& \>m.I.lAM E. SHUCKAHD. /.7Z3.i£,b-. «:c. ^ ^ •'Vinson /L-Z 'di.jfMyj 6-' ^y^a/ZcA^:^ . J/o^j(i. ^/"ifi I'ottdon. PRINTED rOH, XOIS&MA'N . BjiOWjr, GKEEX At XONf;M»l N''-;, P'lTi T< Mr.s;TTT) ifi r-ti 9^"5/ 3i^ CONTENTS. PART r. ON THE ANNULOSA GENERALLY. CHAPTER I. On the Annulose Animals in general, with a short Account of the three aberrant Classes of Annelidas, Vermes, and Cirrhipedes - Page 1 PART II. ON THE WINGED INSECTS. CHAPTER I. On the Ptilota, or four-winged Insects in general, the Characters of the five Orders, and their mutual Relations to other Animals The Metamorphoses of Insects 47 The Lepidoptera CHAP. II. 81 Tlie HlSMlPTERA CHAP. III. 110 The Hymenopteba CHAP. IV. 150 The CoLEOPTERA generally CHA-P. V. • 190 CONTENTS. CHAP. VI. CoLEOPrERA, contimied. The Lamellicornes - . . . Page 207 CHAP. VI r. CoLEOPTERA, Continued. The Predatores - . - . ' . . 2W CHAP. VIII. CoLEOPTERA, Continued. The Capricornes ...... 074 CHAP. I.Y. COLEOPTERA, Continued. The Monilicornes ...... 308 CHAP. X. CoLEOPTERA, continued. On the Malacodermes - • . . .318 CHAP. XI. On the Neuroptera - . - _ . 335 PART III. ON THE APTEROUS INSECTS. CHAP. I. On the ApTERA generally ..... 359 CHAP. II. On the DiPTERA, ARACHMna;, Myriapoda, Crustacea, and Suc- TORIA - . . . . . -366 ON THE HISTORY AND NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. PART I. ON THE ANNULOSA GENERALLY. CHAPTER I. N THE ANNULOSE ANIMALS IN GENERAL, WITH A SHORT AC- COUNT OF THE THREE ABERRANT CLASSES OF ANNELIDES VERMES, AND CIRRHIPEDES. (1.) TL HE great characteristic of the vast assemblage of animals to which we devote this volume, is the total absence of internal bones : hence their hardest parts are always external, and the muscles are usually attached to the under side of the substance which forms the covering of the animal. The body is always divided into rings or transverse joints ; from which circum-" stance naturalists have agreed to call them annulose, or ringed animals. This name is peculiarly applicable, since it expresses a marked distinction from such as have an internal skeleton, analogous to that of man, and thence called vertebrate {yertebrata). We need not, in this place, touch further upon the internal structure of these creatures ; but we shall notice those external peculiarities which are most obvious, and there- fore most likely to be understood by the generality of our readers. So diversified, indeed, are the different Z NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. groups of this immense assemblage, or sub-kingdom of the animal world, that it is impossible to assign to them any other character, as a wholes than that just men- tioned. (2.) There are^, however, certain prominent pecu- liarities, belonging to annulose animals, which deserve the attention of every reader. The Annuhsui (!ontain both the most intelligent and the mitmtest objects in the animal creation ; for, excepting the Iiifusoria, there are none smaller ; and among winged insects we find those with the most highly developed instincts. It certainly appears strange, that beings whose form so widely differs from that of man, should neverthe- less make a much nearer approach to his intellec- tual superiority than any of the vertebrate animals. Not one of the latter, in fact, can be compared, in this respect, with the bee or the ant. Insects, again, are re- markable for their tenacity of life. It is a well known fact, that in proportion to the complexity of animal structure, so does its sense of pain increase, and its capability to support injury diminish. Now as insects, from supplying food to so many others, are more de- fenceless and exposed than vertebrate animals, so do we find that they are particularly tenacious of life ; we con- clude therefore, that their organisation, although perfect in itself, is much less coraphcated than in animals of a larger size. Being thus exposed to so many casualties, they are gifted with great activity and powers of locomo- tion. They command two of the elements, and some- times a third, for all inhabit the earth as much as the air, and several are likewise aquatic. (3.) The typical examples of the Annulosa are pro- vided with two or four wings, and with six feet; but in receding from this perfection, nature proceeds by the most graduated steps. At first, if the wings disappear, we find them compensated for by an additional number of feet, as in spiders and crabs. On tracing the chain further, we see these latter members gradually disappear. GENERAL CHARACTERS OF THE ANNULOSA. ." until, on arriving at the furthest limits of the class, there is nothing to remind us of the typical annulose structure but a long slender body, pointed at both ends, like the common earth-worm, moving about by the action of the circular rings or joints (often very obscure), of which it is composed. Some of the remote Annulosa externally resemble shellfish, and live in the water : others are parasitic, like the Cirrhipedes, or, like the worms, are destitute of limbs; while another large group, in addition to the most eccentric shapes, differ from all the preced- ing by having red blood, and by living either in the ocean or in moist earth. All these, however widely they differ from the pre-eminent types of this assemblage, are clearly formed upon the same general model : their body is di- vided into joints, more or less conspicuous, nor do they differ more among themselves than do the various classes of the vertebrate circle. Annulose animals are not only the most diminutive in size of all creeping things^ but they are, beyond all comparison, more numerous than the vertebrate class. When we consider the surprising habits of the insect world in general, the high develop- ment of instinct which is found among whole families, the activity of motion, the beauty of form, and the re- splendent colours which nature has so lavishly bestowed upon these pigmy creatures, we cannot for a moment hesitate to place them next in the scale of creation to the vertebrate animals, a station which we shall presently show they are entitled to hold on other and more weighty considerations. (4.) Independent, however, of the foregoing characters, which stamp a peculiarity upon the insect world, there is yet another nearly as important, which equally sepa- rates them. This is found in the extraordinary meta- morphosis, or change of form, which all the typical, and some of the aberrant, groups undergo previous to arriving at their perfect state. The only other animals in crea- tion ivhich are known to participate in this character are the frogs, among the reptiles, and these are the most im- B 2 4 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. perfect of all vertebrate animals. The metamorphosis of insects, however, has been invested with so much im- portance by some writers, that we shall hereafter return to it more fully, when treating of those divisions in which it is most strikingly developed. (5.) The rank of the Annidosa, in the gi'eat circle of the animal creation, has more than once been ad- verted to in our former volumes : they are inferior only to the vertebrate animals in being, as a whole, less highly organised, or rather by having a less com- plicated structure. These distinctions, on the other hand, place them far above the three other great di- visions of animals, namely, the Testacea, the Radiata, and the Acrita. Their superiority over these is so self- evident, that it seems impossible to conceive how any naturalist who takes nature for his guide, could think of placing the headless and almost inanimate oyster higher in the scale of creation than the bee and the ant, be- cause the former happens to have a heart, while the latter have none. This outrage upon natural clas- sification is . one of the many instances which resuh from making internal structure the sole basis of scien- tific arrangement. It has originated, not from the legitimate use, but the abuse of our increased acquaint- ance with internal structure. There are professors of comparative anatomy, able but mistaken men, who are now striving to overthrow all received notions on na- tural affinities, and to substitute in their room certain dogmas of their own, founded on minute peculiarities of internal structure which they hold superior to all others. Against these speculative modes of classification ■we have frequently been obliged to enter our protest: it tends to render that which nature has made plain to every one, comprehensible to none but the closet pro- fessor. It increases rather than lessens the difficulties which already beset the study of zoology, and renders it a dry, repulsive study of bones and muscles. In re- i ference to tliat theory, more particularly, which places I UNION OF THE ANNULOSA AND VERTEBRATA. 5 the shellfish above insects, we may strengthen what we have here said by the sentiments of others whose writiiygs have exhibited entomology in its most attractive garb. " What unsophisticated mind, not entangled in the trammels of system, when it surveys the industry, the various proceedings, and the almost miraculous works of insects, — the waxen palaces of the bee, the paper cottages of the wasp and hornet, the crowded me- tropolis of the white ants, the arts, the manufactures, the stratagems of other insects, the associations and labours for the common good of those which are gregarious, will not at once conclude that they must be a stfperior race to the slug, the snail, and others, which live only to eat and propagate their kind!"* Again, it has been well observed that the station which any particular group of animals holds in the scale of creation must be judged of, not by a fancied and often forced resemblance to the human structtire as the only standard, but according to the ingenuity displayed in their organisation, and the variety of effects which may depend on it. f The most • careless observer, indeed, is well aware that many of the vertebrate animals are far inferior to insects, both in their instincts and the complexity of their structure. (6.) The vertebrate and the annulose divisions being thus the two most perfect classes in the animal kingdom, it necessarily results that they follow and blend into each other. We accorchngly find, that the two circles touch at those points where the eel- shaped fishes come into contact with the Annelides, or red- blooded worms ; the affinity of these groups being now so universally admitted, that we need not defend the theory of their union. On the other hand, the Annulosa are connected to the Radiata by means of the barna- cles, whose long stems, rendered pliable by innumerable articulations, at once place them within the definition * Kirby and Spence, Introduction to Entomology, iv. S64. t Hor. Ent. 206. B 3 6 NATUBAIi ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. of annulose animals, while in many other respects they show such a strong affinity to the radiated class (Ra- diata). To understand the perfection of structure in anv given group, we must always draw our definition of' that group from its pre-eminent types ; but, if we wish to know how it blends into other groups, the ab- errant examples, or such as are furthest removed from the typical structure, must be alone regarded. No ani- mals can be more unlike each other than a monkey and a butterfly, each of which are the types of their own class ; but when we look to an eel {Myxine) without eyes or fins, or even a firm skeleton, we can have no great difficulty in comparing it with the leech or the earth-worm: the Myxme, in fact, is the last of the ver- tebrate circle, while the Annelides are the first which present themselves, on quitting the Fertebrata, and en- tering the Annulosa. (7.) Our next question, regarding the primary DIVISIONS of the annulose animals, is not so easily dis- posed. Were we to lay before the reader all the con- flicting opinions that have been promulgated on this subject, we fear, even did our space admit of such de- tails, we should probably perplex and certainly weary him. It has been customary, indeed, for authors to state the reasons which may lead them to reject the theories of others ; and this, to a certain extent, is both necessary and useful. But in the present case, it would lead to so much discussion, that it must from necessity be avoided. Our object is, not to criticise the opinions of others, but make good, so far as we can, our own theory upon the natural arrangement of all animals. The plan, therefore, which we have hitherto pursued in other classes will be continued to this : and the results must be our apology for rejecting all former arrange- ments of the Annulosa. ^Ve shall therefore first in- timate what appear to be the five great divisions or classes of the insect world, and then point out their analogies to all other animals. The Annelides, as already PRIMARY DIVISIONS OF ANNULOSA. / intimated, constitute one : they are all aquatic, worm- like animals, known by having usually red instead of white blood : while their bodies, from being articulated, at once prevent them from being confounded either with the slug-like Mollusca or the Polypes. The next great division which shows an evident resemblance to the last, is the intestinal worms ; being of the most simple struc- ture, but the greatest part of which exhibit, although but faintly, the annulose jointed body, which at once decides that their structure is truly annulose. The types of these are chiefly composed of the Tfsnio'idea of Cuvier, but there are several other forms among the Entozoa of Rudolphi, which will ultimately be referred to this type, an assemblage which appears to us in very great confusion. The third aberrant division is dis- tinguished from the two last, by having five pair of feet, branching off into articulated fringed cirrhi : these are the Cirrhipedes, or barnacles. It was reserved for a countryman of our own, Mr. Thompson, to make known the extraordinary fact, that these animals undergo a metamorphosis ; a discovery which at once removes all doubt on their natural station. These appear to us the three great aberrant groups of the Annulosa. The general reader will have a very good idea of them, by looking to an earth-worm as an example of the Anne- lidesj a tape-worm as representing the class Vermes; and a barnacle as representing that of the Cirrhipedes. These three classes unite themselves, in all probability, into a circle of their own ; for it is a remarkable fact, that Cuvier places the Cirrhipedes immediately conti- guous to the Annelides, thereby tacitly confirming the position we have so frequently advanced, that there is a tendency in all aberrant groups to unite into one circle. Leaving, however, these imperfect Annulosa, we next come to those whose bodies are provided with distinctly formed legs and jointed feet, and of whose annulose structure there can be no doubt. These, we consider, after the example of Aristotle and Linnaeus, as naturally B 4 8 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. arranged under two great groups or classes ; the first comprising the Aptera, or wingless insects, further dis- tinguished by undergoing that particular metamorphosis which tends to give an increased number of legs to the perfect insect. The second is the Ptilota of the phi- losopher of Stagira, or the winged insects, whose meta- morphosis tends to give wings to the adult. These we place as the typical and the sub-typical groups of the Annulosa. Thus it may be said that in a leech, a tape- worm, a barnacle, a spider, and a butterfly, we have the respective types of the five great divisions of annulose animals, in the order here mentioned. (8.) Our next proposition is, that this assemblage or sub-kingdom (equal in rank to the vertebrated division) forms a circle of affinity more or less complete, the only hiatus being in that part which intervenes between the Annelides and the Ptilota. It will be seen, however, that this hiatus is of no great consequence in reference to our present purpose ; because as the Annelides come next to fishes, and there is no other break in thfe chain from them to the Ptilota, we establish the series of the five types, and can readily suppose an intervening form yet undiscovered among the thousands that still remain unknown, which may unite the aquatic Annelides to- the aquatic Neuroptera, the most aberrant class of the Ptilota. Commencing, then, with the Annelides, the resemblance between the earth-worms and many of the Vermes is sufficient to satisfy the ordinary observer of their close resemblance ; while the fact of Lamarck having had no hesitation in placing them together, on account of their general similarity of structure, will have due weight with the scientific naturalist. So little is yet known of the genuine annulose Vermes, that it would be premature to say in what manner they are connected to the Cirrhipedes; but the precise station of these latter in the circle of the Annulosa is rendered certain: — first by their forming the passage to the Radiata, and, secondly, by their absolute union to the ANALOGIES OF THE ANNULOSA. 9 Crustacea. This latter affinity brings us at once into the great class of Aptera, which we quit by means of the dipterous order^ the only one of its divisions where the perfect insect is provided with wings : this order, in fact, connects the Aptera with the typical class of Pti- lotu, the first division of which is the Hymenoptera. We have now arrived among four-winged insects, and, after following the chain of connection from the Hymeno- ptera to the Hemiptera and the Lepidoptera, pass, by the latter, to the Neuroptera. The circle of the Ptilota is closed by the Coleoptera, and thus the Neuroptera, by standing at the furthest extremity, comes nearest to the Annelides, or that point from whence we began. With- out attempting, for the present, to combat the many objections which a first view of this theory, so different from all received arrangements, might easily suggest, we must crave the patience of our entomological readers for a short time, until, by seeing the result in all its bearings and ramifications, the whole theory becomes understood. (9-) Assembling these primary groups of the Annu- losa in a tabular form, we shall at once perceive that they turn out to be representatives of the five great divisions of the vertebrate circle. Analogies of the Annulosa to the Vertebrata. Classes of the Annulosa. Aptera. Ptilota. annelide3. Vermes. Analogies. r Destitute of wings and crawling;") I feet highly developed, and walk.j Furnished with wings, and fly. Body excessively lengthened. 