NOTES OF OBSERVATIONS 
OF 
Nido koko TN SHOES 
AND 
COMMON CROP PESTS 
Dorine 1896. 
APPLE. 
Codlin Moth. Carpocapsa pomonella, Linn. 
P 
Wz 
=a 
=ser 
—~ =, 
— 
CARPOCAPSA POMONELLA.—Moth and caterpillar, nat. size; and moth, magnified 
(after figures in ‘Insects Injurious to Fruits,’ by Dr. W. Saunders) ; infested Apple 
from life by Editor. 
Copuin Morn attack is one of the yearly troubles of the fruit- 
erower, and though other kinds of infestation (as, for instance, that 
of the Apple Sawfly) doubtless play their part, in causing maggotty 
Apples, yet in this country we may safely lay most of the damage, 
to workings within the Apples of the little larve of the Carpocapsa 
pomonella. In the course of last season, nothing was reported to me 
worth record in the way of any advance in information in remedial 
measures here, and perhaps also the attack was not worse than usual, 
though (to give a single instance) in one case of 2000 injured Apples 
B 
