The Entomologist's Monthly Magazine, Volume 19Entomologist's Monthly Magazine Limited, 1883 - Entomology |
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Page 2
... pupa . By this time two more larvæ were full - fed and left the food - plant for the gauze , the rest being fully half grown , when a change of weather came , with wind , heavy rain , and a total absence of sunshine . The larvæ were ...
... pupa . By this time two more larvæ were full - fed and left the food - plant for the gauze , the rest being fully half grown , when a change of weather came , with wind , heavy rain , and a total absence of sunshine . The larvæ were ...
Page 3
... pupa showed the yellow colour of the wings in December and then died . This colour of the wings , as we all know , only shows itself when the insect is nearly ready to emerge , and these Edusa pupa following inherited habit tried to ...
... pupa showed the yellow colour of the wings in December and then died . This colour of the wings , as we all know , only shows itself when the insect is nearly ready to emerge , and these Edusa pupa following inherited habit tried to ...
Page 7
... pupa , having little else to subsist upon . But I believe that the mischief done by all these added together does not equal that done by the Onisci . During mild winters these crustaceous vermin increase and mul- tiply , and feed , and ...
... pupa , having little else to subsist upon . But I believe that the mischief done by all these added together does not equal that done by the Onisci . During mild winters these crustaceous vermin increase and mul- tiply , and feed , and ...
Page 19
... pupa and bred the perfect insect . At the time I had no idea what these larvæ would produce , and certainly did not expect to see a butterfly . What they fed on I cannot say , for they were full- grown when found , and preparing to ...
... pupa and bred the perfect insect . At the time I had no idea what these larvæ would produce , and certainly did not expect to see a butterfly . What they fed on I cannot say , for they were full- grown when found , and preparing to ...
Page 40
... pupa comfortably without room to spare ; the pupa itself is of a very dumpy form , with rather a bluntly tapered abdomen , having at the tip two fine thorny points of inconceivable minuteness , and in contact with the compressed old ...
... pupa comfortably without room to spare ; the pupa itself is of a very dumpy form , with rather a bluntly tapered abdomen , having at the tip two fine thorny points of inconceivable minuteness , and in contact with the compressed old ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen abundant allied alulets anal angles antennæ apex apical appears arbuti August Barrackpore basal base blackish British butterflies Callao captured central cocoon Coleophora Coleoptera collection colour common costal coxæ Cram Curt dark brown darker Desv distinct dorsal Duranta eggs elytra Entomologists Fabr feed female fore-wings fourth longitudinal veins Frederic Moore fuscous genera genus green grey ground-colour hairs Harpalus head hind tibiæ hind-wings Hymenoptera indistinct insect July June larva larvæ latter leaf leaves legs length Lepidoptera Lewisham Linn male March to October margin marked middle Moore moths moult narrow occurred pale palpi Pict plants posterior pronotum pubescent pupa radicum rains rare resemblance Rond rounded scutellum Scymnus September shining short side single specimen slightly species spots Stainton stripe surface taken testaceous thorax tibiæ transverse Trichoptera under-side upper-side variety whitish yellow Zeller Zett
Popular passages
Page v - S (Frank) FRGS— MATABELE LAND AND THE VICTORIA FALLS. A Naturalist's Wanderings in the Interior of South Africa.
Page ii - Characters of new genera and descriptions of new species of Geodephaga from the Hawaiian Islands, V.
Page 39 - In the report of the Proceedings of the last meeting of the Entomological Society of London (ante p. 48) I am described as having " alluded to the genus Platypleura as occurring nearly all over the world.
Page 33 - Diptera occurs in the Entomologist for July of the present year (Ent. xv. 164): — 'At one of the meetings of the International Medical Congress, Dr. WG George stated that a girl, aged twelve, presented herself with the following history: — About three months before being seen by a medical man an ovoid swelling appeared on the outer side of the ankle, causing her some pain and uneasiness in walking. This swelling gradually shifted its position, and slowly moved up the leg, thence towards the right...
Page 120 - September 1 949 at the autumn foray of the British Mycological Society. The identity of the fungus was confirmed by Miss EM Wakefield. As far as I am aware this is the first record of its occurrence on any host other than oak. From the scanty records it appears to be rare both in this country and in Europe. Pilat (1936) records it as occurring usually on old living oak trees, also on dead oak trees and on converted timber exposed to damp, but remarks that it has not yet been recorded...
Page 78 - ... articulating with this framework. The larva burrows its way into the tissue on which it feeds by repeated extension and contraction of the hooks, alternately piercing and tearing. These movements explain the agonizing pain which patients experience when the larvae appear from the eggs. These hooks are very large in proportion to the size of the body of the larvae.
Page 22 - During the latter years of his life much of his time was occnpied in working out and drawing the plumules found-on some families of butterflies.
Page 33 - Several other similar swellings developed upon subsequent occasions under medical observation, and the medical man extracted other grubs exactly similar to the first specimen. No cause could be assigned for these curious phenomena. The larvae were pronounced by competent authority to belong to a Dipterous insect, although the genus could not be satisfactorily determined. There was no sufficient proof of the existence of an (Estrus peculiar to man alone. A good abstract, from which the above is quoted,...
Page 63 - ... machaon, when the forked tubercle is extended, and more like that of ripe pineapple than any other perfume of which I know. I noticed it faintly when turning the moths out of the pill-boxes, but when a number were pinned into a box it became very noticeable indeed. It was confined to the male moth, and seemed especially to come from the curious bladdery termination of the aborted hind legs, but of this I am not positive. It certainly does not continue to be observable when the moths get worn....
Page 6 - ... sufficiently severe to induce complete torpidity, undisturbed by warm and spring-like weather at unseasonable times, and this may account for the vast increase in numbers in species which hibernate in the egg state; it also probably has a strengthening effect on those which pass the winter as small social larvae under a silken tent on the ground...