Fig. 90.—The Yellow-legged Ichneumon Fly (Microgaster glomeratus) of the Cabbage Caterpillar. Left, the adult insect; right, the larva (both enlarged). In the middle, Cabbage Caterpillar and a heap of Microgaster pupæ.
I shall not enumerate here all the various ichneumon flies which benefit agriculture, but simply mention the Small Cabbage Caterpillar Ichneumon Fly (Microgaster glomeratus), depicted in Fig. 90, which, like its host (the large cabbage white), appears in two generations. The larvæ of the ichneumon fly live in large numbers in the large cabbage caterpillar, and at their last moult acquire minute teeth, with which they bite through the skin of their host; they then leave it to die, and surround themselves with a cocoon close to its dead body. There are, besides, a few small and also some large ichneumon flies which lay their eggs in the pupæ of the cabbage white, so that, e.g., in winter many of its angular pupæ, occurring on tree stems and hedges, are found with many small or several large white ichneumon larvæ within them.
Family: Tenthredinidæ (Saw-flies).
Body thick-set. Abdomen never very long, and united by a broad base to the thorax (Fig. 91). Saw-shaped ovipositor (p. 89), drawn in when not in use, and only protruded during egg-laying. Mandibles strong, the remaining mouth-parts not so well developed. The larvæ are false caterpillars (p. 92); they can usually be recognized by their characteristic attitude, for many of them bend the abdomen very much upwards and forwards, especially when frightened, and when at rest the hinder part of the body is spirally coiled (Fig. 91). The fully developed larva spins a cocoon in which it still remains for a long time in the larval condition, even during the whole winter. It becomes a pupa two or three weeks before the appearance of the perfect insect. There are many larvæ of this kind destructive to woods, but only a few which interest the farmer. Here is included—
The Turnip Saw-fly (Athalia spinarum).
Adult: Female one-third of an inch long, stretch of wing over two-thirds of an inch; male somewhat smaller. Bright orange or reddish yellow. Head black, thorax and legs with black markings. Wings large. Larva: Length may be rather more than two-thirds of an inch. The just-hatched larvæ are almost colourless, but the skin quickly becomes bright green, and after the first moult, dark green to black. Ventral side slate grey. Head shining black. Twelve broad body segments, upon which are many wrinkles of the skin.
Fig. 91.—The Turnip Saw-fly (Athalia spinarum): adult female and two caterpillars.
The sluggish adult is found, during May or August, upon kohl rabi and turnips, mustard and charlock, with its wings folded together. The female, by means of her ovipositor, saws small holes in the margin or under side of the leaf, and lays her eggs in these. The larvæ are hatched in from four to six days, and they undergo four moults. The presence of the larvæ can be detected by their cast skins, which remain sticking to the leaves even when the animals themselves, which are often found rolled up on the under sides of the leaves, cannot be seen. The enemy is also known by its way of feeding, for the larvæ keep on the surfaces of the leaves (upper or under surface) and eat out longish holes. As soon as these have reached a certain size, other parts of the leaves or other leaves are attacked. When the larvæ are numerous the holes continually increase in number until only the leaf-ribs are left. The mature larvæ creep into the soil to a depth of from two-fifths to four-fifths of an inch, and spin a small cocoon. The saw-fly emerges either the same or the following year. These insects may therefore appear in May or in August, but in many cases they are seen at only one of these times, either the summer or autumn turnips being attacked, as the case may be. Remedies: Fowls and ducks willingly eat the larvæ, and, provided they are not able to do any damage, can therefore be brought into the fields. Strewing with soot has a good effect. It pays to pick off the larvæ from young plants.
Order 5: Lepidoptera (Butterflies and Moths).
Fig. 92.—Head of a Butterfly. A, eye; Fh, antennæ; Z, proboscis.
Fig. 93.—Scales from a Butterfly’s Wing (strongly magnified).
