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Digital file copy- right by Cornell University Library 1992.Cornell XHnlv>er$it\> LIBRARY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ENTOMOLOGY 1Rew îPorft State College of agriculture SLINGERLAND COLLECTION .................... 5937pÿ^tE LATE PROFESSOR PACKARD^ “ GUIDE TO THE , Jo^Q^r* i STUDY OF INSEOTS ” a , , \ jMy fathiî^ProfeTso^Afpfîeus 1$j4mg'!pack- ! 4jd, had purposed to rewrite and bring tbe r‘|jGuide,to tbe Studÿ of Insects” np to date, -soon as he had fînished Part IL of bis ^jMonograph of Bombycine Moths,” wbicb ; w;as going through tbe press at the timp of p$ÿ|s deatb. He left many notes and references regard to tbe “ Guide,” wbicb we had in- lâénded to use as a préfacé, but we fînd they $$|in not be edited properly by another hand. jjà-J Alpheus Appleton Packard ^;New London, Conn., h j January 2, 1909Plate* <# TRANSFORMATIONS OF MO TH S.GUIDE TO THE STÜDY OF INSECTS AND A TREATISE ON THOSE INJUBIOUS AND BENEFIOIAL TO OBOPS FOR THE USE OF COLLEGES, FARM-SCHOOLS, AND AGRICULTURISTS BY ALPHETJS S. PACKARD, M.D. WITH FIFTEEN PLATES AND SIX HÜNDRED AND SEVENTY WOOD CUTS. NINTH EDITION,\ NEW YORK HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY BOSTON: ESTES & LAURIAT 1889.Copyright by A. S. PACKARD, JR., 1869 and 1876.PREFACE TO THE NINTH EDITION. The reader is requested to correct certain errors as follows : Pp. 69 and 616, Lepisma, with other Thysanura, is not neu- ropterous. P. 346, the name of the common clothes-moth should be cbanged from Tinea Jlavifrontella Linn. to Tinea pelliolella Linn. P. 466, Fig. 433 represents the larva of Cœnia dimidiata Fabr., aecording to Mr. O. Lugger, who has raised it. P. 611, Fig. 598 does not represent the eggs of Corydalis cornutus, which hâve been correctly identified and figured by Dr. Riley. P. 655, for Pedipalpi substitute for the name of the order the word Arthrogastra, of which the Pedipalpi are a snb-order. P. 680, Spirostrephon copei should read Scoterpes copei. In the author’s text-books on Zoology, and also in his “ Entomology for Beginners,” he has adopted a new classi- fication of insects, dividing them into sixteen orders. This scheme will probably be introduced in the next édition of the présent work. Providence, July, 1888. iiiPREFACE TO THE SEVENTH EDITION. More important additions and alterations hâve been made in the sixth and seventh éditions than in any previous one. The author has decided to consider the Hexapoda, Arachnida, and Myriopoda as sub-classes of Tracheata, and consequently what hâve been in former éditions regarded as sub-orders are called orders. The Thysanura, moreover, are separated from the Neuroptera, and regarded as a distinct order, comprising synthetic types with features allying them to the Orthoptera, Neuroptera, and Myriopoda. They are divided into two sub- orders, the lower the Collembola of Lubbock; and for the higher sub-order, comprising the Lepismatidæ andCampodeæ, the terin Cinura (kivegû, to move ; ovpà, tail) is proposed. The terms tenamlum and dater are adopted from the author’s previous writings for the “holder” and “spring” of the Col- lembola ; and for the sucker or organ secreting the adhesive material characteristic of the Collembola, the term collophore is proposed. Brief mention has been made of the Pycnogonidæ, which are placed among the mites ; also of the Peripatidea, which are given a place next to the sucking Myriopoda, since they hâve been proved by the researches of Mr. Moseley to be Tracheata. On page 240 the discovery by Mr. Swinton of an auditory apparatus at the base of the abdomen of Lepidoptera has been noticed, as well as Mr. Mason-Wood’s discovery that Mygale and Scorpio stridulate (page 628). A number of minor •changes and corrections hâve been made in the plates. Some important changes hâve been made in the classifica- tion of the Coleoptera which do not appear in the text. The weevils, CurcAilionidœ, should, in accordance with the views expressed by Dr. Le Conte, be placed at the end of the group. The Coeeineïlidœ and Erotylidœ should also, in accordance with the views of Mr. G. R. Crotch (Check-List of thePREFACE. Coleoptera of America north of Mexico, 1874), be placed ia the Clavicorn sériés, those and allied families being placed in the following succession : Dermestidœ, PJndomychidœ, Cioidœ> Erotylidœ, Atomariidœ, Cucujidœ, Colydiidœ, Bhizophagidœy Trogositidœ, Ætidulidœ, Coccinellidœ, Cistelidœ, etc. At the end of the sériés the succession of families is as follows. Cerambycidœ, Bruchidæ,, Chrysomdidæ, Tenébrionidœ, Ægia- litidæ,, AUeculidœ, ..... Pyrochroidæ, Anthicidœs Melandryidœ, Mordellidœ, Stylopidœ, Meloidœ, Cephaloidœ, Œdemeridœ, Mycteridœ, Pythidæ, Curcidionidœy Scolytidæy and Anthribidœ, Brenthidœ being the last. Since the publication of the last édition of this work, our knowledge of American fossil insects has beenmuch extended. Mr. Scudder has described ten more species from the carbon i- ferous strata of Nova Scotia and Pennsylvania, some of them. of peculiar interest, thus increasing the number of known palæozoic forms to thirty-two. The carboniferous insect- fauna of America is now so well known that we may note a, close affinity between it and that of Europe at the sam a epoch. Tertiary localities exceedingly rich in fossil insecte hâve been discovered in new parts of the West ; more than one hundred species hâve already been described by Mr* Scudder from Eastern and Western Colorado, Wyoming, and British Columbia, but these are a mere fragment of what hâve been found. Among those described are many of an interest- ing character, especially a wonderfully preserved butterfly {Prodryas Persephone) and egg masses of a huge Neuropteron allied to Corydalus, together with others which indicate a. partially tropical fauna at that time. Of post-tertiary insects^ Dr. Horn has described ten beetles from a bone cave in Pennsylvania, and Mr. Scudder two from the interglaciat clays of Ontario. A. S. PACKARD, Jr. Providence, R. I., December, 1882.PREFACE. This introduction to the study of insects is designed to teach the beginner the éléments of entomology, and to serve as a guide to the more elaborate treatises and memoirs which the advanced student may wish to consult. Should the book, imperfect as the author feels it to be, prove of some service in inducing others to study this most interesting and useful branch of natural history, the object of the writer will hâve been fully attained. In order to make it of value to farmers and gardeners, whose needs the writer has kept in view, and that it may be used as a text book in our agricultural colleges, concise ac- counts hâve been given of insects injurious or bénéficiai to végétation, or those in any way affecting human interests. When the Ioealities of the insects are not precisely given, it is to be understood that they occur in the Eastem Atlantic States from Maine to Pennsylvania, and the more northern of the Western States. When the family names occur in the text they are put in spaced Italics, to distinguish them from the generic and spécifie names which are Italicized in the usual way. The succession of the suborders of the hexapodous insects is that proposed by the author in 1863, and the attention of zoôlogists is called to their division into two sériés of sub- orders, which are characterized on page 104. To the first and highest may be applied Leach’s term Metabolia, as they ail agréé in having a perfect metamorphosis ; for the second and lower sériés the term Heterometabolia is pro-Vlll PREFACE. posed, as the four suborders comprised in it differ in the degrees of completeness of their métamorphosés, and are ail linked together by the structural features enumerated on page 104. The classification of the Hymenoptera is original with the author, the bees (Apidæ) being placed highest, and the saw- Aies and Uroceridæ lowest. The succession of the families of the Lepidoptera is that now generally agreed upon by en- tomologists. Loew’s classification of the Diptera, published in the “ Miscellaneous Collections” of the Smithsonian Institution, has been followed, with some modifications. Haliday’s suggestion that the Pulicidæ are allied to the Mycetophilidæ gives a due to their position in nature among the higher Diptera. Leconte’s classification of the Coleoptera is adopted as far as published by him, i. e., to the Bruchidæ. For the succeeding families the arrangement of Gerstaecker in Peters and Carus’ “Handbuch der Zoo- logie ” has been followed, both being based on that of Lacor- daire. The Hemiptera are arranged according to the author’s views of the succession of the families. The classification of the Orthoptera is that proposed by Mr. S. H. Scudder. This succession of families is the reverse of what has been given by recent authors, and is by far the most satisfactory yet presented. The arrangement of the Neuroptera (in the Lin- næan sense) is that of Dr. Hagen, published in his “Synop- sis,” with the addition, however, of the Lepismatidæ, Cam- podeæ and Poduridæ. The usual classification of the Arachnida is modified by placing the Phalangidæ as a family among the Pedipalpi, and the succession of families of this suborder is suggested as be- ing a more natural one than has been previously given. The arrangement of the Araneina, imperfect as authors hâve lefib it, is that adopted by Gerstaecker in Peters andPREFACE. IX Carus’ “Handbuch der Zoologie.” In tke succession of the families of the Acarina, the suggestions of Claparède, in his “ Studien der Acariden,” hâve been foliowed, and in the préparation of the general account of the Arachnids the writer is greatly indebted to Claparède’s elaborate work on the “Evolution of Spiders.” In the préparation of this “Guide” the author has coi> sulted and freely used Westwood’s invaluable “Introduction to the Modem Classification of Insects ; ” Gerstaecker’s “ Arthropoden” in Peters and Carus’ “Handbuch der Zoo- logie;” Siebold’s “Anatomy of the Invertebrates” (Burnett’s translation, 1854) ; Newport’s Article “Insecta” in Todd’s Cyclopædia of Anatomy and Physiolog}^ ; and Dr. T. W. Harris’ “Treatise on Insects injurious to Végétation.” He would also acknowledge his indebtedness to Professor L. Agassiz for many of the general ideas, acquired while the author was a student in the Muséum of Comparative Zoô- logy at Cambridge, regarding the arrangement of the orders and classes, and the morphology of the Articulâtes. For kind assistance rendered in preparing this book, the author is specially indebted to Baron R. von Osten Sacken, who kindly read the proof sheets of the chapter on Diptera ; to Mr. F. G. Sanborn for the communication of many spéci- mens and facts ; and also to Messrs. Edward Norton, S. H. Scudder, J. H. Emerton, C. T. Robinson, A. R. Grote, G. D. Smith, E. T. Cresson, P. R. Uhler, C. V. Riley, Dr. J. L. Le- conte, Dr. Hagen, W. C. Fish, and E. S. Morse. For much kind assistance and very many favors and suggestions, and constant sympathy and encouragement during the printing of the work, he is under spécial obligation to his valued friend, Mr. F. W. Putnam. The types of the new species noticed here are deposited in the Muséum of the Peabody Academy of Science. He would also express his thanks toX PREFACE, the American Entomological Society, the Society of Natural History at Boston, the Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Agriculture, the Essex Institute, the Smithsonian Institu tion, the Secretary of the Maine Board of Agriculture, and to Mr. R. Hardwicke, the publisher of u Science-Gossip,” Prof. Sanborn Tenney, the author of “A Manual of Zo- ôlogy,” and to his coeditors of the “American Naturalist,” for the use of many of the cuts, a list of which may be found on the succeeding pages. Peabody Academy of Science, Salem, Nov. 10,1869.ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Figs. 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 33, 34, 35, 38, 39, 40, 84, 86, 87, 91, 93-106, 124, 126, 130, 131, 132, 142, 144, 146, 151, 180, 191-196, 201, 202, 204, 205, 206, 207, 2086, 209, 212, 213, 215, 219, 220, 221, 224, 225, 226, 246, 256 -260, 267, 320, 321, 332, 333, 379, 404, 408, 409, 421, 422, 442, 455, 480, 481, 484, 485, 487, 493, 500, 501, 502, 509, 513, 618, 519, 521, 531, 534, 536, 552, 561, 562, 576, 579, 593, 601 and 651, were borrowed from the American Entomological Society, at Philadelphia. FIGS. 2, 14, 15-24, 27, 48, 63-67, 69, 181, 216, 217, 222, 230, 231, 233 -235, 247, 369, 389, 420, 424, 427, 435, 436, 438, 497, 508, 578, 630 and ■631 were loaned by the Boston Society of Natural History. Figs. 25, 36, 37, 55, 83, 128, 136, 237, 242, 269, 350, 352-357, 362, 368, 372, 373, 380, 511, 512, 514, 542, 543, 544, 645, 546, 556, 585-587, 589, 590, 591, 594, 602, 603, 604 and 605, were borrowed from the report of the Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture for 1862. Figs. 155-165, 169-179, 270, 271, 285-296, 300, 303-306, 345-348, 358, ■359, 632, 633 and 634, were loaned by the Smithsonian Institution. Figs. 1, 5, 8, 10, 30, 81, 32, 51, 52, 57, 58,62, 64, 68, 72, 79, 80, 81, 82, «5, 89, 92, 110-121, 127, 185, 186, 227, 228, 239, 248, 250, 252, 262, 263, 273, 278, 298, 307-314, 317-319, 322, 324-327, 329-331, 334-343, 361, -363a, 375, 387, 412, 413, 425, 426, 428, 430, 432, 433, 437, 439, 447-451, 456-458, 463, 464, 474,475, 504, 516, 576, 577, 580-584, 588, 592, 608, 613, 615, 627, 636, 637, 638, 639, 641, 642, 646-649, were taken from the “ American Naturalist.” Figs. 41, 70, 71, 88, 129, 138, 143, 152, 200, 232, 249, 253, 255, 349, 492, 554, 618, and 645 were borrowed from the “ Report of the Maine Board of Agriculture for 1862.” Figs. 73-78, were kindly loaned by Prof. JefiHes Wyman. Figs. 570, 671, 574, 675, 617 and 635, were loaned by the Illinois •Geological Survey. I am also indebted to Prof. Sanbom Tenney for the use of Figs. 189, 190, 198, 315, 323, 563-567, from his “Manual of Zoôlogy.” The publishers of Hardwick’s “ Science-Gossip,” London, afforded me stéréotypés of Figs, 517, 557, 569, 573, 606, 607, 609-611, 616, 620 -622, 628, 629 and 640. Electrotypes of Figs. 119, 261, 281, 281C-284, 328, 344, 351, 360, 363, 367, 374, 376, 414, 429, 434, 452-454, 466, 468-471, 477, 479, 494, 506‘, 506s, 510, 522-526, 530, 532, 533, 536-541, 547-551, 564, 568, 595-598, were purchased of the publishers of the “ American Entomologist.” The following figures were engraved expressly for the work, viz : Figs. 11, 12, 13, 26, 28, 29,42, 43-47, 49, 50, 53, 54, 56, 59-61, 80, 107-Xll EXPLANATION OP PLATE. 109, 122, 123, 125, 133-135, 137, 139-141, 145, 148-151, 166-168, 182- 184, 187, 188, 197, 203, 208, 210, 211, 214, 218, 223, 236, 243, 244, 254, 264-266, 272, 280, 297, 299, 301, 302, 308, 310, 364-366, 370, 371, 377, 378, 381-386, 388, 390-397, 399-403, 405-407, 410, 411, 415-419, 423, 431, 440, 441, 443-446, 459-462, 465, 467, 472, 473, 476, 478, 482, 483, 485a, 6, 488, 489, 490, 491, 495, 496, 498, 499, 503, 505, 507, 515, 520, 527-529, 655, 558-560, 565, 572, 599, 600, 612, 614, 619, 623-626, 643, 644 and 650. Of these, 119 were drawn from nature, mostly by Mr. J. H. Emerton, and a few by Messrs. C. A. Walker and L. Trouvelot. These are num- bered: 11, 12, 13-20, 26, 28, 29, 42, 51, 52, 57-63, 64-67, 79-82,90, 107- 109, 122, 123, 125, 133, 137, 139, 141, 145, 148, 149-151, 166, 167, 168, 182-184, 187, 188, 197, 203, 208 a, 6, 210 a, 211, 214, 218, 236, 254, 265, 266, 299, 301, 308, 316, 364-366, 378, 383, 384, 386, 392, 393, 396, 397, 400, 402, 403, 405, 413, 415, 419, 423, 431, 443, 441, 443-446, 465, 473, 476, 482 a, 483, 485 a, 5, 489, 490, 491, 496, 498, 499, 503, 505,507,515 520, 555, 560, 565, 599, 600, 612, 614, 619. Of the remainder, Figs. 134, 459-462, 495, 506, were copied from Harris ; 43, 45, from Leidy ; 46, 47, 49, 50, from Straus-Durckheim ; 44, 53, 54 and 650, from Newport; 135, 140, from Fitch; 223, 243, 244, 528, 529, from Glover; 264, 467, from Curtis; 623-626, from Clapa- rède ; 643, 644, from Doyère ; 56 from Gerstaecker ; 297, from Mecz- nikow; 302, from Brauer; 417, 418, from Leprieur; 527, 558 559, from Guérin-Méneville ; 572 from Dohm; 394, from Blisson; 388, from Candéze ; 377, 381, 382, 385, 390, 391, 395, 399, 401, 406, 407, 410, 472 and 488, from Chapuis and Candéze. Plates 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10 and 11, were taken from the “American Naturalise” Plates 5 and 8, are original, and drawn from nature by Mr. J. H. Emerton. Explanation of Plate 8. Fig. 1. Empretia 8timulea; la, larva. Fig. 2. Leucania unipuncta; 2 a, larva. Fig. 3. Xanthoptera semicrocea ; 3 a, larva. Fig. 4. Catocala ultronia ; 4 o, larva. Fig. 5. Angerona crocataria, male ; 5 a, larva. Fig. 6. Ennomos subsignaria; larva. Fig. 7. Nematocampa filamentaria; 7 a, larva (enlarged twice). Fig. 8. Abraxas ribearia, male. Fig. 9. Anisopteryx vernata, male; 9a, female (enlarged), 95, larva. Fig. 10. Cidaria diversilineata; 10 a, larva. Fig. 11. Galleria cereana. Fig. 12. Lozotænia rosaceana; 12 a, larva. Fig. 13. Penthina pruniana. Fig. 14. Depressaria robiniella. . [its mine. Fig. 15. Lithooollefcis geminatella; a, larva; 5, pupa (enlarged three times), 15c, Ftg. 16. Bucculatrix pomifoliella. Fig. 17. Coleophora; larva. Fig. 18. Lyonetia saccatella; 18a, larva; 185, case (enlarged). Fig. 19. Lithocolleti8 nidificansella (enlarged); 19a, cocoon. Fig. 20. Aglossa cnprealis. Fig. 21. Anchvlopera vacoiniana. Fig. 22. Penthina vitivorana (enlarged). Fig. 23. Pterophorus periscelidactylus ; a, larva; 5, pupa (enlarged three times).GUIDE TO THE STUDY OE INSECTS. THE CLASS OF INSECTS. That branch of the Animal Kingdom known as the Ab- thropoda, includes ail animais having the body composed of rings or segments, like short cylinders, which are placed suc- cessively one behind the other, and whieh bear jointed appen- dages, or feet. The plan of their entire organization, the es- sential features which separate them from ail other animais, lies in the idea of articulation, the apparent joining together of distinct body-segments, bearing hard, jointed appendages. If we observe carefully the body of a Worm, we shall see that it consists of a long cylindrical sac, which at régulai* intervals is folded in upon itself, thus giving a ringed (annulated, or articulated) appearance to the body. In Crustaceans (crabs, lobsters, etc.) and in Insects, from the déposition in the skin of the latter of a peculiar Chemical substance called chitine, the walls of the body become so hard- ened, that when the animal is dead and dry, it readily breaks into numerous very perfect rings. Though this branch contains a far greater number of species than any other of the animal kingdom, its myr- iad forms can ali be reduced to a simple, idéal, typical figure ; that of a long slender cylinder, divided into numerous segments, arranged in two or, as in(Insects, into three régions, and bearing jointed appendages. J It Fig. i. is by the unequal development and the various modes of group- ing the rings, as well as the différences in their number, and also in the changes of form of their appendages, i.e., the feet, jaws, and antennæ, that the various forms of Arthropoda are pro- duced. The Cuvierian branch Articulata comprise the modem branches of Worms and Arthropods. Fig. 1. Worm-like larva of a Fly, Scenopinus.—Original. 12 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. Artliropodous animais are also very distinctly bilateral, i.e tbe body is symmetrically divided into two latéral halves, and not only the trunk but the limbs also show this bilateral symmetry. In a less marked degree there is also an antero- posterior symmetry, i.e. each end of the body is opposed, just as each side of the body is, to the other.* The line separating the two ends is, however, imaginary and vague. The antennæ, on the anterior pôle, or head, are represented by the caudal, or anal, stylets (Fig. 2), and the single parts on the médian line of the body corre- spond. Thus the labrum and clypeus are represented by the tergite ofthe eleventh segment of the abdomen. In nearlyallWorms (Fig.3) the long, tubular, alimentary canal occupies the centre of the body ; above it lies the “heart,” or dorsal vessel, and below, upon the under side, rests the nervous System. The breathing apparatus, or “ lungs,” in Worms consists of / simple filaments, placed on the front of the head ; or of gill-like processes, as in the Crustaceans, whicli are formed by membran- ■ous expansions of the legs ; or, a Fig. 3. e as in the Insects (Fig. 4), of délicate tubes (tracheæ), which * Professor Wyman (On Symmetry ancl Homology in Limbs, Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History, 1867) has shown that antero-posterior symmetry is very marked in Articulâtes. In the adjoining figure of Jœra (Fig. 2) the longi- tudinal lines illustrate what is meant by bilateral symmetry, and the transverse lines “fore and aft” symmetry. The two antero-posterior halves of the body are very symmetrical in the Crustacean généra Jœra, Onia eus, Porcellio, and other Crustacea, and also among the Myriopods, Scutigera, Polydesmus, “ in which the limbs are repeated oppositely, though with different degrees of inequality, from the centre of the body backwards and forwards.” “Leuckart and Van Beneden hâve shown that Mysis has an ear in the last segment, and Schmidt has described an eye in the same part in a worm, Amphicora”— From Wyman. Fig. 3 represents an idéal section of a Worm. / indicates the skin, or mus- cular body-wall, which on each side is produced into one or more fleshy tubercles, usually tipped with bristles or hairs, which serve as organs of locomotion, amiTHE CL ASS OF INSECTS. 3 ramify throughout the whole interior of the animal, and con- nect with breathing pores (stigmata) in the sides of the body. They do not breathe through the mouth as do the higher ani- mais. The tracheæ and blood-vessels follow closely the same c a Fig. 4. course, so that the aération of the blood goes on, apparently, over the whole interior of the body, not being confined to a single région, as in the lungs of the vertebrate animais. Thus it is by observing the general form of the body-walls, and the situation of the different anatomical Systems, both in relation to themselves and the walls of the body, or crust, which surrounds and protects the more délicate organs within, that we are able to find satisfactory characters for isolating, in our définitions, the Arthropoda from ail other animais. We sliall perceive more clearly the différences betvveen the two branches of artieulated or jointed animais, namely, the Worms and the Arthropoda, by examining their young often as lungs. The nervous cord (a) rests on the floor of the cylinder, sending a filament into the oar-like feet (/), and also around the intestine or stomach (b), to a supplementary cord (d), which is situated just over the intestine, and under the heart or dorsal vessel (c). The circle c and e is a diagram of the circulatory Sys- tem ; c is the dorsal vessel, or heart, ft’om the side of which, in each ring, a small vessel is sent downwards and around to e, the ventral vessel.— Original. Fig. 4. An idéal section of a Bee. Here the crust is dense and thick, to which etrong muscles are attached. On the upper side of the ring the wings grow out, while the legs are inserted near the under side. The tracheæ (d) enter through the stigma, or breathing pore, situated just under the wing, and their branches sub- divide and are distributed to the wings, with their five principal reins as indicated4 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. stages, from the time of their exclusion from the egg, until they pass into mature life. A more careful study of this. period than we are now able to enter upon would show us how much alike the young of ail Arthropods are at first, and how soon they hegin to differ, and assume the shape characteristic of their branch. Most Worms, after leaving the egg, are at first like some infusoria, being little sac-like animalcules, often ciliated over nearly the entire surface of the infinitésimal body. Soon this sac-like body grows longer, and con- tracts at intervals ; the intervening parts become unequally enlarged, some segments, or rings, formed by the contraction of the body-walls, greatly exceeding in size those next to them ; and it thus assumes the appearance of being more or less equally ringed, as in the young Terebella (Fig. 5), where the ciliæ arerestricted to a single circle surrounding the body. Gradually (Fig. 6) the ciliæ disap- 6 pear and regular locomotive organs, consisting of minute paddles, grow out from eacli side ; feelers (antennæ), jaws, and eyes (simple rudi- mentary eyes) appear on the few front rings ~£ÉHBI die bod.Y’ wbicb are grouped by themselves li^8fc into a sort of head, though it is difficult, in a large proportion of the lower worms, for un- ùd« skilled observers to distinguish the head from ^he H Thus we see throughout the growth of the worm, no attempt at subdividing the body into régions, each endowed with its peculiar |d fonctions ; but only a more perfect System of Fig. g.--- rings, each relatively very equally developed, in the figure, also to the dorsal vessel (c), the intestine (6), and the nervous cord (a). The tracheæ and a nervous filament are also sent into the legs and to the wings. The tracheæ are also distributed to the dorsal vessel and intestine by numerous branches which serve to hold them in place. — Original. Fig. ô. Young !Ttrebella, soon after leaving the egg. — From A. Agassiz. Fig. (» represents the embryo of a worm ( Autolytus cornutus) at a later stage of growth. a is the middle tentacle of the head; e, one of the posterior tentacles; b» the two eye*spots at the base of the hinder pair of feelers ; c is one of a row of ©ar-like organs (drri) at the base of which are inserted the locomotive bristles.THE CL ASS OF INSECTS. 5 but ail becoming respectively more complicated. For example, in the Earth-worm (Lumbricus), each ring is distinguishable into an upper and under side, and in addition to these a well- marked side-area, to which, as for example in marine worms (e. g. Nereis), oar-like organs are attached. In most worms eye-spots appear on the front rings, and slender tentacles grow out, and a pair of nêrve-knots (ganglia) are apportioned to eacli ring. In the Crustaceans, such as the fresh-water Crawfish (Astch vus), as shown by the German naturalist Rathke ; and also in the earliest stages of the Insect, the body at once assumes a worm-like form, thus beginning its embryonic life from the goal reached by the adult worm. The young of ail Crustaceans (Fig. 7) first begin life in the «egg as oblong flattened worm-like bodies, each end of the body being alike. The young of the lower Crustaceans, such as the Earnacles, and some marine forms (Copepoda), and some lowly organized parasitic species inhabiting the gills of fishes, are hatched as microscopie embryos which would readily be mistaken for young mites (Acarina). In the higher Crus- taceans, such as the fresh-water Crawfish, the & a young, when hatched, does not greatly differ from the parent, as it has passed througli the worm-like stage within the egg. Fig. 7 represents the young of the fresh- water Lobster (Craw’fish) before leaving the egg. The body is divided into rings, ending in lobes on the sides, which are the rudiments of the limbs. b is the rudiment of the eye- Fig. 7. stalk, at the end of which is the eye ; a is the fore antennæ ; ■c is the hind antennæ ; d is one of the maxilla-feet ; e is the first pair of true feet destined in the adult to form the large “claw.” Thus the eye-stalks, antennæ, claws, and legs are moulded upon a common form, and at first are scarcely distin- with the cirri servingas swimmingand locomotive organs; d, the caudal styles, or tail-feelers. In this figure we see how slight are the différences between the feelers of the head, the oar-like swimming organs, and the caudal filaments; we can easily see that they are but modifications of a common form, and ail arise from the common limb-bearing région of the body. The alimentary canal, with the proventriculus, or anterior division of the stomach, oecupies the middle of the i>ody; while the mouth opens on the under side of the head. — From A. Agassiz. Fig. 7. Embryo of the Crawfish. — From Rathke. 1*6 THE CLASS OF INSECTS guishable from each other. Here we see the embryo divided into a head-thorax and a tail. It is the same with Insects. Within the egg at the dawn of life they are flattened oblong bodies curved upon the yelk mass. Before hatching they become more cylindrical, the limbs bud out on the sides of the rings, the head is clearly demarked, and the young Caterpillar soon steps forth from the egg-shell ready armed and equipped for its riotous life. As will be seen in Fig. 8, the legs, jaws, and antennæ are first started as buds from the side of the rings, being simply élongations of the body-wall, which bud out, become larger, and finally jointed, until the x buds arising from the thorax or abdomen become legs, tliose from the base of the head be- come jaws, while the antennæ and palpi sprout out from the front rings of the head. Thus while the bodies of ail articulâtes are built up from a common em- bryonic form, their appendages, which are so diverse, wlien we compare a Lobster’s claw with an Insect’s antenna, or a Spider’s spinneret with the liinder limbs of a Centipede, are yet but modifications of a common form, adapted for the different uses to which they are put by these animais. Fig. 8. Fig. 8. A Caddis, ov Case-fly (Mystnddes) in the egg, with part of the yolk (x) not yet, inclosed within the body-walls. «, antennæ ; between a and b the mandi- blés; b, maxilla; c, labium; d, the separate eye-spots (ocelli), which afterwards in- crease greatly in number and unité to form the compound eye. The “neck” or junction of the head with the thorax is seen at the front part of the yolk-mass; e,. the three pairs of legs, which are folded once on themselves ;/,the pair of anal legs attachcd to the tenth ring of the abdomen, as seen in caterpillars, which form long antenna-like filaments in the Cockroach and May-fly, etc. The rings of the body are but partiallv formed; they are cylindrical, giving the body a worm-like form. Here, as in the other two figures, though not so distinctly seen, the antennæ, jaws, and last pair of abdominal legs are modifications of but a single form, and grow out from the side of the body. The head-appendages are directed forwards, as they are to be adapted for sensory and feeding purposes ; the legs are directed downwards, sinee they are to support the insect while walking. Itappears thattbe two ends of the body are perfected before the middle, and the under side before the upper, as we see the yolk-mass is not yet inclosed and the rings not yet formed above. Thus ail articulâtes differ from ail vertebrates in having the yolk-mass sitnated on the back, instead of on the belly, as in the chick, dog, or liuman em- bryo. — From Zuddach.THE CLASS OF INSECTS. 7 The Worm is long and slender, composed of an irregular number of rings, ail of very even size. Thus, while the size of the rings is fixed, their number is indeterminate, varying from twenty to two hundred or more. The outline of the body is a single cylindrical figure. The organs of locomotion are fleshy filaments and hairs (Fig. 3, /) appended to the sides. In one of the low intestinal worms, the Tape-worm ( Tœnia), each ring, behind the head and “ neck,” is provided with organs of reproduction, so that when the body becomes broken up into its constituent éléments, or rings (as often occurs naturally in these low forms for the more ready propagation of the species, sinçe the young are exposed to many dangers while living in the intestines of animais), they become living inde- pendent beings which “move freely and somewhat quickly like Leaches,” and until their real nature was known they were thought to be worms. This and other facts prove, that, in the Worm, the vitality of the animal is very equally dis- tributed to each ring. If we eut off the head or tail of some of the low worms, such as the Fiat Worms (Planaria, etc.), each piece will become a distinct animal, but an Insect or Crab sooner or later dies when deprived of its head or tail (abdomen). Thus, in the Worm the vital force is very equally distributed to each zoblogical element, or ring of the body ; no single part of the body is much honored above the rest, so as to sub- ordinate and hold the other a i> parts in subservience to its peculiar and higher ends in the animal economy. The Crustacean, of which the Shrimp (Fig. 9) is a typical example, is com- posed of a determinate number (21) of rings which Fig. 9. are gathered into two régions ; the head-thorax (céphalo- thorax) and hind-body, or abdomen. In this class there is a broad distinction between the anterior and posterior ends of the body. The rings are now grouped into two régions, and the hinder division is subordinate in its structure and Fig. 9. A Shrimp. Pandalus annulicornis. a, céphalothorax ; 6, abdomen.8 THE CL ASS OF INSECTS. uses to the forward portion of the body. Hence the nervous power is transferred in some degree towards the head; the céphalothorax containing the nervous centres from which nerves are distributed to the abdomen. Nearly ail the organs perform- ing the functions of locomotion and sensation résidé in the front région ; while the végétative functions, or those concerned in the reproduction and nourishment of the animal, are mostly carried on in the hinder région of the body (the abdomen). The typical Crustacean cannot be said to hâve a true head, in distinction from a thorax bearing the organs of locomotion, but rather a group of rings, to which are appended the organs of sensation and locomotion. Hence we find the appendages of this région gradually changing from antennæ and jaws to foot-jaws, or limbs capable of eating and also of locomotion ; they shade into each other as seen in Fig. 9. Sometimes the jaws become remarkably like claws ; or the legs resemble jaws at the base, but towards their tips become claw-like ; gill-like bodies are sometimes attached to the foot-jaws, and thus, as stated by Professor J. D. Dana in the introduction to his great work on the Crustacea of the United States Exploring Expédi- tion, the typical Crustaceans do not hâve a distinct head, but rather a “head-thorax” (céphalothorax). When we rise a third and last step into the world of Insects, we see a completion and final development of the articu- late plan which has been but obscurely hinted at in the two lowest classes, the Worms and Crustaceans. Here we first meet with a true head, separate in its structure and functions from the thorax, which, in its turn, is clearly distinguishable from the third région of the body, the abdomen, or hind-body. These three régions, as seen in the Wasp (Fig. 10), are each provided with three distinct sets of organs, each having distinct functions, though ail are governed by and minister to the brain force, now in a great measure gathered up from the Fig. îo. posterior rings of the body, and in a more concentrated form (the brain being larger than in the lower articulâtes) lodged in the head. Here, then, is a centralization of parts headwards ; they are Fig. 10. Philanthus ventilabris Fabr. A Wood-wasp. — From Say.COMPOSITION OF THE INSECT-CRUST. 9 brought as if towards a focus, and that focus the head, which is the meaning of the term “ cephalization,” proposed by Pro- fessor Dana.* Ring distinctions hâve given way to régional distinctions. The former characterize the AVorm, the latter the Insect. In other words, the division of the body into three parts, or régions, is in the insect, on the whole, better marked than the division of any one of those parts, except the abdo- men, into rings. Composition of the Insect-crust. Before describing the composition of the body-wall, or crust, of the Insect, let us briefly review the mode in which the same parts are formed in the lower classes, the Worms and Crustaceans. We hâve seen that the typical ring, or segment (called by authors zoonule, zoônite, or somite, meaning parts of a body, though we prefer the term artliromere, denoting the elemental part of a jointed or articulate animal), consists of an upper (tergite), a side (pleurite), and an under piece (sternite). This is seen in its greatest simplicity in the AVorm (Fig. 2),.where the upper and ventral arcs are separated by the pleural région. In the Crus- tacean the parts, hardened by the déposition of chitine and therefore thick and unyielding, hâve to be farther subrlivided to seeure the nécessary amount of freedom of motion to the body and legs. The upper arc not only covers the back of the ani- mal, but extends down the sides ; the legs are jointed to the epimera, or flanks, on the lower arc ; the episternum is situated between the epimerum and sternum ; and the sternum, form- ing the breast, is situated between the legs. In the adult, there- fore, each elemental ring is composed of six pièces. It *should, however, be borne in mind that the tergum and ster- * In two papers on the Classification of Animais, published in the American Journal of Science and Arts, Second Sériés, vol. xxxv, p. 65, vol. xxxvi, July, 1863, andalso in his earlier paper on Crustaceans, “the principle of cephalization U shown to be exhibited among animais in the folio wing ways : 1. By a transfer of members from the locomotive to the ceplialic sériés. 2. By the anterior of the locomotive organs partieipating to some extent in ce* phalic functions. 3. By increased abbreviation, concentration, compactness, and perfection of ■structure, in the parts and organs of the anterior portion of the body. 4. By increased abbreviation, condensation, and perfection of structure in the posterior, or gastric and caudal portion of the body. 5. By an upward rise in the cephalic end of the nervous System. This rise reaches its extreme limit in Man.”10 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. num each consist, in the embryo, of two latéral parts, or halvesr which, during development, unité on the médian line of the body. Typically, therefore, the crustacean ring consists pri- marily of eight pièces. The same number is found in air insects which are wingless, or in the larva and pupa state ; this applies also to the Myriopods and Spiders. In the Myriopoda, or Centipedes, the broad tergum overlaps the small epimera, while the sternum is much larger than in the Spiders and Insects. In this respect it is like the broad fiat under-surface of most worms. Hence the legs of the Centipede are inserted very far apart, and the “breast,” or sternum, is not much smaller than the dorsal part of the crust. In the Julus the dorsal piece (tergum) is greatly developed over the sternum, but tliis is a départure from what is ap- parently the more typical form of the order, i. e. the Centipede. In the Spiders there is a still greater disproportion in size between the tergum and the sternum, though the latter is very large compared with that of Insects. The epimera and episterna, or side-pieces of the Spiders, are partially concealed by the over-arching tergum, and they are small, since the joints of the legs are very large, Audouin’s law of development in Arthro- pods showing that one part of the insect crust is always developed at the expcnse of the adjoining part. In the Spider we notice that the back of the thorax is a single solid plate consisting originally of four rings Consolidated into a single hard piece. In like manner the broad solid sternal plate results from the reunion of the same number of sternites cor- responding, originally, to the number of thoracic legs. Thus the whole upper side of the head and thorax of the Spider is Consolidated into a single hard horny immovable plate, like the upper solid part of the céphalothorax of the Crab or Shrimp. Hence the motions of the Spiders are very stitf com- pared with those of many Insects, and correspond to those of the Crab. The crust of the winged insect is modified for the per- formance of more complex motions. It is subdivided in so different a manner from the two lower order s of the class, that it would almost seem to hâve nothing in common, structurally speaking, with the groups below them. It is only by examin-COMPOSITION OF THE INSECT-CRUST. 11 prm ptm Fig. 11. ing the lowest wingless forms such as the Louse, Flea, Podura, and Bark-lice, where we see a transition to tke Or- ders of Spiders and Myriopods, tkat we can perceive the plan pervading ail these forms, uniting them into a common class. A segment of a winged six-footed insect (Hexapod) consista typically of eight pièces whick we will now examine more leisurely. Figure 12 represents a side-view of the thorax of the Telea Polyphemus, or Silk- worm moth, with the legs and wings removed. Each ring consists primarily of the tergum, the two side-pieces (epimerum and episternum) and the sternum, or breast-plate. But one of these pièces (sternum) remains simple, as in the lower orders. The tergum is divided into four pièces. They were named by Au* douin going from before backwards, Fig. 12. the prœscutum, scutum, scutellum, and postscutelium. The scutum is invariably présent and forms the larger part of the upper portion (tergum) of the tho- ePm'' rax ; the scutellum is, as îts name « indicates, the little shield so promi- nent in the beetle, which is also uniformly présent. The other two pièces are usually minute and crowded down out of sight, and placed between the two oppos- ing rings. As seen in Fig. 11, the præscutum of the moth is a small rounded piece, bent vertically down, so as not to be seen from above. In the lowly organized Hepialus, and some - epm tr té c” tr c" tr 12 3 Fig. 11. Tergal viewof themiddle segment of the thorax of Telea Polyphemus. prm, præscutum; ms, scutum; scm, scutellum; ptm, postscutelium; pt, patagium, or shoulder tippet, covering the insertion of the wings. — Original. Fig. 12. Side view of the thorax of T. Polyphemus, the hairs removed. 1, Pro- thorax ; 2, Mesothorax ; 3, Metathorax, separated by the wider black lines. Tergum of the prothorax not represented. ms, mesoscutum; scm, mesoscutellum; ms”, metascutum; scm"', metascutellum ; pt, a supplementary piece near the inser- tion of patagia; w, pièces situated at the insertion of the wings and surrounded by membrane; em, epimerum of prothorax, the long upright piece above being the episternum ; epm”, episternum of the mesothorax : em", epimerum of the same ; epm”, episternum ofthe metathorax; em”, epimerum of the same, divided into two pièces; c, c”, c", coxæ; té, le”, lé", trochantines; tr, tr, tr, trochanters. — Original.12 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. Fig. 13. Neuroptera, such as the Polystœchotes (Fig. 13 a), the præ- scutum is large, well developed, triangular, and wedged iu between the two halves of the scutum. The little piece succeeding the scutellum, î. e. the postscu- tellum, is still smaller, and rarely used in descrip- tive entomology. Thus far we hâve spokenof the 3| middle, or mesothoracic, ring, where these four pièces are most equally developed. In the first,ol* or prothoracic, ring, one part, most probably the scutum, is well developed, while the others are aborted, and it is next to impossible to trace them in most insects. The prothorax in the higher in- sects, such as the Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, and Diptera is very small, and often intimately soldered to the succeeding or mesothoracic ring. In the lower insects, however, sucli as the Ooleoptera, the bugs (Hemiptera), grasshoppers and their allies (Orthoptera), and the Neuloptera, the large broad pro- thorax consists almost entirely of this single piece, and most writers speak of this part under the name of “thorax,” since the two posterior segments are concealed by the wings wlien the animal is at rest. The metathorax is usually very broad and short. Here we see the scutum split asunder, with the præscutum and scutellum wedged in between, while the post- scutellum is aborted. On the side are two pièces, the upper (epimerum) placed just beneath the tergum, which is the collective name for the four tergal, or dorsal, pièces enumerated above. In front of the epimerum and resting upon the sternum, as its name im- plies, is the episternum. These two parts (pleurites) compose the flanks of the elemental ring. To them the legs are articu- lated. Between the two episterna is situated the breast-piece (sternum), which shows a tendency to grow smaller as we ascend from the Neuroptera to the Bees. In those insects provided with wings, the epimera are also subdivided. The smaller pièces, hinging upon each other, as it were, give play to the very numerous muscles of flight Fig. 13. A tergal view of thorax of Hepialus ( Sthenopis) ; 1, prothorax ; 2, meso- thorax ; 3, metathorax. The prothorax is very small compared with that et PoJy* Mæchotes (13 o, 1), where it is nearly as long as broad.— Original.COMPOSITION OF THE INSECT-CRUST. 13 needed by the insect to perform its complicated motions while on the wing. The insertion of the fore wing is concealed by the “ shoulder tippets,” or jpatagia (Fig. 11), which are only présent in the mesothorax. The external opening of the spiracles just under the wing perforâtes a little piece called by Audouin the péri- treme. A glance at Figures 11 and 12 shows how compactly the various parts of the thorax are agglutinated into a globular mass, and that this is due to the diminished size of the first and third rings, while the middle ring is greatly enlarged to support the muscles of flight. There are four tergal, four pleural, two on each side (and these in the Hymenoptera, Lepi- doptera, and Diptera subdivide into several pièces), and a single sternal piece, making nine for each ring and twenty- seven for the whole thorax, with eight accessory pièces (the three pairs of peritremes and the two patagia), making a total of thirty-five for the entire thorax ; or, multiplying the four tergal pièces by two, since they are formed by the union of two primitive pièces on the médian line of the body, we hâve thirty-nine pièces composing the thorax. Table of the Parts of the Thorax Applied to the Pro-, Meso-, and Metathorax, respectively. ' Dorsal Surface Thorax Pleural Surface Sternal w Surface Præscutum, Scutum, Scutellum, Postscutellum. Epimerum, Episternum, Episternal apophysis, Stigma, Peritreme. Sternum. We must remember that these pièces are rarely of precisely the same form in any two species, and that they differ, often in a very marked way, in different généra of insects. How sim pie, then, is the typical ring, and how complex are the va- rious subdivisions of that ring as seen in the actual, living insect, where each part has its appropriate muscles, nerves, and tracheæ ! We hâve seen how the thorax is formed in Insects generally, let us now advert to the two types of thorax in the six-footed14 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. insects. In the higher sériés of orders, comprising the dip- tera, Lepidoptera and Hymenoptera, placing the highest last, the thorax shows a tendency to assume a globular shape ; the upper side, or tergum, is much arched, the pleural région bulges out full and round, while the legs conceal at their insertion the sternum which is minute in size. In the lower sériés, embracing the Coleoptera, Hemiptera, Orthoptera, and Neuroptera, the entire body tends to be more flattened ; in the thorax the tergum is broad, especially that of the prothorax, while the pleurites (episterna and epimera) are short and bulge out less than in the higher sériés, and the ster- num is almost invariably well developed, often presenting a large thick breast-plate bearing a stout spine or thick tubercle, as in Œdipoda. We can use these characters, in classifying insects into orders, as they are common to the whole subclass. Hence the use of characters drawn from the wings and mouth- parts (which are sometimes wanting), leads to artificial dis- tinctions, as they are peripheral organs, though often convenient in our first attempts at classifying and limiting natural groups. The abdomen. In the hind body, or third région of the trunk, the three divisions of the typical ring (arthromere), are ontire, the tergum is broad and often not much greater in ex- tent than the sternum ; and the pleurites also form either a single piece, or, divided into an epimerum and episternum, form a distinct latéral région, on which the stigmata are sit- uated. The segments of the abdomen hâve received from Lacaze-Duthiers a still more spécial name, that of unte, and the different tergal pièces belonging to the several rings, but especially those that hâve been modified to form the génital armor hâve been designated by him as tergites. We hâve applied this last term to the tergal pièces generally. The typi- cal number of abdominal segments is eleven. In the lowest insects, the Neuroptera, there are usually eleven ; as we hâve counted them in the abdomen of the embryo of Diplax. In others, such as the Hymenoptera and Lepidoptera, there may never be more than ten, so far as présent observation teaches us. The formation of the sting, and of the male intromittent organ, may be observed in the full-grown larva and in the in-COMPOSITION OF THE OVIPOSITOR. 15 complété pupa of the Humble-bee, and other thin-skinned Hymenopterous larvæ, and in a less satisfactory way in the young Dragon-flies. If the larva of the Humble-bee be taken just after it has become full-fecl, and as it is about to enter upon the pupa state, the éléments (sterno - rhab- dites Lacaze- Duthiers), or tubercles, destined to Fig. 16. 17 a. form the ovipositor, lie in separate pairs, in two groups, Fig. 14. Fig. 15. exposed distinctly to view, as in Figures 14-18. The ovipositor thus consists of three pairs of slender non-articulated tubercles, situated in juxta- position on each side of Fig. n. the mesial line of the body. The first pair arises from the eighth abdominal ring, and the second and third pair grow out from the ninth ring. The ends of the first pair scarcely reach beyond the base of the third pair. With the growth of the semi-pupa, the end of the abdomen decreases in size, and is Fig. is. 18a. Fig. 14. Rudiments of the sting, or ovipositor, of the Humble-bee. 8, 9, 10, sternites of eighth, ninth, and tenth abdominal rings in the larva. a, first pair, situ- ated on the eighth sternite ; 5, second and inner pair ; and c, the outer pair. The let- tering is the same in figures 14-2*2. The inner pair (5), forms the true ovipositor, through which the eggs are supposed to pass when laid by the insect, the two outer pairs, a and c, sheathing the inner pair. Ganin shows that in the embryo of Polynema(Fig. 655), the three pairs of tubercles arise from the 7th, 8th and 9th seg- ments respectively. Fig. 15,16. The same a little farther advanced. Fig. 17. The three pairs now appear as if together growing from the base of the Tiinth segment ; 17 a, side view of the same, showing the end of the abdomen grow- ing smaller through the diminution in size of the under side of the body. Fig. 18. The three pairs of rhabdites now nearly equai in size, and nearly xeady to unité and form a tube; 18a, side view of the same; the end of the abdo- men still more pointed ; the ovipositor is situated between the seventh and tenth xings, and is partially retracted within the body.16 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. Fig. 20. gradually incurved toward the base (Fig. 18), and the three^ pairs of rhabdites approach each other so closely that the two outer ones completely ensheath the inner, until a complété extensible tube is formed, which is gradually withdrawn entirely within the body. The male génital organ is originally composed of three pairs (two pairs, apparently, in Æs- a chna, Fig. 19) of tubercles ail arising from the nintJi abdominal ring, being sternal outgrowths and placed on each side of the mesial line of the body, two be- ing anterior, and very unequal in size, and the Fig. 19. third pair nearer the base of the abdomen. The ex- ternal génital organs are to be considered as probably liomologous with the limbs, as Ganin has shown that they bud ont in the same manner from (see p. 704 fig. 655) the arthromere.* 6 This view will apply to the Fig. 21. génital armor of ail Insects, so far as we hâve been able to observe. It is so in the pupa of Æschna (Fig. 21), and the pupa of Agrion (Fig. 22), which com- pletely repeats, in its essential features, the structure of the ovipositor of Bombus. Thus in Æsclina and Agrion the ovipositor consists of a pair of closely appressed ensi- form processes which grow out from under the posterior edge of the eighth abdominal ring, and are embraced between two pairs Fig. 22. * This term is proposed as better defining the idéal ring, or primary zoological element of an articulated animal than the terms somite or zoônite, which seem too vague; we also propose the term arthroderm for the outer crust, or body walls, of Articulâtes, and arthropleura for the pleural, or limb-bearing région, of the body, being that portion of the arthromere situated between the tergite and sternite. Fig. 19. The rudiments of the male intromittent organ of the pupa of Æschna, consisting of two flattened tubercles situated on the ninth ring; the outer pair large and rounded inclosing the smaller linear oval pair. Fig. 20. The same in the Humble-bee, but consisting of three pairs of tubercles, xf V> « » 8,9,10, the last three segments of the abdomen. Fig. 21. The rudimentary ovipositor of the pupa of Æschna, a Dragon-fly. Fig. 22. The same in pupa of Agrion, a small Dragon-fly. Here the rudiments of the eleventh abdominal ring are seen, d, the base of one of the abdominal fais© gills. The ovipositor of Cicada is formed in the same way. — Figs. 11-22 original..COMPOSITION OF THE OVIPOSITOR. 17 of thin lamelliform pièces of similar form and structure, ansing from the sternite of the ninth ring. These outgrowths appar- ently also homologize with the filiform, antennæ-like, jointed appendages of the eleventh ring, as seen in the Perlidæ and most Neuroptera and Orthoptera (especially in Mantis tes- sellata where they (Fig. 23) closely s * resemble antennæ), which, arising as ---- they do from the arthropleural, or limb- *■ *—■" bearing région of the body, i. e. between Fig. 23. the sternum and episternum, are strictly homologous with the abdominal legs of the Myriapoda, the “false legs’’ of cater- pillars, and the abdominal legs of some Neuropterous larvæ (Corydalis, Phryganeidœ, etc.). It will thus be seen that the attenuated form of the tip is producecl by the decrease in size of certain parts, the actual disappearance of others, and the perfection of those parts to be of future use. Thus towards the extremity of the body the pleurites are absorbed and disappear, the tergites overlap on the sternites, and the latter diminish in size and are withdrawn within the body, while the last, or eleventh sternite* entirely disappears.* Meanwhile the sting grows larger and s*- 4t larger, until finally we hâve the neatly fashioned abdominal tip of the bee (4/concealing the complex sting with its intricate System of viscéral ves- sels and glands. Fig. 24. The ovipositor, or sting, of ail insects, therefore, is formed on a common plan (Fig. 24). The solid éléments of the arthro- * In Ranatra, however, Lacaze-Duthiers has noticed the curions fact that in* order to form the long respiratory tube of this insect, the tergite and sternite of th«: pregenital (eighth) segment are aborted, while the pleurites are enormously en- larged and elongated, so as to carry the stigmata far out to the end of the long tube: thus formed. Fig. 23. End of the abdomen of Mantis tessellata ; p, many-jointed anal style, resembling an antenna. 5-11, the last seven abdominal segments; the 8-llth ster- nites being obsolète. — From Lacaze-Duthiers. Fig. 24. Idéal plan of the structure of the ovipositor in the adult insect. l-7t,. the tergites, connected by dotted lines with their corresponding sternites. b, the eighth tergite, or anal scale ; c, epimerum ; af a, two pièces forming the outer pair of rhabdites; i, the second pair, or stylets; and/, the inner pair, or sting; d, the 218 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. mere are modified to form the parts supporting the sting alone. The external opening of the oviduct is always situated between the eighth and ninth segments, while the anal opening lies at the end of the eleventh ring. So that there are really, as Lacaze-Duthiers observes, three segments interposed between the génital and anal openings. The various modifications of the ovipositor and male organ will be noticed under the different suborders. The Structure of the Head. After studying the com- position of the thorax and abdomen, where the constituent parts of the elemental ring occur in their greatest simplicity, we may attempt to unravel the intricate structure of the head. ¥e are to détermine whetlier it is composed of one, or more, segments, and if several, to ascertain how many, and then to learn what parts of the typical arthromere are most largely developed as comparée! with the development of similar parts in the thorax or abdomen. In this, perhaps the most difficult problem the entomologist bas to deal with, the stucly of the head of the adult insect alone is only guesswork. ¥e must trace its growth in the embryo. Though many writers consider the head as consisting of but a single segment, the most emi- nent entomologist s hâve agreecl that the head of insect s is com- posed of two or more segments. Savigny led the way to these •discoveries in transcendental entomology by stating that the appendages of the head are but modified limbs, and homol- ogous with the legs. This view at once gave a due to the complicated structure of the head. If the antennæ and biting organs are modified limbs, then there must be an elemental segment présent in some form, however slightly developed in the mature insect, to which such limbs are attached. But the best observers hâve differed as to the supposed number of such theoretical segments. Burmeister believed that there were two only ; Carus and Audouin thought there were three ; McLeay and Newman four, and Straus-Durckheim recognized seven. Trom the study of the semipupa of the Humble-bee (Bombus) support of the sting; e, the support of the stylet (i). R, the anus ; O, the outlet of the oviduct. The seventh, eighth, and ninth sternites are aborted. — From Lacaze- Duthiers.THE STRUCTURE OF THE HE AD. 19 and several low Neuropterous forms, as the larva of Ephemera, but chiefly the embryos of Diplax, Chrysopa, Attelabus, héma- ties, and Pulex, we hâve concluded that there are four such ele- mental segments in the head of hexapodous insects. /“ On reference to fig. 57 it will be seen that there is a sternal portion on the under side of the two posterior segments of the head, and in the embryo of Attelabus we hâve seen sterna also developed in the antennal and mandibular segments, so that we may conclude that there are four segments in the head of ail six footed insects, corresponding to the jointed appendages, i e. the labium, or seeond maxillæ, the first maxillæ, the man dibles, and the antennæ. Though having, in accordance with the generally received opinions of Milne-Edwards, Dana, and others, believed that the eyes of Crustacea, and therefore of Insects, were the homologues of the limbs, and developed on separate segments placed in front of the antennal segment, as stated in the previous éditions of this work ; I hâve, however, on farther study of the subject, been led to reconsider the mat- ter, and décidé that the eyes are but modified dermal sense cells, and in certain articulâtes developed on limb-bearing seg- ments. Thus in the King Crab (Limulus) a pair of ocelli are situated on the first segment of the body, and the large com- pound eyes grow out on the back of the tliird segment, both bearing limbs. In the embryos of ail the insects y et exam- ined, the eyes are groups of specialized cells of the skin which grow out on the upper, or tergal, side of the same segment which bears the antennæ. In certain mites, as Hydrachna, and its allies, the simple eyes are situated over the second pair of legs, and at a considérable distance behind the head. Among the worms, also, organs of sight, as in Polyophthalmus, are developed on each segment of the body ; or, as in certain Pla- narians, scattered irregularty over the body. The three ocelli, when présent, are developed after the eyes appear. Each of these three ocelli is situated upon a distinct piece ; but we must consider the anterior single ocellus as in reality formed of two, since in the immature pupa of Bombus the anterior ocellus is transversely ovate, resulting from the fusion of two originally distinct ocelli. There are, therefore, apparently two pairs of ocelli. The clypeus and labrum are20 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. simply a fold of the skin of the front part of the antennary segment, and are not to be compared with the tergite or rudi- ment of the eleventh segment of the abdomen. Now, since the arthropleural is the limb-bearmg région in the thorax, it must follow that this région is quite weil devel- oped in the head, while the tergal région, bearing the organs of sight, sometimes of enormous size, is perhaps still more largely developed ; and as ail the parts of the head are subordinated in their development to that of the appendages of which they form the support, it must follow logically that the larger por- tion of the body of the head is pleural and tergal, and that the sternal parts are very slightly developed. Thus each région of the body is characterized by the relative development of the three parts of the arthromere. In the abdomen the upper (tergal) and under (sternal) surfaces are most equally devel- oped, while the pleural line is reduced to a minimum. In the thorax the pleural région is much more developed, either quite as much, or often more than the upper, or tergal portion, while the sternal is reduced to a minimum. In the head the pleurites form the main bulk of the région, and the stemites are reduced to a minimum. Table of the Segments of the Head and their Appendages, BEGINNING WITH THE MOST ANTERIOR. Preoral. First Segment (Antennary), C Antennæ, together with Tergal, < the labrum, epipharynx, C clypeus, eyes, and ocelli. Postoral. Second Segment (Mandïbular), Third Segment (First Maxillary), Fourth Segment (Second Maxillary, or) Labial), | Pleural, | Pleural, ^Tergal (occiput), > Pleural (gêna), ) Sternal (gula), Mandibles. First maxillæ. Second maxillæ (Labium). The Appendages. We naturally begin with the thoracic appendages, or legs, of which there is a pair to each ring. The leg (Fig. 25) consists of six joints, the basal one, the coxa, in the Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, and Diptera, consisting of two-THE APPENDAGES. 21 pièces, i. e. the coxa and trochantine (see Fig. 12) ; the tro- chanter ; the fémur ; the tibia, and, lastly, the tarsus, which is subdivided into from one to five joints, the latter being the normal number. The terminal joint ends in a pair of claws between which is a cushion-like sucker called the pulvillus. f This sucking disk enables the Fly to walk upside down and on glass. In the larva, the feet are short and horny, and the Fig. 25. joints can be still distinguished. In Myriopods, each segment of the abdomen lias a pair of feet like the thoracic ones. We must consider the three pairs of spinnerets of Spiders, which are one to three-jointed, as homologous with the jointed limbs of the higher insects. In the six-footed insects (Hexapoda), the abdominal legs are deciduous, being présent in the Coleopterous grub, the Dipterous maggot, the Caterpillar, and larva of the Saw-fly, but disappearing in the pupa state. They are often, as in most maggot s, either absent, or reduced in number to the two anal, or terminal pair of legs ; while in the Saw-flies, there are as many as eight pairs. These “false” or “prop-legs” are soft and fleshy, and without articulations. At the rétrac- tile extremity is a crown of hooks, as seen in caterpillars or the hind-legs of the larva of Cliironomus (Fig. 26), in which the prothoracic pair of legs is reduced to inarticu- late fleshy legs like the abdominal ones. The position of the different pairs of legs deserves notice in connection with the principle of u antero-posterior symmetry.” The fore- legs are directed forwards like the human arms, but the two hinder pairs are directed backwards. In the Spiders, three pairs of abdominal legs (spinnerets) are retained through- out lifë ; in the lower Hexapods, a single pair, which is ap- pended to the eleventh segment, is often retained, but under a form which is rather like an antenna, than limb-like. In some Neuropterous larvæ (Phryganea, Coryclalus, etc.) the anal pair of limbs are very well marked ; they constitute the “anal forceps” of the adult insect. They sometimes become true, many-jointed appendages, and are tlien remarkably like Fig. 25. A, coxa; B, trochanter ; C, fémur; D, tibia; F, tibial spurs; E, tarsus, divided into five tarsal joints, the fifth ending in a claw.—From Sanbom.22 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. antennæ, as in the instance of Mantis tessellata described by Lacaze-Duthiers (Fig. 23). In the Cockroach these append- âges, sometimes called u anal cerci,” resemble the antennæ of the same insect. In the Lepidoptera and Hymenoptera they do not appear to be jointed, and are greatly aborted. The Wings. The wings of insects first appear as little soft vascular sacs permeated by tracheæ. They grow out in the preparatory stages (Fig. 27) of the pupa from the side of the k thorax and above the insertion of the legs, i.e. between the epimerum and tergum. During the pupa state they are paddike, but when the pupa skin is thrown off they expand with air, and in a few minutes, as in the Butterfly, enlarge to many times their original size. The wings of insects, then, are simple expansions of the crust, spread over a framework of horny tubes. These tubes are really double, consist- ing of a central trachea, or air tube, inclosed within a larger tube filled with blood, and which perforais the functions of the veins. Ilence the aération of the blood is carried on in the wings, and thus they serve the double purpose of lungs and organs of flight. The number and situation of these veins and their branches (veinlets) are of great use in separating généra and species. The typical number of primary veins is five. They diverge outward at a slight angle from the insertion of the wing, and are soon divided into veinlets, from which cross veins are thrown out connecting with otliers to form a net-work of veins and veinlets, called the venation of the wing (Figs. 28, 29). The interspaces between the veins and veinlets are called celte. At a casual glance the venation seems very irregular, but in many insects is simple enougli to enable us to trace and name the veinlets. The five main veins, most usually présent, are Fig. 27. Fig. 27. The semipupa of Jîombus, the larva skin having been removed, show* ing the frvvo pairs of rudimentary wings growing ont from the mesothorax (fc)> antf metathorax (m). n and the seven succeeding dots represent the eight abdominal stigmata, the first one (n) being in the pupa situated on the thorax, since the first ring of the abdomen is in this stage joined to the thorax. — Original.THE WINGS 23 called, beginning at the costa, or front edge, the costal, subcostal, médian, submedian, and internai, and sometimes the médian divides into two, making six veins. The costal vein is un- divided ; the subcostal and me- bj dian are divided into several branches, while the submedian and internai are usually simple. The venation of the fore- wings affords excellent marks in separating généra, but that of the hind wings varies less, and is consequently of less use. The wings of many insects are divided by the veins into three well-marked areas ; the costal, médian, and internai. The costal area (Fig. 31 b) forms the front edge of the wing and is the strongest, since tlie veins are nearer together than elsewhere, and thus afford the greatest résistance to the air Fig. 28. Fig. 29. Fig. 28. Fore and hind wings of a Butterfly, showing the venation. I. fore wing: a, costal vein; 6, subcostal vein; b 1, 62, 63, 64, 65, five subcostal veinlets; c, inde- pendent vein (it is sometimes a branch of the subcostal, and sometimes of the mé- dian vein) ; d, médian vein ; d 1, <22, <*3, d4, four médian veinlets ; e, submedian vein ; /, internai vein ; h, interno-median veinlet (rarely found, according to Doubleday, except in Papilio and Morpho) ; 6 and d are situated in the “ discal cell ; ” gi, g2> gsy the upper, middle, and lower discal veinlets. In the Bombvcidæ and many other moths gl and are thrown off from the subcostal and médian veins respectively, meeting in the middle of the cell at gî. They are sometimes wholly absent. II. The hind wing; the lettering and nanties of the veins and veinlets the same as in the fore wing. — Slightly changedfrtmi Doubleday. Fig. 29. Fore wing of a Hymenopterous insect. c, costal vein; sc, subcostal vein, to, médian vein; sto, submedian vein; i, internai vein; c, 1,2,3, the first, second, and third costal cells ; the second frequently opaque and then called the pterostigma. sc, 1, 2, 3, 4, the four subcostal cells; to, 1, 2, 3, 4, the médian cells; «to, 1,2, 3, the three submedian cells ; il, the internai cell ; this is sometimes divided into two cells, and the number of ail but the costal cells is inconstant, the outer row of cells (4, 4, 3) being the first to disappear. The costal edge extends from c to c ; the outer c, the apex ; the outer edge extends from the apex (c) to a, and the inner edge extends from a, the inner ang'e, to the insertion of the wing at i.— Original. Figs. 30-32from Scudder.24 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. during flight. The médian area (Fig. 31a) is the largest. It is in the grasshoppers and crickets sometimes modified to form a musical organ, being drum-like, as in the Œca?ithus (Fig. 30), or rasp-like, as in Archyp- tera (Fig. 31a). The internai area (c) is the smallest, and less dis- . tinctly marked than the Fig. 30. two other régions; the musical file-like or- gan of Fhaneroptera curvicauda, a grass- hopper (Fig. 32 d) is situated on this area. The limits of the edges of the wing vary in almost every genus, and their comparative length affords excellent generic characters. The front edge (Fig. 29) is called the costal, its termina- tion in the outer angle of the wing is called the apex; the outer edge is situated between the apex and the inner an- gle, between which and the base of the wing is the inner, or internai, edge. Tliese distinc- tions are of most use in describing the butter- flies and moths. i^The Appendages of Fig. 3ia. f]ie Head. These organ s are divided into two groups, the first of which comprise the sensory organs, i, e. the ocelli, eyes, and antennæ, which are attached to the région in front of the mouth, or preoral région of the head. The second group consists of the sensorio-digestive appendages, combining the power of finding and seizing the food and preparing it fof digestion. They are inserted behind the mouth and belong to the postoral région of the head.THE APPENDAGES OF THE HEAD. 25 We will first describe the ocelli, which are theoretically the most anterior organs of the head, ending with the basal appen- dages, the labium (second maxillæ) being the hindermost. The simple eye, Ocellus, or Stemma, is the simplest form of the eye. Its most elementary form (seen in the larva of the Bot-fly and the Cecidomyian larva of Miastor) is that of a brown spot, or group of pigment-cells lodged under the skin and against which a nerve-filament impinges. O ver this spot New- port states that the tégument is transparent and convex, resembling a true cornea, or eye-lens. A well-developed ocellus consists, according to Newport, of a “very convex, smooth, single cornea, beneath which is a spherical crystalline lens, resting upon the plano-convex surface of the expanded vitreous humor, the analogue of the transparent cônes of the compound eyes.” Muller believes that the function of the ocelli is the perception of nearer objects, while that of the compound eyes is to see more distant objects. The ocelli constitute the only visual organs in the Myriapods (except Cermatia), the Arachnida, and the larvæ of many Six-footed Insects ; they are *usually from one to six on a side. In adult insects they are generally three in number, and JJL are generally présent except in the large majority of Coleoptera. Their normal site is in front of the eyes, but they are usually Fig. 33. thrown back, during the growth of the insect, behind the eyes, on the vertex, or topmost part of the head (Fig. 33). The Compound Eyes are a congeries of simple eyes. During the growth of the insect the simple eyes of the larva increase in number, and finally coalesce to form the compound eye, or compound cornea, the surface of which is Fig. 34. very convex and protubérant in the predaceous insects, or those requiring an extended field of vision. The number of facets, or corneæ, vary from fifty (in the Ant) to 3,650, the latter number being counted by Geoffroy in the eye of a Butterfly. These facets are usually hexagonal, as in the Dragon-fly (Fig. 34), or, rarely, quadrangular. Fig. 33. Ocelli of three species of Sand-wasps, Pompilus. — From Cresson. Fig. 34. Three hexagonal facets of the compound eye of a fossil Dragon-fly, greatly magnified. — From Dawson.26 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. The Antennœ (Figs. 35, 36) are inserted usually in the adult insect between, or in front of the eyes, though in the embrya they are inserted below and in front of the eyes. or pedicel, and the terminal part or flagelium, Fig- 36* Fig. 35. or clavola, which usually comprises the greater part of the antenna. It is believed by some tliat the sense of hearing is lodged in the antennæ, though Siebold lias discovered an auditory apparatus situated at the base of the abdomen of some, and in the fore-legs of other species of Grasslioppers. Mr. J. B. Hicks lias made the latest studies on the auditory apparatus. According to liim “it consists first of a cell, sac, or cavity filled with fluid, closed in from the air by a mem- brane analogous to that which closes the foramen ovale in the higher animais ; second, that this membrane is, for the most part, thin and délicate, but often projects above the surface, in either a hemispherical, conical, or canoe-shaped, or even hair- like form, or variously marked ; thirdly, that the antennal nerve gives off branches which corne in contact with the inner wall of the sacs ; but whether the nerve enters, or, as is most probable,, ends in the small internally projecting papilla which I hâve shown to exist in many of these sacs, it is very difficult to say. The principal part of the nerve proceeds to these organs, the remaining portion passing to the muscles, and to the roots of the hairs, at least to tliose of the larger sort.” On the other hand, Lefebvre, Leydig, and Gerstaecker regard this so-called “auditory apparatus” as an organ of smell. The antennæ hâve also the sense of touch, as may readily be observed in Ants, Bees, and tlie Grasshopper and Cockroach. “The Honey-bee, wlien constructing its cells, ascertains their proper direction and size by means of the extremities of these Fig. 35. Filiform antenna of Amphizoa. — From Horn. Fig. 36. A, lamellate antenna of a Lamellicom Beetle; B, antenna of a Fly, with the bristle thrown off from the terminal joint ; O, bristle-like antenna of a Dragon-fly, Libellula. — From Sanborn. It is normally a long, filiform, slender, many- jointed appendage, undergoing great changes in form. Wlien it is higlily specialized, as in Coleoptera and Hymenoptera, it is divided into three parts, the basal or scape, the middleTHE APPENDAGES OF THE HEAD. 27 organs; wliile the same insect, when evidently affected by sounds, keeps them motionless in one direction, as if in the act of listening.,, (Newport.) After cutting off one or both antennæ of the June beetle, Lachnostema, the insect loses its power of directing its flight or steps, wheeling about in a senseless manner. Dr. Clemens observed that the Cecropia moth was similarly affected after losing its antennæ. The Manclibles (Fig. 37) are inserted on each side of the mouth-opening. They usually consist of but a single joint, Fig. 37. representing probably the basal part of the idéal limb. This part, however, is often subdivided by two longitudinal furrows into three parts, each ending in a “tooth” of unequal size for tearing and cutting the food. This tripartite form of the man- dibles, to whicli attention lias been called by Mr. Scudder, is more fully carried out in the maxilla, where each portion is highly specialized. The mandibles vary greatly in form and size. The two cutting edges are usually opposed to each other, or frequently overlap in the carnivorous forms. Their base is often concealed by the clypeus and labrum. Their motion is transverse, being the reverse of the motion of the jaws of Ver- tebrates. The Maxillœ (Figs. 38 &, 39) are a Fig. 38. much more complicated organs than the mandibles. Fig. 39. They are Fig. 37. Different forms of mandibles. A, mandible of Cicindda purpurea; U. Phyiloptera, a green grasshopper; C, Lïbellula trimaculata ; D, Vespa mandata, or paper-making Wasp ; E, “ rostrum ” or jointed sucker of the Bed-bug, Cimex lectu- larius, consisting of mandibles, maxillæ, and labium; F, proboscis, or sucker, of a Mosquito, Culex, in which the mandibles are long and bristle-like.— Front Sanbom. G, mandible of Amphizoa ; H, mandible of Acratusf a genus of Cockchafers. — Front Horn. Fig. 38. a, mentum and labial palpi ; 6, one maxilla, with its palpus, of Acra• tus. — Front Horn. Fig. 39. Maxilla of Amphizoa, with the two lobes (stipes and lacinia), and the palpifer bearing the four-jointed palpus. — Front Horn.28 THE CL ASS OF INSECTS. înserteci en the under side of the head and just behind the mouth. The maxilla consists of a basal joint, or car do, beyond which it is subdivided into three lobes, the stipes, or footstalk ; the or palpus-bearer ; and the lacinia, or blade. The stipes forms the outer and main division of the organ. The lacinia is more membranaceous than the other parts, and its upper surface is covered with fine hairs, and forms a great part of the side of the mouth. It is divided into two lobes, the superior of which is called the g aléa, or helmet, which is often a thick double-jointed organ edged with stiff hairs, and is used as a palpus in the Orthoptera and many Coleoptera. The inferior lobe is attached to the internai angle of the lacinia. It terminâtes in a stiff minute claw, and is densely covered with stout hairs. The maxillary palpi are long, slender, one to four-jointed organs. In Perla I hâve found that botli pairs of palpi bear organs probably of smell. The maxillæ vary greatly in the different groups. Their office is to seize the food and retain it within the mouth, and also to aid the mandibles in comminuting it before it is swallowed. This function reminds us of that of the tongue of vertebrate animais. The labium, or second maxillæ (Fig. 40), is placed in front of the gula, which forms the under part of the head, and is bounded on each side by the genœ, or clieeks, and posteriorly by the occiput. The genæ are bounded laterally by the epicranium and the under side of the eyes. In front are Fig. 4°. situated the basal parts of the labium, or second maxillæ, which embraces the submentum and mentum (or labium proper). The labial palpi are inserted into the mentum, but often the latter piece is differentiated into two, the anterior of which takes the name of palpiger, called by Dr. Leconte (Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections) the ligula, and from which the palpi originate. The ligula is the front edge of the labium, being the piece forming the under lip. It is often a fleshy organ, its inner surface being continuous Fig. 40. Ligula and labial palpi of Amphizoa, an aquatic beetle. It is quadrate and without paraglossæ ; o, mentum of the same, being deeply incised, and with a tooth at the bottom of the excavation.—From Horn.THE APPENDAGES OF THE HE AD. 29 with the soft membrane of the mouth. In the Bees, it is enor- mously developed and covered with soft hairs. It is often confounded with the palpiger. In Hydrous it is divided into two lobes. In most of the Carabidce and Bees it is divided into three lobes, the two outer ones forming the paraglossœ (Fig. 41m), and acting as feelers, while the middle, usually much longer, forms the lingua, or tongue, being the continuation of the ligula. In the bees, where the ligula is greatly developed, it performs the part of the tongue in Vertebrates, and aids the max- illæ in collecting nectar and pollen. The roof of the mouth is formed by the labrum and the epipharynx (Fig. 42 c), a small fleshy tubercle concealed beneath the labrum. It is seen in the bees on turning up the labrum. It probably corresponds to the “labellum” of Schiôdte. The labrum (Fig. 41c) is usually transverse and situated in front of the dypeus (Fig. 416). The shield-like dypeus is the broad, visor-like, square piece forming usually the front of the head. Behind it is the dypeus poster ior, or supra-clypeus, a subdivision of the clypeus, and especially observable in the Hymenoptera. The epicranium forms a large part of the head ; it is bounded posteriorly by the occiput, on the sides by the eyes, and in front by the clypeus, and though usually described as a single piece, is really composed of several. The ocelli often appear to be situated upon it, though in reality they are placed upon a distinct piece or pièces. The u epicrànial suture” is the line of junction of the two uproceplialic lobes” (Huxley). Fig. 41. Fig. 41. Front view of the head of a bee, Anthcphora. a, compound eyes ; c, three simple eyes, situated upon the epicranium; b, clypeus; e, labrum; d, an- tennæ;/, mandibles; i, maxillæ; h, maxillary palpi; l, palpifer; j, labial palpi; m, paraglossæ ; k, ligula.—Frorn Newport. 3*so THE CLASS OF INSECTS (These lobes will be explained farther on when speaking of their development in the embryo.) Behind the epicra- thus forming a “neck.” It will be seen beyond, that the labrum and clypeus are in the embryo developed from a *‘tongue-like process whose inferior part eventually becomes the labrum, wliile superiorly it sends a triangular process (the rudiment of the clypeus) into the interval between the proce- phalic lobes.” * This part. (i. e. the clypeus and labrum) is the most anterior part of the head, and in the embryo, as in the adult, is normally situated in front of the ocelli, but is not to be compared with the “ anal plate,” or eleventh tergite, of the larva, or with the telson of the scorpion, as Huxley f supposes. Fig. 42. Side view of the front part of the head, together with the mouth- parts of the Humble-bee (Bombus). «, clypeus covered with hairs; fc, labrum; c, the fleshy epipharynx partially concealed by the base of the mandibles (cl); e, lacinia, or blade of the maxillæ, with their two-jointed palpi (/) at the base ; j, the labium to which is appended the ligula (g); below are the labial palpi; h, the two basal joints, being greatly enlarged; £, the compound eyes.— Original. * These lobes are folded back upon the top of the base of the head, and they seem to form the tergal portion of the antennary ring, to which they respectively belong, and do not seem to us to be the sternal portion, as suggested by Huxley, for they are apparently developed in front of the mouth-opening, and form the roof of the mouth. t “ Lastly, there are certain parts developed singly in the médian line in the Artic- ulata. Of this nature are the frontal spines of Crustacea, their telson, and the sting Fig. 42. nium is the occiput, or base of the head. It belongs to the la- bial, or second max- illary segment, and helps to form a com- plété ring, articulât- ing with the thorax. It is perforated by a foramen to afford a connection between the interior of the head and thorax. It is sometimes, as in many Coleoptera, Or- thoptera, and Hernip- tera, elongated be- hind and constricted,THE MUSCULAR SYSTEM. 31 In describing Insects the vert ex, or crown, of the head is the highest part ; and the front is the part usually in front of the insertion of the antennæ. The Muscular System lies just beneath, and is continuons with the integument. It consists of numerous “distinct isola- ted straight fibres, which are not gathered into bundles united by common tendons, or covered by aponeuroses [or tendinous sheaths] to form distinct muscles, as in the Vertebrata, but remain separate from each other, and only in some instances are united at one extremity by tendons.” (Newport.) These minute fibres form layers, which Newport regards as separate muscles. “Each fibre is composed of a great number of very minute fibrillæ, or fasciculi of fibrillæ,” and has been observed by Wagner and Newport to be often striated as in Vertebrates. The muscular System is simplest in the lower insects and the larvæ of the higher forms, and is more complex in the head than elsewhere, and more complex in the thorax than in the abdomen. These minute muscles are exceedingly numerous. u Lyonnet, in his immortal work on the anatomy of the larva of Cossus ligniperda, found two liundred and twenty-eight dis- tinct muscles in the head alone, and, by enumerating the fibres in the layers of the different segments, reckoned 1,647 for the body, and 2,118 for the internai organs, thus making together 3,993 muscles in a single larva. In the larva of Sphinx ligus- tri we hâve found the muscles equally numerous with those discovered by Lyonnet in the Cossus.” (Newport.) The muscular System corresponds to the jointed structure of insects, as do the other internai Systems of organs. Of the muscles belonging to a single ring, some stretch from the front edge of one segment to the front edge of the next, and others of the Scorpion, whose mode of development appears to be precisely similar to that of a telson. In the same category we must rank the labrum in front of the mouth, which in the Crustacea (at least) appears to be developed from the sternum of the antennary, or third somite, the metastoma (or so called labium, or lingua) of Crustacea, and the lingua of Insecta, behind the oral aperture. “ However much these appendages may occasionally simulate, or play the part of appendages, it is important to remember, that, morphologically, they are of a very different nature, and that the confusing them with true appendages must tend completely to obscure the beautiful relations which obtain among the dif- ferent classes of the Articulata”—Huxley, Linnæan Transactions, vol. xxii. London.32 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. to the hinder edge ; there are also sets of dorsal and ventral muscles going in an oblique or vertical course. The muscle» are either colorless and transparent, or yellowish white ; and of a soft, almost gelatinous consistence. In form they are simply fiat and thin, straight, band-like, or pyramidal, barrel or feather-shaped. They act variously as rotators, elevators, depressors, retractors, protrusors, Jlëxors, and extensors. The muscular power of insects is enormous. The Flea will leap two hundred times its own height. Certain beetles can support enormous weights. Newport cites the case of Geo- trupes stercorarius which is “able to sustain and escape from beneath a pressure of from twenty to thirty ounces, a prodi- gious weight when it is remembered that the insect itself doe» not weigh even so many grains.” Some beetles hâve been known to gnaw through lead-pipes, and the Stag-beetle of Europe, Lucanus cervus, has, as stated by Mr. Stephensr gnawed k‘a hole an inch in diameter through the side of an iron canister in which it was confined.” “The motions of the insect in walking as in flying are dépendent, in the perfect individual, entirely upon the thoracie segments, but in the larva chiefly upon the abdominal. Al- though the number of legs in the former is always six, and in the latter sometimes so many as twenty-two, progression i» simple and easy. Millier states (Eléments of Physiology, p. 970, Translation) that on watching insects that move slowly he has distinctly perceived that three legs are always moved at one time, being advanced and put to the ground while the other three propel the body forwards. In perfect insects, those moved simultaneously are the fore and hind feet on one side, and the intermediate foot on the opposite ; and afterwards the fore and hind feet on that side, and the middle one on the other, so that, he remarks, in two steps the whole of the legs are in motion. A similar uniformity of motion takes place in the larva, although the whole anterior part of the body is elevated and carried forwards at regular distances, the steps of the insect being almost entirely performed by the ‘false,’ or abdominal legs.” “In flight the motions dépend upon the meso- and meta- thoracie segments conjointly, or entirely upon the former. TheTHE NERVOUS SYSTEM. 33 sternal, episternal, and epimeral pièces, freely articulated together, correspond in fonction with the sternum, the ribs, and the clavicles of birds.* The thorax is expanded and con- tracted at each motion of the wings, as in birds and other ani- mais, and becomes fixed at each increased effort as a fulcrum or point of résistance upon which the great muscles of the wings are to act, thus identifying this part of the body in function as in structure with that of other ani- mais.” (Newport.) The Nervous System. In its simplest form the nervous System consists of two longitudinal cords, each with a swelling (nerve-knot, or ganglion,) corresponding to each segment (Fig. 43). This cord lies on the ventral side of the body, but in the head it passes upwards, sending a filament from each side to surround the œsoph- agus.f As in the Vertebrates, the nervous cord of insects is composed of two distinct columns Fi&* of fibres placed one upon the other. uThe under or externat column, which is nearest to the exterior of the body, is that in which the ganglia, or enlargements, are situated. The upper one, or that which is internai and nearest to the viscera, is entirely without ganglia, and passes directly over the ganglia of the under column without forming part of them, but in verj * Bennet on the Anatomy of the Thorax in Insects, and its Function during' Flight. Zoôlogical Journal, vol. i, p. 394. |The brain of insects is formed of several pairs of ganglia, corresponding^ probably, to the number of primitive segments composing the head. The nervous cord is thus, in the head, massed togethor and compacted to form a brain. Fig. 43. Nervous System of Corydalus cornutus. “ cerebrum ; ” 6, “cere- brellum ; ” c, thoracic ganglia, which distribute a nerve to each leg; d, eight pairs of abdominal ganglia. The dotted lines represent the wings. — From Leidy. 334 THE CL ASS OF INSECTS. close approximation to them.” Newport also believes that the ganglionless upper, or internai, column of fibres is analogous to the motor column of Vertebrata, while the external, or under one, corresponds to the sensitive column, thus representing the cérébro-spinal System of the Vertebrata. From each pair of ganglia are distributed spécial nerves to the various organs. In tlie larva of Sphinx the normal num- ber of double ganglia is thirteen, and the nervous cord of the Neuroptera and other lowly organized and attenuated forms of insects corresponds in the main to this number. In the adult insect, especially in the Coleoptera, Diptera, Lepidoptera, and Hymenoptera, the three tlioracic ganglia are fused together, following the fusion and general lieadwise development of the segments of the tégument. Besides the central nervous cord, eorresponding to the spinal cord of the Vertebrates, there is a vagus, or viscéral nerve, representing the sympathetic nerve of higher animais. This nerve “avises, in the larva, from the anterior part of the cerebrum, and, forming a ganglion on the upper surface of the pharynx, always passes backward heneath the brain, along the middle line of the œsophagus.” In its microscopie structure the nervous cord, like that of Vertebrata, consista of a central u gray ” substance, and an outer or periph- cral part, the “wliite” substance. In the embryo the ganglia are very large and close together, the commissures, or connecting filaments being very short, and small in proportion. Organs of Nutrition. These consist of the alimentary canal and its appendages, or accessory glands (Fig. 44). We hâve already treated of the external appendages (mouth-parts) which préparé the food for digestion. The simplest forai of the alimentary canal is that of a straight tube. In the larva of Stylops and the sedentary young of Bees, it ends in a blind sac, as they live on liquid food and expel no solid excrétions. When well developed, as in the adult insect, it becomes a long convoluted thick muscular tube, subdivided into different parts which perforai different functions and hâve distinct names, taken from analogous organs in the vertebrate animais. This digestive tube is composed of three coats, the outer, or péri-ORGANS OF NUTRITION. 35 toneal ; the middle, or muscular ; and the inner, or mucous. The mucous coat is variously modified, being plaited or folded ; or, as in the Orthoptera and camivorous Goleoptera, it is solidified and covered with rows of strong horny teeth, forming a sort of gizzard. The alimentary canal is held in place by retractor muscles, but principally by exceedingly numerous branches of the main tracheæ. This canal (Fig. 45) is subdivided into the mouth and pha- rynx, the œsophagus, supplementary to which is the crop, or 44 sucking stomach” of Diptera, Lepîdoptera, and Hymenoptera ; the proventriculus, or gizzard ; the rentriculus, or true stoinach, and the intestine, which consists of the ileum, or short intes- Fig. 44. Anatomy of Sphinx ligustri. m, i, q, the nervous cord resting on the floor of the body ; at c, the ganglia form a brain-like organ, much larger than the ganglia of the thorax (m) and abdomen {q). From the brain is sent off the subœsophageal nerve which surrounds the gullet into which the food is conveyed by the maxillæ, or spiral tongue (a), which, when at rest, is rolled up between the vabial palpi (b). From the nervous cord is also thrown off a pair of nerves to each pair of legs {as at n, o, p) and a branch, d, is sent off from above, distributing nerves to the muscles of flight. The heart, or dorsal vessel (c,/), lies just beneath the médian line of the body, and is retained in place by muscular bands (as at /) as well as by small trachéal branches. The alimentary canal (htjt g), forms a straight tube in the head and thorax; h, the crop, or sucking stomach, which opens into the œsophagus ; j, the true, chyle- forming stomach, which contracts posteriorly, and then dilates near its anal outlet into a cloaca (indicated at g, but not distinctly, as it is concealed by the numerous urinary vessels). The urinary vessels also indicated at g, form long tubes (which correspond to the kidneys of Vertebrates), opening into the pyloric end of the stomach. The position of the testes (k) is the same as that of the ovary, and the dotted line l shows the course of the efferent duct (vas deferens) and also of the oviduct of the female. The figure represents a longitudinal section of the insect, the legs and ends of the antennæ having been removed.—From Newport.36 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. tine, and the colon and rectum. The latter part, as well as the crop and proventriculus, are sometimes absent. Of the appendages of the canal, the first are the salivary glands, which are usually long simple tubes, whieh in the larva, ac- cording to Newport, form the silk vessels. They u empty themselves by a single duct through the spinneret on the floor (labium) of the mouth.” In the Ant-lion (Myrméleon) the silk is spun from “a slender telescopic- like spinneret, placed at the extremity of its body,” and Westwood also States that the larva of Chrysopa spins a cocoon “from the spinneret, at the extremity of the body.” These silk glands when taken out of the larva, just as it is about ready to transform, are readily prepared as “gut” for fish-lines, etc., by drying on a board. In the Bees these glands are largely de- veloped to produce a sufficient amount of salivary fluid to moisten the dry pollen of Fig. 45. flowers, before it enters the œsophagus. “Bee-bread” consists of pollen thus moistened and kneaded by the insect. The Honey-bee also dissolves, by the aid of the salivary fluid, the wax used in making its cells. Newport believes this fluid is alkaline, and forms a solvent for the other- wise brittle wax, as he has seen this insect “reduce the per- fectly transparent thin white scales of newly secreted wax to a pasty or soapy consistence, by kneading it between its man- dibles, and mixing it with a fluid from its mouth, before apply- ing it to assist in the formation of part of a new cell.” Insects hâve no true liver; its functions being performed “ by the walls of the stomach, the internai tunic of which is composed of closely-aggregated hepatic cells.” (Siebold.) In the Spiders and Scorpions, liowever, there is a liver distinct from the digestive canal. In the Spiders it is very large, enveloping most of the other viscera. Fig. 45. Alimentary tube of Corydalus cornutus. a, œsophagus; 5, proven- triculus; c, ventriculus; d, large intestine; e, urinary tubes; /, cæcum; g, testis or ovarv.— From Leidy.THE CIRCULATORY SYSTEM. ' 37 Siebold States that in some insects the ileum has glandular appendages whose product is perhaps analogous to the pancre- aticjluid. In the larva of insects is found the corpus adiposum, or fat-body, in the form of large lobes of fat-cells which spread through the intervals of the viscera in the general cavity of the body. It is interpenetrated and retained in place by numerous tracheæ. The Circulatory System. The vascular, or circulatory, System is not a closed sac as in the Worms and Yertebrates. The organs of circulation consist of a contractile, articulated dorsal vessel, or so-called “heart,” which terminâtes in a oephalic aorta. The dorsal vessel receives the venous current through the latéral valvular openings and pumps the blood into its prolongation or cephalic aorta, whence it escapes, traversing the body in ail directions, in regular currents, which do not hâve, however, vascular walls. “In this way, it pénétrâtes the antennæ, the extremities, the wings, and the other appendages of the body, by arterial currents, and is returned by those of a venous nature. Ail the venous currents empty into two latéral ones, running towards the posterior extremity of the body, and which enter, through latéral orifices, the dorsal vessel.” (Siebold.) “The blood of the Insecta is üsually a colorless liquid, though sometimes 3^ellowish, but rarely red. In this liquid are suspended a few very small, oval, or spheroidal corpuscles, which are al way s colorless, hâve a granular aspect, and are sometimes nucleated. “The dorsal vessel, which is constricted at regular intervals, is always situated on the médian line of the abdomen, being attached to the dorsal wall of its segments by several trian- gular muscles whose apices point outwards. Its walls contain both longitudinal and. transverse fibres, and, externally, are covered by a thin peritoneal tunic. Internally, it is lined by another very fine membrane, which, at the points of these con- strictions, forms valvular folds, so that the organ is divided into as many chambers as there are constrictions. Each of these chambers has, at the anterior extremity on each side, a valvular orifice which can be inwardly closed. The returning38 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. blood is accumulated about the heart and enters into it during the diastole of each of its chambers, through the latéral orifices (Fig. 461). It then passes, by the regularly successive contractions of the heart, from behind forwards into the aorta,. which is only a prolongation of the anterior chamber. This aorta consists of a simple, small vessel, situated on the dorsal surface of the thorax (Fig. 44 e), and extending even to the cephalic ganglion, where it either ends in an open extremity, or divides into several short branches which terminate in a like manner. The length of the dorsal vessel dépends, in ail the three States of insects, upon that of the abdomen. The number of its chambers is very variable, but is, most usually, eight. “The blood, after leaving the aorta, traverses the body in currents which are also extravascular, and in this way bathe& ail the organs. The newly-prepared nutritive fluid passes through the walls of the digestive canal in which it is found, into the viscéral cavity, and then ce directly into the blood. Latterly, this extravascular circulation has been called in question, but its presence may be easily and directly observed Fig. 46. Part of the dorsal vessel or heart of Lucanus cervus ; a, the posterior chambers (the anterior chambers are covered by a part of the ligaments which hold the heart in place), i, the auriculo-ventricular openings ; g, g, the latéral mus- cles flxed by the prolongations h, h, to the upper side of the abdomen.—-From Str tus Durckheim. Fig. 47. Interior of the dorsal vessel; a, the inner walls with their circular fleshy fibres; c, the auriculo-ventricular opening; with its semilunar valve (c), in front of which is d, the interventricular valvule. — From Straus Durckheim.THE CIRCULATORY SYSTEM. 39 with very many perfect Insecta and their larvæ. The vascular walls, supposed to hâve been seen at certain points, are, un- doubtedly, the resuit of some errer of observation or interpré- tation. This is also true of the pulsatile organs supposed to hâve been observed in the legs of many water-bugs, and which were thought to affect the circulation.” Blanchard and Agassiz believe in a “ peritracheal circula- tion,” and other observers agréé that the course of the circula- tion is along the trachc æ, L e. that the blood circulâtes in the space between the loose peritoneal envelope and the trachea itself. Professor H. J. Clark objects to this view that the blood disks are too large to pass through such an exceedingly minute space as the distance between the trachea and its peritoneal wall. McLeod has proved that such a circulation does not exist. Newport tliinks that there are actual blood vessels distrib- uted from the heart and upassing transversely across the dorsal surface of each segment in the pupa of Sphinx. If they be not vessels distributed from the heart, it is a some- what curious circumstance that the whole of the blood should be first sent to the head of the insect, and the viscera of the abdominal région be nourished only by the returning blood, which has in part passed the round of the circulation.” Newport also describes in Sphinx the supra-spinal, or great ventral vessel which lies in the abdomen just over the nervous cord, and which is also found in the Scorpion and Centipede. He believes “this vessel to be the chief means of returning the blood from the middle and inferior portion of the body to the posterior extremity of the dorsal vessel or heart.” He strongly suspects that anteriorly this great ventral vessel is connected with the aorta. The circulation of Insects, there- fore, is probably as much a closed one as in the Myriapods, for he states that' the “blood certainly flows in distinct vessels, at least in some parts of the body in perfect insects, and that vessels exist even in the larva.” Observations on the vascular System are exceedingly difïicult from the délicate structure of the vessels, and the subject needs renewed observations to settle these disputed points. The blood is forced through the vessel into the body by regu- lar pulsations. Herold counted thirty to forty in a minute in a40 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. full-grown Caterpillar ; we hâve counted about sixty a minute in thé recently hatched larva of Diplax. During excitement, the number of pulsations increases in rapidity. Newport found the pulsations in a bee, Anthopliora, when quiet, to be eighty a minute : but when “the insects were quite lively, and had been exposed to tlie sun for an hour or two, the number of pulsa- tions amounted to one hundred and fort}-.” He found that the number of pulsations decreased after each moult of the larva of Sphinx ligustri, but increased in force; when it was full grown and had ceased feeding it was thirty. 4 4 After it had passed into the pupa state the number fell to twenty-two, and afterwards to ten or twelve, and, during the period of hibernation, it almost entirely ceases ; but in the per- fect insect it rose from forty-one to fiffcy, and when excited by flight around the room it was from one hundred and ten to one hundred and thhrty-nine.” ^ Organs of Respiration. Ail insects breathe air, or, when they live in the water, respire, by means of brancliiæ, the air mixed mechanically with water. Respiration is carried on by an intricate System of tubes (pul- monary tracheæ) which open by pores (spiracles or stigmata) in the sides of the body ; or, as in aquatic insects, by brancliiæ, or gill-like flattened expan- sions of the body-wall penetrated by tracheæ (branchial tracheæ). There are normally eleven spiracles, or breathing-holes (Fig. 48), on each side of the body ; each consisting of an oval horny ring situated in the peritreme and closed by a valve, which guards Within tins valve is a chamber closed within by another valve which covers the entrance into the tracheæ. The air-tube itself (Fig. 50) consists of “an extemal Fig. 48. Larva of the Humble-bee just beginning to change to a pnpa, showing ten pairs of stigmata In the adnlt bee, only the third pair is apparent, the remaining pairs being concealed from view, or in part aborted. In most insects there are usually only nine pairs of stigmata.—Original.ORGANS OF RESPIRATION. 41 Fig. 49. Fig. 50. serous, and an internai mucous membrane, inclosing between them a spirally convoluted fibre, thus giving great strength .and flexibility to the tube/’ Nearly ail the air enters through the thoracic and first abdominal spiracles, so that on pinching most insects on the thorax they can be easily deprived of breath and killed. “ In some aqnatic larvæ such as those of Dyticidœ, Eristalis < (Fig. 51, pupa), and Epliydra, and also in some perfect insects, as in Nepa and Ranatra, the parts sup- porting the stigmata are prolonged into slen- der tubes, through which the insect, on rising to the surface, breathes the atmospheric air. Agrion (Fig. 52) affords a good instance of branchiæ or gill-like expansions of the crust, or skin. It is supposed that these false gills, or branchiæ, “absorb the air from the water, and convey it by the minute ramifications of the trachéal ves- sels, with which they are abun- dantly supplied, and which ter- Fig. 5i. minate in single trunks, into the main tracheæ, to be distributed over the whole body, as in insects which live in the open atmosphère.” (Newport.) Of branchiæ there are three kinds. The first, as in the larvæ and pupæ of Gnats, consist of slender fila- ments arranged in tufts arising from a single stem. Fis-52* In the larva of Gyrinus and the aquatic Caterpillar of a moth, Fig. 49. Chamber leading into the trachea; o, a, external valve protecting the outer opening of the stigma, or hreathing hole ; b, c, c, inner and more complicated valve closing the entrance into the trachea (l, k); m, conical occlusor muscle closing the inner orifice. — From Straus Durckheim. Fig. 50. Portion of a trachea divested of its peritoneal envelope. a, spirally convoluted fibre, closely wound around the trachea, as at e ; c, origin of a secondary trachéal branch.— From Straus Durckheim. Fig. 52. One of the three gill-like appendages to the abdomen of the larva and pupa of Agrion enlarged, consisting of a broad leaf-like expansion, permeated by tracheæ which take up by endosmosis the air contained in water. — Original. 4*42 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. Hydrocampa stratiolata, they forai short stiff bristles placedi along the side of the body. Agrion and Ephemera, in their larval stages, afford the second kind of branchiæ, and Lïbellula the third kind, or internai gill, situated in the colon. The Mosquito breathes both by branchiæ which form large club- sliaped organs, and by latéral filaments. In those insects that fly, most of the tracheæ are often dilated into air-vesicles, so that by filling and emptying them of air the insect can change its spécifie gravity. That their use is also to lighten the body is shown by their presence in the heavy mandibles and head of the male of Luccmus cervus. In the adult Humble-bee there are two very large vesicles at the base of the abdomen. These vesicles are not found in the larvæ,. or in the adult forais of creeping insects. The act of respiration consists in the alternate dilation and contraction of the abdominal segments, the air entering the body chiefly at the thoracic spiracles. As in the Vertebrates the frequency of the acts of breathing increases after exertion. “When an insect is preparing itself for fliglit, the act of res- piration resembles that of birds under similar circumstances. At the moment of elevating its elytra and expanding its wings, which are, indeed, acts of respiration, the anterior pairs of spiracles are opened, and the air rushing into them is extended over the whole body, which, by the expansion of the air-bags, is enlarged in bulk, and rendered of less spécifie gravity ; so that when the spiracles are closed at the instant the insect endeavors to make the first stroke with and raise itself upon its wings, it is enabled to lise in the air, and sustain a long and powerful flight with but little muscular exertion. In the pupa and larva, State respiration is performed more equally by ail the spiracles, and less especially by the thoracic ones.” During hibernation the act of breathing, like the circulation of the blood, almost entirely ceases, and the heat of the body is greatly lowered. Indeed Newport lias shown that the devel- opment of heat in Insects, just as in Vertebrates, dépends on the “quantity and activity of respiration, and the volume and velocity of the circulation.” The Humble-bee, according to Newport, pôssesses the voluntary power of generating heat by breathing faster. He says, confirming Huber’s observations,.ORGANS OF SECRETION. 43 “the manner in which the bee performs her incubatory office is by placing herself upon the cell of a nymph (pupa) that is soon to be developed, and then beginning to respire at first yery gradually. In a short time the respirations become more and more frequent, until at length they are increased to one hundred and twenty, or one hundred and thirty per minute. The body of the insect soon becomes of a high température, and, on close inspection, is often found to be bathed with per- spiration. When this is the case the température of the insect soon becomes reduced, and the insect leaves the cell, and an- other bee almost immediately takes her place. When respira- tion is performed less violently, and consequently less heat is evolved, the same bee will often continue on a cell for many hours in succession. This extreme amount of heat was evolved entirely by an act of the will in accelerating the respiratory ef- forts, a strong indication of the relation which subsists between the function of respiration and the development of animal heat.” Organs of Sécrétion. The urinary vessels, or what is équivalent to the kidneys of the higher animais, consist in In- sects of several long tubes which empty by one or two common secretory ducts into the posterior or “pyloric” extremity of the stomach. There are also odoriferous glands, analogous to the cutaneous glands of vertebrates. The liquid poured out is usually offensive, and it is used as a means of defence. The Bees, Wasps, Gall-flies, etc., and Scorpions, hâve a poison-sac (Fig. 54 smaller than the nearest species or varieties of the Moluccas ; 3. In the Moluccas tliemselves the species of Amboyna are larg- est ; 4. The species of Celebes equal or even surpass in size those of Amboyna ; 5. The species and varieties of Celebes possess a striking character in the form of the anterior wings, differing from that of the allied species and varieties of ail the surrounding islands ; 6. Tailed species in India or the Indian région become tailless as they spread eastward through tlie archipelago.” Variety breeding. Varieties may be produced artificially ; *hus negro varieties of insects may be raised “from parents76 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. more or less tainted with melanism, and according to Knaggs, there is a “frequent récurrence of individuals wanting a hind wing, which may be noticed even at large in Macaria notata” “Few species are liable to the same extent of variation, and many apparently to none at ail.” Certain species vary “ac- cording as thev may hâve reproduced, génération after gén- ération, on a chalky, peaty, gravelly, or other soil.” Food also exerts an influence in inducing variation, according as cater- piilars of the same species feed on different plants ; this occurs most commonly in the Micro-lepidoptera. (Knaggs, in the Entomologiste Monthly Magazine, London.) Introduced species of insects, like those of plants, oflten thrive more vigorouslv than the native forms. This is instanced by native insects which abound in unusual numbers in newly eleared districts where the former presence of forests and their natural foes kept them under. The Potato-beetle, Can- ker-worm, and Clisiocampa must hâve lived former ty in mod- erate numbers on our native plants, where now countless hosts affect our introduced plants. Among species introduced from a foreign country we hâve onty to instance the Hessian Fly, the Wheat-midge, the Coddling-moth, the Clothes-moth, the Apple Bark-louse, and the Grain-weevil. Mr. W. T. Brig- ham informs us that some of the most abundant insects in the Hawaiian Islands are introduced species carried by vessels from Europe. Vanessa Antiopa, Pyrameis cardui, and P. Atalanta, so abundant in this country, are supposed to be intro- duced butterflies. Aphodius fimetarius, found by us living in dung on Mt. Washington, is one of our most common beetles, and the Asparagus-beetle, introduced from Europe a few years since, is common in gardens in Eastern New York, while Mr. Walsh lias recorded the appearance of the European Gooseberry Saw-Fly, which ravages the Gooseberry and Currant. Pieris rcipæ, the Cabbage-butterfly, introduced from Europe into Quebec about 1859, soon became abundant within a circle of forty miles radius about that city, and lias even spread into Maine and Vermont along the railroads leading from Quebec. Tnsect Years. There are insect j-ears as well as “apple years,” seasons when insects most abound. Every collector knows that there are certain years when a particular species ofGEOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION. 77 insect is unusually common. The Army-worm, Leucania uni- puncta, swarms in countless numbers in a summer following a dry and warm spring. After a cold and rainy spring, insects are less abundant. Mr. F. Smith remarks that in England the summer and autumn of 1860 were unusually wet, which dis- abled the bees, wasps, and fossorial hymenoptera generally, in building their nests. We know how ants are hindered from building their nests by rain, and in a very rainy season num- bers probably die. A succession of rainy seasons caused the Andrenæ, or Spring bees, to disappear from the vicinity of London. While a severe winter, if the cold be continuous, is not injurions to insects, mild periods in winter, when it is warm enough to rouse them from torpidity, are as fatal to insects as to végétation, should severe cold immediately follow. Geological Distribution. The geological distribution of insects corresponds generally with that of other animais, though insect-remains are few in number, owing naturally to the diffîculty with winch their fragile forms are preserved in the rocks. Professor C. F. Hartt lias discovered near St. John, New Brunswick, the oldest insect-remains in the world. They occur in some plant-beds of the Upper Devonian forma- tion, and consist of six species of Neuroptera. Mr. Scudder, who has referred to them in vol. 1 of the American Naturalist, States that with the exception of one or two Ephemeridæ, or May-flies, they mostly represent families which are now extinct. He describes a gigantic May-fly, Platephemera antiqua (PL 1, fig. 3) ; Lithentomum Harttii (PI. 1, fig. 5) ; Homothetus fossi- lis (PI. l,fig. 7) ; and Xenoneura antiquorum which is supposed to bear a stridulating organ like that of the Grasshoppers, so that he uis inclined to believe there were chirping Neu- roptera in those days.” Ascending to the Carboniferous rocks, insect-remains appear more abundant. At Morris, Illinois, hâve been collected some remarkable forms. Among them are Miamia Bronsonii Dana (PL 1, fig. 1), allied to the White Ants and Hemeristia occi- dentalis Dana, allied to Hemerobius and Chrysopa. From the same locality Mr. Harper has described Arthrolycosa antiqua (Fig. 68), a singular form with a jointed abdomen.78 THE CLASS OF INSECTS In the Coal-beds of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, sev- eral interesting Myriopodous, Neuropterous and Orthopterous insects hâve been found ; among them a Cockroach, Arcliimulacris Acadica (PL 1,* fi g. 2). In Europe, Car- ( boniferous insects hâve been discovered at Wettin, Saarbrück, etc. The insects from these two formations show a tendency to assume gigantic and strange shapes. They are also compré- hensive types, combining the characters of different families and even different suborders. The most re- markable instance is the Eugereon Boeckingii Dohrn, from the Coal Formation of Germany. It has been referred by Dr. Hagen, with some doubt, to the Hemiptera, from its long im- mense rostrum into which ail the mouth-parts are produced, the labium ensheathing them as usual in the Hemiptera. Its fore- legs are large and raptorial ; but the filiform many-jointed an- tennæ, and the net-veined wings are Neuropterous characters. Hence Dohrn considers it as a comprehensive type uniting Fig. 68. * EXPLANATION OF PLATE 1. Fig. 1. Miamin Bronsonii. A Neuropterous insect found in iron-stone concré- tions in the Carboniferous beds at Morris, Illinois. The figure is magnified one- third, and has ail its parts restored ; the dotted lines indicate the parts not existing on the stone. Reduced from a figure in the Memoirs of the Boston Society of Nat- ural History, Vol. I. Fig. 2. Archimulacris Acadica. Wing of a Cockroach observed by Mr. Barnes in the coal-formation of Nova Scotia. Fig. 3. Platephemera antiqua. A gigantic May-fly obtained by Mr. Hartt in the Devonian rocks of New Brunswick. Fig. 4. Xylobius sigillariœ. The Myriopod (or Gally-worm) found in the coal- formation of Nova Scotia, by J. W. Dawson. Copied from a figure in Dr. Dawson’s Air-breathers of the Coal-period. Magnified. Fig. 5. Lithentomum Hartii. A Neuropterous insect, the specimen first dis- covered by Mr. Hartt in the Devonian rocks of New Brunswick. This fossil, and those accompanying it, are the oldest insect-remains in the world. Fig. 6. Three facets from the eve of an insect, considered by Dr. Dawson a Dragon-fly. It was found in coprolites of reptiles in the rocks containing the My- riopod, represented in Fig. 4. Copied from Dr. Dawson’s figure, greatly magnified. Fig. 7. Homothetus fossilis. A Neuropterous insect from the Devonian rocks of New Brunswick ; it was discovered by Mr. Hartt. Fig. 8. Haplophlébium Barnesii. A curious Neuropterous insect, of large size, probably allied to our May-flies ; taken by Mr. Barnes from the coal of Cape Bre- ton. These figures, with the exception, of 1, 4, and 6, are of life size, and borrowed Æ’om the new édition of Dr. Dawson’s Acadian Geology.Plate 1. Fig. 1 Fig. 4. Fig. 6. Fig. 7. Fig. 8. FOSSIL INSECTSGEOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION. 79 the characters of the Neuroptera and Hemiptera. It is & large insect, spreading about two inches ; its body must hâve measured over an inch in length. In the Mesozoic rocks, the celebrated Solenhofen locality in B avaria is rich in Liassic insect-remains. Dr. Hagen (Ento- mologiste Annual, London, 1862) States that among the Solen- hofen fossils the Neuroptera and Orthoptera are most largely represented ; as out of four hundred and fifty species of insects, une hundred and fifty are Neuroptera, of winch one hundred and thirty-six are Dragon-flies, and besides “there is a Cory- dalus, one Chrysopa, a large Apochrysa, and a beautiful Nymphes. The last two généra, which do not seem very remote from Chrysopa, are now found only in the Southern Hemi- sphere, Nymphes is peculiarly an Australian genus.” The Lias of England is very rich in fossil insects, especially the Purbeck and Rhoetic Beds (see Brodie’s Work on Fos- rsil Insects and also Westwood in the Geological Journal, etc. Vol. X.). In the Trias, or New-Red Sandstone of the Connecticut Yalley, Professor Hitchcock has found numerous remains of the larva of an aquatic Coleopterous insect. The insects of the Tertiary formation more closely resemble those of the présent day. The most celebrated European locality is Œningen in Switzerland. According to Professor O. Heer, over five thousand specimens of fossil insects hâve been found at Œningen, comprising 844 species, of which 518 are Coleopterous. From ail Tertiary Europe there are 1,322 species, as follows : 166 Hymenoptera, 18 Lepidoptera, 166 Diptera, 660 Coleoptera, 217 Hemiptera, 39 Orthoptera, and 56 Neuroptera. “If we inquire to what insect-fauna of the présent period the Tertiary fauna is most analogous, we shall be surprised to find that most of the species belong to généra actually found in the old and the new world. The insect-fauna of Œningen con- tains 180 généra of this category, of which 114 belong to the Coleoptera. Of these last, two (Dineutes and Caryborus) re- main in Europe, while ail the others are now found living both in Europe and in America. The whole number of Coleopterous généra furnished by Œningen, and known to me, amount to80 THE CL ASS OF INSECTS. 158 ; those that are common to both hemispher.es forming thera more than two-thirds of the whole number, while of tlie actual Coleopterous fauna of Europe, according to the calculation of M. Lacordaire, there is only one-third. The généra found to-day in both parts of the world hâve then during the Tertiary epoch played a more important part than is the case now ; hence the knowledge of the character of the fauna is rendered more difficult. We find at Œningen but a very small number (five) of généra exclusively European seventeen are found to-day in Europe, in Asia, and in Africa, but not in America. For the most part they belong to the Mediterranean fauna (comprising eight généra) and give to the insect-iauna of Œningen a strong proportion of Mediterranean forms. In this fauna I only know of one exclusively Asiatic genus ; two are peculiar to Africa* and two others (Anoplites and Naupcictus) are American. “There are now living, however, in Europe certain généra, which, without being exclusively American, since they are found in Asia and in Africa, belong more peculiarly to America ; such are Belostomum, Hypselonotus, Diplonychus, Evagorus, Sten- opocla, Plecia, Caryborus, and Emeutes. . . . The généra peculiar to our fauna of Tertiary insects amount to forty-four, of whicli twenty-one belong to the Coleoptera ; among the Orthoptera. there is one, and six Hymenoptera, six Diptera, and elevem Hemiptera. They comprise 140 species.” (Heer.) An apparently still richer locality for Tertiary insects has- been discovered by Professor Denton west of the Rocky Moun- tains, near the junction of the White and Green Ri vers, Colo- rado. According to Mr. Scudder “between sixty and sevepty species of insects were brought home, representing nearly ail the different suborders ; about two-thirds of the species were Flies, — some of them the perfect insect, others the maggot-like larvæ,—but, in no instance, did both imago and larva of the same insect occur. The greater part of the beetles were quite small ; there were three or four kinds of Homoptera (allied to the tree-hoppers), Ants of two different généra, and a poorly preserved Moth. Perhaps a minute Thrips, belonging to a. group which has never been found fossil in any part of the world, is of the greatest interest.” He thus sums up wThat is known of American fossil insects*THE DISEASES OF INSECTS. 81 14 The species of fossil insects now known from North America, number eighty-one : six of these belong to tlie Devonian, nine to the Carboniferous, one to tlie Triassic, and sixty-five to the Tertiary epochs. The Hymenoptera, Homoptera, and Diptera occur only in the Tertiaries ; the same is true of the Lepidop- tera, if we exclude the Morris specimen, and of the Coleoptera, with one Triassic exception. The Ortlioptera and Myriopods are restricted to the Carboniferous, wliile the Neuroptera occur both in the Devonian and Carboniferous formations.” Mr Scudder describes from the Carboniferous formation of Nova Scotia, besides Xylobius sigillariœ Daws., four additional spe- cies (X. similis, fractus and Dawsoni, and Archiulus xylobio- ides, n. g. and sp.), forming the famity Archiulidœ. The Diseases of Insects hâve attracted but little atten- tion. They are so far as known mostly tlie resuit of tlie attacks of parasitic plants and animais, though épidémies are known to break out and carry off myriads of insects. Dr. Shimer gives an account of an épidémie among the Chinch bugs, which: “was at its maximum during the moist warm weatlier that fol- lowed the c<\d rains of June and the first jiart of July, 1865.’^ Species of microscopie plants luxuriate in infinitésimal for- ests within the alimentary canal of some wood-devouring insects,. and certain fungi attack those species which are exposed to - dampness, and already enfeebled by other causes. Among the* true entophyta, or parasitic plants, which do not liowever ordi- narily occasion the death of their liost, Professor Leidy describes-' Enterobryus elegans, E. spiralis, E. alternatus, Arthromitus cristatus, Cladophytum comatum, and Corynocladus rcidiatus, which live mostly attached to the mucous walls of the interior of the intestine of Juins marginatus and two other species of Juins, and Passcthis cornutus. Eccrina longa Leidy, lives in Polydesmus Virginiensis; and E. moniliformis Leidy in P. granulatus. But there are parasitic fungi that are largely destructive to their hosts. Such are Sphaeria and Isciria. “These fungi grow with great rapidity within the body of the animal they attack, not only at the expense of the nutritive fluids of the latter, but, after its death, ail the interior soft tissues appear 6$2 THE CL ASS OF INSECTS. to be convertecl into one or more aerial réceptacles of spores.” (Leidy.) These fungi, so often infesting caterpillars, are hence called “ Caterpillar fungi.” They fill tke whole body, distend- ing even the legs, and throw out long filaments, sometimes longer than the larva itself, giving a grotesque appearance to the insect. Leidy has found a species which is very common in the Seventeen-year Locust, Cicada septendecim. He found “among myriads of the imago between twelve and twenty specimens, which, though living, had the posterior third of the abdominal contents converted into a dry, powdery, ochreous- yellow, compact mass of sporuloid bodies.” He thinks this Cicada is very subject to the attacks of these fungi, and that the spores enter the anal and génital passages more readily than the mouth ; thus accounting for their development in the abdomen. The most formidable disease is the “ Muscardine” caused by a fungus, the Botrytus Bassiana of Balsamo. It is well known that this disease has greatly recluced the silk crop in Europe. Balbiani has detected the spores of this fungus in the eggs of Bombyx mori as well as in the different parts of the body of the insect in ail stages of growth. Extrême cleanliness and care against contagion must be observed in its prévention. Among plants a disease like Muscardine, due to the presence of a minute fungus (Mucor mellitophorus), fills the stomach of some insects, including the Honey-bee, with its colorless .spores, and greatly weakens those affeeted. Another fungus, JSporendonema muscœ, infests the common House-fly. Another Silk-worm disease called ‘4 Pebrine” carries off many :silk-worms. Whether it is of pathological or vegetable origin is not yet settled. There are also a few intestinal worms known to be para- sitic in insects. The well-known “Hair-worm” (Gordius) in its young state lives within the body of various insects in- cluding the Spiders. The tadpole-like young differs greatly from the parent, being short, sac-like, ending in a tail. Upon leaving the egg they work their way into the body of insects, &nd there live on the fatty substance of their hosts, wliere they undergo their metamorphosis into the adult liair-like worm, ^nd make their way to the pools of water in which they liveTHE DEFORMITIES OF INSECTS. 83 jand beget their species, and lay “millions of eggs connected together in long cords.” Leidy thus writes regarding tlie habits of a species which infests grasshoppers. “The number of Gordii in eachinsect varies fromone tofive, their length from three inches to a foot ; they occupy a position in the viscéral cavity, where they lie coiled among the viscera, and often extend from the end of the abdomen forward through the thorax even into the liead ; their bulk and weight are fre- quently greater than ail the soft parts, including the muscles, of their living habitation. Nevertheless, with this relatively immense mass of parasites, the insects jump about almost as freely as those not infested. “The worms are milk-white in color, and undivided at the extremities. The females are distended with ova, but I hâve never observed them extruded. When the bodies of Grass- hoppers, containing tliese entozoa, are broken and lain upon moist earth, the worms gradually creep out and pass below its surface.” Goureau States that Filaria, a somewhat similar worm, in- habits Hibernia brumata and Vanessa prorsa. (Ann. Ent. Soc. France.) Siebold describes Gordius subbifurcus which infests the Tloney-bee, especially the drones, though it is rather the work- ers, which frequent the pools where the Gordii live, that we would expect to find thus infested. Another entozoan is Mer- mis albicans of Siebold, which is a very slender whitish worm much like Gordius, and about five inches long. It is found in the drone of the honey-bee and in some other insects. Deformities of Insects, Numerous instances of supernume- rary legs and antennæ are recorded. The antennæ are some- times double, but more commonly the legs. “Of these As- muss lias collected eight examples, and it is remarkable that in six of them the parts on one side are treble.” Newport, from whom we hâve quoted, States that “the most remarkable ex- ample is that given by Lefebvre of Scarites Pyrachmon in which from a single coxa on the left side of the prosternum two tro- chanters originated. The anterior one, the proper trochanter, supported the true prothoracic leg ; while the posterior one, in lhe form of an oblong lanceolate body, attached to the base of84 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. the first, supported two additional legs equally well formed a», the true one.” The wings are often partially aborted and deformed ; this is especially noticeable in the wings of butterflies and moths. Mr. F. G. Sanborn lias described and figured a wing of a female of Libellula luctuosa Burm. (Fig. 69), in which. among other deformities “the ptero- ' Fig. 69. stigma is shorter and broader than that of the opposite wing, and is situated about one-eighth of an incli only from the nodus, only one cubital vein occurring between them, instead of fourteen as in the opposite wing.” (Proceed- ings of the Boston Society of Natural History, vol. xi, p. 326.) . ♦ & ' Directions for Collecting and Preserving Insects.. Insects differ sexually in that the female generally appears to hâve one abdominal ring less (one ring disappearing during the semi-pupa state, when the ovipositor is formed), and in being larger, fuller, and duller colored than the males, wdiile the lat- ter often differ in sculpture and ornamentation. In collect- ing, whenever the two sexes are found united they should be pinned upon the same pin, the male being placed highest. When we take one sex alone, we may feel smo that the otlier is somewhere in the vicinity ; perhaps while one is flying about so as to be easily captured, the other is hidden under some leaf, or resting on the trunk of some tree near by, which must. be examined and every bush in the vicinity vigorously beaten by the net. Many species rare in most places hâve a metropolis where they occur in great abundance. During seasons when his favorites are especially abundant the collector should lay up a store against years of scarcity. At no time of the year need the entomologist rest from his labors. In the winter, under the bark of trees and in moss he can find many species, or on trees, etc., detect their eggs, which he can mark for observation in the spring when they hatch out. He need not relax his endeavors day or night. Mothing is night employment. Skunks and toads entomologize at night. Early in the morning, at sunrise, when the dew is still on the leaves, insects are sluggish and easily taken with the hand ;COLLECTING AND PRES ERVING INSECTS. 85 so at dusk, when many species are found flying, and in the night, the collector will be rewarded with many rarities, many species flying then that hide themselves by day, while many caterpillars leave their retreats to corne out and feed, when the lantern can be used with success in searching for them. Wollaston (Entomologist’s Annual, 1865) states that sandy districts, especially towards the coast, are at ail times préfér- able to clayey ones, but the intermediate soils, such as the loamy soil of swamps and marshes are more productive. Near the sea, insects occur most abundantly beneath pebbles and other objects in grassy spots, or else at the roots of plants. In many places, especially in Alpine tracts, as we hâve found on the summit of Mt. Washington and in Labrador, one has to lie down and look carefully among the short herbage and in the moss for Coleoptera. The most advantageous places for collecting are gardens and farms, the borders of woods and the banks of streams and ponds. The deep, dense forests, and open, treeless tracts are less prolific in insect life. In winter and early spring the moss on the trunks of trees, when carefully shaken over a newspaper or wliite cloth, reveal many beetles and Hymenoptera. In the late summer and autumn, toadstools and various fungi and rot- ten fruits attract many insects, and in early spring when the sap is running we hâve taken rare insects from the stumps of freshly eut hard-wood trees. Wollaston savs, uDead animais, partially-dried bones, as well as the skins of moles and other vermin which are ordinarily hung up in fields are magnificent traps for Coleoptera ; and if any of these be placed around or- chards and inclosures near at home, and be examined every morning, various species of Nitidulæ, Silphiclœ, and other insects of similar habits, are certain to be enticed and cap- tured. “Planks and chippings of wood may be likewise employed as successful agents in alluring a vast number of species which might otherwise escape our notice, and if these be laid down ? in grassy places, and carefully inverted every now and then with as little violence as possible, many insects will be found adhering beneath them, especially after dewy nights and in showery weather. Nor must we omit to urge the importance86 THE CLASS OF INSECTS; of examining the under sides of stones in the vicinity of ants% nests, in which position, düring the spring and summer mont lis,, many of the rarest of our native Coleoptera may be occasion» ally procured.” Excrementitious matter always contains many interesting forms in variaus stages of growth. ' ! The trunks of fallen and decaying trees offer a rich harvest for many wood-boring larvæ, especially the Longicorn beetles, and weevils can be found in the spring, in ail their stages. Nu* mérous carnivorous Coleopterous and Dipterous larvæ dwell within them, and other larvæ which eat the dust made by the borers. The inside of pithy plants like the elder, raspberry,. blackberry, and syringa, are inhabited by many of the wild bees, Osmia, Oeratina, and the wood-wasps, Orabro, Stigmusy, etc., the habits of which, with those of their Chalcid and Ich» neumon parasites, offer endless amusement and study. Ponds and streams shelter a vast throng of insects, and should be diligently dredged with the water-net, and stones and pebbles should be overturned for aquatic beetles, He- miptera, and Dipterous larvæ. The various sorts of galls should be collected in spring and autumn and placed in vials or boxes, where they may be rear- ed, and the rafters of out-houses, stone-walls, etc., should be carefully searched for the nests of Mud-wasps. Collecting Appciratus. First in importance is the net. This is made by attaching a ring of brass wire to a handle made to slide on a pôle six feet long. The net may be a foot in diameter, and the bag itself made of thin gauze or mosquito- netting (the finer, lighter, and more durable the better), and should be about twenty inches deep. It should be sewed to a narrow border of clotli placed around the wire. A light net like this can be rapidly turned upon the insect with one hand. The insect is captured by a dexterous twist which also throws the bottom over the mouth of the net. The insect should be temporarily held between the thumb and fore-finger of the hand at liberty, and then pinned througli the thorax while in the net.. The pin can be drawn through the meshes upon opening the net. The beating-net should be made much stouter, with a shal- lower cloth bag and attached to a sliorter stick. It is used for beating trees, bushes, and herbage for beetles and HemipteraCOLLECTING AND PRESERVING INSECTS. 