A F'EW ORCHARD PHANT DICE 33 
the same name in 1854, and especially tells of taking it from 
Calla lily and the Oleander. Walker, an English writer about 
1849, speaking of this louse says that it feeds upon at least sixty 
known plants and names the potato, turnip, cabbage, lily, carna¬ 
tion, tulip, tobacco, peach, nectarine, and many others. Buckton, 
in his “Monograph of British Aphididae” in 1879, speaks of this 
tibia of oyiparrous ^ X SO 
_MYZUS CERASl 
MYZUS PERSICAE 
n ——I ■ , Stem 9 X80 
- ^ \80 
r I / I 
cornie/e cA spring migrant 
/£ C ' 
rri= 2 rrs 2 S 33 
_ ^ •- ■ ^ — 7 - 
X 8 0 conticje summer a/ate ^ 
13 /T---J A50 
summer alate <} 'i^80 ^ --- 
'STrr7S22j2^ 2>^. - J oC V m 
c^/parot/s V a ^ru 
tibia oA oyipareus ^ X80 
17 
r<r^ 
o o O ^ ^ o 
pq o Oo° ^°-g—)— 
PLATE IV. Antennae, tibiae and cornicles of plant lice. 
M. A. PALMER, ARTIST. 