Sucking mouth-parts, forming a “proboscis” made up of the two very long maxillæ, spirally rolled up under the head when not in use (Fig. 92), and adapted for sucking honey. There are some forms which take no food in the adult condition, and in which the proboscis is short; in a few species of hawk-moths, this organ is even longer than the body. The larvæ (“caterpillars”) have biting mouth-parts. The body of a butterfly or moth is covered with hair-like structures developed by the skin; in the wings these are broader, have a characteristic appearance (Fig. 93), and partially overlap one another. These scales cause the colours of the wing. They can easily be wiped off, leaving the corresponding part of the wing transparent and clear as glass. In many species (all hawk-moths, many owlet moths) there is a wing-hooklet, i.e. the hind wing has a spine or a thick brush which grasps a band-like area of the fore wing. In this way the two pairs of wings are held together. The females of a few species of spinner and looper moths are wingless, or only possess short flap-like wings useless for flight. The metamorphosis is complete (p. 89); the larvæ are true caterpillars; the pupæ are obtectate (p. 93). Many caterpillars creep into the ground to become pupæ, and spin no investment at all (e.g. hawk-moths). Others make a cocoon, which may consist of threads loosely woven together or may be of firm texture (Fig. 60). The cocoon consists chiefly of silk, a substance secreted in a spinning gland, and exuding to the exterior on the lower lip; but minute particles of sand or earth, and fragments of wood gnawed off by the caterpillar, may be stuck in the cocoon. The pupæ of butterflies are naked, without cocoon, but are fixed by threads to leaves, tree stems, walls, hedges, etc. A distinction is drawn between girdled and suspended pupæ; the first are fixed by a silk band, which surrounds them, and the head is directed upwards, while the latter are suspended by the tip of the abdomen (Fig. 94). The time required for the development of the perfect insect from the pupa is not always the same, depending not only upon the species, but also upon the time of year. The summer generation of the large white spends scarcely fourteen days in the pupa stage, the winter generation eight months.
Family: Diurna (Butterflies).
Body relatively weak and thin; wings very broad, not very long relatively. No wing-hooklet (see above). Wings folded together above in a state of rest, so that their upper sides touch. Antennæ thickened in a club-like way at the tip. The caterpillars possess five pairs of pro-legs; they are usually almost devoid of hair. There are, however, a few (e.g. the caterpillar of the peacock butterfly, Fig. 94) which possess hard, spine-like, much-branched bristles. The naked pupæ are sharp cornered; some are girdled, others suspended (p. 137).
Fig. 94.—The Peacock Butterfly (Vanessa io), with pupa, and larva suspended before passing into the pupa state.
Among butterflies with larvæ that become suspended pupæ are the Red Admiral (Vanessa atalanta), the Peacock (Vanessa io, Fig. 94), the Fritillaries (Argynnis), the Meadow Browns (Hipparchia), etc.; and among those with girdled pupæ the Swallow Tail (Papilio machaon), the Whites (Pieris), etc.
The Cabbage White, or Large White (Pieris Brassicæ).
Butterfly: Length a little over an inch, span of wing 2½ inches. Both fore and hind wings milky white, the former black at the root, on the front edge, and the outer angle; also a black patch on the inner margin of the fore wing, passing on to the front margin of the hind wing. The female possesses, in addition, two round black patches on the middle of each fore wing. Under side of the fore wings milky white, yellow at the tip, blackish at the root; under side of the hind wings yellow, with black dots. Caterpillar (Fig. 95): As much as 1⅓ inch long; greenish, or sulphur yellow, with black dots. Head and dorsal side of last segment of the body grey with black spots. Young specimens are of a very bright green with black wartlets closely crowded together.
Fig. 95.—The Cabbage White (Pieris brassicæ) female laying her eggs; caterpillar, and pupa.
From the pupæ which have lived through the winter butterflies emerge in May, and lay their golden yellow eggs in small heaps on the under sides of the leaves of rape, mustard, and cress, also on charlock and such-like cruciferous weeds. The caterpillars of this first generation are hatched in fourteen days, and rarely do any harm, since they only appear in small numbers. They develop rapidly, and during the last days of June become pupæ on the branches and leaves of the plants they live on; the butterflies appear in July. Owing to their rapid development the caterpillars and pupæ of this first generation are but little exposed to the attacks of enemies (ichneumons, birds, etc.). Only a few of them die, therefore, if the weather is favourable. As a result of this, the July butterflies and the eggs laid by them are relatively numerous, so that the number of caterpillars appearing in late summer may be very large. These caterpillars, however, live almost exclusively on the various kinds of cabbage and kohl rabi, and it is this second generation which in many years is so harmful. At the beginning of August the caterpillars are ready to become pupæ, and for this purpose they seek tree stems, hedges, walls, etc. The pupæ now formed live as such through the winter. During this period, however, they are exposed to many dangers (damp, cold, sudden alternation between very low and very high temperatures; ichneumons, birds), and most of them perish, so that only a few butterflies come out the following spring, and lay but a few eggs. It is therefore obvious that the first generation of caterpillars (May, June) is much less numerous than the second generation occurring from late summer to autumn. Under exceptionally favourable conditions even a third generation may appear, since caterpillars of the second generation are able to become pupæ at the beginning of August; and these pupæ, instead of remaining as such over winter, become butterflies the same month. These, again, lay eggs from which the caterpillars of the third generation are hatched, which, however, are not always fully developed before the advent of the cold weather, and in this case perish. It is clear that, in the case of pupæ which develop into butterflies during August in about fourteen days, the unfavourable influences have either no effect (unfavourable weather) or but little (ichneumons, birds), so that the butterflies appear in flocks, which wander into other regions, since they have themselves, when larvæ, devoured the cabbage and turnip plants. In reference to the damage effected by the caterpillar, it may be observed that only the chief veins of the leaf are left, and the margins are not spared. Remedies: Collection of the little heaps of yellow eggs and the young caterpillars, which are blackish and live together in small companies; the planting of a few small hemp plants in the cabbage fields to be protected, by which the butterflies will be kept away.
