HABITS OF THE COCKCHAFER. 
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fitted for cutting and grinding the leaves of plants, upon 
which these beetles subsist; their notched or double claws 
support them securely on the foliage ; and their strong and 
jagged fore-legs, being formed for digging in the ground, 
point out the place of their transformations. 
The habits and transformations of the common cockchafer 
of Europe have been carefiilly observed, and will serve to 
exemplify those of the other insects of this family, which, as 
far as they are known, seem to be nearly the same. This 
insect devours the leaves of trees and shrubs. Its duration 
in the perfect state is very short, each individual living only 
about a week, and the species entirely disappearing in the 
course of a month. After the sexes have paired, the males 
perish, and the females enter the earth to the depth of six 
inches or more, making their way by means of the strong 
teeth which arm the fore-legs ; here they deposit their eggs, 
amounting, according to some writers, to nearly one hundred, 
or, as others assert, to two hundred from each female, which 
are abandoned by the parent, who generally ascends again to 
the surface, and perishes in a short time. 
From the eggs are hatched, in the space of fourteen days, 
little whitish grubs, each provided with six legs near the 
head, and a mouth furnished with strong jaws. When in a 
state of rest, these grubs usually curl themselves in the shape 
of a crescent. They subsist on the tender roots of various 
V 
plants, committing ravages among these vegetable substances, 
on some occasions of the most deplorable kind, so as totally 
to disappoint the best-founded hopes of the husbandman. 
Durino; the summer thev live under the thin coat of vegeta- 
ble mould near the surface, but, as winter approaches, they 
descend below the reach of frost, and remain torpid until the 
succeeding spring, at which time they change their skins, and 
reascend to the surface for food. At the close of their third 
summer (or, as some say, of the fourth or fifth) they cease 
eating, and penetrate about two feet deep into the earth; 
there, by its motions fi’om side to side, each grub forms an 
