United States, Bureau of Entomology
Resource Information
The organization United States, Bureau of Entomology represents an institution, an association, or corporate body that is associated with resources found in Indiana State Library.
The Resource
United States, Bureau of Entomology
Resource Information
The organization United States, Bureau of Entomology represents an institution, an association, or corporate body that is associated with resources found in Indiana State Library.
- Label
- United States, Bureau of Entomology
- Authority link
- (EG-IN)761115
- Subordinate unit
- Bureau of Entomology
210 Items by the Organization United States, Bureau of Entomology
1 Items that are about the Organization United States, Bureau of Entomology
Context
Context of United States, Bureau of EntomologyContributor of
No resources found
No enriched resources found
- Woolly aphis of the apple (Schizoneura lanigera Hausmann)
- A brief survey of Hawaiian bee keeping
- A classification of the mosquitoes of North and Middle America
- A contribution to our knowledge of the Thysanoptera of California
- A list of works on North American entomology : compiled for the use of students and other workers as well as for those about to begin the collection and study of insects
- A manual of dangerous insects likely to be introduced in the United States through importations
- A new genus of Aleyrodidæ : with remarks on Aleyrodes nubifera Berger, and Aleyrodes citri Riley and Howard
- A preliminary report on the sugar-beet wireworm
- A revision of the Ixodoidea, or ticks, of the United States
- A revision of the Tyroglyphidæ of the United States
- American black flies or buffalo gnats
- An annotated bibliography of the Mexican cotton boll weevil
- An enumeration of the published synopses, catalogues, and lists of North American insects : together with other information intended to assist the student of American entomology
- An injurious North American species of Apion, with notes on related forms
- Arsenate of lead as an insecticide against the tobacco hornworms
- Arsenate of lead as an insecticide against the tobacco hornworms in the dark-tobacco district
- Biological studies on three species of Aphididae
- Biology of the termites of the eastern United States, with preventive and remedial measures
- Bulletin
- Bulletin
- Calosoma sycophanta : its life history, behavior, and successful colonization in New England
- Catalogue of the exhibit of economic entomology at the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition, Portland, Oregon, 1905
- Circular
- Circular
- Classification of the Aleyrodidae
- Cockroaches
- Collection and preservation of insects and other material for use in the study of agriculture
- Control of the Mediterranean flour moth by hydrocyanic-acid gas fumigation
- Control of the brown-rot and plum curculio on peaches
- Damage to sugar cane in Louisiana by the sugar-cane borer [Diatræa saccharalis Fab.]/
- Damage to telephone and telegraph poles by wood-boring insects
- Demonstration spraying for the codling moth
- Directions for collecting and preserving insects
- Economic loss to the people of the United States through insects that carry disease
- Field observations on sugar-cane insects in the United States in 1912
- Fumigation for the citrus white fly, as adapted to Florida conditions
- Fumigation of apples for the San Jose scale
- Grasshoppers and their control on sugar beets and truck crops
- Habits and life histories of some flies of the family Tabanidae
- Harvest mites, or "chiggers"
- Hibernation of the Mexican cotton boll weevil
- House fleas
- House flies
- House flies (musca domestica et al.)
- House flies. (Musca domestica and others)
- How to control the San Jose scale
- How to control the San José scale
- How to control the pear thrips [Euthrips pyri Daniel]
- Hydrocyanic-acid gas against household insects
- Hydrocyanic-acid gas against household insects
- Information concerning the North American fever tick : with notes on other species
- Insect damage to the cones and seeds of Pacific Coast conifers
- The tobacco thrips and remedies to prevent "white veins" in wrapper tobacco : (Euthrips nicotianœ Hinds.)
- The true clothes moths (Tinea pellionella and others)
- The two-lined chestnut borer (Agrilus bilineatus Weber)
- The white ant (Termes favipes koll.)
- The white-pine weevil
- The woolly apple aphis
- The yellow clover aphis [Callipterus trifolii Monell]
- Tobacco hornworm insecticide : recommendations for use of powdered arsenate of lead in dark-tobacco district
- White flies injurious to citrus in Florida
- Wireworms attacking cereal and forage crops
- Insects injurious to mushrooms
- Insects injurious to the loco weeds
- Insects liable to dissemination in shipments of sugar cane
- Insects which kill forest trees : character and extent of their depredations and methods of control
- Key to the known larvæ of the mosquitoes of the United States
- Leafhoppers affecting cereals, grasses, and forage crops
- Life history of the codling moth in the Santa Clara Valley of California
- Methods of controlling tobacco insects
- Miscellaneous papers
- Miscellaneous papers on apiculture, Methods of honey testing for bee keepers
- Miscellaneous papers on apiculture, Production and care of extracted honey
- Miscellaneous papers on apiculture, The status of apiculture in the United States
- Miscellaneous papers on apiculture, Wax moths and American foul brood
- Mites and lice on poultry
- Natural control of white flies in Florida
- Note on the occurrence of the North American fever tick on sheep
- Notes on "punkies"
- Notes on the biology of certain weevils related to the cotton boll weevil
- Notes on the economic importance of sowbugs
- Notes on the preoviposition period of the house fly, Musca domestica L.
