Economic entomology for the farmer Economic entomology for the farmer and the fruit grower, and for use as a text-book in agricultural schools and colleges; economicentomol00smit Year: 1906 224 A,V ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY. completely destroyed. Wild as well as cultivated plants are infested, though we do not know that insects infesting our garden varieties are carried over by other wild species. Fig. 224. Fig. 225. 'Pe^2L-\^zfi\\\, Bruchus pisi—c, larva; rf, pupa; (^, adult; all enlarged. We now reach the series Hderomera, or beetles in which the fore and middle tarsi have five joints, while th


Economic entomology for the farmer Economic entomology for the farmer and the fruit grower, and for use as a text-book in agricultural schools and colleges; economicentomol00smit Year: 1906 224 A,V ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY. completely destroyed. Wild as well as cultivated plants are infested, though we do not know that insects infesting our garden varieties are carried over by other wild species. Fig. 224. Fig. 225. 'Pe^2L-\^zfi\\\, Bruchus pisi—c, larva; rf, pupa; (^, adult; all enlarged. We now reach the series Hderomera, or beetles in which the fore and middle tarsi have five joints, while the posterior are four-jointed only. We have rather a large number of families, many with a few species only, and as a whole they are feeders in or on decaying or dry vegetable tissue, whether herbaceous, woody, or fungoid in character. There are exceptions, of course, but that is the rule. The Tencbrionidce, or 'darkling-beetles.' contain species ranging from quite small to very large, found under all sorts of conditions, but most frequently beneath bark of trees, on fungi, or under stones, among dry vegetable matter. There is no uniformity in appearance, but in most instances the antennae are more or less moniliform, or bead-like. The majority of our species are Western, occurring in their greatest variety in the Rocky Mountain region, but none, so far as I know, trouble green vegetation. The typical genus Tenebrio contains black or brownish, somewhat flattened species, with a square thorax and deeply ridged wing-covers. The larvae are known as ' meal-worms,' and feed upon grain or meal remnants in barn, stable, or other sheltered


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