ATTACKING THE LEAVES. 



345 



measures an inch or more in length, is of a whitish color, with 

 a wide yellow stripe down the back, another of the same char- 

 acter along each side, 

 and a nnraber of black 

 spots of different sizes 

 npon eacli segment. 

 The under side is 

 white with a slight 

 tinge of pink, is also 

 spotted with black, 

 and has a wide yellow 

 stripe down the mid- 

 dle. There is but one 

 brood of this insect in 

 a year ; hence there is 

 no probability of its 

 ever becoming so for- 

 midable a pest as tlie 

 imported saw-fly. 



The eggs, which are 

 very pretty (see Fig. 

 358, which shows one much magnified at «, and others of 

 the natural size at h), are attached to the stems and twigs in 

 the autumn, and remain in this condition 

 until spring, when they hatch about the 

 time the bushes are in full leaf, the larvae 

 attaining their full growth within three 

 or four weeks. When ready for their 

 next change, they descend to the ground, 

 and, having penetrated a short distance 

 under the surface, change to dark-brown 

 chrysalids about half an inch long (see 3, 

 Fig. 357), in which condition they remain two or three weei:?i 

 or more, when the perfect insects are liberated. 



The moth (Fig. 359) is of a pale- yellowish color, with 

 several dusky spots, which vary in size and form, being more 



