144 INSECTS INJURIOUS TO THE PEAR. 



August Bas passed. The hole made by the beetle when it is 

 escaping is a little more than one-twentieth of an inch in 

 diameter. 



It was formerly supposed that these insects infested only 

 such trees as were nnheaUhy or were already dying, but it has 

 been shown that sound and healthy trees are attacked and 

 severely injured by them. Neither are they limited in their 

 operations to the twigs, but sometimes attack the trunk also. 

 It is said that there are two broods each year, the early one 

 nurtured in the trunk, and when these reach maturity, the 

 newly -grown twigs, offering a more dainty repast, are accord- 

 ingly attacked and destroyed. 



The injuries inflicted by this insect are not confined wholly 

 to the pear ; occasionally it is found on thp apple, apricot, 

 and plum. The only remedy which has been suggested is to 

 cut off the blighted limbs below the injured part and burn 

 them before the beetle has escaped. 



The damage caused by this insect must not be confounded 

 with the well-known fire-blight on the pear, since that, as 

 already remarked, is a disease probably of a fungoid character, 

 and is entirely independent of insect agency. 



No. 69. — The Pear-tree Bark-louse. 



Lecaninm pyri (Schrank). 



This insect is found on the under side of the limbs of young 

 and thrifty pear-trees, adhering closely to the bark. It ap- 

 pears in the form of a hemispherical scale about one-fifth of 

 an inch in diameter, of a chestnut-brown color, sometimes 

 marked with faint blackish streaks, and having on its surface 

 some shallow indentations. The outer margin is wrinkled. 

 These scales, when mature, are the dead bodies of the females 

 covering and protecting their young ; some are darker in color 

 than others, and there are some smaller ones which are of a 

 dull-yellow hue. 



Under the scales the young lice are interspersed through a 

 mass of white cotton-like matter, which subsequently increases 



