. Annual report of the Regents . E%. Fig, 3. Plate 1. The Cherry-tree aphis, Myzus cerasi: Fig, 1, apterus viviparous, female; 1 a, head andantenna of same; 2, winged migrant; 3, return migrant; 4, winged male; 4 a, head and antenna ofsame; 5, oviparous female. Ninth Report of the State Entomologist 347 beneath the chister of plant-lice; this is knows to botanists as iScorias-spo)i(/iosum. It is evidently fed by the honey-dew that falls upon it.*An example of this fungus has been shown me by Miss FlorenceHimes, of Albany, who had taken it from an alder in Washington fungus was at
. Annual report of the Regents . E%. Fig, 3. Plate 1. The Cherry-tree aphis, Myzus cerasi: Fig, 1, apterus viviparous, female; 1 a, head andantenna of same; 2, winged migrant; 3, return migrant; 4, winged male; 4 a, head and antenna ofsame; 5, oviparous female. Ninth Report of the State Entomologist 347 beneath the chister of plant-lice; this is knows to botanists as iScorias-spo)i(/iosum. It is evidently fed by the honey-dew that falls upon it.*An example of this fungus has been shown me by Miss FlorenceHimes, of Albany, who had taken it from an alder in Washington fungus was at the tip of a small twig that was given off from aboutfour inches below the aphis-bearing stem, and curved upward so nearit that it might easily have received quite an amount of the honey-dewdropping from the plant-lice. The sj^ecimen was identified by A. Peck, State Botanist, as the above-named species of or three other examples of the same had been seen by Miss Phylloxera vitifoliae (Fitch).The Grajyevine
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