'The most imperfectly organised their respective circles ; des' '. of teeth. rXhe mo) i ofthei C titute ( -1 Classes of the Vertebrata. Quadrupeds. Birds. Reptiles. Amphibians. CiRRHiPEDBs. [ ^tl\lT'''^ ^'^^ ^^'^ ^'^*^' °'] Fishes. Among all the different arrangements that have yet ap- peared of the annulose animals, there is not one which 10 NATURAL ARRANGEMKNT OF INSECTS. attempts to establish any sort of relationship between them and the Vertebrata. This has originated from two causes : — firstly, from considering the Anindom as an isolated group, whose divisions were not subject to any general or comprehensive principles ; and secondly, from adopting as the basis of their arrangement a prin- ciple of classification which, as will be shown in the sequel, appears absolutely artificial. Vague, therefore, as one or two of the above analogies may appear, it is yet some satisfaction to see how strong and singularly beautiful they are in others. Of all insects, for instance, none are so perfectly organised for walking as the Ap- tera, since here we find the centipede, the liilus, and many other creatures, whose legs may be almost termed innumerable. The quadrupeds, which they thus re- present, are precisely in the same position, since they are the most perfect walkers of all the Vertebrata, The four-winged insects forming the class Ptilota, and at the head of which stand the butterflies, may truly be called the birds of annulose animals, which they further represent by the feathery down with which their wings are covered and the brilliant colours with which both are ornamented. The resemblance between the serpents and the Annelides will be admitted by every one not blinded by system ; for Avho that looks upon an earth- worm will not be reminded of a snake ? The least or- ganised of all the Annulosa are the intestinal worms, some of which are so low in the scale that no articulations of their body can be discerned. In this imperfection they resemble the amphibians, the most imperfect of the Vertebrata, and where the naked skin is entirely unprotected. Lastly, the Cirrhipedcs, without hav- ing the least resemblance in external form to fishes, nevertheless resemble them in having the body covered with hard plates, and always living in the water. These are only the most prominent analogies, but they are such as will strike a common observer ; and however they may be extended hereafter, are at least sufficient to TtPICAIi GROUPS OF THE ANNULOSA. 11 show a mutual relationship between these two great divisions of animals hitherto undiscovered. (10.) Before taking leave of these analogies, it will be as weU to make a few additional observations relative to the two typical groups. As we wish to meet difficulties rather than to avoid them, we may here anticipate an objection that may be urged against the theory of the Ptilota being the pre-eminently t\ pical group of the An- nulosa. If, it may be argued, the annular rings of which their body is composed be the chief characteristic of in- sects, then it would reasonably follow, that those which have the greatest number of these rings are the most ty- pical. The consequence of this admission would be, that i\iQ Aptera{aX thehead of which stands the 7«//rf«) would become the most typical Annulom. This theory appears to receive additional support from the fact that the Ap- tera in our table stand in a parallel line of analogy to the quadrupeds, which, in many other respects, they certainly represent. The Ptilota, or winged insects, having fewer segments to their body, thus become the sub-typical group, holding the same rank among Aniiulosa as birds do among Vertebrata. These arguments, which are cer- tainly entitled to much consideration, for a long time ex- cited strong doubts in our mind as to which of these we should apply the term typical. On the other hand, if we embrace the received opinion that metamorphosis is the great characteristic of these animals, then the dif- ficulty is solved, since this peculiarity is only seen in its full development among the Ptilota, which would thus become pre-eminently typical. Besides, in all the groups of the animal kingdom which we have investigated, — and our readers are now aware that the number is not small, — we have invariably found that the most perfect ani- mals, that is, those whose organisation or instincts were most superior, were invariably the typical. In this way Vertebrata are superior to Annulosa, quadrupeds to birds, the Qiiadrumana and the Insexsores to the Fercp and the Raptores, and so on. When, therefore, we find this 12 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. principle so general, ^ve have every reason to believe it must be also true in the present instance. 'What person, in idct, whether naturalist or not, who knows any thing of the bee or the ant, would ever think of classing them as inferior in the scale of creation to a spider, a wood- louse, or a scorpion ? Now the group which contains these two highly -gifted families is that of Ptilota, Avhich we consequently infer is the typical class of the Annulosa. This question, after all, is purely speculative, for whether we reverse our original position, and adopt the op- posite opinion before mentioned, it will have no eifect whatever in altering that progression of affinity which results from analysis. Affinities must be traced in de- tail, and therefore analysis is the only sure road which the investigator of the natural system should venture upon in his first advances. Analogies must be discovered after : they are, indeed, indispensable, but they are not to supersede the facts resulting from analysis. It will frequently happen that from ignorance, either of habits or structure, we are at one time unable to trace the analogies of two groups, which subsequent information has proved to be analogous. (11.) The analogies now shown to exist between the primary groups of the vertebrate animals, and those in which we have distributed the Annulosa, leads to se- veral conclusions, not at first apparent, yet intimately bearing on several questions of the highest importance. In the first place, presuming this exposition is correct, we arrive at a definite conclusion on the rank or value of the groups thus brought into comparison. Those, indeed, of the Vertebrata have been long ago settled, not only by the common consent of the most eminent modern zoologists, but by the searching analysis to which they have been submitted in our former volumes. We know, moreover, that as the Annulosa form one of the primary divisions of the animal kingdom, its con- tents cannot be correctly distributed, unless they cor- respond, in. some measure, with the contents of the REMARKS ON THE PRI3IARY DIVISIONS. 13 vertebrate circle. Without this there could be no mutual relationship, no harmony of parts ; and all that has been written on the analogies of the animal creation would fall to the ground. Either the natural arrange- ment of the Annulosa coincides with those principles which regulate the variation of the Vertehrata and all other animals, or we must adopt the preposterous sup- position that they have been formed upon a totally different plan. Now this idea, improbable in itself, is falsified by the comparison we have just laid before the reader. It therefore follows, that no arrangement of the Annulosa can, by any possibility, be a natural one, unless it developes analogies to the Vertebrata equally strong with those we have just stated. We are not now speaking of the details, for an arrangement may be substantially true in its outlines, — it may even be based on the foundation of truth, and yet may be defective or erroneous in some parts of its superstructure. This, however, is an after-consideration. The primary groups, still less the general principles, will never be affected by such inaccuracies ; and in the meantime we get what is of the highest importance to the philosophic zoologist — a definite notion on the value of those groups employed in the comparison, groups which have been acknow- ledged by all writers, but upon whose value not any two have hitherto agreed. The Crustacea, for instance, were considered by the fathers of entomology as an order equivalent in value to the Coleoptera. But Cuvier, at- taching an undue importance, as he frequently did, to these animals, breathing by a different set of organs to winged insects, made them into a class. This innova- tion Avas soon followed up by another, and Lamarck on similar grounds elevated the spiders to the same rank. This mistaken principle, once sanctioned by such names, induced almost every succeeding author to make fresh classes and orders ; until the apterous insects, one of the most natural in the whole animal kingdom, have at length been thrown unto the greatest confusion : all the 14 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. leading and natural divisions have been frittered away, and almost every writer brings out a new arrangement, founded upon nothing better than arbitrary opinion. No%v it is quite obvious, that if entomologists had looked beyond those animals more immediately studied, little or nothing of this confusion would have arisen. They would have discovered that the Crustacea by no means constituted a class, for then there would have been six classes among the Annulosa, while the Vcrtebrata had but five. It appears to us, in short, that the rank of groups can only be determined by analogical comparison, a process which implies a much more general acquaint- ance with zoology than is usually bestowed upon it by those who merely study one of its branches. "What faith or dependence could possibly be placed on the opinions of an entomologist, who proceeded to make an arrangement of the annulose division, founded en- tirely upon his knowledge of such only as are possessed of wings ? Taken abstractedly, such an arrangement car- ries upon its face the certainty of error. And yet more than one of those systems for the Annulosa, which have obtained some degree of notoriety, have every appear- ance of being the offspring of such partial and contracted views. We hope not to be mistaken in this : we desire to do ample justice to the zeal and ability of all who have gone before us in the path we are now pursuing ; but it is absolutely necessary to inculcate, in the rising generation, sound principles of studying nature, and to combat the idea that because an entomologist is emi- nent in his own walk, he is therefore competent to judge of those laws which regulate the whole of the animal creation, of which he is only acquainted with a small part. (12.) Another inference to be drawn from the fore- going table is scarcely of less importance than that we have just mentioned. As the primary gioups of the Annulosa are thus found to represent those of the Fer- tebrata, it follows, as a necessary consequence, that they UNIVERSAL CONSISTENCY OF ANALOGIES. 15 equally represent all other groups, large or small, which agree in having analogies with the vertebrate series. This is one of the consequences of the law of universal representation, which, while it saves a world of expla- natory details, reduces all the variations of animal forms to one and the same uniform law. One such table as the last, if correctly drawn up, does away with the necessity of testing the Annulosa by comparing them with any other circular group ; although such additional compa- risons would certainly tend very much to elucidate the subject, and confirm the correctness of our theory. The reader of our former volumes will perfectly understand this when he remembers that in each of those secondary divisions of the Vertebrata, named in our table, there is found representations of those in which the entire class is first divided; so that the different races of quadrupeds have their counterparts in the different races of birds, of fish, and so on. Hence, if one is correct, the others, theoretically, must be correct also. The student, with our former volumes before him, is thus enabled to trace the analogies of the Annulosa through the whole of the vertebrate circle.* But he need not stop even here. If the basis of an arrangement is natural, it wall stand any test ; we shall, therefore, devote one more paragraph to the analogies of the annulose animals, and then proceed to treat them in further detail. So many curious points of coincidence will thus come to light, that we trust the general reader, no less than the professed entomologist, will feel interested in our exposition. (13.) Few classes of animals can be more different than insects and shellfish. Yet if our proposition, tliat each forms a circular group, is true, then it will necessa- rily follow that the contents of one represent the contents of the other. How far this is really the case will be judged of by the following table and the explanations which follow : — * See the Treatise on Malacology, or Shells and Shellfish, where the analogies they bear to the vertebrate animals and to the Annulosa are stated at ch. il \i. 49. 16 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. Analogies of the Annulosa to the Testacea. Classes of the Annulosa. Ptilota. Aptera. CiRRHIPEDES. Vermes. Annelides. Analogical Characters. rPre-minently typical; head dis-^ j tinct, with long antennx or ten- > L tacula, J 'Sub-typical; head indistinct, often 'J I confounded with the thorax, or f i altogether wanting; antenna f . or tentacula often wsmting. J 'Mouth surrounded with long ten-^ ) tacula or arms; soft parts off I the body generally protected by f ' a shell. 3 "The most simple in their organ- ^ \ isation ; naked; without limbs f ^ of any sort; destitute of bran- f . chis. 3 -Disk of the belly flattened, and often performing the office of a . foot. Tribes of the Testacea. Gasteropoda. DiTHYHA. Cephalopoda. Parenchymata. NUDIBRANCHIA. The high development of the head and of the antennae are not the least remarkable characters of the Ptilota, or typical insects ; while, at the same time, it is all but universal in the Gasteropoda to find the head distinct, and the tentacula, representing antennae, more or less developed. The reverse of this, however, takes place in the apterous insects (^Aptera), and the bivalve shell- fish (^Dithyra^ : the whole of the spiders and scorpions are familiar examples, setting aside the crabs, where the whole body at first sight appears turned into a head, without, however, its limits being at all defined. The Dithyra, or bivalve shellfish, are absolutely headless, and live, like their prototypes, entirely by suction. The analogies between the barnacles (^Cirrhipedes) and the cuttlefish (^Cephalopoda) are even more striking to an ordinary ohserver than the former instances. Both have the mouth surrounded by long flexible arms, with which they seize their prey and convey it to their mouth, placed like that of the radiated animals, in the centre; and in both are numerous animals whose body is protected by shells. The strong analogy, as was formerly observed *, between the Parenchymata and the annulose Vermes has induced Malacology, p. 52. AURANGEMENT OP THE ANNELIDES. 1? all writers to blend them together, even to this day; the one being the most imperfect of all the Testacea, as the other is of the Annulosa. Leaving these^ we arrive at the annulose Annelides and the testaceous Nudihranchia. Even a natm-alist, looking to the outward appearance of these creatures, might readily he deceived in mistaking one for the other : their bocUes, generally naked^ are often ornamented with tufts of plumed or branched ap- pendages, assuming the aspect of horns, filaments, or tentacula ; they are in truth the very prototypes of each other. No wonder, therefore, that the older naturalists, and even Linnaeus, mixed them together, since the fact of one having red and the other white blood was not in those days, considered of much consequence. It is seldom that analogies, so striking as these, run through all the component parts of two series of animals ; for it generally happens that some are much more remote or obscure than others. The completeness, therefore, of this comparison is an additional evidence in favour of our theory on the primary types of the annulose circle. Leaving the ty- pical groups for the present, we shall now take a rapid glance at the three aberrant classes belonging to this division of animals. (14.) The general characters of the Annelides, or at least of the animals arranged by M. Savigny in this group, may be thus stated. They are soft, worm-like animals, mostly aquatic *, either naked, or protected by an ex- ternal shelly or agglutinated tube. The body is wrinkled transversely, or composed of annular segments. Their forms are very singular, and many are ornamented with beautiful colours, but these fade almost immediately after death. Their body being annular, brings them within the circle of the Annulosa ; but their blood is red; they have usually one or more hearts, and, with very few exceptions, are destitute of a distinct head: the sexes, moreover, are not always separate, but the majority are hermaphrodites. They are without any articulated members for locomotion; although some • Hor. Ent. 280. c 18 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OP INSECTS. possess processes or seta?, which can be protruded or withdrawn at pleasure, placed on each side of the body, which serve the animal as feet. The construc- tion of the mouth is excessively variable. In some (N'ereidce), it is lengthened into a proboscis furnished with jaws : in the Serpulidce, or womi-sheUs, which have a testaceous covering, there is an appearance of two lips ; while in the leeches (HirudinidcB), there is a prehensile cavity, supplied with parts which perform the office of jaws. The vertical movements of these parts, which so eminently distinguish vertebrate ani- mals, is still observable in many of the Annelide.sj but what particularly distinguishes the two groups from each other, is the nervous system of these worms, which, according to Cuvier and Savigny, is longitudinal, double, and knotted, or ganglionic, like that of insects. In the leeches, this similitude extends to the same number of ganglions.