87 and various larvæ. Its thorough use we would recommend in the low végétation on mountains and in meadows. The water- net may be either round or of the shape indicated in Fig. 70. The ring should be made of brass, and the shallow net of grass-cloth or coarse millinet. It is used for collecting aqua- tic insects. Various sorts of forceps are indispen- Fig. 70. sable for handling insects. Small délicate narrow-bladed for- ceps with fine sharp points in use by jewellers, and made either of steel or brass, are excellent for handling minute specimens. For larger ones long curved forceps are very con- venient. For pinning insects into boxes the forceps should be stout, the blades blunt and curved at the end so that the insect can be pinned without slanting the forceps mueh. The end» need to be broad and finely indented by lines so as to firmly hold the pin. With a little practice the forceps soon take the place of the fingers. They will hâve to be made to order by a neat workman or surgical-instrument maker. Some persons use the ordinary form of pliers with curved handles, but they should be long and slender. A spring set in to separate the handles when not grasped by the hand is a great convenience. Various pill-boxes, vials, and bottles must always be taken, some containing alcohol or whiskey. Many collectors use a wide-mouth bottle, containing a sponge saturated with ether, chloroform, or benzine, or bruised laurel leaves, the latter be- ing pounded with a hammer and then eut with scissors into small pièces, which give out exhalations of prussic acid strong enough to kill most small insects. Besides these the collector needs a small box lined with corn-pith, or cork, and small enough to slip into the coat- pocket ; or a larger box carried by a strap. Most moths and small Aies can be pinned alive without being pinched (which injures their shape and rubs off the scales and hairs), and then killed by pouring a little benzine into the bottom of the box. Killing Insects for the Cabinet. Care in killing affects very sensibly the looks of the cabinet. If hastily killed and dis- torted by being pinched, with the scales rubbed off and other- wise mangled, the value of such a speeimen is diminished88 THE CL ASS OF INSECTS. either for purposes of study or the neat appearance of the col- lection. □esides the vapor of ether, chloroform, and benzine, the fumes of sulphur readily kill insects. Large specimens may be killed by inserting a pin dipped in a strong solution of ox- alic acid. An excellent collecting bottle is made by putting into a wide-mouth bottle two or three small pièces of cyanide of potassium, which may be covered with cotton, about lialf- filling the bottle. The cotton may be covered with paper lightly attached to the glass and pierced with pin-holes ; this keeps the insect from being lost in the bottle. For Diptera, Loew recommends moistening the bottom of the collecting box with créosote. This is excellent for small Aies and moths, as the mouth of the bottle can be placed over the insect while at rest ; the insect Aies up into the bottle and is immediately suffocated. A bottle well prepared will, according to Laboulbène, last several months, even a year, and is vastly superior to the old means of using ether or chloroform. He States, “the incon- venience of taking small insects from a net is well known, as the most valuable ones usually escape ; but by placing the end of the net, Alled with insects, in a wide-mouthed bottle, and putting in the cork for a few minutes, they will be suffocated.” Pinning Insects. The pin should be inserted through the thorax of most insects. The Coleoptera, however, should be pinned through the right wing-cover ; many Hemiptera are best pinned through tlie scutellum. The specimens should ail be pinned at an equal height, so tliat about one-fourth of the pin should project above the insect. The best pins are those made in Berlin by Klager. They are of Ave sizes, No. 1 being the smallest ; Nos. 1, 2, and 5 are the most convenient. For very minute insects still smaller pins are made. A very good but too short pin is made by Edles- ton and Williams, Crown Court, Cheapside, London. Their Nos. 19 and 20 may be used to impale minute insects upon, and then stuck through a bit of cork, or pith, through which a No. 5 Klager pin may be tlirust. Then the insect is kept out of the reach of devouring insects. Still smaller pins are made by cutting off bits of very Ane silvered wire at the right length, which may be thrust by the forceps into a plece of pith, after the insects liave been impaled upon tliem.COLLECTING AND PRESERVING INSECTS. 89 Small insects, especially beetles, may be mounted on cards or pièces of mica through which tlie pin may be thrust. The French use small oblong bits of mica, with the posterior half covered with green paper on which the number may be placed, The insect may be gummed on the clear part, the two sexes to- gether. The under side can be seen through the thin mica. Others prefer triangular pièces of card, across the end of which the insect may be gummed, so that nearly the whole un- der side is visible. Mr. Wollaston advocates gumming small Coleoptera upon cards. Instead of cutting the pièces of cards first, he gurns them promiscuously upon a sheet of card-board. “Having gummed thickly a space on your card-board equal to, at least, the entire specimen wlien expanded, place the beetle upon it, drag out the limbs with a pin, and, leaving it to dry, go on with the next one that présents itself. As the card has to be eut after- wards around your insect (so as to suit it), there is no advan- tage in gumming it precisely straight upon your frame,—though it is true that a certain amount of care in this respect lessens your after labor of cutting-off very materially. When your frame has been filled, and you are desirous of separating the species, eut out the insect with finely pointed scissors.” For mending broken insects, i. e. gumming on legs and an- tennæ which hâve fallen off, inspissated ox-gall, softened with a little water, is the best gum. For gumming insects upon cards Mr. Wollaston recommends a gum “eomposed of three parts of tragacanth to one of Arabie, botli iji powder ; to be mixed in water containing a grain of corrosive sublimate, without which it will not keep, until of a eonsistency just thick enough to run. As this gum is of an extremely absorbent nature, nearly a fortnight is required before it can be properly made. The best plan is to keep add- ing a little water (and stirring it) every few days until it is of the proper eonsistency. It is advisable to dissolve the grain of corrosive sublimate in the water which is poured first upon the gum.” Preservativé Fluids. The best for common use is alco- hol, diluted with a little water ; or whiskey, as alcohol of full strength is too strong for caterpillars, etc., since it shrivels them90 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. up. Glycérine is excellent for preserving the colors of cater- pillars, though the internai parts elecay somewhat, and the specimen is apt to fall to pièces on being roughly handled. . Labonlbène recommends for the préservation of insects in a- fresh state plunging them in a preservative fluid consisting of alcohol with an excess of arsenious acid in fragments, or the common white arsenic of commerce. A pint and a half of af cohol will take about fourteen grains (troy) of arsenic. The living insect, put into this préparation, absorbs about TÏÏ3Ü0- of its own weight. When soaked in this liquor and dried, it will be safe from the ravages of Moths, Anthrenus, or Dermestes. This- liquid will not change the colors of blue, green, or red beetles if dried after soaking from twelve to twenty-four hours. He- miptera and Orthoptera can be treated in the same way. A stay of a month in this arseniated alcohol mineralizes the insect, so that it appears very hard, and, after drying, becomes glazed with a white deposit wliich can, however, be washed off with alcohol. In this state the specimens become too hard for dissection and study, but will do for cabinet specimens designed for permanent exhibition. Another préparation recommended by Laboulbène is alcohol. containing a variable quantity of corrosive sublimate, but the latter lias to be weighed, as the alcohol evaporates easily, the liquor becoming stronger as it gets older. The strongest solu- tion is one part of corrosive sublimate to one hundred of alco- hol ; the weakest and best is one-tenth of a part of corrosive sublimate to one hundred parts of alcohol. Insects need not re- main in this solution more than two hours before drying. Both of these préparations are very poisonous and should be handled with care. The last-named solution préserves specimens from mould, wliich will attack pinned insects during damp summers. A very strong brine will preserve insects until a better liquor can be procured. Professor A. E. Verrill recommends two sim- ple and cheap solutions for preserving, among other specimens, the larvæ of insects “with their natural color and form remark- ably perfect.” The first consists of two and a half pounds of common sait and four ounces of nitre dissolved in a gallon of water, and filtered. Specimens should be prepared for perma- nent préservation in this solution by being previously immersedCOLLECTINGr AND PRESERVING INSECTS. 91; in a solution consisting of a quart of the first solution and two ounces of arseniate of potash and a gallon of water. (Pro- ceedings Boston Society Nat. Hist., vol. x, p. 257.) The nests, cocoons, and chrysalids of insects may be pre- served from injury from other insects by being soaked in the arseniated alcohol, or dipped into benzine, or a solution of car- bolic acid or créosote. Preparing Insects for the Cabinet. Dried insects may be moistened by laying them for twelve or twenty-four hours in a box containing a layer of wet sand, covered with one thick-: ness of soft paper. Their wings can then be easily spread. Setting-boards for spreading the wings of insects may be made, by sawing deep grooves in a thick board, and placing a strip of pith or cork at the bottom. The groove may be deep enougk to allow a quarter of the length of the pin to project above the insect. The setting-board usually consists of thin parallel strips of board, leaving a groove between them wide enough to receive the body of the insect, at the bottom of which a strip of cork or pith should be glued. The ends of the strips should be nailed on to a stouter strip of wood, raising the surface of the setting-board an inch and a half so that the pins can stick through without touching. Several setting-boards can be made. to form shelves in a frame covered with wire gauze, so that the specimens may be preserved from dust and destructive in- sects, while the air may at the same time hâve constant access. to them. The surface of the board should incline a little to- wards the groove for the réception of the insect, as the wings often gather a little moisture, relax and fall down after the insect is dried. Moths of medium size should remain two or three days on the setting-board, while the larger thick-bodied Sphinges and Bombycidœ require a week to dry. The wings can be arranged by means of a needle stuck into a handle of wood. They should be set horizontally, and the front mar- gin of the fore-wings drawn a little forward of a line perpen- dicular to the body, so as to free the inner margin of the hind wings from the body, that their form may be distinctly seen. Wken thus arranged, they can be confined by pièces of card pinned to the board as indicated in figure 71, or, as we prefer* by square pièces of glass laid upon them.92 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. After the insects hâve been thoroughly dried they should not be placed in the cabinet until after having been in quarantine to see that no eggs of Dermestes or Anthrenus, etc., hâve'been deposited on them. For preserving dried insects in the cabinet Laboulbène recommends plac- ing a rare insect (if a beetle or any other hard insect) in water for an hour until the tissues be softened. If soiled, an insect can be cleansed under water with a fine hair-pencil, then submit it t6 a bath of arseniated alcohol, or, better, alcohol with corrosive sublimate. If the insect becomes prune-colored, it should be washed in pure alcohol se ver al times. This method will do for the rarest insects ; the more common ones can be softened on wet sand, and then the immersion in the arseniated alcohol suffices. After an immersion of an hour or a quarter of an hour, according to the size of the insect, the pin is not affected by the corrosive sublimate, but it is better to unpin the insect previous to immersion, and then pin it when almost dry. For cleaning insects ether or benzine is excellent, applied with a hair-pencil ; though care should be taken in using these substances which are very inflammable. After the specimens are placed in the cabinet, they should be farther protected from destructive insects by placing in the drawers or boxes pièces of camphor wrapped in paper perfo- rated by pin-holes, or bottles containing sponges saturated with benzine. The collection should be carefully examined every month ; the presence of insects can be detected by the dust beneath them. Where a collection is mu ch infested with destructive insects, benzine should be poured into the bottom of the box or drawer, when the fumes and contact of the ben- zine with their bodies will kill them. The specimens them- selves should not be soaked in the benzine if possible, as it renders them brittle. Insect-cabinet. For permanent exhibition, a cabinet of shal- low drawers, protected by doors, is most useful. A drawer may be eighteen by twenty inches square, and two inches deep in the clear, and provided with a tight glass cover. For constantCOLLECTING AND PKESERVING INSECTS. 93 use, boxes made of thin, well-seasoned wood, with tight-fitting covers, are indispensable. For Coleoptera, Dr. Leconte recom- mends that they be twelve by nine inches (inside measurement). For tlie larger Lepidoptera a little larger box is préférable. Others prefer boxes made in the form of books, which may be put away like books on the shelves of the cabinet, though the cover of the box is apt to be in the way. The boxes and drawers should be lined with cork eut into thin slips for soles ; such slips corne from the cork-cutter about twelve by four inches square, and an eighth of an inch thick. A less expensive substitute is paper stretched upon a frame. Mr. E. S. Morse has given in the American Naturalist (vol. I, p. 156) a plan which is very neat and useful for lining boxes in a large muséum, and which are placed in horizontal show-cases (Fig. 72). “A box is made of the re- quired depth, and a light frame is fitted to its in- terior. Upon the upper and under surfaces of this frame, a sheet of white paper (drawing or log- paper answers the pur- ^pose) is securely glued. Fis- 72. ( The paper, having been previously dampened, in drying con- tacts and tightens like a drum-head^ The frame is then secured about one-fourth of an inch from the bottom of the box, and the pin is forced down through the thicknesses of. paper, and if the bottom of the box be of soft pine, the point of the pin may be slightly forced into it. It is thus firmly lield at two or three different points, and ail latéral movements are prevented. Other advantages are secured by this arrangement besides firmness ; when the box needs cleaning or fumigation, the entire collection may be removed by taking out the frame, or camphor, tobacco, or other material can be placed on the bottom of the box, and concealed from sight. The annexed figure represents a transverse section of a portion of the side and bottom of the box with the frame. A, A, box ; B, frame ;‘94 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. P, P, upper and under sheets of paper; C, space between lower sheet of paper and bottom of box.” Other substitutes are the pitli of various plants, especially of corn ; and palm wood, and “inodorous felt” is used, being eut to fit the bottom of the box. Leconte recommends that “ for the purpose of distinguish- ing specimens from different régions, little disks of variously colored paper be used ; they are easily made by a small punch, and should be kept in wooden pill-boxes ready for use ; at the same time a key to the colors, showing the régions em- braced by each, should be made on the fly-leaf of the catalogue of the collection.” He also strongly recommends that the “ specimens should ail be pinned at the same height, since the ease of recognizing species allied in characters is greatly in- creased by having fhem on the same level.” He also States that “it is better, even when numbers with reference to a catalogue are employed, that the name of each species should be written on a label attached to the first spéci- men. Thus the eye is familiarized with the association of the species and its name, memory is aided, and greater power given of identifying species when the cabinet is not at hand.” For indicating the sexes the astronomical sign $ (Mars) is used for the male, and Ç (Venus) for the female, and 9 for the worker. Transportation of Insects. While travelling, ail hard-bodied insects, comprising many Hymenoptera, the Coleoptera, He- miptera, and many Neuroptera should be thrown, with their larvæ, etc., into bottles and vials filled with strong alcohol. When the bottle is filled new liquor should be poured in, and the old may be saved for collecting purposes ; in this way the specimens will not soften and can be preserved indefinitely, and the colors do not, in most cases, change. Leconte States that “if the bottles are in danger of being broken, the specimens, after remaining for a day or two in alcohol, may be taken out, partially dried by exposure to the air, but not so as to be brit- tle, and these packed in layers in small boxes between soft paper; the boxes should then be carefully closed with gum- paper or paste, so as to exclude ail enemies.” Lepidoptera and Dragon-flies and other soft-bodied insects may be well preserved by placing thern in square pièces of pa-REARING LARVÆ. 95 per folded into a triangular form with the edges overlapping. Put up thus, multitudes can be packed away in tin boxes, and will bear transportation to any distance. In tropical climates, ehests lined with tin should be made to contain the insect- boxes, which can thus be preserved against the ravages of white ants, etc. In sending live larvæ by mail, they should be inclosed in lit- tle tin boxes, and in sending dry specimens, the box should be light and strong, and directions given at the post-office to stamp the box lightly. In sending boxes by express they should be carefully packed in a larger box, having an inter- space of two inches, which can be filled in tightly with hay or crumpled bits of paper. Beetles can be wrapped in pièces of soft paper. Labels for alcoholic specimens should consist of parchment with the locality, date of capture, and name of collector written in ink. A temporary label of firm paper with the locality, etc., written with a pencil, will last for several years.. Préservation of Larvæ. Alcoholic specimens of insects, in ail stages of growth, are very useful. Few collections contain al- coholic specimens of the adult insect. 1 This is a mistake. Many of the most important characters are effaced during the drying process, and for purposes of general study alcoholic speci- mens, even of Bees, Lepidoptera, Diptera, and Dragon-flies are very necessary. Larvæ, generally, may be well preserved in vials or bottles of alcohol. They should first be put into whiskey, and then into alcohol. If placed in the latter first, they shrivel and become distorted. Mr. E. Burgess préserves caterpillars with the colors unchanged, by immersing tliem in boiling water thirty or forty seconds, and then placing them in equal parts of alcohol and water. It is well to collect larvæ and pupæ indiscriminately, even if we do not know their adult forms ; we can approximate to them, and in some cases tell very exactly what they must be. Rearing Larvæ. More attention lias been paid to rearing Caterpillars than the young of any other suborder of insects, and the following remarks apply more particularly to them, but96 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. very much the same methods may be pursued in rearing the larvæ of Beetles, Flies, and Hymenoptera. Subterranean larvæ hâve to be kept in moist earth, aquatic larvæ nrnst be reared in aquaria, and carnivorous larvæ must be supplied with flesh. The larvæ of Butterflies are rare; those of moths occur more frequently, while their imagos may be &earce. In some years many larvæ, which are usually rare, occur in abundance, and should then be reared in numbers. In hunting for caterpillars bushes should be shaken and beaten over newspapers or skeets, or an umbrella; herbage should be swept, and trees examined carefully for leaf-rollers and miners. The best specimens of moths and butterflies are obtained by rearing them from the egg, or from the larva or pupa. In confinement the food should be kept fresh, and the box well ventilated. Tumblers covered with gauze, pasteboard boxes pierced with holes and fitted with glass in the covers, or large glass-jars, are very convenient to use as cages. The bot- tom of such vessels may be covered with moist sand, in which the food-plant of the larva may be stuck and kept fresh for several days. Larger and more airy boxes, a foot square, with the sides of gauze, and fitted with a door, through which a bot- tle of water ma}' be introduced, serve well. The object is to keep the food-plant fresh, the air cool, the larva out of the sun, and in fact everything in such a State of equilibrium that the larva will not feel the change of circumstances when kept in confinement. Most caterpillars change to pupæ in the autumn ; and those which transform in the earth should be covered with earth, kept damp by wet moss, and placed in the cellar until the following summer. The collector in seeking for larvæ should carry a good number of pill-boxes, and especially a close tin box, in which the leaves may be kept fresh for a long time. The different forms and markings of caterpillars should be noted, and they should be drawn carefully together with a leaf of the food-plant, and the drawings and pupa skins, and per- fect insect, be numbered to correspond. Descriptions of cat- erpillars cannot be too carefully made, or too long. The relative size of the head, its ornamentation, the stripes and spots of the body, and the position and number of tubercles, and the hairs, or fascicles of hairs, or spines and spinules»ENTOMOLOGICAL WORKS. 97 which arise from lhem, should be notecl, besides the general form of the body* The lines along the body are called dorsal, if in the middle of the back, subdorsal; if upon one side, lat- éral) and ventral when on the sides and under surface, or stig-, matal if including the stigmata or breathing pores, which are generally parti-colored. Indeed, tlie wliole biograpliy of an insect should be ascertained by the observer ; the points to be noted are : 1. Date, when and how the eggs are laid ; and number, size, and marking of the eggs. 2. Date of liatching, the appearance, food-plant of larva, and number of days between eacli moulting ; the changes the larva undergoes, which are often remarkable, especially before the last moulting, with drawings illustrative of these ; the hab- its of tlie larva, whether solitary or gregarious, whether a day or night feeder ; the Ichneumon parasites, and their mode of attack. Specimens of larvæ in the different moultings should be preserved in alcohol. The appearance of the larvæ when full-fed, the date, number of days before pupating, the forma- tion and description of the cocoon, the duration of larvæ in the cocoon before pupation, their appearance just before changing,. their appearance while changing, and alcoholic specimens of larvæ in the act, should ail be studied and noted. 3. Date of pupation; description of the pupa or chrysalis duration of the pupa state, habits, etc. ; together with alcoholic. specimens, or pinned dry ones. Lepidopterous pupæ should be- looked for late in the summer or in the fall and spring, about the roots of trees, and kept moist in mould until the imago appears. Many Coleopterous pupæ may also occur in mould, and if aquatic, under submerged sticks and stones, and those of borers under the bark of decaying trees. 4. Date when the insect escapes from the pupa, and method of escape ; duration of life of the imago ; and the number of broods in a season. Entomological Works. The titles of a few of the most im- portant works on Insects are given below. The more advanced student should, however, possess Dr. Hagen’s Bibliotheca En- tomologica, 8vo, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1862-3, which contains a 7«8 THE CLASS OF INSEOTS. ‘Complété list of ail entomological publications up to the year 1862. Besides these he should consult the annual reports on the progress of Entomology published in Wiegmann’s Archiv fur Naturgeschichte, begun in 1834, and continued up to the présent time ; and also Günther’s Zoôlogical Record (8vo, Van Voorst, London), beginning with the year 1864. Occasional articles are also scattered through the various government re- ports, and those of agricultural societies and agricultural paperso GENERAL WORKS. The Works of Stoammerdam, Malphighi, Leeuwerihoek, Lyonnet, Serres, Meckél, Ramdohr, Suckow, Merlan, and Herbst. Rèaumur, Réné Ant. de. Mémoires pour servir à P Histoire des Insectes. Paris, 1734 -1742, 7 vols. 4to. Roesel, Aug. Joh. Der monatlioh hernusgegeben Insekten-Belustigung. Nürnberg, 1746-1761, 4 vols. 4to, illustrated. Geer, Cari de. Mémoires pour servir à P Histoire des Insectes, 1752-1778, 7 vols. 4to. Idnnœus, Carolus. Systema Naturæ, 1735. 12th édition, 1766-1768. Fabricius, Joh. Christ. Systema Entomologiæ, 1775, 8vo. ——. Généra Insectorum, 1777, 8vo. ——. Species Insectorum, 1781. 2 vols. 8vo. •----Mantissa Insectorum, 1787, 2 vols. 8vo. -----;—. Entomologia Systematica. 4 vols. 8vo, 1792-04. ■Cramer, P. Papillons exotiques des trois parties du monde. 4 vols. 4to, 1775-82. Stoll, Casper. Supplément to Cramer’s Papillons exotiques. 4to, Amsterdam, 1787-91. Smith, J. E.j and Abbot, John. The Natural History of the Rarer Lepidopterous Insects of Georgia. Fol. Plates. London, 1797. Jatreille, Pierre André. Précis des caractères générique des Insectes, 1796, Svo. Généra Crustaceorum et Insectorum, 4 vols. Svo, 1806-1809. -----. Considération générales sur P Ordre naturel des Animaux composant les Classes des Crustacés, des Arachnides et des Insectes. . In Cuvier’s Règne animal, Svo, 1810. -----. Familles naturelles du Règne animal, Svo, 1825. -----. Cours d’Entomologie, Svo, 1831. Fabricius, Otho. Fauna Groenlandica. Hafniæ, 1780 Svo. Contains Lïbéllula virgo (erroneously), Phryganea rhombica, Termes divinatorium, etc. Drury, Dreto. Illustrations of Natural History, etc. London, 1770-1782,4to,3 vols, (ed. Westwood, 1837). Numerous species are figured and described. Treviranus, G. R. Vermischte Sehriften anatomischen und physiologischen Inhalts Bd. 1 u. 2. Gottingen, 1816-17, 4to. Mac Leay, W. S. Horæ Entomologicæ, 2 vols. London, 1819. Meigen, F. W. Systematische Beschreibung der bekannten europâischen zweiflü- geligen Insecten. 7 vols. Aachen and Hamm, 1818-1835. (Although this work contains only European species, many of them are common to both continents.) Say, T. American Entomology. 3 vols. With plates. Philadelphia, 1824,25,28. -----. Complété Writings on the Entomology of North America, edited by J. L. Leconte, M.D. 2 vols. 8vo, colored plates. New York, 1859. JBaer, K. E. v. Beitrage zur Kentniss der niederen Thiere. (Extracted from Nova Acta Acad. Léopold. Carolin. xiii.'2,1827.) >ENTOMOLOGICAL WORKS. 99 .Palisot de Beauvais, A. J. Insectes recueillis en Afrique et en Amérique, clans les royaumes d’Oware et de Bénin, â Saint-Domingue et dans les Etats-Unis, pen- dant les années, 1786-97. Fol. with 90 plates, Paris, 1805-21. .Savigny, J. C. de. Description de P Egypte. Histoire naturelle. Crustacés, Arachnides, Myriapodes et Insectes, 53 pl. in gr. fol. Paris, 1809-1838. Ex- plication sommaire des planches par J. V. Audouin, Paris, 1826, fol. Curtis, John. Description of the Insects brought home by Commander James Clark. Ross’s Second Voyage. App. Nat. Hist., 1831,4to, plates. (Several Arctic species are described.) .Kirby, W. <ÿ W. Spence. An Introduction to Entomology ; or, Eléments of the Nat- ural History of Insects. 4 vols. 8vo, 1828. Seventh édition (comprisingvols. 3 & 4 of the early éditions). London, 1856, post 8vo. Wiedemann, C. R. W. Aussereuropâische Zweillügelige Insecten. 2 vols. Hamm, 1828-30. With plates. Curtis, John. Farm Insects ; being the Natural History and Economy of the Insects injurious to the Field Crops of Great Britain andlreland. 8vo. With plates and ‘ wood-cuts. 1860. -Chevrotât, Aug. Coléoptères du Mexique. Strasbourg, 1834-5. -,Stephens, J. F. Illustrations of British Entomology. London, 8vo, 1835. Sev- eral species of European Insects mentioned in this work hâve been found in North America. .Kirby, W. Fauna boreali-Americana, etc. Norwich, 1837, 4to. Xollar, V. Naturgeschichte der schaeülichen Insekten. Wien, 1837,4to. Contains Termes flavipes, injurious in the hot-houses of Schœnbrunn and Vienna. This description has been omitted in the translation of this work by Mr. Loudon, London, 1840. Macquart, J. Diptères Exotique nouveaux ou peu connus. 2 vols, en 5 parties, et 5 suppléments, Paris, 1838-55. With numerous plates. (Published originally in the Mémoires de la Société des Sciences et des Arts de Lille, 1838-55.) Burmeister, H. Manual of Entomology, translated by W. E. Shuckard. London, 8vo, 1836. Burmeister, Hermann. Zoologischer Hand Atlas. Berlin, 1836-43 fol., 41 plates. Westwood, J. O. An Introduction to the Modem Classification of Insects. 2 vols. 8vo. London, 1839-40. *Cuvier, G. Le Règne animal distribué d’après son Organisation. Nouvelle édi- tion, accompagnée de planches gravées, représentant les types de tous les Gen- res,etc., publiée par un réunion de Disciples de G. Cuvier. Paris, 1849, 8vo. Insectes, Arachnides, Crustacés par Audouin, Blanchard, Doyère, Milne-Ed- ivards et Dugés. 4 vols. Texte et 4 vols, atlas. Guérin-Méneville, F. E. Iconographie du Règne Animal de G. Cuvier, ou repré- sentation d’après nature de l’une des espèces les plus remarquables et souvent non encore figurées de chaque genre d’animaux, vols. 6 et 7: Annélides, Crus- tacés, Arachnides et Insectes, Paris, J. B. Baillière, 1829-44,164 pl. 8vo. Griffith, E. The Animal Kingdom, described and arranged in conformity with its organization. London, 1824-33, 8vo. Class Insecta, 2 vols, with 140 pl. 1832. Classes Annelida, Crustacea et Arachnida. 1 vol. writh 60 pl. •Suites à Buffon et Nouvelles suites à Buffon. Formant avec les Œuvres de cet auteur un Cours complèt cl’ Histoire naturelle. Paris, Dufart, 1798-1807. Paris, Roret, 1834-1864,8vo. (Insectes, Crustacés, Arachnides etc., par Latreille, Lacor- daire, Amyot, Audinet-Serville, Boisduval, Guénée, Rambur, Lepeletier de St. Fargeau, Macquart, Milne- Edwards, Walkenaer, et Gervais). Gosse, P. H. Canadian Naturalist. London, 1840. Zetterstedt, J. W. Insecta Lapponica. Lipsiæ, 1840, 4to. Several species from Lapland hâve been found in the Arctic régions of North America. Pictet, F. Histoire naturelle, etc., des insectes Neuroptères, Part I, Perlides; Part II, Ephémérines. Genève, 1841-45, 8vo, with colored plates.100 THE CT,ASS OF INSECTS. Doubleday, E., and Westwood, J. O. The Généra of Diurnal Lepidoptera. 86 col ored plates, 2 vols. fol. London, 1846-52. Wcilker, F. List of the specimens of Lepidopterous, Dipterous, Neuropterous, and Homopterous Insects in the Collection of the British Muséum. London, 1848-67. Amyot, Ç., and Serville, A. Hemipteres. 8vo, Paris, Roret, 1843. Matzeburg, J. T. C. Die Forstinsekten. 4to, 3 vols. Berlin, 1837-44. Van der Hœven, J. Handbook of Zoology, English translation. 2 vols. 8vo, 1850. Gerstaecker, A. Handbuch der Zoologie (in connection with V. Carus), 2 vols.. 8vo. (vol. 2, Arthropoda). Leipzig, 1863. De Selys Long champs, E. Revue des Odonatés ou Libellules d Europe avec la coh laboratiôn de H. Hagen. Paris, 1850, 8vo. (Mémoir. Soc. R. Science de Liège, vol. vi.) (Two species, Lib. Hudsonica, p. 53, and Agrion Doubledayi, p. 209, are described in this work.) Hagen, H. Revue des Odonatés ; Monographie des Calopterygines ; Monographie des Gomphines (cf. Selys Longchamps). Agassiz, L. Lake Superior, its Physical Character, its Végétation,and its Animais, Boston, 1850. With Catalogue of Coleoptera, by Dr. J. L. Leconte, and of the Lepidoptera, by Çr. T. W. Haras. Lacaze-Duthiers, H. Recherches sur ï; armure génitale femelle des Insectes. Plates. 8vo. Paris, 1853. Melsheimer, F. E. Catalogue of the described Coleoptera of the United States. Smithsonian Institution. 8vo, 1853. Dallas, W. S. Catalogue of Hemipterous Insects in the British Muséum. 1,2. Illustrated. London, 1852. Fitcli, A sa. The noxiotis, bénéficiai, and other Insects of the State of New York. Reports 1-8,1856-66. Smith, Frédéric. Catalogue of Hymenoptera in the British Muséum. Parts i-vi. Plates. London, 1857-58. Fallen, C. F., Stal, C., and Fieber. Varions papers on Hemiptera in Scandinavian and German periodicals. Hiibner, J. Sammlung Exotischer Schmetterlinge. 5 vols. 4to. Plates. 1808. Guénée, A. Species général des Lépidoptères. (Noctuidæ, Phalænidæ and Pyra* lidæ) Suite a Buffon. Paris, 8vo, 1852-57. Stainton, H. T. The Natural History of the Tineina. 8vo, with many plates. Lon don, vols. 1-8, 1855-64, 8vo. Lacordaire, J. T. Généra des Coléoptères. 8vo, tomes 1-7. Paris, Roret, 1854. Bolsduval, J. A. Histoire générale et Iconographie des Lépidoptères et des Che- nilles de l’Amérique septentrionale. 8vo. Paris, tforet, 1829-42. ------. Spécies générale des Lépidoptères. 8vo. Roret, Paris, 1856. ------Essai sur 1’ Entomologie horticole. 8vo. Paris, 1867. Practical Entoniologist. Entomological Society of Philadelphia. Vols. 1, 2, 4to,. 1865-67. Harris, T. W. A Treatise on some of the Insects of New England, which are injurions to Végétation. Third édition, illustrated. Boston, 1862. Leconte, J. L. Classification of the Coleoptera of North America. Part 1,1861-2. Smithsonian Institution. —-----. List of Coleoptera of North America. 8vo, 1863-6. Smithsonian Institu- tion. ------New Species of North American Coleoptera. 8vo. Part 1,1863-6. Smith- sonian Institution. ——. Coleoptera of Kansas and Eastern New Mexico. 4to. 3 plates. 1859* Smithsonian Institution. Hagen, H. Synopsis of the Neuroptera of North America. 8vo. 1861. Smith- v sonian Institution. Morris, J. G. Catalogue of the described Lepidoptera of North America. 8vo- 1860. Smithsonian Institution.ENTOMOLOGICAL WORKS. aoi Osten Sacken, R. Catalogue of the deseribed Diptera ofNorth America. 1858. Smithsonian Institution. Boew, H., and Osten Sacken, R. Monograph of the Diptera of North America. Parts 1,2, 8vo, 1802-64. Smithsonian Institution. Trimble, 1. P. A Treatise on the Insect Enemies of Fruit and Fruit Trees. The Curculio and Apple moth. 4to. Plates. New York, 1865. MORPHOLOGY. ^ Savigny, J. C. Mémoires sur les Animaux sans Vertèbres. 1 Partie. Description et Classification des Animaux invertébrés et articulés, 1. Fascicule. Théorie des Organes de la Bouche des Crustacés et des Insectes. Paris, 1816. Audouin, J. V. Recherches anatomiques sur le Thorax des animaux articulés et celui des Insectes hexapodes en particulier. (Annales d. Scienc. natur. 1,1824, p. 97 and 416.) Eschscholtz, J. F. Beschreibung des inneren Skeletes einiger Insekten aus ver* schiedenen Ordnungen. Dorpat, 1820, Svo, p. 24-49, 2 Taf. Baer, K. E. V. Ueber das aussere und innere Skelet (MeckePs Archiv. f. Anatom. u. Physiol. 1826, p. 327-374). jSrichson, JY. F. Ueber zoologische Charaktere der Insekten, Arachniden und Crustaceen. (Entomographien, S. 1-28.) Berlin, 1840, 8vo. Brullé, A. Recherches sur les Transformations des Appendices dans les Arti- culés (Annales des Sciences naturelles, 3. sér. II, 1844, p. 271-374). Beuckart, R. Ueber die Morphologie und die Verwandtschaftsverhâltnisse der Wirbellosen Thiere. Braunschweig, 1848, 8vo. ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY. Btraus-Diirckheim, H. Considérations générales sur P Anatomie comparée des Animaux articulés, auxquelles on a joint P Anatomie descriptive du Melolontha vulgaris. Paris, 1828, 4to. 10 pl. Dufour, L. Numerous anatomical papers in the Annales des Sciences naturelles, Paris. Siebold, C. Th.v. Lehrbuch der Vergleichenden Anatomie der wirbellosen Thiere. Berlin, 1848, 8vo. Translated by W. I. Burnett. Boston, 1851, 8vo. Gegenbaur, C. Grundzüge der vergleichenden Anatomie. Leipzig, 1&59, 8vo. Geoffroy St. Hilaire, Etienne. Considérations philosophiques sur la détermination du Système solide et du Système nerveux des Animaux articulés. (Annal, d. scienc. natur. II, 1824, p. 295 ff., III, p. 199 u. p. 453 ff.) Bfewport, G. On the Structure, Relations, and Development of the nervous and circulatory Systems, and on the existence of a complété Circulation of the Blood inVessels, in Myriapoda and Macrourous Arachnida. (Philosoph. Transact- 1843, p. 243-302.) -----. On the Structure and Development of the Blood, I. ser. The Development of the Blood Corpuscle in Insects and other Invertebrata, and its Comparison with that of Man and the Vertebrata. (Annals of Nat. Hist.XV, 1845, p. 281-284.) -----. On the Nervous System of the Sphinx ligustri Lin. and on the Changes winch it undergoes during a Part of the Métamorphosés of the Insect. (Philo* soph. Transact. 1832, p. 383-398, and 1831, 389-423.) -----. On the Température of Insects and its Connexion with Fonctions of Res- piration and Circulation in this class of Invertebrated Animais. (Philosoph. Transact. 1837, p. 259-338.) Blanchard, E. Recherches anatomiques et zoologiques sur le Système nerveux des Animaux sans vertèbres. Du système nerveux des Insectes. (Annal, d. scienc. natur. 3. sér. V, 1846, p. 273-379.)102 THE CLASS OF INSECTS, Blanchard, E. Du Système nerveux chez les Invertébrés dans ses rapports avec la Classification de ces Animaux. Paris, 1849, 8vo. Milne-Edwards, H. Leçons sur la Physiologie et P Anatomie comparée de PHomme et des Animaux. Paris, Masson 1857-64, 8vo. EMBEYOLOGY. Bathke, 77. Untersuchungen über die Bildung und Entwickelung des Flusskreb* ses, Leipzig, Voss. 1829, Fol. mit 5 Taf. -----. Zur Morphologie, Reisebemerkungen aus Taurien. Riga, 1837, 4to, mit 5 Taf. Herold, J. M. Exercitationes de animalium vertobris carentium in ovo formatione I. De generatione Aranearum in ovo. — Untersuchungen über die Bildungsge- schichte der Wirbellosen Thiere im Ei. 1. Th. Von der Erzeugung der Spinnen im Ei. Marburg, Krieger, 1824, fol. mit 4 Taf. —. Disquisitiones de animalium vertebris carentium in ovo formatione. De- generatione Insectorum in ovo. Fasc. I, II, Frankfurt a Main, 1835-38, fol. Kôlliker, A. Observationes de prima Insectorum genesi, adjecta articulatorum evolutionis cum vertebratorum comparatione. Dissert, inaug. Turici, Meyer et Zeller, 1842, 4to, c. tab. 3. Zaddach, G. Untersuchung über die Entwickelung und den Bau der Gliederthiere. Heft 1. Die Entwickelung des Phryganiden-Eies. Berlin, Reimer. 1854, 4to, c- tab. 5. Leuckart, R. Die Fortpflanzung und Entwickelung der Pupiparen nach Beobach* tungen an Melophagus ovinus. (Abhandl. d. naturf. Gesellsch. zu Halle IV, 1858» S. 145-226.) Huxley, T. On the agamie Reproduction and Morphology of Aphis (Transact. Linnean Soc. of London, XXII, p. 193-236.) Luhhock, J. On the Ova and Pseudova of Insects (Philosophical Transaction» of the Royal Soc. 1859, p. 341-369. ‘ Claparède, E. Recherches sur P évolution des Araignées. 4to. Utrecht, 1862. Weismann, A. Ueber die Entstehung des vollendeten Insekts in Larve und Puppe. Ein Beitrag zur Métamorphosé der Insekten, Frankfurt a Main, 1863, 4to. -----. Die Entwickelung der Dipteren im Ei, nach Beobachtungen an Chirono- mus, Musca vomitoria und Pulex canis (Zeitschrift für Wissenschal'tliche Zo- ologie XIII, p. 107-204.) — ■ . Die nachembryonale Entwickelung der Musciden nach Beobachtungen an Musca vomitoria und Sarcophaga carnaria. (The same, XIV, p. 187-336.) FOSSIL INSECTS. Giébel, C. Fauna der Vorwelt mit steter Berücksichtigung der lebenden Thiere. 2. Bd. Gliederthiere. 1. Abtheilung. Die Insekten und Spinnen der Vorwelt mit steter Berücksichtigung der lebenden Insekten und Spinnen. Leipzig, 1856, 8vo. Berendt, C. G. Die im Bernstein befindlichen organischen Reste der Vorwelt, ge- sammelt und in Verbindung mit Mehreren herausgegeben. 1. Band. 2, Abth. Die im Bernstein befindlichen Crustaceen,Myriapoden, Arachniden undapteren der Vorwelt, bearbeitet von C. L. Koch und C. G. Berendt.—2. Band. Die im Bernstein befindlichen Hemipteren, Orthopteren, und Neuropteren der Vorwelt, bearbeitet von E. F. Germar, F. J. Pictet, und II. Hagen. Berlin, 1854-56, fol. Heer, O. Die Insecten-faunader Tertiaergebilde von ŒningenundRadoboj. Leip- zig, 1849, 4to, 3 vols. Scudder, S. H. An inquiry into the Zoological Relations of the first discovered Traces of fossil Neuropterous Insects in North America. From the Memoirs of the Boston Society of Natural History, Vol. I, 18î»7, with a plate.ENTOMOLO GIC AL JOURNAL. 103 PERIODICAL WORKS (now in course of publication). Edwards, W. H. Butterflies of North America. Colored plates. Commenced 1868. Annales de la Société eutomologique de France, Paris. Commenced 1832. Transactions of the Entomological Society of London. Commenced 1834. V Insectologie Agricole, Monthly Journal, Paris. Commenced 1867. Zeitung. Entomologische Verein, Stettin. Commenced 1840. Linnœa entomologica. Entomologische Verein, Berlin. Commenced 1846. Zeitschrift. Entomologische Verein, Berlin. Commenced 1857. Annales de la Société entomologique Belge, Brussels. Commenced 1857. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia. Commenced 1819. Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia. Commenced 1817. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. New Sériés. Commenced 1818. Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History. Commenced 1834. Journal of the Boston Society of Natural History. Commenced 1834. Annals of the Lyceuni of Natural History of New York. Commenced 1824. Proceedings and Transactions of the American Entomological Society, Philadel- phia. Commenced 1861. Proceedings and Communications of the Essex Institute, Salem. Commenced 1848. American Naturalisé Philadelphia. Commenced March, 1867. Entomological Journal. Every collector should keep a daily journal of his captures and observations, noting down every fact and hint that falls under his notice. In this book, commenced as soon as the season opens in early spring, can be placed on record the earliest appearance, the time of great- est abundance’, and the disappearance of every insect in any of its stages. Also the descriptions of larvæ, with sketches, and observations upon their habits ; thouglï drawings had better be kept upon separate pièces of paper for easier reference. The insects, when captured and unnamed should be numbered to agréé with corresponding numbers in the note-book.- At the close of the season one will be surprised to see how mueh material of this kind has accumulated. He can then make a cctlendar of appearances of perfect insects and larvæ, so as to hâve the work of the next season portioned out to him ; he will thus know when and where to look for any particular insect or Caterpillar. The Number of Species of Insects. Oswald Heer estimâtes that the Insects comprise four-fifths of the whole animal king- dom. While there are about 55,000 species of animais known, excluding the Insects, the number of this last single class amounts to upwards of 190,000 known species, according to104 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. Gerstaecker’s estimate. He reckons that there are at least 25,000 species of Hymenoptera, from 22,000 to 24,000 Lepidop- tera, about 24,000 Diptera, and 90,000 Coleoptera ; tlie number of the other suborders cannot be easily estimated. Besides these there are about 4,600 Arachnida, and 800 Myriopods. Grouping of Insects into Orders and Suborders. Be- fore beginning an account of tlie Six-footed Insects, we présent the following tabular view of the Classification of In- sects. The idea that the Myriopods, Spiders, and Six-footed Insects formed orders and not classes was first proposed by R. Leuckart in 1848, and afterwards supported by Agassiz and Dana. The arrangements proposed by these and other authors are put in tabular form on page 106. The Class of Insects. Svb-class I Segments grouped into three distinct ré- gions; eyes compound and simple; two pairs of wings : * three pairs of thoracic legs ; one pair of jointed abdominal appendages. A more or less complété metamorphosis, Sub-class //.Segments grouped into two régions, a") false céphalothorax f and an abdomen ; no antennæ ; eyes simple ; wingless ; four pairs of thoracic legs ; three pairs of jointed abdominal appendages(spin- nerets) often présent. No metamorphosis, . Sub-class ZTZJBody cylindrical, worm-like. Segments ' not grouped into régions. Head free ; eyes sim- ple; antennæ présent; wingless; numerous ab- dominal legs présent; yelk-sac présent for a short period after hatching. No metamorphosis. Hexapoda > (Six-footed In- sects). Arachnida (Spiders). MyRIOPODà (Centipedes). The Orders of Six-footed Insects f {Hexapoda), Metabola. The body usually cylindrical ; prothorax' small; mouth-parts more generally haustellate (formed for sucking) ; metamorphosis complété ; pupa inactive; larva usually cylindrical, very unlike the adult, ............................ leterometabola. The body usually flattened; pro- * thorax large and squarish ; mouth-parts usually adapted for biting; metamorphosis in a large number incomplète; pupa often inactive; larva flattened, often resembling the adult, Hymenoptera ► Lkpidoptera. Diptera. Coleoptera. Hemiptera. ► Orthoptera. Neuroptera. ThysanurA. * The number of wingless forms is comparatively few. The Diptera hâve but one pair. fThe so-calletl “céphalothorax” of Spiders is notlike that région in the Crabs, the head being much freer from the thorax. X Leuckart’s classification is an advance on others in his considering the Hexa- poda, Arachnida, and Myriapoda as orders instead of classes, but he says nothingGliOUPING OF INSECTS. 105 The following diagram shows, in a rude way, the relative rank and affinities of the eight orders, and of the two sériés of Six-footed Insects. Neuroptera. Thysanura. Through Lepisma,, and Podura which are wingless Thysa- nurous insects, the lower sériés is connected with the Myriopods, the minute degraded Pauropus and Scolopendrella perhaps forming the connecting links; and through the wingless Aies, Braula, CJiionea, and Nycteribia, the Diptera, belonging to the higher sériés, assume the form of the Spiders, the head being small, and sunken into the thorax, while the legs are long and slender. The first and highest sériés culminâtes in Apis, the Honey-bee ; and the second, or lower, in Cicindéla, the Tiger-beetle. regarding the rank and value of the minor groups. Professor Agassiz extended Eeuekart’s views in considering the seven grand divisions of the order of Hexapods as suborders. In 18(33 (Hovv to Observe and Collect Insects, Maine Scientiflc Sur- vey, and Synthetic Types of Insects, Boston Journal of Natural History), we proposed a new classification of these divisions, by which they are thrown into two main groups headed by the Hymenoptera and Coleoptera respectively. These two groups, as represented in the diagram, are nearly équivalent in value, and stand in a somewhat parallel relation. There is nothing like a linear sériés in the animal kingdom, but it is like a tree. The higher sériés of orders form more of a linear sériés than the lower sériés, so that in the diagram the Neuroptera, Orthoptera, Hemiptera, and Coleoptera form a more broken sériés than the Hy- menoptera, Lepidoptera, and Diptera. A Bee, Butterfly, and House-fly are much more closely allied to each other than a Beetle, a Squash-bug, a Grasshopper, and a Dragon-fly are among themselves. The Neuroptera are the most indepen- dent, and stand at the bottom of andbetween the two sériés, though by the Orthon- tera they are very intimately linked with the Hemiptera and Coleoptera.TABULAR VIEW of the principal Entomological Systems proposed since the time of Ray. 106 THE CLASS OF INSECTS. i É QO A ^ 1. Ctenopters. Jlymenoptera, Diptera, Aphaniptera, Lepidoptera, Homoptera, Trichoptera, Neuroptera. 2. Elytropters. Coleoptera, Hemiptera, Orthoptera. 3. Thyscmures. Arcichnida. Suborders 1-3. Araneoids, Scorpionoids, Acaroids. § U 'H ^ ^ a 9 2 g O O ^ flop Packard, 1863. O Suborders 1-7. Hymenoptera, - Lepidoptera, — Diptera, — Coleoptera, « Hemiptera, Orthoptera, Neuroptera. Arcichnida. Suborders 1-3. Araneæ, Scorpions, Acarina. 0 j -O Myriôpodci. Suborders 1-2. Chilopoda, Chilognatha. Agasstz, 1849. Suborders 1-7. Lepidoptera, Diptera, Hemiptera, Hymenoptera, Orthoptera, Coleoptera, Neuroptera. Arachnida. Suborders 1-2. xVraneæ, Acari. Myriopoda. Latreille, 1796. ! Orders 1-10. Coleoptera, Orthoptera, Hemiptera, Neuroptera, Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, Diptera, Suctoria, Thysanura, Parasita. Order 14. Myriopoda. Order 11. icephala. >o S3 1 . Fabricius 1799. Classes 1- Eleuterata, Ulonata, Synistata, Piezata, Odonata. Classes 11- Glossata, Rhyngota, Antliata. Class 6. Mitosata. Class 7. Unogata. Fabricius, 1775. Orders 1. Eleu- terata. 2. Ulo- nata. 3. Synis- tata (in part). (4. Agonata= Crustacea). 5. Unogata (in part). 6. Glos- sata. 7. Rhyn- gota. 8. Ant- liata. Order 5. Unogata (in part). Order 5. Unogata (in part). Linnæus, 1735. Orders 1-6. Coleoptera, Hemiptera, Lepidoptera, Neuroptera, Hymenoptera, Diptera. Order 7. Aptera (six- footed). Order 7 (in pt.) Aptera (with nu mérous feet) Order 7 (in pt.) Aptera (with 8—14 feet). Metamorphota. (Coleoptera, Aneloptera, Diptera, Tetraptera). Ametamorphota (Hexapoda). « fl Ray, 1705. Amelamorplu polypoda ( part). Ametamorphc octopoda.HYMENOPTERA. 107 HYMENOPTERA. The Bees, Wasps, Saw-flies, Ants, and other members of this suborder differ from ail other insects in having, in the higher and more typical forais, the basal joint of the abdomen thrown for- ward upon and intimately united with the thorax. The head is large, with large compound eyes, and three ocelli. The mouth-parts are well developed both for biting, and feeding on the sweets of plants, the ligula especially, used in lapping nectar, being greatly developed. The other régions of the body are more distinct tlian in other insects ; the wings are small but powerful, with comparatively few and somewhat irregular veins, âdapted for powerful and long-sustained flights ; and the génital appendages retracted, except in the Ichneu- mon parasites and Saw-flies, within the body, are in the female modified into a sting. The transformations of this suborder are the most complété of ail insects ; the larvæ in tlieir general form are more unlike the adult insects than in any other suborder, while the pupæ, on the other hand, most clearly approximate to the imago. The larvæ are short, cylindrical, footless (excepting the young of the Saw-flies, the lowest family, which are provided witli abdominal legs like Lepidopterous larvæ), worm-like grubs, which are helpless, and liave to be fed by the prévision of the parent. The pupa has the limbs free, and is generally contained in a thin silken cocoon ; that of the Saw-flies, however, being tliick. The Hymenoptera exhibit, according to Professor Dana, the normal size of the insect-type. 4 4 This archetypic size is be- Note to page 106. —Ray divided the Hexapods into Coleoptera and Aneloptera, the latter division embracing ail the other suborders except the Coleoptera. His Ametamorphota Hexapoda contained the wingless hexapoda; while the Ametavnor- içhotapolypoda comprise the Myriopods, and the A. octopoda the Arachnids. Lin- næus’ Aptera (withnumerous feet) are équivalent to the Myriopods, and his Aptera (with 8-14 feet) to the Arachnids. In Fabricius, System the Eleutlierata are équiva- lent to the Coleoptera; the Ulonata to the Orthoptera; the Synistata to the Neurop- tera; the Piezata to the Hymenoptera; the Odonata to theLibeliulidæ; the Glossata- to the Lepidopterâ; the Rhyngota to the Hemiptera; the Antliatn to the Diptera. The Mïtosata are the Myriopods, and the Unogata, the Arachnids. In Latreille’s- system the Suctoria, or Fleas, are now referred to the Diptera; the Parasita or Lice, to the Hemiptera, and the Thysanura to the Neuroptera.108 HYMENOPTERA. tween eight and twelve lines (or twelfths of an inch) in length, and two and a half and tliree lines in breadth.” This size is probably a smaller average than in any other suborder ; thus the Hymenoptera while being the most cephalized, consequently comprise the most compactly moulded insectean forms. Besides these structural characters, as animais, endowed with instincts and a kind of reason differing, perhaps, only in degree from that of man, these insects outrank ail other Articu- lâtes. In the unusual différentiation of the individual into males and females, and, generally stérile workers, with a farther dimor- phism of these three sexual forms, such as Huber lias noticed in the Humble-bee, and a conséquent subdivision of labor among them ; in dwelling in large colonies, thus involving new and intricate relations with other insects (such as Aphides, ant-hill-inhabiting beetles, and the peculiar bee-parasites) ; their wonderful instincts, their living principally on the sweets and pollen of flowers, and not being essentially carnivorous (i.e. seizing their prey like the Tiger-beetle) in their habits, as are a large proportion of the other suborders, with the exception of Lepidoptera ; and in their relation to man as a domestic an- imal, subservient to his wants,—the Bees, and Hymenoptera in general, possess a combination of characters which are not found existing in any other suborder of insects, and wliicli rank them first and highest in the insect sériés. The bcdy-wall of the Hymenoptera is unusually dense and hard, smooth and highly polished, and either naked, or covered with hair as in a large proportion of the bees. The head is large, not much smaller than the thorax, and its front is verti- cal. The antennæ are short, filiform, often geniculate, very rarely pectinated. The mandibles are large, stout, toothed, and the maxillæ are well developed into their three subdivisions, the palpi being usually six-jointed ; the labial palpi are usually four-jointed, and the prolongation of the under lip, or ligula, is highly developed, being furnished with a secondary pair of palpi, the paraglossæ, while in the pollen-gathering species the ligula is of great length, and thus answers much the same purpose as the spiral tongue (maxillæ) of the Lepidoptera. Réaumur states that the Bee does not suck up the liquid sweets, but laps them up with its long slender hairy tongueHYMEN OPTE RA. 109 “Even in the drop of honey the bee bends tke end of its tongue about, and lengthens and shortens it successively, and, indeed, withdraws it from moment to moment.” The liquid passes along the upper surface of the pilose tongue, which is withdrawn between its sheaths, the palpi and maxillæ, and thus “conveys and deposits the liquid with which it is charged within a sort of channel, formed by the upper surface of the tongue and the sheaths which fold over it, by which the liquid is conveyed to the moût h.” (Shuckard.) The thorax forms a rounded compact oval mass, with the prothorax and metathorax very small, the mesothorax being large, and also the propodeum, to which the pedicel of the ab- domen is attached. The pleurites are large and bulging, while the sternum is minute. The coxæ and trochantines are large, and quite free from the thorax ; and the trochanters are small, while the rather slender legs are subject to great modifications, as they are devoted to so many different uses by these insects ; thus, in the Sand-wasps they are strongly bristled for the purpose of digging, and in the Bees, the basal joint of the tarsi is much enlarged for carrying pollen. “The manner in which the bee conveys either the pollen, or other material it purposes carrying home, to the posterior legs, or venter, which is to bear it, is very curious. The rapidity of the motion of its legs is then ver}" great ; so great, indeed, as to make it very difficult to foliow them ; but it seems first to collect its ^material gradually with its mandibles, from which the anterior tarsi gather it, and that on each side passes successively the grains of which it consists to the inter- mediate legs, by multiplicated scrapings and twistings of the limbs ; this, then, passes it on by similar manœuvres, and de- posits it, according to the nature of the bee, upon the pos- terior tibiæ and tarsi, or upon the under side of the abdomen. The evidence of this process is speedily manifested by the pos- terior legs gradually exhibiting an increasing pellet of pollen. Thus, for this purpose, ail the legs of the bees are more or less covered with hair. It is the mandibles which are chiefly used in their boring or excavating operations, applying their hands, or anterior tarsi, only to clear their way ; but by the construc- tive, or artisan bees, they are used both in their building and110 HYMENOPTERA. mining operations, and are worked like trowels to collect moist clay, and to apply it to the masonry of their habitations.” (Shuckard.) The four wings are présent, except in rare instances. They are small ; the hinder pair long, narrow, ovate, lanceolate. The costal edge of the fore-wing (Fig. 29), is generally straight, becoming a little curved towards the apex, which is obtusely subrectangular ; the outer edge is bent at right angles, while the inner edge of the wing is long and straight. The veins are offcen difficult to trace, as in the outer half of the wing they break up into a System of net-veins, which are few in number, y et the continuations of the subcostal, médian, and submedian veins can be distinguished after careful study. In some low Ichneumonidœ, the Proctotrupidœ, and Chalciclidœ, the veins show a tendency to become obsolète, only the simple subcostal vein remaining ; and in Pteratomus, the veins are entirely obliterated, and the linear feather-like wings are in one pair fissured, reminding us of the Plume- moths, Pterophorus. The abdomen is composed in the larva State of ten segments, but in the adult stinging Hymenoptera, of six complété seg- ments in the females, and seven in the males ; while in the lôwer families the number varies, having in the Tenthredi- nidæ, eight tergites on the upper side and six sternites on the lower side. The remaining segments are, during the transfor- mations of the insect, aborted and withdrawn within the body. ‘The ovipositor and corresponding parts in the male hâve been described on pp. 14-18. The nervous System consists in the larvæ of eleven ganglia, in the adult five or six of these remain as abdominal ganglia, while the remainder, excluding the cephalic ganglia, are placed in two groups in the thorax. The cérébral ganglia are well developed, evincing the high intellectual qualities necessary in presiding over organs with sucli different uses as the simple and compound eyes, the antennæ, and lingua and palpi, and mandibles, especially in those sociable species which build complété nests. The digestive System, in those bees which sip up their food, consists, besides the external mouth-parts, of a “long œsoph-HYMENOPTERA. 111 agus which dilates into a thin-walled sucking stomach,” which in the Apiariœ and Ve s pi cl æ may be simply a latéral fold, or, as in many Crabron ici ce, “attached solely by a short and narrow.peduncle.” In Formica, Cynips, Leucospis, and Xypliid- rict there is a globular uncurved callous gizzard, which is en- yeloped by the base of the stomach, according to Siebold, who also States that “those Hymenoptera which are engaged during a long and active life in labors for the raising and support of their young, hâve a pretty long and flexuous stomach and in- testine, and the first has, usually, many constrictions ; ” while the Cynipiclæ, Ichneumonidœ, and Tentliredinidœ, which take no care of their young, hâve only a short small stomach and intestine. The sàlivary glands consist of two rather short ramified tufts, often contained entirely in the head. The tracheæ consist, as in other insects, of two main branches, from which numerous transverse anastomosing branches are given off, with numerous vesicular dilatations. Two such vesi- cles of immense volume are situated at the base of the abdo- men, which according to Hunter and Newport “ serve chiefly to enable the insect to alter its spécifie gravity at pleasure dur- ing flight, and thus diminish the muscular exertion required during these movements.” The urinary vessels are very numerous in the Hymenoptera ; they are usually short and surround the pylorus in numbers of from twenty to one hundred and fifty. The two poison glands (Fig. 54, 7i,p) are composed of long ramose tubes, resembling the salivary glands in their minute structure. The poison is poured from these into a pyriform sac lodged near the base of the sting, which is provided with a peculiar muscular apparatus for its sudden extension and with- drawal. The poison, in the Ants, Bees, and Wasps, consists, according to Will, of uformic acid, and a whitish, fatty, sharp residuum, the former being the poisonous substance.” (Bur- nett.) The wax-secreting apparatus consists of spécial dermal glands, as Milne-Edwards supposed. Claus has shown (see <4egenbaur’s Yerg. Anatomie) that these minute glands are mostly unioellular, the external opening being through a fine «bitinous tube on the outer surface of the integument. In the112 HYMENOPTERA. wax-producing insects these glands are developed in great numbers over certain portions of the body. In the Aphides, whose bodies are covered with a powder consisting of fine waxy threads, these glands are collected in groups. Modifications of them appear in the Coccidæ. In the wax-producing Hymen- optera the apparatus is somewhat complicated. The bees secrete wax in thin, transparent, membranous plates on the under side of the abdominal segments. Polygonal areas are formed by the openings of an extraordinarily large number of fine pore-canals, in which, surrounded by very numerous tra- chéal branches, the cylindrical gland-cells are densely piled upon each other. These form the wax organs, over which a fatty layer spreads. In those bees which do not produce wax, the glands of the wax organs are slightly developed. Wax organs also occur in the Humble bees. The honey is elaborated by an unknown Chemical process, from the food contained in the proventriculus, or crop, and which is regurgitated into the honey-cells. The ovaries consist of many-chambered, four, six, or a hun- dred, short tubes. uTlie receptacula seminis is nearly always simple, round or o voici, and necked, and is prolonged into a usually short séminal duct.” The glandula appendicidaris con- sists of a bifurcate tube which opens into the ductus seminalisy and only rarely into the capsula semincdis itself. In the Tenthredinidœ, “this apparatus is formed on a different type ; the séminal vesicle is a simple cliverticulum of the vagina, and more or less distinct from it, besicles it is défi- cient in the accessory gland. The copulatory pouch is absent in ail the Hymenoptera, as are also the sebaceous glands with those females which hâve a sting and a poison gland,” while in other insects the sebaceous glands are présent, and it would be nat- urally inferred, therefore, that the two are homologous, but modifiée! for diverse fonctions. The two testes of the male are u composée! of long follicles, fasciculate and surrounded, together with a portion of the torose cleferent canal, by a common envelope ; but more coin- monly the two testes are contained in a capsule sitiiatecl on the médian line of the body.” (Siebolel.) The eggs are usually long, cylindrical, and slightly curved inHYMENOPTERA. 113 the Bees ; in the Wasps they are more globular, and affixed by their smaller somewhat pedicelled end to the side, near tbe bot- tom of the cell in which they are laid. The eggs of the lower families tend to assume a spherical form. The eggs of dif- erent species of Bombits présent no appréciable différences. The larvæ of the Bees and Wasps, especially the social species, which live surrounded by their food, are of a very persistent form, the various généra differing but slightly, while the species can scarcely be separated. Such we hâve found to be the case in the Bees and Wasps ( Vespidœ) and Fossorial Wasps. The sexes of the species with a very thin tégument, such as Apis, Bombus, and Vespa, can be quite easily distin- guished, as the rudiments of the génital armor can be seen through. The Hymenoptera are mostly confined to the warmer and temperate régions of the earth ; as we approàch the pôles, the Bees disappear, with the exception of Bombus, and perhaps its parasite Apathus ; a species of Vespct is found on the Lab- rador coast, which has a climate like that of Greenland. No fossorial species of Wasps are known to us to occur in the arc- tic régions, while a few species of Ants, and several G li al ci di- dœ and Ichneumonidœ are not uncommon in Northern Labrador and Greenland. Our alpine summits, particularly that of Mt. Washington, reproduces the features of Northern: Labrador and Greenland as regards its Hymenopterous fauna.. The tropics are, however, the home of the Hymenoptera, and especially of the Bees. There are estimated to be about twenty-five thousand living species of this suborder, and this is probably a much smaller number than are yet to be discovered. In geological history, the Hymenoptera do not date far back compared with the Neuroptera and Orthoptera, and even the Coleoptera. Indeed they were among the last to appear upon the earth’s surface. The lower forms, so far as the scanty records show, appeared first 'n the Jura formation ; the Ants appear in the Tertiary period, especially in amber. As we hâve noticed before, the Hymenoptera are more purely terrestrial than any other insects. None are known to be aquatic in the early stages, and only two généra hâve been found 8114 HYMENOPTERA. swimming in the adult state on the surface of pools, and they are the low, minute, degraded Proctotrupids, Prestwichia natans and Polynema natans described by Mr. Lubbock. The Hymenoptera do not imitate or mimic the forms of other in- sects, but, on the contrary, their forms are extensively copied in the Lepidoptera, and especially the Diptera. A partial excep- tion to this law is seen in the antennæ of the Australian genus Thciumatosoma, where they are long and slender, and knobbed as in the butterfly, and also in Tetralonia mirabilis of Smith, from Brazil. The Hymenoptera, also, show their superiority to ail other in- sects in the form of their degraded wingless species, such as Pezomachus, the workers of Formica and the female of Mutilla. In these forms we hâve no striking resemblances to lower orders and suborders, but a strong adhérence to their own Hymenop- terous eharacters. Again ; in the degradational winged forms, we rarely find the antennæ pectinated ; a common occurrence in the lower suborders. In a low species of the Apiariœ, Lamprocolletes cladocerus, from Australia,—that land of anom- alies,—the antennæ are pectinated. This, Mr. F. Smith, the best living authority on this suborder, says, “is certainly the most remarkable bee that I hâve seen, and the only in- stance, to my knowledge, of a bee having pectinated antennæ ; such an occurrence, indeed, in the Aculeate Hymenoptera is only known in two or three instances, as in Psammotherma Jlab- dilata amongstthe Mutillidæ, and again in Ctenocerus Klugii in the Pompilidœ; there is also a modification of it in one or two other species of Pomp ilidœAmong the Tentlire- dinidæ, the male Lophyrus lias well-pectinated antennæ, as also has Cladomacra macropus of Smith, from New Guinea and Celebes. The wings of perhaps the most degraded Hymenoptera, the Proctotrupidæ, are rarely fissured ; wlienthis occurs, as in Pteratomus Putnamii, they somewhat resemble those of Ptero- phorus, the lowest moth. It is extremely rare that the com- pound eyes are replaced by stemmata, or simple eyes ; in but one instance, the genus Anthophoràbia, are the eyes in the male sex reduced to a simple ocellus. This species lives in the darkness of the cells of Anthophora.APIARIÆ. 115 By reason of the permanence of the type, due to the higli Tank of these insects, the generic and spécifie characters are founded on very slight différences, so that these insects, and particularly the two higher families, the Wasps ( Vespidœ) and Bees (Apiariæ) are the most difflcult insects to study. The easiest characters for the récognition of the généra, lie in the venation of the wings , though in the fossorial families the legs vary greatly. The best spécifie characters lie in the sculptur- ing and style of coloration, but the spots and markings are apt to vary greatly. The great différences between the sexes are liable to mislead the student, and hence large collections are indispensable for tlieir proper study. Bees act as “marriage priests ” in the fertilization of plants, conveying pollen from flower to flower, and thus insuring the formation of the fruit. It is said that many plants could not be fertilized without the interposition of Bees. Their interesting habits deserve long and patient study ; it i.s for their observations on the insects of this suborder that the names of Réaumur, the two Hubers, and Latreille will be ever held in spécial remembrance. Most Hymenoptera love the sun, and they may be caught while flying about flowers. The nests of bees, wasps, and ants should be sought for and the entire colony captured, together with the parasites. The hairy species should be pinned while in the net, and the naked ones can be put in the collecting-bot- tle. The larger species may be pinned, like other insects, through the thorax; but the minute Chalcids, etc., should be gummed, like small Coleoptera, upon cards. The nests of bees and of wasps and ants and the young in various stages of growth should be collected, and in such num- bers as to show their different stages of construction, to serve as illustrations of insect architecture. Apiariæ Latreille (Apidæ Leach). This and those families succeeding which are provided with a true sting, were called by Latreille Hymenoptera Aculeata. The male antennæ are mostly thirteen-jointed, while in the female they are twelve- jointed. The females (and the workers, when they exist) feed the larvæ, which mostly live in nests or cells.116 HYMJ3NOPTEKA. In the social Bees, besides the normal male and female forms, there are asexual females, wliose inner génital organs are partly aborted, though externally only differing in tlieir smaller size from the true females. The male antennæ are longer, tapering more towards the tips, and the eyes of the male approacli eacli other doser over the vertex than in the opposite sex, though these are characters which apply to other Hymenoptera. The mouth-parts are in the higlier généra greatly elongated, the labium being long, with the lingua of great length, and tlie lobes of the maxillæ long and knife-shaped ; but these parts, as well as the form of the jaws, are subject to great modifications in the different généra : the labial palpi are four-jointed, and the maxillary palpi are from one to six-jointed. The hind tibia and basal joint of the tarsi are, in the pollen-gathering species, very broad ; the tibia is in Apis and Bombus hollowed on the outside, and stiff bristles project over the cavity from each side of the joint, forming the honey-basket {corbicnlum), on which the “clodden masses of honey and pollen” are con- veyed to their nests. In the parasitic généra, sucli as Apathus, the tibia is, on the contrary, convex, rather than concave,, though of the usual width ; while in Nomcida, also parasitic, the legs are narrow, the tibia not being dilated. In Andrena and its allies, Halictus and Colletés, the mouth- parts, especially the tongue, are much shortened, thus afford- ing a passage jnto the Vespidœ. In these généra the tongue is folded back but once between the horny encasement of tlie maxillæ, but in the higher Apiciriœ the part formed by the union of the lingua and maxilla is twice bent back, and thus protected by the horny lobes of the maxillæ. The fore-wings hâve two or three subcostal (cubital) cells. There are two thousand species of this family. The différ- ences between the larvæ of the various généra of this family are very slight, those of the parasitic species are, however, readily distinguished from their hosts. The higher Apiariœ, comprising the subfamily Apinœ, hâve the ligula long, cylindrical, while the labial palpi hâve two very long, slender, compressed basal joints, and two short terminal joints. The genus Apis has no terminal spurs on the hind tibiæ,APIARIÆ. 117 while the fore-wings hâve three subcostal (cubital) cells, the middle of which is elongated and acutely wedge-shaped. The eyes in the male are united above ; the mouth-parts are nearly aborted, and the hind legs are smooth. In the female there are two paraglossæ on the ligula, and the maxillary palpi are one-jointed. The worker only differs externally from the female in the shorter abdomen. The larva of the Honey-bee closely resembles that of Bom~ bus, but the body is shorter, broader, and more flattened, while tlie head is less prominent, and the latéral tubercles along the body are, perhaps, less prominent than in the young Humble- bee, otherwise the two généra are, in the larval State, much alike. In its natural position, the larva lies at the bottom of the cell doubled upon itself. Though the larvæ are said usually to feed upon pollen, Mr. Desborough states that honey alone is the food of the grub, as lie reared 729 larvæ with no other food than honey. But as with the wild bees they may extract honey from the pollen provided for them. He says the matured bees may be observed feeding at night on the bee-bread (pollen). Lang- stroth (The Hive and Iloney-bee), however, states that “ pol- len is indispensable to the nourishment of the young. It is wery rich in the nitrogenous substances which are not contained in the honey.” The Honey-bee, Apis méllifica, is now distributed over the civilized world. It was introduced into this country during the seventeenth century, and into South America in 1845 (Ger- stæcker). The Italian, or Ligurian, bee is considered by F Smith as being a climatic variety. The cultivation of the Honey-bee is rapidly increasing in this -country, but the German Bee-masters hâve made the most pro- gress in theoretical and practical Bee-culture. Convenient hives are now constructed by which ail the operations of the bees can be observed at leisure. Gerstæcker thus sums up the habits of the Honey-bee : A fertilized quéen which, with a few workers, has wintered over, lays its eggs in the spring first in the worker, and afterwards, at a later period, in the drone- cells (both arranged in two perpendieular rows of cells). Early in summer, the workers construct the larger flask-shaped queen-118 HYMENOPTERA. cells, which are placed on the edge of the comb, and in these the queen-larvæ are fed with rich and choice nourishment. As soon as the first of the new brood of queens is excluded from its cell, which it indicates by a peculiar buzzing noise, the old queen deserts the nest, carrying away with her a part of the swarm, and thus forms a new colony. The recently excluded queen then takes its marriage flight high in the air with a drone, and on its return undertakes the management of the hive, and the duty of laying eggs. When another queen is disclosed, the same process of forming a new colony goes on. When the supply of young queens is exhausted, the workers fall upon the drones and destroy them without mercy. The first brood of workers live about six weeks in summer, and then give way to a new brood. Mr. J. G. Desborough States that the maximum period of the life of a worker is eight months. The queens are known to live five years, and during their whole life lay more than a million eggs (V. Berlepsch). Langstroth States that “during the height of the breeding season, she will often, under favorable circumstances, lay from 2,000 to 3,000 eggs a day.” According to Yon Siebold’s discovery only the queens' and workers' eggs are fertilized by sperm- cells stored in the receptaculum seminis, and these she can fertilize at will, retaining the power for four or five years, as the muscles guarding the duct leading from this sperm-bag are subject to her will. Drone eggs are laid by unfertilized queen-bees, and in some cases even by worker-bees. This last fact has been confirmed by the more recent observations of Mr. Tegetmeier, of London. Principal Leitch, according to Tegetmeier, has suggested the theory that a worker egg may develop a queen, if transferred into a queen-cell. “It is well known that bees, deprived of their queen, select several worker-eggs, or very young larvæ,. for the purpose of rearing queens. The cells in which these eggs are situated are lengthened out and the end turned down- ward." He suggests that the development into a queen was caused by the increased température of the queen-cell, above that of the worker-cells. But Messrs. F. Smith and Woodbury (Proceedings of the Entomological Society of London, January 2, 1862) support F.APIARIÆ. 119 Huber’s theory, that the change is due to “the quality as well as quantity of food with which the royal larva is supplied,” though Dr. Leitch objects, that it has been by no means con- clusively proved “ that the so-called royal jelly differs in any respect from the ordinary food supplied to the worker larva and Mr. Woodbury cites the experiments of Dzierzon, as quoted by Kleine, uthat as Huber, by introducing some royal jelly in cells containing worker-brood, obtained queens, it may be possible to induce bees to construct royal cells, when the Apiarian prefers to hâve them, by inserting a small portion of royal jelly in cells containing worker-larvæ.” Kleine takes “ an unsealed royal cell—which usually contains an excess of royal jelly—and removes from it a portion of the jelly, on the point of a knife or pen, and by placing it on the inner margin of any worker cell, feels confident that the larvæ in them will be reared as queens.” Before these points are settled we must study the habits of the Wild Bees, and of the other social Hymenoptera and White» Ants, together with the social Aphides more carefully. Mr. F. W. Putnam pertinently states, “at présent I cannot believe that the peculiarity of food, or the structure of the cells, pro- duces a différence of development in Humble-bees, for the lar- væ, as has been previously stated, were seen to make their own cells from the pollen paste. Is it not more natural to believe, as has been suggested to me by Professor J. Wyman, that the différence in the development of the eggs is owing to their be- ing laid at various times after imprégnation? Thus, if I am right in supposing that the queens are impregnated by the males late in the summer, the eggs, laid soon after, produce the large queen larvæ ; * the next set of eggs, laid in the spring, produce the workers, or undeveloped females, while from those deposited still later, male bees are principally developed.” (Proceedings of the Essex Institute, Salem, vol. iv, 1864, y 103.) Referring to Mr. Putnam’s statement that there are both small and large queens (besides the workers), Dr. Gerstæcker infers, * Dr. Gerstæcker, on the other hand, states that “from the brood-cells of a nest of Bombus muscorum, found by him on the 18th of September, there were devei* oped at the end of the same month only workers.”120 HYMENOPTERA. “from the examination of numerous individuals fonnd flying in the spring after hibernation, that these could not be considered as true queens, since their ovaries were only moderately devel- oped, though larger than those of the workers, while in the true queen, captured in the summer, the ovaries were perfectly developed. This corresponds almost entirely to what we find in the wasps, wliose spring females hâve only moderately de- veloped ovales.” How the Honey-bee builds its cells, and whether tliey are ex- actly hexagonal, are questions that hâve interested the best observers from Maraldi who wrote in 1712, and Réaumur, whose Mémoires appeared in 1740, down to the présent date. Their solution involves not only the closest observation of the insect while at wrork, but also the shrewdest judgment to ex- plain the facts observed and deduce a legitimate tlieory. Does. the bee intelligently plan her work out beforeliand, or does she follow the guidance of what is called instinct? Does she construct hexagonal cells wliicli are matliematically exact, or does she vary the proportions of eacli cell, so that it is per- fect only in its general idéal form ? Again, in making the cell, is the bee actually capable of making such a cell alone, or is it due to the résultant action of several bees ? Professor J. Wy- man is of the latter opinion, as lie thinks “that if left alone to build a single cell, this would most probably be round. In the cells of Mëlipona, as Huber’s plate shows, they are only hex- agonal when in contact witli the adjoining cells.” (Proceed- ings of the Boston Society of Natural History, x, p. 278, 1866.) A similar view is that proposed in 1862 by the Rev. Samuel Haughton, in a paper read before the Natural History Society of Dublin, where he says, according to Mr. F. Smith, that the hexagonal form of the cell “may be accounted for simply by the mechanical pressure of the insects against eacli other during the formation of the cell. In conséquence of the instinct that compels them to work with reference to a plane, and of the cylindrical form of the insect’s body, the cells must be hex- agonal.” Mr. G. R. Waterhouse (Transactions of the Entomological Society of London. Third sériés, vol. ii, p. 129, 1864) ha»APIARIÆ. 121 prôposed what has been called the “circular theory,” or what the author himself terms “the principle of working in seg- ments of circles.” He contends u that the hexagonal formof the cells of certain bees and wasps may, and does, arise ont of this mode of action when under certain conditions ; that those condi- tions are, that the cells are so commenced that their natural cir- cumferences, as the work proceeds, are either simply brought into contact with each other, or that the cells are so placed that the (we will say theoretical) circumferences must intersect. Contact with adjoining cells, then, is an essential condition to bring about the hexagonal form as I hâve before pointed out (See Proceedings of the Entomological Society, 1858, p. 17) ; but for this resuit it is not necessary that a hexagonal cell should be completely surrounded by other cells.” Is not this theory, after ail, too mechanical ? Is not our bee more of a free agent ? Does it not hâve a mind to design its work ? Mr. F. Smith, who has devoted years to the study of Hymenoptera, especially the higlier forms of this suborder, the Bees and Wasps, replies to both théories of Waterhouse and Haughton, by bringing in the case of the Wasps which also build hexagonal cells, showing that a solitary wasp will build its cells in very regular hexagons. Th us the nest of the soli- tary Wasp, Icaria guttatipennis, “consists of a double row, the number of cells being ten ; I now direct your attention to the fact that ail the cells are perfectly hexagonal, the exterior planes being as beautifully finished as those in contact with the inner planes of the opposing cells. I hâve placed a draw- ing of this nest (Plate 5, Fig. 7) in the box on the table, and I particularly wish you to observe, that the first cell is carried up in a perfectly hexagonal form above the adjoining cells ; a proofthat, if Wasps never build perfect isolated hexagonal cells, they certainly possess the capability of doing so. The exterior of ail the cells, as I before observed, is hexagonal, not cylindri- cal, until fresh cells are added on the outer side, as was ob- served to be the case in combs of the Hive-bee, by Mr. Tegetmeier.” (Proceedings of the Entomological Society of London. Third sériés, ii, 1864, p. 135.) An examination of the cells of three species of Polistes (the female of which begins alone in the spring to build her nest122 HYMENOPTERA. the cells of which are afterwards greatly ihcreased in number after the first brood of females appear), convinced us that the Wasp begins with the circular cup-shaped form of cell, and when about depositing an egg in it, changes her mode of ope- rating, builds up the edges into a hexagonal form, and carries up the rim of each cell independently to its required height. She thus apparently changes her plan at a certain stage of the work, and is so far a free agent. Mr. Smith also exhibited a portion of the nest of another wasp, Tcitua Mario (Plate 5, Fig. 9), that proved to his mind the primary intention of the wasp instinctively to build cells- with exactly six sides. The figure represents part of one of the fiat floors, on which the foundations of the cells are laid in, regular hexagons, instead of beginning in hemispherical cups. Mr. Smith (p. 141) concludes, “that ail hexagonal cells are not constructed upon a circular principle, and that the primary idea of ail social bees and wasps is not to produce cylindrical cells with hemispherical bases.” In this connection the following extract from Mr. Smith’s remarks is of interest : “It may not be known that in order to expedite the building of honey-combs, it is a common practice with bee-keepers in Germany to furnish hives with artificial foundations for the cells ; these consist of sheets of wax, upon. which is impressed a sériés of pyramidal hollows ; in fact, the counterpart of a comb built by the bees themselves, entirely deprived of the cell-walls ; and it is from such a piece of comb» that the casts for the artificial foundations are obtained. A piece of casting of this description I lay before you, and I par- ticularly call your attention (addressing the members of the Entomological Society of London) to the commencement of the outer cells ; you will see, in some instances, a single plane of the hexagonal cell commenced, in others two or three are in. progress ; here you hâve a ground-plan supplied, or, I may say,. the foundations of the habitations ready prepared, upon which. the laborers are to raise the walls, and you may see how admi- rably they hâve done it. Instinct enables the bee to construit hexagonal cells without teaching, and, we are told, in one un- deviating manner. Surely the example before us exhibits an amount of intelligence on the part of the bees in availing them-AFIARIÆ. m selves of such adventitious aid. Must we nôt henceforth, when speaking of the marvels of the hive or the vespiary, eraso from our vocabulary such terms as blind instinct ; and must we not cease to stigmatize the bee as a mere machine?” At the meeting of the same society held Feb. 1, 1864, Mr. F. Smith exhibited a collection of Wasps’ nests,—one of Vespa rufa, the rest of F. vulgaris; they were in various stages of formation, the earliest consisting of only a single cup contain- ing the first egg, others consisting of three or four cups, whilst others again were more complété. The whole had been arti- ficially obtained by Mr. Stone, who tempted the wasps to build by excavating holes in banks and furnishing them with foot- stalks ; in fact, Mr. Stone appeared to possess the power of inducing wasps to build nests of almost any shape he pleased. But to return to the cell of the Bee. It should first be proved that the cells are not exactly and mathematically per- fect hexagons, though sufïiciently so for the purpose for which they are used. In the Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, vol. vii, 1866, Professor Wyman has, by a most careful as well as novel and ingenious mode of investiga- tion, proved that the cells are ail more or less imperfect, and that a hexagonal cell mathematically exact, does not exist in nature, but only in theory. The form of the cell is liable to marked variations, chief among which the foliowing may be mentioned, in the author’s own words : “1. The diameters of workers’ cells may so vary, that ten of them may hâve an aggregate déviation from the normal quantity equal to the diameter of a cell. The average varia- tion is a little less than one half that amount, namely, nearly 0.10 inch, in the same number of cells. “2. The width of the sides varies, and this generally in- volves a variation of the angles which adjoining sides make with each other, since the sides vary not only in length but in direction. “3. The variation in the diameters does not dépend upon accidentai distortion, but upon the manner in which the cell was built.124 HYMENOPTERA. u4. The relative size of the rhombic faces of the pyramidal base is liable to frequent variation, and this where the cells are not transitional from one kind to another. “5. When a fourth side exists in the basal pyramid, it may be in conséquence of irregularity in the size of the cells, or of incorrect alignment of them on the two sides of the comb.” Sometimes one of the faces is lost, and a new one formed, so that ail the basal portion of the cell becomes reversed, as a b c will be seen by refer- ence to Figs. 73 and 74 ; the first repre- Fig. 73. senting the cells when the base is viewed, and the second when looked at perpendic- ularly to one of the sides. In both figures A indicates the ordinary form of the cell. The whole abc sériés of Fig. 74 shows the graduai introduction of the new face, which is seen on the lower border, and the élimination of one of the original faces, which is seen on the upper bordeï*. At B, which is intermediate between the Fig. 74. two extremes, the four faces consist of two equal rhombs,— one of which is the outgoing and the other the incoming one, and two equal hexagons. B, Fig. 74, represents the sides of the same cell, which, instead of forming three trapeziums, as at A, a, 6, c, now form two pentagons, a' and c', and a parallelogram, V.. At C, Figs. 73 and 74, the forms are in ail respects the reverse of those of A. A and C are symmetrical with each other, and B is symmetrical in itself. No pré- cisé number of cells is necessary for the purpose of making this transition, for it may take place in two or three, or extend through a long sériés, as in . Fig. 73. “6. Ordinarily, the error of alignment does not amount to more than one or two diameters of a cell. But occasionally Fig. 75.APIARIÆ. 125 the rows of cells on one side of the comb may deviate from their true direction with regard to those on the other, to the extent of 30°.” “Thus, if a piece of normal comb be held in the position in which it was built, two of the opposite angles of the hexagon, Fig. 75, A, a, will be in the same vertical line, and two of the sides will be parallel to this. The same is true of the opposite side of the comb ; and thus ail the cor- responding parts of the cells on the two sides will be par- allel. In the déviation we are now noticing, the change is like that represented in A, wliere the cell a is in its true position, while the cell b, which is from the oppo- site side, and is in contact with a, varies from it by about 30°. If we look at these two cells in the direc- tion of their sides as at B, the prism a will hâve one of its angles towards the eye, and b one of its sides. In conséquence of this déviation and the continuai Crossing of the rows on opposite sides, the pyramidal base is not made, and the cell is shortened. “ 7. In curved or bent combs the cells on tlie concave side tend to be- come narrower, while those on the other tend to become broader to- wards their mouths. In Fig. 76 (this and Figs. 77 and 78 are made Fis-77 • from impressions obtained directly from the comb and transferred to wood ; they represent the form of the cells exactly), as in the central line of cells, there are a variety of hexagons, each resulting from the union 9 Fig. 76.126 HYMENOPTERA. of two cells, the base being double while the mouth is single. That on the line a, 5, has three sides at one end, United by two long sides with one at the other, and thus two of the opposite sides are not parallel ; at c, d, two sides at a b c d e f Fig. 78. oither end are United by two long sides, these last being par- allel ; and at e, /, the mouth of the compound cell has seven sides. Each has a partition at its base, separating the two originally distinct cells, and each was lined with a cocoon, showing that it had been used for rearing young. At g, not •only has the partition between the combining cells disappeared, but also three of the sides of each cell.” The bees do not appear to hâve any systematic way of mak* ing a transition from worker to drone cells, which are one-fifth larger than the former. More commonly, they effect it by a graduai alteration of the diameters, thus enlarging a worker into a drone, or narrowing a drone into a worker cell. This alteration is usually made in from four to six rows. In one caseAPIARIÆ. 127 Professor Wyman noticed the transition made with only one cell, as in Fig. 78, but not without destroying the regularity of the two adjoining rows. 44 In conséquence of the graduai narrowing or widening of the transition cells, the comb tends to become more or less tri- angular and the cells to become disturbed. The bees counter- act this tendency by the occasional intercalation of an additional row, of which two instances are given in Fig. 78, at a and 6, where three rows of worker cells are continuous with two of drone cells, c, d and e, f; or, reversing the statement, and supposing the transition, as in the building of the comb, is from worker to drone-cells, a row of the latter is from time to time omitted as the rows a and b; in this way, the regularity of the comb is preserved.,, Honey-cells are formed either by enlarging the ordinary brood-cells, or adding them to others often larger, or by con- structing a new comb, devoted entirely to the storing of honey. 44 While the cells of this last are built unequivocally in accord- ance with the hexagonal type, they exhibit a range of variation from it which almost défiés description.” No Ichneumon-flies are known to attack the larva of the Honey-bee, nor in fact, with few exceptions, any of the wild bees, owing, probably, to the difficulty of their gaining access to them, since Anomalon vesparum lias been reared from the cells of wasps which are more exposed than tliose of bees. But the Honey, as well as the wild bees, are afïlicted by a peculiar assemblage of insect-parasites, some of which hâve the most remarkable habits. The most formidable pest of the Hive-bee is the Bee Fly, Phora incrassatct, which in Europe sometimes produces the well-known disease called 44foul- brood.” The Bee-louse, Branla cœca, is, in Europe, sometimes troublesome to the adult bee, while Trichodes apiarius, a beetle, devours the larvæ. The larvæ of Meloë and Stylops are known in Europe to infest the Honey-bee, and among the low intesti- nal worms Assmus enumerates Gordius subbifurcus which in- fests the drones of the Honey-bee as well as other insects. Professor Siebold has also described Mer mis albicans, which is a similar kind of hair-worm, from two to five inches long, and whitish in color. This worm is also found, strangely128 HYMENOPTERA. enough, only in the drones, though it is the workers wliick frequent watery places (where the worm deposits its eggs) ta appease their thirst. The Wax-moths, Galleria cereana and Achroia alvearia, do much harm by consuming the wax and thus breaking down the cells, and by filling the hive with their webs.* The genus Apis is indigenous in South America, though the Honey-bee has been extensively introduced into the West In- dies. Our Honey-bee is replaced in the tropics by the stingless, minute bees, which store up honey and live in far more numer- ous colonies. The cells of Melipona are hexagonal, nearly approaching in regularity those of the Hive-bee, while the honey-cells are irregular, much larger cavities, which hold about one-half as much honey as a cell of the Humble-bee. From a paper on the Brazilian Honey-bees, read by Mr. F. Smith be* fore the Entomological Society of London, March, 1863, he states that the Meîiponas are small insects, having wings shorter titan tlie abdomen, the latter being very convex and oblong ; their mandibles never being dentate ; while the Trigonas hâve the wings more ample, and longer than the abdomen, which ie short, somewhat triangular, while the mandibles are serrated, denticulate, or sometimes edentate. The Meîiponas are re~ stricted to the new world, while Trigona extends into Africa* India, and Australasia. u Ail these bees are honey gatherers, but the honey collected by the different species varies greatly in quality : from the nests of some it is excellent ; from others, worthless. The honey of the species 4 Mombuca9 is said to be black and sour, the quality being dépendent on species of flowers from which the honey is collected. This great différence in the honey of the various species is apparently confirmatory of the fact that each species confines itself to particular flowers, never visiting any other kind. The different relative length of the tongue in * Explanation of Plate 2. Parasites of the Honey-bee. Fig. 1, Phora incras- scita ; Fig. 2, pupa; Fig. 3, larva. Fig. 4, Branla cœca ; Fig. 5, larva. Fig. 6, Tri- chodes apiarius : a, larva ; 6, pupa. Fig. 7, Méloë angusticollis ; Fig. 8, freshly hatched. larva; Fig. 9, second stage of larva; Fig. 10, flrst stage of semi-pupa; Fig. 11, pupa. Fig. 12, Stylops Childreni in the body of a wild bee, Andrena ; Fig. 13, toj> view of the same removed from its host ; Fig. 14, male of the same ; a, side view. Fig. 15, Mucor mellitophorusy a parasitic fungus. Fig. 16, unknown larva found in nest of Humble-bee. Descriptions of the insect parasites will be given beyond.Plate 2. Fig. 1. Fig. 3. Fig. 2. Fig. 5. Fig. 4. Fig. 13. PARASITES OF THE HONEY BEE,APIARIÆ. 129 the species is also confirmatory of the same supposition ; in- deed, the great diversity in this respect observable in these bees, appears to me to be analogous to a similar diversity in the length of the bills of humming-birds, which, it is well known, are always adapted for reaching the nectaries of the particular flowers which they usually frequent.,, In regard to the immense numbers of individuals in a col- ony, Mr. Stretch, who collected them at Panama, “found a nest several feet in length in the hollow of a tree, containing thousands of individuals, their numbers being, as he informs me, apparently countless. “Gardner, in his travels, gives a list of such species (of Melipona) as he met in the provinces of Piauhy and Goyaz, where he found them numerous ; in every house, he says, ‘you find the honey of these bees ; ’ many species, he tells us, build in the hollow trunks of trees, others in banks ; some suspend their nests from branches of trees, whilst one species constructs its nest of clay, it being of large size ; the honey of this spe- cies, he says, is very good.” (Smith.) In a nest of Trigona carbonciria from Eastern Australia, Smith, of the British Muséum, found from 400 to 500 dead workers crammed in the spaces between the combs, but he did not find a female among them. The combs are arranged precisely similar to those of the common wasp. The number of honey-pots, which are placed at the foot of the nest, amounted to 250. Smith inclines to the opinion that the hive of Trigona con- tains several prolific females ; uthe accounts given of the mul- titudes inhabiting some nests is too great, I think, to render it possible that one female could produce them ail. Mr. Stretch described a hive that he saw, occupying the interior of a decay- ing tree, that measured six feet in length, and the multitude of bees he compared to a black cloud. M. Guérin found six fe- males in a nest of Melipona fulvipes.” Hill states, in Gosse’s Naturalisas Sojourn in Jamaica, “that the wax of these bees [Trigona] is very unctuous and dark colored, but susceptible of being wliitened by bleaching. The honey is stored in clusters of cups, about the size of pigeon’s eggs, at the bottom of the hive, and always from the 9130 HYMENOPTERA. brood-cells. The broocl-cells are hexagonal ; they are not deep, and the young ones, when ready to burst their casement, just fill the whole cavity. The mother bee is lighter in color than the other bees, and elongated at the abdomen to double their length.” Smith also States that the female of this genus has the abdomen greatly distended, reminding one of the gravid female of the White Ant. (Smith, Proc. Ent. Soc., London, Dec. 7, 18G3.) In North America, oui* nearest ally, as regards its habits, of the true Iloney-bee, is the Humble-bee (Bombus), of which over forty species are known to inhabit North America. The economy of the Humble-bee is tlius : the queen awakens in early spring from her winter’s sleep beneath the leaves or moss, or in deserted nests, and selects a nesting-place generally in an abandoned nest of a field-mouse, or beneath a stump or sod, and “ immediately,” according to Mr. F. W. Putnam, “collects a small amount of pollen mixed with honey, and in this deposits from seven to fourteen eggs, gradually adding to the pollen mass until the first brood is hatched. She does not wait, however, for one brood to be hatched before laying the eggs of another ; but, as soon as food enough has been collected, «lie lays the eggs for a second. The eggs [Plate 4, Fig. 2] are laid, in contact with each other, in one cavity of the mass of pollen, with a part of which tlie}^ are slightly covered. They are very soon developed ; in fact, the lines are nowhere dis- tinctly drawn between the egg and the larva, the larva and pupa, and again between the latter and the imago ; a perfect sériés, showing this graduai transformation of the young to the imago, can be found in almost every nest. “As soon as the larvæ are capable of motion and commence feeding, they eat the pollen by which they are surrounded, and, gradually separating, push their way in various directions. Eating as they move, and increasing in size quite rapidly, they soon make large cavities in the pollen mass. When they hâve attained their full size, they spin a silken wall about them, which is strengthened by the old bees covering it with a thin layer of wax, which soon becomes hard and tough, thus form- ing a cell. [Plate 4, Figs. 1, 2.] The larvæ now gradually Attain the pupa stage, and remain inactive until their full devehPlate 3. PARASITES OF WILD BEES.APIARIÆ. 131 opment. They then eut their way out, and are ready to assume their duties as workers, small females, males or queens. “It is apparent that the irregular disposition of the cells is due to their being constructed so peculiarly by the larvæ. After the first brood, composed of workers, has corne forth, the queen bee devotes her time principally to her duties at home, the workers supplying the colony with honey and pollen. As the queen continues prolific, more workers are added, and the nest is rapidly enlarged. “ About the middle of summer eggs are deposited which produce both small females and males/’ . . . “Ail eggs laid after the last of July produce the large females, or queens ; and, the males being still in the nest, it is presumed that the queens are impregnated at this time, as, on the approach of cold weather, ail except the queens, of which there are several in each nest, die?’ (Putnam, Com. Essex Inst., vol. iv, p. 98,1864.) Besides Apathus, the larvæ of various moths consume the honey and wa^en cells ; the two-winged Aies, Volucella and Conops, and the larvæ of what is either an Anthomyia or Tachina-like fly ; several species of Anthrax, the Coleopterous Anobium paniceum of Europe, Meloë, Stylops, and Anthero- phagus ochraceus are parasitic on Humble-bees.* The habits of the genus Apatlius are not clearly known, but they are supposed to prey, in the larva state, upon the larvæ of Bojnbus, being found in their nests ; their habits, so far as known, ally them with Nomada. The species are distinguished by the tibiæ being convex, instead of concave, as in Bombus, while the mandibles of the females are acute, triangular, biden- tate, being spatulate and three-toothed in Bombus, and they hâve no pollenigerous organs. There are males and females only, as in ail the remaining généra of the family. Ajmthus Ashtonii (Plate 3, Fig. 1) is found in the Northern States. ♦Explanation of*Plate 3. —Parasites of the Humble and Leaf-cutter Bees. Fig. 1, Apathus Ashtonii. Fig. 2, Nepliopteryx Edmandsii ; a, larva ; b, pupa. Fig. 3, Sa, Microgaster nephoptericis, an Ichneumon parasite of Nephopteryx. Fig. 4, Antherophagus ochraceus. Fig. 5, Anthomyia? larva; a, side view. Fig. 6, Re- cently hatched larva of Stylops Childrenii; a, side view. Fig. 7, larva; a, pnpa of Anthophorcibia megachilis, a Chalcid parasite on Megachile. Fig. 8, Pteratomus Putnamii, an exceedingly minute Proctotrupid fly, supposed to be parasitic on An- thorphorabia megachilis; a, a hind wing. Fig. 9, a Mite found in the nests of JÉumble-bees.132 HYMEN OPTERA. Xylocopa, the Carpenter-bee, is “the largest and most bulky of ail known bees,” but less hirsute than Bombus, wliile tlie basal joint of the labial palpi is almost four times as long as the second ; and the maxillary palpi are six-jointed, the mouth- parts being very higlily organized. The larva of X. Virginica (Plate 4, Fig. 3, adult ; Fig. 4, larva ; Fig. 5, nest) is slenderer than that of Bombus, the body tapering more rapidly towards each end. The power of boring the most symmetrical tunnels in solid wood reaches its perfection in the large Virginian Carpenter- bee (Xylocopa Virginica). We hâve received from Mr. James Angus, of West Farms, N. Y., a piece of trellis for a grape- vine, made of pine wood, containing the cells and young in various stages of growth, together with the larvæ and chrysa- lids of Anthrax sinuosa (Plate 4, Fig. 6, larva; Fig. 7, pupa), a species of fly parasitic on the larva of the bee, and wliich buries its head in its soft body and feeds on its juices. Mr. Angus thus writes us regarding its habits, under date of July 19 : “I asked an intelligent and observing carpenter yes- terday, if he knew how long it took the Xylocopa to bore her tunnel. He said he thought she bored about one-quarter of an inch a day. I don’t think myself she bores more than one- half inch, if she does that. If I mistake not, it takes her about two day s to make her own length at the first start ; but this being across the grain of the wood may not be so easily done as the remainder, which runs parallel with it. She always follows the grain of the wood, with the exception of the en- trance, which is about her own iengtli. The tunnels run from one to one and a half feet in length. They generally mn in opposite directions from the opening, and sometimes otlier gal- leries are run above the first, using the same opening. I think they only make new tunnels when old bnes are not to be found, and that the same tunnels are used ^for many years. Some of the old tunnels are very wide. I hâve found parts of them about an inch in diameter. I think this is caused by rasping off the sides to procure the necessary material for con- structing tlieir cells. The partitions are composed of wood- raspings, and some sticky fluid, probably saliva, to make it adhéré.APIARIÆ. 133 “The tunnels are sometimes taken possession of by other bees and wasps. I think when this is the case, the Xylocopa prefers making a new cell to cleaning out tlie mud and rubbisli of the other species. I frequently find these bees remaining for a long time on the wing close to the opening, and bobbing their heads against the side, as if fanning air into the opening. I hâve seen thera thus employed for twenty minutes. Whether one bee, or more, makes the tunnel, that is, whether they take turns in boring, I cannot say at présent. In opening the cells, more than one are generally found, even at this season. About two weeks ago, I found as many as seven, I think, in one.” * The hole is divided by partitions into cells about seven-tenths of an inch long. These partitions are constructed of the dust or chippings made by the bee in eating out lier cells, for our active little carpenter is provided with strong cutting jaws, moved by powerful muscles, and on her legs are stiff brushes of hair for cleaning out the tunnel as she descends into the heart of the solid wood. She must throw out the chips she bites off from the sides of the burrow with her hind legs, pass- ing the load of chips backwards out of the cell with her fore- limbs, which she uses as hands. The partitions are built most elaborately of a single flattened band of chips, which is rolled up into a coil four layers deep. One side, forming the bottom of the cell, is concave, being * “ Since writing the above I hâve opened one of the new holes of Xylocopa which was commencée! between three and four weeks ago, in a pine slat used in the staging of the greenhouse. The dimensions were as follows: Opening fully SS wide ; depth 7-16 ; whole length of tunnel 6 and 5-16 inches. The tunnel branched both ways fïom the hole. One end, from opening, was 2 and 5-8, containing three cells, two with larva and pollen, the tliird empty. The other side of the opening, or the rest of the tunnel, was empty, with the exception of the old bee (only one) at work. I think this was the work of one bee, and, as near as I ean judge, about twenty-five durs’ work. Width of tunnel inside at widest 0—16 inch. For some days this bee has been discharging a great quantity of saw-dust and pollen, which I had colléeted by placing a vessel under it. It would seem that she had cells constructed also in the opposite side of the hole, and that she removed them to enlarge the tunnel. Among the stuff thrown out, I find a partition of a cell nearly entire. I hâve just found a Xylocopa bobbing at one of the holes, and in order to ascer- tain the depth of the tunnel, and to see whether there were any others in them, I sounded with a pliable rod, and found others in one side, at a depth of five and one hall' inches; the other side was four inches deep, witliout bees. The morning was eool, so that the object in bobbing could not be to introduce fresh currents of air, but must hâve had some relation to tliose inside. The legs on such occasions are, as 1 hâve noticed, loaded writh pollen.”—American Naturalisé vol. 1, p. 370.134 HYMENOPTERA. beaten down and smoothed off by the bee. The otker side of the partition, forming the top of the cell, is flat and rough. At the time of opening the burrow, July 8th, the cells con- tained nearly full-grown larvæ, with some half developed. They were feeding on the masses of pollen, which were as large as a thick kidney-bean, and occupied nearly half the cell. Sa- pyga repanda is parasitic in the cells of Xylocopa violacea of Southern Europe. The habits and structure of the little Ceratina ally it elosely with Xylocopa, as it hollows ont the stems of plants, and builds in them its cylindrical cells. This bee is oblong in form, with tridentate mandibles, and a short labrum. The maxillaiy palpi are six-jointed, and the labial palpi are two-jointed. Ceratina dnpla Say is a common small bright-green smooth-bodied species, which, in the middle of May, according to Dr. Harris’ MS. notes, tunnels out the stems of the elder or blackberry, syringa, or any other pithy shrub, excavating them often to a depth of six or seven inches, and also, according to Mr. Haldeman (Harris MS.), bores in Cocorus. She makes the walls just wide enough to admit lier body, and of a depth capable of holding tliree or four, often five or six cells (Plate 4, Fig. 11). The fmel}r built cells, with their délicate silken walls, are cylindrical and nearly square at each end, though the free end of the last cell is rounded off. They are four and a half tenths of an inch long, and a little over one-third as broad. The bee places them at nearly equal distances apart, the slight inter val between them being filled in with dirt. Dr. T. W. Harris* States that, “May 15, 1832, one female laid its eggs in the hollow of an aster-stalk. Three perfect in- sects were disclosed from it July 28th.” The observations of Mr. Angus, who saw some bees making their cells, May 18th, also confirms this account. The history of our little upholsterer is thus cleared up. Late in the spring she builds her cells, fills them with pollen, and \ays one or more eggs upon each one. Thus in about two rnonths the inseet complétés its transforma- tions ; witliin this period passing through the egg, the larval and chrysalid States, and then, as a bee, living through the win- ter. Its life thus spans one year. * According to a note in MSS. deposited in the Library of the Boston Society of Natural History.APIARIÆ. 135 The larva (Plate 4, Fig. 10) is longer than that of Mega- chile, and compared with that of Xylocopa, the different seg- ments are much more convex, giving a serrate outline to the back of the worm. The pupa, or chrysalis, we hâve found in the cells the last of July. It is white, and three-tenths of an inch long. It differs from that of the Leaf-cutter bee in having four spines on the end of the body, and in having a much longer tongue and maxillæ, both being almost twice as long. In none of the wild bees are the cells constructed with more nicety than those of our little Ceratina. She bores ont with her jaws a long deep well just the size of her body, and then stretches a thin délicate cloth of silk, drawn tight as a drum- head, across each end of her chambers, which she then fills with a mixture of pollen and honey. Her young are not, in this supposed retreat, entirely free from danger. The most invidious foes enter and attack them. Three species of Ichneumon-flies, two of which belong to the Chalcid family, lay their eggs within the body of the larva, and emerge from the dried larva and pupa skins of the bee, often in great numbers. The smallest parasite, belonging to the genus Anthophorabia (so called from being first known as a parasite on*anothçr bee, Anthophora), is a minute species found also abundantly in the tight cells of the Leaf-cutter bee. The species of Anthiclium, according to Smith, are gaily marked with yellow bands and spots ; the ligula is almost twice as long as the labial palpi, and acutely pointed ; the paraglossæ are short, the maxillary palpi are two-jointed, and there are two subcostal cells. The males are longer than the females, with an elongated and stoutly toothed abdominal tip. The female lines her nest, situated in any hole convenient for its purpose, with down from woolly-stemmed plants. They pass the winter in the. larva state, and the bees do not appear until mid-summer. The species mostly occur in the old world. In Anthophora, which approaches nearer to Bombus in its plump and hairy body than the two preceding généra, the lig- ula is twice as long as the labial maxillæ, ending in a bristle- like point ; the basal joint of the hind tarsus is thickly hirsute, while the middle tarsus of the males is generally elongated. The species are gregarious, their numerous cells, while indepen-136 HYMENOPTERA. dent, are crowded together in grassy banks. Species of Melecta are parasitic on tliem, ovipositing in their cells. The larvæ are infected by the Chalcid Aies, Anthophorabia and Monodontomerus, and by a peculiar species of Mite, Hete- ropus ventricosus, described by Newport. 8ay bas described Antliopliora abrupto, and A. taurea from Indiana. In Eucera the antennæ are very long, while the body is still plump and hairy : our more common form in the Middle States is Eucera maculata St. Fargeau. The species are likewise gregarious, and, according to Smith, their habits are precisely the same as those of Anthophora. In Megachile, the Leaf-cutter Bee, the head is broad, the body stout, oblong, the ligula is about one-half longer than the labial palpi, being quite stout, while the paraglossæ are short and pointed ; the maxillæ are long and sabre-shaped, while their palpi are short and two-jointed. Tliere are two subcostal cells in the fore wing. It is a tliick-bodied bee, with a large square head, stout scissor-like jaws, and with a tliick mass of dense hairs on the under side of the tail for the pur- pose of carrying pollen, since it is not provided writh a pollen basket as in the Honey and Humble-bees. The larva is broader and flatter than that of Bombus, the raised pleural région is a little more prominent, and the raised, tliickened tergal portion of each ring is more prominent than in Bombus. The Megachile lays its eggs in burrows in the stems of the elder (Plate 4, Fig. 9), which we liave received from Mr. James Angus ; we hâve also found .tliem in the liollows of the locust tree. Mr. F. W. Putnam thus speaks of the economy of M. centuncularis, our most common species. “My attention was first called, on the 26th of June, to a female busily en- gaged in bringing pièces of leaf to lier cells, which slie was build- ing under a board, on the roof of the piazza, directly under my window. Nearly the whole morning was occupied by the bee in bringing pièces of leaf from a rose-busli growing about ten yards from her cells, returning at intervals of a half minute to a minute with the pièces which she carried in such a manner as not to impede her walking wlien she aliglited near her hole. [We give a figure of the Leaf-cutter bee in the act of cutting out a circular piece of a rose-leaf (Plate 4, Fig. 8). SheAPIARIÆ. 137 alights upon the leaf, and in a few seconds swiftly runs her scissors-like jaws around through the leaf, bearing off the piece in her hind legs.] About noon she had probably com- pleted the cell, upon which she had been engaged, as, during the afternoon, she was occupied in bringing pollen, preparatory to laying her single egg in the cell. For about twenty days the bee continued at work, building new cells and supplying them with pollen. ... On the 28th of July, upon removing the board, it was found that the bee had made thirty cells, afranged in nine rows of unequal Iength, some being slightly curved to adapt them to the space under the board. The longest row contained six cells, and was two and tliree-quarters inehes in Iength; the whole leaf-structure being equal to a Iength of fifteen inehes. Upon making an estimate of the pièces of leaf in this structure, it was ascertained that there must hâve been at least a tliousand pièces used. In addition to the labor of making the cells, this bee, unassisted in ail her duties, had to collect the requisite amount of pollen (and honey?) for each cell, and lay her eggs therein, when com- pleted. Upon carefully cutting out a portion of one of the cells, a full-grown larva was seen engaged in spinning a slight silken cocoon about the walls of its prison, which were quite hard and smooth on the inside, probably owing to the move- ments of the larva, and the conséquent pressing of the sticky particles to the walls. In a short time the opening made was closed over by a very thin silken web. The cells, measured on the inside of the hard walls, were .35 of an inch in Iength, and .15 in diameter. The natural attitude of the larva is some- what curved in its cell, but if straightened, it just equals the inside Iength of the cell. On the 31st of July, two female bees came out, having eut their way through the sides of their cells.” In three other cells “several hundred minute Ichneu- mons [Anthophorabia megachilis] were seen, which came forth as soon as the cells were opened.” (Com. Essex Inst., vol. iv, p. 105, 1864.) Megachile integer Say MS., according to Dr. Harris (MS. notes), forms its nest of leaves the first of August. This spe- cies is twice as large, but closely resembles Megachile brevis of Say. The front of the head is covered with dense ochreous138 HYMENOPTERA. hairs, becoming shorter and black on the vertex. The nestT preserved in the Harris collection, now in the Muséum of the Boston Society of Natural History, is made of rose-leaves, and is scarcely distinguishable from that of M. centuncularis. Osmia, the Mason Bee, is another genus of Carpenter or Upholsterer bees. The species are generally bluish, with greenish reflections, with smooth shiny bodies, and the species are of smaller size than in Megachile. The tongue in this genus is three times as long as the labium; tapering from the base to the acute apex, and clothed with short hair. Mr. F. Smith States that the larva of the English species hatch in eight days after the eggs are laid, feeds ten to twelve days, when it becomes full-grown, then spins a thin silken covering, and remains in an inactive state until the following spring, when it complétés its transformations. The habits of the little Mason-bees are quite varied. They construct their cells in the stems of plants and in rotten posts and trees, or, like Andrena, they burrow in sunny banks. An European species selects snail-shells for its nest, wherein it builds its earthen cells, while other species nidificate under stones. Curtis found two hundred and thirty cocoons of a British species ( Osmia paretinà), placed on the under side of a flat stone, of which one-third were empty. Of the remainder, the most appeared between March and June, males appearing first ; thirty-five more bees were developed the following spring. Thus there were three successive broods for three succeeding years, so that these bees lived three years before arriving at maturity. Mr. G. R. Waterhouse, in the Transactions of the Entomo- logical Society of London, for 1864 (3d sériés, vol. 2, p. 121), states that the cells of Osmia leucomelana “are formed of mud, and eacli cell is built separately. The female bee, having de- posited a small pellet of mud in a sheltered spot between some tufts of grass, immediately commences to excavate a small cavity in its upper surface, scraping the mud away from the centre towards the margin by means of her jaws. A small shallow mud-cup is thus produced. It is rough and uneven on the ou ter surface, but beautifully smooth on the inner. On witnessing thus much of the work performed, I was struck withAPIARIÆ. 139' three points. First, the rapidity with which the insect worked ; secondly, the tenacity with which she kept her original position whilst excavating ; and thirdly, her constantly going over work which had apparently been completed. . . . The lid is excavated and rendered concave on its outer or upper surface, and is convex and rough on its inner surface ; and, in fact, is a simple répétition of the first-formed portion of the cell, a part of a hollow sphere.” The largest species of Osmia known to us is a very dark-blue species which seems to be undescribed. We will call it the wood-boring Osmia (Osmia lignivora). It is larger than the Osmia lignaria of Say, being just half an inch long. The head is much shorter, and less square than in Say’s spe- cies. The front of the head below the antennæ is clothed with dark hairs, but above and on the thorax w ith yellowish ochreous hairs. The body is deep blackish blue, with greenish reflec- tions. We are indebted to a lady for specimens of the bees with their cells, which had been excavated in the interior of a maple tree several inches from the bark. The bee had industri- ously tunnelled out this elaborate burrow (Plate 4, Fig. 12), and, in this respect, resembles the habits of the Carpenter-bee (Xylocopa) more closely than any other species of its genus. The tunnel was over three inches long, and about three- tenths of an inch wide. It contracter! a little in width between the cell, showing that the bee wrorked intelligently, and wasted no more of her energies than w as absolutely necessary. The burrow contained five cells, eacli half an inch long, being rather short and broad, with the hinder end rounded, while the opposite end, next to the one adjoining, is eut off squarely. The cell is somewhat jug-shaped, owing to a slight constriction just behind the mouth. The material of which the cell is com- posed is stout, silken, parchment-like, and very smooth witliin. The interstices between the cells are filled with rather coarse chip pings made by the bee. The bee eut its way out of the cells in Mardi, and lived for a month afterwards on a diet of honey and water. It eagerly lapped up the drops of water supplied by its keeper, to whom it soon grew accustomed, and whom it seemed to recognize. The female of Osmia lignaria Say MS., according to Dr*140 HYMENOPTERA. Harris’ MS. notes, was found in the perfect state in cocoons within earthen cells under stones, April lôtli. The cell she con- struis is half an inch long, oval, cylindrical, and contracted slightly into a sort of neck just before the opening for the exit of the bee. From Mr. James Angus I hâve received the pellets of pollen, about the size of a pea, in which it deposits its eggs ; the larvæ were about one-third grown in August. This species is larger than Osmia simillima of Smith, while the male antennæ are much paler, being fuscous. The front of the head is covered with long dense yellow ochreous hairs. The vertex is not of so dark a green as in O. simillima, and is covered with coarse punctures. The thorax is heavily clothed with yellow ochreous, thick hairs. The abdomen is yellowish, and much more hairy. The legs are stout, fuscous, with yel- lowish hairs. Length, .35 inch. Our smallest and most abundant species is the little green Osmia simillima of Smith. It builds its little oval, somewhat urn-shaped cells, against the roof of the large deserted galls of the oak-gall fly (Diplolepis confluentus), placing them, in this instance, eleven in number, in two irregular rows, from which the mature bees issue through a hole in the gall (Plate 4,* Fig. 14. From specimens communicated by Mr. F. G. Sanborn). The earthen cells, containing the tough dense cocoons, were arranged irregularly so as to fit the concave vault of the larger gall, which was about two inches in diameter. On emerging from the cell the Osmia cuts out with its powerful jaws an ovate lid, nearly as large as one side of the cell. Botli sexes may be found in April and May in the flowers of the willow *Explaxation of Plate 4. —Fig. 1, a cell of the Humble-bee; natural size, with the pollen mass upon the top. Fig. 2, end view of the saine mass, showing the three eggs laid in three divisions of the cavity. Fig. 3, Xylocopa Virginica, the Carpenter Bee. Fig. 4, the larva of Xylocopa Virginica; natural size. Fig. 5, the nest containing the cells of the same, with the partitions and pollen masses, on which the young larva is seen in the act of feeding; natural size. Fig. 6( young larva of Anthrax sinuosa ; side view. Fig. 7, pupa of Anthrax sinuosa, side view; natural size. Fig. 8, the Leaf-cutter Bee {Megachile), on a rose leaf, in the act of cutting out a circulai’ piece. Fig. 9, cells of Megachile, in the elder; natural size. Fig. 10, larva of Ceratina dupla, the little green Upholsterer Bee; enlarged. Fig. 11, cells of the same in the stem of the elder; natural size. Fig. 12, cells of Osmia lignivora, new species, the wood-devouring Mason-bee, exca* vated in the maple ; natural size. Fig. 13, cells of Osmia simillima, the common green Mason-bee, built in the deserted gall of the Oak-gall Fly. Fig. 14, a single earthen cell of the same; natural size. Fig. 15, pollen mass, or bee-bread of Osmia lignaria ; natural size. It is made up of distinct pellets of pollen, which are probably stuck together with saliva.Plate 4. ARCHITECTURE OP BEES.APIARIÆ. 141 and fruit trees which blossom later. The antennæ are black, and the green body is covered with fine white hairs, becoming yellowish above. In the Harris collection are the cells and specimens of Osmia pacifica Say, the peaceful Osmia, which, according to the man- uscript notes of Dr. Harris, is found in the perfect state in earthen cells (Plate 5, Fig. 2) beneath stones. The cell is oval cylindrical, a little contracted as usual with those of ail the spe- cies of the genus, thus forming an urn-shaped cell. It is half an inch long, and nearly three-tenths of an inch wide, while the cocoon, which is rather thin, is three-tenths of an inch long. The following généra, called Cuckoo Bees, are parasitic on other bees, laying their eggs in the cells, or nests, of their host. In Cœlioxys the body is stout, and the bee closely mimics its host, Megachile. The ligula is very long, being almost three times the length of the labium, and the paraglossæ are wholly wanting ; the maxillary palpi are short, three-jointed, and the abdominal tip of the male is variously toothed. Cœlioxys octo- dentata Say, is abundant late in the summer about flowers. An allied genus, Melecta, is parasitic on Anthophora, and Epeolus is parasitic on Colletés. The species of Nomada are very numerous ; in ail, the tongue is long and acute, with paraglossæ about one-fourth as long as the tongue ; the maxillary pair of palpi are six-jointed ; and there are three subcostal cells. The species in their slen- der, smooth, gaily colored body resemble the wasps. These Cuckoo-bees lay their eggs in the nests of Andrena and Ha- lictus, and, according to English authors, Panurgus and Eucera, where they may be found in ail stages of development corre- sponding to those of their hosts. The females do not sting severely. The species émit sweet, balmy, or balsamical odors. Shuckard States that these bees should be killed with burning sulphur to preserve their bright colors. The larvæ differ greatly from those of their hosts, Andrena, the head being much smaller, the body being smoother and rounder, and belonging to a more degraded, lower type. The whole body is more attenuated towards both extremities. The pupa differs from those of any other genus of this family known to us, except Andrena, by having three conspicuous142 HYMENOPTERA. spines on the upper and posterior edge of the orbit, which are also found in the pupa of Stigmus, a Crabronid genus, and which evidently aid in locomotion. Thus the same law of dégrada- tion obtains in these highly organized bee-parasites as in the lower parasitic species, though in a much less marked degree. From specimens found in the nests of Andrena and Halictus, collected at Salem by Mr. J. H. Emerton, and now in the Mu- séum of the Essex Institute, we hâve been enabled in great part to clear up the history of this bee. We hâve found in the nests of Andrena vicina both sexes of Nomada imbricata Smith, and several females of Nomada pulchella of Smith ; and in the cells of Halictus parallelus Say, specimens of Nomada imbri- cata. Both full-grown larvæ and pupæ of different âges, up to the adult Nomada, ready to take leave of its host, were found in the cells of the Andrena vicina. It seems, there- fore, that the newly hatched young of Nomada must feed on the pollen mass destined for the Andrena. But there seems to be enough for both généra to feed upon, as the young of both host and parasite were found living harmoniously to- gether, and the hosts and their parasites are disclosed both at the same time. Does not this mild sort of parasitism in No- mada throw much light on the probable habits of Apathus, the Humble-bee parasite ? It is more than probable that the Apa- thus larvæ simply eat the food of the Bombus larvæ, and do not attack the larvæ of their hosts. Both Nomada and Apathus in their adult stages live harmoniously with their hosts, and are seen gathering food from the same flowers, and flying about the same nest. In the second subfamily, Andrenetœ, the ligula, or tongue, is for the most part short and broad, and the maxillary palpi hâve four joints of equal size. In Sphecodes the body is smooth and wasp-like, and in its habit of running and flying in dry sandy places, it resembles Sphex, whence its generic name. The abdomen is generally light red, farther aiding in the resemblance to the Spliegidœ. The ligula is short, lancet-shaped, fringed with setæ ; the para- glossæ are not so long as the tongue, while the labial palpi are shorter than the paraglossæ, and the maxillæ are broad, lan- ceolate, with six-jointed palpi. The antennæ of the males areAPIARIÆ. 143 short and sometimes moniliform. Sphecodes dichroa Harris is our most common species. Mr. F. Smith, from direct observa- tion, states that this genus builds cells, though earlier authors hâve stated that it is parasitic on Halictus and Andrena. Prosopis is generally yellow on the face, and is “less pubes- oent than any of the bees.” The tongue is broad, subemar- ginate, the paraglossæ reach a little beyond the tongue ; the labial palpi are as long as the tongue, while there are two sub- costal cells in the fore wings. Smith states that the genus is not parasitical as formerly supposed, as he has “repeatedly bred them” from cells laid in a regular order in the hollow of bramble stems. Mr. S. Saunders has also raised them in Alba- nia where “they construct their cells in bramble sticks (which they bore in the same manner as Colletés) with a thin transpa- rent membrane, calculated for holding semi-liquid honey, which they store up for their young. The species are much attacked by Stylops.” Like Sphecodes and Ceratina, this genus, accord- ing to Smith, is unprovided with pollenigerous organs. We hâve several species in this country of which P, affinis Smith, and P. elliptica Kirby, are found northward. The habits of our species are not known. Augochlora comprises beautiful shining metallic green spe- oies, very commonly met with. The thorax is globose, and the anterior wings hâve one marginal and three submarginal oells ; the first submarginal cell as long as the second and third nnited. Augochlora purus Smith is a small, green, rather common species. Mr. J. H. Emerton has found its nests in Sa- lem, near those of Andrena. The mouth of the hole opened under a stone, and was built up so as to form a tube of sand (Plate 5, Fig. 1). The burrow on the 28th of June was four inches deep. Andrena is a genus of great extent, and the species are often difficult to distinguish. The lanceolate tongue is moderately long, and the paraglossæ are half as long as the tongue itself, while the six-jointed maxillaiy palpi are longer than the maxillæ themselves. The wings hâve three subcostal cells, with the rudiments of a foürth one ; the second is squarish, and the third receives a récurrent nervure near the middle. The pos- terior legs “ hâve a long curled lock upon the trochanter be-144 HYMENOPTERA. neath, and the anterior upper surface of the femora is clothed with long loose hair, which equally surrounds the whole of the tibiæ.” (Shuckard.) The abdomen is banded more or less conspicuously with reddish. The larva (Fig. 80) is stout and thick, with a head of moder- ate size, and the mouth-parts are a little shorter than usual, the maxillæ and labium especially. The segments of the body are much more convex (angularly so) than usual, giving a tuberculate outline to the body. It is stouter than that of Halictus, the wings are less convex than in that genus ; while the maxillæ are much stouter and blunter. The pupa is distinguished from the other généra by much the same characters as the imago, except that there Fig. 79. are two tubercles on the vertex near the ocelli. From a comparison of ail its stages, this genus stands inter- médiate between those placed above, and Halictus, which, in ail its characters, is a more degraded form. The males often differ widely from the other sex, in their broad heads and widely spreading bidentate mandibles. Mr. Emerton has observed the habits of our most common species, Andrena vicina Smith, which builds its nest in grassy fields. The burrow is sunken perpendicularly, with short pas- sages leading to the cells, which are slightly inclined downwards and outwards from the main gallery. The walls of the gallery are rough, but the cells are lined with a mucus-like sécrétion, which, on hardening, looks like the glazing of earthen-ware. In Fig. 80 Mr. Emerton gives us a profile view of natural size of the nest showing the main burrow and the cells leading from it ; the oldest cell, containing the pupa (a) is situated nearest the surface, while those containing larvæ (6) lie between the pupa and the cell (e) containing the pollen mass and egg resting upon it. The most recent cell (/) is the deepest down, and contains a freshly deposited pollen mass. At c is the begin- ning of a cell ; g is the level of the ground. The bees were seen at work on the 4th of May, at Salem, Mass.,digging their holes, one of which was already six inches deep ; and by the 15th, hundreds of holes were observed. On the 28th of May, in unearthing six holes, eight cells were found to contain pol-APIARIÆ. 