S5 



smooth. The ridges on the dorsum appear to be formed largelj^ of fat 

 tissue. After becoming full-grown the larva ceases to feed, the 

 alimentary canal becomes emptied, and both the color and form of the 

 larva are stightl}^ changed. The dark color disappears from the inte- 

 rior and is replaced by a creamy tint from the transforming tissues 

 within. The ventral area becomes flattened, and the general curve of 

 the bod}^ is less marked. Swellings may be seen on the sides of the 

 thoracic region, and when these are very noticeable, pupation will 

 soon take place. 



GROWTH. 



It is impossible to follow the growth of an individual larva without 

 interfering so greatly with its normal conditions of life as to make the 

 observations unreliable. It seemed more accurate to measure larvae of 

 approximately known ages. In these measurements the natural curve 

 of the body was not interfered with, but the measurement taken across 

 the tips of the body as curved. In this way it v/as found that in squares 

 during the hot weather the length of the body increases quite regu- 

 larly b}^ about 1 mm. a day. As it becomes cooler the daily growth 

 is less. In bolls which grow to maturit}^ the rate of growth is less 

 and the length of the growing period is much greater. Full-grown 

 larvae vary in length from 5 to 10 mm. across the tips of the curve. 

 Larvae of normal size in squares average from 6 to 7 mm. The largest 

 larvae are developed in bolls which grow to maturity (PI. Ill, fig. 13). 



MOLTS. 



To accommodate the rapid growth of the larva two or three molis 

 occur. The period of change from one instar or stage to the next is 

 so short that the chances of opening a square at just the right time to 

 observe the process are ver}^ small indeed. However, it has-been ascer- 

 tained beyond question that two molts occur before the larva reaches 

 half its growth. The first occurs at about the second day and the 

 second at about the fourth day. Whether a third molt occurs 

 before pupation can not be positive!}" stated; but having occasionally 

 found larvae which had certainl}^ just molted, but which were muck 

 larger than the usual size at the second molt, the writer is led to sus- 

 pect that three larval molts may sometimes, though possibl}" they do 

 not always, occur. In bolls where the length of the laryal stage is 

 often three or four times as great as that usually passed in squares it 

 seems almost certain that more than two larval molts occur regularly. 

 Counting only the first two molts which have been often found, a third 

 occurs at the time the larva pupates. 



PROCESS OF MOLTING. 



So little is known in regard to the molting of Curculionidae that the 

 process as observed is here recorded. In the cases observed, starting 



