They vary from yellowish-green through horn color to chestnut, most of them being simply horn-colored. This is perhaps owing to the fact that our species do not infest our gardens and open fields, but are generally confined to forests, sheltered under... Boston Journal of Natural History - Page 4691837Full view - About this book
| Fruit-culture - 1837 - 510 pages
...uni.form and less brilliant in their coloring, and are in general destitute of spots and painted bauds or zones. This peculiarity seems to be connected with,...to more than half of the whole number, and to more thau three quarters of those with reflected lips. ******* " The natural food of the genus is generally... | |
| Fruit-culture - 1837 - 490 pages
...respective animals which in Europe are common in gardens and fields, on walls and hedges, and other pinces exposed to the action of light, while in this country...than three quarters of those with reflected lips. ******* "The natural food of the genus is generally supposed to be vegetable matter, and the formation... | |
| Amos Binney - Mollusks - 1851 - 390 pages
...the fact that our species do not infest our gardens and open fields, but are generally confined to forests, sheltered under logs and stones, and are rarely seen abroad except during twilight or on damp and dark days ; indeed, they almost entirely disappear as the forests are cut down, and... | |
| Smithsonian Institution - Birds - 1869 - 940 pages
...the fact that our species do not infest our gardens and open fields, but are generally confined to forests, sheltered under logs and stones, and are rarely seen abroad except during twilight or on damp and dark days ; indeed, they almost entirely disappear as the forests are cut down, and... | |
| United States National Museum - Science - 1885 - 984 pages
...the fact that our species do not infest our gardens and open fields, but are generally confined to forests, sheltered under logs and stones, and are rarely seen abroad except during twilight or on damp and dark days; indeed, they almost entirely disappear as the forests are cat down, and seem... | |
| United States National Museum - Science - 1885 - 594 pages
...the fact that our species do not infest our gardens and open fields, but are generally confined to forests, sheltered under logs and stones, and are rarely seen abroad except during twilight or on damp and dark days ; indeed, they almost entirely disappear as the forests are cut down, and... | |
| Ernest Ingersoll, William Cornelius Wyckoff - Science - 1878 - 406 pages
...the fact that our species do not infest our gardens and open fields, but are generally confined to forests, sheltered under logs and stones, and are rarely seen abroad, except during twilight, or on damp and dark day.s." " The European specie-, on the other hand, follow in the track of cultivation,... | |
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