well as the seeds. Some
cross-bills split the scales of coniferous cones into two, withdraw-
ing the seed from underneath the scales.
FOREST PROTECTION 19
Protective measures are:
Screens of wire or lath over nursery beds. The mesh must be fine,
and the distance between the lath must not exceed 34 inch.
Shooting some birds, keeping the balance scared off.
Coating the seeds in red lead (very efficient), one pound of red
lead being sufficient to eover seven pounds of coniferous seeds.
Shortening the period of exposure by planting the seeds in late
spring after three to eight days mulching.
VI.—Wooprrcxrrs. Woodpeckers withdraw the larve of wood boring
insects from their mines with the help of a long, thin tongue. They
withdraw useful as well as harmful insects. They do damage by
opening cones and by eating the seeds thereof.
The damage done by picking holes into the cambium layers of
certain trees is small. The holes made in sound yellow poplars
rather denote a high quality than the presence of defective tim-
ber. The holes made in oak and chestnuts are usually made in
rotten or decaying wood, or in wood of no commercial value.
There exist four theories attempting to explain the curious girdles
of holes made by the woodpecker.
a.—Incubator Theory.
Holes are picked to invite the ovipositing of insects in such holes.
b.—-Napkin Theory.
The woodpecker cleans its beak from particles of rosin.
c.—Calendar Theory.
Due to observation that woodpecker returns at regular inter-
vals to same tree.
d.—Sap-sucking Theory.
20
FOREST PROTECTION
Par. §. Protection Against Insects.
A. Generat REMARKS.
I.
IY.
Insects are the most serious animal enemies of the forest. More
than that, they are the worst enemies of the forest within
organic nature.
But in a certain sense, many insects seemingly injurious, are
in fact beneficial, since they form one of the means by which
nature selects the fittest individuals for the propagation of
our trees.
Almost all of the orders of insects contain families, some or
all the members of which are directly beneficial. These bene-
ficial forms are usually zoophagous, and may be—
a. Predaceous insects feeding on eggs, larve, pups, or
imagines of injurious species, notably—
Order Cotnorrera: Families Coccinellide, Cicin-
delide, Carabide, EHlateride, Cleride, Trogositide,
Colydiide.
Order Diprpra: Families Astlide, Syrphide.
Order Hymmnortera: Superfamily Formicotidea.
Order Hemirprera: Family Reduviide.
Order OrntHorTERA: Family Mantide.
Many Neuropteroid insects.*
%. Parasitic insects, ovipositing on or in the bodies of
injurious species. The more important are—
Order Diprera: Family Tachinide.
Order Hymenoptera: Superfamilies Ichnewmon-
oidea, Practotrypoidea, Chalcidoidea.
e. Parasitic insects, paralyzing their prey by stinging, and
carrying them into their nests where the eggs of the
parasite are deposited.
Order Hymenorrera: Superfamilies Sphegoidea,
V espotdea.
Many families are neither injurious nor beneficial, and are there-
fore of no economic importance. Other groups which may be
either injurious or beneficial to man, are not mentioned here,
because they bear no direct relation to forest trees. Amongst
the phytophagous insects, there are however, very many forms
that are injurious to our forests. Those living on tree weeds
must, of course, be considered as beneficial; but speaking gen-
*The old order Nevuroptgera, has been divided into several orders in modern systems of
classification.
The group as a whole is of little economic importance to the forester, and
for that reason, the inclusive term, Neuropteroid, is used.
FOREST PROTECTION 21
erally, phytophagous insects found in the forests, are more or
less injurious. The families which contain most of the injur-
lous species are—
Order Cotnorrzra: Families Cerambycide, Bu-
preside, Hlateride, Ptinide, Scarabaeide, Chryso-
melide, Curculionidae, Brenthide, Scolytide.
Order Lzeprporrera: Families Arctiide, Bomby-
cide, Cosside, Hesperide, Liparide, Noctuwide, Pa-
pilionide, Zygaende.
Order Hymenoprers: Superfamilies Tenthredi-
noidea, Cyntpotdea.
Order Hemiptera: Families Coccide, Apmdide,
Cicadide.
Order Dirrmra: Families Cecidomytide, Syrph-
ide.
Order OrntHorrerRA: Families Locustide, Phas-
mide.
III. Insects are divided into three groups, according to the rela-
tion that exists between the younger stages and the adults.
a.
The Ametabola, which includes a single order, the
THYSANEURA, in which the young and adults differ
only in size.
The Hemimetabola, in which are included the OrtHOP-
Tara, the Hemirrmra, etc., etc. In this group the
young and adults differ not only in size, but in several
other characters, and the young become more and
more like the adults after each molt.
The Metabola, in which are included the CoLEOPTERa,
LzeripopTera, Hymenoptera, Diprmra, etc., etc. In
this group, the young and the adults are totally un-
like, and before taking the mature form, the larve go
through a resting stage.
The first stage of the insect is the egg, and after hatch-
ing, it arrives at maturity through a series of molts.
On hatching, the young of the Metabola are called
larve (caterpillars, maggots, grubs); and in the Ameta-
bola and Hemimetabola, they are called nymphs. There
are several molts during the larval or nymphal stage,
and the period between any two of them is called an
instar. The quiescent stage during which the larve
of the Metabola change to imagines, is called the pupa;
22
FOREST PROTECTION
and the mature or reproductive stage of all insects
is called the aduli, or wmago. The pupa of a butterfly
is very often called a chrysalis, and the silken sack
spun by many insects in which to pupate, is the co-
coon. Larve of Dirrmra and of some other insects,
pupate within a tough outer covermg commonly sup-
posed to be simply a pupal skin. The true pupa is,
however, entirely within it, and the tough outer cover-
ing is distinguished by the name pupariwm. After
reaching the adult stage, the insect does not become
any larger, and does not molt; its only function is to
mate, and lay eggs. Some species are unable even to
feed after becoming adult, and in almost all cases, the
larvee or nymphs are much more voracious than the
mature insects. In general, then, the greater part of
the insect damage to our forests is done before the in-
sects responsible become mature. The Ambrosia
beetles form a notable exception to this rule.
The sum total of the stages of development of an
insect is termed a generation, and a given species may
be stngle-brooded, double-brooded, treble-brooded, etc.,
according to the number of generations which occur
during a single year. Many insects require more than
a single year to complete a generation, and are then
called biennial, triennial, etc. A species of the Cica-
did is known to have a life round of seventeen years.
IV. Curmaric anp Srasonau Conpirions Arrrectina Insecr Lrrs.
In general, the number of species of insect life decreases as
altitude or latitude increases, while at the same time, the num-
ber of individuals of a species becomes larger. The number
of generations of a given species is also affected by the climate;
for instance, a species which is “double-brooded’’ in the Mid~-
dle States, may become “treble-brooded’’ in the Southern
States, and “single-brooded”’ in Canada.
Insects spend the winter months in a resting or hibernating
stage which varies for the different species. That is, a given
species may hibernate either in the egg, larval, pupal, or adult
stage. They are protected against the cold either by their
own coverings, or by the hiding places selected by them in the
trees, in the bark, in the moss and leaves, in the stumps, or
in the ground. Extreme cold is no more likely to injure the
insect than it is to kill the tree itself; but sudden changes of
temperature and moisture, especially cold wet spells in late
spring, or after a premature thaw has drawn the hibernating
FOREST PROTECTION 23
inseets from their winter quarters, may be disastrous to large
numbers of certain species, particularly during the molting
periods of the larve.
Insect Piacuzs. A succession of favorable springs, free from
late frosts and wet spells, is apt to result in an anomalous mul-
tiplication of a species. Hence, according to European re-
cords, insect plagues, like successions of favorable climatic
conditions, oceur and recur after periodic intervals. The ef-
fects of parasitism however, are very likely to be confused with
climatic effects in these records, and too much dependance
should not be placed on them. These periodic plagues of in-
sects are very likely to occur in spite of all human ingenuity.
But experience teaches us that, in the great majority of cases,
nature may be trusted to restore the balance that has been
so disturbed. An abnormal increase in the numbers of a given
species not only is likely to reduce the natural food supply of
such a species so that many individuals will die of starvation,
but the parasitic and predaceous enemies of the species also
enormously increase in numbers, being encouraged to do s0
by the abundance of the food on which they exist, and by the
ease with which it may be obtained. For the same reason,
bacterial and fungous diseases have a better opportunity to
spread from one individual to another. The years following
an insect plague are, therefore, very likely to be exceptionally
free from the particular species involved. Consequently, a
plague of this sort usually lasts for but one or two years, al-
though in exceptional cases it may last for three or four years.
In the forest, an insect plague, in which several species are
often involved, is likely to follow in the wake of a destructive
fire or storm, or of an attack by fungi. In any case where
such a plague has swept through the forest the dead trees should
be marketed immediately if the conditions are at all favorable.
Otherwise the resulting loss will be much more serious.
The amount of damage done by a serious outbreak of insects
in a forest will depend very largely on the nature of the species
involved. If the species is “monophagous,” that is, depen-
dent for its food supply only on a single species of tree, it is
likely to cause serious losses only in localities where pure stands
of the particular tree occur, or, at least, where the trees of
that species are not so scattered through the forest as to make
it difficult for the adult females of the injurious insect to find
a suitable place for oviposition. Polyphagous insects, on the
other hand, affect many host trees; and while they are likely
to distribute their injuries, so that their effect on the forest
is less noticeable, still the ultimate losses extending over a
period of years, may be very great. A species imported. ac-
24
VI.
VII.
FOREST PROTECTION
cidentally from one country to another, is much more likely
than a native species to cause serious losses, because of the
absence of native parasites and other enemies which serve
to keep it in check in its original habitat. The extensive
ravages of the Gipsy Moth in Massachusetts, which have lasted
over a long period of years, is without precedent in European
countries, although the species has been abundant over a
large part of the continent of Europe, probably for several
centuries.
It may be that insect plagues play a role in the natural change
of species of plants coinciding with geological periods, but
the question is one of speculation, not demonstration.
Species or Trees Arrectep. There are no species which
are not liable to insect attack, but some are much less sus-
ceptible than others. Conifers have, on the whole, less re-
cuperative powers than broad-leaved species, and consequently
succumb much more readily to insect attacks. In this coun-
try, the spruces and pines, wherever occurring in pure and
even-aged forests, are the species which suffer most.
Conpirion or Trers Arrecrep. We may divide injurious
insects into three classes according to the condition of the
trees attacked.
a. Certain species, notable those that feed on leaves
and pith, usually prefer healthy to diseased plants.
They may either kill the tree outright or weaken it
to such an extent that conditions are made favor-
able for the attacks of —
b. species which generally prefer unhealthy trees. Or-
dinarily these species never attack healthy plants,
but in years of plagues they may be forced to do so.
Thus in years of extreme abundance, millions of
bark-beetles may be drowned in the resin of healthy
pines before the trees are weakened to an extent
sufficient to allow subsequent millions to propagate
the species.
c. Certain other species only attack the trees after they
have been killed. Dead timber, either standing or
on the ground, should be marketed as soon as pos-
sible as a precaution against damage. Decaying logs
and stumps are always found infested with numerous
species of insects which cannot be classed as injur-
ious since they merely hasten the process of decay.
Those insects of this class which are injurious are
VIII.
IX.
FOREST PROTECTION 25
of less importance to the forester than to the pur-
chaser of his product. Some of them cause serious
losses in lumber yards, ship yards, bark sheds, fac-
tories, etc.
Insects of classes “a’’? and “b’’ above are sometimes called
“parasitic’’ because they attack living plants, as distinguished
from those of class “c,’’ which feed only on dead timber, and
are called “saprophytic.”” The term “parasite,’’ however, is
commonly used in Entomology to denote a species of insect
which has another species for its host, and the student should
be careful in his reading to distinguish between the broader
and narrower uses of the term.
Part oF TREE Atrackep. No part of the tree is entirely
free from insect injury. According to species, insects may
feed upon the buds (caterpillar causing the fork in the ash),
the leaves (elm leaf-beetle), the fruit (chestnut and acorn
weevils), the pith (locust shoot-borer), the cambium (larvse
of the so-called bark-beetles), the heart-wood (chestnut borers),
the sap-wood (many of the longicorn borers), the roots (larve
of May-beetles), and the bark (notably tan-bark).
DzeGrReE oF Damace. According to the amount of damage
done, insects may be classed as a, Damaging insects; b, Des-
tructive insects, and c, Pernicious insects. Insects are called
physiologically obnoxious if they check the growth or propa-
gation of plants, and technically obnoxious if they destroy or
reduce the technical value without checking the growth. The
Hemlock bark-maggot furnishes a good example of the last
named class.
B. REMEDIES AND PREVENTIVES IN GENERAL AGAINST
Vil.
INSECT INJURY.
Select the proper species for reproduction on a given soil.
Encourage mixed forests.
Avoid large continuous clearings.
Use the ranger staff in controlling the insects.
Remove the weak trees, and strengthen the remaining indi-
viduals by means of thinnings.
Protect and improve the productiveness of the soil.
Protect the forest from damage by storm, sleet, or fire in the
wake of which insect plagues frequently follow.
26
VIII.
AL.
SII.
FOREST PROTECTION
Remove or poison stumps if they are found to form the incu-
bators or food-objects of a noxious insect during one of its
stages.
Peel off the bark where logs are left on the ground for any
considerable length of time.
Encourage hog pastures in the case of certain species of in-
sects. With other species, steep walled ditches may prevent
the enemy from spreading in nurseries and plantations.
Protect the insectivorous animals, notably :—
a. Bats, moles, weasels, foxes, etc.
b. Woodpeckers, tits, owls, ete.
ce. Amphibia.
d. Spiders.
@.
Centipedes, millipedes, etc.
Collect and destroy the insect in that stage which best allows
remedial measures to be taken.
a. Eggs may be tarred or covered with creosote when
they are placed in masses in conspicuous positions.
b. Larve may be destroyed by spraying the food plant
with arsenicals or other stomach poisons, or the in-
sects themselves with kerosene or other contact poi-
sons; by trapping them on or below bands of burlap
or tree tanglefoot; by the use of trap trees; or by
burning their winter quarters or the object (bark)
forming their abode.
c. Pupe may sometimes be collected and burned, par-
ticularly when the insect hibernates in this stage.
d. Adults may be beaten off the bushes during the early
morning; may be collected during the hot hours of
the day in artificial hiding places; or may be caught
by means of pit-falls, tanglefoot or burlap rings, trap
trees, or electric lights.
The selection of a method of treatment depends not only upon
the species of insect concerned, but upon many factors enter-
ing into the local conditions. In general, prevention is better
than the application of a remedy. This is particularly true
in the present status of American forest conditions; and the
use of insecticides is only profitable in rare instances. Indeed
wn America the forester will frequently be prevented from adopt-
ing any measures whatever, remedial or preventive, because the
cost will exceed the value of the benefit to be derived. But in no
FOREST PROTECTION 27
case should a remedy be attempted by one who is not fully
informed as to the life history and food-habits of the insect
enemy, and with the remedy to be used. In either event
more damage than benefit may result. For instance, trap-
trees may often be successfully used against certain insect
pests; but unless destroyed at the proper time, just before
the emergence of the adults, the numbers of the enemy will
be increased rather than diminished. The advice of a com-
petent Forest Entomologist should be obtained wherever pos-
sible.
C. INSECT ANATOMY.
I. The body of an adult insect is divided into three regions.
a.
The head consists of a single segment, and bears
exteriorly a pair of antenne, a pair of compound eyes,
the ocelli, which vary in number and are often absent,
and the mouth parts, consisting of the labrum, two
mandibles, two mazille, and the labiwm. Maxillary
and labial palpi are also present, sometimes so modi-
fied however as to be not easily recognizable. The
difference between “biting’’ and “sucking”? mouth
parts is important both in classification and as re-
gards methods of treatment.
The thorax consists of three segments, the prothoraz,
the mesothorax, and the metathoraz. Each segment
bears a pair of legs, and the mesothorax and meta-
thorax normally bear the fore and hind wings. The
legs are also segmented, the joints bearing the fol-
lowing names: The segment attached to the thorax
is called the cova, then come in order the trochanter
(sometimes made up of two short segments), the femur,
the tibia, and lastly the ¢arsws made up of several
segments on the last of which are borne the claws.
The wings are composed of two membranes held to-
gether by supporting rods called veins, or nerves, and
are sometimes covered with hairs or scales. In the
case of the Corzoprmra, the fore wings (Hlyira) are
hard and leathery, and the veins are absent.
The abdomen consists of several segments, some or
all with stigmata or breathing pores. The external
reproductive organs are usually borne on the last or
anal segment of the abdomen. In certain species
an ovipositor (laying-tube), or a saw-like instrument
assists the female in oviposition.
28
II.
Ii.
IV.
VI.
FOREST PROTECTION
Tue Larva. In the larve of the Metabola, as in the adult
insect, the first segment is the head, the next three make up
the thorax, and the remainder of the body is called the abdo-
men; but the three regions are not so distinct as is the case
with the imago. The mouth parts are almost always for
“biting,” and have the same names as in the imago. The
spinnarets of certain caterpillars, situated in the mouth, are
the apertures of long glands, which traverse the entire body.
If present, the antennse are rudimentary. If legs are present,
there are always three pairs, situated on the ventral side of
the thoracic segments. Sometimes there are also legs on
some of the abdominal segments, but these are more prop-
erly called pro-legs, and are not segmented.
Ture Nympx. In the Ametabola and the Hemimetabola, the
anatomy of the younger stages is similar to that of the imago.
THe Pura. The pupa is called carved or masked, according
to the ease with which legs, antenne, mouth parts, etc., can
be distinguished through the pupa case. The outer web of
silk spun for protection by many Lzpiporprmra and Hyrmmn-
opTpraA is called the cocoon.
Tue Eaa. Insect eggs vary greatly in form. They may be
cup-shaped or kidney-shaped, crater-formed or mucronate,
round, oval, or canoe-shaped. Very rarely they are stalked.
InrerNaL Anatomy. In an insect, this consists of a, the
Endoskeleton; 6, Musculature; c, the Digestive System; (cesopha-
gus, crop, proventriculus, stomach, hind-gut, salivary and
other glands, Malpighian tubes, etc.); d, the Nervous System,
(brain, subcesophageal ganglion, thoracic and abdominal gang-
lia, nerve cord, motor and sensory nerves); e, the Circulatory
System, (the heart and blood); f, the Respiratory System,
(stigmata and trache or tracheal-gills); and g, the Reproduc-
tive Organs, (ovaries, ovarian tubes, and oviduct in the female;
spermaries and vasa deferentia in the male).
FOREST PROTECTION 29
INSECT FAMILIES ARRANGED ACCORDING TO FOOD OBJECTS
Bark Beetles
Flat and round
headed borers:
Bark weevils:
Powder post
beetles:
Ambrosia or
timber beetles:
Wood-boring
caterpillars:
True woodboring
beetle-grubs:
Bark and wood
boring grubs:
Carpenter worms:
Horn tails:
Powder post
beetles:
True Caterpillars
and measuring
worms:
IN THE FOREST.
CoMPARE PacH or
Ent. Buu. No. 48
I. INFESTING THE CAMBIAL BARK.
Scolytide (excepting Platypini, larve and adults)... 9
Buprestide, Cerambycide (mines often extending into
wood prior to pupation)... 20... .. cece cee ee ees 10
Curculionids 2.0.00... . cc ccc cece tee nee ene 10
Ptinidee, (in peeled tan bark)............ 0.0 cee eee 11
II. Inrestine THE Woop.
Scolytide (larvae and adults).................0..- 10
Seslidee .... cc cc ccc ee eee cece ee ene eee wene 10
Lymexilonidee, Brenthide............ cece eee e eee 10
Curculionids, Cerambycide, Buprestide............ 10
Cossidee 2... ee cc ce cece ete tee en eens 11
Siricidee 2.0... 2 ccc cc cee eee ete tee ene 11
Lyctide, Ptinidee, Bostrichide (dead wood only)... 11
Ill. Insuring Leaves orn NEEDLES.
Lepidoptera (practically all families of the order). . 11
False caterpillars Tenthredinide .. ............ eee eee eee ee cee 12
Leaf beetles: Chrysomelids .. 2.0... cece cece ete teen nee 12
Gall insects: Cynipide, Cecidomyiidee, Aphidide. .. ........... 12
Plant lice: Aphidide, Psyllide...... 0... ee ee eee eee 12
Scale insects: Coccide 2... ce cece cnet eens been ete eens 12
IV. Inrestine Twiaes.
Twig mining
beetles: Scolytide, Buprestide, Cerambycidz.............6.. 12
Twig weevils: Curculionide 2 6... ee ce ee eee tee 13
Twig caterpillars: Tineidee, Tortricida. ...... 0... cece ce ee eee ees 13
Scale insects: Coccidse.. 6... ee cette ee teen teeees 13
Plant lice: Aphididae 2.0... ccc ccc teen cee 13
Gall insects: Cecidomyiide and Cynipide...................05. 13
Cicadas: Cicadide 6... cece ee cece tee wenn 13
V. InrestiInec Young Ssppuines IN NURSERIES.
Cutworms: Noctulde 1... 2 cee cece eee ee cent ene
Junebugs: Scarabeeide ....... 6. eee ee eee eee ite teeeee
30 FOREST PROTECTION
Click beetle-larvee
(Wire worms) Hlateride ...........00000e. Le eee eee eee
Weevils: Curculionids: ..... 00... ec ce cee nee e ee eees
Crickets: Gryllidge 2... eee ete e aes
Cicadas: Cicadid® .. 0. 0... ce ec cee eee beeen nees
VI. Inrestine Fruits orn SEEDS.
Weevils: Curculionid®@ ........ 0.00. c cece cece ee ueuecueeae 13
Cone and
nut worms: Tortricide, Phycitide ........ 0... ccc cece eee 14
Gall flies: Cynipidee 2.0... cece eee n nce e eens 14
FOREST PROTECTION 31
Means of Protection
aenaihaimmenmmdiniemmammmanl
I. PROTECTION .AGAINST INSECTS INFESTING THE CAMBIAL
BARK OF THE TRUNK.
A. Against Scotyrip# (Bark BRErLEs).
(1) Conduct the logging operations at that season of the year at which
the logs are apt to become infested; and after infection, remove the bark,
entirely or partially; or move the logs rapidly to water or mill, In other
cases, conduct logging at that season at which the debris left are not apt
to form incubators for Scolytide; or else long before swarming (e. g., cut
pine at Biltmore in early winter, to avoid Dendroctonus frontalis). Com-
pare Agric. Year Book, 1902, p. 275 for D. frontals and p. 281 for D. pon-
derose@.
(2) Girdle, peel, lodge, fall or blaze trap trees of inviting diameter,
shape and position prior to the time of the swarming of the Scolytide. Com-
pare Agric. Year Book, 1902, p. 269. Trap trees might be prepared in the
district to be logged next. Try to destroy the trapped Scolytide without
injury to the Cleride and their allies.
(3) Remove or burn logging debris; or swamp the tree tops left, thus
creating unfavorable conditions of moisture. Sometimes it is possible to
use the debris as traps. Compare, however, Entom. Bul. No. 21, p. 23, for
advice to leave the debris. so as to divert predatory Scolytide from sound
trees to debris.
(4) Leave all trees (also trap trees) in the woods which prove to be
incubators for Ichneumonidae, Braconide, Chalcidide. Remove the outer
bark so as to assist ovipdsiting Ichneumons in reaching their prey. Intro-
duce and breed parasites. (Bul. West Va. Agr. Station, p. 326.)
(5) Counteract reckless deadening by farmers engaged in clearing their
fields.
(6) Adopt proper diameter limit in logging where a Scolytid attacks
only trees of certain diameter classes. Remember, e. g., that the spruce
having under 10’’ d.b.h. is safe from D. prceaperda.
(7) Begin logging in districts recently damaged by fire, storm, sleet.
(8) Remove even worthless trees, if they are apt to act as incubators.
Keep in mind, on the other band, that trees with dead cambium are not
attacked by cambium boring Scolytide.
(9) Have at hand, ready for use, permanent means of transportation
so as to be able to operate when and where you ought to operate; particu-
larly, when and where timber begins to die.
