“- ri r r i ‘Jeu ae ae Ne - rt ee \ BT ty | er ‘ +” . ‘ ‘* ¢ we r) pe g ¥ . S«rtt , ro i i vale + eee eat ere ere ee een bi Soret at cn NOTICE: Return or renew all Library Materials! The Minimum Fee for each Lost Book is $50.00. The person charging this material is responsible for its return to the library from which it was withdrawn on or before the Latest Date stamped. below. Theft, mutilation, and underlining of books are reasons for discipli- nary action and may result in dismissal from the University. To renew call Telephone Center, 333-8400 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN MAR 13 1988 MAY 2 3 1989 NOV 2 8 206 L161—O-1096 : ¥ ; i , me r <4 3- be Ws love _o th oe L2 I cusrecelarta. x ub“by Longman £ C!LalerN bjler liow May 2° ny POL) - THE OF BY M. P. HUBER, MEMBER OF THE PHYSICAL AND NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY OF GENEVA, AND CORRESPONDING MEMBER OF THE NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETIES OF TARNE AND GARONNE, &c, ee TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH, WITH ADDITIONAL NOTES, By J. R. JOHNSON, M.D., F.R.S., &c. — a ree = LONDON: PRINTED FOR LONGMAN, HURST, REES, ORME, AND BROWN . PATERNOSTER-ROW. 1820. oy y if pres} - Py 4 re > ae ee Pe NAAR dy Rime tee Cathy! bp tiibatteg Pr pe Me Bac dey hy PEs b Pee a We a watt wi: oe ay - », > ape 3 gt m4 ' es i i A2uy F| witht 24 ad ed Shwe le sik ve Do bers unt - CE NURSES GON, dae a SY, rosie *s ADVERTISEMENT. Since the following pages were put to the press, the Translator has been favoured with a letter from the Author, of which the following is an extract : — «Since the publication of my ‘ Re- searches into the Natural History of Indigenous Ants,’ I have frequently re- witnessed what I there describe ; so that I can truly affirm, I have neither been led aside by a fertile imagination, nor by a love of the marvellous. ** Some of these facts appear to many of so romantic a nature, that I am happy in not being the only person who has A 8 vi ADVERTISEMENT. noticed them ; not only are there several enlightened observers in this country (Switzerland), but a number of other Naturalists, who, since the publication of my work, have also observed the same occurrences. What has afforded me peculiar satisfaction, is, that of having learned, vivd voce, from M. De Latreille, one of the most distinguished Natura- lists of Paris, Member of the Institute or Academy of Sciences, that he had witnessed, on an extensive scale, and had shown to several of his colleagues, the wars and pillages of my Amazon Ants. ‘* You will find another proof in a work of this great Naturalist, entitled, ‘ Memoires sur divers sujets de ? Histotre Naturelle des Insectes, §c.’ and particu- Jarly in that memoir, entitled, ‘ Conside- rations nouvelles et generales sur les Insectes vivans en Societé. Discours lu a la Séance publique de P Academie des Sciences, le 17 Mars, 1817. ADVERTISEMENT. Vil ** The Author of these Memoirs, after having mentioned in a summary way, the facts I published upon the manners, &c. of the Rufescent Amazon Ant, says, ‘ I observed, in 1802, an army of these Ants in one of their military excursions. They were traversing one of our great roads, covering the whole of its breadth, and advancing in a column of about two feet in width. I attributed this move- ment to a forced emigration. . I sus- pected, however, from the form of this species, before M. Huber had published any account of it, that it had_parti- cular habits. I found this Ant in the woods, in the neighbourhood of Paris. The whole of the facts related by this Naturalist (Huber) have been fully con- jirmed * M. De Latreille told me, that he had shown this singular phenomenon to a skilful English Naturalist, whose name I think is Leach. A 4 Vili ADVERTISEMENT. «« These, Sir, are the proofs by which I hope to obtain the confidence of a great number of those readers, who are unable to ascertain the truth of my assertions.” PREFACE, BY THE TRANSLATOR. Tur favourable critique of these Re. searches (Recherches sur les Meurs des Fourmis, &c.), in the Edinburgh Re- view, for July, 1812, led me to entertain little doubt, that, long ere this, a trans- jation would have been presented to the public. | Disappointed in this expectation, and desirous of filling up agreeably a portion of my leisure time, I engaged in the translation, although aware of the little merit attached to so humble an office. | A Sd x . PREFACE If the reader, however, experience the same pleasure in the perusal of this work, as I did in transcribing it for the press, both parties will be satisfied, and I shall have the gratification of knowing that my labour has not been unavailing, or my time misemployed. The additional notes are not what I was desirous they should be. I hoped to have made some addition to the History of Ants, or at least to have confirmed some of the very remarkable facts re- corded in the present volume, particu- larly that of the female ants voluntarily depriving themselves of their wings after impregnation; but I lament that con- tinued ill health prevented my making those exertions necessary to attain this object. JI regret that, during my residence at Geneva, I was not personally acquainted with our author, who resides in the neighbourhood of that city, and who would doubtless have felt much pleasure in supplying me with additional inform- BY THE TRANSLATOR. | xi ation. I then had no idea of putting the following pages to the press, or I would have obtained an introduction through the medium of my kind friends, Profes- sor Pictet or Monsieur de Luc. It were much to be wished that mo- nographs on the smaller animals, like the one now before us, were more frequently published in this country, since it would have the effect of removing, in some de- gree, the ridicule attached to those who attend to the minuter objects of creation, and of placing this department of Natu- ral History, on a more extended and firm basis. That entomology is neither a trifling nor an useless study, it will be enough - to mention — to say nothing of the na- tional advantage Sweden derived from the entomological knowledge of Lin- nzeus — the very great services rendered to medicine and the arts, by the intro- duction of the silk-worm, the cochineal insect, and the Spanish fly. A 6 Xi PREFACE But, waiving these advantages, and others equally great would doubtless arise, if this branch of Natural History were more generally cultivated, let us only consider it in the light of an amuse- ment, — still is it an amusement not without its charms. The amusements of the Naturalist are attended with no great expense; his em- ployment in the open air contributes to the preservation of his health; his frame becomes robust from constant exercise, and the spirit of enquiry is awakened . as he contemplates the several objects by which he is surrounded: whether he climbs the lofty mountain, confines him- self to the smiling valley, crosses the brawling stream, penetrates the en- tangled forest, or breaks out into the open plain, a thousand beings sporting in the air, measuring the ground, or skimming the surface of the liquid ele- ment, arrest his steps, and claim his at- tention; his pulse beats high with en- BY THE TRANSLATOR. Xi joyment, and his heart, warmed with the » kindlier emotions, throbs with unutter- able delight ; moreover, ‘* He fears no bailiff’s wrath, no baron’s blame ; His is untax’d and undisputed game.” CrasBe’s Borough, p. 110. Bristol, Feb. 6. 1820. aed oa vy ~ clad ape eh Ape “Be ~ : i 4 See ti DD ; rT edge a a re rao tye Yew 4 A, (v2 PREFACE, BY THE AUTHOR. Mucu has been written upon Ants: their form of government, and their la- bours, excited the admiration of the ancients equally with the moderns; but it is only in the present day that just ob- servations have taken place of the fabu- lous recitals of Pliny and Aristotle. The Naturalists of the last century at- tended to their transformations, disco- vered the sexes, and cleared up many essential points of their history. Learn- ed anatomists, also, described their or- gans, classed the different kinds of Ants, and pointed out their generic characters. XVI PREFACE To the individual who wishes to be ac- quainted with the history of these in- sects, it is no slight advantage, to be enabled to designate the species, without lying under the necessity of entering into long and minute descriptions; he can then devote himself entirely to the study of those laws by which these vari- ous tribes are governed, undertake new researches into their habitudes and in- dustry, and have his attention solely oc- cupied with the phenomena their in- stinct presents. If I have made any progress in the History of Ants, I stand, in a considerable degree, indebted to the extensive works of M. Latreille, who, independent of the excellent descriptions, and complete clas- sification he has given us of these in- sects, has, by his observations, con- tributed to remove several popular errors. One of our contemporaries, trusting to a fertile and brilliant imagination, has been pleased so far to honour these little BY THE AUTHOR. XVil insects as to dress them out in all the vir- tues, excusing them the vices that so much disgrace the human species. The History of Ants being yet incom- plete, I have been induced to join my own observations to those of my learned pre- decessors, trusting that the perseverance with which I have studied the economy of Ants for several years has enabled me to fill up a portion of that void which still remains in this branch of science. Animated with the desire of following the steps of the celebrated guide nature had placed near me, I undertook, under his auspices, works similar to those in which he had been distinguished, and found in this occupation the double pleasure, of interesting him and instruct- ing myself. I published in early life, some obser- vations upon humble-bees, insects that live in a republic. ‘These first attempts having been received by Naturalists more favourably than I had reason to expect, ! flattered myself that I should be en- _ Xvi PREFACE abled to disclose some of the secrets in the History of Ants, whose societies, al- though much more extensive, present gveater difficulties, in the investigation, from the diminutive size-of the indivi- dua s composing them, and the obscurity in which most of their operations are en- veloped. These researches, which I am aware are still very imperfect, present so re- markable an assemblage of facts, that I am induced to lay them before the ama- teurs of Natural History, hoping they will meet a favourable reception. Not to interrupt the course of my ob- servations by anatomical details, I have placed in the introduction all that relates to the external organization of Ants. I have also added an abridged notice of factscollected by other Naturalists, whose writings may be easily procured, should the reader feel desirous of obtaining fur- ther information. In these researches I have followed no methodical arrangement, having adopted - BY THE AUTHOR. Xix the plan I considered the best adapted to elucidate the subject. I therefore com- mence, by giving an account of the art with which Ants construct their habi- tation. These insects inhabit, for the most part, the bottom of their subterranean resi- dence ; hence there was a necessity of my being provided with an apparatus that would enable me to follow them in their domestic occupations. After describing the one I employed, I mention the great care which these little creatures take of the eggs, larvee, and pupe of their nu- merous family. I devote an entire chapter to the his- tory of the females; I describe their amours, and state the manner in which new colonies are established, and ancient ones preserved. Passing from the relation of Labourers with the winged individuals, to that of the Labourers among themselves, 1 accompany them in their migrations and excursions, notice their individual conduct, and then de- xX PREFACE scribe the combats in which they en- gage. In the course of this work, several questions are discussed that may appear bold to those who do not_see in insects any thing but organized machines, but they will not astonish the Naturalist, ac- customed to distrust his own opinions. There are few individuals who have not perceived how absurd is the supposition of a blind instinct, and for some time past we have granted to animals, at least so it to me appears, a greater degree of knowledge than formerly. If we reflect a moment on the compli- cated nature of that mechanism, we must put in place of a spark of that light in which we all participate, to enable it to accommodate itself to circumstances, to provide for the several necessities of a numerous colony, and to direct a multi- tude of springs in such a manner as to concur in the same end, we shall be tempted to prefer an hypothesis the most simple,—that which accords to insects a 17 BY THE AUTHOR. XX1 sufficient degree of intelligence for the conduct of their domestic affairs, to that which considers themas mere automatons. But Ants, living as they do in society, and entering upon labours that require some degree of unanimity —have they no means of understanding, and of making known their wants and their situation to. their companions? What are the con- necting bonds of this numerous family ? Have they chiefs, a government, a police? Do we find among them any proof of that subordination so boasted of by their pa- negyrists, and of that economical fore- sight which they present us as an ex- ample for our imitation ?— These impor- tant questions would have alone engaged my attention, hadI been able to followany regular plan in my observations: but when we advance on an unknown region, we cannot trace before-hand the boun- daries of our journey; and Natural History offers more than one proof, that to make new discoveries we must now and then quit the main road. XXil PREFACE I was, however, far from expecting those extraordinary facts that presented themselvesin the course of my researches; among them those of the Ants with their pucerons, which I have already pub- lished, and to which I have made several additions. But there are facts still more singular connected with the Ants of dif- ferent species. The history of the Ama- zon Ants presents a phenomenon so op- posed to what the manners of insects and other animals have hitherto offered us, and recals so prominent a feature in the history of man, that I have given up a great portion of my time to its elucida- tion, and have considered it my duty to devote several chapters to it, with the view of making it known in all its detail, and of putting the reader in the way of judging or verifying the truth of my assertions. I conclude the work by some general considerations which my observations have suggested to me, and by comparing the habits of Ants with those of other in- sects that live in a republic. BY THE AUTHOR. XXili The title I have given to these re- searches is not to be taken in its fullest extent, since I have not studied the man- ners of a// the indigenous ants. I know twenty-three species of which I have not equally learned the history; but if the facts I have noticed, excite the attention of Naturalists, and induce them to fill up the outline I now lay before them, it will bethe sweetest recompense forthe labours to which I have been devoted. rut Pans | dvtie mane (i i si a naionE . INTRODUCTION. My design in this Introduction, is to take a rapid review of the facts collected by several writers relative to the History of Ants. The descriptive part, better known than that which refers to their manners and habits, still presents some doubts which I shall attempt to remove. De Geer, among the ancient, Fabricius and Latreille among the modern natural- ists, are those to whom I shall have re- course for their classification. Systematic authors have placed Ants in the class of insects with four naked wings— with Bees, Wasps, Andrenx, &c. from which they differ essentially in the composition of their families, where we a XXV1 INTRODUCTION. find the males and females furnished with wings, and the workers without them. The characters given by M. Latreille, to distinguish them more particularly, are that of having “the peduncle of the abdomen surmounted with a scale, or knotty; the abdomen of the workers and females ejaculating an acid, or armed with a sting; the antenne filiform, or slightly enlarged at their extremity, bent or fractured in the middle, composed of twelve or thirteen joints ; the second co- nical, of the same length as those that follow ; a tongue, spoon-shaped, entire ; the upper lip effaced; the palpi filiform unequal, anterior of five, posterior of four joints. ‘The first of these characters furnishes two very distinct families, the one, composed of all those ants that have the peduncle surmounted by a scale, the other, of all those in which it is formed of two knots. The characters of the first family, are—having the antenne fili- form, or pointed at the extremity; no sting; a simple venom-bag; the abdomen INTRODUCTION. XXVil more elongated, and composed in the fe- _ males and workers of five rings. The ants of the second family have the antennze moniliform, and consider- ably enlarged at their exttemity ; a sting; the abdomen short, and composed of four rings in females and the workers. The males have, in general, the an- tennz longer, and of thirteen joints; the abdomen is composeb of one ring more than in other individuals of their species ; they possess neither a sting nor a venom- bag. As we shall treat in this work of none but indigenous ants, all of which find place in this general division, I shall not enter into greater detail rela- tive to their classification. Let us examine separately all the parts of the body of ants in order to know their external organs. ‘Their head is triangular, oblong, and terminates in a point more or less obtuse; it is thick at the top, thin at the opposite extremity, and terminated by two large teeth, termed mandibles; underneath is the mouth, properly so called. On each side are a 2 XXVIiL INTRODUCTION. large reticulated oval eyes; above, we commonly notice three more, very small, and placed so as to form a triangle. In the fore-part of the head are the anten- nz, and underneath the lower jaws the palpi. | The mandibles of the pate and the workers are of a horny structure, con- cave, curved, denticulated, moveable, and serve for several purposes: those of the males are very slender, terminate in a point, andare covered with hair. Besides these organs with which the mouth is externally furnished, we also remark an upper lip, slightly projecting, two infe- rior jaws, very small, which play from right to left, and a lower lip, hidden en- tirely underneath ; we are not yet agreed as to their composition. | Fabricius gives to Ants of all kinds, Si their. principal character, that of having a mouth destitute of a tongue (os absque Lingua); Latreille, on the contrary, grants them one, expressing it under this form (Langue en cuilleron entiére); ‘the 17 INTRODUCTION. XX1X lower lip,’”’ he says, “is formed of a co- nical furrow, coriaceous, with an elevated ridge in the middle, and terminated in a point, and of a tongue, or membranous portion, lodged in this furrow, and spoon- shaped.’’