Part 12
Very minute insects, possessing a characteristic jaw apparatus, with which they pierce the outer skin of leaves or the parts of flowers, and suck their juices. The four small wings have long fringes at their edges; the fore wings are tolerably hard. The ends of the feet do not possess claws, but small bladders or suckers. The metamorphosis is incomplete. In some years, one or other of the species may increase to a very large extent, and these minute insects then fly about in swarms, especially on very hot days; and they also wander about in large flocks. If they settle on the face or hands of human beings, they cause a disagreeable and persistent itching, as they continually walk about.
[Illustration:
FIG. 109.—Corn Thrips (_Thrips cerealium_). ]
The =Corn Thrips= (_Thrips cerealium_), ¹⁄₁₂ inch. Dark brown to black. Male wingless. Female with small wings bending outwards at their tips (Fig. 109); fore wings horny, hind wings membranous. Larva orange yellow; head, prothorax, and tip of the abdomen, black. After the last moult it becomes yellowish white, and acquires scale-like wings. Hybernates in the adult condition; lays its eggs on various grasses, also on different grain-plants. The larvæ, and, later on, the perfect insects are found in large numbers sucking the ovaries of flowering corn (wheat, rye, barley); as a result of which the ears do not fully develop, but wither away. _Remedy_: Deep ploughing of the stubble, by which the hybernating individuals are destroyed.
The =Elder Thrips= (_Thrips sambuci_) lives in elder, and sometimes also multiplies in very young field beans, the leaves of which blacken and shrivel up in consequence.
The =Flax Thrips= (_Thrips lini_) often injures flax.
EIGHTH ORDER: =Diptera= (FLIES).
Mouth-parts elongated, adapted for sucking or piercing. Fore wings developed, rarely absent. Hind wings absent, as such,—altered into club-like bodies (balancers or halteres) often covered with scales. Metamorphosis complete. Larvæ always legless; most have biting mouth-parts and no distinct head (maggots); the head-bearing dipterous larvæ possess similar mouth-parts. The last become obtectate pupæ (p. 93), while the headless larvæ become pupæ within the larval skin.
Family: =Culicinæ= (_Gnats_).
Slenderly built, with long, thin legs. An elongated piercing proboscis in the female. The male with feebly developed mouth-parts, and feather-like antennæ. Both sexes suck up water and plant juices, and the female blood as well; hence only the latter bites, especially at night. They hybernate in the adult condition in cellars, barns, etc. The female lays 250 to 300 eggs on any floating object in stagnant water (pools, ditches, water-vessels). The larvæ (with large head, well-developed prothorax, and a breathing-tube on the abdomen) live in water, as do the pupæ. Several generations annually; especially in damp summers and districts where the draining of the soil leaves much to be desired. Although sand flies torment our domestic animals more than gnats, yet these also may be very troublesome to them. They principally attack the less hairy parts of the body (inner side of the ears, nose, mouth, corners of the eye, arms, sexual parts). _Remedies_: Thorough draining of the soil. Washing the domestic animals to be protected with a vinegar extract of walnut leaves; rubbing with walnut leaves. Wherever possible, any sores should be covered up, as they attract gnats, sand flies, and flies; or the skin near them may be painted with turpentine or very dilute carbolic acid. This is the less to be neglected, as several kinds of flies eagerly lay their eggs in the sores of domestic animals.
Family: =Gallicolæ= (_Gall Gnats_).
[Illustration:
FIG. 110.—The Wheat Midge (_Cecidomyia tritici_), female. ]
Small gnats with large broad wings, much narrowed at the root, rounded at the tip, and generally rough with hairs. Feelers made up of a large number of spherical or cylindrical joints, covered with spreading hairs. Proboscis short, legs long. The female has an ovipositor, with which she inserts eggs in any part of a plant. At this particular spot a luxuriant growth of vegetable tissue takes place later on, of varying extent, and even forming a regular gall. The species of gall gnat are usually brightly coloured, often red or yellow; these colours are lost, however, in dried specimens. The larvæ are spindle-shaped, yellowish white, yellow, or red; they become pupæ either in the soil or within the part of the plant which they inhabit. Several species are destructive to fruit-tree culture or forestry; I mention here only the most destructive kinds which attack cultivated plants.