The Garden White, or Small White (Pieris rapæ).
Fig. 96.—The Garden White (Pieris rapæ), male.
Fig. 97.—The Garden White (Pieris rapæ), female, caterpillar.
Butterfly (Figs. 96 and 97): Length rather less than an inch, span of wing two inches; very much like the cabbage white. Base and tip of the fore wing not of such a deep black colour; the black patch in the inner margin of the fore wing is usually absent in the female. The male, however, very often has a black patch in the upper side of the fore wing. Caterpillar: Just over an inch long. Dull green; a longitudinal yellow line on the back; also the black stigmata are connected by a yellow line. Habits as in the preceding species; the female, however, lays her yellow eggs separately, and not in heaps, and the second generation of caterpillars usually become pupæ somewhat later in the year. Collecting is more difficult than in the preceding species, since the young caterpillars live independently, and their colour makes it difficult to recognize them on the green cabbage leaves.
The Green-veined White (Pieris napi).
Butterfly (Fig. 98): As large or somewhat smaller than the preceding species. Wings milky white on their upper side; fore wings dusted with black on their front margin, tips, and ends of the ribs. Two spots on the middle of the fore wing in the female, one or none in the male. Under side of the hind wings yellow; under side of the veins dusted with greenish grey. Caterpillar: A little over an inch. Dull bluish-green, with minute blackish tubercles above, and whitish ones below. A yellow longitudinal line on each side connecting the black spiracles, which are bordered by reddish yellow. Very like the preceding species in the larval condition. Habits as in the preceding species, but this is less common.
Fig. 98.—The Green-veined White (Pieris napi).
Family: Noctuidæ (Owlet Moths).
Night-flying moths, of medium size and dull colour, with smooth-haired bodies. Antennæ long and thin, thread like,—comb-shaped only in the males of a few species; wings powerful, lie in a roof-like way when at rest; almost always a wing-hooklet. Caterpillars usually hairless; mostly with five pairs of pro-legs, a few with four or three pairs. The owlets pair at night; they also fly about during the day, even in bright sunshine. Flight strong and rapid, but always in fits and starts. Almost all species lay their eggs separately, and on herbs, only a few species on trees. The caterpillars are very much scattered, and the damage caused by them is never great, except in spots here and there,—on the contrary, when they increase to a great extent they spread over a wider area. Several species are harmful to agriculture.
The Surface Caterpillars (Species of Agrotis)
are stout caterpillars, 1⅕ to 2 inches long, with five pairs of pro-legs, and shining transparent external skin. They remain in the ground during the day, feeding above ground at night, and also in the daytime when the sky is much overcast. When touched they bend themselves into the form of a C. There are in Britain several species of surface caterpillars which have these habits, but I will only describe here, to begin with, the commonest kind:—
Fig. 99.—The Common Dart or Turnip Moth (Agrotis segetum) with Caterpillar.