— I beg leave to add some few observations to those of these great na- turalists. When the ants wish todrink, we see proceed from their lower jaws, which are much shorter than the upper, a little conical, fleshy, and yellowish tubercle, which performs the office of a tongue, advancing and retiring alternately; it appears to proceed from what we term ‘the lower lip, which serves as the base, and perhaps a sheath to this tongue, and which is so small, that it is only from analogy with other insects we have given it this name. ‘This lip is capable of ad- vancing conjointly with the two lower jaws, and when the insect wishes to lap, the whole apparatus makes a progressive movement, in such a way, that thetongue, which is very short, has no need of much extension to enable it to accomplish its a3 XXX INTRODUCTION. object. The jaws are elongated, en- larged at their extrémity, slightly concave underneath, of a horny substance, and, compared to the mandibles, extremely slender and weak. In the centre, exter- nally, we notice palpi of six rings each, and two more may be also perceived at the base of the tongue; the latter are much smaller and composed only of four rings: we are as vet unacquainted with their use. The antenne, as we have before stated, are bent or fractured, situated in the fore- part of the head, more or less near the middle of the forehead ; they lie in a small longitudinal furrow, and are composed of twelve or thirteen joints ; the first beimg about half their length. The antenne of those ants that have a scale upon the fillet of the abdomen are filiform, and are composed of rings of the same size, or terminate slightly ina point. The ants of the second family have the antenne, on the contrary, enlarged at the extre- mity; those of the males are setaceous INTRODUCTION. XXXI in the first species, more granulated in the Jatter species, and in all are formed. of one ring more than in the workers and females. The head is connected to the thorax or corslet by. a thin, short, and narrow neck, of a fleshy substance, and furnished with muscles, by which all its movements are regulated. The corslet. of the winged individuals is very large comparatively to the head; that of the workers is much narrower 3; that of the former is convex, entire, composed of several horny pieces, of different forms, retained by proper mem- branes: the superior is separated from the sternal portion by a furrow, in the middle of which the wings are implanted. The wings are placed in the back part of the corslet, whilst, in other insects of the same kind, they are situated more in front of the body. Another remarkable character respecting their insertion is,— that the corslet has none of those instru- ments (Cuzllerons) destined to moderate a 4 XXXII INTRODUCTION. ‘the movements of the wings, and which are situated at their base in the other hymenopterous insects. * The corslet of the workers is gibbous, divided equally, and compesed, according to De Geer, of three pieces ; the first ~ that nearest the head, is thick and round ; the second is of less size, extends to the under part of the abdomen, and appears divided in two transversely; the third, much thicker than the second, is trun- cated and obtuse. We cannot well define the form of the corslet, since it varies according to the species; it has four stigma, two of which rest in a slight lateral depression (which seems to divide the corslet), one on each side ; the other two are situated near the posterior. ex- tremity, to the right and left of the fillet. The wings, which are four in number, are transparent, large, and sleek; the posterior are shorter than the anterior, their nervures are slightly coloured, and * These observations were communicated to me by Professor Jurine, and are a proof of the distin- ; uishing glance of this able naturalist. INTRODUCTION. XXXI1 ‘the stigma is yellow or brown. These wings are hooked when the insect flies ; they form but one horizontal surface by means of aseries of little hooks disposed at their margin. To each of the three lower parts of the corslet are attached a pair of legs. ‘They are connected by a moveable piece, long and conical, which we may term the hip. The posterior legs are the longest ; they are each divided into three principal parts —-the thigh, the leg, and the foot or tarsus; the latter is formed of five conical pieces, of unequal length, arti- culated together, and more or less hatry ; the tarsus is terminated by two hooks, between which lies a round substance, which we may regard as the sole of the foot. We remark, at the extremity of the leg, properly so called, a spine or spur, ‘straight, strong, and smooth ; that on the anterior feet is slightly curved, and co- vered with stiff hair, where it is con- nected to the foot. The first piece of the tarsus, which is opposite the spur, presents a considerable curvature. It i a 5 XXXIV INTRODUCTION. furnished with a fringe-work of strong hair, cutregularly. This constitutes the brush which the insect: employs when cleaning its antennz, head, and corslet; it has also other uses, but to these I shall allude on another occasion. The vertical seale is heart-shaped, with the point turned downwards. It is tra- versed at its origin by the abdominal fillet; its form varies, and it furnishes very distinct characters. Latreille re- marks that it is provided with two stigmee, which are situated at its base on the posterior side. The abdomen or belly of the ant is always larger than the corslet, of an oval form, swoln, and more or less pointed at the posterior extremity. It 1s composed of demi-rings, which are of a horny sub- stance ; the superior are connected with the inferior by means of a flexible mem- brane, which allows of their separation and approximation at will. It is easy to notice this when the insect has taken a full meal, since each of these horny pieces INTRODUCTION. XEXV appears then to be separated from the rest by a little whitish band, which is nothing more than this membrane. The abdo- men is composed of four or five rings, the last of which gives passage to the ‘sexual organs and the sting. Latreille regards the scale as charac- teristic, which rests on the fillet of the abdomen, and takes the place of a ring, which, without that, would be wanting in the abdomen of these insects. These are his words:—¥** Naturalists,”’ he says, ** have not considered that this scale or these knots on the peduncle of the abdomen of ants are only the first rings shaped in this way. Several wasps have also the first segment of the abdo- men formed likea knot. To decide this point, let us count the number of rings of which the abdomen of ants is com- posed ; we know, and it is a constant rule with respect to insects of this order, that there are seven rings in the abdomen of males, and six in that of females. Let us see if, after taking away the scale and a 6 KXXVI INTRODUCTION. the knots of the peduncle, we shall find this number. We do not : — for the ab- domen of the.females or workers, which has a scale or single knot in the fore-part, possess but five rings, and that of the males only six. The abdomen of those ants whose peduncle is formed of two knots, will have still one ring less; that isto say, four in some, and five in others.”’ — We have already remarked, that the workers and females of some species are provided with a sting; this consists of a Jittle short, horny substance, straight and conical, formed of two filaments, and ac- companied with two other little pieces, conical, smooth, compressed, one on each ‘side. © “* There exists,’? continues M. Latreille, ‘‘ the greatest resemblance be- tween the exterior organs of generation in single females and workers; the re- semblance indeed is so close, that on the most severe examination we can scarcely perceive any sensible difference.’’ . He regards the workers as impotent females, whose organs have not received their full INTRODUCTION. XXXVil development. In truth, if we consider the form of their head and their teeth, the number of the joints or articulations in their antenne, the number of their rings, the presence of the sting, or that of the venom-bag which replaces it, we shall be struck with the similarity exist- ing between these two orders. The workers are much smaller than the fe- males ; they also differ in the form of the corslet, in the absence of wings, and in colour. Some of the males are smaller, others larger than the workers of their species ; their corslet is shaped like that of the females; the scale or knots are of great similarity in all the individuals of each family: the males are commonly of a blackish hue. Our knowledge of the manners and habits of ants is extremely limited, con- sisting only of a small assemblage of de- tached facts, and of a few assertions, sufficiently vague, which I shall discuss in their proper place. In the list of mo- dern authors who have contributed to XXXVI INTRODUCTION. the history of ants, we find naturalists of the greatest celebrity. Leeuwenhoeck is the first who seri- ously attended to the metamorphoses of ants, and proved that what had been hitherto regarded as their eggs were the real larvee ; indeed from their magnitude this should have been previously known, the eggs of these insects being exceed- ingly minute. Swammerdam confirms, by profound researches and admirable descriptions, the observations published by his prede- cessor : — he notices the several changes ants undergo, and shows the pupa to be the same individual that under the form of larva possessed neither limbs nor any distinct features. He points out the dis- tinction between the males and females, which, he says, are furnished with wings, and remarks, that the common ants are jJabourers or neuters, as obtains in bees. He also describes some of the domestic occupations in which ants are engaged, and informs us, that the larvae of some INTRODUCTION. XxxXIx species spin a silken envelope, in which they undergo their transformation, and then gives us excellent descriptions of several species of ants. Linnzus comes next: — he describes seven species of ants met with in Sweden; — treats of the large conical ant-hills abounding in fir-forests ; finds the female ants, as well as the males, furnished with wings ; which, he says, they lose a little time after birth, and is of opinion they never return to their original habit- ation. Geoffroy adds nothing to the facts brought forward by these excellent na- turalists: he falls, on the contrary, into several errors, which, as they have been combated by De Geer, I shall pass over in silence. ‘This last author (De Geer) informs us, that the young ants cannot extricate them- selves from their silken envelope without the assistance of the labourers; and that the larvae of the shining black ant do not always spin, since we find in their xl INTRODUCTION. nest pupe both naked and _ enclosed, He also observes that the larvee of cer- tain species pass the winter in that state, and that those of the Yellow Ant are closely invested with hair in the month of April, &c. — Passing from the infant to the adult state of the ant, he notices their amours in the air, believes that the females return to their nest to deposit their eggs, in this respect opposing the opinion of Linnzeus, who was, however, better informed on this subject than him- self. This justly celebrated naturalist, notwithstanding, gives us more inform- ation upon the history of ants than the whole of his predecessors. Charles Bonnet was in his turn occu- pied: —he was of opinion that ants are directed in their migrations by the scent. He notices a small family-establishment of these insects on the head of a thistle, of which he gives us an interesting ac- count. Had he, however, opened it, he would have, with admiration, discovered the motive which drew them thither, and INTRODUCTION. xh would no longer have been astonished at their living there without touching the provision he tendered them. He saw these ants engaged in carrying each other, and describes their proceedings in his usual lively and agreeable manner, al- though unaware of the purport for which these insects had assembled. M. Latreille confirms the facts brought forward by other authors. He notices two species of ants destitute of eyes, but does not describe their manners. He also advances some conjectures to which we shall refer hereafter. It appears from all the observations made to the present day, that we are not agreed as to the fate of the males and females ; that we know not why certain larve should, others should not, spin; why among some species we should find pupe both naked and enclosed ; that we have not sufticiently attended to the spirit which reigns in the interior of ant- hills, nor to the relation existing between the labouring ants and their females ; xin INTRODUCTION. that we have not discovered whether they possess the means of understanding each other; that we have not sufficiently de- scribed the construction of their abode, nor the manner in which they establish it, nor do we know whether these insects do or do not form colonies, &c. The number of questions not yet solved is endless ; it is, however, time to fill up some of the numerous sketches which our predecessors have left us upon this subject, and place, if possible, the history of ants on a more solid and secure found- ation. CONTENTS. CHAP. I. Page THE Prem lectue of Ants - <= -+ + ©. = 1 . The Architecture of the Fallow Ants 2 2. - - = = + + + = Mason Ants 16 GS. - - + - + + = © dark Ash-co- coloured Ants - - - - = = $8 Ape, 3. espe cd toi Ante ghathin- habit timber - - - - + - = 47 Bont ee oe we ee pee that forin their residence of saw-dust, &c. 58 CHAP. Il. Or the Eggs, Larva, and Pupa of Ants - - 60 CHAP. III. Or the Fecundation, &c.of Ants - - - 4 i. Of the departure of the Winged Ants 20. 2.- - History of the Winged Ants after impregnation - - - - - 108 3. - - conduct of the Labourers to- wards the pregnant females - - - 127 xliv CONTENTS. CHAPiIV: . Page Or the relation between Ants - - - - = 142 2. Of the manner in which Ants are guided in their several excursions - 15] 3. - - migrations of the Fallow Ants 157 4. - - affection of Ants for their com- panions - - - - = = = = 168 CHAP. V. _ Or the wars of Ants, and some other parti- REAP tea ee ee Oe 2 ee CHAP wiVi. Or the Relation of Ants with the Pucerons and Gall Fasects © <4. eh Ne ve -QOR 1. Of the Antennal Language - - - i. 2.- - intimacy of Ants with the Pueerons § + > er te a BO 3. - - Relation of Ants with the Gall INSECLS Se Se ee 4, - ~- almosthuman industry of Ants 222 5. - - resources of the Ants during writer “Sik eae a ta a 6.