BEETLES. 323 



of Europe, was introduced into America, near New York city, about 1856, and since 

 then has been slowly spreading over Long Island and New Jersey. The beetles that 

 have hibernated appear in early spring, and lay their blackish-brown eggs upon shoots 

 of asparagus as soon as the latter come out of the ground. The full-grown larvae are 

 about 0.25 inch long, ashy gray or obscure olive green, with shining black head 

 and legs, and a row of small warts of the same color along each side. The pupa is 

 enclosed in a slight cocoon, just underground or beneath leaves and rubbish upon the 

 surface. The egg state lasts about eight days, the larval stage about twelve days, and 

 pupation about ten days. The beetle is about 0.25 inch long, and the arrangement 

 of its colors black, yellow, and red is somewhat variable. The head is black; 

 the prothorax reddish, often with two black spots above ; the elytra are yellow, with a 

 sutural stripe of black, from which stripe extends two black bands dividing the yellow 

 part of each elytron into three portions, which vary from three dots to three broad 

 bands, according to the width of the black sutural stripe and its branches. Beneath 

 the beetle is nearly or entirely shining black. Recently a second European species of 

 asparagus-beetle, Crioceris duodecimpunctata, has been introduced into Maryland. 

 The upper surface is orange red, each elytron having six black dots. 



Differing structurally from Crioceris by their very long first ventral segment, are 

 the numerous species of Donacia, found upon water-plants. Donacia resembles, in 

 general appearance, the longicorns (Cerambycidse) ; the antenna being inserted on the 

 front, and filiform, while the prothorax is narrow and not margined. These beetles 

 fly quickly from one plant to another. Their coloration is generally metallic, often 

 bronze-green above, and they are clothed with water-repelling hairs beneath. A 

 noticeable peculiarity of species of this genus is that they are full of some corroding 

 acid that rusts and destroys the pins on which they are mounted in collections. On 

 this account some collectors mount them on slips of paper, as is otherwise done only 

 with minute insects. 



E. Heeger writes of D. clavipes, a European species, that the females, having passed 

 the winter in water and under decaying vegetation, deposit their eggs one by one, in 

 the daytime, upon the thick roots of the water plantain (Alisnia plantago). Each 

 female has only from forty to fifty eggs, which are deposited in from fourteen to 

 eighteen days. In from ten to twenty days the larvae appear, and feed upon the roots 

 of the water-plantain. At the end of five or six weeks pupation takes place in a sub- 

 merged, parchment-like cocoon, which is fastened to the stem of the water-plantain, 

 and which the larvse know how to fill with air. Pupation lasts from twenty to twenty- 

 five days. Professor C. T. E. von Siebold states that the larvae of D. simplex fasten 

 themselves by the end of their abdomen in a hole which they gnaw out of the root- 

 stalk of the bur-reed (Sparaganium simplex}^ while they feed upon the diatoms and 

 algae of the slime about them. The boring into the bur-reed is for respiratory purposes, 

 the larvae breathing the air of the intercellular spaces of the plant by means of its single 

 pair of stigmata, which are in the hooks at the tip of the abdomen. 



The CERAMBYCIDSE, the so-called longicorn family, contains nearly as many species 

 as does the family of Chrysomelidae, and it is difficult to give any scientific characters 

 by which to separate absolutely the two families, although collectors would rarely be 

 in doubt as to which family to assign any given specimen. The species of Ceramby- 

 cidae are generally somewhat elongated, often cylindrical. The antennae are usually 

 very long, sometimes much longer than the rest of the insect - - whence the name 

 longicorn. They are mostly filiform, in some cases serrate, imbricate, or pectinate, 



