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Full text of "Insect life; an introduction to nature-study and a guide for teachers, students, and others interested in out-of-door life"

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INSECT LIFE 

AN INTRODUCTION 
TO NATURE-STUDY 

AND A GUIDE FOR TEACHERS, 
STUDENTS, AND OTHERS INTER- 
ESTED IN OUT-OF-DOOR LIFE. BY 
JOHN HENRY COMSTOCK 



PROFESSOR OF ENTO- 
MOLOGY IN CORNELL 
UNIVERSITY AND IN LE- 
LAND STANFORD JUNIOR 
UNIVERSITY. : : : : : 




WITH MANY ORIGINAL 
ILLUSTRATIONS EN- 
GRAVED BY ANNA BOTS- 
FORD COMSTOCK, MEM- 
BER OF THE SOCIETY 
OF AMERICAN WOOD- 
ENGRAVERS. : 



NEW YORK 

D. APPLETON AND COMPANY 

1897 



COPYRIGHT, 1897 
BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY 



CONTENTS. 



PAGE 

INTRODUCTION . . i 



PART I. 
LESSONS IN INSECT LIFE. 

CHAPTER 

I. THE PARTS OF AN INSECT Q 

II. THE BEGINNING OF A COLLECTION AND A STUDY OF THE 

METAMORPHOSES OF INSECTS 22 

III. THE CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS AND THEIR NEAR RELA- 
TIVES 51 

IV. POND LIFE . . . . . . 87 

V. BROOK LIFE . . . 144 

VI. ORCHARD LIFE 166 

VII. FOREST LIFE . 186 

VIII. ROADSIDE LIFE 221 



PART II. 

THE COLLECTION AND PRESERVATION OF SPECIMENS. 

I. THE COLLECTION OF SPECIMENS 284 

II. THE PRESERVATION OF SPECIMENS 2Q4 

III. ON LABELING SPECIMENS AND TAKING NOTES . . -315 
IV. THE BREEDING OF INSECTS 326 

V. MISCELLANEOUS LISTS 336 




LIST OF PLATES. 



PI ATE 

I. A Pond .... 

II. A Brook 

III. Dandelions and a Locust 
IV. A Forest Aisle 

V. Long-horned Beetles 
VI. Roadside Butterfly . 



TO FACE 
PAGE 

. 8 7 
. 144 

. 166 
. 188 
. 215 

221 



INSECT LIFE 



INTRODUCTION. 

THERE are about us on every side myriads of 
tiny creatures that are commonly passed unnoticed, 
and even when observed they are usually thought to 
be unworthy of serious consideration. But all life is 
linked together in such a way that no part of the 
chain is unimportant. Frequently, upon the action 
of some of these minute beings depends the material 
success or failure of a great commonwealth. 

But insects are of interest to us for other reasons 
than the influence they may have upon our material 
welfare ; the study of them is a fruitful field for in- 
tellectual growth. It is not a small matter to be able 
to view intelligently the facts presented by the in- 
sect world, to know something of what is going on 
around us. And so rich is this field that no one 
gains more than a mere smattering concerning it. 

We know as yet comparatively little about the 
minute structures of insects ; the transformations and 
habits of the greater number of species have not been 
studied ; and the blood relationship of the various 
groups of insects is very imperfectly understood. If, 
therefore, one would learn something of the action of 
the laws that govern the life and development of 



2 INSECT LIFE. 

organized beings, and at the same time experience 
the pleasure derived from original investigation, he 
can not find a better field than is offered by the study 
of insects. 

But it is not necessary that one should have the 
tastes and leisure required for careful scientific inves- 
tigation in order to profit by this study. It can be 
made a recreation, a source of entertainment when 
we are tired, a pleasant occupation for our thoughts 
when we walk. Now that so many of our people 
are spending much time out of doors and summer 
homes are so common, there is a special demand for 
an introduction to Nature study, one that shall be 
a practical aid in the identification of the more com- 
mon forms of life about us, and a guide to a more in- 
timate knowledge of their ways ; and this want has 
been kept in mind in the preparation of this book. 
The wonderful transformations of insects, their beau- 
ty, and the high development of their instinctive 
powers render them attractive subjects of study. 
Any one can find out something new regarding in- 
sect architecture the ways in which these crea- 
tures build nests for themselves or for their young. 
It is easy to observe remarkable feats of engineering, 
examples of foresight, wonderful industry, unremit- 
ting care of young, tragedies, and even war and 
slavery. 

The abundance of insects makes it easy to study 
them. They can be found wherever man can live, 
and at all seasons. This abundance is even greater 
than is commonly supposed. The number of indi- 
viduals in a single species is beyond computation 
who can count the aphids or the scale bugs in a 



INTRODUCTION. 3 

single orchard, or the bees in a single meadow ? Not 
only are insects numerous when we regard individu- 
als, but the number of species is far greater than 
that of all other animals taken together. 

The desire to know more of the creatures about 
us is growing rapidly ; Nature study is being intro- 
duced generally in schools of all grades ; and every- 
where lovers of out-of-door life are learning to ex- 
perience the pleasure of a more intimate acquaintance 
with their surroundings. 

It is to make easier the gaining of this intimate 
acquaintance that this book is written. Its chief ob- 
ject is to serve as a guide for those who wish to 
acquire a knowledge of insects from a study of the 
insects themselves ; it is intended to lie open before 
the observer while the subject of study is examined. 

The needs of the beginner in the study of insects, 
be he old or young, have been kept constantly in 
mind. The teacher of children who is preparing a 
lesson, the youth who is studying by himself, and 
the adult who adds to the pleasure of his outing by 
learning something new to him all need to approach 
Nature by the same path. For this reason an ele- 
mentary, didactic form of treatment has been adopted, 
although the book is intended for adults as well as 
for younger pupils. 

The plan of treatment of the subject is as follows : 
In Part II there are given general directions for col- 
lecting and preserving insects. It is expected that 
this portion of the book will be used merely for ref- 
erence as occasion may require. In Part I there is 
outlined a course of study of insect life. This begins 
with a series of carefully graded lessons, based on 



4 INSECT LIFE. 

the study of insects that can be easily obtained in any 
part of our country. 

Following these lessons, which are numbered, 
there is a chapter treating of the classification of 
insects and their near relatives. With the aid of the 
descriptions and analytical tables given in this chap- 
ter, the student can easily determine the class to 
which any insectlike animal belongs and the order 
of any true insect. Finally, there are several chap- 
ters in which directions are given for the study of 
various insects, including a large proportion of the 
more common groups of insects that are available for 
study by inexperienced students. These chapters 
(Chapters IV to VIII) are independent of each other, 
and may be studied in any order. In these chapters 
the structure and habits of insects living in particular 
kinds of localities are treated under separate heads, 
as Pond Life, Brook Life, Orchard Life, Forest Life, 
and Roadside Life. 

The success of this part of the course will depend 
largely upon the skill displayed by the teacher or 
student in adapting the work to the local conditions. 
In some localities, ponds will furnish the most avail- 
able subjects for study ; in others, the brooks ; in still 
others, the forests ; and in some the cultivated shrubs 
and trees or the open prairie must be depended upon 
for material. 

The work outlined in Part I has been planned 
with the idea that the study shall be of Nature and 
not of a book, and it is hoped that those who teach 
this subject will make it a recreation for their pupils 
and not a task. Most pupils can be easily interested 
in insects if they are allowed to watch their habits 



INTRODUCTION. 



5 



and transformations in the field and in breeding 
cages and aquaria, and the interest can be main- 
tained by appealing to the love of making collec- 
tions, which is so general. The boy or girl that 
finds pleasure in collecting postage stamps, shells, or 
birds' eggs will find even greater pleasure in collect- 
ing insects. It is only a step from the mere making 
of a collection to the learning of something regard- 
ing the objects collected ; and in this way, uncon- 
sciously, without irksome labor, but with much 
pleasure, the powers of observation will be trained 
and a love of Nature developed. 

Everything possible should be done to make this 
study a recreation which the pupils will enjoy out- 
side of school hours. If each has a collection, this 
will be an easy matter. Do not discourage the pupils 
by requiring them to memorize abstract statements 
concerning insects. Let their knowledge of the sub- 
ject be based on personal observations. The state- 
ments in the book are merely to aid the pupils in 
their study of the specimens ; personal observation 
should be the real source of their information. The 
development of the habit of ascertaining facts for 
themselves is one of the greatest benefits the pupils 
will derive from this study. 

In preparing the lessons an effort has been made 
to combine the verification method and the interro- 
gation method of laboratory work in such a way as 
to obtain the desirable results of both systems and to 
give variety to the work. When the former method 
is used the teacher will be able in most cases to 
determine if the pupil has correctly verified the 
statements made in the text by examining the draw- 



6 INSECT LIFE. 

ings he is required to make or the accounts he is 
asked to write. 

In the chapters following the numbered lessons 
the study of aquatic insects is taken up first and con- 
siderable attention is devoted to it. This has been 
done on account of the fascination which streams 
and ponds have for most people, and on account of 
the ease with which the habits of many aquatic in- 
sects can be studied in aquaria. A few jars of water 
with plants and insects in them can be made a never- 
ending source of interest and instruction. 

It is obvious that in order to direct well work of 
this kind the teacher should be thoroughly acquainted 
with the subjects studied by the pupils. The diffi- 
culties that have been in the wav of the teachers that 

** 

have tried to obtain a systematic knowledge of in- 
sects is doubtless the chief reason that insect life has 
not been studied more in the public schools. An 
appreciation of these difficulties led the author and 
illustrator of this book to prepare first, for the use of 
teachers, a comprehensive text-book, by means of 
which the teacher can easily prepare himself to 
direct the study of his pupils. This is entitled A 
Manual for the Study of Insects.* 

In this study, perhaps more than in any other 
taught in the secondary schools, the pleasure of con- 
stantly learning something new can be shared by the 
teacher with the pupils. The writer has had an un- 
usually broad experience in teaching this subject, but 
he has never yet taken a class into the field without 
finding something new to him. 

* Published by the Comstock Publishing Company, Ithaca, N. Y. 



INTRODUCTION. 7 

In this connection we wish to urge the impor- 
tance of perfect sincerity. The teacher should 
frankly say I do not know when asked a question 
that he can not answer, and it will be well if he will 
add, we will try to find out. Teach the pupils early 
that any one by intelligent endeavor can add to the 
sum of knowledge. 

While the chief end of this study is the training 
of the powers of observation arid the careful ascer- 
taining of facts in a scientific manner, it seems to us 
to be well to encourage somewhat an imaginative 
view of the subject. For this purpose we have in- 
cluded some poetical references to insects. We be- 
lieve that the reading of these by the pupils will both 
stimulate their love of a poetical form of expression 
and bring them in closer sympathy with the world 
of life around us. 



PART I. 



LESSONS IN INSECT LIFE. 





CHAPTER I. 

THE PARTS OF AN INSECT. 

'OOK at an insect and you will find a creature 
with parts which are very different from 
those of the animals with which we are more 
familiar. Although it can see, hear, eat, 
and walk, its eyes, ears, mouth, and legs 
are not like the corresponding organs of 
the higher animals. 

It is necessary, therefore, at the 
beginning of our study of insect life, 
to learn something of the structure of insects. We 
will not attempt at first, however, to make a thor- 
ough study of insect anatomy, but will merely select 
one kind of insect, and study the principal divisions 
of the body as seen from the outside. 

Having done this, we will be able to see in our 
later studies in what ways the parts of other kinds of 
insects have been modified in form to fit them for 
their modes of life. Thus, for example, we will find 
that an insect which catches its prey by running has 
legs of a different shape than those of an insect that 

9 



I0 INSECT LIFE. 

swims through the water; and an insect that sucks 
the blood from its victims has a different kind of 
mouth than one that chews up the leaves of plants. 

It is also important that we should know the 
names of the principal parts of the body of an insect, 
so that we may understand descriptions of insects, 
and be able to write descriptions ourselves. 

We have selected locusts, or grasshoppers as they 
are more commonly called, for the subject of these 
introductory lessons. We have done this because 
locusts are quite large, and are common in all parts 
of our country ; and, too, the parts of the body in 
these insects are comparatively simple. 

In the course of these lessons the following things 
will be needed : A supply of locusts,* blank paper 
and pencils for making notes and drawings, one or 
more cyanide bottles (see page 286) for killing the 
specimens collected by the pupils, a lens, cardboard 
and mucilage for mounting dissections, and scissors. 
A compound microscope is very desirable, but not 
absolutely necessary. 

* It is best, when practicable, that the pupils should collect these for 
themselves. But in the case of city schools, or when the work is begun 
at a season of the year when these insects are not readily found, the 
teacher should have on hand a supply of locusts preserved in alcohol. 
These can be collected beforehand or obtained of some dealer in labora- 
tory supplies. The best way to collect them is by sweeping (see page 291) 
the grass in a dry meadow or pasture in late summer or early autumn. 
In this way a pint or more of locusts can be collected in a short time. 
These can be preserved in alcohol in an ordinary glass can, such as is 
used for preserving fruit. There should be more than enough alcohol to 
cover the insects, and after they have been in it for twenty-four hours it 
should be poured off and fresh alcohol substituted. A list of dealers in 
laboratory supplies is given at the close of this volume for the conven- 
ience of those who wish to purchase specimens. 



THE PARTS OF A LOCUST. 



II 




FIG. i. A locust. 



LESSON I. 

THE PARTS OF A LOCUST. 

Collection of Specimens and a General View of the Body. 

1. Collect several locusts or short-horned grass- 
hoppers and bring them to the school. They can be 
carried in a small box 

or wide-mouthed bottle. 
Fig. i represents one of 
these insects. 

2. If living locusts 
are collected, kill them 

by leaving them in a cyanide bottle for a half hour 
or more. 

NOTE. If the pupils can not find living locusts at the time this 
lesson is taken, preserved specimens will be furnished by the teacher. 

3. Count the legs and the wings of the locusts, 
and make a note of the number of each on a sheet of 
paper headed Notes on the Parts of a Locust. 

4. Study the body of the insect and observe that 
it is composed of three portions : first, the head ; sec- 
ond, a stout portion to which the 

/ legs and wings are attached, the 





FIG. 2. "\Vasp, with head, tho- 
rax, and abdomen separated. 



FIG. 3. Side view of locust with wings 
removed. 



thorax ; and, third, the hinder part of the body or 
abdomen (ab-do 1 men}. 

In a locust the division between the thorax and 



12 INSECT LIFE. 

the abdomen is not well marked. Fig. 2 represents 
a wasp with the three regions of the body separated, 
and in Fig. 3 a locust is represented with its wings re- 
moved so as to show the extent of each of these regions. 
5. Make a copy on your sheet of notes of the 
figure of a side view of a locust. 



LESSON II. 

THE PARTS OF A LOCUST (CONTINUFD). 

The Head, except the Mouth-parts. 

The head is the first of the three regions of the 
body. It contains the brain of the insect and other 
important organs ; but in these lessons we will study 
only the outside parts of it. The head bears the 
antennas, the eyes, and the mouth-parts. 

1. The antcnnce (an-ten'nce) are the two long, slen- 
der organs attached to the head in front of the large 
eyes. Make a drawing of one of them. The singu- 
lar form of the word antennas is antenna (an-ten'na). 

2. Study the large eyes which are situated one on 
each side of the head. Examine them with a lens, 

also with a microscope if you have 
the use of one. The surface of the 
eye when much magnified resem- 
bles honeycomb in appearance (Fig. 
4). Each of the six-sided divisions 

of the lar e e y e is a complete eye, 
pound eye, greatly hence the large eyes are compound 

enlarged. 

eyes. 

3. In addition to the two large compound eyes a 
locust has three simple eyes. There is one of these 




THE PARTS OF A LOCUST. l $ 

just in front of the upper part of each compound eye, 
and the third is in a hollow near the middle of the 
face of the locust ; find each of these. 

NOTE. The simple eyes are usually called the ocelli (o-cel' It). This 
term is also applied frequently to the little eyes, or ommatidia, of which 
the compound eyes are composed ; but if nothing is said to indicate that 
the parts of a compound eye are meant, the term ocelli always refers to 
the simple eyes. In the same way the term eyes usually refers to the 
compound eyes alone. The singular form of ocelli is ocellus (o-cel lus). 

4. Make a drawing of the front side of the head 
showing the position of the antennae, the eyes, and 
the ocelli. 

LESSON III. 

THE PARTS OF A LOCUST (CONTINUED). 

The Mouth-parts. 

1. Attached to the lower edge of the front side of 
the head of the locust is a movable flap ; this is the 
upper lip or labrum (la'bruiri). Carefully remove it 
with a knife and save it. 

2. By removing the upper lip there is exposed a 
pair of horny jaws ; these are the mandibles (inan'di- 
bles). The mandibles open sidewise instead of up and 
down like the jaws of higher animals. Carefully re- 
move the mandibles. This can be done by separating 
them with a pin, and turning each one sidewise till it 
breaks from the head. Save the mandibles. 

3. By the removal of the mandibles there is ex- 
posed a second pair of jaws, which, like the mandi- 
bles, open sidewise. These are the maxilla (inax- 
il'la). The singular form of maxillae is maxilla (max- 
il'la). The maxillae, unlike the mandibles, are very 
complicated organs, each maxilla consisting of sev- 



INSECT LIFE. 



eral parts. Leave the maxillse attached to the head 
till later. 

4. Remove the head of the locust and pin it with 
the hinder side uppermost to a piece of cork or block 
of wood. 

5. With the head in this position the flaplike 
lower lip or labium (la'bi-um) can be easily seen. 
Like the maxillas, the labium consists of several 
parts. 

6. Lift the free end of the labium with a pin and 
observe the tonguelike organ which arises from the 

inner side of it, and pro- 
jects between the maxillas; 
this is the hypopliarynx (Jiy- 
po-pJiar' ynx\ 

7. Remove the labium 
and the hypopharynx and 
save them. 

8. After the removal of 
the labium it will be easier 
to remove the maxillse than 
before. Remove them and 
save them. 

FIG. 5. The mouth-parts of a lo- 9. Arrange the mouth- 

cust : 8, labrum ; 10, mandibles ; , , 

TI d, maxillary parts on a card as shown 




palpi; i2, labium; 12 d. labial T?:~ - ~ n A fU^- 

palpi; 13, hypopharynx. "ff- 5 and gum them m 

place. 

10. The five-jointed appendages of the maxillse are 
the maxillary palpi. The singular of palpi is palpus. 

11. The three-jointed appendages of the lower lip 
or labium are the labial palpi. 

Review. The mouth-parts of a locust consist of 
an upper lip, the labrum ; an under lip, the labium; 



THE PARTS OF A LOCUST. j 5 

two pairs of jaws, the mandibles and the maxillce ; and 
a tonguelike organ, the kypopharynx. The jaws open 
sidewise instead of up and down, as do the jaws of 
the higher animals. The upper pair of jaws are called 
the mandibles ; the lower pair of jaws the maxillce. 
Each maxilla bears a palpus ; these are the maxillary 
palpi. The labium bears a pair of palpi ; these are 
the labial palpi. 

LESSON IV. 

THE PARTS OF A LOCUST (CONTINUED). 

The Appendages of the Thorax, the Legs. 

The thorax is the middle one of the three regions 
of the body (see Lesson I and Fig. 3). The append- 
ages of the thorax are three pairs of legs and two 
pairs of wings. In this lesson we will study the 
legs. 

1. Study carefully one of the fore legs of the 
locust and observe that it is composed of several 
parts or segments. Each of these segments of the 
leg has a distinct name. As these names are often 
used in descriptions of insects, it is necessary to learn 
them. 

2. The first segment of the legs, the one that is 
joined to the body, is nearly globular in outline ; this 
is the coxa (cox' a]. 

3. The second segment of the leg is much smaller 
than the coxa ; this is the trochanter (tro-cJian'ter). 

4. The third segment of the leg is the principal 
one ; this is the femur (fe'mur]. Its name is the same 
as that of the principal bone in the human leg. 

5. The fourth segment of the leg is nearly as long 



!6 INSECT LIFE. 

as the femur, but it is more slender; it is called the 
tibia (tib'i-d). This name is the same as the name of 
the principal bone between the knee and ankle of the 
human leg. 

6. All of the leg of the locust beyond the tibia is 
the foot or tarsus (tar'sus). This part consists of 
three segments in the locust, but the number of seg- 
ments in the tarsus differs in different kinds of in- 
sects. 

7. The last segment of the tarsus bears a pair of 
claws. These are called the tarsal claws. 

8. Find each of the parts named above in each of 
the legs of the locust. 

9. Make a drawing of one of the fore legs and 
name the parts. 

10. The plurals of the terms are as follows : coxa, 
coxas ; trochanter, trochanters ; femur, femora (fem/- 
o-ra) ; tibia, tibiae ; tarsus, tarsi. 



LESSON V. 

THE PARTS OF A LOCUST (CONTINUED). 

The Appendages of the Thorax, the Wings. 

1. Remove the two wings of one side, spread 
them out on a card, and gum them in place. 

2. Study the wings and observe that each is com- 
posed of a membrane strengthened by a framework 
of thicker lines. These thickened lines composing 
the framework are called the veins of the wings. The 
term vein used in this connection is not very appro- 
priate, but as it is in general use it would not be well 
to attempt to change it. 



THE PARTS OF A LOCUST. \j 

3. Observe the strong, longitudinal veins, and the 
numerous smaller cross-veins. 

4. The portions of the membrane bounded by the 
veins are called the cells. 

5. Cut a piece about one fourth inch square from 
one of the wings not removed from the body, mount 
it on a card, and make a careful drawing of the veins 
and cells. Label the drawing as follows : Fragment 
of the iving of a locust showing the veins and the cells. 

6. Write a description of the wings of a locust ; 
describe first the general features of the wings, and 
then state how the two wings of one side differ from 
each other. 

LESSON VI. 

THE PARTS OF A LOCUST (CONTINUED). 

The Thorax. 

1. In this lesson we are to study the parts of the 
thorax, but before beginning this study the pupil 
should examine the abdomen and observe that the 
body wall of that region is composed of several ring- 
like segments. 

2. Like the abdomen, the entire body of an insect 
is made up of a series of segments, but it is not so 
easy to distinguish the separate segments in the head 
and thorax as it is in the abdomen. 

3. The segments of which the head is composed 
are grown together so completely that the head ap- 
pears to consist of a single segment. 

4. The thorax consists of three segments, which 
we will try to distinguish. Observe that the first 
pair of legs are borne by a ringlike part which can 



jg INSECT LIFE. 

be separated from the remainder of the thorax. This 
is the first of the segments of the thorax. 

5. Separate the first segment of the thorax from 
the remainder of this region. Observe that the belly 
or ventral side is small, while the upper or dorsal $\&v 
is large, being composed of the large sunbonnet- 
shaped piece which is just back of the head. 

6. The first segment of the thorax is called the 
protJiorax {pro-tlio'rax). 

7. Make a drawing of a side view of the prothorax 
representing the left side. 

8. The portion of the thorax remaining consists 
of two segments closely grown together. These are 
the second and third thoracic segments. The second 
thoracic segment bears the second pair of legs and the 
first pair of wings ; the third thoracic segment bears 
the third pair of legs and the second pair of wings. 
Study the specimen and try to make out the limits 
of these segments. 

9. The second or middle thoracic segment is called 
the mesothorax (mes-o-tho'rax). The third or last tho- 
racic segment is called the metathorax (met-a-tho' rax). 

10. Remove the wings and make a drawing of 
the left side of these two segments. 

o 

11. Observe that the greater part of each side of 
these two segments consists of four large, oblique 
pieces. The first two of these pieces belong to the 
mesothorax, the last two to the metathorax. 

Review.- -The body of an insect consists of a series 
of segments ; of these the first three behind the head 
form the thorax. The three segments of the thorax 

o 

are called the pro thorax, the mesothorax, and the meta- 
thorax respectively. 



THE PARTS OF A LOCUST. 
LESSON VII. 

THE PARTS OF A LOCUST (CONTINUED). 

The Abdomen. 

The abdomen is that portion of the body which 
is behind the thorax. In a locust the thorax and ab- 
domen are so closely connected that it requires care- 
ful study to determine where one ends and the other 
begins. 

1. Examine the ventral or belly side of the body 
and determine which is the first abdominal segment. 
The front edge of this segment is dovetailed into the 
metathorax, so that at first sight it appears to be a 
part of the thorax. 

2. Examine the upper or dorsal part of the first 
abdominal segment ; this is widely separated from 
the ventral part by the cavities for the insertion of 
the hind legs. 

3. Observe the ears ; these are situated one on 
each side of the first abdominal segment. Each is a 
large opening in the body wall which is closed by a 
very delicate membrane (see Fig. 3). Locusts differ 
from other insects in having ears in this position. 

4. Examine the seven abdominal segments follow- 
ing the first ; each of these is ringlike in form. 

5. Find the b r eathing holes or spiracles. There 
is a row of them on each side of the body. The first 
one on each side that is in the abdomen is just in 
front of the ear. In the seven following abdominal 
segments there is one on each side of each segment 
near the lower front corner of the upper part of the 
segment. 



20 INSECT LIFE. 



. In addition to the abdominal spiracles, there are two pairs of 
spiracles which belong to the thorax : one of these is situated in the 
membrane between the prothorax and mesothorax ; the other just above 
and a little back of the insertion of the middle pair of legs. The first 
of these two pairs is covered by the free margin of the prothorax, which 
can be cut away with scissors. 

6. Examine several specimens of locusts and ob- 
serve that in some the hind or caudal end of the 
body tapers to the end and bears four pointed and 
curved, horny pieces, and that in others this end of 
the body is terminated by a single, large, hood-shaped 
plate. Those in which the body ends in four pieces 
are females ; the others are males. 

7. The four pieces at the caudal end of the body 
of the female are for making holes in the ground or 
in soft wood in which the eggs are laid, and are called 
the ovipositor. 

8. In using the ovipositor the insect pushes it into 
the ground and then spreads the pieces apart ; by re- 
peating this operation many times a deep hole is 
made in which the eggs are laid. 

9. Make a drawing of the left side of the abdo- 
men ; represent carefully the position of the ear and 
of the spiracles. Use either a male or female, but 
state under the drawing which sex it represents. 

LESSON VIII. 

THE PARTS OF A LOCUST (CONTINUED). 

Review. 

The following table illustrates the relations ot the 
parts of a locust that have been studied in the pre- 
ceding lessons. The pupils should learn this table 



THE PARTS OF A LOCUST. 21 

so that they can write it without referring to the 
book : 



Head. 



Antennae. 
Compound eyes. 
Simple eyes or ocelli. 



T 



Labrum. 



,, , Mandibles. 

] Maxillte and maxillary palpi. 
[ Labium and labial palpi. 
Prothorax and first pair of legs. 

, ( second pair of legs. 
Thorax. <{ Mesothorax and j first pair of wings. 

, \ third pair of legs. 
Metathorax and \ __ paif of ^ 



\T-' V^,11U 

\\ mg - 

' ( cells. 

f Coxa. 

Trochanter. 
Leg { Femur. 
I Tibia. 

^ Tarsus and claws. 
Abdomen. 



The abdomen bears < spiracles. 

( ovipositor 



( ears (in locusts only). 



CHAPTER II. 




THE BEGINNING OF A COLLECTION AND A STUDY OF THE 
o METAMORPHOSES OF INSECTS. 

HE mere reading of books 
about natural objects will do 
but little toward forming an 
intimate acquaintance with 
Nature. If one would really 
know about the creatures that 
are near us wherever we go, 
he must study them directly, and not depend on 
what others have said about them. 

It is for this reason that these first lessons in 
Insect Life are based on the study of specimens that 
the pupils have collected for themselves. It will be 
far better for the pupils to learn a few things at first 
hand than to memorize a great mass of information 
from books. 

In most places it is comparatively easy to find 
insects. The pupils can collect them while going to 
and from school or during recess ; or a class may be 
excused for an hour or two occasionally to make 
longer trips, under the direction of one of the older 
pupils ; but, when possible, the teacher should accom- 
pany the pupils in their excursions. More insects 
will be found on warm days when the sun is shining 
than at other times. 

22 



THE BEGINNING OF A COLLECTION. 23 

In the case of city schools that are remote from 
parks or other good collecting fields, excursions into 
country places can be made on Saturdays, and the 
specimens collected on such an excursion can be kept 
for study till the following Monday. Much more 
progress in attaining real knowledge will be made in 
this way than by daily recitations based on a study 
of a book about insects. 

With a little effort living insects can be kept in 
breeding cages or aquaria, so that the specimens col- 
lected on a single excursion may serve for daily ob- 
servations for a long time. 

Each pupil should be encouraged to make a per- 
manent collection for himself. With such a collec- 
tion there is little danger of his losing his interest in 
the subject ; and the facts that he has learned will be 
remembered more easily. Moreover, the making of 
additions to a collection and the frequent rearranging 
of it will be a source of great pleasure and instruction. 

If for any reason it is impracticable for the pupils 
to make private collections, a collection should be 
made for the school. If the specimens in such a col- 
lection are labeled with the names of the collectors, 
the pupils will be stimulated to make additions to it. 
And if, as soon as the older pupils have learned to 
handle specimens carefully, each is appointed curator 
of some group of insects, a personal interest in the 
collection will be stimulated, and each will acquire a 
more thorough knowledge of the group collected 
than he would otherwise. 

The group assigned to a student may be some 
order or family of insects, or an artificial group based 
on habits. Some experience with the local con- 



INSECT LIFE. 

ditions in each school will be necessary for the 
teacher to be able to select the more available groups. 

Even when the pupils make private collections it 
will be well to have each one, after he has become 
familiar with the different orders, select some one of 
them as his specialty, and study that one more thor- 
oughly. In this way he will be forced to do more 
careful collecting in order to add to his collection 
constantly, and he will thus learn more about the 
habits of the insects collected. 

Before beginning the work the teacher should 
decide what apparatus is to be used, and make pro- 
vision for obtaining that part of it which the pupils 
are not to make for themselves, so that the work 
shall not be delayed by lack of material. 

Although there are many things that are desira- 
ble for carrying on this work, much can be accom- 
plished with very little material and that which is 
inexpensive. The following lists will aid the teacher 
in deciding what to get :- 

Necessary Supplies for Pupils. 

Cyanide bottles. See page 286. 
Pins. See page 295. 
Empty cigar-boxes. See page 306. 
Cork or pith. See page 309. 

Additional Supplies desirable for Pupils. 

Insect nets. See page 285. 
Glass-topped cases. See page 306. 
Coddington lenses. See below. 
Vials. 
Alcohol. 



THE BEGINNING OF A COLLECTION. 



Desirable Supplies for the School. 

Cabinet for insect cases. See page 294. 

Pliers or pinning forceps. See page 299. 

Cases, pins, vials, and alcohol. 

Microscope. See below. 

Supplies for mounting microscopic objects. See 
page 300. 

At least the teacher should possess a lens. Of 
the cheaper lenses the form known as the Codding- 
ton lenses I have found to be the best. These are 
commonly kept by stationers or jewelers. They can 
also be procured of any dealer in optical instruments. 
See list of dealers at the end of this volume. 

If a microscope be procured for the school, care 
should be taken to get one provided with what is 
known as the society screw, so that objectives of any 
of the more prominent makers can be used on it. If 
the funds at the disposal of the school will only admit 
of the purchase of a microscope with a single objec- 
tive, a three-fourths-inch objective will be found as 
useful as any for entomological work, and perhaps 
later a one-fifth-inch objective or others can be added. 
Price lists of microscopes will be furnished by deal- 
ers in optical instruments. Most dealers make 
discounts from their list prices when furnishing 
schools. 

In preparing the above suggestions we have tried 
to keep in mind the needs and the ability of supply- 
ing these needs of both teachers in the smaller 
schools, where there may be no funds to spend for 
apparatus, and of teachers in the larger schools, where 
even costly apparatus can be purchased. 



2 5 INSECT LIFE. 

LESSON IX. 

PREPARATION FOR A COLLECTING TRIP. 

Having: learned something about the structure of 

o *-^ 

a locust, which was taken as a typical insect, we are 
ready to begin the study of other insects. In doing 
this we will first learn how to collect and preserve 
specimens ; after that we will study the classification 
of insects and the life histories of some of them. 

The forms of insects are numberless, and their 
ways are as varied as are their forms. As we walk 
over the fields they spring up before us or scurry 
away through the grass. Some fly lazily here and 
there ; others dart back and forth with the rapidity of 
thought. We crush them under foot by a careless 
step ; we find them on every shrub and tree ; and 
the streams and ponds are peopled by them. 

Let us approach their study with kindly feelings, 
bent on learning what we can concerning them and 
their ways, and putting aside the false notion that 
many of us have been taught that these creatures are 
to be despised. The great majority of them can be 
regarded as our friends, for they are of service 
to us ; others, while not actually beneficial, do us no 
appreciable harm ; a few, and they are only a few 
compared with the great number that make up the 
insect world, interfere with our happiness. These 
we are forced to fight ; but the combat is one of self- 
defense and not a war against an enemy that harms 
us maliciously. 

In making a collection for study it will be neces- 
sary for us to kill specimens; but we will do this as 



PREPARATION FOR A COLLECTING TRIP. 

humanely as possible, and will not destroy more than 
we need for our work. 

The objects of this lesson are two : first, the 
suggesting of a proper spirit in which to take up 
this work ; and, second, the getting ready for our first 
field trip, so that when the time comes to start there 
will be no delay. 

The most important thing to carry with you into 
the field is a good pair of eyes. Without these but 
little will be accomplished. 

Of the various kinds of collecting apparatus the 
most important is a cyanide bottle. Each pupil, if 
possible, should have one of these. On page 286 will 
be found directions for making them. 

In addition to a cyanide bottle it will be well if 
each one has an insect net, although much can be 
done without a net. See page 285 for a description 
of an insect net. 

No other apparatus is needed for the first field 
trip, but it will be well if some provision be made at 
once for preserving the insects that you are going to 
collect. The following are the more important 
things needed for this : 

1. An insect case or empty cigar-boxes. Read 
what is said on pages 306 to 310 regarding these, and 
note especially what is said on page 310 regarding 
the use of corn pith for lining cigar-boxes. 

2. A supply of insect pins or, if these can not be 
obtained, a paper of ordinary pins. Read what is 
said on this subject on pages 295 to 299. 



28 INSECT LIFE. 

LESSON X. 

THE FIRST COLLECTING TRIP. 

Material needed for the Excursion. " A sharp pair 
of eyes," a cyanide bottle, and an insect net if you 
hav r e one. 

Where to look for Specimens. On flowers and 
leaves, on the surface of the ground, under stones 
and pieces of wood lying on the ground, in rotten 
stumps, and under the bark of decaying logs and 
trees. 

What to collect. --We plan to study all kinds of 
insects and also some animals that are not true in- 
sects, but are closely related to them. It will be best, 
however, on this first excursion to collect only 7'/;/7Y/ 
insects. Other forms may be collected and studied 
later in the course. 

Suggestions. Do not leave your cyanide bottle 
open unnecessarily, for if you do it will lose its 
strength in a short time. With proper care a cyanide 
bottle will last several months. 

Do not hold your face near the open cyanide 
bottle so as to breathe the fumes that escape from it. 
With ordinary care there is no danger in the use of 
a cyanide bottle. 

You can take bees and wasps from flowers with- 
out danger of being stung by shutting them into the 
bottle with the cork. Take the bottle in one hand 
and the cork in the other, and bring the two together 
quickly, one on each side of the insect. 

The insects collected can be left in the cyanide 
bottles or on damp sand in a jar or tight box till 



THE FIRST COLLECTING TRIP. 



2 9 



the following day. If the excursion is made on 
Saturday the insects can be kept soft in this way till 
Monday. 




FIG. 6. Poison ivy. (Note that the leaflets are in threes, and that each has 

only a single midrib.) 

If a cyanide bottle is wet inside it should be 
wiped out and a piece of blotting paper placed in it. 
But if the dampness is due to the dissolving of the 
cyanide it is better to put enough dry plaster of Paris 




FIG. 7. Virginia creeper. (Note that the leaflets are in fives.) 

into the bottle to absorb the liquid ; sprinkle the 
plaster of Paris carefully on top of the layer of 
cement in the bottom of the bottle, so that the whole 
shall form one solid layer. 

To the Teacher. --If poison ivy or poison oak 
abounds in the region where the pupils are to col- 



INSECT LIFE. 



lect, the plant should be made known to them. 
They should also be able to distinguish between 




FIG. 8. Clematis. (Note that the leaflets are in threes, like the poison ivy, 

but each leaflet has several midribs.) 

poison ivy and the harmless Virginia creeper and 
clematis. See Figs. 6, 7, and 8.* 



LESSON XI. 

ON MOUNTING SPECIMENS. 

1. Take the specimens that were collected on the 
first collecting trip, and which have been kept moist 
either by being left in the cyanide bottle or in a 
closed vessel upon damp sand, and spread them out 
before you. If the directions were followed, they 
are all winged. 

2. Select one of the larger specimens and observe 



* The writer, who is extremely susceptible to the poison of poison 
oak and poison ivy, has experienced great relief when poisoned by bath- 
ing the affected parts frequently with a lotion made of one part tincture 
ofgrindelia and four parts water. Prompt and frequent application of 
this lotion will prevent the appearance of the pustules characteristic of 
this disease ; if the application be not made soon enough for this, the 
injury can be kept from spreading by a thorough and persistent use of the 
lotion. 



ON MOUNTING SPECIMENS. 



that, as with the locust, the body consists of three 
main parts the head, the tlwrax, and the abdomen. 

3. In pinning insects most specimens should be 
pinned through the middle of the thorax. Read the 
section on pinning insects on page 297. 

4. Pin four or five of the larger specimens in this 
way, leaving about one fourth of the length of the 
pin above the back of the insect. If insect pins 
be used, avoid using the smaller sizes, as they are 
easily bent. Insects that are too small to be pinned 
with No. 3 Klager pins should be mounted on cards 
as described later. 

5. Ascertain if you have any beetles in your col- 
lection. Beetles have a pair of wing-covers in the 
place of the front wings. 

These wing -covers are 
thick and horny, and 
meet in a straight line 
down the back of the in- 
sect, forming a hard case, 
beneath which the hind 
wings are folded. Fig. 
9 represents a beetle. 

6. Separate the beetles 
in your collection from 
the other specimens. 

7. In pinning beetles 
the pin should be put 

through the right wing-cover at a point about one 
fourth the length of the wing-cover from its base 

(see Fig. 10). 

8. Pin all the beetles in your collection that are 
large enough to be pinned. 




FIG. 9. A beetle. 




INSECT LIFE. 

9. Pin any other winged insects you have that 
are large enough to be pinned, remembering that 

except in case of beetles the insects 
should be pinned through the 
middle of the thorax. 

10. If there remain some in- 
sects that are too small to be 
pinned, they should be mounted 
on cardboard points, as described 
on page 298. 

11. Count the legs on each 
specimen in your collection. (It 

is supposed that you have only winged specimens.) 
How many legs do winged insects have? 

The shrilling locust slowly sheathes 

His dagger voice, and creeps away 
Beneath the brooding leaves where breathes 

The zephyr of the dying day : 
One naked star has waded through 
The purple shallows of the night, 
And faltering as falls the dew 
It drips its misty light. 
O'er garden blooms, 
On tides of musk, 

The beetle booms adown the glooms 
And bumps along the dusk. 

The katydid is rasping at 

The silence from the tangled broom : 
On drunken wings the flitting bat 

Goes staggering athwart the gloom : 
The toadstool bulges through the weeds ; 

And lavishly to left and right 
The fireflies, like golden seeds, 

Are sown about the night. 



THE SECOND COLLECTING TRIP. 



-> j 
JJ) 



O'er slumb'rous blooms, 

On floods of musk, 
The beetle booms adown the glooms 
And bumps along the dusk. 

James Whit comb Riley* 

LESSON XII. 

THE SECOND COLLECTING TRIP. 

1. Review carefully the directions on page 28. 

2. On this excursion the pupils should collect any 
true insects that is, those having only six feet that 
they may find ; but the especial object of the excur- 





FlG. n. Nymph of Melanoplus, 
first stage. (After Emerton.) 



FIG. 12. Nymph of Melanoplus, 
second stage. (After Emerton.) 




FIG. 13. Nymph of Melanoplus, 
third stage. (After Emerton.) 



FlG. 14. Nymph of Melanoplus, 
fourth stage. (After Emerton.) 



sion is to get a set of specimens illustrating the 
growth of either crickets or locusts or bugs. Select 
whichever of these is most common, and get as com- 



* From Old-fashioned Roses, by permission of the Bowen-Merrill Co. 



34 INSECT LIFE. 

plete a series as possible representing the changes 
from the very young insect without any wings, 
through the different stages of wing-growth up to 
the adult insect. 

The accompanying figures (Figs. 11-16) represent 
the transformations of a common locust. Note that 





FIG. 15. Nymph of Melanoplus, FIG. i6.HfeZanop/us, adult, 

fifth stage. (After Emerton.j 

the figures of the younger stages are enlarged. The 
hair line represents in each case the length of the 
insect. 

LESSON XIII. 

INCOMPLETE METAMORPHOSIS. 

Nearly all insects undergo great changes in form 
while getting their growth. Thus, caterpillars in 
time become butterflies or millers ; grubs when 
fully developed are beetles; and maggots are the 
young of two-winged flies. 

In the case of butterflies, millers, beetles, and 
two-winged flies, the fully developed insects bear 
but little resemblance in form to the young. It 
would be difficult to find two adult insects that differ 
more in form than do a butterfly and the caterpillar 
from which it was developed. But in the case of 
certain other insects, the changes undergone during 
the life of the insect are not nearly so great as with 



INCOMPLETE METAMORPHOSIS. 



35 



these. Thus the young locust resembles the adult 
in form to a great extent, except that it lacks wings ; 
and the same thing is true of crickets, bugs, and 
many other insects. 

Those insects which, like butterflies, millers, bee- 
tles, and flies, undergo a complete change of form 
while getting their growth are said to undergo a 
complete metamorphosis. 

Insects which, like locusts, crickets, and bugs, do 
not change greatly in form except by the gradual 
growth of wings are said to undergo an incomplete 
metamorphosis. 

Let us study more carefully the changes of an 
insect with an incomplete metamorphosis. 

1. Pin the specimens that were collected on the 
last excursion. If some are too small to pin, mount 
them on cardboard points. 

2. Select those that were collected to illustrate 
the changes in form from the very young insect 
without any wings through the different stages of 
wing-growth up to the adult insect. 

3. Determine how many stages of growth are 
represented by these, and place together the speci- 
mens illustrating each stage. The young of insects 
that undergo an incomplete metamorphosis are 
termed nymphs. 

4. Make an outline drawing of the thorax and 
wings, when they are present, of each stage. Draw 
either the dorsal or a side view, whichever will show 
best the development of the wings. 



INSECT LIFE. 



LESSON XIV. 

MOLTING. 

1. Take a locust that has been killed by being 
placed in a cyanide bottle or in alcohol and cut the 
abdomen in two, near the middle of it. 

2. Observe that the hard parts of the body are on 
the outside, and that there is no internal skeleton, as 
in our own bodies. 

This fact makes necessary a peculiar feature in 
the growth of insects and of the other animals that 

are closely related to them. The 
body of an insect is inclosed in a 
firm case, which, as it does not in- 
crease in size, becomes too tight for 
the insect as the insect grows. To 
meet this difficulty the outer hard 
layer of the skin is shed. The inner 
soft layer of the skin then stretches 
so as to accommodate the increased 
size of the insect ; later this soft 
skin, which is now on the outside, 
becomes hard, so as to serve as a 
protection to the insect. In time 
this skin also becomes too tight, but 
another soft skin has been formed 
beneath it, and the hard skin can be 
shed like the other. 

This process of shedding the skin is termed 
molting. 

Insects differ greatly as to the number of times 
that they molt ; some pass through only three or 




FIG 17. The cast 
skin of a nymph 
of a dragon-fly. 



OBSERVATION OF INCOMPLETE METAMORPHOSIS. 37 

four molts, while others shed their skin twenty times 
or more. 

It is at the time of molting that changes in the 
form of the body take place. 

Fig. 17 represents the cast skin of a nymph of a 
dragon-fly. 

LESSON XV. 

OBSERVATION OF INCOMPLETE METAMORPHOSIS. 

1 . Collect a considerable number fifteen or twenty 
or more of nymphs of locusts or crickets, and place 
them in a breeding cage. See page 327 for directions 
for making inexpensive breeding cages. 

2. Put a sod of growing grass in the cage for the 
insects to feed upon, and replace it with a fresh one 
when necessary. 

3. Endeavor to rear the nymphs, and make notes 
on their changes. 

4. Examine the cage daily, and when cast skins 
are found, study them and preserve specimens for 
your collection. 

5. Preserve a specimen of each of the nymph 
stages, and label it with the date on which it was 

O ' 

taken. 

6. Observe that, although the changes between 
the different nymph stages are slight, the change be- 
tween the last nymph stage and the adult is a marked 
one, there being a great increase in the size of the 
wings at this time. 



38 INSECT LIFE. 

THE GRASSHOPPER AND THE CRICKET. 

Green little vaulter in the sunny grass, 

Catching your heart up at the feel of June, 

Sole voice that's heard amid the lazy noon, 
When even the bees lag at the summoning brass ; 
And you, warm little housekeeper, who class 

With those who think the candles come too soon, 

Loving the fire, and with your tricksome tune 
Nick the glad silent moments as they pass ; 
Oh, sweet and tiny cousins, that belong 

One to the fields, the other to the hearth, 
Both have your sunshine ; both, though small, are strong 

At your clear hearts ; and both were sent on earth 
To sing in thoughtful ears this natural song : 

Indoors and out, summer and winter Mirth. 

Leigh Hunt. 

LESSON XVI. 

OBSERVATION OF COMPLETE METAMORPHOSIS AND 
DEFINITION OF TERMS. 

And what's a butterfly ? At best, 

He's but a caterpillar, drest. -John Gay. 

1. Collect some caterpillars, and, keeping them 
alive, put them in a breeding- cage to rear. See 
pages 327 to 330 for directions for making breeding 
cages. 

2. Keep the caterpillars supplied with food, giv- 
ing them the same kind of plant as that on which 
they were found, and keep only one kind of cater- 
pillar in a single breeding cage. Most of the com- 
mon hairy caterpillars found running over the surface 
of the ground will feed on grass and many other 
plants, but other caterpillars will starve if not fed on 
their proper food plant. 



OBSERVATION OF COMPLETE METAMORPHOSIS. 



39 



. Among the more available kinds of caterpillars for use in 
this lesson are the following : The common green cabbage-worms ; the 
green worm, ringed with black and spotted with yellow, that eats the 
leaves of caraway ; and the large yellow and black one found on milk- 
weed. The transformations of each of these can be observed in a com- 
paratively short time if the study begins early enough in the season. 
The autumn broods of the first two pass the winter in the pupa state. 

3. Begin a series of notes on each kind of cater- 
pillar under observation, giving each a number and 
numbering the notes to correspond. (See Part II, 
Chapter III.) Begin each note with the date on 
which it was made. Record everything that you 
observe regarding the habits and transformations of 




FIG. 18. Larvas and pupa of a butterfly. 

the insects. Try to observe the molting of the in- 
sects and each of the transformations. 

4. All caterpillars hatch from eggs. If you suc- 
ceed in rearing adult insects and will keep some of 
them caged for a time you may be able to get eggs. 



40 



INSECT LIFE. 



But many insects will not lay in confinement. They 
are more apt to lay in confinement if caged with a 
growing food plant of the larva. 

5. Caterpillars and the corresponding stage of 
other insects with a complete metamorphosis are called 
larva. The singular form of this word is larva. 

6. When a larva is full grown it molts its skin 
and appears in a very different form. This third 
stage (the egg being the first and the larva the sec- 
ond) is called the pupa. The plural of pupa is pupce. 
In Fig. 1 8 there are represented two larvae on the 
upper edge of a fragment of a leaf and a pupa sus- 
pended from the lower edge. The pupae of butter- 
flies are sometimes 
called chrysalids.* 

7. Some larvse 
before changing to 
L, the pupa state spin 
about the body a 
silken case within 
which the pupa 

FIG. 19. A large cocoon within a rolled leaf. State is passed. Such 

a case is called a 

cocoon. Sometimes a leaf is fastened about the cocoon 
(Fig. 19); and some hairy caterpillars make their 
cocoons largely of their own hair, fastening it to- 
gether with a thin layer of silk. 

8. Following the pupa state is the adult or imago 
state. 

* There are two forms of this word : first, chrysalid, with the plural 
chrysalids ; and, second, chrysalis, with the plural chrysalides. The 
singular form of the second and the plural form of the first are in more 
common use. 




BEETLES OR COLEOPTERA. 



LESSON XVII. 

REVIEW OF TERMS USED IN DESCRIBING THE METAMOR- 
PHOSES OF INSECTS. 

KINDS OF METAMORPHOSIS. NAMES OF STAGES. 

/. Development Tvithout metamorphosis. 

This has not been described in these 
lessons, and it occurs only in a single 
order of insects, the Thysanura (see 



,- Immature insect. 
Adult. 



page 63). 

[Egg. 

II. Incomplete metamorphosis. < Nymph (several stages). 

[_ Adult or imago. 

Egg- 
Larva. 

Pupa. (The pupa is 
sometimes inclosed 
in a cocoon.} 
Adult or imago. 



III. Complete metamorphosis. 



LESSON XVIII. 

BEETLES OR COLEOPTERA (Co-le-Op'tC-ra). 

While the pupils are observing the development 
of the insects in their breeding cages, which will 
probably require a long time, the work of making a 
collection can be continued. 

1. Collect as many kinds of beetles as you can 
and mount them as directed in Lesson XI. Beetles 
can be found under stones and pieces of wood lying 
on the ground, under the loose bark of dead trees, 
logs, and stumps, and on the foliage of plants. 

2. The beetles, of which there are many thousand 
kinds, constitute what is termed by naturalists an 
Order. There are several orders of insects ; the one 
composed of beetles is named the Coleoptera. This 



42 INSECT LIFE. 

name is from two Greek words : one, kolcos, meaning 
a sheath, and the other, ptera, meaning wings. It re- 
fers to the fact that in this order in place of the front 
wings there are two horny sheaths which cover the 
hind wings. 

3. Prepare a label like that given below. 



y yy s~& '' ' '* 

''e<*fae> 



10>&e&4ise>t4Z, / "K/^ 2 - -e=-&ji- <te= 
/ I** / 



4. Pin this label into the upper left-hand corner 
of your case, and arrange your beetles below the 
label in rows extending from left to right, putting 
only one kind of beetle in a row. 

5. As you collect more beetles place them with 
these, putting each kind in its proper row. 

6. Select one of the larger beetles in your collec- 
tion and make a drawing representing the dorsal 
view of it. 

LESSON XIX. 

THE ORDER COLEOPTERA (CONTINUED). 

1. Carry a small cyanide bottle in your pocket, 
and, whenever you have an opportunity, collect any 
beetles that you can find, and add them to your col- 
lection. 

2. Observe that in each kind of beetle the winsrs 

O 

are always of the same size. The wings of these in- 
sects are not gradually developed as they are with 
locusts, crickets, and bugs; but the young of beetles 



THE ORDER COLEOPTERA. 

are grubs which undergo a complete metamorphosis 
in the course of their development. 

3. Select one of the larger beetles, and examine its 
wing-covers, or elytra, as they are called. Remove 
them, and note their structure. How do the elytra 
of beetles differ from the front wings of locusts? 

4. Study the hind wings. How does the folding 
of the hind wings of a beetle differ from that of the 
hind wings of a locust? 

5. Mount the elytra and hind wings of the beetle 
on a card. 

6. Study the mouth-parts of the beetle, dissecting 
them out, and mounting them on a card as was done 
with the mouth -parts of a locust in Lesson III. 
Label each of the mouth-parts. 

7. Remove some of the upper rows of beetles in 
your case so as to make room for the two cards just 
prepared, and place the cards immediately below the 
label for the order. Then rearrange the beetles be. 
low the cards. 

8. We have now observed the more important 
characteristics of the order Coleoptera or beetles, 
which are as follows: 

Order Coleoptera. The members of this order have a 
pair of horny wing- covers, called elytra, which meet in a 
straigJit line down the back, and beneath which there is a 
single pair of membranous wings. The month-parts are 
formed for biting. TJie metamorphosis is complete. 




44 INSECT LIFE. 

LESSON XX. 

THE TRANSFORMATIONS OF A BEETLE. 

1. Find a potato field infested with the Colorado 
potato-beetle. Fig-. 20 represents the adult of this 
insect. 

2. If this species is not in your collection, collect 
some of the adult beetles for it. 

3. Search for the larva of this potato- 
beetle. It is a thick, plump grub, strong- 
ly arched above, and of a pale yellow 
color, with two rows of black spots on 
each side. 

4. Search also for the eggs of this in- 
sect. These are yellow in color and are laid in 
clusters on the leaves of the potato. 

5. Take the eggs and larva to the school alive and 
put them in a breeding cage. Keep the larvae sup- 
plied with fresh potato leaves and watch their de- 
velopment, keeping notes on it. Put a few of the 
eggs and larvae in alcohol and preserve them in your 
collection. 

6. When full grown, the larvae go into the ground 
to transform ; there should on this account be a layer 
of soil in the bottom of the cage. 

7. After the larvae have gone into the ground to 
transform, some of the cocoons should be dug up and 
preserved in the collection. 

8. When the beetles begin to emerge from the 
ground, dig up some of the cocoons and remove 
pupae from them for the collection. 

9. Arrange the specimens of this species in your 



A COLLECTING TRIP. 45 

collection in the following order, eggs, larvae, co- 
coons, pupae, adults, and label each group. 



LESSON XXI. 

A COLLECTING TRIP. 

1. Review carefully the directions and sugges- 
tions given for the first collecting trip in Lesson X. 

2. The special object of this trip is to learn to 
collect insects by sweeping grass and beating the 
foliage of herbs and shrubs with an insect net. See 
page 290 for directions for the use of insect nets. 

Great care should be taken to procure the speci- 
mens in as good condition as possible. Empty your 
net frequently, so that the specimens shall not be in- 
jured by the sweeping or beating. 

LESSON XXII. 

MOUNTING OF SPECIMENS. 

If the sweeping and beating of the last trip were 
successful, there will be considerable work to be 
done in mounting specimens. Before doing this read 
pages 297 to 299, and then endeavor to mount your 
specimens in as good condition as possible and pre- 
serve them for future study. 

LESSON XXIII. 

ON COLLECTING BUTTERFLIES. 

Owing to the dustlike covering with which but- 
terflies and moths, or millers, are clothed, and which 



4 6 



INSECT LIFE. 



is easily injured, it is necessary to make a special 
study of the methods of collecting these insects ; for 
if the specimens are not handled properly, they will 
be of very little use for study. We will first study 
the collecting of butterflies. 

1. For collecting butterflies an insect net and a 
collecting box are necessary. The pupils doubtless 
have insect nets before this lesson is reached ; the 
collecting boxes can be made of empty cigar boxes, 
as described on page 287. 

2. In addition to the net and collecting box a 
bottle of chloroform with a brush fitted into the cork 
(Fig. 21) is very desirable, although not absolutely 
necessary. 

3. It is seldom best to attempt to run down a 

butterfly and catch it on the wing. Fol- 
low the insect quietly until it alights, and 
catch it while at rest. 

4. The removal of the insect from the 
net should be done with very great care, 
for here lies the greatest danger of injury 
to the specimen. 

FIG. 21. ^ tne butterfly is a small one, it can 

be taken from the net by placing the mouth 
of an open cyanide bottle over it ; in this way touch- 
ing the specimen with the fingers is avoided. 

If the specimen is too large for this, the net 
should be held in such a way that the insect can not 
flutter and thus injure its wings. Try to have it 
come to rest with its wings folded over its back, for 
the lower side of the wings are not so easily injured as 
is the upper side. Then take the fold of the net con- 
taining the butterfly between the thumb and finger 




ON SPREADING BUTTERFLIES. 



47 



of one hand and pinch the thorax of the insect. This 
can be done in such a way as to kill the insect at 
once without crushing the specimen. It can then be 
removed from the net and pinned and placed into 
the collecting- box. 

If the collector has a bottle of chloroform and 
brush, as soon as the insect is at rest in a fold of the 
net it can be killed by wetting its thorax with chloro- 
form. This is done by putting the wet brush on the 
net where it rests against the thorax of the insect. 
The butterfly can then be removed and pinned into 
the collecting box. 

5. Read paragraph on folded papers for butter- 
flies, page 287. 

6. Go into the field and collect some butterflies. 
Try to secure them in perfect condition rather than 
to try to get a large number. 

7. If you have time to spread the butterflies when 
you return from the field, pass at once to the next 
lesson; but if not, put the specimens on damp sand 
in a tightly closed jar or box and leave them till the 
following day. See paragraph on relaxing insects, 
page 305. 

LESSON XXIV. 

ON SPREADING BUTTERFLIES. 

Read the directions for making spreading boards 
and for spreading insects on pages 303 to 305, and 
then spread the butterflies that you have collected. 



INSECT LIFE. 
LESSON XXV. 

THE STRUCTURE OF BUTTERFLIES. 

1. Take a butterfly that has just been killed or 
one that has been relaxed in a damping jar, and pin 
it so that it can be handled without rubbing the 
colors from the wings. 

2. Examine the compound eyes with a lens or 
microscope, and make a drawing illustrating the 
structure of the surface ; only a small portion of one 
eye need be represented, but show this greatly en- 
larged. 

3. Observe on the lower side of the head two 
forward-projecting organs. These are the feelers of 
the lower lip or labial palpi. 

4. Observe an organ that is coiled up between 
the labial palpi. If the butterfly has been recently 
killed or is thoroughly relaxed, this organ can be 
straightened out by using a pin. It is the sucking 
tube by means of which the insect extracts nectar 
from flowers. It is composed of two parallel parts 
closely united, but with a channel between them 
through which the nectar is sucked. These two 
parts are the maxillae, which have become greatly 
developed and modified to fit them for sucking. 
The other mouth-parts, except the labial palpi, are 
poorly developed. 

