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...leopard moth, which was first noticed in June 1909 is an imported European pest, and is only injurious in its larval stage. The life of the larva is two years. It makes its way into the tree by boring through the bark where it may make great furrows in the growing layer, thus girding the limbs, or it may burrow deeper into the heart of the tree. Its burrows show that it migrates often, from one part of a branch to another or to a different one altogether...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRESERVATION OF YARD ELMS | 2/10/1910 | See Source »

While cutting the leopard moth larvae from the limbs of the elms last fall, a small beetle was found, which has since been identified as the European elm bark-borer--scolytus multistriatus-marsh. In Germany it is known as the "splint kafer" and it is one of their most injurious pests. It enters the bark and the newly hatched larvae work in the splint of the live wood causing the bark to loosen and eventually fall off. Scores of trees in the Yard and about Cambridge have been examined and without exception all of them are infected...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRESERVATION OF YARD ELMS | 2/10/1910 | See Source »

...attention is again called to the trees by a defence of the care taken to preserve them printed in another column. The trees have been sprayed with arsenate of lead for several seasons to protect them from the ravages of the brown-tail and gypsy moths and from the elm beetle, but the presence of the leopard moth was not discovered until last summer. A firm of practical foresters, the head of the Boston park department, and several eminent entomologists were immediately consulted...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE YARD ELMS | 1/29/1910 | See Source »

...leopard moth is a comparatively new insect in this locality but its habits are well understood. As soon as it hatches the worm makes its way into the twigs, where it feeds and grows as it burrows into the larger limbs. These worms vary in size from three-eighths of an inch to over three inches in length, when they are the most destructive. They then bore across and completely girdle large limbs, and frequently even girdle the trunk, finally cutting a cell close to the bark and there turning into pupas. When these develop they push out through...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE YARD ELMS | 1/29/1910 | See Source »

...BOTANICAL CLUB. "The Practical Side of a Brown-Tail Moth Disease." Mr. A. T. Speare. Nash Lecture Room, University Museum, 4.45 P. M. Open to members of the University and of Radcliffe College...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Calendar | 4/14/1909 | See Source »

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