The =Hessian Fly= (_Cecidomyia destructor_).
[Illustration:
FIG. 111.—Plant of Barley, attacked by Hessian Fly. The pupæ at _a_. ]
Female about one-eighth of an inch long, male somewhat smaller. The former velvety black, with black hairs, red belly, and red markings; wings greyish; antennæ one-third the length of the body. Male black, with reddish-yellow hairs, dirty red belly, and red markings. The name “Hessian flies” was given in North America, during last century, because it was believed they were introduced from Germany, in 1778, by Hessian soldiers, in their straw. It is still very destructive in North America, also in Germany, Russia, England, and Scotland. _Habits_: During April or May, on warm still evenings, the female lays her eighty or ninety eggs, singly or in pairs, on the lowest leaves of the still very short haulms of rye, wheat, and barley. Eight days, on an average, after this the maggots, which are at first oblong and spotted with reddish yellow, are hatched, and glide down into the leaf-sheath, where they begin to suck the haulm. They gradually alter their shape, becoming ovoid, and transparent with the exception of the large yellowish white, quite opaque fat body. They soon become pupæ (Fig. 111), which look like grains of linseed, and are found in summer on the haulms of the ripe grain. The presence of the constantly sucking larvæ causes great and injurious distortions of the plant, especially obvious during the flowering time, and for a short time afterwards. The haulm withers, and shrivels at the point where the larvæ are present, _i.e._ above the lowest node, or the lowest but one. At the time when the haulm begins to turn yellow—that is, when the grain begins to ripen,—the larvæ become pupæ; the haulm now easily breaks off at the infected spot; a strong wind or heavy rain throws it to the ground. A badly infested field looks, on this account, as if a herd of cattle had got loose and trodden it all down, or as if the grain had been devastated by hail. Only a few haulms bear ears containing normally developed grains. The flies emerge from the pupæ in August and September, after which the females quickly seek the winter corn, and lay their eggs singly or in pairs on the leaves of the yet young plants. The larvæ creep between the leaf-sheath and the still quite undeveloped haulm, and, in the case of small haulms, a number of larvæ may collect together in the immediate neighbourhood of the root, causing a spherical swelling. In many cases the plant dies if its lower parts are inhabited by many larvæ. Before winter, the larvæ attain their full size, leave the plants, and creep into the soil, where, in the following spring, they become pupæ, from which flies emerge fourteen days later. There are, therefore, two generations annually. The _spreading_ of Hessian flies into regions where they were formerly unknown may be caused by (_a_) straw containing the linseed-like pupæ (straw for paper manufacture, packing, etc.); (_b_) grain, among which are often found pupæ that have fallen out of the haulms among the separated grain. _Remedies_: 1. Sowing the winter grain as late as possible, so that the females of the summer generation when they come out of the pupæ will find no winter-grain-plants in which to lay their eggs. 2. Ploughing up the stubble immediately after harvest, or else burning it, so that the pupæ found above the lower nodes are either deeply buried or else burnt.
The =Scarlet Wheat Midge= (_Cecidomyia equestris_).
Female about ⅛ inch, male ¹⁄₁₂ inch; cherry red, with yellow hairs; back of the thorax dark brown. Antennæ as long as the body in the male, half as long in the female. On the wing from May till June; lays its eggs on the leaves of grain-plants, at the base of the uppermost leaf by preference. The blood-red maggots, when they are hatched, let themselves slide down, and get between the leaf-sheath and haulm. Here they work themselves into the haulm, making a longitudinal groove, the walls of which swell more or less, and the end of which is indicated by an obvious transverse thickening. The leaf-sheath hiding the attacked part of the stem is usually more or less swollen. These gall-like outgrowths take up a great deal of nutritious matter, not only from the affected haulm but also from the plant at large, so that the regions not directly attacked are retarded in their growth. The larvæ are full-grown at harvest time, leave their hiding-places, and let themselves fall to the ground, where the following spring they become pupæ, from which midges quickly emerge. _Remedy_: After a year in which the insect has caused great damage, the fields must be deeply ploughed in order to kill the larvæ, which would otherwise live through the winter.
The =Wheat Midge= (_Cecidomyia tritici_).