- - eggsofthe Pucerons - - - 239 CHAP. VIL. First historical sketch of the Amazon Ants 248 CHAP. VIII. ReEsf£ARCHEsS into the origin of mixed ant- hills - = - eee ee te Ae CONTENTS. xlv CHAP. IX. FurtHer information on the Amazon Ants 288 CHAP.:X; Tue Establishment of a mixed Ant-hill, in a glass apparatus - - - - + = 310 CHAP. XI. History ofthe Sanguine Ants - - - - 329 CHAP. XII. Osservations on those insects that live in Republics - - + - © + = ~ 346 APPENDIX ©-92 2) © wie ye oe © 879 Wet Lage ant “nt io) THE NATURAL HISTORY OF ANTS. CHAP. I. THE ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. Tue first objects which strike the atten- tion in entering upon the study of the history of ants, are the art with which ' ad form their habitations ; their variety, _ and the manner in which they respectively _ answer the wants of the species who con- struct them. They are sometimes fa- bricated with earth, sometimes hewn out in the trunk of the most solid trees, or simply composed of leaves and stalks of plants collected from all quarters. They are of an astonishing size, when compared with their diminutive architects. B ® - ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. I hope, in the course of the present work, to bring the reader to conceive what degree of intelligence we may grant these insects, whose faculties, po- lice, and sagacity, have been, by some authors, as much over-rated as by others not duly appreciated. The three modes of’ building, of which I have just spoken, admit of numerous modifications, each species of ant being endowed with some peculiar talent. I shall mention in what they differ, after describing the general outline of their architecture, if we may express, by the same term, the simple and rude work of an insect, and an art brought to perfec- tion by the hands of man. ah 1, ART OF BUILDING AMONG THE FALLOW ANTS. The fallow ant is that ant which forms in the woods those hillocks so remarkable for their extent. It admits of easy ob- servation, from its being above the mid- dle size, from its operations being carried ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 3 on in open day, and from the simplicity of the work in which we find it engaged. It is very common in every part of Eu- rope, and has, therefore, occupied the attention of Linnzus, De Geer, &c., but these Jearned men, having noticed it un- der a point of view different from mine, and my plan not permitting me to men- tion what they say upon this head, I shall, after briefly describing these insects, com- mence by explaining the construction of their abode, at the same time noticing the very exact police ants of this species observe. | The working fallow ants are from three to four lines in length, and stand high upon their legs. Their head, which is larger than the corslet, is of a pale red or fallow colour at the extremity, and blackish at the top. ‘The mouth is armed with two very strong mandibles, denticu- lated and hooked at the point, which they generally keep apart, and make use of, not only for attacking their enemies and tear- ing their prey, but in carrying burthens, B2 4 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. and performing the labours and repar- ations of the ant-hill. The antenne are black and filiform. The corslet is pro- tuberant, raised anteriorly, compressed and truncated posteriorly, often marked with a black stain above, the rest being of a clear fallow colour. ‘The peduncle of the abdomen is of the same colour, and bears a large scale, which is scolloped and blackish on its superior margin. The abdomen is brown or ash-coloured, slightly invested with hair, globose, com- posed of five rings, not counting the scale, wanting the sting, but armed with avenom-bag. ‘The feet are brown, and the thighs, at their origin, of a reddish tint. I have described, in the Appendix, two varieties of these. ants; one with a black back, another with a back of the same colour as the rest of the corslet. This difference, which scarcely affects the habitudes of these insects, separates, however, those who inhabit the woods from those who live along-side hedges, and in meadows. It is the latter only, ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 5 that have the corslet stained with black and the scale on its upper margin * brown. They both collect, near their habitation, fragments of straw, pieces of wood, little stones, leaves, and all other objects within reach, that may be of service in in- creasing its height, not neglecting even moths, minute shells, corn, oats, and bar- ley, which doubtless gave rise to their ancient renown. But if this foresight, which we supposed them to possess, has not for its object to preserve them from famine during the winter, a time in which ants eat but little, especially grain, it is not the less worthy of our regard, when we consider its real purport. That little mound which seems at the first glance only an assemblage of mate- rials confusedly scattered, is, however, an invention as ingenious as simple to carry off the waters from the ant-hill, to defend it from the injuries of the air, and from hostile attacks, and to regulate the heat * Vide the description of the fallow ant, and par- ticularly the note in the Appendix. BS 6 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. of the sun, or retain it in the interior. ‘The mass of the different materials of which it is composed, always presents a circular dome, whose base, often covered with earth and pebbles, forms a cone, above which the wooden portion of the building is erected in the form of a sugar loaf. But this is simply the exterior covering of the ant-hill; the most con- siderable portion is hidden from our sight, descending to a depth of greater or less extent. Avenues constructed very care- fully of an irregular funnel shape conduct from the roof to the interior. Their number depends upon the population of the nest and its extent. The entrance to the nest is more or less considerable. We sometimes find a spacious aperture at the top, but more frequently, several apertures of nearly equal size, around -which are many narrow passages, symme- trically and circularly disposed, which extend even to the base of their habita- tion. These several apertures were necessary ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 7 to give afree egress to the vast multitude of labourers of which their colony is com- posed. Not only do they work continu- | ally on the outside of their nest, but dif- fering very essentially from other species who willingly remain in the interior shel- tered from the sun, they prefer living in the open air, and do not hesitate carrying — on, even in our presence, the greater part of their operations. In the habitations of the yellow ant, the dark ash-coloured ant, the sanguine ant, the brown ant, &c. we never observe the entrances of sufficient width to allow their enemies easy access, or permit the introduction of the rain. ‘They are co- yered with a dome of earth, closed on all sides, and have no outlet but near the base, which is by along and tortuous pas- sage that winds to the distance of several feet in the grass. The diminutive size of these apertures, at all times diligently guarded within, prevents the entrance of any insects or reptiles that may happen to arrive there. B 4 8 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. - The fallow ants, collected in crowds during the day on their nest, have no fear of being disquieted in the interior, but when, in the evening, they retire to their quarters, no longer perceiving what passes without, how are they screened from the - accidents with which they are menaced ? or how happens it that the rain does not penetrate their abode, open as it is on every side to its introduction? These questions, simple as they are, do not ap- pear to have engaged the attention of naturalists. Have they not then foreseen _the dangers to which these insects would have been exposed, if that wisdom which regulates. the universe had not provided for their safety? Struck with these re- flections, when I first noticed the fallow ants, I directed my entire attention to this subject, and soon acquired the inform- ation I wanted. I remarked that their habitations changed in appearance hourly, and that the diameter of those spacious avenues, where so many ants could freely pass each other during the day, was, as ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 9) night approached, gradually lessened. The aperture at length totally disappear- ed, the dome was closed on all sides, and the ants retired to the bottom of their nest. In further noticing the apertures of these ant-hills, I fully ascertained the nature of the labour of its inhabitants, of which I could not before even guess the purport; for the surface of the nest presented such a constant scene of agita- tion, and so many insects were occupied in carrying materials in every direction, that the movement offered no other image than that of confusion. I saw then clearly that they were en- gaged in stopping up their passages ; and for this purpose, they at first brought for- ward little pieces of wood, which they de- posited near the entrance of those avenues they wished to close, they placed them above the aperture, and even sunk them in the stubble; they then went to seek other ligneous fragments which they dis- posed above the first, but in a different direction, and appeared to choose frag- BO 10 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS: ments of less size in: proportion as the work advanced. ‘They at length brought in a number of dried leaves, and other materials of an enlarged form, with which they covered the roof. Is not this in miniature the art of our builders when they form the covering of any building? Nature seems every where to have anti- cipated the inventions of which we boast. ‘This is doubtless one of the most simple. Our little insects, now in safety in their nest, retire gradually to the interior before the last passages are closed, one or two only remain without, or concealed behind the doors on guard, whilst the rest either take their repose, or engage in dif- ferent occupations in the most perfect security. I was impatient to know what took place in the morning upon these ant-hills, and therefore visited them at an early hour. I found them in the same state in which I had left them the preceding evening. A few ants were wandering .about on the surface of the nest, some ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 11 others issued from time to time from under the margin of the little roofs formed at the entrance of the galleries: others afterwards came forth who began remov- ing the wooden bars that blockaded the entrance, in which they readily succeed- ed. This labour occupied them several hours. ‘The passages were at length free, and the materials with which they had been closed scattered here and there over the ant-hill. Every day, morning and evening, during the fine weather, I was a witness tosimilar proceedings. On days of rain, the doors of all the ant-hills remain closed. When the sky is cloudy in the morning, or rain is indicated, the ants, who seem to be aware of it, open but in part their several avenues, and immediately close them when the rain commences. It would appear from this they are not insensible of the motive for which they form these temporary closures. To have an idea how the straw or stubble roof is formed, let us take a view BO 12 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTSas of the ant-hill at its origin, when it is simply a cavity in the earth. Some of its future inhabitants are seen wandering about in search of materials fit for the ex- terior work, with which, though rather ir- regularly, they cover up the entrance; whilst others are employed in mixing the earth, thrown up in hollowing the inte- rior, with fragments of wood and leaves, which are every moment brought in by their fellow-assistants; and this gives a certain consistence to the edifice, which increases in size daily. Our little archi- tects leave here and there cavities where they intend constructing the galleries which are to lead to the exterior, and as they remove in the morning the barriers placed at the entrance of their nest the preceding evening, the passages are kept entire during the whole time of its con- struction. Wesoon observe it to become convex ; but we should be greatly deceiv- did we consider it solid. ‘This roof is destined to include many apartments or stories. Having observed the motions of ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 18 these little masons through a pane of glass which I adjusted against one of their habitations, I am enabled to speak with some degree of certainty upon the man- ner in which they are constructed. ~ It is by excavating or mining the under portion of their edifice that they form their spacious halls, low indeed and of heavy construction, yet sufficiently con- venient for the use to which they are appropriated, that of receiving at cer- tain hours of the day the larve and pupe. * * The terms of Larva and Pupa are employed to designate the intermediate states of existence in the insect, on its passage from the egg to its becom- ing a perfect animal, endowed with all the powers of its race, the former being commonly known under the appellation of Grub or Caterpillar, the latter of Chrysalis or Aurelia. The ant remains, according to Gould, in the first or larva state of existence nearly a twelvemonth, in the state of pupa about six weeks, and as a perfect insect 16 months. The time, however, they remain as larve and pupz is, no doubt considerably i fluenced by variations in the temperature, and other causes. M. Reaumur hastened the disclosure of the butter- 14 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. These halls have a free communica- tion by galleries made in the same man- ner. If the materials of which the ant- hill is composed were only interlaced, they would fall into a confused heap every time the ants attempted to bring them into regular order. This, however, is obviated by their tempering the earth with rain-water, which afterwards har- dening in the sun, so completely and ef- fectually bids together the several sub- stances as to permit the removal of cer- tain fragments from the ant-hill, without any injury to the rest: it, moreover, strongly opposes the introduction of the rain. I never found, even after long and violent rains, the interior of the nest fly by keeping the aurelia or pupa in a warm room, and retarded it by placing it in an ice house. Mr, Kirby once kept one of the aphidivorous flies — the whole term of whose existence, according to this intelligent entomologist, does not, in the summer, exceed at the very utmost six weeks — several months in the state of larva; and, paradoxical as it may seem, by simply neglecting to give it food.—T. ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 15 wetted to more than a quarter of an inch from the surface, provided it had not been previously out of repair, or deserted by its inhabitants. The ants are extremely well sheltered in their chambers, the largest of which is placed nearly in the centre of the build- ing; it is much loftier than the rest, and traversed only by the beams that support the ceiling : it is in this spot that all the galleries terminate, and this forms, for the most part, their usual residence. As tothe under-ground portion, it can only be seen when the ant-hill.is placed against a declivity ; all the interior may be then readily brought in view, by simply raising up the straw roof. The subterranean residence consists of a range of apartments, excavated in the earth, taking an horizontal direction. That part of the architecture of fallow ants, which equally obtains with the ma- son-ants, and of which I shall soon have occasion to speak, I shall not now stop to describe, but pass on immediately to 16 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. the labours of the latter, which will be found to merit our athention: 2. ARCHITECTURE OF THE MASON-ANTS, I term those mason-ants, whose nests, on the exterior, have the appearance of hil- locks of earth, without admixture of other materials, whilst in the interior they present a series of labyrinths, lodges, vaults, and galleries, constructed with great art. There are several species of mason- ants. The earth, of which their nest is composed, is more or less compact. That which ants of a certain size, such as the ash-coloured and mining ants. employ, appears to be less selected, and forms a less fine paste, than that of which the .brown, microscopic, and yellow ants form their abode. It is, however, sufficiently adapted to their use, and to the nature of _the edifice they intend erecting. To form a correct judgment of the in- _terior arrangement or distribution of an _ant-hill, it is necessary to select such as 15 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 17 have not been accidentally spoiled, or whose form has not been too much al- tered by local circumstances; a slight attention will then suffice to show, that the habitation of the different species are not all constructed after the same system. Thus, the hillock raised by the ash- coloured ants will always present thick walls, fabricated with coarse earth, well- marked stories, and large chambers, with vaulted ceilings, resting upon a solid base. We never observe roads or gal- leries, properly so called, but large pas- sages, of an oval form, and all around considerable cavities and extensive em- bankments of earth. We further notice, that the little architects observe a certain proportion between the large arched ceilings and the pillars that are to sup- port them. The brown, one of the smallest of the ants, is particularly remarkable for the extreme finish of its work. Its body is of a reddish shining brown, its head a little deeper, and the antenne and feet 48 | ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. a little lighter in colour. The abdomen is of an obscure brown, the scale narrow, of a square form, and slightly scolloped. The body is one line and two-fifths in length. * This ant, one of the most industrious of its tribe, forms its nest of stories, four or five lines in height. ‘The partitions are not more than half a line in thick- ness, and the substance of which they are composed is so finely grained, that the inner walls present one smooth, un- broken surface. These stories are not horizontal: they follow the slope of the ant-hill, and lie one upon the other to the ground-floor, which communicates with the subterranean lodges. They are not always, however, arranged with the same regularity, for these ants do not fol- low an invariable plan; it appears, on the contrary, that nature has allowed them a certain latitude in this respect, _and that they can, according to circum- stances, modify them to. their wish :— * See the notes in the Appendix. ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. ly but, however fantastical their habitations may appear, we always observe they have been formed by concentrical stories, On examining each story separately, we ob- serve a number of cavities or halls, lodges of narrower dimensions, and long gal- leries, which serve for general communi- cation. The arched ceilings covering the most spacious places are supported, either by little columns, slender walls, or by regular buttresses. We also notice chambers that have but one entrance, communicating with the lower story, and large open spaces, serving as a kind of carrefour, or cross-road, in which all the streets terminate. Such isthe manner in which the habitations of these ants are constructed. Upon opening them, we commonly find the apartments, as well as the large open spaces, filled with adult ants, and always observe their pup col- lected in the apartments, more or less near the surface. This, however, seems regulated by the hour of the day, and the temperature ; for in this respect these 20 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS, ants are endowed with great sensibility, and know the degree of heat best adapted for their young. The ant-hill contains sometimes more than twenty stories in its upper portion, and at least as many under the surface of the ground. By this arrangement the ants are enabled, with the greatest facility, to regulate the heat. When a too burning sun over- heats their upper apartments, they with- draw with their little ones to the bottom of the ant-hill. The ground-floor becom- ing, in its turn, uninhabitable, during the rainy season, the ants of this species transport what most interests them to the higher stories, and it is there we find them more usually assembled with their pupz and eggs, when the subterranean apartments are submerged.* Having as- * De Azara informs us, that during the inunda- tion of the low districts in South America, when the ant-hills, which are usually about three feet in height, are completely under water, the ants avail themselves of an ingenious contrivance, to pre- vent their being carried to any distance from their ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 91 certained the internal arrangement of their habitations, it was still an object of discovery, how ants, working with a sub- stance so hard, could trace out and finish works so extremely delicate, with the as- sistance only of their teeth, how they could soften the earth, for the purpose of mining, kneading, and building with it, and what cement they employed to unite its several particles into one mass. Did it depend upon a sort of mucilage or resin, or some other liquid furnished by the ants themselves, similar to what the mason-bee employs in building the nest to which it gives so much solidity? I ought, perhaps, to have analysed the earth of which these ant-hills are com- habitation. With this view, and for their greater security, they collect into a compact mass, and keep firm hold of each other, previously attaching one of the extremities to some neighbouring plant, or fixed point of support, leaving the other end free and floating on the surface of the water, as long as the inundation (which usually lasts a few days) con- tinues—T, 92 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. posed, but I was fearful of engaging im difficulties that did not come within my immediate province, and therefore kept to the slow but sure method of observ- ation, by which I hoped- to obtain the same result. I hastened, then, to observe one of these ant-hills, until I should perceive some change in its form. The inhabitants of that I had selected kept within during the day, or only went out by the subterranean galleries, which opened at some feet distance in the mea- dow. ‘There were, however, two or three small openings on the surface of the nest, but I saw none of the labourers pass out this way, on account of their being too much exposed to the sun, which these insects greatly dread. This ant-hill, which had a round form, rose in the grass at the border of a path, and had sustained no injury. I soon per- ceived that the freshness of the air and the dew invited the ants to walk over the surface of their nest; they began ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 23 making new apertures; several ants might be seen arriving at the same time, thrust- ing their head from the entrances, mov- ing about their antennee, and at length adventuring forth to visit the environs. This brought to my recollection a sin- gular opinion of the ancients. ‘They be- lieved that ants were occupied in their architectural labours during the night, when the moon was at its full.* This idea was not, perhaps, without some foundation, and although the moon had doubtless no kind of influence on their conduct, yet I perceived something true in the observation. * Aristotle affirmed, that ants worked in the night, when the moon was at its full; Hist. Anim. ]. ix. c. 38. Pliny also alludes to their nocturnal labours. ‘‘ Operaniur et noctu plena lund ; eadem interlunio cessant.” Gould states that they employ each moment by day and night, almost without in- termission, unless hindered by excessive rains ; and the author of a Memoir in the Transactions of the French Academy, remarks, that the ants, he ov- served, were so incessantly occupied during the night, that it seemed as if they never slept !— T. Q4: ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS, Having then noticed the movements of these insects during the night, I found they were almost always abroad and en- gaged about the dome of their habitation after sun-set. ‘This was -directly the re- verse of what I had observed in the con- duct of the fallow ants, who only go out during the day, and close their doors in the evening. The contrast was still more remarkable than I had previously sup- posed, for upon visiting the brown ants, some days after, during a gentle rain, I saw all their architectural talents in full play. | As soon as the rain commenced, they left, in great numbers, their subterranean ) residence, re-entered it almost immedi- ately, and then returned, bearing between their teeth pellets of earth, which they deposited on the roof of their nest. I could not, at first, conceive, what this was meant for, but at length I saw little walls start up on all sides with spaces left between them. In several places, columns, ranged at regular distances, an- ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 95 nounced halls, lodges, and passages, which the ants proposed establishing ; in one word, it was the ebauche of a new story. I watched with a considerable degree of interest, the most trifling movements of my Masons, and found they did not work, after the manner of wasps and hum- ' ble-bees, when occupied in construct- ing a covering to their nest. The latter sit as it were a-stride (se mettent pour ainsi dire a cheval) the border or margin of this covering, and take it between their teeth to model and attenuate it according to their wish. The wax of which it is com- posed, and the papier which the wasp em- ploys, moistened by some kind of glue, are admirably adapted for this purpose ; but.the earth (often possessing but little tenacity) of which the ants make use, must be worked up after some other manner. Each ant, then, carried between its teeth the pellet of earth it had formed, by scraping with the end of its mandibles, c 26 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. the bottom of its abode, which I have often witnessed in open day. This little mass of earth, being composed of particles but just united, could be readily moulded as the ants wished: thus, when they had applied it to the spot where it was to rest, they divided, and pressed against it with their teeth, so as to fill up the little in- equalities of their wall. The antenne followed all their movements, passing over each particle of earth as soon as it was placed in its proper position. ‘The whole was then rendered more compact, by pressing it lightly with the fore-feet. This work went on remarkably quick. After having traced out the plan of their masonry, in laying here and there found. ations for the pillars and the partitions they were about to erect, they gave them more relief'by adding fresh materials. It often happened that two little walls, which were to form a gallery, were raised oppo- site, and at a slight distance from each other. When they had attained the height of four or five lines, the ants busied them- ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 27 selves in covering in the space left be- tween them by a vaulted ceiling. Qutting, then, their labours in the up- per part of the building, as if they judged all their partitions of sufficient elevation, they affixed to the interior and upper part of each wall, fragments of moistened earth, in an almost horizontal direction, and in such a way, as to form a ledge which, by extension, would be made to join that coming from the oppo- site wall. These ledges were about half a line in thickness; and the breadth of the galleries was, for the most part, about a quarter of an inch. Here several vertical partitions were seen to form the scaffolding of a lodge, which commu- nicated with several corridors, by aper- tures formed in the masonry; there, a regularly formed hall, the vaulted ceiling of which was sustained by numerous pillars; further off might be recognised the rudiments of one of those carrefours of which we have before spoken, and: in which several avenues terminate. ‘These c 2 38 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. parts of the Ant-hill were the most spacious; the ants, however, did not appear embarrassed in constructing the ceiling to cover them in, although they were often more than two inches in breadth. In the upper part of the angles formed by the different walls, they laid the first foundations of this ceiling, and from the top of each pillar, as from so many centres, a layer of earth, horizontal and slightly convex, was carried forward to meet the several portions coming from different points of the large public thoroughfare. This busy crowd of Masons, arriving from all parts with the piece of mortar they wish to add to the building, the order they observe in their operations, the harmony which prevails, and the eagerness with which they avail them- selves of the rain to increase the height of their abode, present to the contempla- tive observer a scene of considerable in- terest. 1 NE | ~ J sometimes, however, laboured under 15 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 29 an apprehension that the building could not possibly resist its own weight, and that such extensive ceilings, sustained only by a few pillars, would fall into ruin from the rain which continually fell upon them ;—but I was quickly convinced of their stability, from observing that the earth, brought by these insects, adhered at all points, on the slightest contact; and that the rain, so far from lessening the cohesion of its particles, appeared even to increase it. Thus, instead of injuring the building, it even contributed to render it still more secure. These parcels of moistened earth, which are only held together by juxta- position, require a fall of rain to cement them more closely, and thus varnish over, as it were, those places where the walls and galleries remain uncovered. All in- equalities in the masonry then disappear. The upper part of these stories, formed of several pieces brought together, pre- sents but one single layer of compact earth. ‘They require for their complete c 3 80 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. consolidation nothing but the heat of the sun. It sometimes, however, happens that a violent rain will destroy the apartments, especially should they be but slightly arched ; but under these cir- cumstances the ants reconstruct them with wonderful patience. These different labours were carried on at the same time, and were so closely followed up in the different quarters, that the Ant-hill received an additional story in the course of seven or eight hours. All the vaulted ceilings, being formed upon a regular plan, and at equal distances from one wall to the other, con- stituted, when finished, but one single roof. Scarcely had the ants finished this story than they began constructing another; but they had not time to finish it: the rain ceasing before the ceiling was fully com- pleted. They still, however, continued their work for a few hours, taking advan- tage of the humidity of the earth; but a keen north wind soon sprung up, and hastily dried the collected fragments, ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. $1 which, no longer possessing the same adherence, readily fell into powder. ‘The ants, finding their efforts ineffectual, were at length discouraged, and aban- doned their employment ; but what was my astonishment, when I saw them des- troy all the apartments that were yet un- covered, scattering here and there over the last story, the materials of which they had been composed! These facts incontestably prove, that they employ neither gum, nor any kind of ce- ment to bind together the several sub- stances of their nest, but in place of this avail themselves of the rain, to work or knead the earth, leaving the sun and wind to dry and consolidate it.* In the * I was in the habit of visiting, almost daily, for amonth, an extensive nest of Red Ants, of which a large flat stone formed the roof.— During my visits for the first three weeks, scarcely a drop of rain had fallen, and the nest seemed to be consider- ably injured by the continual falling in of loose earth, which these little creatures with amazing industry removed, whenever it happened any of the avenues were blocked up. No attempt was ever made towards reparation; but what was my sur- Cc 4 32 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. simplicity of these means, I recognised the hand of Nature: however, I still thought it necessary to make an experi- ment to be convinced of the correctness of these results. A few days after, I en- deavoured to excite them to recommence their labours by an artificial shower. With this view, I took a very strong brush which I plunged in water, and passing my hand backwards and for- wards over the hairs, produced upon the surface of the Ant-hill a very fine dew. The ants perceiving from the interior of their dwelling, the humidity of the roof, prise on visiting my little friends, after a two days’ heavy rain, to find, that the repairs were already completed, and that the upper surface of their habitation presented as smooth a surface as ifa trowel had been passed over it; yet all their work they had industriously effected by kneading with the rain-water, the loose earth into a sort of paste. From the nest being situated in the midst of an extensive heath, where there could be no supply of water, and from its remaining unrepaired during the dry weather, it amounts to a full conviction, that Ants employ no other cement than water, in the construction of their varied habitations. — T. ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 33 came out and passed rapidly over the surface ; the sprinkling was continued ; the Masons were deceived. ‘They went to the bottom of the Nest to pro- vide themselves with little masses of Earth, which they afterwards brought and deposited on the roof; they then constructed walls and chambers; in a word, a complete story was erected in the course of a few hours. ‘This experi- ment I frequently repeated, and always with the same success. It is in the Spring more particularly, that the Mason Ants avail themselves of the rain when they wish to enlarge the boundaries of their nest. Night even does not arrest their progress. I have often noticed in the morning stories that had been com- pletely erected during the night. The ants, not content with giving addi- tional elevation to their abode, hollow out, in the earth, apartments still-more spa- cious ; the materials thus obtained, are, as before stated, employed in the: exterior construction. ‘The art of these insects, co 84 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. therefore, consists in their executing, at the same time, two contrary operations, the one of mining, the other of building, making the former subservient to the jatter; and what is still as singu- lar, the same talent is manifested in these excavations, as in that portion of the building above ground. ‘The humi- dity which penetrates to the bottom of their nest, is doubtless of great assistance to them in these labours. * * It may not be uninteresting after this account of the labours of the Mason-Ants, to give a sketch of the manner in which the Termites, or what have been termed by travellers, White Ants, so abun- dant in Africa, construct their dwelling. Compared with the Architects, their habitations are of an as- tonishing magnitude ; they frequently exceed twelve feet in height, and are so firmly cemented as to bear the pressure of several men at the same time. It often happens that, whilst.a herd of wild cattle are quietly grazing below, one of their body is stationed on them as sentinel, to give timely no- tice of approaching danger. The Termites begin constructing their habitations, by raising, at little distances from each other, several turrets of com- pact clay in the shape of sugar-loaves: upon these they erect others; those in the centre run to the ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 85 3. ARCHITECTURE OF THE DARK ASH- COLOURED ANTSe These Ants, which are fully described in the Appendix, are distinguished, ac- — greatest height ; they afterwards cover in the spaces between them, and then take down the sides of all the inner turrets, leaving only the upper portion to form the cupola or dome, making use of the clay they thus procure, in the formation of the several chambers intended for magazines, nurseries, Xc. The nurseries are entirely composed of wooden materials, enclosed in chambers of elay, usually half an inch in width, ranged around, and as close as possible to the royal apartment. The royal chamber, which, with the rest, are arched over, occu- pies as nearly as possible the centre of the building, and is on a level with the surface of the ground ; it is at first only an inch in length, but increases in size with that of the Queen, until it extends to six or more inches. In this chamber the King and Queen are rétained close captives ; it is impossible they can ever quit it; the entrance only allowing of the passing and repassing of the Soldiers and Labourers (the Queen, in the Jast stage of her pregnancy, is 1000 times the weight of the King, and equal in bulk to about 20,000 Labourers, although, on her first appearance as a winged insect, she equalled only in bulk about 30 Labourers,— her abdomen increases from half an inch to three imches in length, and she lays, according to Smeath- c 6 36 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. cording to Latreille, by their having the body, head, and abdomen, of a shining dark ash-colour, the base of the antennze and the feet reddish, the scale large and nearly triangular, and three small ocellé or simple eyes. The Ash-coloured Ants build in aman- ner very different from the Brown Ants. man, as many as 80,000 eggs in the course of 24 hours: hence the necessity for the numerous at- tendants by whom she is continually surrounded.) In an Ant-Hill of such extensive size, and where there is such an infinity of chambers to accommodate its numerous inhabitants, there must be of necessity a vast number of subterraneous and winding passages. These passages, which conduct to the upper parts of the dome, are carried in a spiral manner round the building, for the Labourers find it extremely difficult to ascend in a less circuitous direction. Very frequently, however, to shorten the distance to the upper nurseries, where they have to take the eggs, they project an arch of about ten inches in length, and half an inch in breadth, grooved or worked into steps, on its upper surface to allow of a more easy passage. When these insects quit their nest on any expedition, they con- struct covered galleries of clay which sometimes. run to a considerable distance, and under this they continue their extensive and highly dreaded depre- dations. — T. ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 37 We have already seen from the descrip- tion of their dwelling, that, in comparison to the latter, it is exceedingly simple and heavy in its construction. ‘This simpli- city, however, was better adapted to my object,—that of examining, if possible, how many ants could concur in the ex- ecution of the same design, and how far they appeared to understand each other in the general progress of their labour ;— that of discovering also, if they acted in concert, or independently of each other ; of their own accord, or from some gene- ralimpulse. I do not flatter myself that I have solved these important questions, but the facts I am about to adduce, will, at least, serve to elucidate this subject. When the Ash-coloured Ants seem de- sirous to give greater elevation to their dwelling, they commence, by placing over the roof a thick layer of earth, which they bring from the interior. It is here they trace en creux et en relief, the plan of a new story; they, at first, form here and there little dykes more or less close to 38 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. each other, and of a breadth proportioned to the use for which they are designed: they give them nearly equal depth, for the most part equalling their breadth ; the masses of earth left- between them, serve afterwards, for the foundation of the inner walls. Having removed all the useless earth from the bottom of each chamber, and reduced to their proper thickness the foundation of the walls, the architects have nothing more to do, than to increase the height of their building, and cover over with a ceiling the several apartments. After witnessing the manner in which these ant-hills are constructed, I was aware that the best and only mode of at- taining a correct knowledge of their or- ganization, was that of following indi- vidually the conduct of the Labourers engaged in erecting them. My journals are filled with observations of this nature. 1 extract afew that seem to possess some interest. I shall at present describe the operations of a single ant that I ob- ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 89 served sufficiently long to satisfy my curiosity. One rainy day, I observed a Labourer digging the ground near the aperture which gave entrance to the ant-hill. It placed in a heap the several fragments it had scraped up, and formed them into small pellets, which it deposited here and there upon the nest. It returned con- stantly to the same place, and appeared to have a marked design, for it laboured with ardour and perseverance. I re- marked a slight furrow, excavated in the ground in a straight line, representing the plan of a path or gallery, The La- bourer, the whole of whose movements fell under my immediate observation, gave it greater depth and breadth, and cleared out its borders; and I saw, at length—in which I could not be deceived —that it had the intention of establish- ing an avenue which was to lead from one of the stories to the under-ground chambers. ~This path, which was about two or three inches in length, and formed 40 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. by a single ant, was opened above, and bordered on each side by a buttress of earth: its concavity en forme de gouttiere was of the most perfect regularity ; for the architect had not left an atom too much. The work of this ant was so well followed and understood, that I could al- most to a certainty guess its next proceed- ing, and the very fragment it was about toremove. At the side of the opening where this path terminated, was a second opening to which it was necessary to arrive by some road. The same ant en- gaged in and executed alone this under- taking. It furrowed out and opened another path, parallel to the first, leaving between each a little wall of three or four lines in height. Those ants who lay the foundation of a wall, achamber, or gallery, from work- ing. separately, occasion now and then a want of coincidence in the parts of the same or different objects. Such ex- amples are of no unfrequent occurrence, but they by no means embarrass them. ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 4} What follows proves that the workman, on discovering his error, knew how to rectify it. A wall had been erected with the view of sustaining a vaulted ceiling, still in- complete, that had been projected from the wall of the opposite chamber. The workman who began constructing it, had given it too little elevation to meet the opposite partition upon which it was to rest. Had it been continued on the ori- ginal plan, it must infallibly have met the wall at about one-half of its height, and this it was necessary toavoid. ‘This state of things very forcibly claimed my atten- tion ; when one of the ants, arriving at the place, and visiting the works, appeared to be struck by the difficulty which pre- sented itself; but this it assoon obviated, by taking down the ceiling and raising the wall upon which it reposed. It then, in my presence, constructed a new ceiling with the fragments of the former one. When the ants commence any under- taking, one would suppose that they 4.2 ' ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS, worked after some preconceived idea, which indeed would seem verified by the execution. Thus, should any ant dis- cover upon the nest, two stalks of plants, which lie cross-ways, a disposition favour- able to the construction of a lodge; or some little beams that may be useful in forming its angles and sides, it examines the several parts with attention, then dis- tributes with much sagacity and address parcels of earth, in the spaces, and along the stems, taking from every quarter ma- terials adapted to its object, sometimes, not caring to destroy the work that others had commenced ; so much are its motions regulated by the idea it has conceived, and upon which it acts, with little atten- tion to all else around it. It goes and returns, until the plan is sufficiently un- derstood by its companions. In another part of the same ant-hill, several fragments of straw seemed ex- pressly placed to form the roof of a large house; a workman took advantage of this disposition: these fragments lying ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 43 horizontally, at half an inch distance from the ground, formed, in crossing each other, an oblong parallelogram. The industrious insect commenced, by placing earth in the several angles of this carpentering work, and all along the little beams of which it was composed. ‘The same workman afterwards placed several rows of the same materials against each other, when the roof became very dis- tinct. On perceiving the possibility of profiting by another plant, to support a vertical wall, it began laying the founda- tions of it ; other ants having by this time arrived, finished in common what this had commenced. * * I have often been surprised at the ingenuity of these little creatures, in availing themselves of con- tiguous blades of grass, stalks of corn, &c., when they wish to enlarge the boundaries of their abode. As these are usually met with in the erect position, they are admirably calculated for pillars; they, therefore coat them over with a fine paste of earth, giving them, by additional layers, the solidity they judge necessary for the work on which they are engaged: they then leave them to be consolidated by the wind, and afterwards spring a number of 4,4, ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS, From these observations, and a thou- sand similar, I am convinced that each ant acts independently of its companions. The first who conceives a plan of easy execution, immediately gives the sketch of it; others have only to continue what this has begun, judging, from an inspec- tion of the first labours, in what they ought to engage. They can all lay down plans, and continue to polish or retouch their work as occasion requires. ‘The water furnishes the cement they require, and the sun and air harden the materials of which their edifice is composed. They have no other chisel than their teeth, no other compass than their antennee, and no other trowel than their fore-feet, of which they make use in an admirable arches, from pillar to pillar, and thus form an ex- tensive saloon. Should they be, at any time, in want of small apartments, they have only to pre- pare a quantity of moistened earth, and by placing this between the pillars, and carrying it up to the roof, leaving here and there an aperture for en- trance, their object is completely attained,.—T. ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 45 manner, to affix and consolidate the moistened earth. These, then, are the material and me- chanical means which they employ in their building. In following an instinct purely mechanical, they might execute with precision, a geometrical and invari- able plan, construct walls of equal length and breadth, vaulted ceilings, whose curve would only require a servile obezts- sance, and we should have been but mo- derately surprised by their industry : but to form these irregular domes, composed of so many stories; to distribute in a con- venient, yet varied manner, the apart- ments they include, and to seize the most favourable time for their labours, but especially to vary them according to cir- cumstances; to profit by the points d’appui that may present themselves; and to judge of the advantage of such and such operations, is it not necessary they should be endowed with faculties closely approaching intelligence, and that, far from considering them as automatons, Nature allows them to perceive the inten- 46 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. tion of those labours in which they have been engaged ?* | | I could readily bring forward number- less examples of the industry of ants, in still mentioning after what manner seve- ral other species construct their abode ; but, not to abuse or weary the patience of my readers, I shail not enter into a de- tail of the labours of the Field Ants, who build little chambers, one above the other, along the stems of plants, and who can, in time of need, connect grains of sand, by juxta-position alone, or by the admixture of a little moistened earth; nor of those of the Sanguine Ant, who are enabled to form from earth, dry leaves, and other materials, a compact tissue, difficult to break, and impe- netrable to water; nor of those covered * For several curious particulars relative to the instinct of insects, I refer to the Introduction to Entomology, by Messrs. Kirby and Spence, vol. ii. p. 465.—This work I cannot too strongly recom- mend to the notice of my readers; since it abounds in a variety of interesting information, and pos- sesses the no small advantage of being ig amusing as instructive. — T | | ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 4:7 galleries, which the Brown Ants construct with earth, conducting from their nest to the feet of trees, and sometimes even to the origin of the branches, for the purpose of arriving with greater secu- rity at the places where they find their food. | 4. ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS THAT FORM THEIR HABITATION IN TIMBER. * Is it nota matter of astonishment, that Nature should have given to insects of * «¢ Some ants” says Kirby,’”’ form their nests entirely of the leaves of trees. One of these was observed by Sir Joseph Banks in New South Wales, which was formed by glueing together several leaves as large as ahand. To keep these leaves in a proper position, thousands of ants united their strength, and if driven away, the leaves spring back with great violence.” Latreille speaks of an ant which is met with at Cayenne (F. bispinosa) that forms its nest of a great quantity of down, which it removes from the seeds of a species of the cotton- tree. Madame Merian, in her ‘“ JInsectes de Su- rinam,” speaks of an ant, which, in Tobago, is called the parasol ant. They are in the habit of cut- ting out circular pieces from the leaves of trees and plants (in thisrespect resembling the apis papaveris). aad carrying them off to their nest. When thus 48 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. the same genus, manners so varied, and an industry so widely different ? Ants furnish us with one of the most striking examples of this kind. We have just completed a sketch of the several species of Mason-ants; each building in a dif- ferent manner, and offering some strik- ing peculiarities in the style and mode of their architecture. ‘That of the Fal- low-ants is founded upon different prin- ciples, and the industry of those who ex- cavate their dwelling in wood, has no point of resemblance with that of the species of which we have lately treated. This tribe of ants includes several spe- cies; and we still observe in their archi- tectural labours very sensible shades of difference: all these insects enter into the first of the nine divisions into which engaged, they bear some resemblance to individuals walking with parasols, hence their name. Smeath- man informs us, that one species of the Termites, or whatare commonly known under the name of White Ants (7. arborum) builds itsnest among the branches of trees; and we learn from M. de Laubere, that in that part of Siam which is exposed to inundations, all the ants construct their habitations in trees. —T. ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 49 Latreille has distributed ants, it includes the Brown, the Ash-coloured, the Fallow, the Mining, the Sanguine, the Fuli- ginous, and the Yellow Ant, &c. These _ants possess the same exterior organs, a similarity of the means employed in con- structing their dwellings, and resem- blances in figure, which have occasioned them to be placed under the same di- vision; their instinct, however, places them at a considerable distance from each other, plainly showing that we can- not always form a correct judgment of the manners and customs of insects from analogy. The labours of those ants that inhabit trees, or what we may term ‘Timber Ants, are less open to general observation than those already described, and have, in consequence, received but little attention from naturalists. The ant holding the first rank in this division, is, the Fuliginous, so called on account of its colour. It is of a shining black, and is two lines in length; its re- D 50 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. publics, composed of a great number of individuals, are less common than those of which we have hitherto spoken. Let us figure to ourselves the interior of'a tree entirely sculptured or hollowed out, consisting of numberless stories, more or less horizontal, whose floors and ceilings are at five or six lines’ distance from each other, and as thin as a card, supported at one time by vertical parti- tions, forming an infinity of chambers ; at another time, by a series of small slen- der columns, allowing us to observe be- tween them the extent of an almost en- tire story; the whole, composed of a blackish, and as it were smoked wood ; ‘and we shall have a just idea of the cities of these ants. The greater number of the vertical partitions, which divide each story inte compartments, are parallel; they follow the course of the igneous layers, and are always concentrical, which gives to their work some degree of regularity. The floors, generally speaking, are horizontal. 