(10) Conduct thinnings in a manner and at a time counteracting in-
fection by Scolytide. Remove dying and injured (by lightning) trees,
also trees weakened in vigor.
32 FOREST PROTECTION
(11) Watch for spider webs showing saw dust; for drops of rosin (pitch
tubes) appearing on the bark; for a local increase of woodpeckers indicating
an increase of food material; for a slight change in the tint of the pine-crowns.
(12) Apply sprays or washes, twice or thrice per season, to particu-
larly valuable trees (Forest Bul. No. 22, p. 56), e. g., lime and Paris green,
mixed to a mass of light green color; or soft soap, adding enough washing
soda and water to reduce the mixture to the consistency of a thick paint;
or a thick wash of soap, Paris green and plaster of Paris; or a mixture of one
pint of carbolic acid, one gallon of soft soap and eight gallons of soft water.
Arsenate of lead may be used instead of Paris green, and has a greater in-
secticidal value.
B. Against BUPRESTIDZ AND CERAMBYCIDA (FLAT-HEADED
AND ROUND-HEADED Borers).
(1) Prepare trap trees, or use trees accidentally injured or weakened
as such.
(2) Remove, peel, burn or immerse in water, trees in weakened con-
dition. Begin logging in districts containing such trees (e. g., blowdowns,
burns).
(3) Prevent ground fires which weaken the trees, burst their bark and
render them liable to successful attacks ly Buprestids and Cerambycids.
Try to retain the fertility of the soil.
(4) Protect insectivorous animals (compare Bureau of Entomology
Bulletin No. 28, p. 28.)
(5) Prevent trees left in the course of logging from being recklessly
injured by axe, by felled trees striking them, etc.
(6) Where you remove a portion only of the trees standing in the woods,
log in winter (not in spring and summer).
C. Against Curcuiionips (“Bark WeEEvILS’’).
(1) Remove the trees which appear injured by axe, lightning, storm,
sleet or the fall of a neighbor.
(2) Prepare trap trees, and destroy the brood of Curculionids develop-
ing therein in due season.
D. Against Prinipz.
Mind that the bark is safe from powderpost beetles for two years, and
do not store any tan bark for more than two years.
FOREST PROTECTION 33
II. PROTECTION AGAINST INSECTS BORING IN WOOD
AND TIMBER.
A. Acarnst ScotytTipa (“AmBrosia Brrruss’’).
(1) Remove infested trees or logs prior to swarming.
(2) Cut low stumps, or poison or char the stumps.
(3) Remove bark from all logs liable to be affected or throw the logs
into water. Do not leave in the woods any summer-felled logs.
(4) Log all blow-downs and brules as rapidly as possible.
(5) Have all parts of the woods continuously accessible to logging, by
establishing permanent means of transportation.
(6) Prevent ruthless deadening by farmers. Girdle cypress, oak and
ash—-preparatory to driving or rafting—after the swarming season of the
Scolytids.
(7) In orchards or gardens, coat the treetrunks with dendrolene; spray
them with kerosene; plug the holes bored, leave a nail therein, or use a de-
terrent wash (compare Bureau of Forestry Bulletin No. 46, p. 66).
(8) Do not leave any logs in the woods or in the log yard for any length
of time. In case of logging in spring and summer, peel off the bark.
B. Against LyvexyLoNnip# anD BRENTHIDA.
(1) Reproduce the chestnut from seedlings, not from sprouts. Re-
move dead limbs quickly, and cover the scar with tar.
(2) Prevent the bark of the chestnut from being injured and opened
by fires, by the fall of neighboring trees, by axe wounds, etc.
On the other hand, scarify a number of trees to be cut and removed in
the course of your operations in the near future. Strip off the bark in nar-
row bands, or blaze and hack through it as high as the axe will reach. Do
this towards the time when the chestnut begins to bloom. The swarming
insect deposits her eggs into the scars made, and all trees thus treated act
as trap trees.
(3) Do not leave any cord wood or any logs of chestnut in the forest
after June 15, so as to remove insects contained therein before hatching.
(4) Keep the forest dense, dark, moist, cool.
C. Against CaRAMBYCIDa (ROUND-HEADED BorERS).
(1) Cut in summer and peel the bark of the logs cut; or remove a hor-
izontal strip of bark along and on top of the log. The moisture gathering
in the gutter thus made prevents the grubs from developing.
(2) Log rapidly after heavy conflagrations, blowdowns or plagues of
bark beetles. Readiness to remove dead timber minimizes the damage by
Cerambycids. If removal is impossible, throw the logs into water, char or
peel them.
(3) For shade trees, prevent oviposition by a wash consisting of soap
and carbolic acid (compare Report N. Y. Forest, Fish and Game Commis-
sion, Vol. IV, p. 21). The borer-holes might be stopped with putty after
inserting a little carbon bisulphide (explosive).
B
34 FOREST PROTECTION
D. Against Lrotipa, Prinipm, Bostricnipm (Powprrpost Burriys).
(1) Use heartwood sticks for sticking in lumber piles.
(2) Do not dead pile.
(3) Spray piles with naphtaline or creoline-Pearson three times, per
season.
(4) Impregnate all sapwood before using it.
(5) Keep an eye on all parts of the yard continuously.
(6) Infested pieces of timber should be thoroughly steamed, or im-
pregnated, or liberally treated with gasoline, kerosene, creoline, or kept
submerged for a number of weeks (compare Bureau of Entomology, Circu-
lar No. 55).
III. PROTECTION AGAINST INSECTS INJURIOUS TO LEAVES,
NEEDLES AND BUDS.
A. Against LepipopTrERous CATERPILLARS.
(1) Remove—possibly by fire—leaf mould, mosses, brush found at
bases of trees where such material forms the winter quarters for the insect.
(2) Apply to the trees bands of burlap, 10’’ wide (compare Farmers’
Bulletin No. 99, p. 20), or bands of “Tree Tanglefoot’’; in the latter case
either after the removal of the ross on the tree, or on a sheet of oiled paper
fastened round the tree. Usually, heavy thinnings precede the application.
(3) Burn the webs of web worms.
(4) Moisten egg heaps with creosote oil (e. g., for tussock moth). Use
a steel brush to destroy the eggs by rubbing.
(5) Spray with washes, remembering, that the underside of the leaves
must be sprayed and that the job is well done only when the tree drips. A
common wash consists of one pound of Paris green and one pound of quick
lime dissolved in 150 gallons of water. An excellent wash is made from
arsenate of lime which adheres long, shows its presence by its white color
and is harmless to the leaves. See for recipe, also for description of power-
spray, New York Forest, Fish and Game Commission, IV. report, p. 10.
(6) Protect insectivorous birds, snakes, lizards, toads.
(7) Confine collected caterpillars as closely together as possible, so as
to breed deadly diseases amongst them (e. g., Empusa), or so as to invite
counter-plagues (Microgaster, Pimpla, etc.)
(8) Catch the swarming moths by exhaust fans placed near strong
electric lights.
(9) Allow of hog pasture.
B. Against TENTHREDINID] (Nematus), APHIDID#, Coccips,
PsyvLuipz.
(1) Use of soap wash, prepared by dissolving soap in boiling water,
adding kerosene (New York Forest, Fish and Game Commission, IV. re-
port, p. 31); or arsenical insecticides, caustic washes, ete., (for which com-
pare Bureau of Entomology, Bul. No. 7, pp. 338, 37, 45, 51).
FOREST PROTECTION 35
(2) Protect insectivorous animals.
(3) Destroy infested plants or, in the case of Nematus erichsonii, in-
fested woodlands.
IV. PROTECTION AGAINST INSECTS INFESTING BRANCHES,
TWIGS, SHOOTS.
A. Against ScoLyrrpa.
(1) Collect and burn affected shoots before the larve begin to pupate
therein.
(2) Use logging debris as traps.
(3) Burn logging debris, or swamp the crowns of felled trees.
B. AcarnstT CurcuLionipa (Twig WEEVILS).
(1) Avoid logging and thinning of pinewoods near young pines in the
seedling or in the sapling stage.
(2) Remove the top shoots of white pine attacked by Pissodes strobi,
and keep them in a barrel covered with netting, in the nursery, so as to kill
the weevil without destroying its parasites.
(3) Remove, char, peel or poison fresh pine stumps.
(4) Apply to the terminal shoots of white pine, during April or May,
a spray consisting of fish oil soap, Paiis green and carbolic acid diluted in
water (Bureau of Forestry, Bul. No. 22, p. 59).
(5) Use trap trees for oviposition, consisting of fresh-cut pine billets
buried obliquely with one end protruding above ground, Burn these traps
after the eggs have hatched.
(6) Collect the adults underneath large pieces of fresh pine bark placed
on the ground. The adults spend the hot hours of the day underneath the
bark attracted by the smell of rosin.
C. AGAINST CERAMBYCID..
(1) Collect limbs broken off by wind and infested by Hlaphidion (Oak
pruner).
(2) Cut off shoots or saplings affected by larve.
D. Against TINEIDa AND TORTRICIDA.
(1) Remove infested shoots.
(2) Apply insecticides.
HK. Acarnst Cicapipa.
(1) Collect larvee.
(2) Protect crows and owls.
36 FOREST PROTECTION
V. PROTECTION AGAINST INSECTS AFFECTING SEEDLINGS
IN NURSERIES.
A. AGAINST CURCULIONIDA.
(1) Do not leave any pine stumps in or near nurseries.
(2) Raise healthy transplants, on well-manured soil,
(3) Collect adults under bark traps, and collect larve on billets buried
obliquely.
B. Acarnst Scarapmipa ( JUNE Bugs).
(1) Collect adults in early morning from bushes.
(2) Cultivate four or five times that section of the nursery which is
lying fallow.
(3) Protect insectivorous birds.
(4) Trap the larve beneath reversed sods of grass.
(5) Separate the beds by deep trenches.
(6) Irrigate freely—if possible, raising the water in the trenches from
time to time to the level of the beds.
(7) Cultivate the beds heavily and frequently, particularly during
the winter months.
C. Acarnst Nocrurpa (Cut Worms).
(1) Catch adu.ts at night with sugared apples.
(2) Poison caterpillars with cabbage sprinkled with arsenic and laid
along the nursery beds.
(3) Irritate caterpillars by continuous cultivation of soil.
D. Acarnsr CrcapIDa.
Do not keep any broad-leaved trees or bushes in or near the nursery
on which the eggs might be deposited. Injection of bisulphide of carbon
into soil is recommended by Bureau of Entomology, Bul. No. 14, p. 111.
EK. Acarnst Gryiuip (CRICKETS).
(1) Protect moles, crows, etc.
(2) Keep deep trenches between the beds, and use short beds.
(3) Insert earthenware pots at the intersection of trenches.
(4) Propagate a fungus disease (Empusa Grylli) for which see Bureau
of Entomology, Bull. No. 38, p. 53.
(5) Plow the beds deeply before using them.
FOREST PROTECTION 37
VI. PROTECTION AGAINST INSECTS INFESTING FRUITS OR SEEDS,
1.&., AGAINST CURCULIONIDA, TORTRI-
CIDA, PHYCITIDA.
(1) When wintering chestnuts or acorns, store them in the natural
way, not allowing the seeds to become dry. See lectures on Sylviculture.
(2) Plant seeds as soon as possible after collecting.
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FOREST PROTECTION 39
REFERENCE LIST
ComMPiLen By F. D. Coupmn anp C. A. Screnck
The following pages will refer the student to publications, most of which
should be in the library of the up-to-date forester, where accounts, more
or less complete, of certain species of insects injurious to forest and shade
trees may be found. The list is by no means complete, and it is very likely
that a few even of the important species have been omitted. The study
of Forest Entomology is still in its infancy; but the literature, while not
yet voluminous, is so scattered that it would not be profitable for the pre-
sent purpose to go through it with a fine-toothed comb. A great many
errors will undoubtedly be noticed by Entomologists, particularly as to
synonymy; but it is hoped, nevertheless, that the list will be of some value
to the students of Forestry for whom it is designed.
The arrangement is faulty in that many polyphagous species of insects
are not listed under all of their host trees. Porthetria dispar, for instance,
is listed only under Quercus, whereas the caterpillars of the Gipsy Moth
feed indiscriminately on the foilage of almost any tree within their range.
The use of the “index,” however, will enable the student to find the refer-
ences to any insect listed, without regard to the host under which the re-
ference is given.
Here follow the complete titles of all the publications used in the pre-
paration of the list. The abbreviations used in the list proper are printed
here in Black-Faced Type, and are followed by the titles, names of authors’
and years of publication.
UNITED STATES PUBLICATIONS
5th Rept. Ent. Com. U. S. Fifth Report of the United States Entomolog-
ical Commission. Insects injurious to forest and shade trees. By
A. 8. Packard. 1890.
Ag. Yr. Bk. for 1895 U. S.—Yearbook of the United States Department
of Agriculture for 1895. The Shade Tree insect problem in the eastern
United States. By L. O. Howard. pp. 361-384. 1896.
Ag. Yr. Bk. for 1902 U. S.—Yearbook of the United States Department
of Agriculture for 1902. Some of the principal insect enemies of coni-
ferous forests in the United States. By A. D. Hopkins. pp. 265-282,
1903.
Ag. Yr. Bk. for 1903 U. S.—Yearbook of the United States Department
of Agriculture for 1903. Insects injurious to hardwood forest trees.
By A. D. Hopkins. pp. 313-328. 1904.
Ag. Yr. Bk. for 1904 U. S.—Yearbook of the United States Department
of Agriculture for 1904. Insect injuries to forest products. By A. D.
Hopkins. pp. 381-398. The nut weevils. By F. H. Chittenden.
pp. 299-310. 19085.
40 FOREST PROTECTION
Ag. Yr. Bk. for 1905 U. S.—Yearbook of the United States Department
of Agriculture for 1905. Insect enemies of forest reproduction. By
A. D. Hopkins. pp. i-iii and 249-256. 1906.
Ag. Yr. Bk. for 1907 U. S.—Yearbook of the United States Department
of Agriculture for 1907. Notable depredations by forest insects. By
A. D. Hopkins. pp. i-iii and 149-164. 1908.
BULLETINS OF THE Bureau (FormMmRiy Division) or ENTOMOLOGY,
Unirep States DeparTMENT oF AGRICULTURE.
Ent. Bul. No. 7 U. S.—Some miscellaneous results of the work of the Di-
vision of Entomology. The ambrosia beetles of the United States.
By H. G. Hubbard. pp. 9-380. Insect injuries to chestnut and pine
trees in Virginia and neighboring states. By F. H. Chittenden. pp.
67-75. 1897.
Ent. Bul. No. 14 U. S.—The Periodical Cicada. By C. L. Marlatt. 1898.
Ent. Bul. No. 21 U. S.—Preliminary report on the insect enemies of forests
in the Northwest. By A. D. Hopkins. 1899.
Ent. Bul. No. 28 U. S.—Insect enemies of the spruce in the Northwest. By
A. D. Hopkins. 1901.
Ent. Bul. No. 32 U. S.—Insect enemies of pine in the Black Hills. By A. D.
Hopkins. 1902.
Ent. Bul. No. 37 U. S.—Proceedings of the fourteenth annual meeting of
the Association of Economic Entomologists. On the study of forest
entomology in America. By A. D. Hopkins. pp. 5-32. 1902.
Ent. Bul. No. 38 U. S.—Some miscellaneous results of the work of the Di-
vision of Entomology. Notes on the Rhinocerus Beetle. By F. H.
Chittenden. pp. 28-82, 1902.
Ent. Bul. No. 48 U. S.—Catalogue of exhibits of insect enemies of forest
products at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904.
By A. D. Hopkins. 1904.
Ent. Bul. No. 53 U. S.—Catalogue of the exhibit of Economic Entomology
at the Lewis and Clrak Centennial Exposition, Portland, Oregon, 1905.
By Rolla P. Currie. 1904.
Ent. Bul. No. 56 U. S.—The Black Hills Beetle. By A. D. Hopkins. 19085.
Ent. Bul. No. 58 U. S.—Some insects injurious to forests. Parts I, II, and
III. By A. D. Hopkins and J. L. Webb. 1906-07.
Ent. Bul. No. 71 U. S.—The Periodical Cicada. By C. L. Martlatt. 1907.
CrrcULARS OF THE Bureau (Formeriy Division) or ENTOMOLOGY OF THE
Unirep States Department or AGRICULTURE.
Ent. Cir. No. 24 U. S.—The Two-lined Chestnut Borer. By F. H. Chitten-
den. 1897.
Ent. Cir. No. 29 U. S.—The Fruit-tree Bark-beetle. By F. H. Chittenden-
1898.
FOREST PROTECTION 41.
Ent. Cir. No. 55 U. S—Powder-post injury to seasoned wood products. By
F. H. Chittenden. 1908.
Ent. Cir. No. 82 U. S.—Pinhole injury to girdled cypress in the South At-
lantic and Gulf States. By A. D. Hopkins. 1907.
Ent. Cir. No. 83 U. S.—The Locust Borer, and methods for its control. By
A. D. Hopkins. 1907.
Ent. Cir. No. 90 U. S.—The White-pine Weevil. By A. D. Hopkins. 1907,
Ent. Cir. No. 96 U. 8.—The Catalpa Sphinx. By L. O. Howard and F. H.
Chittenden. 1907.
Ent. Cir. No. 97 U. S.—The Bagworm. By L. O. Howard and F. H. Chit-
tenden. 1908.
BULLETINS oF THE Formust Smrvice (Formerty Bureau or Forestry)
OF THE Unirep Stares DeParTMENT oF AGRICULTURE.
For. Bul. No. 22 U. S.—The White Pine. Insect enemies of
F. H. Chittenden. pp. 55-61. 1899.
For. Bul. No. 31 U. S.—-The Western Hemlock. Insects of thha-——-. By
A. D. Hopkins. pp. 16-21. 1902.
For. Bul. No. 88 U. S—The Redwood. Insects of the———. By A. D.
Hopkins. pp. 32-40. 1903.
For. Bul. No. 46 U. S—The Basket Willow. Insects injurious to
By F. H. Chittenden. pp. 63-80. 1904.
OTHER PUBLICATIONS OF THE Unirep Starns DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE.
Far. Bul. No. 99 U. S.—Farmer’s Bulletin No. 99. Three insect enemies
of shade trees. By L. O. Howard. 1899.
Far. Bul. No. 264 U. S.—Farmer’s Bulletin No. 264. The Brown-tail Moth,
and how to control it. By L. O. Howard. 1906.
Far. Bul. No. 265 U. S.—Farmer’s Bulletin No. 265. The Gipsy Moth, and
how to control it. By L. O. Howard. 1907.
F'ld. Pr’g’m. F’st. S’ce.-April, 1907, U. S.—Field Programme of the Forest
Service for April, 1907.
STATE PUBLICATIONS.
Nuw JERSEY.
Geol. Rept. for 1899. N. J.—Annual Report of the State Geologist of New
Jersey for the year 1899. Part III. Report on Forests. The role
of insects in the forest. By J. B. Smith. pp. 205-232. 1899.
New York.
Gde. L’fl’t. No. 16 A. M. N. H.—Guide Leaflet No. 16, American Museum
of Natural History. The insect galls of the vicinity of New York City,
By William Beutenmuller. 1904.
Ex. Sta. Bul. No. 233 Cornell—Cornell University. Agricultural Experi-
ment Station of the College of Agriculture. Bulletin No. 233. De-
partment of Entomology. Saw-fly leaf-miners on European elms and
alders. By M. V. Slingerland. 1905.
By
42 FOREST PROTECTION
Ex. Sta. Bul. No. 234 Cornell.—Cornell University. Agricultural Experi-
ment Station of the College of Agriculture. Bulletin No. 234. De-
partment of Entomology. The Bronze Birch-borer. By M. V. Slinger-
land. 1906.
For. Rept. No. 4 N. Y.—Fourth annual report of the Commissioners of Fish-
eries, Game, and Forests of the State of New York. Report for 1898.
Insects injurious to maple trees. By E. P. Felt. pp. 367-395. 1899.
For. Rept. No. 7 N. ¥.—Seventh annual report of the Forest, Fish, and Game
Commission of the State of New York. Report for 1901. Insects
affecting forest trees. By E. P. Felt. pp. 479-534. 1902.
St. Mus. Bul. No. 53 N. Y.—New York State Museum Bulletin No. 53. (En-
tomology 14). 17th Report of the State Entomologist on injurious
and other insects of the State of New York. By E. P. Felt. 1901.
St. Mus. Bul. No. 103 N. Y.—New York State Museum Bulletin No. 103.
(Entomology 25). The Gipsy and Brown-tail Moths. By E. P. Felt.
1906.
St. Mus. Bul. No. 109 N. Y.—New York State Museum Bulletin No. 109.
(Entomology 27). White-marked Tussock-moth and Elm Leaf-beetle.
By E. P. Felt. 1907.
St. Mus. Bul. No. 110 N. Y.—New York State Museumi Bulletin No. 110.
(Entomology 28). 22nd Report of the State Entomologist on injur-
ious and other insects of the state of New York. By E. P. Felt. 1907.
St. Mus. Mem. No. 8 N. Y.—New York State Museum Memoir 8. 2 vol-
umes. Insects affecting park and woodland trees. By E. P. Felt.
1905-06.
OHIO.
Ins. Bul. No. 7 Ohio.—Ohio Department of Agriculture. Division of Nur-
sery and Orchard Inspection. Bulletin No. 7. The insects affecting
the black locust and hardy catalpa. By E. C. Cotton. 1905.
PENNSYLVANIA.
For. Rept. 1901-02 Penn.—Statement of work done by the Pennsylvania
Department of Forestry during 1901 and 1902. 1902.
West VIRGINIA.
Ex. Sta. Bul. No. 35 W. Va.—Bulletin of the West Virginia Agricultural
Experiment Station No. 35. Defects in wood caused by insects. By
A. D. Hopkins. 1894.
Ex. Sta. Bul. No. 56 W. Va.—Bulletin of the West Virginia Agricultural
Experiment Station No. 56. Report on investigations to determine
the cause of unhealthy conditions of the spruce and pine from 1880
to 1893. By A. D. Hopkins. 1899.
MISCELLANEOUS PUBLICATIONS.
Comstock’s Manual.—Manual for the Study of Insects. By J. H. Com-
stock. 18965.
Ratzeburg Vol. TI.—Die Forst-Insecten, volume HI. By J. C. Ratzeburg.
Berlin, 1844.
The Forester for 1901.—The Forester. A periodical published by the Amer-
ican Forestry Association at Washington, D. C.
