198 



GENUINE SNOUT-BEETLES. 



In about a month it attains its full size, when it presents the ap- 

 pearance shown in Fit;- 209, which represents the larva and the 

 pupa highly magnified. Fig. 210 shows an infested apple, the 

 egg c, and egg-cavity b. 



"The larva is a soft white grub, nearly halt an inch in length, 

 w ith a yellowish-brown head and jaws. Its body is much wrinkled, 

 the spaces between the folds being of a bluish-black color; there is 

 also a line of a bluish shade down the back. Having no legs, it is 

 incapable of much movement, and remains within the fruit it 

 occupies, changing there to a pupa of a whitish color, and in two 

 or three weeks, when perfected, the beetle cuts a hole through 

 the fruit and escapes. 



Fig. 210. — Applecontainingeggs; b, egg-cavity, 

 natural size; c, egg, much enlarged. After 

 Gillette. 



Fis. 211 -Anthonomussigrn&tus, 

 Say. After Division of Ento- 

 mology, U. S. Department of 

 Agriculture. 



"When feeding this insect makes a number of holes or punc- 

 tures, and around these a hard knot or swelling forms, which much 

 disfigures the fruit ; pears, as well as apples, are injured in this 

 way. The infested fruits do not usually fall to the ground, as do 

 apples affected by the codling worm, but remain attached to the 

 tree, and the insect, from its habit of living within the fruit 

 through all its stages, is a difficult one to destroy. Picking the 

 affected specimens from the tree, and vigorously jarring the tree 

 during the time when the beetle is about, will bring it to the 

 ground, where it can be destroyed in the same manner as recom- 

 mended for the plum curculio. Fortunately it is seldom found 

 in such abundance as to do much damage to the fruit-crop. In 

 Southern Illinois, and in some portions of Missouri it has proved 



