﻿THE 
  AEMY 
  WOKM 
  : 
  BIBLIOGRAPHY, 
  BY 
  AUTHORS. 
  153 
  

  

  Kiley, 
  C. 
  V. 
  — 
  ^'The 
  Army 
  Worm 
  : 
  Additional 
  Notes 
  on 
  the 
  Mode, 
  Place, 
  and 
  Time 
  of 
  

   Ovi 
  position." 
  Eighth 
  Annual 
  Report 
  of 
  State 
  Entomologist 
  of 
  Missouri 
  (1876), 
  

  

  pp. 
  182-185. 
  

  

  [First 
  announcement 
  of 
  the 
  discovery 
  of 
  tlie 
  eggs.] 
  

  

  Riley, 
  C. 
  V. 
  — 
  ''Biological 
  Notes 
  on 
  the 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  Proceedings 
  of 
  American 
  Asso- 
  

   cialion 
  for 
  the 
  Advancement 
  of 
  Science, 
  xxv, 
  pp. 
  279-283 
  (1876). 
  

  

  [Figures 
  larva, 
  pupa, 
  and 
  adulfc; 
  describes 
  eggs 
  and 
  all 
  otlier 
  stages; 
  hibernation 
  of 
  

   moths 
  ; 
  two 
  broods 
  at 
  Saint 
  Louis.] 
  

  

  Hiley, 
  C. 
  V. 
  — 
  ''The 
  Army 
  Worm 
  : 
  Its 
  Natural 
  History 
  Complete." 
  Scientific 
  Amer- 
  

   icau, 
  XXXV, 
  p. 
  372, 
  December 
  9, 
  1876. 
  

  

  [The 
  paper 
  read 
  before 
  the 
  A. 
  A. 
  A. 
  S., 
  1876, 
  popularized 
  and 
  condensed. 
  Figures 
  and 
  

   describes 
  all 
  stages 
  of 
  Leucania 
  unipuncta.] 
  

  

  Riley, 
  C. 
  V. 
  — 
  " 
  Oviposition 
  of 
  Leucania 
  unipuncta." 
  American 
  Naturalist, 
  vol. 
  x, 
  (1876), 
  

   pp. 
  50d-509. 
  

  

  Riley, 
  C. 
  V. 
  — 
  "The 
  Army 
  Worm: 
  Further 
  Notes 
  and 
  Experiments 
  thereon." 
  Ninth 
  

   Annual 
  Report 
  of 
  Entomologist 
  of 
  Missouri, 
  1877, 
  pp. 
  47-50. 
  

   [isTumber 
  of 
  annual 
  generations 
  ; 
  summary 
  of 
  natural 
  history.] 
  

  

  Hiley, 
  G. 
  V.—" 
  Complete 
  Life 
  History 
  of 
  the 
  Army 
  Worm 
  (Leucania 
  unipuncta) 
  and 
  its 
  

  

  parasites." 
  Massachusetts 
  Agricultural 
  Report, 
  1878. 
  

  

  [ 
  Walker 
  .Prize 
  Essay. 
  Largely 
  taken 
  from 
  the 
  8th 
  and 
  9th 
  Missouri 
  Entomological 
  Reports'.] 
  

   Riley, 
  C. 
  V. 
  — 
  "The 
  Northern 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  American 
  Entomologist, 
  iii, 
  170 
  (1880.) 
  

   [Characters 
  ; 
  natural 
  history 
  ; 
  remedies 
  ; 
  summary 
  from 
  9th 
  Missouri 
  Kept. 
  ; 
  figures 
  of 
  eggs, 
  

   9 
  genitalia, 
  larva, 
  pupa, 
  adult.] 
  

  

  Riley, 
  C. 
  V. 
  — 
  " 
  Further 
  Notes 
  and 
  Observations 
  on 
  the 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  American 
  En- 
  

   tomologist, 
  iii, 
  184, 
  and 
  continued 
  on 
  p. 
  214 
  (1880). 
  

  

  [Number 
  of 
  annual 
  generations; 
  bow 
  the 
  insect 
  hibernates, 
  the 
  destructive 
  generation 
  

   probablj'- 
  not 
  the 
  first 
  of 
  the 
  season 
  ; 
  how 
  far 
  burning 
  over 
  is 
  a 
  preventive 
  ; 
  connection 
  of 
  

   Avet 
  and 
  dry 
  seasons 
  with 
  Army 
  Worm 
  increase.] 
  