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con “"- | OBE OI@e | 77777 ae ine wenn | nee a ate jrveneee ayoy ~7°ZIGY SnYyanshopnry ~~~~~saznooflucy:
nT7 ooo | wt | OFA pT 99g | wt ttt cr | 628 ' ej; 9, PWS TTT jog 77 Ndopy vpvodvand snuopospuaq\|
aan eee --- | cee | ost aze | ge aan tetera mr | PR, Géh [TTT TT ajog 7777 WZ sipjuasf snuvpospuacyy ,
aiaheien ineeneene ~-~ cas [| ---5- wees f Se 7oo mae | eee Tl: om | Gog TT saa 70 "IFT SniuojyD ~~ endunzd ht 3'
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rn weep QT | poy Af FB | “SIAL. su joydhis.) ~~~ “esppdjoog
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ee ae ee eee F6h | TT 7IZ ee Dn Deane ose: & ge ch: a a (2: "QM dostfuog ~snmunyouo Fy |
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meee flee ee | eee | ee “oe na 7T Te eZ LY “TA --g10G |" HUB] SNUWU19U09| ~~~ ~~~ “SNOVULO_F,
weeeeeeee | ween | eee | eee ___. aa ~ GL 9T SHIM J,|"~"0a'T Sapjoazjaund|~ ~ snsoyzydohqyg
woneenn-e Wun es pene Tt a ae GL LY sHim [~~ uuByy snynpyu|~ ~ snsoyzydonyyg
wee eeeeee Ll eeeee flee |e Toe TG woe" FL 61 “""""""-g10g | ‘UneByy seuuad1ins ~~-~~sdobanghiy
ee oun __. 6d ware IZ wate an TORR Pte eat pee rerenn ejogi---~° uueyy taqoffo|-~--7~ sajno0hicy
we ee ene ___.- en nee aT a wate eZ BE f ottttt prt gjog|--~~" uUBpy s2720uNd| -~-- ~~ snBinjoq
eee eee ef ee wee 7T GG we ween Tr -"---g1og|""" 7 aUBA, sRsaqgo|-~~snuopoLpueqe
wenn eee ee _ FOE | Toe G6 7 ~T Te Toe a Top Pen ejog| ydoyy tuunupabual-~-snuopoipuadqy
ns es me mor a eZ ST sooo rs--gpog|---274---- ds cul-~- snsogoyd.in9|- ~~ ~eapryAjoog
ee es Se — mare “ee 16 FE sia J,|-7 7 ao saposstg| eepraornomy
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SLUV
SHONGERAAY AUVARLTT
viojdosjoy Aq luUvUEsUS ‘gq PUB SISUSTDJIS BVOdIg 0} OseUIeC
renydnibophit “xX SYe “snpoouy sniajOINX SVs ‘enqoutarg sniaqojhX BY;
PZe een eee TL 91 90L [77777777 O]Oq |" ~"29BY pussaxps| "~~~" “snsogayhy
Totem fp meme Posen teen €Z ene Tee a 7a woes [ome --<grog|" "77 ~~ *aary ensago|~~~~~~snsogazhy
6981 E8E 99S SOF 861 Tat “er TZ 91 co; a efog | ~~~" Aqyy 1wnjz0y1029| ~~ uospuapod fy, |~ "g SPRAIOOS
O06 | UT +5 Sn rn a LT GG L6 8& y8Q pT e[og| “rep DeoyNGoams|-- ~opydounpa py |\-- wpyserdng
TZ29 PTT re pees 7s a oT 96 LE Ogg [UT e[Og|~~ ~"Aeg snyojnpun|~ ~~~ snysa.gojhxy ice
OLG FT es pees “see a ooo 96 LE TZ48 0 UT e[od |” "eq ststappune |W ~~~ ~~ pingdaT| appAquieled
“AN $0 “BA TM ‘A “N ‘Ss "0 ‘8 °D “S “D § “D ‘SN “BD
§ “ON FOBT 103 9¢ ‘ON 4 *ON L°ON | TZ “ON | LE “ON | SGON | 8P ON [WOO “UH
“WOW ‘SHIT “99 AAA SV ING “wig xn | "9doxy ‘z0q| Ng “‘saq| "Ng ‘say| "ME “quq| "Ng “‘yuqT| [Ng “qua|"ydey UIG| ONINasang PAIOAAG SONGS) ATOR
SLUY I
SHONTAGADY LUVAGLT
Biejdoajoy Aq sisuepeuvs vdnsy o} odvueg
52
53
asyy ‘ydoy vine? snuteajipy SV; ‘enpoyietg eniajojiy FY
__ S98r | ae _ 26h TTT > a m49 TZ OT | oTaTTT pore e1og|~~~ "Aq uinyp77tatg ~"uospuspodhs J,
wrrsetee yp cates peer aa a oo. OL ST worst foro tt rrejog} 7777257777 ds tay" snd ag
nes eee TSS ~ aaa 77" _ GL 0G wocet [ow tenommgpog|(— ot tort ds sup ooo snussagh FT
OL ar rr rs ejog|"~--~" oor] enppotns ~" enyo.ijoywuy|~ ~~~ eepAsjoog
iabeneienaneaia 193 vores ZS LI wr 16 ‘LL | 88 ‘SS G89 [777 TTT efog|~"Aqyy tpuoununip|~ ~~ ppvydounye Wy
ce renreere fF oomewwwee fetes aT ae aoe 91 1Z TOR ST [rms --giog|~~—"“oery wnpytl~ ~~~ "~~ wnwasY ~~ weprsezdng
“AN LOGT 10; Fic “"N ‘S° §°o "8 ‘0. ‘Ss ° oe “fh Ss “0
8 °ON 1938910, ON | ZE°ON | T2°ON | 4°ON | 89 ON | 8F ‘ON ["UIOD “AUgT
‘mOy ‘en “49 ouL aden "0,7 | Ng gua) ME “saa Ng “ug Mg ‘qual mMg ‘yuq| dey 4G) DNraGiaAoAg sHINgdg SONG) AUR
—_— SLIVI
SHONTUAAAY AUVUBLT
RR
eiaidosjo) Aq vyAqdoszsjey esnsy, 0} edvued
FOREST PROTECTION
54
a as er rer ---~ coheketed TZ OT Tees LRT T A = BFOT IT "29 BY tuasaxns| ~~ ~~~ "snL0gajA XY
Tm ee Iz ‘OT “== 92, 03 698 [TTT TTT TT ajog|- ae] snsourdsaun 777" "= snag
peeeenenenenenenes Geenenenetaal “Tam 7a OZ Gt eeebeenenn paneenmannenaial:) (6. < j calateleieiatetetemetens § (1a «3 “se -~~andliqny gs
Tome ae ene eee ZL, LI eneaeanae “TS ""SSIM 7) Uae snmpuyu ~~snsoyzydoliitg
soe pee 7s “se GL 61 Toe poe nes epogy TTT as Uj" T""snuiseyi
ecrnis Cn pamnene wT GL 0g Tee Terr Bog ~~ 77 "aeT snsoynqeu “77 ~"enutsayi
wemteenne- | n----- oieieied water OL GT Tees eT se eyo |" "7" *aaryT Snzoayns| ~~ snyorjoyjoUH
we fe mm OT iene ¥L 61 GOL | TTT TT eyo | "7777 7 *aarT s27qzwts) ~~ “snucpoipuay
aionairnenian 18 ianeied “sa “so = 7am Sees fern -"-arog | ydoxy obnsjopnasd “""SnUuopoeIpUa(y
eheneneneeieaees Sanne nanan wae ¢2 QT Teese peers s="-grog| ~~ otto dg say" > snzogoyding|--~ eprydjoog
woo TSS LT vee 16 ‘LL 88 ‘GS Ggg |7 777777 a8fog}-"Aqyy tpuouwunsp|~ ~~ pprydounp Wy
aheneeeneamenet 19a eee BG Gf i cases peeewerses<g7og) "~~~ *0ey wnpiyu)- ~~ ~~ ~wnwas y|-~ wepyseidng
| 72! re oe “—— 96 L8 ogg pot ejog|~~~"Aeg snyoynpun|- ~~~ snyoau0jh XY | epmAquielag
‘AN TOGT IOF ‘Ss °O ‘sO Ss’ ‘Ss ‘0 SO
8 °ON Iojsoio IZ °ON |} LEON | SS °ON {| SP “ON (UOD “Quy
“sn “49 ou, [ag ‘yu Ing ‘yay MN, “yasy| ‘Mg “yuq|-sde1y ye] ONTasaaog saINnag SONY) ATAY J]
SLIV
SGONGADIEY AMVASLIT
erajdoajog Ag vsnsjopnesg 0} osvueg
59
FOREST PROTECTION
er RR
werrreret | orcccet “nae ran AL ttre ejog| 777777777 ds saj77 777" SNITULOL
nn Eee “c+ 92 OS pot rt tcc gjogiT 7 TT TTT ‘ds sajpoT Tn sngfijoog
crrttrrte 18Z ~--- OL IZ sears jem mo=---91og|~"7~"9e'T waqnosgns|~ ~~~ ~~~ snzfijoagy
nee Cee 9% OL IZ veers [owas grogri~~""~-oary sdaomad|~ ~~ ~~~ ~snphijoogyy
verrrtett forerree -=-~ ZL LT reece frwsseo-sgim pp otro coo ods ‘al--snsoyjzydofing
nT ( oieemed Zh LT coiaihaiel aiabenenmemeaiel >) (915 & waren csrems-dg taco sauahohitd
ne Maen ~a-- G) OZ *6L | TTT [ttt repog [ort rt o ods suj- 7" enwrsaph yy
crrttrtrt wort --0- GL Bt |owtttt prt e[og|~"~"9e'T snzgnjnupsB) ~~ ~~~ ~ snuysopt
wrrtttstt praca --~- Oz GT conte jones grogi-"~" ger] snynayns|~~ snyoLiyoyjoUy
~o-e eteeien TZ Op fowtt tt re s) (0) < rr ds -uj-~~~ ~snpoydfizp\~ ~~ ~eeprAyjoog
12: Ee oteteieiete --~- 96 Le O@g putt tttto efog|~~ ~"Awg sngnynpun)|- ~~~ snysaijojix, SprwosAqurssey
“A CN TOGT +105 ‘$0. so ‘Sn ‘sO
8 *ON iaysoiog | TZ °ON | SG "ON | BP ‘ON |ULOD “quay
‘Woyy “sn “99 ouL ‘ng ‘qua ‘Ng ‘quay yng ‘yual-sdeqy WIG) DNrawzaog saIOdaG BONG ATINV
SHONGUGARY AUVARLT
BLUV
eio}dosjog Aq JOToIWOD *y puY sipuvId soiqy 0} sve
FOREST PROTECTION
56
"(dole peorydeisodéy ¥) snynqupa “gt BY,
weet r ere Penne peewee Psa 1g 92 Teese rr gjog| "777777 ds *ul- ~~ ~enusyoopixy
GJB pT ees 61T¢ T8 1 rn es ayO_| "~~ "a0'T snatnszng| ~~ ~~ ~~~ mNnd1U98 FT
alee aan Cintas Cine 62 #3 Terre BAIA | Tomo dg tay- 7" -angoydhug|--~-espydtosg
TOF : oy a rs an 66 FE CCT afoq|-~~7* pusyY s72qnp Soposss J| BpIaoyNsing
cw remmemme ftw fsa Peas 86 68 wee ewes g[Og|""“aUry Dyulazynany sysaidng |~~ wepyserdng
ennai Cenneineein nena: Snares owes wees poe gjOg i" “*puasy pjootquow nfiysvg | sphpéquvisag
WZZg of ~ocw7tttt OFF FoCTTTT £8 1246 [OUUUTTT S]Og |" T[BYag snzyogwng|~ ~~ ~sndyodossag | ~apiArpusyoy
“A ON ‘Ss “2 ‘SA TM ‘ACN "SO ‘s°0
8 ‘ON GO6T TO} 99 "ON ZL ‘ON £9 “ON | SF “ON
‘WS “SN “IH “AA SY} ING “sg “xA|9deqy “soq | [ng “yaq| ‘Ng “quo ONTaaaIOg SHIOgdg ATINVG
LIV
SGONGHRARY ADVARLYT
Bia}doejon Aq vouresteq ‘y pue TlesvIj seIqy 0} esevuleg
57
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i
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mann rs a ee 2 aod 7777777 "yoy 2 uophIes31g
_ 888i _ 288 —— 288 __ ker ---+- ay wan-- [-------- alow ~ =~ fag uenposof ~~ uophI019}T
ee Zz aan PT =~ 62 ‘CP ST ~~ =—"O1Od ~----"Kug snpgisoduios ~~~~sndfignid _.
ees ree -o.. ~------- ~0- ror | Zetop | wort > [ttt etog | 777s "ay > snugsomyyg |-~- "pA sjoos
19Z ekandantiond rr = we 86 6E wee Pea sfo”g ones ‘nig DINU ~omen 8% qosdng "7" sepiqyuesg
rs nr ---- wen nneee ---- ze (| peop | 7777 SST @ 910g] “Yor Muaysouunu|---snusoopng| epyaoymomny)
satatetatatetateii iliekemtate —— wenn nn-- ~-~- ---- eg ‘gp | ~rnct [rrr crt ejog| "7" "98a DareyoInd| ~~~ ~~ ~oamoy |~~ apryserdng
weeeeneee | ween wna ween conn ee P eevee [ene gjog|--" "prey waupun| unwauasty
an Pell | LILI | ArS | ay Be | BE GE | ----- |--------ofog|----- 7-7 ag wpaaes|--~-----amag
wo | oc wane | aennee-- --~- 96 71a ietetete hanes sfog|- qua snpoydaoosypfia| ~~~ ~snjhyjooa N
ee re wne- wewenee- ---- cB 98 wenee [ono -- neti yi" 7 > UIMON snyojuap| ~~ SNLINO| BproAquyessy
‘me “mW, “ISAAK Syl “Wal Ing Cag xa ne Tal her “UA InE “Mal adey Tg] ONrETcAag saIoadg #ONGD) XUIKV
SHONTURATY LUVAGLIY
eee I
sLUVg
eie}doajoy Aq WNYoYsIp wnipoxey, o} ssemeg
FOREST PROTECTION
58
_-_
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Sg “es “ee enn nna SSIM T|~ ~~ "yop tssaidno|----snursonjyg|~ ~~ ~“epyAjoog
6E a wT is rneneeeeninneianel miata de'T SNIDSssNndap|~~- -sapoyouhyJ| weplAquiBszady
‘$0 $s 0 ‘$oO ‘sa
88 “ON SON | SG °ON | QP ‘ON
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SLEV I
SHONGUAATY AUVAALIY
HSE
viaydosjog Aq vlonbeg 0} o8eumeg
59
FOREST PROTECTION
“o vo" SZ SE fT TTT pr ttre spo) TTT ttt rst pS aes Z
“——s 7a SL BGP TTT pte io: s § rr ereers é}7 ~~ enpydofiaq|---- 7 weprend
ieianed ~cae FL Gp QE ptt ttt pete ajod|-"""7* ydoy wronbes|- ~~~ snussomyy 7
tenia heated eZ QT bf ttt ttt forester cen a[Og|"~"~*aeT snpojound|- ~~ - snurwson7y JT
moon ~oAe OL SEP TTT frrereree ejog|-""""~" oT sngnons| ~~ snyoRuoymwUy|-~~~aepHATOIG
weee “aA LL TS PT ptr srte S[Og|~“oe'T snurpshyyoun|~~--~ sadnajoyi
IZ eZ “cf. “== 608 [77 T TT TA BfOg|-~~"9e"]T wenuryzune|--~--~ wmnipriqo)| eproAquiviss
“So "Ss °F S°o ‘s*n "8 °n
G ON SON | SS ‘ON | SP “ON | *UIOD “sun
"Tag "yasq| Ng “qq Ng “yaq| Ng “yay -ydey mE PNIEgAANG salondg SPONGY ATIAV
SLaVg
SHONTUGMEY AUVAALTT
BIojdosjog Aq vayuvsid B{nyy 0} oseureq
FOREST PROTECTION
60
Oe 4 ST ww" ="giog)|"""~0aT snzopUNd|~—- ~snutsomtyd
a8 OOT | Sh Th sHim [\--~-ydoR wseaudno|~ ---enujsonpyq|-~~-eaprysqoog
PORES | SERRE TEE | eNO | TENS f SRA | «tae STAs | Lise eara ae Pensa
SE °ON =| 89 ON | 8F “ON
yng “raq [yA ‘yuoy| "Pg ‘Fuq| ONTeaAATAg sniogdg BONG UAV
BLU,
SAONGARAAY AMVUGLIT d
Bia}do9joy Aq BuUBTuOsMR siIedADwUeYD 0} osvuIEGg
61
FOREST PROTECTION
- Te ft rt aia 18 a alae ejog|~~---" da snpojuap|~ ~~~ snursoazyd |" ~~ ~wepHAjoog
70: ne rn Cia td 96 ‘68 | 22 ‘88 |777 77777 9]og|~~ ~~~ "qu snaubsy|~~~~~ sadnsqozft ry
099 26E SEF 7oos 96 7) an Q[OG |UIMEN wnrzouuazun|~-~~~~ wmnIpyyo) | sppsquresey
"A "N 'S mal “BA AA "S sal “§ "i ‘Ss wal
8 “ON POGT 103 9g “ON LE "ON | £9 ON | SF ‘ON
"Me “SNL “AS AA IA SV} ING “FIG “XA Ng ‘Pag Ng “wa Pd “yay] ONTaaaaoag SHIOgdg SONY) ATLA
SLUV I
SHONGUATRY ADVESLYT
eiajdoajoy Aq vuvrmaidia snisdiun{ 0} osemeq
T6E 669 “ee 7 “ee $06 OCU Q]Og |" ~~" ~"ABg snzozuap)~ ~~~ snutsoMyy J | ~~“ SPHATOIS
i900 J TT &¢6 96 ‘68 | 88°26, ~TTTT port efoqy qs snout) ~~~ ~~ sodniyopiy]| eppAquresay
‘K'N "KON ‘9°70 ‘g'D ‘gn ‘3°
8 “ON 2 “ON LE ‘ON | SG ‘ON | 8h ON [WO "qut
“ORY “SNE 3G} ‘adey “sJo0q [ng “qual Ng ‘quq|‘Ng ‘gua "adey WIG] DNIeaaang SAINadg PONGY AUTINV,
BLUV I
RHONDUGIAY LUVAGLIY
eiaydoejog Ag siredAowureyy 0} osvureg
FOREST PROTECTION
62
ann annnn- Seta ween 6ZE [77 ejog| ~~" "> ~ uur] opepeu)--~-~-pusysoy py | “epRequiBog
aieieneneninaee 26 FE wT ore perme “gogi7 ~~"qsqE snysosnd |-snysufysojd ity
___ 18s _. 06. _8&_ CEE PTT yma ve'T Sipunjinl|~~ snzayop.ou0)
arn : seg jo saawery) "~~~" qeM syoun|~-~~ ~~ snqopHy | wpyaoymomy
PEP 96 SE FoTTTTT ree ejoq|"~ ~*u1oy_ snyorosyf;~ ~~ ~stydniboin
aieceneieeneinne #6 92 soe proms =-=“-g10g) "ABQ stuuadtunfa|- ~~ ~~~" saj01nDD)) wpyAQuIvse|
“AN ‘sn S’n ‘$°D
8 “ON GG "ON | SP ON [‘WOD “Fu
‘Hs}L “SN “ISM “qaeq|" Mg “wo ydey qy¢) SNragsag SaIOTIS BONY) ATIWY JT
BLUV
SGONGHEAEY AMVERLYT
eviajdoajog Aq suvpénf{ 0} edvureq
6 ‘awody sy, *enydn.bophe *xX V1
nn cnc
ZPP ~-+-- Sn tte “a B cone icone ¢ 96Z, SSIMT, 2 970qi-~ "77 "ABQ asnqespg|~~ ~~~ wopizourg)
we | cm |. yee | itt | ic | mt | wae | mn | op} ge | ge | 88 + Bae F cog) --- ee fae|---~ == engohey|--~~- copra
GIG fo ottttt otter er rn ---- ---- ~--- ~e am 912 | aianenene SOABa'T| "~~~ YET StyousBunue|~ ~~ ~~~ ~~ ouagslig’ espljeumossélyy
es es aw ene eee ee) | meee aa res ~-<-spapaT ayigggmne)|— cmt fi
$21 IZ OI 904 aod 777 eyey WUSSILOS 7 snsoge} D4
orp | oo | ge fore | oes yo ct | | Ge] 881 8 | pee. beeen p atS ag ansbtndlsspoha|--—--“omtoag
<= _e9t ~---- 816 _ PIS ot women or 26 _ FOr 1? 962 iotatekanedad SBia 7,777 7 Oar] at109v eemanel SNSOULDAYD | ~~~ ~“SpIyAJOIs
a es rrr ne w-~ | ----- --+~ -~-~ one wee OTe jégInag yp “say ~-48q10F] LDYANUIU|~ ~ SHJBYIDOUED
m-~- {| w~-ne-- [ -Hene rs or wee | ~---- wee ---= re ---- 912 ayimaig 39 ‘sarty|-~7 77> ‘ABQ supGajai~~ snjayopsyoUoy)
cag) | ott ZOe cette tere wee fee oe at moe Seaiatad “— heiniel L162 aan Hi so: | “Ae Snzoas| ~~~ ~~ SRULUDIDT
egg. | nono rrtee rs rs ~--- -~--- 06 ee Lee [v7 aman ‘ABQ snaispUu)| ~~~ ~~ snuiuppgd| Bpreorynoimny
er ween | eee re were aetad 16 ge foc SHIA T, FP 9fOq |" ~~~ 7 ‘qey Dinosgo | ~~ ~~~ DILIIVT
opp of octttt fot ee er es ~--- lated aaa “ae 06Z SBI T, »H 9fOg| Tea “deq oping DILIOUT
9g. | otttte otto wen- fo ----- -aee ---- L6 ge | Ppo‘teg [7777 1) nn qua Dwsowaf|~~~srzyjogosfiuy) |~~ eeprysordng
ee ee ee rs an rs wane rs ee gfoqi--7-77 "qa sru0joa|~ ~~~ snysa.i70j AX”
626 wene~ | wee eee- | neue --- | ----- wane ~--- og Be a Colaiateeianetas aon ~~ euros ungmaoeDf aan siydpsiGot
69z | ttt ott ne ns rt ---- woe 6 92 19m ju ajo |" ~~" qeay vapioostp | ~~ ppiadoy
tz | ov font ee a ---- mao ZEB 29 QRZ fT su | Tat ABQ DDINGUW|~ ~~~ ~~ SaLOPTOUQ
a ee wane | aoune w-~ | sane ~--- ---- 96 ge | crt pect aog |qq snzoydaoo0sypfiva|~ ~~ ~~~ snjfijo0o N
as ee er a wef ee were —--- CG 2E Fort pre ajog ~~"ABO snuojsiisop 7a UCPO}}D
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a OR UO UO ON. 2 <b 7 be 5009
eg | otc de ---- | --+-- a ~--- ie 16 $e ee” warttes SETA T,|-7 77" qe wnsozyia|~~~~~uowpry dnl
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78
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FOREST PROTECTION
84
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~UIBOOISBY
SSIM J, Y ajog|---7-" wUury vurifid|----~~--~ DLIZNG ZF ~~ w#pIssog
aiecanenenel SoABaT | YV 2 “SG Duth1s00Na)|~~ pduno010wWa |" ~~~ eprredry
aieteheheies SoABO'T |" ~~" “NLIG, DyoUunN]|~ ~~ ~~psezdowo FF
aceneneiene S0ABaT |" "IIRL DuUDILaWD|~ ~~~ ~~ ~npazod PF {~~~ “spmjooN
roan SOAwOTL I" V 3 °S SLiwpessay | ~~~ ~ pjopasypo Fy |~ ~~ ~-eapryory
acaienebeles SOAOT |" "By Dpunaign.t|~~-~~~ ~pjposvup|- ~~~" ~eepid
-UIBIO}BIOD
etebeieieis SVABAT | UIBIN sniuaydijod|--~-~~---~na90,7,
aconeiotane SOABOT |" 77 TTT TAO
qeq on)--- =~ Sqs9moIN Y | ~~eaprramnyeg
saI0gag SONG ATIAV
SLEV gy
89
"DIUOPOLVY BV, *snjZ010}0 AT SVe “Dian 8Vz “mihbLQ BV,
womceeeee fo seeenewe po msese Tee | 07777 ae soo ~ooo LLbe |77 777 ~easwory|~ ~~ "yy 3 “HH DIDUNN|~ ~~ DYdDLHozUDT |- ~~~ Spd
iaiirrrir rs ns ian 083 case 77a on 7ses Gip, |~77 77" seawery|~ ~~~ *areRy Diwotya7|- ~~" ~~ SUUDLg |~-eBpEJETOeD)
ee 9 8961 OLEe 898 Slt “Te ~"-- [+099 ggg {7"" 777 "SeaveTI“V FG HULHes09Na]| ~~ DduLDI01EWA FT | ~~ ~eeppredyy
watson ese Pema were fsa 9072, ananaiaial ae ahaa “seo Bog [7 "TT seaway [~~~ “yOeg vyeurj19q| ~~~ pdwen901079 HT
GEG Te eee G96 fj 7 woe 98 08 7 a ra SOABO'T | -- * NiCl Bgstusu) ~~~ ~~ ~~ DUD |" BPHBOPOJON
96G pT ee A as “Tee ¥8 83 oom fT seABOTT | UIBID snusydfijod|~~~~~~ ~~~ 1972.f |~~-SpHaInyes
“s N 4 "Nl “Ss "Oo “A “"N “SD ‘Sg "ft "Ss wal "Ss wal
8 "ON OT “ON G68T 4OJ [enuew po 66 ON | SS °ON | 8F ON {UIO/) "UOT
‘we “sn “9G | ‘IM “sn IS| AIA SV SpIopsuIOD j-ydoy ‘“AO_ Mg “eA ME “AM “FA ‘4deqy Wig; PNIEm@aaToOg sHIDddg SONY) ATINV A
SLAV
SHONTUGAAY AUVUSLYT
eR
viajydopidey Aq ‘dds viyty 0} esemeqd
FOREST PROTECTION
90
“enoojAT SV
Tor eeeeae GLE we | 08 fou po BPE [77777 Seawary|~~"----naq, peuna|- ~~~ pegunydAy|--~~-esprpory
i a a 7 rr ns ns seg. yn seAwET]|""“"NLIC, Dayyowloid) ~~ ~-~opunsozqo;D|~~“espypamMyEeg
gpg | treat TT #8 8@r {2777 TTT TT seAwoy|""“"V @ "f aupoy)- ~~~ cusydg
2 a nn ie ts #8 2 i peavey |""—"HTEM Deoqnpun|~~ ~~~ mojo. |- > eapysuprdg
‘KN ‘S°o | wnuyy | go | ‘so | sino | ‘s'n
8 ‘ON G68T Joy | 8.99098 | 66 °ON | ES ON | BF ‘ON |'UIOD “gay
‘WOW ‘SnW IG YA IA'Sy] -wop | mg wwyAl mE yoq| mg qalydey WE PRIWEAEOS sulaag
LATINA
SHONGHRSAY AUVAALIT
viajdopidey Aq ‘dds snurxerg 0} osemeq
91
FOREST PROTECTION
RR
kg jn ne soAwo'y|~"-~" pstog adzozp9|—~ ~~~ 108 7D.19,/)|~~ ~seprsurgds
ea | eR
4 Na [ng ‘suy| DNreadcag saIodag SONGS ATA J
ee SLUVg
SHONTUAATY ALUVAALTT
ann
viaj}dopidey Aq ‘dds wdyeyeg 0} advured
FOREST PROTECTION
92
‘wpis-suid "'T SV _
rs Caras inner —e 66 OF TITS PTT" ="=grog(""~"uaYySY pjos1utd|~-~ ~~ ~engnunn
es eas as —— 66 OF Tees pom seefog |" unySY ssurzydoy!~~--~~snuninn gy wo" “BPP HIS
corcrerss op ooseccesses possess TTT ptt pti O9L |77 77 Se]poeny |" Tn gimp hey
STR pT 80¢ Te oT" oT B9L jr SO]PCON |" “Gov 267U0007,- ~~ ~~~ snafiydo'T
Thr GOP | 09 68 Ge ggh jour" SoTpsoN |" Yoke] t409qn|~~- ~~~ snifiydo'y \eeprurperqyuey,
"AN “BA CM ‘AN 8 0 ‘$0 ‘SO "S “O.