[Illustration:
FIG. 112.—The Wheat Midge (_Cecidomyia tritici_): LI, larva in the contracted, LII, the same in the extended condition. B, a wheat flower: _a__{1} outer, _a__{2} inner glume, _b_, stamens; _c_, brush-like stigmas; _d_, ovary; _l_, larvæ of the wheat midge. LI and LII highly, B less highly, magnified. ]
Male ¹⁄₂₅ inch, female (Fig. 110) ¹⁄₁₇ inch, and possessing an ovipositor which, when extended, is twice that length. Citron yellow, slightly hairy; antennæ blackish, eyes black, legs dirty yellow. In spring or early summer, the midges creep out of the soil in fields where wheat has been planted the previous year. After pairing, the females wander to fields where wheat or, more rarely, rye is growing. The attacks of the midges commence when the ears begin to emerge from the leaf-sheaths, and are continued throughout the flowering time of the wheat. At night the female pierces the glumes with her ovipositor, and lays three to ten perfectly transparent eggs in each flower. Each midge lays eggs in several flowers, but two or more midges may use the same flower for this purpose, so that as many as thirty maggots may be found in one bloom (Fig. 112). The maggots, which are hatched out in a week, creep down to the ovary and suck its juices. If many maggots live in one flower it is sure to die, but if there are only a few it may produce a grain, though this may be small. Ears infested by the maggots develop yellow spots later on; many ears remain quite empty, and consequently thin and upright. Full-grown maggot: ⅛ inch; straw yellow to chrome yellow; quite transparent when very young. Is fully developed in three weeks, and then lets itself fall to the ground (July or August). Becomes a pupa the following spring; fourteen days later the midge escapes.
Family: =Rostratæ= (_Crane Flies_, _Daddy Longlegs_).
[Illustration:
FIG. 113.—The Daddy Longlegs, or Common Crane Fly (_Tipula oleracea_). Left, the male and the maggot; right, the female and the pupa. ]
These very long-legged gnats live on the juices of plants, and do not sting. The larvæ are legless, without a hard well-marked head; those of most species live in mouldering plant parts (_e.g._ rotten wood), or the decaying manures of our fields and meadows. A few species, however, are very destructive, since they injure roots and other parts of cultivated plants. The adult and larval stages of all the injurious kinds are not yet distinguished. We know that the larvæ of the yellow and spotted _Tipula maculosa_ are chiefly destructive in sandy soil; while more binding clay soil and rich garden earth are infested by the larvæ of _Tipula oleracea_ (Fig. 113), and damp meadows by those of _Tipula paludosa_. The two last-named species are very much like one another; grey or greyish brown with bright brown wings, having dark front margin. Much is still unknown about the habits of “crane flies”; my researches relate to the =Yellow-spotted Crane Fly= (_Tipula maculosa_). The adults fly about in swarms during summer, usually from the beginning of June, in the fields where the larvæ lived in spring. They lay their eggs either in the same fields or (usually) in others, and are blown about for long distances by the wind. Where the flies settle they lay each time two or three black ovoid eggs, bent like a sickle, and repeat this till all the eggs (200 to 250) are laid. Those fields which have previously been grass land are the most infested by the crane flies. The larvæ are headless, grey to lead coloured, with small prickles at the hinder end of the body, and they first appear, in large numbers, under the pieces of turf which are left behind in such fields, and which appear to be the centres from which the destruction of the standing corn begins. The larvæ are hatched out in summer, during the later part of which, and during autumn, they devour plant roots; after hybernating, they again attack the underground parts of plants the following spring. They devour most readily the roots of grass and corn, but also those of clover, rape, and several other plants, including some found in flower and kitchen gardens. They are mainly injurious either in autumn or spring, according to the nature of the plants attacked. Young grain-plants are killed by them, older ones usually not. On fields where winter corn grows they therefore do most damage in autumn, while this is the case in spring on land where summer corn is cultivated. They are sometimes harmless, since they can also feed on roots left behind in the ground. The larva do not limit their ravages to underground parts; in the evening, and also in the daytime during dark damp weather, they devour parts of the first leaves of very young corn plants, though the damage thus effected is often inconsiderable. In May the larva is ready to pass into the pupa stage; it comes near the surface and becomes a brown pupa, bearing small spines on the abdominal rings. After a rest of fourteen to seventeen days, the pupa works its way upward till the front part of its body sticks out of the soil. The fly then escapes. _Enemies_: Mole, shrews, wagtails, grasshopper warbler, rook, gulls. _Remedies_: When the maggots are very destructive in gardens they may be collected, preferably in wet weather, since they then leave the soil during the day. If they appear to an injurious extent on summer corn, the fields should be rolled in April (either with the ordinary or the spiked roller). At the time (June) when the crane flies swarm about the fields and meadows in flocks, thousands of individuals can easily be caught with a net.
