312 Enemies of Bees — Moths. 



all the honey in their stomachs. They are then given founda- 

 tion and food, and the combs, honey, and hive treated as de- 

 scribed above. It would seem that the spores are in the honey, 

 and by taking that the contagion is administered to the young 

 bees. The honey may be purified from these noxious germs 

 by subjecting it to the boiling temperature, which is generally, 

 if not always, fatal to the spores of fungoid life. By immers- 

 ing the combs in a salicylic acid solution, or sprinkling them 

 with the same, they would be rendered sterile, and could be 

 used without much fear of spreading contagion. It is better, 

 however, to melt them at once. The disease is probably spread 

 by robber bees visiting affected hives, and carrying with them 

 in the honey the fatal germs. 



•(I have found that a paste made of gum tragacanth and 

 water is very superior, and I much prefer it for either general 

 or special use to gum Arabic. Yet it soon sours — which means 

 that it is nourishing these fungoid plants — and thus becomes 

 disagreeable. I have found that a very little salicylic acid 

 will render it sterile, and thus preserve it indefinitely.) 



ENEMIES OF BEES. 



Swift was no mean entomologist, as shown in the following 

 stanza : 



"The little fleas that do us tease, 



Have lesser fleas to bite them, 

 And these again have lesser fleas, 



And so ad injiniium." 



Bees are no exception to this law, as they have to brave the 

 attacks of reptiles, birds, and other insects. In fact, they are 

 beset with perils at home and perils abroad, perils by night 

 and perils by day. 



THE BEE MOTH — Galleria cereana, Fabr. 



This insect belongs to the family of snout moths, Pyralidse. 

 This snout is not the tongue, but the palpi, which fact was 

 not known by Mr. Langstroth, who is usually so accurate, as 

 he essayed to correct Dr. Harris, who stated correctly that 

 the tongue, the ligula, was "very short and hardly visible." 

 This family includes the destructive hop moth, and the nox- 

 ious meal and clover moths, and its members are very readily 

 recognized by their usually long palpi, 'the so-called snouts. 