5. Remove the head and gum it with the maxillae 
uncoiled to a card which is large enough to receive 
the two wings of one side also. 

6. Remove the two wings of one side and gum 
them to the card with the head. 



THE STRUCTURE OF BUTTERFLIES. 



49 



7. Study the clothing of the winsrs. It is neces- 

/ .- O O 

sary to use at least a lens for this ; if there is a micro- 
scope in the school it should be used for this study. 
It will be found that the dust covering the wings and 
body is composed of scales, which are of regular 
form ; and that in butter- 
flies these scales are ar- 



ranged in 



regular order 




FIG. 22. Part of wing; of butterfly, 
greatly magnified. 



upon the wings. Fig. 22 
represents part of a wing 
of a butterfly greatly 
magnified. In the upper 
part of the figure the 
membrane of the wing is 
represented with the 
scales removed. 

8. The butterflies, to- 
gether with the moths, or 

millers, and the skippers, which are insects that re- 
semble butterflies, constitute an order which is 
named the Lepidoptera. This name is from two 
Greek words : lepis, a scale, and ptcron, a wing. 
It refers to the scaly covering of the wings and 
body. 

9. Make a copy of the following label, and fasten 
it in your collection above the specimens of Lepi- 
dopera : 










50 INSECT LIFE. 

10. Place the card bearing the head and wings 
of a butterfly immediately below this label. 



LESSON XXVI. 

ON COLLECTING MOTHS. 

1. The fact that moths, or millers as they are 
often called, do not fold their wings above the body 
like butterflies makes it impracticable to kill speci- 
mens by pinching the thorax. Very large specimens 
can be killed by chloroform, as described in Lesson 
XXIII; but most specimens should be taken from 
the net by placing the mouth of an open cyanide 
bottle over them. Never touch a specimen with the 
fingers if it can be avoided. 

2. Do not carry moths in a cyanide bottle with 
other insects. It is best to have a separate bottle for 
Lepidoptera, for they are liable to be injured by rub- 
bing against other insects ; and the specimens of 
other insects will be soiled by the scales from the 
butterflies or moths. 

3. Many moths can be collected in the fields by 
day, but much larger numbers can be taken at night 
at lights or at sweetened baits. Read the sections 
on sugaring and on collecting at lights on pages 292 
to 293. 

4. Collect as many kinds of moths as possible, 
taking especial pains to get the specimens in good 
condition. 

5. Carefully spread one or more specimens of each 
kind ; other specimens may be simply pinned and left 
till winter, when they can be relaxed and spread. 



CHAPTER III. 




THE CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS AND THEIR NEAR 

RELATIVES. 

N the course of the lessons in the preced- 
ing chapter, a beginning was made in 
the classification of insects. The sub- 
ject can now be taken up in a more 
systematic manner. It is not, how- 
ever, the purpose of this book to car- 
ry the classification of insects further 
than to the orders, although in the 
chapters following this a few easily 
recognized families will be studied. It is believed 

o 

that it is better for the pupils that are beginning this 
study to devote the greater part of their time to 
the study of the structure and habits of insects ; 
later, the classification can be carried farther with 
the aid of more advanced manuals written for that 
purpose. 

The collector of insects is sure to meet many 
small animals that, although not true insects, are 
closely allied to them. It is important, therefore, 
that the characteristics of these near relatives of in- 
sects should be pointed out, which we will briefly do, 
before discussing the orders of insects. 

51 



ij 2 INSECT LIFE. 

The Classes of the Branch Arthropoda. 

In the study of the parts of a locust (see Lesson 
VI) it was learned that the body of an insect is com- 
posed of a series of more or less similar rings or seg- 
ments joined together. This fact is also true of the 
bodies of certain other animals that are not insects ; 
thus, if the body of a scorpion, a centipede, or a lob- 
ster be examined, it will be found to resemble that of 
an insect in this respect. There is another charac- 
teristic in which these animals resemble insects 
namely, some of the segments of the body bear 
jointed legs. 

All the animals possessing these two character- 
istics are classed together as the branch Arthropoda 
(Ar-throp'o-da) of the animal kingdom, the term 
branch being applied to each of the principal divi- 
sions of the animal kingdom. 

A similar segmented form of the body is char- 
acteristic of worms, but these are distinguished from 
the Arthropoda by the absence of legs. It should be 
remembered that many animals commonly called 
worms, as the tomato-worm, apple-worm, etc., are 
not true worms, but are the larvas of insects. The 
angle worm is the most familiar example of a true 
worm. 

The principal divisions of a branch of the animal 
kingdom are called classes. The more common rep- 
resentatives of the branch Arthropoda are distributed 
among four classes. These are the Crustacea, the 
Arachnida, the Myriapoda, and the Hexapoda. The 
last of these comprises the insects, the first three the 
near relatives of insects. 



CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 53 

The following table will enable the student to dis- 
tinguish the classes of the Arthropoda.* 

TABLE OF CLASSES OF THE ARTHROPODA. 

A. With two pairs of antennae and at least five pairs of legs. Aquatic 

animals breathing by gills. Page 53 CRUSTACEA. 

AA. With one pair of antennae or with none. Air-breathing animals. 
The number of legs varies from six to many. 

B. Without antennas and with four pairs of legs, although the maxillary 
palpi are often leglike in form, making the animal appear to have five 

pairs of legs. Page 55 ARACHNIDA. 

BB. With antennae. 
C. With more than three pairs of legs ; and without wings. Page 

57 MYRIAPODA. 

CC. With only three pairs of legs, and usually with wings in the 
adult state. Page 58 HEX APOD A. 

Class CRUSTACEA (Crus-ta'ce-a). 
The Crustaceans (Crus-ta'ce-ans). 

The most familiar illustrations of the Crustacea 
are the crayfishes, the lobsters, the shrimps, and the 

* The following is the method of using the analytical tables given in 
this book : Read carefully the statement of characteristics given opposite 
A and AA respectively, and by examining the animal to be classified de- 
termine which is true of this animal. This will indicate in which division 
of the table the name of the group to which the animal belongs is to be 
looked for. If this division of the table is subdivided, pass to B and BB 
(also to BBB if it occurs) in this division and determine in a like manner 
under which the animal belongs. Continue in this way, passing to the 
letters C, D, E, etc., in regular order till the name of the group is 
reached. Then turn to the page indicated and read the description of 
the group given there, comparing the specimens with the description. 
It should be borne in mind that an analytical table is merely an aid to 
the determination of groups. As the groups that we recognize are not 
always sharply limited in nature, we can not expect to be able in every 
case to find characters that will serve to distinctly separate them in a table. 
Therefore when a student has determined by the aid of a key to what 



54 



INSECT LIFE. 



crabs. Crayfishes (Fig. 23) abound in our brooks, 
and are often improperly called crnbs. The lob- 
sters, the shrimps, and 
the true crabs live in- 
salt water. 

The Crustacea are 
distinguished from 

o 

all other Arthro- 
pods by having two 
pairs of antennas 
and by their mode 
of respiration, being 
the only ones that 
breathe by true 
gills. Many insects 
live in water and are 
furnished with gill- 




FIG. 23. A crayfish. 



like organs, but these 
are tracheal gills. 
True gills are for the purification of blood, while 
tracheal gills are for the purification of the air con- 
tained in the air ves- 
sels or tracheae of an 
insect. The former 
contains a larofe num- 

o 

ber of blood vessels, 
FIG. 2 4 .-Crustacea:tf, Cypris ; the latter a lar^e 

b, Cyclops ; r, Daphnia. 

number of air vessels. 

There are minute Crustacea common in ponds 

and streams. Three of the more abundant of these 

group a species seems to belong, he should verify this determination 
by a study of the characters of that group given in the detailed discussion 
of it. 





FIG. 25. 
A sow-bur. 



CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 



55 



are shown greatly enlarged in Fig. 24 ; they fre- 
quently occur in aquaria in which aquatic plants are 
growing. The sow-bugs (Fig. 25) are also Crustacea. 
They live about water-soaked wood ; w 7 ith these only 
one pair of antennas arc well developed. 

Class ARACHNIDA (A-rach'ni-da). 

The Arachnids (A-racli nids]. 

To this class belong the spiders, scorpions, har- 
vestmen, mites, and certain other less common forms. 
These animals differ from the other classes of the 
branch Arthropoda in having no antennae. They 
have four pairs- of legs fitted for walking, and many 
of them have very large maxillary palpi, which re- 
semble legs. The head and thorax are closely 
united, forming a region which is called the cepJi- 
alotJiorax (cepJi~a-lo-t]w'ra.v). These characteristics are 
easily seen in 
spiders (Fig. 
26). 

The most 
common rep- 
resentatives of 
the class Arach- 
nida are the 
spiders. These 
are extremely 

interesting ani- FIG. 26. A spider, 

mals on ac- 
count of the high development of their instinc- 
tive powers. An account of the habits of some of 
the common species is given in the chapter on Road- 
side Life. 




\ 



INSECT LIFE. 



The harvestmen (Fig-. 27) are also abundant in 
most parts of our country. These iced on small in- 




FIG. 27. A harvestman. 

sects, especially aphids, and are perfectly harmless. 

They are sometimes called " grandfather graybeards." 
Scorpions (Fig. 28) are common in the southern 

portions of the United States, 
but are not found in the North. 
They feed upon spiders and 
large insects, which they seize 
with the large pincers of their 
palpi, and sting to death with 
a poison sting, which is at the 
hind end of the body. 

The mites are mostly very 
small. They differ from other 





FIG. 28, A scorpion. 



FIG. 29. An itch mite : a, from below ; b, 
from above. 



Arachnids in having the abdomen fused with the 
cephalothorax (Fig. 29). Certain velvety red species 



CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 



57 



often attract attention on account of their red color, 
and other species are often found para- 
sitic on insects. The annoying para- 
sites that are known as ticks (Fig. 30), 
and which are common in the warmer 
parts of our country, are mites. The 
sheep-tick, however, is a wingless fly. 




FIG. 30. The 
cattle-tick, female. 



Class MYRIAPODA (Myr-i-ap'o-da). 
The Myriapods (Myr'i-a-pods). 

This class includes the centipedes and the milli- 
pedes, both of which are commonly called thousand- 
lep-g-ed worms. The members of this class have a 

o o 

distinct head which bears a single pair of antennae. 

The body is long, and 
consists of similar seg- 
ments, which are not 
grouped into regions, 
and each segment of 
the body bears one or 
two pairs of legs. 
The centipedes (Fig. 31) have only a single pair 

of legs to each segment. Representatives of many 

species of these are common. The poison glands 

open through the 

claws of the first 

pair of legs, which 

are bent forward 




FIG. 31. A centipede. 




FIG. 32. A millipede. 



so as to act with the mouth-parts. The centipedes 
feed on insects. 

The millipedes (Fig. 32) differ from the centipedes 
in having two pairs of legs on each of the body seg- 
ments except the first three. The millipedes, as a 



INSECT LIFE. 

rule, live in damp places, and feed on decaying vege- 
table matter. They are harmless, except that occa- 
sionally they feed upon growing plants. 

Class HEXAPODA (Hex-ap'o-da). 
The Insects. 

Insects differ from the other classes of the Arthrop- 
oda in having only three pairs of legs, and usually 
in having wings in the adult state. They have a sin- 
gle pair of antennas and the segments of the body 
are grouped into three regions: head, thorax, and 
abdomen. 

The name Hexapoda is from two Greek words : 
hex, six, and pous, foot. Numerous examples of in- 
sects are figured in the following portions of this 
chapter. 

THE ORDERS OF THE CLASS HEXAPODA. 

The class Hexapoda, or insects, is divided into 
nineteen orders. In our Manual for the Study of In. 
sects these orders and the families of which they are 
composed are discussed in detail, but in these first 
lessons we can only briefly refer to each order. The 
following table is taken from the Manual. This 
table of orders is merely intended to aid the pupil in 
determining to which of the orders a specimen that 
he is examining belongs. No effort has been made to 
indicate in the table the relation of the orders to each 
other. 



CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 



59 



TABLE FOR DETERMINING THE ORDERS OF HEXAPODA.* 

( This table includes only adult insects?) 

A. Wingless or with rudimentary wings. 

B. Mandibles and maxillae retracted within the cavity of the head so 

that only their apices are visible. Page 63 THYSANURA. 

BB. Mandibles and maxillae more or less prominent and fitted for 
biting. (See BBB also.) 
C. Head with long, trunklike beak. (Boreus.} Page 78. 

MECOPTERA. 
CC. Head not prolonged into a trunk. 

D. Louselike insects of small size ; body less than one sixth inch 
in length. 
E. Antennae with not more than five segments. (Bird-lice.) 

Page 69 M ALLOPH AGA. 

EE. Antennae with many segments. (Book-lice.) Page 68. 

CORRODENTIA. 

DD. Insects of various forms, but not louselike, and, except in 
the case of some ants, with the body more than one sixth inch 
in length. 

E. Abdomen with short, conical, compressed, many-jointed 
caudal appendages. (Cockroaches.} Page 70. . .ORTHOPTERA. 
EE. Abdomen without jointed caudal appendages. 

F. Legs fitted for jumping. ( Wingless locusts, grasshoppers, 

and crickets.} Page 70 ORTHOPTERA. 

FF. Legs fitted for running. 

G. Abdomen broadly joined to the thorax. 
H. Body linear. (Walking-sticks.} Page 70. 

ORTHOPTERA. 
HH. Body white and somewhat antlike in form. (Ter- 

mes.} Page 67 ISOPTERA. 

HHH. Body neither linear nor antlike in form. ( Wing- 
less firefly et al.} Page 85 COLEOPTERA. 

GG. Base of abdomen strongly constricted. (Ants et al.). 

Page 85 H YMENOPTERA. 

BBB. Mouth-parts formed for sucking. 

C. Small abnormal insects in which the body is either scalelike or 
gall-like in form, or grublike and clothed with wax. The waxy 

* See note at bottom of page 53. 



60 INSECT LIFE. 

covering may be in the form of powder, of large tufts or plates, of 
a continuous layer or of a thin scale, beneath which the insect 

lives. (Coccidtz.) Page 75 HEMIPTERA. 

CC. Body more or less covered with minute scales, or with thick 
long hairs. Prothorax not free (i. e., closely united with the meso- 
thorax). Mouth-parts usually consisting of a long " tongue " 

rolled beneath the head. Page 80 LEPIDOPTERA. 

C JC. Body naked, or with isolated or bristlelike hairs. 

D. Prothorax not well developed, inconspicuous or invisible from 
above. Tarsi five-jointed. Mouth-parts developed into an 

unjointed trunk ; palpi present. Page 83 DIPTERA. 

DD. Prothorax well developed. 

E. Body strongly compressed ; tarsi five-jointed. (Fleas.} Page 

84 SlPHONAPTER A. 

EE. Body not compressed ; tarsi one-, two-, or three-jointed. 
F. Last joint of tarsi bladderlike or hooflike at the tip ; mouth 
parts forming a triangular, unjointed beak ; palpi present. 

Page 74 PH YSOPODA. 

FF. Last joint of tarsi not bladderlike, and furnished with 
one or two claws ; mouth parts forming a slender, usually 
jointed beak ; palpi apparently wanting. Page 75. 

HEMIPTERA. 
AA. Winged. (The wing-covers, elytra, of beetles and of earwigs are 

counted as wings in this table.) 
B. With two wings. 

C. Wings horny, leathery, or parchmentlike. 

D. Mouth-parts formed for sucking. Wings leathery, shortened, 

or membranous at the tip. Page 75 HEMIPTERA. 

DD. Mouth-parts formed for biting. Jaws distinct. 

E. Wings horny, without veins. Hind legs not fitted for 

jumping. Page 85 COLEOPTERA. 

EE. Wings parchmentlike, with a network cf veins. Hind legs 

fitted for jumping. Page 70.. ORTHOPTERA. 

CC. Wings membranous. 

D. Abdomen with caudal filaments. Mouth-parts rudimentary. 

E. Halteres wanting. Page 64 EPHEMERIDA. 

EE. Halteres present (males of Coccidtz). Page 75. 

HEMIPTERA. 

DD. Abdomen without caudal filaments. Halteres in place of 
second wings. Mouth-parts formed for sucking. Page 83. 

DIPTERA. 



CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 6l 

BB. With four wings. 

C. The two pairs of wings unlike in structure. 

D. Front wings leathery at base, and membranous at tip, often 
overlapping. Mouth-parts formed for sucking. Page 75. 

HEMIPTERA. 
DD. Front wings of same texture throughout. 

E. Front wings horny or leathery, being veinless wing covers. 
(Ely tra.} 

F. Abdomen with caudal appendages in form of movable for- 
ceps. Page 69 EUPLEXOPTERA. 

FF. Abdomen without forceplike appendages. Page 85. 

COLEOPTERA. 

EE. Front wings leathery or parchmentlike, with a network of 
veins. 

F. Under wings not folded. Mouth-parts formed for suck- 
ing. Page 75 HEMIPTERA. 

FF. Under wings folded lengthwise. Mouth-parts formed 

for biting. Page 70 ORTHOPTERA. 

CC. The two pairs of wings similar, membranous. 

D. Last joint of tarsi bladderlike or hooflike at the tip. Page 74. 

PHYSOPODA. 
DD. Last joint of tarsi not bladderlike. 

E. Wings entirely or for the greater part clothed with scales. 
Mouth-parts formed for sucking. Page So. . . .LEPIDOPTERA. 
EE. Wings naked, transparent, or thinly clothed with hairs. 
F. Mouth-parts arising from the hinder part of the lower 
surface of the head, and consisting of bristlelike organs in- 
closed in a jointed sheath. (Homoptera.) Page 75. 

HEMIPTERA. 

FF. Mouth-parts in normal position. Mandibles not bristle- 
like. 

G. Wings net-veined, with many veins and cross-veins. 
H. Tarsi consisting of less than five segments. 

I. Antennae inconspicuous, awl-shaped, short, and slen- 
der. 

J. First and second pairs of wings nearly the same 
length ; tarsi three-jointed. Page 65. . .ODONATA. 

JJ. Second pair of wings either small or wanting ; 
tarsi four-jointed. Page 64 EPHEMERIDA. 

II. Antennae usually conspicuous, setiform, filiform 
clavate, capitate, or pectinate. 



62 INSECT LIFE. 

J. Tarsi two- or three-jointed. 

K. Second pair of wings the smaller. Page 68. 

CORRODENTIA. 

KK. Second pair of wings broader, or at least of 
the same size as the first pair. Page 66. 

PLECOPTERA. 
JJ. Tarsi four-jointed ; wings equal. Page 67. 

ISOPTERA, 
HH. Tarsi consisting of five segments. 

I. Abdomen with setiform, many-jointed anal fila- 
ments. (Certain May-flies?) Page 64. .EPHEMERIDA. 

II. Abdomen without many-jointed anal filaments. 

J. Head prolonged into a trunklike beak. Page 78. 

MECOPTERA. 
JJ. Head not prolonged into a beak. Page 77. 

NEUROPTERA. 

GG. Wings with branching veins and comparatively few 
cross veins, or veinless. 
H. Tarsi two- or three-jointed. 

I. Posterior wings smaller than the anterior. Page 68. 

CORRODENTIA. 

II. Posterior wings as large as or larger than the ante- 
rior ones. (Certain stone-flies.) Page 66. 

PLECOPTERA. 
HH. Tarsi four- or five-jointed. 

I. Abdomen with setiform, many-jointed anal fila- 
ments. (Certain May-fries.) Page 64. 

EPHEMERIDA. 

II. Abdomen without many-jointed anal filaments. 

J. Prothorax horny. First wings larger than the 
second, naked or imperceptibly hairy. Second 
wings without, or with few, usually simple, veins. 
Jaws (mandibles) well developed. Palpi small. 
Page 85 HYMENOPTERA. 

JJ. Prothorax membranous or, at the most, parch- 
ment! ike. Second wings as large as or larger than 
the first, folded lengthwise, with many branching 
veins. First wings naked or thinly clothed with 
hair. Jaws (mandibles) inconspicuous. Palpi 
long. Mothlike insects. Page 79. 

TRICHOPTERA. 



CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 



List of Orders of the 

THYSANURA. 

EPHEMERIDA. 

O DON ATA. 

PLECOPTERA. 

ISOPTERA. 

CORRODENTIA. 

MALLOPHAGA. 

EUPLEXOPTERA. 

ORTHOPTERA 

PHYSOPODA. 



Hexapoda. 

HEMIPTERA. 

NEUROPTERA. 

MECOPTERA. 

TRICHOPTERA. 

LEPIDOPTERA. 

DIPTERA. 

SlPHONAPTERA. 

COLEOPTERA. 
HYMENOPTERA. 



Order THYSANURA (Thys-a-nu'ra). 
BristletailS) Springtails, Fish-moths, and others. 

The members of this order are wingless insects wJiich 
undergo no metamorphosis, the larval form being retained 
~by the adult. The mandibles and max- 
illcB are retracted within the cavity of 
the head, so that only their tips are 
visible ; they have, however, some free- 
dom of motion, and can be used for 
biting and chewing soft substances. 
True compound eyes are rarely present ; 
but in some genera there is a group of 
simple eyes on each side of the head. 
The abdomen is sometimes furnisJied 
with rudimentary legs. 

A familiar example of this order 
is the fish-moth (Fig. 33), which 
often does damage to starched cloth- 
ing, bookbindings, and sometimes 
loosens wall paper by eating: out * IG - 33- The fish- 

., , i . - i. moth. 

the paste. The hair line at the 
left of the figure indicates the length of the insect. 
The fish-moth is one of the bristletails, which are 




6 4 



INSECT LIFE. 




FIG. 34. - A springtail. 



so called on account of the bristles at the hind end of 
the body. Fig-. 34 represents one of the springtails. 

In these insects there is a 
taillike organ, which is bent 
under the insect when it is 
at rest, and by which it can 
leap several feet. Spring- 
tails are abundant in damp 
places, among decaying veg- 
etation ; but they are com- 
monly overlooked on account of their minute size. 

The name Thysanura is from two Greek words : 
thysanos, a tassel, and our a, the tail. 

Order EPHEMERIDA (Eph-e-mer'i-da). 
The May-flies. 

The members of this order have delicate membranous 
wings with a fine network of 
veins ; the fore wings, are large 
and the Jiind wings are much 
smaller, or wanting. The mouth- 
parts are rudimentary. The 
met morphosis is incomplete. 

The name of this order is 
from the Greek word epJieme- 
ros, lasting but a day. It was 
given to these insects on ac- 
count of the shortness of their 
lives after reaching the adult 
state. Fig. 35 represents a 
common species. Work on 
May-flies is outlined in the 
chapter on Pond Life. FIG. 35 .-A May-fly. 




CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 



Order ODONATA (Od-o-na'ta). 
The Dragon- flies and Damsel-flies. 

The members of this order have four membranous 
wings which are finely netted with veins ; the hind wings 




FIG. 36. A dragon-fly. 

arc as large or larger than the fore wings, and each 
wing has near the middle of its 
front margin a joint like structure 
the nodus. The mouth-parts are 
formed for biting. The metamor- 
phosis is incomplete. 

The name of this order is 
evidently from the Greek word 
odons, a tooth ; but the reason 
for applying it to these insects 
is obscure. It may refer to the 
tusklike form of the abdomen. 

Fig. 36 represents a dragon- 
fly, and Fig. 37 a damsel-fly 
Work on these insects is out- 
lined in the chapter on Pond 
Life. 




FIG. 37. A damsel-fly. 



66 



INSECT LIFE. 



Order PLECOPTERA (Ple-cop'te-ra). 
The Stone-flies. 

The members of this order have four membranous 
wings, with comparatively few or with many cross-veins ; 
the hind wings are much larger than the fore wings, and 
are folded in plaits and lie upon the abdomen when at 
rest. The mouth-parts are of the biting type of structure, 
but are frequently poorly developed. The metamorphosis 
is incomplete. 

The name of this order is from two Greek words: 
plecos, plaited, and pteron, a wing. It refers to the 
way in which the hind wings are 




FIG. 38. A stone-fly. 



FIG. 39. A nymph of a 
stone-fly. 



folded when at rest. Fig. 38 represents one of the 
larger members of this order with the wings of one 
side spread, and Fig. 39 represents a nymph. Work 
on these insects is outlined in the chapter on Brook 
Life. 



CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 



6 7 



use. 



ing. 




Order ISOPTERA (I-sop'te-ra). 
The Termites or White-ants. 

Tlie members of this order are social insects. Each 
species consists of several distinct castes, of wJiicJi only the 
"kings' and the " queens' are winged. These have 
four long, narrow wings, wJiicJi are somewhat leathery in 
structure, and wJiicJi are furnished with numerous but 
more or less indistinct veins. The two pairs 
of wings are similar in form and structure, 
and are laid flat upon the back when not in 
The mouth-parts are formed for bit- 
The metamorphosis is incomplete. 
The termites are commonly called 
white-ants on account of their light color 
and the fact that they live in large com- 
munities like ants. They are, however, 
not at all closely related to the true ants. 
They can be distinguished from ants at 
a glance by the absence of a slender waist 
between the thorax and ab- 
domen (Fig. 40). 

The termites that occur 
in the United States are 
usually found in old logs 
and stumps, or in the 
ground under stones. Dur- 
ing the greater part of the 
year only the workers (Fig. 

40) and the soldiers (Fig. 

41) are found in the nest. 
But during early summer the winged 

forms, the newly developed kings and A queen. 



FIG. 40. 
A worker. 




FIG. 41. 
A soldier. 




68 



INSECT LIFE. 



queens, also occur. A mature, egg-laying queen is 
presumably present in each nest ; but this form of 
our common species has not yet been found. Fig. 42 
represents an egg-laying queen of an African species. 
The name of this order is from two Greek words : 
isos, equal, and pteron, a wing. It refers to the fact 
that the two pairs of wings are similar in form and 
structure. 

Order CORRODENTIA (Cor-ro-den'ti-a). 
The Psocids (P sod ids) and the Book-lice. 

The winged members of this order have four mem- 
branous wings, with the veins prominent, but ^vith com- 
paratively feiv cross-veins ; the fore wings are larger 
than the hind wings ; and both pairs when not in use are 
placed rooflike over the body, being almost vertical, and 
not folded in plaits. The mouth-parts are formed for 
biting. The metamorphosis is incomplete. 

The winged members of this order feed upon 
lichens and are found on the trunks of trees and on 

fences ; they 

often occur in 

swarms. Fig. 

43 represents a 

common form 

with its wings 

spread. 

The most 

familiar repre- 
sentative of the wingless forms is the book-louse 
(Fig. 44). This is a minute insect which occurs be- 
tween the leaves of old books and on papered walls 
of houses. 





FIG. 43. A psocid. 



FIG. 44. A book- 
louse. 



CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 



6 9 



The name of this order is from the Latin word 
corrodere, to gnaw, and refers to the gnawing habits 
of these insects. 

Order MALLOPHAGA (Mal-loph'a-ga). 
The Bird-lice. 

The members of this order arc wingless parasitic in- 
sects, with biting month-parts. The metamorphosis is 
incomplete. 

The bird-lice are common on poultry and other 
birds. They differ from the true lice in having bit- 
ing mouth-parts, and in feeding upon either 
feathers, hair, or the skin, while the true 
lice have sucking mouth-parts and feed 
upon blood. Fig. 45 represents a species 
which infests poultry. 

The name of the order is from two 
Greek words : mallos, wool, and phagein, 
to eat. Although some species infest sheep FIG. 45. 
and goats, feeding upon their wool, by far Abird - lcuse - 
the greater number live among the feathers of birds. 

Order EUPLEXOPTERA (Eu-plex-op'te-ra). 
The Earwigs. 

The members of this order have apparently four 
wings ; the first pair of which are leathery, very small, 
without veins, and when at rest meet in a straight line on 
the back ; the second pair are large, with radiating veins, 
and when at rest are folded both lengthwise and cross-wise. 
The month-parts are formed for biting. The caudal end 
of the body is furnished with a pair of appendages which 
resemble forceps. The metamorphosis is incomplete. 

These are long and narrow insects, resembling 




INSECT LIFE. 

rove beetles in the form of the body and in the short- 
ness of the wing covers, but easily distinguished by 

having a pair of forceps at the end 
ot the body (Fig. 46). The common 
name, earwig, has reference to a 
widely spread fancy that these in- 
sects creep into the ears of sleeping 
persons. 

The earwigs are rare in the north- 
eastern United States, but are more 
often found in the South and on the 
Pacific coast. In Europe they are 
\ common, and are often troublesome 



pests, feeding upon the corollas of 
flowers, fruits, and other vegetable 
substances. 

FIG. 46. An earwig. . 

1 he name ol the order is from 

three Greek words : eu, well, pleko, to fold, and pteron, 
wing. It refers to the unusual folding of the hind 




wings. 



Order ORTHOPTERA (Or-thop'te-ra). 
Cockroaches, Crickets, Grasshoppers, and Others. 

The members of this order have four wings : the first 
pair are thickened, and overlap when at rest ; the second 
pair are thinner, and are folded in plaits like a fan. 
The month-parts are formed for biting. The metamor- 
phosis is incomplete. 

The name of the order is from two Greek words : 
ortJios, straight, and pteron, a wing. It refers to the 
longitudinal folding of the hind wings. 

This order includes only six families, and as they 
are among our most common insects we will briefly 
refer to each of them. 



CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 



Family BLATTID/E (Blat / ti-dae).--The body is oval 
when seen from above, and is very flat; the three 
pairs of legs are similar in form ; 
the insects run rapidly. They 
are commonly known as cock- 
roaches. Some are winged (Fig. 
47), others are wingless (Fig. 48). 
Family MANTID/E (Man'ti-dse). 
The prothorax is very long and 
slender ; the first pair of legs are 
very different from the others 
and are fitted for grasping. These 
insects feed on other insects, 
which they seize with their fore legs. The suppliant 
attitude which they assume while lying in wait for 







FIG. 47. 
The Croton- 
bug. 




FIG. 48. 
A wingless 
cockroach. 




FIG. 49. A praying-mantis. 



their prey (Fig. 49) has given them the name of pray- 
ing mantes, the name of the typical genus being 
Mantis. 

Family PHASMID/E (Phas'mi-dae).--The body is 
very long and slender; the three pairs of legs are 



INSECT LIFE. 



similar in form, and are also very long and slender; 

the insects walk slowly. This family includes the 

well-known walking sticks (Fig. 50). 

Family ACRIDID^ (A-crid'- 
i-das).- -There are three fami- 
lies of this order in which 
the hind legs are very much 





FIG. 51. A locust. 

stouter or very much longer, 
or both stouter and longer, 
than the other pairs, being 
fitted for jumping. This is 
the iirst of these three fami- 
lies. In this family the an- 
tennas are shorter than the 




FIG. 52. A locust. 

body. The ovipositor is 
short and composed of four 
separate plates. The tarsi 
are three-jointed. The mem- 

. . 

bers of the family are known 
as locusts or short-horned grasshoppers (Figs. 51 and 

52). 

Family LOCUSTID/E (Lo-cus'ti-dae).- -This is the 
second of the three families of jumping Orthoptera. 



FIG. 50. A walking-stick. 



CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 



73 



In this family the antennae are very slender and 
longer than the body. (This is also true of crickets.) 
The ovipositor is sword- 
shaped. The tarsi are four- 
jointed. The family as a 
whole are called the true 
grasshoppers or the longf- 

J FIG. 53. A meadow-grasshopper. 

horned grasshoppers. Some 

of the smaller species (Fig. 53) are known as meadow- 
grasshoppers, and a few of the larger species are 
called katydids (Fig. 54). It should be observed 
that, owing to an unfortunate application of names, 





FIG. 54. The angular-winged katydid and its eggs. 



74 



INSECT LIFE. 



the locusts do not belong to the Locustidae, but to 
the Acrididae. 

Family GRYLLID^E (Gryl / li-dse).--This is the last 
of the three families of jumping Orthoptera. With 
these insects the antennas, 
like those of the long-horned 
grasshoppers, are very slen- 
der and longer than the 
body, except in the mole- 





FIG. 55. A cricket. 



FIG. 56. A cricket. 



crickets. The ovipositor is spear-shaped when ex- 
erted. The tarsi are three-jointed. The members 
of this family are known as crickets (Figs. 55 and 56). 

Order PHYSOPODA (Phy-sop'o-da). 
Thrips. 

TJie members of this order Jiave four wings ; these 
are similar in form, long, narrow, membranous, not 
folded, with but few or no veins, and only rarely with 
cross-veins ; they are fringed with long hairs, and are 
laid horizontally along the back when at rest. The meta- 
morphosis is incomplete. The mouth-parts are probably 
used chiefly for sucking ; they are intermediate in form 
between those of the sucking and those of the biting in- 
sects. The tarsi are one- or two-jointed and bladdcrlike 
at tip. 

The name Physopoda is from two Greek 




CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 

words : physao, to blow up, and pous, a foot. It re- 
fers to the curious bladderlike feet of these insects. 

The species of thrips are very 
minute insects. Fig. 57 represents 
one of them greatly enlarged, with 
the wings of one side spread. They 
can be easily found by pulling to 
pieces the blossoms of clover or 
daisies. Some species are black, 
others are light brown. The wing- 
less nymphs of our common black 
species are bright red. FlG - 57> ~ A thn P s - 

Order HEMIPTERA (He-mip'te-ra). 
>ugs, Lice, Aphids, and others. 

The winged members of this order have four wings ; 
in one suborder the first pair of wings are thickened 
at the base, with thinner extremities which overlap 
on the back ; in another suborder the first pair of 
wings are of the same thickness throughout, and usu- 
ally slope at the sides of the body. TJie mouth-parts 
are formed for sucking. The metamorphosis is incom- 
plete. 

The name Hemiptera is from two Greek words: 
hemi, half, and pteron, a wing. It was suggested by 
the form of the first pair of wings in the true bugs. 
Here the basal half of these organs is thickened 
somewhat like the wing covers of beetles, only the 
terminal half being winglike. The second pair ot 
wings are membranous, and when at rest are folded 
beneath the first pair. 

Within this order are grouped insects that differ 
greatly in form and appearance. These are dis- 
6 



7 6 



INSECT LIFE. 



tributed among three suborders, which can be sep- 
arated by the following table : 

A. Wingless Hemiptera, parasitic upon man and other mammals, with a 

fleshy unjointed beak II. PARASITICA. 

AA. Hemiptera with or without wings, but with a jointed beak. 

B. First pair of wings thickened at the base, with thinner extremities, 
which overlap on the back ; beak arising from the front part of 

the head (Fig. 58) I. HETEROPTERA. 

BB. Wings of the same thickness throughout, and usually sloping at 
the sides of the body ; beak arising from the hinder part of the 
lower side of the head (Fig. 59) III. HOMOPTERA. 

Suborder HETEROPTERA (Het-e-rop'te-ra). This 
suborder includes the true bugs, of which the squash- 
bug (Fig. 60) and the common 
stink-bugs (Fig. 61) are well- 





FIG. 59. Head 
FIG. 58. Head of an hete- of an homopte- 
ropterous insect. rous insect. 



FIG. 60. The FIG. 61. A 
squash-bug. stink-bug. 



known examples. Several families of this suborder 
are discussed in the chapters on Pond Life and on 
Brook Life. 

Suborder PARASITA (Par-a-si'ta).- -This suborder 
is represented in the United States by only 
one family, the Pediculidae (Ped-i-cu'li-das). 
This family comprises the true lice (Fig. 62), 
which differ from the bird lice of the order 
Mallophaga in having sucking mouth parts. 
Abuse! The true lice live on the skin of mammals 




CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 



77 



and suck their blood. There are several species that 
infest man. 

Suborder HOMOPTERA (Ho-mop'te-ra). The Ho- 
moptera includes insects of widely diversified form, 
but which agree, however, in 
having the wings when present 
of the same thickness through- 
out, and usually sloping roof-like 
at the sides of the body when at 
rest, and in having the beak arise 
from the hinder part of the lower 
side of the head (Fig. 59). 

Among the more common 
representatives of this suborder 
are the cicadas (Fig. 63) and the 
spittle-insects and the tree-hop- 
pers, described in the chapter on 
Roadside Life. The common 




FIG. 63. A cicada. 



plant-lice, or aphids, and the scale-bugs are also 
members of this suborder. 

Order NEUROPTERA (Neu-rop'te-ra). 
The Dobson, Aphis-lions, Ant- 1 ions, and Others. 

The members of this order have four ivings ; these 
arc membranous and furnished witJi numerous veins, and 
usually luith jnany cross-veins. The head is not pro- 
longed into a beak. T/ie month-parts are formed for 
biting. The metamorphosis is complete. 

The name of this order is from two Greek words : 
neuron, a nerve, and pteron, a wing. It refers to the 
numerous nerves, or veins as they are more com- 
monlv called, with which the win^s are furnished. 

o 

When the name Neuroptera was first used it was 




INSECT LIFE. 

applied to a much larger group of insects than now, 
a group which has since been divided into many 
orders. So that now, while the name expresses a 
character which is true of the order, it is also true of 
many others.* 

One of the more conspicuous members of the 
order is Polystccchotes punctatus (Pol-ys-tcech* o-tes punc- 

ta'tus), which is repre- 
sented by Fig. 64. To this 
order also belong Corydalis 
.J (see page 153) and the 

FIG. f^Polystccchotes punctatus. AphlS-UotlS (see page I 78). 

Order MECOPTERA (Me-cop'te-ra). 
The Scorpion-flies and Others. 

TJie members of tJiis order have four wings ; these 
are membranous and furnished witJi numerous veins. 
The head is prolonged into a beak, at the end of wJ lick 
biting mouth-parts are situated. The metamorphosis is 
complete. 

This is a small order composed of very remark- 
able insects. The most striking character common 
to all is the shape of the head, which is 
prolonged into a beak with jaws at the 
end (Fig. 65). The name Mccoptera is 
from two Greek words : mecos, length, 
and pteron, a wing. 

The members of the genus Panorpa FIG. 65. Head 

/ r> t L \ f^' /^/r\ 11 j ofascorpion- 

(Pa-nor pa) (rig. 66) are called scorpion- fl y . 



1 The Neuroptera of the older entomologists included the following 
orders : Thysanura, Ephemerida, Odonata, Plecoptera, Isoptera, Corro- 
dentia, Mallophaga, Neuroptera, Mecoptera, and Trichoptera. 




CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 



79 





FIG. 66. A 
scorpion-fly. 



flies on account of the peculiar form of the caudal 
part of the abdomen of the male (Fig-. 67). This at 
first sight suggests the corresponding part 
of a scorpion, but in reality the two are 
very different. 

Very closely allied to the scorpion-flies 
are the insects of the genus Bittacus (Bit 1 - 
ta-cus). These insects have long narrow 
wings, long legs, and a slender 
abdomen. They resemble crane- 
flies very closely when on the wing. In 
this genus the caudal appendages of the 
male are not enlarged as in Panorpa. 

The species of the genus Boreus (Bo're- 
us) are remarkable for occurring on snow in 

the winter in our Northern States. In this 

FIG. 67. 

Tail of a renus the females are windless, while the 

scorpion- 

fly. males have rudimentary wings. 

Order TRICHOPTERA (Tri-chop'te-ra). 
The Caddice-flies or Caddice-worms. 

T/ie members of this order have four wings ; these 
are membranous, furnished with numerous longitudinal 
veins, but with only few cross-veins, and are more or less 
densely clothed with hairs. The mouth-parts are rudi- 
mentary. The metamorphosis is complete. 





FIG. 68. A caddice-fly. 



FIG. 69. A caddice-worm. 



This order is composed of the caddice-flies and 
caddice-worms (Figs. 68 and 69), which are discussed 



So 



INSECT -LIFE. 



in the chapter on Brook Life. The name of the 
order is from two Greek words: tlirix, a hair, pteron, 



a wing. 



It refers to the fact that the wings are 



clothed with hair. 

Order LEPIDOPTERA (Lep-i-dop'te-ra). 
The Mot/is, or Millers, the Skippers, and the Butterflies. 

The members of this order have four wings ; these 
are membranous and covered with overlapping scales. 
The mouth-parts are formed for sucking. The meta- 
morphosis is complete. 

The name of this order is from two Greek words: 
lepis, a scale, and pteron, a wing. It refers to the 
fact that the wings of these insects are covered 

with scales. Every lad 
that lives in the country 
knows that the wings of 
moths and butterflies are 
covered with dust, which 
comes off upon one's fin- 
ders when these insects 

o 

are handled. This dust 
when examined with a 
microscope is found to be 
composed of very minute 

FIG. 70. Part of a wing of a butter- i r rpo . n l qr form 

fly, greatly magnified. The scales scal< n 

were removed from a portion of a ^ wnen a willP; is looked 
the specimen figured. 

at in the same way the 

scales are seen arranged with more or less regularity 
upon it (Fig. 70). The body, the legs, and other ap- 
pendages are also covered with scales. 

This order has been discussed in Lessons XXIII 
to XXV, and several representatives of it are de- 




CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 



8l 



scribed in the chapters following this one. The 
principal divisions of the Lepidoptera that are ap- 
propriately discussed here are three : The moths, 
the skippers, and the butterflies. 

The Mot/is. These are the insects commonly 
called millers. Most of the species fly by night and 
are frequently attracted to lights. When at rest the 




FIG. 71. A moth with threadlike antennae. 

wings are either wrapped around the body, or are 
spread horizontally, or are folded rooflike on the 
abdomen ; they are not held in a vertical position 
above the body. The antennae of moths are of vari- 




FIG. 72. A moth with featherlike antennas. 

ous forms ; they are usually threadlike or featherlike ; 
only in rare cases are they enlarged toward the tip 
(Figs. 71, 72). 

The Skippers.- -^\\Q skippers are so called on ac- 



82 



INSECT LIFE. 



count of their peculiar mode of flight. They fly in 
the daytime and dart suddenly from place to place. 
When at rest they usually hold the wings erect in a 
vertical position like butterflies ; often the fore wings 
are thus held while the hind wings are extended 
horizontally. The antennas are threadlike, and en- 
larged toward the tip ; but in most cases the extreme 
tip is pointed and recurved, forming a hook. The 





FIG. 73. A skipper. 



FIG. 74. A skipper. 



abdomen is usually stout, resembling that of a moth 
rather than that of a butterfly (Figs. 73, 74). 




FiG. 75. The goat-weed butterfly. 



The Butterflies --^hz butterflies fly by day, and 
when at rest they fold the wings together above the 
back in a vertical position. The antennae are thread- 



CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 83 

like with a club at the tip, which is never recurved so 
as to form a hook. The abdomen is slender (Figs. 
75, 




FIG. 76. The banded-purple butterfly. 

Order DIPTERA (Dip'te-ra). 
The Flies. 

TJic members of this order have only two wings ; 
these are borne by the mesothorax. The metathorax is 
fnrnisJied with a pair of knobbed threads the halteres. 
The month-parts are formed for sucking. The meta- 
morphosis is complete. 

To the order Diptera belong all insects that are 
properly termed flies, and only these. The word 
"fly" forms a part of many compound names of in- 
sects of other orders, as butterfly, stone-fly, May-fly, 
and Chalcis-fly ; but when used alone, it is correctly 
applied only to dipterous insects. To some flies 
other common names have been applied, as mosquito, 
gnat, and midge. 

The name Diptera is from two Greek words : dis, 
two, and pteron, a wing. It was suggested by the 
fact that the flies are distinguished by the possession 



8 4 



INSECT LIFE. 



of a single pair of wings ; for no fly has more than 
two wings, and only a few are wingless. 

The common house-fly is the best-known repre- 
sentative of this or- 
der. Fig. 77 repre- 
sents a crane-fly, so 
called on account of 
its long legs. In this 
figure the halteres, 
which represent the 
hind wings in this or- 
der, are well shown. 
Several families of 
flies are referred to 

in the following chap- 
tic. 77. A crane-fly, ter. 

Order SIPHONAPTERA (Siph-o-nap'te ra). 

The Fleas. 

The members of this order are practically wingless, 
the wings being represented only by minute scaly plates. 
The moiit]i-parts are formed for sucking. The meta- 
morphosis is complete. 

The name of the order is 
from two Greek words : si- 
phon, a tube, and ptcros, 
wingless. It refers to the 
form of the mouth and to the 
wingless condition of the in- 
sects. Fig. 78 represents the 





dog-flea and its larva. 



FIG. 78. The dog-flea and its 
larva. 



CLASSIFICATION OF INSECTS. 



Order COLEOPTERA (Co-le-op'te-ra). 
The Beetles. 

The members of this order have a pair of horny wing- 
covers, called elytra, which meet in a straight line down 
the back, and beneath which there is a single pair of mem- 
branous wings. The month-parts are formed for biting. 
The metamorphosis is complete. 

Beetles can be readily distinguished from all other 
insects except earwigs by the 
possession of horny, veinless 
wing-covers, which meet in a 
straight line down the back 
(Fig. 79); and they differ from 
earwigs in lacking the pincer- 
like appendages at the tail end 
of the body characteristic of 
those insects (see page 70). 
Beetles also differ from ear- 
wigs in having a complete metamorphosis. 

The name of the order Coleoptera is from two 
Greek words : colcos, a sheath, and ptcron, a wing. 
It refers to the sheathlike structure of the elytra 
(el'y-tra) or wing-covers, which were formerly be- 
lieved to be modified wings. 

This order has been studied in Lessons XVIII to 
XX, and several families are described in the follow- 
ing chapters. 

Order HYMENOPTERA (Hy-me-nop'te ra). 
Bees, Wasps, Ants, and Others. 

The members of this order have four wings ; these 
are membranous, and furnished with comparatively few or 




FIG. 79. A beetle. 



86 



INSECT LIFE. 



with no transverse veins. The hind wings are smaller 
than the fore wings. TJie mouth-parts are formed for 
biting and sucking. The abdomen in the female is 
iisually furnished ivith a sting, piercer, or saw. TJie 
metamorphosis is complete. 

The bees, wasps, and ants are among the better- 
known insects, and will serve to give an idea of the 

characteristic appearance of 
the members of this order. 
They are chiefly insects of 
small or moderate size, and 
many of them abound wher- 
ever flowers bloom. From the 
FIG. so. An ichneumon-fly, earliest times they have been 

favorites with students of the 

habits of animals, for among them we find the most 
wonderful developments of instinctive powers. Many 
volumes have been written regarding their ways, 
and much remains to be discovered, even concerning 
our most common species. 

The name of the order is from two Greek words : 
hymen, membrane, andflteron, a wing. It refers to the 
fact that the wings are of a delicate membranous tex- 






FIG. 81. An ensign-fly. 



FIG. 82. A digger-wasp. 



ture ; but this characteristic is not distinctive, for it 
is possessed by the wings of many other insects. 
Figs. 80, 81, and 82 represent members of this order. 






rS'vK^sS^'fe^S?^ ^V,-^'"'^''-^. ~'~^ 




PLATE I. 



A POND. 




CHAPTER IV. 

POND LIFE. 

F all delightful fields for Nature study 
none can surpass in interest a well- 
stocked pond, for there is a pecul- 
iar fascination in the study of pond 
life. Even to one who know r s lit- 
tle about Nature, a pretty pond, 
partly shaded by trees and fringed 
with water-plants, is a source of de- 
light. What pleasure when one is 
tired to lie on a grassy bank and watch 
the ripples "chase each other over the 
water, or to thread one's way through a rank growth 
of sedges and rushes to where the cat-tail flags rear 
their tall spikes, and the sweet-scented water-lilies 
lift themselves above their shield-shaped leaves, or to 
float in a boat and watch the clouds above and their 
doubles in the mirror below ! 

Such experiences bring rest and a feeling of har- 
mony with Nature. But a keener enjoyment comes 
with a more intimate acquaintance with the forms of 
life that abound in these places, \vhen one can look 
upon each kind of water-plant as an old friend, and 
know something of the ways of the creatures that 
over the surface or swim beneath. 

87 



33 INSECT LIFE. 

There is a pond that we love to visit when we are 
tired with work at our desks. It is a long, narrow 
one that winds beneath overhanging trees, and is 
margined with a dense growth of water-plants. 
Over this pond dragon-flies hawk at midges; on a 
dead tree near the bank a kingfisher has his perch, 
from which on our approach he swoops down twirl- 
ing his watchman's rattle ; sometimes in the swamp 
near by we frighten up a bittern ; and in the shal- 
lows near the shore the great blue heron loves to 
fish, standing knee-deep in the water watching pa- 
tiently for his victims. 

Here, too, occur large colonies of whirligig-bee- 
tles, which chase each other round and round as if 
at play ; water-striders skim over the surface ; the 
marsh-treader glides on its stiltlike legs among the 
rushes and floating leaves ; and, beneath the surface, 
water- boatmen, back -swimmers, water - scorpions, 
diving -beetles, and many other strange creatures 
abound. 

We go to this pond and watch these creatures in 
their homes and then we bring some of them to our 
study, where we put them in aquaria, and try to 
learn more about their ways. 

Similar ponds can be found in most country 
places, and the following pages of this chapter arc 
written to aid others in making similar studies. 

In the studies of life histories the pupil should be 
very careful in his observations ; it is easy to make 
mistakes. Do not be satisfied with seeing a thing 
once, but observe it over and over again. Make sure 
you are right and then look again. This is the only 
way in which good scientific work can be done, and 



POND LIFE. 89 

every pupil can be a scientific observer if he has eyes 
and will use them properly. 

INSECTS THAT FLY OVER PONDS. 

THE DRAGON-FLIES, OR DARNING-NEEDLES, AND 
THE DAMSEL-FLIES (Field Work\--\l is a field day, 
and we find ourselves near our favorite pond, drawn 
here by a charm we do not care to resist. We are 
seated on a convenient log on the bank. Below us 
lies the water without a ripple on its surface, and 
whether we look up or look down we see the same 
beautiful foliage of the graceful trees that line the 
shores. Fringing the bank beyond is a bed of lilies, 
whose shields float on the surface, and at our feet 
great arrowlike leaves point upward. Not a breath 
stirs a branch, and so still is it that it seems as if no 
living thing were here except the invisible, silent 
stream of life within twig and leaf. Suddenly there 
shoots over the pond that swiftest of winged crea- 
tures, a dragon-fly. So rapid is its flight that we 
can hardly follow it with our sight. Back and forth 
it goes, when, discovering strangers, it darts in front 
of us and suddenly stops in midair. Here it hangs 
for a moment motionless, except for its rapidly 
vibrating wings, and then as suddenly darts away. 

What a pity that children should be taught to 
fear this beautiful, harmless creature by the silly 
legend that it will sew up their eyes and ears! 

The habits of dragon-flies are such that they can 
be studied only in the field ; the roomiest of breed- 
ing cages would offer slight scope for the powers of 
these insects. We must therefore watch them while 
free if we would learn what thev do. 



9 o 



INSECT LIFE. 



Yonder flies a tiny insect, a midge or a mosquito; 
as we watch it, a dragon-fly darts at it and it is gone. 
Now that we have learned what to watch for, we see 
insect after insect destroyed by the rapacious crea- 
ture ; no wonder that it is called a dragon. 

Other dragon-flies have come to our pond. Some 
of them are behaving quite differently from the one 
that is hawking mosquitoes. They soar over the 
pond, and at frequent intervals swoop down and 
touch the water with the tip of the abdomen. Why 
do they do this? Are they at play splashing the 
water like a child ? No, these are females laying 
their eggs. The young of dragon-flies lead a very 
different life from that of the adult. They live be- 
neath the water upon the bottom of the pond or 
stream as the case may be ; and the adult places 
her eggs in such a position that when the young 
hatch they will be in their proper element. 

Not all dragon-flies lay their eggs as these are 
doing. On one occasion the writer, in company with 
his class, saw a dragon-fly poising herself in the air a 
short distance above the point where a water-plant 
emerged from the water. At frequent intervals the 
insect descended with a swift curved movement, 
pushing the end of her abdomen into the water. On 
examination a large cluster of eggs was found at- 
tached to the plant just below the surface. And 
Prof. Uhler has observed a dragon-fly alight upon a 
reed, and, pushing the end of her body below the 
surface of the water, glue a bunch of eggs to the 
submerged stem. 

The dragon-flies that we have been observing 
hold their wings spread out stiffly when at rest (Fig. 



POND LIFE. 



83). But there are certain insects, abundant about a 
ditch near this pond, which resemble these dragon- 




FIG. 83. 

flies very closely in structure, but differ in that they 
fold their wings parallel with the body when resting 
(Fig. 84). They have not the great powers of flight 
possessed by the dragon-flies that do not fold their 
wings, but flit airily from plant 
to plant. The more gentle hab- 
its of these insects have led the } 
French to call them demoiselles 
or damsels. 

English writers heretofore 
have classed both of these kinds 
of insects under the name dra- 
gon-flies, but in the following 
pages we will restrict the name 
dragon-flies to those that hold 
their wings spread out and term 
those that fold their wings dam- 
sel-flies. 

There is a great variety of 
damsel-flies. Some have nearly 

7 




FIG. 84. 



9 2 



INSECT LIFE. 



colorless wings and comparatively dull-colored bod- 
ies, while others have shiny-black wings and brilliant, 
metallic-green or blue bodies. 

The damsel-flies lay their eggs in a remarkable 
manner. These insects have well-developed oviposi- 
tors with which they can make incisions in the stems 
or leaves of plants ; and some of the species at least, 
when they wish to lay their eggs, crawl down the 
stems of aquatic plants and lay their eggs in them be- 
neath the water. 

Can it be that the habit of folding their wings 
when they are not in use is correlated with the pecul- 
iar egg-laying habits of these insects? Certainly it 
would be difficult for them to creep beneath the water 
were their wings expanded like those of dragon-flies. 

Let those who have accompanied us on this field 
trip try to learn something new about dragon-flies 
and damsel-flies. This they can do by patiently 
watching. They can learn upon what kinds of in- 
sects these creatures feed ; they can observe differ- 
ences in their modes of flight, and in the regions 
which each prefers to haunt; and they can ascertain 
more than we now know regarding the various ways 
in which they lay their eggs. As soon as an observa- 
tion is made, it should be recorded in a notebook or 
on slips of paper carried for this purpose. 

After observations have been made on one of 
these insects, that particular one should be captured 
if possible, so that the record of the observation may 
be completed by determining the particular species 
observed. 

Other specimens should be taken for study at 
school and for preservation in your collection. 



POND LIFE. 



93 



It is exceedingly difficult to catch dragon-flies 
while they are on the wing. Watch them till one 
alights, and then approach it quietly till within reach 
of it and capture it with a very quick sweep of the 
net. Damsel-flies, however, are easily captured. 

THE HABITS OF DRAGON-FLIES AND DAMSEL- 
FLIES (School Work}. Write an account of an excur- 
sion that you have made yourself to a pond or 
stream, and include in it the observations that you 
made on* dragon-flies and damsel-flies. State also in 
this account whether you believe these insects to be 
injurious or beneficial to man, and the reasons for this 
belief. 

Copy the following label and place it above the 
dragon-flies and damsel-flies in your collection:* 

Order ODONATA (Od-o-na'ta). 
The Dragon- flies ami Damsel-flies. 

Blue dragon-flies knitting 
To and fro in the sun. 
With sidelong jerk flitting 
Sink down on the rushes, 
And, motionless sitting. 



With level wings swinging 

On green tasseled rushes, 

To dream in the sun. Lowell. 

THE STRUCTURE OF DRAGON-FLIES (School Work). 
Select for study one of the large dragon-flies col- 
lected on the last field day, one of those that hold 
the wings spread out when at rest. If you failed to 

* In writing these labels, underscore the word in capitals with two 
lines, and the words in italics with a single line. See example, page 42. 



94 



INSECT LIFE. 



get any, borrow one of some more successful collec- 
tor. Do not touch the specimen itself, lest you break 
it, but handle it by means of the pin with which it is 
pinned. 

1. Observe the general appearance of the insect, 
noting the large head, the slender neck, the stout 
thorax, the broadly expanded wings, and the long, 
slender abdomen. 

2. Study the head, noting its shape, the puffed out 
front portion, the concave hinder side, and *the large 
compound eyes. 

3. Examine the compound eyes with a lens or 
microscope, and make a drawing illustrating the struc- 
ture of the surface ; only a small portion of one eye 
need be represented, but show this greatly enlarged. 
State the proportion of the surface of the head occu- 
pied by the compound eyes. 

4. Find the simple eyes, using a lens for this pur- 
pose ; they are situated in the triangular space be- 
tween the compound eyes and the puffed out front 
portion of the head. How many of them are there? 

5. Observe the antennas ; these are very small, 
and are situated in the same triangular space as the 
simple eyes. Each antenna consists of a stouter 
basal part and a slender, bristlelike part composed of 
several segments. Make a drawing of one antenna 
greatly enlarged. 

6. Make a drawing of the head seen from above, 
representing each of the parts already mentioned. 
Make the drawing large enough so that the simple 
eyes and antennae can be well shown. 

7. Study the lower side of the head and make a 
drawing of the mouth-parts that can be seen without 



POND LIFE. 

dissection. These are the upper lip or labrum, the 
tips of the mandibles, and the lower lip or labium. 
The maxillae are usually concealed when the mouth 
is closed. The labium is very large and ends in 
three broad flaps, one below the mouth and one on 
each side ; the one below the mouth is sometimes 
more or less split on the middle line, and each of the 
side flaps bears a slender appendage ; sometimes, 
however, these appendages are very minute. 

8. Study the parts of the head already examined 
with a view to seeing how they are fitted to their 
use. The most conspicuous parts are the very large 
eyes ; evidently the sense of sight is exceedingly im- 
portant to these insects; note also that the shape of 
the eyes is such that the insect can see in all direc- 
tions without making any movement of the head or 
body. Regarding the simple eyes, we can only say 
that three well-developed ones are present ; no one 
has yet discovered the peculiar use of these eyes as 
distinguished from that of the compound eyes, but 
it seems as if they must have a function different 
from that of the compound eyes, else why should an 
insect with such highly developed compound eyes 
possess simple eyes also. In many insects the sense 
of smell is believed to have its seat in the antennas ; 
if that is so in dragon-flies, it is evident that com- 
paratively little use is made of this sense by these in- 
sects, for the antennae are so slightly developed as to 
be little more than rudimentary organs ; but it is not 
strange that insects so well provided with organs of 
sight should have little use for organs of smell in 
hawking their prey or in seeking their mates. The 
mouth -parts are admirably fitted for seizing and 



9 6 



INSECT LIFE. 



holding the small insects upon which the dragon-flies 
feed. It is also probable that the freedom of move- 
ment of the head resulting from the slenderness of the 
neck is of great use to these insects in seizing their 
prey. 