14 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. ol The little columnsare from one totwolines in thickness, more or less round, of a height equal to that of the story they support, larger above and below than in the middle, a little flattened at the capital and base, and ranged in regular lines, since they have been worked out in the parallel partitions. What numerous apart- ments! What a series of lodges, halls and corridors do these insects not form by their own unsupported industry ; and what labour in so great an undertaking does it not cost them! The wood, in which ants of this species excavate these labyrinths, takes a blackish hue: —does this arise from the extrava- sated fluids of the tree entering into combination with the external air, or from theemanation of theants themselves, the odour of which may perhaps have some influence; or do the layers of wood, exposed by these insects, undergo any decomposition from combining with the formic acid? I cannot decide this ques- - tion; but I rest well assured, that the D2 LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 52 ARCHITECTURE OF ANS. wood hewn by these insects, is always blackish externally, and even takes the same colour internally, provided it be very thin, preserving only its natural colour when it has any degree of thick- ness. It appears that the oak, willow, and other trees in which these ants esta- blish themselves, equally take these co- lours. I have often’ observed several other species of ants lodged in the inte- rior of trees, but the wood never present- ed the same appearance. I have also often noticed at the foot of those which were inhabited by Fuliginous Ants, a very abundant and blackish liquid : —to what must this be attributed? The vegeta- tion of these trees does not appear in the slightest degree affected by the labours of these insects. It would be a highiy ‘acai sight, could we observe ants occupied in carv- ing the wood in which they fix their resi- dence, we might then learn the origin of the black tint with which it is imbued ; but the labourers of this species working ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 58 always in the interior of trees, and de- sirous of being screened from observation, precludes every hope, on our part, of fol- lowing them in their several occupations. I tried every expedient I could devise to surmount this difficulty; I endeavoured to accustom these ants to live and work under my inspection, but all my efforts were unsuccessful ; they even abandoned the most considerable portion of their nest to seek some new asylum, and spurn- ed the honey and sugar I offered them for nourishment. I was now, of necessity, limited to the inspection alone of these edifices; but by decomposing some of the fragments with care, I hoped to ac- quire some knowledge of their organiza- tion. Here, we perceive horizontal gal- leries, hidden in great part by their walls, which follow the circular direction of the ligneous layers; there, parallel gal- Jeries, separated by extremely thin partitions, having no communication except by a few oval apertures. Such is the nature of these works, remark- able for their delicacy and lightness. » $s 54 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. In other fragments we notice avenues, opened laterally, including portions of walls and transverse partitions, erected here and there, within the galleries, so as toform separate chambers. When the work is further advanced, we always ob- serve round holes, encased, as it were, be- tween two pillars, cut out in the same wall. ‘These holes in course of time be- come square, and the pillars, originally arched at both ends, are worked into regular columns by the chisel of our sculptors. This, then, is the second specimen of their art. ‘This portion of the edifice will probably remain in this state. | But here are fragments differently wrought, in which these same partitions, pierced now in every part, and hewn skilfully, are transformed into colonnades, which sustain the upper stories, and leave a free communication throughout their whole extent. We can readily conceive how parallel galleries hollowed out upon the same plan, and the sides taken down, ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 535 leaving only from space to space what is necessary to sustain their ceilings, may form an entire story; but as each has been pierced separately, the flooring can- not be very level: this, however, the ants turn to their advantage, since these fur- rows are better adapted to retain the larvae that may be placed there. The stories constructed in the great roots offer greater irregularity than those in the very body of the tree, arising, either from the hardness and interlacing of the fibres, which renders the labour more difficult, and obliges the labourers to depart from their accustomed manner, or from their not observing in the extre- mities of their edifice the same arrange- ment as in the centre : whatever it be, we still find horizontal stories, and numerous partitions. If the work be less regular, it becomes more delicate ; for the ants, profiting by the hardness and solidity of the material, give to their building an extreme degree of lightness. Ihave seen fragments of from eight to ten inches in D 4 56 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS- length and of equal height, formed of wood as thin as paper, containing a num- ber of apartments, and presenting the most singular appearance. At the en- trance of these apartments, worked out with so much care, are very considerable openings ; but, in place of chambers, and extensive galleries, thelayers of the wood are hewn in arcades, allowing the ants a free passage in every direction. These may be regarded as the gates or vestibules. conducting to the several lodges. Fig. 3. and 4., Pl. I., give but a very imperfect idea of the labours of these insects. The first represents a fragment taken from the trunk of an oak inhabited by Fuliginous Ants ; the second, a small portion of their nest, taken from the roots of the same tree. To judge’ pro- perly of these fragments, we should place them in every position, we shall then better observe their singular organiz- ation. The Red Ant, a little larger than the preceding, forms a lodging in trees, very — ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 57 analagous to the above, but upon a much smaller scale. ‘Their dwelling consists of stories more or less developed ; some di- vided into little chambers or lodges, the walls of which are remarkably thin; others sustained by an infinity of little columns, resembling, in size and colour, these of which we have already spoken. The wood, however, is not blackened, as is the case with that excavated by the Fuliginous Ants, but retains its original colour. It is commonly less hard, and of the consistence of cork. But what is most remarkable in the history of Red Ants is, that they are not only carvers, but even skilful ma- sons. They more frequently fix their residence in the earth. This is not, however, the only species that can, in time of need, display more than one ta- lent inthis department. We are about to notice two kinds of ants which also enjoy this privilege, the Ethiopian and the Yellow Ant. They have also an art peculiar to them, of which I have not Dd 58 ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. yet treated, and which must be regarded as belonging to the architecture of ants. 5. ARCHITECTURE OF THOSE ANTS THAT FORM THEIR RESIDENCE OF SAW-DUST, DECAYED TIMBER, &c. The Ethiopian Ants, thus named, on account of their jet-black colour, hollow out extensive lodges and long galleries in the oldest trees; but if their works are proportioned to their size, which is greater than that of other ants, they scarcely represent the infancy of the art by the manner in which they are exe- cuted. What is most remarkable in their industry is, the use they make of the wood fallen into powder at the foot of the tree they inhabit, to stop up every chink in the flooring of their houses, to close useless passages, and to make com- partments in those labyrmths which are too spacious. The Yellow, one of the mason ants, shows great skill in the employment of this substance, when it establishes its re- ARCHITECTURE OF ANTS. 5Y sidence in a hollow tree; it constructs entire stories with decayed wood, select- ing the finest particles, which, on being mixed up at the bottom of the tree with a little earth and spider’s web, forms a mass of the consistency of papier mache. This industry recalls to mind that of wasps, as the labours of the Mason and Timber Ants bring to our recollection those of the Mason and Timber Bees. The class of hymenopterous insects, the richest of all in varied industry, in original manners and customs, in curious instinct, offers, continually, similarities and contrasts ; connections between ge- nera the farthest removed, and striking differences between species the most ap- proximate. The moral condition of these insects does not appear to follow their physical condition ; a truth of some im- portance to animal physiology. 60 - CHAP. It. OF THE EGGS, LARVZ, AND PUPA OF ANTS. i! Tue exterior of ant-hills, their form and construction, have hitherto entirely oc- cupied us: it was, however, necessary to commence by establishing the ants in their abode previous to describing the rest of their labours. The object which will now evidently create some interest, is that solicitude the workers evince for the object of their charge, and the mater- nal attention they bestow upon them from the period of their quitting the ege to that of their complete developement. *, * It would be perhaps more regular to speak of the fecundation of ants, before making known the care and affection they evince for their young. This plan, from which we could not well depart, in speaking of insects that lead a solitary life, is not EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. 61 Although several naturalists have studied the metamorphosis of ants, and described the principal circumstances connected with it, yet we are about to examine, un- der new relations, the developement and education of these insects in their differ- ent states. ‘The history of the egg had entirely escaped their researches, as well as several particulars in the mialony of the pupe and larve. My predecessors, not having madeuse of a glazed apparatus to observe what passed in the interior of ant-hills, had but very rarely seen these insects engaged in their household occupations; and this was not so so natural, when treating of numerous and perma- nent republics, such as those of ants. It would have been difficult to have mentioned every circum- stance connected with the reproduction of the species, before describing the interior of their habi- tations, and the method I found the most success- ful in my observations. The education of their young, being the chief end of all their labours, offers, in part, a picture of the manners of these in- dustrious insects. It is for this reason, the plan I now follow appeared the best to elucidate subse- quent remarks.—A. 62 EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. easy of accomplishment as it at first ap- peared. | These insects, although possessing so little timidity, and regardless, as it con- cerns themselves, of the several changes in the weather, evince the greatest con- cern for their little ones. For beings, so delicately formed, they dread the slight- est variations of the atmosphere, are alarmed at the least danger which threat- ens them, and seem particularly anxious to withdraw them from our notice. I was in my first attempts continually disappointed, from the great repugnance they manifested in allowing the light to penetrate their abode: whenever I at- tempted to glaze their apartments, or to lay open to view any of their halls or pas- sages, if they did not completely abandon them, they at least prevented me from following them in their in-door labours. At one time they would darken, by a heap of different materials, all the halls which admitted the light; at another time, as if conscious that the glass, not- rcos, &c. OF ANTS. 63 withstanding its transparency, could guard them from the external air, and that nothing was wanting to render it a true wall, but the power of excluding that glaring light, at all times so disagree- able to them, they preserved entire all the galleries contiguous to it, taking the sole precaution of covering it over with a layer of moistened earth, which efiec- tually hindered further observation. Thus disappointed, I employed a me- thod more simple, though more effec- tual:—I removed a portion of the ant- hill, and then placed over the remainder a thin flat board inclined to the south ; the ants, attracted by the heat brought their little ones to this place. By re- moving this outside shutter or contrevent, I could ascertain the progress in their growth, although the workers, on being disturbed, hastened to convey them to their under-ground quarters. I was often obliged to vary the means I employed ; for the ants, soon wearied by my visits, still baffled all my efforts, 64 EGGS, &C. OF ANTS, by making a true wall of earth behind the contrevent. After having for some time attended to the manners and habits of these insects, I found that we might accustom them by degrees to suffer the entrance of the light in their abode; but it was necessary, notwithstanding, to use much - caution. What succeeded with me the best, was that of forming an oblong opening in the middle of a table, and affixing underneath, a double frame, glazed: on its two longest sides, and opened only at the upper part, which communicated with this aperture. ‘These frames (fig. 1. Pl. I.) being furnished with shutters, permitted me, either to observe the ants, or to favour them in their taste for obscurity. This done, I scattered all the materials of a nestof Fallow Ants upon the table, and left them at liberty to ar- range them at the bottom of the glazed box, which they did in such a manner, that it was easy to observe all their gal- leries, and the apartments to which they led. Jat length covered over the whole EGGS, &C. OF ANTS. 65 of the materials with a large bell-glass, in order that I might witness the move- ments of my prisoners, as well inside as on the outside, and at the same time guard against their escape. But when I saw they were accustomed to their fate, and did not seek to leave their prison, I allowed them free issue from under the bell-glass, and the liberty of running over the platform upon which it rested, taking only the precaution of plunging the feet of the table in vessels filled with water, to arrest the ants in their passage, should they attempt to escape. This apparatus, and several others of which the explanation would be long and tedious, had all the success I wished. I observed, with much pleasure, that the ants continued to take care of the larve, which proved, that in taking them, in some respects, from the state of nature, I had not too much disturbed them. This gave me reason to hope, that I should observe, in its greatest extent, all the care they took of the rising generation, 66 EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. I did not, however, always keep to these artificial means. I compared, as often as possible, the conduct of my pri- soners, with that of those ants inhabiting and ranging about the fields, and as I never remarked any sensible difference in their manner of acting, I concluded I could trust the results obtained by means of my glazed apparatus. Let us now open the shutter which conceals from us the interior of the ant- hill, and let us see what is passing there. Here, the pups are heaped up by hundreds in their spacious lodges ; there, the larvee are collected together, and guarded by workers. In one place, we observe an assemblage of eggs, in another place, some of the workers seem occupied in following an ant of a larger size than the rest ; — this is the mother, or at least one of the females, for there are always several in each ant-hill ; — she lays as she walks, and the guardians, by whom she is surrounded, take up her eggs, or seize EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. 