145 len, and two of them a small larva. On the 29th of June six full-grown larvæ were exhumed, and one about half-grown. About the first of August the larva transforms to a pupa, and during tlie last week of this month the mature bees appear. In Hcdictus, which is a genus of great extent, the head is trans- verse, and flattish ; the mouth- parts are of moderate length, the tongue being very acute, with acute paraglossæ half the length of the tongue, while the labial palpi are not quite so long as the paraglossæ. There are three subcostal cells in the wings, with the rudiments of a fourth often présent, and the second cell is squarish. The abdomen is ob- long ovate, with a longitudinal linear furrow on the tip in the female. In the males the body is longer and the antennæ more filiform and slender than usual in this family. The larvæ are longer, and with more acutely convex segments than in Andrena. The pupæ differ much as the adult beés from Andrena, especially in the shorter mouth-parts. Halictus parallelus Say excavates cells almost exactly like those of Andrena ; but since the bee is smaller, the holes are smaller, though as deep. Mr. Emerton found one nest, in a path, a foot in depth. Another nest, discovered September 9th, was about six inches deep. The cells are in form like those of Andrena, and like them are glazed within. The egg is rather slender and much curved ; in form it is long, cylindrical, ob- tuse at one end, and much smaller at the other. The larva 10 Fig. 80.146 HYMENOPTERA. (Figs. 79, 81) is longer and slenderer, and quite different from the rather broad and flattened larva of Andrena. The body is rather thick behind, but in front tapers slowly towards the head, which is of moderate size. Its body is somewhat tuberculated, the tubercles aid- ing the grub in moving about its cell. Its length is .40 of an inch. On the pupa are four quite dis- tinct conical tubercles forming a transverse line Fig. si. jUst jn front of the ocelli ; and there are also two larger, longer tubercles, on the outer side of each of which an ocellus is situated. Figure 82 represents the pupa seen from beneath. Search was made for the nests on July 16th, when the ground was very hard for six inches in depth, below which the soil was soft and fine, and over twenty cells were dug out. “The upper cells contained nearly mature pupæ, and the lower ones larvæ of various sizes, the smallest being hardly distinguishable by the naked eye. Each of these small larvæ was in a cell by itself, and situated upon a lump of pollen, which was of the size and shape of a pea, and was found to lessen in size as the larva grew larger. These young were probably the offspring of several females, .as four mature bees were found in the hole.” (Emerton.) The larva of an English species hatches in ten days after the «eggs are laid. Another brood of bees appeared the middle of September, as on the ninth of that mont h (1864) Mr. Emerton found sev- eral holes of the same species of bee made in a hard gravel xoad near the turnpike. When opened, they were found to contain several bees with their young. September 2,1867, the same kind of bee w as found in holes, and just ready to leave * the cell. Like Bombus, the females are supposed to hybernate, the males not appearing until late in the season. Like Andrena, these bees suffer from the attacks of Stylops, and according to Shuckard, an Ichneumon preys upon them, while certain spe- cies of Cerceris, Philanthus, and Crabro carry them off to store their nests with.VESPARIÆ. 147 In Colletés the females, as Shuckard observes, resemble the ^workers of the Honey-bee, while there is considérable disparity between the sexes, the males being much smaller, the tongue -and maxillæ very short ; and the four-jointed labial palpi much shorter than the paraglossæ. There are three subcostal oells, with the rudiments of a fourth. These bees form large colo- nies, burrowing in the earth eight or ten inches deep, lining their cells “atthe farther end with a very thin transparent mem* branaceous coating, resembling goldbeaters’ skin.” They thus furnish six or eight cartridge-like cells, covering each with a cap, “ like the parchment on a drum-head.” Smith, from whom we hâve been quoting, States that Miltogvamma punctata, which is a Tachina-like fly, and the Cuckoo-bee, Epeolus variegatus, bave, in Europe, been reared from their cocoons. Vespariæ Latreille, Wasps. In this family, which comprises about 900 species, the body is more attenuated, more cylindri- cal, with a harder and smoother tégument than in the Ap i a r i œ. In the species with densely populated colonies, such as Vespa and Polistes, there are workers which are often very numerous, while in Eumenes and Odynerus, etc., there are only males and females. The antennæ are elbowed, the mandibles are large, stout ; the maxillæ and labium of varying length ; the maxil- lary palpi are six-jointed ; while on the labial palpi, which are four-jointed, there are well-developed paraglossæ. The pro- thorax is prolonged on each side to the insertion of the wings which are long and narrow, and once folded longitudinally when at rest ; the fore pair hâve two or three subcostal cells ; the hind shanks and tibiæ are smooth. The eggs, when first laid, are globular, soon becoming oval. The larvæ of this family are soft, fleshy, with larger heads in proportion to the rest of the body, than in the Api avive; the antennal tubercle, or rudimentary antennæ, are more dis- tinct, and the mandibles are larger. The surface of the body is smoother in Vespa and Polistes, but more tuberculated in the solitary généra, Odynerus and allies, while the end of the body is more acute. As in the Api avive the higher généra are social, building papery nests, while the lower are solitary and build cells of mud or sand in protected places.148 HYMENOPTERA. In Vespa, the Paper Wasp, the ligula is squarish, with the paraglossæ nearly as long as the tongue, the outer maxillary lobes rounded oval, half as long as the palpi, and the labial maxillæ are scarcely longer than the tongue. The abdomen is broad at base, acutely conical. The nests are either with or without a papery covering, supported by a short pedicel. Such females as hâve hybernated, begin to make their cells in the early part of summer. Smith States that the soli- tary female wasp “ begins by making three saucer-shaped ré- ceptacles, in each of which she deposits an egg ; she then proceeds to form other similar-shaped réceptacles, until the eggs first deposited are hatched and the young grubs require a share of lier attention. From the circular bases she now be- gins to raise her hexagonal cells, not building them up at once, but from time to time raising them as the young grubs grow. (Proc. Ent. Soc., London, 1858, p. 35.) Waterhouse States that the cells formed by the solitary fe- male early in the season appear “ to be built entirely of glisten- ing, whitish, silk-like threads which I hâve little doubt are a sécrétion from the insect, ail the threads being firmly attached together as if thej- had originally been of a glutinous nature.” The cells formed later in the season by the workers, differ in consisting of masticated rotten wood. “ Almost simultane- ously with the commencement of the cells, it appears that the nest-covering is commenced. At first it has the appearance of a miniature umbrella, serving to shelter the rudimentary cells.” Plate 5, Fig. 3, shows a group of cells surrounded by one layer of paper, and the beginning of another. As the nest grows larger the cells are ar- ranged in galleries, supported by pedicels, and the number of layers in the outside covering greatly increases in number. While our common and largest species, Vespa maculata Linn. (Fig. 83), and the yellow wasp, F. arenaria Fabr., build papery nests consisting of several galleries, with the mouth of the cells directed downwards, the East Indian species, F. orie7italisrYESPARIÆ. 149 builds its cells of clay, and, according to Waterhouse, “the work is exceedingly beautiful and true.” Another species, according to Smith, makes its nest of sandy loam, the exterior being so hard that a saw used in opening one of its sides was blunted. The larva of Vespa arenaria is long and cylindrical, not so much curved as in Polistes. Its position in its cell corre- sponds to its form, as the cell is longer and narrower than that of Polistes. Each segment of the body is posteriorly some- what thickened, as is the latéral (pleural) ridge of the body. The tip of the abdomen is rather blunt, the last sternite be- ing large and transverse. The pupa is provided with a single tubercie on the vertex, where there are two in the Crabron- idæ and Sphegidæ. By the time the nest of V. arenaria is large enough to contain ten full-grown larvæ, and has about fourteen cells in ail, being about an inch in diameter, the occupants of the two or three central cells will hâve changed to pupæ, and one wasp will hâve been excluded. In a nest of the same species two inches in diameter, there were a second brood of larvæ. The outer row of cells were occupied by pupæ, while the central ones, emptied of the first brood, were filled with a second brood of larvæ. Evidently as soon as an imago leaves its cell, the female deposits an egg therein, as very minute larvæ were found occupying cells next to those containing large full-grown larvæ. In comparing a number of pupæ from a large nest, they will be found to be in ail stages of perfection, from the larva which has ceased feeding, and is preparing to transform, to the imago, still veiled by its thin subimago pellicle. It is dif- ücult to draw lines between these stages. Also when com- pared closely side by side, it is difficult, if not impossible to find any two pupæ just alike, the development proceeding very un- ^qually. Thus the limbs may be more perfect than the antennæ, or certain parts may be less perfect in some than in others, while the limbs may be more highly colored like the imago. Like the bees, Vespa suffers from numerous parasites, includ- ing Rhipiphorous paradoxus, which is a beetle allied to Stylops, and Lebia (Dromius) linearis. The larva of Volucella is said150 HYMENOPTERA. to feed on the Vespa-larvæ, and Mr. Stone says that Anthomyia incana is also parasitic in Wasps’ nests, while two species of Ichneumons, one of which is Anomalon vesparum, also in- fest the larvæ. No parasites hâve been as yet detected in this country. The Hornet, V. crabro Linn., has, according to Mr. Angus, become domesticated about New York. This and the smaller wasps are sometimes injurious by eating into ripe fruit, but the injury is more than counterblanced by the number of Aies and other insects they feed their young with. Indeed, as Saussure States, the species of Vespa are more omnivorous in their tas tes than any other wasps. They live by rapine and pillage, and hâve obtained a worse repute than other insects more injurious. In spring and early summer they feed on the sweets of flowers ; but later in the season attack strawber- ries, plums, grapes, and other fruits, and often enter houses and there help themselves to the dishes on the table. They will eat raw méat, and then aid the butcher by devouring the Aies that lay their eggs on his méats. They will sometimes destroy Honey- bees, attacking them on their return from the Aelds laden with pollen ; they throw themselves upon their luckless victims, and tear the abdomen from the rest of the body, and suck their blood, devouring only the abdomen. They fall upon Aies and butterAies, and, biting oflf their wings, feet, and head, devour the trunk. In attacking insects they use only their powerful jaws, and not the sting, differing in this respect from the fossorial wasps. Saussure States that though wasps do not generally lay up food, yet at certain periods they do Ail the cells with honey. The females feed their young with food chewed up and re- duced to a pulp. Saussure questions wliether the larvæ of one sex are not fed on animal and the other on vegetable food, since Huber had shown “what a great inAuenee the kind of food exerts on the sex of Bees.” But it is now known that the sexes of some, and probably ail insects are determined before the larvæ is hatched. I hâve seen the rudiments of the ovi- positor in the half-grown larvæ of the Humble-bee, and it is most probable that those rudiments began to develop during embryonic life. It is far more probable that the sexual différ- ences are determined at the time of conception.VESPARIÆ. 151 Westwood states that the larvæ, which live head-downward from the reversed position of the comb, retain their position in the cell, while young, by a glutinous sécrétion, and afterwards ‘4 by the swollen front of the body which fills the open part of the cell.” “The female cells are mostly placed apart from those of the males and neuters, those of the males being often mixed, but in a small number, in the neuter combs. The egg state lasts eight days, the larva state thirteen or fourteen, and that of the pupa about ten. After the imago has been produced, one of the old workers cleans out the cell, and fits it for the réception of a fresh inhabitant. The upper tier of cells, being first built, serves for the habitation of the workers ; the females, being produced at the end of the summer, occupy the lowest tiers.” When about to transform the larvæ spin a thin cover- ing, thus closing over the cell. In Polistes the paraglossæ are slender, and a little longer than the long, or as in one instance noticed by us in P. Cana- densis, barrel-shaped ligula, which is split at the end ; the palpi are stouter, while the whole body is much longer than in Vespa ; the abdomen is subpedunculate, and the thorax is rather ob- long than spherical, as in Vespa. The larva differs from that of Vespa in its much larger head, * and shorter, more ovoid form of the body, which is dilated in front so as to retain the insect in its cell, while the tip is more acute ; the antennal tubercles are doser together ; the clypeus is more regularly triangular and more distinct, while the labrum is much larger and excessive^ s wollen, as are the mouth-parts generally. The mandibles are bidentate, where in Vëspa they are tridentate. The pupa differs from that of Vespa, besides the usual generic characters, in having the tubercle on the head smaller. The nests of Polistes (Plate 5, Fig. 4, nest of P. annularis Fabr., from Saussure) are not covered in by a papery wall as in Vespa, but may be found attached to bushes, with the mouth of the cells pointed downwards. While at Burksville Junction, Va., in the last week of April, I had an opportunity of watch- ing three species beginning their cells on the same clump of bushes. They ail worked in the same method, and the cells only differed slightly in size. The cells were formed mostly of152 HYMENOPTERA. crude silk, and the threads could be seen Crossing each other, the same structure being observed at the top and bottom of each cell. In the three-celled nest of Polistes (Plate 5, Fig. 5, 5a) first noticed April 29th, there were but two eggs deposited, the third cell being without an egg, and a little smaller, and the rim not so high as in the other two. The outer edge did not seem to be perfectly circular, though statecl by Water- house to be so in the incipient cells, for in some cases we de- tected two slight angles, thus making three sides, which, however, would be easily overlooked on casual observation ; as there are only two sides within, the cell, from being at its earliest inception hemispherical, or 4 4 saucer-shaped,” becomes five, and subsequently six-sided, and thus from being cir- cular, it is converted by the wasps into a hexagonal cell. In some cells, perhaps a majority, both in this and the other spe- cies, the newly made rim of the small cells is thinner than the parts below, and slightly bent inwards ; thus being quite the re- verse of the thickened rim of the cells of the Hive Bee. It would seem that the wasp plasters on more silk, especially on the angles, building them out, and making them more promi- nent, in order to complété, when other cells are added, their hexagonal form. The three cells are of much the same size and height when the third egg is laid, as we observed in another nest, that of Polistes Canadensis (Linn.), built at the Defences of Washington, near Munson’s Hill, June 9th. Again, when one or two more cells hâve been added to the nest, and there are four or five in ail (Plate 5, Fig. 6 ; 6a, top view, in which there are four cells), two of them are nearly twice as large as the others, while the fifth has been just begun, and is eggless. The form of the two which run up much higher than the others is the same as that of the smaller and shorter ones, i.e. they are on one side nearly semicircular, and on the other, parti}- hexagonal, and the angular sides show a tendency to be even more circular than when the others are built around them, for the little architect seems to bring out the angles more prominently when carrying up the walls of the other cells. Thus she builds, as if by design, one and the same cell both by the u circular” and 44 hexagonal” methods, afterwards adopt-VESPARIÆ. 153 ing only the latter, and if she devotes her attentions specially to plastering the corners alone, with the design of making the cell six-sided, then we must allow, contrary to Mr. Water- house’s views, that the wasp builds the hexagon by choice, and not as the mere resuit of her blindly “ working in segments of circles for if our point be proved, and the most careful obser- vation of the wasp while at work is needed to prove it, then it may be shown that the wasp is a free agent, and can abandon one method of working at a certain stage of her work, and adopt a different mode of operating. The eggs are oval, pointed at the end, and glued to the in- side of the cell. They are situated midway from the top and bottom of the incipient cell, and placed on the innermost sides, so that in a group of several cells the eggs are close together, only separated by the thin cellular walls. In a completed cell the egg is placed very near the bottom. For several days a Polistes Canadensis was engaged in build- ing its nest in my tent in camp near Washington. When first noticed on June 9th, there were three cells, two of which con- tained eggs ; and it was not for two days, the 1 lth, that the third cell was completed, and a third egg deposited in it. The wasp paid especial attention to strengthening the pedicel, going over it repeatedly for an hour or two with its tongue, as if lay- ing on more silken matter, and then proved the work by its swiftly vibrating antennæ. It would often fly out of the tent, and on its return anxiously examine each cell, thrusting its head deep down into each one. It gradually became accustomed to my presence, but eventually abandoned the nest, without adding more cells. The others, while at work on the bushes, abscond- -ed at my approach, and seemed very wary and distrustful, as if desirous of concealing their abodes. Mr. Smith has found Trigmalys bipustidatus to be a parasite on Polistes lanio Fabr. (P. Canadensis Linn.), from St. Salvador, S. A. Saussure arranges the liiglier Vespidæ into two parallel sériés. Yespa is offset by Chartergus and Nectarina; lower down we find Tatua and Synœca, while Polistes is offset by Polybia. These five généra are tropical, and in their habits, the general appearance of their nests, and in the number of individuals represent Yespa and Polistes of the temperate zone. The154 HYMENOPTERA. genus Nectarina is a short plump wasp, somewhat like Odyne- rus in shape ; its distinguishing mark is the concealment of the postscutellum by the scutellum. Nectarina melliftca Sayy of Mexico, builds a large nest externally like that of a wasp, but it is more irregular, and the papery covering consists of but one layer. The interior of the nest is very different, the galleries of cells, instead of being parallel, being arranged in concentric spheres. Chartergus has the tip of the clypeus slighted excavated, and an oval sessile abdomen. (7. chartarius Olivier makes an ex- ceedingly thick tough nest, attached by a broad base to the bough of a tree, about twice as long as thick, and ending in a cône, pierced in the centre by the entrance which passes through the middle to the basal gallery ; the other galleries are* formed by a continuation of the sides of the nest, and arranged in a conical plane. In Tatua, the abdomen is pedicelled, but the petiole is not enlarged, and the abdomen itself is very regularly conical. T. morio Cuvier, from Cayenne, forms a nest like that of Charter- gus ; but the galleries form a fiat floor, and each gallery has an entrance from the outside of the nest, where in the latter there is one common entrance. Plate 5, Fig. 9, shows how the bases of the cells are laid out on the edge of a gallery. In Synœca the peculiarly sliaped abdomen is cordate and compressed. The curious nest of S. cyanea Fabr. is formed of a single layer of cells fixed against the trunk of a tree, and covered in with a dense covering made from the bark of dead trees. Some nests of Synœca are three feet long. In the very extensive genus Polybia, which resembles Polistes in its general shape, the abdo- men is pedicelled, and the mandibles are four-toothed. The nests are somewhat like those of Chartergus, but much smaller. Sev- eral species occur in Mexico, and in Brazil the number of species is very great. In Apoïca the abdomen is very long, and the third segment is as long as the second. Plate 5, Fig.. 11, represents the nest of Apoïca pallida Olivier, from Cayenne. It is unprotected, with a conical base, and with a single row of cells. In Icaria we hâve an approach to Polistes in the slender sériés of cells composing the nest, forming two or three rowsVESPARIÆ. 155 only. Plate 5, Fig. 7, represents the nest of I. guttatipennis Saussure, from Sénégal ; 8, ground plan of a similar nest. These wasps are mostly distinguished from Polybia by the petiole ending in a globular mass. Plate 5, Fig. 10, represents the élégant nest of Mischocyttcirus Icibiatus Fabr., from Cay- enne and Brazil, which consists of a few cells supported by a long pedicel. The wasp itself much resembles Polistes, but the petiole is very much longer. The remaining généra noticed here are solitary, building separate cells, and with only males and females. There are three subcostal cells in the fore wings, and the maxillæ and labium are much elongated. In Eumenes the abdomen lias a long pedicel, being sessile in Odynerus. While authors place Eumenes higher than Ody- nerus, we would consider the latter as a higher, more ceplia- lized form, since the abdomen is less elongated, and the head is larger. In Odynerus the ligula is long, deeply forked at the slender extremity, while the slender paraglossæ are shorter, ending in a two-toothed claw-like tip ; the maxillæ are slender, and the palpi hâve an elongated basal joint ; the clypeus is nearly circular, toothed on the front edge. The larva differs from those of the higher Vespciriœ, in its more elongated head, the square clypeus, the unusually deep fissure of the bilobate la- brum, and in the larger tubercles of the body, as the larva is more active, turning and twisting in its cell, while feeding on its living food ; and in this respect it is more closely allied to the young Crabronidœ. In the pupa of O. cdbophaleratus, the tip is more incurved than in the pupa of Vespa, so that the liind legs (tarsi) reach to the tip, and the abdomen is rounded ovate, while in Vespa it is oblong. The cells (Plate 4, Figs. 13, 14) of Odynerus albophaleratus Sauss. hâve been detected like those of Osmia in a deserted gall of Diplolepis confluens, where several were found in a row, arranged around one side of the gall, side by side, with the holes pointing towards the centre of the gall. The cells are half an inch long, and one-half as wide, being formed of small pellets of mud, giving a corrugated, granulated appearance to the outside, while the inside is lined with silk.156 HYMENOPTERA. We hâve received from Mr. Angus deserted cells of Cera- tina in a syringa stem, in which we detected a pupa of an Odynerus, perhaps 0. leucomelas ; tlie cell was a little shorter than that of the Ceratina it had occupied. The cocoon of tlie Odynerus was of silk, and almost undistinguishable from the old cocoon of Ceratina. The wasp had dispensed with the necessity of making a mud cell. If future research shows that either this or any other species makes a mud cell or not at wiîl, it shows the intelligence of these little “ free-agents ; ” and that a blind adhérence to fixed mechanical laws does not obtain in these insects. The larvæ of Odynerus and Eumenes are carnivorous. I found several cells of 0. alboplialeratus, June 22d, in the deserted nest of a Glîsiocampa, which were stored with micro- lepidopterous larvæ and pupæ, still alive. liaving been para- lyzed by the sting of the wasp. Tlie larvæ of the wasp was short and thick, being, when contracted, not more than twice as long as broad ; the rings of the body are moderately convex, and the pleural région is faintly marked. Prof. A. E. Yerrill has discovered the cells of an Odynerus at New Haven, forming a sandy mass (Plate 5, Fig. 12) attaclied to the stem of a plant. In Eumenes the lingua is very long, being narrower and * more deeply divided than in Odynerus ; the second subcostal space of the wings is long and narrow, wliile in Odynerus it is triangular. The genus is easily recognized by the very long pedicel of the abdomen. Eumenes fraternel Say constructs a tliin cell (Plate 5,* Fig. 15) of pellets of mud, and as large * Explanation of Plate 5. Fig. 1. Mouth of the tunnel of Augoclilora purus ; from Emerton. Fig. 2. Cells of Osmia pacifica ; communicated by Mr. Sanborn. Fig. 3. Vertical section of nest of Vespa with a group of primitive cells surrounded by one layer of paper, and part of another; from Saussure. Fig. 4. Nest of Po- Ustes annularis ; from Saussure. Fig. 5. Three primitive cells of Polistes; 5 a, top view of the same, one being eggless. The sides adjoining are angular. Figs. 6 and 6 a, a cell farther advanced, consisting of four cells, each containing an egg, and with the edges of the cells built up higher and more decidedly six-sided; original. Fig. 7. Cells of Icaria guttatipennis, showing that each cell is built up independently In regular hexagons. Fig. 8. Ground plan of a similar nest. Fig. 9. Ground plan of cells of Tatua morio ; from Smith. Fig. 10. Nest of Mischocyttarus labiatus ; from Saussure. Fig. 11. Nest of Apoïca pallida ; fi*om Saussure. Fig. 12. Nest of Odynerus birenimaculatus. Fig. 13. Nest of Odynerus albophaleratus ; original. Fig. 14. Mud cell of Pelopœus fiavipes ; original. Fig. 15. A row of spherical cell» of Eumenes fraterna, with the female; from Harris.Plate 5. ARCHITECTURE OP WÀSPS.ORABRONIDÆ. 157 as a cherry. It is attached by a short stout pedicel to bushes, and the cavity is filled with the larvæ of small moths. Raphiglossa odyneroides, from Epirus, described by S. S. Saunders, makes elongated cells in galleries in briars, storing them with the larvæ of what lie supposed to be weevils. The dark brown dense tougli cocoon of a Chrysis was also found in the cells. In Mctsaris, whicli connects the Vespariæ with the succeed- ing family, the wings are not completely folded wlien at rest ; there are but two subcostal cells ; the maxillæ are rudimen- tary ; and the antennæ are clavate and eight-jointed. Mcisaris vespoides Cresson, inliabits Colorado Territory. Crabronidæ Latreille. Sand-wasps, Wood-wcisps. In the more typical généra the head is remarkably large, cuboidal, wliile the clypeus is very short, and covered for the most part with a dense silvery or golden pile. The antennæ are genicu- late, the long second joint being received, when at rest, in a deep frontal vertical groove ; the mandibles are large, and of even width tlirougliout, and the mouth-parts are rather short, especially the lingua, wliicli is often, liowever, well developed. There is only one subcostal eell, except in the Pliilanthinœ. The thorax is sub-spherical, and the abdomen is either short and stout, or more or less pedicellate. The forefeet are adaptec! for digging and tunnelling, the forelegs in the females being broad and flat, and in the males, which are supposed to do no work, they are sometimes, as in Thyreopus, armed with vexhillate expansions. The larvi is rather short and thick, a little flattened on the under side, but mucli rounded above ; the segments are convex above, the thoracic segments differing from the abdominal seg- ments in not being thickened posteriorly on each ring. They spin either a very sliglit cocoon, or a tliin dense brown oval cylindrical case, generally reddish brown in color. The pupæ hâve much the same character as the imago, with prominent acute tubercles above the ocelli. The members of this family afford, so far as we are ac- quainted with their habits, most interesting examples of the interdependence of structure and the habits of insects. Most158 HYMENOPTERA. of the species are wood-wasps, making their cells in cy- lindrical holes in rotten wood, or enlarging nail-holes in posts, as is the case with Crabro singularis, according to the observations of Mr. C. A. Sliurtleff, thus adapting them to the requirements of their young. Other généra (Rhopalum pedicel- latum, Stigmus fraternus, and Crabro stirpicola) avail them- seives of those plants whose stem has a pith which they can readily excavate and refit for their habitations. The females provision their nests with caterpillars, aphidæ, spiders, and other insects. This family is most difficult to classify ; it consists rather of groups of généra, some higher and some lower, though as a general rule those généra with pedunculate abdomens are the lowest in the sériés. In illustration, we regard Stigmus, writh its elongated decephalized body, as inferior to Blepharipus, which again is subordinate to the more cephalized Crabro, where the body is shorter, the abdomen sessile, the anterior part of the body more developed headwards, while its nests are constructed more elaborately. The genus Psen, for the same reason, is lower than Cerceris, of which it seems a de- graded form. Some of the most useful characters in separating the généra of this family are to be found in the form of the clypeus, its sculpturing and relative amount of pubescence or hirsuties ; in the form and sculpturing of the propocleum (Newman), or tho- racico-abdominal ring of Newport ; while the tip of the abdo- men présents excellent generic and also spécifie characters, depending on its grooved or flattened shape. The species of this family are mostly found in the north temperate zone, being very abundant in North America and in Europe. The Pemphredoninæ occur far north in abundance, while Cerceris occurs fartliest towards the tropics. The subfamily Philanthinœ includes the three généra, Phi- lanthus, Eucerceris, and Cerceris. In Philanthus (Fig. 84, wing), the head is short, transversely suboval, the clypeus longer than broad, with the first joint of the abdomen nearly as broad when seen from above as the succeeding one. Our more com- mon form southward is Philanthus vertilabris Say (Fig. 85). In Europe P. apivorus provisions its nest with honey-bees.CRABRONIDÆ. 159 Cresson remarks that Eucerceris (Fig. 86, fore wing of male , a, female) differs from Cerceris in the venation, which diffeis greatly in the two sexes. E. zonatus Say occurs in the west. The species of Cerceris (Fig. 87, wing) Fig. 84. hâve transversely oblong heads, the front of the liead is flattened and destitute of hairs, and the rings of the abdomen are contracted, the middle part being un- usually convex and coarsely punctured, while the basal ring is nearly one-half nar- Fig. 85. rower than the succeeding ones. Cerceris deserta Say is our most com- mon form. In Europe some species are Fig. 87. known to store their nests with bees, and the larvæ of Cur- culionidœ and Buprestidæ. Dufour unearthed in a sin- gle field thirty nests of <7. bupresticida which were filled with ten species of Buprestis, comprising four hundred individuals, and none of any other genus. Cerceris tuberculata provisions its nest with Leucosomus ophthalmicus ; and C. tricincta with Clythra. In the subfamily Crabroninœ, there is a great disparity in the sexes, the form of the females being the most persistent. In the male the head is smaller, narrow behind, with shorter mandibles, and a narrower clypeus ; the body is also much slenderer, especially the abdomen, and the legs are simple in Crabro, but in Thyreopus variously modified by expansions of the joints, especially the tibia. The species of Crabro (Fig. 88) are readily distinguished by the large cubical head, and the sliarp mucronate abdo- minal tip of the female. The more typical form of this very extensive genus is Crabro sex-maculatus Say, so-called from the six yellow spots On the subpedunculate abdomen. According to Dr. T. W. Harris (MS. notes), this wasp was seen by Rev. Mr. Leonard, of Dublin, N. H., burrowing in decayed wood, June lOth.160 HYMENOPTERA. Crabro singularis Smith, was discovered by Mr. C. A. Shuitleff boring in a post. In Thyreopus, the body is slender, and the forelegs are curiously dilated in the males, often forming a broad expansion, and so dotted as to présent a sieve-like appearance, while the head is much shorter, being more transverse. T. latipes Smith is known by the broad, long, acute, mucronate, shield-like ex- pansion of the fore tibia, which is striped with black at the base. The species of Rhopalum are usually blackish, without the gay colors prévalent in the généra before mentioned ; the legs are simple, and the abdomen is long and slender, with a long peduncle. The body of the larva is short and thick, tapering rapidly towards each extremity ; the segments are convex, those of the thorax especially being smooth, broad, and regu- larly convex, while the abdominal rings are provided with prominent tubercles. The tip of the body is quite extensible, and when protruded is subacute, terminating in a small knob- like body, formed by the last ring. The larvæ of this genus differ from those of the Vespariœ and Apiariœ known to us by having a few hairs scattered over the bod}^. In the pupa the antennæ, in their natural position, do not quite reach to the second pair of trochanters, and reach only to the tip of the maxillary palpi. The tip of the abdomen is very acute and elongated unusually far be}ond the ovipositor. On the head, between the ocelli and antennæ, are two very prominent, acute tubercles, and the abdominal segments are dentate on the hind edge. Thus both the larva and pupa would seem, by their anatomy, to be unusually active in their loose, illy-constructed cells, which do not confine their food so closely as in the other wasps, as the insects on which they prob- ably feed hâve a greater range in their rather roomy cells. April 18th we opened several stems grown in the open air, and found both larvæ and pupæ ; the latter in different stages of development. The cells were placed in the closely packed dust made by the larva of an Ægeria, or directly bored in the pith of the plants. There were six such cells, each with its inhabitant, within a space an inch in length, some laying cross- wise, others along the middle. The larvæ spin but a veryCRABRONIDÆ. 161 slight cocoon, not at ail comparable with that of Crabro ; the walls of the cell being simply lined with silken threads. Under other circumstances, i. e. where the cells are more exposed, it is not unlikely that a more elaborate cocoon may be spun. Mr. James Angus has bred numerous specimens of Bhopa- lum pedicellatum Pack., from stems of the Rose, Corcorus, Ja- ponica, and Spiræa, grown in hot-houses at West Farms, N. Y. The larva is a quarter of an inch long. The following généra belong to the subfamily Pemphre- doninœ : The genus Stigmus, as its name indicates, may at once be known by the very large pterostigma, as well as the unusually small size of the species. The body of the larva is moderately long and slender, cylindrical, tapering slowly towards both ex- tremities. The rings are short, very convex, subacutely so, and the larva is of a beautiful roseate color. Stigmus frater- nus Say burrows in the stems of the Syringa, of which speci- mens hâve been received from Mr. Angus with the larvæ and pupæ. In Cemonus the front narrows rapidly towards the insertion of the mandibles, and there is a short triangular enclosure on the propodeum, while the abdomen is shorter and thicker than in Pempliredon, a closely allied genus ; the pedicel is also longer. The larvæ of Cemonus inornatus Harris live in irregu- lar burrows in the elder, like those of Rhopalum from which they liave been reared by Mr. Angus. Tliey are known by the broad flattened head and body, serrate side and tergum of the body, and large, conspicuously bidentate mandibles, as well as by the peculiarly flattened abdominal tip. In Passcdœcus the labrum is very prominent, while the man- dibles are very large, widening towards the tip, and in the com- mon P. mandibidaris Cresson they are white, and thus very conspicuous. This species burrows in company with the other wood-wasps mentioned above in the stems of the elder and syringa. The cells are lined with silk. The wasps appear early in June. Their nests are tenanted by Chalcids. The female stores her cells with Aphides, as we hâve found tliem abundantly in stems of plants received from Mr. Angus. The genus Psen seems to be a degraded Cerceris, but the 11162 HYMENOPTERA. abdomen is pedicelled, and differs from Mimesa, a still more slender-bodied genus, in having the tip of the abdomen more or less grooved, while in Mimesa it is fiat and not grooved at ail. Psen leucopus Say has a dense silvery pile on the front of the head, with black antennæ, and the pedicel is rather short. Nyssonidæ Leach. In this family the head is transversely longer and less cubical than in the preceding group ; the ver- tex is liigher and more convex, while the front is narrow, the clypeus long and narrow, the eyes long and narrow, and the antennæ are more clavate than in the Crabronidce, and the propodeum is sometimes armed with acute spines, while the enclosed space is smoothly polished or striated. The wings are long and narrow, and the abdomen is sessile in the typical généra, where it is obconic, but clavate when pedicellate. In Trypoxylon the body is long, with a pedicellate clavate abdomen. In Europe “Mr. Johnson has detected it frequent- ing the holes of a post pre-occupied by a species of Odynerus, and into which it conveyed a small round bail, or pellet, con- taining about fifty individuals of a species of Aphis ; this the Odynerus, upon her return, invariably turned out, flying ont with it, held by her legs, to the distance of about a foot from the aperture of her cell, where she hovered a moment, and then let it fall ; and this was constantly the case till the Trypoxylon had sufficient time to mortar up the orifice of the hole, and the Odynerus was then entirely excluded ; for although she would return to the spot repeatedly, she never endeavored to force the entrance, but flew off to seek another hole elsewhere.” T. politum Say has purplish wings, and no enclosure on the propodeum. T, frigidum Smith lives in the stems of Syringa, from which It has been reared by Mr. Angus. The thin, délicate cocoon is long and slender, enlarging slightly towards the anterior end. The genus Mellinus (belonging to the third subfamily, Mel- lininæ,) is known by its broad front, and slender antennæ, and its pedunculate abdomen, while in Alyson, a slender- bodied genus, it is sessile. Mellinus bimaculatus Say has a black* head, with pale tipped antennæ, and two ovate yellow spots on the abdomen. Alyson oppositus is black, with twoNY SSONIDÆ. 163 yellow spots on the abdomen, which has the basal ring yel- lowish red in the female. The fourth subfamily is the Nyssoninœ, so named from Nys- son, a typical genus. The genus Gorytes is truly a mimetic form, closely simulat- ing the genus Odynerus, one of the Vespariœ. The front of the head is narrow, while the clypeus is larger than usual. The species are numerous, occurring late in the summer on the flowers of Spiræa. Gorytes jlavicornis Harris is polished russet brown, with narrow yellow rings on the abdomen, the propo- deum is smooth and polished, and the basal ring of the abdomen is black. A species has been observed in Europe protruding lier sting into the frothy sécrétion of Tettigoniæ living on grass, and carrying off the insect to provision its nest with. Oxybelus is a short, stout, black genus, with whitish abdomi- nal spots, and stout spines on the thorax, while the sessile abdomen is distinctly conical. “Its prey consists of Diptera, which it has a peculiar mode of carrying by the hind legs the while it either opens the aperture of its burrow or else forms a new one with its anterior pair. Its flight is low, and in skips ; it is very active.” (Westwood.) Oxybelus emarginatus Say has two oval membranous appen- dages to the metathorax, and is a common black species found abundantly on the flowers of the Virginia Creeper. In Nysson the body is a little longer, narrow compared with Miat of Oxybelus, while the terminal joint of the antennæ is Iiickened, flattened, and excavated beneath. Nysson lateralis Say is dull black, with six light spots on the abdomen. The species of Stizus are of large size and easily recognized by their hirsute body, stout legs, triangular silvery clypeus, and the high transverse vertex of the head. The propodeum has a faintly marked triangular enclosure. The species are very rapacious, paralyzing grasshoppers and other large insects with their formidable sting, and carrying them off to provision their nests. Proféssor S. Tenney has sent us a* specimen of the Dog-day Cicada (C. canicularis) which Stizus speciosus had tlius stung. Mr. Atkinson has observed the same fact, and has found the deep burrows of this species, the hole being tliree- fourtlis of an inch in diameter. He has observed it feeding on sap running from a tree.164 HYMENOPTERA. The species of Larra are smaller, and differ from those of Stizus in the long, narrow, very prominent làbrum, the shorter clypeus, broader front and longer abdomen, the tip of which is without the broad subtriangular area which is présent in Stizus and the other généra of this family. Larra unicincta Say is black- ish, with a single reddish band on the second abdominal ring. Bembecidæ Latreille. We hâve but two généra, Bembex and Monedula, which hâve large heads and flattened bodies, bearing a strong resemblance to Syrphus Aies from their similar coloration. The labrum is very large and long, triangular, like a beak. The species are very active, flying rapidly about flowers with a loud hum. “The female Bembex burrows in sand to a considérable deptli, burying various species of Dip- tera (Syrphidæ, Muscidæ, etc.), and depositing her eggs at the same time in company with thern, upon which the larvæ, when hatched, subsist. When a sufficient store has been collected, the parent closes the mouth of the cell with earth.” “An anonymous correspondent in the Entomological Magazine, States that B. rostrata constructs its nests in the soft light sea-sands in the Ionian Islands, and appears to catch its prey (consisting of such Aies as frequent the sand ; amongst others, a bottle- green Ay) wliilst on the wing. He describes the mode in which the female, with astonishing swiftness, scratches its hole with its forelegs like a dog. Bembex tarsata, according to Latreille, provisions its nests with Bombylii.” (Westwood.) Dufour States that two Diptera, Panopea carnea and Toxophora fasciata, the latter allied to Systrophus, are parasites on Bem- bex. Mr. F. G. Sanborn has noticed the exceedingly swift Aight of our common Bembex fasciata Fabr. on sandy beaches where it is found most abundantly. Monedula differs from Bembex in its slenderer body, more clavate antennæ, and its shorter, very obtuse labrum. The body is smoother, and most generally more higlily colored and more gaily spotted than in Bembex. Monedula Carolina Fabr. and M. 4—fasciata Say are common southwards of New England. Larridæ Leach. Mr. F. Smith deAnes this family as having “mandibles notched exteriorly near the base ; the labrum con-LARR1DÆ. 165 cealed, with a single spine at the apex of the intermediate tibiæ ; the abdomen is ovoid-conical.” The gênas Astata is a large hairy form, with long antennæ and palpi and an elongated prothorax. Its spiny legs show its near rèlationship to the Sphegidæ. Astata unicolor Say repre- sents the genus in this country. Tachytes is also of larger size than the following genus. It is covered with long dense golden short hairs, with a trap- ézoïdal front. Tachytes aurulentus Fabr. is rare ; it frequents the flowers of the Asclepias, as we hâve found pollen masses at- tached to the spines of its legs. We figure (89) a tarsus of a wasp belonging probably to this genus, received from Mr. V. T. Chambers, showing the pollen masses of Asclepias at- tached to the spines. The genus Larrada “contains those species whicli hâve the marginal cell truncated at the apex and appendiculated, and three submarginal eells, the first as long as the two following ; .... the metathorax [propodeum] truncated posteriorly, elongate, the sides being generally parallel ; the mandibles are large and arcuate, with a tooth on their exterior towards the base ; abdomen ovate-conical, acuminate at the apex.” Larrada argentata Eeauv. is covered with silvery pile. It.is a slender form, with short, nearly unarmed legs. A Brazilian species of Larrada, according to Mr. H. W. Bâtes, builds a nest composed apparently of the scrapings of the woolly texture of plants ; it is attached to a leaf, having a close resemblance to a piece of German tinder, or a piece of sponge. The cocoons were dark brown, and of a brittle consist- ency. The reporter, Mr. F. Smith, adds : “Iam not aware of any similar habit of building an external nest having been pre- A iously recorded ; our British species of the closely allied genus Tachytes, are burrowers in the ground, particularly in sandy situations ; their anterior tarsi are strongly ciliated, the claws bifid and admirably adapted for burrowing. On examin- ing the insect which constructed the nest now exhibited, I find the legs differently armed ; the anterior pair are not ciliated, Fi-. 89.166 HYMENOPTERA. and the claws are simple and slender, clearly indicative of a. peculiar habit differing from its congeners, and how admirably is this illustrated in the nest before us?” Sphegidæ Latreille. Smith defines this family as having “the posterior margin of the prothorax not prolonged back- wards to the insertion of the wings, and anteriorly produced into a neck, with the abdomen petiolated.” The very fossorial legs are long and spiny, the posterior pair being of unusual length. The mandibles are large, curved, narrow, and acute, the base not being toothed externally, and the antennæ are long and filiform. The species are often gaily colored, being ornamented with black and red, brown and red, or are entirely black, or blue. They love the sunshine, are very active, rest- less in their movements, and hâve a powerful sting. The sting of these and other wasps wliich store up insects for their young, pénétrâtes the nervous centres and paralyzes the victim without depriving it of life, so that it lives many days. A store of living food is thus laid up for the young wasp. After being stung the caterpillars will transfofm into chrys- alids, though too weak to change to moths. Mr. Gueinzius, who résides in South Africa, observes that 4 4 large spiders and caterpillars became immediately motionless on being stung, and I cannot help thinking that the poisonous acid of Hymen- optera has an antiseptie and preserving property ; for cater- pillars and locusts retain their colors weeks after being stung, and this, too, in a moist situation under a burning sun.” These insects either make their nests in the sand, or, like the succeeding family, are “ mud-daubers,” building their cells of mud and plastering them on walls, etc. The tropical genus Ampulex is more closely allied to the preceding family than the other généra. The species are brassy green. Dr. G. A. Perkins has described in the Ameri- can Naturalisé vol. 1, p. 293, the habits of a wasp, probably the Ampulex Sibirica Fabr., which inhabits Sierra Leone, and oviposits in the body of the cockroacli. The dead bodies of the cockroaches are often found with the empty cocoon of the wasp occupying the cavity of the abdomen. A species of this genus, abundant at Zanzibar at certain sea-SPHEGIDÆ. 167 sons, was frequently observed by Mr. C. Cooke to attack the cockroach. The cockroach, as if cowed at its presence, im- médiat ely yields. without a struggle. The Ampulex stings and paralyses its victim, and then Aies away with it. Clilorion is closely allied, containing blue and metallic green species, often with golden yellow wings. Chlorion cyaneum Dahlb., a blue species, is found in the Southern States. The genus Priononyx “differs from the genus Sphex in hav- ing the claws quadridentate beneath at their base ; the neura- tion of the wings and the form of the abdomen are the same as in Harpactopus” which is found only in the tropics and Aus- tralia. Priononyx Thomœ is found from South Carolina to Brazil, including the West Indies. The genus Sphex is quite an extensive one. The head is as wide as the thorax ; the antennæ are filiform, mandibles large and acute, bidentate within, the teeth notched at their base, forming a rudimentary tooth, the apical tooth being acute. The thorax is elongate-ovate, truncated behind, with a trans- verse collar (prothorax). The fore wings hâve one marginal and tliree submarginal cells ; the marginal cell elongate, rounded at its apex ; the first submarginal cell as long as the two following. The abdomen is pedun- culated, conically ovate, and the an- terior tarsi are cili- ated in the females. Sphex ichneumo- nea Linn. (Figure 90) is a large rust- red species, with a dense golden pu- Fig. 90. bescence. It is common from Massachusetts southwards. In the last week of July, and during August and early in Sep- tember, we noticed nearly a dozen of these wasps busily en- gaged in digging their holes in a gravelly walk. In previous seasons they were more numerous, burrowing into grassy168 HYMENOPTERA. banks near the walk. The holes were four to six inches deep. In beginning its hole the wasp dragged away with its teeth a stone one half as large as itself to a distance of eight inches from the hole, while it pushed away others with its head. In beginning its burrow it nsed its large and powerful jaws almost entirely, digging to the depth of an inch in five minutes, com- pleting its hole in about half an hour. After having inserted its head into the hole, where it loosened the earth with its jaws and threw it out of the hole with its jaws and fore legs, it would retreat backwards and push the dirt still farther back from the mouth of the cell with its hind legs. In cases where the farther progress of the work was stopped by a stone too large for the wasp to remove or dig around, it wrould abandon it and begin a new hole. Just as soon as it reached the required depth the wasp flew a few feet to the adjoining bank and falling upon an Orchelimum vulgare or O. gracile, stung and paralyzed it instantly, bore it to its nest, and was out of sight for a moment, and while in the bottom of its hole must hâve deposited its egg in its victim. Reappearing it be- gan to drawT the sand back into the hole, scratching it in quite briskly by means of its spiny fore tarsi, while standing on its two hind pairs of legs. It thus threw in half an inch of dirt upon the grasshopper and then flew off. In this way one Sphex will make two or three such holes in an afternoon. The walk was hard and composed of a coarse sea-gravel, and the rapidity with which the wasp worked her way in with tooth and nail was marvellous. Sphex tihialis St. Fargeau is a black, stout, thick insect. Mr. J. Angus lias reared this species, sending me the larvæ in a cavity previously tunnelled by Xylocopa Virginica in a pine board. The hole was six inches long, and the oval cylin- drical cocoons were packed loosely, either side by side, where there was room, or one a little in advance of the other. The interstices between them were filled with bits of rope, w^hich had perhaps been bitten up into pièces by the wasp itself ; wrhile the end of the cell was filled for a distance of two inches with a coarse sedge arranged in layers, as if rammed in like gun-wad- ding. The cocoons are eighty to ninety hundredths of an inch long, oval lanceolate, somewhat like those of Pompilus. TheySPHEGIDÆ. 109 -consist of two layers, the outer very thin, the inner tough, parchment-like. The larvæ liybernate and turn to pupæ in the spring, appearing in the summer and also in the autumn. The larva is cylindrical, with the pleural ridge prominent, and with no traces of feet ; the head, which is small and not prominent, and rather narrow compared with that of Pelopæus, is bent inwards on the breast so that the mouth reaches to the sternum of the fourth abdominal ring. The posterior half of each ring is much thickened, giving a crenulated outline to the tergum. The abdominal tip is obtuse. Spliex Lanierii Guérin, according to Smith (Proceedings -of the Entomological Society of London, Feb. 7, 1859), con- struis its nest of a cottony substance, filling a tunnel formed by a large curved leaf. The species of the genus are sup- posed to burrow in the ground, and the two cases above cited show an interesting divergence from this habit. Mr. Smith adds, that in “the Sphex which constructs the nest in the rolled leaf, the anterior tarsi are found to be very slightly ciliated, and the tibiæ almost destitute of spines, thus affording •another instance proving that différence of structure is indica- tive of différence of habit.” The genus Pelopæus is of a slighter form than in Sphex, the body being longer and slenderer ; the clypeus is as broad as long, triangular above, in front convex, or produced and end- ing in two teeth. The outer costal cell is lanceolate oval, the second subcostal cell subtrapezoidal, being widest above ; it is -also somewhat longer than broad. The first médian cell is very long and narrow, much more so than usual. The pedicel of the abdomen is long, the first joint in the male being often as long as the remainder of the abdomen. The larva of P. cæruleus Linn. is much like that of Sphex, having a cylindrical body with the rings thickened posteriorly. It differs from that of Pompilus in its longer and narrower head, the short broadly trapezoidal clypeus, and the distinctly marked exserted labrum. The mandibles are long and tridentate. The pupa (of P. flavipes) differs from that of the Vespariœ in having the head more raised from the breast ; the palpi are not partially concealed, as they may be easily seen for their whole length. The long curved mandibles cover the base of the170 HYMENOPTEKA. maxillæ and lingua, and the antennæ reach to the posterior coxæ. The maxillæ are slender, not reaching to the tip of the labium.» The female usually provisions her cells (Plate 5, Fig. 14) with spiders. The cells are constructed of layers of mud of unequal length, and formed of little pellets placed in two rows, and di- verging from the middle. They are a little over an inch long, and from a half to three-quarters of an inch wide, and are some- what three-sided, the inner side next the object, either stone- walls or rafters, to which it is attached, being Hat. As the earthen cells sufficiently protect the délicate larvæ within, the cocoons are very thin, and brown in color. The cells of Pelopœus jlavipes from Brown ville, Texas, col- lected by an United States officer and presented to the Boston Society of Natural History, contained both spiders and numer- ous pupæ of a fly, Sarcophaga nudipennis Loew (MS) which is somewhat allied to Tachina. These last hatched out in mid- summer a few days before the specimens of Pelopæus. It is most probable that they were parasitic on the latter. These specimens of P. flavipes were more higlily ornamented with yel- low than in those found northwards in the Atlantic States, the metathorax being crossed by a broad yellow band. The genus Ammophila is a long slender form, with a petio- late abdomen, the tip of which is often red. The petiole of the abdomen is two-jointed, and very long and slender, being longer than the fusiform part. In the males the petiole is in some species much shorter. The wings are small, with the apex more obtuse than usual ; the second subcostal cell is pentag- onal, and the third is broadly triangular. Westwood states that “the species inhabit sandy districts, in which A. sabulosa forms its burrow, using its jaws in bur- rowing ; and when they are loaded, it ascends backwards to the mouth, turns quickly around, Aies to about a foot’s distance, gives a sudden turn, throwing the sand in a complété shower to about six inches’ distance, and again alights at the mouth of its burrow.” “Latreille states that this species provisions its cells with caterpillars, but Mr. Shuckard states that he has observed the female dragging a very large inflated spider up the nearly per- pendicular side of a sand-bank, at least twenty feet high, andPOMPILIDÆ. 171 that whilst burrowing it makes a loud whirring buzz ; and, in the Transactions of the Entomological Society of London, he States that he has detected both A. sàbulosa and A. Jiirsuta dragging along large spiders. Mr. Curtis observed it bury the caterpillars of a Noctua and Geometra. St. Fargeau, how' ever, states that A. sabulosci collects caterpillars of large size, especially those of Noctuæ, with a surprising perseverance, whereas A. arenaria, forming a distinct section in the genus, collects spiders.” (Westwood.) Ammophila cementciria Smith, and A. urnaria Klug, are the more common species in this country ; they are red and white, while A. luctuosci Smith is a black, shorter, stouter, more hirsute species. They may ail be seen flying about hot sandy places, and alighting near wells and standing water to drink. Pompilidæ Leach. In this family the body is oblong, the sides often compressed, and the head shorter, when seen from above, being more trans- versely ovate than in the preceding family. The antennæ are long, not geniculate, and in the males are stouter and with shorter joints than in the females. The eyes are narrow oval, and the maxillary palpi are six, and the labial palpi four-jointed. The prothorax is ex- tended on the sides back to the base of the wings, wliich latter are large and broad, the fore pair having three subcostal cells. The legs are very long and slender, with thick slender spines. The Pompilidæ, of which about seven hun- dred species are known, hâve a wide geographical range, from the temperate zone to the tropics. Like the Sphegidœ, they oviposit in the body of other insects, storing their nests, usually built in the sand, with spiders and caterpillars. The head of Pompilus (Fig. 91) is a little longer, seen from172 HYMENOPTERA. above, than in the other généra ; the front of the head is about a third longer than broad. The antennæ are long and fili- form and sometimes crenulate, as in Figure 91a, in the males ; the mandibles are stout, broad, sabre-shaped, being much curved, with low flattened teeth, and the maxillary palpi are longer than the labial palpi. The wings are rather broad, with the three subcostal cells lying in a straight row. The abdomen is slightly com- pressed, and equals in length the remainder of the body. The sting is very large and formidable, and ex- cessively painful, benumbing the parts it enters. They * are exceedingly active, running and flying over sandy places like winged spiders. There are about five hundred species of this genus described. They are usually shining black or deep bluish black, with Fig. 91 a. Fig. 92. smoky or reddish wings, and sometimes a reddish abdominal band. This genus is interesting, as affording in its form a mean between the globular thorax and short body of the Apiariœ and the elongated body of the Ichneumonidæ. The Pompilus formosus Say (Fig. 92), called in Texas the Tarantula-killer, attacks that immense spider the Mygale Hentzii, and, according to Dr. G. Lincecum (American Naturalisé May,POMPILIDÆ. 173 1867), paralyzes it with its formidable sting, and inserting an egg in its body, places it in its nest, dug to the depth of five inches. There is but a single brood, produced in June, which is killed off by the frosts of November. This species Fig. 93. feeds in summer 4 4 upon the honey and pollen of the flowers of the Elder, and of Vitis ampélopsis, the Virginia Creeper ; but its favorite nourishment is taken from Flg- 94, the blossoms of Asclepias quadrifolium” (Lincecum.) P. cylindricus Cresson (Fig. 93, wing) is one of our smallest species, being from three to five lines long. It occurs in the South and West. P. arctus Cresson (Fig. 94, wing) in- habits Colorado Territory. P. Marias Cresson (Fig. 95, ? enlarged) is a beautiful and rare species found in Pennsylvania. The genus Priocnemis is characterized by the two hind pair of tibiæ being serrated ($>, Fig. 96, a, wing; 6, pos- terior leg ; c, anterior leg), and by the want of spines on the an- terior legs. P. unifasciatus Say is a wide-spread species and b a readily recognized by the deep black color of the body, the yellow an- tennæ and the large yellow spot at the tip of each anterior wing. The genus Agenia (Fig. 97, a, wing; 6, posterior leg) differs in having smooth legs. A. brevis Cres- Fig. 96. son (Fig. 98, wing) is a little spe- cies found in Georgia. A. congruus Cresson (Fig. 99, wing) was captured in West Virginia ; and A. acceptus Cresson (Fig. 100, wing) in Georgia. The genus Notocyphus (Fig. 101, ?, wing) is found in Brazil and Mexico. Planiceps (Fig. 102,174 HYMEN OPTER A. wing) contains a few species, of which P. niger Cresson, an entirely black species, is found in Connecticut. Aporus (Fig. 103, wing) contains a single American species, A. fasciatus Smith, taken in North Carolina. From Mr. F. G. Sanborn we hâve re- ceived the larva and cocoon of Pompilus Fig. 97. funereus St. Farg., a small black spe- oies, which builds its nest in fields. The larva is short and broad, with the latéral région rather prominent, and the tip of the abdomen rather acute. It differs from Pelopæus in its stouter, rather flat- tened body, and thickened segments, though as our specimen is preserved in alcohol these cliaracters may hâve be- come exaggerated. It more nearly re- sembles Pelopæus in its transverse clypeus, thin bilobate labrum, and the stout mandibles, which are, however, much stouter than in Pelopæus, while the whole head is shorter, broader, and rounder. It is probable that this pecu- liar form of the head (which as in Sphex is bent beneath the breast), together Fig. 103. with the broad transverse clypeus, and broad, short, bilobate, thin, transparent labrum, and especially the unidentate short broad mandibles are family cliaracters, sep- arating the larvæ of this group from those of the Sp hegidæ . The cocoon is ovate, long, and slender, much smaller at one end than the other, not being so regularly fusiform as in Sphex. Ceropales differs from the foregoing gen- Fig. îoo. era jn broad head, its much shorter ab- domen ; and also in the eyes being a little excavated, in the depressed labium, the narrow front, which dilates above and below the middle, and in the greatly elongated hind legs, gen- erally banded with red or whitish. Ceropales bipunctata Say is generally distributed throughout the United States. ItSCOLIADÆ. 175 is easily recognized by the black body and legs, and red pos- terior femora, and is six lines long. C. Hobinsonii Cresson (Fig. 104, uated on a blaok ground, and there is a basal, médian, black streak on the fore wing. The apex of the hind wings is much produced. The larvæ, called “cutworms,” are thick, with a distinct, horny, prothoracic plate, like that in the Tortrices, or leaf-rol- lers ; they are marked with shilling and warty, or smooth and concolor- Fis* m ous spots, and often lon- gitudinal dark Unes, and live by day hidden under sticks and the roots of low plants ; feeding by night. The pupa is found living under ground. Agrotis tessellata of Harris (Fig. 237) is dark ash colored ; the two ordinary spots on the fore wings. are large and pale, and alternate with a triangular and a square, deep, black spot. It expands an inch and a quarter. Agrotis devastator Harris is the moth of the cabbage cut-worm. Another yery abundant species, often seen flying over the blossoms of the Golden-rod in autumn is the Agro- tis subgothica (Fig. 238). Mr. Riley states that this moth is the “parent of a cut-worm which very closely resembles that of A. Coch- rani, but which has the dark side divided into two stripes. The Fis- m cnrysalis remains somewhat longer in the ground, and the moth makes its appearance from four to six weeks later than A. Cochrani.” A. suffusa Den. and Schief. (A. telifera of Harris, fig. 239) is so named from the lance-like streaks on the fore wings. It appears late in July, and probablv attacks corn, as Mr. Uhler has found the chrysalids at the roots of corn in Maryland. Riley describes the larva under the name of the Large Black Cut-worm. It is an inch and a half in length when crawling.NOCTUÆLITÆ. 307 ^Its general color above is dull, dark, leaden brown, with a faint trace of a dirty yellow white line along the back. The subdorsal line is more distinct, and between it and the stigmata are two other indistinct pale lines. There are eight black, shiny, piliferous spots on each segment ; two near the subdorsal line, the smaller a little above anteriorly ; the larger just below it, and a little back of the middle of the segment, with the line appearing especially light above it. The other two are placed each side of the stigmata, the one anteriorly a little above, the other just behind, in the same line with them, and having a white shade above it.” While cut-worms hâve usually been supposed to feed upon the roots of grasses and to eut off the leaves of succulent vegetables, Mr. Cochran, of Calumet, 111., has discovered that one species ascends the apple, pear and grape, eating off the fruit buds, thus doing immense damage to the orchard. Mr. Cochran, in a letter published in the u Prairie Farmer,” states that 4 * they destroy low branched fruit trees of ail kinds except the peach, feeding on the fruit buds first, the wood buds as a second choice, and preferring them to ail things, tender grape buds and shoots (to which they are also partial) not excepted ; the miller always preferring to lay her eggs near the hill or mound over the roots of the trees in the orchard, and if, as is many times the case, the trees hâve a spring dressing of lime or ashes with the view of preventing the operations of the May beetles, this will be selected with unerring instinct by the mil- ler, thus giving her larvæ a fine warm bed to cover themselves with during the day from the observation of their enemies. They will leave potatoes, peas and ail other young, green things, for the buds of the apple and the pear. The long, naked, young trees of the orchard are almost exempt from their voracious attacks, but I found them about midnight, of a dark and damp night, well up in the limbs of these. The habit of the dwarf apple and pear tree, however, just suits their nature, and much of the complaint of those people who cannot make these trees thrive on a sandy soil, has its source and foundation here, though apparently, utterly unknown to the orchardist. There is no known remedy ; sait has no prop- «rties répulsive to them ; they burrow in it equally as quick as308 LEPIDOPTERA. in lime or ashes. Tobacco, soap and other diluted washes do not even provoke them ; but a tin tube, six inches in length, opened on one side and closed around the base of the tree, fit- ting close and entering at the lower end ,an inch into the earth, is what the lawyers would term an effectuai estoppel to further proceedings. ■“If the dwarf tree branches so low from the ground as not to leave six inches clear of trunk between the limbs and ground, the limbs must be sacrificed to save the tree, as in two nights four or five of these pests will fully and effectually strip a four or five year old dwarf of every fruit and wood bud, and often when the tree is green utterly dénudé it of its foliage. I look upon them as an enemy to the orchard more fatal than the can- ker worm when left to themselves, but fortunately for man- kind, more surely headed off.” Mr. Riley has named this cut-worm Agrotis Cochrani (Fig. 240, and larva) and de- scribes the larva which, according to the obser- vations of J. Townley of Marquette, Wis., also ascends standard trees, not confining its injuries to dwarf trees. The cut-worm is 1.07 inches in length. “It is slightly shagreened and the general color is of a dingy ash gray, with lighter or darker shadings. The back is light, inclining to flesh color with a darker dingy line along the dorsum. The sides, particularly along the subdorsal line, are of a darker shade. On each segment there are eight small, black, shiny, slightly elevated points, having the appearance of black sealing-wax, from each of which originates a small black bristle. The stig- mata are of the same black color and one of the black spots is placed quite close to them anteriorly. The head is shiny and of the same dingy color, with two darker marks ; thick and almost joining at the upper surface, becoming thinner below and diverging towards the palpi. The upper surface of the first segment is also shiny like the head. The ventral région is of the same dingy color, but lighter, having a greenish tingeNOCTUÆLITÆ. 309 anteriorly and inclining to yellow under the anal segment. Prolegs and feet of the same color. It has a few short bristles on the anterior and latéral segments. “The head is light brown, with a dark brown spot on each side and dark brown above, leaving the inverted Y mark in the middle light brown, and having much the appearance of a goblet, as one looks from tail to head. The cervical shield is dark brown, except a stripe above and on each side. There are sparse, short, white bristles laterally and posteriorly. The venter and legs are of a glaucous glassy color, and the feet are light brown.” “The moth in its general appearance bears a great resem- blance to Hadena chenopodii, but the two are found to differ ossentialty when compared. From specimens of H. chenopodii, kindly furnished me by Mr. Walsh, and named by Grote, I am enabled to give the essential différences, which are : 1. In A. Cochrani, as already stated, the middle area exceeds some- what in width either of the other two, while in H. chenopodii it is but half as wide as either ; 2. In the Agrotis the space between the spots and between the reniform and transverse posterior is dark, relieving the spots and giving them a light appearance, whilst in the Hadena this space is of the same color as the wing, and the reniform spot is dark. The claviform spot in the Hadena is also quite prominent, and one of its distinctive features ; while in the Agrotis it is just about obsolète. Another larva is called by Mr. Riley the W-marked cut- worm. “It measures one and an eighth inches, and its gen- eral color is ash gray, inclining on the back and upper sides to dirty yellow : it is finely speckled ail over with black and brown spots. Along the back there is a fine line of a lighter color shaded on each side at the ring joints with a darker color. Subdorsal line light sulphur yellow, with a band of dirty brownish yellow underneath. Along the stig- matai région is a wavy line of a dark shade with flesh colored markings underneath it; but the distinguishing feature is v row of black velvety marks along each side of the back, on al but the thoracic segments, and bearing a general resemblanco (looking from tail to head), to the letter W. The ventral région310 LEPEDOPTERA. is greenish gray ; prolegs of the same color ; thoracic feet brown black. Head black with white lines in front, resembling an in- verted Y, and white at the sldes. The thoracic segments fre- quently hâve a greenish hue.” It is the Noctua clandestina. Still another, of which the moth is unknown, is described by Mr. Riley under the name of the Pale Cut-worm. “It is of the same length as Cochran’s cut-worm, and the general color is pale gray, with a lilac colored hue, caused by innumer- able light purplish markings on an almost white ground. There is no particular shading on the back, and it is very slight along the subdorsal line. The stigmatal line, however, being destitute of the above mentioned markings, is almost white. Above this line there is a band of a darker shade than the rest of the body. At first sight this worm appears quite smooth and uniform in color, the most striking feature being the second segment, which is shiny black, with three white lines. One of these lines is on the top, and continues to some extent on the head ; the others are placed on each side of this and do not run down as far. Fig. 241. a The anal segment has also two black shiny marks on its surface. The stigmata are black and the head is gray, below light shiny, and brown above. Legs and feet of the same color as the under side of the body which is nearly white with a glaucous tinge. There are a few scattering hairs near the tail. This worm is smoother than the others.” In Gortyna the antennæ are crenulated in the male, and the fore wings are yellow with darker markings. The larva is dull colored with warty spots. That of G. Jlavago, an European species, feeds in the stems of thistles and the burdock, chang- ing to a pupa inside the stem. G. leucostigma attacks the colum- bine (Harris). The habits of the Dahlia and Aster stalk borer (Gortyna nitela Guenée) hâve been described by Mr. Riley* who states that the fore wings of the moth (Fig. 241 ; a, larva) are lilac gray, speckled with minute yellow dots, with a dis-NOCTUÆLITÆ. 311 tlnct white band running across thein. The Caterpillar is gen- erally of a livid or purplish brown, though varying inuch as to depth of shading and is darker before than behind. “The young worm hatches about the first of July and immediately commences its work of destruction. It works in such a sur- reptitious manner as to be too often unnoticed till the vine is destroyed. The plant does not generally show any signs of decay until the worm is about fully grown, when it wilts and is past recovery. This occurs about a month after the worm is hatched, and it then crawls just under the surface of the ground, fastens a little earth together around itself by a slight web and changes to a chrysalis of a very light mahogany brown color, and three-fourths of an inch long. The moth cornes forth the fore part of September. The careful culturist need fear nothing from this troublesome insect, as an occasional close inspection of the plants about the first of July will reveal the hole where the borer has entered, which is generally quite a distance from the ground, and by splitting downwards one side of the stalk with a penknife it may be found and killed. If this inspection be made at the proper time the worm will be found but a short distance from the hole and the split in the stalk will heal by being kept closed with a piece of thread.” (Prairie Farmer.) Achatodes differs from Gortyna in not having the fore wings falcate. A. zeœ, described by Harris, is rust-red with gray clouds and bands on the fore wings and yellowisli gray hind wings ; it expands an inch and a halfi. The larva feeds inside the stalks of corn, within which it transforms ; it is a little over an inch long, smooth and naked, with the head and the top of the first and last rings of the body black, and with a double row of small, smooth, black dots across each of the other rings. It also infests the dahlia and elder. The genus Mamestra comprises rather large moths in which the antennæ are rather long and simple in the male ; the front of the head is smooth and convex, and the reniform dot is very distinct, while the outer margin of the fore wings is rather oblique. The larva is longer than usual and feeds on the leaves of low plants, remaining concealed by day. The pupa is subterranean, the cocoon being made of earth. Mamestra arctica Boisd. (Hadena arnica) is common norttu312 LEPIDOPTERA. ’ward, and is found in the colder subarctic régions of America and Europe. It cuts off the leaves of roses and other shrubs. Fitch States that the larva, late in May in New York, cuts off the young shoots of the currant. It is an inch and a half long, of a shining livid color, with faint dots, from which anse a very short, fine hair. It remains in the pupa state about a month be- neath the ground, the moth appearing in July. It is found also in Labrador and in Europe. The moth expands an inch and three quarters and is of a deep Spanish brown, variegated with gray, with a very conspicuous reniform dot ; the outer edge is bordered with blue gray. Harris also describes M. picta, a red- dish brown species, with a conspicuous white Z on the outer edge of the fore wing. The larva is yellow, gaily variegated with three longitudinal stripes. It feeds on garden vegeta- bles, and Mr. Fish informs me that it feeds on the cranberry. The genus Plusia is quite unlike the foregoing généra, as the palpi are long and slender, and the fore wings are acute, with silver marks and lines,* usually a dot and dash, like a semicolon ; the inner angle is tufted, and the hind wings are triangular. Our most common species is Plusia precationis Guenée, the larva of which, according to Mr. Saunders, feeds on the hollyhock in August. “It is one and a half inches long, the body tapering anteriorly and thickening in the middle and towards the end. The head is small, smooth, shining green, with a black stripe on each side. The body is green with dull whitish, longitudinal lines above and a whitish stripe somewhat more distinct on each side near the spiracles. It changed to a chrysalis August 9th.” A species of Plusia, like P. præcationis, is figured by Mr. Glover in his unpublished plates of insects injurious to the cotton plant. It has a much curved, semicircular discal spot, with a distinct dot just beyond, the two spots arranged thus . The Caterpillar is pale green, the body increasing in size from the head to the tail and with a latéral row of brown dots. “It was found eating the cotton flower in Georgia the last of October.” It forms a loose, thin cocoon among the leaves, and the pupa is pale green, spotted above with irregular brown spots. Mr. Glover also figures quite a different species of Plusia, which has the sameNOCTUÆLITÆ. 313 Mbits as the species just mentioned. It belongs, however, to a different section of the genus, and on the discal area is an oblique, golden, irregular oval patch, containing two unequal dots. The larva is pale green and has a broad, latéral, white stripe. The chrysalis is brown and protected by a thin, loose cocoon. P. divergens Fabr. lives on the Alps, in Finmark, and in Labrador. Mr. F. G. Sanborn found, July 6th, a closely allied species on the summit of Mount Washington, N. H., which dif- fers from P. divergens in the forked, golden, discal spot being a third smaller, while the two branches of the spot go off at right angles to each other. On the fore wings the second line from the base is acutely dentate on the submedian vein, where in P. divergens it is straight, and the outer line is also den- 4ate, not being so in P. divergens. The hind wings are yel- lowish at base, with a wide black margin. It may be callçd Plusia montana. Mr. Grote has described P. ignea (P. alticola of Walker) from Pike’s Peak, which is closely allied to P. divergens. Plusia œrea Hübner (Fig. 242, side view) is a reddish brown moth, with obscure markings, and without the usual metallic spots. It expands a little over an inch, and is not uncommon in the North- ern States. Aletia is a slender-bodied genus, with triangular Fig. 24a. fore wings A. argillaeea feeds upon the cotton. It is a brown moth with a dark discal oval spot centred by two pale dots. She deposits, according to Mr. Glover, a low, much flattened, vertically ribbed egg upon the surface of the leaf. The larva is a looper, whenee it can be readily distinguished from the army and boll worms, and its body is thickest in the middle, very hairy, green, dotted with black along a subdorsal yellowish line, and with black dots beneath. It matures early in the season, and a second brood becomes fully grown in Sep- tember and October. When about to transform it gathers a leaf together by a web, thus forming a rude cocoon. (Glover.) Like our northern army worm (Leucania unipuncta) the Army worm of the South (Fig. 243, egg and larva, Riley), makes its appearance in great numbers in a single day, committing the greatest havoc in a few hours. Professor J. Darby, of Auburn, Ala., writes me that uSaturday. Septem-314 LEPIDOPTERA. ber 19tli, I was in the field examining the forms (buds betore flowering) and the young bolls (fruit after the floral organs hâve fallen off). I examined ail carefully, with no signs of eggs or worms. On Sunday I did not see it. On Monday I passed it as usual and observed nothing unusual. On Tuesday morn- ing I passed it and noticed nothing unusual. On Tuesday noon every plant in the field was stripped of ail its upper leaves ; not one remaining as far as could be seen, and the plants were covered with millions of worms. I counted on one plant forty- six worms. They commence at the top of the plant, eating every leaf. When the leaves were gone they attacked the young bolls, eating through the perianth and consuming the young cotton. In the course of four days the work was done. They did not touch the grape, nor any other plant in the field. Many left the field and thousands were in the road and on the fences, but not one in a thousand thus escaped. To-day, September 23d, there is scarcely one to be seen. Their disappearance is as myste- rious as their coming. They hâve left no signs that I can see, either Fis* 243- on the stalks or in the ground. They hâve extended over hundreds of miles, and nothing has proved a barrier to them, having been as destructive on islands in the river, as elsewhere. One-third of the cotton crop has been destroyed. Nothing of the kind has occurred in thirty years past to my knowledge.” The larva is reddish brown, with distinct black spots, the dorsaL line being streaked with yellow and black. It hibernâtes as a moth. The presence of this Caterpillar in the West Indies caused the cultivation of cotton to be abandoned. The same, or another species, also appears often in Guiana and other parts of South America. A good remedy against the worm is a mix- ture of two parts of carbolic acid with 100 of water, to be sprinkled on the leaves of the plant. Heliothis has pubescent antennæ, the thorax and abdomen are smooth, and the fore wings slightly acute at tip. The larva is elongated, but not attenuate, with a large head and distinct lines along the body.NOCTUÆLITÆ. 315 Fig. 214. It feeds exposed on low plants, preferring the flowers. The pupa is conical and subterranean. H. armigera Linn. (Fig. 244; a, larva) is the “boll worm” of the Southern States, so destructive to cotton crops. Riley states that it also feeds on the fruit of the tomato, and in Southern Illinois on the silk < and green kernels of corn and also the phlox, tomato and corn-stalks, and, according to Mr. T. Glover, it bores into the pumpkin. Mr. Riley, in the 44 Prairie Farmer,” describes H. phloxiphaya Grote under the name of the uPhlox worm” (Fig. 245, and larva). He States that there are two broods in a year, the first appearing in July, l and becoming moths by the middle of August, the second passing the winter in the chrysalis state. The eggs are deposited singly on ail Fig. 246. portions of the plant, and the Caterpillar, when about to become a chrysalis, enters the ground, and in- terweaves grains of sand with a few silken theads, forming a very slight elastic cocoon.” The genus Heliocheilus differs from Heliothis in its broader and shorter wings and its vena- tion. H. paradoxus Grote (Fig. 246,vena- tion of fore wing) is a pale testaceous moth, with the fore wings . darker. It inhabits Colorado Territory. Anarta is rather a small moth, with a hairy body and small head ; the fore wings Fi g. 245. are thick and velvety, with confused markings, and the hind wings are yellow or white, often bordered with black. The larva is short and smooth in repose, with the anterior portion of the body bent under the breast. The pupa is enclosed in a316 LEPIDOPTERA. cocoon of silk mixed with earth. The genus is arctic or sub- arctic, and inhabits Alpine summits. A. algida Lefebvre in- habits Labrador and Lapland. A closely allied and undescribed species, seems to be peculiar to the summit of Mount Wash- ington, N. H., where it has been detected by Mr. Sanborn. Xanthoptera semicrocea Guenée (Plate 8, fig. 3 ; a, larva) is brown, with the base of the wings saffron yellow ; it expands a little less than one inch. Dr. A. W. Chapman, of Appalachi- cola, Fia., states in a letter to Mr. Sanborn, that the larva feeds on the leaves of the Pitcher plant, Sarracenia. It is red and cylindrical, with short black tubercles on the top of each segment, and a black cylindrical spine on each side of the four basal rings of the abdomen, surmounted by fine hairs. It does not spin a cocoon but hangs loosely by a few silken threads within the pitcher-like leaf, and the moth is the only insect that can get out of the bristly and narrow opening of the “pitcher.” The little slender-bodied genus Erastria has filiform antennæ and a slender crested abdomen, with the usual lines and dots quite distinct. The larva is smooth and slender, with only three pairs of abdominal legs. The pupa is enclosed in a co- coon among leaves or moss. E. carneola Guenée is a common species, with the outer edge of the fore wings flesh colored. In Brephos the hind wings are bright orange, the body is hairy and the antennæ are ciliated ; the abdomen is slender, and the wings are broader than usual. The larva is smooth, elongate, with sixteen legs, though the first two abdominal pairs are useless for walking, hence the larva has a semi- looping gait. It feeds on trees and makes a slight cocoon in moss or under bark. B. infans Moschler inhabits Labrador and New England. It Aies early in April before the snow has leffc the ground. Catocala is a beautiful genus, the species being numerous in this country and of very large size, offcen expanding three inches or more ; the wings are broad, and in reposé form a very fiat roof. The larva is elongate, slender, flattened beneath and spotted with black, attenuated at each end, with fleshy filaments on the sides above the legs, while the head is flat- tened and rather forked above. It feeds on trees and restsNOCTUÆLITÆ. 317 attached to the trunks. The pupa is covered with a bluish efflorescence, enclosed in a slight cocoon of silk, spun amongst leaves or bark. C. piatrix Grote is brown on the anterior wings and varied with black, while the hind wings are yellow with a broad médian and marginal band. It is common in the Middle and Eastern States. C. ultronia Hübner (Plate 8, fig. 4 ; a, larva) expands two and a half inches and is of a rich umber color, with a broad .ash stripe along the middle of the wings, not extending to- wards the apex, which is brown. The hind wings are deep red, dusky at base, with a médian black band, and beyond is a red band a little broader than the dark one, while a little less than the outer third of the wing is blackish. The larva feeds on the Canada plum. It is gray with black punctures, and the head is edged with black. The segments are transversely wrinkled, and on each one are two whitish and two brownish papillæ ; the two brown ones on the eleventh ring are much en- larged, and on the ninth ring is a small brownish horn. On the sides of the body, before the spir- acles is a line of light pink fila- ments fringing the scalloped sides. On July 15th the larva changed to a chrysalis in an earthen cocoon, and the moth ap- peared on the 2d of August. Drasteria is a small, grayish moth, with two geminate black dots near the apex, and a broad diffuse line on the fore wing. The larva is a looper, and the body is attenuated at each end. D. erechtea Cramer Aies very abundantly in grass lands in May and early summer. Mr. Saunders informs me that the larva (Fig. 247) is “one and a quarter inches long and walks like a geometer ; the body is thickest in the middle, being somewhat smaller towards the head, but tapering much more posteriorly, while the head is not large and is rather flattened in front and is pale brown, with darker longi- tudinal Unes. The body above is reddish brown, with many longitudinal darker lines and stripes ; there is a double whitish dorsal line, with a stripe on each side of the darker shade, another stripe of the same hue on each side close to the stig-318 IÆPIDOPTERA. mata, and between these stripes are faint longitudinal lines. It fed on clover and went into the chrysalis state Sept. 21 st.” The two remaining généra hâve broad wings, and are black- ish, with numerous transverse waved lines. The edges of the wings are scalloped, the palpi are very long, and the head nar- row between the eyes, thus showing their affinities to the Phalœnidœ. The species of Homoptera are of a dark ash eolor. H. lunata Drury has a lunate discal spot. Erébus is a gigantic moth, with the outer margin very oblique and a large, incised, discal spot and sublunate margi- nal spots. Our large, blackish species, dark as night, is Ere- bus odora Drury ; it expands about five inches. The magnifi- cent, pale gray Erebus Agrippina Cramer (E. strix of Fabricius) inhabits Brazil ; it expands nearly ten inches. Phalænidæ Latreille (Geometridœ). The Geometrids are easily known by their slender, finely scaled bodies and broad thin wings, which in repose are not folded roof-like over the body, but are spread horizontally and scarcely overlap each other. The antennæ are usually pectinated. They are déli- cate, pale, often greenish or yellowish moths, and fly more by day than the Noctuids. The palpi are short and slender, and the tongue, or maxillæ, is weak and short. The larvæ rarely hâve more than ten legs, some having four- teen, and a few (Metrocampa and Ellopia) twelve. Thus from the absence of legs on the basai rings of the abdomen, the larvæ are loopers, or geometers, as grasping the object on which they are walking with their fore legs, they bring the hind legs close up to the fore legs, thus making a loop like the Greek letter Oméga. They usually let themselves down by spinning a silken thread, hence they are sometimes called “ Drop-worms.” When about to pupate, the larva either spins a slight, loose, silken cocoon, or conceals itself under a covering of leaves fastened together with silk, or buries itself in the ground without any cocoon, while Harris States that a very few fasten themselves to the stems of plants and are changed to chrysa- lids, which hang naked and suspended by the tail. The pupa is long, slender, conical, generally smooth, sometimes with latéral protubérances on the head, and usually dark brown, butPHALÆNIDÆ. 319 often variegated. The species, of which there are about 1,800 described, are widely distributed, and more are found in the arctic régions than of the preceding family. We place at the head of this family the genus Urania and its allies. From their large size, splendid colors, swallow- tailed wings, the fore pair of which are elongated towards the tips, while the outer edge is very oblique, as in Papilio ; their habit of flying by day and other resemblances to the butter- Aies Latreille placed them among the butterflies immediately .after the Hesperians. They hâve also been supposed to belong to the same group as Castnia, but the shape of the head, the long geometriform antennæ, the palpi and the conical pupa and other characters ally them with the Urapteryx and the higher Phalænidæ. Urania Leilus is velvet black, the fore wings erossed by emerald green striæ, and the hind edge of the hind wings are banded with light blue and golden, while the fringe and long tail are white. It is found in Surinam and Brazil. Urapteryx is a true Geometrid, with very square hind wings extending beyond the abdomen, with their outer margin pro- longed into a short tail. U politia Cramer is a yellow species found in Mexico and the West Indies. The larva of the European U sambucaria feeds on the oak, elder, bramble, ^tc., and is elongate, with projections from the eighth and twelfth segments. The pupa is elongate and enclosed in a net- like cocoon suspended by threads. In Chœrodes the hind wings are still angulated, the angle reaching beyond the tips of the abdomen ; the falcate apex of the fore wings is acute, and the outer margin is entire and angulated just above the middle. The species are usually pale ochreous, with short transverse strigæ and two darker lines, the outer one of which is obtusety angulated just before the apex. <7. transversata Drury is a pale ochreous species, which we hâve found resting on red maple leaves. The genus Angerona comprises the single species A. croca• tana Fabr., the larva of which (Plate 8, fig. 5 a) we hâve found feeding on the cultivated strawberry during the last of June. It is an inch and a half long and when at rest extends itself straight out. The body gradually increases in size to the first pair of abdominal legs. The head is flattened so as to be320 LEPIDOPTERA. square above, and whitish green, with three longitudinal brown lines. The prothoracic ring is concolorous with the head, from which two brown lines extend, forraing an inverted Y on the hinder edge. The body is pale gràss green above, with the sides bulging. There are four minute blaek dots on each ring, a whitish, indistinct subdorsal line, and a latéral white line ex- tending to the sides of the anal legs. The body is greenish white. The moth (Plate 8, fig. 5, male) is of a rich yellow, with brown patches on the wings, and appears in July. In Endropia, which is closely allied to Chœrodes, the outer edge of the wings is deeply notched. E. tigrinaria Guenée is dirty ochreous, the wings being sprinkled with black ; the outer line is nearly straight, ferruginous, paler within, with some submarginal spots, and the basal line on the fore winge is angulated, while the apex is pale and margined extemally with blackish. Metrocampa is pearly white, with the wings a little bent in the middle. M. perlata Guen. is pure white, with two darker oblique lines not angulated ; it is found not uncommonly north- ward. The larva of the English M. margaritata has twelve legs, and like Catocala has fleshy filaments on the sides just above the legs. The pupa lives on the surface of the earth. Ellopia has pectinated antennæ and exceedingly thin trans- parent wings, which are angulated in the middle of the outer edge, and with an inner and outer line, the latter bent nearly at right angles. The larva has twelve legs, but is smooth. The English E. fasciaria feeds on firs. Ellopia Jlagitiaria Guenée is pale ashen ochreous, with the speckles and two bands pale brown. It expands from six to eighteen lines. In Caberodes the antennæ are broadly pectinated, and the apex of the fore wings is nearly rectangular. The species are pale ochreous with thick wings, and the outer line termi- nâtes near the apex. C. metrocamparia Guenée is common northwards ; with a blackish discal dot and outer dusky line arcuated and margined with white. The genus Nematocampa is characterized by the four fila- ments on the back of the larva. N. Jilamentaria Guen. (Plate 8, fig. 7 ; 7 a, larva) is a small moth of a pale ochreous color, with reddish brown lines and dots, a ring in the discal space*PHALÆNIDÆ. 321 and just beyond a dark lead-colored band which becomes a broad squarish patch on the inner angle, and which is continu- ons with a broad band of the same color on the hind wings. It expands three quarters of an inch. Its singular larva we hâve found feeding, late in June, on the strawberry. It is .70 of an inch long, cylindrical and with two pairs of long curled filaments, situated on the third and fifth abdominal rings re- spectively; its general color is wood gray, and the pupa is pale reddish gray. The moth appeared on the 27th of July. The genus Eufîtchia,to which our currant worm belongs, may be known by the whitish or ochreous wings being covered with dark, often partially transparent blotches, and the larva being gaily speckled with black and golden spots. E. ribearia Fitch is ochre-yellow, with two rows of dark spots, the inner row be- ing incomplète and the outer row with a large blotch in the middle of the wings. As soon as the leaves of the currant and gooseberry are fairly expanded, late in May or early in June, the young Caterpillar may be found busily eating them. In about three weeks after hatching it becomes fully grown, being about an inch long, and bright yellow with black dots. The chrysalis may be found under the bushes, either upon the ground or just under the surface. In two weeks after pupating the yellowish moth may be seen flying about the garden. Riley states that by sprinkling powdered hellebore upon the leaves, or applying a solution of eight or twelve ounces to a bucket of water, the larvæ will be killed, while hand-picking and shaking the bushes will also reduce their numbers. The genus Ennomos is stouter and much more hairy than any of the preceding généra ; the antennæ are well pectinated in the male, the wings are not so broad as usual and are den- tate. The larva is rather long and twig-like, either smooth or humped, and spins a cocoon consisting of leaves drawn to- gether by silk. E. magnaria Guen. is yellow, punctured with black, with two dusky lines, and the fringe is partly blackish. E. subsignaria Hübner (Fig. 248, moth ; Plate 8, fig. 6, larva) is a délicate, white, widely distributed species, and in the city of New York, where it is free from the attacks of its natural enemies, it is very destructive to the elm trees. 21322 LEPIDOPTERE. A writer in the “ Practical Entomologist” (yol. i, p. 57) States that the caterpillars are hatched as soon as the leaves unfold, and live unobserved for a week or so in the young shoots in the tree-tops, and when half grown are seen crawling about the tree. Towards the end of June they pupate, and in about a week after the moth appears. The importation of the English sparrow is said to hâve very effectually checked the ravages of this Caterpillar, which may be recognized by its resemblance to the twigs of the tree on which it feeds, while its rather large head and the terminal ring of the body are bright red. In Amphidasys the body is very stout and the triangular wings are inclined to be small (in Nyssia, an European genus, the female has minute rudimentary wings) and narrow, while the antennæ are broadly pectinated. The larva is stout, twig- the red Spiræa. It went into the pupa state on the 22d of September. Boarmia has pectinated antennæ, the tip being generally «impie, while the abdomen is rather slender and the wings are dusky gray and crossed by dentate lines. The larva is twig- like, elongate, with small humps and latéral projections, and lives on trees. The pupa is subterranean. B. gnopliaria Guen. is ashen, the wings clouded with fuscous, and dusted with black scales, with four black dentate lines. A species of Boarmia, figured by Mr. Glover, “eats the flowers of the cotton, being found early in October.” The larva is of the same thickness throughout, with a rather large head angulated above, and two tubercles near the tip. It is brown, with a double latéral pale stripe. The chrysalis is brown and enclosed in an under- ground cocoon. The moth expands nearly an inch and a half, Fig. 248. like, being dark brown and warted; it is swollen at each end, and the head is often bifid. The pupa is subterranean. Such are the habits of A. cognataria Guen. which is white and very thickly sprinkled with ashy black. We hâve found the larva feeding on the “Missouri currant,” the gooseberry, andPHALÆNIDÆ. 323 and is ash colored, sprinkled densely with brown speckles, with three angulated, transverse, black stripes. Geometra and its allies (Nemoria, Iodis, and Racheospila), bave smooth, round or angular, entire wings, which are green, «often with whitish lines. Geometra is the largest genus ; “it bas pectinated antennæ, and the larva is rather short, downy, with several dorsal humps. The pupa is enclosed in a trans- parent cocoon amongst moss.” (Stainton.) G. iridaria Guen. is pea green, with two broad bands, and the Costa of the fore wings is white sprinkled with rust red. A great many species, often difficult to identify from the sameness in their markings, are comprised in the genus Acida- lia, which is known by its rather thin wings, with the edges usually entire, and with stripes and bands and other markings common to both. The hind wings are often slightly angulated. The larva is smooth, slender, and feeds concealed under low plants. The pupa is subterranean, or lives in a cocoon among leaves. A. nivosaria Guen. is pure white. A. enucleata Guen. is whitish yellow ; its wings are speckled with brown, and with pale lines and submarginal spots. Macaria is easily recognized by its falcate wings, which bave a rounded excavation below the hooked tip, and there is a rather prominent angle on the hind wings. There are usually two large blotches, one in the middle of the wing, and the other on the outer third of the Costa. The larva is rather short and smooth, and feeds on trees and Fig. 249. «hrubs. The pupa is protected by a cocoon. M. granitata Guen. is gray, with indistinct darker bands and minute black speckles, with a rust red costal spot in front of a black discal «pot. Zerene is a beautiful genus, with feathery antennæ and broad, thin, white wings. Z. catenaria Drury is white with black discal dots, and two black scalloped lines. The larva is a gen- eral feeder, eating sedges, the goldenrod, blueberry, waxwork, and according to Mr. Fish, is injurious to the cranberry. It is a pretty Caterpillar (Fig. 249) and is straw colored, the seg- ments being wrinkled and thickened, with two subdorsal darker threads ; the head is yellow with six black dots ; the spiracles824 LEPIDOPTERA. are black, situated in a white field, and with a black dot on each side. In Maine it pupates about the middle of August, making a thin gauzy cocoon, consisting of yellowish green silken threads. The pupa is white, with scattered black dots and black stripes ; it remains thirty-two days in the pupa State, the moth appearing duriug the middle of September. In Anisopteryx the male antennæ are simply pubescent, the wings are ample, and rounded at the tip, while the hind wings are rounded. The female is wingless, the head small and the body is oval. The male of A. vernata Peck (Plate 8, fig. 9 ; 9 a, female ; 9 6, larva), the moth of the Canker worm, is ash colored, with a whitish costal spot near the tip of the fore wings which are crossed by two jagged whitish bands dotted with black on the outside ; they expand about one inch and a quarter. In the early spring and late in autumn the male Aies about and couples with the wingless female, which lays a patch of short, cylindrical eggs, from sixty to one hundred or more, arranged in rows, and glued to the surface of the bark. The larvæ hatch from the first to the middle of May, or as Harris States, about the time of the flowering of the red currant, and the leaving out of the apple tree. Almost before the presence of the larvæ is known they often nearly strip an orchard of its leaves. They also attack the cherry, plum, elm, and other trees and shrubs. The canker worm (Plate 8, fig. 96) when mature is about an inch long, ash colored on the back, black on the sides, and beneath yellowish. It varies greatly in the intensity of its markings. It ceases eating when four weeks old, and late in June creeps down, or lets itself down by a thread, and bnrrowing from two to six inches in the loose earth, there forais a rude eartlien cocoon, fastening the grains of earth together with silk. Twenty-four hours after the cocoon is fin- ished the worm becomes a chrysalid, which, in the male, is slender, rather pointed in front and light brown in color. Corn- ing forth in the autumn and foliowing spring, its progress up the tree can be arrested by the application of coal oil or prin- ter’s ink, by the well known methods, around the trunk, while the bunches of eggs should be picked off and burnt. The A. pometaria Harris is as abundant as A. vernata ; it has thinner wings, wanting the whitish bands and spot, and having anPHALÆNIDÆ. 325 oblique, dusky, apical line. We are inclined to think that it is simply a variety of A. vernata. Harris has detected an ich- neumon parasite which preys upon the canker worm, and a species of Tachina also attacks the caterpillars, and we hâve noticed a minute species of Platygaster (Fig. 134), first dis- covered by Herrick, ovipositing in its eggs. The Calosomas also devour them, and probably other ground beetles ; and cer- tain wasps (Eumenes) store their nests with them. (Harris. ) Allied to the canker worm is the Eybernia tiliaria Harris, the male of which is much larger and has feathered antennæ. The female is larger and slenderer than that of the canker worm, and along the back are two rows of black dots on a pale gray- ish ground. The moth Aies late in the autumn. The larva is bright yellow, with ten crinkled black lines along the top of the back, and is an inch and a quarter in length. It feeds on the lime, apple and elm, and is sometimes very destructive. Eupithecia is a diminutive form, with very small rounded hind wings, while the fore wings are much elongated towards the apex, and at rest both pairs are spread out and pressed closely to the surface on which the moth rests. The larva is rather short, stiff, often marked with dorsal lozenges, and the head is small and rounded. It feeds on trees or low plants ; sometimes on seeds of plants. The pupa is slender, conical and pointed. E. miserulata Grote is clear silky grayish, with a black interrupted outer line and a grayish fringe, interrupted with black. Cidaria numbers many species in which the antennæ of the male is simple or slightly pubescent, and the fore wings are rather pointed at the tip, while the hind wings are rounded. The larva is elongate and slender, with the head often notched. It feeds on trees or shrubs, and the pupa is of variegated colors. Cidaria diversilineata Hübn. (Plate 8, fig. 10, 10a, larva) is yellowish ochreous, with brownish angular lines, and at rest the abdomen is curved over the back. Mr. Saunders lias found the larva feeding on the woodbine. According to his notes uthe body above is dark brown, with a slightly reddish tint, and patches of a darker shade along the dorsal région, being the color of the twigs of its food plant. It remains in the pupa state about a week.” We hâve also326 LEPIDOPTERA. found both brown and green specimens feeding on the grape vine in midsummer. The worms can be removed by hand-pick- ing as they are rather conspicuous objects. A larva, probably of Cidaria, has been found by Mr. W. C. Fish, stripping the cran- berry plants in Harwich, Mass., late in August. Mr. Fish writes, “I hâve never met them that I am aware of before, but on one bog in this place they destroyed nearly two acres of cranberry vines, eating off ail the green leaves, the bog being as black in spots as though a fire had been over it.” They were not numerous elsewhere in that town, but may prove at times to be a great pest to cranberry growers. We failed to rear the larvæ sent by Mr. Fish. They are about the size of the canker worm. The head, which is no wider than the rest of the body, is deeply indented, on each side rising into a tu- bercle ; the anal plate is long, acute, and beneath it are two minute acute tubercles, tinged with reddish. It is dull reddish brown, simulating the color of the twigs of the cranberry, and is finely lineated with still darker lines. The head is speckled with brown, with a conspicuous tr ans verse band across the vertex, and two rows of pale spots across the front. Just above the spiracles is a broad dusky band. Beneath, the body is paler, with a mesial clear line edged with brown. It is .80 of an inch in length. Mr. Fish States that the owner of the bog flowed it with water so that it was completely covered and the worms were killed. This is a rapid and the most effectuai way to ex- terminate insects ravaging cranberry lots. Pyralidæ Latreille. The Snout-moths, so called from their very long and slender compressed palpi, are very easily recog- nized by this character alone. The more typical forms hâve triangular fore wings, and a slender abdomen and long slender legs, the front pair of which are often tufted. They are usually dull ash gray, with a marked silken lustre. The larger généra, Hypena and Herminia, etc., are called Deltoids, as when at rest the wings form a triangle of the form of the Greek letter Delta. Their antennæ are sometimes pectinated in the male. They are usually gregarious in their habits, and often extremely local. They haunt moist grassy places, are readily disturbed by day, and fly before dusk, while some arePYRALIDÆ. 327 fcrue day-fliers. The larvæ are generally known by their remark- ably glassy appearance, and the few hairs on them hâve an un- usually bristly look. Many spin a cocoon. The pupa is long, slender, and conical. The largest form is Hypena, in which the male antennæ are hairy, and the palpi are long, ascending, and the fore legs are not tufted, and there are often slight tufts of raised scales on the fore wings. The larva is elongate, cylindrical, with four- teen legs, and feeds on low or climbing plants, making a slight cocoon among leaves. The Hop vine moth, H. humuli Harris (Fig. 250 ; a, larva and pupa) is very destructive to the hop. It is marbled with gray beyond the middle of the fore wings, with a distinct oblique gray spot on the tip ; they are crossed by two wavy blackish lines formed of elevated black tufts, and there are two similar tufts in the middle of the wings ; it expands one inch and a quarter. The a . , _ r ^ larva is glassy pea- green. The body is long and slender, ? with rather convex rings, and with long Fi&*m a sparse hairs. The head is rather large and deeply divided into two lobes by the médian suture ; it is a little more yellowish green than the body, which tapers gradually towards the tail, while the anal legs are long and slender, there being but two pairs of abdominal legs, so that the Caterpillar walks with a looping gait. The body is striped with a narrow whitish line, edged broadly below with dusky, and with two white lines on the sides of the body, though specimens vary in the number of lines, some having no latéral whitish stripes. It is .45 of an inch in length. When half grown the larva is pale livid flesh color, not greenish, with a broad dark dorsal line, bounded on each side by a whitish line. It is double-brooded, the first lot of Caterpillar s appearing in May and June, the moths coming out late in June and early in July ; while the second brood of larvæ appear in July and August, the moth flying in Septem- ber. It is very active, leaping off the leaf to the ground when disturbed. When fully grown it forms a loose silken cocoon828 LEPIDOPTERA. within a folded leaf or any crevice, the moth appearing in three weeks. We hâve raised a species of Tachina from the pupa. The vine should be showered with a solution of whale oil, and soapsuds, and the plants shaken to rid them of these pests. Herminia differs from Hypena in its tufted fore legs ; the larva is short, slender towards each end, covered with small spots ; it has sixteen legs, and feeds concealed among dry leaves, making a narrow cocoon among them. H. jucchusi- alis Guenée is one of our most common species. Pyralis has narrow wings, the fore wings being oblong, with distinct lines, and the palpi are short, ascending. The Meal moth, P. farinalis Harris, is reddish gray at the base and hind edge of the fore wings, becoming more reddish towards the tip, different positions; 8, 7, cocoon; 4, pupa; 5, 6, moth), ac- cording to Eiley, “attacks and spoils cio ver for feeding pur- poses, both in the stack and mow, by interweaving and covering it with abundant white silken webs and black excre- ment that much resembles coarse gunpowder. The parent of these cio ver worms is a pretty little lilac-colored moth, with wide golden fringes,” and has been introduced from Europe. The moths fly late in June and in July, and they creep into ali parts of the stack, as the larvæ hâve been found eight feet from the ground, though they are mostty found at the bottom. The larva is three-fourths of an inch long and is dull dark brown, with an olivaceous hue. Mr. Eiley thinks there are several broods through the year, and suggests as a preventative to with two whitish cross lines, the space between being ochreous. The larva is dull whitish, with a reddish brown head, and having reddish pro- 5 thoracic and anal plates. 1 It feeds on straw and Y corn, and Mr. Eiley has ^ found it feeding on clover. Fig. 251. The Clover w o r m , or Asopia costalis Fabr. (Fig. 251 ; 1, 2, larva inPYRALIDÆ. 329 stack the clover on a good log or rail foundation so as to allow the air to pass up through from beneath. In Aglossa pinguinalis Harris, the Grease moth, the palpi are rather long, the fore wings are grayish brown clouded with a darker hue, and are crossed by two indented lines. The larva is of an uniform dark brown, with a darker head and protho- racic plate, and feeds on greasy horse clothes, etc. Another species of Aglossa (perhaps A. cuprealis) has been sent me by Prof. A. E. Verrill, who writes me that the larva does great damage to the old leather bound volumes in the library of Yale College, by eating out great patches and galleries in the leather covers, and also, in some cases, some of the glue and pasteboard. It spins a silken cocoon. The moth (Plate 8, fig. 20) differs from A. pinguinalis by the hind wings being pale whitish gray, instead of grayish brown. The palpi hâve the third joint one-third as long as the second. It is pale brown, with a slight reddish tinge, and the wings are crossed by two pale bands, with several pale costal spots. The outer band is heaviest on the costa and inner angle, and faint in the middle of the wing. The hind wings are pale, shining whitish, with no bands. It expands .90 of an inch. In Europe, Mr. Curtis states, the Aphomia coloneïla Linn. (Fig. 252) which also occurs with us, is a formidable foe of the humble bee, feeding upon its honey. When fully fed it spins a tough web of a close woolly texture, in which the Caterpillar turns to a chrysalis (a). “The female moth creeps into the nest in June to deposit her eggs, and the caterpillars live in families sometimes of five hundred, to the total destruction of the progeny of the poor humble bees. The moths are of a dirty wliite, the upper wings hâve a greenish and rosy tinge, with a line of black dots round the margin, a whitish space near the base, and two black lines near the costa in the male. The fe- male has two distinct, indented, transverse bars, and two black spots on the dise.” Hydrocampa and its allies are exceedingly interesting from330 LEPIDOPTERA. the aquatic habits of the larvæ, which remind us of the Caddis worms. Cataclysta is at once known by its slender body and narrow wings, the hinder pair of which hâve a row of eye-like spots along the hind margin. The larva is elongate, with a pale head, and is aquatic, feeding beneath the leaves of the Duck weed, living in a cylindrical silken case covered with leaves. The pupa has a long ventral projection, and is enclosed in the case of the larva. C. fulicalis Clemens has, on the outer mar- gin of the hind wings, a row of five black lunules connected by intermediate metallic violet blue spots, and behind them a row of orange yellow dots. The larva of Paraponyx is provided with branchiæ and spira- cles ; the pupa residing in a cocoon among leaves under water. Hydrocampa has large white spots on the outer edge of the fore wings. The larva is rather thick, attenuated at each end, with a black head. It is aquatic, living in a Hat case under the leaves of water lilies. The pupa resem- bles that of Cataclysta. The genus Botys (Fig. 253) includes many species, in which the conical abdomen is longer than the wings, and the tip of Fig. 253. the front pair is often prolonged. The larva is said by Stainton to be lively, attenuated at each end and semitransparent, with warty spots. It feeds in rolled up leaves. The pupa is elongate, smooth, enclosed in a slight co- coon among leaves. B. verticalis Albin is whitish, with the outer edge of the fore wings dark grayish. The larva feeds on the nettle. B. citrina G. and R. is a bright j^ellow species. The genus Desmia is at once known by its resemblance to Botys, and by its black body and wings, spotted with broad white patches, while the male antennæ are swollen in the middle* D. maculalis Westwood, the Grape leaf folder, is shiny black, with a white fringe on its wings, which are spotted in the mid- dle with white patches, and with two white bands on the abdo- men of the female. It is found chiefly in the Southern States, where it attacks the grape. The larva, according to Riley, who observed the moth in Southern Illinois, is u glass-green, and folds a leaf, or attaches two, that may be close together, by aid of a few silken threads. It is very active, jumping and jerk-PYRALIDÆ. 331 ing at the least touch. It acquires a flesh-colored hue prior to changing to a chrysalis, which it usually does just within the leaf. Many which thus changed with me on the 21st of July, became moths on the 29th of the same month.” To the genus Phycita belongs the Apple leaf crumpler, or P. nebulo of Walsh, which in the West is known to strip the trees of their early leaves. It draws the le ave s together by a web, and about the middle of June becomes fully grown, when it closes up its horn-like case, and at the end of the same month and early in July appears as a long, narrow-winged moth, somewhat like Nephopteryx, but with broader fore wings. Nephopteryx is a genus with very narrow wings, with the male antennæ sinuous at the base. It feeds on various trees, while the larva of N. Edmandsii Pack. (Plate 3, fig. 2; 2a, larva ; 2 5, pupa), feeds on tlie cells of the humble bee. The genus Myélois closely resembles Nephopteryx. Our most injurious species is the Gooseberry worm, which is very common. It may be callecl the M. convolutella (Fig. 254 ; a, cocoon) and is an importation from Europe (Zeller). Though familiar with the in- sect, and having raised the moth, our a Fig. 254. specimens were too much rubbed for identification, and we are indebted to Mr. Saunders of London, Canada, for very perfect specimens of the moth, and notes regarding its habits, confirma- tory of our own observations. The moth is pale gray, with a dark, transverse, diffuse band on the inner third of the wing, enclosing a zig-zag white line not reaching the Costa. There is a discal discoloration, and beyond, a white zig-zag line with a long, very acute angle on the internai margin, and a row of marginal black dots, while the apex is white, and the veins and their branches white ; it expands nearly an inch. As soon as gooseberries and currants are well formed, many turn pre- maturely red and dull whitish, which is due to the presence of a pale green, smooth tworm, which, after eating out the inside of one berry, leaving a hole for the passage of the excrement, enters another berry making a passage-way of silk until it draws together a bunch of currants, or two or three gooseber- ries. During the last of June it pupates, while the moth does332 LEPIDOPTERA. not appear until the spring of the following year, Mr. Saun* ders’ specimens kaving left the chrysalis May 8th. Crambus, so abundant throughout the summer in grass, is at once known by the long narrow wings being rolled around the body in a tubular form. The larva has sixteen legs, is whit- ish or dull colored, witli large shining spots, and feeds on moss in silken galleries. Mr. Saunders has hatched the larvæ from the eggs. “They feed readily on grass, the blades of which they fasten together with silken threads, under which they live concealed ; they will also feed on clover.” Crambus mutabilis Clemens is grayish fuscous, the palpi a little darker, while the fore wings hâve a grayish médian stripe, not extending beyond the disk, and the discal dot is dark brown. It is a variable and a common species. Other kinds are variously streaked with silvery white. The Bee moth, Galleria, has rather broad wûngs, which are indented on the outer edge. 6r. cereana Fabr. (Plate 8, fig. 11) is dusky gray, streaked with purple brown on the outer edge, with a few dark brown spots on the inner margin. The larva is yellowish white, with brownish dots. It constructs silken galleries running through the comb, in which it feeds. It spins a thick white cocoon. Two broods of moths appear, one in April and May, the other in August. They lay their eggs at evening while the bees are resting. The caterpillars mature in about three weeks. Tortricidæ Leach. The “ Leaf-rollers ” are best character- ized by the shortness of the palpi, which project beak-like, and are rarely long enough to be curved in front of the head ; and by the oblong fore wings. They are of small size, rarely expanding over an inch, and are folded roof-like (Fig. 255) over the body. The fore wings are Fig. 255. broad, compared with those of the Tineidœ, and are much rounded on the Costa. They are variegated with bands and spots, often of brilliant metallic hues, while the hind wings are dull colored like the body, the inner edge being folded fan-like against the body. The antennæ are filiform and the legs are much shorter than in the Pyralids. They fly mostly by night, resting during the day upon the plant on which the larvaTORTRICIDÆ. 333 feeds. They most abound in summer, though a few species are founa in the spring and autumn. The larvæ are cylindrical, usually transversely wrinkled, and nearly naked. The pupa is slender, and the rings of the abdomen armed with transverse rows of teeth. Many of the larger species roll up the leaves of trees, or gather them into a rude tent, with silken threads ; others devour the inte- rior of fruit buds and seeds, or live in the tender shoots, or under the bark, or in the roots, while some live exposed on the leaves of plants. In Antithesia the palpi are longer than the head, and the thorax is tufted behind ; the fore wings are more than twice as long as broad, the Costa being regularly arched, while the apex is obtuse, and the apical third of the Costa is white or ochreous. A. Upartitana Clem. has white fore wings, with a dark brown basal patch, and a central concolorous band, with two or three dark brown spots on the outer third of the Costa. The tip of the wing is spotted with brown, and there is a pale brownish spot in the middle of the white apical third of the wing. It is not uncommon northwards. Another species has been detected on the rose by Mr. F. W. Putnam. The larva Fis- 256• is yellowish green with a jet black head and prothoracic shield, and pupates late in June, the moth appearing during July. It is identical with the Antithesia pruniana of Hübner (Plate 8, fig. 13, natural size) a destructive moth in Europe, where it devours the plum, as its spécifie name indicates. The inner two thirds of the fore wings are marbled with black and lilac colored scales ; the apical third being white, with three costo- apical dark spots, and the extreme apex black. The genus Siderea has rather long fore wings, the Costa be- ing regularly arched, and the tip rather pointed, the outer edge being concave below the tip. Clemens, doubtfully, refers his S.f nubilana (Fig. 256, 7a, head) to this genus. The fore wings are brown, with dark brown markings, and there is a dark brown basal line and a central irregular dark brown band, which becomes ochreous brown in the middle of the wing, and seems to be separated from a conspicuous dark brown triangu-334 IÆPIDOPTERA. Fig. 257. lar patch, which is edged narrowly with ochreous. Near the inner angle are two dark brown oblique stripes. The typical genus Tortrix has the palpi much longer than the head, with the fore wings about twice as long as broad, and the Costa arched abruptly at the base, while the outer edge is truncate and sometimes hollowed out below the tip. T. geli- dana Môschler is a common arctic form, and occurs commonly in northem Labrador, and has been detected ' on the Alpine summit of Mount Washington by Mr. F. G. Sanborn. He has also detected a new species which feeds on the cranberry, for which we suggest the name Tortrix oxycoc- cana. Its body is dark brown, with lighter hairs on each side of the abdominal segments, and fuscous at the tip. The fore wings are of a peculiar glistening gray, mottled with red- dish brown scales, especially towards the outer edge. There are no well defined spots or bands. The hind wings and body, and under surface of the wings are slate colored. The wings expand .64 inch. The Leptoris breviornatana of Clemens (Fig. 257 ; a, side view of the head and labial palpi ; 6, fore wing ; c, hind wing), which is referred to the genus Tortrix by Mr. C. T. Robinson, has tawny yellow fore wings, with the veins brown. An oblique h brown band arises on the basal third of the Costa, and runs to the middle of the inner margin, but does not reach it. On the Costa is a brown patch. It lives in Virginia. Mr. Robinson also informs me that in a forthcom- ing paper on this family he re- fers the Ptycholoma ? semifus- sana of Clemens (Fig. 258 ; a, head ; 5, fore wing ; c, hind wing) to the présent genus. “The fore wings are white along the Costa and hinder margin, marked with pale brown, ochreous and tamished silvery stripes and spots.” It ranges from Maine to Virginia. The genus Lozotœnia has palpi rather longer than the head.TORTRICIDÆ. 335 It differs froin Tortrix in the male having a fold or flap of scales extending nearly to the tip of the fore wing, while the outer -edge is indented below the tip, which is rather produced up- wards. The larvæ of this genus feed in leaves, the edges of which are drawn together by silken threads, or in the stems and seeds of plants. L. rosaceana Harris (Plate 8, fig. 12; 12 a, larva) is pale brown, with two oblique, darker reddish brown bands, and a triangular spot of the same color on the costa near the tip. The hind wings are ochreous yellow, and blackish within. The larva, early in June, binds together the leaves of the rose, apple and strawberry. It is plump and rather large, -and of a pale yellowish green. We found, on the 23d of June, the fully grown larva on the leaves of the strawberry, doubling them up and binding them together by a few silken threads. The worm is pale livid, greenish above and paler beneath, with a conspicuous black dot on each side of the hinder edge of the prothorax. The head is very pale honey yellow, with two black spots : one near the insertion of the mandibles, and the other on the side near the base of the head. The posterior half of each segment is transversely wrinkled a few times. The body is scattered over with a few minute tubercles, each giving rise to a fine hair. It is .80 of an inch long. One specimen spun its slight cocoon on June 26th, the pupa appearing June 30th. It is sometimes attacked by Ichneumons. The pupa is pointed on the vertex of the head, and on the back of each abdominal ring are two rows of spines. The moth usuaJly appears the last of June. There is a second brood in August. We hâve reared another species from the wild strawberry. It may be called the Lozotœnia fragariana. It is a very pretty moth expanding .80 of an inch, with red fore wings, darker on the outer half and with a large triangular white spot near the middle of the costa ; the outer edge of the spot is hollowed out. The outer edge of the wing is pale, especially in the middle, and concolorous with the head and palpi, and thorax. The hind wings and abdomen are whitish buff. The hind wings are whitish beneath. The larva may be found in Maine, early in June, folding the leaves, and the moth appears in the mid- dle of the same month. The Lozotœnia gossypiana, or Cotton Leaf-roller, we describe336 LEPIDOPTERA. from the very characteristic drawings of Mr. Glover. The larva closely resembles that of L. rosaceana and is about the same size. It rolls up the leaf of the cotton into a loose cir- cular fold, and when fully grown spins a thin, loose, transpar- ent cocoon between the leaves. On the abdominal tip of the brown cocoon are three pairs of minute hooks, the two ,outer pairs supported on a pedicel, by which the chrysalis is re- tained in place in the cocoon. The moth is the size of the L. rosaceana, being pale reddish brown, and with three darker bars, the inner one Crossing the costal two-thirds of the wing, the middle and broadest Crossing the wing obliquely, and ter- minating near the outer angle, while the third bar cuts off the apex of the wing. The hind wings are paler, but dusky along the inner side. The species of Penthina may be recognized by the oblong fore wings, the apex being obtuse, sometimes a little falcate. An interesting species, aecording to information received from Mr. M. C. Reed of Hudson, Ohio, rolls up the leaves of the grape, and when the fruit becomes formed, eats the pulp and seeds, thus doing a two-fold injury to the vipia. It may be called the Penthina vitîvorana* (Plate 8^^fig. 22^ enlarged). The head, thorax, and palpi, and basal half of the antennæ are fui vous. The fore wings are dark slate brown. From the mid- dle of the Costa proceeds a blackish band which curves to the middle of the outer third of the wing ; beyond is a linear curved costal band succeeded by another broader but quite short costaL line ; the Costa is tawny beyond, sending a tawny patch obliquely inwards. Near the margin is an irregular blackish patch and two dark spots on the costa, and a larger one at the apex. The hind wings and body are dark slate color. It expands .40 of an inch. The firet-brood of ■eatcrpillare feedc on tfeo loavoo; qp. ^^jiririnjr irr Mny (in Ohin)| nr nr înnn nr thn lonrrnn nrn çrnwn CASlAAttUr* The second brood appears when the grapes are nearly filled £ù*.. out’ an(^ then tbey feed on the pulp and seeds. Mr. Reed writes X me that “in every instance where a grape was opened contain- £* Ç+A îng a fully grown larva, the seeds were mere shells. They con- Xp. n* tinue their work until the grapes are fully ripe, and at that time on removing to a new berry, seem to make their home in the old one, which is attached by a web.” The larva turns- *It is lhe Lobesia botrana of Southern Europe aecording to Prof. Zeller.TOKTRICIDÆ. 337 over the edge of a leaf to form a rude cocoon for the chrysalis. Mr. Read suggests destroying the leaves thus affected before they fall in auturnn, as the larvæ do not descend to the earth to undergo their transformations. Halonota differs from Tortrix in having the apex of the fore wings rather obtuse, and there is a pale blotch usually présent on the middle of the inner margin. H. simulana Clemens is brownish ochreous, with dull ochreous palpi, reddish at the tip ; the fore wings are brown, with a slight brassy hue, and with an ochreous dorsal blotch ; the Costa is streaked with ochreous, and there are two violet streaks, one running be- neath the tip and the other to a faint eye-like patch, behind which, on the hinder margin, are three black spots. The genus Grapholitha is characterized by Stainton as hav- ing the palpi longer than the head, w ith the fore wings more than twice as long as wide, the Costa being slightly arched, and the apex rather pointed, while the outer edge is a little hollowed out below the apex, and rounded at the inner an- gle. The larvæ live in the folded leaves of shrubs, or in the tops of herbaceous plants, or in their roots. Mr. Robinson refers the Steganoptycha? ochreana of Clemens, to Gra- pholitha (Fig. 259 ; a, head ; 5, fore vin g ; c, hind wing.*) The fore wings are pale yel- lowish, and the outer half of the Costa is streaked with ochreous brown, and there is an eye-like patch which is white, and contains two ochreous brown streaks and two black dots. It was discovered in Virginia. Robinson also refers Clemens’ Euryptychia saligneana (Fig. 256 ; 8 a) to this genus. It was bred by Mr. B. D. Walsh, in Illinois, from a willow gall. The fore wings are white, tinted with yellowish, with a dark brown basal patch, the wing beyond being nearly white varied with lead colored speekles, and striped over the venules with dull, leaden gray, transverse stripes, two of which near the anal angle, form a white eye-like patch. (Clemens.) Under the name of Callimosema scintillana (Fig. 256 ; 9 a), * The artist has represented the last branch of the médian vein forked at the tip. It should hâve been the middle branch. ( Clemens.) 22 b338 LEPIDOPTERA. Clemens describes a moth with narrow fore wings, and a large eye-like spot across the inner angle, the venation being the same as in Ioplocama. In this latter genus (Fig. 256 ; 10 a, I. formosana Clemens) the wings are broader and hâve the Costa of the fore wings dilated at the base, while the labial palpi are broad, and reach far beyond the front of the head. ib In Anchylopera the palpi are shorter than the head, with the fore wings broader than usual, and the Costa somewhat obtusely arched towards the base, while the tip is often hook-like and the outer edge concave. The larva feeds between the united leaves of plants. A. spireœfoli- ana Clemens is white on the fore wings, with a large, reddish brown dorsal patch extending from the base to the middle of the wing, and an oblique band from the middle of the Costa to about the centre of the wing ; the Costa beyond is streaked alternately with white and red- dish brown to the apex. The larva feeds on the leaves of Spiræa opulifolia, or Nine-bark. It is pale green with a yellowish tinge. (Clemens.)* Mr. Fish has discovered an un- described species which feeds on the cranberry, and which we may call the Cranberry Anchylopera, A. vacciniana (Plate 8, fig. 21, enlarged). The moth is dark ash, the fore wings being whitish, dusted with brown and reddish scales, with white nar- row bands on the costa, alternating with broader yellowish *Fig. 260; la, represents the head of A. nubeculnrm, described by Clemens in the Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Philadelphia; 16, the vena- tion of the fore wing; and 1 c, the hind wing; 2 a, the head of A. ocettana Clemens; 26, the fore wing; 2 c, the hind wing; 3a, the head of A. mediofasciana Clemens; Z b the fore wing; and 3 c, the hind wing.TORTRICIDÆ. 