9. Study the peculiar features of the thorax, not- 
ing the following points : Its large size this is neces- 
sary to give room for the large and powerful mus- 
cles that move the wings. The position of the legs 
these are situated much farther forward than is 
usual with insects, all of the legs being nearer the 
head than the wings. The legs are used but little for 
walking, their chief use being for clinging to some 
support and, perhaps, for seizing prey. With most 
insects the middle and hind pairs of legs are attached 
to the thorax farther back than are the correspond- 
ing wings, and consequently the side pieces of the 
thorax between the wings, and these legs slope back- 
ward and downward 
from the wings. This 
is shown in Fig. 85, 
which represents a 

FIG. 85. side view of a locust 

with its wings re- 
moved. In a dragon-fly these side pieces of the tho- 
rax slope fonvard and downward. Make a drawing 
of a side view of a dragon-fly, illustrating this point; 
the wings need not be represented, and only the 
bases of the legs need be shown, as is done in the 
figure of a locust. 

10. Examine the legs of the dragon-fly, noting 
the spines borne by the femur and tibia. Consider 
the possible use of these spines in catching and hold- 




POND LIFE. 



97 



ing prey. Make a drawing of one of these legs and 
label the following parts: coxa, trochanter, femur, 
tibia, tarsus, and claws. 

11. Study the wings. These wings are of espe- 
cial interest, for, judging by the powers of flight of 
these insects, they must be extremely well fitted for 
their use. Although large they are very light ; yet 
notwithstanding their lightness they are strong, be- 
ing strengthened by a large number of veins and 
veinlets, and the margin of the wing is strengthened 
throughout by an ambient vein. Near the middle of 
the length of the frontal (costal) margin of each 
wing there is a jointlike structure : this is called the 
nodus ; this structure is characteristic of the wings of 
dragon-flies and damsel-flies, but its use is not known. 
The front part of each wing, which is the part where 
the greatest strength is required, is folded in plaits 
somewhat like a fan. This adds greatly to the 
strength of the wing. Take a flat piece of writing 
paper and observe how easily it can be bent. Now, 
fold this piece of paper like a fan and see how much 
stiffer it is. Study the cross-veins extending back 
from vein I (i. e., the front margin of the wing) and 
note that some of them extend straight across the 

O 

furrow to vein I II (the second vein from the margin), 
and are in the form of triangular braces that tend to 

o 

preserve the form of the furrow. 

12. The abdomen is long, and usually quite slen- 
der. The necessity for the great length of the abdo- 
men is not quite clear; it may be that the abdomen 
serves to steady the flight like the shaft of an arrow ; 
and, too, there may exist a relation between the form 
of the wings and that of the abdomen. With most 



INSECT LIFE. 

swiftly flying insects, as the bees, wasps, hawk-moths, 
and others, the hind wings are reduced in size, and 
thus there is a concentration of the powers of flight 
to a region near the front end of the body, which 
adds to its efficiency, for the opposite arrangement 
would result like an effort to shoot an arrow with the 
wrong end forward ; with dragon-flies the hind wings 
are as large as or larger than the fore wings, but 
the great length of the abdomen results in the flight 
organs as a whole being comparatively near the front 
end of the body. It should also be observed that 
the form of the abdomen is well fitted for the pecul- 
iar method of laying the eggs. In the males of 
dragon-flies there is a slit in the lower side of the 
second abdominal segment, which contains an organ 
furnished with hooks. Dragon-flies and damsel-flies 
differ from all other insects in the position of this 
orofan of the males. Determine the sex of each of 

o 

your specimens and label them male or female as the 
case may be. 

13. Make a sketch of the dragon-fly seen from 
above. 

THE STRUCTURE OF DAMSEL-FLIES (School Work}. 
Compare the structure of a damsel-fly with that of 
the dragon-fly already studied. Note especially the 
form of the head with the eyes projecting like the 
oarlocks of an outrigged skiff, the shape of the wings, 
the position of the wings when at rest, and the form 
of the ovipositor of the females. Make a sketch of 
the head seen from above. Make a sketch showing 
the outline of each of the wings of one side. Deter- 
mine the sex of each of your specimens and label 
them. 



POND LIFE. 



99 



THE MAY-FLIES (Field Work). Let us continue 
our study of the insects that fly over ponds. In 
many places, at certain periods of the year, the most 
abundant of these are the May-flies. These are very 
fragile insects with large, del- 
icate fore wings, with the hind 
wings much smaller or want- 
ins:, and with the abdomen 

C5 ' 

furnished at its caudal end 
with either two or three many- 
jointed, threadlike appendages 

(Fig- 86). 

Although a few May-flies 

can be found at almost any 
time during the warmer parts 
of the year, in each locality 
there are certain periods dur- 
ing which they are much more 
abundant than at other times ; 
then they are apt to appear in 
great swarms. This period is 
as likely to be in June or July as in May, despite the 
common name of these insects. It is at such times 
that a study should be made of their habits. If you 
find that May-flies are abundant at any time and you 
have not already made a study of them, it will be 
worth while to postpone the study of any other in- 
sects and devote your attention to these, for no other 
insects described in these lessons have so short a pe- 
riod of flight as the May-flies. While in the field 
take notes on the following points : 

i. The flight of these insects contrast it with 

o 

that of dragon-flies. 




FIG. 86. 



100 INSECT LIFE. 

2. The food of May-flies can you find any that 
are catching other insects or that are feeding on 
plants? 

3. The young of May-flies live in the water. Try 
to observe the emergence of the insects from the 
water. 

4. If you succeed in observing the emergence of 
the winged insect from the water, collect the emptv 
nymph skin and, if possible, the winged individual 
that emerged from it. These should be preserved 
together in your collection ; they will serve to con- 
nect the adult with its early stages. 

5. May-flies differ from all other insects in that 
they shed the skin once after they are able to fly. 
The winged May- fly when it emerges from the 
water is not a fully developed adult, but is what is 
termed a subimago. The subimago state is of short 
duration ; sometimes it lasts only a few minutes, but 
in other species it lasts twenty-four hours or more. 

Watch the May-flies that are resting on plants or 
other objects near the shore and try to observe the 
molting of the subimago. If you succeed, collect 
the adult or imago and the empty subimago skin, 
and preserve them together in your collection. Even 
if you fail to observe the molting, you ought to be 
able to collect subimago skins if the May-flies are at 
all abundant. 

6. Endeavor to observe the laying of the eggs. 
Some May-flies lay their eggs in masses; specimens 
are often found in which there project from the cau- 
dal end of the body two parallel, subcylindrical 
masses of eggs, for in these insects the two oviducts 
open separately. 



POND LIFE. 101 

7. In the evening, examine the street lamps or 
other lights, and note the extent to which the May- 
flies are attracted to them. 

THE HABITS OF MAY-FLIES (School Work}. Write 
an account of what you have learned regarding May- 
flies. Copy the following label and place it above 
the May-flies in your collection (see footnote, page 

93): 

Order EPHEMERIDA (Eph-e-mer'i-da). 

The May- flies. 

THE STRUCTURE OF MAY-FLIES (School Work\- 
It is quite difficult to preserve specimens of May- 
flies in good condition for study, as they shrivel 
greatly on drying. We will call attention, therefore, 
to only a few of the more important points in the 
structure of these insects. 

1. Study the head and observe the following: 
The very large compound eyes in dried specimens 
these are apt to be more or less shriveled, and in 
some kinds of May-flies each compound eye is di- 
vided into two distinct parts; the simple eyes or 
ocelli in some of our more common species these are 
much larger than is usual with insects ; the mouth- 

o 

parts these are absent or represented by minute 
rudiments. May-flies take no food during their very 
short existence in the adult state. Make a sketch of 
the head seen from above. 

2. Study the wings and make a sketch showing 
the outline of each of the two wings of one side. 

3. Write out a statement of the points of resem- 
blance and the points of difference between the wings 
of May-flies and those of dragon-flies. 



102 



INSECT LIFE. 




sects 



wings 



FIG. 87. 



4. Make a sketch of a May-fly seen from above. 
THE STONE-FLIES (Field Work}. Among the in- 
sects that are common flying about ponds and streams 

are the stone-flies. 
Fig. 87 represents 
one of our larger 
species with the 
wings of one side 
spread out. When 
at rest these in- 
fold their 
upon the 
back, as shown on 
the left side of the 
figure. Most of 
our species are 
much smaller than 
the one represented here, but they can be recognized 
as stone-flies by their resemblance in form to this one. 
The body is flattened, elongate, and with the sides 
nearly parallel ; the prothorax is large ; the antennae 
are long, tapering, and many jointed ; in most species 
the caudal end of the abdomen is furnished with two 
slender appendages. Stone-flies are so called because 
they pass their early stages beneath stones in streams 
and ponds. 

1. Collect as many kinds of stone-flies as you can, 
saving several specimens of each kind. 

2. Make notes on their powers of flight. 

3. Make notes on the localities in which they 
occur. 

4. Try to discover the method in which they lay 
their eggs. 



POND LIFE. 



103 



THE STRUCTURE AND HABITS OF STONE-FLIES 
(School Work).- -Write an account of what you have 
learned regarding stone-flies. Describe first the ap- 
pearance of these insects ; illustrate this by two 
sketches, one showing the appearance of the insect as 
seen from above with the wings closed, the other an 
enlarged view of the head and prothorax as seen from 
above, and compare the eyes and antennae with those 
of dragon-flies and May-flies. In the second part of 
the account state what you have learned regarding 
the habitat and habits of stone-flies. 

Copy the following label and place it above the 
stone-flies in your collection (see footnote, page 3) : 

Order PLECOPTERA (Ple-cop'te-ra). 
The Stone flies. 

OTHER INSECTS THAT FLY OVER PONDS (Field 
Work}. During the field days, when you are studying 
pond life collect any insects that you find flying over 
ponds or resting near them. These should be care- 
fully pinned, labeled, and preserved in your collec- 
tion for future study. 

INSECTS THAT LIVE ON THE SURFACE OF WATER. 

In the excursions that have been made for the 
purpose of studying pond life, the pupils have proba- 
bly observed certain insects running over the sur- 
face of the water as if it were a firm pavement. 
We purpose to study carefully some of these insects, 
but before doing so it will be well to endeavor to 
understand how it is that these creatures can per- 
form the apparent miracle of walking upon water. 



104 INSECT LIFE. 

THE SURFACE-FILM OF WATER (School Work). 
One of the astonishing 1 facts to be learned by the 
study of pond life is that many insects are able to 
walk upon water, and equally strange is the fact that 
certain other insects that live within water can han^r 

o 

from its upper surface without any effort to keep 
themselves there, although their bodies are heavier 
than water. 

These things seem to contradict the well-known 
law of Nature that an object can not float in a liquid 
unless it is lighter than that liquid. And in truth 
it is a fact that under certain conditions objects that 
are much heavier than the liquid upon which they 
are placed will float. 

This phenomenon is due to the presence of what 
has been termed the surface-film of liquids. It has 
been shown by many experiments, some of which 
are given below, that on the surface of water, and 
other liquids also, there is a film of the liquid which 
tends to contract as if it were a membrane stretched 
equally in all directions. The explanation of the for- 
mation of this film is a difficult matter, which can not 
be undertaken here. It is discussed in the more ad- 
vanced works on physics and in some of the larger 
cyclopaedias under the head of capillary attraction. 
The action of the surface-film can be seen by the 
following experiments : 

Experiment /.- -Take a fine needle and carefully 
lay it on the surface of a glass of water. To do this 
hold the needle in a horizontal position and bring it 
as near the water as you can without touching the 
water and then drop the needle. If the experiment 
be performed with sufficient care, the needle will 



POND LIFE. 105 

float. Steel is seven times heavier than water ; never- 
theless, in this experiment we see a piece of steel 
floating: on the surface of water. 

O 

Experiment 2. Take a needle that you have caused 
to float on the water and wet it thoroughly. Now 
you will be unable to make it float so long as it is 
wet. This experiment indicates that one of the con- 
ditions of floating; of a heavy object is that it shall 
not be wet by the liquid. 

Experiment j.- -Take needles of different sizes or 
short pieces of different sizes of wire, and, having 
them perfectly dry, try to make them float. In this 
experiment it is well to lay the piece of wire across 
the tines of a fork and lower it gently into the water. 
It will be found that only the smaller needles or 
pieces of wire will float. This experiment indicates 
that a second condition of the floating of a heavy 
object is that it shall be comparatively small. 

Experiment 4- -Take a glass of water and place it 
on a stand so that you can look through the side of 
the glass at the surface of the water both from above 
and below. Place a needle upon the water, the 
larger the needle the better, provided it will float. 
By studying the floating object carefully it will be 
seen that it rests in a little hollow with sloping sides, 
the surface of the water being indented as if it were 
covered with a membrane stretched across it. 

There are many other interesting phenomena that 
are explained by a knowledge of the action of the 
surface-film of liquids, but their study belongs to the 
subject of physics ; only so much has been introduced 
here as is necessary to understand what we will see 
in our study of pond life. 




I0 6 INSECT LIFE. 

THE WATER-STRIDERS (Field Work). Now that we 
have studied the surface-film of water, let us visit 
some pond or stream and observe those insects that 
live upon it. Chief among these are the water- 
striders, the long-legged creatures that skate over 
the surface as if they had no weight. 

There are a good many species of water-striders, 
and several quite distinct types, differing in size, in 

the form of the body, 
and in the relative 
length of the legs. One 
of the more common 
forms is represented by 
Fig. 88. Try to find 
some of these, for ow- 
insr to their larger size 

FIG. 88. A water stnder. 

it will be easier to ob- 
serve them than other kinds ; but. if you are unable 
to find these, study any water-striders that you can 
find and make notes for an account of them. 

1. Water-striders live upon both ponds and 
streams ; if you are observing them upon a stream, 
note what portions of the stream they prefer. 

2. Do they occur singly or in colonies? 

3. Are they shy or otherwise? 

4. Are they disturbed by fish ? To determine 
this watch them where there are fish, and throw 
grasshoppers or other insects into the water and note 
if the fish are more apt to jump at these than at the 
water-striders. 

5. Throw some insect into the water where there 
are no fish, but near some water-striders, and note 
the actions of the latter. What is likely to happen 



POND LIFE. 



107 



to an insect that falls into the water where there are 
water-striders? 

6. Watch the water-striders and learn if they will 
jump from the water to catch insects that fly near it. 

7. Remain quiet at the shore of the pond or 
stream till the water-striders approach near enough 
to be observed closely and determine what portions 
of the body rest upon the water. 

8. Observe the dimples in the water where the 
feet rest on the surface. 

9. When the sun is shining brightly, find some 
water-striders where the water is shallow and ob- 
serve on the bottom of the pool the shadows of the 
dimples in the water made by the feet of the insects. 
Note that each shadow is surrounded by a golden 
ring of light. The more advanced pupils should be 
able to explain the cause of this ring of light. Note 
that there is no ring of light about the shadow cast 
by the body ; why is this so ? 

10. Make a sketch showing the outline of the 
body and the position of each of the legs and the an- 
tennae when the insect is at rest. 

11. Discover which pair of legs are the chief 
organs of locomotion in the striding of these insects. 

12. Collect as many kinds of water-striders as 
possible, saving several specimens of each species. 
Kill them in your cyanide bottle and then pin them 
on your return home. 

Water-striders are dimorphic that is, there are 
two distinct forms of fully developed individuals in 
each species. One form is winged, the other wing- 
less. Try to procure both the winged and the wing- 
less form of each species collected. The presence 

8 



I0 g INSECT LIFE. 

of winged forms probably enables these insects to 
spread overland from one pond or stream to another, 
but the conditions under which winged forms occur 
are not well understood. Sometimes a third form 
occurs in which the adult has short wings. It should 
be remembered that the nymphs of the winged forms 
have short wing-pads, but these differ in appearance 
from perfect wings. 

THE FAMILIES OF WATER-STRIDERS (School Work). 
-There are two closely related families of bugs the 
members of either of which could well be called 
water-striders on account of their mode of life. In one 
family the legs are much longer than in the other, and 
better fitted for the gliding motion characteristic of 
water-striders ; the members of this family are termed 
"the water-striders." In the other family the legs 
are shorter and fitted for running rather than rowing ; 
as the body is broadest across the prothorax in 
these insects, they are termed "the broad-shoul- 
dered water-striders." 

Separate from the others those specimens of water- 
striders in your collection in which the second and 
third pairs of legs are extremely long and slender, 
and in which the body is widest back of the pro- 
thorax. If this family is well represented in your 
locality, you should have some species in which the 
body is long and slender, as in Fig. 88, and also some 
smaller species in which the body is oval in outline. 

Copy the following label and fasten it above the 
place where the water-striders are to be put in your 
collection :- 

Order HEMIPTERA (He-mip'te-ra). 
The Bugs. 




POND LIFE. I0 g 

Place immediately below this label the following 
one, and then arrange the water-striders just selected 
beneath this second label ; put each species of water- 
strider in a row by itself :- 

Family HYDROBATID.E (Hyd-ro-bat'i-dae). 
The Water-striders. 

Fig. 89 represents a member of the second family 
of water-striders, somewhat enlarged. These insects 
can be distinguished from the true 
water-striders by their comparatively 
short legs and broad prothorax. If 
you have any specimens of this fami- 
ly arrange them just after the true 
water-striders and below the follow- FIG. 89. A broad- 

! i i shouldered water- 

ing label :- strid e r . 

Family VELIID.E (Ve-li'i-dae). 

The Broad-shouldered Water-striders. 



THE HABITS OF WATER-STRIDERS (School Work}. 
-Write an account of what you have learned regard- 
ing water-striders. 

THE STRUCTURE OF WATER-STRIDERS (School 
Work]. Select one of the true water-striders, prefer- 
ably a large one like that represented by Fig 88, and 
study the following parts. 

i. The body is covered with microscopic hairs, 
those on the lower side are longer and usually silvery 
white in color. These doubtless form a waterproof 
coating, and add much to the beauty of the insects, 
causing them to appear like white-bottomed boats 
when on the water. 



HO INSECT LIFE. 

2. The head is inserted in the prothorax up to 
the base of the eyes. The eyes, though small com- 
pared with those of the dragon-fly, are really quite 
large and prominent ; their shape and position are 
such that the insect can readily see in all directions. 
The antennas are long and consist of four segments. 
The beak arises from the forward end of the head ; 
when not in use it usually extends backward between 
the fore legs. It consists of four segments; the sec- 
ond segment, however, is quite short and liable to 
be overlooked. A bristlelike piercing organ can 
usually be seen protruding from the tip of the beak. 
Make a drawing of a side view of the head, show- 
ing the form of the head, eyes, antennae, and 
beak. 

3. Study the position and form of the legs. The 
fore legs are placed well forward, and are stouter 
than the others ; they are used for seizing and hold- 
ing the prey. The middle and hind legs are placed 
far back, and are the chief organs of locomotion, the 
middle les:s beins: used as oars and the hind lees as 

o o o 

rudders. A striking peculiarity of the legs in the two 
families of water-striders is that the last segment of 
the tarsus is split at the end and the claws are in- 
serted in this cleft ; this is most easily seen in the 
stouter fore legs than in the threadlike middle and 
hind legs of the true water-striders. In the broad- 
shouldered water-striders it is easily seen on any of 
the legs. Make a drawing of the tarsus of one of the 
legs, showing this peculiarity. 

4. Make a drawing of the lower side of the abdo- 
men, noting carefully the form of the segments near 
the caudal end. 



POND LIFE. TII 

5. Study all the specimens you have of water- 
striders and see if you can separate the sexes. 

THE WHIRLIGIG-BEETLES (Field Work}.^ lad 
who has loitered much by ponds or wandered along 
the margins of brooks with open eyes can have 
failed to see the whirligig-beetles, those social fel- 
lows that gather in lar^e numbers and chase each 



O 




other round and round in graceful curves with 
wonderful rapidity. These beetles are oval or ellip- 
tical in form, more or less flattened, and usually of 
a very brilliant, bluish-black color above, with a 
metallic luster; one of our common forms is 
represented by Fig. 90, but some of the smal- f 
ler species are proportionally longer and more 
convex. 

Seek for specimens of whirli^i^-beetles on 

1 . FIG. go. 

the surface of the ponds and streams in your 
locality and, when found, watch them carefully, note- 
book in hand, and record all that you can see of their 
ways. 

Take with you on this field trip some empty bot- 
tles, in which to bring home living specimens, and an 
insect net ; you will need the latter in catching these 
wary creatures. 

Note the peculiar odor emitted by the insects 
when caught ; this is caused by the milky fluid which 
the insects emit from various joints of the body, and 
is probably a means of defense. 

As these insects can be easily kept alive in aquaria, 
we will make a more careful study of their habits in 
confinement. 

Comparatively few whirligig-beetles can be found 
in the spring; these are individuals that have sur- 



112 INSECT LIFE. 

vived the winter. A new generation beirins to 

(j O 

appear early in the summer, and they are most 
abundant late in August or early in September. 
As cold weather comes on they disappear, bury- 
ing- themselves in mud at the roots of water plants 
for their winter sleep. But they can be kept 
active in aquaria in warm rooms long after all 
have disappeared from the surface of ponds and 
streams. 

On your return from the field trip prepare an 
aquarium with sand or gravel in the bottom and a 
few water plants anchored in this soil. Put the living 
whirligig-beetles into this aquarium, and cover it so 
that the insects can not escape. 

Put in a killing bottle some specimens to be used 
for a study of the structure of these insects. 

THE STRUCTURE OF WHIRLIGIG-BEETLES (School 
Work). i. Pin the specimens in your killing bottle, 
so that they may be easily handled without injury to 
them, putting the pin through the right wing-cover 
a short distance from its base. 

2. Study the appearance of one of these insects 
when seen from above. Note that the hinder part 
of the body is covered by a pair of horny wing-cov- 
ers or elytra, which meet in a straight line along 
the middle of the back. This type of wing-covers 
is the mark by which beetles are most easily recog- 
nized. 

3. Study the head as seen from above and make a 
drawing of this view, showing the following parts: 
The upper lip a horny flap projecting from the ex- 
treme front end of the head ; the clypeus a narrow 
piece extending crosswise between the upper lip and 




POND LIFE. i i-> 

*-/ 

the chief part of the head ; the antennas these are 
unusually short and thick (Fig. 91 represents one of 
the antennae of a whirligig-beetle greatly 
enlarged); the compound eyes these are 
quite prominent, and are situated a consider- 
able distance from the margin of the head. 

4. Study the head as seen from below. Here 
a very remarkable thing will be seen namely, a 
pair of large compound eyes in addition to the pair 
already observed on the upper side of the head. It 
should be said, however, that these insects really 
have only two compound eyes, like other insects ; but 
each eye is divided within the head, one part extend- 
ing to the upper surface of the head and the other to 
the lower surface. What peculiarity in the mode of 
life of the whirligfigr-beetles renders this arrangement 

o o o 

of eyes desirable ? 

5. Study the mouth-parts and observe that in- 
stead of a beak for sucking, as with the water-strid- 
ers, these insects have jaws fitted for biting. 

6. Make a drawing of one of the front legs, and 
label the following parts : coxa, trochanter, femur, 
tibia, tarsus, claws. 

7. The sexes of whirligig-beetles can be distin- 
guished by the. fact that in the males the segments of 
the tarsus of the fore legs are flattened and furnished 
with a spongy cushion of hairs beneath, while in 
the females the segments are more nearly cylindrical 
and do not bear cushions. Separate the sexes of 
these insects in your collection. 

8. Study the middle and hind legs and observe 
their strangely modified form. While the fore legs 
are oarlike in form, these are modified into short and 



114 



INSECT LIFE. 




very broad paddles. Fig. 92 represents the form of 
one of these. 

9. Remove with a pin one of the wing-covers and 

observe the large membranous wing 
compactly folded beneath it. Although 
these insects are commonly seen only on 
FIG. 92. water, they have good powers of flight, 
and migrate from pond to pond by 

means of their wings. I have taken them at electric 

lights far from any water. 

10. The various kinds of beetles taken together 
constitute the order Coleoptera, and the whirligig- 
beetles form the family Gyriniclce of this order. 
Write the two following labels and place them above 
the whirligig-beetles in your collection :- 

Order COLEOPTERA (Co-le-op'te-ra). 
The Beetles. 

Family GYRINID^: (Gy-rin'i-dre). 
The Whirligig-beetles. 

THE HABITS OF WHIRLIGIG- BEETLES (School 
Work).-- Watch the living specimens that you have 
in an aquarium and learn all you can of their habits. 
The following are some of the points to be observed : 
Compare their attitude when at rest with that of a 
water-strider. Describe their method of locomotion. 
Describe their actions when frightened. Can you 
see any indications of their method of breathing 
when under water? How do they remain beneath 
the water? How do they rise to the surface? In 
what way do the beetles endeavor to escape from 
the water? Try to discover what they will eat 



POND LIFE. H5 

there is some difference of opinion among scientific 
writers on this point. 

Alter observing these insects at intervals for sev- 
eral days write an account of what you have learned 
them. 



INSECTS THAT REST AT THE SURFACE BUT SWIM BENEATH. 

In our studies of pond life up to this time we 
have observed some of the insects that fly over 
ponds and some that live upon the surface of water, 
but a far greater number of insects live within 
the water. Some of these are fitted for a purely 
aquatic life, but many find it necessary to come to 
the surface from time to time to get a supply of air. 
This latter class of insects, as a rule, rest at the sur- 
face in such a position that they have access to the 
air above the water, and only swim beneath when 
alarmed or when in search of food. It is this class of 
insects, those that rest at the surface but swim be- 
neath, that we are to study now. 

A COLLECTING TRIP. Provide yourselves with 
insect nets and a supply of empty bottles for bring- 
ing back living insects. Go to some pond or stream, 
and, resting quietly on the shore, try to observe some 
of the insects that live within the water but rest at 
the surface. If there is no convenient pond and you 
go to a stream for this purpose, choose the more 
quiet portions of the stream, and preferably the 
deeper pools and those in which plants are growing. 
Approach the water very quietly so as not to frighten 
the insects. Often when nothing is to be seen at 
first the observer will, be rewarded by a sight of 
the desired objects if he will sit very still for a time. 



IT 6 INSECT LIFE. 

After learning 1 what you can by watching, sweep 
the vegetation beneath the surface of the water with 
your net, and in this way collect as many kinds ol 
insects as possible. Put the insects into clean bot- 
tles so that they may be kept alive. 

On your return prepare several aquaria with sand 
or gravel on the bottom and aquatic plants anchored 
in the sand ; if practicable prepare as many aquaria 
as you have kinds of insects, so that one kind shall 
not destroy another. But in order to observe pre- 
daceous insects capture their prey it is necessary to 
put other insects with them when you are ready to 
make the observation. After the insects have been 
placed in the aquaria you will soon be able to learn 
which ones belong to the class that rest at the surface 
but swim beneath. 

THE PREDACEOUS DIVING-BEETLES (School Work). 
-If a collecting trip like that outlined above is a 
successful one, there are almost sure to be several 
kinds of beetles among the insects collected. These 
can be recognized by the horny wing-covers, which 
meet in a straight line along- the middle of the back. 

o o 

If we omit certain small beetles which are not likely 
to be studied by the beginner, the beetles collected 
in this way will represent only two families ; one of 
these families is the Dytiscidse, or predaceous diving- 
beetles. The members of this family can be recog- 
nized by the fact that when at rest they hang head 
downward with the tip of the abdomen at the sur- 
face of the water. Figs. 93 and 94 represent two of 
the larger members of this family. There are, how- 
ever, many small species, measuring less than one 
fourth of an inch in length, which can be found in 




POND LIFE. j l j 

almost any pond. If you can obtain specimens of the 
larger ones, they will be best for the purposes of study. 

Some specimens should 
be kept alive in aquaria for 
a study of their habits, and 
some should be killed and 
pinned for a study of their 
structure. 

Place the pinned speci- 
mens when not in use in 

FIG. 93. FIG. 94. 

your collection under a 

copy of the following- label and immediately after the 

whirligig-beetles :- 

Family DYTISCID^E (Dy-tis'ci-dae). 
The Predaceous Diving-beetles. 

Whenever convenient to do so, watch the diving- 
beetles and learn all you can regarding their habits. 
Make a memorandum of whatever you learn; the 
hints given on page 1 14 for the study of the whirligig- 
beetles will be useful here. As these diving-beetles 
are predaceous, they may be fed with other insects 
or bits of raw meat. If properly cared for, they can 
be kept alive in aquaria for a long time, even several 
years. 

THE STRUCTURE OF THE PREDACEOUS DIVING- 
BEETLES {School Work). Select for study specimens 
of the largest species of predaceous diving-beetles in 
your collection and observe the form of the following 
parts : 

* No effort is made in these outlines to indicate a natural sequence 
of the families studied. It will be sufficient for the purposes of begin- 
ners to place each family under the order to which it belongs, placing 
first those studied first. 



I i 8 INSECT LIFE. 

1. The body as a whole. Observe its evenly 
rounded outlines, and consider how well fitted it is 
for gliding through the water. 

2. The antennae. These are inserted immediately 

in front of the eyes, and are threadlike in 

^ 

form, each consisting of twelve similar seg- 
ments (Fig. 95). The form of the antennae is 
an important characteristic of these insects, 
for by it they can be distinguished from the 
FlG " water-scavenger beetles, which they closely 
resemble in general appearance. 

3. The hind legs. These are fitted especially for 
swimming, being long and more or less oarlike ; the 
tarsus is flattened and fringed with hairs, and the 
segments of it taper evenly from its base to the 
claws. Make a drawing of one of these legs. 

4. The middle legs. These do not differ greatly 
from the usual form of the legs of insects, except 
that in the males of certain species the first three 
segments of the tarsus are much wider than the 

o 

others and furnished with cushions beneath. 

5. The fore legs. In the females these legs are 
also of the usual form. But in the males of our com- 
mon larger species the first three segments of the 
tarsus are dilated and form a circular disk, upon the 
under side of which are little cuplike suckers. These 
suckers differ in size and arrangement in different 
genera ; Fig. 96 represents a tarsus of Dytiscus (Dy- 
tis'cus). 

6. Examine the fore legs of all of your pinned 
specimens of the larger diving-beetles and separate 
the sexes of each species. 

7. If your collection is sufficiently full, you will 




POND LIFE. II9 

be able to observe that in some species there are two 
kinds of females, one bavins: smooth winer-covers, 

o o 

and another in which the \vins:-cov- 

O 

ers are furnished with a number of 
deep furrows (Fig. 94). 

8. Study the eyes and compare 
them with those of the whirlis:is:- 

o o 

beetles. 

. FIG. 96. 

9. Remove one wing-cover and 

observe the large wing folded beneath it. These 
beetles can fly well, and thus migrate from pond to 
pond. 

10. Remove the wing and observe the spiracles 
or breathing holes on the back near the side of the 
body. 

11. How do these insects breathe when under 
water ? 

THE HABITS AND STRUCTURE OF THE PKEDA- 
CEOUS DIVING-BEETLES (School Work\.~- Write an ac- 
count of what you have learned regarding these in- 
sects. 

THE WATER-TIGERS (Field and School Work)- 
These rapacious creatures are the larvse of the pre- 
daceous diving-beetles, and are found in the ponds 
frequented by these beetles. In sweeping submerged 
plants for the pond insects already described one is 
quite apt to obtain water -tigers also. They are 
elongated, spindle-form grubs, with large sickle- 
shaped mandibles. Fig. 97 represents one of our 
larger species. Put the specimens that you collect 
into an aquarium in which plants are growing, so 
that the larvce can crawl to and from the surface 
easily. 



120 INSECT LIFE. 

Learn what you can regarding the habits and 
structure of these larvae. Observe their favorite 




FIG. 97. A water-tiger. 

attitude when at rest. Learn how they obtain air. 
Place other aquatic insects with them, and observe 
their predaceous habits and their method of sucking 
the blood of their victims. Note their methods of 
locomotion. 

In studying their structure, observe the peculiar 
form of their mandibles ; these are large, sickle- 
shaped, and hollow, with a slitlike opening near the 
tip. They are admirably fitted for holding the prey 
and at the same time sucking the blood from its 
body, as the hollow of the mandibles communicates 
with the mouth. Observe the spiracles along the 
sides of the abdomen ; these are used but little if at 
all during the larval stage. The last pair of spiracles 
are just beneath the tip of the last abdominal seg- 
ment ; it is through these that the larva obtains its 
supply of air. 

Preserve one or more specimens in alcohol and 
put them with the predaceous diving-beetles in your 
collection. 

THE WATER-SCAVENGER BEETLES (School Work).- 
The water-scavenger beetles are common in quiet 
pools, where they may be found swimming through 
the water or crawling among the plants growing on 
the bottom. If the collecting trip outlined on page 



POND LIFE. 



121 




FIG. 98. A water-scaven- 
ger beetle. 



115, was a successful one, there are probably speci- 
mens of these beetles in your aquaria ; but if you do 
not already have specimens, go 
into the field again and sweep 
plants growing beneath water 
with an insect net until you get 
specimens. 

Fig. 98 represents the largest 
of our water-scavenger beetles ; 
but we have in this country many 
smaller species, and the majority 
of them measure less than one 
half inch in length. 

The members of this family 
differ in habits from other com- 
mon aquatic beetles by the fact 
that when they rest at the surface of the water they 
keep the head end of the body uppermost. The 
most easily observed difference in structure is in the 
form of the antennae. These are club-shaped (Fig. 

99); they are inserted immediately 
in front of the eyes, and are usually 
concealed beneath the eyes and pro- 
thorax. Care must be taken not to 
mistake the very long maxillary palpi 
for the antennae; these palpi arise from the side of 
the mouth, and are only three- or four-jointed. 

Select one of the larger species of water-scavenger 
beetles and make a study of living specimens in an 
aquarium, and of the structure of pinned specimens. 

Study especially the method in which they obtain 
air, and the manner in which they carry it when be- 
neath the water. 




FIG. 99. 



122 INSECT LIFE. 

Observe their food habits. These beetles are sup- 
posed to live chiefly upon decaying vegetation in the 
water, but some of them have been known to feed 
upon other insects and upon snails. 

Arrange your pinned specimens under a copy of 
the following label and immediately after the Dyti- 
scidas : 

Family HYDROPHILID/E (Hyd-ro-phil'i-dse). 
The Water-scavenger Beetles. 

The members of this family form cases in which 
the eggs are laid. Fig. 100 represents one of these 
cases attached to a leaf. If you find 
similar cases preserve them in your col- 
lection with the beetles of this family, or 
place them in an aquarium and try to 
rear the young. 

THE LARVJE OF WATER-SCAVENGER 
BEETLES (Field and School Work).- -The 
larvae of the water- scavenger beetles 
live beneath the surface in ponds inhabi- 
ted by the adults, and may be captured by a sweep- 
ing net in the same way as the adults. As they thrive 
well in aquaria, their habits can be easily observed. 
They bear some resemblance to water-tigers (Fig. 
97), but they can be distinguished from them by 
the following characters : the body is more plump ; 
the mandibles are not so slender, are not tubular, and 
are usually furnished with one or more teeth ; and 
the abdomen, in all the species that I have studied, is 
furnished with backward-projecting spines or with 
filaments, or with both. 

Study the habits of these larvse. Observe the 




100. 




POND LIFE. 

method of respiration, the ways of locomotion, and 
the nature of their food. Offer them both living- and 

o 

dead insects, snails, and meat. Preserve one or more 
larvse in alcohol, and put them with the adults in your 
collection. 

THE BACK-SWIMMERS (School Work). When the 
different kinds of insects that you have collected by 
sweeping submerged plants have been placed in 
aquaria, you will be able to recognize the back-swim- 
mers by the fact that they swim up- 
side down. One of these insects is 
represented back uppermost by Fig. 
101. 

The back-swimmers love to float 
at the surface of the water. Here they hang motion- 
less, back downward in a slanting position, \vith the 
tip of the abdomen at the surface, and the head con- 
siderably submerged. When in this position the 
fore and middle legs are slightly bent, so that the 
claws are at the surface, as if the insect were clinging 
to the ceiling of its room ; while the longer, oar-like 
hind legs are nearly straight, and project down into 
the water somewhat; here they are held in the posi- 
tion of the beginning of a stroke, as if the creature 
were waiting for the word go\ and they can go quick- 
ly and rapidly like an expert sculler. Often they 
will swim to the bottom of the pond, where, clinging 
to a stone or plant, they will rest quietly, apparently 
as much at home as when at the surface. 

In their journeys from one part of the aquarium 
to another, they are forced to keep their oars in con- 
stant motion. For these topsy-turvy creatures carry 
a load which is so light that the moment they stop 
9 



INSECT LIFE. 

rowing they fall upward. This load is a film of 
air, which can be seen shining through their wings 
like burnished silver. Knowing this, we can under- 
stand how the back-swimmers can remain so long 
at the bottom of the aquarium without strangling. 
Occasionally these insects will float on the surface of 
the water with the back uppermost ; when in this 
position they can leap into the air from the water 
and take flight. It is necessary, therefore, to keep 
aquaria containing them covered, in order to prevent 
their escape. 

Let us study these creatures more closely : 

1. Kill two or three specimens by putting them 
into a cyanide bottle. In handling back-swimmers 
care must be taken or they will inflict painful stings 
with their sharp and powerful beaks. 

2. When those in the killing bottle are dead, pin 
them so that they can be handled conveniently. Put 
the pin through the three-cornered piece on the mid- 
dle of the back (the scutellum), so as not to fasten 
the wings down. 

3. Hold the insect back downward and note the 
boat-shaped form of the body, the middle of the back 
representing the keel. 

4. Study the head and observe the following 
parts : The eyes these are very large, and each has 
two large scallops in the outer (lateral) side. The 
antennas these are often so concealed that it is diffi- 
cult to see them ; each is situated just behind that 
scallop of the eye of the same side which is nearest 
the mouth. The beak this projects backward be- 
tween the legs. What insects already studied have 
similar mouth-parts ? To what order do they belong ? 



POND LIFE. 125 

5. Study the legs and observe that the fore and 
middle legs are furnished with claws, and are fitted 
for clinging to plants and stones and for seizing prey, 
while the hind legs are destitute of claws and are 
fitted for swimming. Make a drawing of one of the 
hind legs, also one of a fore or middle leg. 

6. Study the wings. These are closely folded 
over the back of the abdomen. The fore wings are 
thick and heavy at the base, while the tips are thinner 
and overlap. This type of wing is found only in the 
order Hemiptera or bugs. Carefully spread the fore 
wings apart with a pin and observe the hind wings, 
which are beneath them ; these are very thin and 
transparent ; they are stiffened by a few stout veins, 
and are folded lengthwise on the back of the abdo- 

o 

men ; in a recently killed specimen they can be 
spread with a pin. Like most other pond insects 
that we have studied, the back-swimmers can leave 
the water and fly to some other pond if they do not 
like their surroundings. They do not have this free- 
dom, however, until they are grown up. Early in 
the summer back-swimmers are found that have no 
wings ; these are the young ones, the nymphs, on 
which the wings have not yet grown. If you have 
wingless specimens in your collection, label them 
NyuipJis. 

7. Study the belly side of the abdomen. Along 
the middle line there is a prominent ridge which is 
thickly clothed with hairs, and, on each side between 
this ridge and the edge of the body there is a deep 
furrow. Along the upper edge of the outside of this 
furrow, and a short distance from the side of the 
body, there is a fringe of long hairs. Wet a pin and 



126 INSECT LIFE. 

with it carefully brush these hairs toward the side of 
the body so as to uncover the furrow. When this is 
done there can be seen on the sloping outer side of 
the furrow a small hole in each of the segments of the 
abdomen ; these are the spiracles or breathing holes. 
Note that the ridge on the middle of the belly ends 
behind in a sharp, projecting point ; and that on each 
side the edge of the body bearing the fringe of hairs 
also ends behind in a similar point, between which 
and the tip of the abdomen there is quite a space. 
This space serves as an opening to an air-chamber 
between the wings and the abdomen. 

8. Take from the aquarium two or three living 
specimens and put them into a tumbler which is 
nearly filled with water. Be careful not to be stung 
while doing this. 

9. While a specimen is resting quietly at the sur- 
face of the water, study it with a lens. Make a draw- 
ing showing the arrangement of the hairs on the 
abdomen of the living specimen while in the water; 
this arrangement is very different from that seen on 
the pinned specimens already studied. 

10. Observe, on the living specimen in the water, 
the hole near the tip of the body through which the 
air passes into the chambers beneath the fringes of 
hairs and into the air-chamber between the wings and 
the abdomen. 

11. Study the pinned specimens again, and make 
sure that you understand how the air can pass to 
the chambers referred to in the preceding para- 
graph. 

12. On the pinned specimens study the first ab- 
dominal segment on the belly side, and observe the 



POND LIFE. 



127 



little furrow on each side ; these are air-passages 
extending- between the chambers on the belly side 
of the abdomen to that beneath the wings. (In 
addition to the spiracles in the abdomen there are 
spiracles in the thorax ; but as these are exceed- 
ingly difficult to find, they will not be described 
here.) 

13. Observe living specimens in water and note 
that they carry air among the hairs on the lower side 
of the thorax, and in the spaces between the head 
and prothorax and between the prothorax and the 
mesothorax. In fact, a large part of the body is en- 
veloped with air. But the most capacious air-cham- 
bers are those inclosed by the fringes of hairs on the 
belly side of the abdomen. It is to the buoyant ac- 
tion of the air in these that the insect owes its pecul- 
iar position in the water. 

14. If you will watch with a lens living specimens 
in a glass of water you will be able to see them force 
the air out of the chambers beneath the fringes of hair, 

o 

using their hind legs for this purpose, and sometimes 
an entire fringe will be lifted like a lid. 

15. Watch living specimens as they rise to the 
surface from the depths of the aquarium, and see 
how they bump against the surface film. 

16. Throw living flies into the water where the 
back -swimmers are and see what the back -swim- 
mers will do. If flies are abundant in the room, 
observe the fate of those that come to drink from the 
water. 

17. Kill and pin several specimens of each species 
of back-swimmers that you have collected, and ar- 
range them in your collection under a copy of the 



128 



INSECT LIFE. 



following label, and immediately after the water- 
striders, for these insects also belong to the order 
Hemiptera :- 

Family NOTONECTID^E (No-to-nec'ti-dae). 
The Hack-swimmers. 

AN ESSAY ON BACK-SWIMMERS (School Work). 
Write an account of what you have learned regard- 
ins: back-swimmers. 

O 

THE WATER-SCORPIONS (Field and School Work). 
Among the strange insects that live in ponds, but 
come to the surface to obtain air, are the water-scor- 
pions. These are not so com- 
mon as the back- swimmers, 
but as they are found in simi- 
lar situations, there may be 
specimens among those insects 
in your aquaria collected by 
sweeping the stems of sub- 
merged plants. If not, search 

for them in the 

places whereback- 

swimmers are 

found. 

There are two 

quite different 

kinds of water- 
in this 
In one 

of these, called 
Nepa (Ne'pd), the body is flat and broad (Fig. 102) ; in 
the other, called Ranatra (Ran 1 a-tra), the body is long 
and very slender (Fig. 103). In both, the hind end 




FIG. 102. 



scorpions 
country. 




FIG. 103. 



POND LIFE. 



129 



of the body is furnished with a pair of long, slender, 
horny appendages. Each of these is grooved on the 
inner side, so that when they are held together they 
form a tube through which air can be drawn. They 
are represented in this position in the figure of Nepa 
and separate in that of Ranatra. 

Another interesting feature in the structure of 
water-scorpions is the form of the fore legs. These 
are fitted for grasping, and are of such form that 
each is a complete organ by itself. The coxa is long 
(in the case of Ranatra it is very long, so that it ap- 
pears like a femur), and the femur is furnished with 
a groove into which the tibia and tarsus fit like the 
blade of a pocket-knife into the handle. 

The resemblance in form to a scorpion is quite 
striking in the case of Ncpa (Fig. 102), but it is much 
less so with Ranatra. 

If you succeed in obtaining water-scorpions, keep 
them in an aquarium and observe their habits. Study 
their method of obtaining air, the way in which they 
seize their prey, their modes of locomotion, and any 
other features of their life history that you can observe. 

The body of Nepa is very flat, enabling the insect 
to hide beneath stones and rubbish on the bottom of 
ponds. With Ranatra the slender form of the body 
and the dirt with which it is usually covered causes 
the insect to resemble a dirty stick. This resem- 
blance doubtless aids the insect greatly in the cap- 
ture of its prey. 

Adult water-scorpions have well-developed wings 
which reach nearly to the end of the abdomen ; if 
you find wingless individuals, or some with short 
wing-pads, label them as nymphs. 



130 



INSECT LIFE. 



The water-scorpions belong to the order Hemip- 
tera. Place your pinned specimens under a copy of 
the following label and immediately after the back- 
swimmers :- 

Family NEPID^E (Nep'i-dae). 
The Water-scorpions. 

THE GIANT WATER-BUGS (Field and School Work}. 
These are common insects in quiet ponds. Fig. 

104 represents one of the 
larger species, and Fig 105 
a smaller one. All of them 
can fly well in the adult 
state, and some are frequent- 
ly attracted to lights in great 
numbers. These are known 
in some parts 
of the country 
as " electric- 
light bugs." 

The mem- 
bers of this 
family are pre- 
daceous. Their 
fore legs are FIG. 105. Giant 

r, i r^ wa.tet-bug,2?aitAa. 

fitted for seiz- 
ing prey and resemble somewhat those of the water- 
scorpions. 

These insects can be easily kept in aquaria and 
are good subjects for study. The outlines already 
given for the study of other pond insects will afford 
suggestions for work on these. A striking feature 
in the life history of many of the giant water-bugs is 





FIG. 104. Giant water-bug, 
Belostoma. 



POND LIFE. 



that the female fastens her eggs on 
the top of her own back with a thin 
layer of waterproof glue, which she 
secretes for this purpose. Fig. 106 
represents a species found in the far 
West. 

The pinned specimens in your 
collection should be placed after the 
water-scorpions under a copy of the 
following label : 

Family BELOSTOMID/E (Bel-os tom'i-dae). 
The Giant Water-bugs. 




FIG. 106. Female, 
with eggs, Serphus. 



THE WRIGGLERS (Field Work}. The wrigglers, or 
" wigglers," as they are more commonly called, are so 

well known that 
it is hardly neces- 
sary to describe 
their form that 
they may be rec- 
ognized. They 
abound through- 
out the warmer 
part of the year in 
ponds, in ditches 
choked with fall- 
en leaves, and in 
pools in swampy 
places. But usu- 
ally they are most 

FIG. 107. A glass of water containing eggs, larvae, easily lOUnd in 6X- 
and pupae of mosquitoes. posed receptacles 

of rain-water, in watering-troughs, and in other sim- 





132 INSECT LIFE. 

ilar places. There are two forms of them : one are 
the larvas of mosquitoes, the other the pupae of the 
same insects ; both are represented in Fig. 107. 

Collect some wrigglers and put them in a glass 
of water where you can observe them. This aquarium 
should be kept covered when you are not studying 
the insects in it. 

THE LARV/E OF MOSQUITOES (School Work). In 

the study of wrigglers begin with 
the larvas ; these are of the form 
shown at a in Fig. 108. 

i. Note that when a larva is 
at rest it hangs from the surface 
with its head down ; several are 
shown in this position in Fig. 107. 
FIG. 108. Mosquitoes. 2. Note that when a larva is 

#, larva; b. pupa. i i i , . 

disturbed it swims away with a 
wriggling motion or quietly sinks toward the bottom. 

3. Note that a larva can sink without any appar- 
ent effort, while in order to regain the surface it is 
forced to exert itself violently. Evidently the body 
of the insect is heavier than water. 

4. Let us see if we can discover the means by 
which the larva keeps itself at the surface without 
any effort, although the body is heavier than water. 

Note that the true hind end of the body, the 
last abdominal segment, is not at the surface, but is 
turned to one side, and that what really reaches the 
surface is the end of a tube borne by the next-to-the- 
last segment. This is the breathing-tube of the 
larva. If the pupil has the use of a microscope, a 
larva should be mounted on a glass slip and the 
structure of this breathing-tube examined. It will 




POND LIFE. 133 

be found to bear at its hinder-end a rosette of five 
platelike lobes ; this is shown at a in Fig. 109. This 
rosette can be seen imperfectly with 
a o-ood lens. When a larva reaches 

o 

the surface it spreads out the rosette 

upon the surface film, which buoys it 

up in the same way that we have seen 

a needle supported by this film (see 

experiment i, page 104). The body - 

of the larva is only slightly heavier larva; 6, breath- 

rr ing-tube of pupa. 

than the water, and the buoyant enect 
of the surface film on the rosette is sufficient to over- 
come this difference. 

5. Consider the adaptations in structure to the 
mode of life of this insect : The form of the respira- 
tory tube enables it to rest at the surface of the water, 
where it can get a supply of air, while the greater 
weight of the fore end of the body causes it to hang 
down into the water in a position suited to collect- 
ing the minute particles of decaying vegetation scat- 
tered through the water and upon which the insect 
feeds. This position is also one that enables the in- 
sect to start quickly on its wriggling journey when 
alarmed. 

6. If the student has the use of a microscope, it 
will be well for him to make at this point a larger 
r.nd more detailed figure of a larva than that given 
above, which was introduced merely to show the 
general form of these insects in this stage. 

THE PUP.E OF MOSQUITOES (School 
larvae of mosquitoes develop rapidly, and after a few 
molts change into club-shaped pupae, the head and 
thorax being greatly enlarged in this stage. The 



134 



INSECT LIFE. 



general form of the pupae is shown at b in Fig. 108. 
Usually larvse and pupae are found at the same 
time, but if you have only larvse you can obtain 
pupae by keeping the larvae in water till they trans- 
form. 

1. Note and describe the differences between the 
larvae and the pupae in the following respects : The 
form of the body. The position of the insect when 
at rest. The number and position of the breathing- 
tubes. (The structure of a breathing-tube of a pupa, 
as seen through a microscope, is shown at b in Fig. 
109.) 

2. Note that the pupae of mosquitoes are active, 
swimming with a wriggling motion similar to that 
of the larvae. It is a very unusual thing for insects 
that have a complete metamorphosis (see page 35) to 
be active in the pupa state. 

3. Observe the wing-pads on the sides of the 
thorax, also the leaflike appendages at the tail end of 
the body, with which the insect swims. 

4. If you have an opportunity to do so, study the 
pupa with a microscope and make a large, detailed 
drawing of it. 

5. How does the pupa make use of the surface 
film of water ? 

THE EMERGENCE OF MOSQUITOES.- -The pupa 
state of mosquitoes lasts only a few days, then the 
skin splits down the back, and the winged mosquito 
carefully works itself out and cautiously balances 
itself on the cast skin, using it as a raft, until its 
wings are hardened so that it can fly away. 

Collect many wrigglers, and, keeping them in 
water, try to observe the emergence of the adult. 



POND LIFE. 



135 



ADULT MOSQUITOES.- -The form of mosquitoes is 
very well known, but there are certain mosquitolike 
insects that are liable to be mistaken for members of 
this family. Mosquitoes differ from these, however, 
in having a fringe of scalelike hairs on the margin of 
the wing and also on each of the wing-veins. Fig. 




.,, 



ll-l 



FIG no. Wing of mosquito. 

1 10 represents the wing of a mosquito as seen through 
a microscope. 

The sexes of mosquitoes can be distinguished by 
the form of the antennas ; at m in Fig. 1 1 1 is repre- 
sented the antenna of a male, and/ 
the antenna of a female. 

It is only the females that sing 
and bite ; the males are mute and 
live on the juices of plants. 

The eggs are laid side by side in 
a boat-shaped mass on the surface of 

FIG. in. -- Antennae 

the water. One ol these is repre- of mosquitoes. , 
sented floating in Fig. 107. By col- 
lecting a mass of this kind and putting it in a vessel 
of water, the complete life history of these insects 
can be observed. 

Mosquitoes belong to the order of two-winged 
insects or flies. Collect some adults and, if you have 
very slender pins, pin them ; if not, mount them on 




n 6 INSECT LIFE. 

J 

cardboard points. Copy the following labels, and 
arrange your specimens under them :- 

Order DIPTERA (Dip'te-ra). 
The Flies. 

Family CULICID^ (Cu-lic'i-dse). 
The Mosquitoes. 

Write up the life history of a mosquito, and place 
specimens of the eggs, larvae, and pupas in alcohol in 
your collection with the adults. 

INSECTS THAT REST AT THE BOTTOM. 

As a rule, it is rather difficult to watch in the 
field the habits of insects that live at the bottom of 
ponds; but in most cases these insects can be kept 
in aquaria, and there studied without difficulty. 
By searching ponds or the quiet portions of streams, 
some of these insects may be seen crawling over 
the bottom, and can then be taken with the hand. 
But a more rapid way of collecting them is by 
sweeping the bottom of the pond and submerged 
plants with an insect net. If the work outlined in 
the preceding pages has been carried out, it is more 
than probable that some of these insects are al- 
ready in your aquaria. If not, seek for them in the 
field. 

THE HABITS OF WATER-BOATMEN (School Work\- 
These are oval, gray and black, mottled bugs, usually 
less than half an inch in length ; they occur in the 
streams, ponds, and lakes of the whole United States. 
The characteristic form and markings of these in- 
sects are shown in Fig. 112. Very little difficulty 
will be had in finding these insects in almost any lo- 



POND LIFE. 



137 




cality where there are ponds of water, and they are 
very easily kept in aquaria. 

1. Remove a few specimens from the aquarium, 
and place them in a glass of water in the bottom of 
which there is a layer of gravel 

or small pebbles. If several 
specimens are placed in the 
glass, some of them may come to 
rest near enough the side of the 
glass so that they may be studied 
with a lens. 

2. Note that the favorite at- 

r IG. 112. 

titude of a water-boatman is 

clinging to a pebble at the bottom of the aquarium 
by the tips of the middle legs, with the fore legs 
bent up under the head and the hind legs stretched 
out sidewise like oars. This is a very different at- 
titude from that assumed by their near relatives, 
the back-swimmers. 

3. Note that there is a thick layer of air covering 
the entire belly or ventral side of the body. Some- 
times this layer of air extends down the legs nearly 
or quite to the ends of the coxae, and often there is a 
strip of air on the outside of the outer edge of each 
upper wing. The spaces between the head and pro- 
thorax, the prothorax and mesothorax, and between 
the wings and abdomen are also filled with air. These 
masses of air can be seen when the insect bends its 
body. 

4. By watching these insects carefully, you will 
be able to see that sometimes one will lift its wings 
slightly, thus drawing the air from the ventral side 
of the body up under the wings ; and, on the other 



138 INSECT LIFE. 

hand, they frequently rub their hind legs down their 
backs, thus forcing the air from under the wings to 
the ventral surface of the body. 

5. Note that while a water-boatman is resting 
near the bottom of the aquarium, it frequently moves 
its oarlike hind legs backward with a quick sweeping 
motion, causing a current of water to flow over the 
layer of air on the ventral side of the body. 

Although the water-boatmen breathe air, which 
they carry with them in a way very similar to that 
of the back-swimmers, they are able to remain under 
water without going to the surface to renew the sup- 
ply of air for a very long period. This, I think, is 
explained by the fact that the air on the lower side 
of the body and along the outer edge of the wing- 
covers is in direct contact with the water, so that it 
can be purified by the air that is mixed with the 
water. And probably it is to insure this purification 
of the layer of air that the insect causes a current of 
water to flow over it by the sweeping motion of its 
hind legs. This also explains the reason for forcing 
the air out from under the wings and drawing it 
back again. 

Sometimes, however, the insects dart to the sur- 
face and return to the bottom as if going after a fresh 
supply of air; but the movement is so rapid and the 
stay at the surface is so short that I have been unable 
to determine the manner of taking the air. 

6. Observe the mode of life of these insects as 
completely as possible, and write an account of them. 

THE STRUCTURE OF WATER-BOATMEN (ScJiool 
Work). Kill and pin some specimens, and study 
their structure. 



POND LIFE. 



139 



1. Note that the head overlaps the prothorax in- 
stead of being inserted in it, as is usually the case 
with insects. 

2. Observe the very large, three-cornered eyes. 
The antennas are very small, and are concealed under 
the backward-projecting edge of the side of the head. 

3. Observe the lower part of the front of the 
head ; it tapers to a blunt point, but it is not pro- 
longed into a slender beak, as is usual with bugs ; 
near the tip of the head there is a small opening, 
through which the sucking mouth-parts are pushed 
when in use. 

4. The prothorax is conspicuous above, and is 
marked by transverse stripes ; on the sides it is very 
short, and below it is almost completely covered by 
the head ; this brings the fore legs very near to the 
mouth. 

5. Make a drawing of one of the fore legs : note 
that the tarsus consists of a single segment, is scoop- 
like in form, and bears a comblike fringe of bristles. 

6. Make a drawing of a middle leg, and note the 
very long-, slender tarsal claws. What is the use of 

J O ' 

these claws? 

7. Make a drawing of a hind leg. What are these 
legs fitted for? 

8. Studv the lower side of the abdomen of sev- 

.> 

eral specimens. In the females the segments are of 
the usual form, but in the males some of them, and 
especially the last four, are very unsymmetrical, 
being, upon one side, broken into irregular-shaped 
fragments. The cause of this is not known. 

O 

9. Indicate by labels the sexes of your pinned 
specimens. 

10 



140 



INSECT LIFE. 



io. Place the pinned specimens in your collection 
with the Hemiptera under a copy of the following 

label : 

Family CORISID^E (Co-ris'i-dae). 