- Papers on Coccidae or scale insects
- Papers on Coccidae or scale insects, Pt. 1, New species of Diaspine scale insects
- Papers on Coccidae or scale insects, Pt. 2, The national collection of Coccidae
- Papers on cereal and forage insects : the New Mexico range caterpillar [Hemileuca oliviæ Ckll.]/
- Papers on cereal and forage insects, The sorghum midge [Contarinia [Diplosis] sorghicola Coq.]
- Papers on deciduous fruit insects and insecticides ..
- Papers on deciduous fruit insects and insecticides : The pear thrips (Euthrips pyri Daniel)
- Papers on deciduous fruit insects and insecticides : The pear thrips and its control (Euthrips pyri Daniel)
- Papers on deciduous fruit insects and insecticides : additional observations on the lesser apple worm
- Papers on deciduous fruit insects and insecticides : grape root-worm investigations in 1907
- Papers on deciduous fruit insects and insecticides : the cigar case-bearer (colephora fletcherlla fernald.)
- Papers on deciduous fruit insects and insecticides : the codling moth in the Ozarks
- Papers on deciduous fruit insects and insecticides : the one-spray method in the control of the codling moth and the plum curculio
- Papers on deciduous fruit insects and insecticides, The lesser apple worm (Enarmonia prunivora Walsh)
- Papers on deciduous fruit insects and insecticides, The trumpet leaf-miner of the apple
- Papers on deciduous-fruit insects and insecticides, The spring canker-worm
- Papers on insects affecting vegetable and truck crops
- Papers on the cotton boll weevil and related and associated insects
- Papers on the cotton boll weevil and related and associated insects, Notes on the pepper weevil
- Papers on the cotton boll weevil and related and associated insects, The cotton stalk-borer
- Pinhole injury to girdled cypress in the South Atlantic and Gulf states
- Preparations for winter fumigation for the citrus white fly
- Proceedings of the ... annual meeting
- Proceedings of the ... annual meeting of the Association of Economic Entomologists
- Proliferation as a factor in the natural control of the Mexican cotton boll weevil
- Report on the gypsy moth and the brown-tail moth, July, 1904
- Requirements to be complied with by nurserymen or others who make interstate shipments of nursery stock
- Results of the artificial use of the white-fungus disease in Kansas : with notes on approved methods of fighting chinch bugs
- Root-maggots and how to control them
- Rose chafer
- Screw-worms and other maggots affecting animals
- Some factors in the natural control of the Mexican boll weevil
- Some miscellaneous results of the work of the Bureau of Entomology, IX
- Some new California and Georgia Thysanoptera
- Studies of parasites of the cotton boll weevil
- Synopsis, catalogue, and bibliography of North American Thysanoptera, with description of new species
- Technical series
- Technical series
- The Acarina or mites. : A review of the group for the use of economic entomologists.
- The Argentine ant
- The Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say)
- The Colorado potato beetle in Virginia in 1908
- The Florida fern caterpillar
- The Indian-meal moth and "weevil-cut" peanuts
- The Mediterranean fruit-fly : (Ceratitis capitata Wiedemann)
- The Mexican cotton boll weevil : a revision and amplification of bulletin 45, to include the most important observations made in 1904
- The Rocky Mountain spotted fever tick : with special reference to the problem of its control in the Bitter Root Valley in Montana
- The San Jose or Chinese scale
- The San Jose scale and its control
- The abutilon moth
- The alfalfa looper : [Autographa gamma california Speyer]
- The anatomy of the honey bee
- The aphides affecting the apple
- The apple maggot or "railroad worm" (Rhagoletis [Trypeta] pomonella Walsh.)
- The apple-tree tent caterpillar : (Malacasoma americana Fab.)
- The asparagus beetles
- The asparagus miner [Agromyza simplex Loew]
- The bagworm (Thyridopteryx ephemeraeformis Haw)
- The behavior of the honey bee in pollen collecting
- The brood diseases of bees
- The cabbage hair-worm
- The carpet beetle or "buffalo moth"
- The cherry fruit sawfly
- The common red spider (Tetranychus bimaculatus Harvey)
- The cotton bollworm
- The cowpea weevil [Pachymerus chinensis L.]