339 brown bands, five of which are several times larger than the others, and from four of them irregular indistinct lines cross the wing. The first line is situated just beyond the inner third of the wing, and is often obsolète. The second line is the largest and is slightly bent once in the middle of the wing. There is a large brown spot parallel to the Costa, being situated on the angle. The third line is oblique and stops before reaching the inner angle and is forked on the Costa, while the fourth line is a short apical diffuse irregular line. The apex of the wing is dark brown, and is a little more acute than usual in the genus. The length of a fore wing is .20 of an inch. It lays its eggs on the leaves during the month of August and a new brood of larvæ appear in September, though they hatch mostly in the following spring, or early in June, and become fully grown in July. The larva seen from above is much like that of Lozotænia rosaceana, but the head is a little larger in proportion to the rest of the body, being as wide as the body in its thickest part. The body is more hairy, while the prothorax is not dark. The chrysalis is rather slender, the body being contracted at the base of the abdomen, on the rings of which there are dorsal rows of fine spines. Mr. Fish writes me that uthesé larvæ, called the Cranberry- vine worms, hatch about the first of June from eggs that hâve remained upon the leaves of the plant ail winter. They com- mence to feed upon the tender growing shoots of the plant, drawing the leaves together with their web for shelter, conceal- ing themselves and feeding within. Before reaching their full size they, if very numerous, almost wholly destroy the leaves and tender shoots, giving the whole bog a dark dry ap- pearance as though a fire had been over it. This is why they are in some places known as 4 fire-worms.’ Having reached their full size they spin up among the leaves or among the dead leaves upon the ground. After remaining in the pupa State about ten or thirteen days the moths corne out and de- posit their eggs upon the leaves. “This year the moths were out the last of June and first of July. In five or six days the eggs hatched and this second brood, which is usually the most destructive, mostly changed340 LEPIDOPTEKA. to pupæ on the 20th of July. On the 26th of July the first moth came out and most were out before the 4th of August. I saw the moth at Sandwich as late as the 20th of August. Most of the eggs laid in August do not hatch until the following spring. I did succeed in finding two or three larvæ in September, but they were rare at that time. The onty sure means known of destroying them, is to let water upon the bog for twenty-four hours.” Another Tortricid larva, which seems to differ generically from the vine worm, in being thicker and having a larger, squarer prothoracic ring, and a less hairy body is called the “ Fruit-worm.” According to Mr. Fish, these worms appear the first of August and work ail through the month. The first signs of their presence are seen in the berries that are attacked turn- ing prematurety red. Most of them reach their full size before the first of September. In some places wrhere the vines hâve been retarded by be- ing kept under water until the first of June previous (it is com- mon to cover the bogs with water when con- Flg* 261 • venient), they do not reach their full size until a few weeks later. When fully growm they enter the ground and spin their cocoons within a few inches of the surface. The cocoons are covered with grains of sand and are hardly distinguishable from small lumps of earth. They remain in the ground ail winter. I do not know positively the perfect insect, as I hâve never been able to rear it in-doors. In the spring of 1867 I bred two species of Ich- neumons from these cocoons that had remained in the house over winter.” The Strawberry leaf-roller (A. fragariæ Riley, Fig. 261 ; c, fines showing the dimensions of the moth ; a, larva, natural size ; b, the head and four succeeding rings of the body ; d, the terminal ring of the abdomen, showing the anal legs) has, according to Riley, recently been doing much injury to straw- berry plants in Illinois and Canada. “It crumples and folds the leaves, feeding on their pulpy substance, and causing themTORTRICIDÆ. 341 to appear dry and seared, and most usually lines the inside of the fold with silk. There are two broods during the year, and the worms of the first brood, which appear during the month of June, change to the pupa state within the rolled up leaf, and become minute reddish brown moths during the fore part of July. After pairing in the usual manner, the females deposit their eggs on the plants, from which eggs in due time hatches a second brood of worms. These last corne to their growth to- wards the end of September, and changing to pupæ, pass the winter in that state. The moth expands from .40 to .45 of an inch. The head and thorax are reddish brown, with pale palpi and legs, and dusky antennæ, while the tarsal joints are dusky at the tips. The fore wings are reddish brown and streaked and spotted with black and white, as in the figure, while the hind wings and abdomen are dusky.” (American Entomologist, vol. i, p. 89.) The Coddling moth, Carpocapsa, has palpi longer than the head ; the apex of the fore wings is rather obtuse, and the outer edge is suddenly hollowed out below the tip. The larvæ feed in the interior of fruits. C. pomonella Linn. (Fig. 256, lia) is grav, with numerous darker, transverse lines, and with a curved black line before the ocellated patch on the inner an- gle, which line is edged with a coppery tint. The moth lays its eggs on apple and pear trees early in summer in the blossom- end of the fruit, and the larva hatches in a few days, burrowing into the core. It matures in three weeks, when the apple drops to the ground and the larva transforms in a thin cocoon in crevices in bark, etc., and in a few days another brood of moths appear, though most of them remain in their cocoons through thé winter as larvæ, where we hâve found them under the loos- ened bark early in May. This formidable pest may be partially destroyed by gather- ing “ wind-falls,” though the larva often deserts the worm-eaten apple before it falls. The best remedy is that suggested by Dr. Trimble, who binds bands of hay about the trees from July until the middle of September. The larvæ crawl under these bands and there spin their silken cocoons, when every few days the bands can be removed and the worms de- stroyed.342 LEPIDOPTERA. Tineidæ Leach. The Tineids are a family of great extentj and the species are very destructive to végétation, having in- numerable modes of attack. They may be distinguished Irom the Tortricidœ by their smaller size, while the narrow wings which lié on the top of, or are rolled around the body when at rest, are often falcate, or pointed acutely, and edged with a long fringe of exceeding delicacy. The maxillary palpi are greatly developed, while the labial palpi are of the usual size, and usually recurved in front of the head. The antennæ are long and filiform. The larvæ are cylindrical, variously wrinkled transversely, and with from fourteen to sixteen feet. They often construct cases in which they live, and usually spin a siight silken cocoon. About 1,200 species are aiready known in Europe alone. Those of this country hâve been mostly de- scribed by Dr. Clemens. In studying this interesting family, Stainton remarks that “ the elongated wings, the slender body and the long or very long fringes to the wings, are characters by which the Tineidæ may generally be recognized at once ; and the development of the palpi and their variety in form and structure, offer most tangible grounds for separating the greater number of the gén- éra. Indeed, if the student will look at the head of a specieg to see whether it is hairy or smooth, if he will then notice the palpi, whether the maxillary palpi are developed and to what extent, and whether the labial palpi are slender, ascending or drooping, whether the second joint is densely clothed with scales, or bears a long protruding tuft, and if he will farther notice the form of the hind wings, which are either well rounded or very pointed, or indented towards the tip, he will be per- fectly surprised to see how easily he will arrange these insects into généra by their structure.” The larvæ vary excessively in the number of legs, sixteen being the usual number, but in several généra (Gracilaria, Lith- ocolletis, etc.), we only find fourteen; in Nepticula, though the legs are but poorly developed, they number eighteen ; on the other hand the larvæ of a few of the smaller généra (Antispila, Tinagma, etc.) are absolutely footless. For collecting and preserving these minute and délicate moths, which are called by collectors, micro-lepidoptera, especialTINEIDÆ. 343 instructions are necessary. When the moth is taken in the net, it can be blown by the breath into the bottom. “Then by elevating the hand through the ring, or on a level with it, a common cupping glass of about two inches in diameter, or a wine glass carried in the pocket, is placed on top of the left hand over the constricted portion, the grasp relaxed, and the insect permitted to escape through the opening into its interior. The glass is then closed below by the left hand on the outside of the net, and may be transferred to the top of the collecting box, when it can be quieted by chloroform” (Clemens) ; or the moths may be collected in pill boxes, and then carried home and opened into a larger box filled with fumes of ether or ben- zine or cyanide of potassium. In pinching any moths on the thorax, as is sometimes done, the form of that région is inva- riably distorted, and many of the scales removed. In search- ing for “Micros” we must look carefully on the lee side of trees, fences, hedges, and undulations in the ground, for they avoid the wind. Indeed, we can take advantage of this habit of many Micros, and by blowing vigorously on the trunks of trees start the moth off into the net so placed as to intercept it. This method is most productive, C. G. Barrett States, in the “Entomologiste Monthly Magazine,” while a steady wind is blowing. In seeking for the larvæ we must remember that most of them are leaf miner s, and their burrows are detected by the waved brown withered lines on the surface of leaves, and their “/rass,” or excrement, thrown out at one end. Some are found between united leaves, of which the upper is crumpled. Others construct portable cases which they draw about the trunks of trees, fences, etc. Others burrow in the stems of grass, or in fungi, toadstools, and in the pith of currant or raspberry bushes. Most are solitary, a few gregarious. A bush stripped of its leaves and covered with webs, if not done by Clisiocampa (the American Tent Caterpillar), will witness the work of a Tineid. Buds of unfolded herbs suffer from their attacks, such as the heads of composite flowers which are drawn together and con- sumed by the larvæ. After some practice in rearing larvæ it will be found easier and more profitable to search for the leaf rainers, and rear the344 LEPIDOPTERA. perfect, fresh, and uninjured moths from them. In this way many species never found in the perfect state can be secured.* In raising “micro” larvæ it is essential that the leaf in which they mine be preserved fresh for a long time. Thus a glass jar, tumbler or jam-pot, the top of which has been ground to receive an air-tight glass cover, and the bottom covered with moist white sand, will keep a leaf fresh for a week, and thus a larva in the summer will hâve to be fed but two or three times before it changes ; and the moth can be seen through the glass without taking off the cover ; or a glass cylinder can be placed over a plant inserted in wet sand, hav- ing the top covered with gauze. Dr. H. G. Knaggs in treat- ing of the management of caterpillars in breeding boxes, enumerates the diseases, beside muscardine and cholerine, to which they are subject. Among direct injuries are wounds and bruises, which may be productive of deformities in the future imago ; the stings of ichneumon Aies, whose eggs laid either upon or in the body may be crushed with finely pointed scis- sors or pliers ; frost bites, and suffocation chiefly from drown- ing. If the Caterpillar has not been more than ten or twelve hours in the water it may be recovered by being dried on a piece of blotting paper and exposed to the sun. Larvæ may also starve to death even when food is abundant, from loss of appetite, or improper ventilation, light, etc. ; or tliej" may eat too much, become dropsical, and die. Caterpillars undoubt- edly suffer from a contagious disease analogous to low fever. Many die while moulting, especially the larvæ of Butterflies, Sphinges, and Bombycids ; others are carried off by diarrhœa, which is generally caused by improper feeding on too juicy or relaxing food, when oak leaves or dry stunted foliage should be given them. To relieve constipation they should be fed with lettuce and other natural purgatives, and lastly, they may be attacked by fungi, especially, besides those previously men- *“In general, it may be said, the mines of the leaf miners are characteristic of the genus to which the larva may belong. A single mine once identified, enables the collector to pronounce on the genus of ail the species he may find thereafter. This added to the ease with which the larvæ are collected, and the little subséquent care required to bring them to maturity, except to keep the leaves in a fresh and healthy State, makes the study of this group, in every respect, pleasant and satis- factory to the entomologist.” (Clemens.)TINEIDÆ. 343 tioned, a species of Oidium. Such patients should be put in direct sunlight or dry currents of air. (Entomologiste Monthly Magazine, June, 1868.) The pupæ easily dry up ; they should be kept inoist, in tubes of glass closed at either end, through which the moth can be seen when disclosed. In setting micro-lepidoptera: “If the insect is very small I hold it by its legs between the thumb and finger of the left hand, whilst I pierce it with the pin held between the thumb and finger of the right hand ; if the insect is not very small I use a rough surface, as a piece of blotting-paper, or piece of cloth, for it to lie upon and prevent its slipping about, and then cautiously insert the point of the pin in the middle of the thorax, as nearly as possible in a vertical direction. As soon as the pin is fairly through the insect, remove it to a piece of soft cork, and by pressing it in, push the insect as far up the pin as is required. “For setting the insects I find nothing answers as well as a piece of soft cork, papered with smooth paper, and with grooves eut to admit the bodies. The wings are placed in the required position by the setting needle, and are then retained in their places by a wedge-shaped thin paper brace, placed over them till a square brace of smooth card-board is placed over the ends of the wings.” (Stainton.) A small square of glass can also be laid on the wings to keep them expanded, and thus serve the same purpose as the paper braces. Linnæus first set the example of having the spécifie names of the Tortricids end in anci and of the Tineids in ella, and at the présent day the rule is generally followed by entomologists, who hâve also given the same terminations to the names of the smaller spe- cies of Pyralids, such as Pempelia, Crambus and allied généra. In the group of Tineids proper, the head is roughly scaled, with short and thick labial palpi, while the maxillary palpi are generally extremely well developed, and the antennæ some- times (Adela) extremely long. The larvæ live in a portable case and feed on wook hair, etc., and fungi, or decayed wood. Solenobia has very snhrt labial palpi, which are almost con- cealed in the hairs of the mouth, and the case of the larva is shorter than usual. The unimpregnated females of this genus lay fertile eggs, so that one may breed a species for years with-346 LEPIDOPTERA. out ever seeing a male. (Stainton.) Solenobia9 Walshella Clemens is gray, varied with fuscous. The silken case is gran- ulated with fine sand ; the larva is probably lichenivorous. In Tinea the head is rough, the maxillary palpi are usually folded and five jointed, while the labial palpi are cylindrical, hairy and sometimes bristly. The fore wings are oblong ovate, and the hind wings ovate and clothed with scales. rig. 262. The common Clothes moth, Tinea flavifrontella Linn. (Fig. 262 ; fig. 263, a, larva, with its case, b ; c, chrysa- lis, enlarged) is of a light buff color, with a silky iridescent lus- tre, the hind wings and abdomen being a little paler. The head is thickly tufted with hairs and is a little tawny. The wings are long and narrow, pointed acutely, with the most beautiful and délicate long silken fringe, which increases in length towards- the base of the wing. The moth begins to fly about our apart- c b ments in May, individuals remaining through the sum- mer. They lay their eggs in woollens, though we havo a reared numerous specimens which had attacked a mas& of cotton. Early in Junc we found numbers of tho Fis- 263* caterpillars in their flattened cylindrical cases which in this instance were white, the color of the substance they fed upon. The larva is whitish with a tolerably plump body, which tapers slightly towards the end of the body, while the head is honey yellow. The segmenta of the body are thickened above by two transverse folds. The body of the chrysalis is considerably curved, with the head smooth and rounded. The antennæ, together with the hind legs, which are laid on the breast, reach to the tip of the abdo- men. On the upper surface of each ring is a short trans- verse row of minute spines, which aid the chrysalis in moving towards the mouth of its case, just before changing to a moth.. When about to transform, the skin splits open on the backy and the perfect insect glides out. The skin is moulted with great rapidity. To avoid the ravages of this destructive moth,TINEIDÆ. 347 woollens and furs should be carefully shaken and examined early in June. Dr. Harris states that “powdered black pep- per strewed under the edge of carpets is said to repel moths. Sheets of paper sprinkled with spirits of turpentine, camphor in coarse powder, leaves of tobacco, or shavings of Russian leather, should be placed among the clothes when they are laid aside for the summer ; and furs and other small articles can be kept by being sewed in bags with bits of camphor wood, red cedar, or of Spanish cedar, while the cloth lining of carriages can be secured forever from the attacks of moths by being washed or sponged on both sides with a solution of the corro- sive sublimate of mercury in alcohol, made just strong enough not to leave a whitc stain on a black feather.” The moths can be most readily killed by pouring benzine among them, though its use must be much restricted from the disagreeable odor which remains, and c its inflammable na- ture. The use of a weak solution of car- bolic acid is also rec- ommended. Tinea tapetzella Linn., the Carpet moth, is black- isli at the base of the fore wings, the re- mainder being yellow- ish white, while the b Fig. 264. a hind wings are dark gray, and the head white. The larva feeds on carpets, etc. Tinea granella Linn. (Fig. 264 natural size, and enlarged, with the wings spread ; a, larva, natural size and enlarged ; &, pupa, natural size and enlarged ; c, grains of wheat held to gether with a firm web) the Grain moth, is found flying in granaries during the summer. The female lays thirty or more minute eggs, one or two on each grain of wheat. The white worm hatches in a few days, eats its way into the grain, clos- ing the entrance with its castings, and after it has devoured the interior of one grain, unités others in succession to it, until it binds together by a fine web a number of them. When348 LEPIDOPTERA. nearly full grown they cover the grains with a very thick web. According to Curtis the larvœ retire to cracks and crevices in the floor and walls of the granary, and construct their cocoons by gnawing the wood and working it up with their web until it bas the form and size of a grain of wheat, wherein it remains through the winter, changing to a chrysalis early in the spring ; while two or three weeks after the moth appears. It is creamy white, with six brown spots on the costa, and with a long brown fringe. To prevent its attacks empty granaries should be thoroughly cleansed and whitewashed, or washed with coal oil, and when the moths are flying numbers may^ be attracted to the fiâmes of a bright light ; also when the larvæ are at work, the grain should be shovelled over frequently to disturb them. The beautifui genus Adela is at once known by its exces- sively long antennæ. The larva makes a fiat case, and feeds on the leaves of various low plants, such as the wood Anemone and Veronica. The A. Ridingsella of Clemens has coppery brown fore wings, with a pale grayish brown mesial patch dusted with black, and four or five black spots at the inner angle, while the hind wings are fuscous. Hyponomeuta has a smooth head, with rather short, slender, reflexed, subacute labial palpi ; the fore wings are white, dotted in rows with black, and on the base of the hind wings is a transparent patch. The larvæ are gregarious, and the pupa is enclosed in a cocoon. H. millepunctatella Clemens is white, with the base of the costa blackish, and with longitudinal rows of distinct black dots, two of which, one along the inner mar- gin, and one along the fold, are plain. The hind wings are blackish gray. In Depressaria the fore wings are unusually oblong, being rounded at the apex ; and the hind wings are broader than usual, with the inner edge emarginate opposite the subme- dian vein, and rounded opposite the internai vein. The abdo*' men is flattened above, with projecting scales at the sides. The larvæ of this genus are extremely active, and feed on a variety of substances ; some in rolled up leaves of composite plants, some in the leaves and others in the umbels of the umbelliferous plants. Many of the worms descend from the plant on the slightest agitation, so that considérable caution isTINEIDÆ. 349 necessary in attempts to collect them. The full-fed larvæ de* scend to the ground and change to pupæ among the fallen leaves. The perfect insects hâve the peculiarity of sliding about when laid on their backs. D. atroclorsella Clem. is yel- low ochreous, with six or eight black costal dots, with a red- dish patch extending from the dise towards the tip of the wing. The head is rufous above, with the face blackish brown above and yellowish beneath. During the last summer we observed a locust tree which had some of the branches well nigh defoliated by an undescribed species of this genus which we may call the Depressaria robin- iella (Plate 8, fig. 14, natural size). The head, palpi and fore wings are light brick red, spotted irregularly with yellow, and the antennæ are slate brown. The fore wings are a little darker in the middle, especially towards the inner edge. There is a submarginal darker brown band near the outer edge, which does not reach the costa, and on the outer edge is a row of minute black dots. The hind wings and abdomen are of a pale slate gray, and of the same color beneath, while the legs are of a very pale straw yellow. It differs from most of the spe- cies of the genus in having the apex of the fore wing less rounded than usual, and in this and other respects it is allied to the European D. laterella. The larva is thick-bodied, with a black head, and is green, the cervical shield being green. It devours the leaves, drawing them together by threads, and also eats the flower buds. It was most abundant in the last week o^ June. It turned to a chrysalis July 8th, and in about two weeks the moth appeared. In Gelechia the fore wings are rather long and pointed, and the hind wings are trapezoidal and more or less excavated below the tip. The terminal joint of the labial palpi is slender, al- most needle-like, smooth and pointed. This genus is of great extent and comprises a considérable diversity of species. The moth is extremely active. Clemens States that “the habits of the larvæ are extremely varied, feeding upon leaves, flower- buds, young shoots, and in the interior of grain and seeds. The species that feed in buds and shoots are mostly in the larva State in spring and the beginning of summer ; those that feed in and upon leaves are met with in summer and autumn, and350 LEPIDOPTERA. those that feed on seeds do so in the autumn and winter.* The Angoumois Grain moth, G. cerealella Linn. (Fig. 265), is ochreous, with a fuscous streak towards the base, and a few fuscous dots towards the tip of the wing, while the hind wings are grayish ochreous. The wings are sometimes unspotted. It feeds in wheat granaries, where it sécrétés itself within the grain, devouring the mealy substance. Réaumur, according to Mr. Stainton, thus speaks of the economy of material in the food of the larva of Gelechia cerealella. “A grain of wheat or of barley contains the précisé quan- tity of food necessary. to nourish the larva from its birth till it is full fed. For if we open a grain inhabited by a younger and smaller larva, we find that there is more or less of the sub- stance of the grain still to be consumed, according to the size of the larva. But what is remarkable is, that in the latter case, we find at least as much and probably more excrement, and in larger pellets, than we find in a grain tenanted by an older larva.” It is thus driven to eat its excrement over once and perhaps more than once ! We hâve received from Mr. F. G. Sanborn the larva (Fig. 266, much enlarged) of this moth, which had eaten out the kernel of grains of parching corn, leaving but a thin shell. The body is unusually short, thick and white, the tégument being very thin and transparent. Gelechia fungivo- relia Clem. has roseate white fore wings, dusted and banded with brown. Walsh States that “the iarva mines a cabbage- like gall (C. salicis-brassicoides), Fi» 266- peculiar to Salix longifolia, and a pine-cone-like gall on Salix cordata, named C. salicis-stro- biloides by Osten Sacken.” The larva of a similar species, G. roseosuffusella, inhabits the fruit panicles of the sumach. Coleophora is a beautiful form, with long fringes to the wings, which are long and lanceolate, especially the hinder pair. The head is smooth àbove and in front, and the slender, simple antennæ are sometimes thickened with scales as far as theirTINEIDÆ. 351 middle. The labial palpi are slender, rather porrected, with a slender prolonged tuft from the second joint, and the third joint is pointed. The larva is a case-bearer, changing to a pupa within the case. While these moths abound in the larva State, the adult insects are rarely met with. The leaf-feeding larvæ are very easily found, as their presence may be detected by the pale blotches they form on the leaf they feed upon, while the seed-feeding larvæ are much better concealed. “ Coleophora larvæ do not well bear confinement in the hu- mid air of the breeding jar. To be successful in rearing the larvæ, one must use a pot of moistened sând, in which the food plant is placed, covered with a glass cylinder, with fine gauze tied over the top ; or the plant may be kept in water and cov- ered with a cylinder of glass. For this purpose old chimney tops to lamps answer very well. The larvæ of this genus, taken in the fall of the year, hibernate in their cases until the fol- lowing spring, and feed upon the first leaves that put forth. They must not, therefore, be kept in a warm room during the winter. The pupæ of the fall brood of larvæ thrive much better, likewise, if not kept in a warm room during the cold months. The spring, or early summer brood of larvæ, produce imagos in a few weeks after entering the pupa state, and hence it is much more satisfactory to collect early in the year than during the latter part.” (Clemens.) In <7. rosœfoliella Clem. the head and thorax are white, while the fore wings are pale grayish towards the base, clouded with dark brown from the middle to the tip, and the hind wings are dark brown. The case is silken, covered with granulations, cylindrical, slightly compressed, the mouth slightly deflexed and the opposite hook-like end turned down slightly. Its color is brown, varied with gray and reddish-brown granulations. The larva feeds in the spring on the common garden rose, and the case was found in winter attached to a thorn on one of the stems. C. rosacella Clem. also feeds in the spring on the rose and sweet briar. The case is made of the cuticle of the rose- leaf on which the larva feeds. It is a compressed cylinder, and subcostal; xxx, marginal; x*, small, or anterior cross-vein; x**, great cross-vein. — Front Osten Sacken. Fig. 270. Fig. 271 (1). Wing of Ortalis.—a, transverse shoulder-vein; 6, auxiliary vein; c, ei /> 9 and h, flrst, second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth longitudinal veins; », small or middle transverse vein; k, hinder transverse vein; Z, m, w, o, costal vein; JP, anterior basal transverse vein ; q, posterior basal transverse vein ; r, rudiment of the fourth trunk; s, axillary incision; A, B, and C, flrst, second and third costal eells ; Z), marginal cell ; E, submarginal cell ; F, G and H, flrst, second and third posterior cells; /, discal cell; K. flrst or large basal cell; L, second basal cell, orDIPTERA. 361 M. Marey has determined that a common fly when held cap- tive moves its wings 330 times a second ; a honey bee 190 times, and a cabbage butterfly (Pieris) nine times. The wings describe a figure 8 in the air. (Cosmos.) Landois, calcu- lating the rapidity of the vibrations by the sound produced anterior of the smaU basal cells ; M, third basal cell, or posterior of the small basal cells ; JV, anal or axillary corner of the wing ; O, alar appendage, (alula). Fig. 271 (2). Wing of Empis.—t, anterior branch of the third longitudinal vein; u, anterior intercalary. Fig. 271 (3). Wing of Dasypogon.—t, anterior branch of the third longitudinal ▼ein; u, anterior intercalary vein; v, posterior intercalary vein. — From Loew. Comparing the wing of Ortalis with that of the bee and butterfly flgured on page 23, we should prefer to use the same terminology and call Z, m, w, the margi- nal vein ; A jby the costal ; c, d and e the three branches of the subcostal vein ; /, the médian vein ; h, the submedian ; and r, the internai vein. In Macquart’s System, modified slightly by Sacken (fig. 270), b, Z, is the costal; cm, the subcostal; d and e, the médian ; /, the submedian, and g the internai vein.362 DIPTERA. thereby, states that the fly, which produces the Sound of F, vi- brâtes its wings 352 times a second, and the bee, which make» the sound of A',440 times a second. “On the contrary a tired bee hums on E', and therefore vibrâtes its wings only 330 times in a second. This différence is probably involuntary, but the change of ‘tone’ is evidently under the command of the will, and thus offers another point of similarity to a true ‘voice/ A bee in the pursuit of honey hums continually and content- edly on A', but if it is excited or angry it produces a very dif- ferent note. Thus, then, the sounds of insects do not merely serve to bring the sexes together ; they are not merely 4 love songs,’ but also serve, like any true language, to express the feelings. (Sir John Lubbock’s Address before the London Entomological Society, 1868.) Landois describes the sound-producing organs in several généra of Aies. “He distinguishes three different tones as emitted by these insects : during flight, a relatively low tone, a higher one when the wings are held so as to prevent their vibrating, and a higher still when the fly is held so that ail mo- tion of the external parts is prevented. The last mentioned is the true voice of the insect ; it is produced by the stigmata of the thorax, and may be heard when every other part of the body is eut away. The first sound is caused by the rapid vi- bration of the wings in the air ; the second is caused, or at ail events accompanied, by thé vibration and friction of the abdo- minal segments, and by a violent movement of the head against the anterior wall of the thorax.” The haltères also assist in producing the sound. The vibration of the head in the Diptera during the émission of sound is regarded by this author as due to the transmission of movement from the tho- rax. (Zoôlogical Record, 1867.) Landois also states that there are small species which give a deeper note than larger ones, on account of the wing-vibrations not being of the same number in a given time. (Lubbock.) The legs are slender, unarmed, except with stout bristles, as in Asilus ; the joints are simple, cylindrical ; the tarsi are five- jointed, the terminal joint ending in two claws (ungues), be- tween which is the cushion, or pulvillus, consisting of two or three fleshy vesicles, often armed with hairs, which are tubular,,DIPTERA. 363 and secrete an adhesive fluid, which is said to aid the fly in walking up-side-down on polished surfaces. The nervous System in the Diptera is characterized by a grouping of the thoracic ganglia into a single mass, from which proceed nerves to the abdomen ; the abdominal ganglia being for the most part aborted. Thus in some Muscidœ, Œstrus, and Hippobosca, the nervous cord behind the cephalic portion, consists of a single thoracic ganglion, which gives out nerves in different directions. The higher Muscids, such as Syrphus and Conops hâve in addition one or two ganglia situated at the base of the abdomen. The higher groups, such as the Tabanidœ, Asilidœ and Bombylidœ hâve six ganglia, and the Empidœ, Tipulidce and Culicidœ hâve more. The larvæ usually hâve one more pair than the adult, having ten and sometimes eleven ganglia, with long commissures, which are often double. The digestive System is less complex than usual. As in the two preceding suborders, on one side of the cesophagus is a pedicellate sucking stomach which extends into the abdomen near the true chyle-making stomach. The latter is of the usual intestinoid form, enlarging a little anteriorly, with two cœcal appendages beneath on each side, near the cardiac ex- tremity. The four, rarely five, Malpighian vessels which correspond to the kidneys of vertebrates, are united before they open into the single or double common outlet. There are two main tracheæ, and two large air-sacs, one on each side, at the base of the abdomen. The System of tracheæ is simplest in the aquatic Tipulid larvæ, resembling in this respect the Phryganeæ, where the tracheæ are subcutaneous and designed to extract the air from the water. The testes are generally colored, being provided with a pig- ment layer. They are oval, curved or tortuous glands, with a short efferent vessel (vas differens). The ovaries consist of three to four chambered tubes, and a short oviduct. The re- ceptaculum seminis is generally triple. A true bursa copulatrix is wanting in the Diptera, but in “many Muscidœ the vagina has, as a séminal réceptacle or utérus, a spacious and sometimea two-lobed réservoir in which the fecundated eggs are accumu-364 DIPTERA. lated in greàt numbers, and remain until the larvæ are suffi- ciently developed to be hatched, so that these animais are viviparous. In the pupiparous Hippoboscæ, the female organs * are formed on an entirely spécial type, corresponding with the remarkable mode of reproduction in these animais.” (Siebold.) Near the external opening of the oviduct is a pair of glands designed to secrete the gummy matter coating the eggs. The eggs of the Diptera are usually cylindrical, elon- gated and slightly curved, and the surface is smooth, not being ornamented as in the Lepidoptera. In the Tipulidœ the eggs become mature as soon as the pupa skin is thrown off, when they are immediately laid. The larvæ are footless, white, fleshy, thin skinned, cylindrical and worm-like, spinclled or linear in shape. They hâve, in the higher families, as in the Tipulidœ, a distinct head ; but they are often headless, as in the Muscidœ, and are then called maggots. They live in mould, decaying organic substances, or in the water. Many maggots are provided with two corneous hooks, probably the mandibles, with which they seize their food. The pupa is either naked (Pupa obtecta, Fig. 276), likç the chrvsalids of moths, with the limbs exposed, as in the Tipu- Slidœ ; or they are coarctate (pupa coarctata, Fig. 272) as in the Aies generally, the skin of the larva serving to protect the soft pupa within, as during the growth of the pupa the old larval skin séparâtes from the newly formed pupa skin, which contracts slightly. It is then called the puparium, and is usually cylindrical and regularly rounded at each end like the cocoon of moths. Those which hâve the Fig. 272. pupæ obtected, when aquatic and active, are provided with gill-like filaments permeated with tracheæ. The semipupa stage of Diptera, corresponds generally with that of the Hymenoptera and Lepidoptera. By an ingenious device Dr. Fitch succeeded in observing in the living insect the processes by which the larva of the willow Cecidomyia (C. salicis) turns to a pupa, and which is usually accomplished during the night. He States that “as the first step of this change, at the anterior end of the larva the cutis or opake inner skin becomes wholly broken up and dissolved into aDIPTERA. 365 watery fluid, whereby the thin transparent outer skin or cuticlo is elevated like a vesicle or blister, which occupies about a fourth of the length of the worm on its under side, but is much shorter on its back. The insect is now in its em- bryo-pupa state, having lost its larva form and haying not yet assumed its pupa form. In the fluid contained in this vesi- cle, the wings, legs and antennæ of the future fly now begin to be developed, whereby the sheaths of the wings at length corne to be discerned immediately under the skin. This skin is exceedingly thin, délicate and transparent, like the tunica arachnoïdes of the human brain, a mere film, as thin as a spi- der’s web. Eventually the insect, by gently writhing, ruptures this film at its anterior end, and gradually crowds it off down- wards to the lower end of the vesicle, canying the minute black jaws of the larva with it. It there remains, becoming dry and torn into shreds which flake and fall off by the con- tinued motions of the insect. At the same time from the remainder of the surface not occupied by this vesicle, a still more slight and délicate film, appearing as though the worm had been wet in milk which had dried upon it, forming an ex- ceedingly thin pellicle or scurf, becomes separated by the same motions of the insect and drops off in minute scales scarcely to be perceived with a magnifying glass. And now the insect has acquired its perfect pupa form.” Frédéric Brauer has proposed in his “ Monographie der Œstriden,” a division of the Diptera into two large groups. This division is much more natural than the old one into those with coarctate and obtected pupæ. The first group is the Dip- tera orthorapha, comprising the Nemocera, or Aies with long an- tennæ, together with the Stratiomyidœ, Xylophagidœ, Tabanidœ, Acroceridœ (?), Bombylidœ, Asilidæ, Leptidœ, Therevidœ, Empidœ and Dolichopidœ (pass- ing over some small families whose métamorphosés are not known). In these families the larva skin at the last moult splits down along the middle of the back of the three thoracic rings, while a transverse split on the first thoracic ring makes a T-shaped fissure. Through this the mummy-like pupa with free limbs escapes ; or it remains within the loose envelope formed by the old larval skin, when this author calls it a “false pu- parium.”S66 DIPTERA. In the second group, the Diptera cydorapha, the true coaro* tate, cylindrical, smooth puparium is formed by the contraction of the larva skin, but is very different in shape from the ma- ture larva ; while this puparium remains in vital connection by means of tracheæ, with the enclosed pupa, which escapes from the puparium through a curved seam or lid in the anterior end, and not by a slit in the back. This group includes the Pipunculidœ, Syrphidœ, Conopidœ, Œstridœ, Mus- cidœ and Pupipara. Certain Diptera are injurious to crops, as gall producers, but indirectly the Tachinidœ are bénéficiai since they prey on cat- erpillars ; while the greater number act as scavengers in the water and on land, and thus as sanitary agents. Diptera enjoy a wider geographical range than other insects. None of the larger families are exclusively tropical; the Mu s cidœ and mosquitoes are found in the circumpolar régions in abunaance, as well as in the tropics. They are the earliest to appear in spring and the latest to disappear in autumn. They are active at ail times, in rain or sunshine, day or night, though the greater number prefer the sunshine. From their habit of living in vegetables, flowers, and other substances sometimes eaten by persons, physicians occasion- ally are called to treat cases where dipterous larvæ hâve been swallowed and produced sickness. Among those most fre- quently vomited are larvæ of various Muscids, especially An- thomyia. “ C. Gerhardt records a case in which a patient, after four days illness, vomited about fifty larvæ of some dipterous insect, probably a large species of Muscidæ. A. Laboul- bène describes and figures in the Annals of the Entomologi- cal Society of France, a larva of Teichomyza fusca Macquart, which is exceedingly abundant in the public urinais in France, and which lives in human urine. He identifies it with the larvæ described and figured by Davaine in 1857, as having been evacuated from the intestines of a woman after she had suffered mu ch pain. (Zoôlogical Record for 1867.) Four other cases are on record of larvæ having been voided by the urinary pas- sages, or found living in urine, though, as suggested to us by Dr. Hagen, it is possible that in such cases, the worms were not voided, but lived in the urine previous to the time they were detected by the reporters of such cases.DIPTERA. 367 Dr. J. Leidy reports in the Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, for 1859, a case where a num* ber of specimens which “ appeared to be the larvæ of the Blue- bottle Ay,” were given him by a physician, having been vomi- ited from the stomach by a child. Also, a second case where numerous larvæ of a species of Anthomyia, “ were given to him for examination by a physician who had obtained them from bis own person. He had been seized with ail the symptoms of choiera morbus, and in the discharges he had detected nu- merous specimens of this, to him, unknown parasite. It was in the latter part of summer, and the larvæ, it is suspected, had been swallowed with some cold boiled vegetables. Dr. Leidy had observed the same kind of larva in another case, accompanied with the ordinary phenomena of choiera mor- bus.” Isidore Geoffroy Saint Hilaire records a case of a larva of the common fly found living in the skin of an infant ; while Dr. Livingston, according to Cobbold, detected a “solitary larva of a species which had taken up its résidence in his leg. Dr. Kirk removed this parasite by incision ; and on a second occasion he obtained a similar specimen from the shoulder of a negro.” There are about 2,500 species of North American Aies de- scribed, and it is probable that the number of living North American species amounts to 10,000. In Europe there are also about 10,000 known species, belonging to about 680 généra. The Aies of this country, compared with the other groups, hâve been but little studied, though the habits of many are so interesting and the species very numerous. The different parts of the body vary much more than in the Hymenoptera and Lepidoptera, and in such a degree as to often afford compara- tively easy characters for discriminating the généra. Their habits are very variable. Fresh water aquaria are necessary for the maintenance of aquatic larvæ. If quantifies of swamp mud and moss with decaying matter are kept in boxes and jars, multitudes of small Aies will be hatched out. Leaf- mining and seed-inhabiting species can be treated as micro- lepidoptera, and earth-inhabiting larvæ like ordinary cater- pillars. Dung, mould in hollow trees, stems of plants and368 DIPTERA. toadstools contain numerous lame or moggots, as the young of Aies are called, which must be kept in damp boxes. * Flies can be pinned alive, without killing them by pressure, which destroys their form ; and numbers may be killed at once by moistening the bottom of the collecting box with créosote, benzine or ether, or putting them into a bottle with a wide mouth, containing cyanide of potassium. Minute species can be pinned with very slender pins, or pièces of fine silver wire, and stuck into pièces of pith, which can be placed high up on a large pin. In pinning long-legged, slender species, it is advisable to run a piece of card or paper up under their bodies upon which their legs may rest, and thus prevent their loss by breakage. Of these insects, as with ail others, duplicates in ail stages of growth should be preserved in alcohol, while the minute species dry up unless put in spirits. In the genuine flies the thorax is highly centralized; the maxillæ are covered by the labrum, and the labium is not pro- vided with palpi. The females lay eggs from which the larvæ are hatched. They are also divided into the Nemocera, corn- prising those flies having long, thread-like, many-jointed an- tennæ, and embracing the higher families, Le. the Culicidœ, Tipulidœ, Bibionidœ and Rliypliidœ ; while the remain- ing families of this division are included in the Brachycera, or flies with short antennæ, such as the Muscidœ, etc. But the fossil généra, Electra and Chryothemis, discovered by Profes- sor Loew in the amber of the Tertiary formation, and a North American genus of Xylophagidœ, and the genus Rachicerus, hâve intermediate characters combining these distinctions,, which are thus shown to be somewhat arbitrary. Culicidæ Latreille. The family of Mosquitoes or Gnats hâve the mouth-parts very long and slender ; the maxillæ and mandibles are free and lancet-like. Figure 274 (A, larva ; c, its respiratory tube ; B, pupa ; d, the respiratory tubes ; a, the end of the abdomen, with the two oar-like swimming leaves, seen in profile at B, from drawings made by Mr. E. Burgess,) illustrâtes the transformations of a species inhabiting brackish water in the vicinity of Boston. The larvæ remain most of the time at the bottom feeding upon decaying matter, thus act-CULICIDÆ. 369 ing as scavengers and doing great benefit in clearing swamps of miasms. Occasionally they rise to the surface for air by a jerking movement, inhaling it through the star-like respiratory tube which connects witli the tracheæ. The pupæ hâve club-shaped bodies owing to the greatly en- larged thorax, with two respiratory tubes like those of Corethra, situated on the thorax. They remain near the surface of the water wriggling towards the bottom when disturbed, aided by the two broad swimming caudal 1 e a v e s . Though active in their hab- its they do not eat. The eggs are laid in a boat-shaped Fig. 273. mass, which floats on the surface of the water. About four weeks after hatching the imago appears, so that there are several broods during the summer. The females alone bite, the males not coming into our apartments but spending their lives in the retirement of the swamps and woods. This genus abounds in the high Arctic régions as well as in the tropics. Culex pipiens Linn. inhabits Europe, and there are over thirty North American species described in various works. Figure 274 represents a ver- tical and side view of the head (greatly magnified) of a com- mon species of Culex found in Labrador. The antennæ (a) do not reach as far as the tip of the beak, and are supplied at each joint with a thin ver- ticil of hairs (by an oversight partly omitted in the upper fig- ure). The beak consists of a stout bristle-like labrum (not shown in the figure), the bristle-like maxillæ (ma?, with their rather large three-jointed palpi mp) with the mandibles (m) 24870 DIPTERA. which are thicker than the maxillæ and barbed at the tip, and the single hair-like lingua, or tongue (Ig), These Ave bristle- like organs are folded together wittiin the hollowed labium (Z), which is a little enlarged at the tip, and forms a gutter-like case for the rest of the mouth-parts. The mosquito, without any apparent effort, thrusts them, thus massed into a single awl-like beak, into the flesh, and draws in the blood through the chan- nel formed by the fine bristles, Westwood stating that the la- bium does not penetrate the flesh, but becomes bent upon the breast of the fly. He adds “it is supposed that, at the same time it instils into the wound a venomous liquid, which, while it enables the blood to flow faster, is the chief cause of the subséquent irritation.” So far as we are aware no poison glands hâve been démonstrated to exist in the head of Aies, or other six-footed insects, and we are disposed to doubt whether any poison is poured into the wound, and to question whether the barbed mandibles are not suflâcient to produce the irritation ordinarily accompanying the punctured wound made by the mosquito as well as other Aies. A large mosquito, with two light spots on each wing (Ano- %>heles quadrimaculatus Say), bites fiercely. It is abundant very early in the spring before other mosquitoes appear. It seems to hibernate in houses. The genus Corethra has the male antennæ very long and densely haiiy. The wings are finely ciliated as in Culex, and the inner edge has a short fringe. The beautifully transparent and délicate whitish larvæ may be seen in early spring in quiet pools. Early in April the pupa state is assumed, disclosing the Aies late in the month. Chironomidæ Westwood. Of this small family the genus Chironomus includes some small species which are mosquito- like, with ffathered antennæ, and abound in swarms in early spring before the snow disappears. The larvæ are long, slen- der, worm-like ; sometimes of a blood-red color, and aquatic in their habits. While most of the larvæ of this genus live in fresh water, we hâve observed multitudes of the young of C. océaniens Pack, living on floating eel-grass and in green sea- weeds at low water mark in Salem harbor. There are twoCECIDOMYIDÆ. 371 Fig. 275. broods of the larvæ, the first becoming fully grown the last of April, the other the last of September, b the Aies appearing about the middle of October. The larva (Fig. 275, a, en- larged about three times, with the head greatly magnified ; 6, the labrum ; c, the mandibles ; d, the labium) is ey- lindrical, whitish and about a quarter of an inch long. The single pair of fore legs (Fig. 276a) are provided with about twenty-five longitudinal rows of hooks, while the anal legs (Fig. 277 ; a, a portion of the dorsal vessel) terminate in a single crown of hooks which can be drawn in out of sight. The worms were found either creeping over the surface of the weeds, or if about to pupate, concealed in a rude thin case or tube, formed of the débris collected on the weeds. It feeds on sea-weeds and small worms. It remains in the pupa State (Fig. 276) about two weeks, transforming into a fly (Fig. 278 male, and head of the female) which differs from the true Chironomi in having shorter antennæ and smaller palpi, and also in the venation, and the longer thorax. Tanypus resembles Culex in its larva and pupa state, being of similar form. Lyonnet figures a larva which spins a movable case of silk and moss. The eggs of T. varius are laid on the a leaves of aquatic plants, and fastened together Fi&- 277* with gluten. Some species of Ceratopogon, like the mosquito, are blood suckers. The larvæ are, however, terrestrial, living in mushrooms, or under the bark of decaying trees. If I w/Liyi Kl t il i: I " 1 !i':j rt Fig. 276. Cecidomyidæ Westwood. The group of Gall-flies comprises minute, délicate, slender-bodied species, whose bodies are clothed with long hairs. The wings hâve usually three or four longitudinal veins, and are folded over the back. They are gall-flies, the female laying her eggs in the stalk of cereals, and in the stems, leaves and buds of various plants372 DIPTERA. which produce gall-like excrescences inhabited by the larvæ. The Wheat-midge or Hessian-fly does not, however, produco such an enlargement, while other larvæ only produce a folding of the leaf, swelling of a leafrib, or arrest the growth of a bud or stalk. Before giving a spécial account of the Wheat-midge, so de- structive to wheat crops, let us, with the aid of Baron Osten Sacken’s résumé in the Smithsonian Monographs of North American Diptera, Part 1, take a glance at the habits of the family. As a rule the species prefer living plants, though sev~ eral species of Epidosis and Diplosis live in decaying wood, and C. fuscicollis Meigen (?) has been reared by Bouché from de- caying bulbs of tulipe and hyacinths. Others live under the bark of trees, in the cônes of pines, or in fungi. Each species is, as a rule, confined to a peculiar species of plant. Some of the larvæ live as guests or parasites in galls formed by other Cecidomyiæ. Thus C. acrophila and C. pavida live socially in the deformed buds of Fraxinus ; and Diplosis soeialis inhabits the gall of Lasioptera rubi. The larvæ of some species of Diplosis are parasitic among the plant- lice (Aphis). Some of the larvæ live on the surface of leaves, C. glutinosa having been found by Osten Sacken living on the surface of hickory leaves. The rather long, cylindrical eggs laid on the surface leaves, etc., are generally hatched in a few days, though this period may be hastened or retarded by heat or cold. The young larvæ are colorless and transparent, with âge becoming reddish or yellow, or white. They are fourteen-jointed, a supposed supernumerary joint being placed between the headL and the first thoracic segment. The last abdominal ring iaCECIDOM YIDÆ. 373 sometimes provided with bristles or horny spinules, frequently curved, which aid the larvæ in leaping, as they hâve been observed by Dufour to do. The head and mouth-parts are exceedingly rudimentary, consisting of a ring with two pro- fesses extending backwards ; the soft fleshy labium protrudes through this ring; and from the upper part of the ring arise a pair of two-jointed organs, supposed to be rudimental antennæ. On the under side of the body at the juncture of the first or prothoracic segment with the supernumerary seg- ment, is a horny piece called, provisionally, the breast-bone (Fig. 284, a), and which is présent in most of the larvæ of this group. The larvæ having no jaws, must suck in the sap and moisture through the mouth, or absorb it through the skin. They make no excrement, like the larvæ of the Hive bee and Humble bee. Though their motions are ordinarily slow, just before pupation they are very active. The larvæ are not known to moult, though probably the larva skin is shed by gradually peeling off in shreds, in this respect resembling the thin-skinned larvæ of bees. Some larvæ of Cecidomyia before becoming pupæ, leave their galls and descend to the ground, while others remain in them, where they spin a slight silken cocoon. Dr. Harris has described the mode of pupation of the larva of (7. salicis Fitch, stating that “the approaching change is marked by an altera- tion of the color of the anterior segments of the larva, which from orange become red and shining, as if distended by blood. Soori afterwards, rudimentary legs, wings and antennæ begin, as it were, to bud and put forth, and rapidly grow to their full pupal dimensions, and thus the transformation to the pupa is completed.” This process is undergone benëath the larva skin, out of which the pupa does not draw its body, as in the obtected diptera generally. The larva skin, dried and cy- lindrical in shape, thus serves as a cocoon to preserve the soft pupa from harm. The semipupa of C. destructor thus “takes the form and color of a flax-seed. While this change is going on externally, the body of the insect gradually cleaves from its outer dry and brownish skin. When this is carefully opened, the included insect will be seen to be still in the larva state.* *This “larva” is probably the semipupa, or “beginning of the pupa state” (Harris), and may be compared with the semipupa of the Bee. (Fig. 27.)374 DIPTERA. It does not change its condition and become a trae pupa until a few days before it discloses the winged insect.” The pupa resembles that of the fungus-eating Tipulids, such as Sciara. The bases of the antennæ are often produced into horn-like points, which aid the pupa in working its way out from the gall before assuming the fly state, and for the same purpose the back of the abdomen is spinose, and often there are a few bristles at the tip. According to Dr. Harris, the Cecidomyia destructor Say, or Hessian-fly (Fig. 279), has two broods, as the Aies appear in the spring and autumn. At each of these periods the fly lays twenty or thirty eggs in a crease in the leaf of the young plant. In about four days, in warm weatlier, they hatch and the pale red larvæ (a) “ crawl down the leaf, work- ing their way in between it and the main stalk, passing down- wards till they corne to a joint, just above which they remain, a little below the surface of the ground, with the head towards the root of the plant” (c). Here they imbibe the sap by suction alone, and by the simple pressure of their bodies they become embedded in the side of the stem. Two or three larvæ thus embedded serve to weaken the plant, and cause it to wither and die. The larvæ become full grown in five or six weeks, then measuring about three- twentieths of an inch in length. About the first of December their skin hardens, becomes brown and then turns to a bright chestnut color. This is the so-called flax-seed state, or puparium. In two or three weeks the “larva” (or more truly speaking, the semipupa) becomes detached from the old case. In this puparium the larva remains through the winter. To- wards the end of April or the beginning of May the pupa (Fig. 279,6) becomes fully formed, and in the middle of May, in New England, the pupa cornes forth from the brown puparium, “wrapped in a thin white skin,” according to Herrick, u which it soon breaks and is then at liberty.” The Aies appear just as:CECIDOMYIDÆ. 375 the wheat is coming up ; they lay their eggs for a period of three weeks, and then entirely disappear. The maggots hatched from these eggs take the flax-seed form in Jnne and July, and are thus found in the harvest time, most of them remaining on the stubble. Most of the Aies appear in the autumn, but others remain in the puparium until the following spring. By burn- ing the stubble in the fall, their attacks may best be prevented. Among the parasites on this species, are the egg-parasites, Platygaster, and Semiotellus (Ceraphron) destructor Say (Fig. 140), the latter of which pierces Fitch has suggested that the Euro- Fig* 14°* pean parasites of this insect and the C. tritici, could be im- ported and bred in large quantities, so as to stop their ravages. With proper pecuniary aid from the State this seems feasible, while our native parasites might perhaps also be bred and multiplied so as to effectually exterminate these pests. The Wheat-midge, JDiplosis tritici, attacks the wheat in the ear. When the wheat is in blossom the females lay their eggs in the evening by means of the long rétractile tube-like extrem- ity of the body, within the chaffy scales of the flowers, in clusters of from two to fifteen or more. In eight or ten days the eggs disclose the transparent maggots, which with âge be- come orange colored, and when fully grown are one-eighth of an inch long. They crowd around the germ of the wheat, which by pressure becomes shrivelled and aborted. At the end of July and in the beginning of August the maggots become full fed, and in a few days moult their skins, leaving the old larva skin entire, except a little rent in one end of it. ct Great numbers of these skins are found in the wheat ears immediately after the moulting process is completed.” Sometimes the the larva through the sheath of the leaf. Two other Ichneumon para- sites, according to Herrick, destroy the fly while in the flax-seed or semipupa state. The ravages of the Hessian-fly hâve been greatly checked by these minute insects, so that it is in many localities not so destructive as it was formerly. Dr.376 DIPTERA. larva descends to the ground and moults there. Harris States that “it is shorter, somewhat flattened, and more obtuse than before, and is of a deeper yellow color, with an oblong greenish spot in the middle of the body. In this state, which is intermediate between the larva and pupa States, which has by Dr. Fitch been termed the “ embryo-pupa,” and by us “semi» pupa,” the insect spins a minute silken cocoon, which, ac~ cording to Dr. Fitch, is smaller than a mustard seed and remains in the ground through the winter, situated at the depth of an inch beneath the surface. In the next June ing in the fall or spring will destroy many of the insects, and grain sown after the 15th or 20th of May, in New England, will generally escape their attacks. The wings of the Hessian-fly are blackish ; those of the D. tritici are transparent. This last species is orange colored, with long, slender, pale yellow legs, and the joints of the antennæ are twenty-four in number in the male, and twelve in the fe- male. The Oecidomyia rigidœ Osten Sacken (C. salicis Fitch) forms a gall surrounded by the dry and brittle terminal bud at the end of the twigs of the willow. The single larva discloses the fly early in the spring. The bright yellow larva of (7. grossu- lariœ Fitch, causes the gooseberry to turn red prematurely and become putrid. The pupa of (7. pini-inopis is supposed by Osten Sacken to be coarctate, the larva fastening itself to a pine leaf and remaining motionless until the resinous exuda- tion resulting from its attacks hardens, forming a cocoon-like pupa case or puparium. Mr. Walsh describes in the u American Entomologist,” vol. i, 7 ’ \ Fig. 135. they are transformed to pupæ, with the limbs free. When about to assume the adult state the pupa works its way to the surface in June and July. Its chief para- site, jP. tipulœ, which in Europe destroy s great iiumbers of the midge, is allied to the Platygaster error Fitch (Fig. 135). It is évident that deep plough-CECIDOMYIDÆ. 377 Fig. 281. Walsh also Fig. 280. p. 105, the gall formed b y <7. strobiloides O. Sacken (Fig. 280 ; а, natural size ; 5, antenna ; 281, gall) which is simply an en- larged and deformed bud of Salix cordata. The fly appears in April, or early in May, oviposits in a terminal bud, and the gall attains its full size by the middle of July. The larva hibernâtes in a thin cocoon, changing to a pupa in the spring. (Walsh.) Another willow gall made by C. salicis-brassicoides Walsh occurs on the Salix longi- folia, the g ail s forming a mass (Fig. 282) like .the sprouts on a cabbage stalk. Mr. describes the Grape-vine Apple Gall (Fig. 283, gall of C. ? vitis pomum ; a, natural size ; 6, a section), the fly of which is unknown. The gall is divided into numerous cells, each con- taining a larva. It occurs on the wild Frost grape. The Grape-vine Albert gall (C.? vitis-cory- loides Walsh, fig. 284 ; a, head of larva, showing the clove-shaped breast bone ; б, a bunch of galls, natural size ; c, sec- tion of a gall, showing the cell the larva inhabits) is found on the wild Frost grape in Illinois. Walsh lias described fourteen addi- tional species of Cecidomyiæ inhabiting eight different species of willow. The spécifie character of the insects them- selves, are in ail their stages of the slightest possible character, but the dif- ferent galls can be readily distinguished. These galls, according to Walsh and other authors, also afford a shelter to so- called “ inquiline,” or guest species, such as the larvæ of other species of Cecidomyia and species of Scatopse and Drosophila, Fig. 282.873 DIPTERA. Curculionidœ and minute Lepidoptera, together with Aphides and species of Thrips, which last are thought by Mr. Walsh to prey upon the cecidomyious larvæ. The subdivisions of the large genus Ceci- domyia are noticed by Osten Sacken in Part a, & 1 of the Smithsonian Fis* 283- Monographs of Dip- tera. As the student can refer to that work, we simply intro- duce the cuts showing the venation of the wing of each genus, without farther characterizing them. (Fig. 285, Cecidomyia;. 286, Diplosis; 287, Colpodia; 288, Epidosis ; 289, Asynapta;. 290, Spaniocera 291, Lasioptera). Another group of this family are Anarete and its allies (Fig. 292, Zygoneura ; 293, Anarete ; 294, Ca- tocha ; 295, Cam- pylomyza ; 296. Lestremia) which are also related to the Mycetophi- lids. We hâve al- ready referred, on page 51, to cer- tain c e c i d o - myians, which in the larval condi- tion p r o d u c e Fig. 284. young. We figure (297) a species whose metamorphosis has been traced by Nicholas Wagner. The larva is cylindrical in form, like mostCECIDOM YIDÆ • 379 cecidomyian larvæ, with the division between the segments in* dicated by rows of minute spines. From the germ-balls (a, nearest the posterior end of the body) the embryo is gradually formed (as at a in the eighth and ninth rings of the body), when they assume a cylindrical form like the eggs of the adult fly of this family. These eggs may be compared with the Fig. 285. Fig. 286. Fig. 291. Fig. 292, Fig. 293. Fig. 294. Fig. 295. Fig. 296. “pseudova” of the Aphis, and are developed from the two large fatty bodies (corpora adiposa) which are situated one on each side of the body. These “false eggs” increase in num- ber and develop until the entire cavity of the mother larva be- comes distended with young worms like itself, and which are finally born and may be compared with the wingless broods of Plant-lice.* * Grimm thinks that the terni “pseudova” is objectionable, as in the pædo* genetic Chironomus the winter ova, as well as the summer, or false ova, develop without previous ferfcilization by the male.880 DIPTERA. Several species hâve been found in Europe under the bark of apple trees, etc. Loew States “ that the species on which Wagner made his observations is nearly allied to the genus Heteropeza, but still more closely to the genus Monodicrana, from the amber of the Tertiary formation on the shores of the Baltic. (Zoôlogical Record, 1865.) Meinert de- scribes a similar species of worm and its imago, under the name of Miastor metroloas, and charac- terizes the fly as having very short two-jointed palpi, and moniliform eleven-jointed antennæ. The wings hâve three veins, the middle one of which does not reach the apex of the wing. Psychodidæ Zetterstedt. The principal genus in this small family is Psychoda, comprising small Aies with broad, very short, oval whitish wings, which, like the body, are very hairy. They may be seen flying and leaping on the banks of, or on the surface of pools, and on Windows. The larvæ live in dung. The larva of the European P. phalœnoides (so named from its resemblance to a moth) is “long, subfusiform and depressed, with a slender, straight cylindrical tail, longer than the pre- ceding segment. The pupa has two short appendages, thick- cned at the tips behind the head. The abdomen is tapering.” (Westwood.) Tipülidæ Latreille. The Daddy-long-legs or Crane-flies are well known by their large size and long legs, and from their close resemblance in form hâve probably given rise to the humorous stories of giant mosquitoes, which sometimes appear in newspapers. They are characterized by their slender an- tennæ and palpi, and their remarkably long legs, while the abdomen is very slender and cylindrical in shape ; the group chiefly differs, however, from other Aies, according to Baron Osten Sacken (Monograph of the Diptera of North America, Part iv), in the presence of a transverse Y-shaped suture across the mesonotum ; by the completeness of the venation, and the presence of a well developed ovipositor, “with its two Fig. 297.TIPULIDÆ. 381 pairs of long, homy, pointed valves.” The larvæ (Fig. 298, natural size, a larva of this family found living under stones in a running brook at Burkesville Junction, Ya. In tke American Naturalist, vol. ii, it those of the neighboring families in having but a single pair of spiracles Fi»- 298- at the anal end of the body. The head is rather large, and u embedded nearly up to the mouth in the first thoracic seg- ment ; the mandibles are horny and strong, and forked at the end.” The body is grub-like, of a uniform grayish, brownish, or whitish color, and consists of twelve segments. “The larvæ of Ctenophora, living in wood, hâve a soft, white, smooth skin, similar to that of the larvæ of longicoro beetles, or of the Asilidœ, living in similar conditions. The larva of Tipula living in the soil, or the larvæ of those species of Ctenophora which are found in wood so far de- composed as to be like soil or vegetable mould, hâve a much tougher skin, and are covered with a microscopie, appressed pubescence. This toughness, as well as some stiff bristles, scattered over the surface of the skin, is probably useful in burrowing. Thus the larva of Trichocera, digging in vegeta- ble mould or in fungi, is covered, according to Perris, with mi- croscopie erect bristles. The larva of Ula, living in fungi, has, according to the same author, still longer bristles. Those larvæ living in water (as some Limnobina) are soft and slimy, of a dirty greenish color, and with a peculiar clothing of appressed microscopie hairs, not unlike those of the larvæ of Stratiomys. The most anomalous of ail the Tipulideous larvæ are those of the Cylindrotomina. That of Cylindrotoma distinctissima lives upon the leaves of plants, as Anemone, Viola, Stellaria, almost like a Caterpillar. It is green, with a crest along the back, consisting of a row of fleshy processes. The larva of Cylindrotoma (Phalacrocera) replicata, according to Degeer, lives in the water, on water plants, and is distinguished by nu- merous filaments, which, although resembling spines, are flexi- ble and hollow on the inside. Degeer took them for organs of respiration.” (Osten Sacken.) The larvæ move by means of minute stiff bristles arising referred to Tabanus) differ382 DIPTERA. from transverse swellings on the under side of the body. uThe end of the body is truncated, and the two spiracles are placed upon the truncature,” from the edge of which part arise usually four rétractile processes. In the aquatic larva of Ptychoptera there is a long respira- tory tube at the end of the body. The pupæ (Fig. 299, under side, enlarged twice, represents a pupa of this family) hâve usually on the thorax two horn-like processes, representing the thoracic spiracles, and in Ptychoptera one of these processes acquires a great length, in order to allow the pupa to breath under water. The Tipulids, like other Aies with soft bodies which contract in drying, should, as Osten Sacken suggests, be studied from fresh specimens, especially when the thorax and abdomen, with the ovipositor, are to be ex- Eig. 299. amined. The Tipulids of the United States, east of the Mississippi river, closely represent those of Europe, while Os- ten Sacken states that a few species are found to be common to both countries ; and he farther states, with regard to the Tip- ulidœ, that u whenever the North American fauna differs from the European in the occurrence of a peculiar generic form, or in a inarked prevalence of another, this différence is due, either to an admixture of South American forms, or of forms peculiar to the amber fauna.” The genus Tipula com- prises the largest individuals of the family, and the species may be seen early in May fly- ing over grassy fields. The larvæ live in garden mould and under moss in fields and woods. T. trivittata Say is one of our most common species. In the genus Limnobia the body is very slender and délicate, though stouter than in Dicranomyia, a closely allied genus, the larvæ of which are probably aquatic. “The larvæ live in de- caying vegetable matter, especially in wood and fungi.” u Van Poser discovered the larvæ of the European L. annulus (closely allied to L. cinctipes Say) in decayed wood. They are like an earth-worm in size, as well as in color, and line their burrows with a kind of silken web.” (Osten Sacken.) Fig. 300.TIPULIDÆ. 383 The genus Styringomyia (Fig. 300, wing) is an anomalous ge- nus found in gum copal brought from Zanzibar. Of three othei anomalous généra belonging here Osten Sacken ^ describes Bhamphidia, of which the rostrum is \ long, but shorter than the thorax, with species common to Europe and America, and also found in amber ; ToxorrMna which is found both in North and South America, and Elephantomyia which oecurs only in North America, and has a very slender filiform rostrum, almost as long as the body. E. Westwoodii O. Sacken is found in J J Fig. 301. the Northern States and Canada. Erioptera and its allies hâve two submarginal cells and the tibiæ are without spurs at the tip. In Erioptera the wings are pubescent along the veins only, giving the whole wing a hairy appearance. E. venusta O. Sacken has yellowish wings, with two brown bands, and is a common species in the Atlantic States. According to Osten Sacken Chionea is closely allied to Erioptera. It is wingless, with six- jointed antennæ of anomalous structure, and stout, hairy feet, and a short abdomen, which, according to Harris is provided with a “ sword-sliaped borer, resembling that of a grasshopper.” “These insects occur on snow in winter, the larvæ live underground, apparently upon vegetable matter, and hâve been de- scribed in detail by Brauer in the Transactions of the Zoôlogical and Botanical Society of Vienna for 1854.” C. valga Harris (Fig. 301, enlarged ; fig. 302, larva of the European C. araneoides Dalman) is reddish brown, with paler legs. Another section of this large family is represented by the genus Limnophila, in which there are two submarginal cells, usually five posterior cells, and the wings and eyes are smooth, and the antennæ jointed. The larvæ live in decayed wood. The larva of the European L. dispar digs longitudinal burrows in the dry stems of Anglica sylvestris. “It is cylindrical, glabrous, of a livid gray, with a horny black head.” (Osten Sacken.) The anomalous genus Tnchocera has pubescent eyes and Fig. 302. sixteen-384 DIPTERA* distinct ocelli on the sides of the frontal tubercle. The species appear in swarms, flying up and down in their mazy dances,, especially at twilight early in spring, though they may be seen late in autnmn and on warm days in winter. They live in de- caying vegetable matter. Pedicia is a gigantic crane-fly, embracing the largest Aies of the family, and with Trichocera is the only Fis* 303* genus of this family having ocelli. P. albivitta has hyaline wings, with the Costa, the fifth longi- tudinal vein and the central cross veins margined with brown. The body is 1.4 of an inch in length. The larva of an Euro- pean species lives in well water. The genus Cylindrotoma and its allies, resemble Tipula in the course of the veins lying in the vicinity of the stigma, and Osten Sacken illustrâtes the re- a semblances by the accompanying drawings, of which Fig. 303 rep- resents the venation near the stigma of Cylindrotoma ; Fig. Fi&-304* 304 that of the European Phalacrocera replicata, closely allied to the preceding genus, and Fig. 305 that of a genuine Tipula. Ptychoptera is rather stout-bodied and has a singular mem- branous spatulate organ, ciliated on the margin, which is inserted at the base of the haltères. (Osten Sacken.) P. ru- focincta O. S. is black with reddish bands on the feet. The larva of the European P. paludosa has a long respira- tory tube at the end of the body, which it raises to the surface 2 the pupa. processes of the water, and in “one of the horny which distinguishes the thorax of ail the pupæ of the Tipulidœ, is enormously prolonged, like- Fis- 303* wise, for the purpose of breath- ing under water. (Osten Sacken.) The very singular genus Bittacomorpha is an aberrant form, resembling the neu- ropterous Bittacus. The antennæ consist of twenty joints, and the first joint of the tarsi is very much thickened, while. the abdomen is very long and slender. B. davipes Fabr. ig. MYCETOPHILIDÆ. 385 black with a white stripe on the mesonotum, the metanotum and flanks being white, and the legs banded with white. It is a widely diffused species, and présents a most sin- gular appearance when fly- ing, as it moves slowly, with its feet variegated Fig* 306* with snow-white, and extending like the radii of a circle. (Os- ten Sacken.) In the genus Protoplasma (Fig. 306, wing) there are six posterior cells in the wing. P. FitcJm O. Sacken is brownish gray, with brown bands on the wings. Mycetophilidæ Macqnart. This family comprises small Aies, capable of leaping to a considérable height, and provided with two or three ocelli, but not having a proboscis. While the antennæ are usually simple, as in ail other Diptera, those of Platyroptilon Miersii Westwood are forked, having a branch one-half as long as the antenna itself. The thorax does not hâve a tr ans verse suture, and the wings are without a discal cell, while the coxæ are greatly elongated, and the tibiæ are ail armed with spurs. The larvæ are subcylindrical and smooth, with locomotive bristles beneath, and eight pairs of stig- mata ; they are in color white or yellowish. They are gregari- ous, living in decaying vegetable matter, fungi, or in dung, one species forming a gall. They shed their skin several times be- fore becoming fully grown. Osten Sacken states that the larva of Sciopliila which covers the surface of the fungus it feeds in with a web, is long and almost serpentiform, while those of Bolilophila and Mycetophila are shorter and stouter, and that. of Sciara is intermediate. The pupæ of this family are smooth, with rounded angles and edges, whereas those of Tipula are sharp and pointed. They are enclosed in a silken. cocoon. Some species of Sciara do not, however, spin cocoons., The larva of Mycetophila scatophora Perris “carries on its. back a sheath formed of its own excrements and moulded by means of a peculiar undulatory motion of the skin. The pupæ remain within the sheath, but before assuming this state the larva extends the sheath anteriorly in a short neck, and tapestries it on the inside with a pellicle, which renders it 25386 DIPTERA. more tough and resisting.” The larvæ of one genus sometimes live gregariously with those of other généra. Thus Osten Sacken found that the “larvæ of Sciophila appeared in a de- caying fungus only after the transformations of Mycetophila were entirely completed. For two or three weeks the eggs of the former remained apparently dormant among the bustle of so many larvæ of the other species.” (Osten Sacken.) Leja resembles Sciophila in its habits. The larvæ of Sciara hâve no bristles on the tubercles of the under side of the body, usu- ally présent in the family. They are more gregarions than the other généra, and hâve the singular propensity of sticking together in dense patches, generally under the bark of trees. When fully grown they sometimes march in processions in a dense mass, sometimes se ver al feet long, and two to three inches broad, and half an inch in thickness, whence the Ger- manscallthem “ Army-worms.” To the same genus belongs the S. (Molobrus) mali of Fitch, the apple midge, whose larva is glassy white and devours the interior of apples. Professor E. D. Cope describes in the Proceedings of the Philadelphia Academy, 1867, page 222, a procession of a spe- cies of Sciara observed in September by William Kite, in Ches- ter County, Penn., where he had observed this army-worm for three consecutive years. “Tliis company (consisting by rough estimation of about 2,400) extended over a length of about twenty-two inches, with a breadth of from three-fourths of an inch in the thickest part, to about one-eighth of an inch at the head, and one-tenth at tail ; five or six worms deep in thicker parts. They advanced at the rate of four inches in five minutes, the hinder ones working their way over the top of the rest.” These larvæ were about one-half an inch long, semitransparent, with black heads. Mr. Kite observed another procession July 8th, which was six feet six inches long. These trains were attacked by larvæ of Staphylinids, ants, dipterous larvæ and other predaceous insects. Seven other persons in this country hâve witnessed similar trains, one of which was observed in Lee, Mass. The larva of Mycetobia, which agréés closely with that of Rhyphus, is found living in putrescent sap under the bark of the elm tree. We hâve found, through the summer, great num-M Y CETOPHILIDÆ. 387 bers of an undescribed species (Fig. 307 ; a, larva ; &, pupa, magnified three times. Fig. 308, head of the larva greatly en- larged ; a, antenna ; Z, labrum ; m, mandible ; ma?, maxillæ ? mp, maxillary palpi? g, gêna?) which seems to differ from Dufour’s figure of the European M. pallipes in the form of the wings and their venation, as well as in the form of the pupa. The larvæ were first seen in abundance on the 26th of June in the crevices of the bark of the elm from which flowed a sour sap mingled with dust, and in this putrescent mass the slender white worms glided swiftly about. The body is long and slender, scarcely tapering towards either end, and consists of twelve segments besides the head. Like the larva of Scenopinus and Thereva, each abdominal ring is subdivided by a well defined false suture ; but the hinder division in this larva is about one-fourth shorter than the rest of the ring. It is .36 Fis* 307- of an inch long. The head is pale honey yellow, and the body pure white. The three thoraci^ rings are marked posteriorly with honey yellow, with a pair of large round pale spots low down on the side of each ring. It moves with great activity, keeping its mouth-parts constantly moving, pushing them into the dirt. The pupæ were found sticking straight out from the bark, being attached m by the spines on the tail. They were straight, long, cylindrical, the thorax being but little larger than the base of g the abdomen. The head is square in front, ending in two latéral horns, and the abdomen is covered with stout spines, especially at the tip. It is .20 of an inch long, and is pale honey yel- low and covered with dirt. The Aies appeared June 27th, and for six weeks after flew about the trees. The head is black, the thorax and abdomen brown, with a leaden hue ; the abdo- men is a little paler, being whitish beneath, but darker towards the tip. The legs are pale, a little darker externally, especially a l388 DIPTERA. towards the tips of the joint, and the hind tarsi are a little dusky. Its length is .10 of an inch, not including the an- tennæ. It may be called the Mycetobia sordida. Pulicidæ Westwood. While this group has been considered by many writers as forming a distinct “ order,” or suborder of insects, équivalent to the Diptera, under the name of Aphanip- tera, we prefer, with Straus Durckheim, to consider them as wingless Aies, and perhaps scarcely more abnormal than Nycteribia or Braula. Instead of placing them at the foot of the suborder, we prefer, in accordance with a suggestion made by Haliday (Westwood, Class. Insects, vol. ii, p. 495, note), who places them near the Mycetophilids, or ufungivorous Tipulids,” to consider them as allied to that group. The body is much compressed ; there are two simple eyes which take the place of the compound eyes, the epicranial portion of Fig 309 the head being greatly prolonged, while the labrum is wanting, and the labium is small and membranous ; the four-jointed labial palpi, always absent in other diptera, are long and slender. The form of the larva, including the shape of the head and its habit of living in dirt, and its way of moving about, as also its transformations, certainly ally the flea with the Mycetophilids. We hâve received from Dr. G. A. Perkins of Salem, the eggs and larvæ of the species infesting the cat, from which we hâve also hatched the young larvæ. The eggs (of which, according to Westwood, eight or ten are laid by one female) were shaken from the cat’s fur, whence they are said to fall upon the floor and there hatch, the larvæ living in the dust and dirt on the floor, and feeding on decaying vegetable substances. The egg is oval cylindrical, and one forty-fifth of an inch long. The larva when hatched is .06 of an inch long (Fig. 309, the larva four days old ; a, antenna ; 5, end of the body) white, cylindrical, the sides of the body being a little expanded, giving it a slightly flattened appearance when seen from above. The segments are rather convex, the sutures being deeply im~PULICIDÆ. 389 pressed. There are four long hairs on the side of each ring, becoming longer towards the end of the abdomen, where they are longer than the body is thick. The terminal segment of the body is considerably smaller than the one preceding it, and has two long spines arising from the tergal part of the ring ; these spines seem to assist the larva in moving through the hairs and dust in which it lives. The well developed head is rounded, conical, narrower than the prothoracic ring, pale honey yellow, and with long three-jointed antennæ. Mr. Emerton, who made the drawings here given, informs me that the larvæ, when fifteen days old, did not differ from those freshly hatched. I hâve been unable to discover that it moults. Westwood States that “when fully grown, which occurs in summer in about twelve days, the larvæ enclose themselves in a small cocoon of silk. Rosel, how- over, observed that some of the larvæ underwent their transforma- tions without forming any co- coon.” “Thepu- pa is quite inac- tive, with the legs enclosed in separate cases. The period of the duration of the pupa state varies from eleven to sixteen days.” Our specimens were hatched early in October, and they probably pass the winter before changing, as Westwood States that they pass the winter in the larva state. The species here rep- resented (Fig. 310, 6, maxillæ, and their palpi, a ; d, the man- dibles, which are minutely serrated ; c, labial palpi, the labium not being shown in the figure) was found on the person of a man, though it seems to differ specifically from Westwood’s figure of P. irritans Linn., the human flea ; other species live on the dog, cat, squirrel, and other quadrupeds and various birds. The antennæ are concëaled in a small cavity situated behind the simple eyes and are four-jointed ; in P. musculi390 DIPTERA. Duges, they are external. Kirby describes a gigantic species twa lines long, from British America. As a préventive measure in ridding dogs of fleas we would suggest the frequent sweeping and cleansing of the floors of their kennels, and renewing of the straw or chips composing their beds—chips being the best material for them to sleep upon. Flea-afflicted dogs should be washed every few days in strong soapsuds, or weak tobacco, or Petroleum water. A writer in the “Science-Gossip” recom- mends the use of Persian Insect Powder, one package of which suffices for a good sized dog. The powder should be well rubbed in ail over the skin ; or the dog, if small, can be put into a bag previously dusted with the powder ; in either case the dog should be washed soon after.” One of the most serious insect torments of the tropics of America is the Sai'copsylla (Rynchoprion of Oken) pénétrant Linn., called by the natives, the Jigger, Chigoe, Bicho, Chique, or Pique. (Fig. 311 much en- larged ; a, the gravid female, natural size). The female during the dry season, bores into the feet of the natives (though it also lives in dogs and mice, which accounts for its presence in houses), the operation requir- ing but a quarter of an hour, usually penetrating under the nails, and lives there until her body becomes distended with eggs ; the abdomen swelling out to the size of a pea. The presence of the insect often causes distressing sores. The Chigoe lays about sixty eggs, according to Karsten, deposit- ing them in a sort of sac on each side of the external opening of the oviduct. The larvæ do not live in the body of the parent, or of its host, but, like those of Pulex, live free on the ground. The best préventives against its attacks are cleanliness and the constant wearing of shoes or slippers when in the house, and of boots when out of doors. Simulidæ Loew. Simulium molestum (Fig. 312 ; a, larva of this or an allied species, magnified), the Black-fly, represents this family. Its antennæ are eleven-jointed ; the palpi are four-jointed, with long, fine terminal joints, and the ocelli areBIBIONIDÆ. 391 wanting, while the posterior tibiæ, and first joint of the hind tarsi are dilated. The body is short and thick. The labrum is free, sharp as a dagger, and the proboscis is well developed and draws blood profusely. The species are numerous. The Black-fly, so well known as the torment of travellers in the North, is black, with a broad silvery ring on the legs. We hâve received a large species from Mr. E. T. Cox, called in the West the Buffalo fly. On the prairies of Illinois it has been known to plague horses to death by Fig. 312. its bite. The 8. (Rhagio) Columbaschense Fabr. in Hungary abounds in im- mense numbers, often killing cattle. Other species abound in the American tropics where they are a great scourge. The cylindrical larva of the Euro- Fis- 312> pean species is furnished with short antennæ and two flabelli- form appendages. On the under side of the prothorax is a thick conical and rétractile tubercle, and there are several curved filaments at the end of the body. The pupa has eight very long latéral filaments on the front of the thorax, and the posterior end of the body is enclosed in a. semioval membra- nous cocoon, open in front, and posteriorly attached to some plant. The fly leaves the pupa beneath the water. Bibionidæ Macquart. This group is characterized by hav- ing three ocelli and the prothorax much developed ; the wings hâve no discal cell. The coxæ are not prolonged and the em- podium (supplementary cushion) is proportionally long, while the pulvilli are sometimes wanting. The typical genus, Bibio of Geoffroy, has short, nine-jointed antennæ, five-jointed palpi, and the eyes of the male are large and contiguous, while those of the females are small. The larvæ are cylindrical, footless, with ten spiracles, and furnished with transverse rows of short hairs, being found in dung, but they mostly feed on the roots of grass, whole patches of which appearing as if winter-killed. Robins destroy immense numbers of them. Westwood has392 DIPTERA. found the pupæ enclosed in smooth oval cells ; they are naked, the thorax gibbous, with the rudimental wings and legs very short. Bibio albipennis Say, a white-winged species, is double- brooded, and Aies in swarms in June and October, alighting slowly on the passer-by. • Rhyphidæ Loew. This family is known by the wings hav- ing a perfect discal cell, while the empodium resembles a pulvillus ; the pulvilli being wanting. The single genus Rhyphus has short fourteen-jointed antennæ, the second joint of the palpi swollen, and the legs are not spiny. Rliyphus ulternatus Say, is common on Windows. The succeeding families belong to the Brachycera, or short- horned Aies. Xylophagidæ (Macquart). This family is known by the three basal cells of the wings being very prolonged, the an- nulated third joint of the antennæ always without a style or terminal bristle, and by the spurred tibiæ. Xylophagus has ten-jointed antennæ, with the ovipositor very long. The larva is cylindrical, with an oblique scaly plate on the tail, while the head ends in an acute horny point. Loew doubtfully refers the genus Bolbomyia, found fossil in the Prussian Amber, to this group. Stratiomyidæ Latreille. The wings in this group hâve the three basal cells much prolonged, and the costal vein reaching only to the middle of the wing. The third joint of the an- tennæ is sometimes subdivided into several portions. The tibiæ are spurless and the pulvilliform empodium is much developed. The coarctate pupa retains the larva skin nearly in its original form. The genus Beris is easily distinguished by having seven, instead of Ave (the usual number) abdominal segments visible. In JSargus the eyes of the males approxi- mate much doser than in the females. They are showy insects, with bright metallic colors, and are widely distributed over the earth. The larva lives in the earth, is oval oblong, narrowing before ; the head is scaly, with two ocelli, and armed with two hooks, while the body is hairy. Fig. 313 represents a pupaTABANIDÆ. 393 t)elonging probably to this family. Stratiomys has a broad flat» tened abdomen, and the scutellum spined. The larvæ are aquatic, being apodal and flattened, and slen- der especially at the end of the body, which is elongated and has a simple terminal spiracle “ surrounded by a great number of bearded hairs, which form a coronet, and which are capable of being closed up so as to retain a bubble of air, and by the assistance of which the insect suspends itself at the surface of the water for respiration. On assuming the pupa state, the insect floats at liberty in the water, the enclosed pupa occupying only the anterior portion of its larva skin.” Fig. 313. Tabanidæ Latreille. In this important family the three basal cells of the wings are much prolonged ; the third longitu- dinal vein is furcate, and the tegulæ are rather large. The pro- boscis of the male has four, that of the female six bristles. The third joint of the antennæ is annulate and always without style or bristle. The eyes are large, and the thorax oblong and îlattened above. The female Horse-flies are troublesome from their formidable bite. The pupæ are obtected, resembling the .adult Aies. Pangonia has a proboscis often longer than the body itself. Chrysops, the Golden-eyed fly, is very trouble- some, unceasingly flying about one’s head, striving to alight and draw blood. The two basal joints of the antennæ are prolonged, hairy, the third spindle-shaped. Chrysops niger Macquart and C. vittatus Wiedemann are the two most abun- dant species. Tdbanus, the Horse-fly, is known by its large size and powerful biting and sucking apparatus. Like the mosquito, the male horse-fly does not bite, but lires on the sweets of flowers. The accompanying sketch shows the structure of the proboscis of the female of the Green-head fly, Tabanus lineola Fabr. (Fig. 314 ; a, five terminal joints of the antennæ ; Z6, labrum ; m, mandibles ; mæ, maxillæ ; mp, the two-jointed, large, stout, maxillary palpi ; Z, the tongue). Its bite is most painful and poisonous to many. Mr. Walsh has shown,394 DIPTERA. however, that in its larval state the horse-fly is useful to man* as it feeds on snails and probably the larvæ of other root* eating insects. The larvæ of other species are aquatic, living under submerged objects. Walsh describes. a greenish transparent larva which is cylin- drical, twelve-jointed, the body being most slender towards the head, which is small, truncate, conical, the anterior part capable of extension, with short, fleshy, exarticulate antennæ and without ocelli. There are six pairs of dorsal fleshy tubercles. On the un* Fig. 314. der side of the abdominal segments are six rétractile false legs, and a single anal rétractile proleg. It is, when disturbed, vigorous and restless, swimming quickly,. often elevating the anal slit, in which the stigmata are probably placed, out of the water to take in the air. The pupa is cylin- drical, obtuse at the head, tapering a little posteriorly, and is- of a pale yellowish brown. There are six tubercles at the mouth, above which are the trigonate three or four-jointed antennæ. The abdominal segments are furnished with a ring of appressed bristles directed back- Fig. 315. wards, and the anal spine is large, trun- cated, and terminâtes in six small, stout spines. T. atratus Fabr. is a common species ; it is black, covered with a whitish bloom, and expands nearly two inches, while the Tabanus cinctus Fabr., or Orange-belted horse-fly, is smaller and less abundant. Of the smaller species the Tabanus lineola Fabr. (Fig. 315) is so named from the whitish line along the abdomen. This fly is our most common species, thousands of them ap- pearing during the hotter parts of the summer, when the sun is shining on our marshes and Western prairies ; horses and cattle are sometimes worried to death by their harassing bites. In cloudy weather they do not fly and they perish on the cool frosty nights of September. Leptidæ Meigen. This family is easily distinguished from the preceding by the simple third joint of the antennæ, which are provided with a simple or thickened styliform bristle.ASILIDÆ. 395 The tibiæ are spurred; the larvæ slender, cylindrical; the body widening posteriorly, terminâtes in two points, while the pupa is naked, incomplète, with transverse rows of spines on the abdomen, becoming largest at the tip. The larva of Leptis vermileo Fabr. lives at the bottom of holes which it makes in sand, and thns, like the ant-lion, entraps other insects. Cyrtidæ Loew. Known by the greatly inflated thorax and abdomen this family is of but small extent, comprising species which hâve the proboscis rather obsolète, or long and bent be- neath the body. Such are the généra Cyrtus, Acrocera and Oncodes. The genus Hirmoneura represents the family Hir- MONEURIDÆ of LoeW. Mydasidæ Leach. This family, represented in this country by the single genus Midas, is easily known by the large size of the species, and by the long clavate antennæ, the fleshy labium,, and the minute empodium. The larva and pupa are said by Harris to almost exactly resemble those of the rapacious Asilidæ. The larva of Midas clavatus Drury is cylindrical, whitish, tapering before and almost rounded behind, with two spiracles in the last segment but one of the abdomen, and is two inches long. It lives and undergoes its transformations in decaying logs. (Harris.) The pupa (Fig. 316, drawn from a specimen in the Harris collection) is about an inch and a quarter long, brown, nearly cylindrical, Flg' 3ie* with a forked tail ; there are eight spines on the forepart of the body. Midas fulvipes Walsh has similar habits and it» transformations are similar ; the larva is insectivorous. Asilidæ (Asilici) Latreille. These large, stout, Robber-flies, as the Germans style them, are covered with stiff hairs, and hâve long abdomens. The third joint of the antennæ is sim- ple ; the labium forms a horny sheath, and the empodium is like a horny bristle. They are rapacious, seizing other insects and flying off with them, like the fossorial hymenoptera. Da- typogon (Fig. 271, 3, wing) has the second longitudinal vein396 DIPTERA. xunning into the border of the wing, while the anterior tibiœ end in a hooked spine. The genus Laphria is large, stout-bodied, very hirsute, the second longitudinal vein runs into the first, and the style of the antennæ is either thick and stout, and generally wanting, or entirely obsolète. In their loud buzz, swift, peculiar flight and general appearance, the species strikingly resemble humble bees. Lapliria thoracica Fabr. is nearly an inch long, and is black with yellow hairs on the thorax. Asilus is much longer, with an acutely pointed prolonged abdomen, and the species are often nearly naked, while the more essential characters lie in the union of the second longitudinal vein with the first, and the termination of the antennæ in a distinct bristle. The larvæ of Asilus sericeus Say, which feed on roots of the rhubarb plant, according to Dr. Harris, are yellowish white, about three-quarters of an inch long, a little flattened and tapering at each end, with a small brown, rétractile head, which is pro- Tided with two little horny brown hooks. The brown pupa is naked, with a pair of tubercles on the front of the head, three spines on the side, a forked tail, and a transverse row of fine teeth across each abdominal segment, by which they are en- abled to work their way to the surface. The Trupanea apivora Fitch, or Bee-killer, captures the honey bee on the wing, one having been known to kill 141 bees in a day. (Riley.) Therevidæ Westwood. This small group is characterized by the wings having the three basal cells much prolonged ; the third longitudinal vein is furcate, and the antennæ hâve a ter- minal style of variable form, sometimes wanting. There is no empodium, and the labium is fleshy. The larva is very long and slender, the abdominal rings having a double segmented appearance, with two respiratory tubes at the end of the body. They are found in garden mould and rotten wood. The pupa is oblong, with two spines on the front of the head, and three on the side of the thorax. Westwood States that the larva of a species of Thereva, which is like a wire-worm in shape, feeds on the pupæ of some moths. Bombyliidæ Latreille. These pretty Aies are very hirsute,SYRPHIDÆ. 39Î with an oval body and long proboscis; the wings hâve the three basal cells mucli prolonged, witli the anterior intercal- ary vein présent almost without exception, the posterior always wanting. The third joint of the antennæ is simple, and the empodium quite rudimentary. They are exceedingly swift on the wing and are found in sunny paths and glades early in the spring and throughout the summer. They can only be cap- tured when alighted on the ground. The eggs are laid in the nests of bees, and the half cylindrical, long, fleshy, smooth, unarmed larvæ devour the bee larvæ, while the pupa is spiny, armed on the head with horny lamellæ. In the genus Bomby- lius the body is ovate, with long dense hairs and a small head. The eyes of the male are grown together, and the legs are very slender. A species is known in England to lay its eggs at the opening of the holes of Andrena, whose larvæ and pupæ are devoured by the larvæ of the fly. Systropus is very long and slender, and wasp-like, as in Conops, with the proboScis equal- ling the thorax in length. The genus Anthrax is more flattened and oblong in shape than Bombylius, with a short proboscis ; the eyes are not connected in the males. The species are gaily colored, the wings often partially black ; they fly in paths in the hottest days of summer. The larvæ are parasitic on bees, and in their transformations closely resembJe those of Bombylius. Audouin has found Anthrax morio in the nest of Anthophora, and Westwood has found the pupa-skin in the nest of Megachile, while the larva has, in England, more re- cently been found to be parasitic in the nests of certain An- drenidæ. We hâve received from Mr. J. Angus the larva and pupa (Plate 4, figs. 6, 7) of Anthrax sinuosa Wiedemann, which is parasitic in tho nest of Xylocopa Virginica. Syrphidæ Leacho These gaily colored Aies, so useful to ag- riculturists from their habit of feeding upon Plant-lice, closely resemble the wasps in form and coloration, Jiaving hemis- pherical heads, large broad eyes, and rather flattened bodies ornamented with yellow bands and spots. The wings hâve the three basal cells much prolonged, the third longitudinal vein simple, a spurious longitudinal vein between the third and fourth longitudinal veins ; while the fourth longitudinal vein is united398 DIPTERA. at its end with the third, and there is no intercalary vein. The génital armor of the male is unsymmetrical, and there is no empodium. They hover in the hot sun over and about flowers, resting upon them to feed on their sweets. The larvæ either live in the water, when the body ends in a long extensile breathing tube ; or are terrestrial, living in decay ing wood, or parasitically in nests of bees, or, as in Syrphus, live among plant- lice. The singular spherical larva of Mi- crodon globosus (Fig. 317 ; a, puparium ; s, spiracular tubercles ; v, vent ; 6, anterior view of the same ; c, larva just before pupation) is found, according to Mr. Sanborn, under sticks in company with shells. Mïlesia strikingly resembles, in its style of coloration and form, the common large yellow wasp. The antennæ are short, drooping, with a stout oval terminal joint, and a subterminal bristle. M. excentrica Harris, with its yellow spots and bands resembles a wasp. Eristalis is well known by its aquatic “rat-tailed” larvæ, the abdomen terminating in a long respiratory tube equalling the body in length, with two stigmata at the end, which they pro- trude out of the water. There are seven pairs of prolegs, more distinct than in any other genus in the entire suborder. The pupa is found buried in the earth. The body of the larva shor- tens and hardens, forming the puparium, which is provided with four horns, serving as organs of respiration. The species of Eristalis* aie seen flying abundantly about Fig. 317. ♦Jules Kunckel has recently detected a true peritrachial circulation in Eristalis, thus confirming the discoveries of Blanchard and Agassiz. He saw the blood imprisoned between the inner air tube and the envelope of the trachea, and pene- trating into the capillary termination of those tracheæ, and saw the flow of the blood globules in the peritracheal space. This peritracheal circulation thus seems to correspond with thearterial circulation of the vertebrate animais, and the mi- nute branches of the tracheæ are capillaries, and the blood is arterial. “ En résumé, the tracheæ of insects, air tubes in their central portion, blood vessels in their peripheral portion [i. e., the space surrounding the air tube] become at their extremities true arterial capillaries.” “The blood in the peritracheal space re- mains through ail its course in contact with the oxygen; it arrives at the capilla*SYRPHIDÆ. 39» Fig. 318. flowers in the spring, and are common throughout the spring. They scoop up the pollen of the flowers with their maxillæ. We hâve received from Mr. E. T. Cox the puparium (Fig. 318) of a species which in- habits the sait vats of the Equality Sait, Works of Gallatin County, 111. The pupa- rium of a species of Helopliïlus closely re- sembling that figured by Westwood (Class. Insects, Fig. 131, 8), has been found living in the sait water canal of the Naumkeag Factory leading into Salem Harbor, and is in the Muséum of the Peabody Academy. Closely allied to Eristalis is the genus Merodon, of which M. bardus Say (Fig. 319 ; a, puparium, natural size) is fre- Fig. 319. quently met with. Its thorax, the first abdominal ring and the side of the second are cov- ered with short yellow hairs ; it is .70 of an inch in length. The puparium is of the same length, and is cylindrical, ending suddenly in a re- spiratory filament a little longer than the body ; it is quite stout, contracting be- yond its middle into a slender filament. On each abdominal ring is a pair of small, low, flattened tubercles crowned by a number of radiating spinules. Its larva is undoubtedly aquatic, like that of Eris- talis. Mr. Sanborn has also reared from the pupa state M. Narcissi, which probably lives in the soil about decaying bulbs, as the puparium has no respira- tory tube, but instead a very short sessile trun- cated projection, scarcely as long as it is thick, with a pair of stigmata in the end ; the body is cylindrical and rounded alike at each end, with a slight con- Fig. 320. Fig. 321. ries perfectly vivified; it is a true arterial blood. These eapillaries are not m communication with the venons eapillaries ; the blood is taken up by the tissues, It nourishes them and flows into the venous lacunæ, and the lacunar currents carry it to the dorsal vessel.” Annales des Sciences Naturelles, 1868.400 DIPTERA. traction behind the middle of the head ; its surface is rough* ened with transverse wrinkles, but no regularly marked sutures* indicating the divisions between the segments, are apparent. It has been introduced from Europe, according to Mr. Sanborn, by the importers of Dutch bulbs. The well known genus Syi'phus (Fig 320, S. politus Say) so useful in reducing the immense numbers of plant-lice, lays a single egg in a group of plant-lice, which hatches out a footless, eyeless, flattened, transversely wrinkled, gaily colored green and purple maggot (Fig. 321) having a very extensile body, which enables it to reach up and grasp the Aphis by the peculiar sucking mouth-parts. When fully grown the larva adhères by means of a glutinous sécrétion to a leaf, its body contracts and hardens, forming a half cylindrical puparium. The species of Volucella are parasitic in their habits, the larvæ feeding on those of Bombus. They are long, “narrowed in front, transversely wrinkled, with fine latéral points, and the tail is armed with six radiating points ; the mouth is armed with two bifid mandibles, and three pairs of tentacula.”' (Westwood.) The pupæ are not known. The fly would be easily mistaken for a bee, nearly attaining the size of the worker Humble-bee, being remarkably plump and hirsute. J. Künckel States that in Europe two species are known to live in the nests of Yespa. Conopidæ Leach. The species of this family bear some resemblance to the wasp, Eumenes, from their long, slen- der, pedicelled abdomen. The three basal cells of the wings are large, the third closed, more or less remote from the pos- terior border, and ail the longitudinal veins are simple. The eyes in both sexes are smaller than in the preceding family, being separated. The proboscis is, with a few exceptions, much prolonged, and the third joint of the antennæ has either an apical style or a thick dorsal bristle. The male génital armor is symmetrical and turned beneath the abdomen. The flask-shaped larva of Conops is “ soft, whitish, eleven-jointed, with a long neck and a mouth armed with lips and hooks (man- dibles), and two latéral elevated plates supporting the two spiracles.” It was found by Lâchât and Audouin living in the-CONOPIDÆ. 401 abdomen of Bombus. It is also said by St. Fargeau to live in the nest of Yespa, and Conops Jlavipes was bred, according to Curtis, from the body of Osmia. Mr. S. S. Saunders has observed in Epirus the habits of a species which lives in the abdomen of Pompilus audax Smith. The fly lays its eggs in June in the adult Pompilus, probably ovipositing between the abdominal segments. During August the larvæ become fully grown, probably in ten or fifteen days. The puparium is oval, of an uniform, deep, piceous hue, and the fly works its way through the first and second abdominal rings of the wasp, whose abdomen then breaks in two. Saunders also found a similar Conops larva in Sphex flavipennis, cap- tured at the same time and place as the Pompilus ; also a smaller species of Conops was bred from the abdomen of Odynerus. We hâve also bred a species from one of two species of Bom- bus, either B. vagans or B. fer- vidus. In Myopa the antennal bristle is subterminal, and the probos- cis is twice elbowed. Westwood has observed Myopa atra fly- ing about sand-banks in which were the burrows of various bees, and by other authors the genus is said to be parasitic on bees. The genus Pipunculus represents a small group in which the head is almost entirely occupied by the eyes, the front and face being exceedingly narrow, while the antennæ hâve a basal bristle. Loew considers the genus Scenopinus as the type of a dis- tinct family, hinting at its relationship with the Bombyliidæ. The genus is known by the short antennæ, without style or bris- tle ; and by the short proboscis with its broad fleshy end. The larvæ are long, very slender, miich like those of Thereva, and the pupa is much like that of Leptis. Mr. Sanborn has reared S.pallipes Say (Fig. 322 ; a, larva). The larva is.found under 26402 DIPTERA. oarpets, and is remarkable for the double segmented appearance of ail the abdominal segments, except the last one, so that the body, exclusive of the head, seems as if twenty-jointed instead of having but twelve joints. The head is conical, one-third longer than broad, and of a reddish brown color, while the body is white. It is .65 of an inch in length. The larva is also said to live in rotten wood, and is too scarce to be destruc- tive to carpets. The fly is black, with a metallic hue, and with pale feet. The genus Platypeza also represents the Platypezidœ of Meigen, the antennæ of which hâve an apical bristle, with the male génital armor (hypopygium) turned symmetrically under the abdomen. The middle tibiæ are provided with spurs, and the empodium is wanting. The larva is fiat, with rigid curved bristles along the side. It lives in rotten mushrooms. Empidæ Leach. The species of this family closely resemble the Asilidæ in their long body, incumbent wings, and rapaci- ous, carnivorous habits. The first joint of the antennæ is not much shortened, and the third joint has an apical or dorsal bristle, while the empodium is usually membranaceous and of a linear form. The head is small, spherical, the eyes United in the male ; the proboscis is horny, without a distinct tongue, and bent upon the breast. The slender larvæ, whose segments are much constricted, arc found in garden mould. The species hover in swarms over standing water, flying backwards and for- wards as if by a common impulse. They appear very early in the spring, or in autumn. The généra Hybos and Tachydromia xepresent small groups which are closely allied to Empis. Dolichopodidæ Latreille. Loew has characterized this well marked family as generally comprising metallic green, brisk and restless Diptera of small or medium size, predatory on other insects, and living principally in damp situations ; the larvæ living under ground or in decaying wood. The head is hemispherical, the eyes large and hairy, the antennæ are stretched straight out, with a two-jointed bristle. The probos- cis is short and stout, concealed above by the single jointed, usually scale-shaped palpi, with a wide opening which can beŒSTRIDÆ. 403 shut by the protruding suctorial flaps. The wings do not hâve the auxiliary vein running towards the anterior margin ; the an- terior basal cell is very short ; and the discoidal cell coalescent with the second basal cell, while the posterior basal cell is very small. They are mostly “found on the leaves of aquatic plants, on stones partly overflown with water, on dams and near water- falls ; some of them are able to run rapidly over the water, even when it is rippled by the wind (Hydophorus) ; others are fond of sait or brackish waters (Aphrosylus, Thinophilus and some Hydrophorus) ; the species of Medeterus prefer dry situations, and are found on stumps of trees, fences, etc., even in very dry and hot weather.” Œstridæ Leach. Bot-flies, Breeze-flies. In these Aies, so interesting in their habits, the body is stout, hairy, like the Humble bees, and they are easily recognized by having the opening of the mouth very small, with rudimentary oral or- gans. The middle part of the face is exceedingly narrow, and the minute antennæ are inserted in rounded pits. The eggs hatch very soon after laying, and Riley (First Annual Report on the Noxious Insects of Missouri, p. 164) thinks, from the testimony of three independent witnesses, that the sheep bot- fly is viviparous, the larvæ hatching within the body of the parent, who deposits in the nostrils of the sheep the “perfectly formed and living grub.” The larvæ are, in general, thick, fleshy, footless grubs, con- sisting of eleven segments exclusive of the head, which are spined and tuberculated, the former in rows, which enable them to move about readily when living under the skin or in the frontal sinus and thus greatly irritate the animais on which they live. The stigmata are placed in a scaly plate on the thick- ened posterior end of the body. The mouth of the cutaneous larvæ consists simply of fleshy tubercles, while in those species that live in the stomach and frontal sinuses of their hosts, it is provided with horny hooks. While in this state they moult twice, and then attain their full size. They feed on the puru- lent matter originating from the irritation produced by the movements of their bodies. Just before assuming the pupa state, the larva leaves its peculiar habitat, descends into the404 DIPTERA. Fig. 323. ground, and there becomes a coarctate pupa, enclosed within the old larva skin, and remaining in connection with it by means of four tracheæ. The genus Gastrophilus has very smalL mouth-parts, the deep lying palpi being somewhat spherical, and the proboscis nearly obsolète, while the abdomen is sessile. The species are of medium size, short and thick, and very hairy. The female deposits her eggs on the horse’s hips and legs, whence the larvæ are introduced into the stomach. The body of the larva widens posteriorly ; the mandibles are not visible, and the maxillæ con- stitute the so-called mouth-hooks, by which the larva grapples and adhères to the walls of the horse’s stomach. The rudimentary antennæ are Fis- 324> indicated by an ocellus-like point. The Horse Bot-fly, Gas- trophilus equi Fabr. (Fig. 323 ; fig. 324, larva), in its perfect State is pale yellowish, spotted with red, with a grayish yellow hirsuties ; the thorax is banded with black, or sometimes, though rarely, reddish hairs. The hinder trochanters are hooked in the males, and tuberculated in the females, and the wings are banded with reddish, with two spots at the apex. The larvæ live from May till October, and when fully grown. hang by their mouth-hooks on the edge of the rectum, whenccŒSTRIDÆ « 405 they are carried out in the excrement. The pupa state lasts from thirty to forty days, and the perfect fly appears the next season from June to October. In Hypoderma the palpi are entirely wanting. The species are oither very large, or of medium size, and often quite small, cov- ered with fine dense hairs. The legs are long and slender. The Hypoderma bovis Degeer (Fig. 325, a, larva) or Bot-fly of the ox, is black, densely pilose ; the front of the head is dirty ashen, with whitish yellow hairs. The naked black thorax is twice broadly banded with yellow and white ; the scutellum has .slight tubercles ; the abdomen is black, with a basal white or yellowish band, amesial black band, and at the end is a reddish orange band of hairs. The larvæ are found during the month of May and in the summer in the tumors on the backs of cattle, and when fully grown, which is generally in Juty, work their way out and fall to the ground. They exist in the puparium twen- ty-six to thirty days, and the fly appears from June to September. This species is found over ail the oivilized portions of the world. Hypoderma tarandi Linn. infests, in like manner, the Reindeer. The genus Œstromyia is thought to inhabit the Hare. Œstrus ovis Linn., the Sheep Bot-fly, is of a seen about flowers, in * Fig. 331, A, larva of Musca domestica, just hatched, showing the distribu- tion of the two main tracheæ, and the anterior and posterior commissures (a, a), dorsal view. B, the larva in the second stage; sp, spiracle. C, spiracle enlarged. F, head of the same larva, enlarged ; bl9 labrum (?); md, mandibles;, mx, maxillæ ; at, antennæ. E, a terminal spiracle much enlarged. D, pupa- rium ; sp, prothoracic spiracle. Ail the figures much enlarged.MUSCIDÆ. 411 the larva State live in decaying vegetable matter and in privies. They are smaller Aies than the foregoing généra, with smaller alulae, and the fourth longitudinal vein of the wing is straight, thus leaving the first posterior cell fully open. The larvæ are generally much like those of the meat-fly, but are thicker, while others, belonging to the genus Homalomyia, are fiat- tened and hairy. The Radish-Ay, Anthomyia raphani Harris, abounds in the roots of the radish, the fly appearing towards the end of June. Another species, the Onion-fly, Anthomyia ceparum (Fig. 332), causes the leaves of the onion to turn yellow and die from the attacks of the larvæ in the roots. The larvæ mature in two weeks, transform in the root, and two weeks later disclose the Aies. Mr. Walsh suggests that the larvæ may be de- stroyed by pouring boiling hot water over the young plants, which, with- out injuring the on- ions, destroys the m a g g o t s . The Fig. 332. Seed-corn Maggot, the larva of Anthomyia zeœ Riley (Fig. 344, p. 419, a, larva; &, puparium ; c, kernels eaten), destroys, in New Jersey, the kernels of sprouted corn before it cornes up. The Cabbage maggot, the larva of A. brassicæ Bouché, a com- mon Ay in Europe, has been found in Michigan to be injurious to the cabbage. (Riley.) The hairy maggots of Homalomyia cunicularis live in rotten turnips. (Harris.) The puparium (Plate 3, Ag. 5, 5 a) of another species has been found by Mi\ F. W. Putnam in the nests of the humble bee. In Ortalis the front is quite prominent, the clypeus is greatly developed, the opening of the mouth wide, and the proboscis much thickened. This genus comprises variously banded and spotted Aies, which may be seen walking along leaves vibrating their wings. They feed on the leaves, and afterwards the pulpy fruit of the cherry, olive and orange. Another Onion- Ay, discovered by Dr. Shimer in Illinois, is the Ortalis Jlexa412 DIPTERA. of Wiedemann (Fig. 333 ; a, larva). The fly diflers from the Anthomyia ceparum, besides more important respects, in hav- ing black wings with three broad curved bands. The maggot feeds in the root thus killing the top of the plant. A species of Trypeta, aceording to F. Smith, which in Brazil is called the “ Berna ” fly, deposits its eggs in wounds, both on man and beast. “It is remarkable from having the apical in their nostrils whilst they are sleeping, and such are the •effects of its attacks, that, in some cases, death ensues.” (Transactions of the Entomological Society, London, 1868, p. 135.) To the genus Lonchœa, Osten Sacken refers, with considér- able doubt, a fly, which I hâve found in abundance, raising blister-like swellings on the twigs of the willow. They were région is the thickest. The rings are thickened upon their pôs- terior edges, so that they appear contracted in the middle. It is glassy green, with two little elongated tubercles placed near each other at a little distance from the end, where in the pupa they are terminal. It is .15 of an inch long when fully ex- tended. The pupa-case, found late in May, is oval, long, cy- lindrical and obtiise at both ends ; the anterior end is more blunt ; the first segment of the body is minute and forms the segment of the ab- domen elongated into a long oviposi- tor. Mr. Peckolt says the negroes suffer much from the attacks of this fly, which frequent- ly deposits its eggs a Fig. 333. Fig. 334. fully grown in April. The larva (Fig. 334, fly; «, the larva ; 6, the pupa) is curved, cylindrical, tapering nearly alike towards each extremity, though the thoracicMUSCIDÆ. 413 lid, which opens when the fly makes its exit, and bears two small slender tubercles which project upwards. The posterior end bears two terminal spine-like tubercles similar to those on the head, but projecting horizontally. The puparium is glassy green, and the limbs of the enclosed pupa can be partially seen through the skin. The rings are (especially on the thorax) spinose, being the remnants of the rows of spines around the hind edge of the larval segments. It is .15 of an inch long. The pupa lies a short distance from the opening of its burrow, which is about half an inch long, and is situated between the wood and the bark. The larva before pupa- ting eats away the bark, leaving a thin outer scale, or roundish black space which can be folded back like a lid, which the fly pushes open when it emerges. Several swellings occur on the twig in the space Fig- 335* of six inches. The fly appeared the 25th of June. Dufour States that in Europe Lonchœa nigra lives in the outer bark of the oak, and another under the bark of the poplar, while still another species makes a sort of gall in the dogsgrass. The genus Sphyracephala is remarkable for its stalked eyes, which are placed on long stems going out from the sides of the head. Some species are found fossil in the Prussian amber. S. brevicornis Say is rather rare. The Cheese maggot is the larva of Piopliila casei (Fig. 335) a shining black fly, three-twentieths of an inch long, with the four posterior legs 3rellowish, and with transparent wings. The whitish larva is cylindrical, and .22 of an inch in length, and is acutely pointed towards the head and truncated behind, with two long horny stigmata in the middle of the truncature, and two longer fleshy filaments on the lower edge. When moving it extends its mouth-hooks, and pulls itself along by them. Mr. F. W. Putnam has called my attention to the power of leaping possessed by the maggot. When about to414 DIPTERA. leap the larva brings the under side of the abdomen towards the head, while laying on its side, and reaching forward with its head, and at the same time extending its mouth- hooks, grapples by means of them with the hinder edge of the truncature and pulling hard, suddenly with- draws them, jerking itself to a distance of four or fiye inches. The Wine-fly (Fig. 336, puparium) also belongs to the same genus, and with its puparium may be found floating in old wine and cider. Several species of the genus Ephydra hâve been Fig. 336. found living in sait water. Mr, E. T. Cox has sent us specîmens of Ephydra halophila Pack. (Fig. 337 ; a, wing ; 5, puparium), which in the pupa state lives in great numbers in the first graduation house of the Equality Sait Works of Gallatin County, Illinois. The larva itself we hâve not seen, but the puparium is cylindrical, half an inch long, the body ending in a long respiratory tube forked at the end. The fly itself is coppery green, with pale honey yellow legs, and is .15 of an inch in length. Another spe- cies has been found by Professor B. Silliman liv- ing in great abundance in Mono Lake, Cal., and in the Muséum of the Pea- body Academy are pu- paria of this genus from Labrador, and from under sea-weed on Narragansett Bay, and a pool of brack- ish water at Marblehead ; Fig. 337. they are noticed by the author in the “Proceedings of the Essex Institute,” vol. vi. The Apple Fly, or Drosophila, has habits like the apple midge. Mr. W. C. Fish has described in the “ American Naturalist,” the habits of an unknown species (Fig. 338 ; a, larva), which he writes me has been very common this year in Barnstable County, Mass. He says that “it attacks mostlyMUSCIDÆ. 415 the earlier varieties, seeming to hâve a particular fondness foi- the old fashioned Summer, or High-top Sweet. The larvæ en- ter the apple usually where it has been bored by the Apple- worm (Carpocapsa), not uncommonly through the crescent-like puncture of the curculio, and sometimes through the calyx, when it has not been troubled by other insects. Many of them arrive at maturity in August, and the fly soon appears, and successive générations of the maggots follow until cold weather. I hâve frequently found the pupæ in the bottom of barrels in a cellar in the winter, and the Aies appear in the spring. In the early apples, the larvæ work about in every direction. If there are several in an apple, they make it unfit for use. Apples that appear per- fectly sound when taken from the tree, will some- times, if kept, be ail alive with them in a few Fig- 338. weeks.” Other species are known to inhabit putrescent vegetable matter, especially fruits. Mr. B. D. Walsh alsodes- cribes in his “ First Annual Report on the Noxious Insects of Illinois,” another apple fly, Trypeta pomonella Walsh, which destroys stored apples, and has been found troublesome in va- rions parts of the country. In England Oscinis granarius Curtis lives in the stems of wheat. The Oscinis vastator Curtis does serious damage to wheat and barley crops in England, by eating the base of the stalk. The larvæ are fully grown late in June, and a month later, the fly appears. Their attacks are restrained by numer- ous Pteromali, and a minute Proctotrupid (Sigalphus caudatus) oviposits in the egg of the Oscinis. Other allied species in the larva state cause the stems of wheat and barley to swell twice their usual size, which disease is termed in England the goût. The larvæ of Chlorops lineata Fabr. in Europe, destroy the central leaves and plant itself, the female laying her eggs on the stems when the wheat begins to show the ear. In a fort- night the eggs hatch, and the fly appears in September. Curtis also States that Chlorops Herpinii Guérin, attacks the ears of416 DIPTERA. barley, from six to ten larvæ being found in each, and by de- stroying the flowers render the ear stérile. Oscinis frit Linn. in Europe inhabits the husks of the barley, and destroys one- tenth of the grain. Linnæus calculated the annual loss from the attacks of this single species at half a million dollars. Ploughing and harrowing are of no use in guarding against these insects, as they do not transform in the earth ; the best remedy lies in the rotation of crops. Many of these small Aies, like the micro-lepidoptera, are leaf-miners, and are not readily distinguished from them when in the larva state. Of the genus Pliora, a European species (P. incras- sata Fig. 339 ; a, larva ; 6, puparium) frequents bee hives, and is thought by some Fig-m to produce the disease which is known among apiarians as “foulbrood.” In the pupiparous Diptera, namely, those Aies which are born as pupæ from the body of the parent, the larva state having been passed within the oviduct, the thorax is more closely agglutinated than before ; the head is small and sunken in the thorax, and in the wingless species this consolidation of the head and thorax is so marked as to cause them to bear a remarkable resemblance to the spiders. Spider-like in their looks, they are spider-like in their habits, as the names Spider- Aies, Bat-ticks and Bird-ticks, imply a likeness to the lower spiders or ticks. The antennæ are very deeply inserted and partially obsolète ; the labrum is ensheathed by the maxillæ, and the thoracic nervous ganglia are, as in the Arachnida, concentrated into a single mass. Hippoboscidæ Westwood. The Forest-Aies and Sheep Ticks are characterized by the horny and Aattened body, the horizontal Aattened head received into the front edge of the thorax, the large eyes, the rudimentary papilla-like antennæ placed very near together, and the proboscis is formed by the labrum and maxillæ, whose palpi are wanting ; the labium is very short ; wings with the veins présent only on the costalHIPPOBOSCIDÆ. 417 edge, the others either aborted or only partially deyeloped.. They resemble the lice in their parasitic habits, living beneath the hairs of vertebrates, especially of bats, and are abundant beneath the feathers of birds. These Aies differ from ail other insects in their peculiar mode of development, which reminds us of the intra-uterine life of the vertebrate fœtus. According to Dufour and Leuckart they hâve an irregular uterus-like enlargement of the oviduct, which furnishes a milk-like sécrétion for the nourishment of the larvæ. The body of the larvæ, for each female produces but one or two young, when first hatched is not divided into rings, but is smooth, ovate, egg-like, forming a puparium-like case in which the larvæ transform to pupæ immediately after birth. The Forest-fly or Horse-tick, Hippobosca Latreille, has no ocelli, with five stout veins on the costal edge of the wing; thorax broad, and the proboscis short and thick. We figure a species* of this genus (Fig. 340) which was found on the Great Horned Owl. Its body is much flattened, adapted for its life under the feathers, where it gorges itself with the blood of its host. The genus Lipoptena, which has ocelli, with only three costal veins, a long slender probos- Fig. 341. cis, and a small thorax, is remarkable for living in its wing- less state on the Deer, but when the wings are developed it is found on the Grouse (Tetrao). The Bird-tick, Omithomyiar has ocelli, a short proboscis and six costal veins, and there are numerous species, ail bird parasites. * Hippobosca bubonis n. sp. female. Uniform horn color, with a reddish tinge,. and blackish hairs; legs paler, with dark tarsi, body beneath paler; tip of abdo- men black, with long bristles. Length of body .30 inch ; of a wing .34 inch. Dif- fers from H. equinæ in being larger, and in its uniform reddish color. Taken Oct» 5; Muséum of the Peabotfr Academy of Science. 27418 DIPTERA. In tfce wingless Sheep-tick, Melophagus ovinus Linn. wkich is often very troublesome (Fig. 341, and puparium), the head is wider than the thorax, the proboscis is as long as the head itself, the limbs are short and thick, and the bristly abdomen is broad and not divided into joints. The genus Camus, which was placed in the Conopidœ by Nitzsch, seems rather to belong here. C. hemapterus Nitzsch, is uof the size of a flea, with minute rudi- ments of wings, and is parasitic on birds of the genus Sturnus.” Nycteribidæ Leach. The Bat-ticks are remarkably spider-like, with a beaker-like head, without eyes, having four ocelli, or else entirely blind. The finger-like, two-jointed antennæ are situated on the under side of the head. The proboscis is feather-like, the palpi very large and por- rect ; the legs are of great size, with the basal joint of the tarsi of remarkable length, and the hairy abdomen is composed of six segments. They are very small parasites, one or two lines in length. Westwood has extracted the puparium from the body, showing the close relationship ■of these strange forms to Hippobosca. Nycteribia Westwoodii Guérin (Fig. 342) is an East Indian species. Braulina Gerstaecker. The Bee-lice are wingless, minute, Jblind insects, with large heads ; the thorax is transverse, ring- shaped, half as long as the head ; the abdomen is round, five-jointed, and the legs are thick, with long claws ena- bling them to cling to the hairs of bees. The genus Branla may be compared with Fis- the flea, its bodv being flattened vertically, while that of the flea is flattened lat-BRAULINA. 419 erally. While the transformations of Braula show it to be undoubtedly a degraded Muscid, with a true puparium ; those of the flea, with its worm-like, more highly organized larva, and the free obtected pupa show that, though wingless, it occupies a much higher grade in the dipterous sériés. Braula cœca Nitzsch (Fig. 343, and larva) is found living parasitically on the honey bee in Europe, and has not been detected in this country. The antennæ are short, two-jointed and sunken in deep pits. It is from one-half to two-thirds of a line long. The larva is headless, oval, eleven-jointed and white in color. On the day it hatches from the egg it sheds its skin and changes to an oval puparium of a dark brown color. It is a body para- site, one or two of them occurring on the body of the bee, though sometimes they greatly multiply and are very trouble- some to the bee. We now take up the second sériés of suborders of the hexa- podous insects, in which the different segments of the body show a strong tendency to remain equal in size, as in the larva state ; in other words there is less concentration of the parts towards the head. In ail these groups the prothorax is greatly developed, generally free, while the wings tend to conceal the two posterior thoracic segments, and the body generally is elongated, flattened or angulated, not cylindrical as is usually the case in the preceding and higher sériés. The degraded wingless forms resemble the worm-like Myriapods, while, as we hâve seen above, the wingless Aies resemble the Arachnida. The imago (especially in the Hemiptera, Orthoptera and cer- tain Neuroptera) resembles the larva ; that is, the metamor- phosis is less complété than in the preceding groups. Fig. 344. Anthomyia zeœ Riley.420 COLEOPTERA. COLEOPTERA. In the highest suborder of this sériés, the Coleoptera, we find the most complété metamorphosis and the greatest speci- alization of parts, with a more complété con- centration of them to- wards the head than in the lower suborders. They are at once rec- ognized by the elytra, or thickened horny fore wings, which are not actively used in flight (the hind wings being especially adapted for that purpose), while they cover and encase the two posterior seg- ments of the thorax and the abdomen. The prothoracic ring is greatly enlarged, often excavated in front to re- ceive the head. These characters are very per- sistent ; there are few aberrant forms and the suborder is remarkably homogeneous and easily lirai ted. The head is free from Fig. 345. the thorax, but less so than in the preceding suborders ; it is scarcely narrowed behind, and its position is usually horizontal. The eyes are usually FlO. 345, under surface of Harpalus caliginosus. (After Leconte.) a, ligula; 6, paraglossæ ; c, supports of labial palpi; d, labial palpus; e, mentum;/, inner lobe of maxilla; g, outer lobe of maxilla; h, maxillary palpus; i, mandible; kyCOLEOPTERA, 421 quite large, and there is but a pair of ocelli, when présent, or there may be but a single ocellus. The antennæ are generally inserted just in front of the eyes, and rarely between them as Fig. 346. in the previous suborders. They are either filiform where the joints are cylindrical, as in the Carabidœ, not enlarging towards the end, or serrate, as in the Elateridœ, where the buccal opening; Z, giila or throat; m, m, buccal sutures; n, gular suture; o, pro- sternum ;jy, episternum of prothorax; jp, epimeron of prothorax; ç, y*, q41, coxæ; r, r1, r", trochanters; s,a',aM,femora or thighs; t, tf',tf",tibiæ; v, v9,v*,etc., ventral abdominal segments; «r, episterna of mesothorax (the epimeron is just behind it); uc, mesotemum ; y, episternum of metathorax ; y', epimeron of metathorax ; z, meta sternum. Fig. 346, upper surface of Necrophorus Americanus. (After Leconte.; a, man- dible ; b, maxillary palpus ; c, labrum ; d, clypeus ; e, antennæ ; /, front ; y, vertex ; hy occiput; i, neck; k, eye; l, pronotum (usually called prothorax); m, elytron; n, hind wing; o, scutellum (of mesothorax) ; p, metanotum (or dorsal surface of meta- thorax); qf fémur or thigh; r, r, r, tergites of the abdomen; a, a3, a3, spiracles or stigmata; t, f, f't tibiæ; v, tibial spurs; w, tarsi.422 COLEOPTERA. joints are triangular and compressed, giving thereby a serrate outline to the inner edge; or clavate, as in the JSilphidœy where the enlarged terminal joints give a rounded club-shaped termination ; lamellate, when the terminal joints are prolonged internally, forming broad leaf-like expansions, as in the Sca- rabeidœ, while the geniculate antenna is produced when Fig. 347. Different forms of antennæ : 1, serrate ; 2, pectinate ; 3, capitate (and aiso geniculate); 4,5, 6, 7, clavate; 8, 9, lamellate; 10, serrate (Dorcatoma); 11, ir- regular (Gyrinus); 12, two-jointed antenna of Adranes cæcus. Fig. 348. 