82. INSECTS INJURIOUS TO FOREST AND SHADE TEEES. 
wings transparent, their veins dotted with black, the dots on the outer margin larger ; 
an irregular and somewhat broken band of a smoky-brown color extending across for- 
ward of the middle and a broader one beyond the middle, having a black spot or 
stigma on the anterior corner of its outer end; between these bands a smoky-brown 
spot on the inner and a smaller one nearly opposite it on the outer margin; thorax 
with three raised lines; face black with the raised lines brown; legs dull whitish, 
Length, 0.22 inch. (Fitch.) 
68. AMYOT’S OTIOCERUS. 
Otiocerus amyotii Fitch. 
A light yellow homopter; the wing-covers pale sulphur-yellow, with a brown stripe 
from the base to the middle of the inner margin and thence to the outer tip; a row of 
blackish dots on the hind edge alternating with the ends of the apical veins, and 
about six dots forward of the innermost of these, placed on the tips of the subapical 
and on the bases of the apical veins; three brown stripes on the thorax; an orange-red 
stripe on each side of the head, from the eye to the forward edge below the apex. 
Length, 0.25; expanse of wings, 0.70 inch. (Fitch.) 
69. THE LARGE GREEN TREE BUG. 
Rhaphigaster pensylvanicus (De Geer). 
A large flattened grass-green bug (hemupter) edged all around with a light yellow 
line, interrupted at each joint of the abdomen by a small black spot, its antennie 
black beyond the middle of their third joint, with a pale yellow band on the first half 
of the two last joints. Length, 0.60 and 0.70 inch. (Fitch.) 
70. THE WALNUT LEAF-ROLLER. 
Tortrix rileyana Grote. 
Order LEPIDOPTERA ; family TORTRICID®. 
Drawing together the leaves of the black walnut and hickory in May, a colony of 
small yellow caterpillars; late in the month changing to honey-yellow chrysalids, the 
moths escaping by the middle or last of June. The latter expands an inch, and is 
deep ochreous, the fore-wings broad, evenly washed with purplish, with dark velvety- 
brown small spots, of which there are three at the base, two in the middle of the wing, 
and one on the edge, while near the apex is a curved row of four or five spots. The 
hind wings clear bright deep ochreous yellow. (Riley. ) 
71. THE WALNUT CASE-BEARER. 
Acrobasis juglandis Le Baron. 
fq Order LEripoprTeRA; family PYRALIDA. 
Drawing two leaflets together and 
constructing a black case, a small dark 
/ greenish worm, changing to a gray nar- 
row-winged small moth. (Fig. 20.— 
Riley IV, p. 42.) 
We have observed at Provi- 
dence, June 1st, between the fold. 
ed leaves of Carya porcina, a simi- 
Fic. 37.—Walnut case-bearer; a, case between two lar Case, but in the form of a long, 
leaves; b, case; c, A nebulo; d, A. ‘uglandis; e, jag- wz 
pele eae se; c, A nebulo; d, uglandis; ¢ J¢9- ander black cone. 
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