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THE EFFECTS OF THE COLD WINTER OF 1933–34 ON THE ORIENTAL FRUIT MOTH

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

G. G. Dustan
Affiliation:
Vineland Station, Ontario

Extract

The winter of 1933-34 was the coldest to which the oriental fruit moth has been exposed in Canada since its discovery in the Niagara peninsula in 1925, and we were naturally very interested to see how it survived. Unfortunately we have to report that it survived very well indeed, although we are glad to say its larval parasites, both native and imported, also survived.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1935

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References

* —Temperature above 0° F.