1, bipectinate ; 2, flabellate antennæ ; 3, maxillæ of Bembidium ; 4, of Hydrophilus; 5, of Pselaphus; 6, maxillary palpus of Ctenistes; 7, of Tmesipho» lus; 8, of Tychus.—Fr ont Leconte.COLEOPTERA. 428 the second and succeeding joints make an angle with tke first The mandibles are always well developed as chewing organs, becoming abnormally' enlarged in Lucanus, while in certain Scarabeidæ they are small and membranous. The maxillæ (Fig. 348) are supposed to préparé the food to be crushed by the mandibles. The body of the maxilla con- sists of the cardo; a second joint, stipes, to which last are attached two lobes and a palpas. In certain Cicindelidœ and Carabidœ, the outer lobe is slender and two-jointed like a palpus. The maxillary palpi are usually four-jointed, some- times with one joint less, and in but a single instance is there any additional joint, as in Aleochara. The mentum is generally square or trapezoidal, varying in size. The labium bears the ligula, and supports the labial palpi, and varying much in form, is thus important in classifi- cation. The labial palpi are usually three-jointed, sometimes two-jointed, or with no joints apparent, as in certain Staphy- linidœ, according to Leconte. The greatly enlarged prothorax is free and very movable, the pronotum or dorsal piece, considered to be formed origi- nally of four pièces, is usually very distinct from the pièces composing the flanks, though sometime they are continuons. The two hinder rings of the thorax are covered up by the wings and do not vary in form so as to be of much use in classification. They are respectively composed of a præscutum, scutum and scutellum, and postscutellum, the first and fourth pièces being more or less aborted. The pièces composing the flanks are partly concealed by the great enlargement of the dorsal parts of the segment, much more so than in the prece- ding suborders, the side pièces being much smaller and more difficult to trace ; and these flank-pieces (pleurites) help form the under surface of the body, where in the Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera and Diptera, they are greatly enlarged, forming the bulging sides of the body. The epimera and episterna of both the meso- and metatho- rax, Leconte States, are of much value in classification, especi- ally those of the mesothorax, “ according as they reach the middle coxæ, or are eut off from them by the junction of the rpisterna with the metasternum.” The thickened horny an-424 COLEOPTERA. terior pair of wings (elytra), often retain traces of the original veins, consisting of three or four longitudinal lines. Their office in flight seems to be to assist the hind wings in sustain- ing the body, as but rarely when the insect is on the wing do the elytra remain quiet on the back. The membranous hind wings are provided with the usual number of principal veins, but these are not subdivided into veinlets. The wing is long, narrow and pointed, with the costal edge strong, being evi- dently adapted for a swiffc and powerful flight. In the running species, such as many Carabidœ, the hind wings being useless, are aborted, and very rarely in some tropical Lampyridœ and Scarabœidœ are both pairs of wings wanting in both sexes, though, as in the Glow-worm and some of its allies the females are apterous. The legs are well developed, as the beetles are among the most power- ful running insects. The coxæ are large and of much use in distinguishing the families. The trochantine is usually présent in the forelegs, but often absent in the middle pair ; the tro- chanters, or second joint of the leg, is small, circular, ob- liquely eut off, and the fémur and tibia lying next beyond are of varying form, correlated with the habits of the insect, the hinder pair becoming oar-like in the swimming Dytiscidœ and some Hydrophilidœ, while in the Gyrinidœ both pairs of hind legs become broad and fiat. The number of tarsal joints varies from the normal number, five, to four and three joints, the terminal joint as usual being two-clawed. These claws are only known to be wanting in Phanæus, a Scarabæid, and the aberrant family Stylopidœ. According to the number of the tarsal joints the families of Coleoptera hâve been grouped into the Pentamera (five-jointed), the Tet- ramera (four-jointed), the Trimera (three-jointed), and Hete- rornera, which are four-jointed in the hind pair, while the first and second pairs are five-jointed. The abdomen, usually partly concealed by the wings, is ses- sile, its base broad ; in form it is usually somewhat flattened. The tergal and sternal portion of each ring is connected usually by the membranous pleural piece, which represents the epimera and episterna of the thorax, and on which the stig- mata are situated. While in the other suborders the typicalCOLEÔPTERA. 425 number of abdominal segments is ten, no more than nine hâve been traced in the Coleoptera. A few généra are capable of producing sounds by rubbing the n limbs or elytra over finely wrinkled surfaces, which in Trox are situated on the side of the basal segments of the ab- domen, and in Strategus on the tergum of the penultimate seg- ment of the abdomen, while such a surface is found in Ligyrus on the surface of the elytra. The nervous System is subject to great variation in the Cole- optera. The ganglia may be fused into three principal mas- ses, as in the Lamellicorns, Curculionidœ and Scolytidœ, where the first mass corresponds to the prothoracic ganglia, the second and larger to the second and third thoracic ganglia, usually separated in the other suborders, while the third oblong mass represents the whole number of abdominal ganglia, from which radiate the nerves which are distributed to the muscles of the abdomen and the reproductive System. In the Cistel- idœ, Œdemeridœ and Cerambycidœ, the abdominal por- tion of the nervous cord occupies the whole body, and there are five ganglia in the abdomen. These two types of the ner- vous cord sometimes run into each, but are always distinct in the larva state. The alimentary canal is very simple in the flesh-eating spe- cies, going directly, without many convolutions to the anus, but in the vegetable feeders it is very long and greatly con- voluted. The gizzard is oval in shape, its internai folds being armed with hooks. There are two salivary glands. The urin- ary tubes are either four or six in number. “The phosphorescent organs of the Lampyridœ and cer- tain Elateridœ consist of a mass of spherical cells, filled with a finely granular substance and surrounded by nümer- ous trachean branches. This substance which, by daylight, appears of a yellow, sulphur-like aspect, fills in the lam- pyridœ, a portion of the abdominal cavity, and shines on the ventral surface through the last abdominal segments, which are covered with'a very thin skin ; while with the Elateridœ, the illumination occurs through two transparent spots, situated on the dorsal surface of the prothorax. The light produced by these organs, so remarkably rich in tracheæ, is undoubtedly the426 COLEOPTERA. resuit of a combustion kept up by the air of these vessels. This combustion explains the remission of this phosphores- cence observed with the brilliant fire-flies, and which coïn- cides, not with the movements of the heart, but with those of inspiration and expiration.” (Siebold.) The tracheæ of the Coleoptera are always highly developed. In the larva state they arise from two principal trunks. In the adult, however, they branch out directly near each stigma and distribute branches which communicate with other main trunks. In those species which fly most, both the fine and larger tracheæ end in vesicles, which are distributed in great abun- dance ail over the body. In the Lucanidœ they are especi- ally numerous, thus lightening the bulk of the enormousljr developed head. The ovaries are arranged in the form of branches of few or numerous tri- or multilocular tubes ; the receptaculum seminis is wedge-shaped and often arcuate, communicating with the copulatory pouch by a long flexuous spiral séminal duct, and there is a bursa copulatrix usually présent. The testes vary in consisting of two long cœca, or two round or oblong folli- cles, or pyriform and placed like a bunch of grapes on the extremity of the vasa deferentia, or as in the Lamellicorns, Cerambycidæ, Curculionidœ and Crioceridœ, they are round, flattened, dise-like, and are situated, two to twelve in number, on each side of the body. The organ of intromissiou is very extensible, composed of the terminal segments of the body, which form a broad flattened, hairy canaliculated piece. The larvæ when active and not permanently enclosed (like the Curculio) in the substances that form their food, are elon- gated, flattened, wormlike, myriapodous-looking, with a large head, well developed mouth-parts, and with three pairs of tho- racic feet, either horny, or fleshy and rétractile, while there is often a single terminal prop-leg on the terminal segment of the body and a latéral horny spine. The larvæ of the Ceram• byeidœ are white, soft and more or less cylindrical, while those of the Curculionidœ are footless or nearly so, and resemble those of the Gall-flies, both hymenopterous and dip- terous. The pupæ hâve free limbs, and are either enclosed in cocoonaCOLEOPTERA, 427 of earth, or if wood-borers in rude cocoons of fine chips and dust, united by threads, or a viseid matter supplied by the in- sect. None are known to be coarctate, though some Coccin- ellæ transform within the old larva skin, not rejecting it, as usual in the group, while other pupæ are enclosed in the cases in which the larvæ lived. In some Staphylinidœ the pupa shows a tendency to become obtected, the limbs being soidered to the body as if it were enclosed in a common sheath. Gen- erally, however, the antennæ are folded on each side of the clypeus, and the mandibles, maxillæ and labial palpi appear as elongated papillæ. The wing-pads being small, are shaped like those of the adult Meloe, and are laid upon the posterior femora, thus exposing the meso- and inetathorax to view. The tarsal joints lie parallel on each side of the middle line of the body, the hinder pair not reaching to the tips of the abdomen, which ends in a pair of acute prolonged forked in- curved horny hooks, which must aid the pupa in working its way to the surface when about to transform into the beetle. The number of living species is between 60,000 and 80,000, and over 8,000 species are known to inhabit the United States. There are about 1,000 fossil species known. They are found as low down as the Coal Formation, though more abundant in the Tertiary deposits and especially the Amber of Prussia. Coleoptera hâve always been the favorites of entomologists. They hâve been studied, when in their perfect state, more than any other insects, but owing to the difficulty of finding their larvæ, and carrying them through their successive stages of growth, the early stages of comparatively few species are known. The most productive places for the occurrence of beetles are alluvial loams covered with woods, or with rank végétation, where at the roots of plants or upon their flowers, under leaves, logs and stones, under the bark of decaying trees, and in ditches and by the banks of streams, the species occur in the greatest numbers. Grass lands, mosses and fungi, the surfaces of trees and* dead animais, bones, chips, pièces of board and excrement, should be searched diligently. Many are thrown ashore in sea-wrack, or occur under the débris of freshets on river banks. Many Carabidœ run on sandy shores. Very428 COLEOPTERA. early in spring stones can be uptumed, ants’ nests searched, and the muddy waters sifted for species not met with at other times of the year. For beating bushes a large strong ring-net should be made, with a stout bag of cotton cloth fifteen inches deep. This is a v v very serviceable net for many purposes. Yials of 1JU alcohol, a few quills stopped with cork, and close tin boxes for larvæ and the fungi, etc., in which they live, should be provided ; indeed, the collector should never be without a vial and box. Beetles / > should be collected largely in alcohol, and the Fig. 349. colors do not change if pinned soon after being taken. Coleoptera should be placed kigh up on the pin, as in- deed ail insects should. The pin should be stuck through the right elytron (Fig. 349) so that it shall corne out beneath or between the middle and hind pair of legs. Small species should be pinned with minute pins, which can be afterwards mounted on higher ones. Cicindelidæ Leach. The Tiger Beetles hâve very large heads, much broader than the prothorax, very long curved jaws and long, slènder legs. The outer lobe of the maxillæ is biar- ticuiate, the inner usually terminated by an articulated hook. The eleven-jointed antennæ are inserted on the front above the base of the mandibles. They are brownish or greenish with metallic and purplish reflections, marked with light dots and stripes. They abound in sunny paths and sandy shores of rivers, ponds and the océan, flying and running swiftly, and are thus very Fig. 350. ^ifficult capture. The larvæ (Fig. 350) are hideous in aspect ; the head is very large with long jaws ; the thoracic rings large and broad, and the ninth ring has two large tuber- cles each ending in two hooks, by which the hunch-backed grub can climb up its hole, near the entrance of which it lies in wait for weaker insects. These holes may always be found in sandy banks frequented by the beetles. While ail the species living in the United States are ground beetles, in the tropics there are some which live on trees. H. W. Bâtes states that Ctenostoma and its allies hâve a greaterCICINDELIDÆ. 429 resemblance to ants than to the Cicindelæ proper, so much so that when the insects are seen prowling in search of prey along Fig. 351. Fig. 352. Fig. 353. the slender branches of trees, they can scarcely be distinguished from large ants of the Ponera group. The genus Amblychila has the third joint of the maxillary Fig. 354. Fig. 355. Fig. 356. Fig. 357. palpi longer than the fourth, and the flrst joint of the labial palpi very short, while the epipleuræ are wide. Omus differs in the wider epipleuræ ; both généra inhabit the Pacific States, Fig. 358. and the former is found as far east as Kansas. Tetracha (Fig. 351, T. Virginica Hope) has the first joint of the labial palpi elongated. In Cicindéla and allies, the third joint of the max-430 COLEOPTERA. illary palpi is shorter than the fourth. This country is very rich in species, among the most common of which are (7. gen- erosa Dejean (Fig. 352) ; C. vulgaris Say (Fig. 353) ; (7. pur- purea Olivier (Fig. 354) ; (7. hirticollis Say (Fig. 355) ; C. seocguttata Fabr. (Fig. 356), a bright green active species with six golden dots ; and (7. punctulata Olivier* (Fig. 357). Carabidæ Leach. This is a family of very great extent, and one very difficult to limit. In form the species vary greatly ; the antennæ are inserted behind the base of the man- dibles under a frontal ridge ; maxillæ with the outer lobe pal- piform, usually biarticulate, while the inner lobe is usually curved, acute and ciliate, with spine's. The epimera and epi- sterna of the prothorax are usually distinct ; the three anterior segments of the abdomen, usually six, rarely seven or eight in number, are connate. The legs are slender, formed for run- ning ; anterior and middle coxæ globuiar, posterior ones dilated internally, and the tarsi are five-jointed. f * Fig. 358 illustrâtes the extemal anatomy of this family:—l,head of Cicindela; 2, maxillæ of Cicindela; 3, mentum of Omus; 4, mentum of Tetracha; 5, mentum of Cicindela; 6, antennæ of the sanie; 7, abdomen of the male of the same; 8, pos- jerior coxa of the same ; 9, anterior tarsus of Omus (male) ; 10, anterior tarsus of Cicindela. — From Leconte. *Fig. 359 illustrâtes the extemal anatomy of the Carabidæ :—1, extremity of the anterior tibia of Carabus, inner face ; 2, maxillæ of Cychrus ; 3, head of Cychras ; 4, head of Carabus ; 5, antenna and part of head of Loricera ; 6, mentum of Carabus ; 7, maxilla of Carabus ; 8, under surface of Pasimachus ; 9, under surface of meso- and metathorax of Metrius; 10, anterior tibia of Metrius; 11, under surface of meso- and metathorax of Phvsea; 12, antennæ of Pasimachus; 13, mentum of Pasimachus; 14, maxilla of Pasimachus; 15, anterior tibia of Pasimachus; 16, head of Promecognathus ; 17, mentum of Pseudomorphus, showing the indistinct gular suture.—From Leconte.CARABIDÆ. 431 Fig. 360. They are, with few exceptions, predaceous beetles ; they are Tunners, the hind wings being often absent. Their colors are dull metallic or black. They run in grass, or lurk under stones and sticks, or under the bark of trees, whence they go out to hunt in the night- time. They may be found also in great numbers under the débris v-w of freshets and under stones in n the spring. Fig. 361. The larvæ are found in much the same situations as the beetles, and are generally oblong, broad, with the terminal ring armed with two horny hooks or longer filaments, and with a single false leg beneath. The genus Omophron, remark- able for its rounded convex form, and wanting the scutellum, is found on the wet sands by rivers and pools, where also Ela~ plirus occurs, which somewhat resembles Cicindela. It has slightly emarginate anterior tibiæ, with large prominent eyes, Fig. 362. and rows of large shallow ocel- late holes on the elytra. The genus Oalosoma is well known, being common in fields, where it lies in little holes in the sod, in wait for its prey. I hâve seen C. calidum Fabr. (Fig. 360) attacking the June bug (Lachnosterna fusca) tearing open its sides. Its larva (Fig. 361) is black. G. scrutator Fabr. (Fig. 362) is a still larger species with bright green elytra. It is known, accord- a Flgi 363, Cng to Harris, to ascend trees in search of canker-worms Carabus has similar habits, but differs in having the third432 COLEOPTERA. in IlijiiiiiÉ Fig. 364. élongatus joint of the antennæ cylindrical, while that of Calosoma i& greatly compressed. C. serratus Say (Fig. 363 ; a, pupa of the European C. auronitens) is black bordered with purple. The closely allied species of Cychrus, of rich purple and blue tints, differ in the longer head, the deeply bilobate labrum, and in having four of the antennal joints smooth, with thickly striated elytra. (We figure some unknown larvæ of this family which are allied to a*, a Carabus ; Fig. 364, natural ^ size ; Fig. 365, a little en- jTy larged ; a, mouth parts ; 5, end of the body, and Fig. 366, a larva apparently of the same genus.) Pasimachus Lee. (Fig. 367) has been found, according to Walsh, to prey on the Doryphora, or Potato beetle. The genus Scarites and its allies hâve Fig .365. the anterior toothed palmate tibiæ more or less produced at the apex, with a. pedunculate abdomen. In Scar- ites and Pasimachus the basal joint of the antenna is very long ; the former having the maxillæ rounded at the tip, and the tho- rax rounded behind, while in Pasimachus, the thorax is dis- Fig. 367. tinctly ang7?lated, and the max- illæ are hooked. In Clivina the basal joint of the an- Fi»- 366* tennæ is short, the mandibles fiat and acute, and the clypeus is not emarginate. In Harpalus and allies the epimera of the mesotho- rax do not extend to the coxæ, and the mesosternum is large, widely separating the middle coxæ. Of this , group Brachinus (B. fumans Fabr. Fig. 368), the Bombardier beetle, with its narrow head and cordate Fig. 368. prothorax, is remarkable for discharging with quite an explosion from its anal glands a pungent fluid, probableCARABIDÆ. 433 of use as a protection against its enemies. They are yellow- îsh red, with bluish and greenish elytra. Helluomorpha (H. præusta Lap. Fig. 369 ; a, mentum) has a , large mentum and much compressed antennœ. Galerita is similar but much larger, with a red thorax, and blue or black * elytra. Fig. 370 represents the larva ; Fig. 371 the pupa Flg* 369, of 6r. Lecontei Dejean, a Southern species. Casnonia has a rhomboidal head, with a long narrow neck and a cylindrical tho- rax. (7. Pensylvanica De- jean (Fig. 372) is not un- common, being found under stones. The species of Lebia are found upon flowers, especially the golden rod, in August and September. They are gaily colored, with the head con- stricted behind and the thorax pedunculate. The Platynus (P. cupripenne Say, Fig. 373) are often of brilliant metallic green and red colors. In Cymin- dis, which is hairy, the head is not constricted behind, and the^ last joint of the labial palpi is dilated. In Pterosti- chus, which is a genus of great extent, the three basal joints of the antennæ are smooth, the anterior tibiæ are thickened at the ex-< tremity, and the dilated tarsal joints are triangular or cordate. The species are Fig. 372. black and of common occurrence. Amara differs in the head not being narrowed behind, the slightly Fig. 373. emarginate labrum and the elytra being without the usual punctures. Zimmerman States that the species are annual, or double brooded annually ; the eggs, which are laid beneath the surface of the soil, do not mature for several days after coupling ; the larvæ moult once, live six to eight 28 Fig. 370. Fig. 371. species of4M COLEQPTERA. Fig. 374. weeks, and the pupa lives half that time ; the beetles often hibernate. The larva has the general form of that of Poecilus. The species of Harpalus are large, with a very square prothorax. H. caliginosus Say (Fig. 374) is béné- ficiai in eating cut-worms and other ' injurious larvæ. Fig. 375 represents: a larva supposed to belong to this or ! an allied genus. The blind Anoph- thalmus TeUkampfii Erichs. from the Mammoth Cave, has no eyes, while the legs are very long, especially the narrow fore tibiæ ; but in Tre- chus, which is closely allied to the blind Cave Beetle, the eyes are as large as usual, and the legs stouter. Fig. 375. Bembidium com- / prises species of very small size and variable in form, in which the anterior tibiæ are Flg' 376‘ not dilated at the base. They are found abundantly under the refuse of freshets and tides, preying upon dead animal matter and other insects, and a species of Cillenum, closely allied to Bembidium, is known to seize the beach-flea, Gammarus, and devour it. Fig. 376 (A, a little enlarged; B, head; c, mandible ; e, antenna ; /, labium and its two- jointed palpi ; g, maxillæ ; h, i, j, under side of different abdominal rings) represents the larva of a Ground beetle, which, according to Fig. 377. Walsh, preys upon the larva of the Plum cur- culio while under ground. Fig. 377 represents the Fig. 37s. supposed larva of a European species of Chlœnius, and Fig. 378 what we suppose is the larva of a beetle allied to Cillenum. Amphizoidæ Leconte. The genus Amphizoa (Fig. 379, A. insolens ; a, antenna ; 5, labrum ; c, mandibles ; d, maxillæ ; e,DYTISCIDÆ. 435 ligula ; /, mentum ; g, prosternum, front, and 7i, side view ; ï, under side of the rest of the body, skowing the six ventral seg- ments of the abdomen ; J, anterior tarsus : from Horn) found in Northern California, is the sole représentative of this family and differs from the preceding family in the metasternum be- ing truncate behind, and not reaching the abdomen. A. inso~ lens Lee. is an anomalous form, being subaquatic, and in its structure and habits connecting the Carabidœ with the suc- ceeding family. Dytiscidæ McLeay. The Diving Beetles, or Water Tigers, are oval flattened elliptical beetles, which differ from the Car- abidœ in the form of the hinder coxæ, which are very large, touching each other on the inner edge, and externally reaching the side of the body, entirely cutting off the abdominal seg- ments from the metathorax, while the oar-like swimming legs are covered with long hairs, and the hinder pair are much flat- tened. The larvæ are cailed “ water tigers,” being long, cy- lindrical, with large flattened heads, armed with scissor-like jaws with which they seize other insects, or snip off the tails of tadpoles, while they are even known to attack young fishes, sucking their blood. They are known to moult several times, four or five days intervening between the first two periods of moulting, and ten days between the latter. The body ends in a pair of long respiratory tubes, which they protrude into the air, though eight pairs of rudimentary spiracles exist. When about to transform the larva creeps on to the land, constructs a round cell, and in about five days assumes the pupa state, and in two or three weeks the beetle appears, if in summer, or h d j i Fig. 379.436 COLEOPTERA. if in autumn hibernâtes as a pupa, to transform to a beetlc in the spring. In Haliplus the antennæ are ten-jointed, bristle-shaped, and the legs are scarcely adapted for swimming, being narrow. The body is very convex, spotted with black or gray, while the elytra are covered with rows of punctures. In the remain- ing généra, the types of the family, the antennæ are eleven- jointed and the hind legs oar-like. “The larvæ differ not only by their dorsal segments being armed with spines, which gives them a very grotesque appearance, but by their possessing only one claw, and by their anal segment (which is rudimentary in ail other Dytiscidæ) being enormously elongated and forked* so that the anus is placed on the under side of this pe- culiar tail, and the spiracles of the eighth pair, which are ter- minal and tube-like in other Dytiscidæ here become latéral and quite plain.” (Schiôdte.) In Colymbetes and Agabus the anterior tarsi of the males are broad, oblong, and covered be- neath with cups of equal, or nearly equal, size. Agabus differs in having the thorax as wide at the base as at the middle, or still wider. In Dytiscus the ovate, not very convex body is usually broader behind the middle, and the last joint of the palpi is not elongated, while in Acilius which is usually banded, the intermediate tarsi of the male are not dilated. The females of these two généra often hâve the elytra deeply furrowed, while those of the males are smooth. Dytiscus fasdventris Say and Acilius mediatus Say are common in ail our ponds northward. Gyrinidæ Latreille. Whirligigs. These oval bluish black beetles are easily distinguished by their peculiar form and habits. They are always seen in groups, gyrating and circling about on the surface of pools, and when caught, give out a disagreeable milky fluid. Like the previous family, upon being disturbed, they suddenly dive to the bottom, holding on by their claws to submerged objects. They carry down a bubble of air on the tip of the abdomen, and when the supply is ex- hausted rise for more. The cylindrical eggs are placed by the female, end to end, in parallel rows on the leaves of aquatic plants, and the larvæHYDROPIJILIDÆ. 437 are hatched in about eight days. They are myriapodous iu form, with a pair of large, long, latéral respiratory filaments on each segment, much as in the larva of Corydalus. They become fully grown in Au- gust, crawl out of the water and spin an oval ' coeoon, within which the pupa remains a month, and then appears as a beetle. In Gy- rinus (Fig. 380, G. borealis Aube ; Fig. 381, larva of a European species) the scutellum is * lg’ m distinct ; the species of Dineutus, of which D. Ameri- canus is a type, are larger, and lack the scutellum. Schiôdte States that the larvæ of Carabidœ, Dytiscidœ and Gyrinidœ differ from those of other Coleop- tera in having double claws, while in the others the tarsus is undivided and claw-like. Fig. 381. Hydrophilidæ Leach. Carnivorous as larvæ, but when beetles, vegetable eaters, and living on refuse and decaying matter, this family unités the habits of the foregoing families with those of the scavenger Silphids. They are aquatic, small, convex, oval, or hemispherical beetles, in which the middle and posterior feet are sometimes adapted for swimming ; the antennæ are short, and the palpi very long and slender. The females spin a silken, turnip-shaped nidus for their eggs, fifty. to sixty in number, which ends in a horny projection, serving as a respira- tory tube to supply the young larvæ with air as they are hatched. Others cany the cocoon about with them on the under side of the body. To spin this large amount of silk, they are provided with two large silk glands, with external spinnerets. The larvæ hatch in from two to six weeks, and moult three times ; when mature they are long, cy- lindrical, tapering rapidly towards the pos- terior end, with short legs, while the head is Fis- m flattened above and very convex beneath, with the mandibles elevated much as in the larva of Cicindela, enabling them to438 COLEOPTERA. seize their foocl by throwing their heacls back and extending the jaws. The larva of the European H. piceus Linn. (Fig. 382) matures in two months, then ascends to the bank, forms an oval cocoon, and transforms to a beetle in about forty days. ïn the genus Sperchopsis (S. tessellutus Mels.) the middle and hind tarsal joints are equal in length. Hydrophilus is large, oval, olive-black and with smooth elytra. In the larva the latéral appendages of the abdomen are soft, flexible, ciliated, and assist in buojdng up the heavy, fleshy body (for wliich purpose the antennæ are ciliated) but they do not serve for respiration as in Berosus, another extensive genus of this family. (Schiodte.) H. triangularis Say is a large, pitchy black species. In Hydrobius the last joint of the maxillary palpi is longer than the preceding. Sphœridium and its allies; are characterized by an ovate, convex or hemispherical form, with ten rows of punctures or striæ, though in Cyclonotum there are no striæ. In Cercyon the mesosternum is not pro- duced, and the prosternum is keeled over. “In the larvæ of Cercyon and Sphœridium, which represent the Hydrophiline type modified for life on dry land (though in humid places), we find neither latéral abdominal appen- dages, nor even true feet, the animal wrig- gling its way through the débris amongst which it lives, whilst the last abdominal segment is the largest of ail and is often armed with hooks.” (Schiodte.) Platypsyllidæ Leçon te. The only spe- cies of this family known is a small brown insect, *16 inch long (Platypsylla castoris Ritsema, Fig. 3821, enlarged), found on the American beaver. The body is broad, flattened, eyeless, with short elytra, and spiny on the legs and salient parts of the body, as in the flea. Leconte remarks that its affinlties are “ very composite, but ail in the direction of the Adephagous and Clavicorn sériés, though chiefly with the latter/ Silphidæ Leach. The Carrion or Sexton beetles are useful in burying decaying bodies, in which they lay their eggs.SCYDMÆNIDÆ. 439 The larvæ are crustaceous, flattened, with the sides of the body often serrated, black, and of a fetid odor. They undergo their transformations in an oval cocoon. In Necropliorus (Fig. 346, N. Americanus Oliv.) the antennæ hâve ten apparent joints, and the rounded club is four-jointed. The genus Silpha, of which S. Lapponica Herbst (Fig. 383, larva fully grown ; 384, young, from Labrador) is a common spe- cies, differs in the third joint of the antenna being no longer than the second, but shorter than the first. In Necrophilus the third joint is as long as the first. N. Surina- mensis Fabr. has a yellow thorax with a central irregular black spot. Catops and its allies live in fungi, carrion and ants’ nests, and are small, black, oval insects. The Fig*m Fig. 384. eyeless Adelops hirtus Tellk. is blind, wanting the eyes, and is found in Mammoth Cave. Anisotoma and allies, with eleven-jointed antennæ, are oval and sometimes hemis- pherical, and capable of being rolled up into a bail. They are of small size and found in fungi, or under the bark of dead trees. Agathidium (Fig. 385, larva of the European A. seminulum) has the club of the antennæ three-jointed. Clambus and allies comprise exceedingly minute species, found in decaying vege- table matter. An aberrant form is Brathinus, two species of which, B. nitidus Lee. and B. varicornis Lee., hâve been found from Lake Superior to Nova Scotia, about the Fig- 385- roots of grass in damp places. According to Leconte, they arf small shiny insects of graceful form, and distinguished by the prominent middle coxæ. Scydmænidæ Leach. The species of this small group differ from the Pselaphidœ to which they are closely allied by their long elytra and distant conical posterior coxæ. They are mi-440 COLEOPTERA. nute, oval, brown, shiny insects found under stones near water, under bark and in ants’ nests. Scydmœnus is the typical genus. Pselaphidæ MacLeay. In this group the labial palpi are very small, while the four-jointed maxillary palpi are of re- markable length ; the eyes are composed of large lenses, and are sometimes wanting ; the elytra are short, truncated, beneath which the wings, when présent, are folded and the legs are long and the femora are stout, while beyond the leg is usually slender. “The species are very small, not exceeding one- eighth of an inch in length, and are of a chestnut-brown color, usually slightly pubescent ; the head and thorax are most fre- quently narrower than the elytra and abdomen, which is con- vex and usually obtuse at tip. Many are found flying in twilight ; their habits at other times are various, some being found in ants’ nests, while others occur under stones and bark. North America seems to be rich in this family ; more than fifty species are known to me, and several of the généra hâve not occurred in other countries. This family closely approaches the Staphylinidæ, but the ventral segments are fewer in number, and not freely moving, and the eyes are composed of large lenses.” (Leconte.) The genus Claviger and its allies Adranes cæcus Leconte, which is found in ants’ nests in North- ern Georgia, hâve antennæ with less than six joints ; it is blind, and the antennæ hâve only two joints. Pselaphus and its allies hâve eleven-jointed, rarely ten-jointed antennæ. Staphylinidæ Leach. The Rove-beetles are easily recog- nized by their long linear black bodies, with remarkably short elytra, and seven to eight visible horny abdominal segments. The maxillæ are bilobate, usually ciliated, with four-jointed palpi, except in Aleochara, when there is an additional joint ; the antennæ, variable in form and insertion, are usually eleven- jointed, and while the legs are variable in length and form, the anterior coxæ are usually large, conical, prominent and contiguous. Though sometimes an inch in length, they are more commonly minute, inhabiting wet places under stones, manure heaps, fungi, moss, under the bark or leaves of trees. Many species inhabit ants’ nests, and should be carefullySTAPHYLINIDÆ. 441 æought for on dewy momings under stones and pièces of wood, which should be taken up and shaken over a white cloth or paper; or the whole nest should be sifted through a rather coarse sieve, when the small beetles will fall through the raeshes. The eggs are very large. The larvæ (Fig. 386, un- der side of a larva probably belonging to this family, from Maine, enlarged twice) closely resemble the beetles, being narrow, the segments of very equal size, the terminal ring forming a long prop-leg, on each side of which there is a long ciliate seta. In the pupæ the hind wings are not folded beneath the elytra, but extend below, meeting upon the breast. In the true Staphylini the anterior coxæ are promi- nent and their coxal cavities are open behind. Aleo- chara and its allies are difficult to distinguish, as the characters separating them are but slightly marked; they hâve the maxillary palpi moderate in length, with the second and third joints also of moderate length, the fourth small, subulate, distinct, and in Aleochara Flg' 386, itself there is an additional very small fifth joint. In Homa- lota, numerous in species, the ligula is short and bifid, and the first to the fourth joints of the hind tarsi decrease in length. In Tachypo'i'us and allies the prothoracic spiracles are visible ; the anterior coxæ are large, conical and prominent, with the trochanters very distinct, while the antennæ are inserted under the latéral margin of the front. The species are usually convex above, with the thorax always ample, arched and highly polished, and the abdomen conical, sometimes very short. They are found partly in fungi, partly under bark. Dr. Leconte, whom we hâve been quoting, States that the species of Bolito- bius usually hâve the head much elongated; when, however, the head is oval, they approach closely to the genus Quedius of the next tribe, but are recog- nized by the antennæ being inserted at the latéral Flg* margin of the front, near the eyes, and not at the anterior angle of the frontal margin, as in Quedius. In Staphylinus the antennæ are inserted on the anterior mar- gin of the front, inside of the base of the mandibles, but dis-442 COLEOPTERA. tant from each other ; the thorax is punctured and pubescent^ the middle coxæ slightly separate, while the abdomen is nar- rowed at the tips. Fig. 387 represents the larva of this or a. closely allied genus found in a humble bee’s nest. Phïlonthu» differs in having the femora unarmed. The species live in decaying matters and excrement. The spe- cies of Pœderus (Fig. 388, the larva of the European P. tempestivus Erichs.) are found under stones, etc., near water. In Stenus, of which S. stygicus Say and S. Juna Fabr. are types, the eyes are large and prominent, so ' \ that the head resembles that of Cicindela and the Fig. 388. antennæ are inserted upon the front between the eyes ; the labrum is entire and rounded anteriorly, the para- glossæ are dilated, rounded, and the body is coarsely punctured, while that of its nearest ally Dianous is finely punctured and j the paraglossæ are connate and indistinct. / Another small group of généra is repre- sented by Oxyporus, which is found in fungi^ and which has a large head, with large long mandibles Crossing each other, and five-jointed tarsi ; and Oxytelus which is found in wet places and in dung, and has three- a jointed tarsi, with a row of spines- on the front tibiæ, and the middle coxæ separated. Fig. 389. Antliophagus cæsus Harris Correspond- ence (Fig. 389; a, maxilla), is found in wet ground where spearmint grows, of which it diffuses a strong odor. In Omalium the antennæ are inserted under the lateraf mar- gin of the front, the elytra are long, and the tibiæ finely spi- nous. Micralymma is closely allied, but differs in the elytra being very short. The genus Micropeplus is squarish in form and connects the présent family with the one following. Histeridæ Leach. As stated by Leconte, “this is a very well defined family of insects, moderately numerous, nearly ail of a shining black color, with the elytra variously sculpturedTRICHOPTERYGIDÆ. 443 with striæ ; some few species of Hister and Saprinus hâve the elytra marked with red, and a few of the latter genus are metallic in color. The form of the body is variable ; those of the first group are oblong and fiat, with prominent mandibles ; the others are round, oblong oval, globose, some depressed and some convex. The species live under the bark of trees, in excrement and in carcasses. When disturbed the insects retract the antennæ and feet, appearing as if dead. The an- tennæ are geniculate, the eighth and foliowing joints forming a compact annulated, rounded or (rarely) triangular club. The elytra are truncate behind, leaving two segments of the abdomen uncovered. The linear flattened larvæ hâve the ter- minal ring ending in two biarticulated appendages, and a single anal prop-leg. The larva of the European Hister merdarius (Fig. 390) lives in cow dung, forming a cell in which it transforms, and like Anthrenus, the pale brown pupa retains the larva skin about it. In Hister the head is retracted and bent downwards, and the club of the antenna is round and annulated. Hister interruptus Beauv. and A. marginicollis Lee. are common northward. Fig. 390 The genus Hetœrius differs in the antennal club being obconical, truncate and solid. The species are found only in ants’ nests early in the spring. In Saprinus the antennæ are inserted under the margin of the front ; the antennal cavities being at the sides of the prosternum proper. The species are mostly found in carrion and in dung. Scaphidiidæ MacLeay. u Tliis family,” according to Dr* Leçon te, “ contains small oval or rounded oval, convex, very shining insects, living in fungi. The sides of the thorax are oblique, and the head small, so as to make the body somewhat pointed in front; the thorax is very closely applied to the front, and the elytra are broadly truncate, permitting the tip of the conical abdomen to appear.” In Scaphidium the an- tennæ are clavate, the eyes emarginate, the posterior tibiæ are not spinous, and the first joint of the posterior tarsi longest. Trichopterygidæ (Trichopterygia Erichson). This incon- siderable family comprises the smallest beetles known. The n 8 x=y 444 COLEOPTERA. eleven-jointed antennæ, which are verticillate, with long hairs9 are inserted at the margin of the front, and the club is long and loosely articulated. The beetles live under the bark of trees and in ants’ nests. The larvæ are camivorous, being very active, without ocelli, and with cylindrical bodies, with four-jointed antennæ and long four-jointed legs. Trichopteryx is known by its pubescent body, and laminate posterior coxæ. One species is one-third of a line long; others are still smaller. The larva Fig. 391 of tke European T. intermedia Gillmeister (Fig. 391, enlarged) feeds on Poduræ. Phalacridæ Erichson. “A small number of oval or rounded oval, convex, shining insects, constitute this family. They are found on flowers, and sometimes under bark. The elytra hâve sometimes approximate rows of small punctures, but more usually only a suturai stria. The scutellum is larger than usual, triangular. One of the four généra (Tolyphus) of this family is wanting in our fauna. The other three are separated by the form of the posterior tarsi.” (Leçonte.) In Phalaerus the anterior and posterior tarsi are of the saine length. The larvæ are vegetable feeders, living in the flowers of composite plants. Nitidulariæ Latreille. This family includes small oval or elliptical, flattened beetles, which are sometimes almost globu- lar. The head is suddenly narrowed before the insertion of the antennæ, thus forming a short beak, and the antennæ may be partially retracted into a groove under S the eyes. The larvæ are both carnivorous and vegetable-feeders ; they are elongated, with two to four-jointed antennæ, three ocelli on each side, with a flattened hairy bodyf/ ending in four small, horny, recurved tuber- cles. The pupæ may be found under the Lg‘ 392‘ surface of the ground in earth and sawdust. Carpophilus has the second and third abdominal segments short, while the first, fourth and fifth are longer, and the claws are simple. Carpophilus antiquus Mels. is a well known spe-COLYDIIDÆ. 445 cies. Nitidula and its allies are elliptical depressed, often with a broad margin ; the elytra covers the whole abdomen, or leaves merely the tips exposed. In Nitidula the last joint of the labial palpi is not thicker than the preceding, and the species often hâve two red spots on the elytra, as in Nitidula bipustulata Fabr. In Epurœa, which is found under stones and bark, the last joint of the palpi is large and thick. Omosita colon Fabr. is also spotted twice with red ; the genus inay be recognized by the antennal grooves diverging behind, following the outline of the eye3, while in the males the sixth abdominal segment is wanting. Ips is much longer and larger, with trun- cate elytra, and the head is immersed in the thorax to the eyes. Ips sanguinolentus Say has a broad red band on the elytra, with two large round dots. Ips fasciatus Say (Fig. 391, and larva ; found in the roots of the squash by Mr. M. C. Read) has two broad interrupted yellow bands on the elytra ; both species occur about flowing sap in spring. Ips ferruginea of Europe lives on the young of Hylesinus ligniperda. Rhizo- phagus depressus is known in Europe to attack the larvæ of Hylurgus piniperda, according to Dufour. Monotomidæ Chaudoir. The species of this inconsiderable group are much like the preceding family in form, but as Le- conte States, differ from them in the anterior coxæ being small, rounded and separated. They occur under the bark of trees. Trogositidæ Kirby. This group, usually United with the preceding family, is distinguished by the bilobate maxillæ, with the short, four-jointed maxillæ and the short undilated tarsi. They generally live under bark, but some hâve been trans- ported over the whole world in grain. In Trogosita, which comprises long insects, with the thorax narrowed behind, the ligula is entire, the tibiæ are not spinous, and the thorax is prominently angulated in front. Colydiidæ Erichson. The small globular anterior and middle coxæ, and the four-jointed simple tarsi will enable them, Leconte States, to be readily distinguished from any of the neighboring families. The species are of small size, usually446 COLEOPTERA. rather long and cylindrical, and occur in fungi, in the earth, oi under the bark of trees. Colydium, is slender, with finely striate elytra, and the anterior tibiæ hâve one spur enlarged and hooked ; while the first joint of the tarsi is elongated. C. elongatum is stated by European authors to attack the larvæ of Platypus, a genus allied to Scolytus. Rhyssodidæ Erichson. This group, by sonie authors united with the preceding family, simulâtes the form of the Carabids. The antennæ are, however, composed of equal globular joints, and the head is strongly constricted behind into a neck. They are found under bark. In Mhyssodes the eyes are placed upon the side, and in the other genus, Clinidium, upon the upper surface of the head. Cucujidæ Latreille. The species of this family are very much flattened long insects, with fiat, strongly emarginated elytra, and the abdomen has five full segments, equal in length. They are found under bark. The larvæ are quite transparent, with the terminal joint ending in two horny curved hooks. The antennæ are four-jointed, the limbs provided with a single claw, and there are five ocelli on each side of the head. In Syl- vanus, which is of small size, the nine to eleven-jointed an- tennæ do not hâve the first joint elongated as usual, while the terminal ones are enlarged. JSylvanus Surinamensis Linn. is one-ninth of an inch long, of a rusty brown color, and covered with short yellowish hairs. The larva is a flattened yellowish white grub, with the terminal joint somewhat conical. It breeds in bran, rice and wheat. Cucujus is a bright scarlet flattened insect, with punctured elytra, and three faintly marked smooth lines. The larvæ differ from those of Sylvanus by having two horny tubercles at the end of the abdomen ; they are often found in granaries. Cryptophagidæ Kirby. This family differs from the pre- ceding group in the greater length of the first abdominal ring, the thickened body, and in the thorax being as wide as the elytra. Antherophagus is readily known by its resemblance to Epuræa among the Nitidulidœ, as its head and body is fiat,MYCETOPHAGIDÆ. 44ï the front not prolonged, and in the male is deeply excised at the tip. The antennæ of the female are clubbed as usual, and the mandibles are prominent and suddenly incurved at the tips. It is often found on flowers in the perfect state. We hâve found the larvæ (Fig. 393 ; a, end of abdomen) of Antherophagus ochraceus Say (Plate 3, fig. 4) in the nests of humble bees during July and August. They are whitish, and .32 of an inch in length. The beetles are of a pale honey }Tellow, with little darker antennæ, legs and elytra, while the ends of the antennal joints, the base of the coxæ and tibiæ, Fig. 393. and tip of the terminal joint of the tarsi are black. The larva of the European Cryptophagus hirtus Gyll. (Fig. 394) is found in cellars. Derodontidæ Leconte. In these insects the transverse form of the anterior and posterior coxæ Fig. 394. (which latter are slightly separated), dilated inter- nally, forming a small plate to protect the insertion of the thigh, distinguishes this group from ail the preceding families, and approximates it somewhat to the families foliowing the Elateridœ. Lathridiidæ Redtenbacher. Leconte States that the insects of this small family are of very small size, found flying in twilight, and also under bark and stones ; they are of graceful form, the elytra being usually wider than the thorax ; the species of Bonvou- loiria and most of the species of Lathridius (Fig, 395, larva of L. minutus Linn., enlarged) are very Flg- 395, remarkably sculptured, with elevated lines on the thorax. Othniidæ Leconte. Othuius umbrosus Lee. is the type of this family. It occurred in Nebraska, near the Rocky Moun- tains. Mycetophagidæ Leach. The genus Mycetophagus is fînely punctured with closely appressed hairs ; the anterior coxal cavities are open ; the tarsi are four-jointed and filiform, the448 COLEOPTERA. anterior pair in the males having but tliree joints ; the frontal suture is always distinct and usually deep ; the eyes are trans- verse and the antennæ gradually enlarged externally. Dermestidæ Leach. These well known insects hâve the head small and deflexed, with short mandibles, rounded eyes, with a single ocellus ; the prothorax is short, sometimes exca* vated for the réception of the antennæ, which are in- serted in front of the eyes and are usually eleven-jointed, and the legs are short, somewhat contractile, the tarsi being five-jointed. In Byturus the mandibles hâve sev- eral teeth, and the claws are armed with a large basal Fig. 396. tooth. They are small oval brown beetles found eating flowers. Mr. J. L. Russell of Salem, has called my attention to the ravages committed by B. unicolor Say on the raspberry it eats the flowers, being most abundant during June, and for two or three summers has been very abundant. Hand picking was found to be the best remedy. Every entomologist dreads the presence of Dermestes and Antlirenus in his cabinet. The ugiy, bristly, insidious larva, which so skilfully hides. in the body whose interior it consumes, leaving only the shell ready to fall to pièces at the slightest jar, can be kept out only with the greatest précautions. Der- mestes lardarius Linn., the larger of the two, is oblong oval, with short legs, black, with the base of the elytra gray buff, covered by two broad lines. It is timid and Fig. 397. slow in its movements, and when disturbed seeks a shelter, or mimics death. We hâve found the larva (Fig. 396) of probably another species of Dermestes, crawling up the side of an out-house. It was nearly twice the size of D. lardarius. Attagenus pellio Stephens is another insect which infests muséums. It is shorter than Dermestes, black, with two dots on the wing covers. The larva (Fig. 397, en- larged three times) is long and slender, cylindrical, with red- dish brown hairs closely appressed to the body, giving it a silky, shining appearance. The abdomen ends in a long pen- cil of hairs. It has been known to eat holes in carpets. Anthrenus varius Fabr. (Fig. 398 ; a, larva ; 6, pupa) is rounded oval, with transverse waved lines. Its larva is thick,.GEORYSSIDÆ. 449 with long bristles, which are largest on the end of the body. They are generally destructive in muséums, and prey on stuffed specimens of ail sorts. The beetles fly about early in spring and then lay their eggs. The insect is found in ail its stages through the year. They may be killed like the Clothes-moth, also found in muséums, by saturating the specimen infested by them with benzine. To pre- vent their attacks, they should be kept out of collections by keeping benzine in constant évaporation in open vessels. Camphor and turpentine and créosote are also very useful. Insects recently prepared should Fig. 398. be placed in quarantine, so we may be sure none of the mu- séum pests will be introduced into the drawers or cases of the cabinet while either in the egg or larva state. Their presence in cabinets may be detected by the dust they make falling on the white surface beneath. Specimens thoroughly impregnated with carbolic acid, or arsenic, or corrosive sublimate, will not be attacked by them. Byrrhidæ Leach. Pill Beetles. This group has the head retracted under the thorax, with the parts of the mouth more or less protected by the prosternum ; the legs are short, stout and rétractile, and the antennæ are clavate. The typi- cal species are “ oval or rounded, very convex, dull black or bronzed insects, covered with a fine, easily removed pubescence, forming varied patterns.” In Byrrhus ail the tarsi are rétractile. We hâve taken Byrrhus Americanus Lee. in Labrador, on the stems of the “Labrador tea.” They are found in cold mountainous districts. The larvæ (Fig. 399, larva Flg* 399‘ of B. pillula Illiger, a European species found in moss) are fleshy, cylindrical, with the last two rings of the body larger than the others. Gteoryssidæ Heer. This family consists of but a single genus, characterized by Leconte as comprising small, rounded, 29450 COLEOPTERA. convex, roughly sculptured, black insects, found at the mar- gins of streams, on wet sand ; they cover themselves with a mass of mud, so that no part of the insect is visible. Georys- sus pusillus Lee. is our only species. Parnidæ MacLeay. These are aquatic beetles, having a rétractile head, and are often found clinging to submerged stones, both in the larval and pupal states. The body of the beetle is “ clothed with a fine pu- bescence, enabling a film of air to be preserved beneath the water.” The larvæ are hemispherical like a basin, t: ntei t “The larva of Pseplienus Lecontei 3 w. Fig. 400. Hald. (Fig. 400, under side, enlarged I three times) is an elliptical object, ^ with the margins widely extended be- Flg* 401 ' yond the body, and is seen on stones under the water of rapid streams ; it is especially abundant in the rapids of Niagara, and differs in no important particular from the larva of Ileli- clius of the next subfamily. It respires by branchial fila- ments.” (Leconte.) Elmis (Fig. 401, larva of a European species) is known by the narrow, elongate scutellum. Heteroceridæ MacLeay. “This family consists of but a single genus, Heterocerus ; it is represented in every portion of our territory. The species are numerous, but very similar in form and color, so that care is necessary in distinguishing them. They are oblong or subelongate, oval, densely clothed wTith short, silky pubescence, very finely punctuate, and of a brown color, with the elytra usually variegated with undulating bands or spots of a yellow color. They live in galleries which they excavate in sand or mud at the margin of bodies of water, and, when disturbed, run from their galleries and take fiight, after the manner of certain species of Bembidium.” (Leconte.) Lucanidæ Latreille. This family is closely allied to the next, and is often united with it, as it differs chiefly from the outer lamellate joints of the antennæ not being so closelySCARABÆIDÆ. 451 anited into a compact club, as in the Scarabeidœ, and the mentum is usually large. The genus Lucanus, called the Stag- horn beetle, is of large size, with enormously developed jaws in the male, as in Lucanus dama Fabr. (Fig. 402, canus dama (Fig. 403, and cocoon, natural size) is long, thick, nearlv cylin- drical, and the corneous rust-colored head is armed with two large jaws. Liv- ing in rotten wood, like the Cerambycidœ, it constructs a cocoon of the chips it makes. The larva of the European L. cervus is stated by Roesel to live six years. Harris States that they lay their eggs in crevices of the bark of trees, especially near the roots. The larvæ resem- ble the grubs of the Scarabæans in color and form, but are smoother, being less wrinkled. Dorcas bre- vis Say (Fig. 404) is an exceedinglv rare in- sect whose habits are unknown. In Passalus cornutus Fabr., belong- ing to a more aberrant genus, the body is long and flattened with a short bent hook on the head, and the elytra deeply striate. Madam Merian describes the larva of Passalus as being s thick fleshy worm, with a small scaly head, six legs, and slender po'/toriorly ; it lives in decaying wood. Scapabæidæ Erichson. This family, the Lamellicornia of Latreüle , is one of immense extent, being divided into more than 700 généra, comprising some 6,000 species, or three- Fig. 403.452 COLEOPTERA. fourths as many Coleoptera as are known to live in this country. They comprise the mammoths among insects, and it is in the tropics that we meet with the most numerous and bizarre, as well as gigantic forms. Always readily recognized by their clubbed lamel- late antennæ, the terminal joints being expanded into broad fiat leaves, which, at the will of the insect, can be closely shut into a compact club, or loosely expanded fan-like, and laid under the projecting cly- peus, so overhanging the mouth-parts as to give rise to the terms beetle-horned, and “beetling;” these insects, by their Fig. 404. robust, thick, often square body, short fos- sorial legs, with large hooked claws for seizing leaves and stems, hâve been well known to ail observing persons. however slight their entomological knowledge. The larvæ are thick and fleshy cylindrical grubs, with a corneous head, and rather long four-jointed antennæ ; the ocelli are generally wanting ; the legs are stout and long, without claws, and the last ab- dominal segment is soft and baggy. The body is often very transparent, the tracheæ appear- ing through. Fig. 405 represents a singular larva (magnified twice) of this family from Mr. Sanborn’s collection. The genus Copris and allies are known by their rounded form, and the broadly expanded clypeus, which covers in the mouth-parts. In somc species (thosc of Deltochilum) the anterior tarsi arc wanting either in the females or both sexes ; and in somc species a stridulating ap~ paratus is found on the upper surface of the Fig. 405. abdomen. In Copris the labial palpi are dilated, the first joint of the antennal club does not receivc the others, and the claws are distinct. The larva of C. Carolina Fabr., while, according to Osten Sacken, having the general appear- ance of the larvæ of the Lamellicorns, is much thicker and curved up, the back being much swollen and “distended into a hump-like expansion. It is about two inches long and of aSCARABÆIDÆ. 45a dirty yellowish white. Each larva was found enclosed in a globular case of dung or earthy matter, about an inch and a quarter in diameter.” (Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Philadelphia, vol. i, pi. 1, fig. 1.) The closely allied Phaneus camifex MacLeay is common southward, and easily known by its brilliant copper colored thorax and bright green elytra, and by the large horn on the head of the male. These insects are called u Tumble-bugs,” as they enclose their eggs in pellets of rnanure, holding them be- tween their hind legs, and rolling them away to a place of safety. The species of Aphodius live also in rnanure ; they are quite small, nearly cylindrical, with the mouth-parts concealed by the clypeus ; the antennæ are nine-jointed, the club consisting of three joints, and the lobes of the maxillæ are membrana- ceous, unarmed, while the upper parte of the eyes are visible in repose. Apliodius fimetarius Linn., which is black with bright red elytra, has been introduced from Europe, and is abundant in woods, flying over dung ; it is now common in the carriage road of Mount Washington. Fig. 406 represents the larva of the European A. fossor Linn. Chapuis and Candèze found it in rnanure in spring. Geotrupes has eleven- jointed antennæ, with the club three-jointed, the mid- dle coxæ are contiguous, and while the club of its nearest ally, Bolbocerus, a shorter insect, is large and lenticular in form, that of the présent genns is lamellate, as usual. Geotrupes splendidus Fabr. is Flg* 406, a common beetle, with a bright shining green body, flying in paths and wood roads late in the summer. The species of Trox differ in having slightly fossorial legs ; they are oblong convex, the surface being very rough and covered with dirt which is scraped off with difficulty. They live in dried decay- ing animal matter, and, according to Leconte, “possess a dis- tinct stridulating organ ; it is an elliptical plate, with pearly Teflections, occupying the upper part of the external face of the ascending portion of the first ventral segment, and is cov- ered by the elytra ; on the inner surface of the elytra, near the margin, about opposite the thorax, is an oval, smooth, polished space, which has, probably, some connection with the stridu- lating organ.” The larva of “ Trox Carolina Dej.” (T. scabro*454 COLEOPTERA. sus Beauv. Fig. 407), is described b y Cbapuis and Candèze as coming from New Orléans. Mélolontha and its allies corne next in the sériés. They feed exclusively on living plants. The genus Acratus was estab- lished by Dr. Horn for A. Jlavipennis Horn (Fig. 408 ; a, antenna ; 6, maxilla ; c, mentum ; d, mandi- ble ; e, anterior leg and tarsal claw) found in Ari- zona. The genus Dichelonycha is distinguished by the front margin of the thorax being narrow and Fig. 407. membranous, with equal claws, cleft at the tip. Di- chélonycha elongatula Schônh. Is a long green beetle, with long legs, and of a metallic green color ; it is found in June on the d e leaves of the birch. Macrodactylus sub- spinosus Fabricius, the 2À well known Rose-bug or Rose-chafer, is brown, covered with ochreous scales ; the legs, tarsi and claws are yery long and slender. It overruns garden plants, especi- ally injuring the rose leaves. Dr. Harris has observed the transformations of this insect. The nearly globular whitish eggs, about thirty in number, are deposited by the female from one to four inches beneath the surface of the soil, and are hatched in about twenty days. The whitish larva becomes fully grown in the autumn, and is then three-quarters of an inch long and an eighth of an inch wide. In October it descends below the reach of frost, and in the next May is transformed to a pupa in an oval earthen cell. The pupa is yellowish white, somewhat of the form of the beetle, with short wings ; its antennæ and legs folded on its breast, with its white body surrounded by a thin film. The beetles may be often seen in clusters on low bushes in partially cleared fields having just appeared from their cocoons. Dr. Horn has described the genus Plectrodes for a Californian species, P. pubescens Horn (Fig. 409 ; a, maxilla and palpus ; 6, tarsal claw). The wellSC ARABÆIDÆ • 455 known June-bug or Dor-bug, Lachnostema fusca Frôhl. (Fig. 410, 411, larva; 412, side view of pupa), lives as a larva on the roots of grass and is often turned up by the spade or plough. It is then a large fleshy grub, yery com- monly met witli, and is injurious to growing corn and wheat. The pupa is found in its rude earth- en cocoon in May. The beetles are yery injuri- ous to the leaves of fruit trees. They are chest- nut brown, with yellowish hairs beneath, and nearly an inch in length. There are several smaller, closely allied species. Mélolontha (Poly- Fi£- 41°- phylla) variolosa Harris differs in its enormously developed six-jointed lamellate antennal club, that of the female being much smaller. In Anomala the body is small, the an- tennæ nine-jointed, and the mandibles when at rest do not project beyond the clypeus. Such is Anomala varians Fabr., which is very injurious to the vine in June and July. Pelidnota punctataAAxm. has similar habits. It is oblong oval, very convex Fig. 4ii. above, with dull brownish yellow elytra, with three large black dots on each side. It is often abun- dant on grape-vines in July and August, and proves very injurious. The Cotalpa lanigera Linn. (Fig. 413 ; a, larva) or the Gold- smith beetle, is nearly an inch long, bright yellow, with long white, woolly hairs beneath, where it is metallic green. It often injures fruit and shade trees, and Mr. S. Lockwood states that in the larva State it destroys the roots of the strawberry plant. He remarks that on the 16th of June a pair of Cotal- pas coupled, and in the evening the female bur- rowed beneath the dirt, reappearing the next moming, having meanwhile laid at different depths, and singly, fourteen white, long, oval eggs ; on the 13th of July the larvæ hatched, being five-sixteenths of an inch long. (American Naturalist, vol. ii, p. 441.) In Dynastes the labial palpi are inserted on the sides of the456 OOLEOPTERA. mentum, which is acuminate in front ; the head and thorax are armed with large horns in the males ; the first joint of the pos- terior tarsi is not elevated, and there are no stridulating or- gans. Our only species is Dynastes Tityus Linn., found in the Southern States. It is over two inches long, of a greenish gray color, with black spots scattered irregularly over the ely~ tra. Dynastes Hercules Linn., one of the giants of the family, is about six inches long. The genus Cetonia and its allies are flower beetles ; their mandibles are feebly developed and in part membranous and concealed with the other oral organs beneath the clypeus ; and in flying they “ do not raise or expand the elytra, as most Cole- optera do, but pass the wings from the side, under the elytra, horns. Dr. Harris has proposed the name of Hegemon “for the subgenus, includmg the princely Scarabœus Goliathus of Linnæus, together with the still more magnificent Goliathus Drurii of Westwood, and the G. Cacicus of Gory and Per- cheron.” Of Hope’s subgenus Mecynorhina, the Scarabgeus Polyphemus of Fabricius is the type ; it is velvet green above, with a pale buff head and markings, and is two and a half inches long, exclusive of the horns, Dr. Harris has also described as new to science M9 Savagii which has a velvet green thorax, and velvet black elytra, with tawny bands and spots ; it is about two inches long. The G. Goliathus is per- haps the largest of ail the Coleoptera ; specimens measuring nearly four inches. Dr. G. A. Perkins of Salem, Mass,, who collected a large part of the fine sériés of specimens of these Goliath beetles in the Muséum of the Peabody Aeademy of which do not at ail embrace the sides of thebody.” (Leconte.) Fig. 413. The immense Go- liath beetles of the western c o a s t of Africa belong to the genus Goliathus, in which the clypeus of the males is generally forked or armed withSCARABÆIDÆ. 457 Science, informs me that they are found in the tops of trees where they feed on flowers and on sap exuding from wounds in the bark, like the Cetoniæ, and that the natives obtain them by jarring the trees. Harris states that “it appears, from the observations of Dr. Savage, that the food of the Goliath beetles is fluid, like that of the Trichii and Cetoniæ, insects belonging to the same natural family, but the latter live chiefly on the nectar of flowers, and the former on the sap of plants. The long hrushes on their jaws, and the diverging rows of hairs that line their le wer lips, are admirably fitted for absorbing liquid food; while their horny teeth afford these beetles additional means for obtaining it from the leaves and juicy stems of plants, when the blossoms hâve disappeared.” From Cetonia, Lacordaire has separated the genus Euryomia, distinguished by the untoothed maxillæ, by the clypeus being usually parabolic, sometimes parallel and rarely emarginate in front. Euryomia Inda Linn. attacks ripe peaches, spoiling them for the market. They are found about run- nlng sap in April and flying in fields in May, and a new brood appears in Sep- tember. In Osmoderma the elytra are not sinuate on the sides, the prothorax is narrower than the elytra and usually rounded on the sides. Osmoderma scabra Dej. is a large long-legged beetle of a cop- pery purpiish black color. The larva lives in decaying cherry and apple trees. According to Harris it is a whitish fleshy grub, with a reddish corneous head, and closely resembles the grub of the common dor-bee+le, In autumn it forms an oval cocoon by gluing together tLe chips it makes, and the beetle appears in July. Fig. 414. Büprestidæ Leach. This very extensive family is known by the serrated antennæ, the outer joints of which are usually furnished with pores, which are either diffused on the sides, or concentrated in a cavity (fovea) on the under side or at the tip. The head is deeply sunken up to the elliptical eyes, and the labrum is small and prominent, while the mandibles are short and stout. The legs are short, the tibiæ are usually458 COLEOPTERA. jT slender, and the species are generally long, flattened beetles of very tough thick consistence, and are found on flowers, or sunning themselves on the bark of trees in midsummer. The larvæ are flattened footless grubs, with the prothoracic ring greatly enlarged. In Chalcophora the antennal pores are dif fused on the sides of the joints, or only on the lower margin ; the mesosternal suture is indistinct ; the antennæ are inserted in small foveæ, and the pos- terior tarsi hâve the first joint elon- gated. C. Virginiensis Drury is one of our most common species, and inay be seen flying about pine trees in hot days in May and June. Its larva bores into pines, often proving very injurious. Fig. 415. Dicerca is noted for having the tips of the elytra lengthened out and diverging from each other. Dicerca divaricata Say is frequently met with ; it is smoother than usual and highly polished with a bronzed hue. The elytra are marked with numerous fine irregu- lar impressed lines and small ob- long square elevated black spots. The larvæ attack the wild cherry and the garden cherry and peach. Dicerca lurida Fabr. is found on the trunks and limbs of the Fig. 416. hickory. The genus Chrysobothris differs in having the antennæ inserted at the inner extremity of two short oblique grooves, by which the front is narrowed ; the anterior femora are strongly toothed, the third joint of the tarsi is truncate, while in the hind tarsi the first joint is elongated. The species are rather broad and flattened, with impressed bands and spots on the elytra. Chrysobothris femorata Fabr. (Fig. 414 ; a, larva ; Fig. 415, larva of the 417.BUPRESTIDÆ. 459 same genus, found under bark of oaks) is greenish black above, with a brassy polish ; it infests the apple and oak, in whieli it lives one year. C. Harrisii Hentz inhabits the small limbs of the white pine. It is also very injurious to apple trees and red maples. To prevent its attacks Fitch recommends placing a piece of soap in a fork in the tree so that it will be washed down by the rains over the bark, while young trees may be rubbed with soap; this is an excellent remedy against the attacks of ail kinds of borers. The genuine species of Buprestis occur in Europe. The largest species of this family known to us is the Euchroma Columbica Mann, which occurs in Central and South America. It is two and a half inches long and metallic green. Mr. McNiel has sent to the Muséum of the Peabody Academy sev- J eral immense white larvæ (Fig. 416, natural size), from Nicaragua, which are, without much doubt, the young of this gigantic beetle. The small, flattened, ovate, angular Brachys Fig. 418. is probably a leaf miner, as such are the habits of the closely aïlied genus Trachys (T. pygmæa, Fig. 417, larva; 418,pupa), as observed in Europe where it mines the leaves of the Malva and Alcæa, according to M. Leprieur. Throscidæ Laporte. This small group has been separated from the succeeding family ; the species differ in not having the power of leaping, owing to the immovable thorax. In Throscus the antennæ are terminated by a three-jointed club. Elateridæ Leach. A very large and easily limited family, in which the serrate, eleven-jointecl antennæ, are inserted upon or under the margin of the front, in grooves, while the head is retracted, though sometimes free as usual from the prothorax, between which and the mesothorax is a loose articulation, enabling the species to leap in the air by a sudden jerking movement, which Dr. Leconte thus describes : “ a few of the species of the first subfamily (Eucnemidæ) and a majority of those of the third (Elateridæ), possess the singular power of springing in the air when placed on the back. This ia460 COLEOPTERA. effected by extending the prothorax so as to bring the proster- nai spine to the anterior part of the mesosternal cavity, then suddenly relaxing the muscles so that the spine descends violently into the cavity, the force given by this sudden move- ment causes the base of the elytra to strike the supporting surface, and by their elasticity the whole body is propelled upward.” The larvæ, known by the name of Wire-worms, are vegetable feeders, living on the roots of grass, wheat, corn, potatoes, ^ turnips and other garden vegetables. Fig. 419 (enlarged four times) represents a larva of this family found by Mr. Sanborn in the roots of the squash vine. The eggs are laid probably in pastures and fallen ground where the surface is undisturbed, or in the vicinity of rotten wood. The larvæ moult three times, and some species are known to live in this State three years. When fully grown they transform in an earthen cocoon, and may be seen rising out of the ground during the summer, Fig. 419. eSpeciaHy in June. The larvæ are very long cylin- drical (whence their name wire-worm), hard-bodied and diffi- cult to kill, and are generally pale testaceous, or yellowish red in color. They hâve only six thoracic legs, and a slight anal prop-leg ; the body is flattened towards the head and tail. Eucnemis differs from the true Elaters in the serrate an- tennæ being inserted in approximate grooves at the margin of the thorax beneath, which makes the clypeus narrow. The species do not leap so vigorously as those of other leaping généra. Fornax differs from Eucnemis in the antennæ being filiform. In Adelocera (Fig. 420, A. obtecta Say) the third joint of the antennæ is equal to, or larger than the fourth. In Elater and its allies, the antennæ are widely separated, being inserted in small cavities (foveæ) under the margin of the front, and before the eyes. Alaus oculatus Esch. is the largest Elater we hâve, the scutellum is oval, and the elytra hâve a broad margin. The genus Elater has the front of the head eonvex and margined quite broadly, and the thorax is always Fig. 420.ELATERIDÆ. 461 narrowed in front, with the tarsi ciliate beneath, and entirely simple. Elater obliquus Say is a small species about a quarter of an inch long, of a leathery brown color, and yellowisli réd on the prothorax. and base of the elytra. In Agriotes and allies the front is very eonvex, the edge of which is higher than the labrum ; the antennæ are slender, scarcely serrate, the first joint being a little longer than usual. In Ludius the front is eonvex, but not mar- gined behind the labrum, the angle of the hind coxæ are acute and prominent, while the meso- Fi&- 421* sternum is not prominent. Mr. Walsh has found the larva of L. attenuatus Say (Fig. 421 ; fig. 422, larva) which lived in decaying wood for two years in his breeding jar. The . genus Agriotes has the margin of the prothorax bent down in front, while in Dolopius it is straight. Agriotes mancus Say is a pale reddish brown species, while A. stabilis, much more abundant northward, is slenderer, of a darker hue, with a dark shade along the inner edge of each elytron. D. pauper Lee. is a small species found northward. Melanotus includes some of our most com- mon species, such as M. eommunis Gyll., which is of the usual dull brown color. The genus may be known by the front being moderately Fig. 422. convex9 margined anteriorly, and the antennæ are serrate, with the first joint of the usual size, while the prothorax is lobed in front, and the claws are strongly pectinate. Fig. 423 represents a larva prob- ably of this genus. In Limonius and Athous the front is margined, the mouth placed farther forward from the prosternum, the coxal plates are narrow, gradually dilated inwards, and the first joint is only moderate in length. In Fis- Limonius the first tarsal joint is scarcely longer than the second, while in Athous the first tarsal joint is elongated, and the prosternai lobe is long. Limonius plebeius Lee. and L. ectypus Say are obscure reddish brown insects, with a slight fine pubescence.462 COLEOPTERA. Fig. 424. m >14 In Corymbites the front is more or less flattened, and. the coxal plates are narrow externally. C. œripennis Lee. is a skiny dark greenisk species and is found northward. (7. mn- dis Say is dull makogany brown, mottled witk a fine grayisk bloom. C. cylindriformis Germ. is more corn- mon, and of tke usual dull reddish brown. C. triun- dulatus Lee. is frequently found in New England, and lias three transverse waved bands on tke pale elytra ; it is found on tke blossoms of tke rkubarb plant. (7. hierogly• phicus Harris (Fig. 424, elytra) is a similar form. To the genus Pyrophorus belong tke different species of Fire- flies of Central and Soutk America. P. noctilucus (Fig. 425, natural size) is dark rusty brown, and kas two large eye-like luminous spots on tke sides of tke tkorax, and anotker at tke base of the abdomen. Dr. G. A. Perkins in the “ American Naturalist,” vol. ii, p. 428, states that uby placing the luminous parts of one insect quite near tke paper, very fine print can be easily read by its aid, thougk I can- not imagine tke light, even of a large number, to be sufficient for any practi- cal illuminating purposes as kas been affirmed by some writers. The Cuban ladies make a singular use of these Fig. 425. living gems, sewing tkem in lace bags, wkick are disposed as ornaments upon tkeir or arranged as a fillet for tkeir hair.” Tke species of Melanactes are large skining black insects found under stones, and are known by having tke coxal plates gradually dilated inwards. Tke larvæ (Fig. 426, a luminous larva of this genus discovered by Mr. Sanborn in Roxbury, Mass.) are luminous and differ from otkers of tkis family, ac- cording to Osten Sacken, by their small sunken kead, and tke presence of a pair of ocelli. The abdomen ends in a prop-leg. G LU 03 W Fig. 426. dresses, Cebrionidæ Westwood. This family differs from the pre ceding group in tke greater number (six) of abdominal seg-SCHIZOPODIDÆ. 463 ment s, the well developed tibial spurs, the expansion of the anterior tibiæ at the apex, and in the close connection between the front and the labrum. The females are found at the en- trance of holes which they excavate in the ground. (Leconte.) In Cébrio the labrum is separated by suture from the front, and the anterior tibiæ are entire. Cébrio bicolor Fabr. is found in the Southern States. Rhipiceridæ Latreille. In this small group the head is prominent and the maxillæ hâve usually but a single lobe ; the eleven-jointed antennæ are inserted before and in front of the eyes, under ridges, and are serrate in the females and frequently flabellate in the males. The larvæ, in tlieir general appearance, resemble those of the Elateridœ or Tenebrionidœ, be- ing cylindrical, the head almost of tlie sanie breadth as the body, which is hard and horny, more or less dark brown, and in Zenoa picea Beauv. is a little more than an incli in length. “The eighth segment is punctate ail around, and more densely than the Fig. 427. others. The posterior part of this segment is obliquely truncate, and is closed posteriorly by a round, fiat, horny piece, punctate on the outside and which can, to a certain ex- tent, be opened and closed like a lid, being connected by a hinge superiorly, and an expanding membrane inferiorly. This lid is to be considered as the ninth segment of the abdomen.” (Osten Sacken.) The larva, with the adult Zenoa picea, was found under bark in Southern Illinois by Mr. Walsh. San- dalus (S. petrophya Knoch, and tarsus, Fig. 427), with short antennæ, flabellate in the males, is found in various species of cedars. Schizopodidæ Leconte. This small group is represented by only a single species, Schizopodus lœtus Leconte. It resem- bles in form a Galleruca ; it is of a metallic green color, coarsely punctured, with red elytra, and is nearly six-tenths of an inch long. The head is bent down, closely aflîxed to464 COLEOPTERA. the prothorax, and the eleven-jointed antennæ are insert©d immediately in front of the eyes, under a slight promi- nence. Dascyllidæ Guérin. This group embraces généra differ- ing much from each other; the head is usually bent downT sometimes prominent ; the antennæ are eleven-jointed, distant at their insertion immediately in front of the eyes, being placed under a slight ridge, and the mandibles are not promi- nent. They ail live on aquatic plants, and the larvæ are either like those of the Scarabœidæ, being provided with short four-jointed antennæ, and without oeelli, as in Atopa; or they are long, ovate, with distinct oeelli, long bristle-like an- tennæ and very well developed limbs, as in Cyphon. The genus Prionocyphon has the first joint of the antennæ much dilated, and the joint of the labial palpi is inserted on the side of the second ; in Cyphon the palpi are normal. Baron Osten Sacken describes the larva of Prionocyphon discoideus Say as being long, flattened ovate, like a sow-bug (Oniscus) with sharp latéral edges, the body slightly attenuated before and behind, of a leathery consistence, dull pale yellowish, and four-tenths of an inch in length. It was found by Mr. Walsh in the hol- low of an oak stump filled with water, in which it “vibrated vigorously up and down a pencil of hairs proceeding from a horizontal slit in the tail ; this pencil is composed of three pairs of filaments, each beautifully bipectinate. When at the surface this larva generally, but not always, swims on its back, keeping its bodyr slightly below the surface, and striking with its feet, so as to jerk from point,to point, in a curved line. The pencil of hairs touches the surface ail the time. “Occasion- ally, say s Mr. Walsh, “a bubble of air is discharged from the tail. Generally, when it is beneath the surface, the anal pencil is retracted entirely. It has the power of jerking its body sud- ienly round, and darting up and down with great vigor. Its remarkably long antennæ are constantly vibrating, like those of terrestrial insects. The pupa is white, with large black eyes which are very eonspieuous beneath, and two short black setæ on the occiput. The body is covered with a short, white, erect down or pubescence. The antennæ are about two-thirds.JLAMPYRIDÆ. 465 the length of the body, placed lengthwise beneath, side by side. The body is scarcely two-tenths of an inch long. Lampyridæ Leach. The species of the family of Fire-flies. resemble the Elaters, but they are shorter and broader, and of softer consistence. The head is usually immersed in the thorax ; the usually eleven-jointed, serrate, rarely pectinate or flabellate antennæ are inserted on the front rather closely together in the typical généra. The elytra never strongly embrace the sides of the abdomen, are sometimes short, and in some foreign généra entirely wanting in the females. The anterior coxæ are contiguous, conical, with a large trochantine ; the middle coxæ are oblique, and the hinder ones transverse ; while the legs are slender or com- pressed and of mod- erate length. The larvæ are rather long, flattened, blackish, with pale spots on the angles of each segment. In Lycus the an- tennæ are inserted in front of the eyes, at the base of the long beak into which the head is prolonged, and the sides of the thorax are somewhat foliaceous. The female of the Glow-worm, Lam~ pyris, of Europe is wmgless. She lays her eggs, which are of large size, in the earth or upon moss and plants ; the larva- (Fig. 428, female of a species of this genus from Zanzibar).* which feeds on snails, is said to become fully grown in April,, and in fifteen days assumes the imago state. An anonymous French author states, according to Westwood, that when the larva is ready to assume the pupa state, instead of slitting the skin in a line down the back, a slit on each side of the three thoracic segments is made, separating the upper from the lower surfaces.” While the female is large and larva- 30466 COLEOPTERA. like, the much smaller male has broad elytra and a rather nar* row slender body. In the genus Photinus, of which there are numerous species in this country, the antennæ are compressed, or nearly filiform, and the species differ p from those of Lampy- ris, by the females having wings. Nearly N ail hâve phosphor- escent glands in the last abdominal seg- Flg* m ments. The editors of the “American Entomologiste p. 19, give the history of P. pyralis Linn. (Fig. 429 ; a, larva ; e, under- side of a segment ; /, head ; d, a leg ; ô, pupa in its cocoon of earth; c, the. adult). The larva lives in the ground, feeding on earthworms and soft bodied insects. When fnlly grown, or during the latter part of Jnne, it forms an oval cavity in the earth and pupates, and in ten days becomes a beetle. In Photuris the wings and elytra are complété in both sexes, while the head is narrowed behind, and the labrum is distinct. P. Pensylvanica De- Geer (Fig. 430, and 431, larva) is our most com- mon species, and the larva figured I regard as belonging to this species. It is not uncommonly met with in the evening shining brightly as it crawls along, and is blackish and crustaceous like a pill bug. Another Photuris larva (Fig. 432) I hâve fbund under a stone in May. It is represented as in the act of walking, the feet on one side of the body moving alter- nately with those on the other. This is'the mode in which insects usually walk. Fig. 433 (enlarged three times) represents a very singular larva, evidently belonging to this family, and related to the genus Drilus. It was found by Rev. E. C. Bolles, at Westbrooke, Maine, under leaves, and it probably, like other larvæ of this family, is carnivorous. Its body is very flat, with the sides of the head Fig. 431. Fig. 433.MAL ACHIDÆ • 467 and each ring of the body produced into a remarkably long, soft, fleshy tubercle, while there are two rows of black spots along the back. In the genus Pliengodes, the females of which are not yel known in this country, the third and following joints of the antennæ émit two very long, slender and flexible pubescent branches from near the base ; the second and third joints are very short. The elytra are one-third the length of the abdo- men, and are strongly divergent and subulate. Dr. Leconte describes Pliengodes plumosa Oliv. as being testaceous, with the antennæ, excepting the base, and the narrow tips of the elytra fuscous, and the sides of the thorax broadly depressed ; it oc- ours from New York to Texas. In Chaidiognathus the antennæ are filiform ; the elytra are as long or nearly as long as the abdomen and rounded at tip, while the anterior margin of the thorax is s? h rounded. (7. Pensylvanicus DeGeer ( Çf (Fig. 434; a, larva; 5, head en- ^ larged ; c, labium ; d, labrum ; e, a leg ; /, maxilla ; <7, antenna ; À, man- ^ e a dible), in the larva state devours Fig- 434- the grubs of the plum curculio. (American Entomologist, i, p. 35.) In Telephorus the head is never concealed by the tho- rax, and the latter is rounded from the sides along the front margin, the front of the head is emarginate at tip ; the claws are toothed, being rarely cleft. The species are found on the leaves of trees in June. Walsh States that the larva of T. Carolina Fabr. preys on wood-feeding larvæ. Mr. P. S. Sprague has reared the larva of T. bilineatus Say. He found it near Boston under stones in spring, when it pupates, and early in May becomes a beetle. It is found on the leaves of the birch as soon as they are expanded. Malachidæ Redtenbacher. This small group, often united with the preceding family, is chiefly distinguished by the an- tennæ being inserted on the sides of the front, and by the body in some généra being furnished with soft extensible vesicles, while the abdominal segments are in part membranous. Malet- chius and its allies are of small size. Some of them resemble468 COLEOPTERA. at first sight some Staphylinidæ ; they frequent flowers and the banks of ponds and streams. ïhe females of Microhpus are apterous. Fig. 436. Cleridæ Kirby. These beautiful flower beetles are known by the prominent head, the usually emarginate eyes, and the usually eleven-jointed antennæ inserted at the sides of the front, and either serrate or pectinate, with the outer joints enlarged, forming a serrate, or rarely a compact club. Their •bodies are slender, with slender legs. They are rapid in their movements, and run like ants (which they much resemble when in motion) over flowers Fig. 435. and trees to feed on the sweets and sap. The larvæ are carnivorous and infest the nests of bees. They are flattened, hairy grubs, the tip of the abdomen end- ing in two horny points. Those of the généra Corynetes and Necrobia live on dead animal matter. In Priocem (Fig. 485, P. undulata Say) the eyes are coarsely granulated ; the antennæ are serrate, and the maxillary palpi are cylindrical. In Èlasmocerus (E. terminatus Say, called “pupa” states, immediately preceding the Fig. 452. finai genuine pupa state he describes, are but changes of the semipupa, and can be paralleled in some de- gree by the remarkable changes of the bee and moth noted :by us prèviously.480 COLEOPTEKA. The Blister beetles, of which Lytta (Cantharis) affords many species, secrete the substance known as “Cantharadine.” The X / Spanish-fly is \ \ / / used in commerce, Xm 1 and is a bright / jfilk shining green spe- c^es* na^^ve / forms, which as 1 HH \ J_well as Meloë, ^ h when dried, can Fig. 453. be used for pro- ducing blisters, are dark colored. Their larvæ hâve the same form as that of Meloë ; it remains yet to ascertain their true habits, though Latreille States that they live beneath the ground feeding on the roots of vegetables. Among the species of Blister beetles which are especially injurious to the potato are Lyita vittata Fabr. (Fig. 452), L. cinerea Fabr. (Fig. 453, a), L. murina Lee. (Fig. 453, 6), and L. marginata Fabr. (Fig. 454). Phodaga alticeps Lee. (Fig. 455 ; 1, front of male 2, profile of male ; 3, anterior tibia and tarsus ; 4,. Fig. 454. middle tibia ; 5, claw ; from Horn) is a Californian species, remarkable for the great différences between the sexes, in the form of the legs and tarsi. Rhipiphoridæ Gerstaecker. This family is characterized by Leconte as having a vertical head, with perfect mouth- parts, afiîxed to the prothorax by a very slender neck, which is entirely contained within the prothorax, while the vertex is usually elevated. The eleven-jointed antennæ (ten-jointed in the female of certain species) are pectinate or flabel- late in the males, and frequently serrate in the females. The prothorax is as large as the elytra at base, much narrowed in front, and the elytra, rarety covering the abdomen, are usually narrowed be- hind, diverging on the back. The legs are long and slender, with filiform tarsi, and the claws are pectinate or toothed, be- ïng rarely simple. They are found on flowers. The larval. Fig. 455.STYLOPIDÆ. 481 forms are not yet known. BhipipJiorus is a wedge-shaped genus, not found in America. B. Finnicus Paykull is said to be a parasite on Chrysis, the cuckoo wasp. It is here repre- sented by two généra, Macrosiagon and Emmenadia which are wedge-shaped, with coarsely punctured and sparsely pubescent bodies, with the vertex of the head much elevated. In Myo- dites the elytra are very small. The species are found on Soli- dago or Golden-rod in August. The genus Metoecus is allied to Myodites. Metoecus paradoxus Linn. is in Europe a para- site in the nests of wasps (Vespa) eating the larvæ. In the genus Bhipidius the males hâve short pointed dé- hiscent elytra, while the females are entirely wingless and worm-like. It is a parasite on Blatta Germanica. They are to be looked for in this country, where they hâve not yet occurred. Stylopidæ Kirby. This most anomalous family, both as regards the structure and the habits of the few species compos- ing it, were for a long time excluded from the Coleoptera by systematists generally, and by Gerstaecker they are even now placed in the old “order” Strepsiptera. They are minute, forms, and hâve been characterized thus by Dr. Leconte- 4 4 Oral organs atrophied except the mandibles and one pair of palpi. Head large, transverse, vertical, prolonged at the sides,. forming a stout peduncle, at the end of which are situated the eyes, which are convex and very coarsely granulated. Antennæ inserted on the front, at the base of the latéral processes of the head ; forked in one genus. Prothorax exceedingly short. Mesothorax short, bearing at each side a slender, coriaceous* club-shaped appendage, with the inner margin membranous : this appendage represents the elytra. Metathorax very large, , greater in bulk than the rest of the body, with the sutures of the dorsal pièces ail distinct. The postscutellum is conical and! prolonged far over the base of the abdomen ; wings very large,, fan-shaped, with a few diverging nervures ; the epimera are> very large, and project behind almost as far as the postscutel- lum. Abdomen small, with from seven to nine segments. Legs short ; anterior and middle coxæ cylindrical, prominent ; nmd coxæ very small, contiguous, quadrate ; tibiæ without. 31482 COLEOPTERÀ « «purs; tarsi without claws, joints each with a membranous lobe beneath.” The females are sac-like. They live enclosed in the body of the bee. In Stylops the antennæ are six-jointed, and in Xenos they are four-jointed. From the middle of May until late in June both sexes of Stylops may be found in “ stylopized” individu- als of Andrena and Polistes. The flattened triangular head of the female may be seen projecting from between the abdomi- nal segments of the bee, and sometimes there are two or three of them. On carefully drawing out the whole body of a female Stylops Childreni (Fig. 456 ; a, ab- domen of bee enclosing the female St}rlops ; 5, top view), whicli is very extensible, baggy ajid full of a thin fluid, and examining it under a high power we found multitudes, at least three hundred, of very minute Stylops larvæ, like particles of dust issuing in every direction from the body of the parent. Most of them escaped from near the head, over which they ran, as they must do, when the parent is in its natural position, in order to get out upon the surface of the bee. It thus ap- pears that the young (Plate 3, fig. 6, 6 a) are hatched wûthin the body of the parent, and are therefore viviparous. The head of the female is flattened, triangular, nearly equilaterally so, with the apex or région of the mouth obtuse, and the two hinder angles each containing a minute simple eye ; the larger part of the head above consists of the epicranium, which is narrow in front, with the edge convex; the mandibies are obsolète, being two flattened portions lying in front of the gêna and separated from that région by a very distinct suture ; no clypeus or labrum can be distinguished. The mouth is transverse and opens on the upper side of the head, while in front, owing to the position of the mouth, lies the rather large labium and the rounded papilliform maxillæ. The larva is elliptical in form, the head semioval, while theSTYLOPIDÆ. 483 dp of the abdomen is truncate ; the sides of the body are straight, there being no well defined sutures between the seg- ments ; seen laterally the larva is thickest at the metathoracic ring. Two simple eyes are situated near the base of the head. The body is so transparent that the intestine can be traced easily to just before the tip, where it ends in a cul de sac. The two anterior pairs of legs are much alike ; coxæ short ; femora and tibiæ small, cylindrical ; a slen- der tibial spur ; the tarsi consisting of a single clavate joint equalling the tibia in length, being much swollen at the tip, and without claws. The hind tarsi are longer, Fig*457* very slender, two-jointed, the terminal one being bulbous. The terminal styles, inserted in the tenth abdominal ring, are a little more than one-half the length of the body, which is covered with long setose scales. In their movements these infinitési- mal larvæ were very active, as they scrambled over the body of the parent, holding their caudal setæ nearly erect. On the last of April we caught a male Stylops Cliildreni West- wood (Fig. 457, and 458) in the same net with a stylopized Andrena placida, and as the abdo- men of the male was long and very extensile, its tip being provided with a capacious forceps for seizing the body of the female, it is most proba- ble that the female described belonged to the same species, and that at this time the short-lived male, for this one lived but for a day in confinement after capture, unités sexually with the female. It appears then that the larvæ are hatched during the middle or last of June, from the eggs fertilized in April, and which are retained within the body of the parent. The larvæ then crawl on to the body of bees and penetrate within the abdomen of tliose that are to hibernate, and live there through the winter. The entire body of the male is, with the Fig. 458.484 COLEOPTERA. head and antennæ, of a velvety black, the abdomen sliglitly brownish, while the legs and anal forceps are pale resinous brown, and the tips of the tibiæ and the tarsal joints pale testaceous. It is about one-fourth of an inch in length. The succeeding families comprise the divisions Tetramera and Trimera of early authors, in which the penultimate joint of the tarsi is but slightly developed, forming an enlargement at the base of the last joint, with which it is closely United. Bruchidæ Leach. This small family comprises Curculio-like beetles of short rounded form which arc noted for their activity and readiness to take flight when disturbed. They differ from the Curculionidæ in the proboscis being folded on the chest, the antennæ being short and straight and inserted in a cavity next to the eyes. There are 300 species of Bruchus known. Bruchus pisi Linn., the Pea weevil (Fig. 515), is found in seed peas in the spring. It appears soon after the pea is in flower, ovipositing on the young pods (Glover). The young larva feeds in the growing pod, on the pulp of the pea. Peas infested with them should be soaked in boiling hot water before sowing. Bruchus varicomis Lee., in like manner infests the bean. Curculionidæ Latreille. The weevil family may be at once recognized by the head being lengthened into a long snout or proboscis (used for boring into objects when about to oviposit), near the middle of which are situated the long, slender, elbowed antennæ. At the extremity of the snout are situated the mouth-parts, which are much reduced in size, the palpi having small rounded joints. Their bodies are hard and generalty round and often very minute. They are very timid and quickty feign death. The larvæ are white, thick, fleshy, foot- less grubs, with fleshy tubercles instead of legs, and are armed with thick curved jaws. They feed on nuts, seeds, the roots, pith and bark of plants, leaves or flowers, and especially the fruits, while some are leaf-miners and others are said to make galls. Preparatory to transforming they spin silken cocoons. The number of species already known is immense, being not less than from 8,000 to 10,000, and upwards of 630CURCULIONIDÆ. 485 généra hâve been already described by Schônherr and others, of which we can notice but a few of the most important. Brenthus and its allies differ from the following généra in tkeir remarkably long and slender bodies, the snout being stretched straight out, not bent down as usual; while the sligktly clavate antennæ are not elbowed. Dr. Har- ris gives the history of B. septemtrionalis Herbst (Fig. 459). The female in midsummer punctures with her long snout the bark of the white oak. The grub, when hatcked, bores into the solid wood ; it is nearly cylindrical, whitish, except the last seg- ment, which is dark brown and horny, and is Fis- 459. obliquely hollowed at the end, which is dentate, forming a scoop by which the larva clears its gallery of chips. There are three pairs of legs and an anal prop-leg. The pupa is described as being white, with the head bent on the chest between the wings and legs. On the back are rows of sharp teeth, with two larger thorns at the anal tip. Harris States that “the different kinds of Attelabus are said to roll Fig. 460. Fig. 46i. Up the edges of leaves, thereby forming little nests of the shape and size of thimbles to con- tain their eggs and to shelter their young, which afterwards devour the leaves.” A. analis Illiger (Fig. 460) is dull red, with dark blue antennæ and legs. In Bhynchites the head is not con- tracted behind into a neck. R, bicolor Fabr. injures various roses, wild and cultivated. It is red above, with the antennæ, legs and sides of the body black. The little seed weevils, Apion, are pear-shaped and generally black. Apion Sayi Schônh. (Fig. 461) lives in the pods'of the wild Indigo. It is black and one-tenth of an inch in length. Balaninus, the nut- weevil, is oval in shape, with a verÿ slender snout, nearly as long as the body. B. nasicus Say (Fig. 462) is found on hazel bushes, and probably infests the nuts. Harris descrihes486 COLEOPTERA. it as being dark brown, and clothed with very short, rust* yellow, flattened hairs, which are disposed in spots on its wing covers. It is nearly three-tenths of an inch long, exclusive of the snout. The genus. Hylobius has the antennæ inserted before the middle of the snout, not far from the sides of the mouth. The Pine weevil, Hylobius pales Herbst, is very destructive to pines, the pitch-pine especially. This deep chestnut colored weevil is verjr abundant in May and June. It has a line on the thorax, and yellowish white dots scattered over the body, while the thighs are toothed beneath, and the slender cylindrical snout is nearly as long as the tho- rax. The larvæ are found under the bark. In old trees it burrows under the bark, its galleries extending irregularly over the inner surface of the bark and in the sap wood. n The White-pine weevil, Pissodes strobî Peck (Fig. 463; a, larva; &, pupa), equally destructive with the former, is a * jr_ smaller beetle, more slender, and oblong jjlW SilVji oval in form. It is rust-colored brown, with two white dots on the thorax, a /) white scutellum, and behind the middle ^ of the elyt.ra, which are punctured in Fig. 4M. rows, is a transverse white line. Harris States that its eggs are deposited on the leading shoots of the pine, probably on the outer bark, and the larva when hatched bores into the shoot, and thus distorts the tree for life. The pupa is found just under the bark, the beetles appearing in the autumn, though in much greater numbers in May. We hâve found this insect, in ail its stages of growth, under the bark of the white pine the last of April, the larvæ being the most numerous. The larva is white, fooh* less, cylindrical, with a pale reddish head. It is .32 of an inch long, and transforms in a cell. The pupa is white, the tip of the abdomen being square, with a sharp spine on each Fig. 463.CURCÜIilONIDÆ. 481 side. It is .30 of an inch long. An insect tliat would be readily mistaken for the Hylobius pales is the Otiorhynchus sul- catus of Fabricius (Fig. 464), wkich is of muck the same color, but with a thicker body. The Plum Gouger, Anthonomus prunicida Walsli, resembles the Plum curculio in its habits, and, according to Walsh, is equally as common in Northern and Central Illinois. It makes a round puncture in the plum, sometimes five or six, from which the gum copiously exudes. Instead of living, kowever, in the pulp, it devours the kernel and usually transforms inside the stone of the fruit. “The thorax of the plum gouger is ochre-yellow ; the head and hinder parts slate-color, the latter with irregular white and black spots. In common with the other species of the genus to which it belongs its snout usually projects forward, whereas that of the Curculio usually hangs perpendicularly downwards.” (Walsh.) A. sycophanta Walsh is brown-black and was bred by Mr. Walsh from the galls of yarious saw-flies found on the willow, and he supposes that this species, “ while in the larva state, must destroy the egg or the very young larva of the gall-making Nematus, just as A. cra- tœgi Walsh evidently does ; which was found in an undescribed Cecidomyian gall on the thorn bush, and just as the larva of A. scutellatus Schônh. gradually destroys the young plant-lice among which it lives ; otherwise the two larvæ would exist in the same gall.” Walsh has also bred A. tessellatus Walsh from the Cecidomyian gall, C. s. brassicoides. It is “a very con- stant species and easily recognizable by the tessellate appear- ance of the elytra.” A. quadrigibbus Say punctures the apple, making from one to twenty holes in the fruit. The Cranberry weevil, as we may call it, or the Anthonomus suturalis Lee., is a minute reddish brown beetle, with the beak one-half as long as the body, just beyond the middle of which the antennæ are inserted. The head is darker than the rest of the body, being brown black. The thorax is a little darker than the elytra and covered very sparsely with short whitish hairs ; the scutellum is whitish, and the elytra are shining red- dish brown, with the striæ deeply punctured, the interstices being smooth. It is .13 of an inch long including the beak. Mr. W. C. Fish writes me that in the middle of July he488 COLEOPTERA. detected this little weevil laying its eggs in the buds of the cranberry. “It selects a bud not quite ready to open, and clinging to it, works its snout deep into the centre of the bud. An egg is then deposited in the hole made, wken the beetle climbs to the 3tem and cuts it off near where it joins the bud, which drops to the ground and there decays ; the egg hatching and the grub going through its transformations within.” The with a few fine pale hairs, and is .08 of an inch in length. The Magdalis olyra of Herbst (Fig. 465 ; a, larva ; 5, pupa ; the thorax of the larva is enlarged by the pupa growing be- neath ; the pupa from which the drawing was made is not fully developed, since the tip of the fully grown pupa ends in two spines) may be found in ail its stages early in May under the the Plum-Weevil (Fig. 466; a, larva; 5, pupa; c, beetle; d plum stung by the weevil) is a short, stout, thick weevil, and the snout is curved, rather longer than the thorax, and bent on the chest when at rest. It is dark brown, spotted with white, ochre-yellow and black, and the surface is rough, from which the beetle, as Harris says, looks like a Fig. 465. larva is long and rather slender, cylindrical, the body being of uniform thickness and curved ; the head is pale honey yel- low ; the jaws tipped with black ; the rings are very convex, especially the pro- thoracic one ; it is white, bark of the oak. The larva is white, with the head freer from the body than in Pissodes strobi (though it is not so represented in the figure). The body of the beetle is black, punctured, and the thorax has a latéral tubercle on the front edge, while the tarsi are brown with whitish hairs. It is a quarter of an inch long. Fig. 466. Conotrachélus nénuphar Herbst,CURCULIONIDÆ. 489 clried bud when shaken from the trees. When the fruit is set, the beetles sting the plums, and sometimes apples and peaches, with their snouts, making a curved incision, in which a single egg is deposited. Mr. F. C. Hill shows that the curculio makes the crescent-shaped eut after the egg is pushed in “ so as to undermine the egg, and leave it in a kind of flap formed by the little piece of the flesh of the fruit which she has under- mined. Can her object be to wilt the piece around the egg and prevent the growing fruit from crushirig it?” (Practical Entomologist, ii, p. 115.) The grub hatched therefrom is a little footless, fleshy white grub, with a distinct round light brown head. The irritation set up by these larvæ causes the fruit to drop before it is of full size, with the larva still within. Now full-fed, it burrows directly into the ground and there trans- forms during the last of the summer. In three weeks it becomes a beetle It also attacks many other garden fruits, such as the cherry, peach and quince. Drs. Harris, Burnett and other s, think the larva is but a temporary occupant 467• •of the wart on plumb and cherry trees, and not a cause of the disease. The best remedy is jarring the trees, and catch- ing the larvæ in sheets and burning them. Dr. HulFs “cur- culio catcher” is an excellent invention for destroying these insects ; it consists of a large inverted white umbrella, fixed upon a large wheelbarrow split in front to receive the trunk of the tree, against which it is driven with force sufficient to jar the curculios from the tree into the umbrella. The genus Ceutorhynchus is a small, short, thick curculio, which attacks the seeds of the radish and allied plants. We hâve noticed a pale gray species on the radish, which probably inhabits the seeds. The genus Calandra has a slender snout slightly bent down- wards, a coarsely punctured thorax nearly half as long as the490 COLEOPTE11A. whole body, while the elytra are furrowed and do not qui te cover the tip of the abdomen. C. palmarum Linn. is a large black weevil, which lives in the trunks of palme. The Grain Weevil, Sitophüus granarius Linn. (Fig. 467 ; e, and natural size), is pitchy red in color, the surface rough •> it is about an eighth of an inch long, and is im- mensely prolific. This great pest, both as a larva and beetle, consumes wheat after it is stored up, being very abundant in granaries. The larva devours the inside of the hull, leaving the shell whole, so that its presence is not readily de- tected. To prevent its attacks Harris recommends that the wheat be kept cool, well ventilated, and frequently stirred. . A similar weevil, Sitophüus oryzœ Linn. (Fig. 467 ; c, a, larva ; by pupa), attacks the grains of rice and also of wheat ; it differs in having two large red spots on each elytron, and it is abundant in the South, where it is called the 4 4 black weevil.” The European turnip weevil, Ceutorhynchus assimilis Payk., a broad, pale gray insect, has occurred in Maine on the radish. The Grape Curculio, Codiodes incequalis Say (Fig. 468 ; 469 ; a, grape disfigured by the larva ; 6, larva), has lately, according to Walsh, been very destructive to grapes, stinging the fruit and thus- destroying whole bunches of them. The presence of the larva in the grape may be known by a discolora- tion on one side of the berry as if prematurely ripening, though it be the last of June or early in July. Late In July or early in August the grub may be found fully grown, when it drops to the ground and descending a little beneath the surface transforms, and the beetle appears early in Sep- tember. It is grayish black, the elytra black freckled with gray spots, and striated, with large punctures. The legs are dull brick red ; the femora are unarmed, while the four anterior tibiçe hâve a large rectangular tooth near the base. It is from .09 to .11 of an inch in length. As a preventative against their attacks, the vines should be thoroughly shaken each day in June.SCOLYTIDÆ. 491 The genus Phytobius is closely allied to the preceding ; the European P. velatus Beck has the habit, as we learn from Gcrstaecker (Handbuch der Zoologie) of living under water. The Potato-stalk Weevil, Baridius trinotatus Say (Fig. 470 ; larva and pupa ; 471, adult), is a common species in the Mid- dle and Western States, where it causes the stalk to wilt and die, hence ail stalks so affected should be burnt. u The beetle is of a bluish or ash gray color, distinguished as its name ira- plies, by having three shiny black impressed spots at the lower edge of the thorax. The female deposits a single egg in an oblong slit about one-eighth of an inch long, which she has pre- viously formed with her beak in the stalk of the potato. The larva subsequently hatches out and bores into the heart of the stalk, always proceeding downward towards the root. When fully grovvn it is a little over one-fourth of an inch long, and is a soft, whitish, legless grub, with a scaly head.” (Riley.) The larva of P. vestitus Sch. (Fig. 472), infests the stems of the tobacco plant in Mexico. Mr. Huntington has ob- served the Grape Cane gall curculio, Baridius Sesostris Lee. (Fig. 473) in the larval state in large bunches near the joints of the Clinton grape on Kelly’s Island, near Sandusky, Ohio, and has also found the beetle in considérable numbers. The larva closely resembles that of the Potato Baridius. Riley states that the gall is formed during the previous autumn while the tender cane is growing. “It has almost invariably a longitu- dinal slit or dépréssion on one side, dividing that side into two cheeks, which generally hâve a rosy tint.” It pupates late in June, and early in July the adult Fig. 472 appears. It may be known by its polished elytra and punc tured thorax. It is pale reddish, with a stout beak, equalling the body in length, and each elytron has a swelling on the outer edge near the base, and another near the tip. It is a tenth of an inch long. It is the Madarus vitis of Riley. Scolytidæ Westwood. These cylindrical bark borers are492 COLEOPTERA. Fig. 473. rounded beetles of an elongate cylindrical form, truncated be- fore and beiiind. They mine under the bark of trees, running their winding galleries in every direction. They rarely attack liying healthy trees. They are usually brown or tlack in color. The rounded head does not end in a snout and is deeply sunken in the thorax; the clavate antennæ are somewhat el- bowed, while the palpi are very short ; the elytra are often hollowed at the end, and the short stout legs are toothed on the under side of the femora, and the tarsi are slender and narrow. The eggs are laid in the bark, whence the larvæ on being hatched bore straight into the sap wood, or mine between the bark and sap wood. They are like those of the preceding family, fleshy, cylindrical, footless larvæ, wrinkled on the back. When fully grown in the autumn they gnaw an exit for the>beètle, taking care to leave a little space closed in front of their burrow to conceal the pupa. The bark of trees infested by them should be scraped and whitewashed. Hylurgus terebrans Oliv. (Fig. 474) is a rather large red species, very abundant in spring. Fig. 474. It is found under the bark of pines associated with Pissodes, though the larva is smaller and more cylindrical. It mines the inner surface of the bark, slightly grooving the sap wood, and pupates in April, appearing as a beetle in great numbers on warm days early in May. Hylurgus dentatus Say infests the cedar. The Scolytus destructor of Olivier often does much injury to old and decaying elm trees in Europe. Capt. Cox exhibited to the Entomological Society of London a piece of elm three feet long, which was scored by the latéral tubes of this insect, which he estimated must hâve given birth to 280,000 larvæ. The various species of Scolytus, Tomicus and Xyloterus give rise to a disease similar to fireblight, by their ravages beneath the twigs of fruit trees, causing the bark to shrivel and peal où’ as if a fire had run through the orchard. The best method of restraining their attacks is to peal off the affected bark, ex-CERAMBYCIDÆ. 493 posing the eggs and larvæ to the air, when the birds will soon destroy them. T. monographus does great damage by drilling boles in malt-liquor casks in India. It was calculated that sometimes 134,000 holes were drilled in the staves forming a single cask. Immersion in boiling water has been found an effectuai remedy. (Morse.) Also associated with Pissodes, we hâve found in April the galleries of Tomicus pini Say branching out from a common centre. They are filled up with fine chips, and, according to Fitch, are notched in the sides “in which the eggs hâve been placed, where they would remain undisturbed by the beetle as it crawled backwards and forth through the y gallery.” These little beetles hâve not the long snout ' ^ of the weevils, hence they cannot bore through the ï outer bark, but enter into the burrows madc the pre- /j . -a ^ ceding year, and distribute their eggs along the sides. * (Fitch.) T. xylographus Say (Fig. 475) is often a Fig. 476. most formidable enemy to the white pine in the North, and the yellow pine in the South. The genus Cryphalus is a slenderer form. A species, probably the C. materanus of Fitch (Fig. 476), has been found by Mr. Huntington of Kelly’s Island, to bore into empty wine casks and spoil them for use. Cerambycidæ Leach. (Longicornia Latreille). This im- mense family, numbering already nearly 4,000 known species, comprises some of the largest, most showy, as well as the most destructive insects of the suborder. They are readily recog- nized by their oblong, often cylindrical bodies, the remarkably long, filiform, recurved antennæ, and the powerful incurved mandibles. Their eggs are introduced into the cracks in the bark of plants by the long fleshy extensile tip of the abdo- men. The larvæ are long, flattened, cylindrical, fleshy, often footless whitish grubs, with very convex rings, the prothoracie segment being much larger and broader than the succeeding, while the head is small and armed with strong sharp mandi- bles adapted for boring like an auger in the hardest woods. These borers live from one to three years before transform- ing, at the end of which time they construct a cocoon of chips at the end of their burrows, the head of the pupa lying next494 COLEOPTERA. to the thin portion of bark left to conceal the hole. As quoted by Baron Osten Sacken in an interesting article on the larval forms of some of our native beetles, Erichson states that “nofc withstanding the great similitude between the larvæ of Longi- corns, some important différences in the structure of those belonging to the four subdivisions of this family may be no- ticed. The larvæ of the Lamiidæ differ more than the others, on account of the total absence of feet, and the position of the first pair of stigmata which is placed in the fold between the pro- and mesothoracic segments, less abruptly separated than the others. The other larvæ hâve this first pair on the sides of the mesothorax, and hâve feet, which, however, are sometimes so small as to be perceptible only when magni- fied, even in large sized larvæ. The Cerambycidæ (Cerambyx, Callidium and allies) hâve, on the posterior side of the prothorax, above and below, a fleshy, transverse fold, separated by a furrow from the horny dise of this segment. In the Prionidæ and Lepturidæ, the same fold is visible only on the under side. The Lepturœ hâve a large flattened head, as broad as the prothorax, whereas Fig. 477. in the other Longicorn larvæ the head is small and much narrower than the thorax. The larvæ of the Prionidæ show the least différences from those of the Lep- turidæ ; and that of Spondylis is remarkably allied to the lat- ter.” uThepupais at first soft and whitish, and it exhibits ail the parts of the future beetle under a filmy veil which in- wraps every limb. The wings and legs are folded upon the breast ; the long antennæ are turned back against the sides of the body, and then bent forwards between the legs.” (Har- ris.) The beetles mostly hide by day and fly by night. Parandra brunnea Fabr. is much unlike the remaining généra, being Tenebrio-like in form, writh a broad head and short an- tennæ, and shining red in color. The larva is described by Osten Sacken as having a yellowish cordate head, with a large prothorax and fleshy tubercies on the upper and under side ofCERAME Y CIDÆ. 49Ô (1 SJ Lt_ 10 ®j Hlnfn the segments, with the fîrst pair of stigmata placed on the sides of the mesothorax. It is found in dead beach trees. The Orthosoma unicolor Drury (Fig. 477) is a light bay col- ored beetle found flying from the middle of July until Septem- ber. We hâve found the larva (Fig. 478) in the rot- ten stumps of the pine, and in the Western States Biley states that a larva (Fig. 479, head and tho- rax seen from beneath), probably of this species, eats the roots of the grape-vine, hollowing out and sometimes severing the root and killing the vine. Prionus brevicornis Fabr. is a very large, not un- common beetle, of an ovate shape and pitchy black color, with short, thick jaws, and antennæ about half as long as the body. The larvæ, Harris states, are as thick as a man’s thumb, and are found in the trunks and roots of the Balm of Gilead and Lombardy poplar. Flg‘ 478, Fig. 479. Crossidias pulchrior Bland (Fig. 480), from Nebraska, is a pale redclish beetle, with the antennæ, head, base and the largç mark on the disk of the elytra and legs black. An allied form is Eburia? Uïkei Bland (Fig. 481, showing the sculpturing of the head) which is described as coming from Cape St. Lucas, Lower Cali- fornia. The larva of Stenocorus putatcr Peck (Fig. 482 ; a, larva, just about transforming ; 6, pupa) nearly ampu-Flg,48()* tates the branches of the black and white oaks. After becoming , mature in the trunk, and just before undergo- ing its transformations, it gnaws off a bran ch which falls to the ground, containing the larva, which changes to a beetle in midsuminer, and Fig. 481. lays rts egg near the axilla of a leaf stalk or small stem. The beetle is a very slender one, with antennæ longer than the body in the males, the third and fourth joints of which are tipped with a small spine or thorn. It is dull brown, with gray spots. The Banded hickory borer, Chion ACerasphorus) cinctus Drury, makes long galleries in the496 COLEOPTERA. trunks of hickory trees, the worm often workmg its way out of the wood after it has been made into articles of furniture oï carriages. The Ase- mum mœstum Halde- man (Fig. 483 ; a, a, larva ; 6, pupa), we hâve found in ail its stages under the bark of oaks, early in May,. The larva is footless,. white ; the head is rather large, w h i t e * with strong black jaws convex on the outer side; the body is uniform, gradually diminishing in width posteriori ; it is .60 of an inch long. The pupa is .44 of an inch long. The beetle is about half an inch long and is dark brown, with very thick femora. na It Aies the last of May. I hâve received a larva of this Ê species from Dr. Shimer, which was found by him boring H in the grape-vine. The genus Gallidium has antennæ Fig. 484 of moderate length, a broad rounded prothorax, and a flattened. body behind. The larvæ are unusually flattened, with a broad horny head, small stout man- dibles, and six small legs, and they are said to live in this state two years. Callidium. antennatum Newman is en- tirely blue ; it bores in pine wood and in red cedar, min- ing under the bark. C. semi- circularis Bland (Fig. 484) is reddish brown, with a white band on each elytron, enclosing a rather large, semicircular, black spot. It was discovered in Pennsylvania. Clytus has a more cylindrical body, and spherical prothorax, besides being beautifully banded with golden, on a dark ground. Clytus speciosus Say injures the maple. We hâve taken the beetle on the summit cf Mount Katahdin in Maine. The beetle lays its eggs in July and August, and the larvæCERAMB Y CIDÆ • 497 Fig. 485. bore in ail directions through the tree. Osten Sacken de- scribes tke larva of G. pictus Drury, the Hickory-tree borer (Fig. 485 ; a, larva; 6, pupa), as being “six to seven-tentks of an inch in length, being rather long, somewkat flattened club-shaped, the thoracic segments being considerably broader than the abdominal ones, but at the same time distinctly flattened above and below.” The pupa has a } numerous pointed granulations on the prothorax, and similar sharp spines on the abdominal segments. “ On the penultimate segments, these projections are larger and recurved anteriorly at the tip ; there are six in a row near the posterior margin, and two others more anteriorly. The last segment has four ( similar projections in a row.” The male of the Locust tree borer, C. robiniœ Forster (Fig. 486,. c?), according to Walsh, difîers from that of C- pictus “in having much longer and stouter an- tennæ and in having its body tapered behind to< a blunt point,” while the females “are not dis- Fig. 486. tinguishable at ail.” It does great injury to the Locust tree, and appears in the beetle state in September, while <7. pictus, the Hickory tree borer, appears in June. (7. araneiformis Oliv. (Fig. 487) has been detected on a wharf in Philadelphia ; it was first described as coming from St. Domingo. The Long-handed Acrocinus, A. longimanus Fabr. (Fig. 488, larva, natural size), is a gigantic insect, allied to Prionus, but with enormously developed fore legs, the whole body, including the fore legs, when out- stretched measuring ten inches ; it is brown, beautifully banded with red and buff. M.. Salle has found the larva Flg‘ 487‘ at Cordova, Mexico, under the bark of a Ficus. It grows larger in Brazil. Leiopus is a diminutive ally of Lamia. Dr. Shimer has detected the larva of L. xanthoxyli Shimer, under- mining the bark of the prickly-ash, when the wood has recentlv died. It is a footless borer, “of whitish and pink orange oolors, about one-fourth of an inch long.” In the burrows 32498 COLEOPTERA. formed by the larvæ he found May 25th, several pink-orange pupæ, “ invariably lying with their heads outwards ; their long antennæ folded over the wing-cases obliquely down on the sides, passing beneath the posterior pair of legs, a little beyond them and then curving up over the breast, reach the head.” The beetle is related to L. aljplia Say, and is gray, with bands and spots of blackish pubescence ; it is .25 of an inch long. Two species of ichneumons were found by Shimer to prey upon the beetle. In Monoliammus the antennæ are of great length. M. titillator Fabr. is brown mottled with gray ; while a slenderer spe- cies, M. scutellatus Say, of a peculiar dark olive green, with a whitish scutellum, bores in the white pine. The singular habits of the Gircller, Onci- deres cingulatus Say (Fig. 489), hâve thus been described by Professor Haldeman in the Pennsylvania Farm Journal, vol. i, p. 34. “This insect was first described Fig. 488. by Say in the Journal of the Acaden^ of Natural Sciences, vol. v, p. 272, 1825, and its habits were discovered by us and published in our ‘Materials towards a History of the Col- eoptera longicornia of the United States ;* Am. Phil. Trans., vol. x. p. 52, 1837. “ In our walks through the forest our atten- tion was frequently drawn to the branches and main shoots of young hickory trees (Carya alba), which were girdled with a deep notch in such a manner as to induce an observer to be- lle ve that the object in view was to kill the branch beyond the notch, and extraordinary as it may appear, this is actually the fact, and the operator is an insect whose instinct was implanted by the Àlmighty power who created it, and under such circumstances that it could never hâve been acquired as a habit. The effect Fig. 489.CERAMB Y CIPÆ • 49V> of girdling is unknown to the insect, wkose life is too short to foresee the necessities of its progeny during the succeeding season. u This insect may be seen in Pennsylvania during the two last weeks in August and the first week in September feeding upon the bark of the tender branches of the young hickories. Both sexes are rather rare, particularly the male, which is rather smaller than the female, but with longer antennæ. The female makes perforations in the branches of the tree upon which she lives (which are from half an inch to less than a quarter of an inch thick), in which she deposits her eggs ; she then proceeds to gnaw a groove of about a tenth of an inch wide and deep around the branch, and below the place where the eggs are deposited, so that the exterior portion dies and the larva feeds upon the dead wood and food which is essential to many insects, although but few hâve the means of providing it for themselves or their progeny by an instinct so remarkable. “Where this insect is abundant, it must cause muck damage to young forests of hop-poles by the destruction of the prin- cipal shoot. We hâve known insects which, from their rarity, could hardly be regarded as ‘ noxious,’ increase to such an extent as to be very destructive, and the locust trees (Robinia pseudacacia) hâve had their foliage withered during the few last summers from such a cause (Cecidomyia robiniæ Hald.) which lias caused these trees to wither since that period, particularly in August, 1868.” The Tridentate Compsidea, C. tridentata Olîv. (Fig. 490, larva, en- larged three times), is a dark brown beetle, with a rusty red curved line behind the eyes, two stripes on Fis- 49C- the thorax, and a three-toothed stripe on the outer edge of eacli wing-cover, and is about half an inch long. It lives under the bark of elms, occasionally doing much damage. (Harris.) The larva of Psenocerus supemotatus (described by Say) which burrows in the stem of a climbing plant, supposed to be the grape, Osten Sacken describes as being three-tenths of an inch long, subcylindrical or prismatical, the pro- and meso- tkorax being a little broader than the other segments, and the whole body sparsely beset with fine golden hairs.500 COLEOPTEKA. 3 This insect, according to Fitch, also does much injury to the currant, eating the pith “through the whole length of the stalk and leaving it filled with a fine powder. It is about the first of June that the parent insect deposits her eggs upon the currant stalks, and the worms get their growth by the close of the season. They repose in their eells through the winter, changing to pupæ with the warmth of the following spring, and begin to appear abroad in their perfect /-A state as early as the middle of May, the sexes pairing immediately after they corne out.” (Fitch.) In August, 1868, I received from Dr. P. A. Chadbourne, President of Madison University, several branches of the apple containing larvæ, which in the next spring changed to this beetle. The}7 were very injurious to orchards in Fig. 491. his vicinity, and this seems to be the first instance of its occurrence in the apple. The larva (Fig. 491, en- larged thrice) is nearly half an inch long; it is footless, white, with the head scarcely half as wide as the body and con- siderably flattened ; the segments are rather convex, each hav- ing two rows of minute warts, and the tip is rather blunt, with a few fine golden hairs. It devoured the sap wood and under side of the bark and also the pith, thus locally killing the terminal twigs, and causing the bark to shrivel and peel off, leaving a distinct line of démarcation between the dead and living portions of the twig. Each larva seemed to live in a space one and one-half inches long, there being five holes through the bark witliin the space of as many inches. On the 16th of August the grubs seemed to hâve accom- plished their work of destruction, as they were fully grown. The beetle is from .13 to .20 of an inch long, and may be known by its dark, reddish brown, cyiindrical body, with a high tubercle at the base of the elytron, an oblique yellowish white line on the basal third, and a broad curved white line on the outer third of the elytron, or wing-cover. Saperda candida Fabr. (bivittata Say, Fig. 492) the well known Apple tree borer, Aies about orchards in July in New Fig. 45>2.CHRYSOMELIDÆ. 501 England, in May and June in the Western States, usually at night, but we once observed it flying in the hottest part of the day. At this time the female lays her eggs in the bark near the roots. The nearly cylindrical larvæ are whitish fleshy grubs, with a small horny head, while the prothoracic ring, as usual, is much larger than the others, the two preceding ones being very short, and from thence the body narrows to the tip. It bores upward into the wood, where it lives two or three years, finally making a cocoon eight or ten inches from its starting point, in a burrow next to the bark, whence it leaves the pupa state (which begins early in June) in midsum- mer. It also infests the wild apple, quince, pear, June-berry, mountain-ash and hawthorn. Riley advises soaping the trunk of the tree to prevent the beetle from laying its eggs, and when the tree is infested with them to eut through the bark at the upper end of their borings and pour in hot water, while in the autumn the bark should be examined and the young worms that had been hatched through the summer may be dug out and destroyed. We hâve found what we supposed to be the young larvæ of Desmocerus cyaneus Fabr. in the stems of the elder ; the beetle is a handsome purple and white Longicom. We hâve found Mhagium lineatum Olivier living in old trunks of pine trees. The antennæ are no longer than the breadth of the body. It makes a cocoon of chips, and the beetle appears in the autumn, not, however, leaving the tree until the spring. Chrysomelidæ Latreille. The Leaf-beetles are oval or oblong, often very thick and convex above, with short an- tennæ, round prominent eyes, with a narrow cylindrical thorax, and the hinder thighs often much thickened in the middle, while the abdomen has five free segments. The larvæ are short, rounded, cylindrical or flattened, generally of soft 3onsistence, usually gaily colored, and beset with thick flat- tened tubercles or branching spines, and well developed tho- racic feet. There are estimated to be from 8,000 to 10,000 species. They are found feeding, both in the larva and adult stages, on leaves, either on the surface, or, as in Hispa and severai species of Haltica, their larvæ are leaf-miners.502 COLEOPTERA. Fig. 493. The genus Donada connects this family with the preceding. It has a rather long body and unusually long antennæ. D. proxima Kirby is dark blue, and Donacia Kirbyi Lacordaire is of a shining coppery hue. The larvæ live in the stems of water plants, and make a leathery cocoon in the earth before transforming. The Grape-vine Fidia (F. viticida Walsh, Fig. 493) is very injurious to the grape in the Western States, from its habit of “cutting straight elongated holes of about an eighth of an « inch in diameter in the leaves, and when mimer* ous so riddling the leaves as to reduce them to mere shreds.” It is chestnut brown, and cov* ered with short whitish liairs, giving it a hoary appearance. Riley states that it is very abun* dant in the vineyards in Missouri, where it pre* fers Concord and Norton’s Virginia grapes, while it occurs on the wild grape-vine and on the leaves of the Cercis Canadensis. “It makes its appearance during th(k month of June, and by the end of July has generally disap* peared, from which fact we may infer that there is but one brood each year.” The vines should be often shaken and chickens turned in to feed upon them when it is possible. Crioceris is known by its rather long body, and the prothorax be- ing narrower than the ely- tra. The an- tennæ are Fig. 494. rather long, the fore coxæ are swollen, pressed together, and the claws are either free or united at the base. We hâve no native species, but Crioceris asparagi Linn. has been introduced into gardens about New York, doing much injury to the asparagus. Fitch describes it as being about a quarter of an inch long, with a tawny red prothorax and three bright lemon yellow spots on each elytron. The larva is soft-bodied, twiceCHRYSOMELIDÆ. 