REPORT OF THE STATE ENTOMOLOGIST I912 II3 



PUBLICATIONS OF THE ENTOMOLOGIST 

 The following is a list of the principal publications of the Ento- 

 mologist during the year 1912. The titles, 1 time of publication and 

 a summary of the contents of each are given. Volume and page 

 numbers are separated by a colon. 



Dying Hickory Trees. Auburn Advertiser, November 3 ; Buffalo 

 Commercial, Middletown Argus, New York Tribune, November 

 5 ; Geneva Times, Lockport Union-Sun, Ossining Citizen, Water- 

 town Standard, Schenectady Star, Amsterdam Recorder, Novem- 

 ber 6; Glens Falls Times, Catskill Mail, Rome Sentinel, Novem- 

 ber 7; Greenwich Journal, Yonkers News, Oxford Times, No- 

 vember 8; Phoenix Register, Peekskill Union, Norwich News, 

 Perry Record, November 9 ; Cortland Standard, Randolph Regis- 

 ter, Rensselaer Eagle, Tioga County Record, November 10; Sara- 

 toga Eagle, Yonkers Gazette, November 1 1 ; Kingston Freeman, 

 November 17; Catskill Examiner, Pelham Sun, Brooklyn Times, 

 November 18; Washington County Post, November 24, 191 1 



The characteristic work of the hickory bark borer, Eccoptogas- 

 ter quadrispinosa Say, is described and the destruction of infested 

 wood during the winter advised. 



Codling Moth. New York State Department of Agriculture, Bulle- 

 tin 28, 191 1, pages 237-50 (issued December 14, 191 1). Reprinted 

 as Circular 40 



A summarized discussion of Carpocapsa porno ne 11a Linn, 

 and methods of control in the light of recent experiments. 



New Species of Gall Midges. Economic Entomology Journal, 191 1, 

 4 :546-59 



The following new species are described : Leptosyna quercus 

 [quercivora], Asphondylia eupatorii, A. thalic- 

 tri, Uleella [Bruggmaniella] raexicana, Conta- 

 rinia spiraeina, Dicrodiplosis coccidarum, D. 

 gillettei, Mycodiplosis Carolina, M. coccidivora, 

 M. cucurbitae, M. spinosa, Youngomyia quercina, 

 Y. vernoniae, Hyperdiplosis fungicola, Parallelo- 

 diplosis clarkeae, Cecidomyia cerasiphila, C. 

 hopkinsi, Itonida cucurbitae, I. spiraeina, I. 

 taxodii, I. pugionis, I. cincta and I. canadensis. 



1 Titles are usually given as published. In some instances articles 

 appearing in a number of papers have been given different titles by the 

 various editors. 



