: THE CODLING MOTH IN THE OZARKS. 25 
In the 1908 band record the smaller size of the second brood as 
compared with the first is due to the fact that the very small crop of 
apples became so infested that they fell from the trees before a large 
number of the later larvee had matured. For the same reason the 
I I 5 
Jane June J June oats or ly July Ju ” fag Aug Flug Au S 
Fig. 3.—Curve showing baw record of 1908. 
third brood is not represented. The record was not begun in time 
to include the earliest larva, which had begun to leave the fruit 
May 24. 
A band record made in 1908 by Mr. F. W. Faurot (figs. 4 and 5) 
at Anderson, Mo., 40 miles north of Siloam Springs, is mteresting 
olf 
jee Jae ge i ie Ba 
Fic. 4.—Curve showing band record from 6 Jonathan apple trees, made at Anderson, Mo., in 1908, by 
Mr. F. W. Faurot. 
as showing the effect of spraying. The record was made on un- 
sprayed trees in a sprayed orchard. Since the banded trees were 
themselves not sprayed, the size of the first brood of larve shown 
in the band record was not affected. But the spraying of the re- 
mainder of the orchard, and the killing of all larve and pup taken 