The Common Dart or Turnip Moth (Agrotis segetum or A. clavis).—Moth (Fig. 99): Length almost ⅘ of an inch. Span of wing about 1⅘ inch. Fore wings small, ash-grey or brownish, with many dark patches and similar markings. Hind wings in the male, bright grey to snowy white; in the female, brownish grey. Caterpillar (Fig. 99): Up to two inches, earthy grey, occasionally somewhat greenish. Head and prothorax darker. The time taken by the caterpillars to complete their development differs according to the plants attacked, and it is therefore easy to understand why the moths should be seen flying about from the first half of May right on into the autumn, without having recourse to the improbable hypothesis of two successive generations. The eggs are consequently laid at very different times, and are always deposited singly in the soil in the neighbourhood of plant roots, or else in the low-lying leaves and stems of various herbs. The caterpillars hatched from these are destructive earlier or later, according to the time of egg-laying. Most specimens are half grown in winter; these continue their destructive work the following spring. In autumn they attack the roots of winter grain (rye and wheat), rape, and species of cabbage; they also bore readily into turnips and potatoes. In spring, after the winter rest, they continue to attack the roots of winter grain, winter rape, etc., or fleshy underground parts (turnips, potatoes) developed in the interim, or the roots of summer plants (summer grain, buckwheat, summer rape, vegetables, etc.). On clear days the caterpillars always remain hidden in the soil; and those which have bored into juicy underground parts of plants (turnips, carrots), do not leave their abode during the day, but the others, both during the night and on cloudy days, come above ground to attack the leaves and stems of young plants. In exceptional cases the caterpillar is mature by the beginning of winter, in which case it hybernates in the soil as a brown pupa. The moths escaping from such pupæ naturally appear earlier than others. As a rule, the caterpillars do most damage to the winter crop in autumn, wandering about a great deal; in many cases they gnaw through the main root, thus quickly killing the plant attacked, from which they proceed to another. Remedies: When the caterpillars have done much damage in late summer, it is recommended to leave the field alone till October, then to plough it up and sow the winter grain. By putting off the seed-time in this way, the caterpillars will have lost their activity when the corn germinates, and the winter crop will thus escape them. Besides this, the preceding ploughing will bring many caterpillars to the surface, where they will become the prey of birds, or, if not, can be collected. Warm soils, especially those manured with horse dung, are most infested by the caterpillars; and the use of warm kinds of manure should, therefore, be avoided in regions which have much to fear from these insects. Where everything has been destroyed, a thorough ploughing is desirable. Swine may also be driven in during autumn, and will grub up and devour the caterpillars. In this case, sowing will take place the following spring.
Other Surface Caterpillars, which have pretty much the same habits as the preceding, are those of the Heart and Dart Moth (Agrotis exclamationis), the Wheat Moth (A. tritici), and the Thick-bodied Surface Caterpillar (A. ravida or A. crassa).
The Cabbage Moth (Mamestra brassicæ).
Moth (Fig. 100); about ¹¹⁄₁₂ of an inch long, span of wing 1⅗ inch. Fore wings shining brown, with yellowish and black marbling; each patch having a dark outline; a yellowish zigzag line on the outer margin. Hind wings shining yellowish-grey brown. A strongly developed crest in the middle line of the thorax. Caterpillar (Fig. 100): 1⅗ inches, cylindrical. Bright or dark green, brownish green, or greenish brown. On the back a dark longitudinal stripe, divided into two halves by a narrow white longitudinal line. A whitish line running along each side; between this and the dorsal line a dark transverse streak on each segment. The brown pupa (Fig. 100) remains in the soil during the winter, and is not invested in a cocoon. The moth appears in May; during the day it rests on windows, in barns, etc. The greenish yellow eggs are laid separately on the leaves of cabbages (sometimes also on lettuces and turnips). The caterpillars, which appear in fourteen days, creep about actively between the leaves. Within a month they are full-grown, and become pupæ in the soil. At the end of July and in August the summer generation of moths appears. From the eggs laid by these are hatched a second generation of caterpillars, which are always much more numerous than those of the first. From August to October they are found in all kinds of cabbage, especially compactly headed kinds and cauliflower. At first they eat holes in the leaves, leaving, however, the chief veins and usually the edges. Later on they eat right on into the heart of the cabbage. They fill their burrows with excrement, and the attacked plants begin to rot internally. The full-grown caterpillars creep out and become pupa in the soil. Remedy: Collecting the caterpillars while they are still on the outer leaves.
Fig. 100.—The Cabbage Moth (Mamestra brassicæ), with caterpillar and pupa.
The Vegetable or Lettuce Moth (Mamestra oleracea).