503 as long as thick, the body thickening posteriorly, and of a dull ash gray or obscure olive, with a black head and legs. Lema trilineata Olivier (Fig. 494 ; a, larva ; 5, terminal joints of abdomen; c, pupa ; d, eggs) occurs in great abundance on the leaves of the potato. The dirty yellowish larvæ are found on it abundantly, and hide themselves by covering their bodies with their own excrement. They mature in about two weeks, transform in earthen cells .cemented with a gummy exudation discharged from the mouth, and in a fortnight, being about the first of August, the beautiful yellow and black striped beetle, with a reddish head and prothorax, appears. Hispa is also a miner in the larva State. Hispa (Uroplata) rosea Harris (Fig. 495) is supposed by Harris to mine the leaves of the apple tree. Harris describes it as being “of a deep or a tawny reddish yellow color above, marked with little deep red lines and spots. There are three smooth, longitudinal ribs on each elytron, spotted with blood-red, and the space between these lines are deeply punctured in double rows ; the under side of the body is black, and the legs are short and reddish. They meas- Fi&- 4r'5- ure about one-fifth of an inch in length.” “The larvæ burrow under the skin of the leaves of plants, and eat the pulpy substance within, so that the skin over and under the place of their operations, turns brown and dies, having somewhat of a blistered appearance, and within these blistered spots the larvæ or grubs, the pupæ or the beetles, may often be found. The eggs of these insects are little rough, blackish grains, and are glued to the surface of the leaves, sometimes singly, and sometimes in clusters of four or five together. The grubs of our common species are about one-fifth of an inch in length, when fully grown. The body is oblong, flattened, rather broader before than behind, soft, and of a whitish color, ex- cept the head and the top of the first ring, which are brown, or blackish, and of a liorny consistence. It has a pair of legs to each of the first three rings ; the other rifigs are provided with small fleshy warts at the sides, and transverse rows of little rasp-like points above and beneath. The pupa State lasts only about one week, soon after which the beetles corne out of504 COLEOFTERA. their burrows.” Hispa (Uroplata) suturalis Fabr. mines the Locust tree, and often proves very destructive in the Middle and Western States. They are flat, the body behind being broad and square, and the elytra are generally ridged and furrowed. Cassida aurichalcea Fabr., the yellow Helmet beetle, is hem- fspherical, flattened, so that the edges of the wings aie very ing-glory in our garden, eating holes in the leaves. In the young the head and legs are more prominent than in the old. It pupates the last of July and early in August. The Chelymorpha cribraria Fabr. (Fig. 496 ; a, pupa) we hâve found in ali its stages on the leaves of the silk-weed late in July and early in August, and in one instance in Salem it occurred in abundance on the leaves of the raspberry. The larva differs from that of Cassida aurichalcea, not only in its greâter size, but the body is thicker and narrower ; the head is freer from the thorax, and the spines are simple, not spinula- ted. The body is j^ellow and less protected by the cast skin. When about to transform, the larva attaches itself to the leaf by a silken thread, a few segments from the end where the eausing the yellow portions to appear more prominently ; along 2ach side of the abdomen is a row of five spines, and there are four spines on the anterior edge of the prothorax ; it is .40 of an inch in length. Fig. 497 represents, according to Harris, “the larva, nearly full size, of Galeruca gélatinariœ Fabr. or an allied species, found abundantly on Ambrosia elatior, July 30th. They thin; and the larva is broad, oval, flattened, and by means of two spines terminating its upturned abdomen, rfflp holds its old cast larva skin over its Fig. 496. body as a means of protection. Dur- ing the last week in July we hâve found the larvæ in ail stages of growth very abundant on the Morn- Fig. 497. end of the body of the future pupa is situated. It is .45 of an inch long. The pupa is broad and rather flattened, dark and spotted with 3rellow and covered with a whitish powder,CHRYSOMELIDÆ. 505 live on the upper surface of the leaves and devour the cuticle .and parenchyma above, leaving the lower cuticle untouched. It is of a dirty yellowish white color, with black tubercles bearing white bristles. Length one-fourth of an inch.” (Har- ris Correspondence, p. 267.) We hâve found Galeruca marginélla Kirby (Fig. 498 ; a, larva ; 6, pupa) in ail its stages of growth on Myrica gale, during the middle of August, in Northern Maine. The larva is shining black, coria- ceous above, and the body is elongated, flattened, with a small orbicular black head. The upper side of the body is hard, from the close prox- imity of the black flattened tubercles. Beneath, whitish; on the side is a row of small black brown tubercles, and along the middle of the body is a row of transversely linear brown tu- bercles, on each side of which is a ,-----—î minute dot-like tubercle. It is not hairy, and measures .25 of an inch in length. When about to transform it fastens itself by its tail to the surface of a leaf. The pupa is brown-black. The beetle is umber brown, testaceous •on the edges of the elytra, the legs being also testaceous, while the prothorax is pale, with three dark brown spots, of which the central one is T-shaped. The Striped Squash beetle, Diabrotica vittata Fabr. (Fig. 499, a, larva ; 5, pupa seen from underneath; Fig. 500, adult) ap- / y vj[y\ pears on squash vines as soon as they are Fig. 501. Fig. 500. up, and at once devours them unless their attacks are pre- vented. Covering the vines with cotton or a box covered with muslin or millinet is the only sure remedy, while on a large «cale powdered charcoal, or lime is used, to be sprinkled on the leaves. Mr. Gregory, says the “ American Agriculturist,,, re- lies upon plaster, or oyster-shell lime, which may be shaken Fig. 499.506 COLEOPTERA. from a small sieve while the leaves are wet with dew or rain ; to be applied as soon as the plants are up. He objects to the use of air-slacked stove lime, as it is apt to be too caustic and injure the plant. Dr. H. Shimer has given an account of the habits of this insect in the “Prairie Farmer,” and has sent me specimens of the insect in its different stages. He states that the grub in June and July “eats the bark and often perforâtes, and hollows out the lower part of the stem which is beneath the ground, and the upper portion of the root, and occasionally when the supply below fails, we find them in the vine just above the ground.” It hibernâtes in the pupa state. “The larva arrives at maturity in about a month after the egg is laid it remains in the pupa state about two weeks, and the beetle tprobably lives several days before depositing her eggs,. so that one génération is in existence about two months,. and we can only hâve two, never more than three broods in one season.” He has found them boring in Eig. 502. ^ Squasj1 an(j muskmelon vines as late as October lst» The larva is a long, slender, white, cylindrical grub, with a small brownish head. The prothorax is a little corneous. The tho- racic legs are very slender, pale brown ; the end of the body is suddenly truncated, with a small prop-leg beneath. Above is an orbicular brown space, growing black posteriorly and ending in a pair of upcurved, vertical, slender black spines. It is .40 of an inch long. It will be seen that both in its boring habits and its corresponding, remarkable, elongated, cylindrical, soft; white body, that this larva varies widely from that of Galleruca, to which the beetle is closely allied. The pupa is .17 of an inch long, white, with the tip of the abdomen ending in two long acute spines arising from a common base. The Twelve- spotted Diabrothica (Fig. 501, D. duodecim-punctata Fabr.) is injurious to the leaves of the Dahlia. The genus Haltica, to which the little blackish Flea-beetles belong, is well known. The larvæ mine the leaves of the plants on which they afberwards feed. Haltica (Crepidodera) cucumeris Harris (Fig. 502) infests the cucumber. Harris de- scribes it as being “ only one-sixteenth of an inch long, of a black color, with clay-yellow antennæ and legs, except the hindmost thighs, which are brown. The upper side of the bodyCHRYSOMELIDÆ. 507 la covered with punctures, which are arranged in rows on the wing-cases, and there is a deep transverse furrow across the hinder part of the thorax.” It not only kills young cucumber- vines, eating the seed leaves, but is found ail through the summer eating holes in the leaves of various garden vegetables. The Grape-leaf Flea Beetle, H. (Grapto- dera) chalybea Illiger, eats the buds and leaves of the grape. It is a Steel blue in- sect, often varying in its shades of color- ing, sometimes becoming greenish. It is a little over three-twentieths of an inch in length. In Ohio, Mr. M. C. Reed noticed the sexes of this species, which Dr. Leconte considers as probably the Graptodera exapta of Say (Fig. 503), pairing May 6th. The larvæ appeared the last of the month, and by the first week in June, and on the 30th of the same month, the beetles appeared. I hâve received specimens of the larva from Mr. Read. It is a yellowish white, cylindrical worm, with a jet black head and black tubercles, from each of which proceed several fine hairs. The prothorax is brown black above ; on each succeeding ring of the body are ten tergal black tubercles, the two inner ones being long and narrow, and transverse, the others forming round dots. On each ring is a single black dot just between the two lower larger tubercles. On the sides are two rows of black tubercles, and along the middle of the under side a row of transverse tubercles, on each side of which is a row of dot-like tubercles. It is .35 of an inch in length. The Striped Turnip Flea beetle, H. (Phyllotreta) striolata Fabr. (Fig. 504 ; a, larva ; 5, pupa), is black, with a waved yel lowish stripe on each wing-cover, and is less than a tenth of an inch long. Dr. Shimer describes the larva as being white ; the head is of a pale brown color, and near the end of the body is a brown spot equal to the head in size ; besides the thoracic legs there is a single anal prop-leg. It is .35 of an inch long. It feeds upon roots beneath the ground. The pupa is naked, white, and transforms in an earthen cocoon. In seventeen Fig. 504.608 COLEOPTERA. days from the time the larva ceases eating the oeetle appearecL It then feeds on the seed leaves of cabbages and turnips and other garden vegetables, when it proves very injurious, while afterwards in June, when the plants hâve at- tained their growth, they sicken and die from the attacks of the larva in their roots. (American Fig. 505. Naturalisé vol. ii, p. 514.) The Silk-weed Labidomera, L. trimaculata Fabr. (Fig. 505, larva) is found in its larval stage on the Silk-weed about the first of August. It is a thick hemispherical beetle, with a dark blue head and prothorax, and orange elytra, with three large blue spots on each wing-cover. It is one-half of an inch long. Fig. 506. The Colorado potato beetle, Doryphora decem-lineata Say (Fig. 506 ; a, eggs ; 5, the larvæ in different stages of growth ; c, the pupa ; d, beetle ; e, elytron, magnified ; /, leg, magnified) bas gradually spread eastward as far as Maine, from its original habitat in Colorado, having become very destructive to the potato-vine. It becomes a beetle witliin a month after hatching from the yellowish eggs ; the larva is pale yellow with a reddish tinge and a latéral row of black dots. Messrs. Walsh and Riley State that “there are three broods of larvæ every year in North Illinois and Central Missouri, each of which goes under ground to pass into the pupa state, the first two broods coming out of the ground in the beetle state aboutCHRYSOMELIDÆ. 509 Fig. Ô061. we hâve quoted, enumerate and ten or twelve days afterwards, while the third brood of beetles stays under ground ail winter, and only emerges late in tlie following spring, just in time to lay its eggs upon the young po- tato leaves,” which it devours to such an ex- tent as to sometimes almost eut off the en- tire crop in certain lo- calities. The Editors of the ‘6 American En- tomologist,” from whom figure various beetles, hemiptera, and a species of Tachina fly (Lydella doryphoræ Riley) which mostly prey upon the larvæ. Dr. H. Shimer shows, in the “ American Naturalist,” vol. iii, p. 91, that a dry and hot summer is very unfavorable to the development of this insect, the pupæ dying for want of suffi- cient moisture in the soil. The best remedy against its attacks is hand picking. A very closely allied species or variety, the D. juncta Ger- mar (Fig. 5061), may be easily confounded with the other spe- cies, but differs, according to Walsh, in the head of the larva being paler, while in the beetle the tliird and fourth stripe from the outside are united, where they are distinct in the D. 10-lineata, and the legs are entirely pale yellow, with a dark spot on the femora. It feeds on the wild potato, not eating Fi&* 5062* the cultivated species, and has always been an inhabitant of the Western and Southern States. Chrysomela is an oval oblong genus, and its ally, Calligrapha, is very convex, hemispherical ; the species are gaily spotted and banded ; Calligrapha scalaris Lee. is abundant on the aider. The larvæ (Fig. 5062, larva of C. Philadelphica Linn.) are thick and fleshy, with a row of black spiracles along the side of the body, and a dark prothoracic shield. Eumolpus auratus Fabr. is a sliining, rich golden green bee* tle, found on the dog’s-bane. Chlamys is a little oblong, cubical, roughly shagreened,MO COLEOPTERA. metallic greenish beetle, found in abundance on leaves south- ward. The larva of Chlamys plicata Olivier, according to Mr. S. H. Scudder, who has reared it from the sweet-fern, is a sac bearer, drawing after it a rounded, flask-shaped, blackish sac, within which it withdraws when disturbed. Larvæ appar- ently belonging to this species were found by Mr. Emerton on grass in pastures in July. Tliey are interesting as being true sac-bearers, recalling Psyché hélix and other sac-bearing moths, and the Phryganeids. Fig. 507 represents the larva in the act of walking, the head and thoracic segments protruding from the case. The case is a quarter of an inch long and one-half as thick, being oval cylindrical. It is black and appears to be formed of little pellets of vegetable • matter chewed by the larva and applied to the Fig. 507. edge, with a seam along the middle of the under side, which readily spreads open when the sac is pressed. The case is a little contracted before the mouth, where the pellets are a little larger than elsewhere. The larva is of the form of those of others of the family, but the body is slenderer in front of the abdomen, and the legs are longer than usual. The abdomen is suddenly thickened and curved at right angles, the tip being rather pointed. The body is white, with a brown-black head and dark brown legs, and a prothoracic corneous piece, with a corneous piece at the inser- tion of each leg. It is, in its natural curved posture, .25 of an inch long. In the Muséum of the Peabody Âcademy arr several minute chalcid parasites reared from C. plicata. Cryptocephalus is a short, cylindrical genus, numbering neany 800 species. Erotylidæ Westwood. This family is very largely devel- sped in tropical America, and is known by the large, flattened antennal club, which consists of three joints. Most of them are supposed to be leaf insects, while the more northern spe- cies live in fungi. Endomychidæ Leach. In this small group are généra whose bodies are oval, with antennæ longer than the head, which withCOCCINELLIDÆ. 511 the trapeziform prothorax, distinguish them from the allied families. An interesting form from New Hampshire, the Phy- maphora pulchella of Newman (Fig. 508), is described by Harris (Correspondence, p. 256) as being rust-red, with paler feet and antennæ, the head being black; there is a broad black band across the middle of the elytra, and the tips are black. I Coccinellidæ Latreille. The characteristic form Fig. 508. of the “ Lady-birds ” is well known. They are hemispherical, generally red or yellow, with round or Innate black spots. The species are difhcult to dis- criminate, and number upwards of 1,000. Some in- dividuals belonging to different species hâve been known to unité sexually, but producing stérile eggs. Flg- 509- The yellow long oval eggs aye laid in patches, often in a group of plant-lice, which the larvæ greedily devour. They are rather long, oval, soft-bodied, pointed behind, with the prothorax larger than the other rings, often gaily colored and beset with tubercles or spines, and when about to turn to a pupa, the larva attaches itself by the end of the body to a leaf, and either throws off the larva skin, which remains around its tail, or the old dried skin is retained, loosely folded about the pupa as a protection, thus simulating the coarctate pupa of the Aies. The Spotted Hippodamia, H. maculata DeGeer (Fig. 509) is pale red, with thirteen black spots on the body, and is quite common, while the H. convergens Guérin (Fig. 510, with larva and pupa) is common southwards. In Coccinella the body is smooth, hemi- spherical, with the hind angle of the prothorax acute. The eggs of the common Two-spotted Coccinella, (7. bipunc» tata Linn., are laid in May on the bark of trees, and those of another brood are laid in June and hatched July lst. They are oval, cylindrical, orange yellow, and are attached in a bunch of about twenty-five, by one end to the bark. They hatch out when the leaves and their natural article of diet, the Aphis, appear, and may be found running about over the leaves of various garden shrubs and trees. The body is black with fiat* Fig. 510.512 COLEOPTEEA. tened tubercles spinulated above; on each side of thc first abdominal segment is a yellowish spot, and tliere is a broad yellowish spot in the middle of the fourth segment, and one on each side. On June 28th we found several fully grown larvæ a quarter of an inch long, transforming into pupæ, with a freshly transformed beetle. The larva begins the opera- tion by attaching very firmly, with a sort of silky gum, its tail to the leaf, the point of attachment not being the extreme tip, but just before it, where the tip of the abdomen of the pupa is situated. Meanwhile the body contracts in length and widens,. the head is bent upon the breast, and in about twenty-four hours the skin splits open and discloses the pupa. The body Vof the pupa is black ; the head is also black, and the prothorax is black and yellowish pink, with a black dot on each side, and a smaller black dot on each edge ; the mesothorax, wing-covers, scutellum and legs, are shining black. The ab- dominal rings are pale flesh-colored, with two rig. 511. rows Gf iarge black spots on each side, the spots- being transverse ; the terga of the fourth to the seventh seg- ments are separated, the body being arched and leaving a deep furrow between. The beetle is orange yellow, with a black head and prothorax ; the side of the pro- thorax is whitish, with a central diamond-shaped white Fig* 512* spot, and behind it a muçh longer whitish spot. The beetle dérivés its spécifie name from the two black dots on the elytra. It hibernâtes, and might be used to clear house-plants of plant- lice. The Nine-spotted Coccinella, C. novemnotata Herbst (Fig. 511, and pupa), and the Three-banded Coccinella, (7. £n- fasciata Linn. (Fig. 512), are also not uncommon specics. The Fifteen-spotted Lady-bird, Mysia Ib-punctata Olivier, ls black on the head and prothorax, with seven black spots on the brownish red elytra, and a black spot on the scutellum ; it is seven-twentïeths of an inch in length. The larva closely re« semblés that of Coccinella, but along the body are six rows of stout spinulated spines ; the upper surface of the body is black,, with a pale spot on the hinder edge of the prothoracic ring ; the body is pale beneath. It is half an inch long. The pupa is pale, not black like that of the Coccinellæ known to us, andCOCCINELLIDÆ. 513 is sixteen-spotted, with three additional rows of dark spots on the abdomen. The body is broad and fiat, with a row of three spines on each side of the abdomen, and is .40 of ap inch long. In Chïlocovus the margin of the elytra is dilated, and the lunate prothorax is rounded behind. O. bivulnerulus Mulsant (Fig. 513) is black, with two yellow spots. The genus Scymnus is hemispherical, pubescent, with short, abruptly clavate antennæ. I hâve received from Dr. II. Shimer the larva and adult of Scymnus cer- mcalis Muls. which he found in the holes of insects boring in the Prickly-ash. The body is subcylin- drical, pale whitish, much longer and slenderer and Fi£- 513 • narrower than in Coccinella, with a small black round head ; the legs are long and slender, more so than in Coccinella. The rings are rather convex, not tuberculated above, though provided with a few hairs. It is .12 of an inch long. The beetle is reddish brown, witl} very dark Fig. 514. prussian blue elytra, and is .10 of an inch long. JEpilachna borealis Thunberg (Fig. 514) is yellowish, with seven large black patches on each elytron. “The larvæ, according to Osten Sacken, are common on the leaves of the pumpkin. It is yellow, with long, brown, branched spines, arranged in rows of six on each segment, except the first tho- racic segment, which has onty four, The pupa instead of spines has short bristles, especially on the thorax,” Fig. 515. The Pea Weevil (enlargecl) 33514 HEMIPTERA. In the remaining suborders, the metamorphosis is, with tlie exception of most of the Neuroptera, generally “ incomplète,” the active larva and pupa closely resembling the adult, and often scarcely distinguishable from it except in being wingless. This similarity of the adult condition to the larval and pupal forms, as well as the equality in size of the different segments of the body, the aquatic habits of many of the species, and the numerous genuine parasites found among them, are indica- tive of their low rank. HEMIPTERA . This order, including the true “ bugs,” the plant-lice, bed- bug and body-lice, may be briefly characterized by the beak- like sucking mouth-parts, composed of the mandibles and maxillæ, which are ensheathed by the large expanded labium, while the labrum is small and short ; by the free, large protho- rax, the usually angular short body, and the irregularly veined wings, the veins being but few in number, while the fore wings are often half coriaceous and opake. The metamorphosis is incomplète. There are many wingless parasitic forms, and many aquatic species. The triangular head is nearly always sunken into the pro- thorax, and is small in proportion to the rest of the body ; the eyes* are small, nearly globular and very prominent, and the three ocelli are set far back, while the short, bristle-like, or filiform antennæ, with from five to thirteen or more joints, are inserted below and far in advance of the eyes, so that the front is broad and fiat. The parts of the mouth form a four-jointed solid hard beak. The mandibles and maxillæ are long and style-like, the latter without palpi ; they are ensheathed at their base by the canaliculate labium, which lias obsolète palpi, while the lingua is short, but slightly developed, its function of tasting the food, owing to the peculiar habits of the suborder, being thrown into disuse. The labrum is well developed, being generally acutely triangular. The thorax is constructed on the coleopterous type, the prothorax being broad above, and the wings, when folded, concealing the restHEMIPTERA. 515 of the body, while the side pièces (the epimera and epistema) are large and of much the same form as in the Coleoptera, and the legs are situated close together, with coxæ and trochanters yery similar to those of the Coleoptera. The body is usually very fiat above, or, in the more or less cylindrical species, somewliat broad and fiat. The body is less concentrated headwards than in the Coleoptera, though much more so than in the Orthoptera, and in this respect, as well as in other essential characters, the group is intermediate between these two suborders. Both pairs of wings are very equal in size and alike in shape, except in the higher families where they are very unequal, the hinder pair being very small. They are generally very regularly ovate in shape, the costal edge being much curved and rounded towards the obtusely rounded apex ; the outer edge is long and very oblique, and the inner edge short, though often longer than the outer edge in the lower families. The type of venation is rather peculiar in this sub- order, as the costal veins are large and stout, while, as seen in the wings of Aphis, the médian veins are sent out from the Costa ; indeed there is no central powerful vein in the middle of the wing ; in other words the wing is scarcely differentiated into its three spécial régions, so well seen in the Hymenoptera and Lepidoptera, and especially the Orthoptera. The surface is net-veined rather than parallel-veined, but there are few veinlets, and the interspaces are large and few in number, and in this respect most Hemiptera show their superiority to the Orthoptera and Neuroptera. In the lower section of the suborder, the Heteropterous Hemiptera, the thickening of the basal half of the wing tends to obliterate ail traces of the veins, and especially the veinlets. The legs are slender, and often very long, owing to the great length of the femora and tibiæ, while the tarsi, like those of the lowest Coleoptera, mre two or three-jointed. The abdomen has six to nine segments apparent, though the typical number is eleven, according to Lacaze-Duthiers. The stigmata are very distinct, being often raised on a tubercle. On the basal ring of the abdomen are two cavities in which are sometimes seated vocal organs, as in the male Cicada, and in the metathorax of some species are glands for secreting a516 HEMIPTERA. foui odorous fluid. Lacaze-Duthiers has given a sectional view of Ranatra (Fig. 516 ; y, dorsal vessel ; i, intestine ; n, ner- vous cord) which shows the relation of the éléments of an abdominal segment, t, is the tergum ; em, the epimerum ; es, the episternum, and s, the sternum. The ovipositor and the génital armature are generally corn cealed witliin the tip of the abdomen, being rarely exserted so as to form a prominent part of the body. It differs greatly in its development, and is difficult to reduce to a common type* Lacaze-Duthiers States that we may consider the abdomen of the Hemiptera as consisting of ten or eleven segments, accord- ing as we consider the horny ring, lying between the abdomen and thorax as the basal ring of the abdomen, or not. He re- gards the former view as the true one. This autlior contends that in Ploa the tergum of the first and second abdominal v segments (proto and deutotergites) are coal- esced, and that the original sutures are marked >£< by simple striæ, while at the opposite end of N' s the abdomen the génital and anal outlets are Flg* 516‘ separated by three rings, i.e., the eighth, ninth and tenth. In the Ciccididœ and Phytocoris the ovipositor is per- fect and much as described in the Hymenoptera. In the Fulgoridœ, Naucoris, Ploa and Notonecta, the eighth segment is complété, while the ovipositor is more or less in- complète, and it often happens that a reunion of secondary pièces represents a principal piece, and that the éléments of the two postgenital rings are articulated together by overlap- ping each othcr. In Ranatra as well as Nepa is a third modification of the ovipositor, where the postgenital segment is incomplète, #nd the sternal appendages and sternum of the segment bearing the ovipositor only remain, the other paît s being aborted. In the Pentatomids and Cimex there is no ovipositor, but the aborted éléments are more or less developed, so as to be identifiable. The nervous System consists, besides those of the head, of two thoracic ganglia, of which the anterior is the smaller, which gend off two main trunks to the abdomen.HEMIPTERA. 517 The œsophagus is usually small and short, while the much convoluted stomach is very long and subdivided, first into a large, straight, glandular portion ; second, into the convoluted smaller part, and third, in some Pentatomids and Coreidœ there is a third stomach “consisting of a very narrow, slightly, flexuous canal, on which are inserted two or four rows of closely aggregated glandular tubes.” (Siebold.) The Cicad- idœ, and most Heteropterous Hemiptera, hâve very large lobu- lated salivary glands, divided into two unequal portions, and often with long digitiform processes. In the aquatic species, i.ethe N’aucoridœ and Nepido?^ there are two stigmata at the end of the abdomen. In Nepa and Ranatra the stigmata are situated at the base of n long tube. There are four long urinary tubes. The ovaries are formed of from four to eight tubes arranged in a verti- cillate manner about the end of the short oviduct. In the Psyllidœ and Cicadidœ, however, they are composed, in the first family* of from ten to thirty unilocular tubes, and in the second, of from twenty to seventy bilocular tubes. The receptaculum seminis consists of one or two small caeca, and the Cicadidœ are the only Hemiptera which hâve a copulatory pouch, this consisting of a pyriform vesicle. “The viviparous Aphidœ differ from those which are oviparous, in that their eight ovarian tubes are multilocular and their oviducts entirely without appendages, while with the second, or oviparous, these eight tubes are unilocular, and there is a séminal réceptacle and two sebaceous glands.” (Siebold.) The testes vary greatly in number and form, consisting of from one to five tubuliform or rounded glands. The active larvæ of the Hemiptera, like those of the Orthop- tera, resemble closely the imago, differing mainly in possessing the rudiments of wings, which are acquired after tiie second moulting. After two changes of skin (four in ail) they assume the pupa state, which differs mainly from that of the larva in having larger wing-pads. While the development of the imago ordinarily occupies the summer months, in the Aphides it takes but a comparatively few days, but in the Seventeen-year Locust as many years as its name indicates. An exception to this mode of development is seen in the larva of the male518 HEMIPTERA. Coccus, which, as in the higher suborders, spins a silken co* coon, and changes into an inactive pupa. Apterous individuals, especially females, sometimes occur, especially in the aquatic Hydrometra, Velia and Limnobates, and in many other généra the hind pair of wings are often absent. The embryological development of such Hemiptera as hâve been observed (Hydrometra, Corixa, Apliidœ, Coccidœ, Pe di cul in a and Mallophaga) corresponds very closely with that of certain Neuroptera (Libellulidœ and Hemerobidœ. There are about 30,000 species living and fossil. Some species are of great size, especially the Hydrocores, a division containing the aquatic généra, Velia, Nepa, Belostoma and Notonecta, and which first appeared in the Jurassic formation- Latreille divided the Hemiptera into the Heteroptera and Homoptera. The latter are the higher in rank, as the body is more cephalized, the parts of the body more specialized, and in the Apliidœ, which top the sériés, we hâve a great er sex- ual différentiation, the females being both sexual and asexual, the latter by a budding process, and without the interposition of the male producing immense numbers of young, which feed in colonies. The species are smaller than in the Heteroptera, and are ail terrestrial. The Heteropterous Hemiptera, on the other hand, are larger, the body is less compactly put togetheiv the abdomen and thorax are elongated, the head is small com- pared with the rest of the body, and the species are large, some of great size (a sign of dégradation among insects), and several families are aquatic, indicating a lower grade of devel- opment, whiie représentatives of these were the first of the suborder to appear in geological times. Their aflSnities are with the Orthoptera and Neuroptera, while the Apliidœ and Homoptera generally, on the other hand, whose bodies are more cylindrical, ally themselves with the first and higher sé- riés of suborders. In the Homopterous Hemiptera the fore pair of wings are generally transparent and usually net-veined, lying with the hind pair, which are considerably smaller, roof-like upon the body, and the head is held vertically, where in most Heterop- tera it is horizontal and flattened.APHIDÆ. 51G Aphidæ Latreille. The Plant-lice hâve antennæ with from five to seven joints, and generally longer than the body. The ocelli are wanting, and the beak is three-jointed and developed in both sexes. The legs are long and slender, with two-jointed tarsi. The males and females are winged, and also the last brood of asexual individuals, but the early summer broods are wingless. Their bodies are flask-shaped, being cylind- rical, the abdomen thick and rounded, and in Aphis and Lachnus is provided with two tubes on the sixth segment for the passage of a sweet fluid secreted from the stomach. The wings are not net-veined, having few veins, which pass out- wards from the costa. They are usually green in color, with a soft powdery bloom which exudes from their bodies. Bonnet first discovered that the summer brood of wingless individuals were boni of virgin parents, hatched from eggs laid in the autumn, and that the true winged sexes composed the last génération, which united sexually, and that the female laid eggs in the autumn which produced the spring brood of asexual wingless individuals. Dr. W. I. Burnett gives the following brief summary of the mode of development in this group. In the early autumn the colonies of plant-lice are composed of both male and female individuals ; these pair, the males then die, and the females begin to deposit their eggs, after which they die also. Early in the spring, as soon as the sap begins to flow, these eggs are hatched, and the young lice immediately begin to pump up sap from the tender leaves and shoots, increase rap- idly in size, and in a short time corne to maturity. In this State it is found that the whole brood, without a single excep. tion, consists solely of females, or rather, and more properly, of individuals which are capable of reproducing their kind. This reproduction takes place by a viviparous génération, there being found in the individuals in question, young lice, which,* when capable of entering upon individual life, escape from their progenitors, and form a new and greatly increased col- ony. This second génération pursues the same course as the first, the individuals of which it is composed being, like those of the first, sexless, or at least without any trace of the male sex throughout. These same conditions are then repeated, and520 HEMIPTERA. so on almost indefinitely, experiments having shown that the power of reproduction under such circumstances may be exer- cised, according to Bonnet, at least through nine générations, while Duval obtained thus eleven générations in seven montbs, his générations being curtailed at this stage not by a failure of the reproductive power but by the approach of winter, which killed his specimens ; and Kyber even observed that a colony of Aphis dianthi, which had been brought into a con- stantly heated room, continued to propagate for four years in this manner, without the intervention of males, and even in this instance it remains to be proved how much longer these phe- nomena might hâve been continued.” Dr. Burnett, from whom we quote, considers this anomalous mode of increase of indi- viduals as a process of budding, and that the whole sériés, like the leaves of a tree, constitutes but a sin- gle génération, which results from the union of the sexes in the previous fall. It has Fig. 517. always been sup- posed that the final autumnal set of individuals were males and females alone. But Dr. Burnett States: 46The terminal brood has hitherto been considered, as far as I am aware, to be composed exclusively of males and females, or, in other w ords, of perfect insects of both sexes. I was surprised, therefore, on examining the internai organs of the non-winged individuals, to find that many of these last were not females proper, but simply the ordinary gemmiparous form. Moreover so great was the similafity of appearance between these two forms— true females and gemmiparous individuals—that they could be distinguished only by an examination of their internai genitalia.”APHIDÆ. 521 MM. Balbiani and Signoret hâve discovered that tlie com- mon European Aphis aceris produces, besides young of the normal form, a singular dimorphous form (Fig. 517), first de- scribed in 1852 by Mr. J. Thornton, under the name of Pliyl- lophorus testudinatus, and afterwards called Periphyllus testudo by M. Yan der Hoeven. The chief characteristic of this re- markable form, which is flattened, scale-like, is the sériés of leaf-like scales surrounding the body and bordering the appen- dages, while the upper side of the abdomen is covered with hexagonal figures. The generative apparatus is also very ru- dimentary. It does not produce young, and the insects them- selves do not increase in size after birth, being scarcely one millimétré in length. “They undergo no change of skin, never acquire wings like the reproductive individuals, and their antennæ always retain the five joints which they pré- sent in ail young Aphides before the first moult.” (Science Gossip, 1867, p. 204.) Aphides are found upon every part of plants. Some speeies which are Fig. 518. wingless, are found on the roots of plants, others on the stems of twigs, others roll up leaves, or form gall-like swellings on leaves ; the grain Aphis sucks the sap of the kernel. Ants are fond of the sweet excrétions from the abdominal tubes, and often keep them captive in their nests like herds of cattle. Syrphus Aies, Coccinellæ, etc., keep them within proper limits in nature. Various speeies of Aphidius kill larger numbers than we imagine. u When an Aphis lias received an egg from one of these parasites it quits its companions and fastens itself by its ungues to the under side of a leaf, when it swells into a globular form, its skin stretched out and dried up, and in a short time the perfect parasite escapes by a circulai’ hole, the mouth of which sometimes remains like a trap door.” In the Muséum of the Peabody Academy is an apple twig almost covered with dead Aphides, each perforated by a hole from which an Aphidius had escaped.522 HEMIPTERA. In Aphis the seven-jointed antennæ are longer than the bodyv the two basal joints short and thick, the seventh the longest, and near the end of the abdomen there are two long honey tubes. Aphis avenœ Fabr. is abundant and very injurious to the ears of wheat, sucking out the sap and greatly reducing the bulk of the corn. In certain years it has spread over the country in immense numbers. Aphis mali Fabr. (Fig. 518, winged female ; Fig. 519, asexual female), and A. malifoliœ Fitch are found on the apple ; A. cerasi Fabr. on the cherry ; A. persicœ Sulzer on the peach, and A. brassicœ Linn. on the cabbage. There are about thirty species known in this country. In Lachnus the sixth joint of the antennæ is shorter than the seventh, and the honey tubes are very short. Lachnus strobi is found on the white pine bushes offcen in great numbers. Lachnus caryœ Harris is a very large species which lives on the Hickory. Mr. Walsh States that he has “noticed in the autumn, numerous apterous females on the same tree, which lived Fig. 519. many da}^s and laid their eggs in confinement, but died without assuming wings.” The genus Eriosoma ditfers in having no honey tubes, and in having only two médian (dis- coidal) cells. The species are covered with a woolly flocculent substance, secreted from the abdomen, though no spécial glands for this purpose hâve yet been discovered, while but lit- tle “honey” is exuded from the orifices of the aborted honey- tubes. Eriosoma lanigera Hausmann, the Apple-blight, is black, with the abdomen honey yellow. The eggs are laid in the axils of the branches, especially near the roots of the tree, if there are any suckers présent, and are enveloped in the pow- dery substance of the abdomen of the female. By their stings in the bark numerous warts and excresences are produced, the leaves turn yellow and drop off, and the tree often dies. Professor Yerrill has found, about the middle of October, among the wingless individuals, “ a large number of both males and females having well formed and rather large wings, but in other respects closely resembling the rest.” The genus Adelges was proposed by Yallot for certain broad, flattened plant-lice, which attack coniferous trees, often raisingAPHIDÆ. 523 swellings on twigs like pine and spruce cônes. The antennæ are short, five-jointed and slender; there are three straight veinlets arising from the main subcostal vein and directed out- wards, and there are no honey tubes ; otherwise these insects elosely resemble the Aphides. A species (Fig. 520 ; a, pupa seen from beneath) elosely related to the European Adelges (Chermes) coccineus of Ratzburg, and the A. strobüobius of Kaltenbach, which hâve similar habits, we hâve found in abun- dance on the spruce in Maine, where it produces swellings at the end of the twigs, resembling in size and form the cônes of the same tree. The most destruc- tive in sec t of this family is the Grape Phylloxéra, P. vitir foliæ Fitch (P. vastatrix Planchon). It exists in two forma, one raising irregular galls on the leaves, and the other form- ing small swellings on the rootlets. The root-form is both wingless and winged, the latter very rare. The leaf-form is said to be always wingless. Fig. 521 (after Riley) représenta the wingless leaf- form ; a, 5, newly hatched 1 a r v a, ventral and dor- sal view; Rôsel, they are deposited at. random in the water, but Geoffroy* States that they are introduceck into the stems of aquatic plants* the elongated filaments being; alone exposed. Our most com- mon form is Banatra fusca Beau- vois (Fig. 543). The genus Nepa has very short three-jointed antennæ, the two last joints being expanded later- ally. The body is fiat, oval, with two long respiratory tubes, while the thorax is trapézoïdal, and the mesoscutellum is very large ; the thighs are dilated, with a notch to receive the tibia, which is curved and soldered to the tarsus. The genus is very predaceous, feeding like Ranatra and others on the larvæ of Ephemeræ. “The eggs are deposited in the water; they are Fig. 543.FLOTERES. 539 oval, and surmounted by seven elongated filaments, wliich serve, while the egg is in the oviduct, to form a kind of cup for the réception of the succeeding egg, but which are recurved when the egg is discharged.” (Westwood.) Galgulidæ (Galgulini) Burmeister. This small group con- sists of a few species which hâve the hind legs formed for running. The body is short, broad, flattened, and the head is broad with pedunculated eyes, and the four-jointed antennæ are concealed beneath the eyes, while the ocelli are présent. These insects are said to live on the edge of the water, “bury- ing themselves in the sand, especially in the larva state.” The group is interesting as forming a connecting link between the aquatic and terrestrial plant-eating species. In Galgulus the third antennal joint is small, the fourth minute and rounded. G. oculatus Fabr. is uniformly brown, the upper surface granulated, and beneath blackish. Ploteres Latreille. These insects are long, narrowing alike towards both ends, being shaped like a wherry, and with their long legs they course over the surface of ponds and streams, moving backwards and forwards with great facility. They are among the earliest spring insects. The body beneath is furnished with a coating of plush, to repel the water. The four-jointed antennæ are long and slen- der, and the fore legs are partially rap- torial for seizing their prey. Wingless insects (evidently mature as they are found coüpling) occur in this family, as among the Cimicidœ. Thus, there are apterous forms in Hydrotrechus, y Hydrometra and Yelia, while in Pyrrho- coris apterus and Prostemma guttula there are individuals partially winged, “which no one regards otherwise than as specifically identical with the full-winged specimens of the same species, . . . but must be compelled to regard them as imagines with peculiar characters of their own, somewhat analogous to the neuters, or undeveloped females of the bee ; but yet more perfect than540 HEMIPTERA. that kind of imago, being capable of reproduction.” (West- wood.) In Velia the triangular head is sunken in the thorax up to the eyes ; the ocelli are wanting ; the thorax is large, and the wings are présent. The genus Hydrotrechus (Gerris) has the ocelli présent, the abdomen long and slender, while the prothorax is very large, covering the mesothorax. The eggs of a European species are preyed upon by a species of Teleas, according to Meczni kow. Hydrotrechus remigis (Fig. 544) and H. rufoscutellatus Fabr. a reddish species, are abundant on our streams. The larvæare mueh shorter and with broader bodies than the adults. The genus Halobates has the first antennal joint as long as the two following ones together ; both ocelli and wings are wanting ; the mesothorax is very large, and elongated posteri- orly, and the fore legs are short, outstretched, with thickened femora, while the middle pair of limbs is the longest. The species are found swimming on the surface of the océan in the tropics far from land. Reduviidæ (Reduvini) Latreille. The characters of this family are these : head free from the thorax, elongated, nearly cylindrical, with prominent eyes and two ocelli ; the antennæ are of moderate length, slender towards the end, and the beak is stout and incurved ; the tarsi are three-jointed and the legs are long and fitted for running. These insects are among the most predaceous of the Hemiptera. The group begins with an aquatic genus Limnobates, which connects this family with the preceding one ; it runs over the surface of pools like Gerris. The body is linear ; the protho- rax is as long as the rest of the thorax, and the hind wings are wanting. Ploiaria is a remarkably slender, thread-like insect, with long hair-like posterior legs, reminding us of Tipula. The species are raptorial and are frequent in gardens. P. brevipennis Say is reddish, with wings, and the feet are ringed near the knees. Its ally, Emesa, resembles “the thinnest bits of sticks fastened together,” according to Westwood. The body is long and thin, hair-like, and the antennæ are long and délicate ; theREDUVIIDÆ. 541 fore legs are raptorial, with long and thin coxæ. The wings are either wanting, or they reach only to the middle of the ab- domen. Emesa longipes DeGeer has a white head, with a brown band under the eyes ; the femora are annulated with brown, and tipped with white. In Solda the body is small, elliptical and flat ; the antennæ are long and thread-like, half as long as the body. The beak reaches to the end of the breast, the second joint being at least six times as long as Fig. 545. the first, and the legs are short and slender. The species are found mostly in Europe along the shores of the océan and inland waters. The genus Nabis is known by the anterior tibiæ having an apical cushion ; the beak is slender, extending to the hind legs. Nabis férus Linn. is abundant in gardens, feeding on insects. An allied and common form is the Pirates picipes of Herrich Schaeffer (Fig. 545). The P. biguttatus Say has been found between the mattrasses of a bug-infested bed in south Illinois, and probably feeds on the bed-bug. (American Entomolgist, P. 37.) The allied généra Prostemma (P. guttata), and Coranus (C. subap- terus) “are interesting on account of their being generally found in an undeveloped imago state ; the latter being either entirely apterous or with the fore wings rudimental, although occasionally met with having the four wings completely developed.” Mr. Westwood thinks that, especially in bot seasons, these apterous insects acquire full sized wings, in accordance with the same opinion of Spinola, whom he quotes. The type of the family is the genus Peduvius of Fabricius, wliich may be recognized by its second and third antennal joints being inuch longer than the first, while the fourth is hair-like. The limbs are densely hirsute, and the beak is short and stout. Peduvius personatus Linn., a black species, is said to feed upon the bed-bug. “The larva and pupa hâve the in- stinct to envelope themselves in a thick coating of particles of542 HEMIPTERA. dust (DeGeer) and so completely do they exercise this habit that a specimen shut up by M. Brullé, and which had under- gone one of its moultings during its imprisonment, divested its old skin of its coat of dust, in order to recover itself there- with.” (Westwood.) The Evagoras viridis Uhler MS. is said, by the Editors of the “American Entomologist,,, to devour the plum curculio. In Harpactor the head is convex behind the eyes ; the ocelli are distant, knobbed, and the first antennal joint is as long as, and stouter than, the two succeeding ones together. Har- pactor cinctus Fabr. (Fig. 546 ; 5, beak) attacks the larva of the Colorado Potato-beetle. Another member of this family, the Conorhinus sanguisuga of Leconte, is said to occur in beds, its bite being very painful. (American Entomologist, p. 87.) Corisiæ Latreille. In this very extensive family, which is especially rich in species in the tropics, where they are gaily colored, the head is flat, extended horizontally, and sunken up to the eyes within the prothorax. The antennæ are long, fili- form, often clavate at the tip, and from three to five-jointed. The two ocelli are almost always présent, while the beak-sheath (labium) is four-jointed. The tarsi are generally three-jointed, and the claws are provided with two suctorial pads. The membranous wing-covers hâve distinct, often forked, longitu- dinal veins. We follow Gerstaecker in retaining Latreille’s family Cor- isiæ, which includes the “Lygaeidæ,” “Coreidæ” and “Penta- tomidæ,, of recent authors, as they ail agréé in the general form of the body, and, as stated by Gerstaecker, in the struc- ture of the antennæ, the uniform presence of two ocelli, the longitudinal veins of the fore wings, and the hardness of the crust of the body ; these characters separate them from the preceding groups. In Lygæus and allies (Lygæidæ) the scutellum is of the normal size ; the antennæ are four-jointed, and are attached to the under side of the head, and the beak is tolerably long. In Lygæus the head is elongated acutely, the eyes globular, the ocelli distinct, and the antennæ are slender, scareely half asCORISIÆ. 543 long as the body, and slightly clavate. Lygœus turcicus Fabr. is a typical form. Pyrrhocoris apterus Linn. is usually apter- ous ; occasionally specimens are found with wings. It inhabits Europe. The Chinch bug, Blisms leucopterus of Uhler (Fig. 547) is a great enemy of our wheat crops, and, as its spécifie name indicates, it may be known by the white fore wings, contrasting* well with a black spot on the middle of the edge of the wing. It is about three-twentieths of an inch in length. Harris also states that “the young and wingless individuals are at first bright red, changing with âge to brown and black, and are always marked with a white band across the back.” Shimer says the female is “occupied about twenty days in laying her eggs, about 500 in number. The larva hatches in fifteen days and there are two broods in a season, the first brood maturing, in Illinois, from the middle of July to the middle of August, and the second late in autumn.” According to Harris, the “eggs of the chinch bug are laid in the ground, in which the young hâve been found, in great abundance, at the depth of an inch or more. They make their appearance on wheat about the middle of June, and may be seen in their various stages of growth on ail kinds of grain, on corn, and on h e r d s - grass, during the Fig> W7# Flg’648 ■ whole summer. Some of them continue alive through the win- ter in their places of concealment.” The best remedies are the early sowing of small grain in the spring, fall ploughing and the use of the roller upon land that is loose and friable. Stubble, old straw, and corn stalks among weeds in fence corners should be burned in the early spring. This species is widely diffused, ranging from Kansas and Nebraska to the Atlantic Coast. I hâve taken it frequently in Maine, and I544 HEMIPTÊRA. even on the extreme summit of Mount Washington, in Augu jt. Dr. Shimer in his “Notes” on the chinch bug, says that it “attained the maximum of its development in the summer of 1864, in the extensive wheat and corn fields of the valley of the Mississippi ; and in that single year three-fourths of the wheat and one-half of the corn crop were destroyed throughout many extensive districts, comprising almost the entire North-west, with an estimated loss of more than one hundred millions of dollars in the currency that then prevailed,” while Mr. Walsh estimâtes the loss, from the ravages of this insect in Illinois alone, in 1850, to hâve been four millions of dollars. In the summer of 1865, the progeny of the broods of the preceding year were almost entirely swept off by an épidémie disease, so few being left that on the 22d of August, Dr. Shimer found it “ almost impossible to tind even a few cabinet specimens of chinch bugs alive” where the}' were so abundant the year before. uDuring the summer of 1866 the chinch bugs were very scarce in ail the early spring, and up to near the harvest I was not able, with the most diligent search, to find one. At harvest I did succeed in finding a few in some locali- ties.” “This disease among the chinch bugs was associated with the long-continued wet, cloudy, cool weather that pre- vailed during a greater portion of the period of their develop- ment, and doubtless was in a measure produced by déficient light, beat and electricity, combined with an excessive humidity of the atmosphère.” In 1868 it again, according to the Edi- tors of the “American Entomologist,” “did considérable dam- age in certain counties in Southern Illinois and especially in South-west Missouri.” Fig. 548 represents the Anthocoris insidiosus Say, called the False Chinch bug ; it is often mis- taken for the chinch bug, with which it is sometimes found associated. In the “Coreidæ” the scutellum is still of the usual size ; the antennæ are four-jointed ; while the basal joint of the beak is generally the longest. Westwood states that the Coreus marginatus of Europe “in flight makes a humming noise as loud as the hive bee,” and the eggs of this species hâve been observed by Audouin to beCORISIÆ. 545 “of a splendid golden appearance.,, The larvæ and pupæ of several species of Coreus hâve been observed by Westwood to “differ from the imago in wanting ocelli, possessing only two joints in the tarsi (although there is a slight indication of an articulation in the middle of the terminal joint) ; their antennæ also are much thicker, especialty the intermediate joint. The pupa of C. scapha differs also from the imago in having the margins of the abdomen notched.” Several adult forms of this group are known to be partiallv wingless. The Squash-bug, Coreus (Gonocerus) tristis DeGeer (Fig. 549) is very destructive to squash-vines, collecting in great numbers around the stem near the ground, and sucking the sap witli its stout beak. It is a large, blackish brown insect, six-tenths of an incli long, and dirty yellowish beneath. It hibernâtes, leaving the plant in October. About the last of June the sexes meet, and the females “lay their eggs in little patelles, fastening them with a gummy substance to the under side of the leaves. The eggs are round, and flattened on two side s, and are soon hatched. The young bugs are proportionally shorter and more rounded than the perfect insect s, are of a pale ash color, and hâve quite large antennæ, the joints of which are some- what. flattened. As they grow older and increase in size, after moulting their skins a few times, they become more oval in form, and the under side of their bodies gradually acquires a dull ochre-yellow color.” (Harris.) The young attack the leaves, causing them to witherup. Successive broods are said to appear through the summer. Professor Verrill has found, with the assistance of Professor S. W. Johnson, of Yale College, that the odor of this and other hemipterous insects bears the most resemblance to that of the formate of oxide of amyl, or the formate of amylic ether. It is probable that this; substance is its most essential and active ingrédient. (Pro- ceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History, xi, p. 160.) In Neïdes the body is remarkably thin and slender, repeat- ing the form of Ploiaria, or of Spectrum among the Orthoptera. In Alydus the body is small, slender, the head prolonged* 35546 HEMIPTERA. while the ocelli are very near together, and the last antennal joint is often twice as long as the two preceding ones together. Alydus eurinus Say is a widely diffused species. An allied genus is Bhopalus. Another species of this group is the Metapodius nasulus of Say, which, in the Western States, injures cherries by sucking them. In the last group (Pentatomidæ, which we place next to the Membranacei, because they are less allied to the Homoptera, and are more nearly related to Cimex) the scutellum is very large, often covering more than one-half the abdomen, and in this respect they at least remind us of those Orthopterous généra in which the same character prevails. This is a group of great extent, with bright colors and often of large size. The head is received into the large broad, short prothorax, and the body is generally ovate. The second joint of the beak is the longest. The various species are found on shrubs, sucking the leaves or often transfixing caterpillars on their beaks and carry- ing them off to suck their blood at leisure. DeGeer describes the eggs as being generalty of an oval form, attached to leaves at one end by a glutinous sécrétion, the other being furnished with a cap, which the larva bursts off when it hatches out. The larvæ are more convex and less flattened than the adults. “ DeGeer has made an interesting observation relative to the care with which the females of a species of this family (Acan- thosoma grisea), found on the birch, defend their young. In the month of July he observed many females accompanied by their respective broods, each consisting of from twenty to forty young, which they attended with as much care as a hen does her brood of chickens.” (Westwood.) In Pentatoma the antennæ are five-jointed ; the beak is slen- der, reaching to the end of the breast, with its first joint lying in the furrow on the throat. The scutellum is two-thirds the length of the abdomen. Pentatoma tristigma Harris has a «eries of three or four black dots on the under side of the abdomen, of which the posterior one is largest. It is seven- twentieths of an inch long. Pentatoma ligota Harris is a large green species, widely edged ail around, except the head, with pale red.THRIPIDÆ. 547 In Phloëa the body is much flattened, and expanded laterally into leaf-like flaps. The antennæ are three-jointed, the first joint of which is longest. P. corticata Drury is a peculiar form, which occurs in Brazil. Arma spinosa Dallas (Fig. 550, b ; a, beak, seèn from be- neath ; c, beak of Euschistus punctipes Say) is useful since it preys on the larva of the Doryphora. Another bug of this group, the Stiretrus ftmbriatus Say (Fig. 551) has similar habits. In Corimelœna the wing-covers are nearly covered by the scutellum, which a b f Q is wider behind than before. The body Fig. 550. is short and transverse, being broader than long, and scale-like or semicircular in shape. Corimelœna nitiduloides Wolff re- s^mbles a Hister beetle, and is greenish blaçk, with dull honey vellow antennæ. The species of this genus hâve much the same form, and are usually shining black. C. pulicaria Ger- mar, according to Riley, injures strawberry-vines and grape- vines in Illinois. In the genus Tetyra the scutellum covers nearly the whole abdomen, but leaves the side of the wing* jovers exposed. The antennæ are slender; the first joint is longer than the second, the third being the shortest, and the fifth is twice as long as the fourth. Tetyra marmorata Say is a variegated species, the costal margin of the wing being provided with transverse fucous lines. The genus Scutellera is remarkable for the great size of the scutellum, whence its name is derived. This piece, which is elongated trian- * gular, covers not only the entire abdomen, but also the wings ; the antennæ are five-jointed, * the two first joints small, the three last ones long, quite large. The species are adorned with gay metallio colors, and are especially abundant in the Island of Sunda (Gerstaecker.) No species oîScutellera occur in America. In the group or family Arthropteridœ of Fieber the scutellum is still larger than in Scutellera. Thripidæ (Thripsides) Fallen. This interesting group548 HEMIPTERA. bears much the same relation to the Corisiœ as the lice do to the Membranacei (Cimex), or Podura and Lepisma to the Neuropterous families above them. A comparison with the Mallophaga is still better, for in Thrips (Fig. 552) we find, as in the last named group, free, biting mouth-parts, accom panied by a general dégradation of the body. Though the spe- cies are winged, yet the wings are partially aborted ; they are long, narrow, linear, both pairs of equal size, as in the typical Neuroptera, and by the frequent absence of any veins, either longitudinal or transverse, and the long délicate silky fringe,. remind us strikingly of some minute degraded hymenopterous Proctrotrypidœ, Pteratomus (Plate 3, fig. 8), for example. The mandibles are bristle-like ; the maxillæ are flat, triangular, bearing two to three-jointed palpi, and the labial palpi are présent, but very short, and composed of but two : or three joints. Chiefly on account of these characters these in- sects were placed in a dis- tinct order, termed Thy- sanoptera by Haliday, and by many recent authors they hâve been widely separated from what seem to us their nearest allies. Latreille, however, recognized their affinities to the Homoptera, while stating that in their free biting mouth-parts they resembled the Orthoptera, to which Geoffroy referred them. To us they appear to be, as it were, degraded Lygæids, and to preserve the general form of that group, in the long head, the stout, thickened fore limbs, and the large, square prothorax. They hâve both compound and simple eyes, the latter three in number. The antennæ are long and slender, with from five to nine joints. In some species the fore wings are comparatively well developed, or, as Haliday states, they are “transformed into broadish etytra, ciliated only behind, and with longitudinal and transverse nerves. In some species the wings are want- ing, at least in the males.” (Westwood.) “The abdomen is Fig. 552.THRIPIDÆ. 549 Fig. 554. terminated in the male by a long attenuated joint, by a four- val ved borer in the female.” The eggs of Phlæothrips hâve been compared to those of Culex, by Haliday, ubeing cylindric, rounded at one end, and •crowned with a knob at the other.” Both the larva (Fig. 554) and pupa are active, being found in the same situations as the adult. The larvæ are of softer consistence, pale, or reddish, and the thoracic rings are similar to each other, while in the pupa “the articula- tions of the limbs are obscured by a film, and the wings enclosed in short fixed sheaths. The antenne are turned back on the head, and the insect, though it moves about, is much more sluggish than in the other States.” (Hali- day in Westwood’s “Introduction,” etc.) The different species occur under the bark of trees, and are very injurious to grain and flowers, eating holes in the leaves or corollas, and sucking the sap from the flowers of wheat, in the bottom of which they hide. In Phlæothrips and allies (Fig. 552, P. coriacea Haliday?) both sexes hâve the abdomen terminating in an acute point, being either the ovipositor of the female, or the slender termi- nal tube-like joint of the male. The wings are almost with- out veins, with long ciliæ, and at rest folded one upon the other. The antennæ are eight-jointed. Three ocelli are présent in the winged species, but in the wingless forms they are absent. The Phlæothrips mali of Fitch appears “ in a roundish cavity near the tip end of the young fruit.” Dr. Fitch describes another species (P. caryæ) which is found in singularly shaped galls on the hickory, “which resemble a long, slender pod thrust half-way through the leaf.” This author doubts, how- ever, whether these galls are made by these insects. He also States that “the insect within, when disturbed, turns its tail upward over its back in a menacing manner, the same as the rove beetles (Stapliylinidæ) do, and when the point of a needle, which had been pressed upon one of these insects, is touched to the tip of the tongue, unless my imagination greatly de- oeives me, it will frequently be found to impart a peculiar acid biting sensation.” A second group ( Terehrantia Haliday) includes the genus550 HEMIPTERA. Thrips, in which the females are provided with a four-valved compressed ovipositor which lies in a furrow in the two last abdominal segments. The fore wings are thickened, elytri- form, with two longitudinal continuons veins. The antennæ are, for the most part, nine-jointed. Thrips cerealium Haliday is dark reddish brown, and very injurious to wheat. Capsini Burmeister. The species of this family are very numerous and very active in their habits, running swiftly and easily rising on the wing. They are fond of fruits, and it is the little Capsi which give such a nauseous taste to the rasp- berry, which they feed upon. The females are distinguished from the males “by having the ovipositor nearly lialf the* length of the body, somewhat sabre-shaped, and received into* a sût on the under side of the abdomen.” The body in this group is convex, oval, and of a soft consistence, and “distin- guished by the elongated antennæ having the second joint often thickened at the tip, and the terminal joints very slen- der, the rostrum long and four-jointed, while the ocelli are wanting. The pupa of Capsus Danicus is clothed with short and somewhat clavate hairs.” (Westwood.) In Capsus the body is elliptical or oval ; the head is triangu- lar, convex. Capsus quadrivittatus Harris is yellow, with four black bands. Phytocoris differs from Capsus, according to Har- ris, in having a smaller head, while the thorax is wider behind and narrower in front. P. linearis Beauv. is a fifth of an inch long ; the head is yellowish with three narrow, longitudinal,, reddish stripes ; the thorax has a yellow margin, with five longi- tudinal yellow lines upon it. The male is much darker colored. It is excessively common on ail kinds of plants. It appears early in April, but is most abundant in summer. In the genus Miris the head is elongated triangular ; the basal joint of the antennæ is thickest, whereas in the preceding genus the second joint is the stoutest. Miris dorsalis Say is pale yellowish rufous, immaculate, and the antennæ are rather stout, tapering, and rufous. Membranacei Latreille. This family includes the Bed-bug, and it is from this insect that the name “bug” has been ex-MEMBRANACEI. 551 tended to the entire suborder. The antennæ are four-jointed, with the tip clavate or knobbed. The ocelli are, for the most part, wanting; the beak is gutter-like, with a three-jointed sheath (labium). The tarsi are three-jointed, without any foot-pads. In Cimex the beak reaches, when laid upon the breast, as far as the fore coxæ ; the legs and antennæ are cov- ered with fine hairs ; the second antennal joint is longest. The prothorax is elliptical, and the metathorax is nearly as broad as the circular abdomen ; the wings are wanting. The habits of Cimex lectularius Linn., the bed-bug (Fig. 555), are too well known to require any farther mention here. It is exceedingly tenacious of life, and ordi- nary bug-powders and other applications are useless unless the most scrupulous cleanliness is exercised besides. The eggs are oval, white, and the young bugs escape by pushing off a lid at one end of the shell. They are white trans- parent, differing from the perfect insect in hav- Fig. 555. ing a broad triangular head, and short and thick antennæ. Indeed, this is the general form of the louse, to which the larva of Cimex has a very close affinity. Some Cimices are para- sites, infesting pigeons, swallows, etc., in this way also show- ing their near relation to the lice. The bed-bug is rust-red, with brown nairs, and is two and a half Unes in length. It lives as a parasite on the do- mestic birds, such as the dove. Mr. James McDonald writes me that he has found a nest of swallows on a court house in Iowa, swarming with bed-bugs. In Europe the Cimex hirun- dinis Herr. Schaeff. lives on the swallow ; Cimex pipistrelli Jenyns lives on the bat ; and Cimex columbarius is found in pigeon houses. Westwood States that the bed-bug is eleven weeks in attain- ing its full size. DeGeer has kept full sized individuals in a sealed bottle for more than a year without food. The Cock- roach is the natural enemy of the bed-bug, and destroys large numbers. Houses hâve been cleaned of them after being thoroughly fumigated with brimstone. Bed-bugs, as well as other bugs, plant-lice, etc., may be de- stroyed by a préparation consisting of thirty parts of unpuri-552 HEMIPTERA. fied cheap petroleum, mixed with 1,000 parts of water. It can be introduced into holes and cracks in houses, and sprin- kled on plants. The cracks of bedsteads may be filled with mercury ; and benzine will also effectually dislodge them, as well as boiling water. The benzine may be applied by means of a surgical instrument Fig. 556. called the Atomizer. In Syrtis the head is small, compressed laterally, and the fore legs are raptorial, thus allying the genus with Reduvius. Syrtis (Phymata) erosa Fabr. (Fig. 556) has swollen fore legs, and a deep groove on the head; it is useful in devouring Aphides. Fig. 557. In Tingis the beak reaches to the end of the breast, and the fore legs are simple, the thorax and wing-covers are spread out leaf-likc, and the species are of small size. T. hyalina Herrich-Schaeffer is abundant on the willow. T. hystricellus Richter (Fig. 557, upper and under side, magnified twenty diameters) is a Cevlonese species. It “sticks close to the under side of the Bringall leaf, and there undergoes ail its changes, from the larval to the perfect state. The larvæ are black.” (Science-Gossip, p. 84, 1869.)PEDICULINA. 553 In Aradus the beak is longer than the head, the prothorax is widely expanded, while the wing-covers are rounded at the base. A. crenatus of Say has the cylindrical edge of the abdo- men obtusely crenated. The species are found under the bark of trees. Pediculina Burmeister. Lice. In these low degraded Hem- iptera, which stand in the same relation to the rest of the Hemiptera as the Flea does to the more perfectly organized Diptera, the body is wingless, with a small indistinctly jointed thorax, while the abdomen is large, oval, with nine segments. The antennæ are filiform, five-jointed, and the eyes are minute, not faceted. The tarsi are two-jointed, with a large hook-like terminal joint, which is bent back towards the basal joint. The mouth-parts still preserve the form of a beak-like sucker, but it is fleshy and rétractile, and the body is white, and of minute size. The species of Pediculus are blood-suckers, and parasitic on man and various species of Mammalia ; different species being found on different régions of the body. Different varieties, according to Dr. W. I. Burnect, are found living on the bodies of different races of men. Two species live on man; Pediculus humanus capitis DeGeer (Fig. 558) inhabits the head, while the Body Louse, P. corporis of DeGeer (P. vesti- menti Nitzsch) is found elsewhere. These two species are diflScult to distinguish, they are so Fig. 558. closely allied. Professor J. C. Schiôdte, a Scandinavian naturalist, has recently published an elaborate treatise on this genus, and describes the mode of attack used by these disgust- ing créatures. It thrusts its minute beak into the skin, and sucks in the blood by means of its large sucking stomach or “pumping ventricle.” Schiôdte placed one of these insects on his hand, and observed its movements through a glass. After the créature, had fixed its beak or haustellum into his hand this naturalist noticed that u at the top of the head, under the transparent skin, between and a little in advance of the eyes, a triangular blood-red point appears, which is in contin- uai movement, expansion and contraction alternating with554 HEMIPTEKA. increased rapidity. Soon this pulsation becomes so rapid that* several contractions may be counted in a second. However> we must turn our attention elsewbere, for the whole digestive tube is now in the most lively peristaltic movement, filling it- self rapidly with blood, as is easily observed ; the long œsopha- gus is particularly agitating, throwing itself from one side to another inside the neck, bending itself so violently as to re mind one of the coiling of a rope when being shipped on deck.,} Schiodte States that the sucking organ or beak is a “.dark browrn protruding haustellum, provided with hooks at each ex- tremity, out of which an excessively délicate membranaceous tube, of varying length, is hanging. This pumping “ventri- cle” (which is undoubtedly homologous with the pumping stomach of most sucking insects, such as the Diptera, Lepidop- tera and Hymenoptera) Schiodte has discovered in “those Coleopterous larvæ which hâve powerful organs for biting, placed at a distance round a very minute mouth-opening, such as the larvæ of Carabi, Hydrophili, and Hister, as well as in the larvæ of Dytisci, which suck through the mandibles.” The same author also shows that the moutk Fig. 559. of Pediculus differs from that of Hemiptera generally in the circumstance that the labium is capable of being retracted into the upper part of the head, which there- fore présents a little fold, which is extended when the labium is protruded. He also shows that those parts which were, by mistake, thought to be palpi and mandibles by Erichson, Jurine and Landois, are simply lobes on the under side of a chitinous band. In Pediculus the thorax is a little smaller than the elongated abdomen, and ail the tarsi are two-jointed. The genus Phtlii- rius has a very small thorax, with the abdomen much wider than the head, and the fore tarsi hâve but a single joint. Phthirius pubis Linn. (Fig. 559), the Crab louse, is found on the pubic région of man and also on the head. Mallophaga Nitzsch. The Bird-lice live on the hair of Mammalia and feathers of birds. In this group there are dis-MALLOPHAGA. 555 tinct jaws. The flattened body is corneous, hard above, and the head is horizontal, with three to five-jointed antennæ ; the eyes are small and simple ; the mandibles are small, like a hook, and the maxillary palpi, when présent, for they are some- times wanting, are four-jointed, while the labial palpi are two- jointed. The thorax is small and but two-jointed apparently, as the meso- and metathorax are United together. The abdo- men is from nine to ten-jointed, while the short thick limbs hâve two-jointed tarsi and one or two claws. These insects are considered by Burmeister as forming a passage from the Hemiptera into the Orthoptera, as they pos- sess free biting mouth-parts, especially free mandibles, which are not as in the rest of the suborder fused together with the other parts to form a sucking tube. Docophorus buteonis Pack, (pl. 9,* fig. 3) lives on the Red Shouldered Hawk ; and D. hamatus Pack. (Pl. 9, fig. 7) is found on the Snow Bunting. Goniocotes Burnettii Pack. (Fig. 560) infests the domestic fowl. Lipeurus corvi Pack. (Pl. 9, fig. 2) is a parasite of the crow ; L. elongatus Pack. (Pl. 9, fig. 4), and L. gracïlis Pack. (Pl. 9, fig. 6) are long and slender forms. In the genus Phiiopterus of Nitzsch the antennæ are filiform, five-jointed, and the labial palpi are wanting. Ær- mus is an allied genus ; both live on birds. JY*. thoracicus Pack. (Pl. 9, fig. 5) lives on the Snow Bunting. Trichodectes canis DeGeer lives on the dog, and has three-jointed an- tennæ. The females hâve two mov- able hooks on the penultimate ring of the abdomen. T, subrostratus is a parasite of the cat. T. caprœ Pack., lives on the goat. The Saddle-back Gull is inhabited by Colpocephalum lari Pack. (Pl. 9, fig. 1). Gfyropus has no labial palpi. G.porcelli Schrank is a third of an inch long and lives on the Porpoise. Mr. C. Cooke has found G. ovalis on the Guinea pig in this country. *Explanation of Plate 9.—Fig. 1, Colpocephalum lari Pack.; la, antenna; Fig. 2, Lipeurus corvi'Pack..] 2a, antenna; Fig. 3, Docophorus buteonis Pack.; 3a, antenna; Fig. 4, Lipeurus elongatus Pack., 4a, antennæ ; Fig. 5, Nirmus thoracicus Pack. ; Fig. 6, Lipeurus gracilis Pack. ; Fig. 7, Docophorus hamatus Pack.556 ORTHOPTERA. ORTHOPTERA. This suborder may be briefly characterized as having free biting mouth-parts, with highly developed organs of nutrition and digestion. The first pair of wings are somewhat thickened to protect the broad net-veined hinder pair, which fold up like a fan upon the abdomen, and the hind legs are large and adapted for leaping. The transformations are less complété than in the previous groups, the larvæ and pupæ being both active and closely resembling the imago. Ail the species are terrestrial, the more typical forais having remarkable powers of flight, besides leaping powerfully. The grasshopper is the type of the group, the other families bearing more or less resemblance to the allied subordérs, especially the Neuroptera. The head is very large, and much more bulky than in the Coleoptera or Hemiptera, the mouth- parts being so large, reqniring large and broad pièces to sup- port the muscles of the head ; its position is vertical, rarely becoming horizontal. The ocelli are two or three in number, while often obsolète. The eyes are small, very convex, and placed far apart. The antennæ are filiform, often of great length, and exceeding the length of the body several times, the joints being very nu mérous and much alike in size and shape. The clypeus is large, the suture very distinctly separatiiig the base, and the labrum is large, with the edge rounded, slightly bilobate, and partially concealing the mandibles, which are strong and large, and toothed within. They are more perfect than in other insects, presenting both cutting and grinding surfaces. The maxillæ are very distinctly lobed, the outer lobe (galea) somewhat dilated and (in the Blattariæ) ensheathing the long, sharp-toothed inner lobe, and the palpi are five- jointed. The mentum is large and transverse, while the labium is divided into four lobes like the maxillæ, the outer pair (para- glossæ) resembling those of the maxillæ, and in the true grass- hoppers (Acrydium), being expanded into a broad, flattened, smooth, concave plate. The labial palpi are from three to four- jointed. The lingua is large, fleshy and channelled above.ORTHOPTERA. 557 As in the Coleoptera, the prothorax is greatly developed over the other segments, and the mesothorax is rather smaller than the metathoracic ring. The pronotum is very large, broad and flattened above, while the other two segments are concealed by the wings when at rest, and the parts are soft and membranous. The sternum of each ring is very large, broad and fiat, resembling that of Libellula, while the two fore pairs of legs are normal in size, though the fore legs are often raptorial, as in Mantis ; or fossorial, as in Gryllotalpa. The hinder pair are enormously developed for leaping purposes. The fore wings are generally long and narrow, somewhat thickened, like parchment, or thin, transparent, and more or less rounded, while the hind pair are broad and large, folding in longitudinal plaits on the back. Both wings are net-veined, but not so much so as in the Neuroptera, as the longitudinal veins are larger and more regular, while innumer- able cross veins, still more regular than in the Neuroptera, though more numerous, give a characteristic faciès peculiar to the Orthopterous wing. There are also numerous wingless, degraded généra, which resemble the young of other généra. The body is usually much compressed, or greatly flattened (Blattariæ), or long and cylindrieal, as in the Walking Stick. The abdomen consists of eight or nine distinct segments, while the tenth forms part of the ovipositor, being somewhat abor- ted, the tergite only in some cases remaining, and there is in addition in the Locustariœ, according to the views of La- caze-Duthiers, the tergite of an eleventh abdominal ring. We will notice more fully than usual the structure of the ovipositor, as it is of great systematic value. The génital armature is more complex than in the Hymenoptera, and is generally very large and exserted, so as to form a conspicuous part of the body. In its simplest form, in Forficula, it is represented only by a single tergite, ail the other appendages being absent. In the Locustariœ, however, the typical form is seen, consist- ing of a tergite and the epimera supporting the tergo-rhabdite, while the episternum supports the sterno-rhabdites, and the oviduct opens out under the sternite. There are thus four pièces attached to the single ninth ring ; the oviduct opening between the eighth and ninth segments, while the anal opening558 ORTHOPTERA. is under the eleventh ring in ail the Orthoptera, according to Lacaze-Duthiers’ researches. The female génital armature is farther complicated, in the Locustariœ especially. The eleventh segment is composed of five parts, which surround the anus. Two of these are latéral filaments which are, in one case, as in Mantis tessellata (Fig. 23), multi-articulate, and are proper sensory organs, like the antennæ, and must be regarded, in our view, as homologous with the anal prop-legs of Lepidoptera and other insects, and as true-jointed appendages like the thoracic legs, and jointed appendages of the head, such as the palpi and antennæ. They also form the anal stylets of the GryL lidœ, etc. These anal stylets are articulated to the posterior edge of the tenth tergite, as Lacaze-Duthiers States, and thus seem to us to be properly appendages of that ring, which, as this author affirms, “ présents two articulating teeth for this purpose.” The two other éléments are “triangular, surround- ing the anus with three valves, which, by their union, form a sort of pyramidal body,” which he calls the “ subgenital or pre- genital plate.” There are then, two Systems of appendages, as we hâve before stated ; i. e., the génital armature, consist- ing of two pairs of non-articulated stylets, and the single pair of anal articulated stylets, which are the homologues of the thoracic legs, together with the pre-anal plate. The same parts are présent in the male, being converted into large, clasping, hook-shaped stylets, for retaining a firm hold of the female during sexual union. The eggs as they pass from the oviduct between the valves are deposited in a hole in the ground, made by the powerful ovipositor. Certain Locustariœ imitate the Cicada in laying them methodically in the stems of plants, which are drilled ont by the valves of the ovipositor, which are slightly toothed on the outer sides and easily move on one another, somewhat as in the Saw-fly and Cicada. “The eggs of the Gryllidœ are laid either singly in the ground, in irregular clusters in subter- ranean passages, or uniformly in a single row, in the pith of twigs ; those of the Locustariœ are never laid singly, but either in the pith of plants, in regular clusters in the ground, or in regular rows on stems of plants ; those of theORTHOPTERA. 559 Acrydii are always laid in rudely regular clusters, in the ground.” (Scudder.) The nervous System closely resembles that of the Neurop- tera ; it is in ail three stages composed of three thoracic, and six or seven abdominal ganglia, extending the whole length of the body, and united by double commissures. The splanchnic System, or analogue of the great sympathetic nerve in verte- brates, is highly developed in the Acridii and in Gryllotalpa, having in front two pairs of ganglia, and posteriorly one or two, while in the Blatiariœ and Phasmida the single nerve is most developed. Organs of hearing are stated by Siebold to occur in the Acridii, consisting of two fossæ or conchs, surrounded by a projecting horny ring, and at the base of which is stretched a membrane resembling a tympanum. On the internai surface of this membrane are two horny processes, to which is attaclied an extremely délicate vesicle filled with a transparent fluid, and representing a membranous labyrinth. This vesicle is in connection with an auditory nerve, which arises from the third thoracic ganglion, forms a ganglion upon the tympanum, and terminâtes in the immédiate neighborhood of the labyrinth by a collection of cuneiform, staff-like bodies, with very finely pointed extremities (primitive nerve-fibres ?), which are sur- rounded by loosely aggregated, ganglionic globules. The Locustciriœ and Gryllidœ bave a similar organ, situated in the fore legs directly below the coxo-femoral articulation. M. Hensen confirms the accuracy of this description in the “ Zeitschrift fur Wissenschaftliche Zoologie,” vol. xvi, 1867. The highly developed alimentary canal has the crop (pro- ventriculus) separated by a deep constriction from the œsoph- agus, and the gizzard is provided internally with from six to eight rows of horny denticulated plates situated on ridges, with numerous smaller teeth between, so that the whole num ber of teeth amount to 270. The stomach is of even width, not usually making more than one-half of a turn, or one turn ; its cardiac extremity is provided with from two to eight cæca. The salivary glands are highly developed, “ consisting of two, four, or six botryoidal masses, situated in the thorax, and hav-560 ORTHOPTERA. ing long excretory ducts, besides, also, often having long pedunculated réservoirs. The number of chambers in the dorsal vessel is usually eight. The respiratory System does not differ essentially from that of other insects, though in the Acridii most of the trans- verse anastomosing tracheæ hâve large air-reservoirs, greatly assisting in lightening the body for their long-sustained flight. The urinary tubules are short and very numerous, from twenty to one hundred and fifty and over, surrounding the pylorus. The ovaries, two in number, consist of numerous multilocular tubes, while the séminal réceptacle consists of a pedunculated vesicle, whose closed extremity is dilated int® a pea-shaped vesicle, forming the capsula seminis. In most Orthoptera the testes consist of long fasciculated follicles sur- rounded by a common envelope, and many hâve in addition highly developed accessory glands, surrounding a short ductus ejaculatorius. The larvæ of the Orthoptera materially differ only in size from the adult, and the pupæ are distinguished from them by having the rudiments of wings. They attain the adult state by simple moultings. Several cases are on record of pupæ of grasshoppers being found sexually United. In 1867 Mr. Trimen exhibited to the Entomological Society of London “a grasshopper of the genus Pœcilocerus, of which he had found the pupæ in copula ; it was not an isolated case, for he had seen hundreds of pairs of the nymphs at Natal.” Some of the largest insects are included in this suborder, in fact the majority are larger than those of other suborders, and it will probably be found that mam^ large grasshoppers and Mantidœ will weigh nearly as much as any Goliath or Her- cules beetle, the largest of insects. The Orthoptera range, in time, from the Carboniferous for- mation ; and among the earliest forms are certain species of Blattariœ, which are next to the group of the Neuroptera^ the earliest known forms of insect life. In the Carboniferous rocks they hâve rarely occurred, but the form3 are most nu- merous and best preserved in the Tertiary formation, espo- cially in the Amber of Prussia.ORTHOPTERA. 561 There are about 5,000 species known, which attain their greatest development in size and numbers in tropical countries. In studying these insects, the proportions of the head, of the prothorax, of the wings, of the hind legs, and the external génital parts, should especially be taken into account. The ornamentation varies greatly even in the same species, and therefore large numbers of individuals are necessary to ensure a proper knowledge of any species. The different sounds produced by Orthoptera should be care- fully studied ; every species can be distinguished by its pecu- liar note, and as in different families the musical apparatus varies, so each family lias a characteristic chirrup, or shrilling, consisting of a harsh, grating, rasping noise. Mr. Scudder has contributed to the “ American Naturalist,” ii, p. 113, an interesting article on the sounds produced by some of our native species of Grasshoppers, and has even reduced their notes to a written music. He States that grass- hoppers stridulate in four different ways : “first, by rubbing the base of one wing-cover upon the other, using, for that pur- pose, the veins running through the middle portion of the wing ; second, by a similar method, but using the veins of the inner part of the wing ; third, by rubbing the inner surface of the hind legs against the outer surface of the wing-covers ; and fourth, by rubbing togetlier the upper surface of the front edge of the wings and the under surface of the wing-covers. The insects which employ the fourth method stridulate during flight, — the others while at rest. To the first group belong the Crickets (Gryllidæ) ; to the second the Green or Long-horned Grasshoppers (Locustariæ) ; to the third and fourth, certain, kinds of Short-horned or Jumping Grasshoppers (Acrydii).” The transformations of grasshoppers need careful study.. For tliis purpose their eggs should be sought for, and the de- velopment of the embryo in the egg be noted ; also the follow- ing facts should be ascertained : the date of déposition of the* eggs ; the manner of laying them ; how long before the embryo* is hatched ; the date of hatching ; how many days the pupa. lives ; so also of the pupa and of the imago, while the inter- vening changes should be carefully observed. Crows and blackbirds feed on their eggs and larvæ, and hens and turkeya 36562 ORTHOPTERA. feed greedily upon young and old. Ichneumon parasites prey upon them, and also the lower worms, such as Filaria, Grega- rina and Gordius, and the red mites attack them. Mud wasps provision their nests with the young. Orthoptera can be easily preserved in strong alcohol, and may afterwards be taken out and pinned and set at leisure. They can be killed with cyanide of potassium, or ether, with- out losing their colors, as they would do after remaining long in alcohol. They should be pinned through a little triangu- lar spot between the bases of the elytra, or fore wings, when the wings can be spread to advantage. They are also often pinned through the prothorax, or through the right elytron, as in Coleoptera. In pinning these insects for transportation care should be taken to put in additional pins Crossing each other on each side of the abdomen, and in like manner to steady the hind legs, which are very apt to fall off if too much jarred. Gryllidæ Latreille. The Crickets hâve a somewhat cylin- drical body, a large vertical head, with elliptical eyes ; the ocelli are often wTanting, and the long filiform antennæ arise from in front of and betw een the eyes. The wings are of mod- erate size, net-veined, lying flat on the back ; the fore pair are ovate, the costal edge of the fore wings being bent abruptly dowrn on the sides of the body, while the hinder pair are trian- gular. They, like the succeeding families, leap actively, the hind femora being enlarged. The génital armature is largely developed, forming long and slender stylets, often nearly as long as the body. “The subgenital plate is formed by the seventh sternite. The eighth abdominal segment is rudimen- tary and concealed beneath the seventh segment. The ninth segment, situated beyond the outlet of the ovipositor is incom- plète. Its éléments, appearing to be four in number, are devel- oped into a large solid borer. The ninth sternite is bifid, its episternite not being developed.” (L. Duthiers.) A second type is observed in Gryllotalpa, wrhere the subgenital plate is formed by the eighth sternite, instead of the seventh, and the incomplète sternite and tergite of the ninth segment are prés- ent, much like those of the other abdominal rings. The oviposi- tor is very short, while the hairy stylets arise from the eleventhGRYLLIDÆ. 563 abdominal ring and are very long. In the male the long anal hairy stylets are retained, while the parts representing the ovi- positor are aborted. The shrilling of the male is a sexual call, made by raising the fore wings and rubbing them on the hind wings. The noise is due to the peculiar structure of the fore wings, the middle portion of which forms, by its transparent elastic surface, on which there are but few veinlets, a résonant drum, increasing the volume of sound emitted by the rubbing of the file on the upper surface of the hind pair of wings. This file is the modified internai vein, the surface of which is greatly thickened, rounded and covered closely with fine teeth. In the females the wings are not thus modified, and they are silent. They hâve been known to lay 300 eggs, glued together in a common mass. In July the larvæ appear, and by the last of August the grass is alive with fully grown crickets, their loud chirruping resounding through the warm days and nights of autumn. The species are generally dull black or brownish, and in the tropics attain to a large size. In the genus Tridactylus the males hâve the anterior tibiæ three-fingered, i. e., the tibia has a latéral hooked appendage to which the tarsus is attached, while a long hooked projec- tion takes the place of the feet. The species are minute, the largest known, T. apicalis Say, being one-fifth of an inch long. It is found in the Southern States, while Tridactylus terminalis Uhler is found northward. The Mole-cricket, Gryl- lotalpa, so-called from the enlarged fossoi*ial fore feet, lives in wet, swampy soil, by ponds and streams, where it raises ridges while constructing its subterranean galleries in search of insects. Its fore legs are adapted like those of the mole for digging, and are remarkably short and stout, much flat- tened and armed with solid tooth-like projections. Their eggs, from 300 to 400 in number, are laid in the spring in tough sacks, in galleries. Very rare northward, they are more com mon in the Middle and Southern States. Gryllotalpa borealis Burmeister is found in New England, burrowing in moist earth near ponds. The Southern species is Gryllotalpa longipennis Scudder, and in the West Indies an- other species ravages the Sugar-cane. The genus Gryllus in- cludes the common crickets. The European House-cricket,564 ORTHOPTERA. G. domesticus Linn., has been introduced into the vicinity of New York, as stated by Mr. James Angus. Our two largest species are the Gryllus luctuosus Serville, known by the great length of the fore wings, which project beyond the abdomen ; and Gryllus abbreviatus Serville, which is found in the Middle States. The most common New England species is the Gryllus neglectus of Scudder, from which Gryllus niger Harris differs in its much shorter ovipositor. The small cricket so abundant in our fields is Nemobius vittatus Harris, a brownish striped species ; the genus differs from Gryllus in the last joint of the maxillary palpi being double the length of the penultimate, while in Gryllus, it is of the same length. In Œcanthus niveus Serville (Fig. 561, male ; fig. 562, female ; fig. 30,hind Fig. 561. wings of male and female, showing the broad thin portion between b and c, used in producing the shrilling noise) the wings are broad and very transparent, narrower in the female, the hind legs very long and slender, and the male is ivory white. The males make a loud shrilling noise, and both sexes are found on plants, especially the grape-vine. Mr. W. Saunders States that the female does considérable injury to the raspberry and plum twigs Flg* s02- by boring into the branches for the purpose of laying its eggs, and the Editors of the “ Ameri- can Entomologist ” state that it severs grapes from the branches. This genus leads to the next family. Mr. Scudder has described in the “Proceedings of the Bos- ton Society of Natural II is tory,” Archegogryllus priscus, a fossil cricket from the coal formation of Ohio. “One broken hind leg and a fragment of a wing were found ; the leg was notice- able in having the tibia furnished with several large promis nences, while the fémur was smooth.” Locustariæ Latreille. The large green Locusts are easily distinguished by their large heads, and their compressed bodies. The front from being vertical often inclines inwards, owing to the greatly enlarged vertex, which is often producedLOCUSTARIÆ. 565 into a hom. The ocelli are either présent or obsolète, and the eyes are globular in shape. The antennæ are of great length, as are the legs, which are long and slender. The prothorax is saddle-shaped, and the wings are thin, the anterior pair slightly tnickened, while the hinder pair are broad, these insects taking long flights. The base of the upper wings is transparent, form- ing a drum by which the males produce a loud shrill noise ; they do not rub the hind legs against the wings as do the Acrydii. Scudder States that “the day song of some Locus- tarians differs from that of the night.” The abdomen is not of great length, while the ovipositor and male claspers are greatly developed, and are of much importance in classifica- tion. Lacaze-Duthiers describes the typical form as having the subgenital plate formed by the eighth sternite, while the ninth ring is complété. Its éléments form the ovipositor, composed of six pièces, which are large and long, for boring into the earth and twigs in laying the eggs. The ninth ster- nite is bifid. Similar parts in the males are formed for clasp- ing the body of the female, and are large and long. The eggs are laid in the autumn, and the young hatch in the spring. The wingless généra bave curved, cylindrical bodies, with long antennæ, and are very active, leaping very vigorously ; they are brown in color, and inhabit caves or live under stones. Ceutliophilus is a wingless genus, in which the pronotum does not extend over the mesonotum. (7. maculatus Say has the pos- terior tibiæ of the male waved. It is common under stones. (7. stygius Scudder is found in the caves of Kentucky, and Ha- denœcus subterraneus Scudder is found in Mammoth Cave. It is a slender form, the antennæ exceeding the length of the body several times. Udeopsylla differs from the following genus, Daihinia, according to Scudder, “in the longer, more slender, less robust, and less spiny legs, in the somewhat more slender body and smaller head, in the shorter maxillary palpi, and in the structure of the tarsal joints,” the first and fourth being equal in length, while the two middle ones are small, the second joint overlapping the third above. U. robusta Haldeman is found in Nebraska. In the interesting genus Daihinia, the “tarsal joints of the anterior and posterior pair are only three in number, the first and last being of nearly566 ORTHOPTERA. equal length, with a single small joint between tbem, a very interesting exception to the almost universal rule among the Locustariœ.” The Katydid, Cyrtophyllus concavus Say (Fig. 563), has the fore wings concave, much produced in the middle. The eggs, according to Harris, are “ slate colored, and are rather more than one-eighth of an inch in length. They resemble tiny, oval, bivalve shells in shape. The insect lays them in two contiguous rows along the surface of a twig, the bark of which is previously shaved off, or made rough with her piercer. Each row consists of eight or nine eggs, placed some- what obliquely, and overlapping each other a little, and they are fastened to the twig with a gummy substance. In hatching the egg splits open at one end, and the young insect creeps through the cleft.” In Phyllop- tera the wings are narrower, but still concave, and the ovipositor is of moderate size, while in Microcentrum it is very small. P. oblongifolia Burmeister is abundant in September, in New England, being found farther northward than the Katydid, and when it Aies it makes a whizzing noise, compared by Harris to Fig. 563. that of a weaver’s shuttle. He also States that “the females lay their eggs in the autumn on the twigs of trees and shrubs, in double rows, of seven or eight eggs in each row.” These eggs in form, size and color, and in their arrangement on the twig, are very different from those of the Katydid. Phaneroptera has still narrower wings than the généra hitherto noticed, and the ovipositor is more sharply turned upwards. The P. curvicauda of DeGeer (P. angustifolia Harris) is very abundant, being the most common species in Northern New England. In Conocephalus the front of the head is produced into a cône. The species, generally pea green, often présent brown individuals. C. ensiger Harris is a commonly distributed spe-ACRYDII. 567 cies. Mr. S. I. Smith has observed a female of this species “with the ovipositor forced down between the root-leaves and the stalk of a species of Andropogon, where the eggs are probably deposited.” Xiphidium is a genus of smaller size, with the ovipositor nearly straight. X. fasciatum Serville is green, with a brown stripe on the head and thorax. It is common in gardens. According to Hagen and Scudder an undescribed species of Xiphidium makes longitudinal punctures in the pith of the Cotton plant. In Orchelimum the ovipositor is large, ensiform, and up- curved. O. vulgare Harris is very common northward ; it is pale green, with two brown stripes on the head and thorax. It has a large transparent shrilling organ, and is a more robust form than the preceding species. Locusta viridissima Linn. is a common form in Europe. Westwood States that “Hyperho- màla virescens Boisd. from New Guinea, is distinguished by the prothorax extending completely over the abdomen like a pair of elytra,” and that Condylodera tricondyloides from Java, in the elongated, constricted prothorax and fine blue colors, ex- actly imitâtes the Cicindelous genus Tricondyla. Acrydii Latreille. Grasshoppers hâve the body much com- pressed, the head large, the front vertical, the ocelli generally présent, while the antennæ are short, the greatest number of joints being twenty-four. The prothorax is very large, some- times reaching beyond the abdomen, and the wings are deflexed ; the hind legs are enlarged for leaping, and the tarsi are three-jointed. The stridulating noise is produced by rub- bing the thighs against the fore wings, which are long and narrow, while the hind wings are broadly triangular. The ovi- positor, with its accessory pièces, consists of a subgenital plate formed by the seventh sternite ; the ninth segment is complété, and the blades (tergo-rhabdites) composing the ovi- positor consist of three secondary pièces united together be- tween them. These rhabdites are short, thick, somewhat conical, and corneous. The eggs are laid in a cocoon-shaped mass covered with a tough glutinous sécrétion, and containing from fifty to one hundred eggs. The pupæ are distinguished568 ORTHOPTERA. from the larvæ in having large wing-pads. On the basal joints of the abdomen are two cavities covered each with a mem- brane, and containing a vesicle filled with liquid, which is sup- plied by a nerve sent from the third thoracic ganglion. They were considered by Latreille and Burmeister to be vocal or- gans, but more correctly it would seem, by J. Müller and von Siebold as organs of hearing. This family embraces insects of gigantic proportions. The migratory locust (Acrydium migratorium) is a most destructive insect from its voracity and immense numbers. Swarms of grasshoppers are common in the far West where they commit great havoc in crops. Our Calop tenus femur-rubrum h as at times, though not of late years, gone in immense swarms. The larvæ of many species live through the winter, and appear often in March on unusually warm days. In the genus Opomala the acute antennæ are broad and flattened at base. In O. brachyptera Scudder the fore wings are but little more than one-half the length of the bod}^. In Chloeàltis the hinder edge of the pronotum is square or rounded ; there are no foveolæ on the vertex, and the latéral -carinæ of the pronotum is parallel, or quite nearly so. Chloeàltis œnspersa Harris is light bay, sprinkled with black spots, with a black line on the head behind each eye, and ex- tending upon the thorax. The front wings are pale yellowish brown, and the hind shanks are pale red, with the spines tipped with black. Mr. S. I. Smith States that the structure of the ovipositor of this species is “beautifully adapted to a remark- able habit in the manner of depositing the eggs, which seems not to hâve been noticed before among Orthoptera. The eggs are deposited in old logs, in the under sides of boards, or in any soft wood lying among the grass which these insects inhabit. By means of the anal appendages the female exca- vâtes in the wood a smooth round hole about an eighth of an inch in diameter. This hole is at first almost perpendicular but is turned rapidly off in the direction of the grain of the wood, and runs nearly parallel with, and about three-eighths of an inch from the surface ; the whole length of the hole being an inch or an inch and a fourth. A single hole noticed in the end of a log was straight. The eggs, which are aboutACRYDII. 569 a fourth of an inch in length, quite slender and light brownish yellow, are placed in two rows, one on each side, and inclined so that, beginning at the end of the hole, each egg overlies the next in the same row by about half its length. The aperture is closed by a little disk of a hard gummy substance. I hâve seen many of the females engaged in excavating the holes, and they always stood with the body in the direction of the grain of the wood, and apparently did not change their posi- tion during the operation. When one was just beginning a hole it was very easy to see the upper appendages rise and open, and each time scrape away* a little of the wood. During this operation a frothy fluid is emitted from some part of the abdomen, but whether it serves to soften the wood or to lubricate the appendages and the sides of the hole I did not détermine.” The genus Stenobothrus differs in having foveolæ on the vertex. S. curtipennis Harris is a very common species and at once recognized by its very short wings. In the genus Tragocephcda the vertex of the head is promi- nent, the front rather oblique, sloping inwards, and the pro- thorax is acutely angulated posteriorly. T. infuscata Harris and T. viridifasciata Harris are common species; the former is dusky brown, the hind wings transparent, pale greenish yellow next to the body, with a large dusky cloud near the middle of the hind margin, and a black line on the front margin ; while the latter is green, with dusky fore wings broadly banded with green. Pezzotettix closely resembles Caloptenus, except that in some of the species it is wingless. P. borealis Scudder is found in British America, and also on the tops of the moun- tains of New Hampshire and Maine. In the P. alpinus Kollar of Europe there are short wings. The genus Caloptenus has but a slight mesial ridge on the prothorax ; the latéral ridges vary in size, and the sternal tubercle is very large, while the tip of the male abdomen is much swollen. Caloptenus femur- rubrum Harris (Fig. 564, b) is the common Red-legged grass- hopper. It varies greatly and has been so abundant in New England and Canada, though not of late years, as to become a public calamity. It has been seen very rarely on the Labrador voast, and it is a very widely distributed species, ranging from570 ORTHOPTERA. Labrador to the Mississippi. The Caloptenus spretus Uhler (Fig. 564, a), appears in immense numbers in the country be- tween the Mississippi and the Rocky Mountains, and extending from the Saskatchewan river on the north to Texas. The native breeding-places of this species cover an area in Wyom- ing, Montana, and British America, north of Montana, of about 300,000 square miles. From this area in seasons of excessive drought it migrâtes south-eastward, sometimes flying nearly a thousand miles. Dr. Lincecum thus describes the ravages of C. spretus in Texas : 4 4 Last spring the young were hatched from the egg in the early days of March ; by the middle of the month they had destroyed half the végétation, although the insects were wingless and not larger than a house-fly. The first winged eat, and continued until ten in the morning, when they ail flew southward. At about three o’clock in the afternoon of the same day another swarm arrived, ten times as numerous as the first ; these again took flight the following day ; and thus they continued, coming and going, day after day, devouring the foliage and depositing their eggs. At first they selected bare spots for this purpose, but finally the whole surface of the earth was so broken up by their borings that every inch of ground contained several patches of eggs. This visitation was spread over many hundreds of miles.” C. bivittatus Say is a large dull green, or olive colored species, with red legs, and is very abundant in gardens. Romalea microptera, called the 44Lubber grasshopper” in Florida, feeds on the leaves of the orange. (Glover.) It is nearly three inches long; the prothorax is keeled, and the wings only cover half of the abdomen. The larva is reddish, Fig. 564. specimens were seen high in the air at about three in the afternoon ; as a light northerly breeze sprang up, millions dropped to the earth, cover- ing the ground in an hour, and destroying every green thing with avidity. During the night they were quiet, but at day break commenced toACRYDII. 571 while the adult is yellowish brown with dark patches and spots. In Acrydium the spine on the chest is very prominent, and the mesial crest above is well marked, while the tip of the male abdomen is not swollen. Acrydium alutaceum Harris is nearly two inches long, and expands over three inches. It is brownish yellow, with a paler yellow stripe on the top of the head and thorax. To the genus Tropidacris, separated from Acrydium by Mr. Scudder, belongs certain gigantic grasshoppers nearly four inches in length and expanding some eight inches, with gaily colored hind wings. T. cristata Linn. has pale, greenish blue hind wings ; it is reported from Asia and Africa, and is widely distributed through tropical South America. T. dux Drury has brick red hind wings and expands nearly sev- en inches ; its range is from Texas to Panama. Œdipoda is a large and well known ge- nus, in which there is no spine between the fore legs, and the front of the head is vertical and swollen. Œdipoda Carolina Linn. is pale yellowish brown, the wings black with a broad yel- low hind margin, and it expands over three and a half inches. It is abundant everywhere. Œ, suïphurea Fabr. has deep yel- low wings, with a broad dusky band beyond the middle, while Œ. corallina Harris has hind wings of a rich coral red. Œ. xanthoptera Germar (Fig. 565) ranges from New England to the Mississippi. It is reddish brown ; the prothorax has a high rounded unbroken ridge ; the fore wings are flecked with small dusky spots ; the hind wings are yellow at the base, fuscous beyond and clouded at the tip ; the hind shanks are dusky, with a pale band below the knee. The wings of the male ex-Ô72 ORTHOPTERA. pand two and a quarter inches ; those of the female three inches. Mr. Scudder has discovered a chalcid parasite in the eggs of Œdipoda Carolina. In Tettix the pronotum is prolonged beyond the abdomen, and the antennæ are thirteen to fourteen-jointed, while Tetti- gidea differs from it by having twenty-two-jointed antennæ, and a thicker, shorter body. Tettix granulata Kirby has a very prominent vertex, with the front border angulated. Tettigidea lateralis Say is a common species, and may be found, like ail the other allied species, in the spring and au- tumn. It is pale brown, with the sides of the body blackish ; the prothorax is yellowish clay colored, and the fore wings hâve a small white spot at the tips. Batracliidea has but twelve joints to the antennæ, and other- wise differs from Tettix in its more compact shorter body, and more distant eyes, while the mesial crest on the prothorax is very high. In B. cristata Harris the crest is high, regularly arched, and on each side of the prothorax are two shallow grooves ; the surface is rough, with a dark squarish spot on •each side above the terminal half of the fore wings. Saussure describes an aquatic Tettix from Ceylon. The genus Proscopia is wingless, with the front produced into a long slender cône, while the whole body is long and cylindrical, somewhat as in Diapheromera. The antennæ are very minute, six to eight-jointed, and the legs are long and slender. P. gigantea Klug is six inches long, and occurs in Brazil at Para. Phasmida Leach. The Walking-sticks, or Spectres, are slug- gish insects found on twigs and leaves, to which they bear a strong resemblance, and are neither raptorial as regards their fore legs, nor leapers, like the grasshoppers. Their bodies are remarkably long and linear, and the wings either aborted and very small, or strikingly leaf-like. The head is horizontal, long, while the antennæ are rather short, and the abdomen is nearly twice as long as the rest of the body. The subgenital plate is formed by the largely developed eighth sternite, while the ninth segment is incomplète, the sternum consisting of a membranous fold. According to L.PHASMIDA. 573 Duthiers there are eleven abdominal segments, and the anal stylets are not articulated as in the Mantidœ, but are long corneous claspers, and in some cases, very much like those of Libellula, as in Acrophylla, while the eleventh ring is a little triangular tergite, situated between the anal claspers. The egg-sac in Diapheromera femorata Say (Fig. 566, <î), our com- monly diffused species, is flattened elliptical, with a lid in front which can be pushed open by the embryo when about to hatch, and is deposited in the autumn. The young when hatched are linear, and much like the adults except that they are wingless. The male is considerably smaller than the female, and much more slender. In Phasma, a tropical genus, the two sexes are winged, the antennæ are about as long as the body, and the limbs are slender. P. 4-guttatum Bur- meister is between two and three inches in length, and green on the costal border of the hind wing, and rose colored be- hind. It lives in Bornéo. The genus Prisopus differs from the other two généra in the shortened mesothorax ; the legs are much flattened and leaf- like ; the abdomen is longer than the thorax, flattened beneath, and widened on the sides posteriorly. P. spiniceps Burmeister is a Brazilian species, and is two and a half inches long. P. flabellicomis Stoll, according to A. Murray, spends the whole of the day under water adhering to stones in the mountain streams of Brazil, and towards dusk Aies about ; it is the only truly aquatic Orthopteran known. The genus Phyllium, found only in the East Indies, most re- markably imitâtes various leaves, one species having its fore wings so veined and colored as to resemble most strikingly a dried and withered leaf. The wings are often very large and broad, and as if to aid in carrying out the analogy the legs hâve broad leaf-like expansions. The antennæ of the males are twenty-four-jointed, while in the females they are much shorter,674 ORTHOPTERA. consisting of but nine joints. The P. siccifolium Linn. is green and about three inches long. It lives in the East Indies. Mantidæ Latreille. These raptorial Orthoptera are easily recognized by their large size, the enormous spinous fore legs, Fig. 567. adapted for seizing other insects like the raptorial Hemiptera, and which has given them the naine of Soothsayers and Prophets, from their clevotional attitude when watching for their prey. They are worshipped by the Hottentots as tutelary divinities. The head is horizontal, triangular in front, with long filiform antennæ ; the prothorax is very long, and the broad wings are thin, net-veined, with long parallel veins, more strongly resem- bling the Neuroptera in this respect than any other family. The abdomen is long, linear oval. “The subgenital plate is formed by the eighth sternite, the oviduct opening between the seventh and eighth segments. The ninth segment is complété. The éléments of this ring are but little developed, scarcely surpass- ing the subgenital plate ; the two episternites are distinct, and between them is the small ^uth sternite.” The stylets are concealed by the broad expanded sternum of the seventh segment, while the antenna-like appendage (or anal style, Fig. 23) is sometimes many jointed, and is said by Lacaze-Duthiers to be appended Fig. 568. to the eleventh segment of the abdomen. The mass of eggs laid by the female is attached to twigs, and enclosed in a flattened subovate case (oôtheca) of hardened silk. The eggs are infested to some extent by chalcid para-BLATTARIÆ. 575 sites. The young are long and linear. The Race-horse, Man- tis Carolina Linn. (Fig. 567 ; fig. 568, eggs, natural size), occurs in the Southern and Western States, and in the tropics occur the allied généra Vates, Empusa, Harpax and Schizoce- phala. According to Mr. T. Glover the eggs of Mantis Carolina are laid in a packet about an inch long attached to leaf-stalks and twigs. The body of the recently hatched young is linear and turned up at each end, and it devours caterpillars and insects, holding them in the fore legs with a firm grasp by applying the spined tibiæ and tarsi against the more stoutly spined femora, and then sucking their blood at its leisure. Pro- fessor Sanborn Tenney tells me he has observed the female .after sexual union devour the male. Burmeister says that Mantis argentina Burm., of Buenos Ayres, seizes and eats small birds. The genus Eremophila (E. Ehrenbergi of Burm- eister) inhabits the deserts of Northern Africa, where it re- sembles the sand in color. Blattariæ Latreille. The Cockroaches are flattened ovate, with the head rounded and partially concealed by the expanded prothorax. The fore wings are large, ovate, not much smaller than the hind wings ; the antennæ are long and filiform, many jointed. The bilobate subgenital plate is formed by the eighth sternite ; the ninth abdominal ring is complété, the sternite being small and lodged between the two episternites which are soldered into a single annular piece. The anal stylets are short. The species, which are almost invariably reddish hrown, or paler, are nocturnal, hiding by day, and are found under stones. They are fond of heat, the house cockroaches frequenting heated rooms. While the common species are troublesome from eating garments, etc., they do great service in clearing houses and ships of bed-bugs, which they greedily devour. The eggs are laid in a bean-shaped capsule (oôtheca) which is divided into two apartments, each containing a row of separate chambers, about thirty in number, each of which encloses an egg. Many day s are required for oviposition, and the female may be seen running about with the capsule par- tially protruding from her body. During this period embryos ere forming within the capsule, and very soon after it is576 ORTHOPTERA. dropped the larvæ are hatched. The common cockroach, Blatta (Stylopyga) orientalis Linn. has rudimentary wings in. the female, while in the male they are shorter than the body. In Periplaneta the wings are longer than the body, and the supraànal plate is deeply fissured and the abdomen much swollen. Periplaneta Americana Linn. is a commonly dis- tributed species. The genus Platymodes differs from the pre~ ceding one in its narrower and longer body, and the supraànal plate is not fissured ; the anal stylets are much shorter and turned down, while the wings extend beyond the abdomen, the anterior pair being well rounded at the tips. Platamodes Pen- sylvanica DeGeer is pale, shining, reddish brown, and the an- tennæ reach back to the tips of the fore wings. It is found in the “ Croton bug.” Ectobia lithophila Harris is very common in woods under stones in New England. The third joint of its antennæ is as long as the next five, collective^. In Cryptocercus both sexes are wingless ; the antennæ are half as long as the whole body, and the abdominal appendages are not exserted, being very short. C. punctulatus Scudder is known by its thickly punetured body and dark mahogany brown color, with reddish beneath. It is found southwards. In Pycnoscelus the males are wingless ; no females hâve y et been found. It differs from Cryptocercus in having a larger head ; the eyes are placed doser together, and the stylets are slender, cylindrical, of about the same length as the cerci and inserted just within them. Plate 1, fig. 2 represents the wing of an extinct species of cockroach (Blattina?) discovered by Mr. Barnes in the coal formation of Nova Scotia. While most. Df the remains of cockroaches found in the Carboniferous rocks woods under stones, entering houses by night. Fig. 569. In Ectobia the wings are well developed, and the basal joints of the tarsi are shorter than the others. The Ectobia Germanica Stephens (Fig. 569, male and fe- male) is a pale species, and is very abundant in houses in and about Boston, where it is calledFORFICULARIÆ. 577 of this country and Europe hâve been referred to the genus Blattina, Mr. Scudder describes, in the u Palæontology of Illi- nois,” a form under the name of Mylacris anthracophila (Fig» 570, upper wing ; Fig. 571, prothorax) which was found in the lower part of the true coal measures at Morris, Illinois. Forficulariæ Latreille. The Earwigs are very unlike other Orthoptera, and are Fis- 570* readity distinguished by their narrow flattened bodies, with short wing-covers, like the Stapliylinidœ among beetles, on which acconnt Linnæus placed them among the Coleoptera. The head is free, fiat, horizontal ; the ocelli are wanting, and the eyes round ; the antennæ arise from under the eyes, and are filiform and twelve to forty-jointed. The elytra are short and thick, while the rounded, broad, hind wings are folded under- neath so as to be almost entirely concealed by the anterior pair. The female génital armature is described by Lacaze-Duthiers as composed of a subgenital plate formed by the eighth ster- nite, while the eighth and ninth abdominal rings are partly aborted, and only represented by two horny arcs closely soldered to the tergite of the tenth ring. The rhabdites of the eleventh ring are greatly developed, forming the immense forceps, which are often as long as the wliole body. This family was ranked as a separate order by Leach and Kirby, under the name of Dermaptera, and were called Euplexoptera by Westwood. They are nocturnal insects, hiding in the day time between leaves and in flowers, flying about at dark. They feed on the corollas of flowers and on fruit, and will eat bread and méat.. They are rare insects in this country, though troublesome in Europe from their great numbers. An Alpine species lives under stones in Europe. In Forficula the antennæ are fifteen- jointed. Spongopliora bipunctata Scudder has two pale spots on the elytra. In Labia the antennæ are less than twelve- jointed. Labia minuta Scudder is yellowish brown, with the* sides of the abdomen and the head reddish brown. Fig. 571. 37NEUROPTERA. £78 NEUROPTERA. These insects hâve the body, as a whole, more eiongated than in other insects, with large broad, net-veined, thin, mem- branous wings, both pairs being very equal in size, the anterior pair being sometimes smaller than the hind wings, while in some généra the hind ones are either diminished in size or obsolète. The mouth-parts are free, the mandibles being well developed, and the abdomen is long and slender, with the génital armor always présent, but made on the simplest plan, not forming a sting. The metamorphosis is either incomplète or complété ; accordingly the pupa is either active or inactive and when inactive résides in a cocoon. The greater number of species are aquatic ; and several degraded forms (Lepisma, -etc.) bear a strong resemblance to the Myriapods. The description of the head and mouth-parts of the Orthop- tera applies well to the Neuroptera, but the head is horizontal, flatter, and the mouth-parts are less symmetrical, certain parts being greatly developed over others. As a general rule that part of the head situated behind the mouth is larger, in propor- tion to the rest of the head, than usual in the larvæ of the higher insects, and also the mouth-parts are much larger and less compact. Thus the head of a Neuropterous larva may be actually larger than the entire thorax of the same insect ; in lhe Hymenopterous and Lepidopterous larvæ it is tue reverse, the head is often smaller than even the prothoracic ring. The mouth-parts are inclined to become very large, and in the larva of Libellula the labium is enormously developed, masking the jaws and other parts when at rest, and capable of great extension, while it is armed with powerful hooks, being modified palpi, for seizing other insects. The thorax is large, the segments being well developed, and the prothorax is usually large and square, but in what in many respects are the most typical insects of the group, the Ephe- meridæ and Libellulidœ, the prothorax is very small, as in the highest insects, and in the latter group the greatly enlarged flanks of the mesothorax seem to take its place.NEUROPTERA. 579 The wings are large, and in the Libellulidæ they are in constant use. The legs are generally of simple structure, these insects neither walking nor leaping mucli. Rarely, as in Mantispa, are they adapted for seizing their prey, as they are in many Hemiptera and Orthoptera. The abdomen of the Neuroptera is composed, according to Lacaze-Duthiers, of eleven segments (arthromeres), and the ovipositor is constructed on the same plan as in the Hymen- optera, Hemiptera and Orthoptera, though in the différent families the characters vary much more than in the higher sub- orders, in this respect perfectly according with the anatomy of the other parts of the body in the different groups. He States, however, as observation has taught us, that in its structure the ovipositer is simpler than in other insects, and the farthest removed from that of the Hymenoptera. Lacaze-Duthiers, whose work is necessarily incomplète from treating of the female ovipositor alone, not regarding the analogous parts in the other sex, considers the Neuropterous ovipositor (tarière) as having three types of structure. The simplest is found in Libellula, in the abdomen of which there are ten segments much alike ; “the eleventh is more complex than the others ; it has the same structure as in Æschna. It is especially in the division of [the famiiy containing] Libellula and its allies that the two appendages take the form and the function of pincers, and that the spécial word ‘forcipate,’ has been used. These forceps serve, as is well known, for clasping organs, and to enable them to perforai the very long prelimi- naries to fecundation.” The outlet of the oviduct lies between the eighth and ninth segments. The nervous System of the Neuroptera consists of the cere- brellum, with its latéral productions, the optic nerves, forming a cylinder extending between the eyes and presenting four swellings. (Leidy.) There are three thoracic and eight ab- dominal ganglia which are of very uniform size, and connected by double commissures. (See Fig. 43.) The nervous cord is very equably developed and the brain portion is relatively smaller than in the higher suborders. Professor Leidy has described the digestive organs of Cory- dalus comutus, which may serve as a type for the rest of the580 NEUROPTERA. suborder. It agréés with most other généra of the group in having a long œsophagus, which is dilated posteriorly into a spacious proventriculus, which extends as far back as the fifth abdominal segment. The large intestine présents a large con- volution, and abmptly dilates into an oval or fusiform cæcum in its lower third, which latter opens into the rectum. In some généra there is a long sucking stomach inserted on one of the sides. In Corydalus this is only présent in the pupa, and is aborted in the imago ; so also in the larva the “proven triculus, with its apparatus of stomachal teeth,” is adapted to the carnivorous habits of the insect, but in the pupa the teeth disappear, uwhile in the imago we find the œsophagus again lengthened, still contracted at its commencement, but gradu- ally dilating until it forras a capacious Florence flask-shaped proventriculus, or gizzard.” (See Fig. 45.) “ With the Perlidœ the gizzard is wanting, but the upper extremity of the stomach has from four to eight cœca point- ing forwards. With the Libellulidœ the œsophagus is long and large, and protrudes somewhat into the straight, oblong, constricted stomach, which is without cœca, and is succeeded by a very short ileum and colon. The digestive tube of the Ephemeridœ, which in their perfect State take no food, is feebly developed. Its walls are very thin throughout, and the œsophagus is directly continuous with the stomach, which is a bladder-like dilation, and succeeded by a short, straight intes- tine. The predatory Panorpidœ, which are rapacious, differ notably from the other Neuroptera, and resemble rather the preceding order (Orthoptera). The œsophagus is short and straight, and in the thorax is succeeded by a spherical muscu- iar gizzard w hich is lined internally with a brown chitinous membrane covered with stiff hairs. The stomach is tabulai and straight ; the ileum makes two convolutions before pass- ing into the long colon.” (Siebold.) In Lepisma the œsoph* agus terminâtes in a “kind of crop, which is succeeded by a globular gizzard provided with six teeth.” There are tw^o simple, short, salivary glands in the Sialidœ, while in the Phryganeidœ and Hemerobidœ uthey are ramified and highly developed. It is quite remarkable that there is, in this respect, a sexual différence with the Panor-NEUROPTERA. 581 pidœ; the males hâve three pairs of very long, tortuous tubes, while with the females the only vestiges of this apparatus are two indistinct vesicles.” (Siebold.) In their larval State the aquatic Neuroptera breathe by false gills, or branchial tracheæ ; these generally consist of slender filaments situated on the sides of the abdominal seg- ments. These filaments are fleshy, and penetrated by tracheæ, which take up the oxygen from the water. In the larvæ of the P h ryganeidœ these false gills are simple, 44 rarely ramified, and united in groups of from two to five, which stand out to- wards the back.” Siebold also States that 4 4 with those of the Ephemeridœ each of the anterior abdominal segments has a pair of these branchiæ which are sometimes ramified in the most varied manner, and sometimes consist of two kinds, some being lamelliform and alternating with the others which are fasciculate. With ail the Ephemeridœ these organs hâve movements which are sometimes slow and rhythmical and sometimes rapid and oscillatory. . . . The trachean branchiæ of Æschna, Libellula and the other Libellulidœ are formed upon a wholly different plan. They are situated in the very large rectum, and consist of numerous épithélial folds which are traversed by a great number of very fine branches of many large trachean trunks. (Fig. 62, x.) The rectum is, moreover, invested by a very highly developed muscular tunic, and its orifice has three pyramidal valves which regulate the entrance and the escape of the water required for respiration.” In the larval and adult insect there are four main trunks to the tracheary System, two on each side, and much less com- plicated than in other insect s. There are generally six or eight long, flexuous urinary or Malpighian vessels. In the Neuroptera the ovaries 4 4 consist always of multilocular tubes,” and the two testes are, in the Perlidœ, Ephemeridœ and Libellulidœ, composed of 44 a multitude of round follicles, disposed botryoidally around a long dilated portion of each of the deferent canals. . . . With Panorpa the two testicles are very simple and ovoid ; but with the other species they consist of two tufts of long or round follicles. With Myrmeleon and Hemerobius they are oval and surrounded by a distinct envelope. The two deferent582 NEUROPTERA. canals are short, and always hâve on their lower extremity twa long or ovoid accessory follicles.” (Siebold.) The classification of the Neuroptera is difficult from the lowness of the type, which présents an unusual number of deg- radational forms, such as are indicated beyond, and because the different families vary so much among themselves, and contain forms wl)ich mimic the higher groups of insects Though the type is the lowest among hexapodous insects, yet there constantly recur characters which are found only in the highest insects. For example the Pliryganeidœ are Neu- ropterous throughout, yet there are many of the less impor- tant characters which ally them most intimately with the Lepidoptera, especially the Tineidœ. However ail Neuroptera agréé in the lax composition of the body, inducing a worm-like, elongated form. The méta- morphosés are, in the more typical families, less complété than in other insects, except the Hemiptera and Orthoptera, and upon the whole the organs of végétative life are largely devel- oped over those of animal life, making them generally very sluggish in their motions (though the adult Libellulidæ are an exception), and inducing an abnormal size of the body, as this suborder contains many of the largest and most monstrous of insects. The researches of Professor Dana and Messrs. Hartt and Scudder show that the Neuroptera shared with the Orthop- tera the possession of the low marshy lands of Devonian and Carboniferous times, and the forms discovered in the rocks of those periods indicate that they were often of gigantic propor- tions, and among the most degraded of their type. Dr. Anton Dohrn has described, under the name of Euge- reon Bôckingi (Fig. 572), perhaps the most remarkable fossil insect yet discovered. It occurred in the Permian formation in Germany. He considered it as combining Hemipterous and Neuropterous characters, though more closely allied to the Neuroptera. Dr. Hagen writes me that “Eugereon belongs to Dictyoneura Goldenberg, and is perhaps identical with one of the species described and figured by Goldenberg.” Dictyo- neura is said by Goldenberg to resemble the Neuropterous genus Semblis. Dr. Hagen also informs me that Gerstaecker, after an examination of Bockmg*s specimen, 1 tliinks Eugereon-neuroptera. 583 is next related to the Ephemerina. The parts of the mouth hâve nothing of the Hemiptera about them and they are even more related to the Diptera.” While we would d e f e r to the judgment of these distin- guished ento- mologists who hâve actually studied the fos- sil itself, yet judging from Dohrn’s draw- ing we would refer the insect to the Neurop- tera, and would suggest that in certain charac- ters we are strongly reminded of certain more abnormal généra of Hemerobidœ and the Panorpidœ. The wings while closely resembling the Ephemerids, as Dr. Hagen has sug- gested to us, also, in our opinion, recall those of an African species of Palpares, and of the fore wings of Nemoptera, and the antennæ and beak-like mouth-parts seem analogous to those of Panorpa and Boreus.* Fig. 572. Eugereon Bôckingi Dohm, enlarged three diameters; A, a, lab- rum; 5, first pair of jaws (mandibles) ; c, second pair (maxillæ) ; e, labial palpi; /, fragments of antennæ ; m, portion of legs ; n, middle tibiæ. C, a, b, antennæ ; D, a, head ; b, fore femora ; c, prothorax ; d, prostemum (?) ; E, tarsus and end of the tibia of the left fore leg.