114 



- green — Continued. 



and whale leaf -feeding 



insects, xxi. 128. 



Ipple Leaf-skeletonizer, xv, 64. 

 for Army-worm, xxiii. 51. 

 for Chinch-bug. xvi. 42 



idling-moth, xv, 7. 9, 10-14, 15- 

 20. 

 and curculios, Misc. Ess., 2,. 

 :: 40-41. 42-13: xv. 

 15: xvii, 22-23, 24. 25: xxiv, 

 80. 

 ;trtworms, xxi. 101-102: xxiii, 

 91. 

 for Forest Tent-caterpillar, xiii. 10. 

 for Garden Web-worm, xxiii. 18. 



31, 33. 

 for Grass-worm. xiv. 67. 

 for grasshopper.-, xxiii. 14. 

 for Paria aterrima. xiii. 171. 

 for Red-headed Flea-beetle, xxi. 



120- 



for various strawberrv insects, xiii. 



69. 76, 



for White-grubs and May-beetles. 



xvii. 45. 53. 

 for wireworms. Misc. Ess., 18. 

 to protect corn plant against bill- 

 bugs, xvi. "2 

 seed-corn against Agonoderus 

 pallipes, xviii. 13. 

 Parrot. P. J., xxii. 18. 

 Parslev as food plant of Army-worm. 



xxii 

 Parsnip as food plant of same, xxiii. 

 49. 

 of Carrot-beettle. xxiii. 98. 

 of Common Striped Cutworm. 

 xx ; p. 34 

 injured or destroyed by Pale-striped 

 -beetle, xxi. 121 ; xxiii. 108. 

 parvulus. Sphenophorus. Misc. Ess.. 22. 

 21. Ill: xv. 5: xvi. 58. 59, 63. 65. 67. 

 69 71: xxii. 3. 22: xxiii. 52. 5 : : 

 __ xxiv. 2. 7. 

 Passerini, Giovanni, xiii, 40, 42. 100: 



xviii 

 Passion-flowers as food of Black Blis- 

 ter-beetle, xxi, 141. 

 Paster.' x 19. 



Pastures and meadows as breeding 

 places of cutworms, xxi. 100. 

 injurv to. by sod web- worms, xxiii. 

 : " 

 Pawpaw infested by Soft Maple Bark- 



. xiv. 103. 



Pea as food plant of Apantesis arge and 



A. phyllira. x\' " : 



\rmy-worm. xxiii 



of Beet Army-worm, x 



i Pea as food plant — Continued. 



of Dark-sided Cutworm, xxiii, 



33. 

 of Diabrotica tenella. xxiii. 188. 

 of Dingy Cutworm, xxiii. 27 

 of Ear-worm, xxiii, 67. 

 of Garden Web-worm, xxiii, 90. 

 of Granulated Cutworm, xxiii, 



52. 

 of Seed-corn Maggot, xxiii, 70. 

 of Striped Cucumber-beetle, xxi. 



126. 

 of Variegated Cutworm, xxiii. 



24. 

 of Western Green Stink-bug, 

 xxiii. 116; crop destroved. 

 xxi. 99. 

 of Yellow Bear, xxiii. 74. 

 Zebra-caterpillar, xxi. I : 

 crop destroyed by Grass-worm, xiv, 

 57. 63. 

 bv Pale-striped Flea-beetle, xxiii, 

 '107. 108 

 Garden and Sweet, infested by Xec- 



tarophora pisi. xxi. 83. 

 injured by Common Gray Blister- 

 beetle, xxi, 139. 

 by Garden Flea-hopper, xxi. " v 

 bv Imbricated Snout-beetle, xxiii. 



"113. 

 by iulids. xiii, 140. 

 bv Western Cabbage-Flea-beetle, 

 'xxiii. : 

 Sweet, a- food plant of Zebra-cater- 

 pillar, xxi. 153. 

 -vines as food of Cotton Cutworm. 

 xxii 

 Peach and Plum Curculio. experiments 

 with arsenical poisons for 

 the. xvii. XV. 21-25. 

 feeding experiments with. xvii. 

 21. See also Plum-curculio. 

 Aphis. Black, description of two forms 

 of. xxii. 108-110. 

 destructiveness of. xxii. 108. 

 effect of. on tree. xxii. 108. 

 inf.. sting - of Peach and 



PlunC xxii. 100. 

 protection against, xxii. 110. 

 winter form of. xxii. 104. 

 as breeding and food plant of Grass- 

 worm, xiv. 62: xxiii. 82 

 as food plan! talerata. 



xxiii, 76. 



•' Cotton Cutworm, xx 

 xxiii. 80. 



tenella, xxiii. 188. 

 ■-worm, xxiii. 67. 

 of Imbricated Snout-beetle, xx: 

 145. 



xxiv. 143. 