Moth: ⅗ of an inch long; span of wings about 1⅖ of an inch. Fore wings dark rusty brown, darker on the nerves, dusted with white. Hind wings reddish white. Head and thorax like the fore wings; abdomen like the hind wings. Caterpillar: Up to 1⅗ inch; dirty greenish grey, or olive green, irregularly bestrewn with dirty white dots. The caterpillars feed on cabbages, lettuce, asparagus, and other vegetables. Those of the first generation (June and July) hollow out lettuce stalks before the head begins to be formed; those of the second generation (August and September) feed on cabbage or asparagus leaves. The first generation of moths appear in May, the second in the first half of August.
The Pea Moth (Mamestra pisi).
Moth: About ⅖ of an inch long; span of wings about 1⅖ of an inch. Fore wings bright reddish brown with bluish-grey markings, and a yellowish longitudinal streak. Hind wings reddish grey. Caterpillar: 1⅘ of an inch; cylindrical; slender. Back dark greenish or brown red; closely and tolerably regularly veined with dark lines, and with two sulphur yellow longitudinal streaks on the back and one on each side. Head, belly, and feet flesh red. If the caterpillar is touched it moves the front part of its body about here and there, and then lets itself fall down. The moths appear in May and June; the caterpillars are found from July to September on peas, vetches, beans, clover, lupins, sorrel, orach, heath, willow, birch, and yet other plants. Seldom very destructive.
The Grass-root Moth (Hadena monoglypha, or H. polyodon).
Moth: About ⅝ of an inch long; span of wing 1⅘ inches. Fore wings longish; yellow brown blended with dark brown and white; the tips are coloured most brightly. Three black rays on the fore wing; hind wings brown grey. Caterpillar: About 1⅗ inches long, ⅓ of an inch broad, with sixteen feet. Grey or reddish white, more or less shining. Head, prothorax, the last body segment and warts black. At the end of July and during August the female lays her eggs separately on the bases of grass haulms and leaves. The caterpillars creep out at the end of August, and, especially after their hybernation (in April and May), attack meadow grasses, biting through the leaves and haulms at their bases, immediately above the surface of the ground, and devouring, as it were, passages through the grass. The reddish brown pupæ rest in the soil.
The Couch-grass Moth (Hadena basilinea).
Moth: Nearly ⅘ of an inch long; span of wings 1⅗ inches. Head and back rust-coloured or reddish grey, in the male with a large tuft of hairs. Fore wings coloured like the back, with two transverse lines in the middle, and brighter and darker marks as well. Hind wings bright brown, with a faint golden sheen, and with a yellowish fringe. Caterpillar: 1⅕ to 1⅖ inches long, with sixteen feet, bluish grey, somewhat brownish, with dirty white longitudinal lines; greenish belly, and large bright brown head. The moth lays the eggs in little heaps on the stems and leaves of grass plants. The damage which the caterpillars effect among meadow grasses is inconsiderable; but they sometimes appear in considerable numbers on grain-plants, and are then very destructive. The insects are chiefly found on dry high-lying land, which is consequently most liable to the attacks of their larvæ. After hybernation they feed on grass or the leaves and stems of young grain-plants, and change in the soil into stout, smooth, yellowish-brown pupæ, devoid of cocoon. Remedy: In case the caterpillars have got into the crop, threshing should take place as soon as possible, or, after hybernating, they will continue to devour the grain in the barns.
The Wheat-haulm Moth (Luperina didyma).
Moth: Span of wing 1⅕ inches. Individual specimens differ very much from one another: brownish, greyish yellow to ochre yellow, with various dark and light markings. Caterpillar: With sixteen legs, and over an inch long in full-grown specimens (May); thin, spindle-shaped; stiff; bright shining green, with two broad dark red lines on the back. The caterpillars live in the stalks of wheat plants, and other gramineous forms, hollowing them out; they hybernate when tolerably young. In spring they continue to hollow out the wheat plants, going from one stalk to another. The plants attacked quickly have their leaves turned to a rusty colour, and they sicken or even die.
The Grass Moth (Charæas graminis).
Moth: Length ⅗ of an inch; span of wings about 1⅓ inches. Antennæ of the male comb-like. Fore wings short, of a brownish-red, olive brown, or dirty olive-green ground colour, with three whitish patches, and darker markings. Hind wings yellowish grey, brighter at the roots. Caterpillar: With sixteen legs; 1⅘ inches long; bronze grey, back more of a bronze brown, with three narrow bright longitudinal streaks. Head ochre yellow. The moth lays her some two hundred eggs during July, in little heaps at the bases of the grass haulms and leaves. The caterpillars hide during the day, and feed at night. They are very injurious even in the autumn, but become insatiable the following spring, always devouring the lowest parts of the haulms and leaves, so that the upper parts die off. They wander in large companies from one field to another. In June they become pupæ of a shining reddish brown below the surface of the soil or under sods. Enemies: swine, moles, shrews, rooks, wagtails, ducks, fowls. Remedy: Driving in swine, where this is practicable.
