2 INSECTS INJURIOUS TO FORESTS. 
badly injured by borers and that these borers were abundant. On 
March 8, 1907, he collected larve from chestnut telephone poles at 
Pennsboro, W. Va. These were determined to be the larve of the 
chestnut telephone-pole borer. 
The writer on October 3, 1909, inspected some chestnut telegraph 
poles which had been standing for about twelve years on New York 
avenue, in Washington, D.C. The poles had been taken down under 
orders from the city authorities, which necessitated the placing of 
wires in conduits under ground, and they had been lying in piles for 
about a month before they were inspected. The chestnut telephone- 
pole borer had been working in the base of the poles, and white ants, 
or termites, were associated with them. Twelve out of the 103 poles 
examined had been damaged, some more seriously than others. 
On October 15, 1909, Mr. H. E. Hopkins sent a reply to a request 
by Dr. A. D. Hopkins for further information regarding insect dam- 
age to poles in West Virginia. He stated that in one line built twelve 
years ago (40 miles long, 36 chestnut poles to the mile, poles 20 to 
40 feet long and 5 to 12 inches in diameter at the top) approximately 
600 poles had been rotted off at the top of the ground, and inspection 
showed that 95 per cent of the damage was directly or indirectly 
due to insects. Other lines in this division were reported to be in 
about the same condition. It was later determined that most of the 
insect damage was the work of the chestnut telephone-pole borer. 
Dr. A. D. Hopkins states in a recent comprehensive bulletin % that 
‘construction timbers in bridges and like structures, railroad ties, 
telephone and telegraph poles, mine props, fence posts, etc., are 
sometimes seriously injured by wood-boring larve, termites, black 
ants, carpenter bees, and powder-post beetles, and sometimes reduced 
in efficiency from 10 to 100 per cent.’’ Thus, while it has been known 
that almost all classes of forest products that are set in the ground 
are seriously injured by wood-boring insects, the problem of insect 
damage to standing poles, posts, and other timbers has never been 
made the subject of a special investigation. 
In May, 1910, this study was assigned to the writer, and, in addi- 
tion to a study of the insects involved, investigations in cooperation 
with telephone and telegraph companies have been conducted in the 
District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, 
and New York. Through the courtesy a the Western Union Tele- 
graph Company several telegraph lines were inspected in July and 
August, 1910, in Virginia, where the poles were being reset or replaced. 
Here the butts of over 200 poles set under different conditions of 
site were thoroughly examined for insect damage, and sometimes the 
a iaeeee Depmaations in North Ainbrican Forests. <Bul. 58, Past Vi: Bureau of 
Entomology, U. 8. Department of Agriculture, p. 67, 1909. 

