'54 



THE INSECT WORLD. 



I 



caterpillars live in quantities, on apple, pear, and elm trees, and 



destroy the plantations of the promenades of Paris. 



The females of this genus tear off the fur from the extremity of 



their abdomens to make a soft bed 

 for their eggs, and to preserve them 

 from the cold. And yet they are 

 never to see their young, for they die 

 after they have laid their eggs. An- 

 other tribe of Bombycina contains 

 species of a small size, which are 

 remarkable from the habits of their 

 caterpillars, which make, with foreign 

 bodies, cases, in the interior of v/hich 



they live and undergo their metamorphoses. 



The caterpillars of the genus Psyche live in a case composed of 



Fig. 236. — Liparia chrysorrhoea. 



Fig. 237. — Case of Psyche muscella. 



Fig. 238.— Psyche muscella. 



Fig. 239.— Case of Pysche rublcolella. 



Fig. 240. — Case of Psy :he graininelln 



Fig. 241.— Larva of Psyche graminella. 



Fig. 242 .^Psyche graminella. 



fragments of leaves, of bits of grass and straw, of small sticks 

 wood, or of little stones, stuck' together, and intermixed with silk) 

 threads. 



