REPORT OF THE STATIC ENTOMOLOGIST KJl6 <JI 



The Pine Borer. Garden Magazine, February [916, 23:50 



A general account of Parharmonia pini Kell. with suggestions as to 

 control methods. 



Injurious Insects. New York State Department of Agriculture 



Circular 130, 19 16, p. 169-72 



Summary of results obtained in codling moth work in 19 15 with observations 

 on the apple maggot, San Jose scale and white grubs. 



Tent Caterpillars. New York Farmer, February 10, 1916, p. 7 

 Brief warning notice with recommendations for control work. 



Lasioptera fructuaria. Maine Agricultural Experiment Station 

 Bulletin 244, p. 268-69, 1916 

 Technical description of the above-named species. 



The Perils of Our Shade Trees. Country Life in America, March 



1916, 29:42-43 



Summary discussion of the shade tree problem with practical recommendations 

 for the planting and care of trees. 



Insect Enemies of Trees and How to Combat Them. Country Life 

 in America, March 1916, 29:70, 72, 74, 76 and 78 

 Brief practical accounts of the elm leaf beetle, gipsy moth, brown- tail moth, 



white-marked tussock moth, leopard moth, hickory bark borer, two-lined chestnut 



borer, and the bronze birch borer. 



Climate and Variations in the Habits of the Codling Moth. Eco- 

 nomic Entomology, Journal, 9:107-9, 19 16 

 A summary discussion of "side injury " by Carpocapsa pomonella 



Linn., and its apparent relation to cool evening temperatures retarding 



oviposition. 



Side Worm Injury. Western New York Horticultural Society 



Proceedings, 61st Meeting, 19 16, p. 55-60 



A discussion of codling moth control, with special reference to " side injury," 

 the. work of Carpocapsa pomonella Linn. 



Pear Thrips. Knickerbocker Press, April 17, 19 16 



Warning notice advising early and thorough treatment for this pest. 



Side Injury by the Codling Moth. New York State Fruit Growers 

 Association Proceedings, 15th Annual Meeting, p. 29-32, 1916 

 A discussion of the cause and control of " side injury" in western New York 



orchards, the work of Carpocapsa porno ne 11a Linn. 



Insect Problems of the Hudson Valley. New York State Fruit 

 Growers Association Proceedings, 15th Annual Meeting, p. 200-7, 

 1916 

 A somewhat detailed account of the codling moth work with brief notices of 



the red bugs and the apple maggot. 