8 “ON 9g “ON £ “ON GON | €9 ON | SP ON [“GIOD “quay
“HOWL “SRA 9S | “Mag "BIg “xq [dey “og| ‘Ng og] mg quy|-Ng “quqi-qdey u4¢ SNTEREAING saipadg SONGH ATIAV
SLY
SHONTHAADY ADVERT
eiajdoueufy Aq ‘dds snug 0} esemeq
93
FOREST PROTECTION
‘opaiyquad &V;z "Snqous NEV
SIF ect Il 681 GEt 1648 [OT Sa[Pean|-~ “sey Wuosyorta|"“sngomouowmb] | cspyuyperyyasy,
‘AN ‘So THA | “S80 ‘sa ‘$0
8 ‘ON LOGT 10. smq | 69 °ON | 8h “ON [GOH “Quay
‘HOY ‘SUL “ISA “IA “Sy 9278 [Mg UM) ME yA) sdey We] oONTMaZIAg sa1owag SONG TIAA
OS SLIUV I
SHONDMEIAY AUVEELIT
eieydouemARH Aq ‘dds xe] 0} osvumeg
FOREST PROTECTION
94
‘peat
TU TSUTOEnn IUCN Tr UTTTon ne ne ne
wecer fo scte ree “| 66 OF weoee |--------grog|-"Aqyy stuusdranifl-~-~-"~snza90420
ene eee 66 OF ge. [77777777 efOR |" 77 "FBA_stutoorgpD| ~~ -~~~~sn199049
ee StF 66 OF ee, |--7 7-777 cejog|arey, stpouswopgn|~ ~~~~~~sns900. 9 |" ~~ ~~ SPPEIg
OF9 ‘geo 1&P a Tore posers pew eenres gjog| } snosunajfisuuad|----snzouoduinp|~ ~ ~eppyarrog
nn ne nn geg |---~"seppeayy|"- 7777 "Aeg zadaqug|-~~-~-~sngowayy|-~~ ~~~ eapya
~TpsrUsL
fenueyy “BAT M ‘80 ‘8 °O ‘S80
8 [9048 9g °O G‘°ON | SP ON [WOOD “quay
-w0g «=| ng “BIS “XH! Ma FUG Ma IW) Wey YG) ONTIaaTag sa1odag SONG ATINV
SLUV
SHONTUGARY AUVAALT
A
giajdousmAy Aq ‘dds voodlg 0} osemed
FOREST PROTECTION 95
Damage to Populus spp. by Hymenoptera
LrveRARY REFERENCES
Parts
FamMILy GENUB SPECIES Surrerine | For. Bul. (St. Mus. Mem.
No. No. 8
U.S. N. Y¥
Tenthredinide!Janus.__.....- integer Nort...--- Twigs... 68 302
Pteronus_.....- ventralis Say...~- Leaves... 70 322
Damage to Alnus glutinosa by Hymenoptera
Lirerary REFERENCES
PARTs
FaMILy GENUS Sprcres Surrerina |Ex. Sta. Bul.
O.
Cornell
Tenthredinide| Kaliosphinga.__|dohrnii Tischb._..| Leaves. ._.... 58
96
"YSTRM, SBuLoonplof DEY LOLT |
TO foe G19 68& | 66 OF 64g sjoq ~~ wUry pquinjzoo| ~~~ ~~ ~~~ YowaL | |-"~~ SPs
iris rs rs rs Cnn: ais 90 |" "7" "SeA¥eT] |" ~~ ~~ “s8eIQ DyNpWp|~~ ~~~ ~DpUDag|-~~~~~epyT
~FperpuEL
8T9 66-01 819 | ~ 08S — a POL (FA SAY, “SArT|~“(Aueur Artes) *dds|~~~~ 970 ‘sdgufip|--—~ espydyadD
“KN “H NCWY | enue) “ACN "A ON “6° ‘$0 ‘s°0.
Q°ON OT ‘ON 849048 po 2 ON G‘ON | SP ON | Ul0D ‘guy
wey “sny “39] FpseT opmy | -wog j4doy 10,7) ‘4dery ‘1og/ Ing ‘yay|*ng ‘guy|ydey we] DNIaaaag saIogdg SONGS ATIAV GT
SLUVg
SGONDUSATY AUVUELIT
ezojdousemAp Aq ‘dds snozeng 0} odvemeg
97
ern nUInE Tc
OT 6F irs cis ia ee orn: Vries soAGOTT|- ~~~" pung tuyn|~~-vbunydsowp y
GGT fe sig | 7 GL 68 jn seAvaT |" YOVeT DUnIoWD) "~~~ LAU) | espru
~Tporq}uey,
O06 | TTT en CoG | 7 TT ir: acer ejog|"‘uUry snunaznosey|~ ~~ -snjyouodwmny|~ ~ ~epppuasz06g
“ACN [euz0-) jenusyy | “A N ‘S$ “O "S$ "0 ‘sO
3 “ON £86 “ON 8 poo}s L ON OF “ON | €S ON | 8F “ON
“may ‘snyy “asl "BIg “xm)| -UOD [yey Mog) Mg “reg| [NG “UH UW) PNAS saIDddg SONGS) ATINV A
SLUV
SHONWETARY AUVARLTT
I
eaisjdouemsy Aq ‘dds snwmyjg 0} edeumvg
FOREST PROTECTION
98
19 ST9 688 66 OF 628 ejog) ~~~ uwury nguenjoo
AN [enue AN 680 sn § 0
8 ON 8 30048 yb ON 6G ON | 8% ON | WOO Wy
mew sn 4+ “uo | MOY LOT] ME FUG] ME yay] ydey We) oNeHZang saloaag
RLUEV
SHONETUREETY LAVAS]
Eee
vie}douewsH Aq ‘dds se0y 0} odvueg
~ ~~ PPTs
ATA
99
FOREST PROTECTION
“9280701 8Vi
woeceetre po messes po soerress po teree SZ GZ | utr [ecco n oot grog
OIF LPP eae GOS 7 777 L6lr TTT SSIMT|~~~'S "OQ Djo01uI82.L|- ~~ ~ DIfuopwan
SSp FT TSP “6PPr OTS: ~ ~ 8641 Sa[pooN | ~~ "POV wprbi.wusd|~~ ~~ pefuoptaay jespryAWMopyoep,
cee! yenueyW “BA TM “ACN ‘$0 8 “0 ‘80
g °ON §,904S g¢ ‘ON L ‘ON @¢ ‘ON | SF ON |'mI09 ‘Qua,
‘OW “sn “99 -woyj [yng “wig *xq|adey ‘s0q| [ng ‘qUW| "Ng “FUN |ydey 4G] DNIUTZIAg sa10gag SONG) AIIWV
SLUV
SHONGHUEAAY AMVARLIT
eiejdiq Aq ‘dds snuig 0} oseweg
100 FOREST PROTECTION
Damage to Hicoria spp., by Diptera
LITERARY REFERENCES
PARTS
FAMILY GENUS SPECIES Surrerine |G’de Tfet.
AMNH
Cecidomyuidze| Ceceadomyra..._jcaryecola O § ...)/Leaves..._ - 27
Cecidomyia..._jholotricha O S .._\Leaves ...- 26
Cecrdomyra.__.|tubrcola O 8 ...-- Leaves...... 27
Damage to Quercus spp., by Diptera
a cane aaieehaeteatem Lesieniianiaaehiremananeemmimaieiindteinieaimummmmenmel
LITERARY REFERENCES
Parts
FAMILY GENUS Srpcres Surrerine | 5th Rept |G’de. L'flet
Ent Com No 16
Us jiAM. NE
Cecidomyuidee!| Cecudomyza_...inweimla O § ..-.|Leaves.....-| --... 31
Cecradomyra.._.iprlule Walsh ....|/Leaves...... 206 30
Ceeadomyia.....|poculum O § ....|/Leaves.....-| ..--- 30
Damage to Liriodendron spp. by Diptera
LITERARY REFERENCES
Parts
FAMILY GENUS SPEcrIES SuFFERING Gide U fet
fey
A M.N H
Cecidomyiidee|Cecedomyra..._jlurrodendri O 8 .-|Leaves.....- 25
Cecrdomyia._.....|fulaprfera O § ....|Leaves...... 25
Damage to Cornus florida by Diptera
LiveRaAry Ruererences
Parts
FamMiny GENUS SPHcInS Surrerine |G’de Udet
o
AMNHEH
Cecidomyiids|Cecidomyza....jcavula Beuten..../T wigs...-.... 29
Damage to Acer spp. by Diptera
larerary Rererences
Parts
Famiuy GHNUS Spacras SuFFHeRING (Sth Rept |G’de. L’flet
Ent Com No. 16
U.8 (IAM. N.C
Mycetophilids|Scrara......... ocellata O. 8....-. Leaves...... 411 33
101
FOREST PROTECTION
*sidspjuiipy A{IsULIO Ty
ween fe em “soe Gor “Tae rn TPL [OTT estima ~- 7 Avg vppqound|~ ~pioydouyd y\-~ ~ epidosieg
hierniana naar aiabaeel ZSF ~TA aoa Tate pre SIM EET TTT TTT moro El gsngg0g0gt
meen fan ere ---- “GP aan ~eae alaieneneee eteteienabeiat:>-) 7.0 Bp wa nen nen n=-nn- =} = =e eunauboot
6GZZ Tt GLI GGF T1Ig¢ T9 eos jp SOIPISN |" ~~" OL Dipofiurd| ~~, stdspuorwy | ~~ ~~~ wploooy
woeeneeee one eee aoe eee _-- a 208 [oo 89[P9ON TT ie Gas Rg ad SNUYIOT
nn nee TT SHIM J, 3 9Joq|~~~ ~~~" qABH] 290.448|~ ~~~ SaUbtaYy OD
261 6PL Sog omg [7777777 SBM T,| “Wop 820%.L000u0d | - ~~~ - sauliay)|~ ~~ ~seprprady
“KON “KN Tenusyy "BA CTM “AN Ss ‘oO "Ss "0.
g°o &g “ON §,Yoo}s 9g "ON 2, °O GON [WOH "Un
“UOPY “SnyY “IS | ‘Mg ‘san 3S] -MoQ [Mg “BIg “XW) "Ing “JOT|‘jng “woOq|"sdoy WIG] ONTagaaog sa10gag SONGH STINT
SLOT
SHONGUHARY AUVAERLTT
esajdiurayy Aq ‘dds snuig 0} odvureg
FOREST PROTECTION
102
‘SnUYODT BVy
ee
_ aed
woeeeeee aah FE Pe PPTs [ooo moe = 2 -- == snogosoatyay |" ~~ ~~ espy990|
es: Pras 62 __86 “see 2 oo SaAL, ~~“ PlOGD snott1gis| ~~" ~~ ~~ ~sauay
68T Sop 7 _ 8981 [77 cee an uur] styatqn| ~~ ~~~ ~~ soultay) |~~ ~~ eeprprady
‘8 "0. "BA A ‘S'0 | “S'o | 's"o
8 ‘ON og ‘ON | $9 ‘ON | Sh ON |"UI0D qua
“UO “SN IST “BIS “XH Mg YAq! [ng Eq) yey WIG) BNrEmerng sabadg FOND ATERVG
SLUV
SHONGUBAAY AMVUALIT
a dd
eiojdrmey Aq ‘dds veolg 0} esemeg
FOREST PROTECTION 103
Damage to Juglans spp. by Hemiptera
LiteraARY RereReNnces
Parts
Faminy GENUS SPECIES SUFFERING |Geol. Rept.
for 1899
Coccidze_.... Mytilasprs_.__. | nee Twigs......- 210
Damage to Hicoria spp. by Hemiptera
Liverary REFERENCES
FamMiny GENUS SPgcinps SuyRERING Geol. Rept Guide Leaflet St. Mus. Mem’
N. J. A.M. N. H. N. Y.
Aphididze.....|Phyllovera.|caryecaulis Fitch.|Lvs. & Twigs 209 38 331
Coccidee..._. Lecantum..|8P.....--ana-u-- Twigs....-..- 210 | deen fe ee
Damage to Alnus spp. by Hemiptera
Literary RereReNnces
Parts
FAMILY GENUS SPECIES Surrerina (5th Rept| Com- {[St. Mus. Mem
Ent. Com.| stock’s o. 8
U. Manual N. Y
Aphidide.___|Pemphigus..__-_|tessellatus Fitch ..|Lvs. & Twigs} 1637 1161 195
1As Schizoneura tessellata.
Damage to Fagus spp. by Hemiptera
LirerarRy Rererences
Parts
FAMILY GrNnvus SPECIES Sur¥HaRING Com-
stock’s
Manual
FELT TUE ae earn apdienemaaanamanaad Lonmpsamamenagmmen cor aiieiagameum ee pana nner aaoaz] |imeeen seaelaninesen anemones inainanndpainaneenestetibiaeseameenitnamtieasnnd lammiaimeameinetienemeneeiemmmmmeneciaenamnl (nmeemteammmntinniiaiaamnnel
Aphididz_....| Schazoneura_....;embricator Fitch....|Lvs, & Twigs 161
FOREST PROTECTION
104
S001} JMIJ UO GDUSIINDDO 841 YUM steep Al[edroutid ynq ‘snouTUINOA ST sotoeds sy} WO 9IN4VISFTT OU Lax ‘pppoig AjIeulIo0 gy,
RR
seems O1Z “= = ae ae wae ~--- IsBIay, 2 afog| JsuIOD snsoroiuied|—~~snjotpids Vy
6ZE OFL 7-7 nae -* “7 ~rar on" " “SBIM Ti ZYpe yy UWlN80701IDA| ~ WNIWUWNI2704L9}8 F
77 ns rare S9T alana seas ae wee pets SOABOT I~ TTT TTT gyrtt Sauna yy
Tose TES Oct ie If? T6 && TOOT" “SSIMT,| WUury wtoepuazdas| ~~" ~~~" u99tgt Ee |" ~~~ SPIPBIK)
‘ACN ‘A N [enueyy § 0 8 21 8 0 § 0
$ ON 6G ON 8 ,[9048 TZ ON | VL ON | SG ON | 8F ON
Mey sn I8| Ma sn 49 -UW09 nq JUY| Mg Fuq| ng Jug] Ng ‘yUyY| ONTARAAAG ga1Ipgdg
SLUV
SHONAUAATY LUVAALET
eioydimeapy Aq ‘dds snorend 0} eseured
FOREST PROTECTION 105
Damage to Ulmus spp. by Hemiptera
LiveRARY REFERENCES
Parts
FAamMILy GENUS SPECIES SuFFERING | St. Mus. Mem.
Oo.
N.Y.
Aphididae... . .|Callapterus....... ulmefole. Monell ..|Leaves...... 176
chizoneura._..j|americana Riley. .| Leaves... _. 177
Colopha....... ulmocola Fritch... .|Leaves.._... 186
Coccidse_..._ Chionaspis_.--- americana Johns..|Bole & Twigs 207
Gossyparia_..... spurva Mod.......|Bole & Twigs 203
Damage to Liriodendron spp. by Hemiptera
Literary RerereNnces
PARTS
Faminy GENUS SPECIES Surrerine | Geol. Rept. |St. Mus. Mem.
for 1899 No. 8
N. J. N.Y.
Coccide...... Eulecanium....\tulcpifere Cook___|Twigs......- 1210 208
1As Lecanium.
106
"mNAUDOOINT SY aneut ‘Dpvoy{y A[LOULIOTs
GlTI fo oct rs anes 7 “= 7a rs ins: minnie SOABOT|"~ ~“SOU], tt70ftieon| unydisoundsiq
7) a nls nn ee Ce es ene Cn ae seawory) ~~~ ~~" uu] 82.990| ~~ enioydopsny) | ~~~ ~esprprady
74 a ns en eee ITT} TEED Pp orret porerr po ttcen feo Soave] |""U 2 *M Djose90|~ ~~~ ~paupuaagng
SQL fT rs res ree “a “= rs (rin: Mannan SOABO'T (~~ "AUT Djootugon TT SNIDOIDUIY J
ss ere 6PrL oe “see en oe “ee oo Toes pT es BypOd |" 77 TT" fOex) stigon| ~~ “snoaq00pnas JF
0021 SPL oe ane wort fottrt potter potest poteret pereoce sqUIV] |B1q wnzmosfo16yu|~~~~~~ wunyuDoe'y
96T eo _69T _866 aaa aT 16 a4 4 Sn rrr: IAT! 4 Ssapiqnieunuur~~~~~ DIDUL NT
sorresses | seeeesee fo sees f ncnes nn 16 ge LIB [77 ~~" "SBYAT}ysutog snsoopsqauay|-~~~-engor
ic a is VS a Ire Te 16 ge Tn SBA. L|-“WUr] wpospuszdos
‘AN ‘ACN [ienuvw} “AN | ‘S'n | ‘8'o | ‘sn | ‘sn | ‘so
8 ‘ON Sf "ON | 8f00)8 | “ON | TL ‘ON | PION | 9 “ON | QF ‘ON |'aI0 “jug
“Me “SHAY “FSi "TR “snyy 4S} = -areg “4dey “IO Mg “say Rg Jaq Tad “saa Md "Faq ‘4dety TG ONTHRIING SaIDgdg
SLUV
SAONTUGADY AUVARLIT
vioidimepy Aq ‘dds 190y 0} oseued
FOREST PROTECTION 107
Damage to Various Woods by Isoptera
Literary RererReNnces
ARTS
FamMILy GENUS SPECIES Surrerine |Ag.¥r.Bk.(/St. Mus. Mem.
tor 1304 Ho.
Rn ee epiniricireritrenitellandniiiitinie | AMARA TEs | {iherririnnET TERRI NTT | SeVSSSANRoirTItTiRNTTTHTFSITTTSSRSR | (iiirrawinsiaewrrnrrr?TenisHSSTLSTSSSTSSS | SSSSS-IR}WSW/efiniimoriri/?Hl=TerTnS-A/RSSRRG} SAN AAAS camataaiaetimmnnen arnt
1As Termes.
Damage to Various Conifers by Orthoptera
LiterRaARyY REFHRENCES
Parts
FamiI.y GENUS SPECIES Surrerina |For. Rept.| Com-
' No. 7 stock’s
N. Y. Manual
Gryllide...... Gryllotalpa ._....\boreahs Burm. ....|Rts, nurse’ies| ...-. 117
Gryllus. nm @ PP..-..-------- Rts. murse’ies| ..... 117
8
Ocecanthus......|pint Beut........ Leaves..-... 512 118
FOREST PROTECTION
108
“ACN [snuey “Ua Rael ‘SA $0
8 “ON 8,90 | ZO-LOGT | SG °ON | SP ‘ON |WIOD “quq
“UOT “SN “S| “WO | “ydey “oq | Ing ‘yuA| "Ng ‘yuy|-4ydey THE ONINGAIOG saloadg SONGS)
cee SLUV
SHONGUGITY AMVUGLIT
ae
eiojdoyy1Q Aq soar], poavey-peoig snore, 0} odvuleg
FOREST PROTECTION 109
CHAPTER III: PROTECTION AGAINST PLANTS.
Par. 6. Protection Against Weeds.
Weeds are plants, herbaceous or lignaceous in character, the pre-
sence of which in the woods is financially undesirable.
A. Influencing Factors.
I. A plant may appear as a weed in one locality whilst
it is useful in another. Kalmia, e. g., is useful
on steep slopes by holding the soil; whilst it is
harmful on areas in regeneration. Grasses and
herbaceous weeds are valuable on forest pas-
tures; they may interfere, however, with natural
regeneration from seeds.
II. A plant may be considered as a weed at a certain
stage of certain sylvicultural operations. This
is the case with black gum, witch hazel, box
elder, halesia which forms a superstructure in-
terfering with the regeneration of yellow poplar,
chestnut, and yellow pine. On the other hand,
these same species may be valuable as an un-
dergrowth or as a companion growth with yel-
low poplar, chestnut, pine and oak after the
thicket stage.
II. A plant of a usually valuable kind may be classed
as a weed when it is hopelessly deformed; e. g.,
decrepit, hollow, burned chestnuts; fire shoots
of hickory and oak.
Thus the forester might distinguish between “ab-
solute weeds,” which are always damaging, and
“relative weeds,” which are damaging only
under a given set of conditions.
B. Most weeds injure the forest only indirectly. Direct damage is
done by parasitic weeds, in rare cases. The most note-worthy
eases of indirect injury are the following:
I. Smilax, grapevine, blackberry interfere with the
transportation of wood goods and with the ease
of access to the woods.
II. Sedge grass, heather, blueberry form a matting through
whieh water or air cannot pass.
110
III.
IV.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
X.
FOREST PROTECTION
The mineral fertility of the soil is absorbed by the
weeds (especially the fruiting weeds) competing
with the trees for a food supply.
The weeds, notably those produced after fires, inter-
fere with the natural regeneration of the best
species of the forest; they prevent, through dense
shade, the lignification of the valuable seed-
lings during summer. Instances are: Chinqua~
pin and gum in the case of yellow pine regener-
ation at Biltmore; witch hazel, dogwood in yel-
low poplar regeneration in Pisgah forest; black
jack oak in long leaf pine forests.
Some weeds distort and oppress the seedlings and
saplings after climbing to their tops. Grape-
vine on yellow poplar; Convolvulus on many
tree seedlings. In tropical countries, the tree
climbers (sometimes parasitic) are particularly
troublesome, notably in felling trees.
Certain weed species (notably Ericace) produce,
through their leaf fall, an unfavorable, dusty
humus.
Weeds harbor and hide mice and damaging insects.
Dead weeds increase the danger of fires, especially
in the spring.
