I. Notes On Insects Bred From the Bark And Wood of the American Larch

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127), Ari- zona; Wolcott (1909), Wisconsin and Ohio; Smith (1909, p. 303), New Jersey; and Blatchley (1910, p. 859), Indiana.
This small clerid has been reported as associated — doubt- less in the capacity of a predator — with a large number of bark and wood-inhabiting forms derived from a variety of different trees. Hopkins (1893, p. 187) states that it " Attacks PolygrapJius r'ufi/pennis in Black Spruce and PityophtJtorus consimilis in vSumach (Rhus glabra) and with Scolytus regulosus in Appl
...e bark." According to Felt (1906, p. 449), LeConte reared it from hickory twigs con- taining Clwatnesus hicorice. Felt (1906, p. 503) reared it from hickory limbs infested w^ith ChrysobotJiris femorata, and Magdalis olyra. Blackman (1915, p. 54) records having bred P. dislocatus from limbs of pine containing Pityogenes liopkinsi and no other borer, and Chapin (1917, p. 29) 96 College of Forestry obtained several specimens from twigs of Rhus glabra asso- ciated with the cerambycids Liopus fascicularis, Harr.

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