82 



Fruit — Continued. 

 -grafts injured by Pale striped Flea- 

 beetle, xxi, 121. 

 injured by Greasy Cutworm, xxiii 



21, 22. 

 ripe, destroyed by Green June-beetle, 



xxiii, 102. 

 small, leaves of. as food of woolly 



bears, xxiii, 73. 

 -spot, peach, xxii. 101. 127. See under 



Peach fruit-spot, 

 -trees and fruit injured by Schisto- 

 cerca americana, xxiii. 141. 

 by Tarnished Plant-bug, xiii, 

 115, 116, 122-129. 

 injured by Dingy Cutworm, xxiii, 27. 

 leaves, buds, and bark of, devoured 

 by Clay-colored Weevil, xxi, 145. 

 eaten by Southern Corn Root- 

 worm beetle, xxi, 126. 

 -weevil. Black, xiii. 62. 177. 

 description of, xiii. 177. 

 injurious to Strawberry in England 

 and on Continent, xiii, 177. 

 Fruits, as food of flower-beetles, xxiii. 

 100. 

 bruised and sound, as food of Niti- 



dulidae, xxiii. 181. 

 field crops, and garden products in- 

 jured by Greasy Cutworm, xxi, 104. 

 infested by Thripidae, xxiii, 135. 

 injured by Dark-sided Cutworm, xxiii. 

 33. 

 frutescens. Wistaria, xxiii, 166. 

 Fuchsias injured by Common Red Spi- 

 der, xxi. 58. 

 fugax. Solenopsis. xiii, 45, 61. 112; Misc. 



Ess., 58; xviii. 9. 

 fugitiva, Banchus, xv, 70. 



Limneria. xv, 70. 

 Fulgoridae, xxi, 64. 

 fulleri. Aramigus, xvii. XIII. 

 Fuller's Rose-beetle, appearance of in 



hothouses, xvii, XTTT. 

 fulvipes, Merisus, Misc. Ess.. 15. 



Pti romalus, xiv. 47.4": Misc. Ess., 15. 

 fulvoroseana, Crcesia?. xiv 17. 

 fulvosa, Prodenia autumnalis, xiv, 57. 

 fumata. Typhcea, Misc. Ess.. 94. 

 Fumigation, xxii. 33. 34. 120. 121. 

 for Black Peach-aphis, xxii. 110. 

 for San rose Scale, xx, 24: xxi. 25. 

 26: xxii. 28. 29, 31-44. 56. 57. See 

 also under Orchard Fumigation, 

 for scale insects generally, xxii. 113. 



White Ant. xix. 199. 

 for Woolly Aphis, xxii, 107. 

 method of procedure in. xxii, 31-33. 

 117. 

 funebris, Eurytoma, Misc. Ess., 16: xv. 

 4. 



Fungi as food of Balaninus uniformis, 

 xvi, 77. 

 of Leaf-cutting Ant, xxiii, 160. 

 of meadow grasshoppers, xxiii. 



145. 147. 

 of tree-crickets (or white crick- 

 ets), xxiii, 215, 216, 219, 220, 

 221, 222. 

 eaten by adult Northern Corn Root- 

 worm, xviii, 158. 

 of contagious disease, experiments 



with, xix, 102-141. 

 of leaf spots, xxii, 103. 

 parasitic, xvi, 45, et seq. ; xvii. 44, 52, 

 74_76. 78; xviii, 47, 74, 126; xix, 

 18. 19, et seq. 

 Fungous diseases, xiii, 170. 



of Chinch-bug, xvi, 40, 45, 46, 48, 

 49, 56. 

 culture of, and infection experi- 

 ments with, xvii. 81-84. 

 (See also under Chinch-bug, and 

 Disease.) 

 of San Jose Scale, xx. 22. 

 of White-grubs, xviii, 126. 

 of wireworms. xviii, 47. 

 Fungus and insect pests of the nursery 

 mos1 important to the nursery trade, 

 classification, description, and dis- 

 cussion of the, xxii, 99-138. 

 causing Apple-scab, xxii, 102. 

 green muscardine, xx, 50, 51, 52, 53, 



54. 91. 

 House-fly. xix, 22. 



parasite of Diedrocephala mollipes, 

 xxi, 72. 

 of grasshoppers, xxi, 129. 

 of San Jose Scale, xxi, 24, 30-40; 



xxii, 69. 

 of woolly bears, xxi, 158. 

 parasites of insects, outline of experi- 

 ments with, xix, 36-38, 65-67, 83. 

 100-102. See also under Botrytis, 

 Entomophthora, Isaria, and Sporo- 

 trichum. 

 of the green leaf, gasoline blast- 

 lamp used against, xxiv. 44, 57. 

 of White-grubs, xviii. 122. 

 of willow saw-flies, xiv. 101. 

 spores as food of ladvbugs, xxiii, 

 179. 

 of scavenger-beetles, xxiii, 180. 

 181. 

 white muscardine, xx. 37, 50, 51. 52, 

 53, et seq. 

 field experiments with, xix, 99. 

 spontaneous outbreak of, xix, 100. 

 furcata, Scudderia. xxiii. 143. 

 furfura, Chionaspis, xx, 16; xxi. 20; 



xxii, 118. 