Fig. 101.—The Grass Moth (Charæas graminis) and its caterpillar.
The Darnel Moth (Neuronia popularis).
Moth: Length rather less than ⅘ of an inch; span of wings nearly 1⅗ inches. Much variegated, beautiful. Fore legs reddish brown, with peach-coloured glow; all the nerves and several markings yellowish white, and dark markings as well. Hind wings yellowish, and abdomen white. Head and thorax brown, mixed with yellowish white. Caterpillar: Over two inches long, and about one-third of an inch thick; 16-legged; tapers at both ends. Has an oily lustre. Dorsal side of a bronze brown, sharply marked off by a yellowish line from the bright brownish grey ventral side, and traversed by three longitudinal bright brown lines, which in young specimens are almost white. Habits pretty much like those of the preceding species.
The Silver Y Moth (Plusia gamma).
Fig. 102.—The Silver Y Moth (Plusia gamma), with caterpillar and pupa.
Moth: About ⅝ of an inch long; span of wings 1¾ inches. Dark grey, mixed with a reddish tint, and darkly marbled. About the middle of the fore wing there is a very obvious gamma (γ), or Y-shaped mark. Hind wings bright brown at the root, darker at the margins, with a whitish fringe. A crest of hairs on the dorsal side of the thorax. Caterpillar: 12-legged. It bends its body like a looper (Fig. 102). Length 1 to 1⅕ inches. Ground colour green; but there may be variations in this from a dirty green to a brownish colour. Six fine longitudinal lines on the back, and a yellowish line above the legs. The caterpillar is almost naked, only possessing a few small, isolated bristle-like hairs. Habits: At least two generations, and sometimes as many as five in two years. The Silver Y Moth generally hybernates as a half-grown caterpillar, but sometimes also in the pupa, or moth state. The caterpillars may therefore be met with the whole year; but they are usually most abundant from the end of June to the middle of August, and, under favourable conditions, may become an agricultural pest. They devour the leaves of almost all wild and cultivated plants (except grasses, corn, and trees), and are especially fond of leguminous plants (peas, vetches, clover), flax, beet, rape, cabbage, and buckwheat. The moths mostly appear in May, but also in July, and later on in the summer, especially on clear days. The female lays her numerous bright green eggs, some four hundred in number, separately, on the leaves of the above-named plants. The caterpillars are not always easy to see, owing to their greenish colour; under favourable conditions they may pass through the whole of their development up to the moth stage in from six to seven weeks. In some years they appear in such large numbers, that almost all the cultivated plants found in the fields of an infested region are utterly spoilt by them, excepting the corn. Natural enemies: Starlings, all sharp-beaked singing birds haunting fields; sparrows; ground beetles, rove beetles, and the larvæ of these families; several ichneumon flies, parasitic fungi. Remedies: Driving in poultry, where practicable. Collecting, e.g. by means of a machine invented by L. Dehoff, of Gutenberg, near Halle. “Several troughs with steep inner walls are fastened together by laths, at distances equal to those between adjacent furrows, and besoms are fixed to the laths. These troughs are drawn along like sledges by a horse walking in the furrows, and the caterpillars are swept by the besoms into the troughs, from which they are collected in sacks at the ends of the furrows. With this cheap machine about twelve acres per day can be cleared” (Taschenberg).
Family: Pyralidæ (Snout Moths).
Small moths with thread-like antennæ, comb-like in the males of a few species, with tolerably large eyes, and very large labial palps often stretched out in front like a beak (Fig. 103). Fore wings of an elongated triangular shape. Wing booklets. Legs tolerably long. Caterpillars slightly hairy, with four or five pairs of pro-legs.
The Rye Snout Moth (Pyralis secalis).
Moth: ⅗ of an inch long, span of wings 1⅕ inches. Wings elongated, whitish grey, with an A-shaped patch on the fore wings. Caterpillar: Rather more than ⅖ of an inch long; green, streaked with brown, 16-legged, with a brown head, and tapering at both ends. Habits: The caterpillar lives during June in the rye haulms, hollowing them out. As a result of this, the ears remain hidden between the leaves and leaf-sheaths, and it often happens that only the tips of the awns appear externally. No grain is formed; the ears first become white and dry, and then fall off.