The dead mould spread on the ground by many weeds
prevents the germinating seed of valuable species
from sending its rootlets into the mineral soil.
Certain weeds play an important part in the path-
ology of the trees, the weeds acting as hosts
for the second generation of certain fungi.
C. Means of Protection.
I.
Preventive measures.
a. Maintain a complete cover overhead—
a pious wish in the primeval forests.
b. Underplant light demanding species with
shade bearers at a time at which
the leaf canopy overhead, through
friction of crown against crown, be-
comes excessively open—another
pious wish under the present con-
ditions confronting American silvi-
culture.
ec. Work towards immediate reforestation
after making a clean sweep of the
old crop.
FOREST PROTECTION 111
d.
€.
Insist on thorough protection against
ground fires which, above all, foster
the growth of weeds and are in-
jurious to the nobility amongst the
forest species. Kalmia, chinquapin,
alder, soft maple, gum, halesia ob-
tain the upper hand in the forest
through fires. On fertile soil the
growth of annual and biennial weeds
after fires is especially luxuriant. In
the Adirondacks, the reforestation
of fire-swept tracts is handicapped
by the excessive growth of forest
weeds.
Admit for pasture cattle, hogs, sheep
and goats, thus checking at the
same time the danger from fires.
II. Restrictive Measures.
a.
b.
P-
©
D. Weed Species.
Cut (with a mowing scythe) herbaceous
weeds before the seed ripens.
In forest plantations, cultivate the rows
of plants, or raise farm crops to-
gether with seedlings.
Plow abandoned fields thorouglhy before
reforestation.
Crush blackberry briars; decapitate ferns;
skin thorns; deaden gum, dogwood,
maple, beech; remove the bark for
2 ft. above the stump on cotton-
woods to prevent the growth of root
suckers.
Cover the stumps of undesirable hard-
woods with dirt or brush; poison the
stumps; peel the stumps down into
the roots; set fire to brush heaps
massed upon such stumps in cop-
pice woods.
I. Andromeda, huckleberry, etc., are expelled by the
continued use of a briar scythe, preferably in
early August. Valuable seedlings are planted
on reversed sods when placed in thickets formed
by the above species.
112
II.
III.
VII.
VIII.
TX.
FOREST PROTECTION
Kalmia and Rhododendron may be checked by burn-
ing. They sprout luxuriantly after such burn-
ing. They do not catch up, however, with the
more rapid development of the seedlings planted
at the same time. In other cases, it is better
to allow ivy and laurel to grow unharmed. The
stems when over 4’’ in diameter can be dead-
ened readily.
Chinquapin may be deadened with crushing tongs
in spring.
Dogwood may be deadened. Dogwood sprouts grow
vigorously from the stumps; hence it will not
suffice to cut the dogwood with an axe.
Large trees of black gum are skinned or deadened.
It is impossible to get rid of small shoots.
Hazel, Vaccinium and Azalea on mountain pastures
can be checked by the use of a colter, by re-
peated mowings or, possibly, by pasturing goats.
Blackberry is expelled by crushing its shoots or by
skinning them between two pieces of timber.
Ferns should be decapitated in early spring.
Climbers (Clematis, Vitis, Ampelopsis and others) are
checked by cutting close to the ground.
FOREST PROTECTION 113
Par. 7. Protection Against Fungi.
The diseases of our American trees caused by fungi have been studied by
Dr. Hermann von Schrenk, of the Shaw School of Botany. Still, it must
be admitted that our knowledge of the diseases of trees induced by eryp-
togamic parasites is deficient or inadequate. In the forest, obviously, the
present conditions confronting forestry do not allow of “tree doctoring.”
Nurseries and young plantations in which fungi may cause enormous dam-
age are practically absent from our forests. Fungi directly causing the
death of trees, of over 12 inches d.b.h., are practically unknown.
Saplings and poles killed by fungi die from below, whilst those killed
by insects die from above.
A. Effect of Fungus Infection.
Observations in the United States are at hand only with re-
ference to fungi of a technically damaging character.
Such fungi may cause:—
I. Disintegration of lignin, leaving the shining white
fibres of cellulose untouched.
II. Disintegration of cellulose leaving a brittle brown
mass resembling charcoal.
III. Disintegration of entire cell walls, leaving a hole
or holes.
IV. Liquification of the rosin incrustating the heart-
wood, in which case the rosin exudes at branch
holes where it solidifies by oxidation, forming
knots, galls or streaks of rosin.
B. Parts of Tree Infected; and Methods of Infection.
Fungi may attack the heartwood, or the sapwood, or
both heartwood and sapwood. Heartwood fungi (which never
kill a tree directly) enter through insect mines; through axe
scars; through branch stubs having heartwood, or through
tops broken off by snow, by sleet, by falling neighbors or by
storm. For the latter reason, diseased timber prevails fre-
quently along wind swept ridges and shores,
Sapwood fungi may use the same channels of access, or
may enter the wood through lightning streaks and through
fire clefts. Sapwood resists the attack of fungi much better
than heartwood as long as the tree lives. The sapwood is the
life zone of the tree in which it defends itself readily, by thick-
ening its cell walls or by cell wall incrustations, or by form-
ing cork against the spread of hyphe.
In dead trees, on the other hand, sapwood decomposes
much more readily than heartwood owing to the absence of
F
114
FOREST PROTECTION
incrustating substances and owing to the presence of more
moisture, more starch and more albumen.
The insects co-operate with the fungi to an unknown ex-
tent. Corky bark being fungus-proof, many spores enter the
galleries of boring insects either carried by the wind or car-
ried in the “fur’’ of borers and enemies of borers. It might
be stated that the insects distribute spores in the same man-~
ner in which the birds or the rodents distribute seeds. <A par-
ticularly interesting case is that of “Ambrosia,” a fungus
supposed to be raised by the Ambrosia beetles. Cyllene ro-
binie makespossible the inroads of Polyporus rimosus. Dis-
coloration of the sapwood coincides with the attacks of Den-~
droctonus frontalis and follows the “steamships’’ in oak lum-
ber. A fungus-lawn is found in the mines of Lymexylon.
Infection is performed
(a) most frequently by spores,
1. in dew or rain (notably—the lower fungi);
2. by wind (notably—the higher fungi);
3. by insects (rarely, after Tubeuf);
4. by forcible ejection of spores from sporocarps, asci
and sporangia.
(b) more rarely by mycelium,
1. notably when the mycelium lives in the earth, or rather
in the roots (Trametes radiciperda, Agaricus melleus “(Rhizo-
morphs)’’;
2. also above ground, the mycelium spreading from plant
to plant (Trichospheria, Herpotrichia).
Many fungi appear immediately after the affection of
the tree by other detrimental influences (e. g. after insects,
fire, storm, drought), so that it is possible to decide upon the
immediate cause of damage inflicted only by the test of arti-
ficial infection. The fungi found present upon a dead tree
can never be considered, eo «pso, as tree killers.
In many cases the mycelium of the tree killer has dis-
appeared when the tree is dead; and only sporocarps may be
still present. Many parasites on the other hand develop
sporocarps only saprophytically on a dead substratum.
Certain timber fungi stop work at once when the tree is
cut, e. g., the yellow rot fungus of black locust and the peck-
iness fungus of bald cypress. The progress of decay, in such
cases, ends with the death of the tree.
The speed at which a fungus disease spreads from a given
point of attack is entirely unknown. This speed is very fast
in the case of saprophytes working in dead sapwood; it is prob-
ably very slow in the case of parasitic fungi attacking the
heartwood of grown trees.
FOREST PROTECTION 115
The tales of cruisers to the effect that a tract will “be-
come punky in ten to fifteen years’? do not seem to deserve
any credit.
An old tree is, ceteris paribus, more readily affected, and
more apt to be found affected by disease, than a young one.
C. Beneficial Fungi.
The symbiosis of certain fungi with certain trees (dis-
covered by Frank) seems to be beneficial to both; possibly
essential to both.
Many of our trees and shrubs are dependent upon cer-
tain fungi, at least for such foods as are derived from humus.
These fungi consist of delicate, cobwebby threads such as
are seen on mouldy bread. These threads spread through
the soil and either enter the outer cells of the root or simply
form a mantle (Mycorrhiza) about the root. The fungi live
upon decaying animal and plant matter, and transfer a por-
tion of this food to the root and doubtless secure in return
certain benefits from the root. This mutual helpful relation-
ship of two plants is termed commensalism.
The majority of our heaths, evergreens, poplars, willows,
beeches and oaks have become dependent upon these fungi
and do not thrive in soils where the fungi are not found.
Some herbaceous plants, like the Indian-pipe, have be-
come entirely dependent upon these fungi for food and have,
as a consequence, lost all their chlorophyll.
This field of forest ecological study is practically un-
touched, though it will form the basis of future silviculture.
Certain fungi might be used, technologically, for the prepar-
ation of pure cellulose.
D. Signs of disease.
The signs of disease are visible only on a tree, usually,
when it is too late to save the patient.
These signs are:—
A. Hypertrophical swellings, f.i., knots on Spanish oak
and tumors on yellow pine at Biltmore.
B. Exudations of rosin in galls or in seams.
©. Appearance of sporophores, which are rare in some
species, but are frequently seen on diseased red
oak, locust, and ash. When decaying holes ap-
pear on a tree, the forester is apt to find the
whole tree diseased. Yellow poplar trees are
sound within one foot, and white oak logs are
sound within two feet from the actual end of
a cavity.
116 FOREST PROTECTION
The tree weeds, e. g., Halesia (Mohrodendron), gum and
calmia, might be exterminated in days to come with the help
of their fungus enemies.
E. Synopsis of the orders of damaging fungi.
I. Order Phycomycetes. Family Peronosporee.
The mycelium is unicellular. The propa-
gation is effected by numerous branching hyphe
forming at their tips little sacs or sporangia in
clusters or chains (conidia). These are carried
by wind to other plants where they germinate
at once, forming a tube that penetrates the leaf.
If the leaf is wet, the contents of the sporangia
break up into a number of zoospores which de-
velop the characteristic hyphe of the fungi.
Sexual reproduction occurs in most species and
consists of a gametangia cut off from the ends
of the hyphe and fertilized by male gametes
developed on branches (antheridia) of the game-
tangia bearing hyphe. The resulting thick walled
gametospore tides the fungus over winter.
American representatives are not fully known.
Some bad nursery fungi belong to this family
(notably Phytophtora omnivora).
II. Order Ascomycetes.
Ist. Family—Pyrenomycetes.
Flask-shaped frutifications (peri-
thecia) are characteristic of this fam-
ily. Within the perithecia, which are
open at the top (angiocarpous), occur
numerous asci, each containing eight
spores. Preceeding the formation of
perithecia, conidiospores are usually
formed which are especially efficaci-
ous in disseminating the fungi. Ex-
amples: Nectria on maple and beech.
2nd. Family—Discomycetes.
Distinguished by open gymnocar-
pous apothecia (cup-shaped recepta-
cles, bearing freely exposed asci).
The Discomycetes are unimportant
for the American forester, none being
observed as damaging our trees. Rhy-
tisma acerinum frequently forms large
black incrustations of pseudo-paren-
chyma on the leaves of maple, conidia
developing in the summer and mature
FOREST PROTECTION 117
apothecia in the succeeding spring.
The most important representative of
this family in Europe is Peziza.
III. Order Basidiomycetes.
Spores carried on basidia of definite shape
and size, and bearing a fixed number of spores.
Ist.
2nd.
Family— Uredinew.
All are injurious parasites, the
mycelium being in the intercellular
spaces of the tissues (particularly in
the leaves) of higher plants. These
fungi change their hostplants, showing
a double generation, and develop sev-
eral kinds of asexual spores, according
to the season and to the host; scidio-
spores and pycnoconidia in spring;
uredospores in summer; teleutospores
in autumn, which in the following
spring develop basidiospores. The my-
celium from the basidiospores enters
the first host and develops the sci-
dium stage (formerly the genus Ae-
cidium) with ecidia and pycnidia. The
next stage on a different host develops
the uredospores (formerly genus Ure-
do), and in autumn the thick walled
teleutospores.
Family—Hymenomycetes.
Basidia imbedded in a common
hymenium which clothes, in Agari-
cacee, a, series of radial lamelle on the
under side of the pileus, and in Poly-
poracee and Boletacee, the inner sur-
face of pores.
In a few genera no distinctive
fructifications are formed (Hzxobast-
dium vaccinii, parasitic and causing
hypertrophy on Hricacee).
Another arrangement of the orders
and families of fungi might be made
with reference to pathogeny:
a. The groups
Uredinee
Ustilaginece contain parasites only,
(so-called “‘Smuts”) | so that no proof of
Peronosporee parasitism is required.
Exoascee
(witch broom)
118
FOREST PROTECTION
b. The groups
Pyrenomycetes
Discomycetes contain parasites as
Hymenomycetes well as saprophytes so
Myxomycetes that proof of parasi-
And several groups\ tism is required.
of lower fungi and
bacteria.
This proof is obtained by artificial infection only.
Infection reveals,—
(1) parasitic nature of a fungus,
(2) exact species of fungus,
(3) relationship of hetercecious Uredinee and
their host plants (uredinal, telial and
zecidial stages),
(4) various forms of reproductive organs,
(5) conditions favorable to attacks.
The fungi might be further divided into two
large groups, namely:
(a) Physiologically obnoxious species (tree killers
and tree deformers) belonging to the
orders Phycomycetes and Ascomycetes and
to the family Uredinee of the order
Basidiomycetes.
(b) Technically obnoxious species (wood disin-
tegrators) belonging notably to the fam-
ily Hymenomycetes; this group may be
sub-divided into fungi living on dead
trees (Saprophytes) and fungi living on
live trees (Parasites).
Group (a) is of greatest importance
in Germany and France; whilst group
(b) is of greatest importance in the
United States.
F. According to parts attacked, the forest fungi might be subdivided
as follows:
VI.
Nursery fungi and plantation fungi.
Root fungi in saplings and poles.
Leaf and twig fungi. (Bulletin Bureau of Plant In-
dustry No. 149, page 18).
Fungi causing hypertrophical formations (witch
brooms).
Fungi discoloring lumber or timber.
Fungi destroying the cambium and the sapwood of
standing trees or poles.
FOREST PROTECTION 119
VII. Fungi destroying the sapwood of dead trees and of logs.
VIII. Fungi destroying the heartwood in living trees.
IX. Fungi destroying timber, ties, poles and posts after
manufacture and whilst in use.
G. Fungus species worthy of note which are physiologically obnoxious.
I. Agaricus melleus (honey fungus) is a champignon
attacking and killing conifers four to fifteen
years old. White pine suffers very badly. The
disease spreads underground through the so-
called rhizomorpha (strong threads of mycel-
ium). The soil at the basis of affected plants
is charged with exuded rosin. Comp. Bull. Plant
Industry, No. 149, page 23.
II. Aecidium pint attacks the needles and the young
bark of pine saplings. The spores enter by a
wound and the spread of the mycelium in the
cambium causes hypertrophical formations, es-
pecially on the main stem. The teleutosporous
generation has a Senecio species for its host
(Coleosportum senecionis).
III. Peridermium cerebrum (family Uredinew) kills two
year old lodgepole pines as well as other pines.
(Agric. Year Book 1900, p. 200).
IV. Peridermium strobt, known as the blister of the white
pine, has Pinus cembra for its original host.
Whilst it does not injure this species seriously,
its attacks are deadly to our white pine during
its juvenile stage. In old trees well protected
by heavy bark, the tops and branches alone are
affected. The disease is frequent abroad; and
stringent measures should prevent it from en-
tering into the United States. The uredal form
of the fungus (Cronartium ribicolum) forms blotches
on the leaves of the currant (Ribes), Compare
Quarterly Journal of Forestry, July, 1909, p. 282.
V. A Gymnosporangium causes the “Cedar apples” of
red cedar; see Bull. 21, Div. of Pathology, p. 8.
For. Bull. 31 (Red Cedar) p. 26.
VI. Hysterium pinastri causes the shedding disease dreaded
in nurseries. Pine seedlings up to four years
old drop the needles of a sudden in spring. White
pine is little affected; strong seedlings are im-
mune. The disease spreads through old needles
on which the fungus lives saprophytically. Not
observed in America so far.
120
FOREST PROTECTION
VII. Diaporthe parasitica (discovered by Dr. Murrill) is
the worst treekilling disease yet described in
the United States. It tends to exterminate the
chestnut trees from New York to Virginia, and
is spreading southward. Entering the cambial
layers of the tree and notably those of its branches
without the requirement of preceding wounds,
the mycelium actually “girdles’’ the living trees
(W. A. Murrill, in Jour. N. Y. Bot. Garden 7:
143-158; Bull. No. 149, Bureau of Plant Indus-
try, p. 22).
VIII. Hypoderma strobicola is the “needle blight’’ of the
white pine and appears to be a dangerous para-
site on Pinus Sirobus. Compare Tubeuf’s “Dis-
eases of Plants,’ english edition by W. G. Smith,
p. 233. Tubeuf claims that the disease may
devastate whole tracts of forests. A disease of
the white pine similar to that described by Tubeuf
has been reported from Massachusetts (various
articles in Woodland and Roadside), from Wes-
tern North Carolina and from eastern Tennessee,
and is being studied by the pathological divis-
ions of the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. Compare
Circular No. 35, Bureau of Plant Industry.
“Damping-off’’ is a disease of seedlings soon after
ping:
germination dreaded by all nurserymen, and
decimating many natural regenerations (birch!).
The fungi causing the disease are undescribed.
H. Fungus species worthy of note which are technically obnoxious.
The genus Polyporus (including Trametes, Fomes, Boletus,
Polystictus, and Dedalea) is responsible for the decomposi-
tion of heartwood in living trees frequently brought about
by the help of an enzym.
Overaged timber is almost invariably attacked by Poly-
The sporophores may appear in branch holes or scars,
and are, although the disease might be common, rare in many
Most noteworthy are the following Polypori:—
I. Polyporus annosus (or Trametes radiciperda), a root
fungus of conifers, attacks pole woods. Sporo-
phores under ground in roots. Wood turns brown
to begin with and is finally hollowed out. (Agric.
Year Book 1900, p. 207).
II. Trametes pini causes the heartwood rot (known as
“red heart’’) of pine; the punkiness and per-
haps the ring cracks of fir, long leaf, short leaf,
II.
IV.
VI.
VII.
VITl.
FOREST PROTECTION 121
and sugar pines; the speckled rot or red heart
of Douglas fir; the cork of western hemlock.
It is found only in trees over forty years old,
usually more in the top of the tree,—but in
Pinus monticola close to the gound. The wood
never rots out entirely and the absence of cavi-
ties is characteristic of this fungus. It enters
through branch stubs containing heartwood.
Reference Bull. For. 33, p. 15; F. & I. 1902,
p. 62; Agric. Year Book 1900, plate XXII. and
XXIV. and page 206.
Polyporus juniperinus creates long holes coated white
in the heartwood of red cedar. (For. Bull. 31,
p-. 25; Agric. Year Book 1900, p. 208; Bull. 21
of Div. of Vegetable Pathology).
Polyporus carneus causes the red rot of red cedar
and of arbor vite. The wood splits into small
cubes, charcoal like. (Bull. 21 of Div. of Vege-
table Physiology and Pathology; For. Bull. 21,
p. 26).
Polyporus versicolor causes the soft rot of live catalpa,
Polyporus catalpe the brown rot of the species;
Bull. Bureau Plant Industry, No. 149, page 47
and pp. 538 to 56; Bull. 37 of Bureau of Forestry,
pp. 51-58; also in oak and hemlock and beech
(For. Bull. 51, p. 31) as a saprophyte on ties.
Polyporus rimosus causes the yellow rot of black
locust, in its heartwood. Holes made by locust
borers (Cyllene robiniw) serve as entrances,
(Agric. Year Book 1900, p. 207); Contr. Shaw
School of Botany, No. 17; Bureau Plant Indus-
try Bull. No. 149, p. 45.
Polyporus schweiniizti causes the “butt rot,” “ground
rot’? or “root rot’’ of all conifers, notably of
Douglas fir and hemlock. Fungus enters at the
base of the tree through insect mines. Trees
die in patches; sporophores are short-lived.
(Bull. For. 33, p. 15; F. & I. 1902, p. 61; Agric.
Year Book 1900, p.p 203 and 206, and plate
XXIV).
Polyporus fraxinophilus occurs in white ash having
over seven inches d.b.b. The hyphe seem to
enter by the water niches left by broken branches.
Wood becomes straw colored. Very frequent.
Reference Bull. 82 and Bull. 149, page 46, of
Bureau of Plant Industry.
122 FOREST PROTECTION
IX. Polyporus nigricans attacks beech, birch and poplar
in the New England States causing standing
timber to rot. (Agric. Year Book 1900, p. 207;
Bulletin Bureau Plant Industry No. 149, p. 42).
Xx. Polyporus sulfureus causes the brown rot of many
conifers, also of oak, walnut and cherry. (Bull.
Bureau Plant Industry No. 149, page 37; Agric.
Year Book 1900, p. 207).
XI. Polyporus igniartus occurs everywhere on beech and
oak. (Agric. Year Book 1900, p. 207; Bulletin
Bureau Plant Industry, No. 149, pp. 25 to 37).
XIT. Polyporus ibocedris causes the peckiness of bald
cypress and the pin rot of incense cedar. The
pecks consist of disconnected holes (or pockets)
about 4’’ long ending abruptly and partially
filled with brown powder. Found in trees over
100 years old. Reference: Contr. Shaw School
of Botany, No. 14.
XIII. Polyporus pinicola. Western conifers, four years after
death, are found entirely destroyed by Poly-
porus pinicola. Reference: F. & I., 1902, p. 60;
Agric. Year Book 1900, pp. 202 and 209 and
plate A XV.
XIV. Polyporus obtusus is a common cause of the sap rot
in dead oak trees (Bull. Bureau of Plant In-
dustry, p. 41).
XV. Polyporus fulvus causes the so-called “red heart”
of the birch (Bull. Bureau of Plant Industry,
p. 47).
XVI. Polyporus squamosus causes “white rot’’ in various
hardwood trees, e. g. maple, oak, beech, birch
and ash. (Bull. Bureau of Plant Industry, p. 48).
XVII. Polyporus pergamenus causes the “sap rot’’ of trees
and logs—often after fires—in many hardwoods
(notably oak); its work is particularly quick, and
so is the rapidity of its fruiting (Bull. Bureau of
Plant Industry, No. 149, p. 56).
XVIII. Polyporus betulinus and fomentarius may parasiti-
cally weaken living birches and beeches (Mayr),
or may be satisfied to cause the decomposition
of weakened and of dead wood (Von Schrenk),
(Bull. Bureau of Plant Industry, No. 149, p. 49).
XIX. Polyporus applanatus is reported as the killer (?) of
cottonwoods (Bull. Bureau of Plant Industry,
No, 149, p. 58).
FOREST PROTECTION 123
XX. Polyporus ponderosus n. sp., described in detail by
H. von Schrenk in Bull. 36 of Bureau of Plant
Industry, p. 37 f.f.g., causes the red rot of Pinus
ponderosa killed by insect pests at the lapse of
two years. The fungus is a saprophyte closely
resembling Polyporus pinicola.
I, Aside of the Polyport, the following technically obnoxious fungi
deserve attention.
I. Lenzttes sepiaria is a saprophyt preying on hemlock,
long leaf and short leaf pine—notably on rail-
road ties. (Reference For. Bull. 51).
II. Schizophyllum commune attacks railroad ties of short
leaf pine, hemlock, etc. saprophytically. (Ref.
For. Bull. 51).
III. Unnamed fungus, the sporophores of which are un-
known, attacks Sequota sempervirens and causes
“brown rot’’ (or “butt rot’’ or “pin rot’’), the
decay beginning in the inner rings of heartwood
near the ground. The fibre is converted into
pockets, usually twice as broad as long, filled
with dark brown matter. (Reference: For. Bull.
38, pp. 29-31, and plates X. and XI).
IV. Ceratostomella (Spheria) pilifera, a saprophyt of the
family Discomycetes, causes the bluing of sap-
wood in the lumber and in the dead boles (killed
by Dendroctonus) of Pinus ponderosa. This fungus
does not interfere with the strength of the tim-
ber; it decreases its fissibility—a disadvantage
in cutting of railroad ties. The spores seem to
enter through the ladder mines made by the
Ambrosia beetles—but do not seem to develop
into Ambrosia. Reference: Bull. 36, Bureau of
Plant Industry entire.
