Published June 1965. Facts and recommendations in this publication may no longer be valid. Please look for up-to-date information in the OSU Extension Catalog: http://extension.oregonstate.edu/catalog
Food habits and biology of five species of Pleocoma larvae were
studied at a dozen forested sites in western Oregon between May 1960
and December 1961.
First instar Pleocoma hatch in late summer and moult to second
instars in early fall. Second and subsequent instars moult annually
between mid-summer and...
Six species of Cleridae, including Enoclerus spegeus Fabricius,
E. lecontei Wolcott, E. schaefferi (Barr), E. eximius Mannerheim,
Thanasimus undatulus Say, and an undescribed species of Enoclerus,
were found on Douglas-fir in western Oregon. E. sphegeus was the
only clerid of the six species studied which was primarily associated
with the...
Population development of the symphylan, Scutigerella immaculata
(Newport), was studied in laboratory cultures. Also symphylan
injury to greenhouse plants was investigated. Plastic polyethylene
containers partly filled with damp ground hemlock bark were used to
culture symphylan in the laboratory. Fresh lettuce food was supplied
to the cultures weekly.
Factors which...
The purpose of this study was to study in some detail
host factors which influence the population dynamics of
bark beetle. The dissertation objectives were to ascertain
the applicability of utilizing osmotic pressure
values and relative turgidity values of phloem tissue as
indicators which reflect upon the physiological profile
of...
Factors considered were phloem moisture, sour-phloem (which
may be furthered by the presence of ample phloem moisture), oleoresin of the host, and the presence of unmated female beetles in
suitable host material.
Levels of phloem moisture present in variously prepared logs
in the field ranged from about 100 to upwards...
The cabbage flea beetle, Phyllotreta cruciferae (Coleoptera:
Chrysomelidae) was introduced into the United States from Europe
during the 1920's and 1930's. It was described as a new species,
P. columbiana, native to North America by F. H. Chittenden in 1927.
This synonymic situation was discovered in 1953 after P. cruciferae...