The Hop Snout Moth (Hypena rostralis).
Fig. 103.—The Hop Snout Moth (Hypena rostralis).
Moth (Fig. 103): Length rather less than ⅖ of an inch; span of wings 1⅕ inches, or more. Fore wings usually brownish, somewhat scalloped on the fringed outer margins; a zigzag black line near the base; in the middle, near the front edge, a patch bordered with white, and behind this a dark longitudinal streak. Hind wings dull grey, with a silky sheen. Caterpillar: At most one inch long, 14-legged, very slender, green, with a dark middle line and two white side lines. Very active; wriggles about on the ground like an eel. Habits: The moth is on the wing at the beginning of August, the second generation in August; the latter hybernates in outhouses, barns, summer-houses, etc. The eggs are laid on wild and cultivated hops, also on stinging nettles. The caterpillars are found on the hop plants, especially in June; they sometimes entirely devour the leaves, with the exception of the nerves. In July they become pupæ, either between the leaves or on the soil, and are invested in a grey cocoon. The moths appear at the beginning of August, and give rise to a second generation of caterpillars, from which, after the pupa stage, the moths which live through the winter are developed.
The Cabbage Snout Moth (Botys forficalis).
Moth: Length about half an inch. Span of wings rather over one inch. Fore wings sharply bent in front before their sharp tips; rusty yellow, somewhat darker on the nerves, with rusty brown transverse streaks from the outermost corners to the middle of the hinder margin, and with other reddish brown markings. Hind wings and body shining straw yellow. Caterpillar: ⅘ inch long, 16-legged, tapering in front and behind. Yellowish green, with indistinct longitudinal lines and bright brown head. A few small yellowish-green hairs. Habits: The first generation appear in small numbers in May. The caterpillars hatched out from the eggs of these live (May and June) on the leaves of cabbages and wild cruciferous plants. They always shelter themselves between the leaves, and spin a few thin threads across the entrances to their abodes. The caterpillars burrow horizontally in the earth, and there become pupæ invested in cocoons. The moths of the second generation appear in August; in autumn the caterpillars hatched from their eggs damage cabbages, sometimes to a large extent. In October they burrow into the soil, where they hybernate. Remedy: Deep digging or ploughing after the crop, by which the larvæ invested in webs are buried deeply, and consequently for the most part killed.
The Mother-of-pearl Moth (Botys margaritalis = B. extimalis).
Moth (Fig. 104): Length nearly ⅖ inch; span of wing over 1⅕ inches. Fore wings bright sulphur yellow, with large rust-coloured patches, and two rusty yellow transverse lines. Hind wings shining straw yellow; all four wings with a mother-of-pearl sheen. Caterpillar (Fig. 104): ⅘ inch, 16-legged, yellowish, head and neck-shield black. Body with a broad, grey, longitudinal streak on each side. Four longitudinal rows of dark brown warts. Habits: The moth is on the wing in June and July, and lays the longish ovoid eggs on cruciferous plants (rape, radish, several wild forms). The caterpillar lives concealed in a white web, and gnaws holes in the pods, into which it inserts the forepart of its body for the purpose of devouring the still green seeds. The attacked pods, owing to the presence of round holes in them, look something like flutes or fifes.
Fig. 104.—The Mother-of-pearl Moth (Botys margaritalis), with larva (1) and injured pods.
The full-grown caterpillars burrow into the soil, where they hybernate in a delicate web. Remedy: Compare the preceding species.
Family: Tortricidæ (Leaf-rollers).
Small, thick-set moths (Fig. 105), with smaller palps than the snout moths. Fore wings broad at the root, with straight or somewhat curved outer margins. Hind wings as broad, or even broader, than the fore wings. When at rest the fore wings lie in a roof-like way. They usually possess many characteristic markings. Hind wings greyish, without markings. Antennæ thread-like. Caterpillars hairless, or only slightly hairy; 16-legged: many kinds live in leaves, which they roll up; others in twigs, buds, and fruits, which they hollow out.
The Fawn-coloured Pea Moth (Grapholitha nebritana = G. pisana).