The Water-boatmen. 

THE NYMPHS OF DAMSEL-FLIES (Field Work\- 
The nymphs of damsel-flies are truly aquatic, having 
gill-like organs which enable them to live in water 

without coming to the surface from 
time to time for a supply of air. 
They may be found in those ponds 
or streams about which the adults 
fly, and are most abundant among 
the stems of submerged plants. Fig. 
113 will enable you to recognize 
these insects when found. 

Collectspecimens of these nymphs 
1 and place them in aquaria for study. 
THE HABITS AND STRUCTURE 
OF THE NYMPHS OF DAMSEL-FLIES 
(School Work}- -The nymphs of dam- 
sel-flies are easily reared in aquaria 
of in which the water is kept pure by 
growing plants. Frequently tiny 
ones will appear in such aquaria from eggs that were 
in the stems of the plants when they were collected. 
In such cases it is easy to watch the entire life 
history of the insect after it leaves the egg. 

We will not outline such a study, for the pupil 
who has made the observations on pond life already 
indicated will be able to direct his own studies; and 
independent original observations are much more 




FlG - 



POND LIFE. 141 

enjoyable than prescribed work. We will, however, 
explain two striking peculiarities in the structure of 
these insects : 

1. Remove the nymph from the water and exam- 
ine its mouth-parts. The lower side of the head will 
be seen to be covered by a broad flap ; this is the 
greatly developed lower lip or labium, and is termed 
in these insects the mask. With a pin lift the end of 
the mask away from the head, and observe that it is 
very long and is hinged in such a way that it can be 
pushed out a considerable distance in front of the 
head. Note also that it is furnished with hooks at 
the end. This is the organ by which the nymph 
seizes its prey. Try to observe the nymphs in your 
aquarium catch other insects. 

A similar organ is possessed by the nymphs of 
dragon-flies, and is represented in Fig. 115. 

2. Observe the leaflike organs at the hind end 
of the body. These are the tracheal gills, 

the organs by means of which the insect 
breathes during its life in the water. Fig. 
114 represents a tracheal gill of a damsel-fly 
greatly enlarged. These organs are called 
tracheal gills because the tracheae or air- 
vessels extend into them, and the air con- 
tained in the tracheae is purified by the water 
(or rather by the air in the water) that bathes 
the gills. While with true gills, as those of FlG - II4 - 
fishes and lobsters, etc., the gill contains vessels car- 
rying blood to be purified. 

3. Preserve specimens of nymphs of damsel-flies 
in alcohol and put them in your collection with the 
adults. 




> INSECT LIFE. 

4. Write an account of what you have learned 
about these insects. 

THE HABITS AND STRUCTURE OF THE NYMPHS 
OF DRAGON-FLIES (Field and School Work). The 
nymphs of dragon-flies are found in the same situa- 
tions as those of damsel-flies ; they are also found 
crawling over the bottoms of ponds and streams 
where there are no plants growing. They vary 
greatly in form, some being slender while others are 
very broad. They resemble the nymphs of damsel- 
flies in having a mask and in their use of this organ ; 
but they differ in lacking the external tracheal gills. 
Fig. 115 represents one of these nymphs. 

Collect specimens of these nymphs and place 
them in aquaria for study. Also preserve some in 

alcohol in your collec- 
tion with the adult 
dragon - flies. When 
collecting 1 these, search 

FIG. 115. 

for cast skins along 

the shores of the pond or stream. Preserve speci- 
mens of the cast skins in your collection. 

We will call attention to only one feature in the 
structure and habits of these creatures, leaving the 
pupil to discover other things for himself: 

The nymphs of dragon-flies possess tracheal gills 
of very unusual form. These are situated within the 
body, and consist of a large number of tracheae rami- 
fying in the walls of the hind part of the intestine 
-the rectum. The nymph draws water into this 
part of the intestine through the opening at the 
hind end of the body ; and this water, bathing the 
walls of the rectum, purifies the air in the tracheae 




POND LIFE. 143 

in the same way that the air in the tracheae of an 
ordinary tracheal gill is purified. By watching a 
living specimen it can be seen to alternately draw in 
the water and force it out again. 

This arrangement serves as an organ of locomo- 
tion as well as an organ of respiration. For the 
insect, by suddenly forcing out the water from the 
rectum, can cause itself to shoot forward. The jet 
of water forced out from the rectum when the insect 
jumps forward is most easily seen when the insect is 
on the bottom of the aquarium ; in such a case the 
fine dirt will be disturbed by it for a considerable 
distance back of the insect. 

If you can find a large number of nymphs of 
dragon-flies, do so, and, keeping them in aquaria, try 
to observe the emergence of the adult. Of this 
Tennyson wrote : 

To-day I saw the dragon-fly 
Come from the wells where he did lie, 
An inner impulse rent the veil 
Of his old husk ; from head to tail 
Came out clear plates of sapphire mail. 
He dried his wings : like gauze they grew, 
Through crofts and pastures wet with dew 
A living flash of light he flew. 




CHAPTER V. 

BROOK LIFE. 

N a deep ravine, where a hill stream 
tumbles down a stairway of rocks, is 
one of our favorite resorts on Satur- 
days. A dense forest growth covers 
the sides of the ravine, and shuts out 
all the world besides ; but at midday, 
when the sun shines brightly, the light 
streams down through the narrow 
opening above the creek. This is the 
time to watch the ways of the crea- 
tures clinging to the rocks in the 
rapids, or living in the quiet pools below. Many a 
holiday have we waded up this stream, bottles and 
lens in hand, coaxing Nature to yield up some of her 
secrets. 

Here we have watched the caddice-worms drag 
their log houses over the bottoms of the pools ; here 
the brinks of the falls bear great patches of a living 
carpet of wriggling black-fly larvae ; and here we 
discovered how the net-winged midges leave the 
water, unfold their wings, and take flight. It is a 
rich collecting field ; the cool, pure water of the 
brook and the rush of the torrents affording a home 

144 




PLATE II. 



A BROOK. 



BROOK LIFE. 145 

for many creatures that can not live in the warmer 
and more quiet streams of the valley below. 

In the following- pages are mentioned some of 
the insects that may be found in similar streams- 
that is, in streams flowing rapidly over stones. Most 
of these insects occur rarely or not at all in quiet, 
sluggish streams, flowing over sandy bottoms, through 
level stretches of country. In such streams are found 
the insects described in the chapter on Pond Life. 

In our hill stream, too, there occur many of the 
pond insects, for during its course there are quiet 
bays and broad, still waters, which seem perfectly 
suited to their needs. 

Little brook, sing to me : 

Sing about a bumblebee 
That tumbled from a lily-bell, and grumbled mumblingly 

Because he wet the film 

Of his wings, and had to swim, 
While the water-bugs raced round and laughed at him ! 

Little brook, sing a song 

Of a leaf that sailed along 
Down the golden-braided center of your current swift and strong, 

And a dragon-fly that lit 

On the tilting rim of it, 
And rode away and wasn't scared a bit. 

James Whitcomb Riley* 

INSECTS THAT LIVE BENEATH STONES IN RAPIDS. 

There is no collecting field that is more certain to 
yield returns than the bed of a rapidly flowing 
stream of pure water. Lift the stones from such a 

* From Old-fashioned Roses, by permission of the Bowen-Merrill Co. 



I 4 6 INSECT LIFE. 

stream at any season of the year and you will find 
nymphs and larvas of various kinds clinging to their 
lower surface. If before lifting the stones you will 
place a net in the stream just below them, other in- 
sects that live beneath the stones will be swept into 
it by the current. 

A great variety of insects live in such places, the 
kinds differing in different localities. But there are 
certain families that are almost sure to be represented 
in any rapidly flowing stream ; they are the stone- 
flies, the May-flies, and the caddice-worms. These 
and a few others are described below. 

Most of these insects are not easily kept in aquaria 
without running water. But if you can place an aqua- 
rium under a faucet, and keep the water from over- 
flowing by the use of a constant-level siphon (see 
page 331), you may be able to preserve living speci- 
mens for study. 

If you are unable to do this, study the insects as 
well as you can in the field, and bring back speci- 
mens for your collection and for a study of their 
structure. 

THE NYMPHS OF STONE-FLIES (Field and School 
Work}. In most localities the insects that occur in 
greatest numbers on the lower side of stones in the 
beds of streams are the nymphs of stone-flies, and it 
was probably this fact that suggested their common 
name. Usually the first stone lifted from a riff will 
be found to bear several of these insects clinging to 
it, or scurrying over its surface in their efforts to 
escape. When at rest the very flat body is closely 
applied to the stone, while the legs, antennas, and 
caudal setse radiate from it on the surface of the 



BROOK LIFE. 



stone. In our common forms there is a tuft of hair- 
like tracheal gills just behind the base of each leg, 
and the more mature individuals have conspicuous 
wing-pads (Fig. 116). These general characteristics 
will enable the pupil to recognize 
these insects. Specimens should 
be collected and taken to school 
for a more careful study of their 
structure. Look also for empty 
nymph skins ; these will be found 
clinging to stones and other ob- 
jects on the shores of the stream, 
where they were left when the 
adults emerged. 

Pin the empty nymph skins 
and preserve the nymphs in al- 
cohol. Put both in your collec- 
tion with the adult stone-flies (see 
page 103). 

In the study of the structure 
of these insects note the follow- 
ing : The nymphs resemble the adults to a consid- 
erable degree, except that they lack wings. The 
order Plccoptera, or stone-flies, is a good example 
of those orders, the members of which undergo an 
incomplete metamorphosis. The body is greatly 
flattened ; in this way the insect is well fitted for 
creeping under stones. The legs are flattened and 
fringed with hairs, fitting the insect for swimming as 
well as for creeping. The tarsi are each furnished 
with two claws. The organs of special sense are well 
developed, there being large compound eyes, three 
simple eyes, and long antennae. The mouth is fur- 




FIG. 1 16. Nymph of 
stone-fly. 



148 INSECT LIFE. 

nished with strong, toothed mandibles (it is some- 
times necessary to cut away the upper lip in order 
to see them well), and the caudal end of the body is 
furnished with two large setas. The number and 
position of the tufts of tracheal gills differ in different 
species. 

The nymphs of stone-flies are carnivorous. 
THE NYMPHS OF MAY-FLIES (Field and School 
Work}.- -These are also found beneath stones in the 
beds of rapidly flowing streams, but they also oc- 
cur in many other situations. Some live in the 
banks of streams, where they excavate burrows for 
shelter; others live in slowly moving waters and 
conceal themselves by covering the body with mud ; 
and still others swim among water plants. But in 
regions where there are rapidly flowing streams, 
those that live under stones will be most easily 
found. 

As a rule, the body is not flattened to so great an 
extent as with the nymphs of stone-flies ; the tracheal 
gills are usually more or less platelike in form, al- 
though sometimes they are threadlike and 
tufted ; and the tarsi end in a single claw. 
Fig. 117 represents one of our most com- 
mon species. 

Study the structure of a nymph, and 
compare it with that of the nymph of a 
stone-fly. 

FIG. 117. Preserve specimens in alcohol, and put 
Nymph of them in your collection with the adult Mav- 

a May- fly. J -> 

flies (see page 101). 

THE CADDICE-WORMS (Field and School Work).- 
When the writer was a lad, before he had heard of 




BROOK LIFE. 149 

Nature study before the study of insects except as 
a part of zoology was taught in any school in this 
country he began his study of caddice-worms. It 
was not a thorough study in fact, he would have 
been surprised to have heard it called study at all. 
To him it was fun, after a long tussle with a hard 
Latin lesson, to run over the long bridge across the 
river and on to the swamp near the lake where the 
Azaleas blossomed, and to lie face down on the bank 
of a stream and watch the curious worms that had 
tiny log houses about their bodies. 

It was his first introduction to a field of study 
that has since happily occupied the greater part of 
his time for several decades. Probably for this rea- 
son he always expe- 
riences a thrill of 

pleasure when he is 

i FIG. n8. 

permitted to intro- 
duce these little architects to other Nature-loving 
youngsters. 

This was a sluggish stream, and the caddice- 
worms found there built cases of fragments of partly 
decayed wood, like that shown in Fig. 118. Later, 
in another quiet stream where grass was growing in 
the water, there were found other cad- 
dice-worms, which built cases having a 
still greater resemblance to log houses. 
These cases were composed of tiny lengths 
of grass laid crosswise (Fig. 119). They 
are rough-appearing structures, but within 
they are smooth and lined with silk an excellent 
protection to the soft-bodied larvae that occupy them. 
Caddice-worms, like either of these described 





150 INSECT LIFE. 

above, can be kept in aquaria, and are excellent sub- 
jects for study. 

In swiftly flowing streams, and especially in those 
in which the water is cool, there may be found many 
other kinds. Several of these build cases of small 
stones or grains of sand. Some of the cases are very 
regular in form ; others consist of a central tube with 
large stones fastened on two sides of it (Fig. 120); 





FIG. 120. FIG. 121. FIG. 122. 

and one kind, built of fine sand, is coiled so as to 
resemble the shell of a snail (Fig. 121). 

In all of these the material of which the case is 
made is fastened together by silk, which the larvas 
spin from the mouth in the same manner as caterpil- 
lars. In some species the case is composed entirely 
of silk. Fig. 122 represents the form of such a case 
made by a larva that lives among eel-grass in a lake. 

Before transforming to pupae, the caddice-worms 
partly close their cases so as to keep out intruders, 
but openings are left for the inflow of water for 
breathing. 

The adults are known as caddice-flies ; they are 
mothlike insects, which are often attracted to lights 
at night. Fig. 68, page 79, represents one of them. 

Collect as many kinds of caddice-worms as possi- 
ble. Keep alive some of those that will live in 
aquaria, and study their habits. 

Remove some from their cases, and study their 



BROOK LIFE. I ^ I 

structure. Note especially the following : The great 
length of the legs, which enables the larva to pull 
itself along without exposing much of its body ; the 
firmer covering of the fore part of the body which 
is exposed while the insect is walking ; the softer 
texture and paler color of the protected parts of the 
body ; the number, form, and position of the tracheal 
gills ; and the hooks at the hind end of the body by 
which the larva holds itself within its case. 

Preserve larvae with their cases in alcohol, and 
mount empty cases on cards. Try to rear pupse and 
adults from larvae kept in aquaria. 

Place specimens of larvae, cases, pupae, and adults 
in your collection under a copy of the following 

label : 

Order TRICHOPTERA (Tri-chop'te-ra). 

The Caddice-flies or Caddice-worms. 

Write an account of your observations on these 
insects, and illustrate it with sketches of their cases. 

THE NET-BUILDING CADDICE-WORMS (Field and 
ScJwol Work).--\\\ lifting stones from a stream where 
the current flows swiftly, the collector often finds 
attached to the lower side of the stones little masses 
of pebbles which are fastened to each other and to 
the larger stone by threads of silk. These are the 
homes of the net-building caddice-worms. 

Pull these rude habitations apart and the owners 
will be found in more or less perfect tubes of silk. 
Very little respect for the architectural skill of these 
builders is commanded by their dwellings. But if 
one looks a little farther something will be found 
that is sure to excite admiration. The dweller with- 



152 



INSECT LIFE. 




FIG. 123. Net of a net-building 
caddice-worm. 



in this rude retreat is a fisherman, and stretched be- 
tween two stones near-by can be seen his net. 

This is made of silk. It is usually funnel-shaped, 
opening 1 up-stream, and in the center of it there is a 
portion composed of threads of silk extending in two 
directions at right angles to each other, so as to form 

meshes of surprising regu- 
larity. It is as if a spider 
had stretched a small web 
in the water where the cur- 
rent is swiftest (Fig. 123). 

These nets occur in rap- 
ids between stones, but in 
many places they are to be 
found in greater numbers 
along the brinks of falls. 
Here they are built upon the surface of the rock, 
in the form of semi-elliptical cups, which are kept 
distended by the current. Much of the coating of 
dirt with which these rocks are clothed in summer 
is due to its being caught in these nets. 

It is usually difficult to procure specimens of these 
nets for preservation ; sometimes, however, one can 
be found attached to the surface of a single small 
stone or to a piece of wood in such a way that it can 
be removed from the water without injury to it. 

Find some net-building caddice-worms and learn 
all you can regarding their ways ; collect specimens 
for your collection and for study ; compare their 
structure with that of other caddice-worms ; pre- 
serve specimens of larvae in alcohol ; and dry, if pos- 
sible, some of their nests and nets. 
Write an account of these insects. 



BROOK LIFE. 



153 



THE WATER-PENNIES (Field Work}.- -These are 

strange larvae, which are rarely recognized as insects 

by the young collector. They are very flat, circular 

in outline, and about five sixteenths of 

an inch in diameter. Thev are found 

j 

clinging to the lower surface of stones 
in rapid streams. Fig. 124 represents 
one greatly enlarged. They are larvae 
of beetles of the genus Pscphcnus (Pse- 
phe'nus), and are 
FIG. 124. A wa- merely mentioned 

ter-penny. 




dent of brook life may know what 
they are. 

THE DOBSON OR HORNED Co- 
RYDALIS (Field Work). If a net or 
a wire screen be held with one 
edge close to the bottom below 
some stones lifted with a hoe or 
garden rake, many of the insects 
living under the stones will be 
swept into the net or upon the 
screen, and can thus be captured. 
One of the insects that is often 
caught in this way is the dobson, 
the ugly creature represented by 
Fig. 125. 

This larva is well known in 

many parts of the United States, FlG . I25 '_ T he dobson. 
as it is used extensively by anglers 
for bait, especially for bass, and in spite of its dis- 
agreeable appearance it is in some respects very in- 
teresting to students of Nature study. 




f 



154 



INSECT LIFE. 



It will not thrive in an ordinary aquarium, but it 
can be kept alive in one through which there is a 
current of well-aerated water flowing. If such an 
aquarium is lacking, specimens can be kept alive on 
damp sand or in a box with freshly cut grass, for 
this is a truly amphibious species. 

As this insect lives nearly three years in the 
larval state, larvas can be found at any season of the 

year. In the latter part of 
May or early in June the 
full-grown larvas leave the 
water, and each makes a 
cell under a stone or some 
other object on or near 
the bank of the stream. 
Here they soon change to 
pupas. These are white 
and have prominent wing- 
pads. In about a month 
after the larva leaves the 
water the adult insect ap- 
pears. Fig. 1 26 represents 
the male, which has re- 
markably long mandibles. 
The female resembles the 
male, except that the man- 
dibles are comparatively 
short. Soon after the 
adults appear the eggs are 
laid. These are attached to 
stones or other objects overhanging the water ; they 
are laid in blotchlike masses which are chalky-white 
in color, and measure from half an inch to nearly an 




FIG. 126. The adult dobson or 
horned Corydalis, male. 



BROOK LIFE. 



155 



inch in diameter. A single mass contains from two 
thousand to three thousand eggs. When the larvae 
hatch they at once find their way into the water, 
where they remain until full grown. 

The best time to study this insect is late in the 
spring and early in the summer, for at this season all 
stages of it can be found. Try to get larvae, pupas, 
adults, and eggs, and preserve them in your collec- 
tion under a copy of the following label :- 

Order NEUROPTERA (Neu-rop'te-ra). 
Family SIALID/E (Si-al'i-dae). 

The adult dobson is known as the horned Cory- 
dalis, its scientific name being Corydalis cornnta. 

THE STRUCTURE OF THE DOBSON (School \Vork\- 
Put a larva in a cyanide bottle one or two hours be- 
fore it is needed for study, as it requires considerable 
time to kill these insects. 

1. Lay the specimen on its back and make a draw- 
ing of the ventral surface. 

C3 

2. Name the parts and appendages of the body 
shown in this view. The long, tapering appendages 
on the sides of the abdomen may be termed the 
lateral filaments ; the tufts of hairlike appendages 
near the bases of the lateral filaments are tracJieal 
gills, and at the hind end of the body there is a pair 
of prolegs. Each proleg is furnished with a pair of 
claws. 

Note that in addition to the tracheal gills this 
larva has well-developed spiracles. Make a drawing 
of a spiracle as seen through a lens. Note especially 
the lid by which the opening of the spiracle is closed. 
State the number of spiracles and the position of 



ii 



156 INSECT LIFE. 

each pair. Consider how well fitted this insect is 
both for life in the water and on the land. 

A more detailed account of the structure of this 
larva is given in The Elements of Insect Anatomy, 
by Comstock and Kellogg. 

THE NEAR RELATIVES OF THE DOBSON OR CORY- 
DALIS (Field Work}.--\\\ searching for the dobson the 
pupil is apt to find certain other members of the 
same family which live in similar situations. Some 
of these resemble Corydalis very closely, except that 
they are smaller when full grown and do not have 
tufts of tracheal gills ; these belong to the genus 
Chauliodes (Chau-li' o-dcs}. A still smaller larva which 
is similar in form and also lacks tracheal gills is Sialis 
(Si'a-lis) ; this differs from both of the preceding in 
having at the hind end of the body a long, tapering 
appendage instead of a pair of prolegs. Place any 
specimens that you may get of either of these in your 
collection under the family Sialidce (see page 155). 

INSECTS THAT LIVE EXPOSED IN TORRENTS. 

There are many insects that find in rapids places 
best fitted for their existence, but most of these are 
more or less protected from the rush of the water by 
the fact that they live beneath stones. Some insects, 
however, scorn any protection, but live exposed 
where the water flows the swiftest ; two of these are 
mentioned below. 

THE BLACK-FLIES (Field f-F0r).--The larvae of the 
black-flies should be sought in streams flowing down 
steep descents. If present, they are easily found, for 
they occur clustered together in large numbers, form- 
ing a black coating over the rocks. They prefer the 




BROOK LIFE. 157 

brinks of falls and places where the slanting bed-rock 
is washed clean by a swift flow of water, but some- 

./ 

times they cling to pieces of wood or small stones 
that are firmly fixed in the rapids. 

When the larvae are fully grown they spin boot- 
shaped cocoons within which the pupa state is passed ; 
these are firmly fastened to the 
rock upon which the larvae lived. 
In Fig. 127 there are represented 
a larva and a cocoon. 

1. Find a cluster of larvae and 
take notes on the following: The 
way in which they keep their place 
in the swift current. (It is the tail 
end by which they are usually 
fastened to rock.) Their method 

of locomotion, and the action of the fan-shaped or- 
gans attached to the head. 

2. Collect larvae and cocoons and try to keep them 
alive in water. These insects can not be reared in 
aquaria unless they are placed under a jet of water, 
but they can be kept alive several hours, thus giving 
some opportunity for watching their habits in con- 
finement. 

3. Look for the eggs of the black-flies. These 
are yellowish or brownish and occur in patches in 
situations similar to those inhabited by the larvae. 

4. Look also for adults. These occur in swarms, 
hovering over the brinks of falls and dashing back 
and forth through the spray. Sometimes they may 
be seen darting into the water and out again ; at such 
times they are laying their eggs. 

Fig. 128 represents one of these flies somewhat 





158 INSECT LIFE. 

enlarged, and Fig. 129 represents an antenna much 
more enlarged. The peculiar venation of the wings 
is sufficient to distinguish black- 
flies from all others. 

THE BLACK - FLIES (School 
Work). Prepare for your collec- 
tion as complete a series as DOS- 
sible of the different stages of 

*u ,-u a- j FlG - I2 9- 

these insects, pinning the nies and preserving 
the eggs, larvse, and cocoons with pupge in alcohol. 
Place them with other Diptera under a copy of the 
following label :- 

Family SIMULIID^E (Sim-u-li'i-dae). 
The Black-flies. 

Watch living larvae in a glass of water and ob- 
serve the following : The disklike sucker, fringed 
with hooks at the caudal end of the body. The 
fleshy proleg situated just back of the head ; this ends 
in a sucker fringed with hooks. The thread of silk 
spun from the mouth. The fan-shaped organs borne 
by the head. And the three delicate, much-branched 
tracheal gills, which are pushed out from between 
the last two abdominal segments. 

Write an account of what you have learned re- 
garding black-flies, including a description of the 
methods of locomotion of the larvae and the prob- 
able method by which the larvae obtain their food. 
It has been found by examining the stomachs of 
these larvae that they feed on microscopic aquatic 
plants and bits of tissue of larger plants. 

THE NET-WINGED MIDGES (Field and School Work). 
These insects occur in situations similar to those 



BROOK LIFE. 



159 




inhabited by the black-flies, but as they are compara- 
tively rare insects they are merely mentioned here. 

In Fig. 130 a represents 
a larva seen from above, b 
a larva seen from below, 
and c a side view of the 
pupa. 

As these are the strang- 
est of all insect larvae they 
should be carefully studied 
if found. A full account of 

. FIG. 130. Xet-winged midges; a, 

their habltS and transfer- larva, dorsal view ; 0, larva, ven- 

, . trai view ; c, puparium. 

mations is given in our 

Manual for the Study of Insects. They belong to 

the order Diptera and to the family BLEPHAROCERID.E 

(Bleph-a-ro-cer'i-dae). 

INSECTS OF BROOKSIDES. 

In the study of brook life the pupil will hardly 
fail to observe many insects about the shores of the 
streams. The presence of the greater part of them 
in such situations is not due to the proximity of 
water, but is largely a matter of chance. Any forest, 
orchard, or roadside insect may be found near a 
brook if its proper food occurs there. Some of these 

insects are described in subsequent chapters. 

Here mention is made of a few of those that 

prefer the vicinity of water and are rarely 

found elsewhere. 

THE SHORE-BUGS (Field and School Work). 
These abound in the vicinity of streams and lakes 
and upon damp soils. They are small bugs, of dark 
colors with white or yellow markings, and with long- 




FIG. 131. 




INSECT LIFE. 

antennae. Fig. 131 will aid in recognizing them. The 

shore-bugs take Might quickly when disturbed, but 

alight after flying a short distance ; some species dig 

burrows and live for a part of the time beneath the 

ground. Collect specimens and put them in your 

collection under a copy of the following label :- 

Family SALDID/E (Sal'di-dae). 

The Shore-bugs. 

THE TOAD-SHAPED BUGS (Field and School Work}. 
There is sometimes found on the margins of streams 
or in marshes where the soil is moist a cu- 
rious bug, which, on account of its short and 
broad body and projecting eyes, reminds 
one of a toad (Fig. 132). If you find speci- 
mens of these, observe the color of the soil 
upon which they are found and compare it 
with that of the insects, for this species exhibits con- 
siderable variation in coloring, and its colors are usu- 
ally protective. 

The toad shaped bugs belong to the order Hemip- 
tera. Label your specimens as follows :- 
Family GALGULID.B (Gal-gu'li-dse). 
The Toad- shaped Bugs. 

THE PINE-CONE WILLOW-GALL (Field and School 
Work). The wanderer by the brookside often sees 
a crop of cones borne by willows, and if he is care- 
less he is apt to pass them by, thinking that they, like 
the cones of pines and spruces, contain the seeds of 
the plant. But the observant student knows that the 
seeds of willows are borne in catkins, which differ 
greatly in shape from these conelike growths. 



BROOK LIFE. 



161 



These cone-shaped objects belong to that class of 
vegetable growths termed galls. There are very 
many kinds of these ; and upon some plants, as oaks, 
for example, they are very abundant. 

Galls are produced by insects in this way. The 
female gall-producing insect stings the plant and lays 
an egg in the wound. It is believed that in some 
cases there is deposited with the egg a drop of poison, 
which causes the growth of the gall. But in other 
cases the gall does not begin to develop until the 
larva hatches from the egg and begins to feed upon 
the tissue of the plant. Evidently if there is a poison 
in such cases it must be secreted by the larva. The 
explanation of why galls grow is not yet clear ; but 
we know this much, that each species of gall-making 
insect makes a par- 
ticular kind of gall. 
Hence one versed 
in this subject can 
tell by the form 
and structure of a 



gall what species 
of insect produced 
it. The gall serves 
as a home and food 
for the larva de- 
veloped within it. 
Let us return to 
the pine-cone wil- 
low-gall (Fig. 133). 

This differs in FlG> I 33- The pine-cone willow-gall. 

shape and In the manner of its growth from most 
galls. (Other types of galls will be described in later 




1 62 INSECT LIFE. 

chapters.) It is produced by a small gall-gnat, which 
lays an egg in the tip of a branch of willow. A mag- 
got hatches from this egg and lives in the heart of 
the bud, which ceases to grow in length ; but, strange- 
ly enough, leaves continue to be developed, and they, 
crowded together, form the cone-shaped gall. 

Collect specimens of the pine-cone willow-gall 
and, splitting them open in the middle, find the larvae 
that produced them. 

In early spring the adult gall-gnats can be reared 
by keeping the galls in breeding cages. 

There is a guest gall-gnat that lays its eggs be- 
tween the scales of the pine-cone willow-gall, and the 
larvae hatched from these develop in this place. 
Seek for specimens of these larvae, and in early spring 
try to breed the adults. Both of these gall-gnats 
pass the winter in the larval state within the galls. 
The larvae can be found within the galls at any time 
during the summer, fall, or winter; but in order to 
breed the adults, it is best to leave the galls on the 
plants till early spring. 

There are several kinds of insects, among them 
certain long-horned grasshoppers, that deposit their 
eggs between the leaves of the pine-cone willow-gall ; 
the young, however, leave the galls as soon as they 
are hatched. 

Gall-making species are found in several of the 
orders of insects. The two gall-gnats mentioned 
here belong to the order Diptera. Place specimens 
in your collection with other Diptera under a copy 
cf the following label :- 

Family CECIDOMYIID^: (Cec-i-do-my-i'i-dse). 
The Gall-gnats. 



BROOK LIFE. 163 

THE ALDER-BLIGHT (Field and School Work). One 
often finds on the trunks and branches of alders 
growing on the margins of streams large patches of 
snowy-white matter. These patches are composed of 
many insects crowded together and covered with a 
downy excretion. Such insects are known as woolly- 
aphids. There are several kinds of common woolly- 
aphids. That which lives on the alder is known as 
the alder-blight, another kind living on beech trees is 
called the beech-tree blight, and a third kind, infesting 
apple trees, is the woolly-aphis-of-the-apple. All of 
these secrete large quantities of honey-dew. 

Each aphid has its beak inserted into the bark of 
the infested tree. By cutting off a section of an in- 
fested branch and putting it in a cyanide bottle, the 
insects can be killed, and most of them will remain 
clinging to the branch. It. can then be pinned into 
the collection. The aphids belong to the order 
Hemiptera ; place specimens under the following 

label : 

Family APHIDID.^ (A-phid'i-dae). 

The Plant-lice or Aphids (Aph'ids). 

j 

THE WANDERER (Field and SeJiool rr r <?r).--The 
name wanderer has been applied 
to a butterfly (Fig. 134) that is 
found only in limited localities, al- 
though it occurs from Maine to 
Florida and westward to Kansas. 
It prefers the borders of streams FlG . ^_ T "e wanderer, 
and marshy places where alder 
grows ; and now that its life history is known, this 
fact is explained. The caterpillars of nearly all but- 




164 INSECT LIFE. 

terflies feed on plants, but the larva of this species 
is truly carnivorous, feeding on the woolly-aphids 
known as the alder-blight. 

If the alder-blight is common in your locality, 
search colonies of it for the larvae of this butterfly. 
They will be found burrowing through the downy 
mass, and their paths will be marked by the remains 
of their victims. They resemble grubs more than 
ordinary caterpillars, and are more or less covered 
with the white excretion of the plant-lice. Their 
legs and prolegs are short and small, allowing the 
body to be closely pressed to the bark of the branch. 
By collecting these caterpillars and feeding them with 
the alder-blight, the transformations of the butterfly 
can be easily observed. If you do this, save speci- 
mens of larvas, pupse, pupa skins, and adults for your 
collection. This species should be labeled as fol- 
lows :- 

Order LEPIDOPTERA (Lep-i-dop'te-ra). 

The Moths, the Skippers, and the Butterflies. 

Family LYC^NID^E (Ly-csen'i-dre). 

The Gossamer -winged Butterflies. 

THE GROUSE-LOCUSTS (Field and School \Vork\- 
There is a group of small locusts the members of 

which are remarkable for the shape of 
the pronotum. This projects back- 
ward like a little roof over the wings, 
FIG. 135. and often extends beyond ihe end of 

A grouse-locust. J 

the abdomen (Fig. 135). With these 
insects the fore wings are in the shape of small, rough 
scales, the hind wings being protected by the pro- 
notum. 




BROOK LIFE. 165 

The grouse-locusts are commonly found in low, 
wet places and on the borders of streams. They 
prefer the broad gravelly stretches where there is 
little or no vegetation, the low banks that are swept 
by the water when the streams are high. They vary 
greatly in color, their color being usually similar to 
that of the soil on which they live. They are very 
active, and hence difficult to catch without the use 
of a net. In studying these insects in the field note 
especially the protective nature of their colors. Pre- 
pare one or more specimens for your collection by 
spreading the wings so as to show the relative size 
of the fore and hind wings. 

Label them as follows :- 

Order ORTHOPTERA (Or-thop'te-ra). 
Cockroaches, Crickets, Grasshoppers, and Others. 

Family ACRIDID/E (A-crid'i-die). 
The Locusts, or Short-horned Grasshoppers, 




CHAPTER VI. 

ORCHARD LIFE. 

AN orchard is an excellent place for 
Nature study. Here live many kinds 
of tiny creatures, each kind with its 
own peculiar mode of life. Some have 
comparatively simple life histories, 
merely eating and growing and final- 
ly laying eggs for another generation ; 
but others undergo wonderful transfor- 
mations, and still others exhibit an in- 
stinct that seems much like reason. And 
even those that appear to live the most 
humdrum existence are well worthy of 
careful study, for their lives are never as 
simple as they seem at first sight. 

By a study of orchard life there may 
be learned also much that is of immediate 
practical importance ; some of the most 
dreaded insect pests infest fruit trees. A 
thorough knowledge of the ways of these 
depredators enables us to plan successful- 
ly methods of destroying them, and thus 
to prevent their ravages. 

To carry on this study it is not neces- 
the knotgrass sar y to gfo to a large orchard. Except in 

beetle, 'mstro- J m 

idea poly goni. a city, almost every dwelling-house has 

166 



FIG. 136. 
Knotgrass and 




PLATE III. DANDELIONS AND A LOCUST. 



ORCHARD LIFE. 



167 



some fruit trees about it, and these are sure to be in- 
fested by some of the insects described in this chap- 
ter. And the boys and girls that live in cities can 
find fruit trees with a little effort. 

This chapter is restricted to insects infesting 
fruit trees. Many other kinds of insects may be 
found on grass and other herbage about orchards ; 
some of these are described in the chapter on Road- 
side Life. 

Under the high-top sweeting, 
Many a playmate came to share 

The sports of our merry meeting: 
Zigzag butterflies, many a pair, 
Doubled and danced in the sunny air ; 
The yellow wasp was a visitor there ; 
The cricket chirped from his grassy lair ; 
Even the squirrel would sometimes dare 
Look down upon us, with curious stare ; 
The bees plied fearless their honeyed care 
Almost beside us, nor seemed aware 
Of human presence ; and when the glare 
Of day was done, and the eve was fair, 
The fireflies glimmered everywhere, 
Like diamond-sparkles in beauty's hair, 

In the boughs of the high-top sweeting. 
The humming-bird, with his gem-bright eye, 

Paused there to sip the clover, 
Or whizzed like a rifle-bullet by ; 
The katydid, with its rasping dry, 
Made forever the same reply, 
Which laughing voices would still deny ; 
And the beautiful four-winged dragon-fly 
Darted among us, now low, now high, 
And we sprang aside with a startled cry, 
Fearing the fancied savagery 

Of the harmless and playful rover. 



1 68 INSECT LIFE. 

The flying grasshopper clacked his wings, 

Like castanets gayly beating ; 
The toad hopped by us, with jolting springs ; 
The yellow spider that spins and swings 
Swayed on its ladder of silken strings ; 
The shy cicada, whose noon-voice rings 
So piercing shrill that it almost stings 
The sense of hearing, and all the things 
Which the fervid northern summer brings 
The world that buzzes and crawls and sings- 
Were friends of the high-top sweeting. 

Elizabeth Akcrs.* 



INSECTS INFESTING FOLIAGE. 

THE APPLE-TREE TENT-CATERPILLAR (Field and 
School Work}. In early spring, as soon as the leaves 
begin to expand, conspicuous webs may be found on 
the branches of apple and other trees. The begin- 
ning of such a web is represented in the upper part 
of Fig. 137. These webs are the "tents' of the 
apple-tree tent-caterpillar an insect that is social 
while in the caterpillar state. Each colony consists 
of the larvas that have hatched from a cluster of eggs 
deposited by a moth on a twig near the place where 
the web is afterward built. Such a cluster of eggs is 
represented above the web in the figure. Usually, 
however, the tent is built much farther from the egg- 
cluster than is shown here. 

1. Search for egg-clusters on the twigs of apple 
before the leaves appear ; they can be found at any 
time during the winter or early spring. 

2. If egg-clusters are found, examine them from 



* From The High-top Sweeting, by permission of Messrs. Charles 
Scribner's Sons. 



ORCHARD LIFE. 



169 



day to day and ascertain the date of hatching of the 
larvas. 

3. If the larva? hatch before the leaf-buds open, 
ascertain upon what the larvae feed at this time. 






." -,afX' ,,>.' .. ,,. ,".S -i- 5 

:: r 




FIG. 137. The apple-tree tent-caterpillar, eggs, tent, larva, cocoons, and adult. 

4. If egg-clusters are not found, search for webs. 
Upon what kinds of trees other than apple can these 
be found ? 

5. If possible, find a specimen in a convenient 
place to study where it can be examined daily. If 
none is found near the school or the home of the 
pupil, or near some street between the two, cut off a 



INSECT LIFE. 

branch bearing a tent, and tie it to a branch of another 
tree of the same kind in a convenient place. 

6. Describe the position, form, and structure of 
one of these tents. Of what is it made ? Where 
does the substance of which it is made come from ? 
How is the tent held in place? How is it increased 
in size ? Make a picture of a tent. 

7. Describe one of the caterpillars that lives in 
this tent (see page 325). 

8. Upon what do the caterpillars feed? At what 
time of the day do they feed ? How far do they go 
for their food ? 

9. Are the paths over which the caterpillars go to 
and from their food marked in any way ? If so, how ? 

10. The way in which this pest is usually fought 
is by destroying the caterpillars in their tents. Can 
this be done better at one time of day than another? 
If so, when ? 

11. Search for the remains of the cluster of eggs 
from which a colony of tent-caterpillars have hatched. 
Carefully describe this cluster. Make a picture of it. 
Preserve the specimen for your collection. 

12. Put a branch of the kind of tree upon which 
the caterpillars are feeding in water in a breeding 
cage. Select a branch which bears many leaves. 
Place fifteen or twenty caterpillars on this branch, in 
order to keep them confined, and thus be able to 
observe their transformations. Put fresh branches 
in the cage when necessary to keep the larvae sup- 
plied with food. 

13. What do the caterpillars do when full grown ? 
Observe their actions in your breeding cage and in 
the field. 



ORCHARD LIFE 



14. Preserve some caterpillars in alcohol, and 
put them in your collection near the cluster of 



15. Observe and describe the making of cocoons. 
Note the date when the cocoons are made. 

16. After you are familiar with the appearance of 
the cocoons, look for them out of doors, and find out 
where they are made. 

17. Open a cocoon a few days after it is made, 
and describe the pupa. 

1 8. Preserve a pupa in alcohol, and put it next to 
the larvae in your collection. 

19. Watch for the appearance of the adult moths, 
and thus determine the duration of the pupa state. 

20. Preserve specimens of the cocoons and moths. 
First kill the moths by putting them in the killing 
bottle, then pin and spread them. When dry, take 
them from the spreading board, and put them in the 
collection with the other specimens illustrating the 
transformations of the species. Try to get both sexes 
of the moth; the temales are larger than the males, 
and have narrower antennas. 

21. Make a picture of the moth. 

22. Write an account of the life history of this 
insect. 

23. Arrange the specimens of the apple-tree tent- 
caterpillar in your collection under a copy of the 
following labels : 

O 

Order LEPIDOPTERA (Lep-i-dop'te-ra). 
The Moths, the Skippers, and the Butterflies. 

Family LASIOCAMPTD^E (Las-i-o-cam'pi-dae). 
The Lasiocampids {Las-i-o-cam'pids'}, 



12 



172 



INSECT LIFE. 



NOTE. There are several species of tent-caterpillars in the United 
States. The most common one east of the Rocky Mountains is the one 
figured above the apple-tree tent-caterpillar, Clisiocampa americana 
(Clis-i-o-cam'pa a-mer-i-ca no). Another species that occurs in this region 
is the tent-caterpillar-of-the-forest, Clisiocampa disstria (C. dis stri-a). 
The larva of this species differs in having a row of spots along the middle 
of the back instead of a continuous, narrow line. This species will an- 
swer just as well for the work outlined above as the apple-tree tent- 
caterpillar. 

The more common tent-caterpillars of the Pacific coast are Clisio- 
campa californica (C. cal-i-for ni-ca), whose webs may be found on oaks 
in March and April, and Clisiocampa constricta (C. con-shic to), which in- 
fests fruit trees later in the season. The caterpillars of the last-named 
species do not make tents, although they live in colonies. 

OTHER LEAF-EATING CATERPILLARS (Field and 
School W0r&).- -There are many kinds of caterpillars 
that feed on the foliage of other fruit trees, any one 

O J 

of which will serve as a good subject for study. It 
would take too much space to describe many of these 
and to outline the method of study of them, as has 
been done above for the tent-caterpillars. The fol- 
lowing brief outline will be all that is necessary for 
the pupils that have carefully studied several of the 
insects already described : 

1. Collect larvas found feeding on the foliage of 
fruit trees. Try to get several specimens of each 
kind, and note carefully upon what they were feed- 
ing. 

2. Put each kind of larva into a separate breeding 
cage (see pages 327 to 330 for descriptions of breeding 
cages), and feed each with leaves from the kind of 
tree on which it was found. Keep the food fresh by 
placing the stems in water, and renew it daily. 

3. Make careful notes on the habits of the insects, 
and describe each stage in their development. 



ORCHARD LIFE. 



173 



4. Save specimens for your collection of anything 
illustrating- the habits of the species and specimens 
of each of the stages in the development of the species. 
Arrange these specimens in your collection, labeled 
as fully as you can. 

5. Write an account of what you have learned. 
The following are some of the more common of 

the orchard insects that feed on foliage :- 

The yellow-necked apple-tree-worm, Datana minis- 
tra (Da-ta'na mi nis'tra).- -This caterpillar has the 




FIG. 138. The yellow-necked apple-tree-worm. 

curious habit of assuming the attitude shown in Fig. 
138. It feeds on forest trees as well as fruit trees. 
It remains throughout the 
winter in the pupa state. 
Fig. 139 represents the 
adult. There are sev- 
eral closely allied species 
which feed on forest trees. 
The red -humped ap- 
ple-worm, GLdemasia con- FIG. 139. 




174 



INSECT LIFE. 



cinna (CEd-e-ma' si-a con-cin'nd]- -The larva of the spe- 
cies has a coral-red head, and there is a hump of 
the same color on the back of the first abdominal 




^^^^ FIG. 140. The red-humped apple-worm. 

segment (Fig. 140). This species passes the winter 
in the pupa state, and the adults appear in June and 

July. 

The measuring- worms.- -There are many kinds of 

these. Fig. 141 represents 
one of them. They are 
called measuring-worms on 
account of the curious way 
in which they walk. The 
most important species that 
infest fruit trees are known 

FIG. 141. A measuring-worm. 

as canker-worms. There 

are two species of canker-worms, which are very 
similar in appearance and habits. In both 
the adult female is wingless (Fig. 142), 
while the male (Fig. 143) has well-devel- 
oped wings. 

The white-marked tussock-moth, No- 
toloplms leucostigma (No-tol' o-plius Icu-co- 

caterpillar (Fig. 144) is 





FIG. 142. Fe- 
male canker- 
worm. 



ORCHARD LIFE. 



175 



common on both fruit and forest trees ; it is an ex- 
ceedingly beautiful larva, being ornamented with 
bright colors. The adult fe- 
male is wingless, and lays her 
eggs in a frothy mass on her 
cocoon. The male (Fig. 145) 
has well-developed wings. 

THE PLANT - LICE OR 
APHIDS (Field and School 
Work]. - The plant-lice or 
aphids are minute insects 
which live by sucking the sap from the more tender 
portions of plants. They usually occur clustered 




FIG. 143. Male canker-worm. 




fcfe&Ct" 

"^^-^L^^-^^ 

FIG. 144. The white-marked tussock-moth, larva. 

together in large numbers, and may be either winged 
or wingless (Fig. 146). Many kinds of aphids can be 
found in any orchard ; among the more common 





FIG. 146. A group of aphids. 



INSECT LIFE. 

species are the green ones that are very abundant 
some years on the tips of branches of apple, and the 
dark-colored ones that cause the leaves of peach and 
cherry to curl, thus forming tubes within which they 
live. 

Find a colony of aphids in a convenient place 
where they can be observed from day to day, take 
notes on their habits and structure, and finally write 
an account of what you have learned. The following 
suggestions will aid you in this study: 

1. Observe the form of the body. Usually there 
are two forms of individuals in a colony one wing- 
less, the other winged. Usually the greater num- 
ber of individuals are wingless, and these never 
develop wings. But as aphids increase in numbers 
very rapidly, there is danger of the destruction of 
the food-plant and a consequent destruction of the 
colony. To avoid this danger, from time to time 
individuals are born that develop wings. These fly 
away, and start new colonies in fresh localities. The 
nymphs of the winged form can be recognized by 
their wing-pads. 

2. Observe the reproduction of aphids. Both 
the wingless and the winged forms referred to 
in the preceding paragraph give birth to living 
young. In some species the young aphid pro- 
duced in this way is inclosed in a soft shell, but 
usually not. The birth of the young aphids can be 
easily seen with a hand lens at any time during 
the warmer part of the year in almost any colony of 
aphids. 

3. The two forms of aphids that are being consid- 
ered now consist each of a single sex, all of the indi- 



ORCHARD LIFE. 177 

viduals being females. As these females reproduce 
without pairing, they are termed agamic (a-gam'ic]. 
(The word agamic is from two Greek words, mean- 
ing without marriage.) The two forms are designated 
as the wingless agamic form and the winged agamic 
form respectively ; the latter is often called the mi- 
grating form. 

4. Collect specimens of the following forms of the 
species that you are studying, and preserve them in 
alcohol:- -Full-grown wingless agamic females, 
nymphs of the wingless agamic form, winged agamic 
females, and nymphs of the winged agamic form. 

5. Generally on the setting in of cold weather, or 
in some cases on the failure of nourishment, the 
weather being still warm, there is produced a gen- 
eration including individuals of both sexes. These 
are known as the sexual forms. The males may be 
either winged or wingless, but these true females 
are always wingless. The sexual forms pair, and 
the female produces one or more eggs. It is in 
the egg state that the species usually pass the win- 
ter. 

6. In the autumn watch for the appearance of the 
sexual forms and for eggs. 

7. Study the agamic forms, and note if there is a 
pair of tubes on the back of the sixth abdominal seg- 
ment. Sometimes these are represented by tubercles 
and sometimes they are wanting. 

8. It has been generally believed that through 
these tubes or tubercles the sweet, transparent fluid, 
which is known as honey-dew, is excreted. But it 
has been recently discovered that the honey-dew 
comes from the hind opening of the alimentary 



178 



INSECT LTFE. 



canal.* Try 7 to observe the excretion of honey- 
dew. 

9. Find a colony of aphids that is attended by 
ants, and determine why the ants are there. 

INSECTS THAT PREY UPON APHIDS. 

THE APHIS-LIONS (Field and School lVcr).Look 
among colonies of aphids for aphis-lions. These are 
spindle-shaped larvae, with very long, slender, curved 
jaws ; one of these larvae is represented on the lower 
left leaf in Fig. 147. The aphis-lions are most easily 




FIG. 147. Eggs, larva, cocoon, and adult of Chrysopa. 

found in those colonies of aphids that live within 
curled leaves. 

i. Remove a small branch bearing a colony of 

* M. Biirgen. Der Honigtau. Jenaische Jeitschrift, Bd. xxv (1891), 

s. 387-428. 



ORCHARD LIFE. 

aphids and place it in water or wet sand in a breed- 
ing cage. Tie a wad of cotton about the branch so 
that aphis-lions can not easily escape from it. 

2. Collect several aphis-lions and place them 
among the aphids, and observe their habits. If the 
aphids are destroyed before the aphis-lions get their 
growth and spin cocoons, transfer the aphis-lions to 
a new colony of aphids. 

3. When the aphis-lions have made cocoons, 
transfer the cocoons to a wide-mouthed bottle cov- 
ered with netting, and leave them there till the 
adults emerge. The adult aphis-lion is called a lace- 
winged-fly. 

4. Search for eggs of lace-winged-flies. They 
can be found on the leaves of trees and bushes, 
attached by long, slender stalks, as shown in the 
fisrure. 

O 

5. Prepare a set of specimens illustrating the 
transformations of lace-winged-flies or aphis-lions, 
and label them as follows : 

Order NEUROPTERA (Xeu-rop'te-ra). 

Family CHRYSOPID.-E (Chry-sop'i-dae). 

The Lace-winged-flies or Aphis-lions. 

THE LADY-BUGS (Field and School Work).--T\\e 
insects that are commonly called lady-bugs are small 
beetles which are more or less nearly hemi- 
spherical in form, and generally red or yellow 
with black spots, or black, with white, red, 
or yellow spots. Fig. 148 represents a com- 
mon species. Lady-bugs, both in the adult 
and larval states, feed on aphids, other small in- 
sects, and the eggs of insects. The object of this 





INSECT LIFE. 

lesson is to have the pupils observe the transforma- 
tions of some common species of lady-bug. 

1. Collect larvae of lady-bugs and place them in a 

breeding cage with a colony of aphids, put- 
ting only one kind in a cage. These larvag 
can be found in the same situations as the 
aphis-lions (see preceding lesson), and resem- 
ble them somewhat in form. They are not 
G * I49 ' so slender as the aphis-lions, and their jaws 

are shorter. Fig. 149 represents a common species. 

The breeding cage should be arranged and cared for 

the same as for aphis-lions. 

2. Ascertain the method in which lady-bugs pass 
the pupa state; it is an unusual one. Fig. 150 rep- 
resents a pupa. 

3. Prepare a set of specimens illustrating 
the transformations of a species of lady-bug, 
and place it with your Coleoptera, labeled as 
FIG. 150. follows :- 

Family COCCINELLID/E (Coc-ci-nel'li-dce). 
The Lady-bugs. 

INSECTS INFESTING FRUIT. 

THE COD LIN- MOTH (Field and School Work). The 
most important pest of the apple is the " worm " that 
is frequently found feeding within the 
fruit near its core. This " worm ' of 
wormy apples is the larva of a tiny 
moth, which is known as the codlin- 
moth (Fig. 151). FIG. 151. 

i. Carefully examine a number of wormy apples 
by cutting them to pieces, and write an account of 





ORCHARD LIFE. iSl 

the injury to them. Where does the larva enter the 
fruit? Where is the injury chiefly done? Where 
does the larva emerge from the fruit? 

2. In what place is it probable that the eggs of 
this insect are laid, judging by the observations that 
you have made on the habits of the larvae? 

3. Collect a large number of the larvae by remov- 
ing them from wormy apples, and place them in a 
tightly closed jelly-glass or other small cage. Put 
some pieces of apple in the cage to serve as food. 
Put also some small pieces of bark in the cage so 
that the larvae may hide under them. 

4. Describe the larva, and preserve some speci- 
mens in alcohol. 

5. Observe the larvse daily until they make their 
cocoons, and then describe the cocoons. Note date 
when the cocoons are made, so as to determine the 
length of time spent by the insect in its cocoon. 

6. Try to find similar cocoons under loose bark 
on apple trees. 

7. Empty cocoons of this insect are often found 
under loose bark that has been pierced by a wood- 
pecker in order to feed on the insects. Preserve 
specimens of such pieces of bark and cocoons. 

8. Scrape the loose bark from the trunk of an 
apple tree, and then take a piece of wrapping paper 
long enough to reach around the trunk and fold it so 
as to make a band about three inches wide, and fasten 
this band about the trunk. The band can be fastened 
in place with a tack or with a cord. Look beneath 
this band once a week, and collect the larvae and 
pupae that you find there, keeping a record of the 
number found each week. 



INSECT LIFE. 

NOTE. At one time fruit-growers fought the codlin-moth by collect- 
ing the larvae and pupae in this way and destroying them. It has been 
found, however, that a better way is to spray the apple trees just after 
the blossoms fall with Paris-green-water. By this means the larvae are 
poisoned before they eat their way into the young fruit. 

9. Examine the cage containing cocoons daily in 
order to determine the date of emergence of the 
moths. 

10. There is more than one generation of this in- 
sect each year. Determine by breeding the number 
of generations in your locality, and the method of 
passing the winter. 

11. Write an account of the life history of this 
insect. 

12. Prepare a set of specimens illustrating the 
transformations of this species, place them with the 
Lepidoptera in your collection, and label them as fol- 
lows : 

Superfamily TORTRICINA (Tor-tri-ci'na). 

The Tortricids (Tor'tri-cids]. 

Carpocapsa pomonella (Car-po-cap 'sa pom-o-nel'la). 

The Codlin-moth. 

THE PLUM-CURCULIO (Field and School Work]- 
The plum-curculio is the insect that stings immature 
plums, laying eggs in them, from which hatch grubs, 
that cause the fruit to fall prematurely. 

This insect also infests the peach, nectarine, apri- 
cot, and cherry. In the case of the cherry the in- 
fested fruit does not fall, but ripens with the larvae 
in it, the larvae being the well-known " worm ' of 
" wormy cherries." 

The study of this insect should begin early in the 
season, for the eggs are laid in the young fruit. 



ORCHARD LIFE. 



133 



i. Search for the eggs in any of the fruits named 
above. Their presence can be easily determined by 
a peculiar mark made by the female when laying her 
eggs. A hole is made through the skin of the fruit, 
and into this hole the egg is put. The insect then 
makes a crescent-shaped incision partly surrounding 
the one containing the egg. 

2. If the dot and crescent mark is found on the 
fruit, search should be made for the adult insects. 
These are most easily found early in the season, and 
can be readily obtained by spreading a cloth under 
an infested tree and jarring the tree. The adults 
will drop to the ground feigning death. Specimens 
should be pinned for your collection. 

The adult is a beetle. It is about one fifth of an 
inch in length, and is dark brown spotted with black, 
yellow, and white. The wing-covers are rough, and 
the head is prolonged into a snout, which is bent 
back under the prothorax when at rest. 

3. Preserve in alcohol specimens of fruit showing 
the dot and crescent mark. Cherries will be most 
available for this on account of their small size. Pre- 
serve also specimens of the larvae. 

4. Describe the way in which the larvae injure the 
fruit. 

5. Place infested fruit in a breeding cage on a 
layer of earth ; determine method of passing the 
pupa state ; preserve specimens of pupas ; and breed 
the adult insect, so as to determine whether the in- 
sects that you collected by jarring are really the 
adult of this species. 

6. Write an account of the habits and appearance 
of this insect. 



1 84 



INSECT LIFE. 



7. Label your specimens properly. The species 
belongs to the order Coleoptera ; the family CURCU- 
LIONID^E (Cur-cu-li-on'i-dse), The Curculios (Cur-cu 1 li-os) 
or Weevils ; and the specific name of this curculio is 
Conotrachelns nenuphor (Con-o-tra-che 1 lus nen'u-phor). 

THE POMACE-FLIES (Field and School Work). 
There are several species of small flies, the larvse of 
which live in decaying fruit; and as these insects 
are often abundant about pomace in cider-mills and 
wineries, they have been termed pomace-flies. 

Usually the larvse of these flies can be found in 
decaying fruit in any orchard during the autumn. 
And as they develop very rapidly, they are excellent 
subjects for study. In the case of one species which 
1 studied, the complete life cycle occupied only from 
eleven to seventeen days. 

1. Place in a breeding cage some decaying apples 
or other fruit in which there are maggots. There 
should be a layer of earth in the breeding cage, as 
some species of pomace-flies pass the pupa state in 
the ground. 

2. Study the larva carefully and write a description 
of it. Note especially the form of the first pair of 
spiracles, which project near the head of the body, 
as these present the most obvious specific distinctions 
of the larvae of the different species. The form of 
the caudal end of the body should be carefully studied 
also. The skin of these larvae is so transparent that 
the larger tracheae, or breathing tubes, can be easily 
seen through it with a low power of the microscope. 
Make a drawing representing an entire larva, and 
more detailed drawings representing each end of the 
body. 



ORCHARD LIKE. 



I8 5 



3. When the larvae are full grown, determine 
where the pupa state is passed, and make a drawing 
of the puparium. The pupa state of most flies, in- 
cluding the pomace-flies, is passed within the dried 
skin of the larva. This dried skin, which serves the 
purposes of a cocoon, is termed a puparium (pu-pa'~ 
ri-um). 

4. Put some puparia in a vial in order to deter- 
mine the duration of the pupa state. 

5. When the adult flies emerge in your breeding 
cage, save some specimens for your collection, and 
put some living ones in a cage with decaying fruit 
which is not infested. If you have more than one 
species of pomace-flies, put the different species in 
different cages. Try to discover the eggs when they 
are laid, and to determine the duration of each stage 
of the insect. 

6. Write an account of the pomace-flies that you 
have studied. 

/. Prepare a set of specimens for your collection. 
The pomace-flies belong to the order Diptera, the 
family MUSCID/E (Mus'ci-dae), and to the genus Dro- 
sophila (Dro-soph 1 i-ld). 





CHAPTER VII. 

FOREST LIFE. 

DELIGHTFUL place for the study of in- 
sect life, especially on a hot summer day, 
is the margin of a forest. Here abound 
innumerable species, exhibiting the great- 
est variety of habits. And the charm of 
a holiday spent in the shade can be increased mani- 
fold by watching and collecting them. 

