674 



ENGLISH INDEX. 



skipper, ii. 301 : mountain, iii. 

 149: nettle, 252: orange-tip, 

 253 : painted lady, 260 : pea- 

 cock, i. 9; iii. 213: purple em- 

 peror or high-flier, iv. 512, 530: 

 silver-washed fritillary, iii. 252 : 

 swallow-tail, ii. 242,291; iii. 

 212: tortoiseshell, iii. 110 



Cabbage tribe, insect assailants of, 

 i. 189. 



Cabinet, directions for making, iv. 

 556. 



Camphor, how to be used, iv. 559. 



Carrots and Parsnips, injured by 

 a centipede, i. 185. 



Carus C. G. discovered a circula- 

 tion in larvae, &c. iv. 91. 



Case or Caddis worms, i. 465 ; ii. 

 261, 298. 



Cased-nymphs, i. 67. 



Catching insects, directions for, iv. 

 528. 



Caterpillars, diseases of, iv. 214 : 

 how best destroyed, i. 30 : how 

 to preserve, 551 : processionary, 

 ii. 23: teazel, iii. 275: surveyors, 

 attitudes of, ii. 233 : what insects 

 destroy, i. 268 ; iv. 228 : spuri- 

 ous, ii. 285: clothing of, iii. 

 173. 



Cattle, insects that attack, i. 145. 



Caul of insects, iv. 98, 151. 



Centipedes, i. 126, 258, 311. 



Cephalopoda, (Cuttle-fish) have 

 three hearts, iii. 6. 



Chabrier, eulogium of, iv. 186. 



Chafer, carrion, ii. 386 : cock, i. 

 178, 207; ii. 372: dung, 231, 

 237, 254: fern, 5: rose, 317: 

 tree, 231. 



Cheese maggot, i. 229 ; ii. 280 : 

 mite, 226, 328. 



Cherry, insects that attack, i. 197. 



Chestnut, insects that attack, i.203. 



Chrysalis, i. 65. 



Cicada, male, sound produced by, 

 and its apparatus, ii. 398, 4QO. 



Circulation, different modes of in 

 the animal kingdom, iv. 81 : 

 whether any in insects, 86. 



Clairville's system, iv. 473. 



Classes of annulose animals, iii. 16; 

 iv. 374; osculant, iii. 14. 



Climates, insect, iv. 494. 



Clocks orDors, ii. 306. 



Clover-seed, destroyed by a wee- 

 vil, i. 178. 



Cochineal, i. 321. 



Cockroach, i. 229, 242. 



Cocoon, i. 68, 457; iii. 213: of bees, 

 ii. 138 : of saw-flies, 261 : of Le- 

 pidoptera,iii. 274: of Ephemerae, 

 395. 



Collar of certain insects, whether 

 the analogue of the prothorax, 

 iii. 546. 



Collier, plant-louse of the bean, 

 i. 176. 



Colours (brilliant), use of in insects, 

 ii. 221. 



Commosis, what ? ii. 479. 



Concealment, modes of in insects, 

 ii. 254. 



Correlation, iv. 366. 



Cossus, Pliny's, i. 302. 



Cotton, insects that injure, i. 185. 



Creation, works of, have a double 

 object, iv. 411. 



Crepuscular insects, iv. 525. 



Cricket, field, ii. 393; iv. 110: 

 house, i. 243 ; ii. 392 : Indian, 

 i. 243 : mole, ii. 362, 394 ; iii. 

 584. 



Crop of insects, iv. 113, 115. 



Cuckow, bee,i. 289 : insects, 345. 



Cucumbers, fecundated by bees, 

 i. 299. 



Cupides, iv. 179, 190. 



Currant, insects thatattack, i. 196. 



Cuvicrs system, iv. 474. 



Dances of insects, ii. 5, 367. 



Death-watch, i. 36; ii. 381. 



Deer infested by insects, i. 159. 



De Gcer (Baron), system of, iv. 

 453. 



Developments of plants and ani- 

 mals, iii. 57. 



DeviVs-horse, ii. 218. 



Digger (entomological) described, 

 iv. 529. 