* The connection of this group with the Verte- brata and annulose animals has been before demonstrated. We shall, however, in this place, cite the opinion of Mr. MacLeay, who writes as follows : " That the Annelides, thus lying between the two most perfect forms in zoology, should be so inferior in the senses and powers of locomotion to both, is certainly surprising ;" but, on further reflection, we shall cease to think this anomalous, and may in some measure even expect that the vital powers of these beings ought to be influenced by the circumstance, that Nature in them is leaving one plan of construction, in order to adopt another which is totally different. (15.) The affinity between these animals and the fishes, through the medium of Gastrobranchus, is thus stated by our author. "The common leech is a red- blooded aquatic animal, which swims, like the lam- preys, in an undulatory motion. Like those animals, it has a circulation composed of veins and arteries : it breathes, like them, by two rows of holes, which • Hor. Ent.278. ARRANGEMENT OF THE ANNELIBES. 19 communicate with branchial pouches. The mouth is still surrounded by a lip proper for suction, and contains three maxillae, — one answering to the soli- tary upper tooth of the Gastrohranchus, and the other to the lateral teeth of its tongue. These maxilloe are minute, compressed, and serrated with very small teeth. The affinity of the leech to the cyclostomous fishes seems to have been first perceived by Linnaeus, as appears by the place which he gave to his genus Myxine. When, moreover, we find their habits to be so similar, it may be said that nothing more is wanted to complete the resemblance, than that the wrinkled membranaceous skeleton of Ammocwtus should, in the leech, be supposed to form the envelope of the whole animal." Our author, nevertheless, remarks, that " a great alteration, however, has now taken place in the internal structure, notwithstanding the above very evi- dent affinities." That the Annelides, on the other hand, approach to true insects, through the medium of the NereidcB, or sea- worms, is highly probable. These latter are more complicated in their structure than any others, from possessing a head, antennae, and blackish points resembling eyes : these eyes, however, are so imperfect, that LatreiUe compares them to the rudimentary ocelli visible in caterpillars and other in- sect larvae. From the Nereidce, moreover, agreeing in certain particulars, relating to their organs of reproduc- tion, with the Myriapoda, Mr, MacLeay considers that there is an affinity between them. He observes, '^ If to these considerations be added their vermicular motion, the form and disposition of their feet, — the two last of which are sometimes, as in Nereis margaritacea, trans- formed into filiform appendages, exactly similar to those which terminate the body of several Myriapoda, — we can have no doubt," concludes our author, " of our having at length reached truly the annulose animals, which are white-blooded, and are externally articulated." * AU » HorcB Ent. p. 282. c 2 20 NATURAL ARnAXGEJIENT OF INSECTS. these relations indeed exist, and yet may be accounted for upon the simple principle, that the Nereidce, in their own circle, represent the Myriapoda, but without having any affinity to them. As we have had no opportunity of studying these animals, we shall depart somewhat from our usual practice, and, instead of venturing upon any arrangement of our own, shall here lay before the reader the views entertained of their natural classifi- cation by others. (16.) Cuvier, who first discriminated this class by the name of Vers a sang rouge, has arranged them into three orders, founded upon their different modes of respiration. These are named Tubicoles, Dorsibranches, and Abranches. The first have their branchias in the form of a plume of feathers, attached to the head or to the anterior part of the body; which latter is always protected by a tubular sheath. The second have the branchite disposed on the sides of the body, where they assume the form of little ramified branches, tufts, plates, or tubercles : the greatest number live in the mud or freely swim in the ocean ; but some few inhabit tubes, like the former division. The third class comprehends such as have no apparent branchiae, and which respire from the surface of the skin, or, as it is supposed, by interior cavities. The greatest part of these animals live at the bottom of the sea, but a few reside in humid ground, like the earth-worm. The learned Savigny divides the Annelldes into five orders, three of which are furnished with those bristly appendages on the sides of the body which perform the office of feet, and which are wanting in the other two.* Lamarck's ar- rangement of the Annelides is founded upon the facts disclosed by Savigny. He divides the whole group under the three following orders : — 1. Annelides apodes, or footless Annelides ; 2. Annelides antennees, or such • Mentioned in HnrcE EntomologiciE, p. 281. The recent arrangement of MacLeay, hereafter noliced, seems to be precisely the same as Savigny's, -at least, in the primary divisions. ARRANGEMENT OP THE ANNELIDES. 21 as are furnished with antennae ; 3. Annelides seden- taires, or such as are flxeil to other substances. (17.) The arrangement of iNIilne Edwards is the most recent ; and, although leading to no general re- sults connected with the other classes of the Annulosa, may here be inserted, as disclosing some important facts relative to structure, which may hereafcer be turned to good account : although, where no general principles are aimed at, we seldom notice these isolated arrangements. (18.) The author in question divides the Anne- lides into two groups : — 1. The Annelides Apodes, or footless Annelides ; and, 2. The Annelides Che- TOPODEs, which are assisted in their locomotion by setiE placed upon pediform tubercles. The former, or Annelides Apodes, are very inferior in point of num- bers to the latter, and are distinguished by having a sucker at both their extremities. They constitute two families ; viz. the Hirudinidoe, or leeches, the body of which is wholly unfurnished with appendages, and these form two tribes ; the Albionnides, in which the oral sucker is but of one piece, and is separated from the body by a constriction, — its orifice being evidently longitudinal. Here he places the genus Pontobdella, the species of which are natives of the ocean, and attach them- selves chiefly to the chondropterygeous fishes, as the rays and sharks ; and Piscicola, which inhabits fresh waters, and frequents carps and tench. The second tribe are the Bdelleoides, in which the sucker consists of several pieces, and is scarcely separate from the rest of the body. It has its aperture transverse, forming, as it were, two hps, the interior of which is drawn back. This tribe contains Bdella, Hirudo, Erpobdella, Ne- phelys, &c. — the most celebrated of which is the medi- cinal leech (Hirudo). They are all mhabitants of fresh water, and some die almost instantly on being Avith- drawn from it, whilst others will live out of it for a considerable time. Many of them are great enemies to c 3 22 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. the earth--vvorm (Lumbricus) ; whilst they themselves are preyed on by birds, fishes, and the aquatic larvae of hexapod insects. The second family, or Branchellio- nidce, which have the body furnished above with a double series of membranous foliaceous appendages, is formed by the single genus Branchellion, the typical species of which attaches itself to the Torpedo in the Mediterranean, (19.) The second large division of the group, the Annelides Chetopodes, is considerably the most nu- merous, and may be further separated into two sub- divisions ; viz. the Annelides CephalobrancJiia;, or Tubi- coles, and the Annelides MesohrancMcB. The former are without a head, eyes, or maxill^, and the body is terminated anteriorly by a mouth. It is usually furnished with appendages, the whole or the majority of which are collected in front. It is also suppUed with hooked or subulated setce, which emanate from pediform tuber- cles, and which enable them to ascend or descend within their tubes. The majority can neither swim nor walk ; and those which crawl upon the ground, do so by the aid of their tentacula. These animals always reside in tubes, which are affixed to other substances, and which but few quit. Lamarck styled them sedentary, from this circumstance; but very many which he arranged in this division, from the animal being imperfectly known, have, with the progress of research, been discovered to belong to the gasteropodous mollusks, as Magilis, Ver- metus, Dentalium, Siliqiiaria, &c. : the habitations of many of these animals are, consequently, very simi- lar to those of the latter. The impervious nature of their tubular residences required that their respiratory apparatus should be collected at its orifice ; and we therefore thus find their structure accommodating itself to their natural economy. Several of these creatures are gregarious, and their tubes then assume very much the appearance of honeycombs. The animals them- selves are elongate and vermiform. They consist of ARRANGEMENT OP THE ANNELIDES. 23 several families ; viz. the Serpulidce, the AmphitritidcB, and the Terebellidce, &c. : the latter reside in slight tubes, which are buried in the sand or concealed beneath stones. The AmphitritidcB are readily recognised by the golden setae, arranged like the teeth of a comb, at their anterior extremity. The tube of the Serpulida is cal- careous and convoluted ; and the anterior extremity of their body is ornamented with a coronet of appendages resembling plumes disposed in the shape of a funnel. They contain many genera, as Serpula, Sahella, Her- mella, Pectinaria, &c. (20.) The Annelides MESOBRANCHiiB, which con- stitute the second subdivision of the Annelides Cheto- podes, are distinguished by the body extending beyond the oral aperture ; and it is usually terminated by a dis- tinct head, frequently furnished with eyes and maxillae ; and they have either no appendages, or these are placed along the whole course of the body. They are separated into three families ; viz. the Terricoles, the Arenicoles, and the Errantes, or Cephalotce. The first of these have no dermal appendages ; and have neither a very distinct head, eyes, antennse, nor maxillse ; their body is cylin- drical, attenuated at both extremities, and furnished with several rows of setae, which serve them instead of legs ; and they live either in humid earth, or in the mud. The Lumhricus, or earth-worm, is the best known example of this group, which consists of three tribes, — the Thalassamenidce, the Lumhricidce, and the Cli/menidcB. The first contains the genera Thalassema and Sternapsis ; the second, iVa'is, Tubi/ex and Lumbri- cus ; and the third contains Ciymene ; which last makes an approach to the Tubicoles, on account of its fragile tube, formed of grains of sand and particles of shells, although its structural peculiarities agree better with this family. (21.) The second family, the Arenicoles, consisting of the genera Arenicola and Chetoptera, have many characters in common with the preceding : these have, c 4) 24- NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. however, their branchiae placed only on the middle of the body. Their structure is more simple than that of the Errantes, — to which, through the medium of the AricidoB, consisting of the genera Cirratulus, Ophelia, Aricia, Sec, they form the passage. They inhabit the sands of the ocean, at the depth of one or two feet ; and they betray their retreat by the small convoluted threads of sand formed on the surface. Fishermen make great use of them to bait their hooks ; and, when caught, they stain the fingers with a yellow liquid. (22.) The third and last family, the Errantes, is the largest of all ; they form several tribes, and consist of a multitude of genera. They are the most highly or- ganised of the whole of this group ; having a very dis- tinct head, furnished with antennae, eyes, and almost always a protractile proboscis armed with maxillae : each ring of their body bears a pair of feet, the structure of which varies considerably, — sometimes placed on the back and the belly, — and each consistingof two tubercles ; yet both are occasionally united, and their extremity is furnished with a pencil of setae. When the feet are united, and form but one organ, they are generally fur- nished with a pair of cirrhi, or fleshy filiform append- ages, at the base of which the branchiae are seated. The setae themselves, Avhich decorate the feet, are usu- ally rigid and retractile, and they then serve for loco- motion and the defence of the animal ; but they are also often very long and flexible, and cannot then be withdrawn into the body, but cover it like a dense fur. They walk and swim well ; but usually dwell beneath stones, among shells, or buried in the sand. A mucus that exudes from them, frequently forms around them a sort of tubular case, which they inhabit, but which is of a less compact and solid structure than that observed in the Tnhicoles; and besides, the animal has the power of quitting it to seek its food and prey. They are all marine animals. We will briefly enumerate the tribes they constitute, and the more conspicuous genera. (23.) Those without cirrhi at the base of their feet 1 ARRANGEMENT OF THE ANNELIDES. 25 form two tribes, each consisting of a single genus, Pe- repafes and Campontia. Those which have their feet furnished with cirrhi, are the Nereids, which are very- abundant upon our coasts. They have a slender elon- gate body, their legs are furnished with tubercles, and the proboscis is armed with two very strong mandibles. They comprise many genera; viz. Glrjcera, Nephtys, Alciope, Nereis, Syllis, Phyllis, Hesione, &c. The Eu- NiciDJE resemble the latter in their general form ; but their feet are furnished with long filaments springing from one stem, like the teeth of a comb. They com- prise the genera CEnone and Aglaura, which have eight mandibles, and conceal the head beneath the first segment of the body : Lycidice and Leodice have seven man- dibles, with the head free and porrect; and further, Dio- patra, Eunice, &c. The AiwPHYNOMiDiE are those whose branchiffi are very complicated, — being tufted or ramose, — and they are spread all over the body. They have no maxiUae. The genera they consist of are Hiponoe, Euphrosyne, Amphynoma, Chloe'ia. And, lastly, the ApHRODiTiDiE, which are the most conspicuous of all : their body is oval, and fringed with long setse glittering with the most brilliant metallic splendour ; their back is furnished with large membranous plates like elytra, dis- posed alternately, and hidden beneath an arch of fur formed by a dense multitude of hairs, which spring, like the before-mentioned setse, from the feet of the animal, and are placed alternately as far as the twenty-fifth pair. They comprise Sigalion, Palmyra, Aphrodita, &c. Polynoe closely approaches the Aphroditce in their struc- ture, but the latter are destitute of setse, ^(18 — 23.) W.E. Sh.] (24.) Mr. MacLeay's is the last arrangement of the Annelides we shall notice : his definition of the whole class and of the chief groups will here be given in nearly his own words. These animals, he observes, differ from true (or rather typical) Annxilosa, in being hermaphrodite, and in general red-blooded. They are soft, vermiform animals, of an articulated structure. 26 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OP INSECTS. and which form the immediate connection between such vertebrate animals as Amphioxus and Myxine among fish, and such annulose animals as Porocephalns., and other white-blooded Vermes as have the sexes distinct. He divides the whole into five principal groups : — 1. The Nereidina, or such as are free, having a distinct head, provided either with eyes, or antennae, or with both. 2. Serpulina, the animals of which are se- dentary, destitute of a head, but provided with eyes or antennae. These two are considered the typical groups, and are distinguished by having their body provided with distinct feet. 3. The Lumbricina are animals without eyes or antennae, having the body setigerous for locomotion, and the articulations distinct. 4. The Nemertina, which are aquatic animals, without eyes or a,ntenn8e, the body not externally setigerous, and the . articulations indistinct. 5. and lastly, the Hirudina are animals provided generally with eyes, but not with antennae : the body is not externally setigerous, but the articulations are distinct. To these definitions Mr. MacLeay has added the following observations on three of these groups, which are too valuable to be omitted. The Nereidina he considers as the most perfect in their structure of all the class, as they possess numerous organs, and have a distinct head, which is generally provided with eyes and antennae : some of them, after the manner of the Serpulina, inhabit tubes, which tubes are membranaceous, and formed by a transudation from their body ; but in general the Nereidina are naked, and they are always agUe animals, freely moving about in search of their prey. In general appearance they are wonderfully like centipedes. 