—After Dohm. *Erichsonand Siebold hâve grouped the Termitidœ, Psocidœ, Embidœ% Ephemeridœ and Libellulidœunder the nameof “false” Neuroptera,and con- sidered them as Orthoptera, restricting the Neuroptera to the Sialidœ, Hemero- bidœ, Panorpidœ and Phryganeidob,and this classification has been adopted by most continental entomologists. Now while believing in the unity of the Neu- ropterous type, and that the so called “ false ” Neuroptera (especially the May-flies and the dragon-flies) are really the most typical of the suborder, being the most unlike other insects, do not we hâve many characters in these palæozoic net- veined insects, which unité more intimately the so called false and true Neuropr ters ? We would not forget the analogies shown in these fossil net-veined insecta Ca584 NEUROPTERA. It is a rather large insect, the head and mouth-parts measur- ing thirty-nine millimétrés, the three thoracic rings twenty- eight millimétrés, and the part preserved of the right upper wing forty-four millimétrés, and of the right under wing fifty- one millimétrés. The antennæ are long and thread-like, as in Panorpa, and the venation of the wings are of the Neuropter- ous type, while the elongated mouth-parts are Hemipterous in appearance, though the labial palpi (A e) are well developed, being usually absent in the Hemiptera. It is the most puz- zling form yet brought to light, and has been compared by Dr. Dohrn to the fossil Archæopteryx of the Solenhofen slates, referred by some naturalists to the birds, and by others to the reptiles. We hâve shown elsewhere* that the Neuropterous families, except the most typical, i.e., the Epliemeridœ and Libellu- lidœ, mimic every other suborder of insects. They are in fact comprehensive or synthetic types, combining, as do ail decephalized, embryonic forms, the structures of the other sub- orders of insects, and thus presenting, in advance, features which remind us of characters more fully wrought out in higher n,nd more compactly finished groups of insects. As regards the préservation of the dragon-flies, Mr. Uhler states that “the large, brilliant green dragon-flies (Cordu- lina), as well as the yellow, brown-striped Gomphina, having the eye§ wide apart, will furnish new species in almost ail parts of the country. In order to préservé specimens in the neatest manner it is well to slip them immediately, when caught, into paper bags of suitable size ; first taking care to lay back the wings so that they will be applied together, to prevent mutila- tion. These paper bags nmy be piaced loosely in a box carried for the purpose. Thej^ can thus be taken out at leisure, killed by applying a camel’s hair pencil, dipped in sulphuric ether, chloroform, or benzine, to the under side of the body, and then hâve the wings spread by placing them upon the setting to the Orthoptera, and which serve to nnite the two suborders more intimately than ever. Indeed entomologists in the future may unité the Orthoptera and Neuroptera (in the Linnæan sense) into a single suborder équivalent to the Coleop- tera or Hymenoptera, and these two groups may stand as two subordinate divi- sions just as the “Homoptera” and “Hemiptera” are subdivisions of the Lin- næan group of Hemiptera. ♦Journal of the Boston Society of Natural History, viii, p. 590.TERMITIDÆ. 585 'jboards. In most species the colors change after death, hence it is important to make short descriptions of the colors before killing the specimens.” The smaller, more slender and déli- cate Neuroptera should be pinned directly in the collecting box. Many species are caught by a light in the night time, such as Polystoechotes nebulosus and the Phryganeidœ; and a bright light placed in damp situations by streams, etc., will attract large numbers, the smaller species, like moths, be • ing attracted a great distance by light. For the proper study of the généra of these insects, and often of the species, they should be collected in alcohol, so as to be studied in a flexible state. Dr. J. L. Leconte has published in the “ American Naturalist,” iii, p. 307, some new directions for the préserva- tion of insects which will apply to these as well as other insects. u Surgical art has given to us an instrument by which a poisonous liquid can be rapidly and most effectively applied to the entire surface of large numbers of specimens as they stand in the cabinet boxes, without the trouble of moving them. I refer to the 4 Atomizer.’ “Opinions may vary as to the nature of the liquid poison to be used, but after several trials I hâve found the foliowing formula to be quite satisfactory ; it produces no efflorescence, •even on the most highly polished species, while the odor is quite strong, and persistent enough to destroy any larvæ or eggs that may be already in the box : — Saturated alcoholic solution of arsenious acid, eight fluid ounces ; Strychnine, twelve grains ; Crystallized carbolic acid, one draclim ; Minerai naphtha (or heavy benzine) and strong alcohol, enough to make one quart. I hâve not stated the quantity of naphtha, since there are some varieties of light petroleum in commerce which dissolve in alcohol only to a slight extent. These should not be used. The heavier oils which mix indefinitely with alco- hol are the proper ones, and for the two pints of mixture ten to twelve fluid ounces of the naphtha will be sufficient. Care should be taken to test the naphtha on a piece of paper. If it leaves a greasy stain which does not disappear after a few hours it is not suitable for this purpose. “The best form of atomizer is the long, plated, réversible tube ; it should be worked with a gum elastic pipe, having two586 NEUROPTERA. bulbs to secure uniformity in the current. The atomizing glas» tubes and the bottle which usually accompany the apparatus are unnecessary: a common narrow-necked two ounce bottle will serve perfectty to hold the fluid.” The aquatic larvæ and pupæ can easily be reared in aquaria in jars and tumblers, taking care that the weaker species are separated from those more powerful and bloodthirsty. The little Entomostraca, or water-fleas, serve as food for many of the smaller species. With very little care many species can be raised in this way, and so little is known of their transforma- tions that figures and descriptions would be of great value. The interesting and varied habits of the different families can be also easily noted. They can be called summer insects, sinçe few are found late in the fall or early in the spring, though. several Perlidœ, Hemerobius, Boreus and several species of Phryganeids are found ere the snow has gone in the spring, and a few species of the latter family are found in November. Termitidæ Leach. The White Ants in the different grades of individuals, and their complex economy, foreshadow the for- micaries of the ant and the hive of the bee. The bodies of the winged individuals are shaped somewhat like that of the ant, but they differ in the long, narrow, straight, finely net-veined wings, the costa of which is remarkably straight, while both wings are equal in shape and size, with the veins arranged in the same manner in both. The head is of moderate size, hori- zontal ; the eyes are rather small, globose, and between them are two ocelli, the third and more anterior one being nearly obsolète. The antennæ are short, with about twenty joints, and the mandibles are small triangular, with fine teeth on the cutting, or inner edge. The abdomen is ovate and shorter than in the Neuroptera generally. In ail these points, as well as in their habits, the white ants are the most perfectly organ- ized of the Neuroptera. They are more cephalized, their bodies are developed more headwards, and their intelligence and remarkable instincts ally them also, intellectually, with the most perfect of insects, the Bees, Wasps and Ants. Thus in the lowest suborder of insects we find features which strikingly remind us of the highest insects. Nature constantly repeat-TERMITIDÆ. 587 ing the same idea in different groups, here leaps over as it were whole groups of insects, as if by prophecy pointing out the advent of still more perfect forms and higher intelligences. Geology teaches us that the white ant and other Neuroptera preceded in time, as they do in structure, their higher ana- logues. The genus Calotermes differs from Termes in its small head, the large, transverse, oblong prothorax, the veined costal area, and in the tarsi being furnished with an apical plantula (or foot-pad situated between the claws). G. castaneus Burmeis- ter is almost cosmopolitan, occurring in Western and tropical America. In Termopsis the head is large, the ocelli are ab- sent, and the prothorax is small, otherwise it agréés with Calo- termes. T. angusticollis Linn. is found in the Pacific States. The type of the family, Termes, has a large rounded head, with two ocelli, and a small heart-shaped prothorax ; the costal area is free, while the foot-pad (plantula) is absent. Our com- mon white ant, Termes Jlavipes Kollar is found from Massachu- setts southward, under stones, sticks and in stumps. It is of a chestnut color, head and prothorax black brown, with brown- ish antennæ ringed with a paler hue, with white, very délicate wings, and the mouth, tibiæ and tarsi are yellow. The work- ers are white, with honey yellow heads. The white ants of Africa live together like ants in colonies of vast extent. The males and females are winged and closely resemble each other as usual. There are two wingless forms ; the soldiers, which hâve large square heads, and long powerful mandibles, with a large prothorax, and the workers which hâve small rounded heads and minute, nearly obsolète mandi- bles. There also occur among the workers certain individuals (Nasuti) which hâve the front of the head prolonged into a horn. Ail these wingless individuals are asexual, the organs of reproduction being undeveloped. They hâve been consid- ered to be larvæ by eminent authorities, but they are found in the nest in abundance when the males and females hâve arrived at maturity. They must, therefore, be considered like the workers among bees and ants, as individuals specialized, or set apart for the performance of certain duties involving the in- crease and préservation of the entire colony. Thus the sol-588 NEUROPTERA. diers, as they are termed by Smeathman, with their warlike aspect, act as “sentinels and soldiers, making their appearance when the nest is invaded, attacking the intruders and inciting the laborers to work. The more peaceful and laborious workers are estimated to be one hundred times more numerous than the soldiers.” “They collect food, form covered ways, guard the males and females and take care of the eggs and young.” (Westwood.) While most of the species burrow in wood, or under ground, others, as in the Termes fatale Linn. (T. bellicosus Smeathman), raise conical hillocks of remarkable strength and firmness, often ten or twelve feet high. After imprégnation the females, as in the case of the ants, lose their wings. They are then conducted into the interior of the nest by the workers. Here the body of the female gradually be- comes enormously distended with eggs, being over two inches in length, and it is known to la}" 80,000 in the course of a day. The pupa of Termes lucifugus, a French species, was found by Latreille in the spring, with four white tubercles, or wing pads. Other pupæ are described and figured by Westwood, which by their long wing-pads, prolonged beyond the abdomen, closely resemble the Homopterous adult Cercopidœ . Fossil Termites occur in the coal formation of Germany. Embijdæ Burmeister. These are small insects, forming a connecting link between the white ants and Psocus ; they are characterized by the linear depressed body, with the head free from the thorax, the wings equal in size, with few yeins, and triarticulate tarsi. The larvæ are found under stones and are protected by a cocoon which they renew at each moulting of the skin. (Gerstaecker.) Embia Savigni Westwood is found in Egypt. A species of Olyntlia ? the only genus of this family found in North America, is stated by Hagm to occur in Cuba. Psocidæ Leach. These minute insects would be easily mis- taken for Aphides, both the wingless as well as the winged individuals. Their bodies are oval, the head free from the prothorax, which is small and partially concealed by the wings. The wings are unequal in size, and with few veins, thus départ-PSOCIDÆ. 589 in g widely from the usual Neuropterous type of venation, and closely resembling that of the plant-lice. Mr. R. McLachlan states (Entomologist’s Monthly Magazine) that “ the eggs are laid in patches on leaves, bark, or other objects, and the fe- males cover them with a web. The larvæ and pupæ greatly resemble the per- fect insects.” The larvæ closely resemble the pupæ ; the ocelli in these states are absent, and the tarsi are two or three-jointed, accord- ing to the species. He has observed individuals with but partially developed wings. “ In ail their states they probably feed on dry vegetable substances and lichens. They are univer- sally common, living more Fi«- 573- or less in societies on tree trunks and palings, and amongst the herbage of trees, especially firs, larches and yews, and some species in houses and warehouses. I believe that both sexes possess the power of spinning a web, not distinguishable from that of spiders. They are exceedingly active and diffi- cult of capture.” (McLachlan.) In the nearly wingless genus Clothilla, from California, there are no ocelli, the wings are incomplète, and the tarsi three- jointed. Clotliilla picea Motschulsky is but .04 of an inch long and pitchy black in color, with a brassy reflection. In the nearly wingless Atropos the ocelli are wanting and the tarsi are three-jointed, while the rudimentary wings forin minute square pads. The A. divinatorius of Otho Fabricius is a little pale, louse-like insect, seen running over books and in insect cases, where it does considérable injury to specimens. The Atropos is in England called the “ death-watch,” and is sup- posed to make the ticking sound heard in spring. Mr. E. Newman (Entomologist, iii, p. 66) has bred “ Psocus pulicarius, or some allied species, from Clothilla pulsatoria” (Fig. 573.)590 NEUROPTERA. The genus Psocus, which closely resembles in its appeau ance and habits the Aphides, though the species are not suck* ing insects, bas three ocelli, two or three-jointed tarsi, and well developed wings. The species are very numerous, and abound during the close of summer. Psocus venosus Burm. is said by Fitch to live on the maple, while P. salicis he describes as being found on the willow. Perlidæ Leach. This group comprises those Neuroptera with long flattened bodies, the sides of which are parallel, while the prothorax is large ; the antennæ are long and thread-like, and the wings are unequal in size, the posterior ones being broad, triangular. The labial palpi are présent, while the mandibles exist ordinarily in a rudimentary State. The wings are usually charged with many irregular transverse veins, and when folded fiat on the back, extend beyond the abdomen. The tarsi are three-jointed, and there are, in the typical généra, two terminal setæ on the abdomen. The pupæ are active, with prominent wing-pads. They are found in rivers under stones, while the adults are found resting on leaves and in low damp places. The larvæ resemble the adult, except in being wing- less, and bear a general resemblance to the larvæ of certain Ephemerids, showing the near relationship of the two families. The genus Pteronarcys is remarkable for retaining in the adult state external gill-like filaments attached to the under side of the prothorax. It consequently lives in exceedingly moist places, much nearer the water than Perla. P. regalis Newman is fuscous, the head is no broader than the thorax, while in P. proteus Newman the head is broader than the pro- thorax and the abdomen is yellowish beneath. In Perla the wings are veiny, the transverse veins few and very regular, while the hind wings hâve a large, plicated anal space. The palpi are thread-like, and there are two abdominal setæ. Westwood remarks that u there is a very great diversity in the sexes of the typical genus Perla, the males being much smaller than the females, with very short wings.” Perla ab- normis Newman is yellowish fuscous, and the wings are sub- hyaline with the veins clay-yellow. The genus Isopteryx is characterized by the wings havingPEELIDÆ. 591 the transverse veins few in number, almost absent, and there is no basal space in the posterior wings. The palpi are seta- ceous, the last joint being shortest. Isopteryx Cydippe New- man is pale yellow and immaculate. Capnia is known by the wings being veiny, with the trans- verse veins very few and regular ; the anal area of the posterior wings is large, plicate, and the palpi are filiform, with the last joint ovate, longer than the preceding one, and there are two setæ. Capnia pygmœa Burm. is shining black, with gray hairs. It is common in New York in February, according to Dr. Fitch. The species of Tœniopteryx hâve the wings inrolled and veined, with the transverse veins very scarce, rather regular ; the anal area of the posterior wings is large and plicated ; the palpi are filiform, with the last joint ovate. There are no abdominal setæ, and the tarsi are divided into three long equal joints. They fly early in spring and late in the autumn, and south- wards, during the winter. T, frigida Ilagen is black, with grayish hairs, with a gray band on the middle and another at the apex of the nearly transparent wings. In Nemoura the wings are veiny, fiat, and the transverse veins are few, very regular, the veins of the pterostigma forming an X. The anal area of the posterior wings is large and plicate, and there are no caudal setæ. The males are smaller than the females, with shorter wings. N. albidipennis Walker is piceous, shining, with whitish wings. The genus Leuctra differs from Nemoura in the wings being rolled in when at rest. L. tennis Pictet is fuscous, with three elevated lines on the disk of the thorax. Under the name Palœopterina, Scudder lias described a group considered by him as a distinct family which comprises but three fossil species discovered in the Carboniferous forma- tion at Morris, Illinois. The fragments of the first species found were described by Professor J. D. Dana in 1864, under the name of Miamia Bronsoni (Plate 1, fig. 1, the dotted lines represent the parts restored by Mr. Scudder). He States that this insect “while Neuropterous in wings, closely ap- proaching the Semblids, bas broad costate fémurs, and even a large spinous joint to the anterior legs, peculiarities which seem to be almost inconsistent with the Neuropterous type,592 NEUROPTERA. altkough in part charaeterizing the Mantispids, and which are? in complété harmony with the Orthopterous type.” (American Journal of Science and Arts, 1864, p. 33.) Professer Dana farther States “ that in the^ broad costate fémurs of the second pair of legs and the form of the prothorax, it ap* proaches the Orthopters of the Phyllium family, and is very unlike any known Neu- ropters. The anterior legs are peculiar in: having a large and broad fémur armed above with very slender spines as long as the joint, three of which, though mutilated, are seen in the specimen. But something of this kind is observed under Neuropters in the Mantis- pids. It is qui te probable that these anterior' Fig. 574. legs were prehensile, as in Mantispa, and the fact that the tibia and tarsus are not in sight in the specimen,. favors this conclusion. . . . There appears to hâve been a pair of short obtuse appendages at the extremity of the abdomen, much as in Phyllium. The head is mostly obliterated.” Mr. S. H. Scudder in the “Memoirs of the Boston So- ciety of Natural History” for 1867, shows that the vena- tion of this genus recalls fea- tures of several other Neu- ropterous families, such as the Termitidœ, the Hemero- bidœ and Sialidœ. Mr. Scudder, who has given a restoration of this remark- able insect, States that the Fig* 575* head is somewhat like that of Perla, being oval, depressed, with long oval latéral eyes. These two authors disagree as to the “fore legs” (Dana), Mr. Scudder calling the parts so designated by Professor Dana, the head. Gerstaecker States his opinion that Miamia is. “ without doubt a Perlarian.”EPHEMERIDÆ. 593 Mr. Scudder has more recently described in the “Palæon- tology of the Illinois Geological Survey,” iii, p. 566, two other forms of this group. He remarks, 44 the two specimens before me, with wings better preserved than in the individual of Mia- mia Bronsoni, prove that my délinéation of the conjectural parts of the wing structure of the Palœopterina was in part erroneous, and give evidence of a doser relationship of the Palæopterina to the ancient Ter mit in a than I had supposed possible.” A second species of Miamia from Morris, Illinois, he calls M. Danœ (Fig. 574 ; ail the specimens occurred in balls of iron stone). It is four-fifths smaller than M. Bron- soni. He also remarks, 44 the other fossil which I would refer to the Palæopterina is Chrestotes lapidea (Fig. 575). The genus differs from Miamia in the shortness and rotundity of the wings,” and in the venation, some points of which remind him of the Blattariœ. Ephemeridæ Leach. The May-flies, or Ephemerids, as their name iniplies, are, when fully grown, very short-lived insects, the adult living but a few hours. The body is slender and weak, beiug very long ; the prothorax is of moderate size ; the antennæ are subulate, or awl-like, being very small, as in. the Libellulidœ, while the parts of the mouth are rudimen- tary, the insect taking no food in the adult or imago state. The wings are very unequal in size, the hinder pair being much smaller, or in some instances (Cloë and Caenis) entirely aborted ; the transverse veins are either few or numerous ; the tarsi are four or five-jointed, and appended to the long, slender abdomen are two or three long caudal filaments. The sexes unité while on the upper surface of the water, and after a short union the female drops in the water her eggs 44 in two long, cylindrical yellow masses, each consisting of numer- ous minute eggs.” Walsh States that he possesses a 44 sub- imago of Palingenia bilineata, which oviposited in that; State.” The larvæ live in running water and prey on small aquatic insects, the body being long and fiat, with long hair- like antennæ, and small eyes situated on the side of the head, the ocelli not usually being présent, and long sickle-shaped jaws, while along each side of the abdomen are leaf-like or 38o94 NEUROPTERA. bushy false gills, and the body ends in long feathered anal hairs. They live, it is stated, two or three years, and résidé in burrows in the mud, under stones, or among grass and weeds, where they may be taken with the water-net in great abundance, and are beautiful objects for the aquarium. Lub- bock States that Chloëon passes through twenty-one moultings of the skin before it assumes the imago State ; the pupæ are active and hâve, as a general rule, the rudiments of wings. After leaving the pupa skin the insect (subimago), when its wings are expanded, takes a short flight, and then casts an- other skin before reaching the final imago state. They often fly in immense numbers, and become stranded in winrows along the borders of lakes. The perfect insects should be preserved in alcohol for study, as they shrivel up when pinned. They should be described when alive if possible. The genus Ephemera of Linnæus has three long and equal eaudal setæ ; the fore wings are présent, with very numerous transverse veins, while the eyes are remote, and in the males simple. Ephemera décora Walker is luteous, with the end of the antennæ black and a reddish band on the side of the body. The remains of a gigantic form described by Mr. Scudder under the name of Platephemera antiqua (Plate 1, fig. 3) has been discovered by Mr. C. F. Hartt in the Devonian formation of New Brunswick. Another fossil wing, Haploplilebium Barnesii (Plate 1, fig. 8), accompanying the preceding, has been doubtfully referred to the May-fiies by Mr. Scudder. It indicates a very large species. Mr. Scudder also figures, in the Palæontology of the Illinois Geological Survey, certain fos- sils from lower Carboniferous strata, which “appear to be the wings of insects, and, being probably more nearly allied (p. 571) to the Ephemeridœ than to other Neuroptera, should be grouped under the generic name Ephémérités.” In Palingenia tliere are three caudal setæ, the middle one being short, and sometimes almost absent in the males. There are four wings with very numerous transverse veins, and the eyes are remote and simple. P. bilineata Say is a common species and one of the largest of the family ; it is found floating on the surface of lakes. It is greenish yellow, with a reddish «tripe on the side of the prothorax. The genus Baëtis has butEPHEMERIDÆ « 595 two abdominal setæ, while the four wings are provided with numerous cross-veins. The eyes are simple, and in the males of large size and placed very near each other. Baëtis inter- punctata Say is a yellowish white species tinged with green, with an arcuate black line on the front, and a latéral black point, while the prothorax has one black stripe on the side. The singular genus Bœtisca is very thick-bodied, and differs from the other Ephemerids in the fifth abdominal joints being twice as long as any of the others. I ÀI The pupa (Fig. 576, i; a, latéral tooth ; ii, antenna ; m, section of the abdomen, the numerals indicat- ing the segments ; a, branchiæ, above which is a flap, b) “differs,” according to Walsh, “from ail de- scribed Ephemerinous pupæ in the antennæ being eight-jointed or there- abouts, not multiarticulate, and also in the branchiæ being internai and not used for locomotive purposes, and from ail larvæ and pupæ, and indeed from ail known hexapod insects in any of their states, in the pro-, meso- and metanotum being connate and confluent, and extending over one-half of the abdomen in the form of a large, dilated, convex carapace, or shield,* thus giving the in- sect a very Crustacean appearance.” The larva, early in its life, has rudi- ment ary wings, as in many grasshoppers, but in the pupa State they are not présent. Near Baëtis cornes Potamanthus, which has three caudal setæ and four wings provided with numerous cross-veins ; the eyes in the males are double, large and approximate. The Potamanthus cupidus of Say is black, with a broad dorsal stripe and a latéral impressed line on each side of the thorax. P. marginatus Zetterstedt (Fig. 577), a boréal European species, we hâve found in abundance in Labrador fly- ing over pools in July.596 NEUROPTERA. In Cloë there are but two caudal setæ, and though there are usually four wings, y et the hinder pair are sometimes wanting, and there are few transverse veins. The eyes in the males are double, large and approximate. Clo'è pygmœa Hagen is brownish gray, with the feet and setæ white, and the wings hya- line. It is a Canadian species. Cænis differs in having three caudal setæ, with no hind wings developed, and few cross-veins, and the eyes in the males are very simple and remote. Cænis hilaris Say is small and whitish, with black eyes, and the thorax is pale fulvous, with short obscure lines beneath and on the sides. Hagen States that the most abnormal Ephemerid is Oligoneu- na, distinguished by the abortive condition of the legs, the large size of the longitudinal veins of the wings, the rarity of the transverse veinlets, and by a long bristle-like appendage at the base of the fore wing. A closely allied genus has been described by Dr. Hagen under the name Laclïlania, It has two caudal filaments, where Oligoneuria has three, and there are three strong transverse veins in the fore wings. L. abnor- mis Hagen (Fig. 578, enlarged) is a Cuban species. Mr. Scudder regards as the type of a distinct family, which he calls the Hemeristina, a single form, the Hemeristia occidentalis of Dana, which occurred with Miamia Bronsoni in the Lower Carboniferous rocks of Illinois. Mr. Scudder de- fines this family as consisting of “Neuroptera of large size. The prothorax is quadrangular, narrower than the meso- and metathorax, though not proportionally so much so as in the Palœopterina; the femora (probably the front pair) are as in the Palœopterina, but proportionally broader. Wings large, long, about twice as broad beyond the middle as near the base, the costal border convex in its outer half, with nu- merous and prominent cross-veins but no réticulations ; when at rest, overlapping quite completely, even close to the base,LIBELLULIDÆ. 597 mueh as in the Perlariœ, and probably with the sides pro- tected near the base by the deflected marginal and scapular (subcostal) areas.” Scudder shows that while the venation is much the same as in Hemerobius, as stated by Professor Dana, it also resembles that of the Sialidœ and Ephemeridœ and Libellulidæ. Gerstaecker thinks that Hemeristia “at least stands nearer to the Ephemeridœ than to any other family.” (Bronn’s Klassen und Ordnungen des Thier-Reichs, vol. v.) Libellulidæ Latreille. Dragon-flies, Devil’s-darning-nee- dles, or Mosquito Hawks, are readily known by the enormous head and thorax, with the remarkably long, slender, cylindrical abdomen. The head is large and globular, with immense eyes often encircling the head. The large square thorax is remark- composing the flanks are greatly enlarged, rising up especially in front, taking the place of the prothorax, which is usually very large in the Neuroptera generally, but is in this family greatly aborted, as these insects scarcely ever walk. As in the Ephemeridœ the antennæ are short and setiform, but the mouth is furnished with palpi. The wings * are large, * Fig. 579. Venation of a fore wing of Gomphus. Veins. — a, a, costal vein; b, subcostal vein; c, c, médian vein ; d, submedian vein ; e, postcostal vein. Sectors— (branches springing from areas, veins, cross-veins, or other sectors). fff, princi- pal sector; g, nodal sector; h, subnodal sector; k, médian sector; mm, short sec- tor; n, upper sector of the triangle (normally a prolongation of d); o, lower sector of the triangle (normally a prolongation of e); o', o", its branches. (The figure gives an angle where o' bifurcates from o, which should hâve been a flow- ing curve. Both n and o should hâve been engraved as springing from the lower angle of the triangle, t.) Cross-veins.—p, nodus; q, arc or arculus; rrr, - - - ant«- cubitals. (The basai antecubital is wrongly engraved as dislocated with that of 598 NEUROPTEKA. densely reticulated, very equal in size, and in some cases the hind wings are a little larger than the fore wings. The tarsi are three-jointed, and the second abdominal segment of the males is furnished with accessory génital organs. “Landois notices a peculiar sound-producing organ in this family, and figures that of Æschna juncea. It is situated in the prothoracic stigmata, which are placed quite at the front of the thorax, and concealed by the head. These stigmata are large elongated slits, one margin of which is simple, whilst the other bears a sort of chitinous comb of about twenty teeth, between which an exceedingly délicate membrane is extended. The metathoracic stigmata, which in general are the chief or- gans of sound in this part of the body, are smaller, and bear on one side a semilunar valve with stiff hairs.” (Günther’s Zoôlogical Record for 1867.) “During the pairing of the sexes, which takes place during. flight, the male seizes the neck of the female with his anal claspers ; the female then curves the end of its abdomen ta the second abdominal ring of the male, which has a swollen expansion of the under surface, containing in a longitudinal cleft the intromittent organ, which conveys the séminal fluid from the bladder-like cavity into the body of the female. But since the outlet of the testicle opens on the ninth segment of the abdomen, the males previous to union with the other sex, must fill the copulating sac with the séminal fluid, by curving its abdomen upon itself. After the union has been, efiected the females generally let go of the males. In man}^ the second or snbcostal sériés); sss,------postcubitals. Areas and Angles. — t, the triangle (discoidal) ; u, internai triangle ; V, anal triangle ; W, basal area (or space) ; xx7 médian area (or space) ; y, membranule ; z, anal angle in the male, the dotted line z' showing the form of the anal corner of the wing in the female Gomphur• (The angle z ought to hâve been engraved as much more acute and salient.) A A, discoidal areolets (in the figure two ranges of them commencing with three). pterostigma; C, its basal (or internai) side prolonged in the normal manner; D, uquadrangle,” “quadrilatéral,” or “area above the triangle,” boûnded above by my helow by d, basally by q, and terminally by an unnamed cross-vein; EEEr postcostal area (or space). Of the above pterological parts, q and its sectors, ?*, s, TF, y, B, and in the Calopterygina and Agrionina “the quadrilatéral” (D), and “the postcostal area’* (E), are the most important in classification. — From Hagen with modifications by Walsh. Following the nomenclature adopted in this work, aa would indicate the marginal vein; b, the costal; c, the subcostal; d, probably the médian, and e* the submedian vein.LIBELLTJLIDÆ. 599 species of Libellula, however, during oviposition, the male retains his hold on the neck of the female, and both fly over the surface of standing water, the female touching the surface of the pool with the tip of her abdomen, and letting the eggs fall into the water. “In some généra (Libellula, Agrion) the two sexes of a spe- cies differ greatly in color, the males having bright variegated colors, while the females are dusky, being more of one color. The males of many species hâve, on the abdomen, several days after exclusion from the pupa case, a bluish powdery exuda- tion. The genus Calopteryx and allies differ sexually in the color of the wings.” (Gerstaecker.) “ Brauer indicates the occurrence of dimorphism in the fe- males of some species of the genus Neurothemis, some of them having the wings very richly veined, as in the males, whilst others hâve widely netted veins like those of the ordi- nary Libellulæ.” (Günther’s Zoological Record for 1867.) During July and August the various species of Libellula and its allies most abound. The eggs are attached loosely in bunches to the stems of rushes and other water-plants. In laying them, the dragon-fly, according to Mr. P. R. Uhler’s observations, “alights upon water-plants, and, pushing the end of her body below the surface of the water, glues a bunch of eggs to the submerged stem or leaf. Libellula aurtpennis I hâve often seen laying eggs, and I think I was not deceived in my observation that she dropped a bunch of eggs into the open ditch while balancing herself just a little way above the surface of the water. I hâve also seen her settled upon the reeds in brackish water with her abdomen submerged in part, and there attaching a cluster of eggs. I feel pretty sure that L. auripennis does not always deposit the whole of her eggs at one time, as I hâve seen her attach a cluster of not more than a dozen small yellow eggs. There must be more than one hundred eggs in one of the large bunches. The eggs of some of the Agrions are bright apple-green, but I cannot be sure that I hâve ever seen them in the very act of oviposi- tion. They hâve curious habits of settling upon leaves and grass growing in the water, and often allow their abdomens to fall below the surface of the water. Sometimes they fly against600 NEUROPTERA. the surface, but I never saw what I could assert to be the pro- jecting of the eggs from the body upon plants or into the water. The English entomologists assert that the female Agrion goes below the surface to a depth of several inches to deposit eggs upon the submerged stems of plants.” The Agrions, however, according to Lacaze-Duthiers, a French anatomist, make with the ovipositor a little notch in the plant upon which they lay their eggs. These eggs hatch during the middle of the sum- mer, and the young larva (Fig. 62) when first hatched differs from the more mature larva (Fig. 580), in not Fig. sso. having the rudiments of wings, and in the long, spider-like legs. The larva is very active in its habits, being provided with six legs attached to the thorax, on the back of which, afber the first one or two moults, are the little wing- pads, or rudimentary wings. The large head is provided with enormous eyes, while a pair of simple, minute ej elets (ocelli) are placed near the origin of the small bristle-like feelers, or antennæ. Seen from beneath, instead of the formidable array of jaws and ac- cessory organs commonly observed in most carnivorous larvæ, we see nothing but a broad, smooth mask covering the lower part of the face, but when some unwary insect cornes within striking distance the battery of jaws is unmasked, and opens x' upon the victim. This mask (Fig. 581, under side of head of a dragon- fly larva, with the labium fulty ex- tended ; x, x', x'\ the three subdivi- sions ; y, maxillæ. For other details of the head of the larva of Diplax, see p. 60) is peculiar to the young, or larva and pupa, of the dragon-fly. It is the labium, or under lip greatly enlarged, and armed at the broad spoon-shaped extremity (a?) wdth two sharp hooks, adapted for seizing andLIBELLULIDÆ. 601 Tetaining its prey. At rest, the terminal half is so bent up as to conceal the face, and thus the créature crawls about, to ail appearance, the most innocent and harmless of insects. Not only does the immature dragon-fly walk over the bottom of the pool or stream it inhabits but it can also leap for a con- sidérable distance, and by a most curious con- trivance. By a syringe-like apparatus lodged in the end of the body, it discharges a stream of water for a distance of two or three inches behind it, thus propelling the insect forwards. This apparatus combines the functions of loco- motion and respiration. There are, as usual, two breathing pores (stigmata) on each side of Fl&- 582* the thorax. But the process of breathing seems to be mostly carried on in the taîl. The tracheæ are here collected in a large mass, sending their branches into folds of membrane lining the end of the alimentary canal, and which act like a piston to force out the water. The entrance to the canal is protected by three to five tri- angular horny valves (Fig. 582, 9, 10 ; Fig. 583, side view), which open and shut at will. When open the water flows in, bathing the internai gill-like organs which cxtract the air from the water. This is then -suddenly expelled by a strong muscular effort. In the smaller généra, Agrion (Fig. 584, side view of false-gill, showing but one leaf), Lestes and Calopteryx, the respiratory leaves, called the tracheary, or false-gills, are not enclosed within the body, but form three broad leaves, permeated by tracheæ, or air-vessels. They are not true gills, however, as the blood is not aerated in them. They only absorb air to supply the tra- cheæ, which aerate the blood only within the general cavity of the body. These false gills also act as rudders to aid the insect in swimming. It is easy to watch the dragon-flies through their transformations, as they can easily be kept in aquaria. Little, almost nothing, is known regarding their Fig. 584.602 NEUROPTERA. habits, and any one who can spend the necessary time and patience in rearing them, so as to trace up the different stages from the larva to the adult fly, and describe and figure them accurately, will do good service to science. Mr. Uhler states that we know but little of the young stages of our species, but “the larva and pupa of the Libéllulœ may be always known from those of the Æschnœ by their shorter, deeper, and more robust form, and generally by their thick clothing of hair.” The pupa (Fig. 585, pupa probably either of Æschna con- stricta or Æ. clepsydra) scarcely differs from the larva, except in having larger wing-pads. It is still active, and preys on other insects. When the insect is about to assume the pupa state the bod}^ having outgrown the larva skin, by a strong muscular effort opens a rent along the back of the thorax, and the insect having fastened its claws into some object at the bottom of the pool, the pupa gradually Works its way out of the larva skin. It is now considerably larger than before. Immediately after this tedious operation its body is soft,, but the crust soon hardens. This change,, with most species, probably occurs early in summer. When about to change into the adult fly the pupa climbs up some plant near the surface of the water. Again its back yawns wide open, and from the rent our dragon-fly slowly emerges. For an hour or more it remains torpid and listless,. with its flabby, soft wings remaining motionless. The fluids leave the surface, the crust hardens and dries, rich and varied tints appear, and the dragon-fly rises into its new world of light and sunsliine. In Agrion and its allies (Agrionina) the antennæ are four- jointed, the eyes are small compared with those of Libellula, and distinct ; the wings are equal, while the abdomen is cylin- drical and long and slender. In Calopteryx the wings are very broad and densely reticulated ; the pterostigma is absent in the males, that of the females irregular and areolate ; theLIBELLULIDÆ. 603 basal space has no transverse veins, and the male appendages are forcipate. (Hagen.) Calopteryx apicalis Burm. is shining brassy green, with long black feet. In Lestes there are two antecubital transverse venules ; the fourth apical sector is broken ; the postcostal space is simple ; and the quadrangular space is trapezoidal, with the exterior inferior angle acute ; the pterostigma is large, oblong, and the appendages in the male are forcipated. Lestes eurina Say is blue, varied with green and violet. The beautiful genus Agrion has the apical sector straight, the postcostal space simple, the quadrangular space trapézoïdal, with the exterior inferior angle acute ; the pterostigma small, rhomboidal, while the male abdominal ap- pendages are short. Agrion civile Hagen is brassy-black, varied with blue or green, with a hairy head and thorax. A. saucium Burm. (Fig. 586) is red, variegated with black, and is a common species. In the group Æschnina the wings are unequal, and ail the triangles of the wing are of the same form. In Gomphus and its allies the wings are un- e q u a 1, the hinder ones be- ing broader, and the trian- gles of both pairs of wings hâve no trans- verse veins. Gomphus fra- temus Say is yellow spotted Fig* 587‘ with black, with black feet. The genus Anax differs in the anal angle of the posterior wings being rounded in the male, and the abdomen has a latéral interrupted ridge. Anax Junius Drury is a large and widely spread species ; it is green, spot- ted with blue and fuscous, with a yellow head. Æschna differs«04 NEUROPTERA. in having the anal angle of the posterior wings of the male acute. Æschna héros Fabr. is one of our largest and most abundant dragon-flies. It is fuscous, marked with yellowish green, and with two oblique green stripes on the side of the thorax. In the third group of this immense family, the Libellulina, the wings are unequal, and the triangle of the anterior wings Fig. 588. is dissimilar, while the anterior génital hamule of the male is free. In Cordulia the anal angle of the posterior wings of the male is acute, and the body is brassy green. C. tenebrosa Say is found in the Western States. The genus Libellula is characterized by the short, rather flattened abdomen, narrowing rapidly towards the tip, and the male clasp- ing organs are scarcely visi- ble. Libellula trimaculata DeGeer (Fig. 587, male) is so called from the three dark clouds on the wings of the female. The male differs in having a dark patch at the front edge of the wings, and a sin- gle broad cloud just beyond the middle of the wing. IJbel* » Fig. 589.SIALIDÆ. 605 Ma quàdnmaculata Linn. (Fig. 588) is reddish yellow, with four dark clouds on the wings whick are yellow anteriorly on the base. In Diplax the abdomen is a little shorter than the wings, and is slender, flattened, compressed at the base, whiie the feet are long and slender. Diplax rubicundula Fabr. is a very abundant spe- cies, being yellowish red. Diplax Bérénice Drury (Fig. 589, male ; fig. 590, female) is blàck, with the Fig- 591* head blue in front, spotted with yellow, while the thorax and abdomen are striped with yellow. There are fewer stripes on the body of the male. D. Elisa Hagen (Fig. 591) is black, with the head yellowish and with greenish yellow spots on the sides of the thorax and base of the abdomen. The Nannophya bella of Uhler (Fig. 592) is asmaller form, with an unusually short abdomen, and the réticulations of the wings Fig. 590. are large and simple. It is black, while the male is frosted over with a whitish powder. Sialidæ Leach. Tliis family is not a numerous one, but the species are interesting as comprising some of thé largest of in- sects. Hagen defines the group briefly as having the body short and thick, while the prothorax is large and square. The antennæ are long and setaceous ; the wings are large, reticulated, the pos- terior ones with the anal space plicated, and the tarsi are five-jointed. “ The female of Sialis,” according to Westwood, “deposits an immense quantity of eggs, which she attaches one by one Fig. 592.£06 NEUROPTERA. to rushes or other aquatic plants. They are of a cylindrica! form, terininating at the top in a sudden point ; they are at- tached side by side with the greatest regularity.” The larvæ, as in those of Corydalus, are broad and flattened, with a pair of long, thick, respiratory filaments attached to the side of each ring of the abdomen. The body of the pupa is curved, with the wings laid along the breast, mueh as in the Phry ganeid pupæ. The larva is active and predaceous, being armed with strong jaws. When full-fed it leaves the pools or streams in which it has been living and makes an earthern cell in the bank, in which the inactive pupa undergoes its remain- ing transformations. In Sialis the prothorax is large and square, almost equal in size to the head ; there are no ocelli ; the antennæ are filiform, and the wings irregularly net-veined, the veins being stout. The fourth joint of the tarsi is dilated and twice lobed. The larva is much like that of Cory- dalus, but differs in having the abdomen terminating in a “long and slender setose tail.” 593, caudal appendages of the male, from Walsh) is black, with the head not narrower be- hind, while S. Americana Rambur is rust-red, and the head is narrower behind. The wings expand about an inch. Chauliodes is a much larger insect, with a quadrangular pro- thorax nearly as large as the head. There are three ocelli placed close together, and the antennæ are either pectinated or serrated. The wings are veiny, the transverse veins slender. The joints of the tarsi are cylindrical, and the caudal appen- dages of the male are conical and simple. Walsh describes the larva of C. rastricornis Rambur as resembling that of Cory- dalus, but being much smaller, measuring 1.60 of an inch, and the abdomen has one segment less, with no caudal setæ, “so that Chauliodes forms a connecting link in this respect between Corydalus and Sialis, the larva of which is said to hâve ‘ one long, slender, setose tail,*” and the under side of the abdomen is “ entirely destitute of the remarkable paddle-like branchiæ found in Corydalus.” The pupa resembles that of Corydalus. Fig. 593. Sialis infumata Newman (Fig.SIALIDÆ. 607 Chauliodes pectinicornis Linn., our most common species., is yellowish ashen, with reddish pectinated antennæ. In C. ser- ricornis Say the antennæ are serrate. In Corydalus, the largest form known, the pro- ihorax is square but narrower than the head and the antennæ are stout but filiform. The male of C. cornutus Linn. (Fig. 594, fe- male ; fig. 595, male ; fig. 596, pupa ; fig. 597, larva), has very long mandibles, about twice as long as the head, whence its spécifie name. According to the Editors of the “ American Entomol- ogist,” the eggs of this insect (Fig. 598) are “oval, about the size of a radish seed, and of a pale color, with some dark mark- in gs. They are usu- ally deposited in a squarish mass upon reeds or other aquatic plants overhanging the water.” Hagen does not “ think that the latéral filamentous ap- pendages are connect- ed with respiration ; the little sponges at Fig* 694, the base of the filaments and a little behind them are the true branchiæ.” uThe reason that the larva of Corydalus has both branchiæ and spiracles is, that it lives, like Sialis, some weeks out of the water before its transformation.” (Hagen.)608 NEUROPTERA. The genus Raphidia is not aquatic in its habits as it is found under the bark of trees pursuing small insects. The adult has. a long neck (prothorax), whiôh is much narrower than the head, and the antennæ are short and filiform, while the ovipositor of the female is long and ensiform, probably enabling it to deposit its eggs in the chinks in the bark. The larva is long and slender; before transforming it makes no cocoon. At first the pupa is inactive, bat according to Mr. Waterhouse (Westwood’s In- troduction), itbe- comes active while the imago skin is develop- ing, and walks. about, as the pu- pa skin is exceed- ingly thin. The genus is only found on the Pa- cific coast of this continent, anoth- er proof of the analogy of the in- sect fauna of the Western shores of this country to that of P^urope, where this genus also abounds. Fig. 595. In their form and habits, including both those of the larva,, and of the partially active pupa, which wiggles violently and even leaps, as the larva does, as stated by Percheron, whom Mr. Westwood quotes {jouit de la meme faculté de contorsion et de sauts, que la larve exécute a un si haut degré), hâve we not. brought forcibly before us the Thysanura ?H EME ROBIDÆ • 609 Hemerobidæ Leacli. The Aphis Lions and Lace-winged Aies, which are included in this family, hâve long, slender, cy- lindrical bodies. The wings are large, with numerous veins, the posterior ones with no anal space ; the ocelli are usually absent, and the tarsi are five-jointed. The larvæ vary considerably in form, but are usually flat- tened or short, thick, ovate and fleshy, with large sickle-like mandibles ; “the under side of these organs is deeply grooved, and the maxillæ, which are nearly equal to them in size, and of a similar form, play in this groove.” (Westwood.) With these they pierce the bodies of their victims and suck out their juices. The sides of the abdominal segments are fringed and hâve latéral tuber- cles bearing a thin tuft of radiating hairs. The body of the pupa is more cylindrical, being curved, and with the limbs and wings folded to the breast. The larva spins a silken cocoon, and the pupa is inactive. In Aleuronia the body is covered with a whitish powder ; the eyes are reniform, and . the antennæ are moniliform. The wings are ciliated ; the longitudinal veins are few in number, while the transverse ones are almost absent. Aleuronia Westwoodii of Fitch is a very small insect, being black, covered with a whitish pow- der, with a pale abdomen and feet. The singular genus Coniopteryx, whose larva somewhat resembles a Smynthurus, one of the Thysanura, showing the close relationship of these aberrant forms, is characterized by Hagen as being powdered with whitish scales, having globose e}Tes and monili- form antennæ. The wings are not ciliated, the longitudinal veins are few, and there are some transverse veins. The pos- terior wings of the males are small. Coniopteryx vicina Hagen is black, covered with grayish powder, and the wings hâves eight longitudinal veins, ail joined together by a single trans- verse vein. It is about one-seventh of an inch in length. Haliday (in Westwood’s Introduction) thinks that the larva of the European C. tineiformis preys on plant-lice. When about Fig. 596.€10 NEUKOPTERA. to transform it spins an “orbicular pouch of fine white silk of close texture, generally on the trunk of a tree, in chinks of the bark, or among moss. The pupa is quiescent.” The singular genus Nemoptera is at once recognized by the remarkabiy long, narrow, linear hind wings which reach far beyond the abdomen. The larva has a remarkabiy long, almost filiform thorax, and was de- scribed under the name of Necro- philus. The species are found in Western Asia and in Northern Africa. The genus Hemerobius has mo- niliform antennæ, the wings having the subcostal and médian veins joined together at the apex, and the costal space of the anterior wings is broader at the base, with a ré- current forked vein ; the transverse sériés of venules are gradate (like a pair of steps). We hâve found in Maine a larva (Fig. 599, tergal and side view) of this genus on the bark of a birch tree in October, where it was seen preying on Aphides, and had covered its abdomen with the empty skins of its victims, forming a thick mantle as seen in the figure. Hemerobius alternatus Fitch is white or yellowish, varied with fuscous, with tawny liairs. According to Fige- 597. Fitch it is found upon pine and hemlock bushes. H. occidentalis Fitch has hyaline wings, not mottled as usual with smoky dots or clouds, but aclorned with two faint parallel lines ; it expands .38 of an inch. I hâve raised specimens, referred to this species by Dr. Hagen, which occurred in the pupa state (Fig. 600), in considérable numbers under a cloth wrapped around a pear tree in a garden in Salem. The cocoon is oval, cylindrical, dense, and surrounded by a much thinner mass of silk more globularHEMEROBIDÆ. 611 in form. The partially active pupæ crawled out of the co- eoons, and were found scattered about in the paper containing them. The genus Polystœchotes is of much larger size than Heme- robius or Chrysopa, and Hagen suggests that the larva is aquatic. P. punctatus Fabr. is widely distributed, flying lazily at night-fall. The aberrant genus Man- tispa is a most interesting form, from the great length of the prothorax, which with other characters remind us strikingly of the Orthopterous genus Mantis. The fore legs are, like those of Mantis, adapted for seizing other insects. Mantispa brunnea Say is our most common species, occurring in the Middle and Western States and southwards to Central America. Chrysopa (Fig. 601, eggs, larva, and adult of C. perla of Europe), the Lace-winged" Fly, is abundant and of great use, as in the larva State it preys on plant- lice. Its body is slender, with deli- Fis* 598* cate gauze-like wings, and is generally green, with golden eyes. When disturbed it often emits a fœtid odor. Their eggs, supported by long pedicels, are often laid in a group of Aphides or in plants infested by them. When hatched the voracious larva finds its food ready at hand, and destroys immense numbers of plant-lice, whence its naine, Aphis-lion. It turns to a pupa late in suinmer, and thus passes the winter within a very dense, round, whitish cocoon situated in the crevices of bark, etc. In Europe gardeners search for these Aphis-lions and place them on fruit trees overrun with lice, which they soon depopulate. The Chrysopa ocu- lata of Say (Fig. 602, and eggs) is our most abun- dant form. It gives out a foui smell when handled. By this genus we are led to the Ant-lion, or Myrme- leon. It is a larger insect than any of the fore- going généra, and reminds us in many respects of the dragon- flies. The antennæ are short and stout, clavate, while the body Fig. 599. Fig. 600.612 NEUROPTERA. is very long and slender, and the wings are long, narrow and densely veined. The larva (Fig. 603) bears a close resemblance to th'at of Chrysopa. It makes a pitfall in fine sand at the bot- tom of which it hides, leaving only the tips of its mandibles in sight, which are extended and ready to seize any insect which may fall into them. The pupa re- ■ tains the large mandibles and uses them in cutting its way out of its cocoon. Myrméleon obsoletus Say (Fig. 604) is not rare in the warmer parts of the country, and has been found at Salem, Mass., by Dr. E. P. Colby. M. abdominalis Say has also been found as far north as Milton, Mass., by Mr. J. Schofield. Mr. R. Tri- men, speaking of the Entomo- Fig- 602. logy of Natal, South Africa. (Entomological Monthly Magazine), notes the habits of a “huge Myrmeleon, of the genus Palpares, the spotted and variegated aspect of whose wings will cause you to mistake them for moths. . . . These great insects are very unlike Libellulidœ in their flight, flapping wildly and irregularly about, as if their Fig- 60S* muscular apparatus were too weak to wield their stretch of wings. In repose the wings are folded above each other so as to form an acute-angled roof above the abdomen. They difier in this respect from the long-horned Ascalaphi, which deflect the wings on either side, and hold the abdomen, erect or nearly so.” Ascalaphus with its long filiform knobbed antennæ, and broad wings and gay colors is Flg* 604* the butterfly among Neu- roptera. It Aies in the heat of the day, seeking the hottest places and is abundant in the deserts of the East. The body and feet are short and the large wings are less densely veinedPANORPIDÆ. 613 than in Myrmeleon. The eggs when laid are hedged around by little pales like a fence “ and are so placed that nothing can approach the brood ; nor can the young ramble abroad till they hâve acquired strength to resist the ants and other insect ene- mies. The abdomen of the larva is depressed and oval, with ten pectinations on each side.” (Westwood.) It closely re- sembles that of Myrmeleon. McLachlan States that the eggs of Ascalaphus macaronius were observed by Kollar deposited on a grass stem. Ascalaphus hyalinus Latr. is found in the Southern States and Mexico. Panorpidæ Leach. This family is interesting as affording a passage from the winged Neuroptera to the degraded wing- less forms which are often excluded from the suborder by writers, and placed apart by themselves under the title of Thysanura. Hagen thus defines the group : “body cylindri- cal or conical ; head exserted ; antennæ shorter than the wings ; mouth rostrated ; latéral palpi biarticulated ; prothorax small ; wings either almost absent or narrow, equal, longer than the body, narrowed at base; the posterior wings with no anal space ; tarsi of five joints.” In Panorpa, the Scorpion Fly, so called from the long for- ceps-like tip of the male abdomen, there are three ocelli and the wings are narrow. The génital organs of the male are greatly lengthened out, and are forcipated, with the last seg- ment inflated ; the two tarsal hooks are serrated, and the an- tennæ are bristle-like. Lacaze-Duthiers selects the ovipositor of Panorpa as being an intermediate type, as regards complexity, between Libellula and Æschna. “ When disturbed, the female of Panorpa Ger- manica or commun is, darts out a long slender tube towards the disturbing object. Soon a little drop of a whitish liquid appears at its extremity ; it is a means of defence. While at rest the conical abdomen, terminating in a point, appears te be composed of a less number of segments.” At first sight there seems to be but two, though in reality there are three segments between the oviduct and the anal outlet, since the ninth ring is very small and partly aborted, being concealed beneath the others. The eleventh segment consists of five614 NEUROPTERA. pièces, a tergite, two sternal scales, and two appendages articu- lated to the tergal piece. M. Lacaze-Duthiers does not extend the comparison of the ovipositor of Panorpa to those of Podura and Smynthurus, but we can see how easy the transition is. Only let the long flexi- ble ovipositor of Panorpa be permanently extended, which in insects usually involves its being bent and appressed to the under side of the abdomen, and with a few other slight modifi- cations we hâve the leaping ovipositor of the Podura and its allies ! The larva is terrestrial, as Stein has found the pupa buried an inch deep in moist earth, at the foot of an aider stump. (West- wood.) Brauer States that the larva is long, cylindrical, with long filaments arising from tubercles on the body. In its general appear- ance it resembles certain caterpillars,. and also Phryganeid larvæ. P. ru- fescens Rambur (Fig. 605, enlarged) is the most common form in New Fig. 605. England. It is of a yellowish red color, with the antennæ black, except the three or four basal joints which are reddish. It is about half an inch long and the wings expand an inch. The Tipula-like genus Bittacus, though it has four wings, is, in its remarkably slender body and long legs, much like the Crane-flies. There are seven species in this country, one of which, B. püicornis Westwood, has been found in Canada and New York. The winter insect, Boreus, is wingless in the fe- male sex, and in its habits and form as well as its minute size, reminds us strikingly of Podura and Lepisma, though the re- semblance has not to our knowledge been specially noticed by entomologists. In this genus the ocelli are absent, and the males hâve very imperfect style-like wings, while the females are entirely wingless. “The abdomen of the female is termi- nated by a three-jointed ovipositor, the under side of which is defended by a produced valve-like bilobed plate arising from the under side of the seventh segment. The male has the abdomen terminated by two short, recurved, attenuated, pilose styles.” (Westwood.) In this description we are reminded ofPHRYGANEIDÆ. 615 the Spring-tails (Podura), which leap by means of the long ovi- positor, and corresponding male organs, bent beneath the body. Dr. Fitch has described two forms of these winter insects which, like Podura, occur in moss and are found leaping on the snow. Boreus nivoriundus is about one-seventh of an inch long, and is reddish, with a bronze tinge, while B. brumalis is entirely brassy-black, and is a still smaller species. We must not pass over the singular genus Merope, which is interesting in this connection. It has no ocelli, while the compound eyes are large, reniform and united on the top of the head. The antennæ are short and thick, narrowed at the apex, while the wings are broad, with numerous transverse veins, and the male abdomen has large forceps. The Merope tuber of Newman is very rare. It is clay yellow (luteous), and expands nearly an inch. Hagen remarks that “the genus and species are very singular and abnormal ; perhaps the most re- markable of ail hitherto known Neuroptera. It certainly be- longs to the Panorpina” Phryganeidæ Latreille. Some of the members of this family bear a striking resemblance to the smaller moths, such as the Tineidœ. As cliaracterized briefly by Dr. Hagen, their bodies are compressed, cylindrical ; the head is free, an- tennæ long, thread-like, the mouth is imperfectly developed, and the labial palpi are triarticulate. The prothorax is small ; the wings longer than the body, with few transverse veins, while the posterior wings hâve the anal space large, plicated (rarely absent), and the tarsi are five-jointed. In ail these characteristics, together with the cylindrical form of the larva, the quiescent pupa which is very much like that of a moth with its wings and limbs free, instead of being soldered together, and in the habits of the larva, which in some généra resemble those of the Sialidœ, this family stands above the Neurop- tera to be hereafter mentioned, and in a serial arrangement, such as we are forced to make in our books, this seems to us to be their proper place, while in nature they appear to us to stand off by themselves parallel with the Sialidœ and Hemerobidœ, certain généra of which, in the imago state (such as Coniopteryx), they closely resemble, while they seem616 NEUROPTERA. to rank higher than the Panorpidæ, which next to the Thysanura are in our view the lowest family among the Neu- roptera. The larvæ are more or less cylindrical, with well developed thoracic feet, and a pair of feet on the end of the abdomen, varying in length. The head is small, and like that of a Tor- bricid larva, which the Caddis or Case-worm, as the larva is called, greatly resembles, not only in form, but in its habit of rolling up submerged leaves. They also construct cases of bits of sticks, sawdust, or grains of sand, which they drag over the bottom of quiet pools, retreating within when disturbed. They live on vegetable matter, and on water-fleas (Entomostraca) and small aquatic larvæ. When about to pupate they close up the mouth of the case with a grating, or as in the case of Helicopsyche by a dense silken lid with a single slit, and in some instances spin a slight, thin, silken cocoon, within which the pupa state is passed. The pupa is much like that of the smaller moths, except that the wings and limbs are free from the body. Dr. Hagen informs me that after leaving its case it makes its way over the surface of the water to the shore, sometimes going a long distance. “Westwood States that “the females deposit their eggs in a double gelatinous mass, which is of a green color, and is retained for a considérable time at the extremity of the body ; the mass is subsequently attached to the surface of some aquatic plant, and Mr. Hyde- man has observed the female of Phryganea grandis creep down the stems of aquatic plants under the water, very nearly a foot deep, for the purpose of oviposition.” A. Meyer mentions several instances of the union of the sexes of different species of this family, with the production of fertile eggs. (Günther’s Zoôlogical Record for 1867.) Only one exception to the aquatic habits of this family is the Enoicyla pusilïa Burmeister which, according to Mc- Lachlan, in Europe “lives out of the water amongst moss at the roots of trees. The larva is destitute of the extern al respiratory filaments common to almost ail caddis-worms, but the spiracles are not very évident. E. pusilla is also remark- able, inasmuch as the female is wingless, and little resembling the male.” Von Siebold discovered that an Ichneumon (Agrio-PHRYGANEIDÆ. 617 typus armatus) attacks the fully grown larva of a Phryganea {Aspatkerium), whick inhabits a smooth cylindrical case, which the Ichneumon converts into a pupa case by spinning a long broad band of silk around the anterior opening. (Gen staecker.) In Neuronia and Phryganea the maxillary palpi differ in the two sexes, and there are two spurs on each of the fore legs, and four on the middle and hind legs. The maxil- lary palpi in the males are four-jointed, in the females iive-jointed, and there are three ocelli. Neuronia differs from Phryganea in having its antennæ a little shorter than the wings, whereas in the latter they are longer, and the fore wings are hairy. Neu- ronia semifasciata Say is fulvous, with rig. 607. ^he £ore wings transversely flecked with brownish black, a small basal spot, and an abrupt, médian streak at the hinder margin of the wing, while the disk lias two yellowish spots, and there is a short fuscous subapical band on the hind wings. Fig. 606 Fig- 606. represents the case of the European Phryganea grandis Linn. In the group Limnophilides the maxillary palpi of the males are three, those of the fe- males five-jointed ; ocelli three ; anterior wings rather narrow, the apex obliquely truncated or rounded. In Limnophilus the tibial spurs of the three pairs of legs are arranged thus, 1, 3, 4 (i. e., one spur on the front pair of tibiæ ; three on the middle, and four on the hinder pair), and the apex of the anterior wings is , truncated. L. perpusillus Walker.is a boréal species, oc- curring at Hudson’s Bay. Limnophilus rhom- hicus Linn. (Fig. 607, case made of bits of moss) Flg* 610# is an ochreous species, with luteous hairs. Fig. 608, a, case, represents a case-worm which we hâve found in great abund- Fig. 009. Fig. (618 NEUROPTERA. ance in Labrador. Tkough we hâve not reared the imago we suppose it to be the Limnophilus subpwnctulatus of Zetterstedt, the most abundant species we met in Labrador. The case is straight, cylindrical, and built of coarse gravel, and the larva is a thick, cylindrical, whitish worm. Fig. 609 repre- sents the case of L. Jlavicomis Fabr., a European species, which is often constructed of small shells. Fig. 610 illustrâtes the case of the European L.pellu- cidus Olivier, which is formed of large pièces of Fig. bii. leaves laid flat over each other. In Sericostoma the ocelli are wanting, and the palpi are pilose, the maxillary palpi of the males are four-jointed, cover- ing the face like a mask. S. Americanum Walker is black with black hairs ; the antennæ are twice the length of the body, while the anterior wings are much longer than the hind ones. Fig. 611 represents the tube of a European species of this genus. In Helicopsyche the spurs are arranged thus : 2, 2, 4, and the maxillary palpi of the males mask the face, being recurved. We hâve found the larvæ of Helicopsyche glabra Hagen (Fig. : b Fig. 612. a 612, a?, lonate patch on the basal abdominal ring; a, front view of the head, enlarged ; m, mandible ; e, eye ; 6, vertical view of the end of the abdomen, enlarged), about changing to pupæ, the middle of July, in Wenham Lake, Mass. One had spun its operculum and lay with its head just behindPHRYGANEIDÆ. 619 it. The body of the larva is curved, though not spirally, and when out of the case it is cylindrical, thickest on the basal ring of the abdomen, and is pale greenish, while the head, thorax and legs are brownish ; it is .25 of an inch in length. The head is hairy and is smaller than usual, a little narrower than the thorax, with black, acute unidentate mandibles. The thoracic rings are horny above, somewhat hairy, and the legs are slender and hairy. The abdomen ends rather abruptly, with two short tubercles ending in a hook, both sides being alike, the body throughout as symmetrical as other larvæ Fig. 613. of this family, though living in a helicoid case. On each side of the basal segment of the abdomen is a lunate, corneous, hairy spot, by which the larva probabty retains its hold in the case when the head and thorax are protruded. The case is usually very regularly hélix-like in form, though the umbilicus varies in size. It is composed of fine grains of sand so arranged that the outer a surface is smooth. It is closed during the pupa State by a dense, silken concave, suborbicular operculum, with concen- tré lines, rounded on the side, and but slightly con- vex on the other, with a slightly curved sût for the passage of water situated on the less convex side, each side of the slit be- ing provided with slender straight teeth which near- ly touch each other, thus forming an imperfect grate. The larva does not spin a cocoon. Fig. 613 represents the case of H. arenifera Lea, from Indiana. Mr. J. A. McNiel has brought from Pulvon, west coast of Nicaragua, similar larvæ, belonging to a species very closely Fig. 614.620 NEUROPTERA. allied to that described above. They differ in being a little larger and more hairy. The case is similar, though with a rough exterior. Tlie pupa (Fig. 614, a, antennæ, curved back behind the eyes ; Z, labrum ; m, mandibles ; mp, maxillary palpi ; w, wings) of this Nicaraguan larva is curved in a slightty spiral manner, the antennæ are curved over and behind the eyes, reaching to the seventh abdominal ring ; the maxillary palpi are laid backwards on the side of the thorax, and the labial palpi lie between them, though diverging from each other. The wings are pressed to the body under the legs, the latter being fringed with long hairs. On the end of the abdomen are two slender tubercles ending in fine hairs, and alike on both sides, the pupa, like the larva, being symmetri- cal throughout. The larvæ seem to live in clear water on a sandy bottom, often attached to submerged sticks, unio shells, etc. In Leptocerus the antennæ of the males are ex- tremely long ; tibial spurs thus : 2, 2, 2. L. niger Linn. is black, shilling, with black hair ; the antennæ are black, the basal half annulated with snow-white, while the basal joint is reddish ; the feet are luteous, the intermediate ones being snow-white, while the Fig. 615. anterior wings are steel-blue black, and the hind wings blackish. It is found in Europe and the United States. Fig. 615 represents, Dr. Hagen informs me, a case of either this species or L. sepulclirolis Walker, or else a similar species. The larva builds a thin, long, conical, sandy tube supported between two needles of the pine. The specimens figured were found by Rev. E. C. Bolles at Westbrook, Maine. In Setodes the species are snow-white ; the spurs are ar- ranged thus : 0, 2, 2. S. candida Hagen is pale yellow, with the anterior wings snowy white. It occurs in the Southern States. McLachlan states that “ some species of Setodes make délicate little tubes, entirely formed of a silky sécrétion, without any mix- Fig. 616. ture of extraneous matters.” Fig. 616 repre- sents a tube of a European species of Setodes formed of sand. In Hydropsyche and allies the ocelli are three in number, or entirely wanting, while the last division of the maxillary palpiPHRYGANEIDÆ. 621 is very long, filiform and multiarticulate. In Hydropsyche the spurs are arranged thus : 2, 4, 4. The antennæ are rather long and slender, the oeelli are absent, and the intermediate feet of the female are dilated. H. scaïaris Hagen is black gray, with white hairs, and the antennæ are yellowish, and obliquely striated with black at the base ; the first joint is covered with snow-white hairs. PMlopotamus has three oeelli, and the tibial spurs are arranged thus : 2, 4, 4. In Rhyacophila the maxillary palpi hâve the last joint entire, straight, shorter than the rest ; while there are three oeelli, and the tibial spurs are arranged thus : 3,4, 4. R. fuscula Walker is rust-red, with some black hairs and a subfuscous spot on each side of the thorax. It cornes from Hudson’s Bay. Another curious Neuropterous insect found in the iron-stone concrétions of Morris, 111., is the Megatlientomum pustulatum of Scudder (Fig. 617, natural size), described and figured by him in the “Palæon- tology of the Illinois State Geological Sur- vey.” “The fragment represents a wing (ap- parently an upper one) of a Neuropterous in- sect. It is gigantic in size, very broad, with distant nervures, sim- ple infrequent divarica- tions, and in the outer half of the wing, which alone is presented, a cross neuration, composed solety of most délicate and irregu- lar veinlets. The wing is also furnished with a great number of larger and smaller discolored spots, the surfaces of the larger ones irregularly elevated.” Mr. Scudder thinks the wing is allied to that of Coniopteryx, adding ‘ ‘ it appears to belong to a family hitherto undescribed. I do not know of a single insect, living or fossil, which approaches it in the struc- ture of the wings.”622 THYSANURA. THYSANURA. The Thysanura are wingless, and undergo no metamor- pnosis. There is a great range in the degree of complexity of structure from Lepisma, the latter resembling a larval Perla or Blatta, to Anura. The higher group, or bristle-tails, which we may call Cinura, comprises the families Lepismatidæ and Campodeæ, Lubbock has applied the term Collembola to the Poduridæ and Smyntliuridæ, in allusion to the sucker-like organ situated at the base of the abdomen. The Cinura are characterized by their well-developed mouth-parts, abdominal feet and bristles or cerci, and the Collembola by their spring (dater), its holder (tenaculum-, Fig. 617a), as well as the sucker or coïlophore, as it may be termed ; by the rudimentary mouth- parts and by their diminutive size. These interesting small, wingless forms also afford a pas- sage from the true winged insects to the Myriopods, Scolo- pendrella being a connecting link, having the head and aiitennæ of Campodea, and the abdominal legs of the Myriopods. Evcn the place of abdominal legs in Lepisma is supplied by the rows of small stylets which prop up the long slender abdomen. Lepismatidæ Burmeister. Bristle-tails. These agile créa- tures, which are revealed by turning over stones and sticks in damp situations, and are often seen about houses, hâve a long flattened body, with metallic scales, in form somewhat like those of butterflies. The antennæ are very long, setiform, man3^-jointed ; the mouth-parts are free, with long palpi ; the maxillary palpi being seven-jointed and the labial palpi four- jointed. The mandibles are stout, sunken in the head, and armed with teeth for gnawing. The prothorax is very large, and ail the rings of the body are of much the same size, sc that the insect bears a general resemblance to the Mjriapods. The anal stylets are long and large, which with the smallei Fig. 617a.CAMPODEÆ. 623 ones inserted on the subterminal rings of the abdomen aid greatly in locomotion, though these insects run with great ra- pidity and do not leap like the JPoduridœ, and thus remind ns, as well as in their general appearance, of certain wingless cockroaches. In Lepisma (Fig. 618, X. 4-seriata Pack.) there are long bristles on the tip of the ab- domen, of which three are longest, while Machilis differs in having compound eyes, and longer abdominal bristles. Lepisma saccharina Linn. is often verv common in houses, where it eats holes in silks and silken tapestry, devours the paste and mutilâtes the leaves of books. X. domes- tica Pack, is a beautiful white hairy species, spotted with black, and is common Fig. oia about fireplaces in Salem. Machilis variabilis Say (PI. 10, figs. 8, 9), is dark brown, with long caudal stylets. It is com- mon in the United States. M. orbitalis Pack, inhabits Idaho. Campodeæ Meinert. Under this name Dr. Meinert has established a family consisting of two but little known généra, which hâve Hat and elongated bodies and no springing appara- tus, nor eyes, and thougli the author excludes the Lepismæ from the Thysanura, we would suggest that the Campodeæ seem intermediate between the running Lepismæ and the springing Poduræ. The antennæ are setaceous or filiform, and the feet are adapted for running, with distinct, elongated, two-clawed tarsi. There are two anal cerci arising from the tenth and last abdominal segment. There are six thoracic spiracles, the Poduræ having none (Meinert). The genus Japyx of Haliday has short, inarticulate, horny anal cerci. J, solifugus Haliday lays few eggs, but those very large. It lives under stones and when disturbed resembles “a Lithobius in the character of its mo veinent s,” and bears a remarkable resemblance to a young Forficula. J. subterraneus Pack, lives in Kentucky. The other genus, Campodea, has many-jointed anal cerci. C, staphylinus Westw. of Europe lives under stones. C. Americana Pack, has similar habits. C. Coolei Pack, lives in Mammoth Cave-624: NEUROPTERA. Poduridæ Burmeister. The Spring-tails are the typicat Thysanura, as they differ more than Lepisma and allies from ail other insects. The anal bristles, which are free in Lepisma* are here united and bent beneath the body, forming the “spring” by which they leap to a prodigious height for such minute insects. The body is cylindrical, not flattened, and is covered either with hairs or scales. The four or six-jointed antennæ are short and thick, and the eyes are simple, usually four to eight on each side. The mouth-parts are not well de- veloped, though mostly présent, the mandibles being small, with minute teeth, and the maxillary palpi entirely wanting (Gerstaecker), though Lubbock States that the “second pair of maxillæ [labium] are membranous and délicate.” The pro- thorax is small, convex, while the two hinder thoracic rings are large and similar to each other. The legs are stout, with tarsi consisting of but a single joint. The abdomen consists of six, sometimes only three segments, with a long anal stylet forming the forked tail, or “spring,” beneath. (Gerstaecker.) They are found in gardens, or hot-beds, on manure heaps in winter, and on the snow ; they may also be seen leaping on the surface of the water in quiet pools. According to Nicolet these insects are very prolific, as he found 1360 eggs in a sin- gle individual. The embryo is developed in twelve days. They moult often, and at periods of fourteen days each. The intestinal canal consists in great part of a long and voluminous chyle-making stomach, into the lower end of which six free Malpighian tubes pour their contents. (Nicolet.) In Papirius Saundersii, as in many other apterous Articulata, tlie testis is formed on the same type as the ovaiy. On each side of the body is a simple tube opening into a triangular réser- voir with its base in front. The nervous System of Smynthurus consists, according to Nicolet, of four ganglia, with a double connecting cord. Two of these ganglia occupy the head and form the œsophageal collar. The two others consist of a tho- racic and one abdominal ganglion. There are in Podura four pairs of stigmata. in the four basal rings of the abdomen. Next to the two main tracheæ are six pairs of rather long vesicie& united with them by loops. (Gerstaecker.) Lubbock states that in Smynthurus there are but two spirarPODtTRIDÆ. 625 clés, adding that uit is very unusual for an articulate animal to hâve only two spiracles, and their position is still more ex- traordinary, for they open on the under side of the head, immediately below the antennæ, ... on the inner side of the basis of the mandibles.” “In the manner of subdivisions the tracheæ of Smynthurus dififer from those of the true in- sects, and agréé more closely with the Myrio- poda and trachéal Arachnida, in the fact that they do not often give off branches nor form tnfts, but generally divide dichotomously, and run considérable distances without a sépara- tion.” (Mr. Lubbock, whom we hâve just quoted, States that Papirius has no tracheæ.) In Smynthurus the ovaries consist, according to Lubbock, of a single egg-tube. On the un- derside of the abdomen is a sucking tube, sien- Fig. 619. der and forked in Smynthurus, but short in Podura, etc., by which the animal adhères to smooth surfaces. In the genus Podura the body is long, with four-jointed antennæ, and the flexible spring-tail is short, while in Desoria, which is found in the Alps, the tail is long. The genus Degeeria is known by the ovate body,. and basal half of the spring equal- ling the fork in length. A species Fig. eao. (Fig. 619) closely resembling the European D. nivalis Nicolet, we hâve found in summer resting on the leaves of the Clematis. The Lepidocyrtus al- binos Nie. (Fig. 620) is a minute pearly white species found in Europe ; its scales (Fig. 621) are thin and with distinct markings. Smynthurus is short, differing greatly in form from Podura, and bears a striking resemblance to the larva of Coniopteryx. The body is short, nearly spherical, and 40-626 ARACHNIDA. in its form approaches the spiders, as noticed by Latreille. The four-jointed antennæ are long and elbowed, while there are eight simple eyes on each side of the head. The species are found on the leaves of garden plants. In Papirius of Lubbock, the antennæ are said to be u four-jointed, but with- out a well marked elbow, and with a short terminal segment, offering the appearance of being many-jointed. * SUB-CLASS II. ARACHNIDA. The typical forms of this order hâve the body divided into two régions, the head-thorax (céphalothorax) and abdomen. The head is sometimes quite distinct, but is generally sunken into the thorax, which bears four pairs of legs, while the abdo- men has no organs of locomotion, though the abdomen is pro- vided with three pairs of jointed appendages (the spinnerets), which are, however, homologous with the legs. The metamor- phosis is very incomplète in the lower forms, while in the spiders there is none at ail after the animal leaves the egg. The head is without antennæ, or compound eyes. The order shows some analogy with certain Dipterous insects, especi- ally when compared with the wingless Chionea and Nycteribia, and its lowest forms (certain mites) bear a close resemblance to some of the lower Crustacea, as the young stages and em- bryonic development are remarkably similar. The typical forms of fhe order homologize too closely with the apterous insects to allow them to be separated as a distinct class. We shall see below that the rank here assigned to the graup ac- cords well with their anatomical characters and habits. In some généra there is a decided line of démarcation between the head and the thorax, which is, however, very distinct during embryonic life, and we do not perceive that graduai transition from mouth-parts to swimming legs which obtains in the Crustacea. The order, however, has much lower, more degraded forms than the Myriopods even, as the genus Demodex testifies, which may recall readily certain intestinal worms. This we would consider as but an example *EXPLÀNATION OP Plate 10.—Fig. 1, Lepisma saccharina Linn?; Fig. 2, 3 Degeeria flavocincta Pack.; Fig. 4, 5, D. purpurascens Pack.; Fig. 6, 7, Isotoma plumbea Pack.; Fig. 8, 9, Machilis v iriabilis Say.4 5 3 Z THYSANURA.ARACHN1DA. 627 of what often occurs among ail degraded forms, of a récur- rence to the archétypal form of the articulate type, and not for this reason, as some authors hâve done, would we place the Arachnids of Latreille in a class by themselves, below the Myriapods ; nor on recurring to the spiders alone, with their high organization and wonderful instincts, would we follow Professor Owen and others in placing them even above the true insects. We must look upon the Spider as a hexapodous insect, de- graded, wingless, and partially decephalized. A part of the éléments, constituting the head in insects, hâve been, as it were, withheld from the head and detained in the thorax, which has thus an increase in one pair of limbs. On the other hand, the sensorial, or pre-oral, région of the head, is wanting in two most important members, i. e., the compound eyes and the an- tennæ. Both Zaddach and Claparède state that there are no organs in the spiders homologous with the antennæ of insects. The simple fact that the homology of the organs generally is so close between the two groups shows that they must fall into the same class. The same can be said of the Myriapods. The circulatory System is very perfect in the spiders and scorpions, but in most of the lower mites there is no dorsal vessel, or vascular System at ail, the fluids being supposed to circulate in the general cavity of the body, “ and by the aid of the muscular movements and the contractions of the intesti- nal canal, transferred in an irregular manner hither and thither in the viscéral cavity and in the extremities.” (Siebold.) In the Phalangidœ there is a distinct, three-chambered dorsal vessel, or heart. In the spiders and scorpions, bowever, the vascular System is highly organized, as shown by JJewport (in the Scorpions), and Claparède (in Lycosa). Here then, is, as in Sphinx, a dorsal and ventral vessel with latéral veins, or ve- nous sinuses, performing the functions of true veins. The main dorsal vessel is mostly situate in the abdomen, as the lungs hâve their seat in that région, where the most important respi- ratory function, that of supplying the blood with fresh oxygen, is performed. Claparède has shown that in Lycosa the blood flows through the dorsal vessel from the head, instead of towards the head, as in the six-footed insects.628 ARACHNIDA. The nervous System consists of a small brain, a group of thoracic ganglia and a few abdominal ganglia, which, however. are aborted in the spiders. The cérébral ganglia, or brain, lie just above the œsophagus, and send down two cords embrao ing the throat, and also distribute nerves to the ocelli and mouth-parts. In the mites (Acarina), where the body is oval, and not divided into the two distinct régions, there is no brain, and but a single ganglion lodged in the abdomen, from which are distributed the nerves supplying the head and the peripheral parts. In the spiders the brain is of considérable size, and the thoracic ganglia or c subœsophageal ganglia,” are large, send- ing off on each side four large processes from which proceed the nerves supplying the feet. In the scorpion (Pedipalpi) the nervous System is still more highly organized. The brain is not large ; it is composed of the two spherical superœsoplia- geal ganglia fused togetherr sending off the usual nerves to the mouth-parts. This brain- like organ is connected by two filaments with the ventral gan- glionic mass, formed by the probable union of several gan- d glia, and situated in the middle Fig. 022. of the false céphalothorax. The continuation of the nervous cord consists of seven abdominal ganglia, with the commissures united into a single cord. The maxillary palpi, functionally, take the place of antennæ, showing how one organ may perforai the office of another in a different group of animais. It is also évident that the spider combines in the same organ the senses of taste, smell and feel- ing, which are supposed in insects to résidé in the two pairs of palpi and the antennæ. Mygale and Scorpio stridulate. The alimentary canal is formed, according to Siebold, on two types. In the mites and spiders, the stomach is produced lat>ARACHNIDA. 629 •erally into large cœcal appendages (Fig. 622, alimentary canal of Tegenaria civilis ; a, stomach, with cœca ; c, liver ; d, rénal organ ; e, fat body), and then passes into a short, small intes- tine, going straight to the end of the body. In the Pedipalpes (Phrynidæ and Scorpions) the intestinal canal is more simple, not having any cœcal dilatations to the very small stomach. The salivary glands are often of large size, especially in Ixodes, and are thus adapted to their blood-sucking habits, much saliva being needed to mix with their food. In the spiders and scorpions the liver is well developed and distinct from the intestinal tube, being in the spiders a brown or dirty yellow mass filling a large part of the abdominal cavity and enveloping most of the other viscera. As during the growth of the young spider the head is thrown back on top of the thorax to which it is thus most closely Uni- ted, it follows that the simple eyes, from two to twelve in number, are situated on the upper surface of the céphalo- thorax, while no other sensory organs, î.e., the compound eyes and antennæ, are ever developed. Thus in the adult spider the mandibles seem to be pushed far in front of the ocelli, and to occupy what is originally the proper or normal site of the ocelli, and in insects of the antennæ, which no doubt has led most authors to homologize them with the antennæ of hexa- podous insects. Claparède says “ ail the appendages are post- oral, hence there are no organs homologous with the antennæ.” Thus the mouth-opening is brought far forward ; it is flanked on each side by a mandible (Plate 10, fig. 3, c, a, movable claw^, or fang), a large, powerful limb, which does not move horizontally but vertieally; behind are the large, well developed maxillæ (Plate 10, fig. 2, b ; 7, maxillary palpus ; 8, male palpus), with their long, leg-like palpus. Thus the function of the insectean antennæ must, in the spiders, résidé in the maxillary palpi. Claparède’s researches on the embryology of the spiders and mites hâve demonstrated that the front pair of legs of Arach • nids are homologous with the labial palpi of insects, which, as we hâve previously stated (p. 59), in the latter, are late in embryonic life thrown forwards, and associated with the max- illæ and other mouth-parts, while in the Arachnids they retain their embryonic position and are grouped with the legs (see630 ARACHNIDA. fig. 59, 4) and are usually of the same form. Thus one cepha* lie segment of insects is permanently retained in the thorax among the Arachnids, whereas we hâve seen in the embryo of the dragon-fly (Figs. 59, 61, 4) it assumes an intermediate position between the head and thorax, the remaining anterior part of the head being clearly separated by a deep suture. In Fig. 59, we see the labial palpi (4) grouped with the three pairs of legs ; a position permanent in the Arachnida. The dragon- fly, at the period represented by Fig. 59, p. 57, may be legiti- mately compared with the scorpion, especially Cyclopthalmus* from the coal measures. While, as Blackwall States, nothing is known with certainty concerning the organs of smell and hearing in spiders, Mr. R. Beck “ suggests that spiders are capable of distinguishing sounds to some extent by means of very délicate waving hair& which are found on the upper surfaces of their legs. During life they move at their peculiarly cup-shaped bases, with the least motion of the atmosphère, but are immovable after death. It is well known that sound is due to vibrations which are generally conveyed by undulations of the air ; now I am perfectly satisfied that if these undulations are of a certain character the hairs I am alluding to, upon the spider’s leg, will move, and I wish y ou particularly to notice that they are of different lengths, so that some might move whilst others would not, and also that the longest is at the extremity of the leg, and therefore can receive an undulation which might die away higher up. I may just mention that there is a group of these peculiar hairs on the flea. The legs of a spider are most sen- sitive organs of feeling, if they do not also embrace those of hearing.” (Entomologist, London, 1866, iii, p. 246.) The four thoracic feet hâve seven joints, and it is probable that the two basal joints homologize with the coxa and tro- chantine of insects, in which the two joints are retracted, side by side, and closely fused together. The tergal part of the thoracic segments is large, overlapping the pleural, while the sternum is a rather large, broad breast-plate. The abdomen is generalty somewhat spherical, and in but few instances is it drawn out and the rings well developed, as in the scorpion. In the mites it is fused closely with the céphalothorax.ARACHNIDA. 631 In the gênas Hersilla we see clearly that tke three pairs of spinnerets are but modified legs. The second and inner pair are generally the smallest, while the third and largest pair are the most posterior. Their office is to reel out the silk from the silk-glands. The tip of the articulated spinnerets ends in a cône, perforated by myriads of little tubes (over 1,000 in Epeïra, about 300 in Lycosa, and a less number in the smaller species) through which the silk escapes in excessively délicate threads, which unité to form the common thread visible to the naked eye. (Plate 10, fig. 4, spinnerets of Epeïra vulgaris en- larged twenty-five diameters ; fig. 5, a spinning tube.) The Acarina are supposed to hâve glands analogous to the silk glands, whose product, like silk, hardens on exposure to the air, and by which certain parasitic généra, such as Uro- poda, fix themselves solidly to their host. Siebold States also, that u many species of Hydrachna fix, by a kind of glue, the anterior portion of their body on aquatic plants, and in this position await the completion of their moulting. The organs secreting this substance hâve not yet been discovered. It is well known that the European Tetranychus telarius spins large webs on the leaves of trees and on house-plants. The reproductive System is much as described in insects, ex- cept that the external appendages are rarely developed in either sex. The génital armor is situated at the base of the abdomen ; it is concealed when présent under the skin. In the Acarina the two ovaries open on the middle of the abdomen, or on the under side of the thorax, either between or behind the last pair of legs. In Hydrachna the oviduct opens into an ovipositor by which the insect is enabled to lay its eggs under the skin of the fresh-water mussel on which it is parasitic, and other mites oviposit in a similar way under the epidermis of plants. In most spiders the two ovaries hâve their outlet in an ori- fice situated between the two lung-sacs. They hâve a distinct receptaculum seminis, especially marked in Epeïra. “The Scorpiomdœ hâve three ovaries, consisting of as many lon- gitudinal ones, united by four pairs of transverse ones.” The outer two of the former are oviducts, leading out at the base of the abdomen.632 AKACHNIDA. The testes of Ixodes consist of four or five pairs of unequal follicles, opening out near the base of the abdomen.” The males are distinguished from the females by their larger “cheli- ceres” (maxillary palpi) and larger pair of clasping legs. In the spiders the testes are “two long, simple, interlaced cæca, eoncealed beneath the hepatic lobes,” which lead by two def- erent canals to the base of the abdomen, through a simple fissure, which, however, is not applied to the vulva. The com- plicated hollow spoon-shaped palpi are supposed to be the in- tromittent organs. “ They are filled writh sperm and applied to the entrance of the vulva. For this purpose the last joint of the palpi, which is always hollowr and much enlarged, contains a soft spiral body, terminated by a curved, gutter-like, horny process. Beside this there is an arched, horny filament, and several hooks and other appendages of the most varied forms. These appendages are protractile and serve, some to seize the female, and others as conductors of the sperm.” (Siebold.) While the majority of the Arachnida are developed as usual after the la3Ûng of the eggs, a few, such as the scorpions and Oribatidæ and other mites, are known to be viviparous, and it is probable that an alternation of générations occurs in some of the lower mites. The Tardigrades are hermaphro- dites. The Arachnida breathe both by tracheæ and lung-like organs. The mites, the false scorpions, the harvest-men and Sol pu- gidœ are provided with tracheæ, communicating externally by means of spiracles, generally two in number, and concealed between the anterior feet. In Hydrachna, which lives con- stantly beneath the water, the tracheæ “possess probably, the power to extract from the water, the air necessary for respira- tion.” (Siebold.) In the false scorpions a pair of latéral stig- mata are situated on each of the two basal rings of the abdomen. From these spring “four short, but large trachean trunks from which arise numerous unbranched tracheæ spread- ing through the entire body.” In the Solpugidœ there are three pairs of stigmata and the tracheæ ramify and are distrib- buted much as in insects, and in the Phalangidœ the tra- cheary s}7stem is well developed, arising from two stigmata opening between the insertion of the posterior legs.ARACHNIDA. 633 In most of the spiders (such as Segestria, Dysdera and Ar« gyroneta) there are both a tracheary System and lungs. The two stigmata, from which these tracheæ lead, open near the pulmonary opening. In two other généra, Salticus and Micro» phantes, there are two stigmata situated at the posterior end of the abdomen. Siebold calls attention to a tracheary System in many Araneæ opening by a transverse fissure placed near the spinnerets. From this opening a main trunk leads in, soon dividing into four simple tracheæ, which are not round as usual, “but are flattened, riband-like, and without the trace of a spiral filament ; these extend, with a graduai atténuation, to the base of the abdomen. . . . The air received into these organs is separated into as fine portions as that of the lungs.* The so called lungs of the spiders are little round sacs open- ing by transverse fissures on the under side of the base of the abdomen. The inner surface is divided into thin lamellæ, oonnected together like the leaves of a book. Each of these is formed by a membranous fold, between the two leaves of which the air enters from the general cavity of the lung, and is divided into very minute portions. No traces of blood ves- sels hâve been found in these pulmonary lamellæ.” (Siebold.) Among the organs of spécial sécrétion the poison and silk glands require description. There are two poison glands emptying into the throat, and thence opening out through hol- lows in the jaws. (Plate 10, fig. 3, a, b.) In the scorpion the poison gland is lodged in the last abdominal segment at the base of the sting. The silk, as contained in the glands, is a viscid transparent fluid, which on exposure to the air hardens into silk ; it is drawn out by the legs through three, rarely two pairs of spinnerets. There are usually five of these glands lodged in the abdomen, and the “threads probably hâve different qualities, according to the glands from which they are secreted.” (Siebold.) “ To form the thread this liquid is drawn through the tubes, ♦According to Dr. Bumett, Blanchard regards these anomalous tracheæ as only elongated pulmonary sacs. Leuckart, however, considers that these organs are only a sort of tracheæ deprived of the usual spiral filament to keep their walls from collapsing, and he considers that the pulmonary sacs of the spider are sim ply modified tracheæ. — Dr. W. I. JBurnett’s Translation of Siebolds’s Anatomy of the Invertébrata,634 AKACHNIDA. which divide it into such small fibres that it dries almost im« mediately on coming in contact with the air. The spider has the power of uniting these fibres into one or several threads* according to the purpose for which they are to be used. The thread commonly used for the web is composed of hundreds of simple fibres, each spun through a separate tube. As the thread runs from the body it is guided by the hind feet, which hold it off from contact with surrounding objects, until the desired point is reached, when a touch of the spinners fastens it securely.” (Emerton, American Naturalist, ii, p. 478.) The eggs are laid but once a year in June. The évolution of the embryo begins immediately, and goes on with a rapidity according with the température. The egg consists, as Herold observed, simply of a vitelline membrane, but no chorion ; it is perfectly homogeneous, and has no micropyle. The contents are an émulsion of fatty globules suspended in a scanty amount of liquid, which should not be confounded with the al- bumen (or white) of the eggs of vertebrates. No trace of the “germinative vesicle” has as y et been traced in the eggs of insects, though perhaps it has been overlooked from its trans- parency. The first stages in the egg after they are laid, are the foliow- ing : at the surface of the vitellus appear, here and there* small, very clear and perfectly circular spots ; they are the nucléus of the future blastoderm (primitive skin, from which the organs of the embryo successively originate or “bud” out). These nuclei act as centres of attraction on the molé- cules of the vitellus for the formation of the cellules. The unmodified vitellus diminishes in the same proportion as the périphérie layer of granules increases. The granules multiply rapidly, and soon the surface of the egg appears to be divided into a certain number of areas, each of which is occupied in the centre by a circular and transparent space surrounded with small opake granules, which become less and less dense as we go to the outer surface. These hexagonal cellules form an uni- form layer over the entire surface of the egg ; it is the blasto- derm. Up to this time the changes preciseiy accord with those observed in the hexapodous insects. The next stage is the formation of ventral tubercles, the ru-ARACHN1DA. 635 diments of the limbs of the embryo. The first change is the formation of the “primitive streak,” or the splitting of the blastoderm, which is due to a local multiplication of the cel- lules along the médian line of the egg. These tubercles resuit from a simple thickening of the blas- toderm, and what is ultimately destined to be the back (tergum) of the animal, arises from a similar thickening of the blasto** derm, which he calls the “primitive cumulus.” This mass, easily distinguished by its whiteness, always floats on the top of the yolk of the egg, keeping its position next the eye of the observer. The “ cumulus,” at first almost hemispherical* elongates over the surface of the blastoderm, becoming pyri- form. This région is the posterior, or anal, pôle of the egg* We see the “cumulus” spreading from the anal pôle over the surface like a veil, but it is less white than the polar région. This veil continues to spread over the entire surface to a pôle opposing the anal, which Claparède terms the cephalic pôle. Each pôle forms a very prominent projection. At this stage the body of the embryo becomes well marked and subdivided, worm-like, into rings. (Fig. 623.) The extent of the dorsal région is greatly limited, while that of the ventral side is greatly increased. The entire ventral région, occupying most of the whole egg, is homologous with the primitive ventral streak. It is at this time that the formation of the protozoônites (elemental rings* Fig. 624. Fig. 623. Fig. 625.636 ARACHNIDA. or primordial segments) takes place» Six of these zones or segments arise between the cephalic and anal pôles; these zones represent the ventral arcs. The two anterior rings bear the mouth-parts, the mandibles and maxillæ ; while the others form rings corresponding to the four pair of feet. These pro- tozoônites are very transitory, only existing for a short period ; they gradually retreat towards the ventral side, enlarge and nearly touch each other. The embryo (Fig. 624) now grows much longer, and new em- bryonal segments are formed in the abdomen just as they grow out in the worms, and Myriapods, and also in the Crustacea, ac- cording to Rathke’s researches. Thus while the cephalothora- cic rings appear simultaneously the abdominal segments appear one after the other. The first one appears between the last tho- racic ring and the anal “ hood,” or pôle. Meanwhile the latéral extremities of the protozoonites hâve become enlarged ; these onlargements form the appendages. These tubercles, or rudi- mentary limbs, appear on the abdominal as well as on the tho- racic rings (Fig. 625). This fact is one of great interest, as showing a resemblance to the Crustacean with its abdominal legs, and more especially to the abdominal footed Myriapods, and the larvæ of many true six-footed insects. Thus the young spider is at first like a Caterpillar, having “false,” de- oiduous, abdominal legs. Five abdominal rings are présent in Pholcus. Next follows the development of the u post-abdomen,” or tail, which being differentiated from the anal pôle or “hood,” becomes detached from the yolk mass, and is folded back upon the embryo, just as the abdomen of a crab is folded in an op- posite wa}r to the ventral side of the body.* This “post-abdomen,” after dividing into three segments, disappears completely during the growth of the embryo. This is the more interesting, as the “post-abdomen” of the scor« pion is retained permanently. Meanwhile the two Oephalic * And in like manner the cephalic lobes, containing the ocelli, are seen in the author’s figures folded back upon the base of the head, so that the antennæ are never developed, and the mandibles of the spider take thelr place, in advance of the eyes. The structure and succession of the rings of the insectean head are most readily exnlained, and some due is given to their number and succession by eomparison with the embryo of spiders.ARACHNIDA. 637 lobes hâve developed, and the blastoderm has divided into a dermal, or outer layer, and a muscular, or inner layer of cells. The outer layer forms the chitinous body-wall, or crust, while from the inner layer are developed the digestive, vascu- lar and other organs besides the muscles. After the rudiments of the appendages are formed the epi- mera appear, At this period we are struck with the perfect identity between ail the appendages of the body at their first origin. In the Arachnida the formation of the primitive seg- ments takes place much sooner than in most other articulâtes, where they often do not appear until after the rudiments of the limbs are developed. Another characteristic of the évolution of the spiders is the tardy appearance of the rudiments of the legs. The ven- tral arcs, or protozoônites, subdivide into ventral and pleural parts, which signalize the formation of the permanent rings of the body. The author’s figures and statement show, though he does not state the fact clearly, that development progresses from each end of the body towards the centre, as we hâve shown* to be the case in insects. Thus the posterior half of the body repeats the mode of development and general form of the anterior, or cephalic pôle. The third period in the life of the embryo dates from the forma- tion of the ventral rudiments to the exclusion of the spider. The first change consists in the lengthening and meeting of the rudimentary legs. The mouth-parts develop first. At this period the limb-bearing (pleural) région of the body séparâtes and the sternal piece or breast-plate appears as a “slower, later formation.” Now the thoracic legs grow much more rapidly than the mouth-parts and lie interlocked upon the "breast. (Fig. 626.f) When the first pair of legs are * Proceedings Boston Society of Natural History, Feb. 7,1866. fFiG. 626, m, mandibles; mx, maxillæ; l, fourth pair of legs; p, postabdomen. Fig. 626.638 ARACHNIDA. long enough to cross each other the jointed structure of the limbs disappears, and they soon become divided into their usual number of joints, though the tarsal joints are the last to be perfected. At this tiine the maxillæ become differentiated, or split up, into the basal lobe and its appendage, or palpus. Claparède compares the basal lobe to the coxa of the legs, though it is formed long before the coxæ of the feet them- selves. The anterior pair of appendages form the mandibles. The formation of the head is next in order. The “cephalic lobe” is divided into wliat the author calls two “procephalic lobes,” separated by a deep incision, and at this period the head appears very distinct from the thorax. Afterwards the anterior or ante-oral part of the head is, as in the case of the “post-abdomen,” folded back on the top, and then closely sol- dered to the thorax, thus forming the so called u céphalo- thorax.” These procephalic lobes are separated by a third lobe or “triangular plate” which grows up between them, forming the epichile. The mouth first appears as a longitu- dinal furrow in this triangle, the posterior border of which becomes the so called labium (“glossoide” of Latreille). The labium thus originates in the spiders in an entirely different way from the appendages, and is not formed, as Brullé sup- posed, by the soldering of the maxillæ, hence we shall adopt Latreille’s term “glossoide” for this piece. The two procephalic lobes afterwards unité, and are soldered together on the médian line, to form the anterior face of the head. This approach takes place from above, over the buccal frame (epichile). The mandibles are thus in advance of the mouth, though primitively behind it. “The head is then in the embryo of the spider very distinct from the thorax. Only towards the end of embryonic life does the soldering of the 4 cranium ’ and of the prothorax become so intimate that their limits become indistinct. It is only from this moment that there exists a true céphalothorax.” (Claparède.) Towards the end of embryonic life the simple eyes appear, arising from four little furrows, called the “ophthalmic fur- rows.” They are colored by the déposition of a small quantity of pigment. They appear at an earlier period in the Acarina. Formation of the heart and viscera. After the walls of theARACHNIDA. 639 body and its appendages hâve been formed the dorsal vessel appears. It is formed thus : when the division of the blasto- derm into its muscnlar and outer layers takes place the cells multiply and are heaped up along the médian line of the body, so as to form a sort of cordon (cord), not only in the abdomi- nal, but in the thoracic région of the body. The vessel prob- ably originates in the spaces between the cells, but the author has been unable to trace either its origin or that of the blood- corpuscles. But the rudimentary heart soon présents rhyth- mic pulsations, and in the limbs we see the arteries filled with a homogeneous fluid, in which can be detected the prés- ence of small corpuscles, moving by impulses synchronous with the systole of the dorsal vessel, showing that this fluid is the blood. The heart already présents several dilatations (cham- bers) corresponding to the abdominal segments. The nervous System does not appear to be formed when the embryo assumes the ventral instead of the dorsal position. The digestive System is very rudimentary when the embryo quits the egg. The alimentary canal is probably hollowed out of the middle of the vitelline mass, being a membranous tube formed around the remaining yolk mass. The lungs and spin- nerets are well formed when the embryo is hatched, while the ejres appear later. The same processes of development go on in the scorpions, the a post-abdomen ” of the Araneina (which we hâve seen folded back on the base of the abdomen and finally to disap- pear) in them being retained, forming the long, articulated “tail;” thus the distinction into abdomen and post-abdomen is very artificial as the two parts merge into each other, especi- ally in Solpuga, Chelifer and Phrynus. In the mites the arrest of development is still more marked, as the three régions of the body are in the adult not différent tiated, and the entire body assumes an oval form, the abdomi- nal parts being short, thus strikingly resembling the embryo of Pholcus, and the spiders generally, as seen in Claparède’s figures. In the Acarina there is a true metamorphosis, the larvæ of some forms when first hatched being worm-like ; then there is an oval stage when the young mite has but three pairs of640 ARACHNIDA. feet (though in others at this stage there are four pairs), and after another moulting the fourth pair of limbs appear. The young mite is analogous to the “Nauplius” stage of many low Crustacea. Claparède* has observed in Àtax Bonzi, which is a parasite on the gills of fresh-water mussels, that out of the originally laid egg (Plate 11 fig. 3, embryo of Atax Bonzi ; le, head-plate 5 ag, infolding of the belly; dm, intermediate skin; mo, outer shell of the egg ; md, mandibles ; mx, maxillæ ; pl-p3, legs ; vt, yolk. Fig. 4, front view of the same) ; not a larva, but an egg-shaped form hatches, which he calls a “deutovum.” (PL 11 fig. 1, bursting of the egg-shell into two halves, mo, on the day that the deutovum, dm, hatches out ; md, mandibles ; mx, maxillæ ; ps, third pair of legs ; Ui, body cavity ; sp, com- mon beginning of the alimentary canal and nervous System ; amb, hæmabœba, amœba-like bodies, which represent the blood corpuscles ; there being no circulation of the blood, the move- ments of the hæmabœba constitute a vicarious circulation. Fig. 2, the deutovum free from the first egg-shell ; lettering same as in Fig. 1, oc, rudiments of the simple eyes ; r, beak; h, h', rudimentary stomach and liver). From this deutovum (which is not the “amnion” of insects) is developed a six- footed larva. This larva passes into an eight-footed form, the “second larva,” (the “nymph” or pupa, of Dujardin and Robin) which transforms into the adult mite. The pupa dif- fers from the adult in having longer feet, and four instead of ten génital cups, the latter being the usual number in the adult. The larvæ are elongated oval, with six long legs and four ocelli. They swarm for a short time over the gills of the mus- sel they are living on and then bore into the substance of the gill to undergo their next transformation. Here the young mite increases in size and becomes round. The tissues soften, those of the different organs not being so well marked as in the first larval stage. The limbs are short and much largei * The development of spiders and of the Arachnids generally, has been traced by Rathke, Herold, and more especially by Claparède, in a work of great ability, from which we hâve drawn the preceding account, often using the anthor’s own words. His observations were made on various généra of spiders (Pholcus, etc.) His “ Studies on Mites,” from which Plate 11 is copied, appeared in Siebold’s and KOUiker’s Journal of Scientific Zoûlogy, 1868, part iv.PLATE 11. ME TAMORPH OSTS OF ' : MITE S.ARACHNIDA. 641 than before, the whole animal assuming an embryo-like appear- ance, and moving about like a rounded mass in its enclosure. Indeed is this process not (though Claparède does not say so) a histolysis of the former larval tissues, and the formation of a new body, as in the change of the six-footed insect beneath the larva skin, where the pupa is formed ? A new set of limbs grow out, this time there being four instead of three pairs of legs, while the old larval skin is still embraced within the membrane containing the second larval rounded mass. Soon the body is perfected, and the pupa, as we may properly call it, slips out of the larval membrane. The “second larva” after some time undergoes another change ; the limbs grow much shorter and are folded beneath the body, the animal being immovable, while the whole body assumes a broadly ovate form, and looks like an embryo just before hatching, but still lying within the egg. This may also be comparable with the formation of the adult fly within the puparium. (Compare Weismann’s account of this process in Musca, pp. 63, 64.) This period seems to be an exact répéti- tion of the histolysis, and the formation of new tissues for the building up of a new body which preceded the pupal stage, while the adult mite slips out of its pupal membrane just as. the pupa threw off its larval membrane. This process, again, may be compared to an adult butterfly, or fly, emerging from its pupal membrane. Thus the mites, at least several species, pass through a seriea of métamorphosés similar to those of such insects as hâve a. complété metamorphosis (except that the Acarian pupa is~ active), while the absence of such a metamorphosis in the spiders is paralleled by the incomplète metamorphosis of the Orthoptera and many Neuroptera, which reach adult life by simple moultings of the skin. In the genus Myobia there is not only a deutovum, besides the original egg, but also a tritovum-stage. The eggs of this mite are long, oval and conical at the posterior end. The em- bryo, with the rudiments of limbs, is represented by Fig. 5 of Plate 11. The little tubercles md and ma?, represent the man- dibles and maxillæ, while the three pair of legs, p1-^3, bud out from the middle of the body ; le represents the head-plate. 416 42 ARACHNIDA. The maxillæ and mandibles finally unité to form a beak (r Fig. 6) and the three pairs of feet (p’-p3) are folded along the médian line of the body. The farther development of the embryo is now for a time arrested, and a peculiar tooth-like process (Fig. 7, d) is developed. Claparède thinks that by means of this the anterior end of the egg-shell is eut off, and the embryo protrudes through, when, as in Fig. 7, it is seen to be surrounded by a new membrane, the deutovum (dt), équivalent to that of Atax. The front pair of legs (p') hâve grown larger and stand ont in front and on each side of the beak (r) . The growing embryo again forces off the anterior end of its deutovum, and the oval end of the egg protrudes through, and is surrounded by another membrane. This is the tritovum. The embryo is now surrounded by the membrane of the tritovum, and also by the deutovular membrane and the original egg-shell, the last two having lost a small portion of their anterior ends. During the tritovum-stage the fore pair of feet become curved in like claws, and the beak sinks down jnto the body. Now the six-footed larva (Fig. 8) breaks through the shell and closely resembles the adult (Plate 11. fig. 9). The first pair of feet, modified for grasping the hairs of the field-mouse, on which it is a parasite, take the place of the maxillæ, which hâve been arrested in their development, and the mandibles (pr) assume a style-like form. After one or more moultings of the skin a fourth pair of feet (p4) are acquired, and the adult form results, which the author considers as the type of a new family of Acarina. Claparède also suggests the affinity of Mvobia to the Tardigrades (Echiniscus and Lydella), especially from the study of the structure of the style-like mandibles and their supports. We feel convinced, after examining Clapa- rède’s figures and descriptions that this comparison is very significant, and this lias led us to consider the Tardigrades as a family of true mites, related to Myobia and Demodex. A French naturalisé C. Robin, has recently observed in cer- • tain bird sarcoptids, to which the parasite of the Downy Woodpecker noticed above is allied, “that the males pass through four, and the females through five stages, indicated as follows : (1) the egg, on issuing from which the animal has theARACHNIDA. 643 form of (2) a hexapod larva, followed by the stage of (3) octo- pod nymphæ [four-footed pupæ], without sexual organs. (4) From some of these nymphæ issue : a, sexual males, after a moult which is final for them ; 6, from others issue females without external sexual organs, resembling the nymphæ, but larger, and in some species furnished with spécial copulatory organs. Finally, after a last moult following copulation, these females produce (5) the sexual and fecundated females, which do not copulate, and in the ovary of which eggs are to be seen. No moult foliows that which produces males or females fur- nished with sexual organs ; but previously to this the moults are more numerous than the changes of condition.” u The larvæ undergo from two to three moults before passing to the State of nymphæ.” These latter also undergo two or three moults. (Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 1868, p. 78.) In some other species of mites no males hâve been found, and the females hâve been isolated after being hatched, and yet hâve been known to Islj eggs, which produced young with- out the interposition of the males. This parthenogenesis has been noticed in several species. But few fossil Araclmids hâve been yet discovered. Roemer has described a spider from the coal formation of Germany under the name of Proto- lycosa, while two species of scorpions, and a Phalangium-like spider hâve been detected in the same formation in this eountry. In studying spiders, of which we hâve several hundred spe- cies, the number and relative situation of the eyes, and the relative length of the different pairs of legs, should be noticed ; their webs and the manner of construeting them ; their habi- tats, whether spreading their webs upon or in the ground, or in trees, or on herbage, or whether the species are aquatic, or erratic, and pursue their prey without building webs to entrap them, should be observed. So, also, how they deposit their eggs, and the form and appearance of the silken nidus, and whether the female bears her eggs about her, and how this is done, whether holding on to the egg-sac by her fore or hind legs, should ail be carefully noticed. Care must be taken not to mistake the young for full-grown, mature species, and de- scribe them as such. Spiders can be reared in boxes as644 ARACHNIDA. însects. The only way to preserve them is to throw them into alcohol; when pinned they shrivel up and lose their colors, which keep well in spirits. The colors of spiders vary much at different seasons of the year, especially during the frosts of autumn, when the changes produced are greatest. Ail spiders are directly bénéficiai to agriculture by their camivorous habits, as they ail prey upon insects, and do no harm to végétation. Their instincts are wonderful, and their habits and organization worthy of more study than has y et been paid them in this country We hâve no species poisonous to man, except when the state of health renders the constitution open to receive injury from their bite, just as mosquitoes and black Aies often cause serious harm to some persons. The Arachnids are divided into three groups, or suborders, the Araneina, the Pedipalpi, and the Acarina. ARANEINA. The Spiders are distinguished from other Arachnids by hav- ing mandibles used exclusively for biting, a spherical, sac-like abdomen, not divided into segments, and attached to the head- thorax by a slender pedicel. The maxillæ resemble the tho- racic feet. They breathe both by lungs and tracheæ, and do not undergo a metamorphosis, the young on being hatched hav- ing four pairs of legs. The mandibles (Plate 12, fig. 3, front view, with the eight ocelli above) are vertical and end in a powerful hook, in the end of which opens a duct (Plate 12,3 a, b) connected with the poison gland situated in the head. The maxillæ, represented by the so called palpi, though in reality the maxillæ themselves, with a flattened coxal lobe at the base (Plate 12,fig. 2,6, palpi of female ; fig. 8, do. of male) are simple in the female, but in the male the terminal joint is enlarged and modified greatly as an accessory génital organ. The céphalothorax is not jointed, and there are usually eight, rarely six, simple eyes (ocelli). In the genus Nops from Cuba there are, however, on\y two, while in certain cave-inhabiting species, according to Menge,AR ANE INA* 645 such as the Anthrobia Mammothia of Tellkampf from Mam- nioth Cave, and other spiders inhabiting European caves, there are none. We quote an interesting account of the habits of spiders, especially the mode of spinning their webs, published by Mr. J. H. Emerton in the “American Naturalist” (ii, p. 478), who has studied our native species with much care. “ The feet of spiders are wonderfully adapted for walking on the web. Each foot is furnished with three claws (Plate 12, Fig. 6, a, 5, 5), the middle one of which (a) is bent over at the end, forming a long finger for clinging to the wreb, or for guid- ing the thread in spinning. The outer claws (e, e) are curved and toothed like a comb. Opposite the claws are several stiff hairs (c) which are toothed like the claws, and serve as a thumb for the latter to shut against.” “When a spider wishes to build a web she usually selects a corner, so that the structure may be attached on several sides. She then runs a few threads along the objects to which the web is fastened, to facilitate her passage from point to point. The web is commenced by a line or two across the point where the centre is to be, which is not usually the géométrie centre, but nearer the top than the bottom. Radiating lines (Plate 12, fig. 1, 6, 6, b) are then spun from the centre in ail directions. In doing this the spider often crosses from one side of the web to the opposite, so that the finished portion is always tightly drawn, and the tension of the completed web is the same in every part.” “ Having finished the framework, the spider begins near the «entre and spins a thread (Fig. 1, c, c, c) spirally, around the web to the circumference, fastening it to each radius as it crosses. The distance between the spirals varies with the size of the spiders, being about as far as they can reach. This spiral thread serves to keep the parts of the web in place dur* ing the rest of the process, and is removed as fast as the web is finished. It also furnishes a ready means of Crossing from one radius to another where they are farthest apart. Ail the thread spun up to this stage of the process is smooth when dry, and will not adhéré if touched with a smooth object.” “The spider, having thus formed the web, begins to put in646 ARANEINA. the final circles at the outside, walking around on the scaffold- ing previously prepared, which she gradually destroys as she proceeds, until in the finished web only a few turns in the cen- tre are left. The thread of the circles last spun is covered with viscid globules, strung upon it like beads at short distances. If an insect cornes in contact with the thread, it immediately adhères, and its struggles only bring a larger part of its body into contact with the web. Dust and seeds also stick to the web, so that in a single day it is often so clogged as to be of no farther use. The web aiso becomes torn by the struggles of the prey, and by wind and rain, so that it requires repair or renewal every night. In mending a web the spider usually removes ail except the outside threads, biting them off and rolling them into a hard bail between her jaws, so that when released it will drop quickly to the ground. This probably gave rise to the opinion, sometimes advanced, that the old web is eaten by the spider. “ When the web is finished she stations herself in the centre, where a small circle is left free of the adhesive threads. Her usual position is head downward, with each foot on one of the radii of the web, and the spinners ready to fasten themselves by a thread at the least alarm. She often remains in her hole with one foot out, and resting on a tight thread connected with the centre of the web, so that any vibration is quickly detected. If the web be gently touphed the spider will rush into the cen- tre, and face towards the disturbed part. She will then jerk smartly several of the radii leading in that direction, to see if the intruder is a living animal. If this test is followed by the expected struggle she runs out towards the victim, stepping as little as possible on the adhesive threads, seizes it in her jaws, and as soon as it begins to feel the effects of the bite, envelops it in a silken covering, and hangs it up to suck at her leisure. In spinning this envelope the insect is held and turned around mainly by the short third pair of feet, while a fiat band of threads is drawn from the spinners by the hind pair working alternately like the hands in pulling a rope, and wound over it in every direction, so that in a few seconds it is so covered as to be unable to move a limb. When a web is shaken by the wind the spider will sometimes draw in ail her feet towards herPlate 12. THE COHHOH GARDEE 8PIDER.TETRAPNEUMONES. 641 body, thereby tightening the web in every direction so that the vibration is prevented. “ The construction of nets for catching food is not the only use of the thread made by these spiders. They seldom move from place to place without spinning a line after them as they go. They are able by its use to drop safely from any height, and when suspended by it are carried by the wind across wide spaces without any exertion on their part, except to let out the thread. The crevices in which they pass the winter and the leisure hours of summer, are partly lined and enclosed by a coating of silk resembling that used for confining captured in- sects. The eggs are enclosed in a cocoon of the same mate- rial, and there the young remain until they are strong enough to shift for themselves, growing to nearly double their size without apparent nourishment. “Several hundred young are produced by a single female, but probably it is seldom that one-tenth of this number ever reach adult size. Nearly ail the spiders which we see in webs are females or young. They spend most of their time in the vicinity of their webs, and many doubtless pass their lives within a few yards of the place of their birth. The adult males are seldom seen building or occupying webs : they remain con- cealed during the day, and at night wander about from web to web. When young there is no obvious différence between the sexes, but as the time for the last moult approaches, the ends of the palpi of the male swell to several tiines their former size. When the time for the final moult arrives, both sexes retire to their holes and cast off the skins of their entire bodies, even to the claws. This process obliges them to remain con- cealed uutil the new skin has acquired sufficient strength and firmness, when they again return to their webs. The females still resemble the young, except in size, but the males arc distinguished from them by the greater length of their limbs, the diminished size of the posterior half of the body, and the large and complicated joints of the palpi (Plate 12, fig. 8).” Tetrapneumones Latreille. The large hairy species of Mygale differ from other spiders in having four lung-sacs and as many stigmata, and only two pairs of spinnerets, of which648 ARANEINA. one pair is very small, while there are eight ocelli. The differ* ent species make cylindrical holes in the earth ; that of M\ nidulans of the West Indies is closed by a lid of earth covered beneath with silk. Mygale avicularia Linn., the Bird spider, seizes small birds and sucks their blood. M. Hentzii (Fig. 627, natural size) ranges from Missouri southward. Dipneumones Latreille. In the remaining généra of spider s there are two lung-sacs, two or four stigmata, and three pairs Fig. 627. of spinnerets. They are divided into two groups, the “Sed- entary” and “Wandering” spiders. The sedentary species hâve the ocelli usually arranged in two transverse rows ; they spin webs in which they remain and seize their prey. In theDIPNEUMONES. 649 genus Dysdera there are six ocelli, of which four lie in the front row ; the céphalothorax is small, long, oval, and the first pair of legs are the longest. The species dwell in silken tubes, under stones or in crevices. D. interrita Hentz is a New England species. In Drassus there are eight ocelli, and the hindermost pair of feet are the longest. Clubione includes those species which hâve eight ocelli, the four hinder ones, with the two outer ones on the front row, forming almost a semicircle ; the fore legs are the longest. They construct under the bark of trees, under leaves or be- neath stones, tubes of very white silk, from which they make nocturnal expéditions for food. C. tranquilla Hentz is com- mon in the United States. C. medicinalis Walkenaer has been used as a vesicant. The Water spider of Europe, Argyroneta aquatica Linn., lives beneath the water, where it makes its nest and oocoon, which is filled with air. The genus Tegenaria has the ocelli arranged in two ^lightly curved rows, the third pair of feet are shorter than the others, and the ab- domen is oval. The species are “sedentary, making in obscure corners a horizontal web, at the upper part of which is a tubular habitation, where the spider remains motionless till some insect be entangled in the threads.” (Hentz.) T. medicinalis Hentz is “pale brown, turning to bluish black; ‘Céphalothorax with a blackish band on each side ; abdomen varied with black, or plumbeous and brown ; feet varied with blackish.” It u is found in every cellar or dark place in the country. For some time the use of its web as a narcotic, in cases of fever, was recommended by many physicians.” (Hentz.) Fig. 628 (enlarged) represents T. atrica, a European species. Filistata is a closely allied genus. F. hibemalis Hentz Fig. 628.650 ARANEINA. “makes a tubular habitation of silk in crevices on old walls or rocks, throwing out an irregular web which is spread on the wall or stone around the aperture. . . . In walking it use& the palpi like feet, and these organs are very long, particularly in the male.” According to Hentz it is fonnd in South Caro- lina and Alabama. The two généra Pholcus and Theridion belong to Latreille’s group, “ Inæquitelæ,” comprising those forms in which the first pair of limbs are usually the longest. In Pholcus the legs, are very long and slender. According to Hentz the species: are “ sedentary, making in dark corners a very loose web of slender threads, crossed in ail directions. The eggs are col- lected together without a silk covering, which the mother car- nes with her cheliceres” (maxillary palpi). This genus “by* the extreme length of its legs resembles Phalangium. The species belonging to it may be found in apartments seldom visited, particularly churches and caves. The}r shake their body when threatened by an enexny, but seem to hâve very weak means of offence, and to feed on the very smallest prey.” P. Atlanticus Hentz inhabits the Southern States. In Theridion the four inner ocelli are larger than the four outer ones, and the first and last pair of limbs are the longest. Hentz states that the species are sedentary, forming a web made of threads crossed in ail directions, while the cocoons are of various shapes. A majority of the species are very small, and their webs made on the tops of weeds, in bushes, or in retired corners, are familial* to every one. T. vulgare Hentz varies “from a cream white to a livid brown, or plum- beous color. The céphalothorax is dull rufous, the abdomen with various undulating lines, and the feet hâve more or less distinct, dark or plumbeous rings.” Hentz says that “there is probably no spider so abundant in the United States. It. makes an irregular web in somewhat retired corners, and usu- ally in dark situations, but occasionally also in the open air.” It catches large insects and hangs them up to its nest. Hentz. says of the T. studiosum which he has described, that “when its web is destroyed it does not abandon its cocoon, which is* orbicular and whitish, and is placed in the central part of the web. The mother then grasps it with her cheliceres, and de-DIPNEUMONES. 