Fifth report of the United States Entomological Commission, being a revised and enlarged edition of Bulletin no7, on insects injurious to forest and shade trees . Fig. 177.—Leaf of Poplar-leaved Birch folded byleaf-roller. No. 74. BIRCH LEAF-ROLLERS. 507 Figures 178, 179, and 180 represent the work of three leaf-rollers notyet identified. 75. Argyresihia gwdariella (Linn.). The histories of this and the next Tiueid have been sketched as fol-lows by Mrs. Dimmock : Argyresthia gocdarteUa Liun, (Syst. Nat., 1758, ed. 10, p. 897.) Fabricius (, 1775, p. 664) writes of this species Habita


Fifth report of the United States Entomological Commission, being a revised and enlarged edition of Bulletin no7, on insects injurious to forest and shade trees . Fig. 177.—Leaf of Poplar-leaved Birch folded byleaf-roller. No. 74. BIRCH LEAF-ROLLERS. 507 Figures 178, 179, and 180 represent the work of three leaf-rollers notyet identified. 75. Argyresihia gwdariella (Linn.). The histories of this and the next Tiueid have been sketched as fol-lows by Mrs. Dimmock : Argyresthia gocdarteUa Liun, (Syst. Nat., 1758, ed. 10, p. 897.) Fabricius (, 1775, p. 664) writes of this species Habitat in Aluetis, in betulse geminis,^and Kaltenbach (Pflauzenfinde, 1872, pp. 604-605) states that the larvse of this specieslive in the catkins of Betula and Almis. Chambers (Can. Eutom., August 1875, v. 7,pp. 144-145) notes the discovery of this species in North America, and, after describing^the imago, adds: The larva feeds under the bark and in th8young shoots of the birch in March and April. A. Balding(Entom. MonWily Mag., February 1885, v. 21, pp. 203-206) de-scribes the larva, which he found feeding in catkins of Betula andAlnus. (Psyche, iv, 241.).


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