2. The Serpulina of our author are sedentary animals, without eyes or an- tennae : they live in tubes, which are either a natural transudation of their body, of a membranaceous or cal- careous substance, or their tubes are semifactitious, or, in other words, composed of an agglutination of particles of sand, or other small substances. The calcareous nature of the tube in some Serpulina is very advantageous for REMARKS ON THE VERMES. 27 their preservation in a fossil state. 3. The Nemertina are white-blooded worms, like some of the Hirudma, or leeches : in this group, however, the character of ar- ticulation becomes most indistinct. Rudolphi has placed Gordius along with Nemertes ; and if Gordius goes into the group of Nemertirm, it is possible that lularia may also. Nemertes Borlasii is a long black sea- worm, which is said to suck shellfish ; and the articulations of its body become visible when it is contracted.* (25.) Respecting the Vermes, or annulose worms, all we can state in this place is matter rather of opinion than of investigation. In a former volumet, we have felt no hesitation in considering a large portion of Cuvier's Pa- renchymata as belonging to the class of Testacea. We have been led to this determination from the analogy of Guilding's genus Herpa to that of Planaria; and from the latter animals crawling upon a disk-shaped belly, per- fectly like the Nudibranchia, or the dories and tritons, aU of which are universally considered as wakediMollusca. On the other hand, we should be disposed to place among the true Vermes all those in which the body, from being cylindrical, presents no vestige of a disk. Probably the greater part of the Enfosoa of Rudolphi come under this head ; they all live and propagate in the interior of others, and they are so various that al- most every animal has its own particular parasite. In some of these, particularly in the order Nemato'idea, there are no perceptible joints, but the external skin is striated transversely: but as we ascend higher in the scale, these incipient indications of the annulose struc- ture disappear, and the body, as in the whole family of the Tcenio'idea, or tape-worms, is composed, as Cuvier justly says, of joints more or less distinctly marked ; the whole being terminated at one extremity by a square head, hollowed by four small suckers, while the other is attenuated to a narrow point. True it is, that both * Note on the AnnStdce j Annals of Natural History, No. xvl p. 385. t Malacology, p. 37. 28 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. Rudolphi anil Cuvier place the latter among the Pareri- chymuta, simply because the body has slight indications of viscera ; but the distinction is too vague, and we are by no means disposed to adopt the views of arrange- ment proposed by these two eminent zoologists. Of all the true Vermes, the FilariaAs perhaps the most simple, and the genus Tcenia the most complicated. It has been said by some writer, that the tape-worm should more properly be considered a compound animal ; since, if the true head be severed from the body, another would spring up in its place : this may possibly be true, but it is doubtful, and the fact does not touch the case in question ; the remaining portion is still divided into segments or flattened rings, and the animal, to all intents and purposes, is annulose. That beings so simply constructed, are in- timately related to the Annelides, may be inferred from the fact that most authors include the Gordius, or hair- worm, with the latter, and the Filaria, or Guinea worm, with the former, or the Nemato'idea. This pest of hot climates is said to be very common, particularly on the African coast, where it insinuates itself under the skin of the natives, and is reputed to acquire the length of more than ten feet. In this manner it will continue to grow for several years, sometimes causing such intense agony as to produce convidsions in the unhappy sufferer. Its body is of the thickness of a very small quill ; and when it shows itself externally, the whole must be gently drawn out, otherwise it breaks, and excruciating suffering is produced. The most typical of all the true Vermes are probably found in Cuvier's family of Tcemo'idea, which includes all those intestinal animals in which the head is furnished with two or more suckers placed round its middle, the centre of which is either marked by a pore, or sometimes furnished with a little proboscis, which is either naked or armed with spines. It has been ge- nerally asserted, that the pores of the head are connected by canals or nerves which creep along the margin of the joints of the body : each of these joints has one or two REMARKS ON THE CIRRHIPEDES. 29 pores, differently situated, which appear to be the orifices of ovaries ; a clear proof, sliould such be the fact, that every tape- worm is not a compound, but a single animal. The common, or best known species, Tcenia lata, is one of the most cruel enemies to mankind; it occasions ex- cruciating agonies, and frequently produces death : it has been said to attain the incredible length of upwards of a hundred feet ; but that of twenty appears much more likely. We need not dwell further on this class of animals^ which appear to have been created as afflictions to the human race, and whose natural arrangement, although so much has been written upon their structure, appears to us to be involved in considerable obscurity. They form, indeed, a part of that varied chain in cre- ation, which unites, by imperceptible and graduated links, the lovely and the disgusting — the inviting and the repulsive. But where there is so much to admire and to fascinate, the general reader, for whom our pages are chiefly intended, will turn from those creatures which prey upon his perishable body, that he may be- stow more admiration on the varied hues and elegant forms of the butterfly — a fitting emblem of his own immortal soul. (26.) The CiBRHiPEDES, better known by the familiar name of Barnaclen, are, in many respects, the most im- perfect of aU the annulose animals. They are all marine, living in the ocean, and are attached to other bodies, as rocks, pieces of floating timber, the bottoms of vessels, and even to the backs of marine animals. Their num- ber is but few, and their geographical range very wide. In general appearance, they have some resemblance both to limpets and to bivalve shells; and this probably induced Linnaeus, in the infancy of science, to place them with the Mollusca, or shellfish, where they will still be found, even in modern Introductions to Con- chology, under the division of multivalve shells ! The resemblances, however, here alluded to, are but very slight, even in external appearance ; whUe the true 30 NATURAL AURANGEMENT OF INSECTS. nature of the animal of a barnacle and of a shellfish, as M. Cuvier well observes, is " very different." The Cirrhipedes,in fact, are thetestaceous or shelly Annulosa ; that is, they reprettent the 3Iollusca in the circle of an- nulose animals. Hence the error of M. Cuvier (who so frequently confounded analogy and affinity), in placing thera immediately after the true shellfish, although he justly observes that they have a sort of intermediate station between them and the Articulata ; in other words, they are analogous to the former, and connected with the latter. The body and all the most vital parts of the barnacles are protected by shelly pieces or valves, which fit close to each other, with a single opening at the top, through which the animal protrudes its feet, and imbibes its nourishment ; we say its feet, for such they really are, although they cannot be used as such for locomotion — the animal itself being fixed either by its shell, or by a flexible peduncle immoveable at the base. It was long imagined that the barnacles were produced either from eggs, which were glutinous, and so adhered to the substance on which the full-grown animal was afterwards found, or that they were vivi- parous, the female bringing forth the young alive, and depositing them in suitable situations. Very recently, however, a naturalist of our own country. Dr. Thomp- son, has made known the extraordinary fact, that these creatures undergo a metamorphosis no less surprising than that of perfect insects. This, of cours^ removes all doubts of the true station which the Cirrhipedes oc- cupy in the natural system, and at once places them in the circle of Annulosa, even if the possession of articu- lated limbs were not sufficient to place them strictly within that circle. (27.) The anatomical structure of these animals may be thus briefly stated : — The vital parts are enveloped in a mantle or tunic, which is covered externally by shelly plates, varying in number and shape ; thus bearing a strong analogy to the Dithyra, or bivalve shell. That ARRANGEMENT OF THE CIRRHIPEDES. 31 part which is called the head is merely a slight eminence, beneath which is a mouth furnished with lateral jaws. Unlike all other annulose animals, this part is not at one of the extremities ; for those organs which are called the feet, are placed above the mouth, so that the latter, properly speaking, is placed nearly beneath the body: there are six of these feet-like organs on each side, each consisting of a short stem, which is then divided into two very long, jointed filaments, resembling the an- tenna of insects, and fringed, especially at the end, with fine hairs : in front of these is another, much longer and thicker, which Poll calls a species of proboscis, and which there is every reason to consider as analogous to that organ in quadrupeds. M. Cuvier, indeed, objects to this term, but leaves us quite in the dark as to its real use. Poli, whose authority is of the greatest weight, observes that the motion of the heart is dis- tinctly visible.* To his invaluable work, and the me- moirs of M. Cuvier, we must refer the scientific reader for further details ; but the paper by sir Everard Home upon these animals f scarcely deserves his attention, being replete with errors. To Mr. Thompson's essay we shall presently return. (28.) We shall not here attempt any natural ar- rangement of these animals, but merely notice them as they stand at present arranged in systems. The chief divisions which have been made are two ; and these have been called families. The first contains those which are elevated upon a fleshy, flexible peduncle, and are the true barnacles ; while the second is composed of such as are attached by their shells only, and are conse- quently sessile. Collectors generally call them acorn- shells. These primary divisions, however, are arbitrary. Among the true barnacles, or those provided with pe- duncles, we find some entirely covered by shelly plates; while others are either wholly destitute of such pro- ♦ Test. Sic. i. 18. t Phil. Trans. Ixxv. 4ia 32 NATURAL ARUANGEMENT OF INSECTS. tection, or have them so small that they can scarcely be perceived. Others, again, have the peduncle entirely covered with shelly granules, so that the membranaceous skin can scarcely be seen; while a few, possessing the compressed shelly structure of this division, are com- pletely sessile. In the second great division of sessile barnacles, we find modifications of form still more re- markable. Some are found affixed indiscriminately to marine objects, whether living or dead; others take up their habitation only upon corals ; a few seem confined to the backs of turtle, while the genera TublcbieUa and Coronula imbed themselves in the flesh on the back of whales. To Dr. Leach, more than to any other natu- ralist, are we indebted for the definitions of all these various groups which he has proposed as genera. Mr. Gray, we believe, has also illustrated their aflinities ; and Mr. G. B. Sowerby has figured very many in his Genera of Shells. On the Continent, Audouin, Wagner, and Burmeister have investigated them ; and the latter in- defatigable entomologist has confirmed the discoveries of Dr. Thompson. (29.) In regard to the habits of the Cirrhipedes ge- nerally, very little can be said. Destined to live in an element different from that assigned to man, they are seldom seen in their native haunts by the closet natu- ralist. "With many opportunities, in early life, for studying them in a living state, we regret that other avo- cations prevented this from being more than partially done. There can be no doubt, however, that the Cir- rhipedes are carnivorous animals, feeding upon those minute polypes which swarm in all parts of the ocean, although frequently invisible to the naked eye. During the leisure of a voyage across the Atlantic, we had once the opportunity of watching a bunch of pedun- culated barnacles, taken from a piece of floating timber and placed in a bucket of sea water. After a short time, as if they wished to reconnoitre their new habita- tion, they gradually opened the orifice in front, and pro- ANALOGIES OF THE CIRRHIPEDES. 33 truded their fringed arms about half way ; and finding that no injury resulted, they projected the other half. In this position they were really beautiful, for the cirrhi formed the rays of an oblong flower-shaped cup, each filament being slightly curved inwards at the tip. We observed some little moving particles in the tub of sea water; and " ever and anon" our captive barnacles would instantaneously draw themselves into their shelly co- vering, as if they had captured their minute prey, and had retired to eat it. Now, this is precisely the mode of life pursued by all those sessile polypes, called animal flowers [Actini7ice) ; nor can there be the least doubt that the feet of the Cirrhipedes are, in fact, used as their arms, wherewith to seize all those small marine animals which come within their reach. (30.) The analogies of the Cirrhipedes are remark- ably interesting. We have already shown that they represent the apodal reptiles. But it is truly wonderful how Nature, in this group of Annulosa, has contrived to represent the fissirostral type among birds, of which the flycatchers are well known examples. These birds, in fact, are the most sedentary of their class ; that is, they make little or no use of their feet, but as mere supports to their body, for they neither climb, run, nor even walk. It is the peculiar property, also, of these birds, to sit for hours upon the same twig, almost im- moveable, watching for such passing insects as come within the reach of a sudden dart : while thus sta- tioned, they are, in fact, as sedentary as the Cirrhipedes, and for the time may be said to be fixed to the station they have selected. The proof of an analogy being natural, is by comparing the two circles of which the particular groups under consideration form a part ; thus, if we look to the order Insessores, or perching birds, and to the circle of the Annulosa, we find they re- present each other in the following manner: — 34 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. Analogies of the Cirbhipedes to the Fissirostral Birds. Classes of the Annulosa, Aptbra. Ptilota. Anneudes. Vermes. ClRKHIPEDES- Analogies. f Eminently carnivorous ; sub-typi- 7 I cat i fThe most typical in perfection of J I structure. J f Ornamental appendages to \ head. Feed upon juices. rCarnivorous ; watch for their ■J prey ; locomotion imperfect, or C none. the? Tribes of Perching Birds, Dentibostbbs. conibostres. scansores. TENtnROSTRES. FiSSIROSTRBS. The regularity with which the groups in each of these cohimns follow each other in absolute affinity, and thereby form two circles, is always one of the proofs that analogies are founded in nature. Perhaps the most singular representation which this table elicits, is that by which the worms (^Vermes) typify the hum- ming-birds ( Tenuirostres). It is among the vermiform or tenuirostral types of the Vertebrata, that we always find those animals which have an unusually long and pointed snout — whether it is modified into the muzzle of a quadruped, or the bill of a bird ; the mouth, also, is invariably small. Now, this character, under a new appearance, shows itself among the intestinal worms, which are the most pointed at their extremity of all the others ; the mouth being so small as sometimes not to be visible. The suctorial birds, in like manner, have the longest bills, but the smallest mouth, in pro- portion to their size, of all the Insessores ; and they live chiefly upon vegetable juices, while the worms live upon those of animals. It is the beauty of the theory of representation, that if once the natural series has been discovered, it receives new strength and demon- stration from all other natural groups in the animal kingdom : so that the foregoing table is but a clue to a hundred others, which may be taken from those por ANALOGIES OF THE ANNULOSA. S5 tions of the vertebrate and annulose kingdoms, which have been illustrated in this manner in our former vo- lumes. (31.) The resemblance of the barnacles to marine shellfish is so strong, that to this day they are confounded Avith them by collectors; while even LinnaeuSj from not being acquainted with the true structure of the animal, fell into the same error, and classed them with the Mol- lusca. Here> then, we have a strong instance of that principle which nature invariably acts upon in the con- struction of all her productions ; we have one group of animals representing another ; and this so completely, as to deceive both the learned and the ignorant. Now, the only way in which this popular association of the barnacles with the shelly Testacea can be clearly de- monstrated, is, by comparing the two groups together, and applying to their component parts the test of ana- logy. Unfortunately, the natural series of the Cirrhi- pedes among themselves is unknown. There can be little doubt, however, that the sessile and the peduncu- lated divisions form the two typical groups ; and these furnish us, of course, with the chief characters of the whole class. We can thus compare the primary divi- sions of the Annulosa, one of which is the Cirrhipedes, with the five great divisions of the animal kingdom, — the Mollusca being unlike any one of the latter. The following table shows these two series, with their divi- sions and analogies : — Analogies of the Animal Kingdom to the Annulosa. Series of the . , • Series of the Animal Kingdom. Jinaiogtes. Annulosa. Vertebrat/l Metamorphosis imperfect, or none. Aptera. Annulosa. Metamorphosis perfect. Ptilota. Radiata C Heart indistinct, or none; body? an\elide5.) The luliform type of larva stands at the head : it is so called because of its resemblance to those insects which constitute the perfection of apterous in- sects, and of which the common ringworm (lulus), so frequent under stones and bark in this country, is a good example. Caterpillars of this type are always smooth; they have no horns or excrescences either upon their head or their skin: they possess no noxious qua- lity; nor do they assume,when disturbed, any threatening ' 1^ RAPTORIAL TYPE OF LARV^. 