CATERPILLARS. 



Neils of uaMcaf-rolling Caterpillars. 



and may readily be found as soon as the leaves 

 expand. In June, when the perfect insect has ap- 

 peared, by beating a branch of an oak, a whole shower 

 of these pretty green moths may be shook into the air. 



Among the leaf-rolling caterpillars, there is a 

 small dark-brown one, with a black head and six 

 feet, very common in gardens on the currant-bush, 

 or the leaves of the rose-tree. (Loxoteenia Rosana, 

 Stephens.) It is exceedingly destructive to the 

 flower-buds. The eggs are deposited in the summer, 

 and probably also in the autumn or in spring, in 

 little oval or circular patches of a green colour. The 

 grub makes its appearance with the first opening of 

 the leaves, of whose structure in the half-expanded 

 state it takes advantage to construct its summer tent. 

 It is not, like some of the other leaf-rollers, contented 