The best places for the study of forest insects are 
the edges of woods, groves, isolated forest trees 
growing in open fields or by roadsides, and fringes 
of trees along the banks of streams. The depths of 
dense forests are inhabited by a much smaller number 
of kinds of insects than the places just named. 

In the chapters on Pond Life, Brook Life, and 
Orchard Life detailed directions have been given for 
the study of the insects mentioned. But by the time 
the student has reached this chapter he should have 
become sufficiently familiar with the methods of 
study to be able to plan his own investigations ; 
hence the chief object of this chapter is to point out 
subjects for study. 

'Tis a woodland enchanted ! 
The great August noonlight, 
186 



FOREST LIFE. * 187 

Through myriad rifts slanted, 

Leaf and bole thickly sprinkles 

With flickering gold ; 

There, in warm August gloaming, 

With quick, silent brightenings, 

From meadow-lands roaming, 

The firefly twinkles 

His fitful heat-lightnings. Lowell. 

THE LARGER LEAF-EATING CATERPILLARS. 

The Giant Silkworms. 

The largest of the leaf-eating insects found on our 
forest trees are the giant silkworms. There are 
several species of these, and some of them can be 
found in almost any of the inhabited portions of our 
country. 

./ 

These larvae frequently attract attention on ac- 
count of their large size, and the adults are favorites 
with young collectors, being the most showy of 
moths. 

It is easy to rear these insects, beginning with 
either eggs, larvae, or pupae. The following general 
directions for breeding will apply to any of the 
species : 

Eggs of the Giant Silkworms. The eggs of the 
giant silkworm moths, being of large size, are fre- 
quently found attached to leaves of the trees upon 
which the larvae feed, but they are more often ob- 
tained from moths kept in confinement. When a 
female moth is captured it is usually only necessary 
to place her in a breeding cage, and keep her alive 
for a few days, in order to obtain fertile eggs. The 
females of this family of moths can be recognized by 
13 



!88 > INSECT LIFE. 

the fact that the antennas are not so large as are the 
antennae of the males. In case a female moth is bred 
from a cocoon, it is necessary that she should be al- 
lowed to mate with a male in order that her eggs be 
fertilized. II there be no males in the cage with her, 
males can usually be obtained by leaving the cage 
near an open window for a day or two. Frequently 
under such conditions males will come to the cage 
in large numbers. Having obtained eggs, it is neces- 
sary to ascertain the food plant of the larva ; the 
more common food plants of each of the species is 
given below. 

Larvce of the Giant Silkivornis. These larvae can 
be found throughout the summer months, but they 
are more frequently observed in the latter part of the 
season, when they are nearly or quite full grown. 
The collection of them is greatly facilitated by 
searching beneath the trees on which they live for 
the pellets of excrement which drop to the ground 
from where they are feeding. In collecting them, 
note carefully their food plant. 

Cocoons of the Giant Silkivorms.- -The pupa state 
of the giant silk-worms is passed within dense silken 
cocoons, which have suggested their popular name. 
All of our species pass the winter in this state, and 
several of them fasten their cocoons to the branches 
of trees ; consequently it is during the winter months, 
while the trees are bare, that the cocoons are most 
often collected. Cocoons which are collected during 
the winter should be stored in a cool place till spring, 
so that the adults shall not emerge before it is possi- 
ble to find food for the larvae that will hatch from 
their eggs. Even when it is not desired to breed a 




PLATE IV 



A FOREST AISLE. 



FOREST LIFE. 



189 



second generation, it is undesirable to keep the 
cocoons during the winter months in a warm, dry 
room, for there is apt to be insufficient moisture in 
the air of such a room for the perfect development 
of the insects. 

Classification of the Giant Silkworms, --The giant 
silkworms, being the larvas of moths, belong to the 
order Lepidoptera. These moths constitute the family 
SATURNIID^E (Sat-ur-ni'i-dse). The scientific name of 
each of the species mentioned below is given after 
the popular name. The following are the more 
common North American species: 

THE lO-MOTH, Automeris io (Au-tom' e-ris i'd). 
This is the most common of the smaller species of 
the family. The female is represented by Fig. 152. 
In this sex the ground color of the fore wings is 




FIG. 152. The io-moth. 



purplish red. The male differs greatly in appear- 
ance, being somewhat smaller and of a deep yellow 
color, but it can be easily recognized by its general 
resemblance to the female in other respects. 



INSECT LIFE. 



The larva (Fig. 153) is one that the student should 
learn to recognize in order that he may avoid han- 
it, for it is armed with spines the prick of 

which is venom- 
ous, 
with 



dling 




FIG. 153. Larva of the io-moth. 



It is green, 
a broad 
brown or reddish 
stripe, edged be- 
low with white on 
each side of the 
abdomen ; the spines are tipped with black. It feeds 
on the leaves of apple, cherry, willow, elm, currant, 
and many other plants. The cocoon is thin ; it is 
usually surrounded by leaves, and made near the 
ground. The adults sometimes emerge in the au- 
tumn, but usually not till spring. 

THE POLYPHEMUS-MOTH, Telea polyphemus ( Te'le-a 
pol-y-phe' mus).- -This is a yellowish or brownish moth, 
with a windowlike spot in each wing. There is a 
gray band on the front margin of the fore wings, and 
near the outer margin of both pairs of wings there is 
a dusky band, edged without with pink; the fore 
wings are crossed by a broken dusty or reddish line 
near the base, edged within with white or pink. The 
transparent spot on each wing is divided by a vein 
and encircled by yellow and black rings. The \vings 
expand from five to six inches. 

The larva (Fig. 154) feeds on oak, basswood, but- 
ternut, elm, maple, apple, plum, and other trees. 
When full grown, it measures three inches or more 
in length. It is of a light green color, with an oblique 
yellow line on each side of each abdominal segment 
except the first and last ; the last segment is bordered 



FOREST LIFE. 



by a purplish brown V-shaped mark. The tubercles 
on the body are small, of an orange color, with me- 




FIG. 154. Larva of the Polyphemus-moth. 

tallic reflections. The cocoon (Fig. 155) is dense and 
usually inclosed in 
a leaf. Sometimes 
it is fastened to a 
twig, but ordinari- 
ly it falls to the 
ground with the 
leaves in the au- 
tumn. Observe and FIG. 155. Cocoon of the Polyphemus-moth. 




192 



INSECT LIFE. 



describe the method of exit of the adult from the 
cocoon. 

THE LUNA-MOTH, Tropcza hum (Tro-pce'a lit' no). 
This is the most beautiful of the giant silkworm 
moths. Its wings are of a delicate light green color, 
with a purple-brown band on the front edge of the 




FIG. 156. The luna-moth. 



fore winsrs. It can be easily recognized by Fi^. ic6. 

O J O J O -' 

The larva feeds on the leaves of walnut, hickory, 



FOREST LIFE. 



193 



and other forest trees. It measures when full grown 
about three inches in length. It is pale bluish 
green, with a pearl-colored head. It has a pale yel- 
low stripe along each side of the body, and a trans- 
verse yellow line on the back between each two 
abdominal segments. The cocoon resembles that of 
the preceding species in form, but is very thin, con- 
taining but little silk. It is found on the surface of 
the ground beneath the trees on which the larvae 
feed. 

THE PROMETHEA-MOTH, Callosamia promcthca (Cal- 
lo-sa'mi-a pro-ine' the-a].- -The female moth of this spe- 
cies can be recognized by Fig. 157. The male differs 




FIG. 157. The Promethea-mcth, female. 

so greatly from the female that it is liable to be mis- 
taken for a distinct species. It is blackish, with the 
transverse lines very faint, and with the spot near 
the center of each wing wanting or very faintly indi- 



194 



INSECT LIFE. 




cated. The fore wings also differ markedly in shape 
from those of the female, the apex of each being 
much more distinctly sickle-shaped. We have ob- 
tained forty males of this 
species in a single after- 
noon by placing a cage 
containing living females 
near an open window. 
They fly most in the lat- 
ter part of the afternoon. 
The larva when full-grown measures 
two inches or more in length. It is of 
a clear and pale bluish green color ; 
the legs and oval shield are yellowish, 
and the body is armed with longitudi- 
nal rows of tubercles. The tubercles 
are black, polished, wartlike elevations, 
excepting two each on the second and 
third thoracic segments, which are 
larger and rich coral-red, and one sim- 
ilar in size to these, but of a yellow 
color, on the eighth abdominal seg- 
ment. This larva feeds on the leaves 
of a large proportion of our common 
fruit and forest trees, but we have 
found it most frequently on wild cher- 
ry and ash and on lilac. The cocoons 
can be easily collected during the win- 
ter from these trees. The cocoon is 
FIG. iss.-Cocoon greatly elongated, and is inclosed in a 

cf the Promethea- i r j_i_ *_ i u i i 

moth- leal, the petiole or which is securely 

fastened to the branch by a band of 

silk extending from the cocoon (Fig. 158). At the 



FOREST LIFE. 



195 



upper end of the cocoon there is a conical, valve- 
like arrangement, which allows the adult to emerge 
without the necessity of making a hole through 
the cocoon. Cut one of your cocoons in two cross- 

j 

wise so as to see this valve. 

THE CECROPIA-MOTH, Samia cecropia (Sa'mi-a ce- 
cro'pi-ti).- -This is the largest of our giant silkworm 




FIG. 159. The Cecropia-moth. 



moths, the wings expanding from five to six inches 
and a half. It can be recognized by Fig. 159. The 
larva is known to feed on at least fifty species of 



196 



INSECT LIFE. 



plants, including apple, plum, and the more common 
forest trees. When full grown it measures from 
three to four inches in length, and is dull bluish green 
in color. The body is armed with six rows of tuber- 
cles, extending nearly its entire length, and there is 
an additional short row on each side of the ventral 
aspect of the first five segments following the head. 
The tubercles on the second and third thoracic sesr- 

o 

ments are larger than the others, and are coral red. 
The other dorsal tubercles are yellow, excepting 
those of the first thoracic and last abdominal seg- 
ments, which, with the lateral tubercles, are blue ; all 
are armed with black bristles. The cocoon (Fig. 




FIG. 160. Cocoon of the Cecropia-moth. 

1 60) is securely fastened to a branch of the food 
plant, where it is easily found during the winter 
months. 

THE CEANOTHUS SILKWORM, Samia californica. 
The Cecropia-moth is not found on the Pacific coast, 
but. its place is taken by a closely allied species simi- 
lar in size and markings, but differing in having the 
ground color of the wings reddish or dusky brown. 
The larva feeds on CcanotJius ; the cocoon resembles 



FOREST LIFE. 



I 9 7 



that of the Cecropia-moth, except that the ends are 
usually free from the branch to which the cocoon is 

J 

attached. 

THE ROYAL-MOTHS. 

The royal-moths constitute a family, the ClTHE- 
RONIID/E (Cith-e-ro-ni'i-dae), which is closely allied to 
the giant silkworms. The species are of medium or 
large size, and some of them are among the more 
common forest insects. The larvas are armed with 
horns or spines, of which those on the second thorac- 
ic segment, and sometimes also those on the third, 
are long and curved. These caterpillars eat the 
leaves of forest trees, and go into the ground to 
transform, which they do without making cocoons. 
The rings of the pupa bear little notched ridges, the 
teeth of which, together with some strong prickles at 
the hind end of the body, assist it in forcing its way 
upward out of the earth. The following are the 
more common species :- 




FIG. 161. Larva of the imperial-moth. 

THE IMPERIAL-MOTH, Basilona imperialis(Bas-i-lo'na 
im-pe-ri-a! Us). The full-grown larva of this species 



INSECT LIFE. 




fi 

-4- 

o 



rt 
tc 



o 



FOREST LIFE. 



I 99 



(Fig. 161) measures from three to four inches in 
length. It feeds on hickory, butternut, and other 
forest trees. The moth expands from four to five 
inches and a half. It is sulphur-yello\v, banded and 
speckled with purplish brown. 

THE REGAL-MOTH, CitJieronia rcgalis (Citli-c-ro ' ni-a 
re-ga'lis).- -This is the largest and most magnificent of 
the royal-moths (Fig. 162). The fore wings are olive- 
colored, spotted with yellow, and with a more or less 
distinctly marked band outside the middle olive. 
The wings expand from four to six inches. 

The larva, when full grown, measures from four 
to five inches in length, and can be recognized by the 
very long, spiny horns with which it is armed. 
Those of the mesothorax and metathorax are much 
longer than the others ; of these, there are four on 
each segment ; the intermediate ones measure about 
three fifths of an inch in length. The larva feeds on 

O 

hickory, walnut, and various other trees. 

THE ANISOTA OAK-WORMS.- -There are several 
smaller royal-moths belonging to the genus Anisota 
(An-i-so'td}, the larvae 
of which feed on oak. 





FIG. 163. Anisota, male. 



FIG. 164. Anisota, female. 



These larvae are more or less striped and armed with 
spines. In the adult state the sexes differ greatly in 



200 INSECT LIFE. 

appearance. The male and female of a common spe- 
cies are represented by Figs. 163 and 164. 

THE LARGER NEST-BUILDING CATERPILLARS. 

Many species of caterpillars make nests within 
which they live. The greater number of these be- 
long to the group described below as leaf-rollers a 
group composed chiefly of very small species. A 
few of the larger caterpillars also make nests. The 
more common species of these are the following :- 

THE TENT-CATERPILLARS. See page 172 for a 
reference to these. 

THE FALL WEB-WORM, Hyphantria cunea (Hy- 
phan'tri-a cu'nc-a). A very common sight in autumn 
in all parts of our country is large, ugly webs inclos- 
ing branches of fruit or forest trees. These webs are 

o 

especially common on apple and on ash. Each web 
is the residence of a colony of larvas which have 
hatched from a cluster of eggs laid on a leaf by a 
snow-white moth. There is a variety of this moth in 
which the fore wings are thickly studded with dark 
brown specks. Every gradation exists between this 
form and those that are spotless. The species win- 
ters in the pupa state, and the moths emerge during 
May or June. The webs made by this insect should 
not be confounded with those made by the apple-tree 
tent-caterpillar. The webs of the fall web-worm 
are made in the autumn, and are much lighter in 
texture, being extended over all of the leaves fed 
upon by the colony. 

THE SCALLOP-SHELL MOTH, Calocalpa undulata 
(Cal-o-cal' pa un-du-la'ta).--T\iis is a pretty moth, with 
its yellow wings crossed by so many fine, zigzag, 



FOREST LIFE. 



2O I 





M, "Mm 

NTs :-Yl 



dark brown lines that it is hard to tell which of the 
two is the ground color (Fig. 165). It lays its eggs 
in a cluster on a leaf near the tip of a twig of cher- 
ry, usually wild cherry. 
The larvae make a snug 
nest by fastening together 
the leaves at the end of 
the twig, and within this 
nest (Fig. 166) they live, 
adding new leaves to the 
outside as more food is 
needed. The leaves die 
and become brown, and 
thus render the nest con- 
spicuous. The larvae are 
black above, with four 
white stripes, and flesh- 
colored below. When full 
grown they descend to 
the ground to transform, 
and pass the winter in the 
pupa state. 




i3Wf^.r,T- 
^Jfl^B 

Wrf BF . 



K|L; 

l!fe:i 




ip^4^3 

% 




FIG. i6v The scallop- 
shell moth. 



FIG. 166. Nest of larva? of the scallop- 
shell moth, and egjjs of moth enlarged. 



THE MOCHA-STOXE MOTHS, Ichthyura (Ich-thy- 
ji'ra).- -There often occur on poplar and willow nests 
of the form shown in Fig. 167. Each of these nests 



2O2 



INSECT LIFE. 



contains a colony of larvae the young of a moth of 
the genus Ichthyura, of which there are several spe- 




FlG. 167. Eggs, larva, and nest of a mocha-stone moth. 



cies in this country. The moths are brownish gray, 
with the fore wings crossed by irregular whitish 
lines (Fig. 168). It was these peculiar markings, re- 
sembling somewhat those of a moss-agate, that sug- 
gested the popular name given above. In the case 

of our most common species, the 
nests are found in midsummer 
or later. The larvae, when 
young, feed within the nest, but 
when they become large they 
leave the nest at night to feed on 
other leaves. The cocoons are 
made under leaves or other rub- 
bish on the ground, and the adults do not emerge 
until the following: summer. These insects can be 

r? 

easily bred by placing a nest in a breeding cage and 
putting fresh branches of the food plant next to the 
nest as often as necessarv. 

THE SILVER-SPOTTED SKIPPER, Epargyrcus titynts 
(Ep-ar-gy' re-us tit' y-rus].--\[ one will lie on his back in 




FIG. 168. A mocha-stone 
moth. 



FOREST LIFE. 



203 



late July or in September under the low hanging 
branches of some locust tree, and look so that the 
leaves are clearly outlined against the sky, he may 
see that the fernlike regularity of some of the com- 
pound leaves is interrupted, several of the leaflets 
beinsr fastened together with silk so as to make a little 

C5 O 

tube, which serves as a home for the builder. These 
tubes are made in various ways ; sometimes the tips 
of several pairs of opposite leaflets are brought to- 
gether below the leaf-stalk and fastened with silk, 
and the overlapping edges of the leaflets on each side 
fastened in the same way ; thus is formed a roomy 
chamber, within which the architect lives. 

The remains of such a nest is represented in Fig. 
169. When this specimen was collected late one 




FIG. 169. Nest of a larva of the silver-spotted skipper. 

afternoon, the leaflets were all present on the stem; 
but w r hen I went to photograph it the next morning 
I found that the caterpillar during the night, having 
nothing else to feed upon, had eaten the leaflets at 
both ends of the nest. 

These nests are made by the larva of the silver- 
spotted skipper, a butterflylike insect which flies from 
14 



2O4 



INSECT LIFE. 




flower to flower with a skipping 1 motion (see page 81 
for the characteristics of the skippers). This skipper 
is dark chocolate-brown, with a row of yellow spots 
extending- across the fore wing, and with a large, 

silvery white spot 
on the lower side of 
the hind wing. The 
larva is a curious 
creature, with a 

FIG. 170. Larva of the silver-spotted skipper. 

large head, a slen- 
der neck, and a spindle-shaped body (Fig. 170), and 
will serve as a type of the family HESPERIID^E (Hes- 
pe-ri'i-das), which includes our common skippers; 
for the larvse of this family can be recognized by 
this peculiar form, and most of them live concealed 
in a folded leaf or in a nest made of several leaves 
fastened together. 

THE BAG-WORMS, family PSYCHID/E (Psy'chi-dse). 
The bag-worms are those caterpillars 
that have the curious habit of building: 

o 

each for itself a silken sac covered with 
little twigs within which it lives (Figs. 
171 and 172). When the caterpillar 
wishes to move from one place to an- 
other, it pushes forth the front end of 
its body and creeps along, carrying its 
house with it. It is said that the spe- 
cies that inhabit Ceylon are believed by 
the natives to be composed of individ- 
uals who, in a previous incarnation, 
were human beings and stole kindling- 
wood, and who now atone for the theft by repeating 
the act as an insect. 




FIG. 171. 



FOREST LIFE. 



205 



When a bag-worm is fully 7 grown, it fastens its 
sac to a twig and changes to a pupa within it. And 
here the females remain until death, leaving their 
eggs within their sacs. These females are grublike 
creatures without wings. But the male pupa works 
his way out from the lower end of his sac, and 
changes to a winged moth. Fig. 172 represents the 






FIG. 172. FIG. 173. FIG. 174. 

sac of a male with the empty pupa skin projecting 
from the lower end, and Fig. 173 the fully developed 
male. These figures are of one of our smaller species. 
Fig. 174 represents the male of one of the larger 
species. 

OTHER LARGER LEAF-EATING CATERPILLARS. 

In addition to the species mentioned above, there 
are very many of the larger caterpillars that infest 
the foliage of forest trees. Any one of these may be 
taken as a subject for study, and the work carried on 
in the manner outlined for the study of similar orchard 
insects. See page 172. 

THE SMALLER LEAF-EATING CATERPILLARS. 

There is an immense number of small caterpillars 
that infest the foliage of forest trees. Of this number, 
the majority of those that would attract the attention 



206 



INSECT LIFE. 




of the young student represent two groups the leaf- 
rollers and the leaf-miners. 

THE LEAF-ROLLERS. 

If the pupil will examine the leaves of almost any 
forest tree during the summer or autumn 
he will find that some of them are rolled 
in such a way as to form a nest, within 
which one or more larvae live or have 
lived. These nests vary greatly in form ; 
sometimes a single leaf, or even only a 
part of a leaf, is rolled ; in other cases 
the nest is formed by fastening together 
several leaves. In most cases the build- 
ing of the nest is the work of a single 
larva, but in very many instances several 
larvae work together to build a common 
nest. It should be said, however, that 
each of the leaf-rolling species builds a 
nest of a particular form, and each of 
these species infests a certain kind or 
kinds of trees. Hence, when a student 
has carefully studied the life history of a 
leaf-roller, he will be able, as a rule, to 
recognize the work of this species by a 
study of the nest alone. 

In making its nest the leaf-roller fast- 
ens the folds of its nest in the desired 
position by means of little bands of silk. 
Several of these bands are shown in Fig. 
175, and in Fig. 176 are represented sev- 
eral types of nests made of rolled leaves. 

The breeding of leaf-rollers is somewhat more 



I 

is 



FIG. 175. 



FOREST LIFE. 



20/ 



difficult than the breeding of those leaf-eating species 
that do not make nests ; the changing of the latter 
from a wilted branch to a fresh one is accomplished 
without difficulty, but a similar process in the case of 
a leaf-roller implies the 
building of a new nest 
by the insect. For this 
reason it is best to leave 
the nests on the trees 
till the larvae are nearly 
full-grown, and then to 
cut the branch bearing 
the nest and place it in 
water or damp sand in 
a breeding cage. This 
implies the keeping of a 
close watch of the in- 
sects while on the trees, 
lest thev mature and es- 

./ 

cape. It is well, when 
comparatively few spec- 
imens are found, to in- 
close the nest while it 
is left on the tree in a 

bag of Swiss muslin. Some leaf-miners pass the pupa 
state within their nest ; but as others leave the nests 
and enter the ground to transform, it is best to have 
a layer of earth in the breeding cage. 

The greater number of the leaf-rolling caterpillars 
belong to the superfamily TORTRICINA (Tor-tri-ci'na), 
or Tortric ids ( Tor' tri-cids) ; but there are members of 
several other families of moths that have similar 
habits. 




FIG. 176. 



208 INSECT LIFE. 

THE LEAF-MINERS. 

There are many leaf-eating caterpillars that are so 
minute that they can live within the substance of a 
leaf, the space between the two skins of the leaf being 
sufficiently large to afford them room for a dwelling 
and pasture. The larvae that live in this way are 
called leaf-miners. 

During the late summer and autumn there can be 
found on almost any shrub or tree leaves that are 
more or less discolored by white or grayish blotches 
or by long twisted lines that reveal the abiding-places 
of leaf-miners. Surely Mr. Lowell must have had 
these in mind when he wrote : 

And there's never a blade nor a leaf too mean 
To be some happy creature's palace. 

Not only are very many kinds of plants infested 
by these larvae, but the mines in the leaves differ 
greatly in form and in their position in the leaf. 
These differences in food plant and in the shape and 
position of the mines do not indicate that these larvae 
are inconstant in their habits. In fact, the opposite 
is the case. Each species of leaf-miner infests a par- 
ticular species of plant, or, at the most, several closely 
allied plants. And each species makes a mine of 
definite shape, although some species exhibit different 
habits in the different stages of their growth. So 
constant are these creatures in their habits that in 
most cases an expert can determine the species of 
leaf-miner that made a mine by merely examining 
the infested leaf. 

The various kinds of mines can be classed under a 



FOREST LIFE. 



209 



few distinct types. The long, narrow, and more or 
less winding mines are described as linear mines. 
Some of these are very narrow at their beginning 
and gradually enlarge, resembling in outline a ser- 
pent ; frequently the larger end is terminated by a 
blotchlike enlargement, suggesting a head. Such 
mines are termed serpentine mines. The leaves of the 
wild columbine are often marked by serpentine mines 
(Fig. 177). Other mines that start from a narrow be- 
ginning enlarge more 
rapidly and extend in 
a more or less regu- 
lar curve ; these are 
trumpet mines. 

The breeding of 
leaf - miners is at- 
tended by the same 
difficulties as the 



breeding of leaf-roll- 
ers mentioned above. 
But with a little care 
mines can be selected 
in which the larvae 
are so nearly full grown that they will complete their 
transformations if the branch bearing the mined 
leaves be placed in water or damp sand in a breeding 
cage. When the adult insects are reared, great care 
will be necessary in mounting them on account of 
their minute size. See page 298 for directions for 
mounting small insects. 

A very instructive collection can be made by 
pressing mined leaves, and mounting them as botan- 
ical specimens are mounted. Each specimen should 




FIG. 177. Leaf with serpentine mines. 



2IO 



INSECT LIFE. 



be carefully labeled with the name of the plant and 
the date of collecting the specimen. 

There are certain flies and beetles the larvae of 
which are leaf-miners, but the great majority of the 
insects that live in this way are larvae of minute 
moths, which belong to the superfamily TlNElNA 
(Tin-e-i'na) ; these are commonly called Tineids(Tin'- 
e-ids). 

GALLS AND GALL-INSECTS. 

There occur on the leaves, stems, or roots of very 
many species of plants abnormal growths caused by 
insects ; these are termed galls. Among the more 
familiar examples of galls are the various kinds of 




FIG. 178. An oak leaf bearing oak-apples. The larger one is represented 

cut open. 

oak-apples, of which a common one is illustrated by 
Fig. 178. 



FOREST LIFE. 211 

In the center of an oak apple there is a little cell, 
within which a larva lives till it gets its growth. 
This larva is hatched from an esrsr laid in the tissue 

o o 

of the leaf by a small, four-winged insect, called a 
gall-fly. When the young larva began to feed on 
the leaf, the leaf began to grow around it in a won- 
derful way ; so that very soon the larva was sur- 
rounded by a large ball of plant growth, which 
served as a home and furnished food for the larva. 

Why the plant grew in this way no one knows. As 
a rule, when a leaf-eating larva feeds on the tissue of 
a leaf there is no extra gro\vth ; but when the larva 
of a gall-fly begins to feed, an abnormal growth of 
the plant commences. More than this, this growth 
is of a definite form which is different for the differ- 
ent species of gall-flies. Hence, when an entomolo- 
gist who has studied these insects sees a familiar gall, 
he knows at once what species of insect produced it. 
It is natural to suppose that the larva excretes a 
poison, which acts on the plant in such a way as to 
produce this remarkable result. There are certain 
other gall-producing insects which belong to a differ- 
ent order than those that produce the oak-apples, 
the galls of which begin to grow before the larvas 
hatch. In these cases it is supposed that a drop of 
poison is deposited with the egg by the parent insect. 

Many species of gall-flies undergo their transfor- 
mations within their galls, while in other species the 
full-ofrown larva leaves the gall and enters the ground 

o o 

to transform. 

The gall represented by Fig. 178 is produced by 
a single larva. But certain species of gall-flies lay 
many eggs together, and there results the growth of 



212 



INSECT LIFE. 



a compound gall containing many cells, in each of 
which a larva gets its growth. The mossy-rose-gall, 
which occurs on the stem of the sweetbrier (Fig. 
179), is a familiar example of a many-celled gall. 




FlG. 179. The mossy-rose-gall. 

In the two kinds of galls figured here the larva 
lives in a closed cell which has no opening until one 
is made by the full-grown larva for his escape. Most 
galls of this kind are made by insects of the family 
CYNIPID^E (Cy-nip'i-das) of the order Hymenoptera. 
To this family the name gall-flies is restricted, al- 
though many other insects produce galls. Fig. 180 
represents an adult gall-fly greatly enlarged. 

The largest galls that occur on forest trees are 
produced by gall-flies, but there are other kinds of 



FOREST LIFE. 



213 




FIG. iSo. A gall-fly. 



galls which are much more abundant than those of the 

gall-flies ; these are the galls made by plant-lice and 

by mites. The galls 

produced by plant-lice, 

and also those produced 

by mites, differ from the 

galls of the gall-flies in 

that each gall has an 

open mouth. 

The conical galls 
which are so common 
on the leaves of witch- 
hazel (Fig. 181) are good 
illustrations of this type 
of gall. These galls project from the upper side of 
the leaf, but each has an opening on the lower side of 
the leaf. The plant-louse that produces' this gall is 
an agamic female (see page 177); when this female 
is mature, she gives birth to numerous young, which 

escape from the mouth 
of the gall, scatter over 
the leaf, and each in 
turn produces a gall. 

In most localities 
there are so many kinds 
of galls that it would be 
unwise for a student to 
attempt to study them 
all. A better plan is to 
select some one species 
or genus of trees and to study the galls made on 
these trees by one family of insects. Thus, if oaks 
occur in the locality, a good subject is the oak galls 




FIG. 181. 



214 INSECT LIFE. 

made by gall-flies (family Cynipidcs). The student 
should learn the different species of oaks that grow 
in the locality, and should always label the galls col- 
lected with the name of the particular species of oak 
on which they were found. The particular time of 
the year in which the galls are developed should be 
determined, and an effort should be made to breed 
the adult gall-flies. Many species of gall-flies under- 
go their transformations within their galls, while in 
other species the full-grown larva leaves the gall and 
enters the earth to transform. In the former case 
the adults are most surely obtained by leaving the 
galls on the trees and inclosing each in a little bag of 
Swiss muslin. And in the latter case care must be 
taken not to collect the galls before they are mature, 
else they will wither and the contained larvas perish. 
In breeding species that pass the winter in their galls, 
the galls should be left out of doors till spring to pre- 
vent the galls becoming too dry and hard.* 

In the study of galls made by plant-lice, select 
some common species of gall, so that specimens can 
be cut open and examined at frequent intervals. 
Note carefully by this method what goes on within 
the galls, and observe the spreading of the young 
from the galls and the formation of new galls. 

* For a thorough study of this subject, see the following : Alternating 
Generations : A Biological Study of Oak Galls and Gall-flies. By Her- 
mann Adler. Translated and edited by Charles R. Straton. Published 
by Macmillan & Co. Price, $3.25. 








4 5 

PLATE V. LONG-HORNED BEETLES. 



FOREST LIFE. 21 5 

INSECTS INFESTING THE TRUNKS AND BRANCHES OF 

TREES. 

The insects that live within the trunks and 
branches of trees are called borers. There are very 
many species of these, and representatives of several 
of the orders of insects, as well as of many different 
families, are found among them. 

In the study of these insects larvae should be col- 
lected from the infested trees from time to time and 
preserved in alcohol ; when the insects have trans- 
formed to pupae, these can be transferred to breeding 
ca^es and the adults reared. 

o 

If the infested wood is dead, a piece of it contain- 
ing the borers can be placed in a breeding cage at 
once, as soon as the larvae are found, and the insects 
bred in this way. 

Among: the more common borers are the larvae of 

o 

the long-horned beetles, which constitute the 
family CERAMBYClD^Cer.am-byc'i-dae). The 
larvae are footless grubs of the form shown 
in Fig. 182. The pupa state in some species 
is passed within the burrows made by the 
larvae ; in other species the larva makes a 
little ring of chips around itself between the 
bark and the wood, and changes to a pupa 
within this rude cocoon. Several examples 
of beetles of this family are represented on Plate V.* 

* EXPLANATION TO PLATE V. i. The ribbed pine-borer, Rhagium 
lineatum ; 2. The two-spotted Oberea, Oberea bimaculata, a borer in 
blackberry and raspberry ; 3. The sawyer, Monohamus confusor, a borer 
in pine and fir ; 4. The broad-necked Prionus, Prionns laticollis, a borer 
in the roots of grape, apple, poplar, and other trees ; 5. The beautiful 
maple-borer, Plaginotiis spe^iosus. 




2l6 



INSECT LIFE. 



If the bark be pulled from dead branches or trunks 
of trees, the inner layer and the sap-wood will be 
found to be ornamented in many cases with burrows 
of more or less regular form. These smoothly cut 
figures are the mines of the engraver-beetles. Many 
kinds of these en^ravin^s can be found, each charac- 

O O ' 




FIG. 183. 

teristic of a particular kind of engraver-beetle. A 
common pattern is shown in Fig. 183. The beetles 
that do this work are mostly of cylindrical form and 

of small size ; many spe- 
cies are almost micro- 
scopic, and the larger 
ones rarely exceed a 
quarter of an inch in 
length. Thev are usu- 

C5 ./ 

ally brown, sometimes 
black, and with many 
the hind end of the body 
is very blunt, as if cut 

FIG. I84.-A horn-tail. off ^hese beetles be _ 

long to the family SCOLYTID/E (Sco-lyt'i-dae). 

The insects known as horn-tails are often found 




FOREST LIFE. 



on the trunks of forest trees, in the wood of which the 
larvas bore. Fig. 184 represents an adult horn-tail. 
In this family the female has a long- ovipositor, with 
which she makes slender holes in the trunks of trees 
for the reception of her eggs. The horn-tails belong 
to the family SIRICID.E (Si-ric'i-dae) of the order Hy- 
menoptera. 

Among the more striking in appearance of the 
insects found on forest trees are certain ichneumon- 
flies that are parasitic on the larvas of the horn-tails. 
These ichneumon- 
flies bore holes into 
the trees infested 
by the horn-tails, 
and lay their eggs 
into the burrows 
of the latter. The 
larvas of the ichneu- 
mon-flies fasten 
themselves to the 
horn-tail larvae, and 
destroy them by 
sucking their blood. 
Fig. 185 represents 

one of these ichneu- 
mon - flies in the FlG> l8 5- The horn-tail parasite laying an egg. 

act of laying an egg. These insects belong to the 
family ICHNEUMONID^E (Ich-neu-mon'i-dse) of the or- 
der Hymenoptera. 




218 



INSECT LIFE. 



MISCELLANEOUS FOREST INSECTS. 

The Cicadas. 

The shrill Cicadas, people of the pine 

Making their summer lives one ceaseless song. Byron. 

Our more common species of cicadas are large 
insects, but as the nymphs live in the ground, and 
the adults spend most of their time high up among 
the branches of trees, they would attract compara- 
tively little attention were it not for their songs. The 

student of forest insects, how- 
ever, is soon made aware of the 
presence of cicadas if he collects 
at midday during the period of 
flight of these insects. Their song 

O * ' 

is a high, sharp trill, that far ex- 
ceeds in volume the song of any 
other insect that sings in the day- 
time. 

One of our most common spe- 
cies is the dosr-dav-har vest-fly, 

o ./ - ' 

Cicada tibiccn (Ci-ca'da ti-bi'cen). 
This insect (Fig. 186) is black and 
green in color and more or less 
powdered beneath. It is found 
every year in the localities in which it occurs, al- 
though it requires two years for an individual to at- 
tain its development. 

The species of cicada that attracts most attention 
is the periodical cicada, Cicada septendecim (C. scp- 
ten' de-ciiii). This species is often called the seventeen- 
year locust ; but as it is not a locust, this name should 




FIG. 186. 



FOREST LIFE. 



219 



not be used. This species is not quite so large as 
the dog-day-harvest fly, and is black and brick-red in 
color. It is remarkable on account of the slowness 
of its growth, the nymphs requiring seventeen years 
for their development in the North and thirteen years 
in the South. As all of the members of one genera- 
tion reach the adult state at about the same time, the 
species appears in immense swarms which attract 
general attention. In many localities several broods 
coexist ; this explains the fact that in such places 
these insects appear several times during a single 
period of seventeen or thirteen years. The adult 
female lays her egg in slits which she makes in the 
twigs of trees. The eggs hatch in about six weeks. 
The young nymphs drop to the ground and bury 
themselves in the earth, where they live by sucking 
the juices from the roots of trees. When full-grown, 
seventeen or thirteen years later, they crawl up to 
the surface of the ground and undergo their last 
molt on the trunks of trees. The last nymph skin is 
left clinging to the bark where the transformation 
occurred, and soon afterward the songs of the insects 
are heard. 

The student should collect nymph skins, adults, 
and twigs in which the eggs have been laid. 

The cicadas constitute the family CICADID/E (Ci- 
cad'i-dae) of the order Hemiptera. 

THE TREE-HOPPERS, OR BROWXIE-BUGS. 

The tree-hoppers are so called because they live 
upon trees, bushes, and vines, and can jump with 
great agility. Many of them are grotesque in ap- 
pearance, having great humps on their backs; and in 
15 



220 



INSECT LIFE. 





FIG. 188. 



all the prothorax is prolonged backward like a roof 
over the body (Fig. 187). A common species bears a 
pair of hornlike projections, which have giv- 
en it the name of the buffalo 
tree-hopper (Fig. 188); and an- 
other common species (Fig. 
189) excretes honey-dew, and 
is attended by ants. If the 
young entomologist wishes to laugh, let him look at 
the faces of tree-hoppers through a lens. A front 
view of several of these insect-Brownies is 
given in Fig. 190. Their eyes have a keen, 
droll look, and the line that separates the 
head from the prothorax gives them the 
appearance of wearing glasses. In some cases the 
prothorax is elevated above the head, so that it looks 





FIG. 190. -Tree-hoppers or Brownie-bugs. 



like a peaked nightcap ; in others it is shaped like a 
Tam-o'-shanter ; while others have prominent horns. 
The tree-hoppers feed upon plants, but they sel- 
dom appear in sufficient numbers to do much damage. 
They constitute the family MEMBRACID/E (Mem-brac'- 
i-das) of the order Hemiptera. 




PLATE VI. 



ROADSIDE BUTTERFLIES. 



CHAPTER VIII. 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 





* 

'OR the careful collector of insects, a 
country roadside is always a fruitful 
field. Here live all the insects de- 
scribed in the preceding- chapters, for 
there are roadside ponds, brooks, or- 
chards, and forests, as well as meadows. 
But this chapter is devoted to a few 
of the more prominent insects that live in grassy 
places, or on common roadside weeds and shrubs, or 
that lurk under stones, or that mine in roadside 
paths and cliffs. 

As in the preceding chapter, the principal object 
here is to point out subjects for study. The students 
that have carefully carried out the work indicated in 



221 



09-? 

+**** 



INSECT LIFE. 



earlier chapters will not need, in most cases, detailed 
directions for the study of these subjects ; in a few 
cases special directions are given. 

Balloons from the thistles 

Tell summer's disasters, 

The butterflies yellow, 

As caught in an eddy 

Of air's silent ocean, 

Sink, waver, and steady 

O'er goat's-beard and asters, 

Like souls of dead Mowers, 

With aimless emotion 

Still lingering unready 

To leave their old bovvers. Lowell. 

SPIDERS. 

Any one that loves the study of insect life is sure 
to be interested in the habits of spiders, although 

these creatures are not true 
insects ; and there is no bet- 
ter place for observing them 
than by roadsides. There 
are very many kinds of spiders, repre- 
senting many different families, but only 
a few of the more prominent ones can 
be mentioned here. 

THE FUNNEL-WEB WEAVERS. 

Even the most careful observers 
seldom realize what an immense num- 
ber of spider-webs are spun upon the 
IQI. Folded g ra ss by roadsides. But occasionally 
leaf of grass these webs are made visible in the ear- 

with egg-sac 

of spider. \y morning by the dew which has con- 




ROADSIDE LIFE. 



223 



densed upon them. At such times we may see the 
grass covered by an almost continuous carpet of silk. 
The greater number of the webs seen at such 
times are of the form which we term funnel-webs. 
They consist of a concave sheet of silk, with a fun- 
nel-shaped tube at one side, and numerous lines ex- 
tending in all directions to the supporting spears of 
grass (Fig. 192). The tube serves as a hiding place 




FIG. 192. Web of the grass-spider. 

for the owner of the web ; from this retreat the 
spider runs out on the upper surface of the \veb to 
seize any insect that alights upon it. The tube 
opens below, near the roots of the grass, so that the 



224 



INSECT LIFE. 



spider can escape from it if a too formidable insect 
comes upon the web. 

The most common species of funnel-web weaver 
is the grass-spider, Agalcna ncevia (Ag-a-le'na nce'vi-a) ; 
this abounds in all parts of the United States. 

THE ORB-WEAVERS. 

Those spiders that build nets which consist of a 
framework of radiating lines upon which is fastened 

a thread in a spiral 
manner (Fig. 195) 
are called the orb- 
weavers. There are 
many species of 
these, each differing 
somewhat in habits, 
but the more gen- 
eral features of 
their webs are quite 
similar. 

No more inter- 
esting subject for 
study can be found 
than the methods of 
work of these spi- 
ders ; and we will 

^^^^^^^^^__ not deprive the stu- 
dent of the pleasure of finding out for himself how 
they build their webs by describing the process in 
detail. We will, however, help him a little by call- 
ing attention to a few points. 

Find a completed web, and examine carefully the 
silk of which it is composed. With a small stick 




FIG. 193. Partially completed web of an orb- 
weaver. 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



7 t 



touch one of the turns of the spiral line, and observe 
the result when you attempt to take the stick away. 
In a similar manner 'touch one of the radiating lines, 
and also some of the 
lines that form the irreg- 
ular outer framework of 
the web. You will dis- 
cover that there are two 
kinds of silk in the web 
of an orb- weaver, which 
differ in two important 
characteristics ; note what 
these are, and determine 
to what extent each kind 
is used. What advanta- 
ges are gained by the use 
of each of these kinds of 
silk? 

If you have the use of 
a microscope, press a 
glass slip against a web 
so that a section of it shall 
adhere to it, and examine 
this section with a micro- 
scope. Make a sketch 
showing the difference in 
appearance of the two 
kinds of silk. 

Find a partially com- 
pleted web and observe 
that a temporary, spiral FIG. 194. A dewy morning, 
stay-line (Fig. 193, a, a) is 
used in the construction of the web before the appli- 




226 INSECT LIFE. 

cation of the permanent spiral line (Fig. 193, b, b\ 
How do these two lines differ? What becomes of 
the first line ? 

Throw an insect into a completed web and make 
notes on the way in which the spider captures and 
destroys its prey. If the web be that of one of the 
larger orb-weavers, a large insect, as a locust or 
grasshopper, can be used. 

Study different species of orb-weavers, and note 
differences in the structure of their webs and in the 
position of the spiders while waiting for their prey. 

Write an account of the habits of an orb-weaver. 

On dewy mornings the webs of the orb-weavers 
are often heavily loaded with dew, so that adjacent 
turns of the spiral thread adhere together. Fig. 194 
represents such a web one that the writer saw from 
his window while at work on this book. 

BALLOONING SPIDERS. 

There are certain spiders that make long journeys 
through the air like an aeronaut. These ballooning 
spiders are frequently very abundant, especially in 
warm autumn days. At such times innumerable 
threads can be seen streaming from fences, from 
bushes, and the tips of stalks of grass, or floating 
through the air. The ballooning spider climbs to 
some elevated point, which may be merely the tip of 
a stalk of grass, and then, standing on the tips of its 
feet, lifts its body as high as it can, and spins out a 
thread of silk. This thread is carried up and away 
by a current of air. When the thread is long 
enough, the force of the air current on it is sufficient 
to buoy the spider up. It then lets go its hold with 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 227 

its feet and sails away. That these spiders travel 
long 1 distances in this manner has been shown by the 
fact that they have been seen floating through the air 
at sea far from land. 

A NOISELESS, PATIENT SPIDER. 

A noiseless, patient spicier, 

I mark'd where, on a little promontory, it stood isolated ; 
Mark'd how, to explore the vacant, vast surrounding, 
It launch'd forth filament, filament, filammt out of itself; 
Ever unreeling them ever tirelessly speeding them. 

And you, O my soul, where you stand, 

Surrounded, surrounded, in measureless oceans of space, 

Ceaselessly musing, venturing, throwing seeking the spheres, to 

connect them ; 
Till the bridge you will need be form'd till the ductile anchor 

hold; 

Till the gossamer thread you fling catch somewhere, O my soul. 

Walt Whitman. 

THE COBWEB-WEAVERS. 

Many are the kinds of webs spun by different 
spiders. Some of them, as the orb-webs and the 
funnel-webs, delight us with their wonderful regular- 
ity of form, while others appear to be a mere shape- 
less maze of threads. Such are the structures whose 
presence in the corners of our rooms torment thrifty 
housewives, and which are disrespectfully termed 
cobwebs. 

Although the house spiders are the most familiar 
members of this family, the greater number of spe- 
cies spin their webs in the fields on bushes. These 
webs usually consist of a flat or curved sheet, under 
which the spider hangs back downward. This sheet 




228 INSECT LIFE. 

is supported by threads running in all directions to 
the neighboring objects. Frequently there is a large 
number of these supporting threads above the web, 
which serve the additional purpose of impeding the 
flight of insects and causing them to fall. 

Some of these spiders do not remain in their webs, 
but have a nest in a neighboring crack 
or corner, from which they rush to seize 
their prey. And sometimes there is a 
funnel-shaped tube leading to this nest. 
But these spiders differ from the true 
funnel - web weavers in running back 
downward on the lower side of their web. 

The cobweb-weavers are small spiders with unu- 
sually slim legs. Fig. 195 represents a common spe- 
cies. 

IN A GARRET. 

Here, in the summer, at a broken pane, 

The yellow wasps come in, and buzz and build 

Among the rafters ; wind and snow and rain 
All enter, as the seasons are fulfilled. 

Here where the gray incessant spiders spin, 
Shrouding from view the sunny world outside, 

A golden bumblebee has blundered in 
And lost the way to liberty, and died. 

Elisabeth Akers* 

THE RUNNING SPIDERS. 

There are certain large, dark-colored, hairy 
spiders that are common by roadsides, running over 
the ground or lurking under stones and fences. 
These spiders frequently attract attention by drag- 

* By permission of Messrs. Charles Scribner's Sons. 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



229 



ging after them a large gray ball (Fig. 196); this is 
the egg-sac which the female carries about with her 




FIG. 196. Lycosa and egg-sac. 

attached to her spinnerets. These spiders run swift- 
ly, and as they depend on the use of their legs for the 
capture of their prey they are called running spiders. 
The larger members of our common species be- 
long to the genus Lycosa (Ly-co'sa). These drag after 
them their egg-sacs, as described above; and when 
the young hatch they climb on their mother's back 
and are carried about fora time. The females of the 
genus Dolomcdcs (Dol-o-jne'des), which also belongs to 
the family of running spiders, carry their egg-sac in 
their mandibles until the young are ready to hatch. 
At this time the mother fastens the egg-sac in a bush 
and spins a web of irregular threads about 
it, among which the young spiders re- 
main for a time. 




THE JUMPING SPIDERS. 

The jumping spiders are of medium 
size, with a short body, and short, stout 
legs (Fig. 197). They are common on 
plants, logs, fences, and the sides of build- 
ings. They are very apt to attract attention by their 
peculiar appearance, their short, stout legs, bright 
colors, conspicuous eyes, and quick, jumping move- 



230 



INSECT LIFE. 



mcnts being very different from those of ordinary 
spiders. These self-possessed spiders are able to 
stare an ordinary observer out of countenance. They 
move sidewise or backward with great ease, and can 
jump a long distance. They stalk their prey, and 
make no webs except nests, in which they hide in 
winter or when molting or laying eggs. 

THE CRAB-SPIDERS. 

There are certain spiders which are called crab- 
spiders, on account of the short and broad form of 
the body, and the curious fact that they can walk 
more readily sidewise or backward than forward. 

These spiders spin no webs, but lie in wait for 
their prey. They live chiefly on plants and fences, 
and in the winter hide in cracks and under stones 
and bark. Most of the species are marked with gray 
and brown, like the bark upon which they live. Some 
species conceal themselves in flowers, where they lie 
in wait for their prey. These are brightly colored, 
like the flowers which they inhabit, so 
that insects visiting flowers may alight 
within reach of a spider before seeing it. 
One of the best-known members of 
FIG. 198. this family is the female of Misumena 

Misumena vatta. J 

vatia (Mi-su-me'na va'ti-a). This is milk- 
white, with sometimes a light crimson mark on each 
side of the abdomen, and is found within flowers 
(Fig. 198). 

THE TARANTULAS AND THE TRAP-DOOR SPIDERS. 

Those who live in the warmer parts of our coun- 
try know well the large spiders commonly called ta- 




ROADSIDE LIFE. 231 

rantulas. These are the giants among spiders, some 
of them being the largest known ; but some species 
of this family are not very large. They are dark-col- 
ored, hairy spiders, and can be distinguished from 
the other families mentioned here by the fact that the 
claw of the mandibles works up and down instead of 
side wise. 

The members of this family do not construct true 
webs, but they dig long tubes in the earth which 
they line with silk, or line their hiding places in clefts 
in trees or elsewhere with a layer of silk. They live 
only in warm countries. 

One of the best known of the tarantulas is Euryp- 
clma Jientzii (Eu-ryp* cl-ma kcntz'i-i). This species oc- 
curs in the South and in the Middle West, and is the 
largest of our spielers (Fig. 199). Several closely 
allied species are found in California. 

But the members of this family that have at- 

,/ 

tracted most admiration on account of their habits 




FIG. 199. A tarantula, Eurypelma hentzii. 

are the trap-door spiders. These dig a tube in the 
ground, as do many other members of this family ; 



232 



INSECT LIFE. 



but this tube is lined with a denser layer of silk, and 
is provided with a hinged lid, which fits the opening 
of the tube with wonderful accuracy (Fig. 200). 
There are two small holes in the edge of the lid 
farthest from the hinge ; when the spider enters its 
nest it runs over the door, and, catching the claws of 
its hind legs into these holes, pulls the door shut after 
it. The spider hides in this nest when not seeking 




FlG. 200. Entrance to nest of a trap-door spider. 

its prey. Some species take the precaution to build 
a branch to their nest, and to provide this branch 
with a door. As this door forms a part of one side 
of the main tube, it is not likely to be observed by 
any creature which may find its way past the first 
door of the nest. 

Several species of trap-door spiders occur in the 
Southern and Southwestern States. 

THE HARVESTMEN OR GRANDFATHER-GRAYBEARDS. 

Among the more common frequenters of road- 
sides are the harvestmen, which are near relatives of 
spiders. They differ from spiders, however, in hav- 
ing the abdomen segmented. Most harvestmen can 
be recognized by their very long and slender legs 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



233 



(Fig. 201), although some species have comparatively 
short ones. They feed on small insects, especially 
aphids, and are perfectly harmless. 




FIG. 2ci. 



It is a common practice with children to catch 
these creatures and say to them, " Grandfather-gray- 
beard, tell me where the cows are or I'll kill you ! ' 
As the poor frightened animal points its legs in all 
directions in its frantic efforts to escape, it usually 
earns its freedom, but too often it is not without the 
loss of one or more legs. 

THE LOCUSTS, GRASSHOPPERS, AND CRICKETS. 

The locusts, grasshoppers, and crickets are the 
most universally common and conspicuous of the 
roadside insects ; for at any time, from early spring 
to late autumn, some of them can be found by any 
grassy roadside. 

These three groups of insects constitute three 
closely related families of the order Orthoptera, 
which are characterized on pages 72-74. They all 
agree in having the hind legs fitted for jumping, but 
differ in the form of the antennas and of the oviposi- 
tor, and in the number of segments in the tarsi. 

The crickets are generally known as such, but 
confusion exists in the common names of the other 




234 INSECT LIFE. 

t\vo families, for most people that have not made a 
special study of insects do not make any distinction 
between the locusts and the true grasshoppers, but 
call the members of both families grasshoppers. On 
this account the locusts are sometimes called the 
short-horned grasshoppers, and the true grasshoppers 
are distinguished as the long-horned grasshoppers. 

The pupil should collect specimens of each of the 
three families, and, after studying the descriptions 

on pages 72-74, label these 
specimens properly and place 
them in his collection. 

Which of the two insects 
represented in Fig. 202 is a 
FIG. 202.-A locust and I true grasshopper ? 

grasshopper. Jf the pup i] hag not a l rea dy 

done so, a series of specimens of either locusts, grass- 
hoppers, or crickets which illustrates incomplete 
metamorphosis should be collected. See Lessons 
XII and XIII. 

Frequently small red parasites are found clinging 
to locusts ; these are mites. See page 56. 

Many locusts and grasshoppers exhibit what is 
known as protective coloring that is, their colors 
are such as to protect them from birds when at rest 
in their usual haunts. Thus the true grasshoppers, 
which live among the blades of grass or the foliage 
of shrubs and trees, are usually green, while many 
locusts that rest on the ground are of the same color 
as the soil. 

Collect specimens illustrating this. 

Certain species of locusts are very liable to be 
destroyed by a fungous disease. The victims before 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 235 

dying climb up some weed, to which they cling- so 
firmly in their death grip that their bodies remain 
clinging to the plant long after death. Find speci- 
mens of locusts that have been killed in this way and 
preserve them with the part of the plant to which 
they are clinging. 

THE GRASSHOPPER AND THE CRICKET. 

The poetry of earth is never dead : 

When all the birds are faint with the hot sun, 

And hide in cooling trees, a voice will run 

From hedge to hedge about the new-mown mead : 

That is the grasshopper's he takes the lead 

In summer luxury he has never done 

With his delights ; for, when tired out with fun, 

He rests at ease beneath some pleasant weed. 

The poetry of earth is ceasing never : 

On a lone winter evening, when the frost 

Has wrought a silence, from the stove there shrills 

The cricket's song, in warmth increasing ever, 

And seems to one in drowsiness half lost, 

The grasshopper's among some grassy hills. 

John Keats. 

THE SONGS OF INSECTS. 

Comparatively little is known regarding the songs 
of insects, if under this head we include all the 
sounds produced by these creatures. In a few in- 
stances the way in which the sounds are produced 
and the apparent object are understood ; but in the 
great majority of cases this is not so. 

Flies buzz when on the wing, but why? It may 
be that the sound is merely incident to the rapid mo- 
tion of their wings, and means no more than the hum 
of rapidly moving machinery. But this can hardly 

16 



236 



INSECT LIFE. 



be true of the sounds produced by bees. The care- 
ful student of the honey-bee soon learns a language 
which is as intelligible to him as spoken words. The 
contented hum of the worker gathering pollen and 
nectar is very different from the savage buzz of the 
s:ime individual when threatening an intruder who is 
disturbing the hive. So also is the sound produced 
by a queenless colony very different from that pro- 
duced by one that has not this misfortune. The 
sound produced by bees emerging from any number 
of hives when merely the ordinary labor is going on 
would not be mistaken for the tumult caused by a 
single swarm leaving its hive for a new home. 

Still, perhaps the only meaning of these various 
sounds is that the bees move in a different way when 
influenced by different emotions, and that the produc- 
tion of a peculiar sound is merely incidental and is 
not the object of the peculiar motion. 

There are insects, however, in which distinct 
musical organs are developed, and that make move- 
ments that have for their sole object the production 
of sound. It is to these singers that we will turn our 
attention. 

Chief among them are the cicadas, locusts, grass- 
hoppers, and crickets. In all of these it is only the 
males that sing, these insects resembling the song- 
birds in this respect. We will study here only the 
musical organs of Orthoptera. 

Locusts produce sounds in two ways : First, cer- 
tain species rub the inner surface of the hind femora, 
upon which there is a row of minute spines, against 
the outer surface of the fore wings. In this case each 
fore wing serves as a fiddle and each hind leg as a fid- 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



237 



die-bow. Second, other species rub together the up- 
per surface of the front edge of the hind wings and 
the under surface of the fore wings. This is done 
while the locust is flying, and the result is a crack- 
ling sound. Third, the males of the different kinds 
of true grasshoppers, including the katydids, are pro- 
vided with an elaborate musical apparatus, by means 
of which they call their mates. This consists of a pe- 
culiar arrangement of the veins and cells of a portion 
of each fore wing near its base. This arrangement 
differs in the different spe- 
cies, but in each it is such 
that by rubbing the fore 
wings together they are 
made to vibrate, and thus 
produce the sound. Fig. 
203 represents a fore wing 
of the male of a common 
meadow grasshopper, and 
Fig. 204 that of a female of 
the same species. 

Of all the insect musi- 
cians the crickets are most 
easily observed ; we will 
therefore select them for our special study : 

1. Collect some crickets with fully developed 
wings and bring them alive to school. 

2. Note that some of the crickets have a long, 
spear-shaped organ at the hind end of the body : 
these are the females and this organ is the oviposi- 
tor. The males differ from the females, not only in 
lacking the ovipositor, but also in the form of the 
front wings. 




FIG. 203. Wing- 
cover of male 
meadow grass- 
hopper. 



FIG. 204. Wing- 
cover of female 
meadow grass- 
hopper. 



238 



INSECT LIFE. 




3. Prepare a breeding cage by placing a sod of 
growing grass in it, put several living male crick- 
ets in it, and set the cage where the insects can be 
watched. After the insects have become used to the 
cage they will chirp, and the pupils can determine 
how it is done. 

4. Kill a pair of crickets by placing them in a 
cyanide bottle and then study their wings. How do 

the front wings of 
the male differ from 
those of the female? 
Make drawings 

showing the differ- 
ences. 

5. If you have 
the use of a micro- 
scope observe that 
the principal vein 
which extends diag- 
onally across the 
base of the fore 
wing of the male 

(Fig. 205, a) is furnished on the lower side of the wing 
with ridges like those of a file (Fig. 205, ti) ; and that 
on the inner margin of this wing, a short distance 
toward the base from the end of the principal vein, 
there is a hardened portion, which may be called the 
scraper (Fig. 205, c\ 

6. Watch a cricket while chirping and determine 
how the files and scrapers of the two fore wings are 
used. 

7. Write an account of the way in which crickets 
chirp. 




FIG. 205. Musical organs of a male cricket. 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 239 

KATYDID. 

I love to hear thine earnest voice, 

Wherever thou art hid, 
Thou testy little dogmatist, 

Thou pretty katydid ! 
Thou mindest me of gentle folks 

Old gentle folks are they 
Thou say'st an undisputed thing 

In such a solemn way. 

Oliver Wendell Holmes. 

CATERPILLARS, MOTHS, AND BUTTERFLIES. 

The Tiger-moths. 