59 attitude. The head is never immoderately large nor dis- proportionably small^ but of a just proportion to the rest of their body. Their shape is invariably long, as- similating to the form of an lulus; and they are always provided with feet, the body being cylindrical. Some- times there is a little down upon their skin, but other- wise this part is invariably smooth. They never conceal themselves under any natural or artificial shelter when feeding, but roam about; yet they do not leap, nor do they ever frequent the water. It will be perceived that, in many respects, the distinctions of this type of larva are negative; yet such characters are just as good, and in many cases better, than those which are drawn from positive circumstances. The best examples we can name of the larva we have now described, will be those of the garden or cabbage butterflies: the swallow-tailed cater- pillars also belong to this type, but are not so charac- teristic as the former. (56.) The Raptorial type, in most groups, may be at once known by having its body covered either with pun- gent spines, or warty tubercles assuming the same shape. Although unable to inflict injury by their bite, these spines upon the surface of these caterpillars are almost always sharp, and very frequenly have the property of inflicting a pain and irritation much more severe than we experience in the sting of a nettle. They are, in fact, the type of evil ; and they show this in a remark- able manner : if, as in some lepidopterous groups, al- though not in the diurnal butterflies, the body is unde- fended either by spines or tubercles, they have yet the extraordinary habit of assuming various threatening or terrific attitudes, in such a way as to intimidate the spectator, and make him believe that they have the power of inflicting upon him grievous bodily injury. Nay, still further to show that particular reference they bear to the noxious and ferocious among animals, and to the evil and reprobate part of mankind, when they change into chrysalis, they either bury themselves in the earth, as if that was their final home, or, if the Co NATURAL ARRANGEMKNT OF INSECTS. change is effected in the open air, their heads are sus- pended downwards; whereas, in the pre-eminent or iuliform type, the metamorphosis is invariably per- formed in the open air; and in the typical diurnal but- terflies, the head of the chrysalis is always pointed towards the skies, as intimating a joyful and happy change in its next transformation. But this wonderful analogy does not cease here ; it is among the caterpillars of this type, and of this type only, that we tind all those which feed upon noxious or deadly plants, — on hemlock, nightshade, nettles, and all such as, either for their poisonous or hurtful qualities, are shunned by mankind, — as fit emblems of evil and of mischief. It is almost needless to recapitulate the negative characters of this type : the body is always lengthened and cylin- drical, the head without any particular horns, spines, or excrescences, and of a moderate proportionable size : the other extremity of the animal, although obtuse, is never suddenly thickened ; neither are there any tails, filaments, or pointed appendages at the end. All the caterpillars of the diurnal Lepidoptera belonging to this type, are spined or tuberculated ; but in the next tribe, which includes the hawk-moths, or crepuscular Lepi- doptera [Sphingides Sw.), the threatening attitudes are developed in lieu of the armed spines : in both, how- ever, we find a large proportion feeding upon poisonous or noxious plants. The common white admirable but- terfly, which lives upon the nettle ; the painted lady, which, as a larva, devours thistles ; and the splendid peacock butterfly, which feeds with the former ; are all familiar examples of the type we have here indicated. (.57.) The third is the Natatorial, or Anopluriform type, so named because, in the higher and larger groups, the animals belonging to it either live in the water or frequent its vicinity : such aquatic creatures may there- fore be said to be enclosed or covered, as it were, from the atmosphere, and live under shelter of another sub- stance. Now, although none of the diurnal butterflies are either natatorial, or in any degree aquatic. Nature SUCTORIAL TYPE OV LARV^. 61 has nevertheless preserved, in such as belong to this type, the strongest and most beautiful analogy to animals of such habits. The Hesperidce, or skipper butterflies, unlike all others of the tribe, are enclosed and covered, in their larva state, from the air; not, indeed, in water, but within the folds of a leafy case, fabricated by the animal itself, and which it never quits except as a winged insect. The name of anopluriform had better, perhaps, be retained to the examples of this type among the diurnal Lepidoptera ; this epithet having been be- stowed upon it from the resemblance borne by the cater- pillars to the anopluriform apterous insects, or bird lice, of Dr. Leach. But let us enumerate more par- ticularly the character of these larvae. First, then, the head, which in the two former is of moderate size, in this type is always disproportionably large, thick, and obtuse, yet it is never decorated with horns or append- ages : the body is not long, but rather inclined to shortness ; the hinder extremity, however, is always much thicker than the fore part, so that it frequently seems to end very abruptly : the surface is generally smooth and naked, nor is their any appearance of spines, tubercles, or other appendages. These caterpillars, more than any other, resemble the fat maggots of flies ; while their bodies, being sufliciently protected by the covered habitation they fabricate, are usually soft : the legs are small and weak, because there is little use for them ; the caterpillar being, as it were, sedentary. In the natatorial or anopluriform type of other animals, the legs are generally wanting. (58.) The Suctorial, or Vermiform type, is one of the most remarkable types, in the variation of its struc- ture, and in the apparently contradictory forms under which it appears. There is one peculiar distinction, however, by which it may generally be recognised ; this is, in the sraallness of the heads of these caterpil- lars, destitute, at the same time, of any thing like ex- traneous appendages. It follows, from this circum- stance, that the mouth is particularly small ; while the 62 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. hinder extremity of the body is invariably narrow and pointed. These peculiarities are the very reverse of those of the larvae belonging to the last type, and render this of very easy detection. It might be in- ferred from the term vermiform, that these larvse are always of the lengthened shape of a worm, and that in the mode of taking their food they are suctorial ; but neither of these inferences would be correct. These caterpillars are likened to the true earth-worms, because both their extremities are pointed, and because they are the representatives of those creatures among the diurnal Lepidoptera. Again, they are termed suctorial, because most of their corresponding types or representatives among other animals derive their food from suction alone, and are the most toothless of their respective groups. The different shapes which belong to the suc- torial type among the diurnal butterflies, is the onisci- form, or chclonian : in other words, its shape is inter- mediate between that of a wood-louse {Oniscus Lin.) and a chelonian reptile, or tortoise : the head and tail, indeed, are small and narrow ; but the body is dispro- portionably broad, much depressed, and appears as if divided into plates like the shell on the back of a tortoise. Most of the butterflies belonging to this type are natives of the Tropics ; but there is one division which is more particularly European, and which con- stitutes the genus Polyommatus* , or, the Blues and Coppers, of English collectors. (59.) The Rasorial, or Thysanuriform, caterpillars belong to the last type we have to notice ; and they differ, in many striking peculiarities, from all that we have yet spoken of. In the general shape of their body, and in the proportionate size of their head, they as- similate to the iuliform and the raptorial types ; but from both these they may be known by two characters. Either the head itself is armed with distinct spines, forming a sort of crest round the back part ; or it seems divided into two parts by a deep notch, each portion • Zool. 111. ii. pL m. THYSANUBIFORM TYPE OF I.ARV^. SS being pointed : sometimes these points are so long as to resemble horns ; in other examples they are very short, and hardly conspicuous ; while in some few, although the hinder part of the head is pointed, it is not divided. The extremity of the body gives us another pecu- liarity: this part, also, terminates in two pointed pro- cesses, which, according to their length in different examples, either assume the apnearance of tails, or of two little short spines. We have no very striking in- stances of these horned caterpillars among those of the European butterflies ; but if the student meet with the larvae of any of the brown meadow butterflies, forming the modern genus HipparcMa, he will have a very good idea of the general character of thysanuriforrn larvae, the great developement of which is seen only in the large butterflies of Tropical America. A few words may be necessary in explanation of the names given to these caterpillars. They have been called Tliysanuri- form, under a belief (and we think the supposition is correct) that they represent the Lepisma or Thysanura of Dr. Leach ; while, by terming them also Rasorial, we point out at once their unquestionable analogy to the rasorial birds. (60.) Let us now compare these types of lepido- pterous larvae with the five great groups of birds and quadrupeds : the test of their accuracy will consist, of course, on the analogy by which each should mutually represent the other. We commence, then, with the iuliform type. The butterflies which proceed from caterpillars bearing this form, are well known to be the most perfect of the whole tribe. This is manifested by their possessing six perfect feet adapted for walking. Linnaeus was well aware that the swallow-tailed butter- flies were the princes of the diurnal Lepidoptera, for he places them at the head as the Nohiles, and names the species after the heroes of Greece and Troy. They are, in short, the most perfect of all butterflies, whether we regard their general structure, or the unrivalled beauty of their form and colouring. Now, this perfection, in ht NATURAL ARRANGESIENT OF INSECTS. like manner, belongs to the typical order of perchers among birds, and the Quadrumana or Frimnten among quadrupeds. In each of these, the power of locomotion is most developed and complete ; and the feet are con- sequently more perfectly formed for such purposes than in any other. If we look to the metamorphoses of the iuliform butterflies, the analogy is further strengthened. Their transformation is not merely complete, but nearly all change into chrysalis with the head directed upwards. To this remarkable fact, which is an essential part of the sublime instruction conveyed to us by these em- blems of our own resurrection, we attach the greatest importance ; and we accordingly find it to be one of the leading features of the most perfect sort of meta- morphosis. The iuliform, or pre-eminent type of larva thus agrees with the pre-eminent orders of qua- drupeds and of birds ; all agreeing in being the most perfect of their kind. The raptorial type (called by some the Scolopendriforni) is the next in succession. "We have seen that there is a character of evil belonging to this type, even under the apparently harmless form of a caterpillar ; and if any one should be inclined to term this fanciful,'he would soon change his opinion upon handling one of the spined caterpillars of Brazil, the pain of which (caused by its poisonous spines) would cripple his fingers for many hours. Now, one of the great characters of all the examples of this type throughout nature, is to be less perfect in their con- struction than the last, but to be endowed with one advantage, — that of strength. Such a power, in fact, is inseparable from their nature. The falcons and vul- tures among birds, and the carnivorous beasts among the quadrupeds, being the most cruel and ferocious, are consequently stronger than any others. The same ob- servation is applicable to the butterflies of this type ; they are well known to be the strongest in make, and the most powerful in flight, of all the diurnal lepido- ptera ; while they show a marked inferiority to the iuli- form butterflies, by having the two fore feet so short ABERRANT TVPES OF LARViE. 65 as to be incapable of being used in walking. The meta- morphosis of these caterpillars has been already adverted to, and its pecidiarity forms a part of the inferiority of their station when compared to that of the pre-eminent type : the head of the chrysalis is pointed downwards to the earth, symbolical that all types of evil '• are of the earth — earthly;" in contradistinction to the up- ward direction of those pupa of the last type, which are the symbols of perfection. Upon these grounds do we maintain, that, in all the stages of their existence, the two principal types of the diurnal butterflies are strictly analogous to those of the vertebrate animals : if any other proof was wanting, we need only rest our argu- ment upon this. In quadrupeds and iuliform butter- flies we have the greatest perfection of the feet; whereas in raptorial or scolopendriform butterflies, and in birds. Nature has evidently rendered these organs imperfect, and made their perfection to consist in superior powers of flight. (6 J.) If we turn to the aberrant types of larvae, or those which have been named the Anopluriform, the Vermiform, and the Thy sanuri form, we shall find their analogies equally strong among the vertebrate animals. The enormous head of the Hesperian caterpillars, and their thick obtuse body, are strikingly conspicuous in the anopluriform quadrupeds, or the whales ( Cetacea) ; in which order, the head is so disproportionably large as frequently to exceed the circumference of the body : the aquatic birds, in like manner, represent both ; and although their bodies do not end so abruptly, yet they have the shortest tails of all the birds in existence. Next let us take the vermiform or onisciform larvs ; how strikingly do the caterpillars of the blue and copper butterflies (Polyommatus Lat.) resemble a little tortoise, with their small pointed head and tail, and their wide depressed body marked by lines resembling plates ! If, again, we compare them to armadillos, the analogy is equally just and capable of demonstration; for the genus 66 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. Das)//)!!^ is a vermiform type, while it is almost tlie only one among quadrupeds, which, from being covered with bony plates, can be compared to the tortoises or chelonian reptiles. The smallness of the head and mouth in the vermiform caterpillars is very remarkable; and upon looking to quadrupeds and birds, we find that the Glires, or mice, the armadillos, and the wading tribes (^Grallatores), have the smallest and most pointed muz- zlej the narrowest gape, and the least mouth of all ver- tebrate animals. Now, the only difference between the general form of these tortoise-like caterpillars, and that of the common earth-worm, is this, — that in the former the body is excessively contracted, whereas in the latter it is excessively lengthened : the pointed extremities of the head and of the tail, in both animals, is a common character, which, as we have already seen, belongs to no other type of larvae of insects or of vertebrate animals; this at once accounts for the excessive length of body possessed by all the gnawing quadrupeds {Glires Linn,), and by all the birds in the order of waders {Gralla- tores). (62.) There now only remain the Rasorial or Thy- sanuriform caterpillars ; and these, if the preceding views are correct, must of necessity represent the Gallinacece, or Rasores, among birds, and the horned cattle, or ruminants (Ungulata), among quadrupeds. Now, both of these groups of vertebrate animals, in their respec- tive classes, are the only ones which have horns, crests, or pointed appendages on their heads. Look to the whole of the order Ungulata, and you will find the rhinoceros, with its horned snout, and the numerous families of deer and antelopes and oxen, all decorated in this manner : turn to the gallinaceous birds, and you will find nearly all the peacocks and pheasants ornamented either with conspicuous crests, or with little ear-like egrets ; the different fowls with fleshy combs cresting their heads, and the front of the different Guinea hens armed with bony protuberances. These COMPARISON OF hXRVJE WITH UNGULATA. 