Family: =Muscæformes= (_Gnat Flies_).
Gnats with relatively short legs, and antennæ which are in any case shorter than the body, and are usually quite short and cylindrical, possessing, however, six or more joints, while the antennæ of true flies usually have only three joints. The gnat flies form, as it were, the transition between the slender gnats with their long legs and antennæ, and the more thick-set flies, the legs and antennæ of which are short. Here belong the genera of =Shade Gnats= (_Sciara_, e.g. _Sciara Thomæ_, the larvæ of which often wander about in companies, as the so-called =Army Worm=), the =Sand Flies= (_Simulia_), and the =Hair Gnats= (_Bibio_, _e.g._ the =Garden Hair Gnat=, _Bibio hortulanus_, the larva of which gnaws the roots of plants, especially in humous garden soil).
The =Sand Flies=, or =Mosquitoes= (_Simulia_),
have thick-set bodies, short legs, and short nine or ten-jointed antennæ; they are from ¹⁄₂₅ to ⅕ of an inch long, and have a short but sharp proboscis, with which they suck up the flower juices which constitute their chief food. But the female also sucks the blood of human beings and animals, making herself exceedingly annoying in this way. Its larval state is passed through in stagnant water; its appearance is therefore local, and is especially favoured by damp summers. The mature sand flies are found from early spring or through the whole summer; several generations succeed one another in the same year. Sand flies often appear in swarms, containing thousands of individuals. Since the female eagerly creeps into the ears, noses, and corners of the eyes in horses and oxen, she is extremely annoying and even dangerous. Her bite produces a smarting sensation, and may cause actual boils to form in the skin. When a large swarm of sand flies settles on a herd of cattle or on some horses, these animals become maddened and furious; they often rush wildly round for so long that they fall down dead. _Simulia reptans_ is a common British form. _Remedies_: Compare what is said on p. 165, about gnats. Sand flies can usually be kept from horses’ ears by means of ear-caps.
Family: =Tabanidæ= (_Gad Flies_).
[Illustration:
FIG. 114.—The Rain Breeze Fly (_Hæmatopota pluvialis_). ]
Large or medium-sized flies with thick-set body, large broad head, flat abdomen, and strong legs. The proboscis is less developed in the male, which lives merely on plant juices, than in the blood-sucking female. The cylindrical whitish larvæ live in earth, and are harmless. But the female insects bite human beings, and the larger kind attack horses and cattle in such a manner that blood-drops may be seen on the ground under the animals attacked, if these remain for a time in the same spot. There belong to this family: 1. The =Breeze Flies= (_Tabanus_), large insects up to ⅘ inch long, which are seen flying about with a buzzing sound over meadows and fields in the sunshine (=Ox Fly= = _T. bovinus_; =Horse Fly= = _T. autumnalis_). 2. The =Lesser Breeze Flies= (_Hæmatopota_), smaller and more slender, with grey wings, bite most before a storm and in hot sultry days. 3. The =Blinding Breeze Flies= (_Chrysops_), as large as the Lesser Breeze Flies, but broader, with shining golden-green eyes and wings marked with black. _Remedies_: Compare p. 165, and above; draining the soil, however, is no good here.
Family: =Muscidæ= (_True Flies_).
These are flies with three-jointed antennæ, constructed on the type seen in the common house fly. Here are included the =Caterpillar Flies= (_Tachina_), the =Flesh Flies= (_Sarcophaga_), =Common Flies= (_Musca_), =Flower Flies= (_Anthomyia_), =Green-eyed Flies= (_Chlorops_), etc.
