vin COCCIDAE - SCALE-INSECTS 597 



the genus JAoy/^/'^/^x, we can at present offer the reader no 

 satisfactory account. 1 



Products of Coccidae. Honey-dew is secreted by Coccidae, 

 but as a rule not so extensively as by Aphidae and some other 

 Homoptera ; nevertheless, it is often sufficient to make the plants 

 frequented by Coccids very sticky and unclean. Some species 

 make a really extensive exudation of such matter. Eeaumur 

 records that a Coccid, which is doubtless Lc<-n nimn jn>,-xicae, 

 excretes a supply of honey-dew that drips to the ground ; he says 

 it tastes sweet and nice. The manna mentioned in the book of 

 Exodus is pretty certainly the honey-dew secreted by Coccus (now 

 Gossyparia) manni/era, which lives on T<.ni><iri.>' in many places 

 in the Mediterranean basin. This substance is still called by the 

 A rains "Man," and is used as food; in its natural state it is a 

 substance very like honey; it is doubtless excreted by the 

 Coccus, and is not produced directly by the Tamarix as some 

 have supposed. Waxy matters are produced by several Coccidae. 

 Ceroplastes cc/'ij', v//.$, a Lecaniid, produces white wax in India. 

 Ceroplastes is a widely distributed genus, and various species of it 

 have been used for the purpose of producing wax in other parts 

 of the world. The white wax of China is understood to be pro- 

 duced by another Lecaniid, Ericerus pcla ; but little is known as 

 to this Insect; it is said that the wax is produced by the winged 

 males. The substance was formerly greatly prized in China, but 

 is falling into disuse on account of the introduction of Kerosene. 

 Lac is produced by Carteria lacca, a Lecauiid living in India on 

 Anona squamosa, as well as on species of Fie us, Ehamnus and 

 other trees ; the lac is the shelly scale produced by the Insect 

 as a covering; it is composed in larger part of resinous ma tin-, 

 with which there is mixed a comparatively small quantity of wax 

 and other substances. The body of this Insect also affords t lu- 

 red substance called lake. Various species of Kermes formerly 

 afforded a red dye well known to the Greeks and Eomans. These 

 Insects live onQuercus cocci frr<+ in the Mediterranean region. A 

 medicinal syrup is also obtained from them. Porpliyropliora 

 j-xi/onica was used in North and Central Europe for the same pur- 

 poses as Kermes ; it is a Coccid living on the roots of Polygonum 

 cocciferum. These European Insects were replaced commercially 



1 For summary as to our present knowledge of this curious condition of Insect 

 life, see Mayet, Ann. Soc. cnt. France, 1896, p. 419. 



