. Eastern forest insects. Forest insects. **. V* ~ «- r" ' 4 n COURTESY OF DUKE UNIV. SCH. OF FOREST. Figure 58.—Galleries of Neoclytm caprea, the banded ash borer. Note that tunnels are tightly packed with granular frass. clothed with a hairy covering. Felt (239) published a monograph on the genus. The poplar borer, Saperda calcarata Say, occurs throughout the United States and Canada, wherever poplar grows. Willows are also subject to attack. The adult is from 20 to 28 mm. long, grayish-black or reddish-brown, and densely clothed with gray and yellow fine hairs (fig. 60). There also are


. Eastern forest insects. Forest insects. **. V* ~ «- r" ' 4 n COURTESY OF DUKE UNIV. SCH. OF FOREST. Figure 58.—Galleries of Neoclytm caprea, the banded ash borer. Note that tunnels are tightly packed with granular frass. clothed with a hairy covering. Felt (239) published a monograph on the genus. The poplar borer, Saperda calcarata Say, occurs throughout the United States and Canada, wherever poplar grows. Willows are also subject to attack. The adult is from 20 to 28 mm. long, grayish-black or reddish-brown, and densely clothed with gray and yellow fine hairs (fig. 60). There also are yellowish stripes on the thorax and orange-yellow markings on the wing covers. Full- grown larvae are creamy white and about 30 mm. long. Adults appear during the summer, feed on the bark of young twigs, and deposit their eggs in small slits cut in the bark, usu- ally in the middle third of the tree. The larvae bore into the inner bark and sapwood where they later spend the winter. In the spring, they bore into the sapwood and heartwood and feed there until they are mature. Attacked trees are characterized by the presence of swollen scars and holes in the trunk and larger branches. Each larva bores an opening out to and through the bark through which frass is expelled and sap exudes. Wet areas around these holes blacken and appear varnished. The life cycle requires 3 years in the North. In the Deep South it is shorter. In 185. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Baker, Whiteford L. (Whiteford Lee), 1903-. Washington : U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service ; for sale by the Supt. of Docs. , U. S. G. P. O


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookcollectionbiodive, booksubjectforestinsects