THE SALT-MARSH CATERPILLAR. 353 



is yellow, sliadetl at the sides with black, and there is a 

 blackish line extending along the top of the back. The 

 breathing-holes are white, and very distinct even throuo-h 

 the hairs. These caterpillars, when feeding on the marshes, 

 are sometimes overtaken by the tide, and when escape be- 

 comes impossible they roll themselves up in a circular form, 

 as is common with others of the tribe, and abandon them- 

 selves to their fate. The hairs on their bodies seem to have 

 a repelling power, and prevent the Avater from wetting their 

 skins, so that they float on the surface, and are often carried 

 by the waves to distant places, where they are thrown on 

 shore and left in winrows with the wash of the sea. After 

 a little time, most of them recover from their half-drowned 

 condition, and begin their depredations anew. In this way, 

 these insects seem to have spread from the places where they 

 first appeared to others at a considerable distance. 



From the marshes about Cambridge they were once, it is 

 said, driven in great numbers by a high tide and strong wind 

 upon Boston Neck, near to Roxbury line. Thence they seem 

 to have migrated to the eastern side of the Neck, and, follow- 

 ing the marshes to South Boston and Dorchester, they have 

 spread in the course of time to those which border upon 

 Neponset River and Quincy. How far they have extended 

 north of Boston I have not been able to ascertain ; but I 

 believe that they are occasionally found on all the marshes 

 of Chelsea, Saugus, and Lynn. Although these insects do 

 not seem ever entirely to have disappeared from places where 

 they have once established themselves, they do not prevail 

 every year in the same overwhelming swarais ; but their 

 numbers are increased or lessened at irregular periods from 

 causes which are not well understood. 



These caterpillars are produced from eggs, which are laid 

 by the moths on the grass of the marshes about the middle 

 of June, and are hatched in seven or eight days afterwards; 

 and the number of eggs deposited by a single female is, on an 

 average, about eight hundred. The moths themselves vary 

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