A RECENTLY INTRODUCED PEST.
PIBIvIS EAPAE SHOULD BE WjATGTIED. This insect, which recently made its appearance at Napier, Hawke’s Bay, is regarded in some parts of the world as a serious cabbage pest, and it is therefore in the interests of all tliaL every effort should be made to stamp it out. It attacks all vegetables of the cabbage family, riddling the leaves with large holes and rendering edible portions unfit for consumption. So much of the leaf tissue may be devoured that the growth of the plant is seriously checked and it has but little chance of recovery. The adult insect is a white butterfly with three or four black spots on lhe wings; it measures about fiveeighths of an inch in length and lvas a wing expanse of about two inches. The caterpillars are of an intense leaf-green colour, except for a slender orange stripe down the middle of the back and another broken si ripe along each side of: the body. In a general way they have a velvety appearance, due to numerous close-set, short, white and black hairs that form a kind of white bloom over the body. No work Ims been done in New Zealand on the control, of these pests, but they have been carefully studied in the United States, where the following -pray is said to be effective against them: Dissolve 31b. of laundry or fish oil soap by boiling in several gallons of water, make this up to 50 gallons and add lAlb to 21b. of calcium arsenate. The spray is now ready for use and may be applied with safety up to within three or four weeks of harvesting the cabbage.
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Bibliographic details
Manawatu Herald, Volume LII, Issue 4578, 12 March 1931, Page 1
Word Count
280A RECENTLY INTRODUCED PEST. Manawatu Herald, Volume LII, Issue 4578, 12 March 1931, Page 1
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