“The bluing’’ of the sapwood in logs and
lumber is disastrous notably to the value of
poplar logs driven or rafted to destination dur-
ing spring and summer, of poplar sap lumber,
pine saps, sap gum and the like, sawed and slowly
air dried during spring and summer. These in-
juries are due to undescribed fungi.
V. Echinodontium tinctorium attacks western hemlock
causing “cork,’—like Trametes pint; also in
spruce and red fir. (Reference: For. Bull. 38,
p. 15).
124 FOREST PROTECTION
J. General remedies against fungi on live trees.
I. Extermination or removal of the fungus itself;
(1) in case of seeds, by sterilization with hot
water, or copper “steep-mixtures.”’
(2) in case of leaf-fungi, by dusting or spray-
ing with mixtures containing copper or
sulphur.
(3) in case of Agaricacee and Polyporacee, by
removal of sporophores, by excision;
(4) in case of dead parts of plants carrying
sporocarps, or other reproductive stages
of fungi, by dead-pruning, or removal
of dead litter on ground.
II. Extermination of living host or of affected parts of
same.
(1) Removal of living host.
(2) Removal of complimentary (hetercecious)
host.
III. Avoidance of conditions favoring infection.
(1) no wounds, or antiseptic treatment of same;
(2) avoidance of localities favorable to disease;
(3) no large, even aged, pure forests;
(4) no selection systems, no summer cutting;
(5) rotation of crops;
(6) no planting of hetercecious hosts together;
(7) xaixed forests; short rotation; suppression of
boring insects; no artificial pruning of
living branches;
(8) raising strong trees of individual power of
resistence and independent for help from
neighbors;
(9) improvement cuttings and thinnings.
K. General remedies against fungi in nurseries.
(1) Change of species, notably in nursery beds.
(2) Sterilized soil in nursery beds.
. (8) Deep trenches between nursery beds.
(4) Drenching the beds with a weak solution of sulphuric
acid (one ounce of acid to one gallon of water)
prior to seed planting and after the sprouting
of the seedlings. Compare Circular No. 4, Bu-
reau of Plant Industry.
(5) Production of fungus proof varieties.
(6) Spraying of affected leaves or shoots, or beds with
Bordeaux mixture, consisting of a 3% solution
of copper sulphate and lime (Recipe, Tubeuf
& Smith, page 69).
FOREST PROTECTION 125
LZ. General remedies against fungi in young regenerations.
(1) Use very strong plants.
(2) Do not buy plants from nurseries known to be infested.
(3) Toungya.
(4) Avoid foreigners.
(5) Plant only kinds known to suit the locality.
(6) No regeneration from mother trees in pine (Hyster-
zum!) in beech (Phytophtora!) ete.
(7) No seedlings of conifers near stumps of hardwoods.
M. General remedies against fungi in lumber, ties and poles.
(1) Wet storage; preservation in ponds (mill), saltwater
(tamarack), running water (Cesar’s Rhine bridge),
swamps (Ky. walnut).
(2) Dry storage (like furniture) under shelter; dry kiln!!
(3) “Antistain,” or “painting,” or exposure to sun and
wind; or else interruption of logging and mill-
ing from April to September.
(4) Impregnation either of the wood, or of the medium
in which the wood is kept. (Compare H. von
Schrenk, in Bull. 14, Bureau of Plant Industry;
further Lectures on “ Utilization’? by GC. A.
Schenck, paragraph XLIV).
126
FOREST PROTECTION
Par. 8. Protection Against Parasites Other Than Fungi.
A. A number of phanerogams live parasitically upon various trees,
notably in the tropics.
In the United States, the common mistletoe (Phoraden-
dron flavescens) and the dwarf mistletoe (Arceuthobium cryp-
topoda and pustllum) are worthy of note. (Bull. Bureau of
Plant Industry No. 149, pp. 14 to 17). Arceuthobium occi~
dentale deforms the bole and the branches of western hem-
lock, causing cancerous tumors (Plate VI, Forestry Bulletin
No. 33, p. 16).
The damage done by these parasites is so insignificant
that remedies are nowhere indicated.
Tree mosses, tree algze and tree lichens are variously reported as
malefactors when occurring in such quantities that young
leaves and fresh shoots are smothered by them. It is possible
also that they interfere with the function of the “lenticels.”
Tillandsia usneordes and Usnea barbaia may be mentioned
as representatives of this group. The former called “Spanish
moss’’ is a flowering plant, common on trees in the Southern
States; the latter, a lichen, is abundant in northern swamps
and woods. Compare Bulletin No. 149, Bureau of Plant In-
dustry, page 17.
Part B: Protection Against Inorganic Nature.
CHAPTER I: PROTECTION AGAINST ADVERSE
CLIMATIC INFLUENCES.
Par. 9. Protection Against Frost.
Frost May sre BENEFICIAL
By checking insect plagues (late frost), also mice and other rodents,
decimating them in cold and protracted winters;
By clipping back inferior species competing with aristocrats (beech
vs. oak at Viernheim); undesirable coppice sprouts, cut in Aug-
ust, are apt to die;
By furnishing ice on lakes and on iced roads, creating conditions favor-
able to transportation by sleds, and steady weather for logging,
skidding, etc.;
By increasing the value of firewood, and oftentimes by forcing men
to take employment in the woods when other occupations are barred
by frost.
A. Frost 1s InJuriIovus ro UTILIZATION
By INTERFERING
1. in the south with the logging operations,—owing to the
unreliability of the occurrence of frost; the necessity
of shoeing cattle; the formation of jams in flumes;
the interference by late frost with tan bark peeling,
etc.; also by bursting trees, when felled in frozen con-
dition; by toughness of fibre so as to retard the feed
of the saw-carriage; by danger to water pipes, con-
nected with engines, boilers, locomotives, donkey
engines, etc.; by necessity of changing the setting of
the teeth, and the temper and the speed of the saw.
2. in the north with water transportation on the lakes (no-
tably Great Lakes) and rivers (notably St. Lawrence),
B. Frost 1s Insurious PHysioLoGicaLLy (SYLVICULTURALLY)
By KILLING LEAVES, BUDS, SHOOTS, BRANCHES (notably sappy
shoots), flowers and fruits, seedlings and (rarely) saplings.
There is no proof at band of poles or trees of native species being
killed by frost.
Foreigners (e. g., palms, eucalypts and many species tried in nor-
thern prairies) are subject to frost.
127
128 FOREST PROTECTION
Absolute cold is not injurious, eo tpso, to native species, which
know how to protect themselves
by leaves dropped
by non-freezing cell contents
by lignification
by cork layers, bud scales, hairs
by color
by position (rolled up rhododendron leaves)
by beginning growth late and by finishing it early.
The death of a specimen, or of parts of it, is brought about, in all
probability, by a rapid transition from cold to warm (cite
various theories, and experiments made to support them).
Hence it is that the severe frost of winter, or frost occurring
at a time at which plants are protected, is less injurious than
a light early frost in fall or a light late frost in spring.
Frost occurring unexpectedly is most injurious,—and particularly
so to the young parts of an old plant or to a plant, all parts
of which are young and tender (e. g., germinating seedlings).
(a) INFLUENCING FACTORS ARE:
Locality (frost holes), latitude, altitude, exposures
(eastern);
Atmospheric conditions preceding and following
a cold spell;
Snow cover;
Condition of plant (germs sprouting; buds open-
ing; shoots lengthening; lignification unfin-
ished);
Size (age) of plants;
Presence or absence of wind.
(b) CoNSEQUENCES OF FROST ARE:
Failures of nursery beds;
Failure of natural seed regenerations;
Failure of seed years;
Failure of seedlings to compete with weeds (e. g.,
sedgegrass and walnut at Biltmore), and with
rabbits (e. g., maple and chestnutoak at
Biltmore);
Saplings and seedlings growing bushy or forking
(cherry, loosing tips of shoots incessantly;
larch, at Biltmore, on Bradley Plantation,
due to September frost, 1906; echinata at
Biltmore, everywhere, due to September frost,
1906);
Aristocrats smothered by mob (walnut at Bilt-
more overtopped by hard maple, owing to
frost);
FOREST PROTECTION 129
Shortened growing season;
Restricted number of species locally producible;
Double rings of wood, and possibly windshakes
in wood;
Weakened condition of a tree, subjecting it to
insects and fungi, and also to breakage by
storm, snow and sleet, owing to the reduced
elasticity of the fibre.
(c) SPECIES AFFLICTED:
The species known to suffer, in one way or an-
other, from frost are called “sensitive;’’ the
others are known as “hardy’’ species.
HARDY SENSITIVE
AT BILTMORE
Chestnut Beech
Maples Oaks
Black Gum Catalpa
Seotch Pine Oregon Ash
White Pine Oregon Maple
Rigid Pine Box Elder
Halesia Pinus ponderosa
Cottonwood Pinus lambertiana
Hickories Pinus echinata
Spruces Edgeworthia
Douglasia Walnut
Yellow Poplar Buckeye
(d) Tam REMEDIES AGAINST FROST ARE ALMOST ENTIRELY
PREVENTIVE:
(Restrictive measures are possible only in nur-
series, and consist in watering the beds after
very cold nights).
1. IN NURSERIES:
Late planting of seeds in spring, where late frost
is dreaded; or else early planting where early
frost is feared in fall;
Lath screens, or nursery under cover (unless
lignification is handicapped);
Clouds of smoke on frosty mornings;
Avoidance of east aspects;
Heeling-out transplants, so as to retard sprout-
ing in spring;
H
130 FOREST PROTECTION
Avoidance of dense stands in seed beds (ash seed-
lings at Biltmore failed to lignify in 19085,
excepting those at outer edge).
2. IN PLANTATIONS:
Remarx: A seedling once crippled by frost is
apt to be crippled again, and again, and
again, owing to the fact, that the replace-
ment of organs once lost takes time; so that
the growing season is shortened. The wal-
nuts and buckeyes at Biltmore, once clipped
back by frost have been clipped back an-
nually.
Early planting in spring to avoid early frost;
Late planting in spring to avoid late frost;
No experimenting with the introduction of new
species;
Natural regeneration of Pinus echinata (also
White Pine in Adirondacks) to avoid for-
mation of double whirls;
Planting sensitive species beneath a light cover
overhead, so as to prevent excessive height
growth, or premature formation of spring
shoots.
Use of strong stocky seedlings, since minute
plants are prevented from lignification by
shading weeds.
Selecting species suiting the soil (walnut on best
soil, where it will lignify; echinata on poor
soil, where it will form one shoot only),
the exposure, and the climate (prairie plant-
ing);
Cultivation, so as to stimulate insolation and
lignification; possibly pruning to same end;
or else to give the lead to one side shoot
amongst several when the leader is frost-
killed.
3. IN NATURAL SEED REGENERATION:
Progress of the axe in shelterwood-types accord-
ing to the requirements of the seedlings,
viz., slow, where late frost is feared, so as
to retard the act of sprouting in spring;
or else rapid, where early frost is feared,
so as to allow of lignification;
Untimely and sudden removal of mother trees
may shock tender plants (even spruce 5’
high), on the other hand.
C. Frost is Insurious
FOREST PROTECTION 131
Frost may be invited on purpose to check a less
desirable species in mixture with a hardier
and more desirable species.
BY LIFTING (UPROOTING) SELDLINGS IN NURSERIES AND PLANTATIONS.
Subject to damage are
Flat rooted species growing slowly in early youth, notably
conifers (yellow pine yearlings, white pine yearlings,
spruce, hemlock);
Moist localities and loose soil;
East exposures, and notably steep east aspects.
(a) Remedial measures are:
Pressing seedlings back, soon after accident.
(b) Restrictive measures are:
1. In NURSERIES:
Drainage by deep paths (middlings) between the
beds;
Proper exration of soil;
Seedbeds planted broadcast;
Strong seedlings, and long roots;
Shading beds, and covering space between the
rows of plants;
No weeding in early fall.
2. IN PLANTATIONS:
D. Frosr is Insuriovus
Planting on reversed sods;
Mound planting;
Planting three year-olds (two year old trans-
plants in case of yellow pine);
Planting ball plants;
Planting under shelter overhead.
BY CAUSING FROST CRACKS
in hardwoods only, notably in case of injured trees and of
species having strong medullary rays.
Insect disease and fungus disease follow in the cracks.
Remepy: Timely thinning or improvement cutting.
Cracks occur, notably,
along lower part of bole;
on standards over coppice;
on south side of trees;
on medium sized trees (114’-3’).
in moist localities.
132 FOREST PROTECTION
Par. 10. Protection Against Heat.
A. Hear Causes Harm ONty:
When it invites forest fires;
When it fails to be balanced by the moisture in the air or soil (wood
lots in the prairies; old park trees);
When it occurs suddenly, striking the trees in a state of non-pro-
tection (e. g., new plantations and trees isolated of a sudden).
B. Tue Piants Protect THEMSELVES ORDINARILY Acainst Hzat:
By dropping leaves;
By resinous cell contents;
By closed stomata;
By color and position of leaves;
By coverings of cork, hair and that like.
C. RemeEprEs:
1. IN INFANT FORESTS:
(a) in nurseries:
Secure irrigation;
Provide lath screens or cloth screens;
Maintain a cover of mould on the soil;
Cultivate so as to increase the porosity of soil;
Plant the seeds early in spring before the winter
moisture has vanished;
Transplant early and transplant deeply.
(b) in plantations:
Use strong transplants;
Adopt mound planting;
Plant under cover;
Adopt ball planting;
Avoid loss of root fibres during act of out-planting;
Cultivate.
(c) in natural seed regenerations:
Remove mother trees slowly;
Remove trees reflecting heat unto young growth.
(d) Generally:
Maintain a dense cover overhead, and a good
layer of humus underneath.
2. IN POLE FORESTS AND TREE FORESTS:
Characteristic for damage (so-called sunscald) is:
Bark scaling off;
Sap wood turning brown;
Discoloration and decay within a distinct sector of bole.
(a) Prevent sunscald by avoiding sudden changes of the
influx of light;
FOREST PROTECTION 133
Notably so in the case of dense stands of beech,
spruce, white pine, ash;
Notably on the West-South-West edge of a wood
lot.
At Biltmore, Oak saplings along the macada-
mized roads; chestnuts on the arboretum
road; and hickories of small diameter have
been visited by the disease.
(b) Do not remove the trees affected by sunscald; their
removal will merely expose the trees in the rear,
and the damage will continue.
(c) Do not remove, from endangered trees, by pruning,
any living branches.
(d) Time the progress of the axe properly in thinnings,
preparatory cuttings, seed cuttings and removal
cuttings.
134 FOREST PROTECTION
Par. 11. Protection Against Snow and Sleet.
Snow 18 BENEFICIAL:
By preventing fires;
By storing water and by preserving soil moisture;
By facilitating the logging operations;
By covering sensitive plants;
By removing dead side branches;
By preventing frost from entering deeply into soil;
By reducing the felling damages.
A. Snow is TEcHNIcALLY OBNOXIOUS:
By preventing the use of wagons or railroads;
By endangering skidding on steep slopes;
By increasing sledding expenses (when snow is too deep);
By causing extra outlay in cutting stumps low to the ground;
By reducing the accessibility of the woods.
Remark: Winters of excessive snow are known as winters of re-
stricted output of lumber.
B. Snow 1s PuysioLoGicaLtty OBNOXIOUS:
By bending down saplings and poles with or without their roots;
By breaking off branches and crowns or by breaking down poles
and trees with the roots;
By causing rodents and game to attack trees and saplings for food;
By exposing trees after breakage to the attacks of insects and fungi;
By increasing storm damage at a time when the trees are loaded
with snow or sleet.
C. Facrors oF DAMAGE.
Species and mixture of species;
Age and size of trees;
Method of regeneration and notably the density thereof;
Climatic constellations (e. g., coincidence of storm; succession of
thaws and snows; occurrences of snow in Octover, before the
fall of the leaves);
Preceding treatment by thinning; by removal cuttings; by leaving
standards after coppiceing; by road making.
Locality, elevation and aspect:
Steepness of slope;
Depth of soil (Coxehill);
Rate of growth (fast grown yellow pine and top whirls of fast grown
white pine at Biltmore;)
Prior injuries by fire, by boxing, by insects and fungi (black locusts).
Remark: Remember the following illustrations:
White cedar in swamps of South Carolina;
Cuban pine in Alabama;
FOREST PROTECTION 135
Poplar tops in Pisgah Forest;
Topped white pines in the Pink Beds;
Black locusts and hickory on mountain tops;
Plantations of rigid pine in Black Forest;
Spruce saplings in the Balsams, in the early spring of 1908.
D. ReEemevins:
Selecting the proper species for planting or for natural seed re-
generations, in keeping with the requirements of the locality
and of the climate;
Group system of natural seed regeneration;
Planting in rows instead of planting in triangles (Hess);
Thinnings properly made beginning early in very dense regenerations;
Pollarding;
Readiness of permanent means of transportation so as to make
possible the salvage of broken timber.
CHAPTER II: PROTECTION AGAINST STORM, EROSION,
SANDDRIFTS, NOXIOUS GASES.
Part 12. Protection Against Wind Storms.
WIND 18 BENEFICIAL:
By restoring the chemical balance of the atmosphere;
By distributing pollen and seeds;
By preventing excessive formation of side branches;
By bringing rain.
A. Damagsis Causep BY WIND Storm (aside of forest fires spread or fanned):
(a) IN PLANTATIONS:
By loosening the anchorage of tall seedlings and
saplings; (notably, after planting in furrows,
in the prairies, on sand dunes);
By drying out roots and shoots and leaves and
soil (notably in the early spring);
By removing the protecting cover of snow;
By allowing the “mob’’ to whip the top shoots
of “aristocrats.”’
(b) IN EXPOSED LOCALITIES:
By one-sided (seashore or Pisgah ridge) or stunted
growth.
(c) IN TREE FORESTS AND IN LARGE POLE WOODS:
By breakage of crowns or branches, thus allow-
ing access to fungi and to insects;
By breakage of stems at their point of least re-
sistence;
By uprooting trees singly, in avenues, or in large
blocks;
By endangering the logging operations.
B. Facrors or DaMAGm ARE:
(a) Spucres:
Flat-rooted conifers are most endangered; a mix~
ture of species in advisable.
(b) Size cuass:
Poles and trees over 8’’ in diameter are most
subject to damage.
(c) Locaziry:
Leeward sides of lakes;
Mountain slopes and mountain tops on leeward
side;
Moist spots;
Shallow soil.
136
FOREST PROTECTION 137
(d) Prion TREATMENT:
Partial logging, leaving a freshly bared front
exposed to the prevailing storm;
Standards over coppice;
Single seedtrees over regeneration;
Borggreve thinnings;
Turpentining by the box system;
Interference with anchorage of roots by making
ditches or roads.
(e) SHAPE OF TREES:
Cylindrical trees are more top heavy than coni-
cal trees.
(f) AccOMPANYING CIRCUMSTANCES:
Heavy rains soaking the soil;
Heavy seed years when the tops of the trees are
loaded with cones;
Sleet;
Snow.
C. PREVENTIVE MEASURES:
(a) SyLVICULTURALLY:
Ball planting, deep planting, sod covering on
shifting sand.
Fostering hardwoods or mixture therewith;
Early and moderate and regular thinnings;
Pruning or lopping to reduce top-heaviness;
No standards;
No single tree method of natural seed regeneration;
Proper preparation in due time of trees intended
for an isolated position;
Short rotations.
(b) TecHnicaxy:
Avoidance of logging methods leaving points
favorable to the attack of storms;
Progress of the axe against the direction of the
barometric minima;
Herty method of terpentining;
Proper “cutting series;’’
Timely “severance cuttings.”
D. Resrricrive Measures:
Readiness of means of transportation (railroads and roads) after
wind falls;
Removing the bark from wind falls;
Throwing wind falls in water.
138 FOREST PROTECTION
Par. 13. Protection Against Erosion.
The adult forest does not require any protection from erosion—usu-
ally so.
It must be remembered, on the other hand, that “civilization’’ (by
ditching the slopes on the hills; by cutting roads and railroads into the soil;
by draining the bottom-lands for farming purposes) increases the rapidity
of the subterranean and of the superficial drainage; that it results in a par-
tial destruction of the soil on the hill sides.
Erosion, in the present geological acra, is not so active, nevertheless,
as it was in prior periods.
A forest plantation on the hill side suffers during its early stages from
erosion where the soil consists of clay, and where the plough has preceded
the establishment of the embryo-forest.
Some seedlings are washed out of the soil whilst others are covered
by detritus.
At Biltmore, erosion has harmed particularly the so-called “old school
house’’ plantation, in its earliest stage of development.
As soon as the forest covers the ground fully, viz.: when the branches
of neighboring specimens interlace, all erosion is usually stopped and stopped
for good.
Oftentimes deep gullies are cut into the side slopes during and after
agricultural occupancy of the soil; in such cases, the stopping of the gullies
by wicker works or hurdles can be recommended.
These wicker works should not protrude more than one-half foot above
the surface of the soil.
They should be made, particularly, at the upper end of the gully. It
is useless to make them at the lower end alone.
These wicker works will hinder erosion to a certain extent; will quiet
the soil within the gully; and will allow the grasses and the weeds to occupy
the sides of the gully.
The most interesting case of erosion met in Eastern America is, pos-
sibly, the erosion exhibited in the immediate proximity of the smelter works
at Ducktown, Tenn.
Here, the hillsides were laid bare entirely at a time at which the smelters
used the timber for charcoal.
Following this deforestation, the bared areas were used for roasting
(by the open heap method) of the copper-bearing ores. As a consequence,
every vestige of vegetation has been annihilated on the hillsides and eros-
ion has had a chance to work in an amazing degree of intensity.
Hrosion may be checked by horizontal ditches—or ditches running
at a very light grade; by the planting of grasses or weeds between horizon-
tal ditches; and finally, by afforestation.
There is no means better than successful afforestation by which the
soil can be fastened or anchored to the underlying rock.
Afforestation as a topic of lectures belongs into “Sylviculture’’ and
into “Forest Policy.”
FOREST PROTECTION 139
Par. 14. Protection Against Shifting Sands.
Instances are rare in which the forest requires any protection against
shifting sands.
On the other hand, the forest frequently tends to protect from damage
the farms, the railroads and other human interests.
In other words: The forest requires, rarely, protection against shift-
ing sands; and it acts frequently as a protector against shifting sands.
Famous instances of the role which the forest plays in this connection
are those of Cape Cod, Mass.; of Hatteras Island, N. C. (Compare Collier
Cobb’s article in the National Geographic Magazine entitled “Where the
wind does the work’’); in Central Hungary; mm the Landes of Gascogny,
France; in the Rhine Valley near Darmstadt, Germany; along the Colum-
bia River in Oregon and Washington; and so on).
A. Shifting sand along the seashore is found notably in the form of sand
dunes moving landward, fed and driven by ocean winds.
It would be unwise to attempt any afforestation of the dunes nearest
the ocean. Afforestation may set in at some distance from the
ocean in protected depressions found between parallel dunes.
The dunes are fixed, to begin with, by rough palings forming the heart
of the dunes and causing a constant growth of the height of the
dunes. The sides of the dunes are fortified by sandgrasses and
sandweeds.
The species used for afforestation belong to particularly modest genera:
Cottonwoods, willows and pines are recommended.
Obviously, the forester restocking shifting sands is interested in the
fixation of the sands more than in a direct revenue derivable from
plantations made at a very high expense on very sterile soil.
B. The case lies somewhat different on sand areas found inland. Here,
afforestation is frequently indicated as a means toward a revenue
obtainable from soil lying otherwise unproductive and threaten-
ing, at the margins of the sand fields, destruction to adjoining farm-
land.
The usual method of proceeding is the following:
Sods of grasses or else sods of heather are laid on the soil, checker-board
fashion. Within the sods are planted longrooted yellow pines,
preference being given to transplants two years old or else to ball
plants one year old. There is no harm in “deep planting.”
Afforestation should begin on the windward side of the sand area, in
protected spots.
