BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY. 
61 
502. Fernald, C. H. Tlie hackmatack saw fly. <Ellswortli American, 
16 August, 1883. 
503. Fernald, C. H. The black army worm \Agrotis fennica]. Lewis¬ 
ton Journal, 9 October, 1884. 
504. Fernald, C. H. The apple maggot [Trypeta pomonella]. <Port- 
land Transcript, 29 October, 1884. 
505. Fernald, C. H. Apple tree insects. <Maine Farmer, 2 July, 
1885. 
506. Fernald, C. H. Parasitic insects [Thalessa]. <Maine Farmer, 
23 July, 1885. 
507. Fernald, C. LI. Plant lice. <Ellsworth American, 30 July, 1885. 
508. Fernald, O. H. The bud moth. <Maine Farmer, 13 August, 
1885. 
509. Fernald, C. H. The twig pruner on the apple. <Maine Farmer, 
27 August, 1885. 
510. Fernald, C. H. Mosquitoes. <Zion’s Herald, 9 September, 1885. 
511. Fernald, C. H. The red-humped caterpillar. <Maine Farmer, 
7 January, 1886. 
512. Fernald, C. H. The Buffalo carpet-beetle. <Amherst Record, 
13 October, 1S86. 
513. Fernald, C. H. The skunk beneficial to farmers. <National 
Farmer, February, 1888. 
514. Fernald, C. H. Injurious insects. <Thirty-tifth Annual Rept. 
Seer. Mass. Board Agric., for 1887,1888, pp. 78-94, figs. 1-12. 
Brief notes on the ravages and means against canker worms, Anisopteryx 
[= Paleacrita\ vernata, A. autumnata [ —pometaria ], white marked tussock 
moth, Orgyia leucostigma, eye-spotted hud moth, Tmetocera ocellana, codling 
moth, Carpocapsa pomonella, grape berry moth, Eudemis botrana, American 
bean weevil, Bruch us obsoletus, and pea weevil, B. pisi; remarks on some 
of the more important insecticides. 
515. Fernald, O. H. Injurious insects. <Trans. Mass. Ilortic. Soc., 
for 1888,1888, pp. 107-116. 
General notes on losses caused by insects, and on insecticides. 
516. Ferrill, George W. More about the army worm. <Prairie 
Farmer, 1861, new ser., v. 8, p. 417. 
Eggs of Leucania unipuncta laid in wheat in the fall or spring. 
517. Fiske, O. Insect in pear trees. <New Engl. Farmer, 1830, v. 8, 
p. 401. 
Ravages of Scolytus pyri [= Xyleborus dispar ]. 
518. Fitch, Asa.* Insects injurious to vegetation. — No. 1. <Amer. 
Quart. Journ. Agric. and Sci., 1845, v. 1, pp. 250-254, pi. 3. 
Descriptions and figures of Saperda [=0&emi] tripunctata , S. bivittata [=ca?j- 
dida ], S. calcarata, Clytus [= Plagionotus\ speciosus, C. [= Cyllene ] pictus , 
C. [ =Neoclytus~\ caprasa, Dcsmocerus paUiatus, and Purpuricenus humeralis. 
* Dr. Fitch was born at Fitch’s Point, Salem, N. Y., 24 February, 1809, and died 
18 April, 1879, at Salem, N. Y. See Arner. Ent., May, 1880, v. 3, n. s., v. 1, pp. 121-123- 
