Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Wireworms Attacking Cereal and Forage Crops
The false wireworms (fig. 1, a) will also answer to the above description, but can easily be distinguished by their ability to move very rapidly and by the clavate last joint of the antennae; the true wireworms, though able to move rapidly in the soil, are not very agile when placed on the surface of the ground, and their antennae never have clavate terminal joints. The term wireworm is also, though erroneously, applied to these false wireworms, which are, however, the larvae of another group of beetles, the darkling beetles (tenebrionidae). These beetles can not snap the forepart of the body. One species of darkling beetle (tenebrio molitor L., fig. Is common throughout the United States, and its larva, the meal.
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