90 NORTH AMERICAN INSECTS. 



duces it so fast and so abundantly, that, were the consump 

 tion of shellac ten times greater than it is, it could readily 

 be supplied. 



There are many other species of Shield-lice found in the 

 old countries, which have from time immemorial furnished 

 a substance used for dyeing red, and which arc still used 

 for that purpose. Hence their name among the Greeks 

 and Romans was &quot;Coccus,&quot; by the Arabs called &quot; Kermcs,&quot; 

 and by the Persians &quot; Alkermcs.&quot; 



Professor Ehrenberg, of Berlin, to whom the science is 

 so much indebted for his laborious microscopic investiga 

 tions of the Animalcules, found large Tamarisk-trees (Tarn- 

 arix mannifera, Ehrenb.) upon Mount Sinai, the young 

 shoots of which were covered with a species of Shield-louse, 

 which he called Coccus manniferus. 



These insects, by puncturing the brandies with their pro 

 boscis, cause them to discharge a large quantity of gummy 

 secretion, which very soon hardens and drops from the tree, 

 when it is easily collected by the natives, who believe it to 

 be the real manna of the Israelites. 



Our currant bushes, young apple, and peach trees, often 

 suffer from the ravages of different species of bark-lice, and 

 not unfrequently arc destroyed by them. Many small birds 

 feed principally on these species of Lice, but, in spite of 

 this, their multiplication is often so great that we must 

 rely upon other and artificial means to destroy them. 



Dr. Harris, of Cambridge, mentioning them in his &quot; Re 

 port on the Insects of Massachusetts Injurious to Vegeta 

 tion,&quot; says: &quot;The best application for the destruction of the 

 Lice is a wash made of two parts of soft soap and eight of 

 water, with which is to be mixed lime enough to bring it 

 to the consistence of thick whitewash. This is to be put 

 upon the trunks and limbs of the trees with a brush, and 

 as high as practicable, so as to cover the whole surface, 

 and fill all the cracks in the bark. The proper time for 



