Definitions
Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
- n. One of several different winged insects which are injurious to turnips. A dipterous insect of the genus Anthomyia, as A. radicum, whose larva lives in the turnip-root. See cut under
Anthomyia .
Examples
“The culture of hops, though profitable when it succeeds, is very precarious: as soon as the plant appears above ground, it is attacked by an insect somewhat similar to the turnip-fly, which devours the young heads.”
The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 10, No. 270, August 25, 1827
“The seedlings are liable to be destroyed by an insect closely resembling the turnip-fly, as well as by the frog.”
“The heat and smoke produced has been found perfectly efficacious against the turnip-fly in England.”
“In the case of cereal crops, the importance of a speedy early growth is not so great, as we have already pointed out, as it is in turnips, where the danger to the young plants from the ravages of the turnip-fly is such that the growth of even a day or two may make a very considerable difference.”
“Colorado beetle or the fourteen-year locust, and so absolutely powerless against the hop-fly, the turnip-fly, and the phylloxera.”
Falling in Love With Other Essays on More Exact Branches of Science
“For example, turnip-fly (which is not an aphis, but a small beetle) always begins its ravages (as Miss Ormerod has abundantly shown) upon a plot of charlock, and then spreads from patches of that weed to the neighbouring turnips, which are slightly diverse members of the same genus.”
Falling in Love With Other Essays on More Exact Branches of Science
“Then the farmer has the wheat-fly and the turnip-fly to contend against; the former has actually devoured Lower Canada, and the latter has obliged me in a garden to sow several successive crops.”
“The country people here call it the turnip-fly and black-dolphin; but I know it to be one of the _coleoptera_; the”
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