Among the very many kinds of caterpillars that 
may be found by roadsides, the most common and 
most widely distributed are the larvae of certain 
tiger-moths. These larvae are densely clothed with 
hair, and are often found running over the surface of 
the ground ; for many species seem to have but little 
choice of food plant, but roam free like cattle in a 
pasture. When full grown these larvae spin cocoons, 
which are composed of the hair of the larvae fastened 
together with a thin warp of silk. The adults are 
called tiger-moths because many of the species are 
conspicuously spotted. 

The tiger-moths constitute the family ARCTIID^ 
(Arc-ti'i-dae). There is not space here to describe 
other moths that occur by roadsides. 

In collecting these larvae for breeding observe in 
the case of each species whether it is restricted to 
some particular kind of plant or not. In the former 
case the breeding cage should be supplied with that 
kind of plant, but in the latter case a sod of grass 
will probably furnish the larvae satisfactory food. 



240 



INSECT LIFE. 




FIG. 206. 



The most commonly observed species of these insects 
are the following :- 

The Isabella tiger-moth, Pyrrharctia Isabella (Pyr- 
r/iarc'ti-a is-a-bcl' la}. The larva of this species is the 
evenly clipped, furry caterpillar, reddish brown in 

the middle and black 
at each end, which is 
seen so commonly in 
the autumn and early 
spring (Fig. 206). The 

^^^^^^ adult is of a dull gray- 

ish tawny yellow, with a few black dots on the wings. 
The yellow-bear Spilosoma virginica (Spil-o-so'ma 
vir-om'i-ca).--The larva of this species is one of the 
most common hairv cat- 

/ 

erpillars found feeding 

on herbaceous plants. It 

is clothed with yellow 

hairs, which are very un- 
even in length, and which 

vary greatly in color in 

different individuals. The moth (Fig. 207) is snowy 

white, with the wings marked by a few black dots ; 

these vary in number, but there are rarely more 

than three on each wing. 

The salt-marsh caterpillar, Estigmene acrcea (Es-tig- 

me'ne a-crce'a). This 
species is not re- 
stricted to salt- 
marshes, as its name 
might indicate, but 
is widely distributed 




FIG. 207. Spilosoma virginica. 




FlG. 208. Estigmene acrcea. 



throughout the Uni- 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



241 




FlG. 2O> Eyprepia virgo. 



ted States. The moth (Fig. 208) is white, marked 
with yellow and black. The sexes differ greatly in 
the ground col- 
or of the wings ; 
in the female 
this is white 
throughout ; in 
the male only 
the upper sur- 
face of the fore 
wings is white, 
the lower sur- 
face of the fore wings and the hind wings above and 
below being yellow. 

The most striking in appearance of our common 
tiger-moths belong to the genus Eyprepia (Ey-pre'pi-a). 
Of these there 
are many spe- 
cies. Fig. 209 
represents one 
of the larger 
ones. In these 
insects the fore 
wings are vel- 
vety black, 
marked with 

yellowish or pink bands ; in some species 
the lighter color predominates, so that the 
fore wings appear to be yellow or pink 
spotted with black. 

The harlequin milkweed-caterpillar, Cycnia egle 
(Cyc'ni-a egle).- -This larva is the most common cater- 
pillar found on milkweed. It is clothed with tufts 




FlG. 210. The harlequin milkweed- 
caterpillar. 



242 



INSECT LIFE. 



of orange, black, and white (Fig. 210). The adult 
has mouse-gray, unspotted wings. 

MOTHS.* 

Ghosts of departed winged things, 

What memories are those 
That tempt you with your damask wings 

Here where my candle glows ? 

Vainly you hover, circling oft 

The tongue of yellow flame : 
A tiger by caresses soft 

You vainly seek to tame. 

Here is no hope for you : nay, here 

Death lurks within the light, 
To leap upon you flying near 

And sweep you from the night. 

Moon-butterflies, back to your blooms 

Born of the dew and stars ! 
Hence, ghosts, and find again your glooms 

Hidden by shadow-bars. 

Quick speed across the dusky blue, 

Lest, in a sudden breath, 
This tawny tiger wake, and you 

Endure a second death ! 

Frank Dempster Sherman. 

THE SWALLOW-TAIL BUTTERFLIES. 

These magnificent butterflies are easily recog- 
nized by their large size and the tail-like prolonga- 
tions of the hind wings. The ground color of the 
wings is black, which is usually marked with yellow, 

* From Lyrics for a Lute, by permission of Messrs. Houghton, 
Mifflin & Co. 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



243 










and often with metallic blue or green ; sometimes 
the yellow markings are more conspicuous than the 

black ground 
color. The swal- 
low-tails belong 
to the family PA- 

PILIOXID^E (Pa- 

pil-i-on'i-das). The 
following well- 

known species will 
serve as illustra- 
tions : 

The black swal- 
low-tail, Papilio polyxcnes (Pa-pil 1 
i-o po-lyx'e-nes). In the adult the 
wings are black, crossed with 
two rows of yellow spots, and 
with marginal lunules of the 
same color. The two rows of 
spots are much more distinct in 
the male than in the female. 
The larva (Fig. 21 1) is the green 
caterpillar, ringed with black 
and spotted with yellow, that 
eats the leaves of caraway. 

The tiger swallow-tail, Jas- 
oniades glaucus (Jas-o-ni'a-des 
glau'cus}. This is the very com- 
mon large swallow tail with yel- 
low wings. On the fore wings 
there are four black bars extending back from the 
costa ; the inner one of these crosses the hind wings 
also. In the South there are two forms of the fe- 




FIG. 211. Larva of the 
black swallow-tail. 



244 



INSECT LIFE. 



male; in the second form the disk of the win<rs is 

o 

entirely black, but the black bands of the other form 

are faintly indicated by a darker 
shade. The larva of this species is 
represented by Fig. 212. It has 
the curious habit of weaving upon 
a leaf a carpet of silk, upon which 




FIG. 212. Larva of the 
tiger swallow-tail on 
its bed. 




FIG. 213. The zebra-swallow-tail. 



it rests when not feeding ; when nearly full grown, 
instead of spinning a simple carpet as before, it 
stretches a web across the hollow of a leaf, and thus 
makes a spring bed upon which it sleeps. 

The zebra swallow-tail, Ipliiclidcs ajax (Ipk-i-cli'des 
<?y<2;r).--This butterfly (Fig. 213) has the wings 
crossed by several bands of greenish white. Three 
distinct forms of this species occur; these differ in 
size, in the length of the tails of the hind wings, and 
in the time of appearance. The one figured here is 
the early-spring form. 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



245 



THE WHITES AND THE YELLOWS. 

These are the most abundant of all our butterflies, 
being common everywhere in fields and roads. 
They are usually of 
medium size, but 
some of them are 
small. They belong 
to the family PlER- 
ID^E (Pi-er'i-das). 

THE WHITES.- 
The more common 
representatives of 
this group are the 

FlG. 214. A cabbage-butterfly. 

well-known cabbage- 

<_5 

butterflies. The most widely distributed species is 
Picris rapte (Pi'e-ris rapcz). Fig. 214 represents the 





FIG. 215. Larvae and pupa 
of a cabbage-butterfly. 



male ; in the female there are two spots on the outer 
part of the fore wing, besides the black tip. In Fig. 



246 



INSECT LIFE. 




FIG. 216. A yellow. 



215 two larvae and a chrysalis are represented on a 
cabbage leaf. 

O 

THE YELLOWS.- -The yellows are easily recog- 
nized by their bright yellow colors, although in some 

species whitish forms 
occur. They abound 
almost everywhere in 
open fields, and are com- 
mon in wet places in 
roads. Fig. 216 repre- 
sents the male of a com- 
mon species ; in the fe- 
male the border on the 
^^^^^ fore wings is broader, 

and contains a submarginal row of yellow spots. 
This species is dimorphic. The second form is rep- 
resented only by the female sex, and differs in having 
the ground color of the wings white instead of yel- 
low. The larva feeds on clover and allied plants. 

THE GOSSAMER-WINGED BUTTERFLIES. 

There are certain butterflies, many of which are 
common by roadsides, that are of small size and deli- 
cate structure. These constitute the family LYC^N- 
ID^: (Ly-caen'i-das), or gossamer-winged butterflies. 
They resemble in size the smaller skippers (see page 
Si), but can be distinguished at a glance from the 
skippers by their delicate wings and more slender 
bodies. Our common species are grouped under 
three heads the coppers, the blues, and the hair- 
streaks. 

THE COPPERS.- -The coppers are easily distin- 
guished from other gossamer-winged butterflies by 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



247 




,,-..- 





FIG. 218. A blue. 



their orange-red and brown colors, each with a cop- 
pery tinge, and conspicuous black 

markings. Fig. 217 represents a 

common species. 

THE BLUES. The blues are so 

called on account of the blue color 

of the upper surface of the wings. FlG - 2I7 '~ A copper - 

The extent of this color, how- 
ever, differs greatly in different 
species, and also in the two 
sexes of the same species. Fig. 
218 represents the size and 
form of a common species. 

THE HAIR-STREAKS.- -These 
are usually dark brown, with 
delicate striped markings on 

the lower surface of the wings, 

which suggested the common 

name given above ; but some spe- 
cies are brilliantly marked with 

metallic blue or green. The 

hind wings are also commonly 

furnished with delicate tail-like 

prolongations (Fig. 219). The 

fore wings of the male often bear 

a small dull oval spot near the FIG. 2 i 9 .-A hair-streak. 

middle of the costal part of the wing the discal stig- 
ma which is filled with the peculiar scent-scales 
known as andriconia. 

THE FOUR-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES. 

The family NYMPHALID^ (Nym-phari-clas), which 
includes a large proportion of our butterflies, differ 




248 



INSECT LIFE. 



from all others in our fauna in having the fore legs 
very greatly reduced in size in both sexes. So great 
is the reduction that these legs can not be used for 
walking, but are folded on the breast like a tippet. 
A slight reduction in the size of the fore legs oc- 
curs in the Lycasnidae, but there it occurs only in 
the males and to a much less degree than in this 
family. 

This is the largest of the families of butterflies. 
It not only surpasses the other families in number of 
species, but it contains a greater number and variety of 
striking forms and also a larger proportion of the spe- 
cies of butterflies familiar to every observer of insects. 
There may be in any locality one or two species of 




FIG. 220. The monarch. 



yellows or of whites more abundant, but the larger 
number of species commonly observed are four- 
footed butterflies. The following are some of the 
more common forms: 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



249 



THE MONARCH. The monarch, Anosia plcxippus 
(A-no'si-a plcx-ip'pus], can be recognized by Fig. 220. 
The larva feeds upon different species of milk- 
weed. When full grown it is yellow, broadly 
banded with black, and bears a pair of long, fleshy 
filaments on the second thoracic segment and a 
similar pair on the seventh abdominal segment. 
The chrysalis is bright green, dotted with golden 

spots. 

THE VICEROY.- -The viceroy, Basilarchia arcJiip- 
pus (Bas-i-lar'cJii-a ar-cliip' pus), resembles the monarch 
in color and markings, but can be distinguished by 
its smaller size and by the presence of a transverse 
black band on the hind wings (Fig. 221). 




FIG. 221. The v.ceroy. 

Notwithstanding the close resemblance in ap- 
pearance of these two insects, they belong to dif- 
ferent subfamilies ot butterflies, the viceroy exhib- 
iting: to a wonderful degree what is known as mim- 

o o 

icry. 

THE CRESCENT-SPOTS. These are small butter- 



250 



INSECT LIFE. 



flies, of which many species occur in this country. 
They are of a fulvous color, heavily marked with 
black. Each species varies considerably in mark- 
ings, and different species re- 
semble each other quite close- 
ly, making this a difficult 
group for the beginning stu- 
dent. Fig. 222 represents a 
common species. 

THE FRITILLARIES. The 
fritillaries (frit'il-la-ries) is a 

group of butterflies including species varying from 
a little below to somewhat above medium size. The 
color of the wings is fulvous, bordered and check- 
ered with black ; the lower surface of the hind wings 
is often marked with curving rows of silvery spots. 
The larvas feed upon the leaves of violets. Fig. 223 
represents a common species. 




FIG. 222. A crescent-spot. 




FIG. 223. A fritiilary. 



THE ANGLE-WINGS.- -To this group belong many 
of our best-known butterflies. With these the outer 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



251 



margin of the fore wings is usually decidedly angular 
or notched, as if a part had been cut away. A large 
proportion of the species hibernate in the adult state, 
and some of them are the first butterflies to appear 
in the spring. The following are some of our more 
common species: 

The red admiral, Vanessa atalanta (Va-ncs'sa at-a- 
/an'ta).--The larva of this species feeds chiefly on 
nettle and on 
hop. The adult 
is represented 
by Fig. 224. 

The painted 
beauty, Vanessa 
hunt era ( V. Inui'- 
te-ra).- -The up- 
per surface of 
this butterfly is 
represented by 
Fig. 225 ; on the lower surface there are two eye- 
like spots on each hind wing. The larva feeds on 

everlasting (Gna- 
phalium) and allied 
plants. 

The cosmopoli- 
tan butterfly, Va- 
nessa car did (V. ear'- 
dn-i)- -This butter- 
fly resembles the 
preceding very 

FIG. 225. The painted beauty. i i i j 

closely in color and 

markings, but can be distinguished by the fact that 
on the lower surface of each hind wing there is a 
17 




FIG. 224. The red admiral. 




252 



INSECT LIFE. 



submarginal row of four or five eyelike spots. The 
larva feeds on thistles and allied plants. This but- 
terfly is distributed 
over the greater part 
of the world. 

The American 
tortoise-shell, Aglais 
milberti (Ag'lais mil- 
&T'/z).--The larvas of 
this species feed up- 
on nettle, and are 

gregarious in their early stages. The adult can be 
recognized by Fig. 226. 

The mourning-cloak, Euvanessa antiopa (En-va- 
nes' sa an-ti'o : pa).--This butterfly (Fig. 227) is one of 




FIG. 226. The American tortoise-shell. 




FIG. 227. The mourning-cloak. 



the first to be seen in the spring, as it hibernates in 
the adult state. The larvag live on willow, elm, pop- 
lar, and redbud ; they are gregarious, and often 
strip large branches of their leaves. 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



253 



The compton-tortoise, Eugonia j-album (Eu-go'ni-a 
j-al'bum). The upper surface of this species is repre- 
sented by Fig-. 
228 ; on the 
lower surface 
of the hind 
wings there is 
a small L- 
shaped silvery 
bar. 

There are 
several com- 
angle- 

i , FIG. 228. The compton-tortoise. 

flies that resemble the preceding species in having a 
metallic spot on the lower surface of the hind wings, 
but differ in having the inner margin of the fore 

wings roundly notched 
beyond the middle. 
These belong to the ge- 
nus Polygonia (Pol-y-go'- 
ni-d). 

THE MEADOW. 
BROWNS.- -There are sev- 
eral common butterflies 



mon 
wing 





FIG. 229. A meadow-brown. 



that are brown in color 
and whose markings con- 
sist almost entirely of eyelike spots. As these are 
usually confined to grassy places, they are called the 
meadow-browns. One of them is represented by 
Fig. 229. 



254 



INSECT LIFE. 



THE BUTTERFLY.* 

Leafless, stemless, floating flower, 

From a rainbow's scattered bower, 

Like a bubble of the air 

Blown by fairies, tell me where 

Seed or scion I may find 

Bearing blossoms of thy kind. John B, Tabb. 

THE BEES, WASPS, AND DIGGER-WASPS. 

Throughout the summer and autumn the bees, 
wasps, and digger-wasps abound on the blossoms of 
roadside weeds. It requires some study and obser- 
vation to distinguish these three groups of insects, 
but the pupils should learn to do so. Specimens of 
several species of each of these groups should be col- 
lected, properly labeled, and placed in the collection. 
All of these belong to the order Hymenoptera. 

THE BEES. 

The bees can be distinguished from all other Hy- 
menoptera by the form of the basal segment of the 

hind tarsi (Fig. 230, c). 
This segment is more or 
less dilated, flattened, 
usually hairy, and bears 
an apparatus for collect- 
ing and carrying pollen. 
In some bees, however 
those that do not make 

FIG. 230. Legs of insects: a, wasp ; , nests for themselves, but 
ichneumon-fly ; c, bee ; t, trochan- , . . 

ter; m, metatarsus. lay their CggS in the 





* From Poems by John B. Tabb, by permission of Messrs. Copeland 
and Day. 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 255 

nests of other bees this segment is narrower, and 
is not furnished with organs for collecting and car- 
rying pollen. 

Some bees are solitary that is, each female makes 
a nest for her own young. Several kinds of these 
will be described later. Here mention will be made 
only of the social bees those kinds in which a large 
number of individuals work together to make a 
common nest. Of these there exist in this country 
the honey-bee and various species of bumblebees. 
These belong to the family APIDJE (A'pi-dse). 

THE HONEY-BEE. The honey-bees are constant 
visitors of roadside blossoms ; here they are intently 
busy probing rapidly flower after flower as if they 
had not a moment to lose. Some amass great loads 
of yellow pollen on their hind tegs, while others 
think only of gathering nectar. Some of them are 
plebeian black bees, while others bear the yellow 
bands at the base of the abdomen, characteristic of 
the more aristocratic Italian blood. The bees never 
seem satisfied with the yield of nectar; they drain a 
few florets on a spray of blossoms, and then, as if 
hoping to find a larger crop, they fly to another, only 
to repeat the operation a moment later. 

As there are many special books on the honey- 
bee, we will not take the space to describe here the 
habits of this wonderful species. The best way to 
study it is to spend some time in an apiary with a 
practical beekeeper, and then continue the study by 
means of an observation hive, which can be obtained 
of most dealers in beekeepers' supplies. Such a 
hive can be placed in a schoolroom with its entrance 
at a window, and so arranged that the bees can not 



256 INSECT LIFE. 

enter the room, but admitting of free examination of 
the operations of the bees through the glass sides of 
the hive. 

BEES.* 

Bees don't care about the snow; 
I can tell you why that's so : 

Once I caught a little bee 

Who was much too warm for me ! 

frank Dempster Sherman. 

THE BUMBLEBEES. The clumsy, blundering 
bumblebees are one of the most characteristic fea- 
tures of roadside life. There are many kinds of them ; 
more than fifty species have been described from 
North America alone. 

With the bumblebees as with the honey-bee and 
with other social Hymenoptera, there are three 
forms of individuals in each species the males or 
drones, the females or queens, and the workers. In 
the spring and early summer only queens are found ; 
these are larger than the other two forms. A little 
later in the season the workers appear. There is a 
great variation in size of the workers of some species, 
but usually they can be easily distinguished from the 
queens by their smaller size. The males or drones 
are developed in the latter part of the summer. 
They resemble the workers in size, but differ in that 
the pollen baskets of the tibias of the hind legs are 
imperfectly developed. The fringe of hairs is not so 
long as in the workers, and there are scattered hairs 
over the surface of the tibia within the fringes. 

* From Little-Folk Lyrics, by permission of Messrs. Houghton, 
Mifflin cS: Co. 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 257 

In the latter part of the summer the pupils should 
collect the three forms of some of the more common 
species of bumblebees. 

The nests of bumblebees are made in deserted 
mouse-nests. In early spring a queen finds a nest in 
which a mouse has passed the winter, and places 
within it a ball of pollen, upon which she lays some 
eggs. As soon as the larvse hatch they eat into the 
pollen mass in all directions and, when full-grown, 
make for themselves silken cocoons and change to 
pupae. These cocoons the old bees strengthen with 
wax, and after the young bees vacate them they are 
used as storing cells for honey. This explains the 
irregularity of the bumblebee-comb. The first 
broods of the season are workers, and relieve the 
queen of all duties except laying the eggs. Later in 
the summer males and young queens appear. In the 
autumn the colony breaks up, and all of the bees ex- 
cept the young queens perish. These crawl away in- 
to some protected place and pass the winter. In the 
spring each queen that has survived the winter founds 
a new colony, performing, until a brood of workers 
has been developed, both the duties of queen and of 
worker. 

THE HOLLYHOCK.* 

Seraglio of the Sultan Bee ! 

I listen at the waxen door, 
And hear the zithern's melody 

And sound of dancing on the floor. 

Frank Dempster Sherman. 



* From Lyrics for a Lute, by permission of Messrs. Houghton 
Mifflin & Co. 



2 5 8 



INSECT LIFE. 



THE WASPS. 



Many kinds of wasps and wasplike insects can be 
found on roadside flowers. The true wasps can be 
distinguished from the wasplike insects by the fact 
that when at rest they fold their wings lengthwise 
like a fan. Collect specimens of true wasps. 

As with the bees, some of the true wasps are soli- 
tary, while other species are social. 

THE SOLITARY WASPS.- -The different species of 
solitary wasps vary greatly in habits. Some are min- 
ers, digging tunnels in the earth ; some are carpenters, 
cutting tubular nests in wood, and showing a mason's 
skill by partitioning their tunnels off into cells with 
mud ; while others are masons pure and simple, build- 
ing oval or globular mud-nests, which they fasten to 
twigs of trees, the sides of buildings, or to other ob- 
jects. 



r 




FlG. 231. Eumenes fraternus and its nest. 

The solitary wasps constitute the family EUMENI- 
(Eu-men'i-das). In this family the tibise of the mid- 
dle legs bear a single terminal spur, and the tarsal 
claws are armed with a tooth. A common represen- 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



259 



tative of the family is Eumenes fraternus (Eii me-nes fra- 
ter' mis), which makes a neat little nest, appearing like 
a miniature water-jug, attached to a twig (Fig. 231). 

THE SOCIAL WASPS. The social wasps are the 
builders of the well-known paper nests. There are 
two types of these 
nests. In one the 
nest consists of a 
single comb, sus- 
pended by a pe- 
duncle, and is not 
inclosed by an en- 
velope (Fig. 232). 
The wasps that build nests of this form belong to the 
genus Polistes (Po-lis'tes). In this genus the abdomen 
is long and spindle-shaped (Fig. 233). The species 
are black, ringed with 
yellow, or are brown- 
ish. 

In the other type 
of nest there are sev- 
eral combs when the 




FIG. 232. Nest of Polistes. 





FIG. 233. Polistes. 



FIG. 234. Nest of Vespa. 



nest is completed, and all are inclosed by a spherical 
paper envelope (Fig. 234). These nests are made by 




2 6o INSECT LIFE. 

wasps of the genus Vcspa, which are commonly known 
as yellow-jackets, and as hornets. With these insects 
the body is comparatively short and stout (Fig. 235), 
and is black, spotted and banded with yellowish white. 
Some species of Vcspa attach their nests to build- 
ings or to the branches of shrubs and trees. Such 
nests are made of a gray paper com- 
posed of fibers of weather-worn wood, 
which the wasps obtain from fences and 
the sides of unpainted buildings. 

Other species build their nests in 
holes in the ground. These are usually 
FIG. 2.i5. vespa. composed of brownish paper which is 
quite fragile, being composed of more 
or less decayed wood. Owing to the fragile nature 
of this paper, the outer envelope of such nests con- 
sists of many small, shell-like parts fastened together, 
instead of large sheets. 

The social wasps resemble the bumblebees in 
that a colony exists only one season ; the males and 
workers die in the autumn, the young queens hiber- 
nate, and each starts a new colony in the spring, the 
queen at first performing the duties of both queen 
and worker. The social wasps belong to the family 
VESPID.E (Ves'pi-dae). 

THE DIGGER-WASPS. 

There are several families of vvasplike insects 
which have been classed together as the dieter- 

C3 O O 

wasps, because most of the species make nests for 
their young by digging burrows in the ground or in 
wood. These insects differ from the true wasps in 
that their wings lie flat above the body when at rest, 




ROADSIDE LIFE. 26 1 

and they differ from the bees in not having the hind 
legs fitted for carrying pollen. 

Although the digger-wasps do not provision their 
nests with pollen or nectar, they feed on these sub- 
stances themselves, and hence are often found on 
flowers. Many of them are also frequently found in 
damp places collecting mud for their nests, for some 
species make their nests entirely of mud, and others 
that make burrows in wood divide these burrows 
into cells by partitions of mud. 

Of those that build their nests of mud, the most 
common are the thread-waisted wasps, so called on 
account of the form of the first ab- 
dominal segment (Fig. 236). They 
make nests of mud attached to the 
lower surface of flat stones or to FIG. 2? 6. A thread- 
the ceilings of buildings. These istedwasp. 
nests usually have the form of several tubes an inch 
or so long placed side by side, and are provisioned 
with spiders. The spiders are not killed, but stung 
until paralyzed. The prey thus treated remains alive 
a long time, but is helpless. An egg is laid in each 
cell with this provision, and then the opening of the 
tube is sealed up securely. When the larva hatches 
it finds nicely preserved food right at hand sufficient 
to nourish it during its growth. Nests of other dig- 
ger-wasps are described below. 

INSECTS OF SUMACH AND OTHER PITHY PLANTS. 

Many bees, wasps, and digger-wasps build their 
nests in dead branches of sumach and other pithy 
plants. Where sumach grows it affords the best op- 
portunity for the study of the nests of these insects. 



262 



INSECT LIFE. 



If the reader will go to the nearest clump of sumachs 
and break off a dozen dead branches, and then split 
them carefully, he is almost certain to 
find one or more such nests. Fig. 237 
represents a common type of nest found 
in sumach. 

These nests are made by solitary in- 
sects that is, a single female working 
alone builds a nest in which to lay her 
eggs. Representatives of several fam- 
ilies utilize dead branches of pithy plants 
for this purpose. In such places can be 
found nests of solitary bees, of solitary 
wasps, and of digger-wasps. 

The parent insect finds an entrance 
through a knothole at the side or at 
the end of the branch when the tip has 
been broken off. She excavates the pith 
for a considerable distance ; then she 
collects a quantity of food and places it 
in the lower part of this tunnel, after 
which she lays an egg upon it, and 
builds a partition across the tunnel just 
above the egg and the supply of food. 
She repeats this process until the tunnel 
is divided into several cells, each con- 
taining an egg and a quantity of food. 

When the larvae hatch from these 

FIG 2 Nest e SS s eacn finds in its cell sufficient food 
of Trypoxyion to nourish it till it is full-STrown. When 

frigidum. 

this stage is reached the larvae of some 
species spin cocoons about their bodies, within which 
the pupa state is passed ; in other species the larvae 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



263 



change to pupas without making cocoons. After a 
time the pupae change to adult insects, which dig their 
way out from the nest, and in turn build similar nests 
for their young. In leaving the nest the newly devel- 
oped adults pass out through the opening at the up- 
per end. It follows from this that the youngest of 
the brood the one in the cell last made is able to 
emerge first, each adult being obliged to wait till 
those above it are out of the way before it can escape. 

The nests of solitary bees can be recognized by 
the fact that they are provisioned with a paste made 
of pollen and nectar ; and, so far as I have observed, 
the partitions in the nests of solitary bees are always 
made of vegetable matter. Sometimes the partitions 
are made of pith, sometimes of chewed-up leaves, 
and in the case of certain large carpenter-bees the 
partitions are built of small chips fastened together 
in a spiral. 

The nests of the solitary true wasps and those of 
the digger-wasps are provisioned with animal matter, 
each species using a particular kind of food. Some 
use only spiders for this purpose, some plant-lice, 
some caterpillars, and so on through the list. In 
each case the creatures stored in the nest are not 
killed, but are stung in such a way as to be paralyzed. 
Here they lie helpless till needed as food by the 
larva that hatches from the egg laid with them. 

The solitary wasps and the digger-wasps that 
build their nests in pithy plants also agree in usually 
making the partitions in their nests of mud. In fact, 
I know of no way of distinguishing between the nests 
of these two groups of insects except by breeding the 
adults. This, however, can be done easily. 



264 



INSECT LIFE. 



When a nest of any of these in- 
sects is found containing either larvas 
or pupse, the adults can be bred 
by carefully closing the nest and 
placing it in a breeding cage, or, if it 
is too long, in a bag of Swiss muslin. 
There are certain minute digger- 
wasps that do not need to remove all 
the pith from the section of the 
branch in which they make their 
nest. These make winding burrows 
in the pith. Fig. 238 rep- 
resents one of these nests. 
Such nests are usually 
provisioned with plant- 
lice. 

Some of the wood-bur- 
rowing bees and wasps 
are not so saving of their 
labor as those that bur- 
row in pith, but make 
their tunnels in solid 
wood. Fig. 239 repre- 
sents the nest of a solitary 
wasp which was made in a 
board in the side of a 
barn. The contents of 
the cells had been re- 
moved by the collector 
before the nest came into our posses- 
sion, hence they are not shown in 
the figure. The partitions in this 
nest are made of mud. The archi- 



239. 




ROADSIDE LIFE. 265 

tect of it is pictured in Fig. 240. Its name is Monobia 
quadridens {Mo-no bia quad'ri-dens). 

There are large carpenter-bees that make nests 
similar to that of Monobia, except that the partitions 
are formed of bits of wood 
fastened together. These 
bees resemble bumblebees 
in size and appearance, but 
differ in having a dense 
brush on the hind legs in- 
stead of a pollen basket. 

^ri r FlG. 240. Monolia quadridens. 

I he bees of the genus 

Megachile (Meg-a-chi 1 le) have the curious habit of mak- 
ing cells for their young out of neatly cut pieces of 
leaves, and on this account they are called leaf-cutter 
bees. The cells of the leaf-cutter bees are packed 
away in such secure places that one does not often 
find them, but it is a very easy thing to find frag- 
ments of leaves from which the pieces have been cut 
by bees. The leaves of various plants are used for 
this purpose, but rose-leaves are used more frequent- 
ly than any other kind. In Fig. 241 there are repre- 
sented one of these bees, its nest, and a spray of rose- 
leaves from which pieces have been cut by the bee. 

The species represented here, JHegacJiile acuta (M. 
a cu'tii], is a carpenter as well as a leaf-cutter. It 
first makes a tunnel in wood, often selecting that 
which is partially decayed ; then it proceeds to build 
a thimble-shaped tube at the bottom of this tunnel. 
For this purpose it cuts from the leaves oblong 
pieces, each of w r hich forms a part of a side and the 
bottom of the thimble-shaped tube. Two such 
pieces had been cut from the lower leaf on the left 



266 



INSECT LIFE. 



side of the spray figured here. When the thimble- 
shaped tube is completed, the bee partially fills it 
with a paste of pollen and nectar, and then places an 
egg upon the supply of food. She then cuts several 
circular pieces of leaves, the diameter of which is a 




FIG. 241. A leaf-cutter bee, nest, and rose-leaves cut by the bee. 

little greater than the diameter of the tube, and forces 
them into the open end of it, thus making a tightly 
fitting plug ; three of these circular pieces had been 
cut from the spray figured. Usually several cells of 
this kind are placed end to end in a burrow, and 
sometimes many bees will build their nests near to- 
gether in the same piece of wood. 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



267 



The leaf-cutter bees do not always bore tunnels in 
which to place their cells. We have found these 
cells in a crack between shingles on a roof, in the 
cavity of a large branch of sumach, beneath stones 
lying on the ground, and, in Florida, in the tubular 
leaves of the pitcher-plant. 

Some species of bees make nests similar to those 
of the leaf-cutter bees, except that the cells are 
formed of pieces of petals of flowers. The petals of 
Pelargonium are often used for this purpose. 

THE CLIFF-DWELLERS. 

There are many bees, wasps, and digger-wasps 
that build their nests in the sides of cliffs, reminding 
one of the habitations built 
by certain communities of 
Indians in the far West. 
The insect cliff - dwellers 
prefer sandy cliffs, and it 
often happens that a sand- 
bank becomes so thickly 
studded with the burrows 
of these insects that it looks 
as if it had been used as a 
target for practice with a 
shotgun. 

The most abundant of 
these cliff-dwellers are the 
minute bees belonging to the genus Halictus (Ha-lic'- 
tus). These are the smallest of all our bees, measur- 
ing only from one tenth to three tenths of an inch in 
length. Great numbers of them can be seen during 
the warmer parts of the day, flying back and forth, 
18 




2 68 INSECT LIFE. 

close to the face of the cliffs inhabited by them. 
The openings to their burrows are just large enough 
for a bee to enter, but a short distance from the open- 
ing the burrow is enlarged so that a bee can turn 
about in it easily. This feature and the small size of 
the opening distinguish the burrows of Halictus from 
those of other common cliff-dwellers. In the sides of 
this comparatively large burrow there are many 
small openings leading into cells, in each of which is 
placed a supply of food and an egg. The walls of 
these cells are glazed like the surface of pottery. It 
is said that several females unite in making the larger 
burrow, after which each female makes passages ex- 
tending sidewise from this main burrow or public 
corridor to her own cells. If this is true a cliff in- 
habited by Halictus may be compared to a city com- 
posed of apartment houses. 

Certain cliff-dwelling bees, which are much larger 
than Halictus, resembling the honey-bee in size, con- 
ceal the entrance to their burrows by building over 
each a tube which is bent downward. 

Some solitary wasps and many species of digger- 
wasps are cliff-dwellers. The nests of these can be 
recognized by the fact that they are provisioned with 
insects or spiders. 

THE MINERS OF THE PLAINS. 

Although the sides of sandy cliffs afford the min- 
ing insects the best of conditions for building their 
nests, both as regards the economy of labor and in 
protection from drenching rains, there are many spe- 
cies that prefer to mine in level ground. The fol- 
lowing are among the more common of these : 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



269 



THE MINING-BEES. The bees of the genus An- 
drena (An-dre'na] probably attract attention more 
frequently than any other mining-bees. Some of the 
species nearly or quite equal in size the workers of 
the honey-bee. They build their nests in grassy 
fields, sinking a perpendicular shaft with branches 
leading sidewise to the cells. The main shaft some- 
times extends to a depth of more than one foot. 
These bees, though strictly solitary each female 
building her own nest frequently build their nests 
near together, forming large villages. Sometimes a 
village, or we might say a city, of this kind, covering 
only one square rod of ground, will include several 
thousand nests. 

THE MINING DIGGER-WASPS.- -Various digger- 
wasps build their nests in level ground, especially in 
sandy places. One family of these are known as the 
spider-wasps, because they provision 
their nests with spiders. The spider- 
wasps belong to the family POMPILID^E 
(Pom-pil'i-dse) ; they are slender in 
form, with long legs (Fig. 242), and are 
usually black with dusky reddish or 
black wings ; sometimes they are variegated with red 
or orange. They are common everywhere through- 
out our country, and are often seen on bright, hot 
days running about with a jerky step and constantly 
twinkling wings ; even when at rest the wings are 
frequently twitched. It is a common thing also to 
see these digger-wasps running backward, dragging 
their prey after them. A very large species which 
occurs in the Southwest is known as the tarantula- 
hawk, because it stores its burrows with tarantulas. 




2/0 



INSECT LIFE. 




Another very large digger-wasp which frequently 
attracts attention is represented by Fig. 243. This 

is the cicada- 
killer, Sphcci- 
us spcciosus 
(SpJie'ci-usspc- 
ci-d sus). It is 
black, some- 
times of a 
rusty color, 
and has the 
abdomen 
FIG. *u.-sp*ecius spcciosus. banded with 

yellow. It digs burrows in the earth two feet or 
more in depth, and provisions each with a cicada. 

THE TIGER-BEETLES.- -The tiger-beetles are long- 
legged, agile beetles, which abound on bright, hot 
days in dusty roads, in beaten paths, and on the 
shores of streams. Fig. 244 represents a common 
species. Their popular name was suggested by their 
predaceous habits and the stripes with which many 
species are marked. They can run swiftly and fly 
well. When approached by a passer-by, 
they remain quiet but alert till nearly 
reached ; then like a flash they fly up and 
away, but alight after going a few rods. 
Before alighting they always turn so as to 
face the approaching person and be able 
to watch his movements. 

These beetles dig sloping burrows in 
the earth into which they retreat in stormy or cold 
weather. 

The larvae of the tiger-beetles live in vertical bur- 




FiG. 244. 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



271 




rows, which can be easily recognized after one has 
learned their characteristic appearance. These bur- 
rows abound in sandy places, in beaten paths, and 
in plowed fields that have become dry and hard. 
The larger ones, those occupied by full-grown larvae, 
measure about one sixth inch in diameter, and often 
extend a foot or more in depth. The sides are 
smooth ; the entrance to each is very regular in out- 
line, and without any loose dirt on the surface of the 
ground near it, as is usually the case with 
somewhat similar burrows made by ants. 

Fig. 245 represents a larva of a tiger- 
beetle. When watching for its prey, the 
larva rests perfectly still at the mouth of 
its burrow. Its dirt-colored head is bent 
at right angles to its lighter-colored body 
and makes a neat plug to the opening of 
the hole. Its rapacious jaws extend upward, wide 
open, ready to seize the first unwary insect that 
walks over this living trap. On the fifth segment of 
the abdomen there is a hump, and on this hump are 
two hooks curved forward. This is an arrangement 
by which the little rascal can hold back and keep 
from being jerked out of its hole when it gets some 
large insect by the leg, and by which it can drag its 
struggling prey down into its lair, where it may eat 
it at leisure. 

The holes of the tiger-beetle larvae are always 
open when found, the larvae being frightened away 
by the approach of the observer. But sit down near 
them, and watch quietly, and soon they will be 
plugged by dirt-colored heads. Each passer-by will 
cause the cautious larvae to retreat ; but they will re- 



2/2 



INSECT LIFE. 



turn in a few minutes to their position of patient 
watchfulness, and here they wait like a still fisher- 
man on a log. 

The habits of these larvae can be observed in a 
schoolroom in the following manner :- 

1. Take a box about eight inches deep, and half 
fill it with sand or fine earth, and pour some water 
on the soil so that it shall become packed firmly. 

2. Collect several tiger-beetle larvae. In doing 
this put a stalk down the burrow so that it shall not 
become filled with dirt, and thus lost while you are 
digging the larva out. Put each larva collected in a 
single vial, so that they can not injure each other. 

3. With a slender stick or a slate pencil make 
holes in the soil in your box, one or two inches deep 

and about as wide as burrows of tiger- 
beetle larvae, and put a larva in each. 

4. Observe the way in which the lar- 
vae deepen these holes, and fit them for 
their use. 

5. When the larvae have become well 
established in their new burrows, scatter 
sugar on the surface of the soil so as to 
attract flies. 

6. Make notes on the habits of tiger- 
beetle larvae, and write an account of 
them. 

INSECTS OF GOLDENROD. 

In late summer and in the autumn the 
GoSenrod, yellow blossoms of the goldenrod attract 
Soiidago. swarms of insects of various kinds ; at 
this season there is no better field for the collector than 
the clumps of this plant growing in the fence corners. 




ROADSIDE LIFE. 



273 




I 

FIG. 247. 



THE SOLDIER-BEETLES. The most abundant of 
the goldenrod visitors are the soldier-beetles ; so- 
called on account of the bright colors of 
their yellow and black uniforms (Fig. 247). 
Sometimes these beetles occur in such 
great numbers on the goldenrod blossoms 
as to bend the plant down by their 
weight. Here they are in constant mo- 
tion, crawling over the plant and over 
each other. But they can fly readily, and 
do so often, passing from cluster to cluster. These 
beetles belong to the genus Chauliognathus (Chaul-i- 
og'na-thus\ of the firefly family, LAMPYRID/E (Lam- 
pyr'i-das). 

THE LOCUST - BORER. - -Associated 
with the soldier beetles w r e often find 
one with his back covered with yellow 
stripes like the chevron on the sleeves of 
a sergeant (Fig. 248). This is the locust- 
borer, Cyllene robinice (Cyl-le'ne ro-bin' i-ce}. 
It belongs to the family of long-horned 
beetles. 

THE BLISTER-BEETLES. Blister-beetles are also 
frequently found on the flowers of goldenrod. With 
these the body is comparatively soft ; the 
head is broad, and abruptly narrowed into 
a neck, and the prothorax is narrower than 
the wing -covers (Fig. 249). There are 
many kinds of blister-beetles ; they consti- 
tute the family MELOID^: (Me-lo'i-das). They 
are called blister-beetles because the dried 
bodies of certain species are used for making blister 
plasters. 




FIG. 248. 




274 



INSECT LIFE. 




FIG. 250. 



THE AMBUSH-BUG.- -There is a greenish bug, with 
very strong fore legs and a broadly expanded abdo- 
men (Fig. 250), which conceals itself in the flowers 
of goldenrod and in other flowers. This is the am- 
bush-bug ; it rests quietly among the flowers 
until some nectar-loving insect comes with- 
in its reach, when the visitor is seized and 
destroyed. The ambush-bug can overcome 
insects much larger than itself. Its name is 
Phymata wolffii (Phy-ma'ta ivolf r fi-i\ and it belongs 
to the family PHYMATIM: (Phy-mat'i-das). 

THE GOLDENROD GALLS. One of the most 
familiar of abnormal growths on plants is a ball-like 
enlargement of the stem of goldenrod (Fig. 251). 
This is caused by a maggot which lives within it, 
and which develops into a pretty fly with banded 
wings. The name of the fly is 
Try pet a solidaginis ( Try-pe'ta sol- 
i-dag'i-ms), and its gall is desig- 
nated as the round goldenrod 
gall. 

There is another gall on the 
stem of goldenrod which is FlG 2 ^7._The round" gold- 
more elongate and is hollow. enrodgaiL 
This is known as the elliptical goldenrod gall ; it is 
represented in the lower part of Fig. 246. This gall 
is made by the larva of a Tineid moth, Gelechia gallce- 
solidaginis (Ge-le l -chi-a gal-lce-sol-i-dag'i-nis). 

Collect specimens of these galls, and, placing 
them in breeding-cages, rear the adult insects. 





ROADSIDE LIFE. 



ANTS. 



2/5 



The most abundant of all roadside insects are the 
ants. Of these there are many kinds, each differing 
more or less from the others in appearance and in 
habits, but the following generalizations can be 
made : 

All ants are social, many individuals working 
together to make a common nest. As with the 
social bees and with the social wasps, each colony of 
ants consists of three classes of individuals : males, 
females or queens, and workers. The males and fe- 
males are winged ; the workers are wingless. The 
worker class is the one most often observed, this class 
constituting the greater number of individuals found 
in any nest. In fact, it is only during a part of the 
year that winged forms can be found in the nests, 
although wingless queens are constantly present. 

Often in warm summer afternoons the air will 
seem to be filled with countless thousands of flying 
ants. Their moving wings divide the sun's rays into 
rainbow flashes as they rise or fall, a silent, onward- 
moving host. This is the wedding journey of the 
male and female ants, which have come from many 
communities and have taken flight together. But 
soon the journey is over and they drop to earth, 
where the males soon die ; but the females tear off 
their own wings, having no further use for them, and 
set about to find places to lay their eggs. Some- 
times a female starts a new colony ; in other cases 
she is found by some workers of her own species and 
adopted as their queen. 

The term queen, as applied to the individual at 



276 INSECT LIFE. 

the head of a colony of ants, is a misnomer, for among 
social insects the queens do not rule ; they are 
merely the mothers of their colonies. The queen 
ant is not jealous, like the queen bee, but may live in 
peace in the same dwelling with several other queens. 
She is always an object of extreme devotion to her 
attendants, who feed her and care for her eggs as 
soon as she lays them. 

The larvas of ants are white and legless; most 
species spin cocoons when ready to pupate, but some 
do not. The oblong, egg-shaped bodies which may 
be seen in any ant's nest, and which are often mis- 
taken by the careless observer for eggs, are these 
cocoons. The eggs are so small that they escape 
observation unless careful search is made for them. 
The larvae are efficiently cared for by the workers, 
who carry them about and put them in the warmer 
parts of the nest and feed them. When the adults 
issue from their cocoons their nurses help them out 
carefully ; and they unfold the legs and smooth out 
the wings of new-fledged royalty with tenderest solici- 
tude. The workers are by far the most interesting 
portion of the ant colony, as they do all the work- 
feed the colony, build and defend the nests, care for 
the young and for the stock, and carry on the wars. 
The workers are undeveloped females, which very 
rarely lay eggs, and as the eggs of workers always 
develop into males, the presence of a queen is neces- 
sary for the perpetuation of the life of a colony. For 
this reason, as the queens grow old the workers find 
young queens at the swarming season, bring them 
into their nests, and adopt them as successors to the 
old queens. 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



277 



There are many forms of ants' nests, but each 
species builds the same sort. Sometimes the nest is 
a simple tunnel in the earth, sometimes a large mound 
with tunnels and galleries extending many feet under 
ground, and some species live in decayed trees. In 
the tropics a greater variety of these structures occur 
than in our country. Some colonies own several 
mounds. One colony of one species has been known 
to have two hundred mounds, covering several hun- 
dred square yards. Ants are also very good road- 
makers, sometimes making clean, beaten paths, and 
sometimes working out covered ways under rubbish. 

As to their food, ants are general feeders, eating 
animal food and also sweet substances, like the juice 
of fruit and sugar ; and they are also very fond of 
the honey-dew given off by aphids, and the ants re- 
gard these aphids as their milch-cows. An ant will 
walk up to an aphid and stroke its back with its 
antennae, and immediately the pleased aphid gives 
forth a drop of sweet fluid, which the ant at once 
drinks up. The ants take very good care of their 
cattle, and will carry them to new pastures if the old 
ones dry up. They also carry the aphid-eggs into 
their nests, and keep them sheltered during the win- 
ter, and then carry the young plant-lice out and put 
them on plants in the spring. When ants are seen 
going up and down the trunks of trees it is safe to 
suppose they are attending aphids. They also care 
similarly for some other honey-giving insects, as cer- 
tain bark-lice (Coccidce) and tree-hoppers (Membracidcz). 

THE HABITS OF ANTS (Field Work}. Make a col- 
lection of ants representing as many species as practi- 
cable. Give each species a number, and make notes 



2/8 



INSECT LIFE. 



on the kind of nest made by each. The smaller 
specimens should be mounted on cardboard points. 

Look for ant-nests under stones lying on the sur- 
face of the ground, and when one is found containing 
eggs, larvae, pupas, and adults, collect a set of speci- 
mens illustrating the transformations of the species. 

Find a shrub or tree upon the trunk of which ants 
are passing up and down. Watch some of the ants 
that are going up and determine the object of their 
journey. Follow some of the ants that are passing 
down till they reach their nest. It sometimes hap- 
pens that ants have covered ways several rods in 
length leading from their nest to the trees that they 
frequent. If such a road be found, uncover it care- 
fully till the nest is reached. 

Write an account of what you have learned in the 
field regarding the habits of ants. 

THE HABITS OF ANTS (School Work}.- -The habits 
of ants can be studied in a schoolroom by establish- 
ing a colony in an artificial nest. Such a nest is 

represented in Fig. 
252. It is similar to 
one devised by Sir 
John Lubbock. 

The 




FIG. 252. An artificial ant-nest. 

materials needed for the construction of a nest of 
this kind are two panes of window-glass ten inches 
square, a sheet of tin eleven inches square, and a 
piece of plank one and one fourth inches thick, 
twenty inches long, and at least sixteen inches wide. 
To make the nest, proceed as follows : Cut a tri- 
angular piece about one inch long on its two short 
sides from one corner of one of the panes of glass. 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 



279 



From the sheet of tin make a tray three eighths of 
an inch in depth. This tray will be a little wider 
than the panes of glass and will contain them easily. 
On the upper side of the plank a short distance from 
the edge, cut a deep furrow. This plank is to form 
the base of the nest, and the furrow is to serve as a 
moat, which is to be kept filled with water, in order 
to prevent the escape of the ants. It is necessary to 
paint the base with several coats of paint to protect it 
from water and thus prevent its warping. 

To prepare the nest for use, place the tin tray on 
the base, put in the tray the square pane of glass, lay 
on the edges of the glass four strips of wood about 
one half inch wide and a little thicker than the height 
of the ants which are to be kept in the nest, cover 
the glass with a layer of fine earth of the same thick- 
ness as the strips of wood, place upon this layer of 
earth and the strips of wood the pane of glass from 
which one corner has been cut, and cover the whole 
with a cover of the same size and shape as the upper 
pane of glass. In the nest figured the cover is made 
of blackened tin, and one half of it is covered by a 
board. This gives a variation in temperature in dif- 
ferent parts of the nest when it stands in the sun- 
light. 

The ants when established in the nest are to mine 
in the earth between the two plates of glass. The 
removal of one corner from the upper pane provides 
an opening to the nest. The thickness of the strips 
of wood between the edges of the two panes of glass 
determines the depth of the layer of earth in which 
the ants live. This should not be much thicker than 
the ants are high ; for if it is the ants will be able 



280 INSECT LIFE. 

to conceal themselves so that they can not be ob- 
served. 

The nest being 1 prepared, the next step is to trans- 
fer a colony of ants to it. The things needed with 
which to do this are a two-quart glass fruit-can or 
some similar vessel that can be closed tightly, a 
clean vial, and a garden trowel. With these in 
hand, find a small colony of ants, such as are com- 
mon under stones in most parts of the country. 
Collect as many of the ants and of the eggs, larvae, 
and pupae as possible, and put them in the fruit-can 
together with the dirt that is scooped up in collect- 
ing them with the trowel. Search carefully for the 
queen ; sometimes she is found immediately beneath 
the stone covering the nest, but often it is necessary 
to dig: a considerable distance in order to find her. 

o 

She can be recognized by her large size. If the 
queen is not found, empty the contents of the can 
back into the nest, and take up another colony ; 
without a queen the experiment will be a failure. 
When the queen is found place her in the vial so that 
she shall not be injured while being carried to the 
schoolroom. 

Having obtained a queen and a large part of her 
family old and young, return to the schoolroom and 
empty the contents of the fruit-can on to the board 
covering the upper pane of glass, and place the queen 
there with her family. If much dirt and rubbish has 
been collected with the ants, remove some of it so 
that not more than a half pint of it remains. When 
this is done leave the ants undisturbed for a day or 
two. Of course the moat should be filled with water 
so that they can not escape. 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 28 1 

Usually within twenty-four hours the ants will 
find the opening leading into the space between the 
two panes of glass and will make a mine into the 
layer of earth which is there, and will remove their 
queen and young to this place. This process can be 
hastened by gradually removing the dirt placed on 
the cover of the nest with the ants. 

After the ants have made a nest between the 
panes of glass, they can be observed, when desired, 
by merely lifting the board forming the cover of the 
nest. 

With proper care a colony can be kept in a nest 
of this kind as long as the queen lives, which may 
be several years. The food for the ants can be 
placed on the base of the nest anywhere within the 
moat, and may consist of sugar, minute bits of meat, 
fruits, etc. With a little care the kinds of food 
preferred by the colony can be easily determined. 
The pupae of ants, which can be collected from 
nests in the field during the summer months, will 
be greedily devoured. The soil in the nest should 
be kept from becoming too dry by putting a little 
water into one side of the tin tray from time to 
time. 

Many suggestions as to the kinds of experiments 
that can be tried with a colony of ants can be ob- 
tained by reading the well-known work of Sir John 
Lubbock entitled Ants, Bees, and Wasps. 

O the South Wind and the Sun ! . 
How each loved the other one 
Full of fancy full of folly- 
Full of jollity and fun ! 



282 INSECT LIFE. 

How they romped and ran about, 
Like two boys when school is out, 
With glowing face, and lisping lip, 
Low laugh, and lifted shout ! 

Over meadow-lands they tripped, 
Where the dandelions dipped 

In crimson foam of clover-bloom, 

And dripped and dripped and dripped ; 
And they clinched the bumble-stings, 
Gauming honey on their wings, 

And bundling them in lily-bells, 
With maudlin murmurings. 

And the humming-bird, that hung 

Like a jewel up among 
The tilted honeysuckle-horns, 

They mesmerized, and swung 

In the palpitating air, 

Drowsed with odors strange and rare, 
And, with whispered laughter, slipped away 

And left him hanging there. 

And the golden-banded bees, 
Droning o'er the flowery leas, 

They bridled, reined, and rode away 
Across the fragrant breeze, 
Till in hollow oak and elm 
They had groomed and stabled them 

In waxen stalls that oozed with dews 
Of rose and lily-stem. 

Where the dusty highway leads, 
High above the wayside weeds 

They sowed the air with butterflies 
Like blooming flower-seeds, 
Till the dull grasshopper sprung 
Haifa man's height up, and hung 

Tranced in the heat, with whirring wings, 
And sung and sung and sung ! 



ROADSIDE LIFE. 283 

And they loitered, hand in hand, 

Where the snipe along the sand 
Of the river ran to meet them 

As the ripple meets the land, 

Till the dragon-fly, in light 

Gauzy armor, burnished bright, 
Came tilting down the waters 

In a wild, bewildered flight. 

'James Whttcomb Riley.* 
* From Aftenvhiles, by permission of the Bowen- Merrill Co. 




PART II. 

THE COLLECTION AND PRESERVATION 

OF SPECIMENS. 




CHAPTER I. 

THE COLLECTION OF SPECIMENS. 

IN order to study insects thoroughly it is 
necessary to collect specimens. Very 
much can be learned by merely watching 
insects in the field, but if we are to study 
their structure and their classification, we 
must make a collection. 

In doing this we should be humane. 
It is not probable that insects are as sen- 
sitive to pain as we are, but there is no 
doubt that they suffer when injured. We 
should, therefore, handle our specimens carefully, kill 
them without inflicting needless pain, and destroy no 
more than is necessary for study. It is not merely 
the insects that are to be considered in this matter, 
for no one can be cruel to animals without its having 
a bad effect on his character. 

I. COLLECTING APPARATUS. 

The first step in the collecting of insects is the 

preparation of collecting apparatus. Many things 

284 



THE COLLECTION OF SPECIMENS. 285 

have been devised for this purpose, and are in use 
by professional entomologists, but the beginner 
needs only a few of them. Usually a collecting out- 
tit will consist of merely a net, a killing bottle, and a 
few vials or pill-boxes for bringing home living 
specimens. If one desires to collect butterflies it is 
well to add to this list a cork-lined collecting box 
and perhaps a vial of chloroform with a small brush 
fitted in the cork. 

INSECT NETS. Many insects can be easily and 
safely caught by hand, but it is desirable that some 
members of the class, and the more the better, should 
have insect-nets. The usual form of an insect net is 
shown in Fig. 253. Such a net is made as follows :- 

The ring is of No. 3 galvanized iron wire, and is 
one foot in diameter. It is securely fitted into a light 
wooden handle, which is three feet and six inches in 
length. The ring is covered with a piece of strong 
cloth ordinary sheeting to which a bag of cheese- 
cloth is sewed. The strong cloth over the ring is 
necessary to prevent the net from wearing out 
quickly. The bag of the net should be longer than 
its diameter, so that when an insect is caught while 
flying it can be imprisoned in the bottom of the bag 
by simply rolling the handle of the net. The bottom 
of the bag should be rounded, without corners or 
points in which insects can lodge. 

KILLING BOTTLES.- -The specimens collected 
should be killed in some way that shall not mutilate 
them. This can be done by putting a few drops of 
chloroform, sulphuric ether, or benzene on cotton 
and inclosing it with the insects to be killed in a 
bottle or small box. But the most convenient way, 



286 



INSECT LIFE. 



and the one that is commonly employed, is by the 
use of a cyanide bottle. Each pupil, except very 
young ones, should have such a bottle. The bottles 
can be prepared, either by the teacher or by a drug- 
gist, in the following manner :- 

Take a wide-mouthed bottle holding four or six 
ounces. Put in this bottle a piece of cyanide of potas- 
sium, about three fourths of an inch square, and 
water enough to cover the cyanide ; and then im- 
mediately, before there is time for the cyanide to 
dissolve, put enough plaster of Paris in the bottle to 
entirely soak up the water. In this way the cyanide 

will be firmly cemented in place in the 
bottom of the bottle. The bottle 
should then be left open in a shady 
place for an hour to dry, and then se- 
curely corked with a long cork and 
labeled Poison, after which it is ready 
for use (Fig. 254). 

In using a cyanide bottle care should 
be taken not to leave it open unneces- 
sarily, lest it lose its strength. With 
proper care a bottle will retain its 
strength for several months. 
Specimens placed in the bottle to be killed should 
be left there for at least a half hour. They may be left 
in the bottle several hours, even over night, without 
injury. Thus a collecting trip may be made one day 
and the specimens left in the bottle till the following 
day before they are pinned. If it is necessary to re- 
turn an insect to the cyanide bottle on account of its 
revival after it is pinned, the pin should be removed, 
for the gas in the bottle will corrode it. 




FIG. 254. 



THE COLLECTION OF SPECIMENS. 



287 




J 



FIG. 255. 



A small cyanide bottle, about one fourth the size 
of that described above, is very convenient for car- 
rying in one's pocket constantly during the 
collecting season. A very convenient pock- 
et-bottle is represented half size by Fig. 

255- 

COLLECTING BOXES. Collectors of but- 
terflies usually have a shallow tin box, lined 
with pith or cork, into which specimens 
can be pinned, and fitted with a strap by 
means of which it can be slung over the 
shoulder (Fig. 256). A cheap substitute for such a 
box can be made by using a shallow cigar-box, lined 
with cork and fitted with a strong cord. Make a 
small hole in each end of the box, and through each 

hole put an end 
of the cord and 
tie a knot in it ; 
tack a piece of 
sheet-cork to the 
bottom of the box on the inside, and the box is ready 
for use. If sheet-cork can not be obtained, the box 
can be lined with the pith of corn-stalks, or slices 
can be cut from cork stopples and tacked to the bot- 
tom of the box. 

FOLDED PAPERS FOR BUTTERFLIES.- -There is an- 
other method of caring temporarily for specimens of 
butterflies, which is used when it is not convenient to 
pin them. The specimen is killed while it is yet in 
the net by pinching the thorax, care being taken that 
the wings are folded together above the back, so that 
they shall not be rubbed. Then the specimen is 
dropped into a triangular envelope made by folding 




FIG. 256. A collecting box. 



288 



INSECT LIFE. 



a piece of paper, as shown in Fig. 257, and a memo- 
randum of the locality and date of capture is written 






FIG. 257. Folded paper for butterflies. 

on the envelope. If one expects to use this method, 
it is well to have a shallow, flat tin box in which the 
envelopes can be carried without danger of breaking 
the specimens. When it is desired to pin and spread 
specimens that have been stored in this way they are 
relaxed by putting them on damp sand, as described 
in the next chapter. 