The =Caterpillar Flies= (_Tachina_)
are black, grey, or reddish yellow flies, reminding one by their appearance of the common house fly or the blue-bottle. They play the same part in the economy of nature as the sand wasps (p. 129), but always lay their eggs externally on the skin of the host; the maggots consequently never prey on those insect larvæ which live in the tissues of plants or in the soil.
[Illustration:
FIG. 115.—Caterpillar Fly (_Tachina fera_). ]
The =Flesh Flies= (_Sarcophaga_)
have a longish abdomen, with large bristles on the hinder margins of the segments. Thorax with three longitudinal streaks. The flies suck up sweat, but do not bite. The eggs develop within the abdomen of the mother; the flies lay the young larvæ in dead flesh; also, if not kept clean, in wounds of human beings and animals,—sometimes, too, in the genital opening of horses, cattle, and swine, in which case the maggots live as true parasites in the vagina and uterus, causing a secretion of mucus, upon which they live. Two to three generations yearly; fifty to eighty maggots each time. _Remedies_: On keeping the flies from cattle, cf. p. 165; to keep them from meat, flynets, a gauze cover. =Blow Fly= (_S. carnaria_), with black speckled abdomen.
The =Common Flies= (_Musca_)
are coloured dark or shining green. The headless white maggots live in dung (=House Fly= = _Musca domestica_), in fresh or decaying meat (=Blue-bottle= = _M. vomitoria_), exceptionally (_M. vomitoria_) in wounds that are not kept clean, or in the vagina of several domestic animals. _Remedy_: Compare above (“Flesh Fly”).
The =Flower Flies= (_Anthomyia_).
These are found on flowers, and resemble many common flies in appearance and colour. The headless white maggots live in dung, also in decaying or sound parts of plants; a few species may sometimes develop in the one kind of material, sometimes in the other. _Anthomyia meteorica_ swarms round the heads of domestic animals, and may even cause inflammation of the eyes and ears. The =Wheat Bulb Fly= (_Anthomyia coarctata_, about a quarter of an inch long, yellowish grey, with black hairs) lives as a larva during winter and spring in the hearts of rye and wheat plants, the leaves of which become yellow in consequence. During April and the beginning of May the larvæ quit these plants and become pupæ in the ground. The second generation can, in like manner, live in various kinds of summer grain. The =Lupine Fly= (_A. funesta_)—nearly one-fifth of an inch long, brownish grey (male) or whitish grey (female), with black legs—digs, when a larva, tunnels in the roots, stems, and seed-leaves of young lupine plants, causing the root and stem to turn black, and the seed-leaves to wither. _Preventive Measure_: Early sowing of the lupines. The =Mangold and Beet Fly= (_A. betæ_), a quarter of an inch long, yellowish grey, lays its eggs, five to eight in number, in the young leaves of mangold and beet. The maggots devour the green substance of the leaf between the two layers of epidermis, so that the leaves die. In June the maggots creep out of the leaves, and become pupæ in the soil. The flies quickly escape, and two or three generations follow one another in the year. As, however, the leaves are now larger, the later generations only effect a small amount of damage. _Preventive Measure_: Close sowing of the turnips, so that even if many are killed there will still be enough young plants. The =Cabbage Root-eating Fly= (_A. radicum_) and the =Radish Fly= (_A. floralis_) live as fleshy, wrinkled, dirty white maggots with black dots, in the underground parts of turnip, cabbage, horseradish, radishes, etc. They lead a similar life to the =Cabbage Fly= (_A. brassicæ_), the cylindrical, smooth, yellowish white maggot of which lives in the underground parts of cabbage, turnip, and rape. The roots attacked swell here and there (Fig. 116), and later on decay; the leaves of the infested plants first become of a dull leaden colour and then wither. Entire fields of cabbage, rape, or turnips, are often destroyed by cabbage fly maggots. The insect passes the winter in the pupa state; the flies appear early in the spring, and usually twice more later on. It is therefore most desirable to pull up and burn the infested plants as soon as possible. A proper rotation of crops should also be practised. [The =Onion Fly= (_A. ceparum_) maggot feeds within the bulbs of stored onions. The male fly is grey, the female yellow.]
[Illustration:
FIG. 116.—A turnip infested by the Cabbage Fly: A, swellings; G, tunnels. ]
The =Cheese Fly= (_Piophila casei_),