284 SENECIO JACOBAEA & CALLIMOKPHA JACOBAEA— POOLE. 



found in hundreds in Turnchapel Quarries, Plymouth, at 

 Newton Ferrars, Hessenford, everywhere round here prob- 

 ably. I have found it more common near Ragwort though I 

 have made no special comparisons." 



Larvae of Cinnabar Moth {Callimorpha Jacobaea). 



Food Plant: Commonly, the Ragwort {Senecio Jacobaea). 



The larvae usually attack the lower leaves first and work 

 upwards towards the flower. They frequently strip the 

 lower portion of the plant completely, and in a very short 

 time. Large colonies are often seen on one plant; and the 

 striking colouring of the larvae make them conspicuous even 

 at a little distance. 



Remarks by Dr. A. H. MacKay. 



Senecio Jacobaea L. {St. James Ragwort), was probably 

 introduced into Pictou, Nova Scotia, not far from 1850. 

 Shortly after, the Cattle Disease appeared. But it did not 

 follow the presence of the weed until after it became well 

 established in the pastures and hayfields. About 1882 there 

 was an attempt made by the Dominion Government to as- 

 certain the character, cause and best method of dealing with 

 the disease which was recognized as a peculiar and almost 

 specific cirrhosis of the fiver. It was, however, suspected to 

 be contagious; and the policy of slaughter and compensation 

 was adopted. Drs. William Osier, Adami, Wyatt Johnson, 

 McEachran and other pathologists took part in the earlier 

 investigations. 



In 1906 Dr. J. G. Rutherford as Veterinary Director 

 General, reports Dr. W. H. Pethick's experiments on a 200 

 acre farm at Cloverville in Antigonish county. He also notes 

 that Dr. Gilruth of New Zealand devoted considerable atten- 

 tion to a peculiar hepatic cirrhosis known as the Winton Dis- 

 ease, from which horses as well as cattle and sheep suffered 

 due to the ingestion of Ragwort. In Cape Colony, South 



