. Injurious insects of the orchard, vineyard, field, garden, conservatory, household, storehouse, domestic animals, etc., with remedies for their extermination . )on them. It has nearly thesame habits as the (rreater Leaf-roller (Chapter XL.) 212 INSECTS INFESTING THE RASPBERRY. Fig. 199.—Raspberry Leaf-roller, nat-ural size and enlarged—colors, yellowish ,^5^^^,^^^^;,^-^or brownish. The perfect moth (Fig. 199) has yellowish, varied with brownstreaks and patches. The caterpillarappears about the time the berry is inbloom. I have found the moth of thisspecies, and also the nest o


. Injurious insects of the orchard, vineyard, field, garden, conservatory, household, storehouse, domestic animals, etc., with remedies for their extermination . )on them. It has nearly thesame habits as the (rreater Leaf-roller (Chapter XL.) 212 INSECTS INFESTING THE RASPBERRY. Fig. 199.—Raspberry Leaf-roller, nat-ural size and enlarged—colors, yellowish ,^5^^^,^^^^;,^-^or brownish. The perfect moth (Fig. 199) has yellowish, varied with brownstreaks and patches. The caterpillarappears about the time the berry is inbloom. I have found the moth of thisspecies, and also the nest of the larva, but have never foundthe larva. Remedies.—(See Remedies, Chapter XL.). CHAPTER CXXVIII. The Raspberry Aphis. (Siphonophora rubi.—Kaltenbach.) Order, Hemiptera ; ) -r, .-, . c, 1 1 TT ( F amily, Aphidid^e. Sub-order, Homoptera ; ) • [Living on the stems and leaves of blackberry and rasp-berry bushes, which they puncture with their beaks andextract the sap; small, greenish plant-lice.] The wingless and winged lice of this species are almostentirely of a greenish color.—Prof. Thomas. Remedy.—Use No. 3, 4, 5, or 7. CHAPTER CXXIX. The Negro Bug.(Corimelsena pulicaria.—Germar.) Order, Hemiptera ; ) ^^^^.^ Scutellarid^. Sub-order, Homoptera \ ) -^ [Living upon the stems and fruit of the strawberry, rasp-berry, cherry, and quince; a small black bug, with a whitestripe on each side of the wing-covers.] INSECTS INFESTING THE RASPBERRY. 213 These bugs puncture the young twig^; and fruit and imbibethe sap; but the injury they occasion in this direction is asnothing compared to the effect which their presence has uponthe fruit, as they exhale an offensive o


Size: 1775px × 1407px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookidinjuriousins, bookyear1883