BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
341 
Riley, C. V. — " Synonyms of Parasites ; Mistakes corrected.'' American Entomolo- 
gist, iii, p. 293, 1880. 
[States Diductium zigzag — a supposed cotton-worm parasite — to be a Hcxaplasta ; also sur- 
mise* it to be a parasite of I'hora aletice, and not ot Aletia itself.] 
Riley, C. V. — Answers to Correspondents concerning Cotton Worm inquiries; also, 
small notal there-auent. American Entomologist, iii, pp. 107, 108, 129, 154, 181, 
2€4, 205, 206, 228, 278, 1880. 
Riley, C. V. — 11 Cotton Worms and Cicadas, Professor Stelle's Logic." Selma Times, 
July 19, 1881. 
[A controversial answer to certain publications of Ptofessor Stelle's, and e.-pecially to that 
in the Mobile Register of January 15, URL] 
Riley, C. V. — " Hibernation of the Cotton Worm Moth; Ease with which mistakes 
are made/' American Naturalist, XV, p. 244, March, 1881. 
[A correspondent mistakes Leucnnia unipuneta for Alctia.j 
Riley, C. V. — "Notes on North American Microgasters. Are.'' Transactions of the 
Academy of Science of Saint Loais, iv. No. 2, April 16, 1881. 
[On pp. 3, 11, and 12 treats of Ap aideles aletur. a new i p e oi si parasitic upon the Cotton 
Worm.] 
Riley, C. V. — " Moth* Mistaken for Aletia." American Naturalist xv, p. 4.80. June, 
1881. 
[I'latyhypena xcabra and Ph^bcria atomarit.] 
Riley, C. V. — "The Cotton Worm." Address of Hon. <<e<>. B. Loring, and other Pro- 
ceedings of Cotton Convention held at Atlanta, (-a . November 2,1881. Govern- 
ment Printing Office. 1881. 
[A lengthy address devoted prin< ipallv t<» a description ei unproved machinery tor the de- 
struction of the worms. J 
Rvyort of sunn u<!<ir<>*. — Atlanta Constitution, November ;>. l^fl. 
Say, Thomas.— " Correspondenee relative to the Insect that destroys the Cotton 
Plant." Southern Agriculturist, i, p. 8021. 
JiHmpr. — New Harmony Disseminator. 18:10. 
L'cimpr. — Transactions of the Agricultural Society of the State of New York, 1857. 
p. 883. 
JUimjir.—^:\\'s Entomology of North America. Kd. Le Conte,i. pp. '.WO, 3>1, KO. 
[Consists of a letter from C. W. Capers to Thomas Say, transmitting specimens of the cot- 
ton worm, and Say's reply, describing the insect as Xt-ctua xyliiia.] 
Schwarz, E. A.— Colorado Citizen, Septemher 9, 1>7!'. 
[A short letter defending Professor Uiley against the vharges of "Investigator. "] 
Schwarz, E. A. — ' Report of E. A. Schwarz, of Washington, D. C. w Report n})on 
Cotton Insects, Department of Agriculture. 1"?*.'. pp. 347-3f>0. 
[An account of Mr. Schwarz's trip to the Bahamas in search of Aletia, together with "Re- 
marks on the Hibernation of Aletia."] 
Schwarz, E. A. — " Biological Note on Euphctrus comttockii Howard." American Nat- 
uralist, p. 61, January, 1881. 
[Gives habit* of this Cotton Worm parasite. J 
Rrimpr. — Naturalists' Leisure Hour, January, 1881. 
Scientific American. — "A Probable Core for Cotton Worm." Octoher 26, 1878. 
[Editorial notice of the discovery by Riley that the moths feed on the foliar glands.] 
Seabrook, Whitemarsh B. - A Memoir on the Origin, Cultivation, and Uses of Cot- 
ton, from the Earliest Ages to the Present Time, with Especial Reference to the 
Sea Island Cotton Plant, including the Improvements in its Cultivation, and the 
Preparation of the Wool, &c, in Georgia and South Carolina. Read hefore the 
Agricultural Society of St. Johns, Colleton, Novemher 13, 1843, and the State 
Agricultural Society of South Carolina, December 6, 1843, and hy hoth societies 
ordered to he published. Charleston, 1-44. 
[On pp. 42-45 is a short historical sketch of the "caterpillar (Xoctua xylina). with an ac- 
count of the methods used in Colleton County to exterminate them ; also some remarks upon 
the natural history of the insect. 1 