67 are but so many representations of rasorial or thysa- nuriform larvse, the chief characteristic of which, as every experienced entomologist well knows, is the horn- like spines which crest the head, and give to them the aspect of ruminant caterpillars. But this is not the only mode by which Nature has clearly pointed out to us the harmony and simplicity of her fundamental laws. Thysanuriforra larvae are those only which have the body either terminating in two long filaments resem- bling tails*, or in two lieshy points, as in the caterpillars of our common meadow brown butterflies, f Now, if it be inquired, what are the birds which have the greatest developement of tail? — the merest tyro wiU name the peacocks, the pheasants, and all the typical gallinaceous birds, as possessing this member in its highest state of developement. The analogy of this order of birds, with that composed of the domesticated quadrupeds, long ago pointed out by Linnaeus, is unquestionable ; and we accordingly find that the horse, which stands at their head, has the most beautiful tail among quadru- peds. But an arrangement, it has well been said, it really natural, will stand any test : the most trivial, as well as what appears to be the most important circum- stances, must be taken into consideration. Now, it is notorious, that the most bulky of true quadrupeds are found in the class Ungulata ; there we have the ele- phant, the rhinoceros, the hippopotamus, and the whole family of antelopes and oxen : the largest birds, on the same principle, occur in the rasorial order ; and in like manner the giants of the diurnal butterflies all proceed from the thysanuriform caterpUlars. To pursue these beautiful and astonishing representations further, — for many others might be pointed out, — is surely needless. Enough has been said to establish our proposition, that the types of lepidopterons larvae are only so many re- presentations of the primary types among the most * Merian's Ins. pi. 19. fig. 1. ; StoU, pi. 3. figs. 3, 4. f See Lewin's Brit. Ins. pi. 17. to 21. F 2 68 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. perfect of the vertebrate animals. This fact being demonstrated, it follows that all the larvic of annulose animals must bear as true analogies to those of the diurnal Lepidoptera , as these latter do to the primary- divisions of quadrupeds and of birds. {63.) If, again, we look for analogies between the classes of the Annulosa and the typical forms of larvee already explained, we shall not be altogether disappointed. It becomes, indeed, of the first importance to illustrate this subject, because, having abandoned all the arrange- ments and theories of our predecessors, the entomo- logical world in general will expect that good and sufficient reasons should be urged for this venturous proceeding. We begin, then, with the iuliform type of caterpillars, which, as we have already seen, are the pre-eminent ; and they accordingly produce the most perfectly organised of all the diurnal butterflies : it is consequently this type which represents and stands at the head of tlie class Ptilota. Next come the Aptera, and the raptorial larvee. In the former we find all the different races of those noxious or disgusting insects which excite so much terror in viilgar minds, and whose very appearance is repulsive. Among these it is only necessary to mention the different races of spiders, wood lice, scorpions, centipedes, harvest bugs, bird lice, and those detestable parasites the Acari, which are the pest of man in tropical countries. Surely, if any assem- blage of insects may be called types of evil, those in the list now before us are universally felt and known as such. They compose, consequently, the sub-typical group, whose hideous aspect and hurtful qualities are aptly represented by the forbidding appearance and the stinging qualities of the raptorial or scolopendriform type of caterpillars. These latter, among the diurnal Lepi- doptera, produce the Nymphalldie, the sub-typical group of the butterflies; and are again represented by the threat- ening rampant caterpillars of the sphinxes, which are also the sub-typical group of the lepidopterous order. Be- COMPARISON OF LARV^ WITH THE ANNULOSA. 6^ tween all these, therefore, it is not possible to conceive a more beautiful series of representations. Now pass to the Rasorial or Thysanuriform type, the caterpillars of which, as Dr. Horsfield well observes, have their heads beset with horn-like processes ; but " their chief cha- racteristic," as he could not fail to observe, " consists in two very strongly marked lengthened or filiform ap- pendages " at the end of the abdomen. We have already seen that these tail-like processes represent the long tails of the rasorial birds ; and we shall find that Nature again employs this favourite device to designate the rasorial type of the Annulosa, It is among i\\e Anneiides alone, of all the aberrant classes of annulose animals, that we find not a few, but the greatest portion, ornamented with fringed crests on the fore part of their body, and long tail-like processes at the other. Among the Annelides, also, we have the largest Annulosa ; while the thysa- nuriform larvae produce the largest of all butterflies. Other analogies might be pointed out ; but the above are so strong, that there cannot be a doubt of the Annelides representing the thysanuriform caterpillars. Let us next compare the class of Vermes, comprising the intestinal worms, with the vermiform type of caterpillars. Here the analogy is no less interesting. The entomologist will recollect that the great distinction of these cater- pillars is the attenuated or pointed form of its two ex- tremities, so that at first sight it is not readily seen which is the head and which is the tail. Now, this is precisely the description of an intestinal worm, where the mouth, if it exists, is so small as to become obso- lete : even minute inspection is necessary before we can determine at which end it is situated ; so completely pointed and uniform are the two extremities. If it be urged, that the shape of the vermiform caterpillars of the diurnal Lepidoptera are broad and flat in the middle of their body, we have only to look to several of the Vermes for an exact representation of this shape. And if it be said, again, that there are no vermiform cater- F 3 70 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. pillars having the long cylindrical body of the intestinal worms, the entomologist must be reminded of the larvte of the Linnican Geometria, now called the true moths [Phal(P7iides), where we find the longest caterpillars in the whole order of Lepidopfera ; just as the Vermes, and their representatives, are the longest of all annulose animals. There now remains but one division in each group to be compared, and these are the Anopluriform caterpillars and the Cirrhipedes, or barnacles. These, it will be remembered, stand at the extreme confines of their own superior groups; the Hesperian butterflies being the last of the Papiliones, and the barnacles the last of the Annulosa. In such extreme groups, the analogies, also, are always the most remote ; nor can we expect to (race any thing in common, as regards absolute struc- ture, between the form of an anopluriform caterpillar and barnacle : but when we reflect upon the habits of these two very dissimilar tribes, we are immediately struck with the beautiful method by which Nature has intended that they should represent each other. The " truly natural character," as Mr. MacLeay observes of the Cirrhipedes, " is that vegetative quality by which they are rendered incapable of locomotion ; " while it may with equal truth be said, that the most striking and universal peculiarity of anopluriform caterpillars consists in their always remaining, as it were, sedentary : they spin themselves up in a leaf, which (apparently at least) they never quit ; and in which they change into the pupa. So far, therefore, they have nearly as much of that " vegetative quality," when we compare them with all the other types of larvje, as have the Cirrhipedes. Both, in short, are modifications of the apodal larva;, and may be described as truly sedentary, or living in one place. We have intimated, that it would be almost impossible to discover the most remote analogy between the form of a barnacle and an anopluriform larva ; but there is a very curious coincidence in the general ap- pearance of the two animals, which may be here men- FORMS ALWAYS SYMBOLICAL. 71 tioned. Any one who looks at an anopluriform cater- pillar, must be struck by the excessive size of the head, — often broader than the body, from which it is so far removed, as to appear attached to it by a peduncle. Dr. Horsfield, therefore, j ustly characterised these larvae as having " a very large head, attached to the body by a long neck." Now, the Cirrhipedes, properly speaking, have no head ; but that part of the animal which corre- sponds thereto, and where the mouth is situated, is ele- vated on a long fleshy slender peduncle ; so that the thickest part of the creature is that where the mouth is situated. Such, in fact, is an anopluriform larva ; the head, where the mouth is placed, is the thickest part of the animal ; so that the figure of a pedunculated bar- nacle may be termed a rude sketch of that form which Nature developes more accurately in the larva of a Hesperia, and brings to the highest perfection in the quadrupeds, under the form of the whale, — that is, in the most perfect of all her groups. We make no apo- logy to the reader for this apparent digression ; for what can be more delightful than to trace the varied yet consistent operations of Nature through the endless diversity of forms she spreads before us. We have shown that the primary types of caterpillars represent the primary divisions of quadrupeds and of birds, and that these three important groups are again represented by the great divisions of Annulosa. It is impossible to believe that results, so uniformly consistent with each other, can be founded but on the true symbolical system of Nature. We hope, therefore, to have now demon- strated our original proposition ; namely, that the groups of the Annulosa represent those of the Fertebrata, and that the principles of variation, in one and the other, are precisely the same. The following table, therefore, concentrates all we have said in this paragraph : — F 4 72 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. Analogies of the Larv^ of the Lepidoptera to the An- NULOSA. Classes of the Analogies Primary Types of Annulosa. Analogies. h\Mm. Ptilota. f Pre-eminently typical; innoxO j^/f^^_ ■* I lous ; and smooth. 3 Aptera. Hairy or spinous ; often poisonous. Scolopendrijorm, CaatPEBES. {""Itrl^l^^''' ''''^''''' '^ ^ Anopluriform. ,. f Both extremities pointed : head > Vermiform, or Vermes. J very small. j Onisnform. . fHead armed with .opines; body J n,, . ,r^„„ Annelides. \ with tail-like appendages. j Thymnunjorm. (64.) Let us now inquire into the principle of variation that pervades each of the types of larvae herein described. This demands our particular attention, because, as it ap- pears to us, some erroneous ideas have been entertained on this subject. We have seen that, in one large group of insects, containing many hundreds, perhaps thousands, of species, there are five leading types or forms of cater- pillars ; and that these correspond, and follow each other, in the same order of succession as do the classes and orders of quadrupeds and of birds. But the student, any more than the professed entomologist, must not be- lieve that all the thysanuriform larvne, for instance, go in one of these five divisions ; or that he is to class all the scolopendriform caterpillars together under another di- vision. True it is, that by such an arrangement he would get a uniformity of the same-shaped caterpillars, and he might flatter himself with having discovered the true arrangement of the Lepidoptera; but when he looked to the butterflies which proceeded from his thysanuriform or his scolopendriform larvae, he would find that, so far. from exhibiting the regularity and affinity with each other, which, from looking only to their caterpillars, he had expected, he will be perfectly disappointed. But, to render this clear, let us state a case ; — let us suppose, for instance, he had in his possession the five cater- pillars here represented : he sees that they answer to our description of the thysanuriform type; and, as they TRANSFORMATIONS OF THYSANURIFORM LARV^. 73 have a very close resemblance to each other, he conse- quently concludes, with every show of reason, that they will produce pupae and butterflies equally near, and equally resembling each other. He accordingly feeds them, and watches their transformation with great anx- iety. The first, we will suppose, which changes into chrysalis, is that of Podalirius Pompilius* , or the Ja- vanese swallow-tail : he sees with surprise, that the chrysalis, instead of having its head suspended down- wards, as in all the true thysanuriform types, has it in an erect position; while the butterfly, into which it is subsequently transformed, has six perfect legs, and turns out to be of the iuliform, or pre-eminent, type. Sadly perplexed at this, he traces the progress of another ; this he conceives, from the length of its horns, to be more typical, and he consequently expects that it will pro- duce him a perfect thysanuriform butterfly. But he is again baffled; it becomes transformed into the purple emperor, — a butterfly which belongs to the raptorial, or scolopendriform, division. Of two green caterpillars, which, from their similarity, seemed to belong to species of the same genus, one only becomes a true thysanuri- form butterfly, the other changing to one of the scolo- pendriform types. Finally, he gets from a fifih, which closely resembles the last two, a decided species of Iles- peria,—a butterfly totally different from all those which his collection of thysanuriform larva;had produced. How, then, it may be asked, can we maintain that each of the great divisions of butterflies has a peculiarly shaped ca- terpillar; when we see, as in the foregoing instance, those which are caUed thysanuriform are scattered in every one of these divisions ? This question brings us to the point we are to explain, — namely, the principle of their va- riation. It is, theoretically, as follows : — Every natural group of butterflies, either in their caterpillar or perfect state, contains representations of the primary types of larvtc, modified, however, in such a manner, as to indi- cate the real type to which they actually belong. Sup- • Zool lU. ii. pi. 105, 74 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS pose, for instance, we take the iuliform butterflies, the most perfect of the diurnal Lepidoptera; now, although the types of this division perfectly agree with our de- finition, we nevertheless discover, as we proceed to the aberrant examples, that Nature so modifies them, that some assume the aspect and character of scolopendriform larvfe, others have the thysanuriform shape, and so on. So that, although the butterflies which stand at the head of the iuliform division, as being typical, have iuliform larvffi, yet that the group, taken as a whole, will contain analogical representations of all the other types of larvae we have described. The scolopendriform butterflies {^Nymphalides Sw.), in the very same manner, contain representations of iuliform, thysanuriform, vermiform, and anopluriform caterpillars, besides their own proper type, which is scolopendriform. This fact, which none of the modern lepidopterous writers appear to have perceived, has been so fully illustrated in a series of plates*, as to be placed beyond all reasonable doubt. No better argument, indeed, than this, can be urged against the prevalent but erroneous idea, that the natural ar- rangement of the Lepidoptera, or, in fact, of insects generally, entirely depends upon the form of their ca- terpillars. Our belief is, therefore, that, without a knowledge of the perfect insect, we should never be able to explain whether it was allied to any one particular type by aflSnity, or whether it only analogically repre- sented it. iQ5.') Most of the modifications under which the primary types of larvae are in a manner disguised, will be easily comprehended by the foregoing remarks. Iuli- form larvae, as we have already said, are smooth ; but sometimes they are covered with fleshy tubercles, as in the instance of that beautiful butterfly, Polydorus Thoas. Now, the whole structure of the perfect insect shows that it belongs to the iuliform butterfly ; and the reason of its larva being disguised in the form of another type (for the spine- like tubercles on its body are merely soft * Zool. 111. 2dseriesi SUCCESSION OF REPRESENTATION CONSTANT. 