146 
Cord} ceps on a larva resembling that of Diabrotica vitiata. 
Burrill, T. J.—White Grub in Illinois. (Cultivator and Country 
Gentleman, Aug. 27, 1874, v. 39, p. —.) 
Mention of Cordyceps. 
Riley, C. V.—The Unadorned Tiphia or White Grub Parasite: 
Siphia inornata, Say. (Sixth Ann. Rep. State Ent. Mo., 
p. 123.) 
Mention of Torrubia milUaris (possibly T. cinerea) as a 
white grub parasite. 
1875. | 
Peck, C. H.—Report of the Botanist. (Twenty-eighth Ann. 
Rep. N. Y. State Mus. Nat. Hist., for 1874, p. 70.) 
Description of Torrubia superficialis, n. sp., from dead larvae. 
Riley, C. Y.— Torrubia elongaia, the White Grub Fungus. (Col- 
man’s Rural World, June 12, 1875, v. —, p. —.) 
Name of Torrubia elongata proposed for white grub fungus. 
Figures from specimens obtained in Missouri. 
1876. ' 
Mann, B. P.—Notes on the White Mountain Faunae. (Psyche, 
July, 1876, v. 1, p. 183.) 
Syrphus found infested by fungi (Entomophthorae?). 
1877. ] 
Cooke, M. C.—The Hyphomycetous Fungi of the United States. 
(Bull. Buffalo Soc, Nat. Sci., 1877, v. 3: Feb., p. 189; July, 
p. 193.) 
Five species of entomochthonous Isaria mentioned on p. 189. 
Riley, C. Y.— [Note on the Development of Torrubia elongaia.~\ 
(N. Y. Weekly Tribune, Oct. 4, 1877, v. —, p. —.) 
1878. I 
-[Occurrence of Torrubia elongaia in South and West.] 
(N. Y. Weekly Sun, Sept. 12, 1878, v. —, p. —.) 
/ 
Saunders, W.—The Annual Address of the President of the Ento¬ 
mological Society of Ontario. (Can. Ent., Oct., 1878, v. 10, p. 
183; Ann. Rep. Ent. Soc. Ont. for 1878, p. 5.) 
Report of destructive disease (muscardine?) among nearly full- 
grown larvae of Clisiocampa sylvatica. 