  

  Riley, 
  C. 
  V. 
  — 
  " 
  The 
  Genuine 
  Army 
  Worm 
  in 
  the 
  West." 
  American 
  Naturalist, 
  Sep- 
  

   tember, 
  1881, 
  p. 
  750. 
  

  

  [A 
  short 
  notice 
  of 
  the 
  appearance 
  of 
  the 
  Army 
  "Worm 
  in 
  Illinois 
  and 
  Indiana.] 
  

   Riley, 
  C. 
  V. 
  — 
  "The 
  Army 
  Worm 
  vs. 
  The 
  Clover 
  Hay 
  Worm," 
  Rural 
  New 
  Yorker, 
  

  

  June 
  10, 
  1882. 
  

  

  [An 
  account 
  of 
  the 
  appearance 
  of 
  the 
  worms 
  in 
  Tennessee 
  and 
  Alabama, 
  and 
  of 
  the 
  mis- 
  

   taken 
  views 
  of 
  planters 
  concerning 
  the 
  originating 
  of 
  the 
  worms 
  in 
  old 
  clover 
  lands, 
  arising 
  

   from 
  a 
  confusion 
  of 
  the 
  Army 
  Worm 
  with 
  the 
  Clover 
  Hay 
  Worm.] 
  

  

  Rural 
  New 
  Yorker.—" 
  The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  June 
  12, 
  1880. 
  

  

  [Leucania 
  unipuncta 
  appears 
  on 
  Long 
  Island, 
  IST. 
  Y., 
  in 
  vast 
  numbers, 
  and 
  is 
  very 
  destructiva 
  

   to 
  crops.] 
  

  

  Rural 
  "World.— 
  "The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  Aug. 
  4, 
  1881. 
  

  

  [An 
  account 
  of 
  the 
  damage 
  done 
  in 
  Illinois 
  in 
  late 
  July 
  by 
  the 
  worms, 
  principally 
  to 
  oats.] 
  

   Saunders, 
  "Wm. 
  — 
  " 
  Annual 
  Address 
  of 
  the 
  President 
  of 
  the 
  Entomological 
  Society 
  

   of 
  Ontario." 
  Canadian 
  Entomologist, 
  xiii, 
  197 
  (1881). 
  

  

  [On 
  pp. 
  198 
  and 
  199, 
  speaks 
  of 
  the 
  Army 
  Worm 
  as 
  double 
  brooded, 
  and 
  probably 
  hiber- 
  

   nating 
  in 
  the 
  larva 
  state 
  ; 
  and 
  predicts 
  comparative 
  exemption 
  in 
  1882 
  in 
  Ontario.] 
  

  

  Scientific 
  American. 
  — 
  " 
  The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  June 
  16, 
  1880. 
  

  

  [A 
  short 
  account 
  of 
  the 
  ravages 
  on 
  Long 
  Island.] 
  

   Scientific 
  American. 
  — 
  "The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  June 
  16, 
  1880. 
  

  

  [A 
  lengthy 
  illustrated 
  account 
  compiled 
  from 
  Eiley.] 
  

  

  Scudder, 
  S. 
  H.— 
  Canadian 
  Entomologist., 
  vii 
  (1875), 
  pp. 
  178-179. 
  

  

  [A 
  report 
  of 
  a 
  meeting 
  of 
  the 
  Entomological 
  Club, 
  A. 
  A. 
  A. 
  S., 
  in 
  which 
  Mr. 
  Scuddor 
  re- 
  

   marked 
  on 
  the 
  abundance 
  of 
  the 
  Army 
  Worm 
  in 
  Massachusetts.] 
  

  

  Scudder, 
  S. 
  H. 
  — 
  "Recent 
  Progress 
  of 
  Entomology 
  in 
  N. 
  A. 
  First 
  annual 
  address 
  

  

  of 
  the 
  President 
  of 
  the 
  Cambridge 
  Entomological 
  Club." 
  Psyche, 
  ii 
  (1878), 
  p. 
  97. 
  

  

  [On 
  p. 
  113, 
  in 
  reviewing 
  Thomas's 
  IHinois 
  Report, 
  especially 
  mentions 
  his 
  conclusions 
  that 
  

  

  Leucania 
  is 
  normally 
  a 
  cut-worm, 
  and 
  calls 
  attention 
  to 
  the 
  fact 
  that 
  it 
  has 
  no 
  scientific 
  

  

  .] 
  

  

  