75 processes) is, to show that the genus Polydr/rus represents the Nipnplialides, or scolopendriform butterflies. Another iuliform larva has the body terminated by two little points, thereby denoting its representation of the thysa- nuriform caterpillars. Thus every natural group, not only of the diurnal butterflies, but — so far as we yet Jjnow — of the whole order Lepidoptera, contains repre- sentations of the primary forms of larvse, following each other in a uniform series, and producing perfect insects whose structure harmonises with this theory. Where natural groups are comparatively small, and pre-emi- nently typical, it sometimes occurs that all the larvie are uniform, without any of the above modifications. We see a strong instance of this in the old genus Pieris, the most typical, according to our views, of all annulose animals. It is to this very circumstance we must attribute the fact of all the Pierian larvae being iuliform. But, when groups are very extensive, we consequently find a greater variety of shape, of colour, and even of struc- ture, in the perfect insects ; and this extends also to their larvffi. The genus PapUis of Latreille, the very next after that of his Pieris, is a case in point. We ventured, some years ago, to break up this most natural group into minor subdivisions, because we found it contained iuli- form, scolopendriform, thysanuriform, vermiform, and anopluriform larvae, while the perfect insects produced from them imitated, in some way or other, each of the great divisions of the lepidopterous circle. (JoQ.) In orders where the metamorphosis is imper- fect or incomplete, and the larvae more or less represent the perfect insect, the analogies we have already detailed can nevertheless be traced. Thus, while the lepidopterous caterpillars live upon vegetables, the Hemiptera, in their typical example (^Reduviidcp), are carnivorous: like all the raptorial types, these insects live by rapine, and suck the blood or juices of their victims. The aquatic, or anopluriform, type is seen in the active larvae of the dragon-flies, in the neuropterous order. (67.) We shall now briefly notice the shape and 16 NATUUAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. peculiarities of the perfect pupa, or chrysalis. It is without limbs, inactive, and so sluggish as to show no other signs of life than a slight degree of motion upon being disturbed. An insect in this state exhibits little or no indication either of the form it originally had, or that which it is destined to assume. Among the typical Lepidoptera, or, more properly, the butterflies, we find three distinct types of pupse, all of which change into that state above the ground. The^r*-^ of these chiefly belong to the iuliform division : its form is angulated, with both extremities pointed ; the tail is fastened to some other substance, generally the tree upon which it fed as a caterpillar ; while the body is kept in an erect position, with the head pointing upwards, by means of a transverse thread, which loops it across its breast. The second form is generally more angulated than the former, and not unfrequently ornamented with golden and other metallic colours ; but it is attached in a very different manner ; it has no transverse brace, because it hangs suspended in the air by the tad, so that the head is consequently directed downwards to the earth. The third kind of pupa is attached, like the first, both by the tail and by a transverse thread; but its position is generally horizontal, and it is always enclosed within a convoluted leaf, similar to the habitation which it lived in as a caterpillar. The skippers (Hesperidee) are the only family of butterflies, at present known, which change into pupiE of this description. There is reason to think^ however, that, even in this famUy, some considerable de- viations from the above mode of attachment will here- after be detected. Lewin * figures the pupa of the spotted skipper as enclosed in a slight web, " under cover of a leaf," but without the transverse brace or thread. With the metamorphoses, also, of the extensive family of Erycinidce, we are but imperfectly acquainted, except so far as regards one solitary species, figured by Stoll. The pupa of the Apollo butterfly is also described as being enveloped within a leaf; but whether it be simply » Brit. Ins. pi. 46. fig. 7. MODES OF CHANGE INTO VUPM. 77 enclosed in a thin web, without a brace, similar to that of the spotted skipper, is uncertain. Should the figures of Lewin be correct, it follows that such unbraced pupae will present us with a. fourth variation among the butter- flies; and this will be analogous to the pupse of the spinning moths, or silkworms (^Botnbycides^, subse- quently noticed. (68.) But the typical forms of perfect Pupce are not all to be found among the butterflies ; and this shows us, by the way, that a system built upon this stage of an insect is not a whit more valuable than another which rests solely upon the caterpillar. Hitherto we have seen that these creatures perform their transformations in the same element as that in which they were born ; but on entering among the crepuscular or twilight flying tribe (^Sphingides Sw.), we find that the larvje quit the air and hide themselves in the bowels of the earth, as if they " loved darkness better than light, be- cause their type was evil." At the head of this tribe stands the death's-head moth (^Sphinx Atropos), car- rying upon him the " sign and seal" of the symbol which Nature has designed him to be. Upon the thorax of this extraordinary insect, which is the largest moth found in Europe, the figure of a human skull, the em- blem of death and of the grave, is so distinctly stamped, that a casual observer might easily imagine it was the work of some cunning limner desirous to give an un- natural terror to the aspect of a really harmless insect. Now, the caterpillar of this forbidding creature, when it is about to undergo its transformation, penetrates to more than a foot deep into the earth; and all the true sphinges do the same ; but Nature does not pass to these subterranean pupse without many gradual modi- fications. Some of the hawk moths spin themselves a web on the surface of the ground, which is covered by leaves : others proceed a step further, and make use of particles of dirt in preference : next come a few who repose themselves in a little hollow grave, so that they hardly lie beneath the surface : succeeding species dig 78 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. deeper and deeper^ until we have the Sphinx Atropos as the type and perfection of subterranean pupse. The greatest part of the night-moths (^N^octuides) possess this metamorphosis, which may also be found in the aberrant examples of the other tribes of moths ; but in the two first mentioned, the Sphingides and the Noc- tuides, it is most prevalent and typical. The most complicated sort of pupa, however, is that into which the silkworm tribe are changed ; for here we have a surprising display of preparatory caution and indus- trious skill. It seems hardly necessary to describe in this place the pupa or cocoon of the common silk- worm, or rather caterpillar, except to notice its general structure. There is a provident care in the prepa- rations made by all insects of this tribe, which is very remarkable ; — they envelope themselves in an oval com- pact ball of the most delicate threads of silk ; these are drawn from their own bodies; and they contrive, in some unexplained stage of the operation^ to affix the whole, externally, to a firm object. Now, this is evi- dently a very near approach to the same form of pupa as that which is so slightly developed in the skipper butterfly before alluded to; but the difference is this, — that in the silk-spinning caterpillars, the web or cocoon is so firm and compact as to resist the weather ; whereas, in the other insect, the web is so thin that it can be seen through, and consequently requires the additional protection of a leaf or of some other substance. "VVe may add, also, that in the former, the chrysalis is always thick, cylindrical, and obtuse, particularly at the head; while, in the latter, it always exhibits some appearance of angles, and the head is more or less pointed. The pupse of the true moths (Phalcenides) are mostly of this latter description; that is, they spin a thin and often almost transparent web, witliin the folds of a leaf, al- though the form of the chrysalis itself is like that of the silkworm. Thiis, in fact, is the typical form of the pupje among the true moths; but in this tribe we have representations of the terrestrial and several other TRANSFORMATIONS OF IMPERFECT FVPM. 79 types, although we find none of those which are so common among the diurnal butterflies. Such are the leading variations or the most remarkable differences at present known among the inactive pupae of the typical order of annulose animals. But there is another modi- fication which must here be noticed, because it comes under our definition of a perfect chrysalis : this is called coarctate; and is when the larva changes into a pupa so entirely covered with a thick crustaceous shell, as to assume the appearance of an oval egg, the surface of which is smooth and glossy, without, in most in- stances, exhibiting more than a slight indication of those joints, segments, or angles, which are seen in all tlie types before-mentioned. This sort of pupa is chiefly, if not exclusively, found in the order of Diptera, or of two-winged insects, and in that of the Hymemptera, which includes the bees and wasps. MM. Kirby and Spence consider this as a " fifth kind of pupae, which are not, as in other instances, excluded from the skin of the larvae, but remain concealed under it, and were hence called by Linnaeus coarctate pupce : they may be termed, in common language, cased nymphs. The envelope of these is formed of the skin of the larva considerably altered in form and texture." * (69.) Of imperfect pupae, or such as are active, and resemble either the larva or the adult insect, there are various kinds. The name given by Linnasus to these semi-transformations, appears to us particularly objec- tionable : he called them complete, — thereby leading us to the erroneous supposition that they are the most com- plete or perfect examples of the pupa transformation ; the fact being, that they are, in this respect, precisely the contrary : they not only greatly resemble the mature insect in form, but are equally capable of eating and moving. As these insects, however, cast their skins at stated periods, and undergo changes, though slight, in their external and internal conformation, they are justly regarded by all authors as undergoing metamorphosis, * Int. to Eiit. i. 69. 80 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. although of an imperfect kind. Now, these belong to two very different groups of annulose animals. In the one, composing the apterous division of Linnieus, there is no appearance of wings : these are his complete pupje. The rest belong to the Ptilotu, or winged group, and resemble the perfect insect in every thing but pos- sessing wings, the rudiments of which only appear : these latter are called by some writers semi-complete pupffi ; and this name may be retained, because it im- plies an intermediate state of metamorphosis, between the imperfect transformation of an apterous insect, and the perfect or complete one of a butterfly. The period during which insects remain in this state depends upon the specie.; ; some quit it in a few hours, others after some months, while not a few continue in it one or even two years, (70.) Let us now look to the third and last state of an insect. We have traced this singular little being through the two preparatory stages of his existence : in the first, he is an inhabitant of the earth, in the second of the grave, and in the third he becomes a denizen of the air. Such, at least, is the life of those perfect, or winged, insects, which are typical of the grand division of animals now before us. The connection between these, and apterous or wingless tribes, is ren- dered gradual by the intervention of the dipterous flies, where the organs of flight are but two ; whereas, in the perfect Ptilota, the wings are almost universally four. When an insect assumes its adult or perfect state, Linnaeus termed it an imago, " because, having laid aside its mask, and cast off its swaddling bands, being no longer disguised or confined, or in any respect im- perfect, it is now become a true representative or image of its species, and is qualified to fulfil the laws of nature in perpetuating its kind. As the power of flying constitutes the perfection of true insects, we accordingly find this in its highest state of developement in the lepi- dapterous order, where the wings are the largest, and the most adapted fcr rapidity of flight. From this UNIVERSAL HARMONY OF NATURe's LAWS. 81 point of perfection, Nature recedes on each side, as from a land-mark ; until, by two different routes, she reaches the order Coleoptera, where she presents us with an immense assemblage of insects, having, indeed, four. wings, but of which two are converted into cases or shells {elytra), which principally serve as mere pro- tectors or shields to the single pair which are alone formed for flight. Hence it follows, that the beetles are the most imperfect fliers of the Ptilota, or true insects ; while, to compensate for such a loss, they are the most expert runners of all the orders. On looking to the vertebrate animals, we find the same plan in their creation. No birds run so swiftly as the waders ( Grallatores) ; and no quadrupeds, in reference to their size, pass over an extent of ground so swiftly as do the rabbits, the hares, and other types of the order GUres. How beautifully does Nature thus adhere to her primary laws, while she modifies them in the most surprising manner. We shall now terminate our remarks on the metamorphoses of insects, or rather, of those two great divisions which constitute the types of the Annulosa. CHAP. II. THE LEPIDOPTERA. (71.) The order Lepidoptera, as being the most per- fect of all insects, is that with which we commence our survey. It comprises the butterflies, the hawk moths, and the moths. The wonderful metamorphosis under- gone by these insects, would be almost incredible, were it not familiarised to us from early childhood. That a crawling worm, ravenous of gross food, should volun- tarily seek a retreat in the earth, or spin its own shroud, 6 82 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. — that then a change should come over it, so complete, as that not a lineament of its first form was retained, — that in this state, after remaining a misshaped lump, to all appearance inanimate, it should suddenly burst forth, full of life and joy, and with many-coloured wings ascend into mid air, and derive its only sustenance from the nectar of flowers ; — all this, we say, is one of those miracles of nature, which, were it told of an in- sect that had never yet been seen, the world would not beheve. But the world, alas ! is absorbed in its own concerns ; the things of time, in the minds of the mil- lion, exclude those of eternity. And although in this, as in numberless other instances, " Wisdom uttereth her voice in the streets, and crieth aloud," — that voice is disregarded. A living emblem is placed before our eyes, of those changes which await Man : but by how few is it regarded ! How few "lay it to their heart," and bring the momentous question to themselves — Is mine to be a change of happiness or of misery ? And deems weak man the future promise vain, When worms can die and glorious rise again ? (72.) The general peculiarities of the Lepidoptera are so strongly marked, as to give to the whole group a very determinate character. It seems hardly necessary, in a work of this nature, to describe a form so univer- sally known. As we must, however, enter into some particulars, we will take the common scarlet admirable butterfly as an explanatory type {fig. 1 .), both of the larva or caterpillar (a), the pupa or chrysalis (6), and the imago or perfect state (c). The wings are four, broad, and ample, and rendered opake by a fine powder, which, upon being magnified, is found to consist of innumerable minute scales. The nourishment is imbibed by means of a long trunk or proboscis, which is spirally curved up when the insect is not feeding. The an- tenna are long, composed of a vast number of very short minute joints, which frequently form a club- shaped mass at the end. The lower wings only, in some GENERAL DEFINITION OF LEPIDOPTERA. 83 groups, are capable of being folded. Tlie metamorpho- sis is complete ; that is, the pupa is quiescent : some authors term it obtect, and others incomplete : this latter terra, however, is objectionable, inasmuch as it is cal- culated to give an erroneous impression on the subject. The change of the caterpillar or larva (a) to the chrysalis or pupa (6), and then to the perfect winged insect (c), in this species, and nearly all others throughout the whole order, is as complete an external metamorphosis as can possibly be imagined. (73.) The connection of this order in the circle of the Ptilota has been already intimated, and will again be adverted to when we come to speak of the Hemi- ptera and the A'europtera. Several of the hemipterous genera have their wings covered with a' farinaceous p( wder, and dilated quite as much as many of the moths. Mr, MacLeay instances the African Flata limbata, as another proof of this affinity ; since it is not only destitute of ocelli, but has the antennae re- markably developed. The immediate means of trans- G 2 84 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. ition, the same author continues, "is probably exem- plified in the genus Aleyrodes," whose metamorphosis is described by lleauraer as perfectly resembling that of the Lepidoptera. On the other hand, the connection of this order to the Neuroptera is effected by the Linnsean genus Phryganea ; and this so perfectly, that the latter may even be called aquatic moths. (74.) The different arrangements that have been proposed for this vast assemblage, can only be slightly noticed ; for, were we to enter into such details, a mo- derate volume would scarce contain them. The three great divisions of butterfly, hawk moth, and moth, are so obvious, that Linnaeus formed them into as many genera. The distinction was natural, but the denomi- nation artificial ; not because they respectively com- prised many thousands of species, but because the rank of each group is totally different from those which he denominated genera in the other orders. Fabricius long had the general credit of having first broken up these groups, and thereby made the first step towards a better definition of their contents. But this merit belongs to a countryman of our own. It was in the year I767, that Moses Harris published his small " Essay preced- ing a Supplement to the Aurelian," wherein he not only gives most accurate magnified figures of all the leading ,; types of the British butterflies, but actually divides them into genera. Few copies of this remarkable work, in all probability, were printed ; and being given to the world at a time when to doubt the authority of Linnaeus^ was considered scientific treason, the Essay seems to have! attracted little or no attention. Harris founded his ge- nera on the neuration of the wings, to which he paid the most minute attention ; and his figures of those organs are beautifully accurate. In the year 1776, was pub- lished the famous " Vienna Catalogue," as it is generally termed, " the joint production of Messrs. Denis anhalid(e ; which they also represent. Of these, the typical genus is the well-known death's head {the Sphinx atropus Linn.) concerning which there are so many tales of superstition and of terror. This insect, which we have already said is the type of the whole tribe, has been very properly detached from its allies ; but the change has been attended with this dis- advantage,— that the family name has been left with the others, which are not typical, and a new one proposed for this, which is strictly and naturally so. The larva has an ovate truncated head; and the horn at the end of the body is lengthened, naked, and covered with tubercles : when disturbed, it draws itself up in a threatening attitude {c); and its whole appearance is then so formidable, that most persons view it with fear. There are, nevertheless, many deviations from this typical structure. In Stnerinthiis (exemplified by our beautiful Poplar sphinx), the head is pointed above, and almost triangular ; while in another group the horn is nearly wanting. The/)r L honey. j CTrue wings only two; the most V \ imperfect flyers. j ^ Orders of the Plilota. Hemiptera. Lepidoptera. hvmenoptera. coleoptera. Neuroptera. (1 11 .) It is a remarkable fact, that all the orders of the Ptilota exhibit one primary division which is rapacious, that is, preying upon other insects, as the lions and tigers among quadrupeds, and the falcons among birds. The universality of this law is manifest in every order above named ; and the Hemiptera, as a whole, being the raptorial order of the circle of the Ptilota, so the Cimicides are the pre-eminent types, standing at the head of their own order, and consequently representing it. The Cicades have such an acknowledged resem- blance to the Lepidoptera, that many authors have ac- tually thought they passed into each other, without the intervention of any other group ; so that, were it not for the remarkable structure and metamorphosis oiAleyrodes, we should be disposed to place some of the aberrant Cicades in that rank we now assign to Aleyrodes. The whole of the Lepidoptera, and the Cicadides also, are herbivorous; or, at least, never touch animal substances; for both live on the juices or nectar of plants, in their 11 4. NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. adult state.