VIALS AND PILL-BOXES. A supply of vials and 
pill-boxes is desirable for almost every collecting trip ; 
many delicate insects can be carried with safety in 
these that would be rubbed in a killing bottle; and, 
too, it is often desirable to carry home living speci- 
mens, especially of larvae and pupae. For collecting 
spiders and soft-bodied insects one or more small 
bottles or vials partly filled with alcohol are useful. 

II. WHEN AND WHERE TO COLLECT INSECTS. 

Although insects can be collected at all seasons of 
the year and at all times of the day and night, there 
are certain periods during which a very much greater 
varietv can be obtained than at others. 

./ 

Obviously the best season of the year is during 
the summer months; the best periods of the day are 



THE COLLECTION OF SPECIMENS. 289 

between 8 A. M. and 2 P. M., and in the evening twilight. 
These are the times during which searching for insects 
in the fields will yield the largest returns. If, how- 
ever, the collecting be restricted to these periods 
many species will escape notice. Many insects can 
also be collected after dark by enticing them to lights 
or sweetened baits. 

While the careful collector will search for speci- 
mens in all manner of places, there are certain locali- 
ties in which insects occur much more abundantly 
than in others. First in importance is upon herbage 
and shrubbery, where many species of plants are 
growing together, and especially upon the borders 
of woods. Open fields, which are covered chiefly by 
a single species of plant, and deep, dense forests fur- 
nish many interesting forms, but a much more limited 
variety. The banks and beds of ponds and streams 
are also excellent collecting places. A great variety 
of forms can be obtained from the lower surface of 
stones taken from the beds of streams. Many species 
may be found in the moss on the trunks of trees, be- 
neath bark, and in rotten stumps and logs. Other 
forms are obtained from flowers, from dead animals, 
from fungi, in decaying fruits, in seeds and nuts, and 
under stones, chips, and other rubbish. Frequently 
many cocoons and chrysalids can be found attached 
to fences and to the sides of buildings, and many in- 
teresting nests occur attached beneath eaves and to 
the lower surface of the roofs of barns and other 
buildings. 

III. HOW TO COLLECT INSECTS. 

There are ways, to be described later, by which 
large numbers of specimens are easily obtained. But 



290 



INSECT LIFE. 



in these wholesale modes of collecting comparatively 
little is learned regarding the species collected. On 
this account careful searching for specimens should 
be placed first among the methods of collecting. The 
eye should be trained to detect insects in their natu- 
ral haunts without disturbing them ; then something 
can be learned of the habits of the species before 
taking specimens. 

By carefully peering into herbage or among the 
foliage of shrubs and trees many insects can be ob- 
served and many lessons learned ; other localities in 
which insects abound are indicated in the preceding 
section of this chapter. 

This looking among herbage, in trees and shrubs, 
and under stones in the beds of streams, is the simpler 
part of searching. The more difficult part is to train 
the eyes to be quick in recognizing the indications of 
the presence of concealed insects. A dead or dying 
twig will suggest a search for a borer ; the premature 
turning yellow of the foliage of a branch will suggest 
a similar cause ; the sudden wilting or drooping of 
isolated plants is generally caused by insects either at 
the root or in the stalk. A rolled or spotted leaf 
should be examined and the cause ascertained. In 
a word, the eyes should be trained to be quick in 
observing anything abnormal in the appearance of 
plants ; and the mind, to be quick to seek the cause. 

THE USE OF NETS. Much of the success of the 
collector will depend upon his skill in the use of his 
net. The deliberate way in which one often sees a 
net swung would indicate that the collector believes 
that the insects are waiting to be caught. The small 
returns, however, which result from this mode of 



THE COLLECTION OF SPECIMENS. 



291 



collecting serve to dispel such belief. The net should 
be swung so quickly that the insects have not time 
to escape. In collecting butterflies, dragon-flies, and 
other swiftly flying insects, it is usually better to wait 
till the insect alights before attempting to catch it. 

For general collecting the most important mode 
of using the net is that commonly known as sweep- 
ing. Larger returns, both as regards the number of 
species and of specimens, can be obtained in this way 
than in any other. In order to sweep, the collector 
grasps his net handle eighteen or twenty inches 
above the ring, and with a quick motion back and 
forth in front of him as he walks through the grass 
or other herbage, sweeps the insects from it into his 
net. Of course, the net must be turned at the end of 
each stroke, and must be kept in rapid motion, so 
that the insects can not escape from it. After sweep- 
ing a greater or less distance, depending upon the 
abundance of specimens, the net is examined, the de- 
sirable specimens secured, and the others allowed to 
escape. 

Another method of using a net is to beat from 
beneath the foliage of shrubs and trees; in this way 
many specimens can be jarred into the net. 

In using a net in water it should be moved back 
and forth as rapidly as possible, care being taken to 
beat or sweep any plants growing on the bottom of 
the pond or stream. Sometimes many specimens can 
be obtained by sweeping into the net leaves and other 
rubbish from the bottom of a pond, and bringing them 
to the shore and looking them over carefully. 

In swiftly flowing streams an excellent way to 
collect is to stand where the water flows swiftest, 



292 



INSECT LIFE. 



holding the net in a vertical position between the 
feet, and overturning the stones in the bed of the 
stream in front of the net with a hoe or garden rake. 
If the current is swift enough many of the insects 
that live beneath such stones will be swept into the 
net. 

SUGARING. The method of collecting insects 
known among entomologists as sugaring is one of 
the most important to the collector of night-flying 
moths. Other insects can be taken in this way, but 
not in so great numbers as moths. A paste is made 
of sugar and water. Unrefined sugar is the best for 
this purpose, as it has a stronger odor than white 
sugar. The paste should be thin enough to be used 
with a brush, but not so thin that it will flow from 
the objects to which it is applied. This paste is ap- 
plied immediately after sunset to the trunks of trees, 
to fences, and to other suitable objects. In each case 
a patch about two inches wide and several inches 
long is made. After dark these baits are visited by 
the collector, who carries a lantern and several cyanide 
bottles. One bottle is needed for storing the speci- 
mens after they have become quiet, and several bot- 
tles for collecting. Some collectors use a dark lan- 
tern, but an ordinary lantern will serve the purpose. 
This should be hung on the left arm, leaving both 
hands free to manipulate the collecting bottle. 

If a patch of sugar be approached cautiously, 
usually the light can be directed upon it without dis- 
turbing the moths that are there feeding. If a speci- 
men is seen that is desired, the cork can be removed 
from the collecting bottle with the left hand and the 
bottle placed over the specimen. The insect will 



THE COLLECTION OF SPECIMENS. 



293 



usually fly into the bottom part of the bottle ; if it 
does not, a slight lateral movement of the bottle will 
cause it to do so. The bottle should then be brought 
into a vertical position with the mouth directed up- 
ward, and quickly carried to the cork which is held 
in the left hand. 

The specimens collected should be left in a cyanide 
bottle until the following morning. Then there will 
be no danger of the resuscitation of any of them. 
Warm dark nights when there is but little or no wind 
are the best for sugaring. 

COLLECTING AT LIGHTS.- -Very many insects are 
attracted to lights, and at such times are easily caught. 
When electric street lamps can be reached they afford 
the most prolific fields for the collector. A study 
lamp placed at an open window on a summer even- 
ing, although less prolific than the more conspicuous 
street lamps, often yields good returns. 



CHAPTER II. 




FIG. 258. 



THE PRESERVATION OF SPECIMENS. 

THERE are two ways of pre- 
serving entomological speci- 
mens : they may be either pinned 
and dried, or they may be placed 
in a preservative fluid. The 
method chosen will depend upon 
the nature of the specimen and 
the use to which it is to be put. As a rule, any 
specimen that will preserve its form when dried is 
pinned. Thus entomologists usually pin the adults 
of nearly all insects, specimens of nests, infested 
twigs, mined or rolled leaves, and other similar ob- 
jects. On the other hand, the immature forms of all 
insects, and such adults as have soft bodies that will 
shrivel upon drying, are usually placed in alcohol. 
Millipedes, centipedes, mites, spiders, and other 
forms allied to these are also preserved in alcohol. 
Some insects, on account of their minute size, are 
mounted as microscopic objects in Canada balsam 
upon glass slips, as described later. 

In case specimens are desired for anatomical 
study, they are preserved in alcohol or some other 
fluid, whether the body be soft or not ; and certain 

294 



THE PRESERVATION OF SPECIMENS. 



'95 



hard-bodied insects, as beetles, are often stored in 
alcohol and pinned later. But many insects, as flies 
and other hairy forms, are greatly injured by being 
placed in a fluid, the hairs being matted so that when 
the insect is pinned it presents an unnatural appear- 
ance. 

INSECT PINS. For pinning insects a special kind 
of pin is ordinarily used one made of slender wire 
so that the specimens are mutilated as little as possi- 
ble. These can be procured of any dealer in ento- 
mological supplies ; a list of such dealers is given on 
page 340. 

There are several styles of insect pins, but all 
of those in general use can be classed under two 
heads the English and the German. The English 
pins are short, so that an insect when pinned is close 
to the bottom of the cabinet, while the German pins 
are long, so that the pinned insect is held free from 
the bottom of the cabinet. By the use of the latter 
the danger of breaking off the legs from specimens, 
when they are changed from one place in the cabinet 
to another, is greatly lessened. Without entering 
into any further discussion as to the relative merits 
of the two kinds of pins, it can be said that it would 
be unwise for an American collector to use any but 
the German pins, for, as nearly all American ento- 
mologists use this style, it would be difficult for a 

O J 

collector using short pins to make exchanges in this 
country. 

Insect pins are made of different sizes of wire and 
numbered accordingly, but the numbers used by the 
different makers do not correspond with each other. 
Below is given the names of the three kinds of Ger- 



296 



INSECT LIFE. 






j i 


3 

FIG. 


5 

259- 



man pins now advertised for sale in this country, 
with a list of the sizes of each. Fig. 259 represents 

Klager pins :- 

Klager : oo, o, /, 2, [ j], 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. 

Length, if inch. 

(Karlsbad) Carlesbader : o, i, 2, 3, 4, [5], 

6, 7, <?, 9, 10. Length, i^ inch. 

Schliiter: oo, o, I, 2, [j], 4, 5, <5, 7, 8, 9. 

Length, i-| inch. 

The numbers printed in italics indicate 

in each case the sizes that will be found 

most generally useful. If only a single 

size is purchased, select that in brackets. 

A convenient way of storing insect pins 
is in a block of the form shown in Fig. 260. The 
holes in the block are about three fourths as deep as 
the pins are long, so that the heads of the pins pro- 
ject from them. Several holes are made in the block 
in order that each size of pin can be kept separate. 

If for any reason it is impracticable for the pupil 
to procure insect pins, ordinary pins, or the smaller 
sizes of the black pins, commonly called mourning 
pins, can be used. As a rule, 
the mourning pins have bet- 
ter points than the common 
brass pins, and are to be pre- 
ferred on this account, espe- 
cially when cork or pith is 
not used in the insect cases. 
If possible, however, insect pins should be used. 
Ordinary pins are made of too large wire for pinning 
insects, and specimens pinned with such pins are 
rarely suitable for a permanent collection, although 




FIG. 260. Block for pins. 



THE PRESERVATION OF SPECIMENS. 



297 




FIG. 261. 




they may serve very well the purposes of a tempora- 
ry study. 

THE PINNING OF SPECIMENS. The appearance of 
a collection of insects depends greatly upon the care 
taken in pinning the specimens. Nearly all insects 

should be pinned 

through the mid- 
dle of the thorax. 

Many bugs (He- 

miptera) are best 

pinned through the 

scutellum (Fig. 

261), and beetles 

are pinned through 

the right wing-cov- 
er at about one fourth its length from the base (Fig. 
262). About one fourth of the length of the pin 
should be allowed to project above the specimen ; 
uniformity in this respect will add greatly to the 
neatness of the appearance of the collection. 

A convenient device for securing uniformity is 
what may be termed a pinning block. This is made 
from strips of wood which are 
one fourth as thick as the pins 
are long, and which are fas- 
tened together as shown in 
Fig. 263. A hole just large 
enough to allow the passage 
of the head of an insect pin is bored through the 
center of each of the steps of the block. In pinning 
an insect the pin is pushed through the insect so that 
less than one fourth of its length projects above it, 
and then the insect is pushed back into place by in- 




FlG. 263. A pinning block. 



> 




298 INSECT LIFE. 

serting the head of the pin in the hole in the lowet 
step of the block. This step and the second are used 
in spacing labels, and the third is used in fixing the 
height of insects mounted on cardboard points. 

Insects that are too small to be pinned, but not so 
small that they need to be mounted as microscopic 
objects, are gummed to the points of narrow 
and pointed pieces of cardboard, which are 
mounted on pins (Fig. 264). Another way 
is to impale the insect on the point of a fine 
pin, inserting the pin into the lower side of 
the thorax, and then, after cutting away the 

** 

head and the larger part of the pin, to 
mount what is left in a narrow strip of firm 
FIG. 264. blotting paper, which in turn is mounted 
on a large pin (Fig. 265). If suitable card- 
board can be obtained for this purpose it is better 
than blotting paper, but ordinary cardboard is split 
by the pins. Still another way of mounting small 
insects is to impale them on the 
point of a bent pin which is fastened 
to another pin, as shown in Fig. 266. 
In preparing these pins the fine one 
is wound about the coarser one a 
short distance from the point of the 
latter, where it is somewhat tapered, 
the two being held together with 
pliers ; then the head is cut off from 

FIG. 265. ,1 11 j . i_ j FIG. 266. 

the small pin, and it is shoved up 
toward the head of the coarse one. If care has been 
taken to wind the fine pin closely about the larger 
one, it will fit the latter tightly when pushed into 
the proper position. 





THE PRESERVATION OF SPECIMENS. 



299 



In pinning- leaves a small piece of cardboard 
should be placed on each side of the leaf and the pin 
pushed through these. This will hold the specimen 
firmly in place. 

PINNING FORCEPS. --In handling pinned specimens 
pinning forceps are desirable, as by their use there is 




FIG. 267. Pinning forceps. 

much less danger of bending the pins when pushing 1 
them into cork. Several styles of pinning forceps are 
for sale by dealers ; that used by the writer is shown 
in Fig-. 267. As these forceps are quite expensive, 
comparatively few pupils will care to buy them. A 
good substitute for them are the "flat-nosed" pliers, 
which can be obtained at any hardware store. By 
means of these a 
delicate pin can be 
grasped firmly near 
the point and pushed 
into soft wood with- 
out bending it. FlG " 268 -- pliers - 
These pliers are somewhat more convenient to use if 
one corner be ground off, as shown in Fig. 268. 

In transferring specimens that are pinned with 
slender pins take hold of the head of the pin with 
the thumb and forefinger of the left hand, and then 
seize the pin near the point with the pliers. Do 
all the pushing or pulling with the pliers, but keep 
the pin from tipping sidewise with the left hand. 




20 



300 



INSECT LIFE. 



In this way there is but little danger of bending 
the pin. 

PRESERVATIVE FLUIDS.- -The most important of 
the preservative fluids is alcohol, and, except for 
special purposes, no other is needed. The alcohol 
should be of the full strength of ordinary commercial 
alcohol i. e., ninety-five per cent. It should be 
noted, however, that many soft-bodied insects, espe- 
cially larvae, shrivel if put directly into strong alcohol ; 
with these it is necessary to remove the water from 
the body gradually. This can be done by placing 
the specimens in alcohol of different strengths suc- 
cessively, using at first fifty per cent alcohol. This 
can be easily prepared by half filling the bottle with 
strong alcohol, then nearly filling it with water, and 
shaking it a few times. The specimens should not 
be left more than five or six hours in this ; they 
should then be transferred to seventy-five per cent 
alcohol, prepared in a similar way. They may be 
left in this for one day, and then transferred to 
strong alcohol for permanent preservation. 

Certain colorless or white grubs and maggots are 
apt to turn black when preserved in alcohol. This 
can be prevented by first dipping them in boiling 
water for a few seconds, after which they should be 
placed in alcohol as described above. 

MOUNTING MICROSCOPIC OBJECTS. Insects that 
are too minute to be pinned or satisfactorily mounted 
on cardboard points are usually mounted in Canada 
balsam on a glass slide, and covered with a very thin 
sheet of glass. The slides, balsam, and cover-glasses 
can be obtained of any dealer in optical apparatus. 

In most cases it is necessary to remove the water 



THE PRESERVATION OF SPECIMENS. 

from the body of the insect before mounting it; this 
is done by placing the specimen in alcohol. If the 
insect is hard so that there is no danger of shriveling, 
it may be placed in strong alcohol at once, and then 
mounted after a few hours. Insects with soft bodies 
should be hardened gradually by being placed suc- 
cessively in fifty per cent, seventy-five per cent, and 
ninety-five per cent alcohol, as described in the pre- 
ceding section. 

When the specimen is hardened by the alcohol, 
place it in a watch glass containing a small quantity 
of oil of cloves, and leave it for a few minutes ; this 
is to remove the alcohol and render the object more 
clear. Then put the object on the slide, cover it 
with balsam, and place a cover-glass over the im- 
bedded object. In the course of a few days the 
balsam will become hard, so that there will be lit- 
tle danger of injury to the specimen by handling the 
slide. 

INFLATING LARVAE.- -The fact that the appearance 
of many larvae is greatly altered by preserving them 
in alcohol leads many entomologists to remove the 
viscera from such larvae, especially caterpillars, and 
inflate and dry the skins. The process is somewhat 
difficult and disagreeable to perform, but if it is well 
done very beautiful specimens are obtained, which 
preserve the form and color of the larvae much better 
than those prepared in any other way. 

The method of preparation is as follows: Kill 
the larva by leaving it for a time in a cyanide bottle. 
Insert the point of a pin into the posterior end of the 
alimentary canal, and, by moving it about, break off 
the hind end of the intestine from its attachment 



302 



INSECT LIFE. 



to the end of the body. Lay the specimen on a sheet 
of blotting paper, and, placing a lead pencil across it 
just back of its head, press out the viscera by rolling 
the pencil toward the hind end of the larva. Dur- 
ing this operation move the specimen about on the 
blotting paper so that the skin will be kept dry. 
When the contents of the body has been pressed out, 
insert a straw or a glass tube drawn to a point at the 
tip in the opening at the hind end, and inflate the 
skin. If a straw is used, the skin can be fastened to 
it by thrusting a fine insect pin through it and the 
straw near the hind end of the specimen. When a 
glass tube is used, first insert the tube, then remove 
it carefully so as to leave the opening expanded ; 
heat the point of the tube in the flame of a lamp, and 
insert it in the opening again. If this is done prop- 
erly the seared edges of the opening will adhere 
firmly to the point of the tube. If the opening is not 
perfectly closed it can be sealed with a drop of glue. 

Inflate the skin, and hold it 
while inflated in a hot place to 
dry. The skin can be dried by 
holding it near to the side of 
the chimney of a lighted lamp. 
A more convenient way is to 
dry it in a little oven, made by 
laying a large lamp chimney 
across a tray of sand over a 
lamp (Fig. 269). If the glass 
tube be cut in two, and a sec- 
tion of rubber tubing inserted 
^^^^^ between the two pieces, it will 
be much more convenient to use. In drying the 




FIG. 269. An oven. 



THE PRESERVATION OF SPECIMENS. 



303 




skin great care should be taken not to heat it too 
much so as to destroy the colors. 

When the skin is dry, remove it from the tube 
and mount it on a piece of covered copper wire, 
which has been bent about a small 
piece of cork through which an in- 
sect pin is pushed, as shown in Fig. 
270. The two ends of the wire are 
inserted in the opening from which 
the glass tube has been removed, a 
drop of glue having been previously 
put on each of the ends (Fig. 271). 

SPREADING INSECTS. With many insects it is de- 

j 

sirable to spread the wings at right angles to the 
length of the body. Not only do the specimens ap- 
pear better when prepared this way, but such prepa- 
ration is necessary in order to see the markings and 
structure of the wings. This is especially true in the 
case of butterflies and moths, which are usually 

spread before being 
placed in a permanent 
collection. 

For spreading in- 
sects a device known as 
a spreading board is 
used. This consists of 

bio. 271. A mounted inflated skin. 

two strips of wood fas- 
tened a short distance apart, so as to leave a groove 
for the body of the insect, and upon which the wings 
are fastened in position and left until the insect is 
dry (Fig. 272). A narrow strip of cork is tacked to 
the lower side of the two strips of wood ; this closes 
the groove below, and serves as a support for the 




304 



INSECT LIFE. 



<t 



pin upon which the insect is pinned. Another strip 
of wood is fastened to the lower side of the cleats to 

which the two strips are nailed. 
This serves as a bottom, and 
protects the points of the pins 
which project through the piece 
of cork. 

In spreading a specimen a 
narrow piece of paper is used 
on each side to hold the wings 
in place till they are properly 
arranged (Fig. 272, a). The 
wings are moved into position 
by slipping them forward or 
backward under the slips of 
paper, using for this purpose a 
fine pin, which is inserted near 
a strong vein of the wing. 
When the wings are properly 
arranged their entire surface is 
covered with wider strips of 
paper (Fig. 272, b). The speci- 
mens are left on the boards till 

FIG. 2?2 .-A spreading board. the y. are dl 7- This usually 

requires two or three days. 

Large, stout-bodied moths should be left on the 
boards longer. 

For pinning the sheets of paper over the wings 
the sharp-pointed "mourning pins" are much better 
than the ordinary brass pins, and thin sheets of mica 
are often used instead of sheets of paper. 

A device which may be known as a spreading 
pin is more convenient than the narrow strip of paper 




THE PRESERVATION OF SPECIMENS. 



305 



for holding the wings down while they are being ar- 
ranged. This is made of a large, sharp-pointed pin 
(usually a black pin) and a piece of wire _ 
(Fig. 273). Fig. 272, c t illustrates the way 
in which these spreading pins are used. 
Only two of these are needed, as they are 
removed after the broad strips of paper or 
mica are pinned over the wings. 

No rule as to the position in which the 



wings should be placed can be made that FIG. 273. A 

11 i 11 T^ 11 spreading pin. 

will apply to all specimens, out usually 
in spreading moths the fore wings are brought so far 
forward that the hind edges (the inner margins) of 
the two wings form a straight line across the insect 
at right angles to the direction of the body, and the 
hind wings are brought forward so that their front 
edges (the costal margins) are nearly covered by the 
fore wings. Great care should be taken to have the 
wings of the two sides in similar positions. 

RELAXING INSECTS. It is often desirable to 
spread insects which have become dry ; this is espe- 
cially the case where butterflies are put into envelopes 
when collected, or where more moths are collected 
and pinned than can be spread at once. Such speci- 
mens can be spread at any time -later by first relaxing 
them. To do this partly fill a vessel with sand and 
saturate the sand with water; lay the specimens to 
be relaxed upon a piece of paper spread over this 
sand, and tightly close the vessel. If a damp towel 
be spread over the top of the vessel before the cover 
is put on, the air in the vessel will be more surely 
kept moist. After the specimens are left for a time 
from one to three days in this moist atmosphere, 



3o6 



INSECT LIFE. 



they can be spread as easily as when fresh. Care 
must be taken not to leave the specimens in the relax- 
ing jar too long lest they become moldy. A few 
drops of carbolic acid poured upon the sand will 
tend to prevent the growth of mold. 

INSECT CASES. Cases or boxes are needed in 
which to store specimens when pinned. For tempo- 
rary use, and especially when it is desirable to avoid 
all unnecessary expense, empty cigar-boxes can be 
procured for this purpose. The shallow boxes 
those made to hold fifty cigars are best. 

Unfortunately it is impracticable to keep collec- 
tions of insects permanently in cigar-boxes, for there 
is a small beetle the museum pest which is sure to 
destroy the specimens if they are not kept in cases 
with tightly fitting covers. Cigar-boxes will serve 
the needs of a class while they are carrying on the 
work ; but if the teacher or any of the pupils desire 
to make a permanent collection, insect cases should 
be procured. There are many styles of these in use ; 
that described below will be found serviceable and 
inexpensive, and can be made by any skillful carpen- 
ter. It is made as follows :- 

The lumber should be basswood or some other 
nonresinous wood that will not split too easily. Pine 
is not suitable for this purpose on account of the 
resin that will exude and injure the specimens. Cut 
from a board, half an inch in thickness, two strips. 
One of these should be an inch and a quarter, the 
other an inch and three quarters wide. Match these 
together with a tongue and groove three sixteenths 
of an inch deep, making the groove in the narrower 
piece. On one side of the narrower piece near the 



THE PRESERVATION OF SPECIMENS. 



307 



edge farthest from this groove make another groove 
fitted to receive a piece of glass, which is to form the 
top of the case ; and on the same side of the wider 
piece at the edge farthest from the tongue cut a rab- 
bet three eighths of an inch deep ; this is to receive 
, ,. the board that is to form the bot- 

tom of the case. Fig. 274 repre- 
sents a cross section of the strips of 
i wood thus prepared, and will serve 
as a working drawing for the car- 
penter or cabinet maker. 

From these strips the sides of 
the case are to be made. The 
tongue and groove should fit snug- 
ly, so that pests can not enter the 



-V 



PT 

*v 



fr /^ 

FIG. 274. 




FIG. 275. 



FIG. 276. 



case when it is closed, and the corners of the case 
should be very carefully mitered (Fig. 275). 

The corners should be both glued and nailed. As 
soon as the case is put together, and before the glue 
hardens, the top and bottom should be slightly sepa- 




INSECT LIFE. 

rated so that they shall not be glued together (Fig. 

276). If a number is put near one corner on both the 

cover and the lower 
part of the box (Fig. 
277) it will be easy to 
determine how the case 

FIG. 277. An insect case. , , , 

should be put together 

after being opened, and thus insure a fit of the two 
parts. This will also obviate the danger of putting 
the wrong cover on a case when several of them 
have been opened at once. 

The bottom should be made of well-seasoned, soft, 
nonresinous wood. If the wood is not well seasoned 
it will shrink and make a crack through which pests 
will enter. It should be soft so that pins can be eas- 
ily inserted in it if it is not lined with cork, and non- 
resinous, as resinous wood will injuriously affect the 
specimens, and is liable to become unsightly from the 
exudation of resin. For this reason pine is unsuit- 
able, but basswood is excellent. 

It is important that the cases be made of uniform 
size, so that they may be stored as drawers in a cabi- 
net, or between two upright boards upon which 
cleats have been nailed three inches apart (Fig. 278). 
A convenient size is twelve inches and a half by fif- 
teen inches and a half. This admits of the use of glass 
which measures twelve inches by fifteen inches, a 
common size of window glass. This is a smaller size 
than is ordinarily used by those having large collec- 
tions of insects. But cases of this size will be more 
convenient for young pupils to handle than larger 
ones. A larger case is described below as the college 
insect case. 



THE PRESERVATION OF SPECIMENS. 



309 



Hooks are usually put on insect cases, as shown 
in Fig. 277, but they are hardly necessary on small 
cases if they are made so that the covers fit tightly. 

Insect cases are usually left the natural color of 
the wood on the outside and painted white on the in- 
side. Ordinary oil paint is not suitable for this, as it 
will turn yellow when kept in the dark. The best 
paint for this purpose is made of zinc-white and glue. 
Care should be taken to get the best quality of zinc- 
white that which is free from lumps otherwise a 
smooth paint can not be made. 

In making this paint use an ordinary glue-pot. 
Dissolve one part by weight of glue in five parts of 
water. Then stir in zinc-white until the mixture is 
of the consistency of ordinary paint ; about five parts 
by weight of zinc-white will be required. The mix- 
ture is heated while being prepared, and is used 
warm. If any of the mixture is left unused it forms 
a solid cake ; but this can be liquefied by heat and 
used when desired. This paint dries in a few min- 
utes after being applied, and will remain permanently 
a beautitul, clear white. 

It is very desirable, if practicable, to have the 
cases lined with cork. Sheet-cork is kept by the 
dealers in entomological supplies for this purpose, 
and recently compressed cork, which, when well 
made, is better than sheet-cork, has come into use. 
Compressed cork is ground cork mixed with a small 
amount of glue, compressed into sheets, and covered 
with paper. As a single sheet of compressed cork 
will cover the bottom of the case, it presents a 
neater appearance than sheet-cork. Thick linoleum, 
a substance made of cork and used for covering 



310 INSECT LIFE. 

floors, is also a good substitute for sheet-cork. The 
use of cork largely obviates the danger of injuring 
the points of delicate pins. 

In certain parts of our country, especially in the 
warmer parts of California, an excellent substitute for 
cork can be obtained by cutting into thin slices dead 
flowering stalks of the century plant. The inner 
part of such stalks is a very soft pith called pita-wood 
(pronounced pe'tah-wood). 

The pith of large cornstalks is even softer than 
pita- wood, but it is not as convenient to use on ac- 
count of its smaller size. But the pupils that are" 
unable to procure cases lined with cork or pita-wood 
should provide themselves with at least one cigar- 
box, into the bottom of which they have neatly glued 
a layer of corn pith. The cork, pita-wood, or corn 
pith can be covered with a sheet of white paper, giv- 
ing the case a neat appearance. 

If only a single box is thus lined with pith, it 
should be reserved for the specimens that are being 
studied that is, those that are taken out frequently. 

THE COLLEGE INSECT CASE. There is a great lack of uni- 
formity in the size and details of form of the insect cases used in 
the larger museums. The style used in the great museums at Ber- 
lin, Germany, and at Cambridge in this country differs from the one 
described above in size, the outside dimensions being sixteen inches 
by nineteen inches by three inches, and in construction, the corners 
being both dovetailed and mitered, otherwise the two cases are the 
same. The case used by the writer differs from that used at Berlin 
and Cambridge only in having the bottom made of glass as well as 
the top. 

The most essential feature of an insect case is that it shall be 
tight so that museum pests can not enter. In the more common 
insect cases the bottoms are of wood ; but it is extremely difficult 



THE PRESERVATION OF SPECIMENS. 311 

to keep such bottoms from swelling and shrinking with variations 
in the moisture of the atmosphere. The result is that cases with 
wooden bottoms are very liable to have cracks in them which will 
give the museum pests a chance to enter. With the ordinary 
method of lining insect cases with cork the wooden bottoms admit 
of the cork being easily fastened in place with tacks ; but with the 
method of arranging insects upon blocks described below there is 
no occasion for fastening anything to the bottom of the case. 
Hence glass can be used as well as wood, and with glass for both 
top and bottom a case can be easily made which shall remain as 
tight as when new. 

THE BLOCK SYSTEM OF ARRANGING COLLECTIONS. The 
ordinary \vay of arranging entomological collections is to pin the 
specimens into cork fastened to the bottoms of the cases, and this 
method will probably be found most practicable for the greater num- 
ber of teachers that use this book ; but where a large and rapidly- 
growing collection is to be cared for, the block system of arranging 
collections, devised by the writer, will be found much more convenient. 

Under the old system, a very large proportion of the time of a 
curator of a rapidly growing collection is devoted to the rearrange- 
ment of his collection, to simply removing pinned specimens from 
one place in a cork-lined case and putting them into another. This 
not only consumes much time, but results in the breaking of many 
specimens. Where the block system is used this loss of time and 
breakage of specimens is reduced to a minimum. 

The fundamental idea of the block system is to fasten upon a 
small block each series of specimens illustrating a single species. 
A standard size of block is adopted for what may be termed the 
unit block ; other blocks which are multiples or fractions of this 
size are also used. When it is necessary to rearrange the collection 
the relative positions of the blocks can be easily and rapidly changed 
without danger of breaking the specimens. 

The blocks are made of soft nonresinous wood and are painted 
on the upper side with the zinc-white and glue mixture described 
above. The pins are inserted and removed with pinning forceps or 
pliers. It is desirable to have a few blocks made of compressed 
cork or of wood with sheet-cork or linoleum tacked to them for the 
specimens that are being studied or are not yet classified. When 



312 



INSECT LIFE. 



specimens are ready to be put in a permanent place they are trans- 
ferred to the wooden blocks ; after this it is seldom necessary to 
remove the pins from the wood. 

Where the block system is used it is very important that the in- 
sect cases be of uniform size, so that the blocks shall fit well. This 
can be assured by having an iron frame over which each case is 
fitted when made. The corners should be cut from this frame so 

as to make room for the glue that is pressed 
out from the corners of the case by the clamps 
that are used in making the case (Fig. 278). 

The blocks also should be of uniform sizes. 
This is most easily attained where they are 
cut by machinery, and, too, they are much 
cheaper when made in this way. Those used 
by the writer are made by a manufacturer 
of bee-keepers' supplies, and cost unpainted 
three dollars per thousand. 

The blocks are all one third inch in thick- 
ness and 4||- inches in length. This admits 
of there being four columns of blocks in each 
case.* The variation in size is attained by having the blocks of 
differing widths. There is given below a list of the widths ot blocks 
used in the entomological collections under the charge of the writer. 

BLOCKS FOR MOUNTING INSECTS. 




FIG. 278. Iron frame 
for mold for cases. 



Name of size. 


Dimensions it 


i inches. 


Remarks. 


Double 


4H x 7 1 


X ^ ) 


Used for series illustrating 


One and one half. . . 
Unit 


" 5f 
" "} 




the transformations or hab- 
its of a species. 


Two thirds 


" 2- 


" { 


Used for large insects as 


One half 


" 1^ 


I 


o 

Lepidoptera and large Or- 


One third 


" ll 


" i 


thoptera. 


One fourth 


l 


7 
It 


For small insects. 


One eighth.. 







For generic and family labels. 


o 

One sixth 


" 4 


" ) 


For rilling out columns only 


One twelfth 


8 

A 


" I 


o J 

a few of these are needed. 




1 6 


1 





The outside dimensions of the case are sixteen inches by nineteen 
inches. As the wooden sides are half an inch thick, the case measures 



THE PRESERVATION OF SPECIMENS. 



313 



The blocks should be made so that the grain of the wood ex- 
tends along the longer dimension of the block, i. e., from top to 
bottom in the first two sizes, and from left to right in all others. 

BENT-NECKED VIALS. It is necessary to preserve many speci- 
mens in alcohol, and it is very desirable that such specimens should 
be mounted on blocks so as to be placed with other specimens illus- 
trating the same species. The use of the ordinary vials or glass 
tubes for this is attended with serious difficulties. It is almost im- 
possible to prevent the leakage of the alcohol and the consequent 
destruction of the specimens. In addition 
to this the curved surface of a vial will make 
the contained specimen appear very different 
from what it is. A long slender larva will 
appear much thicker than it is, while its 
length will not be magnified. 

To meet these difficulties the writer has 

had vials made of the form represented in Fig. 279. The bend in 
the neck prevents the rapid leakage of alcohol, and the plain sides 
the magnification of one diameter of the contained specimens. Two 
sizes of these vials are manufactured one containing one half 
ounce, the other two ounces. They can be obtained of Messrs. 
Whitall, Tatum & Co., New York. 

To fix one of these vials to a block a white card is fastened to 
its lower side with liquid glue (the acetic acid and alcohol solution). 




FIG. 279. A bent- 
necked vial. 





FiG, 280. Clips for slides on a block. 



FIG. 281. 



The card is then trimmed close to the sides of the vial, but is al- 
lowed to project a short distance beyond each end ; then the card is 
fastened at each end to the block with ribbon pins. 



on the inside fifteen inches by eighteen inches. This would admit of 
four columns of blocks, each block being four inches and a half long ; 
but in order that the blocks may be easily removed from the case they 
are made a little shorter than this. 



INSECT LIFE. 

CLIPS FOR SLIDES. The glass slides upon which microscopic 
objects are mounted are fastened to blocks by means of clips which 
are made from wire (Figs. 280 and 281). 

DESTRUCTION OF MUSEUM PESTS. Even when specimens 
are kept in tight cases, it often happens that the museum pest finds 
its way into a case and attacks the specimens. The presence of 
this tormentor is indicated by a fine dust that falls to the bottom 
of the case from the infested specimen. All of the cases in a col- 
lection should be searched once a month for this indication of the 
presence of pests. If a case is found to be infested, the pests can 
be destroyed by pouring a tablespoonful of carbon bisulphide in one 
corner of the case and tightly closing the case. This substance 
evaporates rapidly and will destroy the pests without injuring the 
specimens. It can be obtained of any druggist. 

If it is necessary to store away a collection for more than one 
month, a naphtha cone should be put in each case and strips ot 
paper pasted over the crack between the top and bottom. Naphtha 
cones can be obtained of dealers in entomological supplies. 

MOLD. In certain regions where the climate is moist speci- 
mens are very liable to become covered with mold. The best 
method of preventing this is to keep a small quantity of carbolic 
acid in the cases. 



CHAPTER III. 

ON LABELING SPECIMENS AND TAKING NOTES. 

IN making a collection of insects, the specimens 
should be carefully labeled so that it will be possible 
at any time to tell when and where each one was col- 
lected ; and if observations are made regarding the 
insects, these should be recorded in such a way that 
there can be no doubt regarding the specimens to 
which they refer. The collector, therefore, should 
adopt at the outset a definite system of labeling speci- 
mens and of taking notes. 

It is very important that the system adopted 
should be a simple one, one that can be easily carried 
out ; for if too much labor is involved there will be 
great danger that it will not be done. 

I. ON LABELING SPECIMENS. 

UNNUMBERED SPECIMENS.- -The number of speci- 
mens which a collector of insects must handle is so 
great that it is impracticable to give each specimen a 
number referring to a catalogue or a note-book, as is 
customary in collecting larger animals. Entomolo- 
gists, therefore, when they wish merely to record the 
locality and date of capture make use of small labels 
which are placed on the pins below the specimens. 
21 315 



316 INSECT LIFE. 

These labels may be either printed or written or 
partly printed, and with blank spaces to be filled out 

Wlth * ' F ' 282 is 



Ithaca, N. Y. Ithaca, N. Y. Ithaca, N. Y. 

Aug. ' 9 6. Aug. ' 9 6. Aug. ' 9 6. a copy of a sheet of la- 

Ithaca, N. Y. Ithaca, N. Y. Ithaca, N. Y. , , r . 

Aug. ' 9 6. Aug. ' 9 6. Aug. ' 9 6- bels ol the latter kind. 



Ithaca, N. Y. Ithaca, N. Y. Ithaca, N. Y. \V,'tU l^U^l ( *l i J 

Aug. ' 9 6. Aug. ' 9 6. Aug. ' 9 6. With a label of this kind 

Ithaca, N. Y. Ithaca, N. Y. Ithaca, N. Y. it- j s O nlv nPPP^irv tn 

Aug. ' 9 6. Aug. ' 9 6. Aug. ' 9 6. necessary 

ithaca, N. Y. ithaca. N. Y. ithaca, N. Y. write a figure indicating 

Aug. '96. Aug. '96. Aug. '96. 

ithaca, N. Y. ithaca, N. Y. ithaca, N. Y. the day ol the month on 

Aug. '96. Aug. '96. Aug. '96. , , ' , 

which the specimen was 

FlG. 282. Locality and date labels. 1 1 , T A , 

collected. It costs but 

little to have labels like these printed ; and they save 
much labor, and add greatly to the neatness of the 
collection. 

In getting labels of this kind, tell the printer not 
to space the labels, but to set them solid, so that it 
will not be necessary to trim them after they are 
cut apart. The smaller the labels are the better they 
appear. 

In writing labels it is best to use India ink, as the 
ordinary writing inks fade in the course of a few 
years if exposed to light. In writing dates use the 
ordinary abbreviations for the months instead of 
numerals, as is sometimes done. For when numerals 
are used there is danger of ambiguity ; 6, 9, '96 may 
mean either 6 Sept., '96, or June 9, '96. 

In the case of bottles of alcoholic specimens pin 
a label to the stopper, for convenience of reading, and 
put a duplicate within the bottle to prevent the oc- 
currence of mistakes from an exchange of stoppers. 

Sometimes in addition to the label indicating the 
locality and date of capture, it is desirable to add one 
indicating the conditions of capture, as at sugar, at 



ON LABELING SPECIMENS AND TAKING NOTES. 317 

electric light, or in the twilight. We have sheets of 
labels printed for this purpose (Fig. 283). 

When more than one label is used Sugar Ljght Iwnjght 
thev are spaced on the pin so that "f"- V& 

j A ou^cir . 1^1^11 i. 

^Q/-h r-on \\(* r^irl Sugar. Light. 

eacn can oe reau. sugar. Light. 

NUMBERED SPECIES. In the Sugan Light - Twilight - 

r .., , . . . . c FIG. 283. Labels in- 

study of life histories it is oiten nee- dicating conditions 
essary to record more information capture. 

than can be placed upon labels. In such cases the 
specimens and notes should be given corresponding 
numbers. Even in this case it is not best to give 
each specimen a distinct number; a much simpler 
way is to give all specimens of each species the same 
number. 

Suppose, for example, that the first species studied 
is the apple-tree tent-caterpillar. In this case all the 
specimens of this species should be labeled No. I, 
and all notes on this species should have the same 
number. The next species studied should be num- 
bered No. 2, and so on. 

The locality and date labels, already described, 
can be used in connection with the numbered labels ; 
there is no objection to putting two or three labels 
on a specimen if each records additional informa- 
tion. 

Sometimes it is desirable to make notes regarding 
a particular specimen, which shows some individual 
peculiarity or was collected under peculiar conditions. 
In such a case use is made of a subnumber, which is 
written on the label below the number referring to 
the species. 

Fig. 284 represents a sheet of labels such as we 
use for our numbered species. Cornell U. is printed 



INSECT LIFE. 



Cornell U, 

No. 
bub. 

Cornell U 

Mo. 
Sub. 

Cornell U 

No. 
Sub. 

Cornell U 

No. 

Sub. 



Cornell U. Cornell U. 

No. No. 

Sub. Sub. 

Cornell U. Cornell U. 

No. No. 

Sub. Sub. 

Cornell U. Cornell U. 

No. No. 

Sub. Sub. 

Cornell U. Cornell U. 
No. No. 

Sub. Sub. 



FIG. 284. Labels for 
bered species. 



num- 



on each label to avoid the danger of mistakes occur- 
ring in case exchanges are made with collectors 
using a similar system. Each of our students using 

this system has his name printed 
in the corresponding place on 
his labels. The blank space 
after the abbreviation Sub. is 
used only when it is necessary 
to give a subnumber, as indi- 
cated above. A narrow blank 
space is left below the place 
for the subnumber in which a 
date may be written. 

NUMBERED LOTS OF SPECIMENS. The method of labeling 
specimens described above will be sufficient for the needs of those 
whose collections are small. The following suggestion is for those 
having charge of large and rapidly growing collections : 

It often happens that a large number of specimens, not all of the 
same species, are to be labeled, respecting each of which precisely 
the same record is to be made. It is my practice to give each lot 
of specimens of this kind a number, and to place on each specimen 
a label indicating the lot to which it belongs. In a note-book, kept 
especially for this purpose, and known 
as the Lot Book, a full account of each 
lot is written. By doing this the record 
is as complete as it would be were each 
specimen given a number, and a note 
written for each. Fig. 285 represents 
a sheet of the labels used for this pur- 
pose. The following extracts from the 
Lot Book of Cornell University will illus- 
trate the application of this system : 
LOT 30. Lepidoptera from Colorado. 

These were collected and presented to the university by Mr. 

H. W. Nash. See Letter File I, page 43. 
LOT 31. Coleoptera from Arizona. These were collected by Mr. 



Cornell U. Cornell U. Cornell U. 
Lot Lot Lot 

Sub. Sub. Sub. 

Cornell U. Cornell U. Cornell U. 
Lot Lot Lot 

Sub. Sub. Sub. 

Cornell U. Cornell U. Cornell U. 

Lot Lot Lot 

Sub. Sub. Sub. 

Cornell U. Cornell U. Cornell U. 
Lot Lot Lot 

Sub. Sub. Sub. 

FIG. 285. Labels for num- 
bered lots of specimens. 



ON LABELING SPECIMENS AND TAKING NOTES. 



H. K. Morrison. They were purchased in February, 1883. 
See letters. 

LOT 45. A collection of Hemiptera determined by Professor P. R. 
Uhler during the year 1883. See correspondence in Letter 
Book I and Letter File I. The subnumbers refer to a list fur- 
nished by Professor Uhler, which is in Letter File I, pp. 166- 
172. 

The last extract illustrates a very important use made of lot 
numbers. In this way it is easy to label each specimen so that its 
name and the authority for the determination can be easily ascer- 
tained. And as the label is a small one placed upon the pin, there is 
no danger of the specimen and 
its label becoming separated. 
These labels are used in addition 
to the larger labels placed at the 
head of each series of specimens 
in a systematic collection. 



Coleoptera. . 



Cicindet idae . 



Omus . 



lecontii 



Omus 



Tetra. c/>a * 



BLANK FORMS FOR 
LABELS. - In arranging 
specimens in a systematic 
order in a collection, there 
should be placed at the 
head of each group of in- 
sects a label bearing the 
name of the group. These 
labels are used in addition 
to those already described , 
which are always left on 
the pins or in the bottles 
as the case may be. The 
group labels are of larger size than the preceding, 
and are usually written on blank forms like those 
shown in Fig. 286, except that it is customary to have 
the forms printed in red ink ; and the forms are twice 
as long and twice as wide as shown here. 



Tetra. cha 
tfirf'iniea. 



FIG. 286. Labels. 



320 



INSECT LIFE. 



The four sizes are used for the names of orders, 
families, genera, and species respectively. The 
method of arrangement of these labels is also shown 
in Fig. 286, the x's representing the position of the 
specimens thus labeled. 

These figures represent the style of labels ordi- 
narily used in collections. In the case of collections 
made by young pupils who are beginning the study 
of insects more extensive labels may be desirable. 
These should be neatly written on plain paper and a 
line drawn about each with a pen. See examples in 
Lessons XVI 1 1 and XXV. 

II. ON TAKING NOTES. 

NOTE-BOOKS AND SLIPS.- -There are two distinct 
systems of keeping notes : By one, the notes are writ- 
ten in a blank book ; by the other, they are written 
on slips of paper, which are afterward arranged ac- 
cording to subjects. 

An objection to the use of a note-book arises from 
the fact that when one begins a series of observations 
it is impossible to determine how much space is going 
to be required for the notes on it; and, consequently, 
it is impracticable to keep together all notes on each 
subject. By the slip system this is easily done ; for 
this reason, most naturalists write their notes on slips 
or sheets of paper, and keep them classified in envel- 
opes or covers. 

A combination of these two systems meets most 
perfectly the needs of an entomologist. It is my 
practice to write notes on general subjects on sheets 
of paper, which are kept classified in folded sheets of 
Manilla paper. But for the notes on species of in- 



ON LABELING SPECIMENS AND TAKING NOTES. 



321 



sects both a note-book and loose sheets of paper are 
used. 

The species on which observations are made are 
numbered, as described on page 317. The note-book 
is a paged blank book, which is made of ruled quarto 
paper. There is a single red line about one inch 
from the left margin of each page. An entire page 
is devoted to each number ; this greatly facilitates the 
finding of notes, for the number of the notes and that 
of the page are the same. The space at the left of 
the red line is reserved for dates and subnumbers. 
The first line of the notes consist only of the name of 
the species ; if this is not known at the time the notes 
are begun, the line is left blank and a descriptive title 
for temporary use is written on the second line. 

As already stated, one page of the note-book is 
reserved for notes on each species. In many cases 
this page is sufficient ; when it is found insufficient, 
the expression " See notes" is written at the end of 
the note in the book, and all further notes are written 
on loose sheets. These are kept in folded sheets of 
Manilla paper, which are stored in boxes in their 
numerical sequence. 

The use of a note-book in this system is a sure 
protection against the danger of using the same 
number twice; and it is the most convenient method 
of keeping the notes on the large number of species 
respecting which extended observations are not made ; 
while the supplementary sheets afford all the advan- 
tages of the slip system when extended observations 
are made. 

INDICATION OF SEX. In many insects there are 
marked external sexual differences, either of size, 



322 



INSECT LIFE. 



form, color, or of shape of appendages. In others it 
is difficult to determine the sex without dissection. 
When the sex of a specimen is known it should be 
indicated on the label. This is commonly done bv 
using the astronomical sign $ or ? , the former indi- 
cating the male sex, the latter the female. It will aid 
the student in distinguishing these signs to remember 
that $ represents the shield and spear of Mars, and 
$ the hand-glass or mirror of Venus. In the case of 
social insects, as ants, bees, and wasps, the workers 
are indicated by Q . 

ON TAKING NOTES. After many years' experi- 
ence I am sure that nothing more important can be 
said to the young student regarding the taking of 
notes than to urge him to take them at the time 
the observation is made. If you make an observa- 
tion in the field do not wait till you return to your 
study to record it, but write an account of what you 
have seen immediately, and do this, if possible, while 
observing the fact. Almost invariably the writing 
of an account of an observation will suggest queries, 
many of which can be answered at the time the ob- 
servation is made, but not after the observer has 
returned to his study. 

Even in those cases where it is intended to make 
a long and serious study of a subject, every phenom- 
enon observed should be noted as soon as seen. 
Make your record while the occurrence is fresh in 
your mind, before it loses the charm of novelty and 
becomes a commonplace. Many an account is very 
incomplete simply because the writer has become so 
familiar with certain details that it does not seem to 
him worth while to record them. The reader will 



ON LABELING SPECIMENS AND TAKING NOTES. 



323 



please bear in mind that I have reference merely to 
the taking of notes for the observer's personal use ; 
the publication of conclusions based upon hasty, first 
impressions is not advised. Fill your note-book with 
descriptions, but digest them carefully, sifting out 
for publication only those that exhaustive study and 
repeated observations prove to be valuable. In 
making observations be sure you are right and tJien look 
again. 

Write your notes in as good style as you can 
command. It does not pay to be slovenly here, giv- 
ing no attention to literary form. Remember, how- 

O J 

ever, that the more simple and direct an account is, 
the better its style. 

DESCRIPTIONS OF INSECTS. One of the best 
methods of training the powers of observation is by 
writing descriptions of natural objects ; for the prep- 
aration of a careful description will lead the describer 
to see many features that otherwise would not be 
observed. 

The nature of the description will depend greatly 
on the amount of experience the writer of it has had. 
The young beginner of Nature study will be expected 
to mention only the more general features of the 
object described, while the more advanced student 
should be able to point out its distinctive character- 
istics. Thus in describing a butterfly the beginner 
should note, among other things, that it has six legs, 
four wings, a pair of horns (antennas), two large eyes, 
a coiled tube for sucking, and that the wings are 
clothed with a dustlike substance. But the more ad- 
vanced student should not be expected to state any 
of these facts, except by implication in the statement 



324 



INSECT LIFE. 



that the insect described is a butterfly, for the includ- 
ing of characteristics that are true of all butterflies 
would be unnecessary, and tend to obscure the im- 
portance of the more distinctive features of the species 
described. He should not attempt to say everything 
possible about the insect, but should try to discover 
and state in what respects the butterfly described 
differs from other butterflies ; so that the reader of 
his description can recognize with as little effort as 
possible the particular species described. 

No detailed rules for describing insects can be 
easily given ; the peculiar characteristics will be 
found in different organs in different cases. The 
following are some of the features that should be 
studied in search for distinguishing characteristics 
when describing adult insects :- 

1. The body as a whole. The size of the insect; the general 
color ; the color of the more prominent markings ; the relative pro- 
portions of the head, thorax, and abdomen ; the clothing of the 
body, as scales, hairs, and spines ; and any striking peculiarity of 
the appendages of the body. 

2. The head. The relative size of the head; the details of the 
color markings of the head ; the size and shape of the compound 
eyes ; variations in size of the ocelli in different parts of the com- 
pound eyes ; the presence or absence of hairs either in or fringirg 
the compound eyes ; the number and position of the simple eyes; 
the insertion of the antennas ; the general form of the antennas ; the 
clothing of the antennas ; the relative length of the different seg- 
ments of the antennas ; the form of the labrum ; the shape of the 
mandibles ; the structure of the maxillas and maxillary palpi ; and 
the structure of the labium and labial palpi. 

3. The thorax. Peculiarities in the size and form of the thorax ; 
the details of the markings of the thorax ; the structure and color- 
ing of the wings ; the structure, clothing, and armature of the legs ; 
and the position of the thoracic spiracles. 



ON LABELING SPECIMENS AND TAKING NOTES. 325 

4. The abdomen. The size and general form of the abdomen ; 
the number of visible abdominal segments ; the details of the mark- 
ings of the abdomen ; the number and structure of the caudal ap- 
pendages ; and the number and position of the abdominal spiracles. 

In preparing a description of a larva the follow- 
ing features should be observed :- 

The size and general form of the body ; the presence or absence 
of legs and of prolegs ; the number and position of the prolegs when 
present ; in footless larvae, the presence or absence of a distinct 
head ; the general color of the skin, and the color and pattern of its 
markings ; the nature of the clothing or armature of the body; the 
colors of the clothing or armature ; in " naked " larvae, the arrange- 
ment of the tubercles bearing minute hairs or more conspicuous 
spines ; in hairy larvae, the arrangement of the hairs, whether scat- 
tered evenly over the body or gathered in tufts ; if the hairs are 
tufted, the arrangement of the tufts ; the number and position of 
long pencils of hairs if present ; the number and position of the 
spiracles. 

In addition to the above, there are many features 
characteristic of limited groups of insects which will 
be learned by the student as he advances in the study 
of such groups. 



CHAPTER IV. 




THE BREEDING OF INSECTS. 

IN the study of the life 
histories of insects many 
facts can be most easily and 
surely determined by the 
study of specimens in con- 
finement. It is rarely prac- 
ticable to watch the devel- 
opment of an individual in- 
sect in the field, but with 
the aid of a breeding cage 

FlG. 287. A home-made breeding . . ., , ,, 

cage. this is easily done, i he use 

of breeding cages also ena- 
bles the lover of Nature study to keep constantly at 
hand where they can be seen daily, or even hourly, 
examples of the life of the fields and ponds. 

In collecting insects for study in confinement it 
is necessary to note carefully the conditions under 
which they naturally live, and then to imitate these 
conditions as closely as possible. If the insects are 
feeding on a plant, the kind of plant and the part in- 
fested should be observed, so that the specimens 
when confined may be given the proper food. If 

they live in water, determine whether they will re- 

326 



THE BREEDING OF INSECTS. 327 



/ 



quire running water or can be kept in an ordinary 
aquarium. And if they are predaceous, the nature 
of their food should be ascertained, if possible, al- 
though many predaceous insects can be fed on raw 
meat. 

Great care should be taken not to injure the 
specimens when collecting them. Plant-eating spe- 
cies can be carried in tight boxes, in which should be 
placed a quantity of their food. Air holes in the 
boxes are not necessary. It is more important that 
the food be kept from wilting than that there should 
be fresh air. If aquatic insects are to be collected, 
large bottles with wide mouths or glass fruit-cans 
will be convenient for transporting them. If the 
bottles or cans be only partly filled with water they 
may be closed tightly for the time occupied by an 
ordinary field trip. 

BREEDING CAGES. Several styles of elaborate 
and expensive breeding cages are in use by profes- 
sional entomologists, but it seems hardly worth while 
to describe them here, for equally good results can 
be obtained with simple and inexpensive cages, which 
can be made by any handy boy. 

A good home-made cage can be built by fitting a 
pane of glass into one side of an empty soap-box. A 
board, three or four inches wide, should be fastened 
below the glass so as to admit of a layer of soil being 
placed in the lower part of the cage, and the glass 
can be made to slide, so as to serve as a door (Fig. 
287). The glass should fit closely when shut, to pre- 
vent the escape of insects. 

In rearing caterpillars and other leaf-eating larvse 
branches of the food plant should be stuck into bot- 



328 INSECT LIFE. 

ties or cans which are filled with sand saturated with 
water. By keeping the sand wet the plants can be 
kept fresh longer than in water alone, and the dan- 
ger of the larvae being drowned is avoided by the 
use of sand. 

Many larvae when full-grown enter the ground to 
pass the pupa state ; on this account a layer of loose 
soil should be kept in the bottom of a breeding cage. 
This soil should not be allowed to become dry, 
neither should it be soaked with water. If the soil 
is too dry the pupae will not mature, or if they do so 
the wings will not expand fully ; if the soil is too 
damp the pupae are liable to be drowned or to be 
killed by mold. 

It is often necessary to keep pupae over winter, 
for a large proportion of insects pass the winter in 
the pupa state. Hibernating pupae may be left in 
the breeding cages or removed and packed in moss 
in small boxes. Great care should be taken to keep 
moist the soil in the breeding cages, or the moss if 
that be used. The cages or boxes containing the 
pupae should be stored in a cool cellar, or in an un- 
heated room, or in a large box placed out of doors 
where the sun can not strike it. Low temperature 
is not so much to be feared as great and frequent 
changes of temperature. 

Hibernating pupae can be kept in a warm room if 
care be taken to keep them moist, but under such 
treatment the mature insects are apt to emerge in 
midwinter. 

An excellent breeding cage is represented by Fig. 
288. It is made by combining a flower-pot and a 
lantern-globe. When practicable, the food plant of 



THE BREEDING OF INSECTS. 



329 




FIG. 288. 



the insects to be bred 
is planted in the flow- 
er-pot ; in other cases 
a bottle or tin can 
filled with wet sand is 
sunk into the soil in 
the flower - pot, and 
the stems of the plant 
are stuck into this wet 
sand. The top of the 
lantern-globe is cov- 
ered with Swiss mus- 
lin. These breeding 





FIG. 289. 



cages are inexpensive, and especially so when the 
pots and globes are bought in considerable quanti- 
ties. Fig. 290 represents a 
modification of this style of 
breeding cage that is used 
by the writer. It differs 
only in that large glass cyl- 
inders take the place of the 
lantern-globes. These cylin- 
ders were made especially 
for us by a manufacturer of 
glass, and cost from six dol- 
lars to eight dollars per doz- 
en, according to size, when 
made in lots of fifty. 

When the transforma- 
tions of small insects or of a 
small number of larger ones 
are to be studied, a conven- 
ient cage can be made by 




FIG. 290. 



