48 



that an abundance of two species of grass taken from cotton fields was 

 included. These weevils showed an average duration of life of nearly 

 7£ days, ranging from 3 to 10 days. The weevils made no effort to 

 feed upon the grass, so the slightly longer life period must be due to 

 other causes. 



CANNIBALISM. 



It is hardly proper to speak of cannibalism as a food habit of the 

 boll weevil, but the facts observed may well be recorded here. Under 

 the impulse of extreme hunger weevils have several times showed a 

 slight cannibalistic tendency. 



Seven beetles were confined in a pill box without food. On the 

 third day 6 only were alive. Of the seventh only the hardest chitin- 

 ized parts (head, proboscis, pronotum, legs, and elytra) remained, the 

 softer parts having been eaten by the survivors. 



In another box containing 12 adults the leaf supplied for food was 

 insufficient, and on the fourth day 8 were dead, 4 were partly" eaten, 

 and others had lost one or more legs each. 



In another case a few young adults and a number of squares con- 

 taining pupa? were placed in a box together with a few fresh squares 

 to serve as food for the adults. When the box was opened after a 

 number of days, one " reddish-brown" adult was found having its 

 elytra eaten through and most of its abdomen devoured. In spite of 

 this mutilation the victim was still alive and kicking slowly. The 

 squares were still fresh and fit for food, so that this is really the 

 clearest case of cannibalism observed. 



Frequently more than one larva hatches in a square, and when this 

 is the case a struggle between them is almost certain to take place 

 before they become full grown. Many cases have been observed in 

 which squares contained one living and one or more smaller dead 

 larva?, while in a few cases the actual death straggle was observed. 



FOOD HABITS. 



Among the habits of any insect of economic importance, the first 

 for careful study are those relating to its food, and the second, those 

 connected with its propagation. The study of the life history of the 

 boll weevil has revealed no especially vulnerable point, but rather the 

 important fact that in all its stages it is better protected against the 

 attacks of enemies and the ordinarily effective remedies recommended 

 by the economic entomologist than any other insect which has ever 

 threatened the production of any of the great staple crops of this 

 country. Naturally, then, we must needs turn to a study of the habits 

 of the pest to point the way to means by which either it may be itself 

 destroyed or its great destructiveness prevented. 



