(C) 



LIST OF PUBLICATIONS OF THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 



The following is a list of the principal publications of the Ento- 

 mologist during the year 1892 — thirty-three are named, — giving 

 title, place and time of publication and a summary of contents. 



A similar list for the years 1870-1874 is appended. 



Killing the Pea-Weevil. (Kural New Yorker, for April 2, 1892, 



li, p. 227, c. 2, 3 — 9 cm.) 



Bruchus pi si may he killed in newly ripened pease by exposure for one 

 hour to a temperature of 145° Fahr. The vapor of bisulphide of carbon is 

 believed to be the best agent for killing the bean- and the pea-vreevil. 



Early "Grasshoppers." (Country Gentleman, for April 14, 1892, 

 Ivii, pp. 286-7, cols. 4, 1 — 28 cm.) 



Insects taken in Washington Co., N. Y., hopping about on March 20th, 

 are the young of the green-striped locust, Chimaroeephala viridifasciata 

 De Geer, noticed in the Second Report on the Insects of New York, 

 as appearing in the winter of 1882 in different places in New York. Their 

 life-history is sketched and reasons given why severe injuries may not be 

 expected from these early appearances. Reference is made to the erroneous 

 popular use of the name "grasshopper" for locust. 



[See extended notice as Chortophaga viridifasciata, in pp. 330-334 of this 

 report (ix).] 



''^Cluster Flies — Pollenia Rudis. (Country Gentleman, for May 5, 

 1892, Ivii, p. 358, c. 1, 2 — 54 cm.) 



The fly identified and the names which it has borne; notice by W. H. Dall, 

 of its occurrence at Geneva, N. Y,, and elsewhere by other writers: its hiber- 

 nation in houses: its principal features: how it may be killed. 



[Extended in pp. 309-314 of tliis (Ninth) Report.] 



Report of the State Entomologist for the Year 1890. (Forty- 

 fourth Annual Report of the jN'ew York State Museum for the 

 Year 1800, pp. 197-405, figs. 1-40.) Separate : Seventh Report 

 on the Injurious and Other Insects of the State of New York 

 [April 29J, 1891, pp. 210, figs. 40. 



The contents are: Introductory: Injurious Insects: Aulacomerus 

 lutescens, the Poplar saw-fly. Pyrrharctia Isabella, the Black-and- red Woolly 



*The capitalization, etc., of the Country Gentleman is followed herein in the citation from it 

 of titles of publications. 



