. Circular. Insect pests; Insect pests. â --^â -z-"'^>^. Fig. 3.âThe Australian roach (Pcriplanela ): a, Male with spread wings; 6, female; c, pupa. All life-size. (Original.) eighteenth century, although unknown at the same time in the French Canadian possessions.' It then seemed to be commonly known as the mill beetle. The early Dutch called them Kakerlacli, and in the wSwede settlements they were known as Brodsetare (bread eaters). It is now very common in houses in the East, but is quite generally distributed, and is the com- mon species even so far removed from the Atl


. Circular. Insect pests; Insect pests. â --^â -z-"'^>^. Fig. 3.âThe Australian roach (Pcriplanela ): a, Male with spread wings; 6, female; c, pupa. All life-size. (Original.) eighteenth century, although unknown at the same time in the French Canadian possessions.' It then seemed to be commonly known as the mill beetle. The early Dutch called them Kakerlacli, and in the wSwede settlements they were known as Brodsetare (bread eaters). It is now very common in houses in the East, but is quite generally distributed, and is the com- mon species even so far removed from the Atlantic seaboard as New Mexico. The characteristics of this insect are shown in the accom- panying illustration (fig. 4). The German cockroach (Blattella germanica) is particularly abun- dant in Germany and neighboring European countries, but, like most See Kalm'a Travels, Vol. I, p. 321; II, p. 256. [Cir. 51]. 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 United States. Bureau of Entomology. [Washington, D. C. ] : The Division


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