18 PARASITES OF GIPSY AND BROWN-TAIL MOTHS. 
Boisgiraud, of Poitiers, France, in 1840. Prof. Trotter found this 
reference in a little-known paper by N. Joly, published in 1842, and 
entitled ‘‘Notice of the Ravages which Liparis dispar L. has made 
around Toulouse, followed by some Reflexions upon a Method of 
Destroying Certain Insects.” It seems that Boisgiraud, about 1840, 
freed the poplars along a road near Poitiers of the gipsy moth by 
placing upon them the carabid beetle Calosoma sycophanta L., and 
destroyed earwigs in his own garden by placing with them a rove 
beetle (Staphylinus olens Mill). He also experimented against the 
same insect with the ground beetle Carabus auratus L. His experi- 
ment must have become rather well known at the time, since Prof. 
Trotter points out that in 1843 the technical commission of the 
Society for the Encouragement of Arts and Crafts of Milan offered a 
gold medal to be given in 1845 to the person who in the meantime 
should have undertaken with some success new experiments tending to 
promote the artificial development of some species of carnivorous 
insects which could be used eflicaciously to destroy another species of 
insect recognized as injurious to agriculture. This offer drew forth a 
memoir from Antonio Villa, a well-known writer on entomology, who 
had previously confined himself to the Coleoptera, entitled ‘‘The Car- 
nivorous Insects used to Destroy the Species Injurious to Agricul- 
ture.’ This memoir was presented December 26, 1844, and he advo- 
cated the employment of climbing carabid beetles for tree-inhabiting 
forms, rove beetles to destroy the insects found in flowers, and ground 
beetles for cutworms and other earth-inhabiting forms. The. paper 
of Villa was praised in certain reviews and criticized in others. It 
seems to have been entirely lost sight of in later years. 
A later Italian writer, Rondani, who devoted himself for the most 
part to systematic work, appreciated the practical importance of 
parasite work and published tables giving the host relations of differ- 
ent species. His work influenced many arguments in the dispute 
which sprang up in Italy about 1868 as to the usefulness of insec- 
tivorous birds to agriculture, and Silvestri calls attention to the fact 
that Dr. T. Bellenghi was referring to Rondani when, in 1872, he spoke - 
what Silvestri calls ‘‘the prophetic words:” ‘‘Entomological para- 
sitism has a future, and in it more than in anything else Italian agri- 
culture must put its faith.”’ 
PERMITTING THE PARASITES TO ESCAPE. 
The earliest published suggestion as to the practical use of para- 
sites of injurious insects, by permitting the parasites to escape while 
the host insect is killed, appears to have been made by C. V. Riley 
when State entomologist of Missouri. Writing of the rascal leaf- 
crumpler (Mineola indiginella Zell.) in his Fourth Report on the 