330 



INSECT LIFE. 



combining a large lamp-chimney with a small flower- 
pot (Fig. 289). 

AQUARIA. For the breeding of aquatic insects 
aquaria are needed. As the ordinary rectangular 
aquaria are expensive and are liable to leak, we use 
glass vessels instead. 

Small aquaria can be made of jelly-tumblers, glass 
finger-bowls, and glass fruit-cans, and larger aquaria, 

of the form shown in Fig. 
291, can be obtained of some 
dealers. A good substitute 
for these is what is known 
as a battery-jar. There are 
several sizes of these, which 
can be obtained of most deal- 
ers in scientific apparatus. 

To prepare an aquarium, 
place in the jar a layer of 
sand ; plant some water 
plants in this sand, cover the 
sand with a layer of gravel 
or small stones, and then add 
the required amount of wa- 
ter carefully so as not to dis- 
turb the plants or to roil the water unduly. The 
growing plants will keep the water in good condi- 
tion for aquatic animal life, and render changing of 
the water unnecessary, if the animals in it live natu- 
rally in quiet water. Among the more available 
plants for use in aquaria are the following : 
Water weed, Elodca canadensis. 
Bladderwort, Utricularia (several species). 
Water-star wort, Callitriche (several species). 




FIG. 291. 



THE BREEDING OF INSECTS. 



331 




Watercress, Nasturtium officinale. 

Stone worts, Char a and Nitella (several species of 
each). 

Frog-spittle or water-silk, Spirogira. 

A small quantity of duckweed, Lemna (Fig. 292), 
placed on the surface of 
the water adds to the 
beauty of an aquarium. 

When it is necessary 
to add water to an aqua- 
rium on account of loss 
by evaporation, rain wa- 
ter should be used to 

FIG. 292. Duckweed. 

prevent an undue ac- 

cumulation of the mineral matter held in solution in 

other water. 

THE CONSTANT-LEVEL SIPHON. Certain insects 
that live in rapidly flowing streams require a con- 
stant change of water. Some of these are extremely 
difficult to breed in confinement, but others can be 
kept alive easily if placed in an aquarium 
which is prepared as described above, 
and through which there is a stream of 

o 

water constantly flowing. 

The water can be admitted to the 
aquarium from a faucet, and the surplus 
water removed by a device which may 
be called a constant-level siphon. This 




FIG 



Con- 



. 2QT,. on- . , . . -|-^. 

stant -level is represented in operation in rig. 291, 

siphon ' and separate in Fig. 293. 

The siphon can be made of small lead pipe. It 
differs from an ordinary siphon in being bent up at 
the outer end (the last bend shown in the figure is 



22 



332 



INSECT LIFE. 



not essential ; it is the one preceding that which is 
referred to here) and in having the inner arm (the 




FIG. 294. Section of a root cage. 



one within the aquarium) longer than the outer arm. 
These two peculiarities prevent the emptying of the 



THE BREEDING OF INSECTS. 



333 



siphon, as air can not enter at either end. If the 
bore of the siphon is considerably larger than the 
stream of water flowing into the aquarium, the water 
in the aquarium will be kept at a constant level, 
which will be that of the outer end of the siphon. 

To prevent the escape of the insects through the 
siphon, a cylinder of fine wire gauze, closed at each 
end with a disk of cork, is fitted over the inner end 
of the siphon (Fig. 293). 

THE ROOT CAGE. For the study of insects that 
infest the roots of plants, the writer has devised a 
special form of breeding cage known as the root 
cage. In its simplest form this cage consists of a 




FIG. 295. A root cage. 



frame holding two plates of glass in a vertical posi- 
tion and only a short distance apart. The space be- 
tween the plates of glass is filled with soil in which 



334 



INSECT LIFE. 



a 



c 



seeds are planted or small plants set. The width of 
the space between the plates of glass depends on the 
width of two strips of wood placed between them, 

one at each end, and should 
t be only wide enough to allow 
the insects under observation 
to move freely through the 
soiL If it is too wide the in- 
sects will be able to conceal 
themselves. Immediately 

outside of each glass there is 
a piece of blackened zinc, 
which slips into grooves in 
the ends of the cage, and 
which can be easily removed 
when it is desired to observe 
the insects in the soil. Fig. 
294 represents a small section 
of such a cage with the zinc 
removed. 

In a more expensive form 
of the cage, which is used in 
the Insectary of Cornell Uni- 
versity (Fig. 295), there is 
only one plate of glass next 
to the soil, the place of the 
other plate of glass being oc- 
cupied by a porous tile, be- 

296. A sectional view of a tween which and an outer 

plate of glass is packed a lay- 
er of moss. By wetting the moss sufficient moisture 
passes through the porous tile to keep the soil in 
good condition for the growth of the plants in the 




Fi 



THE BREEDING OF INSECTS. 



335 



soil without unduly wetting the soil. A cross sec- 
tion of this cage is represented by Fig. 296 ; the parts 
are as follows : a, plate of glass forming the back 
of the cage ; b, space filled with moss ; c, porous tile ; 
d, thin space filled with soil in which seed is sown 
and the insects to be watched are placed ; e, plate of 
glass forming the front of the cage ; f, a sheet of 
zinc for darkening the cage this is removed when 
observations are to be made ; g g, sections of the 
wooden frame of the cage. 

FIREFLIES.* 

As o'er the face of Evening fair 

A shade of twilight came, 
Lost sunbeams, tangled in her hair, 

Fell into drops of flame. 

Charles Henry Ltiders. 

* From The Dead Nymph and other Poems, by permission of Charles 
Scribner's Sons. 



CHAPTER V. 

MISCELLANEOUS LISTS. 

I. BOOKS ON INSECTS. 

THE literature of entomology is very extensive. 
Hundreds of books on insects have been printed, and 
more than twenty-five journals devoted exclusively 
to this subject are now published. In addition to 
this, most of the zoological journals contain articles 
on insects. 

Nevertheless there is still a lack of the kind of 
books usually sought for by beginners in this study. 
There are a few good general text-books on the sub- 
ject, and a larger number of excellent popular works 
on the habits of insects, but there does not exist to- 
day a fairly complete treatise on the American spe- 
cies of any order of insects. The fact is, the science 
of entomology is still in its infancy, and a great field 
is open for the earnest worker. 

Tn the following list there are enumerated those 
works that are most useful to beginning students. 
More advanced students should consult The Zoolog- 
ical Record in order to ascertain the titles and places 
of publication of more special treatises. * 

* The Zoological Record is published annually by the Zoological 
Society of London. Each volume gives a complete list of the works and 

336 



MISCELLANEOUS LISTS. 



337 



GENERAL TEXT-BOOKS. 

COMSTOCK, J. H. and A. B. A Manual for the 
Study of Insects. Comstock Publishing Company, 
Ithaca, N. Y., 1895. Price, $3.75 net; postage, 34 
cents. 

This work contains a series of analytical tables by means of 
which the family to which any North American insect belongs can 
be determined. Under the head of each family the characteristics 
of the family, both as regards structure and habits, are given, and 
the more common species are described. It is profusely illustrated. 

HYATT, ALPHEUS, and ARMS, J. M. Guides for 
Science Teaching. No. III. Insecta. D. C. Heath 
& Co., Boston, 1890. Price, $1.25. 

A very useful work for teachers. 

PACKARD, A. S. Guide to the Study of Insects. 
Henry Holt & Co., New York. Price, $5. (First 
edition, Salem, 1869.) 

PACKARD, A. S. Entomology for Beginners. 
Henry Holt & Co., New York, 1888. Price, $1.40. 

THE CAMBRIDGE NATURAL HISTORY, VOL. V.- 
Peripatus, by A. Sedgwick ; Myriapods, by F. G. 
Sinclair; Insects, Part I, by David Sharp. Mac- 
millan & Co., London and New York, 1895. Price, 

$4- 

This, in many respects, is the best text-book on entomology yet 
published. The beginning student who wishes to study North 
American insects will find Comstock's Manual better suited to his 
needs, but this volume of The Cambridge Natural History should 



publications relating to zoology in all its branches that have appeared 
during the year preceding the date of the volume. The first volume was 
for the year 1864. 



333 



INSECT LIFE. 



be in the library of every advanced student of entomology. Part II 
of this work, which will treat of the Hemiptera, Lepicloptera, Dip- 
tera, and Coleoptera, has not yet (1896) appeared. It is to consti- 
tute Vol. VI of the series. 

THE STANDARD NATURAL HISTORY. The title 
of this work has been changed to The Riverside 
Natural History. 

THE RIVERSIDE NATURAL HISTORY. Edited by 
John Sterling Kingsley. Six volumes, royal Svo. 
Houghton, Mifflin & Co., Boston and New York. 
Price, $30, $36, or $42, depending on the binding. 

Vol. II of this work treats of the Crustacea and insects. Unfor- 
tunately, it can not be purchased separately, and the entire work is 
too expensive for most students. It is, however, an excellent work 
of reference for a school library. 

HARRIS, T. W. Insects Injurious to Vegetation. 
(Flint edition.) Orange Judd Company, New York. 
Price, plain plates, $4; colored plates, $6.50. 

Although this is an old work and consequently somewhat out of 
date as regards classification, it is one of the best books on insects 
ever written ; it doubtless has done more to stimulate an interest in 
the study of insects than any other American work. It is magnifi- 
cently illustrated. 

SMITH, JOHN B. --Economic Entomology. J. B. 
Lippincott & Co., Philadelphia, 1896. Price, $2.50. 

This is a very useful text-book intended especially for students 
in agricultural colleges. 

SAUNDERS, WILLIAM. Insects Injurious to Fruits. 
J. B. Lippincott & Co., Philadelphia, 1883. Price, $2. 

This is a very useful work. The insects discussed are classified 
according to the plants they infest. 



MISCELLANEOUS LISTS. 



339 



WEED, CLARENCE M. Insects and Insectides. 
Orange Judd Company, New York. Revised edi- 
tion, 1895. Price, $1.50. 

RILEY, C. V. Directions for Collecting: and Pre- 

o 

serving Insects. Smithsonian Institution, Washing- 
ton, D. C., 1892. Price, 25 cents. 

This is a very complete treatise on the subject named. It also 
contains a much larger list of writings on insects than that given 
here. 

MORE SPECIAL WORKS. 

SCUDDER, S. H. --Brief Guide to the Commoner 
Butterflies of the Northern United States and Can- 
ada. Henry Holt & Co., New York, 1893. Price, 



FRENCH, G. H.--The Butterflies of the Eastern 
United States. J. B. Lippincott & Co., Philadelphia, 
1886. Price, $2. 

LE CONTE and HORN. Classification of the Cole- 
optera of North America. Secretary of the Ameri- 
can Entomological Society, Philadelphia. Price, $2.50. 

WILLISTON, S. W. Manual of North American 
Diptera. Second edition, 1896. James T. Hatha- 
way, New Haven, Conn. Price, $2.25. 

CRESSON, E. T. Synopsis of the Families and 
Genera of the Hymenoptera of America North of 
Mexico. Secretary of the American Entomological 
Society, Philadelphia. Price, $3. 

MURRY, ANDREW. Economic Entomology: Ap- 
tera. Chapman & Hall, 193 Piccadilly, London. Out 
of print. To be obtained of dealers in second-hand 
books. 

This work is especially valuable for its discussion of mites. 



340 



INSECT LIFE. 



MIALL, L. C. The Natural History of Aquatic 
Insects. Macmillan & Co., London and New York, 
1895. Price, $1.75. 

BANKS, NATHAN. A Synopsis, Catalogue, and 
Bibliography of the Neuropteroid Insects of Tem- 
perate North America. (From the Transactions of 
the American Entomological Society, Vol. XIX.) 
Secretary of the American Entomological Society, 
Philadelphia. Price, 50 cents. 

CALVERT, PHILIP P. Catalogue of the Odonata 
(Dragon-flies) of the Vicinity of Philadelphia, with 
an introduction to the study of this group of insects. 
(From the Transactions of the American Entomolog- 
ical Society, Vol. XX.) Secretary of the American 
Entomological Society, Philadelphia. Price, $i. 

ON THE HABITS OF INSECTS. 

KlRBY and SPENCE. An Introduction to Ento- 
mology. Seventh edition. One volume, which is a 
reprint of Vols. I and II of earlier editions. London, 
1856. 

This work is out of print, and can he obtained only of dealers in 
second-hand hooks. But it is to be found in most of the larger 
public libraries. 

There are many other excellent works on the 
habits of insects, but they can not be enumerated here 
for lack of space. 

II. DEALERS IN ENTOMOLOGICAL SUPPLIES. 

\ 

Charles C. Riedy, 432 Montgomery Street, San Fran- 
cisco, Cal. 



DEALERS IN OPTICAL INSTRUMENTS. 



341 



A. Smith & Sons, 269 Pearl Street, New York, N. Y. 
John Akhurst, 78 Ashland Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. 
M. Abbott Frazar, 93 Sudbury Street, Boston, Mass. 
Entomological Society of Ontario, Victoria Hall, 

London, Ontario. 
Queen & Co., 1010 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, 

Pa. 
The Bausch & Lomb Optical Company, 515-543 N. 

St. Paul Street, Rochester, N. Y. 

III. DEALERS IN OPTICAL INSTRUMENTS. 

The Bausch & Lomb Optical Company, New York 

city and Rochester, N. Y. 
Eimer & Amend, 205-211 Third Avenue, New York 

city. 
The Franklin Educational Company, Harcourt 

Street, Boston, Mass. 

J. Grunow, 70 W. Thirty-ninth Street, New York. 
The Gundlach Optical Company, Rochester, N. Y. 
William Krafft, 411 W. Fifty-ninth Street, New 

York. 
The Mclntosh Battery and Optical Company, 521-531 

Wabash Avenue, Chicago, 111. 

Queen & Co., 1010 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 
Richards & Co., 30 E. Eighteenth Street, New York, 

108 Lake Street, Chicago, 111. 

Edward Pennock, 3609 Woodland Avenue, Philadel- 
phia, Pa. 
Spencer Lens Company, 546 Main Street, Buffalo, 

N. Y. 
Walmsley, Fuller & Co., 134-136 W'abash Avenue, 

Chicago, 111. 



342 



INSECT LIFE. 



Williams, Brown & Earlc, Tenth and Chestnut 
Streets, Philadelphia, Pa. 

G. S. Woolman, 116 Fulton Street, New York. 

J. Zentmayer, 209 S. Eleventh Street, Philadelphia, 
Pa. 

Charles C. Riedy, 432 Montgomery Street, San Fran- 
cisco, Cal. 



' 



INDEX, 



Abdomen, ig. 

Acrididse, 72. 

Adult, 40. 

Agalena naevia, 224. 

Agamic, 177. 

Aglais milberti, 252. 

Alder-blight, 163. 

Ambush-bug, 274. 

American tortoise-shell, 252. 

Andrena, 269. 

Andriconia, 247. 

Angle-wings, 250. 

Anisota oak-worms, 199. 

Anosia plexippus, 249. 

Antennae, 12. 

Ant-lions, 77. 

Ant-nest, 278. 

Ants, 85, 178, 275. 

Aphididoe, 163. 

Aphids, 75, 163, 175. 

Aphis-lions, 77, 78, 178, 179. 

Apple-tree tent-caterpillar, i6S. 

Aquaria, 330. 

Arachnida, 53, 55. 

Arctiidre, 239. 

Arthropoda, 52. 

Automeris io, 189. 



Back-swimmers, 123, 128. 
Bag-worm, 204. 
Ballooning spiders, 226. 
Basilarchia archippus, 249. 
Basilona imperialis, 197. 
Bees, 85, 254. 
Beetles, 41, 85. 
Belostoma, 130. 
Bent-necked vials, 313. 
Bird-lice, 69. 
Bittacus, 79. 
Black-flies, 156. 
Black swallow-tail, 243. 
Blank forms for labels, 319. 
Blattidae, 71. 
Blepharoceridoe, 159. 
Blister-beetles, 273. 
Block system of arranging collec- 
tions, 311. 
Blues, 247. 
Book-lice, 68. 
Books on insects, 336. 
Boreus, 79. 
Breathing holes, 19. 
Breeding cages, 327. 
Breeding of insects, 326. 
Bristletails, 63. 
343 



344 



INSECT LIFE. 



Broad-shouldered water-striders, 

109. 

Brownie-bugs, 219. 
Bugs, 75. 
Bumblebees, 256. 
Butterflies, So, 82, 239. 

Caddice-flies, 79, 151. 
Caddice-worms, 79, 148, 151. 
Callosamia promethea, 193. 
Calocalpa undulata, 200. 
Cases, 306. 
Caterpillars, 239. 
Cattle-tick, 57. 
Ceanothus silkworm, 196. 
Cecidomyiidas, 162. 
Cecropia-moth, 195. 
Cells of the wings, 17. 
Centipede, 57. 
Cephalothorax, 55. 
Cerambycidae, 215. 
Chauliodes, 156. 
Chauliognathus, 273. 
Chrysopidae, 179. 
Cicada-killer, 270. 
Cicadas, 218. 
Cicada septendecim, 218. 
Cicada tibicen, 218. 
Cigar-boxes, 306. 
Citheroniidce, 197. 
Citheronia regalis, 199. 
Clematis, 30. 
Cliff-dwellers, 267. 
Clips for slides, 314. 
Clisiocampa americana, 172. 
Clisiocampa californica, 172. 
Clisiocampa constricta, 172. 
Clisiocampa disstria, 172. 
Cobweb-weavers, 227. 
Coccidse, 277. 
Coccinellidae, 180. 



Cockroaches, 70, 71. 
Cocoon, 40. 
Codlin-moth, 180. 
Coleoptera, 41, 43, 85. 
Collecting apparatus, 284. 
Collecting boxes, 287. 
Collecting butterflies, 45. 
Collecting moths, 50. 
College insect case, 310. 
Colorado potato-beetle, 44. 
Complete metamorphosis, 35, 38. 
Compound eyes, 12. 
Compton-tortoise, 253. 
Conotrachelus nenuphar, 184. 
Coppers, 246. 
Corisidse, 140. 
Corrodentia, 68. 
Corydalis, 78. 
Corydalis cornuta, 155. 
Cosmopolitan butterfly, 251. 
Coxa, 15. 
Crabs, 54. 
Crab-spiders, 230. 
Crayfishes, 53. 
Crescent-spots, 249. 
Crickets, 70, 74, 233, 237. 
Crustacea, 53. 
Culicidse, 136. 
Curculionidae, 184. 
Curculios, 184. 
Cyanide bottle, 286. 
Cyclops, 54. 
Cycnia egle, 241. 
Cyllene robiniae, 2/3. 
Cynipidae, 212, 214. 
Cypris, 54. 

Damsel-flies, 65, 89, 93, 98, 140. 
Daphnia, 54. 
Darning-needles, 89. 
Datana ministra, 173. 



INDEX. 



345 



Dealers in entomological supplies, 

340. 
Dealers in optical instruments, 341. 

Descriptions of insects, 323. 
Digger-wasp, 86, 260. 
Diptera, 83. 
Dobson, 77, 153. 
Dog-day-harvest-fly, 218. 
Dog-fleas, 84. 
Dolomedes, 229. 
Dragon-flies, 65, 89, 93. 
Drosophila, 185. 
Dytiscidse, 116. 

Ears, 19. 
Earwigs, 69. 
Elytra, 43. 

Engraver-beetles, 216. 
Ensign-fly, 86. 
Epargyreus tityrus, 202. 
Ephemerida, 64. 
Estigmene acrrea, 240. 
Eugonia j-album, 253. 
Eumenes fraternus, 259. 
Eumenidae, 258. 
Euplexoptera, 69. 
Eurypelma hentzii, 231. 
Euvanessa antiopa, 252. 
Eyes, 12. 
Eyprepia, 241. 

Fall web-worm, 200. 

Femur, 15. 

Fireflies, 335. 

Fish-moths, 63. 

Fleas, 84. 

Flies, 83. 

Folded papers for butterflies, 287. 

Forceps, 299. 

Forest life, 186. 

Four-footed butterflies, 247. 



Fritillaries, 250. 
Funnel-web weavers, 222. 



Galgulidae, 160. 

Gall-gnats, 162. 

Gall-insects, 210. 

Galls, 210. 

Gelechia gallaesolidaginis, 274. 

Giant silkworm, 187. 

Giant water-bugs, 130. 

Gills, 54. 

Goldenrod, 272. 

Goldenrod-galls, 274. 

Gossamer-winged butterflies, 164, 

246. 

Grandfather graybeards, 56, 232. 
Grasshoppers, 70, 233. 
Grass-spider, 224. 
Grouse-locusts, 164. 
Gryllidae, 74. 
Gyrinidce, 114. 

Hair-streaks, 247. 

Halictus, 267. 

Harlequin milkweed-caterpillar, 

241. 

Harvestmen, 56, 232. 
Head, 12. 
Hemiptera, 75. 
Heteroptera, 76. 
Hexapoda, 53, 58. 
Hollyhock, 257. 
Homoptera, 77. 
Honey-bee, 255. 
Honey-dew, 177. 
Horned corydalis, 153. 
Hydrobatida;, 109. 
Hymenopters, 85. 
Hyphantria cunea, 200. 
Hypopharynx, 14. 



346 



INSECT LIFE. 



Ichneumon-fly, 86. 

Ichneumonidse, 217. 

Ichthyura, 201. 

Imago, 40. 

Imperial-moth, 197. 

Incomplete metamorphosis, 35, 37. 

lariating larvae, 301. 

Insects, 58. 

lo-moth, 189. 

Iphiclides ajax, 244. 

Iron frame for mold for cases, 312. 

Isabella tiger-moth, 240. 

Isoptera, 67. 

Jasoniades glaucus, 243. 
Jumping spiders, 229. 

Katydids, 73, 239. 
Killing bottles, 285. 

Labeling specimens, 315. 

Labial palpi, 14. 

Labium, 14. 

Labrum, 13. 

Lace-winged flies, 179. 

Lady-bugs, 179, 180. 

Lampyridne, 273. 

Larva, 40. 

Lasiocampidae, 171. 

Leaf-eating caterpillars, 172, 187. 

Leaf-cutter bees, 265. 

Leaf-miners, 208. 

Leaf-rollers, 206. 

Lepidoptera, 80. 

Lice, 75, 76. 

Lights, 293. 

Lobsters, 53. 

Locust-borer, 273. 

Locustidae, 72. 

Locusts, 72, 233, 236. 

Long-horned beetles, 215. 



Long-horned grasshoppers, 73. 
Luna-moth, 192. 
Lycaenidae, 164, 246. 
Lycosa, 229. 

Mallophaga, 69. 
Mandibles, 13. 
Mantidae, 71. 
Maxillae, 13. 
Maxillary palpi, 14. 
May-flies, 64, 99, 101, 148. 
Meadow-browns, 253. 
Meadow grasshoppers, 73. 
Measuring- worms, 174. 
Mecoptera, 78. 
Megachile, 265. 
Megachile acuta,'265. 
Meloidae, 273. 
Membracidae, 220, 277. 
Mesothorax, 18. 
Metathorax, 18 
Microscopic objects, 300. 
Millers, 80. 
Millipede, 57. 
Miners of the plains, 268. 
Mining-bees, 269. 
Mining digger-wasps, 269. 
Misumena vatia, 230. 
Mites, 56. 

Mocha-stone moth, 201. 
Mold, 314. 
Molting, 36. 
Morarch, 249. 
Monobia quadridens, 265. 
Monohamus confusor, 215. 
Mossy-rose-gall, 212. 
Mosquitoes, 132. 
Moths, 80, 81, 239, 242. 
Mourning-cloak, 252. 
Mouth-parts, 13. 
Muscidae, 185. 



INDEX. 



347 



Museum pests, 314. 
Myriapoda, 53, 57. 

Nepa, 128. 

Nest-building caterpillars, 200. 

Net-building caddice-worms, 151. 

Net-winged midges, 158. 

Nets, 285. 

Neuroptera, 77. 

Nodus, 97. 

Note-books, 320. 

Notolophus leucostigma, 174. 

Notonectidae, 128. 

Nymphalidae, 247. 

Nymphs, 35. 

Oak-apples, 210. 
Oberea bimaculata, 215. 
Ocelli, 13. 
Odonata, 65. 

(Edemasia concinna, 173. 
Orb-weavers, 224. 
Orchard life, 166. 
Orthoptera, 70. 
Oven, 302. 
Ovipositor, 20. 

Painted beauty, 251. 
Palpus, 14. 
Panorpa, 78. 
Papilio polyxenes, 243. 
Parasita, 76. 
Periodical cicada, 218. 
Phasmidae, 71. 
Phymata wolffii, 274. 
Phymatidae, 274. 
Physopoda, 74. 
Pieridae, 245. 
Pieris rapae, 245. 
Pine-cone willow-gall, 160. 
Pinning forceps, 299. 
23 



Pins, 295. 
Pita-wood, 310. 
Plaginotus speciosus, 215. 
Plant-lice, 163, 175. 
Plecoptera, 66, 147. 
Pliers, 299. 
Plum-curculio, 182. 
Poison ivy, 29. 
Polistes, 259. 
Polyphemus-moth, 190. 
Polystoechotes punctatus, 78. 
Pomace-flies, 184. 
Praying mantes, 71. 
Predaceous diving-beetles, 116. 
Preservation of specimens, 294. 
Preservative fluids, 300. 
Prionus laticollis, 215. 
Promethea-moth, 193. 
Prothorax, 18. 
Psephenus, 153. 
Psocids, 68. 
Psychidae, 204. 
Pupa, 40. 
Puparium, 185. 
Pyrrharctia Isabella, 240. 

Ranatra, 128. 
Red admiral, 251. 
Red-humped apple -worm, 173. 
Regal-moth, 199. 
Relaxing insects, 305. 
Rhagium lineatum, 215. 
Roadside life, 221. 
Root cage, 333. 
Royal-moths, 197. 
Running spiders, 228. 

Saldidae, 160. 

Salt-marsh caterpillar, 240. 
Samia californica, 196. 
Samia cecropia, 195. 



348 



INSECT LIFE. 



Saturniidre, 189. 

Scales, 49. 

Scallop-shell moth, 200. 

Scolytida?, 216. 

Scorpion-flies, 78. 

Scorpions, 56. 

Sex, indication of, 321. 

Sheep-tick, 57. 

Shore-bugs, 159. 

Short-horned grasshoppers, 72. 

Shrimps, 53. 

Sialidae, 155. 

Sialis, 156. 

Silver-spotted skipper, 202. 

Simple eyes, 12. 

Simuliidse, 158. 

Siphon, constant-level, 331. 

Siphonaptera, 84. 

Siricidse, 217. 

Skippers, 80, 81. 

Smaller leaf - eating caterpillars, 

205. 

Social wasps, 259. 

Soldier-beetles, 273. 

Solidago, 272. 

Solitary wasps, 258. 

Songs of insects, 235. 

Sow-bug, 54. 

Spiders, 222. 

Spiracles, 19. 

Spreading board, 304. 

Spreading insects, 303. 

Spreading pin, 304. 

Springtails, 63. 

Stone-flies, 66, 102, 103, 146. 

Stink-bugs, 76. 

Subimago, 100. 

Sugaring, 292. 

Sumach, 261. 

Supplies for pupils, 24. 

Supplies for the school, 25. 



Surface film of water, 104. 
Swallow-tail butterflies, 242. 

Tarantulas, 230. 
Tarsal claws, 16. 
Tarsus, 1 6. 

Telea polyphemus, 190. 
Termites, 67. 
Thorax, 17. 

Thread-waisted wasps, 261. 
Thrips, 74. 
Thysanura, 63. 
Tibia, 16. 
Tiger-beetles, 270, 
Tiger-moths, 239. 
Tiger swallow-tail, 243. 
Toad-shaped bugs, 160. 
Tortricids, 182, 207. 
Tortricina, 182, 207. 
Tracheal gills, 54, 141. 
Trap-door spiders, 230. 
Tree-hoppers, 219. 
Trichoptera, 79, 151. 
Trochanter, 15. 
Tropsea luna, 192. 
True grasshoppers, 73. 
Trypeta solidaginis, 274. 
Trypoxylon frigidum, 262. 



Vanessa atalanta, 251. 
Vanessa cardui, 251. 
Vanessa huntera, 251. 
Veins of the wings, 16. 
Veliidae, 109. 
Vespa, 260. 
Vespidae, 260. 
Viceroy, 249. 
Virginia creeper, 29. 

Wanderer, 163. 
Walking sticks, 72. 



INDEX. 



349 



Wasps, 85, 258. 
Water-boatmen, 136. 
Water-pennies, 153. 
Water-scavenger beetles, 120. 
Water-scorpions, 128. 
Water-striders, 106, 109. 
Water-tigers, 119. 
Weevils, 184. 
White-ants, 67. 

White-marked tussock-moth, 174. 
Whites, 245. 



Whirligig-beetles, in. 
" Wiggiers," 131. 
Wrigglers, 131. 

Yellow-bear, 240. 

Yellow - necked apple - tree - worm, 

173- 
Yellows, 245, 246. 

Zaitha, 130. 

Zebra swallow-tail, 244. 



THE END. 



D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 
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** NORTH AMERICA. With Keys to the Species, Descrip- 
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a reputation." L. H. Bailey, Professor of Horticulture, Cornell University. 

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useful and handsomely prepared handbook, and the elaborate index is an especially 
valuable part of it. Taken in connection with the many careful drawings, it would 
seem as though your little volume thoroughly covers its subject." Louis Prang. 

" The author describes in a most interesting and charming manner many familiar 
wild and cultivated plants, enlivening his remarks by crisp epigrams, and rendering 
ide itification of the subjects described simple by means of some two hundred draw- 
ings from Mature, made by his own pen. . . . The book will do much to more fully 
acquaint the reader with those plants of field and garden treated upon with which he 
may be but partly familiar, and go a long way toward correcting many popular 
errors existing in the matter of colors of their flowers, a subject to which Mr. Mathews 
has devoted much attention, and on which he is now a recognized authority in the 
trade." New York Florists' Exchange. 

"A book of much value and interest, admirably arranged for the student and the 
lover of flowers. . . . The text is full of compact information, well selected and interest- 
ingly presented. ... It seems to us to be a most attractive handbook of its kind." 
New York Sun. 

"A delightful book and very useful. Its language is plain and familiar, and the 
illustrations are dainty works of art. It is just the book for those who want to be 
familiar with the well-known flowers, those that grow in the cultivated gardens as well 
as those that blossom in the fields." Newark Daily Advertiser. 

"Seasonable and valuable. The young botanist and the lover of flowers, who have 
only studied from Nature, will be greatly aided by this work." Pittsburg Post. 

" Charmingly written, and to any one who loves the flowers and who does not? 
will prove no less fascinating than instructive. It will open up in the garden and the 
fields a new world full of curiosity and delight, and invest them with a new interest in 
his sight." Christian Work. 

" One need not be deeply read in floral lore to be interested in what Mr. Mathews 
has written, and the more proficient one is therein the greater his satisfaction is likely 
to be." New York Mail and Express. 

" Mr. F. Pchuyler Mathews's careful description and graceful drawings of our 
' Familiar Flowers of Field and Garden ' are fitted to make them familiar even to those 
who have not before made their acquaintance." New York Evening Post. 



New York : D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue. 



D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 
CAMILIAR TREES AND THEIR LEAVES. 

*- By F. SCHUYLER MATHEWS, author of "Familiar Flowers of 
Field and Garden," " The Beautiful Flower Garden," etc. Il- 
lustrated with over 200 Drawings from Nature by the Author, 
I2mo. Cloth, $1.75. 

" It is not often that we find a book which deserves such unreserved commendation. 
It is commendable for several reasons : it is a book that has been needed for a long 
time, it is written in a popular and attractive style, it is accurately and profusely illus- 
trated, and it is by an authority on the subject ot which it treats." Public Opinion. 

" Most readers of the book will find a world of information they never dreamed of 
about leaves that have long been familiar with them. The study will open to them 
new sources of pleasure in every tiee around their houses, and prove interesting as well 
as instructive." San Francisco Call. 

"A revelation of the sweets and joys of natural things that we are too apt to pass 
by with but little or no thought. The book is somewhat more than an ordinary botan- 
ical treatise on leaves and trees. It is a heart-to heart talk with Nature, a true appre- 
ciation of the beauty and the real usefulness of leaves and trees." Boston Courier. 

" Has about it a simplicity and a directness of purpose that appeal at once to every 
lover of Nature." New York Mail and Express. 

" Mr. Mathews's book is just what is needed to open our eyes. His text is charm- 
ing, and displays a loving and intimate acquaintance with tree life, while the drawings 
of foliage are beautifully executed. We commend the volume as a welcome companion 
in country walks." Philadtipkia Public Ledger. 

"The book is one to read, and then to keep at hand for continual reference."- 
Chicago Dial. 

"The unscientific lover of Nature will find this book a source of enjoyment as well 
as of instruction, and it will be a valuable introduction to the more scientific study of 
the subject." Cleveland Plain Dealer. 

" This book will be found most satisfactory. It is a book which is needed, written 
by one who knows trees as he knows people." Minneapolis Journal. 

"A book of large value to the student. The reader gathers a wide and valuable 
knowledge which will awaken new interest in every tramp through the forest" Chi- 
cag) Inter-Ocean. 

" A most admirable volume in many ways. It meets a distinct and widely felt 
want; the work is excellently done ; its appearance is very timely. . . . Written in a 
clear and simple style, and requires no previous technical knowledge of botany to under- 
stand it." Baltimore News. 

1 This very valuable book will be prized by all who love Nature." The Churchman. 

"Of the many Nature books that are constantly inviting the reader lo leave pave- 
ment and wander in country bypaths, this one, with its scientific foundation, and its 
simplicity and clearness of style, is among the most alluring." St. Paul Pioneer-Press. 



New York : D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue. 



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D. APPLETON CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



NATURAL HISTORY OF SELBORNE, 

AND OBSERVATIONS ON NATURE. By GILBERT 
WHITE. With an Introduction by John Burroughs, 80 Illus- 
trations by Clifton Johnson, and the Text and New Letters of 
the Buckland edition. In two volumes. I2mo. Cloth, $4.00. 

" White himself, were he alive to-day, would join all his loving readers in thanking 
the American publishers for a thoroughly excellent presentation of his famous book. 
. . . This latest edition of White's book must go into all of pur libraries; our young 
people must have it at hand, and our trained lovers of select literature must take it into 
their homes. By such reading we keep knowledge in proper perspective and are able 
to grasp the proportions of discovery." Maurice Thompson, in the Independent. 

" White's ' Selborne ' belongs in the same category as Walton's ' Complete Angler ' ; 
. . . here they are, the ' Complete Angler ' well along in its third century, and the other 
just started in its second century, both of them as highly esteemed as they were when 
first published, both bound to live forever, if we may trust the predictions of their re- 
spective admirers. John Burroughs, in his charming introduction, tells us why White's 
book has lasted and why this new and beautiful edition has been printed. . . . This new 
edition of his work comes to us beautifully illustrated by Clifton Johnson." New J 'ork 
Times. 

" White's ' Selborne ' has been reprinted many times, in many forms, but never be- 
fore, so far as we can remember, in so creditable a form as it assumes in these two 
volumes, nor with drawings comparable to those which Mr. Clifton Johnson has made 
for them." New York Mail and Express. 

" We are loath to put down the two handsome volumes in which the source of such 
a gift as this has been republished. The type is so clear, the paper is so pleasant to 
the touch, the weight of each volume is so nicely adapted to the hand, and one turns 
page after page with exactly that quiet sense of ever new and ever old endeared de- 
light which comes through a window looking on the English countryside the rooks 
cawing in a neighboring copse, the little village nestling sleepily amid the trees, trees 
so green that sometimes they seem to hover on the edge of black, and then again so 
green that they seem vivid with the flaunting bravery of spring." New York 
Tribune. 

"Not only for the significance they lend to one of the masterpieces of English 
literature, but as a revelation of English rural life and scenes, are these pictures de- 
lightfully welcome. The edition is in every way creditable to the publishers." 
Boston Beacon. 

" Rural England has many attractions for the lover of Nature, and no work, per- 
haps, has done its charms greater justice than Gilbert White's ' Natural History of 
Selborne.' " Boston Journal. 

"This charming edition leaves really nothing to be desired." Westminster 
Gazette. 

" This edition is beautifully illustrated and bound, and deserves to be welcomed by 
all naturalists and Nature lovers." London Daily Chronicle. 

" Handsome and desirable in every respect. . . . Welcome to old and young. "- 
New York Herald. 

"The charm of White's ' Selborne' is not drfinable But there is no other book of 
the past generations that will ever take the place with the field naturalists." Balti- 
more Sun. 



New York : D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue. 



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D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



AMP-FIRES OF A NATURALIST. From the 
Field Notes of LEWIS LINDSAY DYCHE, A. M., M. S., Professor 
of Zoology and Curator of Birds and Mammals in the Kansas 
State University. The Story of Fourteen Expeditions after 
North American Mammals. By CLARENCE E. EDWORDS. 
With numerous Illustrations. I2mo. Cloth, $1.50. 

" It is not always that a professor of zoology is so enthusiastic a sportsman as Prof. 
Dyche. His hunting exploits are as varied as those of Gordon Gumming, for example, 
in South Africa. His grizzly bear is as dangerous as the lion, and his mountain sheep 
and goats more difficult to stalk and shoot than any creatures of the torrid zone. Evi- 
dently he came by his tastes as a hunter from lifelong experience." New York 
Tribune. 

" The book has no dull pages, and is often excitingly interesting, and fully in- 
structive as to the habits, haunts, and nature of wild beasts." Chicago Inter-Ocean. 

"There is abundance of interesting incident in addition to the scientific element, 
and the illustrations are numerous and highly graphic as to the big game met by the 
hunters, and the hardships cheerfully undertaken." Brooklyn Eagle. 

"The narrative is simple and manly and full of the freedom of forests. . . . This 
record of his work ought to awaken the interest of the generation growing up, if only 
by the contrast of his active experience of the resources of Nature and of savage life 
with the background of culture and the environment of educational advantages that 
are being rapidly formed for the students of the United States. Prof. Dyche seems, 
from this account of him, to have thought no personal hardship or exertion wasted in 
his attempt to collect facts, that the naturalist of the future may be provided with com- 
plete and verified ideas as to species which will soon be extinct. This is good work 
work that we need and that posterity will recognize with gratitude. The illustrations 
of the book are interesting, and the type is clear." New York Times. 

" The adventures are simply told, but some of them are thrilling of necessity, how- 
ever modestly the narrator does his work. Prof. Dyche has had about as many expe- 
riences in the way of hunting for science as fall to the lot of the mcst fortunate, and 
this recountal of them is most interesting. The camps from which he worked ranged 
from the Lake of the Woods to Arizona, and northwest to British Columbia, and in 
every region he was successful in securing rare specimens for his museum." Chicago 
Times. 

" The literary construction is refreshing. The reader is carried into the midst of 
the very scenes of which the author tells, not bv elaborateness of description but by the 
directness and vividness of every sentence, He is given no opportunity to abandon 
the companions with which the book his provided him, for incident is made to follow 
incident with no intervening literary padding. In fact, the book is all action." Kansas 
City Journal. 

"As an outdoor book of camping and hunting this book possesses a timely 
interest, but it also has the merit of scientific exactness in the descriptions of tha 
habits, peculiarities, and haunts of wild animals." Philadelphia Press. 

"But what is most important of all in a narrative of this kind for it seems to ui 
that 'Camp-Fires of a Naturalist' was written first of all for entertainment these 
notes neither have been ' dressed up ' and their accuracy thereby impaired, nor yet re- 
tailed in a dry and statistical manner. The book, in a word, is a plain narrative of 
adventures among the larger American animals." Philadelphia Bulletin. 

'' We recommend it most heartily to old and young alike, and suggest it as a beauti 
ful souvenir volume for those who have seen the wonderful display of mounted animal? 
at the World's Fair." Tope k a Capital. 



New York : D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue. 



D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S PUBLICATIONS. 



THE ANTHROPOLOGICAL SERIES. 



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NOW READY. 

HE BEGINNINGS OF ART. By ERNST 

GROSSE, Professor of Philosophy in the University of Freiburg. 
A new volume in the Anthropological Series, edited by Pro- 
fessor FREDERICK STARR. Illustrated. I2mo. Cloth, $1,75. 

This is an inquiry into the laws which control the life and development of art, and 
into the relations existing between it and certain forms of civilization. The origin of 
an artistic activity should be sought among the most primitive peoples, like the native 
Australians, the Mincopies of the Andaman Islands, the Botocudos of South America, 
and the Eskimos ; and with these alone the author studies his subject Their arts are 
regarded as a social phenomenon and a social function, and are classified as arts of rest 
4nd arts of motion. The arts of rest comprise decoration, first of the body by scarifica- 
tion, painting, tattooing, and dress; and then of implements painting and sculpture; 
while the arts of motion are the dance (a living sculpture), poetry or song, with rhythm, 
and music. 

OMAN'S SHARE IN PRIMITIVE CUL- 
TURE. By OTIS TUFTON MASON, A. M., Curator of the 
Department of Ethnology in the United States National Mu- 
seum. With numerous Illustrations. I2mo. Cloth, $1.75- 

" A most interesting rdsumt of the revelations which science has made concerning 
the habits of human beings in primitive times, and especially as to the place, the duties, 
and the customs of women." Philadelphia Inquirer. 

HE PYGMIES. By A. DE QUATREFAGES, late 

Professor of Anthropology at the Museum of Natural History, 

Paris. W T ith numerous Illustrations. I2mo. Cloth, $1.75. 

" Probably no one was better equipped t) illustrate the general subject than Quatre- 
fages. While constantly occupied upon the anatomical and osseous phases of his sub- 
ject, he was none the less well acquainted with what literature and history had to say 
concerning the pygmies. . . . This book ought to be in every divinity school in which 
man as well as God is studied, and from which missionaries go out to convert the human 
being of reality and not the man of rhetoric and text-books." Boston Literary World. 




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BEGINNINGS OF WRITING. By W. J. 
HOFFMAN, M. D. With numerous Illustrations. i2mo. Cloth, 

$i-75- 

This interesting book gives a most attractive account of the rude methods employed 
by primitive man for recording his deeds. The earliest writing consists of pictographs 
which were traced on stone, wood, bone, skins, and various paperlike substances. Dr. 
Hoffman shows how the several classes of symbols used in these records are to be in- 
terpreted, and traces the growth of conventional signs up to syllabaries and alphabets 
the two classes of signs employed by modern peoples. 

IN PREPARATION. 

THE SOUTH SEA ISLANDERS. By Dr. SCHMELTZ. 
THE ZUNI. By FRANK HAMILTON GUSHING. 
THE AZTECS. By Mrs. ZELIA NUTTALL. 

D. APPLETON AND COMPANY. NEW YORK. 



D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 

OUTINGS A T ODD TIMES. By CHARLES C. 
ABBOTT, author of " Days out of Doors " and " A Naturalist's 
Rambles about Home." i6mo. Cloth, gilt top, $1.25. 

" A charming little volume, literally alone with Nature, for it discusses seasons and 
the fields, birds, etc., with ihe loving freedom of a naturalist born. Every page reads 
'ike a sylvan poem; and for the lovers of the beautiful in quiet outdoor and out-of- 
town life, this beautifully bound and attractively printed little volume will prove a 
companion and friend." Rochester Union and Advertiser. 



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NA TURALIST'S RAMBLES ABO UT HOME. 

By CHARLES C. ABBOTT. i2mo. Cloth, $1.50. 

"The home about which Dr. Abbott rambles is clearly the haunt of fowl and fish, 
of animal and insect life ; and it is of the habits and nature of these that he discourses 
pleasantly in this book. Summer and winter, morning and evening, he has been in 
the open air all the time on the alert for some new revelation of instinct, or feeling, 
or character on the part of his neighbor creatures. Most that he sees and hears he 
reports agreeably to us, as it was nc doubt delightful to himself. Books like this, 
which are free from all the technicalit es of science, but yet lack little that has scien- 
tific value, are well suited to the reading of the young. Their atmosphere is a healthy 
one for boys in particular to breathe." Boston Transcript. 



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A YS OUT OF DOORS. By CHARLES C. ABBOTT- 
I2mo. Cloth, $1.50. 

'"Days out of Doors' is a series of sketches of animal life by Charles C. Abbott, 
a naturalist whose graceful writings have entertained and instructed the public before 
now. The essays and narratives in this book are grouped in twelve chapters, named 
after the months of the year. Under 'January' the author talks of squirrels, musk- 
rats, water-snakes, and the predatory animals that withstand the rigor of winter; 
under ' February' of frogs and herons, crows and blackbirds; under ' March" of gulls 
and fishes and foxy sparrows: and so on appropriately, instructively, and divertingly 
through the whole twelve." JWzi; York Sun. 



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PLA YTIME NA TURALIST. By Dr. J. E. 

TAYLOR, F. L. S., editor of " Science Gossip." With 366 Illus- 
trations. I2mo. Cloth, $1.50. 

"The work contains abundant evidence of the author's knowledge and enthusiasm, 
and any boy who may read it carefully is sure to find something to attract him. The 
style is clear and lively, and there are many good illustrations." Nature. 



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ORIGIN OF FLORAL STRUCTURES 

^^ through Insects and other Agencies. By the Rev. GEORGE 
HENSLOW, Professor of Botany, Queen's College. With nu- 
merous Illustrations. I2mo. Cloth, $1.75. 

"Much has been written on the structure of flowers, and it might seem almost 
superfluous to attempt to say anything more on the sutject, but it is only within the 
last few years that a new literature has sprung up, in which the authors have described 
their observations and given their interpretations of the uses of floral mechanisms, more 
especially in connection with the processes of fertilization." From Introduction. 



New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue. 



D. APPLETON CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



THE LIBRARY OF USEFUL STORIES. 

Each book complete in itself. By writers of authority in their various , 
spheres. i6mo. Cloth, 40 cents per volume. 

NOW READY. 

r lE STORY OF THE STARS. By G. F. CHAM- 
BERS, F. R. A. S., author of " Handbook of Descriptive and 
Practical Astronomy," etc. With 24 Illustrations. 

"The author presents his wonderful and at times bewildering facts in a bright and 
cheery spirit that makes the book doubly attractive." Boston Home Journal. 



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STORY OF "PRIMITIVE" MAN. By 
EDWARD CLODD, author of " The Story of Creation," etc. 

"No candid person will deny that Mr. Clodd has come as near as any one at this 
time is likely to come to an authentic exposition of all the information hitherto gained 
regarding the earlier stages in the evolution of mankind." New York Sun. 




STORY OF THE PLANTS. By GRANT 

ALLEN, author of " Flowers and their Pedigrees," etc. 

"As fascinating in style as a first class story of fiction, and is a simple and clear 
exposition of plant life." Boston Home Journal. 



'T 
JL 



STORY OF THE EARTH. By H. G. 

SEELEY, F. R. S., Professor of Geography in King's College, 
London. With Illustrations. 

"It is doubtful if the fascinating story of the planet on which we live has been pre- 
viously told so clearly and at the same time so comprehensively." Boston Advertiser. 



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STORY OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM. By 
G. F. CHAMBERS, F. R. A. S. 

" Any intelligent reader can get clear ideas of the movements of the worlds about us. 
. . . Will impart a wise knowledge of astronomical wonders." Chicago Inter-Ocean. 

E STORY OF A PIECE OF COAL. By E. 

A. MARTIN, F. G. S. 

" The value and importance of this volume are out of all proportion to its size and 
outward appearance." Chicago Record. 

STORY OF ELECTRICITY. By JOHN 
MUNRO, C. E. 

" The book is an excellent one, crammed full of facts, and deserves a place not 
alone on the desk of the student, but on the workbench of the practical electrician." 
New York Times. 




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STORY OF EXTINCT CIVILIZATIONS 

OF THE EAST. By ROBERT ANDERSON, M.A., F. A. S., 
author of " Early England," " The Stuart Period," etc. 

New York : D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue. 



D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 

THE STORY OF THE WEST SERIES. 
Edited by Bipley Hitchcock. 

" There is a vast extent of territory lying between the Missouri River and the Pacific 
coast which has barely been skimmed over so far. That the conditions of life therein 
are undergoing changes little short of marvelous will be understood when one recalls 
the fact that the first white male child born in Kansas is still living there ; and Kansas 
is by no means one of the newer States. Revolutionary indeed has been the upturning 
of the old condition of affairs, and little remains thereof, and less will remain as each 
year goes by, until presently there will be only tradition of the Sioux and Comanches, 
the cowboy life, the wild horse, and the antelope. Histories, many of them, have been 
written about the Western country alluded to, but most if not practically all by outsiders 
who knew not personally that life of kaleidoscopic allurement. But ere it shall have 
vanished forever we are likely to have truthful, complete, and charming portrayals oi 
it produced by men who actually knew the life and have the power to describe it." 
Henry Edward Rood, in the Mail and Express. 



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NOW READY. 

HE STORY OF THE INDIAN. By GEORGE 

BIRD GRINNELL, author of " Pawnee Hero Stories," " Black- 
foot Lodge Tales," etc. I2mo. Cloth, $1.50. 

" In every way worthy of an author who, as an authority upon the Western Indians, 
is second to none. A book full cf color, abounding in observation, and remarkable in 
sustained interest, it is at the same time characterized by a grace of style which is rarely 
to be looked for in such a work, and which adds not a little to the charm of it."- 
London Daily Chronicle. 

"Only an author qualified by personal experience could offer us a profitable study 
of a race so alien from our own as is the Indian in thought, feeling, and culture. Only 
long association with Indians can enable a white man measurably to comprehend their 
thoughts and enter into their feelings. Such association has been Mr. Grinnell's." 
New York Sun. 



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HE STORY OF THE MINE. By CHARLES 
HOWARD SHINN. Illustrated. i2mo. Cloth, $1.50. 

"The author has written a book, not alone full of information, but replete with the 
true romance of the American mine." New York Times. 

"Few chapters of recent history are more fascinating than that which Mr. Shinn 
has told in ' The Story of the Mine.' ' -The Outlook. 

"Both a history and a romance. . . . Highly interesting, new, and thrilling." 
Philadelphia Inquirer. 

IN PREPARATION. 

The Story of the Trapper. By GILBERT PARKER. 

The Story of the Cowboy. By E. HOUGH. 

The Story of the Soldier. By Capt. J. McB. STEMBEL, U. S. A. 

The Story of the Explorer. 

The Story of the Railroad. 



New York : D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue. 



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D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 

HE BEGINNERS OF A NATION. A History 
of the Source and Rise of the Earliest English Settlements in 
America, with Special Reference to the Life and Character of 
the People. The first volume in A History of Life in the 
United States. By EDWARD EGGLESTON. Small 8vo. Cloth, 
gilt top, uncut, with Maps, $1.50. 

" Few works on the period which it covers can compare with this in point of mere 
literary attractiveness, and we fancy that many to whom its scholarly value will not ap 
peal will read the volume with interest and delight." New York Evening Post, 

" Wiitten with a firm grasp of the theme, inspired by ample knowledge, and made 
attractive by a vigorous and resonant style, the book will receive much attention. It 
is a great theme the author has taken up, and he grasps it with the confidence of a 
master." New York Times. 

"Mr. Eggleston's 'Beginners' is unique. No similar historical study has, to our 
knowledge, ever been done in the same way. Mr. Eggleston is a reliable reporter of 
facts; but he is also an exceedingly keen critic. He writes history without the effort 
to merge the critic in the historian. His sense of humor is never dormant. He renders 
some of the dullest passages in colonial annals actually amusing by his witty treatment 
of them. He finds a laugh for his readers where most of his predecessors have found 
yawns. And with all this he does not sacrifice the dignity of history for an instant." 
Boston Saturday Evening Gazette. 

"The delightful style, the clear flow of the narrative, the philosophical tone, and 
the able analysis of men and events will commend Mr. Eggleston's work to earnest 
students." Philadelphia Public Ledger. 

" The work is worthy of careful reading, not only because of the author's ability as a 
literary artist, but because of his conspicuous proficiency in interpreting the causes of 
and changes in American life and character." Boston Journal. 

" It is noticeable that Mr. Eggleston has followed no beaten track, but has drawn 
his own conclusions as to the early period, and they differ from the generally received 
version not a little. The book is stimulating and will prove of great value to the stu- 
dent of history." Minneapolis Journal. 

"A very interesting as well as a valuable book. . . . A distinct advance upon most 
that has been written, particularly of the settlement of New England." Newark 
A dvertiser. 

" One of the most important books of the year. It is a work of art as well as of 
historical science, and its distinctive purpose is to give an insight into the real life and 
character of people. . . . The author's style is charming, and the history is fully as inter- 
esting as a novel." Brooklyn Standard-Union. 

" The value of Mr. Eggleston's work is in that it is really a history of 'life,' not 
merely a record of events. . . . The comprehensive purpose of his volume has been 
excellently performed. The book is eminently readable." Philadelphia Times. 



New York : D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue. 



D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S PUBLICATIONS. 

]\/T EMOIRS OF MARSHAL OUDINOT, Due de 

** '* Reggio. Compiled from the hitherto unpublished souvenirs of 

the Duchesse de Reggio by GASTON STIEGLER, and now first 

translated into English by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos. With 

two Portraits in Heliogravure. I2mo. Cloth, $2.00. 

"The ' Memoirs of Marshal Oudinot' are interesting because they include the his- 
tory of one of the most brilliant periods the world has ever seen." Chicago Evening 
Post. 

"The reading of this charming, vivacious, and accurate book makes it a continual 
source of wonder that any one, at this day, should be writing a history of the Napo- 
leonic era. . . . The complete unconsciousness and the exquisite naturalness of ihe 
style are charming." N. Y. Commercial Advertiser. 

"This frankly loyal and graphic picturing of a great man's true character, seen from 
the nearest of standpoints by a biographer of wondeiful keenness, is genuinely refresh- 
ing. Vivid and explicit without being unduly sentimental, it is a book distinctly in- 
valuable to and actually inseparable from a study of French history " Boston Globe. 

" It is for the side lights of the marshal's life that this book is chiefly valuable, and 
wjnderfully illuminating they are. Besides, there is a never ending charm in the fresh- 
ness of the narrative. There is nothing that is dull or monotonous." Chicago Journal. 

" Full of new and entertaining material, and has a really significant historical value. 
. . . These memoirs are noteworthy for their gentleness of tone and their freedom from 
satire and vituperation. They deal with great events, and their very simplicity and 
unpretentiousness are evidence of their incontestable merit." Boston Beacon. 

" The story of this gallant soldier is of strong romantic interest and makes excellent 
reading, while the side lights thrown on events of a long period marked by many ex- 
traordinary changes are vastly interesting and informing. It is an inspiring and thor- 
oughly delightful volume." Providence News. 

" Few French commanders were more popular, both with rulers and with the people. 
The eventful story of his life, modestly told, is charming in interest." Chicago Inter- 
Ocean. 

" The pages are filled with illustrious names that arouse pleasant or unpleasant mem- 
ories, and the reader reads eagerly onward, always entertained, frequently enlightened, 
until the last page is reached. ... It will be equally welcomed by the student of his- 
tory and by the general reader." Boston Saturday Evening Gazette. 

"Amid the mass of French memorial writing there is none that will be found more 
attractive, because there is none more genuine than this record." Chicago Times- 
Herald. 

" An extremely interesting addition to historical biography. . . . These memoirs 
relate the extraordinary career of an extraordinary man. ... A complete biography, 
written in an easy, natural, unpretentious style." Detroit Free Press. 



D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK. 



D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



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STOR Y OF ARCHITECTURE. An Outline 
of the Styles in all Countries. By CHARLES THOMPSON MATH- 
EWS, Fellow of the American Institute of Architects ; author of 
" The Renaissance under the Valois," etc. Illustrated. i2mo. 
Cloth, $3.00. 

This compact yet comprehensive history of architecture offers a study of 
tha effects of civilization upon architecture as a necessity and an art. Almost 
all the architectural monuments specially referred to are described from 
personal knowledge. American architecture receives careful attention, and 
Asiatic and Oriental architecture, usually neglected in such books, is dis- 
cussed with an exceptional fullness of information. As regards the various 
phases of European architecture, the book will be found to be of constant 
value to travelers as well as to students, while in its comprehensiveness, in- 
forming quality, and the extent of the illustrations, it fills a place with the 
general reader which has long been vacant. 

SCHOOLS AND MASTERS OF SCULPTURE. 

***-* By A. G. RADCLIFFE. With 35 full-page Illustrations. i2mo. 
Cloth, $3.00. 

"A comprehensive and judicious history of the art of sculpture, each chapter giv- 
ing a clear and distinct account of the condition, character, and progress of the art. 
. . . Gives a very excellent account of the collections of sculpture in the American 
galleries and museums." Boston Transcript. 

" It would be difficult to name another work that would be so v luable to the gen- 
eral reader on the same subject as this book. . . . All has been set down that it is 
necessary for the lay reader to know." San P'rancisco Bulletin. 

" Free of all unnecessary technicalities, and abounds in the interesting facts the 
intelligent student of art will like to know and remember " Chicago Inter-Ocean. 

" Invaluable as a history of sculpture that can be understood by the general 
reader.' ' Philadelphia Press. 

SCHOOLS AND MASTERS OF PAINTING. 

'*' With an Appendix on the Principal Galleries of Europe. By 
A. G. RADCLIFFE. Illustrated. Entirely new edition, revised, 
and partly rewritten. I2tno. Cloth, $3.00 ; calf, $5.00. 

" The volume is one of great practical utility, and may be used to advantage as an 
nrtistic guide book by persons visiting the collections of Italy, France, and Germany 
for the first time. The twelve great pictures of the world, which are familiar by 
cooies and engravings to all who have the slightest tincture of taste for art, are described 
in a special chapter, which affords a convenient stepping-stone to a just appreciation of 
thi most celebrated masters of painting. An important feature of the work, and one 
which may save the traveler much time and expense, is the sketch presented in the 
appendix of the galleries of Florence, Rome, Paris, Venice, Dresden, and other Euro- 
pea.i collections." New York Tribune. 



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