Annual report of the Agricultural Experiment Station of the University of Minnesota . as soon as the Beetles areobserved they be destroyed by frequent jarring, catching themon a sheet or white cloth beneath the tree, and destroying an auxiliary to this leaves and trees may be poisoned withParis Green, using the same proportions with lime as recom-mended in discussion of Blister Beetles on Windsor 62, on page 69, also represents this beetle. Other injurious insects occurring during the past season wereas follows: Scolytids, on box elders. Various Jassids, or Leaf Hoppers. 66


Annual report of the Agricultural Experiment Station of the University of Minnesota . as soon as the Beetles areobserved they be destroyed by frequent jarring, catching themon a sheet or white cloth beneath the tree, and destroying an auxiliary to this leaves and trees may be poisoned withParis Green, using the same proportions with lime as recom-mended in discussion of Blister Beetles on Windsor 62, on page 69, also represents this beetle. Other injurious insects occurring during the past season wereas follows: Scolytids, on box elders. Various Jassids, or Leaf Hoppers. 66 INSECTS INJURIOUS IN 1902. A number of scale insects, various forms of plant lice, theusual quota of Cabbage Worms; a Mite, on box elders. Ptinus fur on sacks of flour stored in elevator. Tribolium conf usitin, in flour. An Anthomyd causing the deatb of crop beans by boring inthe stalk. Box Elder Bug (Leptucorisa trivittata); a very few reportedin Meeker and Big Stone counties. The borer known as Saperda cretata; Lyctus striatus boringin timber, etc. INSECTS INJURIOUS IN 1902. 67. Fig. 57.—Hessian-fly: (1) adult female; (2) abdomen of male; (3) pupa re-moved from puparium (flax-seed); (4) puparium ; (5) larvae;(7) puparia in position. All enlarged exceptingY. (After Taschenburg).


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectagriculture, bookyear