Moth (Fig. 105): Length ⅜ inch; span of wings about ⅖ inch. Fore wings fawn-coloured, with metallic sheen; alternating short, white, and dark lines on the front margin. Hind wings black, with bronze sheen and white fringe. Caterpillar: ⅓ inch long; 16-legged; pale green, with brown or black head, neck-shield, and last body segment. The thoracic legs are black. Dark warts on each segment. Habits: Compare the succeeding species.
Fig. 105.—The Fawn-coloured Pea Moth (Grapholitha nebritana).
The Crescent Pea Moth (Grapholitha dorsana).
Moth: Somewhat larger than the preceding species. Fore wings olive brown, with many small short white lines on the front margin. A yellowish white crescent on the middle of the hinder margin. Hind wings brownish. Caterpillar: Nearly ⅖ inch long, 16-legged, orange yellow, with brown or black head, neck-shield, last body segment, and thoracic feet. Covered with brownish-yellow warts. Habits: The moths fly about in large numbers round the pea blossoms, always a short time after sunset. The female lays one, two, or at most three eggs, on a very young pod, or on an ovary. In fourteen days the caterpillar is hatched, bores into the pod, and attacks the peas. The opening made in the margin of the pod closes up again. The pod generally ripens early. When it opens, the full-grown caterpillars creep out, and become pupæ in the soil, within a web, where the pupa lives through the winter. The peas attacked are always covered, while in the pod, with the coarse-grained excrement of the caterpillars, and are often united two or three together by web fibres. Remedy: Deep digging of the soil before the winter, or, still better, deep hoeing as soon as the pea crop is gathered in. In this way many of the caterpillars or pupæ hidden in the soil will be destroyed.
Family: Tineidæ (Leaf-miners).
Fig. 106.—The Larch Moth (Coleophora laricella).
These moths are the smallest of the Lepidoptera. Like the snout moths, they have strongly developed labial palps, but are distinguished from them by their small wings; the hind wings are especially small, and have sharp tips. The extent of the wings is increased by a broad marginal fringe. When at rest, the wings slope like a roof, and the fringe near their tips is often turned upwards. Antennæ thread-like, tolerably long—in the males of a few species may even be very long. Caterpillars slightly hairy, with five, or, rarely, four pairs of pro-legs. To this family belong the well-known Clothes Moth; the Corn Moth, living in stored-up grain; and also—
The Carrot Moth (Depressaria nervosa = Hæmylis daucella).
Moth: Length ⅖ inch. Span of wings rather over ⅘ inch. Fore wings reddish-grey brown, blackish on the nerves, and with scattered whitish markings. Hind wings more of a grey brown. Thorax and abdomen very shiny, and somewhat brighter than the wings. Caterpillar: Nearly ⅖ inch long, tolerably thick, especially in the middle, and variegated. Head, thorax, and last body segment shining black, the last two regions with reddish-yellow margin, and the thorax, in addition to this, divided into right and left halves by a longitudinal yellow line. The rest of the body is olive green; a broad orange-coloured line divides it into a darker dorsal and a lighter ventral side. On the back many ill-defined warts of a shining black colour. Habits: In March and April many of the carrot moths which have survived the winter come out of their hiding-places; they only fly at night. The eggs are laid separately on umbelliferous weeds, carraway, or carrot plants. The caterpillars are first seen when the plants flower; they live on the flower-stalks, which they bind together by a few threads, and devour the flowers and young fruits, sometimes even the flower-stalks. The caterpillars are very active, and let themselves down by a thread when disturbed. Usually they are fully grown in five weeks, and then bore into the stalks of the plant, where they become pupæ. It is not known whether there are one or two generations. The caterpillars are found at very various times, from May to August.
The Diamond-back Moth (Plutella cruciferarum = Tinea xylostella).
Moth: About ¼ inch long; span of wings ⅗ inch. Fore wings small, lancet-shaped, with long fringes. Ground colour yellowish brown, darkly speckled. Hind wings brownish grey, small, strongly fringed. When at rest the long fringes form a sharp backward and upwardly directed comb, while the antennæ are applied together and stretched straight forwards. Caterpillar: About ¼ inch long, tapering in front and behind. A beautiful green, with a black head. Lives hidden under a very thin web or under a few fibres, on the lower side of the leaves of cabbage, rape, and other crucifers. Habits: The pupa lives through the winter; the moths emerge in May, and fly about in the evening. Two generations; the first generation of caterpillars in the first half of July, the second in late summer. The second generation is particularly apt to be destructive to cabbage. Pupæ found on the leaves of the plants attacked, and surrounded by a thick web.