The most famous attempt made in America toward the afforestation
of inland sands is that of the Forest Service trying to establish,
on the “Bad Lands’’ of Nebraska, a planted forest on a large scale.
140 FOREST PROTECTION
It is obvious that small plants are pulled out of a loose soil readily by
the wind—notably so in the case of evergreens; and that large
transplants suffer badly from the shock of outplanting and from
the inadequacy of the water supply available on sterile sand.
Wheresoever the soil is apt to become shifting, the law should prohibit
the removal of the trees by their owners.
The influence in that direction exercised by a commonwealth is dealt
with in the lectures on “Forest Policy.”
FOREST PROTECTION 141
Par. 15. Protection Against Noxious Gases (Sulphurfumes).
By the term “sulphurfumes’’ are understood certain gases formed by
the oxidation of sulphur. Huge amounts of these gases are produced wher-
ever sulphur-bearing minerals are treated in the presence of atmospheric air.
Contamination of the atmosphere is one of the evils adherent to civili-
zation, or, which is the same, adherent to an increase of population at cer-
tain centers. The breath of any man or any animal and, more than that,
the smoke rising from any building (dwellings as well as factories) contami-
nate the air.
After Angus Smith, the atmosphere at Manchester, England, contains
a little less than the one-millionth part of SO. on the average of the year.
The rain water investigations made by the same English author show
the rapid increase of sulphuric acid in rain water near industrial centers.
The sulphur contained in common coal averages 1.7%, of which 1.2%
develop into noxious sulphurfumes. In other words, 85 tons of coal will
develop on the average 2 tons of noxious SO>.
Since the consumption of bituminous coal in the United States is in
excess of 200,000,000 tons per annum, it appears that we send into the at-
mosphere (pre-eminently in the northeast) annually about 4,700,000 tons
of sulphurous acid.
A. Naturs or Damage To LEAVES.
There is not at hand, at the present time, any scientific explana-
tion of the strange physiological effect which sulphur fumes
exercise upon vegetation.
After Prof. Naegeli, SO. checks the normal movement of the live
plasma in the leaves.
Von Schroeder finds that the transpiration from the leaves is that
function which is most vitally reduced by inhalation of SQOx;.
During night, transpiration from the leaves is naturally reduced
to a minimum, and it is interesting to note that there is little
difference in the evaporative function of leaves during night,
whether they be exposed to SO, or whether they be left in
an atmosphere free from SO3;.
When the sun shines, the difference between the evaporation in
leaves exposed to SO, and in leaves exposed to a pure atmos-
phere is very striking.
Reduced transpiration appears to be noticeable before discolora-
tion of leaves occurs in a sulphurous atmosphere.
After von Schroeder, very small quantities of SO. continuously
acting produce the same final result (always in the glass case)
which large quantities will produce acting for short periods
only. This observation does not tally with the results of
Freytag’s experiments made in the open air.
142 FOREST PROTECTION
Darkness reduces the damage by SO, more than dryness. In the
presence of light, heat and humidity, the discoloring and dead-
ening action of SO, is most intense; which is to say: It is
strongest when the vital functions of the leaves are most active.
Parallel experiments show no discoloration as a consequence of the
absorption of SO, in the dark room (at night), although such
absorption takes place actually.
Wet leaves show much more discoloration than dry leaves in the
same sulphurous atmosphere.
The main difficulty met in ascertaining the dilution at which SO,
becomes innocuous lies in the disturbing influence of light
and moisture.
After Freytag (experiments in the open air) damage is possible
only in humid air, or when the leaves are slightly wet from
drizzling rain and from dew.
Again, after Freytag, air containing less than 0.003% (of weight)
of SO. is innocuous, even under adverse hydrographic con-
ditions and in spite of continuous fumigation, applied during
a number of weeks.
Freytag’s experiments are the only open-air experiments which
have been conducted with scientific correctness.
SO, and SO; are absorbed in the same absolute quantities by the
leaves when present in the air in equal proportions. Discol-
oration of leaves, however, and decrease in transpiration from
leaves are, simultaneously, much smaller in an atmosphere
of SO; than in an atmosphere of SO:. Consequently, all
conditions which favor the formation of SO; in the air before
the air touches the leaves must decrease the damage—espec-
ially so in the case of chronic affections.
The assumption that clouds of smoke interfere with the admis-
sion of light and hence with the assimilation of the leaves is
erroneous.
There is no such thing as the “stuffing up’’ of the so-called stomata
found on the leaves (through which inhalation and transpira-
tion takes place) caused by soot or solid particles contained
in the fumes.
Experiments made by Stoeckhardt prove this thesis beyond a doubt.
B. CHemicat Remarks,
Sulphurous acid (H.SO;) is unknown in the free state; it is likely
to be contained in the solution of gaseous SO, in the water.
Sulphurous acid forms primary and secondary sulphites; its salts
are obtained by saturating a base with a watery solution of SO;.
If sulphurous acid is eliminated from its salts by the action of stronger
acids, then it forms its anhydrid and water.
FOREST PROTECTION 143
Since a large number of calories of heat are set free by the union
of S and O, in forming the SO., the anhydrid is a constant
combination.
SO, is readily reduced, by H.S, into water and sulphur.
In watery solutions as well as in gaseous form SO, readily oxidises
into SO;3, when exposed to the influence of the atmosphere,
32 calories of heat being liberated by such oxidation.
On the other hand, SO; at red heat dissolves into oxygen and SO:.
It stands to reason that with increasing distance from the
smoke-stack the contents of the smoke are more SO; than SO:.
After von Schroeder, the gases of SO; are, without a doubt, less
damaging to vegetation inhaling them than the gases of SO.
Within the leaves SO, is very quickly converted, by oxidation,
into sO Be
A few hours after gas-poisoning, only SO; (not SO.) can be proven
to be present within the leaves.
Chemical analysis of leaves can only fix the territory infested in
a random way. It can never be used as a measure of damage
locally found. The damage can be assessed only according
to the effects discernible with the naked eye. So-called “in-
visible damages’’ have never been allowed by the Courts.
The chemical analysis of leaves suspected to be poisoned deals
only with an abnormal (unnatural) surplus of SO:.
All leaves contain, in nature, certain amounts of SO;, the amounts
depending on the composition of the soil and on the species.
Hence a comparative analysis of the leaves is absolutely necessary
where it is intended to establish the influence of sulphurfumes
on vegetation. This analysis must allow for the difference
in the soil and the difference in the distance from the smelters.
At the same time, the leaves examined must be taken from
the same part of the tree and from the same side of the tree;
further, the leaves must be in the same stage of development.
After recent experiments the sulphuric contents in the leaves within
the lower part of the crown are much higher than the sulphuric
contents in the upper part of the crown.
The ashes obtained from trees growing in low lands are relatively
poorer in SO; than the ashes from trees growing on mountains.
Weak limbs show more SO; than strong limbs.
C Tre Merits or tHe CazmicaL ANALYSIS.
Science has not established any absolutely reliable means to
connect death or injury of trees with a poisoning effect of
SO, or SO; suspended in the air surrounding such trees,
144 FOREST PROTECTION
An anatomic—microscopic proof of injury due to SO, or SO; can-
not be given (Haselhoff and Lindau, p. 98 and p. 37).
A number of injurious influences (frost, heat, desiccation of soil,
insects, fungi (Schroeder and Reuss, p. 110) fire, etc.) bring
about, within the leaves and needles, identical or similar al-
terations of the cell-structure (Haselhoff and Lindau, p. 12 ff).
The consensus of opinion, amongst scientific specialists (R. Har-
tig, p. 6; Winkler, p. 879; Schroeder and Reuss, p. 126) is to
the effect that excessive contents of SO; within the leaves
are not necessarily injurious.
Injury due to sulphurfumes can be assumed only when there are
at hand
A. death visible to the naked eye;
B. no other plausible cause of such death;
C. contents of SO; in the leaves which are unmistak-
ably wncreased by the reaction of the leaves
and needles on sulphur fumes.
UNMISTAKABLY INCREASED contents of SO;
proven chemically within the leaves are
a. not identical with abnormal con-
tents;
b. notsuch contents as exceed the av-
erage contents of leaves within
territories acknowledged to be
beyond the reach of sulphur
fumes; in other words,
c. mot particularly high percentages of
SO; found within the leaves.
General averages holding good
for the contents of SO; within
the leaves of healthy trees do
not exist (Haselhoff and L ndau,
p. 67).
If the contents of SO; found within the in-
jured or uninjured leaves and needles of
a given tree exceed those obtained by
averaging a large number of analytic re-
sults obtained from the tests of healthy
leaves and needles, then and in such case
the excess is frequently due to any one,
or to a combination of the following
causes:
(a) Som: A soil naturally rich in
SO, or irrigated with water
containing SO;, produces
FOREST PROTECTION 145
leaves and needles sur-
charged with SO;. Such
surcharge has no detrimen-
tal influence on the state of
health of the trees (Hasel-
hoff and Lindau, p. 46, p.
51, p. 55, p. 56).
(b) Ace: Old needles contain more
SO; than young needles.
(Haselhoff and Lindau, p.
67; Schroeder and Reuss, p.
128).
(c) Ssason: Young leaves contain
more SO; than old leaves.
(d) Posrrron: On the same healthy
tree, the sulphur contents
of the leaves vary accord-
ing to the position of the
Jeaves,which position might
be
at the base or at the
top of the crown,
on the inside or on
the outside of the
crown.
(e) Exmvation: On the slope of a
hill, the sulphur contents in
the healthy leaves of the
same tree-species exhibit
variations depending on the
elevation above sea-level
(Schroeder and Reuss, p.
126).
The sulphur contents of given leaves and need-
les are “unmistakably increased” by
the reaction on sulphur fumes in all cases
where it can be proven that none of the
causes of increase above enumerated has
or have brought about such increase. It
is advisable, as a consequence,
(1) to back the chemical analysis of
the leaves by the chemical
analysis of the soil on which
such leaves were produced,
so as to prove that an in-
I
146 FOREST PROTECTION
crease of leaf-sulphur is not
due to an increase of soil-
sulphur (Haselhoff and Lin-
dau, p. 378);
(2) to compare the analytic results
of such leaves and needles
only which were picked
equally old;
equally situated with-
in the crown of the
trees;
equally situated with
reference to eleva-
tion.
All experts agree that short, sudden, strong
attacks by sulphur fumes are apt to be
deadly; still, such attacks do not cause
@ VERY MARKED increase of SO; in the
leaves.
On the other hand, long-continued, but slight
attacks by sulphur fumes result in a
heavy increase of SO; in the leaves;
still, such attacks do not cause a very
marked injury to the trees (Wislicenus,
Journal of Applied Chemistry, 1901, p.
28).
It is evident, consequently, that conclusions
based on the chemical analysis of leaves
and needles are apt to be rash; and that
so-called chemical proofs must be viewed
with great precaution (Wieler, p. 380).
D. UnreviaBiuiry oF Guass-Casn EXPERIMENTS.
Experiments touching the poisonous effect of fumes made with
plants placed in a glass case cannot be so telling as experi-
ments made in the open, because.
a. In the glass case, the gas is admitted from below so
as to infest the lower surface of the leaves, which
lower surface is known to be more subject to
sulphur attacks than the upper surface.
b. Sulphurous anhydrid, in statu nascendi, is increas-
ingly active and pre-eminently corrosive.
c. The discoloration of the leaves in nature differs from
the discoloration usually observed in glass case
experiments.
Ly
FOREST PROTECTION 147
d. In nature, SO; is largely mixed with 8O., the former
being less active than the latter. In the glass
case, usually, only SO, is developed.
Factors oF DAMA3E.
Without a doubt, a slight admixture to the atmosphere of either
SO, or SO; has a certain influence on vegetation; such in-
fluence being irregularly proportioned to the amount of the
admixture,
After Stoeckhardt, the one-millionth part of the air consisting of
SO, results, in the course of time, in discoloration (335 fumi-
gations discolor wet leaves in six weeks, dry leaves in eight
weeks).
The degree of injury depends on
a The continuity of the fumigation which is governed
by the steadiness of the wind direction and which
decreases, step by step, with increasing distance
from the smelters.
b. The sensitiveness of the plants which is governed
by species, quality of the soil, preceding injury
by fire, pasture or general neglect.
c. The number of months per annum during which the
leaves show physical activity. In the case of
hardwoods, this number is about 314, extend-
ing from May 1 to August 15.
d. Atmospheric conditions which may allow the gases
to remain in bulk after emission from the smoke-
stack, thus concentrating the damage on such
parts of the country toward which the smoke
happens to drift in bulk.
It has been proven by experiments as well as by the experience
of all observers in nature, that days of great atmospheric hu-
midity, days on which fog forms and days following nights
of heavy dew are particularly prolific in breeding acute dis-
coloration or damage. On the other hand, very bright weather
as well as heavy rains seem to minimize the damage by inten-
sive dilution and may prevent damage entirely.
The toxic influence of sulphur gases might be considered either
as an acute or as a chronic disease. Acute cases appear only
in the near proximity of smelters where clouds of smoke kept
in bulk under certain atmospheric constellations actually ex-
ercise a corroding influence on the leaves.
On the other hand, where the diluted gases are inhaled by the plants
during a long number of days under the influence of a steady
wind, there chronic discoloration and chronic disease will enter
aN appearance.
148 FOREST PROTECTION
F. Damace to ram Sor.
Conclusive experiments prove that soluble sulphuric salts of cop-
per (like blue vitriol) fail to cause any damage to the plants,
whether applied in the form of dust or in the form of watery
solution. Very concentrated solutions, however, cause cor-
rosion; also dust falling on leaves wet with dew.
Although the roots of plants are unable to refuse entrance to dam-
aging liquids, it has been found that soluble salts of copper,
when entering the soil, form at once an insoluble chemical
combination with the bases of the soil. It is possible, how-
ever, that poor quartz-sand, in the immediate proximity of
the smelters, can be affected by soluble salts of copper.
Insoluble salts of copper are, obviously, harmless in the soil.
Absolute proof for or against soil-poisoning can be obtained only
by planting seeds and seedlings into soil supposed to be poi-
soned, after removal to a point far from the smelters. Plant-
ing experiments made by Reuss have failed to prove any posion-
ing of the soil, even under extreme conditions.
The sulphuric acid contained in the soil is by no means propor-
tioned to the damage appearing in the trees. On the other
hand, trees stocking on sulphuric soil (e. g. gypsum soil) show
invariably a high percentage of sulphuric acid within the leaves.
It seems as if sulphuric acid obtained through the roots is
innocuous, whilst sulphuric acid inhaled through the leaves
is noxious.
If by condensation of the gases at the smelters the atmosphere
is purified, the soil in the proximity of the smelters is as ready
to produce as ever. In other words, there is no such thing
as irreparable damage caused by smelterfumes.
Experiments with plants watered with a solution of SO, prove
conclusively that no damage results from such watering. On
the contrary! After Freytag, plants watered with a solu-
tion of SO, have shown better yields than those which were
not watered with SOx.
In other words, sulphuric acid has a chance to become a blessing
to agriculture, especially where the soil contains insoluble
phosphates; and there is, decidedly, no such thing as the “ poi-
soning of the soil’’ through SO, or SO;, applied in gaseous
form or liquid form, as salt or acid.
G. Damace to Farm Crops anno Fruir Trees.
Within the vegetation economically used, farm crops suffer less
from fumes than trees. In the case of farm crops potatoes
seem to be least sensitive, cereals follow next, whilst legumi-
nous plants are more sensitive.
FOREST PROTECTION 149
Farming can be carried on remuneratively in closer proximity of
the smelters than forestry. Obviously, in the case of annual
plants, there is no cumulative influence of SO, due to many
a year’s exposure.
The fact that farm crops are more resistant to smoke than forest
crops may be explained ,also, by the higher reproductive power
of the former and by the greater height of the latter, the leaves
of which are exposed to more concentrated gases of SO..
In case of fruit trees, mulberries seem to be least sensitive; then
follow apples, pears, peaches, plums, with cherries as the most
sensitive fruit trees at the rear end.
Wherever fruit trees are well attended by cultivation and by fer-
tilizing, the damage by sulphur fumes is minimized.
The “floral organs’’ of the fruit trees seem to be less affected by
smoke than the “pulmonary organs,” which means to say
the fruiting of the trees is not badly interfered with by SO,
and SO Be
H. Damace To Forssts.
The forest trees, according to species and individuality, exhibit
a very varying degree of sensitiveness to the influence of sul-
pbhur fumes. The degree of liability to damage is in no way
proportioned to the readiness with which the trees inhale sul-
phuric fumes. For instance, the conifers are more affected
by sulphur fumes than are the hardwoods. Still, exposed to
the same atmosphere charged with sulphuric fumes, the coni-
fers will inhale smaller quantities of toxic gases than the hard-
woods.
The power of resistence which the various species show to the in-
fluence of sulphur fumes is, on the other hand, directly pro-
portioned to the power of reproduction (power of recovery)
which the various species show. It is obvious that this power
of recovery is particularly good in hardwoods, which must
recover, every spring, from the natural loss of foliage sustained
in the preceding fall.
In the case of broad-leaved species, any loss of vital organs is readily
made up, whilst in the case of conifers the reproductive power
is comparatively low.
Amongst the conifers, those which retain their needles for a num-
ber of years are more apt to suffer from sulphuric fumes than
those which retain their needles for one or two years only.
Inasmuch as the resistence which the trees offer to injury by sul-
phurfumes is proprotioned to their power of reproduction,
and inasmuch as this power of reproduction largely depends
on the fertility of the soil, it is obvious that all species suc-
cumb on impoverished soil more rapidly than on good soil.
150 FOREST PROTECTION
This observation is backed by the facts exhibited near Ducktown,
Tenn., where the shade trees in the gardens seem to do re-
markably well in close proximity to the smelters.
Ceteris paribus, the following schedule has been arranged as the
result of investigations for the trees in the Ducktown region
having over 7’’ diameter, the trees most easily killed by SO,
being placed at the top of the schedule:
Suscerrisiiry ro Actua Insury.
White Pine
Hemlock
Scrub Pine
Pitch Pine
Birch
Chestnut
Hickory
Oaks
Yellow Poplar
Maple
Black Gur
This schedule tallies well with the schedule given by European
authors for closely related species.
If a similar schedule is formed according to the ease of discolor-
ation, entirely different results are obtained:
SUSCEPTIBILITY TO DISCOLORATION.
VERY EASILY MEDIUM NOT APT TO BE
DISCOLORED DISCOLORED DISCOLORED
Black Oak Poplar Black Gum
Hickory White Oak White Pine
Scarlet Oak Chestnut Oak Maple
Chestnut Post Oak Pitch Pine
Spanish Oak Hemlock
Noteworthy it is that the power of resistance to fumes is more
increased by the power of reproduction than decreased by
the sensitiveness of the leaves.
In nature, wherever grave deviations from exact schedules of sen-
sitiveness are found, it stands to reason that other influences,
aside from sulphurfumes, are simultaneously responsible for
the death or for the discoloration of the trees.
The best time for any observations in the forest is the late sum-
mer or early fall (the time between August 15 and October 1).
Sulphurfumes cannot be held responsible for the local death of
trees within a “smoke region,”’
(1) if species known to be more sensitive are less affected
than species known to be more resistent;
FOREST PROTECTION 151
(2) if tall specimens are no more affected than short
specimens; or if the trees die from below;
(3) if the dying trees are affected with a fungus-disease
(e. g. White Pine blight and Chestnut blight)
or an insect disease causing the death of the
trees outside the smoke region;
(4) if death and discoloration are confined to one species
only;
(5) if the owner of the forests, allowing indiscriminate
logging, or allowing forest fires to rage, is guilty
of contributory negligence;
(6) if discoloration is caused by late frost, or draught,
or leaf fungi;
(7) if the death rate within the smoke region is no greater
than the death rate without, under otherwise
equal conditions (of geology, soil-fertility, as-
pect, forest fires, desiccation, storms, insects,
fungi and prior treatment of forests);
(8) if dying and living trees are normally covered with
tree mosses, alge and lichens;
(9) if the death rate at the windward edge of the for-
ests is not larger than the death rate in the in-
terior;
(10) if the size of the annual rings of accretion is not ab-
normally small;
(11) if there are at hand, in the affected region, other
plausible causes of discoloration and of death.
| Preventive Massures.
1. In the source of damage:
(a) Dilution of fumes
by emission into the upper atmosphere from
mountain tops or from high smoke-stacks;
by accelerated conversion of SO, into SO3;;
by artificial draught increasing the rapidity of
dilution;
by manufacture of sulphuric acid.
(b) Other means suggested:
by running smelter plants at night (possible in
pygmean operations only);
by discontinuing operations in May, June and
July (impossible where hundreds of workmen
depend on continued employment);
152 FOREST PROTECTION
by smelting in the regions where the hardwoods
prevail; where the forest has little value; on
islands; in deserts or prairies.
2. In woodlands adjoining:
(a) Conversion of woodlands into farms or pastures; o41
of high forest into low forest;
(b) Cutting affected and dying trees;
(c) Maintaining the fertility and, notably, the water con-
tents of the soil through protection from fire and
by keeping a dense undergrowth;
(d) Avoidance of partial logging.
I. Index to Malefactors.
Acanthocinus nodosus Fab., 48.
Acanthocinus obsoletus Oliv., 48.
Acmeo pulchella Hbst., 57.
Aecidium pint, 119.
Aegeria acerni Clem., 88.
Agaricacee, 117.
Agaricus melleus, 114, 119.
Agrilus anxius Gory, 64, 65.
Agrilus bilineatus Web., 67, 68.
Agrilus otiosus Say, 73.
alder 111.
Allorhina nitida Linn., 62.
Ambrosia, 114.
Ametabola, 21.
Ampelopsis, 112.
Andromeda, 111.
animals, 12.
Antsota rubicunda Fab., 88.
Anisota senatoria S. & A., 85.
Anisota stigma Fab., 85.
Apatela americana Harr., 86, 88.
Aphididae, 21, 29, 34, 101, 102, 108,
105, 106.
Aphrophora paralella Say, 101.
Apion nigrum Hbst., 73.
Arceuthobium cryptopoda, 126.
Arceuthobium occidentale, 126.
Arceuthobium pusillum, 126.
Archips fervidana Clem., 85.
Arctiide, 21, 77, 82, 85, 86, 87, 88.
Arhopalus fulminans Fab., 43, 67,
Ascomyceies, 116, 118.
Asemum mestum Hald., 43, 48, 50.
Asemum nitidum Lec., 53, 54.
Asilide, 20.
Aspidiotus perniciosus Comst., 104.
Aspidiotus tenebricosus Comst., 106.
Asterolecanium variolosum Ratz.,
104.
Attelabus analis, Web., 62.
Automeris io Fab., 88.
Azalea, 112.
Balaninus, 67.
Balaninus nasicus Say, 63, 68.
Balaninus proboscidus Fab., 67.
Balaninus rectus Say, 63, 67.
Basidiomycetes, 117.
Basilona imperialis Dru., 77, 82.
beaver, 18.
beech, 111.
Bellamira scalaris Say, 65.
birds, 18.
blackberry, 109, 111, 112.
Blastobaside, 85.
blueberry, 109.
bluejay, 18.
boar, wild, 15.
Bombycide, 21.
Bosirochide, 29, 34.
box-elder, 109.
Brachys eruginosa Gory, 66.
Brenthidee, 21, 29, 33, 57, 66, 67, 68,
Buprestide, 21, 29, 32, 48, 48, 49,
50, 52, 58, 54, 56, 57, 63, 65, 66,
67, 68, 73, 74.
Buprestis apricans Hbst., 48.
Buprestis aurulenta Linn., 438, 48,
50, 56.
Callidium ereum Newm., 67.
Callidium antennatum Newm., 48,
61.
Callidium janthinum Lec., 59.
Callipterus ulmifolit Monell, 105.
Callosamia promethea Dru., 90.
Camponotus herculeanus Linn., 97.
Carabide, 20.
Carphoborus, 44, 47, 51, 54.
caterpillars, Lepidopterous, 34.
Catocala spp., 85.
Cecidomyza caryecola O. S., 100.
Cecidomyia clavula Beuten, 100.
Cecidomyia holotricha O. S., 100.
Cecidomyia liriodendri O. §., 100.
