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CHAFER , a word used in See also: modern speech to distinguish the beetles of the See also: family Scarabaeidae, and more especially those See also: species which feed on leaves in the adult See also: state
.
The word is derived from the O
.
Eng. ceafor, and it is interesting to note that the cognate Ger
.
Kafer is applied to beetles of all kinds
.
For the characters of the Scarabaeidae see See also: COLEOPTERA
.
This family includes a large number of beetles, some of which feed on
From Cambridge Nat"ral See also: History, vol. ii
.
"See also: Worms." by permission of See also: Macmillan & Co., Ltd
.
Mature See also: female of Chaetosoma claparedii, (From Mechnikov.) a, esophagus; b, See also: intestine; c, anus; d, ovary; e, generative See also: pore; f, ventral bristles
.
dung and others on See also: vegetable tissues
.
The cockchafers and their near See also: allies belong to the subfamily Melolonthinae, and the See also: rose-chafers to the Cetoniinae; in both the beetles eat leaves, and their grubs spend a long See also: life underground devouring roots
.
In Britain the Melolonthines that are usually noted as injurious are the two species of cockchafer (Melolontha vulgaris and M. hippocastani), large heavy beetles with black pubescent See also: pro-thorax, See also: brown elytra and an elongated pointed tail-
See also: process; the summer-chafer (Rhizotrogus solstitialis), a smaller pale brown chafer; and the still smaller garden-chafer or "-cockerbundy " (Phyllopertha horticola), which has a dark See also: green pro-thorax and brown elytra
.
Of the Cetoniines, the beautiful metallic green rose-chafer, Cetonia aurata, sometimes causes damage, especially in gardens
.
The larvae of the chafers are heavy, soft-skinned grubs, with hard brown heads provided with powerful mandibles, three pairs of well- See also: developed legs, and a swollen See also: abdomen
.
As they grow, the larvae become strongly flexed towards the ventral See also: surface, and lie curled up in their earthen cells, feeding on roots
.
The larval life lasts several years, and in hard frosts the grubs go deep down away from the surface
.
Pupation takes place in the autumn, and though the perfect See also: insect emerges from the cuticle very soon afterwards, it remains in its underground cell for several months, not making its way to the upper air until the ensuing summer
.
After pairing, the female crawls down into the See also: soil to See also: lay her eggs
.
The grubs of chafers, when turned up by the plough, are greedily devoured by poultry, pigs and various See also: wild birds
.
When the beetles become so numerous as to See also: call for destruction, they are usually shaken off the trees where they rest on to sheets or tarred boards
.
On the continent of See also: Europe chafers are far more numerous than in the See also: United See also: Kingdom, and the rural governments in See also: France give rewards for their destruction
.
D
.
See also: Sharp states that in the department of See also: Seine-inferieure 867,173,000 cockchafers and 647,000,000 larvae were killed in the four years preceding 1870
.
The anatomy of Melolontha is very fully described in a classical memoir by H
.
E
.
Strauss-Durckheim ( See also: Paris, 1828)
.
(G
.
H
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