Online Encyclopedia

WIREWORM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 740 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WIREWORM  , a popular name for the slender, hard-skinned grubs or larvae of the click-beetles or Elateridae, a

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family of the
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Coleoptera (q.v.) . These larvae pass a long
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life (two or three years) in the
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soil, feeding on the roots of
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plants, and they often cause much damage to
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farm crops of all kinds, but especially to cereals . A wireworm may be known by its broad, quadrate head and cylindrical or somewhat flattened
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body, all of whose segments are protected by a
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firm, chitinous cuticle . The three pairs of legs on the thoracic segments are short and the last abdominal segment is, as is frequently the case in beetle grubs, directed downwards to serve as a terminal proleg . The hinder end of the body is acutely pointed in the larvae of the
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species of Agriotes (A. obscurus and A. lineatus) that are the best known of the wireworms, but in another
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common form (the
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grub of Athous haemorrhoidalis) the tail is bifid and beset with sharp processes . The subterranean habits of wireworms make it hard to exterminate them when they have once begun to attack a crop, and the most hopeful practice is, by rotation and by proper treatment of the
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land, to clear it of the
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insects before the seed be sown . Passing easily through the soil on account of their shape, wireworms travel from plant to plant and thus injure the roots of a large number in a short time . (See ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY.) Other subterranean creatures—such as the " leather-jacket " grub of crane-flies—which have no legs, and geophilid centipedes, which may have over two
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hundred, are often confounded with the six-legged wireworms .

End of Article: WIREWORM
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