Cecidomyia nivetpila O. S., 100.
Cecidomyia pilule Walsh, 100.
Cecidomyia pinirigide Pack., 99.
Cecidomyia poculum O. S., 100.
Cecidomyia resinicola O. 8., 99.
Cecidomyia tubicola O. S., 100.
Cecidomyia tulipifera O. §., 100.
Cecidomytide, 21, 29, 99, 100.
Cedar apples, 119.
Cerambycide, 21, 29, 32, 38, 35, 48,
45, 47, 48, 50, 52, 54, 55, 56, 57,
58, 59, 61, 62, 63, 65, 66, 67, 68,
69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76.
Ceratocampide, 77, 82, 85, 88.
Ceratographis pusillus Kby., 48.
Ceratomia amyntor Geyer, 86.
Ceratomia catalpe Boisd., 91.
Ceratomia undulosa Walk., 90.
Ceratostomella pilifera, 128.
Chattophorus acerts Linn., 106.
Chaleidoidea, 20.
158
154 FOREST PROTECTION
Chermes abieits Linn., 102.
Chermes pinicorticis Fitch., 101.
Chermes sibiricus Chold., 102.
Chermes strobit Hart., 101.
Chion cinctus Dru., 68, 67, 68.
Chionaspis americana Johns, 105.
Chionaspis pinifolie Fitch., 101.
chinquapin, 110, 111, 112.
chipmunk, 16.
Chalciphora virgimensis Dru., 48,
48, 50.
Chramesus icorie Lec., 68.
Chrysobothris denttpes Germ., 48.
Chrysobothris femorata Fab., 63, 67,
68, 74.
Chrysobothris 6-signata Say, 65.
Chrysomela scalaris Lec., 75.
Chrysomelide@, 21, 29, 48, 63, 68, 69,
73, 75.
Cercopide, 101.
Cicada, 104, 106.
Cicadide, 21, 30, 35, 104, 106.
Cicindelide, 20.
Cimbex americana Leach, 97.
Citheronia regalvs Fab., 82.
Clematis, 112.
Cleride, 20.
climbers, 112.
Coccide, 21, 29, 34, 101, 102, 103,
104, 105, 106.
Coceinellida, 20.
Cochlidiide, 85.
Coleoptera, 20, 21, 38, 43-76.
Colopha ulmicola Fitch., 105.
Colydiide, 20.
Componotus pennsylvanicus Deg.,
9
Conotrachelus elegans Say, 63.
Conotrachelus juglandis Lec., 62.
Conotrachelus nenuphar Herbst., 63.
Convolvulus, 110.
Corthylus columbianus Hpk., 66, 68,
70.
Corthylus punctatissimus Zm., 74.
Cosside, 21, 29, 85, 86, 87, 88.
Cotalpa lanigera Linn., 64, 68.
cottonwoods, 111.
Crepidodera rufipes Linn., 738.
Cressonia juglandis 8. & A., 82.
cross-bills, 18.
crows, 18.
Cryphalus, 50, 55, 56.
Cryptorhynchus, 67.
Cryptorhynchus parochus Hbst., 62.
Crypturgus atomus Lec., 48, 50.
Crypturgus pusillus, 48.
Curculionide, 21, 29, 30, 32, 35, 36,
37, 48, 44, 48, 50, 51, 56, 57, 62,
63, 67, 68, 69, 73.
Curis dentatus Newm., 57.
nips spp., 96.
Cyllene picte Dru., 63.
Cyllene robine Forst., 73, 114, 121.
Cynipide, 30, 96.
Cympoidea, 21, 29,
damping-off, 120.
Dantana angus G. & R., 85.
Danitana integerrema Dru., 82.
Dantana minisira G. & R., 82, 88,
85, 89.
deer, 15.
Dendroctonus, 44, 45, 46, 47, 49.
Dendroctonus approximatus Dtz., 47.
Dendroctonus brevicomis Lec., 44,
Dendroctonus engelmannt Hopk., 51.
Dendroctonus fontalis, 31, 43, 48, 50,
114.
Dendrocitonus monticole Hopk., 44,
45, 46, 47.
Dendroctonus obesus Mann., 48, 51.
Dendrocionus piceaperda Hopk., 31,
50
Dendrocionus ponderose Hopk., 47.
Dendroctonus pseudotsuga Hopk., 54.
Dendroctonus similis Lec., 49, 54.
Dendroctonus terebrans Oliv., 43, 48.
Dendrocionus valens Lec., 43, 46, 47,
48.
Diapheromera femorata Say, 108.
Diaporthe parasitica Murrill, 120.
Dicerca lurida Fab., 63.
Dicerca obscura Fab., 63, 74.
Dioryctria reniculella Grote, 78.
Diptera, 20, 21, 38, 99, 100.
Discomycetes, 116, 118.
dogwood, 110, 111, 112.
Dolurgus pumilis Mann., 51.
doves, 18.
Drepanosiphum acerifoliz Thos., 106.
drought, 114.
Dryocartes, 48, 50.
Dryocartes affaber Mann., 51.
Dryocartes autographus Ratz., 50.
Dryocartes eichhofft Hopk., 65.
Dryocartes granicollis Lec., 50.
Dryophilus, 59.
Eburia quadrigeminata cay 63, 76.
Ecdytolopha insiticiana Zell., 87.
Echinodontium tinctorium, 123.
Elaphidion villosum Fab., 63, 68, 74.
Elateride, 20, 21, 30.
Enarmonia bracteatans Fern., 77.
Enarmonia caryana Fitch., 82,
INDEX TO MALEFACTORS 155
Epargyreus tityrus Fab., 87.
Erauns tiharva Harr., 89.
Ergates spiculatus Lec., 47, 48.
Ericace, 110, 117.
erosion, 138.
Endocimus mannerheimi Boh., 57.
Euclea delphinit Boisd., 85.
Eulecanium tulipifere Cook, 105.
Eulia poliiana Haw., 77
EHunomos magnarius Guen., 84.
Euproctis chrysorrhea Linn., 85.
Eupsalis minuta Dru., 57, 66, 67,
68, 69.
Euschausia argentata Pack., 77.
Euvanessa antiopa Linn., 86.
Evetria comstockiana Fern., 77.
Eveiria frustrana Comst., 77.
Evetria rigidana Fern., 77.
Exoascee, 117.
Exobasidium vaccinit, 117.
ferns, 111, 112.
finches, 18.
fire, 8, 114.
Formicide, 94, 97.
Formacoidea, 20.
frost, 127.
fungi, 113, 115.
Galerucella luteola Mull., 69.
Gaurotes cyanipennis Say, 62.
Gelechiide, 77, 78.
Geometride, 78, 84, 86, 89.
Glyptoscelis pubescens Fab., 48.
Gnathotrichus, 47.
Gnathotrichus materiarius Fitch., 43,
48, 50.
Gnathotrichus sulcatus Lec., 53, 54,
55, 59.
Goes oculatus Lec., 63.
Goes pulchra Hald., 63.
Goes pulverulenitus Hld., 66.
Goes tesselata Hald., 68.
Goes tigrina DeG., 63, 68.
Gossyparia spurta Mod., 105.
grapevine, 109, 110.
Graphisurus fasciatus DeG., 68.
ground-hog, 18.
grouse, 18.
Gryllide, 30, 36, 107.
Gryllotalpa borealis Burm., 107.
Gryllus spp., 107.
gum, black, 109, 110, 111, 112.
mnosporangium, 119.
alesia (Mohrodendron), 109, 111,
116.
Halisidota carye Harr., 82.
Halisidota maculata Harr., 86.
Halisidota tesselaris 8. & A., 85, 86,
88
hazel, 112.
hazel, witch, 109, 110.
heat, 132.
heather, 109.
hedge-hog, 18.
Hemerocampa leucostigma 8. & A.,
86, 87, 88, 89.
Hemileuca maia Dru., 85.
Hemimetabola, 21.
Hemiptera, 20, 21, 38, 101-106.
Hepiahde, 84, 87.
Herpotrichia, 114.
Hesperide, 21.
Heterocampa bilineata Pack., 89.
Holeocera glandulella Riley, 85.
Homoptera lunata Dru., 88.
huckleberry, 111.
Hylastes cavernosus Zimm., 48.
Hylastes porosus Er., 47.
Hylastinus rufipes Eichh., 69.
Hylecetus americanus Harr., 68.
Hylecetus lugubris Say, 67.
Hylesinus, 58, 54, 55.
Hylesinus aculeatus Say, 76.
Hylesinus granulatus Lec., 55.
Hylesinus nebulosus Lec., 54.
Hylobius pales Hbst., 48, 48.
Hylotrupes amethystinus Lec., 59.
Hylotrupes ligneus Fab., 61.
Hylurgops glabratus Zeff., 43.
Hylurgops pinifex Fitch., 48.
Hylurgops rugipennis Mann., 51.
Hylurgops subcostulatus Mann., 44,
45, 46, 47.
Hymenomycetes, 117, 118.
Hymenoptera, 20, 21, 38, 92-98.
Hyphaniria cunea Dru., 87, 90.
Hyphantria textor Harr., 85.
Hypoderma strobicola, 120.
Hystertum pinasiri, 119.
Ichneumonoidea, 20.
Incurvaria acerifoliella Fitch., 88.
insects, 20.
Isoptera, 107.
Tthycerus noveboracensis Fst., 68.
Janus integer Nort., 95.
Kaliosphinga dohrnit Tischb., 95.
Kaliosphinga ulm Sund., 97.
Kalmia, 109, 111, 112.
Kermes, 104.
»Lachnus strobt Fitch., 101.
Lagoa crispata Pack., 85.
Lapara bombycoides Walk., 77.
Lapara coniferarum 8. & A., 77.
156 FOREST PROTECTION
Lasiocampide, 85, 88.
Lecantum, 101, 103.
Lecanium nigrofascvatum Prg., 106.
Lenzites sepiaria, 123.
Lepidoptera, 21, 29, 34, 38, 77-91.
Leptostylus aculiferus Say, 70.
Leptura canadensis Fab., 50, 52.
Leucotermes flavipes Koll., 107.
Inparide, 21, 85, 86, 37, 88, 89.
Lithocolleites hamadryella Clem., 85.
Locustide, 21, 108.
Lophyrus abbotit Leach, 92.
Lophyrus lecontet Fitch, 92.
Lyctide, 29, 34.
Lyctus spp., 63, 76.
Lyda, 92.
Lygeonemaius erichsoniz Hart., 93.
Lymexilonide, 29, 33.
Lymeaxylide, 67, 68.
Lymexylon sericeum Harr., 67, 68.
Magdalts armicollis Say, 69.
Magdalis barbata Say, 69.
Magdalts olyra Herbst., 66.
Malacosoma disstria Hubn., 85, 88.
Mallodon dasystomus Say, 63, 68.
Mallodon melanopus Linn., 68.
man, 7.
Mantide, 20.
maple, 111.
Mecas inornata Say, 64.
Megalopygide, 85
Melandryide, 50, 56.
Melanophila, 49.
Melanophila drummondt Kby., 52,
54
Melanophila fulvogutiata Harr., 52.
Melasoma lapponica Linn., 64.
Melasoma. scripta Fab., 64.
Metabola, 21.
mice, 16.
Microcentrum laurtfolium Linn.,108.
Mechrodendron (Halesia), 116.
M gnohamunus confusor Kby., 48,
Monohammus scutellatus Say, 43, 45,
48.
Mycelophilide, 100.
Mytilaspis, 101, 103.
Myzomycetes, 118.
Nectria, 116.
Nematus, 34.
Nematus erichsonit, 35.
Nematus integer Say, 94.
Neoclytus caprea Say, 76.
Neoclytus erythrocephalus Fab., 57,
7 , .
Neophasia menapia Feld., 77, 79.
Neuroptera, 20.
Nocturde, 21, 29, 36, 85, 86, 88,
Notodontide, 82, 83, 85, 89.
Nototophus antiqua Linn., 85.
Nymphalidae, 86.
oak, black jack, 110.
Odontota dorsalis Thunb., 73.
Odontota rubra Web., 75.
Odontota scutellaris Oliv., 73.
Oecanthus pint Beut., 107.
Oeme rigida Say, 57.
Oncideres cingulaia Say, 63, 68.
Orthoptera, 20, 21, 38, 107, 108.
Orthosoma brunneum DeG., 48.
Pachylobius picivorus Germ., 43, 48.
Pachyia monticola Rand, 56.
Paleacrita vernata Peck, 86.
Pantographia limata G. & R., 89.
Papilionde, 21.
Paralechia pinifoliella Cham., 77.
Parharmonia pint, Vrell., 77.
pasturage, 12.
Paururus hopkinsi Ashm., 92.
Paururus pinicola Ashm., 92.
Pemphigus tessellatus Fitch., 103.
Peridermium strobi, 119.
Peronosporee, 116, 117.
Peztza, 117.
Phasmide, 21, 108.
Phenacoccus acericola King, 106.
Philedia punctomacularia, 78.
Phlarosinus, 57.
Phlarosinus cupresst Hopk., 58, 60.
Phlarosinus dentatus Say, 61.
Phlarosinus punctatus Lec., 59, 60.
Phiarosinus sequoie Hopk., 58, 59.
Phoradendron flavescens, 126.
Phycitide, 30, 37, 77, 78.
Phycomycetes, 116.
Phylloxera pallida Linn., 64.
Phymatodes decussatus Lec., 58.
Phymatodes variabilis Linn., 64.
Physenemum andree Hald., 57.
Phytophtora omnivora, 116.
Pieride, 77, 79
Pinipestis zimmermanni Grte., 77.
pigeons, 18.
Prssodes, 44, 51.
Pissodes dubius Rand, 56.
Pissodes strobt Peck, 43, 48, 50.
Pityogenes, 48, 45, 55.
Pityogenes carinulatus Lec., 47.
Pityogenes cariniceps, 47.
Pityogenes plagiatus Lec., 48.
Pityophthorus, 43, 45, 46, 47, 48,
50, 55, 65.
Pityophthorus cariniceps Lec., 50.
INDEX TO MALEFACTORS 157
Pityophthorus confinis Lec., 47.
Pityophthorus minutissimus Zimm.,
68
Pityophthorus nitidulus Mann., 45,
Pityophthorus pruinosus Eichh., 68.
Pityophthorus pubipennis Lec., 68.
Pityophthorus puncticollis Lec., 45,
47, 51.
Pityophthorus querciperda Schw., 68.
Plagionotus speciosus Say, 74.
Plaiypus, 43, 53, 54.
Platypus compostius Say, 57, 67,
68.
Polygonia interrogationis Fab., 86.
Polygraphus rufipennis Kby., 50.
Polyporacee, 117.
Polyporus annosus, 120.
Polyporus applanatus, 122.
Polyporus betulonus, 122.
Polyporus carneus, 121.
Polyporus catalpe, 121.
Polyporus fomentarius, 122.
Polyporus fraxinophilus, 121.
Polyporus fulvus, 122.
Polyporus igniarius, 122.
Polyporus quniperinus, 121.
Polyporus libocedris, 122.
Polyporus nigricaus, 122.
Polyporus obtusus, 122.
Polyporus pergamenus, 122.
Polyporus pinicola, 122, 123.
Polyporus ponderosus, 128.
Polyporus schweinitzi, 121.
Polyporus squamosus, 122.
Polyporus sulfureus, 122.
Polyporus rimosus, 114, 121.
Polyporus versicolor, 121.
porcupine, 18.
Porthetria dispar, Linn., 85.
Prionoxystus robinie Peck., 85, 87.
Prigntus laticollis Dru., 48, 64, 67,
Proctotrypoidea, 20.
Pseudocaccus aceris Goeff., 106.
Psychide, 81.
Psyllide, 29, 34.
Pterocyclon fasciatum Say, 57.
Pierocydon malt Fitch., 50, 57, 66,
Pieronus ventralis Say, 95.
Pitlinus ruficornis Say, 74.
Ptinide, 21, 29, 32, 34.
Ptininide, 47, 59, 68, 74, 76.
Pylinaria innumerabilis Rathy,
Pyralide, 89.
Pyrenomycetes, 116, 118.
Recurvaria obliquestrigella Cham..,78.
Reduviidee, 20.
Rhagium lineatum Oliv., 48, 48, 50.
Rhizococcus, 101, 102.
Rhododendron, 112.
sand, shifting, 139.
Saperda, 72.
Saperda calcarata Say, 64.
Saperda concolor Lec., 64.
Saperda discoidea Fab., 63.
Saperda tridentata Oliv., 69.
Saperda vestita Say, 75.
Saturnude, 82, 83, 85, 88, 89, 90.
Scarabeide, 21, 29, 36, 62, 68, 76.
Schizoneura tmbricator Fitch., 103.
Sciara ocellata O. §., 100.
Scolytide, 21, 29, 31, 33, 35, 43-61,
63, 65-70, 72, 74-76.
Scolytus, 50, 55.
Scolytus preceps Lec., 55. ;
Scolytus quadrispinosus Say, 63.
Scolytus rugulosus Ratz., 72.
Scolytus subscaber Lec., 55.
Scolytus unispinosus Lec., 49, 54.
Schizoneura americana Riley, 105.
Schizophyllum commune, 128.
sedge, broom, 16.
sedge-grass, 109.
Selandria diluta Cress., 96.
Serica trociformis Burm., 68.
Serropalpus barbatus Schall., 50, 56.
Sestide, 29, 77, 80, 88.
Sinozylon basilare Say, 63.
Siricide, 29, 92, 94, 96, 98.
sleet, 134.
smilax, 109.
snow, 134.
Sphingide, 77, 82, 86, 90, 91.
Sphing Kalmie 8. & A., 90.
squatters, 7.
squirrels, 16.
Sthenopis argenteomaculatus Harr.,
4
storm, 114, 136.
sulphur fumes, 141.
sunscald, 133.
Symmerista albifrons 8. & A., 85.
Syrphide, 20, 21.
Systena marginalis Ill., 63.
Telea polyphemus Cram., 82, 83, 85,
Tenthredinide, 29, 34, 92, 98, 94,
95, 96, 97.
Termitide, 107.
Tetropium cinnamopterum Kby., 50.
158 FOREST PROTECTION
Thyridopteryx ephemereformis Haw.
81
Tibicen septendecim Linn., 104, 106.
Tillandsia usneocides, 126
Tineide, 29, 35, 85, 88.
Tomaicus, 45, 50, 55.
Tomicus avulsus Hichh., 48, 48.
Tomicus balsameus Lec., 50, 56.
Tomicus cacographus Lec., 48, 48,
50
Tomicus colatus Eichh., 438, 48.
Tomicus callagraphus Germ., 43, 47,
48.
Tomicus concinnus Mann., 51.
Tomaicus confusus Lec., 47.
Tomicus integer Eichh., 46, 47.
Tomicus latidens Lec., 44.
Tomicus monticola Hopk., 44.
Tomicus oregon EHichh., 47.
Tomicus pint Say, 48, 46, 48, 50.
Tortricide, 29, 30, 35, 37, 77, 78,
82, 85, 87.
Tortrix fumiferana Clem., 78.
Tortrix quercifoliana Fitch., 85.
Trachinide, 20.
Trametes pint, 120.
Trametes radiciperda, 114, 120.
Tremex columba Linn., 96, 98.
Trichospheria, 114.
Trogositide, 20.
Trypodendron, 65.
Trypodendron bivittatum Mannh.,
48, 50, 51, 52.
Trypodendron fasciatum Say, 74.
Trypodendron mali Fitch., 74.
turkey, wild, 18.
Uredinew, 117.
Urocerus abdominalis Harr., 94.
Urocerus albicornis Fab., 9-4.
Urocerus flavipennis Kby., 94.
Urographis fasciatus Horn., 62, 63,
67, 68, 71, 74.
Usnea barbata, 126.
Ustilaginee, 117.
Vaccinium, 112.
Vespamima sequoia Hy. Edw., 77,
0
Vespoidea, 20.
Vitis, 112.
weeds, 109.
windstorm, 136.
woodchuck, 18.
woodpeckers, 18.
Xyleborus, 57.
Xyleborus, celatus Zimm., 50, 74.
Xyleborus celsus Eichh., 68, 68.
Xyleborus dispar Fab., 70.
Xyleborus fuscatus Eichh., 68.
Xyleborus obesus Lec., 52, 68, 74.
Xyleborus politus Say, 50, 66, 74.
Xyleborus pubesceus Zimm., 48, 67,
74
Xyleborus saxesent Ratz., 52, 54,
63, 64, 66, 68, 72, 74.
Xyleborus tachygraphus Zimm., 70,
74
Xylochinus, 50, 56.
Xylotrechus colonus Fab., 68, 67,
68, 74.
Xyloirechus undulatus Say, 52, 54,
Zeuzerapyrina Linn., 86, 87, 88.
Zygende, 21.4
II. Index of Species Affected.
Abtes balsamea, 56.
Abies concolor, 55.
Abtes fraserz, 56.
Abves grandis, 55.
Acer, 74, 88, 98, 100, 106.
Alnus, 108, 111.
Alnus glutinosa, 95.
Arbor-vitee, 121.
ash, white, 121, 122, 133.
basswood, 18.
beech, 18, 121, 122, 129, 133.
Betula, 65, 88.
birch, 18, 122, 150.
black gum, 129, 150.
buffalo-nut, 16.
Castanea, 67, 84.
Catalpa, 91, 121, 129.
cedar, incense, 122.
Chamecyparts, 61.
Chamecyparts lawsoniana, 60.
cherry, 16, 122, 128.
chestnut, 19, 109, 120, 129, 133, 150.
conifers, 107, 119, 120, 122.
Cornus florida, 100.
cottonwood, 18, 122, 129, 139.
Crategus, 16.
currant, 119.
cypress, bald, 114, 122.
Douglas fir, 121, 129.
Fagus, 66, 103.
fir, 16, 17, 120.
fir, Douglas, 121.
fir, red, 123.
Fraxinus, 76, 90.
hazel, 18.
hemlock, (see 7’suga), 18, 121, 1238,
131, 150.
hemlock, western, 121, 128.
hickories, 17, 129, 1385, 150.
Hicoria, 63, 82, 100, 108.
Incense cedar, 122
Juglans, 62, 103.
Juniperus, 81.
Juniperus virginiana, 61.
Kalmia, 18.
Larix, 93.
Larix occidentalis, 49.
linden, 16.
Liquidambar, 71.
Liriodendron, 70, 100, 105, 129.
locust, 16, 17, 114, 121, 135.
maple, 16, 18, 122, 128, 129, 150.
oak, 16, 17, 19, 121, 122, 129, 150.
oak, chestnut, 128, 150.
oak, scarlet, 18, 150.
oak, white, 18, 150.
Picea, 50, 51, 78, 94, 102.
Picea engelmanni, 51.
Picea pungens, 16.
Picea stichensis, 16, 51.
pine, 16, 120, 135, 139.
pine, seedlings, 119, 131.
pine, white, 119, 181, 138, 150.
pine, yellow, 109.
Pinus, 76, 92, 99, 101.
Pinus cembra, 119.
Pinus echinata, 16, 48, 129, 1380.
Pinus flexilis, 45.
Pinus jeffreyr, 47.
Pinus lambertiana, 44, 129.
Pinus monticola, 45, 121.
Pinus murrayana, 46.
Pinus palustris, 48.
Pinus ponderosa, 47, 123, 129.
Pinus resinosa, 48.
Pinus rigida, 48, 129, 150.
Pinus strobus, 48, 120, 129, 130, 131.
Pinus teda, 48.
poplar, 122.
poplar, yellow, 109, 115, 135, 150.
Populus, 64, 95.
Pseudotsuga, 54.
Pyrularia, 16.
Pyrus, 72.
Quercus, 68, 85, 96, 100, 108.
red-cedar, 18, 119, 121.
Rhododendron, 18.
Ribes, 119.
Robinia, 73, 87.
Sequoia, 58, 80.
Sequoia sempervirens, 123.
spruce, (see Picea), 18, 123, 129,
130, 181, 183
Taxodium distichum, 57.
Tiha, 75, 89.
Tsuga, 79.
Tsuga canadensis, 52.
Tsuga heterophylla, 58.
Thuja gigantea, 59.
Ulmus, 69, 86, 97, 105.
walnut, 122, 128, 129, 130.
willow, 139.
159
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