67 them at the very moment of her laying them; they collect them together, and carry them in little heaps in their mouths. * On looking a little closer, we find that they turn them continually with their tongues ; it even appears, they pass them one after the other between their teeth, and thus keep them constantly moistened. Such is the first apergu which my glazed apparatus offered. Having directed my close attention to these eggs, I remarked they were of different sizes, shades, and forms. The smallest were white, opake, and cylindri- cal; the largest, transparent, and slightly arched at both ends; those of a middle size were semi-transparent. In holding them up to the light, I observed a sort of white oblong cloud; in some, a trans- * The eggs of ants are so remarkably minute, that there would seem an absolute necessity of their being held together by some glutinous matter, otherwise, it would render the removal of such small bodies in the mandibles of ants almost impossible ; the mandibles being so constituted as not to be brought into that close contact necessary for this operation, — T, 68 . kEGG6s, &c. oF ANTS. parent point might be remarked at the superior extremity; in others, a clear zone above and underneath the little cloud. The largest presented a single opake and whitish point in their interior. There were some whose whole body was so remarkably clear, as to allow of my observing very distinctly the rings... In fixing my attention more closely upon the latter, I observed the egg open, and . the larva appear in its place. Having compared these eggs with those just laid, I constantly found the latter of a milky whiteness, completely opake, and smaller by one-half; so that Ihad no reason to doubt of the eggs of ants receiving a very considerable in- crease in size; that in elongating, they become transparent, but do not at this time disclose the form of the worm which is always arched. To be convinced of the truth of this statement, I viewed these eggs with the microscope; I also measured them, and having separated them from each other, Eccs, &c. OF ANTS. 69 found the longest to be those only in which the worms were disclosed in my my presence. If I removed them from the workers, before they had attained their full length and transparency, they dried up, and the worms never quitted them. Isit, then, to the care which the workers take in passing them across their mouths, that we must attribute the secret of their preservation ? Do these eggs require this humidity, or do they absorb a part of it, to furnish nourishment to the little worms they contain ? It appears at Jeast highly probable; and the observations of M. Reaumur give weight to this opinion. I have discovered in his writings, that there are other eggs, which also increase in size,—as those lodged in the galls of different trees, which are occasioned by Cynips*, or other insects of the same kind. * To these insects we are indebted for that valu- able article of commerce, the gall-nut. The Cyniys is furnished with a finely-pointed instrument, with which it wounds the leaves and other parts of the tree, for the sake of depositing its eggs. The puncture of the leaves, &c. gives rise to those excres- 70 EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. «It ought not,” says this exact and judi- cious observer, ‘‘to bepassed by in silence, thatthe egg which I found in the gall appeared to me considerably larger than the eggs of the same species, when they proceed from the body of the fly, or even when they are taken from the body of the impregnated or mother-fly, near the time of their being laid. ‘The whole of those I took from the abdomen of the flies I killed were remarkably small ; it therefore appeared certain, that the egg would have increased, and indeed had in- creased, in the gall. We are only in the habit of observing eggs surrounded by a covering incapable cences termed galls, which not only form the habit- ation, for a considerable period, of the infant insect, but serve it the whole time of its imprisonment for food. On examining the galls, some will be found to have an opening in them; these are they, from which the fly has escaped : others, that want this aperture, will be found to contain the insect, either in its larva, pupa, or imago state; for it ap- pears these several changes, at Icast with some of the species, take place within the body of the gall. — T. EGGS, &c. OF ANTs. 71 of extension; but why is it that those egos, which nature has enclosed, in a flexible membrane, do not increase ? The envelope of the egg may, in this in- stance, be compared to the membrane which includes the human foetus, and those of quadrupeds. Nature has formed the eggs of some other insects in such a manner, that they are also capable of increase: such are, according to M. Vallisnieri, the eggs of the Tenthredo, which produce those larvee that feed upon the rose. * These remarkable examples authorise me in admitting an increase in size, in the eggs of ants, as fully proved; although it may not be exactly under the same circumstances as those of which the philo- sopher I have just quoted speaks ; but if they are not surrounded with a liquid, or preserved from the influence of the external air, their pellicle, moistened every instant by the workers, may preserve a * Latreille alludes to this increase in the size of the eggs, both in these insects, and the Cynips. —T. 72 EGGS, &C. OF ANTS. certain degree of suppleness, and the faculty of extension, according to the developement of the worm they enclose. At the end of fifteen days, the little worm is seen to quit the shell: its body is then perfectly transparent, and presents only a head and rings, without any rudiment of feet or antenne. ‘The insect, at this period, is completely de- dependant upon the workers. Ihave been enabled to observe, through the glasses of my artificial ant-hill, the great care taken of these little worms, which bear also the name of Larva. They were generally guarded by a body of ants, who, raised upon their feet, with their ab- domen brought between these members, were prepared to cast their venom upon all intruders, whilst, here and there, other workers were engaged in clearing the pas- sages, by removing the materials which were outof place; a great number of their companions taking at the same time their repose, and appearing to be fast asleep: but a busy scene occurred at the moment eGcGs, &c. OF ANTs. 13 of transporting their little ones to enjoy the warmth of the sun. When the sun’s rays fell upon the exterior portion of the nest, the ants, who were then on the surface, descended with great rapidity to the bottom of the ant-hill, struck with their antennz the other ants, ran one after the other, and jostled their com- panions, who mounted at the moment under the bell glass, and redescended with the same speed, putting in their turn the whole colony in motion, so that we could observe a swarm of workers, filling up all the passages; but what proved still more their intention by these move- ments, was, the violence with which the workers sometimes seized, with their mandibles, those who did not appear to understand them, dragging them forth tothe top of the ant-hill, and immedi- ately leaving them, to go and seek those still remaining with the young. As soon as the ants had intimation of the appearance of the Sun, they occupied themselves with the larve and pupe; E 74° EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. they carried them with all expedition above the ant-hill, where they left them exposed to the influence of the heat. Their ardour suffered no relaxation ; the female larvae (which are heavier, and much larger than those of the other cast) were carried, with some difficulty, through the narrow passages, leading from the interior to the exterior of the ant-hill, and placed in the sun, by the side of those of the workers and males. After remaining there a quarter of an hour, the ants again took them up, and sheltered them from the direct rays of the sun, by placing them in chambers, situated under a layer of straw, which did not entirely intercept the heat. The workers, after having fulfilled the duties imposed upon them in regard to the larvee, did not forget themselves ; they sought, in their turn, to stretch themselves in the sun, lay upon each other in heaps, and seemed to enjoy some repose, but it was of no long duration. I observed a great number constantly EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. 15 employed on the surface of the ant-hill, and others engaged in carrying back the larvae, in proportion as the sun declined. The moment of nourishing them being at length arrived, each ant approached a larva, and offered it food. “ The larve of ants,” observes M. Latreille, ‘* resemble, when they quit the egg, little white worms, destitute of feet, thick, short, and in form almost conical; their body is composed of twelve rings; the anterior part is slender and curved. We remark at the head two little horny pieces or hooks, too distant from each other to be regarded as true teeth; under these hooks we observe four little points or cé/s, two on each side, and a mamelon, or tubercular process, almost cylindrical, soft, and retractile, by which the larva receives its food.” * * What a world of wonders is there not opened to our view, in the transformations the insect tribe undergo, from the period of their birth, to the full and complete development of their several organs. Unless well assured of the fact, how could we imagine the feeble helpless worm just described would ever become the industrious, enterprising E2 76 EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. The ants do not prepare for their lar- vee provisions de bouche, as happens with ant, furnished with organs of motion and of flight. How devoid of probability would appear the state- ment, did we not possess evidence to the contrary, that the magnificent butterfly we see hovering from flower to flower, ever drew its origin from the creeping caterpillar. But these changes, sur- prising as they are, are yet equalled by other cir- cumstances connected with the metamorphoses of insects, for with these changes in appearance, the animal alters its habits and mode of life. The but- terfly in its first or larva state of existence eats vo- raciously, and in a manner greatly disproportioned to its size, devouring twice its weight of leaves in a day ; in its second or pupa state, this inordinate appetite ceases, and all its active powers are sus- pended; in its third, imago, or perfect state, no longer bound to the spot that gave it birth, it takes a wider range, cleaves the regions of the air, and sips the nectar of flowers. That beautiful silver- winged insect (Libellula) now crossing our path, passed the first part of its existence as a water in- sect, and that little creature (Ephemera) we see sporting in the sun-beam, whose existence as a winged insect is limited only to a few hours, and seemingly with no other view than that of con- tinuing its kind, has also passed the first period of its life in the same element. The common gnat, that so much annoys us in our evening walks, was originally an inhabitant of some stagnant pool. The 15* EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. 77 several species of bees and other insects, which provide before-hand for the wants of their little ones ; they give them every day the nourishment best suited to their condition; the instinct of the larve is sufficiently developed, to enable them to demand and receive their repast, in the same way as the young of birds receive it from their parents. When hungry, they erect their body, and search with their mouth that of the workers, who are appointed to nourish them. ‘The ant then separates its mandibles, and allows them to take from its very mouth the fluids they seek. I know not if these fluids undergo any change in the body of the workers, but I am far from believing it to be the case, since I have often seen the ants ———— beetle that flits along at even-tide, lay in a worm- like state for a considerable period, locked up in the caverned chambers of the earth, and — but why proceed, when the whole insect tribe, generally speaking, undergo such developements. — T, E 3 78 EGGs, &c. OF ANTS. offer them nourishment, almost immedi- ately after they had themselves taken it ; perhaps honey and sugar dissolved in water. I presume, however, that the regimen is proportioned to the age and sex of each individual, that the aliment is more substantial the nearer the time of their metamorphosis, and that more is given to the larvee of females than to those of the workers and males; but the questions which have reference to the quality and quantity of these aliments are of difficult solution: however, as it is of some importance to ascertain if the nourishment which the larva takes has any influence upon the development of | the sexes in. the females of ants, as ob- tains in bees, I purpose making some ex- periments by nourishing myself the lar- vee of different species. Let us at pre- sent follow the workers in the last care they bestow upon the larvae; it is not sufficient to lay them in the sun and give them food; it is still necessary to keep them remarkably clean. ‘These insects, EGGS, &C. OF ANTS. 79 therefore, who in point of tenderness to the young committed to their charge, do not yield to any of the females of the larger animals, pass their tongue and man- dibles continually over their bodies, and thus render them perfectly white. * The * As these insects evince so much attachment to the charge committed to their care, I was desirous of ascertaining if they would show equal concern for the offspring of another species. For this pur- pose, I visited a nest inhabited by the little black aut, where there were only larve, and removed a few to a nest occupied by the yellow ant, containing only pupe. Here they lay for a time unnoticed. At length, one or two of the ants took them up, with the intention of carrying them away, when another, who appeared stationed as centinel, ran violently against and overthrew them, thus occa sioning them to relinquish their hold: this part of the nest was at length deserted, the larve were left where first deposited, and the centinel retired. At this time not a single ant was within view. In about five minutes a little troop sallied forth, and, as if acting under some general impulse, carried off their unwelcome visitors to one of their under- ground apartments. Visiting this nest from day to day, I never afterwards saw these larve, and there- fore, conclude they had been set apart, where, from neglect, they had perished. Had the larve been brought up in common with those of their own family, 1 must have known it; for, as I before said, E 4 80 EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. ants have also another occupation; that of extricating them from their cuticle, which becomes distended and soft at the period of their transformation. Previous. to changing this skin, the the nest contained pup only. In an after-visit to this nest, I reversed the experiment, by carrying away some of the pupae, and placing them in the nest from which I had before taken the larve. This done, a similar scene took place. The pupe were at first regarded with indifference. Some of the inhabitants then attempted a removal, to which there was, fora time, strong opposition. In a few minutes, however, they were carried off to the subterranean chambers. In these experiments, there was this slight difference: in the former in- stance, the ants retired, as it would seem, to de- liberate; in :the latter, they remained the whole time within sight, a little distance from the pupe. Had the larve or pupe been suffered to remain where first placed, this would have greatly em- barrassed the ants in their daily operations, this be- ing the spot where. they were in the habit of bring- ing their young to enjoy the sun’s warmth. But why they should take them. under-ground, in pre- ference to carrying and depositing them beyond the nest, is a question I can only answer by supposing they there conveyed them to insure their certain destruction, and thus prevent further molest- ation. — T. EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. 81 jarvee spin themselves a silken covering or cocoon, (as is the case with many other insects,) in which in the form of pupe, they prepare to undergo their last metamorphosis. ‘This cocoon is of a cy- lindrical form, elongated, of a pale yellow colour, and very smooth and _ close in its texture. A remarkable circumstance for which no cause has been yet assigned is, ~ that there are ants whose larve never spin ; but this exception only holds with those species that possess a sting and two knots on the peduncle of the abdomen. Thus, there are somelarvee whichundergo their change in a silken envelope, and others which become pup, without lying under the necessity of spinning or weav- ing one. * * Among the spinning larva, there are some whose web is marked with a black point at one of the extremities, which has been taken for the re- mains of the skin of the pupz, which they reject in their preceding state; but as I have found the cocoons, thus stained, before the larvae they con- tained had undergone their metamorphosis, this supposition falls to the ground. I am fully con- vinced it is nothing more than the residue of the EO” 82 -EGGs, &c. OF ANTS. The larvee of some ants pass the winter heaped up in the lowermost floor of their dwelling. I have found, at this period, very small larvee inthe nests inhabited by the Yellow Ant, the Field Ant, and some other species, but none, in those of the Fallow, Ash-coloured, and Mining Ants. Those that are to pass the winter in this state are covered with hair, which is not the case in summer; affording another proof of that Providence at which naturalists are struck at every step. We do not find the larvee of males and females but in the spring; their transformation takes place in the beginning of summer. The insect, in the state of pupa, has acquired the figure it will always pre- serve; nothing seems wanting but strength = ee aliment, which these insects discharge a little time before their change. — A. Gould is of our Author’s opinion; but Sir Edward King, who published a memoir on ants in an early number of the Philosophical Transactions conjectures, that it is a secretion cast out by the larva in its transformation. — T. eGcs, &c. OF ANTS. 83 and a little more consistence: it is also as large as it will ever be; all its members are distinct, one single pellicle envelopes them. The ant, under this form, con- tinues to move for some moments after its quitting the state of larva, but it soon be- comes immoveable: it afterwards changes gradually in colour, passing from a fine white to a pale yellow; then becoming red, and in several species, brown, almost verging to black. The rudiments of wings may at this time be seen in those which are destined to fly. The pupz have still many attentions to receive from the workers ; the greater part are enclos- ed in a tissue spun by themselves before their metamorphosis ; but they cannot, like other insects, liberate themselves from this covering by effecting an open- ing in it with their teeth. They have scarcely the power of moving; their cover- ing is of too compactatexture, and form- ed of too strong a silk, to allow of their tearing it without the assistance of the workers. But how do these indefatiga- E 6 84: EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. ble attendants ascertain the proper mo- ment for this process ?