GARDEN INSECTS 



223 



The Grapevine Flea-Beetle, or Hal tic a cJialybea. 



The Imported Elm-Leaf Beetle. Where numerous, this is 

 a good insect with which to study bird foods. This may 

 be done by making feeding tests, and by observing the 

 birds that feed upon it, as the children go to and from 

 school. They have increased especially in cities and 

 towns where the native birds have 

 been driven away by English 

 sparrows. 



The Imported Currant Worm, Nema- 

 tus ventricosus. This and the 

 native currant worm, Pristiphora 

 grossularice, are both sawflies 

 about the size of the house fly, but 

 more slender and with black areas 

 on the front border of the fore- 

 wings. The males and females 

 may be found about the time cur- 

 rant leaves open in the spring, and 

 a few days after, the white eggs are 

 placed end to end along the veins 

 on the underside of the leaves. I 

 have been informed that a pair of 

 black and white creeping warblers 

 kept one row of currant bushes so clean that the box 

 of white hellebore, provided against them, remained 

 unopened. 



The Rose Slug, Monostegia rosce. This familiar pest 

 feeds upon the upper surface of the rose leaf, chiefly at 

 night, remaining hidden beneath the leaf during the day. 

 The rose bushes appear as if scorched and are greatly 



FIG. 94. ASPARAGUS BEETLES 



Eggs, larvae, and adults 

 (Photograph by the author) 



