Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-gb8f7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T21:56:18.436Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

FOOD-PLANTS AND DISTRIBUTION OF THE SPECIES OF CALLIGRAPHA IN CANADA, WITH DESCRIPTIONS OF NEW SPECIES (COLEOPTERA, CHRYSOMELIDAE)*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

W. J. Brown
Affiliation:
Ottawa, Ont.

Extract

Twenty-nine species and named subspecies of Calligrapha Chev., including eight species previously undescribed, are listed below with notes on food-plant, distribution, and variability. New names are offered for the hamonyms elegans (Olivier) and similis (Rogers). The records and notes, except those credited to authors, are based almost entirely on material in the Canadian National Collection.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1945

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

LITERATURE CITED

1. Blatchley, W. S.Coleoptera or beetles known to occur in Indiana, pp. 11386. The Nature Publishing Co., Indianapolis. 1910.Google Scholar
2. Brown, W. J.The Canadian species of Exema and Arthrochlamys. Canad. Ent., 75:119131. 1943.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3. Brown, W. J.The dimorphism in the male copulatory organ of the chrysomelid Arthrochlamys bebbianae Brown. Canad. Ent., 76:7072. 1944.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4. Caulfield, F. B.Remarks on Chrysomela scalaris Lec., Chrysomela labyrinthica Lec., and Physonota unipuncta Say. Canad. Ent., 16:226227. 1884.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5. Caulfield, F. B.Notes on Chrysomela scalaris Lec. Canad. Ent., 17:230. 1885.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6. Fitch, A. Insects infesting deciduous forest trees. Fifth Rept. Noxious and Other Insects of New York, pp. 174. 1859.Google Scholar
7. Gibson, A.Basswood, or linden, insects. Thirty-fourth Ann. Rept. Ent. Soc. Ont. (1903), pp. 5061. 1904.Google Scholar
8. Hagen, H. A.Note on Chalcographa scalaris LeConte. Canad. Ent., 16:225226. 1884.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
9. Harris, T. W.A report on the insects of Massachusetts, injurious to vegetation, pp. 1459. Tolsom, Wells and Thurston. Cambridge. 1841.Google Scholar
10. Huxley, J.The new systematics. pp. 1583. Clarendon Press, Oxford. 1940.Google Scholar
11. Knab, F.Some species of Calligrapha. Proc. Ent. Soc. Washington. 11:8387. 1909.Google Scholar
12. LcConte, J.Descriptions of some new species of North American (coleopterous) insects. Ann. Lyceum Nat. Hist. New York, 1:169173. 1824.Google Scholar
13. Leng, C. W., and Davis, W. T.. List of the Coleoptera of Staten Island, New York. Proc. Staten Island Inst. Arts and Sci., 2:190. 1924.Google Scholar
14. Mayer, E.Systematics and the origin of species, pp. 1334. Columbia University Press, New York. 1942.Google Scholar
15. Morris, F. J. A. Beetles found about foliage. Forty-first Ann. Rept. Ent. Soc. Ont. 1910), pp. 4551. 1911.Google Scholar
16. Morris, F. J. A. Chrysomelians of Ontario. Forty-fourth Ann. Rept. Ent. Soc. Ont. (1913), pp. 8394. 1914.Google Scholar
17. Packard, A. S. Insects injurious to forest and shade trees. Fifth Rept. U. S. Ent. Commission, pp. 1955. Government Printing Office. Washington.Google Scholar
18. Powell, E. F.The Chrysomelinae of Nebraska. Ent. News, 43:9297. 1932.Google Scholar
19. Schaeffer, C.The North American species of Hydrothassa with notes on other Chrysomelidae and a description of new species and a variety. Jour. New York Ent. Soc., 36:287291. 1928.Google Scholar
20. Smith, J. B. The insects of New Jersey. Ann. Rept. New Jersey State Mus. (1909), pp. 1888. 1910.Google Scholar
21. Smith, R. C., and Kelly, E. G.. The thirteenth or 1943 annual insect population summary of Kansas. Jour. Kansas Ent. Soc., 17:8198. 1944.Google Scholar
22. Stäl, C.Monographie des chrysomélides de 1'Amérique, pt. 3, Actes d. 1. Soc. Roy. des Sc. d'Upsal (3), 4:177365. 1865.Google Scholar
23. Thorpe, W. H.Biological races in insects and allied groups. Biol. Rev., 5:177212. 1930.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
24Thorpe, W. H.Biological races in insects and their significance in evolution. Ann. Appl. Biol., 18:406414. 1931.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
25Thorpe, W. H. Ecology and the future of systematics. In The new systematics, ed. by Huxley, J., pp. 341364. Clarendon Press, Oxford. 1940.Google Scholar
26. Townes, H. K. jr.A catalogue and reclassification of the Nearctic Ichneumonidae, pt. 1. Mem. Am. Ent. Soc. no. II. pp. 1477. 1944.Google Scholar
27. Walsh, B. D.On phytophagic varieties and phytophagic species. Proc. Ent. Soc. Philadelphia. 3:403430. 1864.Google Scholar
28. Woods, W. C. The biology of Maine species of Altica. Maine Agr. Expt. Sta. Bull. 273. 1918.Google Scholar
29Woods, W. C. The blueberry leaf-beetle and some of its relatives. Maine Agr. Expt. Sta. Bull. 319. 1924.Google Scholar