19 
CLEMENS, Dr. B.—Tineina of North America, Stainton edition, 1872, 
p.128. Ibid., p. 36, in litt. to Stainton, identified with A. lineatella. 
CHAMBERS, V. Canadian Pinjomologisn Vol. LV, 1872, p. 208. 
Shows the identity of pruinella with lineatella. 
CHAMBERS, V. T.—Bul. U. 8. Geolog. and Geog. Surv. Terr., IV, 1878, 
pp. 112, 129. 
Gives food plants and references. 
SAUNDERS, W.—Ann. Rep. Entom. Soc. Ontario, 1872, p. 15. 
Describes injury to strawberry caused by what is supposed to be this insect 
under the designation the strawberry root and crown borer; larve stated to be 
so abundant in places in Ontario as to almost destroy the strawberry beds by 
eating into the crown of the plants and excavating channels and chambers; 
said to be double-brooded, the first brood wintering in a half-grown state in the 
crown of strawberry, while the second brood attacks the young runners soon 
after the fruiting season; aiso reported in Ontario to infest buds and twigs of 
peach. 
GLOVER, T.—Entomological Record, Monthly Rept. U. S. Dept. Agri- 
culture (July), 1872, pp. 304-5. 
Figures moth and larva and burrow in peach twig; said to be very trouble- 
some in peach orchards of Maryland and Virginia; its presence first noticed 
during the preceding season; twigs described as injured before ree in some 
cases all of the young twigs killed to a distance downward from 1 to 2} inche +s, the 
larvie entering near the*terminal bud; suggests pruning and burning of inj ured 
shoots while the caterpillars are still within them. 
GLOVER, T.—An. Rept. U.S. Dept. Agriculture, 1872 (1873), p. 112. 
Repeats the information given above. 
Comstock, J. H.—Proc. West. N. Y. Hort. Soc., 1878, p. 13. 
Description of insect and injury; gives figures. 
Comstock, J. H.—Rept. U. 8. Dept. Agriculture, 1879, p. 255. 
Gives in brief the habits of the insect; states that it attacks the newly 
expanded twigs, entering them at the base and eating them off completely, so 
that the branches wither and are held to the old wood merely by the gummy 
excretions; in some cases all of the twigs thus destroyed; describes the fact of 
the second generation developing in the ripening fruit, in which larve were 
found in Blackistone Island, Virginia, throughout the season, and also on the 
grounds of the Department of Agriculture; the larve leaving the peach, trans- 
form and attach to the outside of the fruit, making no cocoon; the twig-inhab- 
iting generation said to mature in May and June, and the fruit-inhabiting 
brood in the latter part of July and throughout August. 
LINTNER, J. A.—First An. Rept. N. Y. State Entom., 1882, p. 151. 
Gives bibliography and quotations from previous writers, describing the 
insect and its habits, and reports it to occur in possibly eight localities in the 
State of New York; figures the moth; refers to the existence of a parasite, and 
details remedies. 
ForBEs, 8. A.—Trans. Miss. Valley Hort. Soc., 1883, Vol. I. 
In a comprehensive article, entitled ‘Insects affecting the strawberry,” the 
habits, etc., of the supposed Anarsia lineatella as a crown-miner in strawberry 
plants are giv en. 
ForBEs, S. A.—12th Rept. St. Ent. Illinois, 1882 (1883), p. 76. 
Reports the occurrence in Illinois of the strawberry crown-miner, which is 
supposed to be A. lineatella; quotes previous literature both as twig-borer in 
peach and crown-miner in strawberry; suggests remedies; figures larvie from 
strawberry. 
a. ve Py _ » r . ¢ 
RILEY, C. V.—Prairie Farmer, Nov. 24, 1883. 
Refers to the occurrence of the larvex in strawberry plants in Illinois. 
