CLOVER STEM BORER. 379 



distribution the seeds of luisehiot' iire wide seiittered, uo knowinj; 

 when they may germinate. 



Fig. i;}l» shows tlie eggs, 

 hirvi>, pupa and imago of 

 the insect as well as the 

 natural size of eggs and 

 the larva — the latter as it 

 appears in the hollowed 

 stem of the clover. The 



eggs are yellow, curved, * * fjg. 139. 

 and 1.7 m m (about 1-lU of an inch) long. The larva', like wire 

 worms and many other grubs, are slim, with the three pair 

 of jointed legs well developed, and u pair of anal pro-legs. When 

 full grown the yellow larva is 8 m m (a little more than .3 of an 

 inch) long. Like the pupa it has two plainly nuirked anal sjiines. 

 The impa is also yellow and slender, and O m m long. I find 

 Say's description of the imago, as usual, very exact : "it is slen- 

 der, cylindrical; the dark red antenna' gradually form a club of 

 five joints. The palpi are thread-like; the maiulibles ])ifid at 

 tip; the maxillae have horny teeth. The thorax is yellowish- 

 red, smooth and unspotted. The elytra are bluish-black, with a 

 green tinge, marked with deeply impressed punctures, arranged 

 in regular series, but without impressed strije. The thighs are 

 pale rufous at base; the tibia' have a slight rufous tinge; the 

 tarsi are dotted with dense hairs beneath the three basal joints, 

 the 3d being bilobate." The venter has the three posterior joints 

 black. The length of the beetle is about T m m (| of an inch). 



The female lays the eggs in June, piercing the stem witli her 

 jaws, and pushing her eggs clear in to the pith, often, says Prof. 

 Comstock, to a depth of (> m m. The larva' feed ui>ou the pith 

 downward, forming a burrow 15 c m (0 inches) long. Tliis 

 greatly injures if it does not kill the jilant outriglit. The pupa 

 is formed at the bottom of the burrow in August, and shortly 