651 fends her progeny while life endures. She also takes care of her young, making a tent like that of social caterpillars for their shelter, and remaining near them till tkey can protect themselves.” It occurs in South Carolina and Alabama. Hentz says of T. verecundum Hentz, a jet black species found in the Southern States, that “it is very common under stones, logs, or clods of earth, where it makes a web, the threads of which are so powerful as to arrest the largest Hymenopterous insects, such as humble bees. Its bite, if I can rely on the vague description of physicians unac- quainted with ento- mology, is somewhat dangerous, producing alarming nervous dis- orders. “Fig. 629 rep- resents Theridion ri- parium (lower figure, male ; upper, female, enlarged), of Europe. Epeira is readily known by the large globular abdomen. The species are “sed- entary, forming a web composed of spiral threads crossed by other threads depart- ing from the centre ; they often dwell in a tent constructed above the web ; the cocoons are of various forms. E. vulgaris Hentz (Plate 12, fig. 12) is pale gray, with a pitchy black ab- domen, with various winding white marks, and a middle one in the form of a cross. It spins a regular geometrical web, and is almost domesticated, being found about the outside of houses and in gardens. E. domiciliorum Hentz is a gray or brownish species, and is found in dark rooms. The genus Nephila comprises large spiders, with long cylin- drical abdomens. N.plumipes (Fig. 630, natural size) is found in the Southern States. Dr. B. G. Wilder has given an ac*652 ARANEINA. count of its habits, and considéra its silk, if the spider could be reared in sufficient quantities, as of commercial value. The males (upper figure) are minute in size, compared with the females. The genus Thomisus is characterized by the small size of the cheliceres, and the first and second pair of feet are either the longest, or the second alone are longest. The species “ wander affcer their prey, making no web, but casting irregular threads, with a flattened cocoon, usually placed under leaves, and watched by the mother till the young are liatched.” (Hentz.) T. vulgaris Hentz is “ pale gray, with four impressed dots on the abdomen ; the body is fiat, and the legs are covered with indistinct darker rings. This spider, commonly seen on fenoDIPNEUMONES. 653 ing or prostrate timber, like those of the same genus, moves sidewise and backwards, but it is much more active than T. celer. When pursued by an enemy, like Attus and Epeïra, it leaps and hangs by a thread, which supports it in the air." It is a widely diffused species. T. celer Hentz is also a widely distributed species, and is “found usually on blossoms, where it remains patiently waiting for Diptera, other small insects, and even butterflies, which it secures with amazing muscular power.” The three remaining généra belong to Latreille’s group of “ Wanderers,” as they spin no web. The species of Dolomedes (Fig. 631, from Harris’ Correspondence) wander after their prey, making no web, except while rearing their young, and hiding under stones, sometimes diving under water; the cocoon is usually orbicular, and is carried by the mother. D. lanceo- latus Hentz “is always found near or on water, running on it with surprising agility, preying often on large aquatic insects. A female of Dolomedes was twice found on high bushes by my friend, T. W. Harris, in Milton, Mass., ‘on a large, irregular654 ARANEINA. loose, horizontal web, at one extremity of which was situated her follicle, or egg-bag, covered with young. The parent ap- peared watching them at some distance/ This spider can dive and stay a considérable time under water, to avoid its cnemies. It was found in March, in Alabama, under stones near a stream of water.” It ranges northwards to Massachu- setts. The Tarantula belongs to the genus Lycosa, which comprises large stout hairy spiders, with large cheliceres and moderately sized fangs, with the fourth pair of feet the longest and the third pair shortest. The species make no web, wandering for their prey, and hiding under stones. The}7 frequently make holes in the ground in which they dwell, spinning at the orifice a ring of silk which forms a Consolidated entrance like a trap door. The cocoon is usually orbicular, and is often carried about by the mother, while the young are borne about on the back of her abdomen. (Hentz.) L. tarantula Linn. is the cele- brated Tarantula of Italy and Spain. Its bite is commonly supposed to produce the effects termed “tarantism,” but Dr. Bergsôe has proved that tarantism is rarely due to the bite of the tarantula, which is comparatively harmless. The Lycosa fatifera of Hentz is said by him to be bluish black, with the céphalothorax deeper in color at the sides ; tlie cheliceres are covered with rufous hairs, and liave a red éléva- tion on their outer side near their base. It is one of the largest species of the genus. “This formidable species dwells in holes, ten or twelve inches in depth, in light soil, which it digs itself ; for the cavity is always proportionate to the size of the spider. The orifice of the hole has a ring made chiefly of silk, which prevents the soil from falling in when it rains. This lycosa, probably as large as the Tarantula of the south of Europe, is common in Massachusetts, but we hâve not heard of serious accidents produced by its bite; Its poison, how- ever, must be of the same nature and as virulent.” (Hentz.) In the leaping spiders, Salticus, the céphalothorax is usually large, square, and the abdomen is oval cylindrical. Hentz says that they wander after their prey, making no web, but concealing themselves in a silken valve, for the purpose of casting their skin, or for hibernation. The Salticus (Attus)PEDIPALPI. 655 familiaris of Hentz is a common species throughout the United States. It is pale gray, hairy, and the abdomen is blackish, with a grayish angular band edged with whitish. Hentz says that it is almost domesticated in our houses, and dwells in eracks around sashes, between clapboards, etc., and may be seen on the sunny side of the house, and in the hottest places, wandering in search of prey. It moves with agility and ease, but usually with a certain leaping gait. . . . Before leaping this Attus always fixes a thread on the point from which it départs ; by this it is suspended in the air, if it miss its aim, and it is secure against falling far from its hunting grounds. These spiders, and probably ail other species, a day or two before they change their skin, make a tube of white silk, open at both ends ; there they remain motionless till the moulting time arrives, and even some days after are seen there still, probably remaining in a secure place, for the purpose of re- gaining strength and activity.” PEDIPALPI. Under the term Pedipalpi we would embrace besides the Pedipalps of Latreille, the Solpugids and Phalangids. They ail agréé in having the maxillary palpi greatly enlarged and usually ending in a forceps, and the abdomen distinctly jointed, with the end, sometimes, as in the scorpions, pro- longed into a tail. In the rétention of the tail in some of the forms, the abnormally enlarged maxillæ, the jointed céphalo- thorax and abdomen, which in the scorpions reminds us of the Myriopods, we hâve characters which place the Pedipalps be- low the true spiders. Solpugidæ Gervais. In this group, the species of which are large, hairy, spider-like animais, the céphalothorax is clearly jointed, and the abdomen is elongated ; respiration is carried on by tracheæ. Solpuga may at once be known by the enormous, though not very long, maxillary palpi. S. araneoides Pallas inhabits Southern Russia. JS. (Galeodes) subulata Say inhabits the Southwestern States.656 PEDIPALPI. Phalangidæ Gervais. In the group of Harvest-men the? céphalothorax is not jointed ; the abdomen is short and thick, and the maxillary palpi end in a simple claw ; the mandibles are well developed and end in a forceps. The legs are extremely long. They breathe through tracheæ. They occur about houses, especially in shady places and in woods and fields. 6 4 They are carnivorous, feeding on small insects, and are said to be especially addicted to Aphis-eating.” (Wood.) The genus Phalangium has no spines on the palpi, and has two simple eyes. The species hâve been well described by Dr. H. C. Wood, jr. (Proceedings of the Essex Institute, vol. vi), some of whose illustrations appear here, so that the spe- cies here mentioned can be easily identified. P. dorsatum SayPHRYNIDÆ. 657 (Fig. 632, a, female, natural size ; 6, male, natural size ; c, pénis, anterior and latéral view, enlarged) has been found from northern New York to Washington. When handled it emits a drop of an odorous clear fluid. We hâve found it frequently in Salem. P. ventricosum Wood (Fig. 633, a, trochanter ; 5, femora ; c, mandi- bles ; d, maxillary palpus, male? natural size) is widely distributed in the United States. Acanthocheir is an eyeless genus with spiny palpi. A. armata Tellkampf is found in Mammoth Cave. In Gonyleptes the céphalothorax is much enlarged, and overhangs the abdomen. G. ornatum Say (Fig. 634, male, a, under surface ; 5, upper surface, natural size ; c, pénis) is found in the Southern States ; the species are quite numerous in South America. Fig. 633. Under the name of Archetarbus rotundatus (Fig. 635) Mr. Scudder describes a fossil Pedipalp, which seems to be “allied a to the Phalangidœ and to the Phrynidœ. In its fragmentary state one can scarcely judge with certainty of its exact relationship. The arrangement of the legs ac- cords well with both families. The broad attachment of the thorax ta the abdomen is a Phalangidan char- acteristic, while the size and shape) of the abdomen, the number of the) abdominal segments and the crowd- ed state of the central portions of the basal ones, indicate doser afïinities to the Phrynidœ.79 b Fig. 634. Phrynidæ Sundeval. Whip-scorpions. In this group the 42658 PEDIPALPI. anterior pair of legs are very long and slender, being much smaller than the others, while the maxillary palpi are very large ; there are eight simple eyes, and the abdomen is eleven to twelve-jointed, while there are two pairs of stigmata, and they also breathe by lungs. Phry- nus is at once known by the excessively long, whip-like, multiarticulate fore legs, which ap- parently perform the office of antennæ ; the body is short and broad, and has no appendage to the abdomen. P. reniformis Fabr. is fourteen lines long, and is found in Brazil. P. asperatipes Wood Fig. 635. occurs in Lower California. No species occur in the United States. The genus Thelyphonus is known by the oblong body, ending usually in a slender many-jointed filament. T. caudatus Fabr. is fifteen lines long, and inhabits Java. T. giganteus Lucas occurs in the South-western States and in Mexico. Its bite is poisonous. Chernetidæ Menge. (Pseudo-scorpiones Latreille.) The False-scorpions are at once known by their large maxillary palpi like the scorpion’s claw. The abdomen is eleven-jointed, flattened, without any appendage, and the living forms are minute ; they breathe by tracheæ. They are found running about dusty books and in dark places and feed on mites and Psoci. They are often found attached to the leg of some fly or other insect by which they are transported about. “Thefe- male chelifer bears the eggs, seventeen in number, in a little bunch under her Fig. 636. abdomen near the opening of her sex- ual organs. Menge has observed the Pseudo-scorpions cast their skin in a light web made for that purpose. The little animal remained five days in the web after its metamorphosis, and did not assume its dark colors for four weeks. Three months after it returned to the same web for hibernation. Menge describes eight species from the Prussian Amber, be- longing to généra still living, and Corda one (MicrolabrisSCORPIONIDÆ. 659 Sternbergi) from the coal formation in Bohemia, one inch long. Schiodte has found a curious blind species in the caves of * Adelsburg, and it is very probable that a doser examination of the Kentucky caves will give a similar American species.” (Hagen.) In Chemes there are no eyes. C. Sanborni Hagen is found in Massachusetts. In Chelifer there are two eyes. C. cancroides Linn. (Fig. 636, enlarged) is dark brown, with many short spines on the thorax. It occurs in Massachusetts and Illinois. Scorpionidæ Latreille. The Scorpions are well known by the immense forceps-like maxillæ, and the long tail continu- ons with the thorax, and end- ing in a powerful sting, in which is lodged a poison sac. The body is more distinctly divided into seg- ments than any other Arachnids, and hence the scorpions bear, as Gerstaecker suggests, a strong analogy to the Myriapods. The genus Scorpio is restricted to those species which hâve six ocelli. S. AUenii Wood is our only North American species and is found in Lower California. Our other spe- cies are mostly comprised in the genus Buthus, which has eight ocelli. B. Carolinianus Beauvois (Fig. 637) ranges from the South- ern Atlantic States through Texas Fis- 637* northward into Southern Kansas. “ Scorpions are dangerous in proportion to their size, their âge, the State of irritation they may be in, and the température of the climate in which they résidé. The wounds, however, even of the largest species are rarely fatal.” (Moquin Tandon.) Messrs. Meek and Worthen hâve described (Palæontology of the Illinois Geological Survey, iii, p. 560) two fossil scor- pions from the lower part of the coal measures of Illinois, which are as highly developed, and bear a very close resen*-660 ACARINA. blance to the living species. The Eoscorpion carbonarius of Meek and Worthen is said by them to resemble closely Buthus hirsutus from California. The other fossil scorpion is the Ma- zonia Woodiana M. and W., which differs from any known living forms in not having any latéral eyes. Very different and belonging to a much more degraded and embryonic type is the Cyclophthalmus Bucklandi from the Coal Measures of Bohemia, in which the tail is continuons with the body, being. unusually thick. ACARINA. The Mites differ from other Arachnids by their oval or rounded bodies, which are not articnlated, the céphalothorax being merged with the abdomen ; the mouth-parts are adapted either for biting or sucking, and they breathe by tracheæ. They are usually minute in size ; the ticks, which are some- times half an inch in length, comprising the largest forms. They appear first in geological history in the Prussian Ambei\ where species of Trombidium and Hydrachna occur. Bdellidæ Dugès. This inconsiderable family is represented by small mites with long, five-jointed maxillary palpi, and from two to six ocelli, which are sometimes wanting. The limbs are long and thick. The young closely resemble the adults. The genus Bdella has legs of nearly equal length. B. longi- cornis Linn., an European species, is scarlet red, and half a line in length. B. marina Pack, lives between tide marks. Trombididæ Leach. The species of this famity are red mites, with either claw-like or style-like maxillary palpi, and short mandibles, with the terminal joints scissor-like and op« posed to each other. The genus Tetranychus has slender style- like maxillæ, and two ocelli. The two fore pair of legs arise at a long distance from the hind ones, the first pair being the longest. T. telarius Linn. the little red mites of our hot- houses spin webs on rose leaves. It is 3rellowisb, with two red- dish yellow spots on the sides, and is one-half a line long.IXODIDÆ. 661 It may be killed by showering sulphur over the leaves. In Europe it is found on the linden tree. The young of this spe- cies, according to Claparède, passes through an Ixodes-like stage, as regards the mouth-parts, for this reason we place the Ixodidæ below them. Hydrachnidæ Sundeval. The Water-mites are known by liaving the maxillary palpi five-jointed, with terminal hooks, or bristles, at the end. The legs gradually increase in length, the hindermost pair being longest ; they are ciliated, with two claws. There are two ocelli. These mites swim in fresh and sometimes sait water, and are seen running over water-plants. The young differ so much from the adults that they were de- scribed by Audouin under the name of Achlysia. In Hy- drachna the mandibles are needle-shaped, and the third joint of the maxillæ is the longest. The body is oval, with the limbs adapted for swimming, and there are two eyes. Hy- drachna concharum is parasitic throughout life on the gills of fresh water mussels. Others are parasitic during early life on fresh water Hemiptera and Coleoptera. In Atax the body is oval, solid and corneous. The mandi- bles end in a stout curved claw, and the five-jointed maxillary palpi end in an acute point. The species are red in color and live in flowing streams ; when in their early, and in some cases their adult stages, they are parasitic in the gills of mussels. Ixodidæ Leach. The Ticks are mites of gigantic size, with bodies of a leathery consistence. The three to four-jointed maxillæ are small, not reaching beyond the beak. The man- dibles are saw-like, being covered towards the end with teeth, with from two to four terminal hooks, and, with the large spatulate, dentate “glossoide” of the maxillæ, form a beak which the tick pushes into the skin of its host. The ocelli are often wanting, and the legs are slender, with two claws, and in the young a distinct membranous foot-pad. The recently hatched young (Fig. 638, a, glossoide ; 6, mandibles ; -c, maxillary palpi ; e, adult gorged with blood) is six-footed, the legs being very long, and the head and mouth-parts are much larger in proportion to the rest of the body than in the662 ACARINA. adult, while the tripartite division of the body is very distinct, the thorax being distinct from the head and abdomen. The genus Argas closely resembles Ixodes. Gerstaecker States that the Argas Persicus Fisher is very annoying to trav- ellers in Persia. Travellers in the tropics speak of the in- tolérable torment occasioned by wood ticks, Ixodes, which, occurring ordinarily on shrubs and trees, attach themselves to ail sorts of reptiles, beasts and cattle, and even man himself as he passes by within their reach. Sometimes cases fall within the practice of the physician who is called to remove the tick, which is found sometimes literally buried under the skin. Mr. J. Stauffer writes me, that “on June 23d the daugh- ter of Abraham Jackson (colored), playing among the leaves in a wood, near Springville, Lancaster County, Penn., on her return home complaL ecL of pain in the arm. No at- tention was paid to it till the next day, when a raised tu- mor was noticed, a small portion protruding through the skin, apparently like a splinter of wood. The child was taken to a physician who applied the forceps, and after considérable pain to the child, and labor to himself, extracted a species of Ixodes, nearly one-quarter of an inch long, of an oval form, and brown mahogany color, with a metallic spot, like silver bronze, cen- trally situated on the dorsal région.” This tick proved, from Mr. Stauffer’s figures, to be without doubt, Ixodes unipunctata Pack. (Plate 13, fig. 11, enlarged). It has also been found in Massachusetts by Mr. F. G. Sanborn. The Ixodes albipictus Pack. (Fig. 638, adult gorged with blood, and the six-footed young, with the mouth-parts of the young enlarged, and d, a foot showing the claws and sucking dise), was discovered by Mr. W. J. Hays in great numbers on a moose which had been partially domesticated. The females lay their eggs from the first of May until the 2oth of June, the “eggs being forced outORIBATIDÆ. 663 in large masses.” “On the 3d of July tlie entire mass of eggs seemed to hatch out at once, the shell opening like a clam and releasing a six-legged insect.” (Hays.) The opening of the oviduct is just behind the head, between the anterior pair of feet, so that the eggs appear as if ejected from the mouth. Another species is the Ixodes bovis (Plate 13, fig. 10), the common cattle tick of the Western States and Central America, which is allied to the European L ricinus. It is very annoying to horned cattle, gorging itself with their blood, though by no means confined to them alone, as it lives indifferently upon the rattlesnake, the iguana, small mammals, and undoubtedly any sort of animal that brushes by its lurking-place in the forest. It is a reddish, coriaceous, flattened, seed-like créature, with the body oblong oval, and contracted just behind the middle. When fully grown it measures from a quarter to half an inch in length. We hâve received it from Missouri, at the hands of Mr. Riley ; and Mr. J. A. McNiel has found it very abun- dantly on horned cattle, on the western coast of Nicaragua. Gamasidæ Leach. These mites hâve scissor-like mandibles, free maxillæ, with joints of equal length, and hairy legs of similar size and form, while the ocelli are obsolète. They live parasitically on the bodies of other animais. The genus Gam- asus has long mandibles, with curved, five-jointed, acutely pointed maxillary palpi ; the body is oval, flattened, the skin dense, and the first and last pair of legs are somewhat longer than the middle ones. G. coleoptratorum Linn. is clear, red- dish yellow, and about a third of a line long. It occurs in Europe on beetles, especially species of Geotrupes and Necro- phorus. The same, or a closely allied species, is found in this country. Uropoda vegetans DeGeer, a similar form, also lives on beetles. The genus Dermanyssus has shorter jointed max- illary palpi than in Gamasus. D. avium Dugès lives on birds, and D. pipistréllæ Gervais on bats. In Pteroptus the terminal joint of the maxillæ is very long. Pt. vespertilionis Dufour is a parasite of the bat. Oribatidæ Nicolet. In these mites the body is very hard and horny. The four-jointed maxillary palpi are short, with664 ACAKINA. the flrst joint very large, forming a toothed eating surface. The ocelli are nearly obsolète, and the legs hâve from one to three claws. The céphalothorax has generally two wing-like projections, and two or three cup-shaped pedicellated stigmata on the edge. They generally live on vegetable matter. In Oribates the side of the céphalothorax is produced often into wing-like processes, with the abdomen orbicular, flattened, sometimes emarginate. The European O. alatus Hermann is smooth, blackish Fig. 639. brown, and lives under moss. In Notlirus the body is elongated, somewhat quadrangular, and has no latéral expansions, while the legs are stout, with tripartite claws. We hâve observed an undescribed species of this genus sucking the eggs of the canker-worm in Salem. It may be called Notlirus ovivorus (Fig. 639). It isreddish brown, with a dense hard body, with the edge of the abdomen expanded eventy, and with three slender capitate processes on the céphalothorax. Acaridæ. This family comprises the true mites, which hâve soft, thin- s k i n n e d bodies, with either scissor or style-like mandibles, the latter form- ing a rétractile horny tube. The maxillæ are obsolète, as well as the ocelli. The claws are sometimes provided with a sucker. The members of this, and the following groups, are among the most lowly organized of articulâtes, and are found living parasitically on the skin of other animais, or buried within their integuments, while certain acari hâve been detected within the lungs and air passages, the bloodves- sels and the intestinal canals of vertebrate animais. TheACARIDÆ. 665 genus Cheyletus is remarkable for having the maxillæ very large, and like a pair of legs, with the ends tripartite, the outer division being curved and clawlike, while the two innermost are slender lobes pectinated on the inner side ; the mandibles are style-like. A European species (Fig. 640) feeds on Cheese- mites. It is thought by Mr. R. Beck that another species of Cheyletus is parthenogenous, as “he obtained several généra- tions from the first individual, without the intervention of a male.” (Science-Gossip, 1869, p. 7.) Mr. J. H. Gregory, of Marblehead, Mass., has found a species of this genus, which we may call Cheyletus seminivorus (Plate 13, fig. 6). It injured the seeds of the cabbage stored up during the winter by sucking them dry. The genus Tyroglyphus is known by the body being elongated oval, with scissor-like mandibles, and outstretched four-jointed feet, with a long stalked sucking dise at the end. T. domesticus DeGeer is in Europe common in hou ses. Many people hâve been startled by statements in newspapers and more authoritative sources, as to the immense numbers of sugar mites, T. sacchari (Fig. 641), found in unrefined or raw sugar. According to Professor Cameron, of Dublin, as quoted in the “Journal of the Franklin Insti- tute,” for November, 1868, “Dr. Hassel {who was the first to notice their general occurrence in the raw sugar sold in Lon- don) found them in a living state in no fewer than sixty-nine out of seventy-two «amples. He did not detect them in a single specimen of refined sugar. In an inferior sample of raw sugar, examined in Dublin by Mr. Cameron, he reports finding five hundred mites in ten grains of sugar, so that in a pound’s weight occurred one hundred thousand. They appear as white specks in the sugar. The disease known as grocer’s itch is, undoubtedly, due to the presence of this mite, which, like its ally the Sarcoptes, works its way under the skin of the hand, in this case, however, of cleanly persons. Closely allied to the preceding is the Cheese-mite, T. siro Linn., which often abounds in newly made cheese. Lyonnet666 ACARINA. states that during summer this mite is viviparous. T. farinar DeGeer, as its name indicates, is found in flour. Other species hâve been known to occur in ulcers. We figure the larva of the European Typhlodromus pyri (Plate 13, fig. 4) the adult of which, according to A. Scheuten, is allied to Tyroglyphus, and lives under the epidermis of the leaves of the pear. There are but two pairs of legs présent, and the body is long, cylindrical and worm-like. Fig. 5, plate 13, represents the four-legged larva of another species of Typhlodromus. The Itch mite belongs to the genus Sarcoptes, in which the body is rounded ovate, with needle-like mandibles, and witlr short three-jointed legs. The female differs from the male in having the two hinder pairs of legs only partially developed,. and ending in a long bristle. S. scabiei Linn. (Plate 13, fig. 7, female) was first recognized by an Arabian author of the- twelfth century as the cause of the disease which results from its attacks. It buries itself in the skin on the more protected parts of the body, forming minute galleries, by which its prés- ence is detected, and by its punctures maintains a constant irritation. Other species are known to infest the cat, dog and swine. They are best destroyed by the faithful use of sulphur oint- ment. Various species of an allied genus, Dermatodectes, live in galleries on different species of domestic animais ; thus D. equi lives in the skin of the horse, Z>. bovis in cattle, and D. ovis in sheep. Various Sarcoptids occur on birds ; among them are species of Dermaleiclms. On March 6th, Mr. C. Cooke called my attention to certain female mites (Plate 13 fig. 1) which were situated on the narrow groove between the main stem of the barb and the outer edge of the barbules of the feathers of the Downy Woodpecker, and subsequently we found the other forms indicated in Plate 13, figs. 2 and 3, in the down under the feathers. These long worm-like mites are probably the females of the singular male Sarcoptes-like mite, represented by Figs. 2 and 3 of the plate, as they were found on the same specimen of woodpecker at about the same date. The female (though there is probably a still earlier hexapo- dous stage) of this Sarcoptid, which we may call DermaleiclmsACARIDÆ. 667 pici-pubescentis, has an elongated, oblong, flattened body, with four short legs, provided with a few bristle-like hairs, and end- ing in a stalked sucker, by aid of which the mite is enabled to walk over smooth, hard surfaces. The body is square at the end, with a slight médian indentation, and four long bristles of equal length. They remained motionless in the groove on the barb of the feather, and when removed seemed very inert and sluggish. The male (Plate 13, fig. 3) is a most singular form, its body being rudely ovate, with the head sunken between the fore legs, which are considerably smaller than the second pair, while the third pair are twice as large as the second pair, and directed backwards, and the fourth pair are very small, not reaching the extremity of the body, which is deeply cleft, and supports four long bristles on each side of the cleft, while other bristles are attached to the legs and body, giving the créature a haggard, unkempt appearance. The génital armature i& situated between the largest or third pair of legs. A preced- ing stage of this mite, which may be called the pupa, is repre- sented on Plate 13, fig. 2. It (ail the figures of this sarcoptid being drawn to one scale by Prof. A. M. Edwards, and magnified one hundred and fifteen diameters) looks somewhat like the adult, the body being shorter and broader, but without any génital armature. We figure on Plate 13, figs. 8 and 9, greatly en- larged, a most remarkable mite, cliscovered by New- port on the body of a larva of a wild bee, and described by him under the name of Heteropus ven- tricosus. Fig. 8, in the plate, represents the body Nf7 of the fully formed female. In this stage it reminds us Fis- of Demodex and the Tardigrades. After attaining this form its small abdomen begins to enlarge until it assumes a globu- lar form (Plate 13, fig. 9) and the mass of mites look like little beads. Mr. Newport was unable to discover the male, and thought that this mite was parthenogenous. Another singular mite is the Demodex folliculorum (Fig. 642), which was dis- covered by Dr. Simon, of Berlin, buried in the diseased folli- cles of the wings of the nose in man. It is a long, slender, worm-like form, with eight short legs, and in the larval State has six legs. This singular form is among the lowest and668 ACARINA. most degradêd of the order of Arachnids. It will be seen that the adult Demodex retains the elongated, worm-like appear- ance of the larvæ of the higher mites, such as Typhlodromus. This is an indication of its low rank, and hints of a close rela- tionship to the Tardigrades. Tardigrada Doyère. (Arctisca). The Tardigrades, or Bear animalcules, referred by some to the worms, were consid- ored as mites by O. F. Müller in 1785, and a species was de- scribed by him under the name of Acarus ursellus. They hâve also been referred to the Rotatoria by Dujardin, and were, by Schultze, considered as parasitic Entomostraca allied to Ler- næa. With Müller we would consider them as insects belonging to the Aca- rina, and venture, after studying Clapa- rède’s admirable work, “Studien an Acariden,” containing an account of the genus Myobia, to consider the Tar- digrades as a family of mites. In form, as indicated by the accompanjûng figures, copied from Doyère’s valuable memoir, they are essentially mites, and allied in form to Demodex and He- teropus, though in their internai organi- Fig. 643. zation difiering from ail other insects in being true hermaphrodites. Müller observed that they moulted their skins. The mouth is adapted for sucking, with style-like mandibles like those of Myobia. There are two ocelli, and the worm-like body is cylindrical, consisting of four thoracic segments behind the head, bearing four pairs of short, thick legs, ending in three or four claws (in these characters reminding us of the Peripatus, a worm with a large, fleshy Explanàtion of Plate 13.—Fig. 1, Dermaleichus pid-pubescentis Pack., fe- male. Fig. 2, young male. Fig. 3, adult male. Fig. 4, larva of Typhlodromus pyri Scheuten (after Scheuten). Fig. 5, larva of another species of Typhlodromus (after Scheuten). Fig. 6, Cheyletus seminivorus Pack. Fig. 7, Sarcoptes scabiei DeGeer (after Gervais). Fig. 8, Heteropus ventricosus Newport, fully formed fe- male. Fig. 9, gravid female of the same (after Newport). Fig. 10, Ixodes bovis Riley. Fig. 11, Ixodes unipunctata Pack. Ail the figures are enlarged.H. 13: MITES AND TECKS.LINGUATULINA. 669 leg-like process attached to the sides of each ring of the body and ending in a pair of claws). In size they are microscopie and live in standing water among plants and like the Rotatoria revive after being apparently dead and dried up. They were called Tardigrades from their excessively slow motions. The young isborn with itsfull complé- ment of legs, and moults several times before arriving at maturity. Milnesium tardigradum Schrank (Fig. 643, £, mouth-parts ; b, alimen- tary canal ; ov, ovary) is a fifth of a line long ; while Emydium testudo Doyùre (Fig. 644, magnified one hun- dred and twenty times) is another European species. Macrobiotus America- nus Pack, lias been discovered in Maine by Rev. W. R. Cross. Linguatulina. Y. Ben. These remarkably worm- like mites in the adult state inhabit the nostrils and frontal sinuses of dogs and wolves, and more rarely of horses and sheep. The larvæ, which are like low mites in form, are provided with boring horny jaws and two pairs of small feet armed with sharp, rétractile claws. They live in the liver of various animais, where they become encysted, passing through a sort of pupa state. The most common species is here represented (Fig. 644a, Pentastoma tœnioides Rudolphi, from Verrill). The male is .08 inch, and the female, which is oviparous, three Fig. 644 a or £our inches long. It sometimes infests man, living in the early otages encysted in the liver and lungs. In Egypt P. constrictum Siebold is occasionally fatal. Pycnogonidæ Latr. Marine, atracheate mites, with pal pi, clielæ and four pairs of long legs, into which the stomach sends long cæca. Pycnogonum pdagicum and Nymphon yrossipes are types of the group.670 MYRIOPODA. SUB-ÇLASS III. MYRIOPODA. The Myriopods are readily known by their long, cylindrical or somewhat flattened bodies, which are composed of from ten (counting tke head as one) to over two hundred rings. The head is free from the rest of the body, and is much like that of insects, while the thoracic rings are scarcely distinguishable, either in form or the character of their appendages, from the numerous abdominal rings, so that the head, instead of being soldered to the thorax as in the spiders, is here free, while the thorax is merged in the abdomen. The head of Cermatia shows how closely the highest Myrio- pod agréés with the insects. The few (sixteen) segments composing the body (counting the head as one) ; the large compound eyes, the long filiform antennæ, and well developed palpi, farther show the close relationship of this form to the insects. The habits of this genus also remind us of the spi- ders, as they are predaceous and are said to leap after their prey. In the Chilopod Myriopods the mouth-parts are of the same number, and follow each other in the same order as in the insects. Thus in advance of the mouth there are first the ocelli, and immediately behind them the antennæ ; behind the mouth are the mandibles, the maxillæ with their palpi, and the labial palpi. As each of these jointed organs is reprc- sented by an elemental ring we hâve four segments in the head. In the embryo of Julus the rudiments of the first pair of legs are soon aborted, and thus the first thoracic ring bears no legs in adult life. The legs are composed of a coxa, a fémur, a tibia and a tarsus, as in the higher insects. As shown by Newport the nervous, digestive, respiratory and reproductive Systems very closely resemble those of the larvæ of insects, as does the external form of these animais. Newport States that the nervous System of Myriopods ap- proaches nearer, in the simplicity of its formation, to that of the Annelids than that of the larvæ of insects. “In the Chilopoda it has the form of a double cord connected by largeMYRIAPODA. 671 ganglia in each segment, as in most of the Annelida, Crusta- cea and Insecta ; but in the vermiform Chilognatha, which former researches hâve proved to me are most nearly con- nected to the Annelida, the two parts of this double cord, are so closely united laterally as to appear like a single cord that gives off a multitude of small nervous trunks at its sides throughout its whole length, but without distinct ganglionic enlargements at their origin.” The brain is “ composed of at least four pairs of ganglia.” The digestive System comprises the long, tubular salivary glands, of which two are found on each side of the œsophagus and stomach, opening by a long excretory duct into the mouth ; and Professor Leidy has described two others which are placed on each side of the œsophagus, and are pyriform, con- glomerate, and cellular in structure. Also the long intestinal canal which is much as described in the higher insects ; while, as in Julus, according to Leidy, “at the termination of the proventriculus, there open two biliary tubes, and from it, sur- rounding the commencement of the ventriculus, is suspended a broad, white, opaque, reticulated band, apparently composed like the reta adiposa of insects.” The circulatory System is of a much lower type than in insects, and in Julus it approaches, according to Newport, by its rudimentary development that of the worms. The vascular System consists of a dorsal vessel, or heart, with very numerous separate chambers, almost equal to the segments of the body, which connects with another System of vessels lying on the under side of the body between the alimentary canal and the nervous cord. This plexus of vessels thus forms “a vascular collar around the anterior part of the alimentary canal.” “At each constriction of the heart in the Julidœ, between two chambers, there are two transverse latéral orifices, as in In- sects,” which Newport supposes to be either the terminations of délicate veins, or simple apertures admitting the blood from the venous sinuses in the body. The tracheary System is much as in the six-footed insects, and the stigmata hâve the same relative position, but are placed on the alternate segments of the body. In the Chilopoda the sexual System is much as in the six*672 CHILOPODA. footed insects, and the orifices are placed at the end of the body. The ovary is a long single tube, which opens in the last ring of the body ; while in the lower suborder, Chilognatha, there is only a single long ovarian tube, provided with two short oviducts which open on the third segment of the body from the head. The male organs in the Chilopods are much more complicated than in the other Myriopods, and the two or three, or even the single testicular tube, open on the end of the body, while in the Chilognaths, such as Julus, there are fcwo testes which lead out by a vas deferens to the orifice situ- ated on the third thoracic ring. The order is divided into two* suborders, L e., the Chilopoda and Chilognatha of Latreille. CHILOPODA. This group is characterized by each ring being simple and not divided into subsegments, and bearing but a single pair of feet, while the head is divided into two régions, one placed before the mouth, the other behind the mouth. The sexual outlet is situated at the end of the body. This suborder is the highest, as it contains those Myriopods which hâve the fewest segments to the body*, thus approaching the six-footed insects and spiders. They are active, rapacious, in their habits, and by the division of the head into the two régions, movable on each other, they can almost emulate the insects in their powers of seizing their prey. As stated by Professor Wood, their highly organized muscular and nervous System, the compactness of their intestinal apparatus, and the length and power of their legs, ail betoken habits of great activity ; whilst the formidable nature of their mandibles, and the sharp spines, both latéral and terminal, with which their feet are armed, fit them for predatory warfare. Thus it will be seen that the Chilopods are the more animal, while the Chilognaths are the more végétative ; this is due to the greater concentration of the body headwards, and the more compact, build of the body behind the head. * The larvæ of this group may hâve as many as six or eight pairs of legs when. they leave the egg, while the young Chilognaths hâve only three. (Rolle-taii.)LITHOBIIDÆ. 67a It is probable that the Centipedes and their allies appeared at a much later period in the earth’s history than the Chilog- n.aths, as the earliest form of the présent suborder known to us- is the Geophilus proavus* of Germar, from the Jurassic rocksy whilst the oldest Myriopod, one of the Julidœ, is, according to Dawson, found in the lower Carboniferous rocks of Nova Scotia, and Dr. Anton Dohrn has recently described a Julus from the coal formation of Gerinany. Cermatidæ Leach. This group is characterized by having only sixteen rings to the body, while the legs and antennæ hâve more numerous joints than usual. The head is large, very free from the body, with compound eyes, as in the six-footed in- sects, and long spiny palpi, while the tergites, or scuta, are but eight in number, and there are nine pairs of spiracles. The female ovipositor is forceps-like, while the corresponding male appendages are style-like. The species are the most gaily colored of the order, being striped along the body and banded on the legs. Cermatia for- ceps Rafinesque is greenish-brown, with three longi- tudinal stripes of deep green. Lithobiidæ Newport. In this and the remain- ing families of this suborder the antennæ are short, and the eyes simple and sometimes wanting. In the présent family there are fifteen tergites, and the antennæ are longer than in the succeeding group. In Lithobius the antennæ are forty-jointed, and Fig. 645. the head is broad and fiat. The species of this genus attack: earth-worms, grappling with them for several hours, and after* killing them, suck their blood. They.will, in confinement, de- stroy each other. Their bite is poisonous to small articulâtes.. The European L. fofficatus, according to Newman (“Ento~ mologist'' 1866, iii, p. 342) is preyed upon by Proctotrupes calcar of Haliday. Lithobius Americanus Newport (Fig. 645) is a widely diffused species, and erroneously passes by the name of Ear-wig. It is found everywhere, under sticks and about manure-heaps, where it feeds upon insects and wonns. * Since shown by Prof. Marsh to be an Annelid (Ischyracanthus). 43874 CHILOPODA. The genus Bothropolys of Wood, differs in having small, almost round punctiform excoriations arranged in three or four sériés on the coxa. The B. multidentatus of Newport is found in the Eastem United States, and is recognized by having from tliirty-two to thirty-seven ocelli on each side of the head. Scolopendridæ Leach. The Centipede is the type of this family. There are from twenty-one to twenty-tbree feet-bear- ing segments, with few or no ocelli, while the last pair of feet are thickened and generally spinous. This genus comprises the most gigantic of ail Myriapods, Scolopendra gigantea Linn. from the East Indies, being nine inches long. S. héros Girard is our largest species, and is found in the Southern States. The bite of the Centipede is dangerous ; the poison is conveyed from two glands, one in each of the large fangs or first pair of legs. The genus Scolopocryptops differs in having no ocelli, and twenty-three feet-bearing seg- ments, while the antennæ are seventeen-jointed. S. sexspinosa Say (Fig. 646) is common about Philadelphia, and is found in Iowa ; it is deep orange, with yellow, somewhat compressed feet, with three spines on each of the last pair of feet. Wood describes the manner of moulting Fig. 646. in ^is species. The skin had been crowded back so as to cover only the last two or three rings. The cast skin contains the skin of the head and ail its appendages, even to the maxillæ and maxillary palpi. The anterior portion of the skin was so torn as to show that the process of shedding proba- bly began by the créature’s withdrawing its head from its case, and then thrusting it out between some of the anterior sterna, completing the process by pushing the skin back with its legs, and aiding them by a peculiar wriggling motion. The exuvia had most of the posterior segments entire, showing that the occupant had been withdrawn from it like a hand from a glove.” Wood also States that the female guards her young-bv laying on her side, and then coiling her body passes them along by aPAUROPODIDÆ. 675 u rapid cilia-like action of her feet ; ” thus arranging them sat- isfactorily to herself. Geophilidæ Leach. These Myriapods are yery long and slender, with from thirty to two hundred segments, each formed of two complété, but unequal subsegments, and bearing but a single pair of feet. There are no ocelli ; the antennæ are fourteen-jointed, and the anal feet are short and style-like. In Mecistocephalus the “ cephalic segment,” or anterior part of the head is more than twice as long as broad, while in Geophilus the same région of the head is square. M. fulvus Wood is fulvous, polished, with a light orange head ; according to Wood it is most often found under the inner bark of decaying logs of the locust tree. Geophilus cephalicus is an unu- sually broad species found near Philadelphia. G. bipuncticeps Wood (Fig. 647) is found in the Western States and Sonora. In Strigamia the cephalic segment is small, short, and generally somewhat triangular. S. bothriopus Wood is a bright red robust species, and inhabits Philadelphia. S. chionopliila Wood is a aiminutive species, being only three-fourths of an inch long ; it is found far north, at Fort Simpson, on the Red River of the North. The largest spe- cies known is S. epileptica Wood from Oregon, which is five and a half inches long. The last pair of male feet are represented by Wood to be antenniform, those of the female being small, short, and preserving the usual shape of the leg. This is an interesting instance of the antero- posterior symmetry of these animais, here more strongly marked than usual. Pauropodidæ Lubbock. The sole member of this family is the Pauropus, which Sir John Lubbock discovered in England living among decaying leaves. “The body is composed of ten segments, including the head, and is convex, with scattered hairs ; there are nine pairs of legs, and the antennæ are five- jointed, bifid at the extremity and bearing three long jointed676 CHILOGNATHA. appendages.” The two species, P. Huxleyi and P. peduncula• tus of Lubbock are white, and about one-twentieth of an inch in length. Lubbock regards this remarkable forai as a “con- necting link between the Chilopods and Chilog- naths, and also as bridging over to a certain extent the great chasm which séparâtes them from other articulata.” No tracheæ could be detected. The six-footed young (Fig. 648) had the first pair of legs attached to the first seg- ment behind the head, the two other pairs to the foliowing one. The resemblance of Pauro- pus to those Poduræ, such as Achorutes, in which the “spring” is very short, is certainly Fig. 648. remarkable. We may, therefore, consider the Pauropus as a connecting link between the Myriopods and the Neuroptera. P. Lubbockii Pack., was found at Salem, Mass. CHILOGNATHA. In this division of the Myriopods the body is divided into nu mérous segments, each furnished with two pairs of short legs, and the antennæ are short, with but few joints. They are the lowest insects, and in Julus, with its large number of rings of the same form, we hâve a good illustration of the végétative répétition of the zoological éléments, or segments, composing the body, which is the reverse of what obtains in the cephalized honey bee, for instance, and reminds us strikingly of the Worms. In the genus Brachycybe, a remote ally of Polydesmus, we are strongly reminded of some crus- taceans, such as the Isopods, and the posterior end of the body of this Myriopod, in the broad latéral expansions of the segments, even recalls the tail of a trilobite. Wood States tliat the eyes are frequently absent, and when présent they are generally numerous and collected in patches near the base of the antennæ. The long, cylindrical-bodied Julus is the typical form of the suborder, while the flattened dilated Polydesmus is a more aberrant form. The mouth-parts are either, as in Julus, formed for feedingPOLYDESMIDÆ. 677 tm decaying vegetable matter, or tube-like, as in Brachycybe and allies ; one pair of maxiltæ are wanting. Glomeridæ Leach. In this group the eyes are arranged in a linear sériés, and the antennæ are placed on the front of the head. The body is half-cylindrical, short and plump, with from twelve to thirteen segments. The head is large and free, with the first thoracic ring small, while the last abdominal ring is large and shield-shaped. The génital openings in both sexes are situated just behind the insertion of the second pair of limbs. In Glomeris the body consists of twelve rings and seventeen pairs of limbs, while in Sphœrotherium the body is made up of thirteen rings and twenty-one pairs of feet. The species are exotic, Glomeris marginata Latreille being found in Europe, and the Sphærotheria in the tropics. Polydesmidæ Leach. In this group the body is much flat- tened, the sterna overarching the scuta, to which they are closely cemented, and the scuta are furnished with latéral laminæ. “The head is large and massive, the absence of eyes and the small antennæ point to a state of low development of the spécial senses. The female genitalia are placed in the third segment, just posterior to the second pair of legs. They are generally more or less hidden within the body ; the maie organs are situated in the seventh segment, replacing the eighth pair of legs. They generally project very prominently from the body.” The young hâve three pairs of legs, on the 2d, 4th and 5th rings. In Polydesmus the body is much flattened, with broad latéral expansions to the rings. Polydesmus Cana- densis Newport is deep brown, with pubescent scarcely clavate antennæ ; each of the scuta has eight scales, arranged in a double sériés. The male appendages Fig. 649. are hairy, with a curved terminal spine of moderate length. The female appendages “consist of a pair of bodies shaped somewhat like the crest of a helmet. Along their free margin is an opening surmounted by a double sériés of teeth-like pro- cesses. It is found in the Northern and Middle States. P. erythropygus Brandt (Fig. 649) inhabits the Middle and678 CHILOGNATHA. Western States. ïn Polyxenus the body is short, clothed with short penicillate scales, and there are thirteen pairs of feet. (These scales, or hairs, as has been remarked to us by Mr. Sanborn, are remarkably like the hairs of Dermestes, and this homology is another proof that the Myriapods are an order of the class Insecta.) P. fasciculatus Say is about a tenth of an inch in length. It has been detected by Mr. Sanborn under the bark of trees near Boston, and I hâve found it in Salem in the same situations, and also at Nantucket. Julidæ Leach. Thousand Legs. Millepedes. This group embraces the typical species of this suborder. The body is alrnost perfectly cylindrical, with the sternum greatly reduced in size, those of the posterior subsegments being alrnost absent, while the tergum is greatly in excess. The head is large, with often rather long and filiform antennæ, and simple eyes arranged in variously shaped patelles near the base of the antennæ. In Juins the body is slender and seldom more than three inches long; the sides of the first scutum are produced in the female, while the antennæ are long and filiform. Wood says the males are “farther distinguished by a peculiar altera- tion of the first pair of feet, which are transformed into a pair of very large, thick organs,” which probably serve as clasping appendages. Juins is found commonty under sticks, etc. It is long, cylindrical, hard, with numerous feet, short and weak, attached to the under surface of the body nearly in the middle of the abdomen. The antennæ are short and filiform. They crawl rather slowly, and at rest curve the body into a ring. They live on vegetable substances, or eat dead earth-worms or snails. “In the spring the female deposits her eggs in masses of sixty or seventy, in a hole excavated for the purpose under the ground ; after three weeks or more the young make their appearance.” (Van der Hoeven.) Newport States that when hatched the young Julus consists of eight rings, including the head. The body of the embryo, seen from above, is com- pressed and wedge-shaped, being broadest at the second and third segments. For many days (seventeen) after hatching, the embryo is surrounded by a membrane which Newport re-JULIDÆ. 679 gards as the analogue of the amnion, or vitelline membrane, of the vertebrates. This membrane is at the end of the body connected with another, which in the unburst shell is external to the “ amnion,” and lines the interior of the shell. New- port compares this with the chorion of vertebrates. Before the amnion is thrown off the embryo moults, and six new segments appear (Fig. 650, 5), and minute tubercles bud out on the under surface of the six and seventh rings, as at a. The new segments are always developed be- tween the last and penultimate ones,* as has been observed in the worms, the crustacea, the spiders, and as I hâve observed in the em- bryo of the Dragon-fly. In the young Julus no legs grow out on the third segment from the head, but the outlet of the oviduct of the female is placed on this segment. The male organs find their outlet on the sixth ring from the head. Julus Canadensis Newp. is brownish chestnut, ornamented with a black dorsal line, and a latéral row of black dots. The body consists of fiffcy-three segments. It is found in the Northern States and Canada. J. multistriatus Walsh (Fig. 651) inhabits the Western States. The genus Spirobolus has a much larger, thicker body, and a ratlier small head, with short antennæ, often lying partially hidden in a groove in the side of the head. Spirobolus margi- natus Say is deep brown, annulated with red, and consists of from fifty-three to fifty-seven segments. The male appendages are described by Wood as formed of two outer parts, and a connecting yoke-like piece. To this family without much doubt, as Dr. Dawson States, belongs the Xylobius sigillariœ of Dawson (Plate 1, fig. 4) from the Lower Carboniferous rocks Fig 6B1- of Nova Scotia. This, in its short, thick antennæ, and small head, rather approaches Spirobolus than Julus, though the antennæ are shorter, while the twelve ocelli represented in Dr. Dawson’s figure (Air-Breaihers of the Coal Period. Montreal, *In the Chilopoda the new segments are intercaiated between the old ones.680 CHILOGNATHA. 1863. Plate vi, fig. 58-61) are arranged much as in S. margi- nattes. It differs remarkably, however, in the raised posterior margin of the segments, giving a serrate outline to the body. In this respect it seems to combine the characters of the prés- ent family and that of Spirostrephon, a genus in many respects intermediate between the Polydesmidœ and the Siphonantia. Four spiracles are represented on the tenth to the thirteenth segments from the head. The genus Spirostrephon is in many respects intermediate Fetween this and the succeeding family, the sterna being soft, as in the Siphonantia. S. Gopei Pack, was found by Mr. C. Cooke in Mammoth Cave. Siphonantia Brandt. In the sucking Myriopods (Sugantia of Brandt) we meet with the lowest, most worm-like forms of the sub-class. The. head is very small and concealed beneath the prothoracic ring. The parts of the mouth are fused and nnited into a sucking tube for the imbibition of fluids. The oyes are either présent or absent, and the scuta, or tergites, may be prolonged laterally into laminæ which afford protec- tion only to the back and flanks, the central part of the abdo- men being soft. The feet are small and hidden beneath the I>road body, while the male appendages are placed on the seventh segment. In Octoglena the eight eyes are arranged in two converging rows. O. bivirgata Wood is brown, with a reddish stripe on each side, with about forty-five segments to the body. In Brachycybe the rostrum is acute, much shorter than the antennæ, while the body is broad and flattened. Brachycybe Leeontei Wood inhabits Georgia, and has long latéral expansions to the tergites. PERIPATIDEA. This group is perhaps équivalent and allied to the Myrio- poda, with some affinities to the Tardigrades. Peripatiis has animérous pores or stigmata, from which fine tracheæ arise. The body and appendages are not jointed, the thirty pairs of legs ending each in two claws. B. Edwardsii inhabits Venezuela.ENTOMOLOGICAL CALENDAR. Tms calendar applies mostly to the New England States, where the appearances t)f the insects here enumerated hâve been recorded. It should be borne in mind that the season of New York City is about two weeks in advance of that of Boston, and that of Virginia and Illinois about a month or six weeks earlier. It is designed to be of spécial use to farmers and gardeners as indicating the times of appear- ance of injurious insects. When only the generic name is given several species appear simultaneously. The reader in noticing an insect mentioned here can tum to the index and find in the body of the work an account of its habits. MARCH. Bombus, queens; a few Ichneumons and Chalcids; Vanessa; Grapta; a few specimens of Noctuidæ, Tortricidæ and Tineidæ; Ephippophora caryana; Canker worm, females and males; Anthomyia; Tachina; Chironomus; Anophiles; Bibio; Cliionea; Valga, on the snow; Trichocera hiemalis; Cicindelæ and Carabidæ; Dytiscidæ, and otherwater beetles; Aquatic Hemiptera; CapniaandTæniopteryx; Boreus. APRIL. lst-15th.—Formica; Brephos; Adela, on willows; Aphodius; Ptinus fur; Der- mestes; Anthrenus; Attagenus; Epuræa; Ips; Ellychnia; Larva and female of Meloë on bodies of wild bees and wasps ; Ceuthophilus. 16th-30th.—Polyommatus; Lycæna; Thecla; Coddlingmoth (Carpocapsa) ; mos- quitoes and larvæ; Bombylius; Burying beetles; Euryomia Inda; Buprestids; Ghalcophora Virginica; Castings of Saperda candida; Cylindrical bark borers {Tomicus, Xylographa); Hylurgus; Pissodes strobi; Hylobius pales; Phytocoris. MAT. lst-15th.—Xylocopa, Ceratina, Osmia, Andrena and Halictus nesting; Collas; Argynnis Bellone; Melitæa Myrina; Chrysophanus Phlœas; Clisiocampa larva hatchingout; Scoliopteryx; Drasteria; Coremia; Gooseberry Pempeüa; Tipulidæ; Hessian-fly and Wheat-midge; Cecidomyia; Syrphus; Eristalis; Squash beetle; Plum weevil; Hister; Clerus; Elater; Limonius; Cratonychus; Meloë; Calli- grapha; Œdipoda corallina; Tragocephala infascata, viridifasciata; Libellula; Hemerobius. 18th-31st.—Cynips ; Selandria rosæ and cerasi, laying eggs; Strawberry Emphy- tus larva; Papilio Turnus; Pontia oleracea; Melitæa Phaëton, larva; Argynnis; Thanaos; Hesperia; Alypia octomaôulata; Sphinx; Ceratomia 4-comis; Sesia; Hyphantria textor; Arctia; Leucarctia; Agrotis and eut-worm s; Hypena humuli, hop-vine worm ; Grapholitha and other leaf-rolling larvæ on apple and pear; Vine Penthina larva; Garpet moth; Chrysops; Geotrupes; Haltica on turnip, tomato, «ncumbers, etc ; Apion ; Asemum mœstum ; Gastrophysa cœruleipennis ; Galleruca (681 )682 ENTOMOLOGICAIi CAUSNDAB, JUNEt lst-15th.—Pri8tophora identidem, cranberry fly larva ; Nematus ventricosu% larva; Cynips; Enrytoma hordei instraw; Pteromalus; Abia, larva; Papilio As» terjas; Eudamus Tityrus; Smerinthus; Abraxas ribearia; Scotosia undulata; Antithesia pruniana, larva; larvæ of Lithocolletis salicifoliella, juglandiella; Nep- ticula villosella; Cranberry Anchylopera larva; Strawberry Anchylopera larva; Grape Pterophorus larva; Anisota pellucida; lcthyura; Tabanus; Tephritis; Oscinis; Laphria; Asilus; Bot-flies; June beetle, Lachnostema; Areodes lani géra; Pelidnota punctata; Serica sericea; Apion Sayi; Macrodactylus subspin osus, Rose chafer; Dicerca divaricata; Chrysobothris fulvoguttata and Harrisii Alaus oculatus; Attelabus analis and bipunctulatus ; Rhynchites bicolor; Arrhen odes septentrionis; Telephorus; Corymbites; various fireflies, Photinus and Photuris; Colorado potato beetle; Coccinella; Pemphigus vitifoliæ; Apple bark louse, Aspidiotus conchiformis ; Cicada rimosa ; (Edipoda Carolîna; Panorpa. 18th-30th.—Megachile nesting; Pristiphora grossulariæ, larva; Neonympha Eury- tris; Grapta Progne, larva; Cynthia cardui, larva, Atalanta larva; Limenitis Missippus; Nymphalis Ephestion; Melitæa Phaëfcon, Pharos, Harrisii; Satyrus- Nephele; Actias Luna; Eudryas grata, larva; Trochilium tipuliforme; Ægeriaexit- iosa ; Platysamia Cecropia ; Telea Polyphemus ; Hypenabumuli ; Desmia maculalis; Crambus; Asopia costalis; Gooseberry Pempelia larva; Philarapelus; Chæro- campa; Halesidota; Datana ministra; Eacles imperialis; Citheronia regalis; Hyperchiria Io ; Loxotænia rosaceana ; Carpocapsa pomonella, larva ; Limacodes LocustDepressaria larva; Strobisia levipedella; Coleophora; Tinea, clothes-moth; Cerura borealis; Bryophila; Pterophorus larvæ; Sarcophaga; Anthomyia raphani, radishfly; Scolytus pyri ; Cerasphorus cinctus ; Monohammus titillator; Anomala varians; Fidia viticida; Desmocerus pallia tus; Hispa suturalis; Lytta cinerea; Grape Cœliodes larva; Squash bug, Coreus tristis; Lecanium quercifex; Chinch bug; Thrips; Cicada 17-decim; Tettigoma rosæ; Chrysopa, Phryganea; Neuronia. JULT. lst-l?th. — Wasps nesting; Pine Lophyrus larvæ; Melitæa Harrisii; Hesperia Hobomoc; Satyrus Alope; Deilephila; Darapsa; Harrisina Americana; Alypia octomaculata; Phragmatobia rubricosa ; Pyrrharctia Isabella; Euphanessa; Ha- dena arctica; Catocala; Dahlia Gortyna larva, boring the stems; Phlox worm; Ennomos subsignaria, Angerona crotataria and manv other Phalænidæ: Phycita nebulo, and many other Pyralidæ and Tortricidæ; Simulium; Œstrus; Ortalis flexa; Acinia; Limnobia; Monohammus scutellatus; Trichodes humeralis; Lep- tura Canadensis; Buprestis fasciatus; Grape Baridius; Beduvius; many Libel- lulæ. 16th-31st.—Pristiphora grossulariæ; Tremex Columba; Heteropterus margin- atus; Polyommatus Comyntas; Thecla falacer; Danais, larva; Argynnis Idalia and Aphrodite; Ægeria cucurbitæ; Sphinx larvæ; Utetheisa bella; Iûthosia casta; Ichthynra albosigma; Clisiocampa; Lagoa crispata; Xyleutes robiniæ; Apatela Americana; Agrotis telifera, dévastator; Hypena humuli, 2d brood of larvæ; Bra- chytænia malana; Antithesia pruniana; Pterophorus; Coleophora; Nepticula;. Gracilaria; Elachista; Lema trilineata; Anthonomus prunicida ; Eumolpus aura- ous; Prionus laticollis; Orthosoma unicolor; Leptostylus; Monohammus marmo- ratus; Lucanus capreolus, dama; Clytus; Saperda; Osmoderma scabra; Cran berry Anthonomus ; Tettigonia fabæ ; Clastoptera. AUGÜST. lst-15th.-^Many bees and wasps; Crabronidæ; Nyssonidæ; Bembecidæ; Lai> ridæ; Sphex, Pompilns and other fossorial wasps ; Cimbex larva; Pelecinus and varions Chalcids and Proctotrypidæ ; Œceticus makes its cocoon; Gortyna zeæ; Agrotis subgothica; Plusia; Heliothis; Northern Army worm (Leucania) ; Nept»ENTOMOLOGI CAL, CALÜNDAR. 683 cula; Gelechia; Lyonetia; Phalænidæ and Noctuidæ ; Cranberry Antithesia; Saperda calcarata; Clytus; Tettigoniæ and many other Hemiptera, Grain Aphis and other Aphides ; Coccidæ ; Phymata erosa ; Œcanthus niveus ; Chloëaltis ; Acheta; Nemobius, and other grasshoppers. 16th-3lst.—Orgyia; larvæ of many moths and butterflies; Lycomorpha pholns; Apple Lithocolletis larva; Sac-beaiing Lyonetia larya ; Tomicus and other bark boring beetles ; Girdler Oncideres ; Psocidæ ; second brood of Chrysopa. SEPTEMBER. Antsswarm; Males and females of Bombus ; Nymphalis Disippe; Gastropacha Americana, larva; Limacodes, larva; Boll worm (larva); Zerene catenaria; Larvæ of varions Lithocolletis, Bucculatrix and other Tineids; Sciara larva; Carabidæ; Clytus pictus oviposits on locust; Meloë; Membracis bimaculata; Pemphigus rais' ing galls; Lachnus strobi. OCTOBER. Œceticus, and larvæ of varions Tineids; Ægeria pyri; Canker worm moth; Anisopteryx; Hibemia tiliaria ; Bdellia somnulentella ; Rhagium lineatum matures, but hibernâtes in its cell; Hemerobius, and larva. The Driver Ant, seep.lSL'GLOSSARY, Acuminate. Ending in a prolonged point. Anastomosing. Inosculating or running into each other like veins. Annulate. When a leg, antenna, etc., is suiTOunded by narrow rings of a dif- ferent color. Apodous. Footless. Areolate. Furnished with small areas; like a net work. Aristate. Furnished with a hair. Aurélia. Ancient terni for pupa. Blastoderm. The primitive skin of the embryo. Blastoaermic cells. The cells forming the blastoderm. Bullate. Blistered. Calcarated. Armed with spurs. Cancellate. Crossed by Unes going at right angles to each other. Capitate. Ending in a knob. Carina. An elevated keel-like ridge. Carpus. The pteristigma. Cellule. A little space surrounded by veins ou the wing. Chela. Terminal portion of a foot, with a movable latéral toe, like the claw of a crab or mandibles of arachnids. Chrysnlis. The pupa of Lepidoptera. Concolorous. Of the same color with another part. Ciliate. Fringed. [ashes. Cinereous. Ash color; color or wood Cingula. A colored band. Clavate. Club-shaped. Coarctate. Contracted ; compact. Confluent. Running into each other. Connote. United. Cordate. Heart shaped. Coriaceous. Leather-like, thick, tongh, and somewhat rigid. Corneous. Of a horny substance; re- sembling horn. Crenate. Scalloped, with rounded teeth. Cupreous. Coppery in color. Dentated. Furnished with teeth. Depressed. Flattened down. Dilated. Widened, expanded. Dimidiate. Half round. Discal. Relatingto the disk; discoidal. Edentulous. Destitute of teeth. Emarginate. Notched; terminatingin an acute notch at tip. Entire. (Wings) with a simple, not in- dented, edge. Epistoma. That part of the face between the front and labrum. Eruca. The larva. Excurved. Curved outwards. Ex sert ed. Protruded; opposed to in* closed. Exuvia. Cast-off skin. Fades. Appearance, aspect. Falcate. Sickle-shaped. Fascia. A stripe broader than a line. Fauna. An assemblage of animais peo- pling a région or country. Fenestrated. Marked with transparent spots surrounded by a darker color, like window panes. Ferruginous. Rust-colored. Filiform. Thread-like. Flavescent. Somewhat yellow. Flexuous. Almost zigzag. Foliaceous. Leaf-like. Fordpated. Forcens-like. Fovea. A more or less rounded déprés- sion. Free. Unrestrained in articulated move- ment; not soldered at the points of contact. Front. The fore-face, bounded by the eyes, the vertex, and often beneath by the epistoma, or clypeus. Fuliginous. Of the color of dark smoke. Fulvo-œneous. Brazen, with a tinge of brownish yellow. ‘ [deer. Fulvous. Tawny ; color of the common Furcated. Forkeu. Fusco-testaceous. Dull reddish brown. Fuscous. Dark brown; approaching black. Fusiform. Snindle-shaped; gradually tapering at ëach end. Ganglion. A centre of the nervous Sys- tem, containing nerve cells, and re- ceiving and giving out impressions. Geminate. Arranged in pairs ; twin. Gemmiparous. Asexual génération by new individuals arising as buds from the body of the parent. Glabrous. Smooth; opposed to hairy, downy, villous. Gloucous. Gray; bluishgreen. Ramule. A little hook. Hastate. Halberd shaped. Haustellate. Furnished with a proboscis or tongue-like mouth. Hexapodous. Provided with six feet. Hirsute. Clothed with shaggy hairs. Hyaline. Transparent; of the color of water. Hypostoma. The clypeus in diptera. Incrassated. Thickened; swelled out on some particular part. (685)686 GLOSSARY. In/umated. Clouded. Infuscated. Darkened with a blackish tinge. Interrupted. Suddenly stopped. Involuted. Rolled inwards spirally. Jrrorated. Freckled ; sprinkled with atoms. LamélUform. Sheet or leaf-like. Limbate. When a disk is surrounded by a margin of a different color. Lamina. A plate or sheet-like piece. Linear. Like a line. Lineated. Provided with line-like marks. Mandibulate. Fumished with mandi- bles; opposed to haustellate. Marginated. Surrounded by an elevated or attenuated margin. Membranaceous. Thin ; skinny, and semi-transparent like parchment. Mucronate. Ending in a Sharp point. Mutic. (Jnarmed. Nymph. Old name for pupa. Obcordate. Inversely heart-shaped. Obovate. Inversely ovate; the smaller end tumed towards the base. Obsolète. Not distinct; or almost lost to view. Obtected. Covered. Ochreous. Of a more or les s deep ochre color. Olivaceou8. Olive colored. Operculum. Alid; a small valvular ap- pendage. Oval. Egg-shaped. Ovate. More or less oval. Oviposition. The act of depositing eggs. Petiolated. Supported on a stem. Piceous. Pitchy, color of pitch; shining reddish black. Pilose. Clothed with pile, or dense down. Process. A projection. Produced. Drawn out; prolonged. Pruinose. Frosty. Pseudova. Unimpregnated eggs, which produce young, as in those laid by Virgin Aphides. Pubescent. Coated with very fine hairs, or down. Pulvérulent. Dusty. Punctured. Marked with numerous small impressed dots. Raptorial. Adapted for seizing prey. Eecurved. Curved backwards. Reniform. Kidney shaped. Reticulated. Marked like net work. Revolute, Rolled backwards. Rostmm. The beak or sucking mouth- parts in Hemiptera. Ru/escent. Somewhat reddish. Rufous. Reddish. Rugose. Wrinkled. Sanguineous. Blood-red. S cabrons. Rough like a file; with small raised dots. Scalloped. Edge marked by rounded hollows, without intervening angles. Sericeous. Having the surface with a silk-like gloss, usually from the prés- ence of minute, dense hairs. Serrafed. Like saw-teeth. Setaceous. Bristle-like. Sessile. Not stalked. Sinuated. Scooped out. Spinous. Armed with spines. Spurs. Stiff bristles, or spines, on the tibiæ. Stria. Aline usuallydepressed; some- times composed of punctures. Subaduncate. Somewhat hooked or curved. Subulate. Shaped like an awl. Sulcate. With groove-like excavations. Suture. A seam, or impressed line; usually between segments. Tawny. Fulvous; a pale dirty yellow. Teneral. A State of the imago‘(Neurop- tera) after exclusion from the pupa, m which it has not fully completed its coloring, clothing, etc. Tessellate. Spotted like a checker-board. Testaceous. Dull red ; brick color. Tomentose. Covered with fine matted hairs. Truncated. Cut squarely off. Tuberculose. Covered with tubercle-like prominences. Undnate. Hooked at the end. Unequal. Differing in size, or length. Unguiculate. Armed with a hook or nail. Valvule. A small valve-like process. Ventral. Relating to the under surface of the abdomen. Verticillate. Placed in whirls. Verriculate. With thickset tufts of par- allel hairs. Verrucose. Covered with wart-like prominences. Villose. Clothed with soft, rather long hairs. Vulva. Orifice of the oviduct. ABBREVIATIONS. Beauv., Beauvois. Boisd., Boisduval. Burm., Burmeister. Clem., Clemens. Dahlb., Dahlbom. Den., Dennis. Dej., Dejean. Erich., Erichson. Esch., Esch- oltz. Fabr., Fabricius. Frohl., Frohling. Grav., Gravenhorst. G. and R., Grote and Robinson. Guen., Guenée. Gyll., Gyllenhal. Hald., Haldeman. H. Sch., Herrich-Schaeffer. Hübn., Hübner. Latr., Latreille. Lee., Leçon te. Linn., Lin- næus. Mann., Mannerheim. Mels., Melsheimer. Qliv., Olivier. Pack., Packard. Sauss., Saussure. Schief., Schiefermüller. Schonh., Schônherr. St. Farg., St, Fargeau Tellk., Tellkampf. Walk., Walker. S, male; ?, female; ?,worker.INDEX Abdomen, 14. Abdominal legs, 21. Abia caprifoliura, 216. A. cerasi, 217. Abraxas ribearia, 321. Acanthoeheir armata, 657. Acanthosoma grisea, 546. Acaridæ 661. Acarina,,628, 631,638, 639,642,644,660,668. Acarus ursellus, 368. Achlysia, 661. Achorutes, 676. Achatodes zeæ, 311. Acidaliaenucleata,323. A. ni vos aria, 323. Acilius mediatus, 436. Acoloithus Americana, 282. Acraea violæ, 251. Acratus ftavipennis, 454. Acrocera, 395. Acrocinus longimanus, 497. Acronvcta aceris, 305. A. oblinita, 304. Acropnylla, 573. Acrydii, 559, 567. Acry ilium aleutaceum, 571. Aetias Azteca, 298. A. Luna, 234, 298. Ail lia Ridingçella, 348. Ad liges coccineus, 523. Adjlocera obtecfca, 460. Adalops hirtus, 439. Adranes cæcus, 422, 440. Ægeriadæ,277. Ægeria caudata, 278. Æ. exitiosa, 277. Æ. polistiformis, 278. Æ. pyri, 278. Æ. quinque-caudata, 279. Æ. tipuliforme, 279. Ægialites debilis, 475. Ægialitidæ, 475. Æschna, ovipositor of, 16. Æschna, 579, 581. Æ. clepsydra, 602. Æ. constricta, 602. Æ. héros, 604. Æ. juncea, 598. Agabus, 436. Agamie reproduction, 49. Agathidium seminulum, 439. Agenia acceptas, 173. A. brevis, 173. A. congruus, 173. Aglossa cuprealis, 329. A. pinguinalis, 329. Agrion, 599, 601, 602. Ovipositor of, 16. A. civile, 603. A. saucium, 603. Agrionina, 598, 603. Agriotes, 461. A. mancus, 461. Agriotypus armatus, 616. Agrotis, 243. A. Cochrani, 306, 308. A. devastator, 306. A. subgothica, 306. A. suffusa, 306. tessellata, 306. Air vesicles, 42. Alaus oculatus, 460. Aleochara, 423, 440,441. Aletia argillacea, 313. Aleurodes, 626. Aleuronia Westwoodii, 609, A. telifera, 306. A. Alimentary canal, 34. Allantus basilaris, 224. Allecula, 475. Allotria, 213. Alucita, 202. A. polydactyia, 387. Alydus eurinus, 546. Alypia octo-maculata, 281. Alyson oppositus, 162. Amara, 433. Amblychila, 429. Amblynotus, 212. American Silk-worm, 195. American Tent Caterpillar, 343. Ammophila arenaria, 171. A. cementar l ia, 171. A. Ilirsuta, 171. A. luctuosa, 171. A. sabulosa, 170,171. A.umaria, 171. Amnion, 678, 679. Amphicerus bicaudatus, 471. Amphidasys cognataria, 322. Amphizoa insolens, 435. Amphizoidæ, 434. Ampulex Sibirica, 166. Anagrus, 202. Anal cerci, 22. Anal forceps, 21. Anal plate, 30. Anaphes, 202. Anavete, 378. Anarta algida, 316. Anaspis, 476. Anax Junius, 603. Anehylopera fragariæ, 340. A. medlo- fasciana, 338. A. nubeculana, 338. A. ocellana, 338. A. spireæfoliana, 338. A. vacciniana, 338. Andrena, 141, 142, 143, 145, 146, 408. A. vicina, 144. Andrenetæ, 142. Andrenus marginicollis, 443. Angerona crocataria, 319. Angoumois Grain-moth, 350. Anisopteryx, 231. A. pometaria, 324. A. vernata, 200, 324, 325. Anisota rubicunda, 300. A. senatoria, 300. Anisotoma, 439. Anobium notatum, 47. A. paniceum, 131. Anomala varians, 455. Anomalon vesparum, 127,150,195. Anomis xylina, 313. Anomma arcens, 181. A. Burmeisterl, 181, 683. Anopheles quadrimacnlatns, 370. Anophthalmus Tellkampfli, 434. Anotia Bonnetii, 533. Antennæ, 26. Antennary segments, 20, 58. Antheræa Yama-maï, 296. £447. Antherophagus, 446. A. ochraceus, 131 (687)688 INDEX, Anthicidæ, 476. Anthicus, 476. Anthidium, 185. Anthocharis cardamines, hermaphro- dite, 46. Antbocoris insidiosus, 544. Anthoinyia, 131. A. brassicæ, 411. A. cep arum, 411. A. cunicularis, 411. A. rapbani, 411. A. urcana, 150. A. zeæ, 411, 410. Antlionomus cratægi, 487. A. prunicida, 487. A. quadrigibbus, 487. A. scutel- latus. 487. A. suturalis, 487. A. syco- phanta, 487. A. tessellatus, 487. Antnophagus cæsus ? 442. Anthophora, 29,141 206, 397. A. abrupta, 136. A. megachilis, 206. A. taurea, Anthophorabia, 114,135,136,202,206. A. megachilis, 131, 137. Anthrax, 131. Â. mono, 397. A. sinu- osa, 132, 140, 397. Anthrenus varius, 448. Anthribidæ, 53. Anthrobia Mammothia, 645. Antispila, 342. [333. Antithesia bipartitana, 333. A. pruniana, Ant lion, 611. Apatela American a, 304. Apathus, 131, 142. A. Ashtonii, 131. Aphidæ, 112, 517, 519. Aphides, 48, 50, 54, 161, 202, 378. Aphidius, 198,203,521. A. avenaphis, 198. A. triticaphis, 198. Aphis, 69,198,203,213,372,379. A. aceris, 521. A. avenæ, 522. A. brassicæ, 522. A. cerasi, 522. A. dianthi, 520. A. mali, 522. A. malifoliæ, 522. A. persicæ, 522. Aphis lion, 609, 611. Aphodius lime tarin s, 453. A. fossor, 453. Aphomia colonellaj 329. Aphrophora quadrinotata, 532. Aphrosylus, 403. Apiariæ, 115,147. Apion Sayi, 485. Apis mellifica, 117. Apochrysa, 79. Anoica pallida, 154,156. Apophyllus, 50, 211. Aporus fasciatus, 174. Apple fly, 386,414. Apple leaf crumpler, 331. Apple tree borer, 500. Arachnida, 104, 625, 632. Arachnids, 629, 630, 640, 643, 660. Aradus crenatus, 553. Aranea diadema, 193. Araneæ, 633. Araneina, 639, 644. Archegogryllus priscus, 564. Archetarbus rotundatus, 657. Archimulacris Acadica, 78. Archyptera, 24. Arctia, 239. A. Anna, 286. A. caja, 63. A. pudica, 284. A. virgo, 286. Arctians, 280. Arctisca, 667. Argas Persicns, 662. Argynnis Aphrodite, 253. A. Atlantis, 252. A. Bellona, 253. A. Diana, 253. A. Ida lia, 252. A. Montinus, 253. A. Mvrina, 253. Argyromiges qnercifoliella, 353. Argyroneta, 633. A. aquatica, 649. Arma spinosa, 547. Army worm, 77,196,197, 203, 305, 386, 4C7> Arthromacra. 475. Arthromere, 9,16. Arthropoda, 1,3, 6. Ascalaphus, 54, 612. A. hyalinns, 613. A*. macaronius, 613. Asclera, 476. Asemum moestum, 496. Asexual forms, 49. Ash, mountain, slug, 222. Asilidæ, 395. Asilus 362. A. sericeus, 396. Asopia costalis, 328. Asparagus beetle, 76,502. Aspatherium, 617. Aspidiotus, 50. A. conchiformls, 528. A. IlaiTisii, 530. Astata unicolor, 165. Asynapta, 378. Atax, 642, 661. A. Bonzi, 640. Athalia centifoliæ, 44. Athous, 461. A topa, 464. Atropos divinatorius, 589. A. pulsato- rius, 589. Attaci, 234. Atta clypeata, 186. Attagenus pellio, 448. Attacus, 235. A. Atlas, 296. A. AurotaT 297. A. Mylitta, 296. A. Perayi, 296. A. Yama-maï,296. Attelabus analis, 485. Attus, 194, 655. Augochlora punis, 143,156. Aulacizes mollipes, 532. Aulacodes nigriventris, 195. Aulax, 212. Bætisca, 595. Baëtis interpunctata, 595. Balaninus nasicus, 485. Baridius trinotatus, 491. B. sesostri 491. B. vestitus, 491. Bark lice, 11. Batrachedra salicipomonella, 352. Batrachidea cristata, 572. Batrachomyia, 406. Bat-ticks, 416, 418. Bdella longicomis, 660. Bdellidæ, 660. Bear animalcules, 668. Bed bug, 551. Bee killer, 396. Bee louse, 418. Bee moth, 332. Bee, venation of, 23. Belostoma, 80, 518. B. grisea, 537. B. Haldimanum, 537. Bembecidæ, 164. Bembex fasciata, 164. B. rostrata, 164* B. tarsata, 164. Bembidium, 422, 434. Beris, 392. “ Berna ” fly, 412. Berosus, 438. Bethylus fuscicornis, 2QL Bibio albipennis, 392. Bibionidæ, 39Ï. Bicho, 390. Biorhiza nigra, 211. Bird lice, 554. Bird sarcoptids, 642. Bird ticks, 416, 417. Bite of insects, 43. Bittacomorpha, 54. B. davipes, 384.INDEX. 68$ Bittacus, 54. B. pilicomis, 614. Black fly, 390. Blaps mortisaga, 473. Blastoderm, 55. Blastophaga grossorum, 207. Blatta, 194. B. Germanica, 481. B. ori- entalis, 576. Blattariæ, 575. Blattina, 576, 577. Blood, 37. Blue-bottle fly, 407, 408. Boarmia gnopharia, 322. Bolbocerus, 453. Bolbomyia, 392. Boletophagus comutus, 474. Bolitobius, 441. Bolitophila, 385. Bombardier beetle, 432. Bombus, 53, 54, 65, 130, 132,135,146,400. B. fervidus, 401. Bombus, head of, 30. Bombycidæ, 200, 234, 238, 283. Bombyliidæ, 395. Bombylius, 54,164, 397. Bombyx Huttoni, 295. B. mori, 293, 294, 295. B. neustria, 300. B. phœdima, 384. Bonvouloiria, 447. Boreus, 493, 583, 583, 614. B. brumalis, 615. B. nivoriundus, 615. Bostrichus, 471. Bot fly, 25, 403. Bothropolys multidentatus, 674. Botys citrma, 330. B. verticalis, 330. Brachinus fumans, 432. Brachyara, 392. Brachycybe, 676. B. Lecontei, 680. Bracliyderes, 408. Brachys, 459. Bracon, 197,198. Braconidæ, 197. Branchiæ, 41. Brathinus nitidus, 439. B. varicomis, 439. Brailla, 46, 360, 388. Braula caeca, 127, 419. Braulina, 418. Breeze-flies, 403. Brenthus septentrionalis, 485. Brephos infans, 316. Bristle tails, 622. Bruchidæ, 484. Bruchus fabi, 484. B. pisi, 484, 513. Buprestidæ, 159, 457. Buthus Carolinianus, 659. B. hirsutus, 660. Butterflies, hermaphroditism in, 238. Butterfly, venation of, 23. Butternut saw-fly, 224. Button-wood Tremex, 228. Byrrhidæ, 449. Byrrhus Americanus, 449. B. pillula, 449. Byrsocrypta, 523. Byturus unicolor, 448. Cabbage butterfly, 249. Cabbage maggoti 411. Caberodes metrocamparia, 320. Caddis or case-worm, 6, 615. Caddis-flies, 236. Caenis, 593. C. hilaris, 596. Calandra, 489. Callalucia vermiculata, 283. Callidinm antennatum, 496. Calligrapha Philadelphica, 509. C. scal- aris, 509.. Callimome, 212. Callimorpha Lecontei, 286. C. interrup*- to-marginata, 286. Callimosema scintillana, 337. Caliochlora chloris, 290. Callosamia Prometliea, 237, 298. Calosoma calidum, 431. C. scrutator, 431. Caloptenus bivittatus, 570. C. femur- ruber, 569. C. spretus,570. Calopterygina, 598. Calopteryx, 599, 601, 602. C. apicalis, 603. Calotermes castaneus, 587. Campodea fragilis, 623. Campodeæ, 623. Campylomyza, 378. Canker worm, 70, 324. Canker-wonn moth, 200. Capnia pygmæa, 591. Capsini, 550. [550. Capsus Danicus, 550. C. quadrivittatus, Carabidæ, 421, 423, 424, 427, 430, 435, 437, 446. Carabus auronitens, 432. G. serratus, 432» Cardo, 28. Camus hemapteni8, 418. Carpenter-bee, 132. Carpet moth, 347. Carpocapsa pomonella, 341. Carpophilus antiquus, 444. Carrion or Sexton Beetle, 438. Caryborus, 79, 80. Case-fly, 6. Casnonia Pensylvanica, 433. Cassida, 408. C. auricbalcea, 504. Cassidomyia, 408. Castnia, 280. Cataclysta fulicalis, 330. Catocala, 302. C. piatrix, 317. O. ultro* nia,317. Catocha, 378. Catops, 439. Cebno bicolor, 463. Cebrionidæ, 462. Cecidomyiæ, 202, 205. Cecidomyia acrophila, 372. C. artemisiæ, 199. C. destructor, 373, 374. C. fusci» collis, 372. C. glutinosa, 372. C. gros, sulariæ, 376. C. pavida, 372. C. pini- inopis, 376. C. rigidæ, 376. C. robiniæ, 499. C. salicis, 364, 373, 376. C. salici- . brassicoides, 377. C. strobiloides, 377. C. tritici, 375, 376. C ? vitis-coryloides^. 377. Cecidomyidæ, 371. Cecropia moth, 27, 234,298. Cells of the Honey bee, 120. Cemonus inornatus, 161. Centipedes, 10, 673, 674. Cephalization, 9. Cephaloidæ, 476. Cephaloon lepturides, 476. Céphalothorax, 8. Cephus, 215. C. abbreviatus, 227. C. trt macula tu s, 227. Cerambycidæ, 425, 426, 493. Ceraphron, 199. C. armatum, 200. Cerasphorus cinctus, 495. Ceratma, 143, 219. C. dupla, 134,140. Ceratocampadæ, 299. Ceratomia Amyntor, 274. Ceratopogon, 371. Cercens, 146. C. bupresticida, 159. C. deserta, 159. C. tricmcta, 159. C. tuber» culata, 159.MO INDEX. Cercopidæ, 588. Cercopis, 532. Cercyon, 438. Cermatia, 670. C. forceps, 673. Cermatidæ, 673. Ceropalus bipunctata, 174. C. Robin- sonii, 175. Cetonia, 456, 457. Ceuthophilus maculatus, 565. C. stygius, 565. Oeutorhynchus, 489. Chalcididæ, 202. Chalcids, 161, 207, 410. Chalcis albifrons, 203. C. bracata, 203. Chalcophora Virginiensis, 458. Chalicodoma micraria, 192. Chartergus chartarius, 154. Ohartophila floralis, 408. Chauliodes pectinicornis, 607. C. rastri- cornis, 606. C. serricornis, 607. Chauliognathus Pensylvanicus, 467. Cheese maggofc, 413. Chelifer, 639. C. cancroides, 659. Ohelymorpha cribaria, 504. Chermes, 50,523. C. abietis, 525. ' Chernes. C. Sanborni, 659. Chernetidæ, 658. Cherry slug, 222. Oheyletus, 665. C. semenivorus, 668. Chigoe, 390. Chilocorus bivulnerulus, 513. Chilognatha, 671, 676. Chilopoda, 670, 672. Chilopods, 672, 676. Chinch bug, 543. Chion cinctus, 495. Chionea, 358, 559. C. araneoides, 383. C. valga, 383. Chionobas, 75, 262. C. Bore, 263. C. Calais, 263. C. Chrixus, 263. C. Jutta, 263. C. Œno, 263. C. semidea, 263. Chigue, 390. Chironomidæ, 370. Chironomus oceanicus, 370. Chironomus larva, 21. •Chitine, 1, 9. Chlænius, 434. Chlamys plicata, 510. Chloëaltis conspersa, 568. Chloëon, 594. Chlorion cyaneum, 167. Chlorops Herpinii, 415. C. lineata, 415. Chœrodes transversata, 319. Chrestotes lapidea, 593. Chrvsididæ, 190,199. Chrysis, 157,191, 192. C. hilaris, 192. Chrysobothris femorata, 458. C. Harrisii, 459. Chrysomelidæ, 501. Chrysopa, 47, 79. C. perla, 611. C. ocu- lata, 611. Chrysophanus Americanus,264. C.Thoe, 264, 357. Chrysops niger, 393. C. vittatus, 393. Cicada canicularis, 163. C. Cassinii, 535. C. pruinosa, 534. C. rimosa, 534 C. septendecim, 535. Cicadellina, 531. Cicadidæ 516. Cicindela generosa, 430. C. hirfcicollis, 430. C. punctata, 430. C. purpurea, 430. C. sexguttata, 430. C. vulgaris, 430. Cicindelidæ, 423, 428. Cidaria diversilineata, 325. Cillenum, 434. Cimbex Americana, 215. Cimex, 516. C. columbarius, 651. C hirundinis, 551. C. lectularius, 551. C. pipistrelli, 551. Cioidæ, 472. Circulatory System, 37, 398. Cis, 472. Cistela, 475. Cistelidæ, 425, 475. Citheronia Mexicana, 299. C. regalis, 299. C. sepulcralis, 299. Cladius isomera, 226. Cladomacra macropus, 114. Cladura indivisa, 360. Clambus, 439. Classification of insects, 104. Clastoptera proteus, 532. Claviger, 440. Clavola, 26. Cleptes semiaurata, 192. Cleridæ, 468. Clerus, 468. C. alvearius, 469. Clmidium, 446. Clisiocampa, 156, 196, 343. C. Araen- cana, 207, 238, 301. C. disstria, 301. Clivina, 432. Cloaca, 35. Cloë, 593. C. pygmæa, 596. Clothes moth, 346. Clothilla picea, 589. Clover worm, 328. Clubione holosericea, 193. C. medicin- ahs, 649. C. tranquilla, 649. Clypeus, 29. Cly tus, 159. C. araneiformis, 497. C. pic- tus, 497. C. robiniæ, 497. C. speciosus, 496. Coccus cacti, 527. C. citri, 527. C. lacca, 527. C. manniparus, 527. C. Gloverii, 5^7 Coccidæ, 112, 525. Coccinella bipunctata, 511. C. novem* notata, 512. C. trifasciata, 512. Coccinellidæ, 511. Coccophagus, 527. Coccus cacti, 526. Cochlidiæ, 288. Cockchafer, 71. Cockroach, 194, 575. Cocoons of Silk Worms, 240. Coddling moth, 341. Cœliodes inæqualis, 490. Cœlioxys octodentata, 141. Cœlodasys (Notodonta) unicomis, 292. Coleophora coruscipennella, 351. C. rosacella, 351. C. rosæfoliella, 351. Coleoptera, 420, 421. Antennæ of, 422. Number of species of, 427. Colias, 244. C. interior, 251. C. Labra- dorensis, 250. C. occidentalis, 251. C, Philodice, 250. Collecting insects, 84. Colletés, 141. 143, 147. Collophore, 622. Colorado potato beetle, 408, 508. Colpodia, 378. Colydidæ, 445. Colydium elongatum, 446. Colymbetes, 436. Comrhon fly, 361. Comprehensive types, 54. Compsidea tridentata, 499. Condylodera tricondyloides, 567. Coniopteryx,625. C.tineiformis,609. C. vicina, 609.INDEX. 691 €onocephalus ensiger, 566. Conopidæ, 400, 418. Conops, 131, 363. C. flavipes, 401. Conorhinus sanguisuga, 542. Conotrachelus nénuphar, 488. Copris, 47. C. Carolina, 451. Coptera, 201. C. polita, 201. Coranus subapterus, 541. Cordulia tenebrosa, 604. Cordulina, 584. Coreidæ, 542. Corethra, 65, 370. Coreus marginatus, 544. C. scapha, 545. C. tristis, 545. Corimelæna pulicaria, 547. Corisiæ; 542. Corixa mterrupta, 536. Corn, insects injurious to, 306, 311, 350. Cornea, 25. Corydalus, 79. C. cornutus, 33, 579, 607. Corymbites æripennis, 462. C. viridis, 462. C. cylindriformis, 462. C. triun- dulatus, 462. C. hieroglyphicus, 462. Côrynetes, 468. Costa, 23. Cotalpa lanigera, 455. Cotton Anomis, 313. Cotton Boarmia, 322. Cotton Heliothis, 315. Cotton Leaf roller, 335. Cotton Plusia, 312. Coxa, 20. Crabro, 146,197. C. sex-maculatus, 159. C. singularis, 158, 160. C. stirpicola, 158. Crabronidæ, 149, 155, 157, 195. Crambidia pallida, 285. drambus, 236. C. mutabilis, 332. Cranberry Anchylopera, 338. Cranberry didaria, 325. Cranberry Pristiphora, 217. Cranberry Tortrix, 334. Cranberry weevil, 487. Crane-flies, 380. Crepidodera cucumeris, 506. Cressonia juglandis, 274. Crickets, 562. Crioceridæ, 426. Crioceris asparagi, 502. Crocota ferruginosa, 285. Crossidius pulchrior, 495. Croton bug, 576. Crustacea, 636. drustaceans, typical, 5, 7, 8. Cryplialus materarius, 4b3. Cryptocephalus, 510. Cryptocercus punctulatus, 576. C. mul- tispinosus, 190. Cryptophagidæ, 446. Cryptophagus hirtus, 447. Cryptus, 193, 197, 395. C ? omatipennis, 197. Ctenistes, 422. Ctenocerus, 114. Ctenophora, 381. Ctenostoma, 428. Cfcenucha, 239, 280. C. Virginica, 234, 283. Cuckoo bee, 141,147. Cuckoo Aies, 191. Cucujidæ, 446. Cucujus, 446. Cucumber flea beetle, 506. Culex pipiens, 369. Culicidæ, 368. dupes capitata, 470. C. cinerea, 470. Cupesidæ, 469. Curcuiionidæ, 159, 378, 425, 426, 484. Currant Abraxas, 321. Currant Borers, 279, 500. Currant Pristiphora, 217. duterebra buccata, 406. C. cuniculi, 406. C. emasculator, 405. C. horripilum, 406. Cut-worms, liemedies for, 308. Cychrus, 432. Cyclonotum, 438. Cyclopthalmus, 630. d. Bucklandi, 660. Cylindrotoma, 384. C. distinctissima, 381. C. (Phalacrocera) replicata, 381. Cymatophora caniplaga, 304. Cymindis, 433. Cynipidæ, 205, 208. Cynips, 50, 202. C. confluens, 209, 211. C. divisa, 209. C. folii, 209. C. gallæ- tinctoriæ, 211. C. quercus-aciculata, 208. C. quercus-futilis, 210, 211. C. quercus globulus, 210. C. quercus-pa- lustris, 211. C. quercus-papillata, 210. C. seminator, 210. C. tubicola, 210. Cynthia, 244. Cyphon, 464. Cyrtidæ, 395. Cyrtophyllum concavum, 566. Daddy-long-legs, 380. Daihinia, 565. Danais, 245. D. archippus, 251. Dascyllidæ, 464. Dasypogon, 361, 395. Death’s head Sphinx, 284. Deciduous legs, 21. Deformities of Insects, 83. Degeeria nivalis, 625. Deilephila lineata, 275. D. chamœneriv 276. Delphax arvensis, 533. Demodex, 626, 642. D. folliculorum, 69, 667. Dendroides Canadensis, 4< 7. D. con- color, 477. Depressaria atrodorsella, 349. D. later- ella, 349. D. robiniella, 349. Dermaleichus pici-pubescentis, 666. Dermanyssus avium, 663. D. pipistrel- læ, 663. Dermaptera, 577. Dermatobia moyocuil, 406. D. noxialis, 406. Dermatodectes bovis, 666. D. equi, 666. D. ovis, 666. Dermestes lardarius, 448. Dermestidæ, 448. Derodontidæ, 447. Desmia maculalis, 330. Desmocerus cyaneus, 506. Desoria, 625. Development of Insects, 54. Devil’s darning needles, 597. Dexia, 408. Diabrotica, 12-punctata, 506. D. vittata, 505 Dianous, 442. Diapheromera femorata, 573. Diapria cecidomyiarum, 199. Diastrophus. 212. Dicerca divaricata, 458. D. lurida, 458. Dichelonycha elongatula, 454. Dictyoneura. 582. Diedrocephala, 532. Dimorphism, 52. Dineutes, 79, 80. D. Americanus, 437.692 INDEX. Diplax, 55, 60, 600. D. Bérénice, 605. D. Elisa, 6u5. D. rubicundula, 605. Diplolepariæ, 208. Diplolepis conüuens, 155. D. confluen- tus, 140. Diplonychus, 80. Diplosis, 375, 378. D. socialis, 378. Dipneumones, 648. Diptera, 358. Number of species of, 267. Venation of, 360. Diseases of insects, 81, 344. Diving Beetles, 435. Dolerus arvensis, 222. Dolichopodidæ, 402. Dolomedes lanceolatus, 653. Dolopius stabilis, 461. D. pauper, 461. Donacia Kirbyi, 502. D. proxima, 502. Dor bug, 455. Dorcas brevis, 451. Dorcatomma, 422. Dorsal vessel, 37. Dorthesia, 526. Dorylus, 181. Doryphora decem-lineata, 508. D. juncta, 500. Dragon-flies, 584, 597, 630, 679. Drassus, 649. Drasteria erechtea, 317. Drilus, 466. Drop-worms, 318. Drosophila, 377, 414. Dryopteris rosea, 293. Ductus ejaculatorius, 44. Dynastes, 455. D. Hercules, 456. D. Tityus, 456. Dysdera, 633. D. interrita, 649. Dytiscidæ, 424, 435, 436, 437. Dytiscus, 53. D. fasciventris, 436. Eacles imperialis, 300. Eurwigs, 577. Eburia? Ulkei, 495. Echiniscus, 642. Echinomyia, 408. Eciton Mexieana, 186. E. Sumichrasti, 186. Ectatomma ferruginea, 184. Ectobia Germanica, 576. E. lithophila, 576. Edema albifrons, 292. Eggs, 46. Egg-parasites, 198. Eiphosom i nnnulatum, 195. Elachista ? oriclmlcella, 352. Elaphrus, 431. Elasmocerus terminatus, 468. Elater, 460. E. obliquus, 461. Elateridæ, 421,425, 459. Elephantomyia Westwoodii, 383. Elis costalis, 177. Ellema Harrisii, 271. Ellopia, 318. E. fasciaria, 320. E. flagit- iaria, 320. Elm butterfly, 260. Elm Ennomos, 321. Elm Tremex, 228. Elmis, 450. Elodes, 473. Embia Savigni, 588. Embidæ, 583, 588. Emesa longipes, 541. Emmenadia, 481. Emphvtus maculatus, 220. Empidæ, 402. Empis, 361. Empretia stimulea, 289. Empusa, 575. Emydium testudo, 669. Encyrtus, 223. E. Botus, 207. E. Reate*. 207. E. varicornis, 207. Endomychidæ, 510. Endropia tigrinaria, 320. Enuomos magnaria, 321. E. subsignaria* 321. Enoicyla pusilla, 616. Entomological journal, 103. Entomological Systems, 106. Entomological Works, 97. Entomostraca, 616. Eoscorpion carbonarius, 660. Epeïra domiciliorum, 651. E. vulgaris, 631, 651. Epeolus, 141. E. variegatus, 147. Ephemera décora, 594. Ephemeridæ, 578, 580, 581, 583, 593. Ephemerids, 583, 593. Ephemerina, 583. Ephémérités, 594. Ephydra halophila, 414. Epicranium, 29. Epidosis, 372, 378. Epilachna borealis, 513. Epimera, 9. Epipharyx, 20, 29. Epipone nitidulans, 203. Epirus, 401. Episternum, 9. Epuræa, 445, 446. Erastria carneola, 316. Erebus Agrippina, 318. E. odora, 318.. Eremophila Ehrenbergi, 575. Erioptera venusta, 383. Eriosoma lanigera, 522. E. pyri, 525. Eristalis, 398. Ernobius mollis, 471. Erotylidæ, 510. Erythroneura vitis, 532. Eucera, 141. E. maculata, 136. Eucerceris zonatus, 159. Eucheira socialis, 244. Euchroma Columbica, 459. Euclea Monitor, 289. Euchronia JVlaia, 299. Eucnemis, 460. Eudamus Bathyllus, 269. E. Tityrus,269; Eudryas, 280. È. grata, 281. E. unio, 2Ô2.. Eugereon Bœckingi,.54, 78, 582. Eulophus basalis, 207. Eumenes, 147, 155,156. E. coarctata, 207* E. fraterna, 156. E. tinctor, 192. Eumolpus auratus, 509. Euphanessa mendica, 285. Eupithecia miserulata, 325. Euplexoptera, 577. Eupyrrhoglossum Sagra, 277. Euremia, 280. Euryomia Inda, 457. Euryptychia saligneana, 337. Eurytoma, 203, 205, 212. E. flavipes, 205. E. hordei, 203, 205. E. secalis, 205. Etiscirrhopterus Poeyi, 282. Euura orbitalis, 218. E. perturbans, 218. E. salicis-ovum, 218. Evagoras viridis, 542. Evagorus, 80. Evania, 194,195. E. lævigata, 194. Evaniidæ, 194. Eyes, 25. Facets of eye, 25.INDEX, 693 False legs, 17. I False Scorpions, 632. | Fatty body, 37. Fauua, 71. Fémur, 21. Fidia viticida, 502. Fidonia piniaria, hermaphrodite, 46. Figites, 212. F. (Diplolepis) 5-lineatus 208. Figitidæ, 212. Filaria, 83. Filistata hibernalis, 649. Fire fly, 462, 465. Fire-worms, 339. Fir saw fly, 224. Flagelluni, 26. Flata, 112. F. limbata, 533. Flea, 11, 360, 388. Flesh fly, 407, 408. Flight of Insects, 32. Fœnus, 194, 195. F. jaculator, 195. ' Forest-flies, 416. Forflcula, 54, 577. Forflculariæ, 577. Formica flava, 183. F. fulvacea, 183. F. fusca, 180. F. herculanea, 183. F. Pen- sylvanica, 183. F. rubra, 183. F. san- guinea, 180,182, 183. Formicariæ, 179. Formicomus, 476. Fornax, 460. Fossil Diptera, 368. Front of the head, 31. Fruit-worm, (Cranberry) 340. Fulgora candelaria, 533. F. lantemaria, 533. Fulgoridæ, 532. Fungus eating-flies, 199. Galea, 28. Galerita Lecontei, 433. Galeruca gelatinariæ, 504. G. margin- ella, 505. •Galesus, 201. Galgudini, 519. Galgulus oculatus, 539. Galleria cereana, 332. Gall-flies, 199, 208, 371. Gall-midges, 199. Gamasidæ, 663. Gamasus coleoptratorum, 663. Gastropacha Americana, 300. Gastrophilus equi, 404. Gelechia cerealella, 350. G. fungivorella, 350. G. roseosuffusella, 350. Gêna, 28. Génération, organs of, 43. Génital organs, 16. Geographical Distribution, 71. Geological Distribution, 77. Geometra iridaria, 323. Geometridæ, 303. Geophilidæ, 675. Geophilus bipuncticeps, 675. G. cephal- icus, 675. G. proavns, 673. Georyssidæ, 449. Georyssus pusillus, 450. Geotrupes, 663. G. splendidus, 453. G. stercorarius, 32. Gerris, 516, 539. G. paludum, 540. G. rufoscutellatus, 540. Gills, 41. Girdler, 498. Gizzard, 35. ■Glaucopis, 280, 283. Glomeridæ, 677. Glomeris marginata, 677. Glossina morsitans, 407. Glow-wôrm, 424. Glyphe, 203. Golden-eyed fly, 393. Goldsmith beetle, 455. Goliathus cacicus, 456. G. Drurii, 456. G. Goliathus, 456. Gomphina, 584. Gomphus, 597. G. fratemus, 603. Gonatopus lunatus, 199. Gonia, 408. Gonocerus, 545. Gonyleptes ornatum, 657. Gooseberry Midge, 376. Gooseberry Pempelia, 331. Gooseberry Pristiphora, 217. Gooseberry saw-fly, 217, 219. Gooseberry worm, 331. Gordius, 82. Gortyna flavago, 310. G. nitela, 310. G leucostigma, 310. Gorytes flavicomis, lfi3. Gracilaria, 342. Grain moth, 347, 350. Grain weevil, 490. Gramatophora trisignata, 304. Grape Acoloithus, 282. Grape Alypia, 281. Grape Anomala, 455. Grape Baridius, 491. Grape Borer, 278. Grape Cidaria, 325. Grape Desmia, 330. Grape Eudryas, 281. Grape Fidia, 502. Grape-leaf Flea beetle, 507. Grape-leaf folder, 330. Grape Penthina, 336. Grape Philampelus, 275. Grape Pterophorus, 356. Grape Tliyreus, 276. Grape weevil, 490. Grapholitha, 337. Grapta c-argenteum, 260. G. comma, 260. G. Faunus, 260. G. interrogationis, 259. Graptodera chalybea, 507. G. exapta, 507. Grasshoppers, 556. Grease moth, 329. Green-head fly, 393. Grotea anguina, 197. Gryllidæ, 558, 562. Gryllotalpa borealis, 563. G. longipennls, 563. Gryllus abbreviatus, 564. G. campestris, 60. G. domesticus, 563. G. luctuosus 564. G. neglectus, 564. G. niger, 564. Guest gall-flies, 212. Gyrinidæ, 424, 436, 437. Gyrinus, 422. G. borealis, 437. Gyropus porcelli, 555. Hadena chenopodii, 309. Hadenœcus subterraneus, 565. Halesidota caryæ, 287. H. maculata, 287, H. tessellaris, 287. Halictus, 141.142,144,145. H. paralellus, 145. Haliplus, 436. Hnlonota simulana, 337. Haltica chalybea, 507. H. cucumeriflr 506. II. striolata, 507. Hamamelistes cornu, 523. Haplophlebium, 594.694 INDEX, Harpactopus, 167. Harpactor cinctus, 542. Harpalus, 542. H. caliginosus, 420,434. Harpax, 575. Harvest-men, 632, 656. Hatching of the larva, 61. Head, appendages of, 24. Segments of, 20. Structure of, 18. Hearing, organs of, 559. Sense of, 26. Heart, 37. Development of, 42. Hedychrum bidentulum, 191. H. dimidi- atum, 192. H. lucidulum, 191. H. re- gium, 191. Hegemon, 456. Helichus, 450. Heliconia Melpomone, 251. Helicopsyche, 616. H. arenifera, 619. H. glabra, 619. Heliocheilus paradoxus, 315. Heliothis armigera, 315. Helluomorpha præusta, 433. Helochara communis, 532. Helophilus, 399. Hemeristia occidentalis, 77, 596. Hemeristina, 596. Hemerobiidæ, 237, 580, 583, 609, 622. Hemerobius, 581,586. H. alternatus, 610. H. occidentalis, 610. Hemiptera, 514. Hemiteles, 193. Hepiali, 301. Hepialus, 11, 233, 236. H. humuli, 302. H. mustelinus, 302. Hermaphrodites, 45. Herminia juccliusialis, 328. Hersilla, 631. Hesperj a Hobomoc, 269. H. Mystic, 270. H. Wamsutta, 270. Hesperians, 269. Hessian-fly, 200, 202, 207, 372. Hetærius, 443. Heteroceridæ, 450. Heteromera, 424. Heterometabolia, iii. Heteropus ventricosus, 136, 667, 668. Hexapoda, 21. Hibernation, 42. Hickory girdler, 498. Hickory saw-fly, 224. Hickory tree borer, 495, 497. Hipparchia, 262. Hippobosca, 363, 364. H. bubonis, 417. H. equinæ, 417. Hippoboscidæ, 416. Hippodamia convergens, 511. H. macu- lata, 511. Hirmoneura, 395. Hispa rosea, 503. H. suturalis, 504. Histeridæ, 442. Hister interruptus, 443. H. merdarius, 443. Hockeria, 203. Homalomyia, 411. Homolota, 441. Homoptera lunata, 318. Homothetus fossilis, 77. Honev-ant, 181. Honev bees, 45, 50, 52,116,147, 361. Honeysuckle saw fly, 216. Hop butterllies, 259, 260, 265. Hop Hepialus, 302. Hop Hypena, 327. Hop-vine moth, 327. Horia sansruinipennis, 479. Hornet, 150. Homtails, 227. Horse bot fly, 404. Horse fly, 393. Horse tick, 417. House fly, 407, 409. Humble bee, 130,131,194,198, 329. Stmg, of, 15. Hyalomyia, 404. Hybernia tdiaria, 325. Hybos, 402. Hybridity, 54. J661. Hydrachua, 631,632,660. H. concharum, Hydraclmidæ, 661. Hydrobius, 438. Hydrocampa, 329, 330. Hydrocoris, 518. Hydrometra, 539. Hydrophilidæ, 424, 437. H. piceus, 438. Hydrophilus, 422. H. triangularis, 438. Hydropliorus, 403. Hydropsyche scalaris, 621. Hydrotrechns, 539, 540. Hylobates, 540. Hylobius pales. 486. Hylotoma McLeayi, 217. Hylurgus deatatus. 492. H. terebrans. 492. Hymenopteva, 107. Hypena humuli, 327. Hyperchiria varia, 299. Hyperhomala virescens, 567. Hypermetamorphosis, 67. Hyphantria cunea, 287. H. textor, 286. Hypoderma bovis, 405. H. tarandi, 405. Hypodermis, 63. Hyponomeuta millepunctatella, 348. Hypoprepia fucosa, 284, 285. Hyporhagus, 475. Hypselonotus, 80. Ibalia, 213. Icaria guttatipennis 121,155,156. Ichneumonidæ, 192. lchneumon, 135, 146. I. ovulorum, 200. I. paratus, 197. I. suturalis, 196. Idia Bigoti, 410. Idioptera, 360. Imago, 70. Inæquitelæ, 650, Inostemma inserens, 201. Inquilinæ, 212. Insects biscxual, 45. Insect Crust, composition of, 9. Insect years, 76. Intestine, 35. Introduced species, 76. Ioplocama fonnosana, 338. Ips fasciatus, 445. I. ferrugineus,445. I. sanguinolentus, 415. Isopteryx Cydippe, 591. Itch mite, 666. Ithomia, 251. Ixodidæ, 661. Ixodes, 629, 632. I. albipictus, 662. I. bovis, 663, 668. I. ricinus, 663. I. uni- punctata, 662, 668. Japyx solifugus, 623. Jassus irroratus, 532. Jigger, 390. Joint-Avorm, 203, 204, 205. Juglans squamosa, 224. Julidæ, 671, 673, 678. Juins, 62, 671, 673, 676, 678. J. Canaden- sis, 679. J. mnltistriatus, 679. June beetle, 27, 455. Junonia cœnia, 261.INDEX, 695 Katydid, 566. Killing insects for the Cabinet, 87. Labellum, 29. Labia minuta, 577. Labidomera trimaculata, 508. Labidus, 186. Labium, 28. Labrum, 29. Lace winged Aies, 609, 611. Lachlania abnormis, 596. Lachneides, 300. Lachnostema, 27. L. fusca, 455. Lachnus caryæ, 522. L. strobi, 522. Lacinia, 28. Lady bird, 511. Læmophlœus adustus, figure of, 555. Lagoa crispata, 288. Lagriidæ, 475. Lamellicomia, 451. Lamellicorns, 425, 426. Lamprocolletes, 114. Lampyridæ, 424, 425, 465. Lampyris, 465. Laphria, 54. L. thoracica, 396. Large Black Cut-worm, 306. Larrada argentata, 165. Larra unicincta, 164. Larridæ, 164. [95. Larvæ, préservation of, 95. Rearing of, Larva State, 62. Lasioptera, 378. L. rubi, 372. Lathndiidæ, 447. Lathridius minutus, 447. Leaf beetles, 501. Leaf cutter bee, 135, 136. Leaf rollers, 332. Lebia, 433. L. (Dromius) linearis, 149. Lecanium, 50, 526. L. acericola, 528. L. hesperidum, 528. L. McCluræ, 528. Legs, false, 17, 21. Joints of, 20. Leiopus alpha, 497. L. xanthoxyli, 497. Lema trilineata, 503. Lepidocyrtus albinos, 425. Lepidoptera, 229. Digestive System of, 237. Nervous System of, 237. Lepisesia fiavofasciata, 277. Lepisma, 578, 583, 622. L. saccharina, 623. Lepismatidæ, 622. Leptidæ, 394. Leptis vermilio, 395, Leptocerus niger, 620. L. sepuichralis, 620. Leptoris breviornatana, 334. Lepturæ, 494. Lestes, 601. L. eurina, 603. Lestremia, 378. Leucania uni puncta, 196, 203, 305, 313. Leucarctia acræa, 286. Leucosomus ophthalmicus, 159. Leucospis altinis, 203. L. Poeyi, 203. Leuctra tenuis, 591. Libellula, 578, 579, 581, 599, 602. L. auri- pennis,599. L. luctuosa, 84. L. quad- rimaculata, 604. L. trimaculata, 604. Libellulidæ, 578, 579, 580, 581, 583, 597. Libellulina, 604. Libythea Bachmanii, 264. Lice, 553. Ligula, 28. Ligyrus, 425. Limacodes, 228. L. scapha, 290. Limenitis Arthemis, 262. L. Epbestion, 262. L. Misippus, 261. Limnobates, 540. Limnobia annulus, 382. Limnobina, 381. Limnophila dispar, 383. Limnophilides, 617. Limnophilus flavicornis, 618. L. pellu- cidus, 618. L. perpusillus, 617. L. rhombicus, 617. L. subpunctulatus 618. Limonius ectypus, 461. L. plebeius, 46L Linden slug, 222. Lingua, 29. Liotheum anseris, 555. Lipoptena, 417. Lithacodes fasciola, 290. Lithentomum Harttii, 77. Lithobiidæ, 673. Lithobius Americanus, 673. L. forfica- tus, 673. Lithocolletis, 342. L. curvilineatella, 354. L. Fitchella, 353. L. geminatella, 353, 354. L. juglandiella, 353. L. nidifican- sella, 354. L. salicifoliella, 353. Lithosia argillacea, 284. L. casta, 284. Lithosians, 280. Livia vernalis, 531. Locustariæ, 557, 564. Locusta viridissima, 48, 567. Locusts, 564. Locust Depressaria, 349. Locust Eudamus, 269. Locust gall midge, 499. Locust Lree borer, 497. Lonchæa nigra, 413. Lonchoptera, 68. Longicornia, 493. Lophyrus, 114, 219. L. Abbotii, 226. L. abdominalis, 226. L. abietis, 224, 226. L. Americana, 226. L. compar, 226. L. Fabricii, 226. L. insularis, 226. L. Le- contei, 226. L. pinetum, 226. L. pini* rigidæ, 225,226. Louse, 11. Lozotænia fragariana, 335. L. gcssypi- ana, 3:15. L. rosaceana, 335, 336. Lubber grassliopper, 570. Lucanidæ, 426, 450. Lucanus dama, 451. L. cervus, 32, 451. Ludius attenuatus, 461. Lycæna comyntas, 265. L. neglecta, 265. Lycomorpha Pholus, 283. Lycosa, 627, 631. L. fatigera, 654. L. ta- rantula, 654. Lyctus opaculus, 472. Lycus, 465. Lyda inanita, 215. L. scripta, 226. Lydella, 642. Lygæidæ, 542. Lygæus, 542. L. turcicus, 543. Lymexylidæ, 469. Lymexylon sericeum, 469. Lyonetia saccatella, 355. Lystra auricoma, 533. L. lanata, 533. Lytta vittata, 480. L. cinerea, 480. L. murina, 480. L. marginata, 480. Macaria granitata, 323. Machilis, 623. Macrobiotus, 669. Macrodactylus subspinosus, 454. Macroglossa stellatarum, 277. Macrolepidoptera, 242. Macrosiagon, 481. Macrosila Carolina, 274. M. cingulata* 272. M. cluentius, 274. M. quinque- maculata, 272.696 INDEX, Madarus vitis, 491. Magdalinus olyra, 488. Malachidæ, 467. Malachius, 467. Male génital organs, 16. Mallophaga, 554. Mamestra arctica, 811. M. plcta, 312. Mandibles, 27. Mandibular segments, 20, 58. Mantidæ, 574. Mantis, 54. M. argentina, 575. M. Caro- lina, 575. Mantispa, 54, 579. M. brunnea, 611. Mantispids, 592. Mantis tessellata, ovipositor of, 17. Masaris vespoides, 157. Mason bee, 138, 207. Maxillæ, 27. Maxillary segments, 20, 58. May Aies, 593. Mazonia Woodiana, 660. Méat fly, 408. Mechanitis, 251. Mecistocephalus fulvus, 675. Mecynorhma Savagei, 456. Medeterus, 403. Megachile, 206, 397. M. brevis, 137. M. centuncularis, 136, 138. M. integer, 137. M. muraria, 191. M. Poeyi, 203. Megathentomum pustulatum, 621. Melanactes, 462. Melandiya striata, 476. Melandryidæ, 475. Melanism, 76. Melanotus communis, 461. Melecta, 136,141. Melipona, 128. M. fulyipes, 129. Melitæa Anicia, 258. M. Chalcedon, 258. M. Harrisii, 257. M. Œnone, 257. M. Packardii, 256. M. Phaeton, 255. M. Texana, 258. M. Tharos, 256. Melittia cucurbitæ, 279. Mellinus bimaculatus, 162. Meloë, 6,131, 427. M. angusticollis, 478. M. violaceus, 478. Meloidæ, 477. Melolontha, 454. M. yariolosa, 455. Melophagus, 46. M. ovinus, 418. Membranacei, 550. Mentum, 27, 28. Mermis albicans, 127. Merodon bardus, 399. M. narcissi, 399. Merope tuber, 615. Mesochorus, 193. Metabolia, iii. Metapoclius nasalus, 546. 31ethoca Canadensis, 178. Metoecus paradoxus, 481. Metrocampa, 318. 31. margaritata, 320. 3Iiamia Bronsoni, 77,591. 31. Danæ, 593. Miastor, 25. M. metroloas, 51, 380. 3Iicoceras, 53. 3iicralymma, 442. 31icrocentrum, 556. Microdon globosns, 398. 31icrogaster, 193,198, 203. M. nephopte* ricis, 131, 198. 3Iicrolabris Sternbergi, 659. Microlepidoptera, 242. Microlipus, 468. Micropeplus, 442. Microphantes, 633. 3ricropya, 47. 31icrotonus sericans, 476. Midas clayatus, 395. M. fulvipes, 395. Milesia excentrica, 398. Millepedes, 678. Milnesium tardigradum, 669. Miltogramma punctata, 147. Mimesa, 162. Mimetic forms, 53. Miris dorsalis, 550. Mischocyttarus labiatus, 155,156. Mites, 628, 632, 639. Transformations o£ 643. Mole cricket, 563. Monedula Carolina, 164. M. 4-fasciata, 164. Monodontomerus, 136, 205. 31onohammus scutellatus, 498. M. titil- lator, 498. Monomma, 475. 31onommidæ, 475. Monotomidæ, 445. Mordella, 207, 476. 31ordellidæ, 476. 3Iordellistena, 476. 3Iorpho Epistrophis, 262. M. Menelaus, 262. M. Polyphemus, 262. 31osquito hawks, 597. 3Iotions of Insects, 32. 3Iusca, 641. 31. (Calliphora) yomitoria, 408. 31. domestica, 409, 410. M. (Lu- cilia) Cæsar, 408,409. 31. yomitoria, 64. 31uscardine, 82. 31uscidæ, 164, 407. 31uscles, 31. 31uscular power, 32. 31usic of insects, 362, 561,563. 3Iutilla, 176, 177. M. Europæa, 179. M. feiTUgata, 179. M. occidentalis, 179. 3Iutillariæ, 177,181. Mycetobia pallipes, 387. M. sordida, 388. Mycetophagidæ, 447. 31ycetophagus, 447. 3Iycetophila scatophora, 385. 31ycetophilidæ, 385. 31ydasidæ, 395. 31ygale avicularia, 648. M. Hentzii, 172, 648. M. nidulans, 648. 3Iygnimia Mexicana, 175. M. ustulata, 175. 3Iylacris anthracophila, 577. 3Iymar pulchellus, 201. 3Iyobia, 641, 642. 3iyodites, 481. 31yopa atra, 401. 3Iynapoda, 10, 104, 625, 670. 31yriapods, 626, 627, 636, 670. Myrmecocystus 31exicanus, 184. 31yrmeleon, 581, 611. 31. abdominalis, 612. 31. obsoletns, 612. 3Iyrmica molefaciens, 185. 31. molesta, 185. 31yrmicariæ, 181. 3Iyrmosa, 177. M. nnicolor, 178. 3Iysia 15-punctata, 512. 3Iystacides, 6. 31yzine sexcincta, 177. Nabis férus, 541. Nannophya bella, 605. Nautocoris, 516. Necrobia, 468. Necrophilus Surinamensis, 439. Necrophorus, 663. N. Americanus, 421, 439. Nectarina, 153. N. melliflca, 154. Neïdes, 545. Nematocampa filamentaria, 390.INDEX, 697 Nematus, 217. N. conju^atus, 214. N. grossulariæ, 214. N. trilineatus, 220. N. verfcebratus, 219. N. yentricosus, 50, 219. Nemobius vittatus, 564. Nemoptera, 610. Nemoura albidipennis, 591. Neonvmpha, 262. N. Eurytris, 264. Nepaî 516, 518, 537, 538. N. cinerea, 47. Nephila plumipes, 651. Nephopteryx Edmandsii, 131,198, 331. Nepidæ, 537. Nepticula, 342. N. amelanchierella, 356. N. corylifoliella, 356. N. microtheriella, 355. N. platanella, 356. Nerice bidentata, 292. Nervous System, 33. Neuronia semifasciata, 617. Neuroptera, 578. Neuroterus, 50. Neurotherius, 599. Nirmus, 555. Nitidula bipustulata, 445. Nitidulariæ, 444. Nitidulidæ, 446. Noctua, 243. Noctuælitæ, 302. Noctuidæ, 238, 303. Noetuids, 292. Nomada, 131,141,212. N. imbricata, 142. N. pulchella, 142. Nops, 644. Nothrus ovivorus, 664. Notocyphus, 173. Notodonta. 292. Notonecta, 516, 518. N. irrorata, 537. N. undulata, 537. Notonectidæ, 536. Notoxus anchora, 476. Nudaria mundana, 285. Nycteribia, 358,388, 626. N. Westwoodii, 418. Nycteribidæ, 418. Nymphes, 79. Nyssia, 322. N. hispidaria, 54. Nysson lateralis, 163. Nyssonidæ, 162. Oak Biorhiza, 211. Oak Cynips, 210. Oak gall Aies, 210. Oat-louse Aphidiüs, 198. Occiput, 29, 30. Ocellary segments, 20, 58. Ocelli, 19, 25. Ocinari, 295. Octoglena bivirgata, 680. Ocyptera, 408. Odontomachus clarus, 182. Odor of bugs, 545. Odynerus, 147, 154, 162, 206, 211, 401. O. albophaleratus, 155, 156. O. leucome- las, 156, 218. Œcanthus, 24. CE. niveus, 564. Œceticus, 231, 291. CEcodoma, 177. CE. cephalotes, 188, 189. CE. Mexicana, 187,188. CE. sexdentata, 189. CE. Texana, 189. CEcophylla smaragdina, 184. tus, 275. S. modestus, 275. Sinyuthurus, 624, 625. Snout-moths, 326. Solenobia? Walsliella, 346. Solpuga, 639. S. araneoides, 655. S (Galeodes) Americana, 655. Solpugidæ, 632, 655. Soipugids, 655. Soothsayers, 574. Sounds produced by insects, 362,561,563 Spaniocera, 378. Spanish fly, 480. Species of insects, number of, 103. Speciflc names, 345. Spectres, 572. Spercheus tessellatus, 438. Sperm, 44. Sphærotherium, 677. Sphecodes, 142,143. S. dicliroa, 143. Sphegidæ, 142, 149, 165,166. Sphex, 142. S. flavipennis, 401. 8. ich* neumonea, 167. S. Lanierii, 169. 8. tibialis, 168. Sphinges, 23(5. Sphingidæ, 238, 27. Sphinx, 627. S. chersis, 272. S. dmpi ferarum, 272. S. gordius, 272. S. kal- miæ, 272. S. ligustri, 63, 237. Sphinx ligustri, anatomy of, 85. Sphœridium, 438. Sphyracephala brevicomis, 413. Spider fly, 358, 416. Spiders, 643, 644. Spiders, évolution of, 637, 638. Spider’s web, method of splnniig 64k Spilosoma Virgin ica, 287. Spinnerets, 21. Spiracle, 40. Spiroboius marginatus, 679. Spirostrephon, 680. Spondylis, 494. Spongophora bipunctata, 577INDEX, 701 Spring beetles, 450. Spring-tails, 615, 624. Squash beetle, 505. Squash vine borer, 279. Stag beetle, 32. Staphylinidæ, 181, 423,427,440,577. Maphylinus, 54, 441, Statyra, 475. Steganoptycha? ochrcana, 337. Stenuua, 25. Stcnobothrus curtipennis, 569. Stonocerus, 53. S. putator, 495. Stenopoda, 80. Stenus Juno, 442. S. stygicus, 442. 8ternite, 9. Sterno-rhabdites, 15. [lata, 302, Sthenopi8, 236, 237. S. argeuteonmou- Stignms, 142. S. fraternus, 158,161. Stilbum splendiduin, 192. Sting, 14. Stipes, 28. Stiretrus limbriatus,647. Stizus speciosus, 163. Stomach, sucking, 85. 8tomoxy8 caltricans, 407. Strategus, 425. Stratiomyidæ, 392. Stratiomys, 393. Strawberry Gorimelnna, 547. Strawberry Empbvtus, 221. Strawberry saw 221. Strawberry leaf rollcr, 340. Strawberry Lozotænia, 335. Sti'epsiptera, 481. Slrigamia bothriopus,675. S. chtonophi* la, 675. S. epileptica, 675. Stylopidw, 424, 481. Stylops, 34, 131, 143, 146, 149, 194, 691. S, Childrenii, 131, 482. Stylopyga, 576. Styringomyia, 383. Siibmentum, 28. Sucking myriai)ods, 680. Sugantia; 680. Sugar mite, 665. Sylvanus Surinamensis, 446. Symmctry, antero-posterior, 2,21. Symmetry, bilateral, 2. 8ynerges, 212. Synœca, 153. S. cyanea, 154. Synoplirus, 212. Syrpnidæ, 164, 397. Syrphus, 54,363, 398, 400. Syrtis erosa, 552. Systropus, 397. Tabauidæ, 393. Tabanus atratus. 394. T. cinctus, 394. T. lineola, 393, 394. Tachina, 325. T. (Ly délia) doryphoræ, 408. T. (Senometopia) militaris, 407. Tachina-like fly, 131,147. Tachydromia, 402. Tachyporus, 441. Tachytes auvulentus, 165. Tæniopteryx frigida, 691. Tanarthrus salinus, 476. Tanypus varius, 371. Tapmoma tomentosa, 183. Tardigrada, 668. Tardigrades, 45, 69, 632,642. Tarsus, 21. Tatua, 153. T. morio, 122,154.156. Tegenaria atrica, 649. T. eivilis, 629. T. medicinalis, 649. Telea Polyphemus, 11,195,243, 297. Teleas, 199,200. T. Linnæi, 200. Telephorus Carolina, 467. T. bilineatu* 467. Tenebrio molitor, 474. Tenebrionidæ, 473. Tent-caterpillar, 207. Tenthredinidæ, 213. Tergite, 9,14. Terias Délia, 251. T. Lisa, 251. Termes, 54. T. bellicosus, 588. T. fatale 588. T. flavipes, 587. T. lucifbgus, 584 Termites, 588. Tei*mitidæ, 583, 586, 593. Terinopsis augusticollis, 587. Testis, 35, 44. Tetracha Vi -ginica, 429. Tetralonia, 114. Tetramera, 424,484. Tetranyehus telarius, 631,669. Tetrapneumonos, 647. Tottigidea laleralis, 572. Tettigonia biflda, 532. Tettigoniæ, 163. Tettix granulata, 572. Tetyra marmorata, 547. Thaumatosoma, 114. Thecln Acadica, 265. T. hurnuli, 265. T Mopsus, 266. T. Niphon, 265. T». strt gosa, 267. Thelaxes ulmicola, 523. Thelyphonus caudatus, 658. T. gigan teus, 658. Thereva, 396. Therevidæ, 395. Theridion studiosum, 650. T. verecun dum, 651. T. vulgare, 650. Thinophilus, 403. Thomisus celer, 652, 653. T. vulgari» 652. Thorax, structure of, 11. Thousand Legs, 678. Thripidæ, 547. TUrips, 69, 80, 378. T. cerealium, 550. Throscidæ, 459. Thyatira, 304. Thyreocori8 histeroides, 547. Thyreopus, 159. T. latipes, 160. Thyreus Abbotii, 276. Tbyridopteryx, 290. T. ephemeræformia 289,291. T. nigricans, 289. Thysanopteru, 548. Thysanura, 608, 609 613, 622, 623. Ticks, 661. Tiger Beetles, 428. Tinagma, 342. Tinea, 201. T. flavifrens, 346. T. grau ella, 347. T. tapetzela, 347. Tiueidæ, 303, 234, 342, 582. Tineidæ, transformation of, 67. Tineids, 236, 237. Tingis hyalina, 552. T. hystrioellus. Tipnia inomata, 177. Tipula, 360, 381. T. trivittftta, 382. Tipulidæ, 199, 381. Tmesiphorus, 422. Tobacco worxa 274. Tolype Velleda 300. Tolyphus, 444. Tomicus monographua 496. T. pinl, 496 T. xylographus, 49?. Tortricidæ, 332. Tortricodes. 290. Tortrix gelidana, 834. T. exyooeoan* 334. A702 INDEX, Torymus Har 6. Touch. sense of. 26. Toxophora fasciata, 164. Toxorhina, 363. Trachea, 40. Trachys pygmæa, 459. Tragocephala infuscata, 669. T. viridi- fasciata, 669. Transformations of insects, 661. Transportation of insects, 94. Trechus, 434. Tremex, 196 T. Coluraba, 228. T. lati- tarsus, 225. Trichii, 457. rrichiosoma bicolor, 216 T. triangulum, 216. Trichocera, 381,383. Trichodectes canis, 655. Trichodes apiarius, 127,468. T. Nuttallii, 468. Trichopterygidæ, 443. Trichopteryx intermedia, 444. Triconayla, 667. Tricrama, 479. Tridactylus apicalis, T. terminalis, 663. Trigona, 128,129. T. carbonaria, 229. Trigonalys bipustulatus, 168. Trilocha, 296. Trimera, 424,484. Trochanter, 21. Trochantine, 21. Trogosita, 445. Trogositia», 446, Trogns exesorius, 196. Trombididæ, 660. Trombidium, 660. Tropidacris ciistata, 671. T. dnx, 671. Trox, 425. T. Carolina, 463. T. scabro- sns, 453. Trupanea apiyora, 396. Trypeta, 412. T. pomonella, 416. Trypoxylon, 195. T. frigidum, 162. T. politum, J 62. Tsetze flv, 407. Tumble bug, 47. Turnip flea beetle, 507. Tychus, 422. Typhlocyba, 69, 531. Typhlodromus pyri, 666, 068. Typhlopone, 179. T. pallipes, 181. Tyroglyphus domesticns, 666. T. ferma?, 666. T. sacchari, 666. T. siro, 640, 665. Udeopsylla robnsta, 666. dla, 381. Upis ceramboides, 474. CJrania Leilus, 819. Urapteryx politia, 819. U. sambucaria, drinary tubes. 43. drinary yessels, 36. Urite, 14. drocerid», 227. diocerus albicorais, 227. droplata rosea, 503. U. autorails, 604. Uropoda, 631. U. yegetans, 663. dtetheisa bella, 285. Vanessa Antiopa, 206, 244. 258. V. Cali- fornica, 269. V. Milbertii, 269. V. ur tics, ®7 Variety breeding, 75. Vas deferens, 36. Vasa deferentia, 44. Vates, 575. Velia, 518, 538, 540. Venation, 22. Venation of Lepidoptera, 229. Ventriculus, 35. Ver macaque, 406. Ver moyocuil, 406. Vertex of the head, 81. Vesiculæ séminales, 45. Vespa, 147,195, 400. V. arcnaria, 148 A V. crabro, 160. V. maculata, 148. V orientalis, 148. V. rufa, 123. V.ynlg» ris, 123. Vespariæ, 147, Vine slug, 222. VoluceUa, 131,149,400. Wandering spiders, 648. Walking sticks, 672. Warega fly, 409. Wasp, 8. Water boatmen, 586 Water fleas, 616. Water mites, 661. Water tigers, 436. Wax, 111. Weeping willow saw-fly 220. Weevils, 484. Wheat beetles, 446. Wheat-fly, 199. Wheat ioint worm, 203. Wheat-lou8e Aphidius, 198. Wheat-midge, 201,372. Wheat moths, 347, 350. Whip scorpions, 657. Whirligigs, 536. White ant, 130, 586. White-pine saw-fly, 225. Willow Cecidomyia, 3<>4. Wine-cask borer, 493. Wine-fly, 414. Wings, 22. Wire worms, 460. W-marked cut-worm, 309. Wood ticks, 662. Wood wasp, 8,157. Xanthia, 243. Xanthoptera semicrocea, 316. Xenoneura antiquorum, 77. Xenos, 482. Xiphidium fasciatum, 567. Xiphidria albicorais, 227. Xyela infuscata, 226. Xyleutes robiniœ, 301. X. crepera, 302. Xylobius sigillariæ, 679. Xylocopa, 139. X. yiokicea, 134. X. Vm ginica, 168, 397. Xylophagidæ, 392. Xylophagus, 392. Yellow-legged Barley-fly, 206. Zenoa piceæ, 463. Zerene catenaria, 323. Zoônule, zoônite, 9. Zygæna exulan*. 280. Zygænidæ, 234, 237. 279. Zygone ira, 378.APPENDIX. The Early Stages of Ichneumon Parasites. Ganin has shown that certain Proctotrypidœ (Platygaster, Polynema, Teleas and Ophioneurus), the larvæ of which live in the eggs as well as the larvæ of other insects, pass through a sériés of remarkable changes, heretofore unsuspected, before assuming the final and more normal larval state. He compares these Fig. 652. Development of Platygaster. changes to the hyper-metamorphosis of Meloë and Sitaris (see p. 478). The ovary of Platygaster differs from that of other insects in that it is a closed tube or sac. Hence it foliows (703)704 APPENDIX. that at every time an egg is laid, the egg tube is rupturedï Tliis was also observed in the sheep tick (Melophagus) by Leuckart, and in certain Aies (lÂmnobia, Psychoda, and My- cetobia) by Ganin himself. The earliest stage observed after the egg is laid, is that in which the egg contains a single cell with a nucléus and nucle- olus. Ont of this cell (Fig. 652 A, a) arise two other cells. The central cell (a) gives origin to the embryo. The two ou ter ones multiply by subdivision and form an embryonal membrane, or “amnion,” which is a provisional envelope and does not assist in building up the body of the germ, which however is accomplished by the cells resulting from the subdivi- sion of the central single cell. Fig. 652 B, g, shows the germ just form* ing out of the nucléus (a) ; and 6,, the peripheral cells of the blasto- derm skin, or “amnion.” Fig. C shows the yolk transformed into the embryo (g) with the outer layer of blastodermic cells (b). The body of the germ is bent upon itself. Fig. 652 D shows the embryo much further advanced with the two pairs of lobes (md, rudimentary mandi- bles, d, rudimentary pad-like or- gans, seen in a more advanced stage in E) and the bilobate tail (st). Fig. 653 show's the first larval stage after leaving the egg (m, mouth ; aty rudimentary antennæ ; md, mandibles ; d, tongue-like appen- dages ; st, anal stylets ; the subject of this figure belongs to a distinct species from Fig. 652 E). This strange form would scarcely be thought an insect, were not its origin and further development known, but rather a parasitic Copepodous Crus- acean, whence he calls this the Cyclops-like stage. In this. condition it clings to the inside of its host by means of its Fig. 653.APPENDIX. 705 Fig. 654. temporary hook-like jaws (md), moving about like a Cestodes embryo with its well known six hooks. Tlie tail moves up and down, but is scarcely used in locomotion. The nervous and vascular Systems and tracheæ are wanting, while the alimen- tary canal is simply a blind sac, remaining in an unorgan- ized state. The second larval state (Fig. 654, a?, œsophagus ; supraœsophageal ganglion; n, nervous cord ; ga and g, génital organs ; ms, bands of muscles) is attained by meanc of a moult, as usual in the métamorphosés of insects. The cells of the inner layer of the skin Fig. 655 (hypoder- Second lar> - cf Platygaster. mis) now multiply greatly, and give rise to what corresponds to the primitive band of the embryos of other insects. The third larval form is of the usual shape of ich- neumon larvæ. In Polynema the larva in its first stage is very small and motionless, and with scarcely a tçaee of organization, being a mere flask-shàped sac of cells. After five or six days it passes into a worm-like stage and subsequently into a third stage (Fig. 655, frjr, three pairs of abdominal tuberclee destined toform the ovipositor ; Z, rudiments of the legs ; /&, portion of the fatty body -r atj rudiments of the antennæ, jtf, imaginaL dises, or rudiments of the wings). The larva of Ophioneurus is at first of the form indicated by Fig. 656 E. It differs from the généra already mentioned, in remaining within its egg membrane and Third larva of Polynema.706 APPENDIX. md not assuming their strange forms. From the non-segmented, ,sac-like larva it passes directly into the pupa state. The development of Teleas is like that of Platygaster. Fig. 656 A, represents the egg ; B, O, and Z), the first stage Fi&- k*6- of the larva, the ab- domen (or posterior division of the body ) being furnished with a sériés of bristles on each side. B represents the ven- tral, C the dorsal, and D the profile view ; at, antennæ ; mcZ, hook-like man- dibles ; mo, mouth ; 5, bristles ; m, intes- tine; sw, the tail, and wZ, under lip, or labium. In the sec ond larval stage, which is oval in form, and non-segmented, the primitive band is formed. The Embryonal Membranes of Insects.—After the forma- tion of the germinal layer or blastoderm, the outer layer of blastodermic cells peels off or moults, forming the so-called “am- nion” (“pariétal membrane’Vof Brandt, Fig. 657, am). This skin is a moult from the blastoderm. At a later period, after the formation of the primitive band, a second membrane (Fig. <657, db “faltenblatt” of Weismann ; viscéral layer of Brandt) séparâtes from the primitive band. It surrounds the embryo in the Hymenoptera, Diptera and Coleoptera, enveloping the limbs, and is shed as a thin pellicle when the embryo leaves the egg. Melnikow (Archiv fiir Naturgeschichte, 1869, p. 136) from whose article the accompanying figure is taken, shows that in the lice, however, both the amnion and viscéral mem- brane share in building up the body of the embryo, and pass upon the dorsal side of the embryo. Brandt (Memoirs of theAPPENDIX. 707 Fig. 657. di..... St. Petersburg Aeademy, 1869) also shows that the viscéral layer in the Libellulidæ enter s, together with the “ amnion,” into the formation of the yolk sac. Melnikow remarks that u it appears from these facts that the différences which we see in the embryonal mem- m " %s°iWmùaiï‘ branes of insects, are in direct rela- tion to the mode in which the prim- itive band is formed. It seems, therefore, that the mode of origin of the primitive band, or its position in relation to the yolk, is concerned in the above mentioned différences of the embryonal membranes. îif-vi Development of the Louse. — After the budding out of the limbs from the primitive band, the germ appears as seen in Fig. 657. We now see the amnion (ara) surround- ing the yolk mass, and the viscéral membrane (db) within partially envel- oping the embryo. The head (vk, procephalic lobes, or anten- nal segment,) besides the antennæ (as),bears three pairs of short tubercles, which are the rudiments of the mandibles, maxillæ, and labium or second maxillæ. Behind the mouth-parts arise six long slender tubercles forming the rudimentary legs, while the primitive streak rudely marks out the ventral walls of the thorax and abdomen. Fig. 658 represents the head and mouth- parts of the embryo of the same louse ; vk is the forehead, or elypeus ; ant, the antennæ ; raad, the mandibles ; raaæ1, the first pair of maxillæ, and raaar, the second pair of maxillæ, or labium. Fig. 659 represents the mouth-parts of the same insect a little farther advanced, with the jaws and labium elongated and closely folded together. Fig. 660 represents the same still farther advanced ; the mandibles are sharp, and resemble the jaws of the Mallophaga or biting lice ; and the maxillæ (max1) and labium (raaæ2) are still large, while after- wards the labium becomes nearly obsolète. Fig. 661 repre- Embryo of louse.708 APPENDIX. Fig. 668. Fig. 661. DEVELOPMENT OF MOUTH-PARTS OF THE LOUSE.APPENDIX. 709 sents the mouth-parts of one of the Mallophaga, Goniodes, to compare with the rudimentary mouth-part of Pediculus ; Ib is the upper lip, or labrum, situated under the clypeus ; macZ, the mandibles ; max, the maxillæ ; Z, the lyre-formed piece ; pZ, the “ plate”, and o, the beak or tongue. (This and figs. 658-661 are from Melnikow’s memoir.) Fig. 662 represents the mouth of Pediculus vestimenti (copied from Schiodte) with the parts entirely protruding, and seen from above, magnified one hun- dred and sixty times ; aa, the summit of the head, with four bristles on each side ; 55, the chitinous band, and c, the hind part of the lower lip ; eZd, the foremost protruding part of the lip (the haustellum) ; ee the hooks turned outwards ; /, the inner tube of suction slightly bent and twisted ; the two pairs of jaws are perceived on the outside of these lines ; a few blood globules are seen in the interior of the tube. Formation op the Wings.—As has already been remarked on p. 64, the génital glands and the muscles of the adult insect were found by Weismann to exist in a rudimentary state in the embryo, while the imaginai dises (which are minute scales, or isolated portions of the inner layer of skin, attachée! either to a nerve or trachea, and which are readily seen on dissection in the young larva), which are destined to grow and spread so as to form the skin of the adult, even exist, though in an ex- tremely rudimentary condition, in the embryo. Weismann has also satisfactorily shown that in the Diptera the wings arise from similar dises in connection with what he doubtfully re, garded as a nerve. More recently, however, Landois has published in Siebold and Kôlliker’s “Zeitschrift” a fuller account of the formation of the wings in the butterflies. They are found to exist in the Caterpillar, soon after leaving the egg, in the form of minute expansions of the peritoneal membrane surrounding a trachea. This forms a microscopie sac filled with fat cells, some of which transform into elongated nucleated cells, in which tracheæ are developed. As the bag grows larger, the tracheæ enlarge, and Project towards what is destined to be the outer edge of the wing, until when the larva is ready to transform into the pupa.710 APPENDIX. the wings appear as little bags hanging down the sides, just under the skin. The number of main trackeæ in the wing appears from one of Landois’ figures to be six. Hence, as we hâve before suspected, this is probably the typical number of veins in the wings of ail insects, though usually but five are readily made out. A New Fossil Carboniferous Insect.— Mr. S. I. Smith contributes to the “ American Journal of Science ” a descrip- tion of the fore wing of Paolia vetusta from near Paoli, Indi- ana. The wing (Fig. 663) is 2.54 inches in length and about .85 inch wide. The venation is remarkable for the number of slender branchlets which the veins throw off towards the poste- rior border and the tip of the wing. The great care with which the specimen has been drawn and engraved obviâtes the necessity of farther description. Mr. Smith remarks that Fig. 663. Wing of Paolia vetusta. “this wing differs so mucli in neuration from any family of recent insects, that it is difficult to point out any near affinity with living forms, although it shows some points of resem- blance to several families of Neuroptera, and especially to the Ephemerids.” To Hemeristia and Miamia, he adds, “it shows more resemblance, but still differs more from either of these généra, which are considered distinct families by Mr. Scudder, than they do from each other. It seems still more allied to Dictyoneura libelluloides of Goldenberg, Prof. Hagen consider- ing it, with Eugereon Bockingii Dohrn, as a species of this genus. “ In both Dictyoneura and Eugereon, as figured, the wings hâve considérable resemblance to the specimen from Indiana, but in neither of them are the nervures so numerouslyU Plate 14. 8 INJURIOUS INSECTS.APPENDIX 711 branched towards the posterior border of the wing, and in Eugereon the spaces between the first three nervures next the anterior border are connected by straight cross-nervures. There are also important différences in the branching of the main nervures.” Abdominal Sense Organs. — On p. 17 the remarkable antenniform abdominal appendages of Mantis tessellata are fig- ured as an illustration of what we hâve called “ sensorio-geni- ital ” organs. Dr. Dohm has shown that the jointed abdominal appendages of Gryllotalpa are true sensory organs. More recently we hâve observed sense organs (probably of smell) in the anal stylets of the cockroach (Periplaneta Americana), consisting of about ninety minute sacs, situated in single rows on the upper side of each joint of the stylets. They are like similar organs in the antennæ of the same insect. Similar organs are situated on the female anal stylets of Chrysopila, a Leptis-like fly. These also are like the single sacs situated on the ends of the labial and maxillary palpi of Perla.—American Naturaliste IV. p. 690. Injurious and Bénéficiai, Insects.— Explanation of Plate 14. Of much interest to gardeners is the bean weevil (Bruchus varicornis of Leconte, flg. 8, bean containing several grubs; 8a, pupa). This is the well known and very destructive bean weevil of Europe, con- ceming which Mr. Angus writes from West Farms, N. Y., to the author : “I send you a sample of beans which I think will startle you if you hâve not seen such before. I discovered this beetle in the kid- ney or bush bean a few years ago, and they hâve been greatly on the increase every year since. I might say much on the gloomy prospect before us in the cultivation of this important garden and farm pro- duct if the work of ,this insect is not eut short by some means or other. The pea Bruchus is bad enough, but this is worse.” Another insect recently brought to the notice of farmers, is the corn Sphenophorus (N. zeœ Walsh, flg. 11), of which Mr. R. Howcll, of Tiago County, New York, writes, June 14, 1869: “This is the fourth year they hâve infested the newly planted corn in this vicinity. The encloscd specimens were taken on the llth instant. I présumé that they hâve been in every hillof corn in my fleld. They piercc the young corn in numerous places, so that each blade has from one to six or eight holes of the size of a pin, or larger. and I found a num- ber last Friday about an inch under ground hanging to young stalks712 APPENDIX. with much tenacity. When yery numerous every stalk is killed Some flelds two or three years ago were wholly destroyed by this in- sect. Among plant house insects may be noticed the white scale bark Fig. 664. Larva of Leiopus xanthoxyli. louse (Aspidiotus bromeliœ Bouche, flg. 6, magnifled ; 4, young magnifled; 4a, end of body still more enlarged). It is often destroyed by a minute chalchid fly, Cocco* phagus(?). Boisduval’s fera bark louse (.Lecanium filicum Boisd., flg. 7a, scale enlarged seen from above; 76, the same, seen from beneath, and showing the form of the body surrounded by the broad, flat edge of the scale ; 7c, an antenna, enlarged ; 7d, a leg, enlarged; 7e, end of the body, showing the flattened hairs fringing the edge), is common on hot-house plants, as also the Platy- cerium bark louse (Lecanium platycerii Pack., flg. 6, magnifled ; 5a, an antenna, enlarged), and the plant house Coccus (C. adonidum Linn., flg. 3, magnifled). The plant house Aleurodes (A. vaporarium of Westwood, flg. 9, enlarged; 9a, pupa enlarged), is more common per- haps than one would suppose. It lives out of doors on tomato leaves and we found it not uncommon, in September, on strawberry plants on the grounds of the State Agricultural College, at Amherst. The list of hot-house insects is completed by one of the most injurious of ail, the minute Thrips (Heliothrips hœmorrhoidalis Haliday), from Europe, flg. 2, greatly magnifled, which by its punctures, causes the sur- Fig’ 665* face of the leaf affected to turn red or white, while at times the entire leaf withers. Fig. 10 represeuts the Cran- berry weevïl, Anthonomus su- turaMs Leconte ; 10a, its larva, mentioned on p. 487. Fig. représenta the Byturus uni- color Say (enlarged) which feeds on the flowers of the raspberry. Explanation of Plate 15.— Fig. 1, Leiopus facetus Say, the larva of which bores in the branches of the apple tree. Fig. 2, Leiopus xanthoxyli Shimer. which bores under the bark of the prickly ash. Larva of Callidium amœnum.Plate 15. No. 6. No. IL INJUBIOUS AND BENEFICIAI* IN8ECT8.APPENDIX. 713 TFig. 664, a, represents the larva; b, upper side, c, under side of the bead, greatly enlarged. Fig. 3, Callidium arnœnum Say, Fig. 4>65, a, larva ; b, upper, c, under side of head enlarged. Fig. 6, Drep- Fig. 666. anodes varus Gr. and Rob. Fig. 4, the larva and pupa, the former closely resembling the twigs of the juniper, on which it feeds. Fig. Fig. 667. a 6, Bucculatrix thuiella Pack., enlarged ; (a, cocoon, natural size,) which feeds on the cedar. Fig. 7, Tel- ephorus bilineatus Say ; Fig. S, larva enlarged. Fig. 666, -a1 upper; b, under side of the head, much enlarged. The larva of this species was identifled by Mr. P. S. Sprague, who found it near Boston, under stones in spring, where it changes to a pupa and early in May becomes a beetle, when it eats the newly expanded. leaves of the birch. Fig. 9, Galerita janus Fabr. Fig. 667 unknown larva ; a, up- per, ô, under side of head, enlarged. The specimen here flgured was discovered by Mr. J. H. Emerton, under stones July lst. Fig. 10, Larva of Co*- dulia lateralis Burm. Fig. 11, larva of Macromia transversa Say.714 APPENDIX, New Classification of the Hemiptera.—Prof. Schiodte has proposed the following classification of the Hemiptera* which is probably the best yet suggested, and is based on a more profound study of their extemal anatomy than has been previously made. It will be noticed, however, that the lice (Pediculina) are not included, though he regards them as forming a separate division (Siphunculata Latr.) of equal value with the Heteroptera and Homoptera. He does not seem to include the Mallophaga among the Hemiptera. The familier of the Homoptera are not characterized. I. Genæ (cheeks) hollowed out, to receive the flrst pair of coxæ. [Posterior pair of coxæ hinged, provided with fémoral grooves.] Saborder Homoptera. H. Genæ entire, remote from the coxæ. Suborder Heteroptera. A Posterior coxæ acetabulate, rotating, with no fémoral grooves. TrocTialopoda. a. Metathoracic epimera laminate, nearly concealing the flrst ventral segment [of the abdomen. 1. Antennæ covered at the base. Fam. 1. Cimices. 2. Antennæ entirely uncovered. *. Antennæ inserted before the eyes. Fam. 2. Corel. **. Antennæ inserted below the eyes. Fam. 3. Lygœi. b. Metathoracic epimera without the ventral lamina. [metrœ. 1. Claws superposed (inserted before the end of the joint). Fam. 4. Hydro- 2. Claws terminal. *. Metathoracic epimera almost covered by the mesothoracic epimera. Last pair of abdominal spiracles forming a short tube. Fam. 5. Nepæ. **. Metathoracic epimera wholly uncovered. Abdominal spiracles equal. [Fam. 6. Beduvii*. B. Posterior coxæ hinged, provided with fémoral grooves. Pagiopoda. a. Antennæ uncovered. Fam. 7. Acanthiœ. b Antennæ partially covered. 1. Body depressed, prone. a. Beakfree. f. Metathoracic epimera uncovered. *. Feet cursorial. Fam. 8. Pelegoni. **. Feet natatory. Fam. 9. Naucorides. tf. Mesothoracic epimera almost covered by the metathoracic epimera. [Fam. 10. Bélostomata. /3. Beak free. [Metathoracic epimera r ncovered, appendlculated.] Fam. [11. Corixœ.. 2. Body boat-shaped, supinate. [Metathoracic epimera uncovered. Beak free.] Fam. 12. Notonectœ. New Classification of the Spiders.—The arrangement of the groups of spiders given by me is very imperfect. I therefore présent the following classification of Dr. T. Thorell (On European Spiders. Part I, 1869-70) as the most satisfac- tory. While I hâve considered the Araneina as forming a su'b-APPENDIX. 715 order of the order Arachnida, it will be noticed that Thorell regards the Araneina as an order, dividing it into the seven suborders and twenty-two families indicated below. The ar- rangement of these groups is like the branches of a tree, and this represents well the relations of the groups of articulâtes, as well as other sub-kingdoms. As Thorell remarks : “ As regards the larger groups of spiders, the suborders and the families, the reasons for tbe order of arrangement we hâve chosen will, we hope, easily be seen if one casts one’s eye on the accompanying diagram, which gives a view of the con- nection founded on real affinity, which the families of the spiders adopted by us, according to our opinion, hâve to each other.” Fig. 668. Opilione8. I. Orbitelariæ. 1. Epeiroidæ. II. Betitelariæ. 2. Theridioidæ. 3. Scytodoidæ. 4. Enyoidæ. ni. Tubitelariæ. 6. Urocteoidæ. 6. Omanoidæ. 7. Hersilionidæ. 8. Agalenoidæ. 9. Drassoidæ. 10. Dysderoidæ. 11. Füostatoidæ. IV. Territelariæ. 12. Theraphosoid» 13. Liphistioidæ. 14. Catadysoidæ. v. Laterigraaæ. 15. Thomisoidæ. vi. Citigradæ. 16. Lycosoidæ. 17. Oxyopoidæ. vn. Saltigradæ. 18. Myrmecionidæ* 19. Otiothopoid». 20. Dinopoidæ. 21. Eresoidæ. 22. Attoid».