—If they possessed the faculty of hearing, we might imagine they knew the fit time, from some noise produced in the interior of the prison by the insects whose developement has com- menced; but there is no indication favour- ing this opinion ; it is probable they have a knowledge of it from some slight move- ments that take place within, which they ascertain through the medium of their antenne; for these organs are endowed with a sensibility, of which it would be difficult to form a just idea: whatever it: be, they are never deceived. Let us still follow them in that labour, wherein are displayed, as it regards their charge, a zeal and an attachment. which would justly merit our attention, even were they the real parents of these in- sects; how much greater then must be our astonishment, when we consider that they bear no further relation to them, than that of being born under the same roof. Several males and females lay in EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. 85 their enveloping membrane in one of the largest cavities. of my glazed ant-hill. The Labourers, assembled together, ap- peared to be in continual motion around them. I noticed three or four mounted upon one of these cocoons, endeavouring to open it with their teeth at that extre- mity answering to the head of the pupa; they began thinning it, by tearing away some threads of silk where they wished to pierce it; and at length, by dint of pinching and biting this tissue, so ex- tremely difficult to break, they formed in ita vast number of apertures. They af- terwards attempted to enlarge these open- ings, by tearing or drawing away the silk; but these efforts proving ineffectual, they passed one of their teeth into the cocoon, through the apertures they had formed, and by cutting each thread, one after the other, with great patience, at length effected a passage, of a line in diameter, in the superior part of the web. They now uncovered the head and feet of the insect to which they were desirous of 86 EGGs, &c. OF ANTS. giving liberty, but before they could re- lease it, it was absolutely necessary to en- large the opening; for this purpose, these guardians cut out a portion in the longitudinal direction of the cocoon, with their teeth alone, employing these instru- ments as we are in the habit of employing a pair of scissars. A considerable degree of agitation prevailed in this part of the ant hill ; anumber of ants were occupied in disengaging the winged individual of its envelope; they took repose and re- lieved each other by turns, evincing great eagerness in seconding their companions in this undertaking.* To eflect its * Among those ants I kept in confinement, | observed that considerable bustle prevailed when any of the pupz were about to quit the cocoon. For the most part, two or three stationed themselves on or near each cocoon. From seeing, more than once, two engaged in the operation of extricating the imprisoned ant from its envelope, I was desirous of ascertaining whether a single worker could ac- complish this operation. I therefore placed ina wine glass with a little moistened earth one of the Yellow Ants with three or four pupz; the first object with this little creature, was that of excavating a chamber for the deposition of its treasure. The -EcGs, &c. OF ANTS. 87 speedy liberation, some raised up the portion or bandalette cut out in the length of the cocoon; whilst others drew it gently from its imprisonment. When the ant was extricated from its envelop- ing membrane, it was not, like other in- sects, capable of enjoying its freedom, and taking flight: nature did not will it that it should so soon be independent of the labourers. It could neither fly, nor walk, nor without difficulty stand ; for the body was still confined by another membrane, from which it could not, by its own exertions, disengage itself. In this fresh embarrassment, the la- bourers did not forsake it; they removed the satin-like pellicle which embraced pup were then brought up, and laid on the surface of the earth, from day to day, to receive the sun’s warmth. In a few days, I saw the scattered rem~ nants of one of the cocoons, and the worker with his assistant engaged in giving liberty to the re- maining ants. I did not, at the time, notice whether the pupe were or were not capable of effecting their own liberation; but according to the state- ment of De Geer, the pupa dies when neglected by the workers. — T. 88 EGGs, &c. OF ANTS. every part of the body, drew the antennz gently from their investment, then dis- engaged the feet and the wings, and lastly, the body, the abdomen, and its pe- duncle. The insect was now in a condi- tion to walk and receive nourishment, for which it appeared there was urgent need. The first attention therefore, paid it by the guardians, was that of giving it the food I had placed within their reach. The ants in every part of the ant-hill were occupied in giving liberty to the males, females, and young labourers, that were still enveloped. On being dispos- sessed of their coverings, the remnants were collected and placed aside in one of the most distant lodges of their habita- _ tion; for these insects observe the greatest order and regularity. Some species of ants remove these shreds to a distance from the ant-hill, others, cover the ex- terior surface of their nest with them, or collect them in particular apartments. * * M. Latreille has remarked, as well as De Geer, that, among the Ash-coloured Ants, there are some pupe which are naked, others enclosed in a EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. 89 The labourers we have seen in charge of the larvee and pupe evince the same so- cocoon; but he does not know if there are any that undergo their metamorphosis without spinning, or if the workers tear off their enveloping mem- brane ; however he leans to this latter opinion. [ have often made the same remark. I have even confirmed the conjecture he had advanced, and often seen the ash-coloured labourers opening the cocoon of the pupe, a short period after their trans- formation. The Mining Ants act the same: but for what purpose do they hasten to liberate them, and of what advantage is it to the larve to spin, if the workers so soon destroy the tissue they have woven? It cannot be for the sake of unfolding their mem- bers from the last envelope in the state of pupa, for the ants do not render them this service until they are capable of motion, and have acquired their full strength: they even know the precise moment when to remove them. Are not these cocoons of essen- tial service to the larve at the time of passing to the state of pupe ? I have frequently drawn from their cocoons, larve which had just spun, and which were not yet metamorphosed: some days after, they began rejecting their larva-skin, but could not dis- engage their limbs, which, with the abdomen, re- mained attached to it. The ants offered them no assistance. These pupe were never well developed, and they soon perished. It appears that these cocoons offered thera a point of support, enabling them to free themselves from the skin which they are under the necessity of rejecting. It will be ob- jected, perhaps, that the larve of several species 90 EGGS, &C. OF ANTS, licitude for the ants, freshly transformed : they lie for some days under the necessity of watching and following them ; they ac- company them in their excursions, point out to them the paths and labyrinths of their habitation, and nourish them with the greatest care ; they also perform the ‘difficult task of extending the wings of the males and females, which would otherwise remain folded up, and acquit themselves with such address, as not to injure these frail and delicate members. At one time, they bring together, in the same apartments, the males they find rambling ; at another time, act as guides never spin, and they would of course experience the same inconvenience as those I drew too hastily from their cocoon. To this I answer, that nature has provided for this case in another manner :— the body of these Ants is very different from that of others, their elongated peduncle gives greater liberty to the abdomen, to move, bend, and extend itself, than the peduncle of the first, which is closely attached to the corslet. They have, in addition, a sting, which may also facilitate their developement, for the pupz at first possess much strength and vivacity, although they soon after pass into a state of lethargy. — A. EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. 91 in conducting them from the ant-hill. In short, the labourers appear to have the complete direction of their conduct, as long as they remain there, and neglect not to discharge the several duties, con- nected with these insects (whose strength is not yet developed) until the period of their taking flight for the purpose of con- tinuing their kind. How can we sufficiently admire the as- siduity which the labouring ants evince for the little ones whose safety is con- fided to them! — By what bond has nature attached them so strongly to the pro- geny of another mother! ‘This question having a reference to the different families composed of three sorts of individuals, — the labourers, charged with educating the young, fabricating, and provisioning the nest ; and those upon whom the of- fice devolves of multiplying the species, — deserves to be treated at greater length, and with greater attention, than our con- fined knowledge permits. But we have a glimpse, however, of the secret of this 92 EGGS, &c.. OF. ANTS. singular constitution, in the resemblance the labourers have with the female ants, relatively to their external sexual organs. The connexion which exists be- tween ants, and hive and humble bees, throws additional light upon this subject, by showing us labourers demi-fecund with the one *, and little rival females, abundant enough with the other. + » That solicitude also which the labouring ants evince for the larva, whose birth they have witnessed, clearly discovers their sex, and would be sufficient to prove that they are neither neuters nor males, even if the conduct of the males towards them did not indicate that they belong to the class of females. This observation, which I have several times made, (the. details of which I suppress, ) leaves me in no doubt upon this point. I shall here only add, that I have never known the * Nouvelles Observations sur les Abeilles, par F. Huber. + V. Linn. Trans. vol. vi. Memoir upon Humble Bees, by the Author of these researches, EGGS, &c. OF ANTS. fr 93 labouring ants produce eggs, and have constantly found the approach of the male attended with the sacrifice of theirlives. But with what view does nature permitas many sterile females among ants as among wasps and bees ? Isit notin order to in- crease the number of individuals, in the same family, without producing a popula- tion that wouldbe more than proportioned to it ? — In reserving a certain number of females for conception, she has ap- pointed others to take care of the infant generation. She has even deprived the latter of the faculty of flying; but in re- turn for this, they enjoy a sweet recom- pense, either (as we have no reason to doubt) by their being inspired for their charge with the sentiments of mothers for their young, or by their having an unli- mited power over the other orders of the society in which they live ; a truth which | hope to establish in the course of this work, and which differs widely from the received opinion, that these republics are governed by several chiefs. 94 CHAP. IIE. OF THE FECUNDATION, &C. OF ANTS. 1. Departure of the Winged Ants. Werner we unable to determine the sexes of ants from the appearance of those light and membranous wings with which some are furnished, and others totally unprovided, we should still conclude, that the former were destined to change their place of abode, the latter to remain on the spot where they receive their birth. That prerogative which distin- guishes the males and females from the workers, has not been granted them for the advantage of the colony in which they pass the first period of their exist- FECUNDATION Wc. OF ANTS. 95 ence. They are neither called upon to provision their abode, nor to seek, afar off, materials for its construction. Nature has endowed them with instruments of flight, for the well-being and continuance of the species, and for the purpose of establishing ant-hills in every situation, and forming numerous colonies. But how are these new colonies established ? What particulars do the amours of these winged ants offer us? Do the males and females live incommon? Have they the same instinct as the workers? What a variety of questions could we not pro- pose on this subject ; a subject hitherto but slightly touched upon, and by com- paratively few authors, and whose impor- tance, as it regards the economy of ants, merits the closest attention. Having observed these insects in the interior of the ant-hill, remarked their education, and the cares bestowed upon them, to the period when they are in a condition to walk or fly, we shall now 96 FECUNDATION &C. OF ANTS. follow them out of the nest, and, as far as possible, in their aérial excursions. Let us lose sight for one moment of the glazed ant-hill. Let us retire to a meadow, on a fine summer’s day, at a time when they first make use of their wings, and take a survey of their habita- tion, on the surface of which we shall ob- serve walking to and fro many of its winged inhabitants. ‘These are the males and females of the Field Ants; they climb all the plants which surround their resi- dence, and are every where accompanied by a multitude of workers, who follow their steps with ceaseless solicitude. — Some, however, attempt to retain and re- conduct them to the ant-hill; but the greater part content themselves with simply escorting them. They offer them nourishment for the last time, and render them the last token of their care and af- fection. The dome of the ant-hill does not afford the winged ants a sufficiently ample field for the display of their amours ; FECUNDATION OF ANTS. Q7 the crowd by which they are constantly surrounded seems to embarrass their movements ; they soon come to the de- termination of taking flight, and seeking in the air a wider theatre, in which they can accomplish the wish of nature. But what are those dazzling objects we see on | that little hillock rising above the grass ? They are the male Ants who come forth by hundreds from their subterranean resi- dence, and display their silvery and transparent wings as they wander over the surface of their nest. ‘The females, who are in much smaller number, soon join their paramours, proudly displaying their big and highly bronzed abdomen, and occasionally extending their glitter- ing wings, whose ever-varying lustre adds much to the beauty. of this interest- ing assemblage. Disorder and agitation are now mani- fest in the ant-hill; the bustle increases every moment, the winged insects climb with great briskness the neighbouring plants, followed by a numerous retinue . 98 FECUNDATION OF ANTS. of workers, who are continually running from one male to another, touching them with their antenne, and offering them food. The males, at length, quit the paternal roof and take flight, as from one general impulse, in which they are quickly fol- lowed by the females. The winged tribe soon disappear. ‘The workers retrace for some instants the steps of these highly fa- voured beings, to whom they have shown such extreme care and attention, and whom they are never destined to see more. Many pleasing pictures are exhibited by the variety in colour and form of this assemblage of insects. In some, the whole body is of one uniform colour; the workers being yellow, the males black, and the females flaxen. Their wings display all the brilliant hues of the rain- bow. In others, the body of the workers is of a dark ash-colour, stained with red upon the corslet ; the males, whose body is a deep black, have the feet of a fine yellow, and the wings whitish; the fe- males have the corslet and abdomen FECUNDATION OF ANTS. 99 brown, ornamented with orange-coloured spots; the wings are transparent and blackish at their extremities. It is requisite that the temperature of the air should be at the 15° or 16° of Reaumur (67° Fahrenheit), to allow of our witnessing the departure of the males and females: unless this be the case, they continue within the nest, shel- tered from the wet and the cold air. When the weather is favourable, the la. bourers, who seem to be aware of it, form several apertures in the ant-hill, to give a ready passage to the crowd that are about to quit it. The males and fe- males may be then seen coming to take the air at the entrance. The hour of de- parture arrives: they all take flight. The workers alone re-enter the nest, and close the entrances. But let us continue our course, and still follow the winged ants in their flight. A shower of these insects soon arrests the attention. They fall from some height in the air, by pairs, roll themselves in F2 100 FECUNDATION OF ANTS. the dust, and sport in the grass. With some, the junction takes place previous to their reaching the ground; with others, it is effected upon the plants where they rest; some few disengage themselves from their companions, and, mounting in the air, rejoin a cloud of other winged ants, collected near the top of a tree, around which they make continual evolutions.