- The dispersion of the gipsy moth
- The distribution of the Rocky Mountain spotted fever tick
- The fig moth
- The fowl tick
- The grape root-worm : with special reference to investigations in the Erie grape belt from 1907 to 1909
- The grape-berry moth : [Polichrosis viteana Clem.]
- The grape-leaf skeletonizer
- The green-striped maple worm (Anisota rubicunda Fab.)
- The greenhouse white fly (Alyrodes vaporariorum Westw.)
- The harlequin cabbage bug (Murgantia histrionica Hahn.)
- The horn fly : (Haematobia serrata Rob.-Desv)
- The horse-radish webworm : [Plutella armoracia Busek]
- The house centipede
- The huisache girdler
- The importation into the United States of the parasites of the gipsy moth and the brown-tail moth : a report of progress, with some consideration of previous and concurrent efforts of this kind
- The insect enemies of the cotton boll weevil
- The larger canna leaf-roller : Calpodes ethlius Cram
- The larger corn stalk-borer, (Diatrœa saccharalis Fab.)
- The laws in force against injurious insects and foul brood in the United States
- The leaf blister mite : (Eriophyes pyri Pagenstecher)
- The leopard moth (Zeuzera pyrina Fab.)
- The life history and bionomics of some North American ticks
- The life history of the alder blight aphis. [Prociphilus tessellata Fitch.]
- The lime-sulphur-salt wash and its substitutes
- The locust borer and methods for its control
- The mango weevil : (Cryptorhynchus mangiferae Fab.)
- The manipulation of the wax scales of the honey bee
- The melon aphis (A̲phis gossypii Glov.)
- The more important Aleyrodidæ infesting economic plants : with description of a new species infesting the orange
- The most important step in the control of the boll weevil
- The most important step in the cultural system of controlling the boll weevil
- The nut weevils
- The occurrence of bee diseases in the United States : (preliminary report)
- The one-spray method in the control of the codling moth and the plum curculio : (second report)
- The orange thrips
- The oyster-shell scale and the scurfy scale
- The pea aphis : (Macrosiphum pisi Kalt)
- The periodical cicada
- The periodical cicada in 1906 (Tibicen septendecim L.)
- The periodical cicada in 1907 : (Tibicen septendecim L., race tredecim Walsh-Riley.)
- The periodical cicada in 1911 : (Tibicen septendecim L.)
- The pink bollworm
- The plum curculio
- The plum curculio (Conotrachelus nenuphar Herbst.)
- The potato-tuber moth [Phthorimœa opercul Zell] : a preliminary account
- The principal cactus insects of the United States
- The rearing of queen bees
- The red spider on cotton : (Tetranychus bimaculatus Harvey)
- The red spider on hops in the Sacramento Valley of California
- The rose slug-caterpillar
- The rose slugs
- The roundheaded apple-tree borer
- The social organization and breeding habits of the cotton-protecting kelep of Guatemala
- The spotted beet webworm
- The squash-vine borer
- The strawberry weevil : (Anthonmomus signatus Say)
- The striped beet caterpillar : [Mamestra trifolii Rott]
- The striped cucumber beetle (Diabrotica vittata Fab)
- The structure of certain dipterous larvae with particular reference to those in human foods.
- The tobacco budworm and its control in the Georgia and Florida tobacco-growing region
- The tobacco budworm and its control in the southern tobacco districts
- The tobacco thrips : a new and destructive enemy of shade-grown tobacco
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- Insects injurious to mushrooms
- A manual of dangerous insects likely to be introduced in the United States through importations
- Notes on the biology of certain weevils related to the cotton boll weevil
- The Colorado potato beetle in Virginia in 1908
- Notes on the economic importance of sowbugs
- Studies of parasites of the cotton boll weevil
- The insect enemies of the cotton boll weevil
- Leafhoppers affecting cereals, grasses, and forage crops
- The Argentine ant
- The Indian-meal moth and "weevil-cut" peanuts
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.library.in.gov/resource/FcKwQhaXINI/" typeof="Organization http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Organization"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.library.in.gov/resource/FcKwQhaXINI/">United States, Bureau of Entomology</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.library.in.gov/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="http://link.library.in.gov/">Indiana State Library</a></span></span></span></span></div>
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.library.in.gov/resource/FcKwQhaXINI/" typeof="Organization http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Organization"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.library.in.gov/resource/FcKwQhaXINI/">United States, Bureau of Entomology</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.library.in.gov/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="http://link.library.in.gov/">Indiana State Library</a></span></span></span></span></div>