* The analogies, therefore, of these two orders are not only placed beyond all doubt, but find their corresponding representatives in vertebrate as well as annulose animals. The Aphides, or plant lice, are the bees of the Hemiptera ; for these two groups contain the only insects which secrete honey. This resemblance, however, is not a mere analogy, but an affinity. Latreille, without any scruple, places Thrips in the same division as Aphis, from which, however, it differs so remarkably as to possess jaws ; and he alludes to a fact, what every one may verify, — viz. that when these insects (^Thrips) are irritated, they turn up their body in the manner of the Staphylini. The resemblance which the onisciform shape, and often the coriaceous covering, of the Coccides bears to Cokoptera, exactly accords with every thing we have said on the analogies of the latter group. They have the hardest covering of all insects ; just as the armadillos among quadrupeds, and the chelonians, or tortoises, among reptiles. Pur- suing the especial analogy apparent in our table, we find, also, that the Coccides and the Coleoptera are the most imperfect flyers in their own groups : the females of the former are apterous ; while the wings of the males are only two, and these fold over each other, horizontally, on the body. The reader will remember what we have said on the wings of the Coleoptera, which, in effect, are but two-winged insects ; the upper pair, or elytra, being almost useless as organs of flight. With such striking and even beautiful representations of four out of the five orders of the Ptilota, as this table substantiates, we may very well leave the last for future investigation. The truth is, that, until the ab- errant tribes of the Hetnipteru, and perhaps even those which are typical, are properly analysed, it will be manifestly impossible to determine what other insects enter into that group where at present we place only Aleyrodes. We should not be surprised, however, if * The raptorial feet of the larvje of the cicadas may possibly be used to ! dress out the juices of leaves, &c. i ANALOGIES OF THE COLEOPTERA. 115 some aquatic or sub -aquatic form may eventually be added to it ; and this alone would be quite sufficient to establish an analogy to the Neuroptera. (112.) The analogies of the Hemiptera to all other groups, whether of vertebrate or annulose animals, may be traced through the foregoing exposition ; for, if this is substantially true, it follows, as a matter of course, that the Hemiptera, like the Ptilota, have their prototypes among all circular series of animals : one only of these will, therefore, be noticed, since every experienced entomologist can now pursue this line of inquiry. This comparison will bring the Hemiptera into junction with the Coleoptera. Analogies of the Hemiptera to the Coleoptera. Families Tribes Tribes of the of the Analogies. of the Predatores. Hemiptera. Coleoptera. Cicindeli, of which we possess a species in this country, is remarkable for its pedunculated eyes. The reputed British Coptosoma globus presents a unique instance in the Hemiptera, of the folding of the hemelytra in repose ; for these organs, being considerably longer than the body, could not other- wise be brought under the protection of the large scutel- lum. Solenosthed'um Spin., and Cokotichus White, are conspicuous for having a deep channel, for the reception of the rostrum, in the pectus, the sides of which have singularly elevated ridges. The genera which have an enlarged scutellum, from the protection this affords to the hemelytra, or superior wings, of course dispense with the coriaceous texture observable in those which are not so formed; for otherwise it is only where these organs lap over each other, that the membranaceous substance pre- vails; but in the lieduvii we frequently observe a nearly THE PENTATOMIDiE. 119 entirely membranaceous texture of the superior wings. In this family, the latter structure occurs in all the true Pentatomce. Very little is actually known of the habits of these insects; it is presumable, however, that the majority feed upon other insects ; and a friend of ours has observed Pentatoma bidens preying upon Vanessa lo, which implies a degree of skill in the capture of its prey we were scarcely prepared to expect in any of this group. If there be no mistake in the account given us by 'Westermann, of the destruction caused by Thyreo- coris sUpho'ides in rice fields, in Hindostan, the family evidently feeds upon a variety of substances ; although may it not be that these insects are found in profusion amongst those crops, themselves seeking the true de- stroyer ? We can here give but a very general idea of the group, which is so large, that the space we can allot to it would scarcely suffice to record their generic names. In the next family, the Corei, which, from their great variety, will scarcely yield to a collective character, we observe insects in which the sides of the abdomen are frequently considerably and angularly dilated; the wings, when closed, having their sides always parallel, and leaving those lateral portions of the abdomen uncovered; but this dilatation is not always found in them. It is observed chiefly in Coreus itself, and remarkably so in Phyl/omorphus paradowus and hystrix, in whicb these appendages are dilated into thin lobated plates, and ex- tend also from the sides of the prothorax. In Anisocelis we observe the posterior tibite laterally dilated into a thin foliaceous appendage, as are the antennae in Pachylis, which besides contains the largest species of the family ; one, the P. ^j^^as Kirby, being more than an inch and a half long. In Physomerus, Merocoris, and Meropacliys, we find very largely swollen posterior femora. Some of these insects stiU present a moderately large scutellum. which, although less than in the preceding family, is always larger than in the next; and in Menenotus, which seems to connect the Coj-ei with ihe Pentatomce, we find the thorax produced laterally forwards, giving it the 1 4 120 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. appearance of a crescent, whence one species has been named lunatus. The prettiest species we possess, in this country, of the family, is the Corisus Hyosryami, which is not uncommon ; it is of a brilliant vermilion, spotted with black. We may also notice here the very slender and elongated form of Berytus Fab. [N'eides Latr.), of which the B. Tipularius is frequently found in our fields, and the delicate antenna; of which are acutely an- gulated at the apex of the basal joint. By means of this form, the transition is easily made to the third family, the LygcBi, which consists of elongated insects. As in the preceding families (with but two or three excep- tions, viz. in Pyrrhocoris, Largus, and Myerophysa), we observe the usual ocelli, found, with rare exceptions, and the total exclusion of one family, the Capsini, throughout the heteropterous Heviiptera. This family, compared with the former, is of very limited extent, and the insects are generally much smaller. The very beau- tiful Lygceus equestris is a British insect, although ex- tremely rare, — for we believe only two specimens have yet been discovered, one of which we are lucky enough to possess : it is about six lines long ; of a brilliant vermilion colour, varied with black, and having a limpid white spot in the centre of the junction of the hemely- tra. Pyrrhocoris apterus (also a British insect) is grega- rious, and offers an uncommon anomaly in frequently existing only in a wingless state, but exercising, even thus, all the functions of the imago. Its apterous con- dition must not, therefore, lead us rashly to conclude that it is an imperfect insect; it may have, and evidently, from the results, has, undergone all the completing in- ternal developements, which from some cause, not yet understood, have been thwarted in their external exhi- bition. This circumstance, however, is not peculiar to this insect only among the Hemiptera, and we observe it in the orthopterous portion of our Neuroptera. In the Hemiptera, it displays itself in Myrmus viiriformis, and Actorus popularum Fab. of the preceding family ; and we shall find it again occurring in the Reduviidce. THE REDUVlin^. 121 The most remarkable form, perhaps, among the Lygcei, is the Microphysa pselapho'ides Burm. which has only abbreviated elytra, and is totally deficient in its interior wings. ( 1 1 5.) Our second circle, the Reduviid^, consists, we expect, of the following three families: — 1. the Cap- sini; 2. the T'mgi; and, 3. the Reduvii. Possibly, Cimex lectularius may form a fourth family belonging to this group. All these insects we shall find considerably more rapacious than those of the preceding circle ; and although in Capsus, and its immediate affinities, it is not quite so strongly instanced, so do they, doubtlessly, on this account, form the connecting link between the two. In the Capsini, we observe throughout the total absence of ocelli ; and, although there are but few dis- tinct generic forms in this family, their deficiency is fully compensated by an overwhelming preponderance in species. The insects are small, and have long and slender antenna; and legs, which, in Miris, are longer than the body. The Harpocera Burmeisteri Curt., in the male, is remarkable for the apical contortion of the second joint of the antennse. In Heterotoma, the second joint of the antennae is much enlarged, and very much compressed : and in the little plump Orthonotus, the posterior femora are considerably thickened, and the tibiae and tarsi exceedingly slender, and twice the length of the femora; and this last genus possesses the faculty of leaping. From the Capsini we pass to the Tinyi, the second family of this group ; and here we observe remarkable differences of form ; the most typical being exceedingly depressed, their whole external integument and hemelytra frequently consisting of a closely reti- culated semi transparent substance, which, in Galeatus Curt., is extremely pellucid. Although the antennse differ from the description given above in the definition of the group, it is very evident, from the structure of the rostrum and of the head, that these insects have a close affinity to the Reduvii. It will admit of sub- division into those which have simple anterior legs, 122 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OP INSECTS. which constitute the true Tingi, comprising also Aradus, which is a sub-cortical genus ; Aneurus, another sub- cortical form, in which the superior wings are wholly membranaceous ; and other allied insects. In these, the wings usually cover the abdomen ; but in the second division, in Syrtis, we observe the sides of the abdomen dilated, as we had occasion to notice in Coreus ; and in Macrocephalus there is an enlargement of the scutellum, as in the Sriifati, equally covering the superior wings, and which likewise corroborates the observations we there made ; for we find these Avings also, in this genus, membranaceous, excepting their slight lateral portion ; all the rest being wholly protected by the scutellum. These two genera present us also with a character and structure ; viz. their raptorial anterior legs, which, as far as habits can confirm, substantiates their position as being very proximate to the raptorial RediivU. These legs consist of a largely swollen femur, into a groove beneath which the curved tibia fits. The objeqt of the enlargement of the femur is to give room for the exer- cise of the powerful muscles that contract and close the limb, Avhereby the insect is enabled to seize and retain its comparatively strong prey, and which it then feeds on at leisure. If the Cimex lectularius enters this group, it is probably in this vicinity that it should be inserted. To Aneurus it is allied by its very depressed form, although amply distinguished from its antennae being attenuated at their apex. There are few persons who are not acquainted with the bed bug, which is the insect we are now speaking of. It excites, perhaps, too much disgust to interest any but zealous entomologists ; and yet it would be found, upon examination, to be a curious insect. Like some few other Hemiptera we have previously mentioned, it is always deficient in wings ; although Londoners, in particidar, can well at- test, that this does not, in the slightest degree, impair its powers of propagation. The family of the Reduvii will now occupy us. This very numerous concourse, being the typical family of the group, are consequently THE UEDUVHD^. 123 the most rapacious. Their very aspect seems to indi- cate predatory instincts: their small head, prominent eyes, frequently short, robust, and raptorial anterior legs, and lengthened posterior ones, combined with a compact but long body, convey an idea of agility and strength, which seem, in some respects, analogous to the concurrent structure in the feline Mammalia ; and many of them are equally nocturnal in their habits. In one genus, in particular, the South American Cono- rhinus, there is as strong a disposition as in Cimex to feed upon blood ; for we find that it frequents houses, and attacks sleeping persons. This genus also exhibits, perhaps, the largest species of the family, the C. me. gistus, being frequently more than an inch and a half long : indeed, this family contains generally large in- sects. Although, perhaps, the normal number of joints to the antenniE throughout the heteropterous division of the Hemiptera is not to exceed five, we here frequently find a divergence from it, — in some extending to eight ; and in one in particular, the Hammatocerus, the num- ber reaches thirty,— the usual second joint being sub- divided into these numerous articulations. Some species are remarkable for producing, under irritation, a chirp- ing noise, like several of the Longicorn Coleoptera ; and one, the Prionotus serratus, has been observed to give an electric shock. The accuracy of this, Burmeister doubts ; and, indeed, it does appear very startling ; yet Messrs. Kirby and Spence mention it upon such high authority, that its veracity it would be temerity to impugn.' Their words are*, " The late major-general Davis, of the Royal Artillery, well known as a most accurate observer of nature, and an indefatigable col- lector of her treasures, as well as a most admirable painter of them, once informed me, that when abroad, having taken up this animal [Reduvius serratus), and placed it upon his hand, it gave him a considerable shock, as if from an electric jar, with its legs, which he • Introd, to Entom, L 108, 124< NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. felt as high as his shoulders ; and, dropping the crea- ture, he observed six marks upon his hand, where the six feet had stood." We expect the bug must have been recently feeding upon the Gymnotus electricus J Although there is considerable uniformity of general contour in these insects, some, nevertheless, present pe- culiar differences of structure ; for instance, Notocyrtus has its thorax exceedingly inflated above ; and the before-mentioned Prionotus serratus has the prothorax longitudinally compressed into a raised semicircle ex- tending over the scutellum, the edge of which is notched; whence it is called in the West Indies the " wheel bug," and it also thence derives its specific name. The transverse suture of the head and thorax, in many of these insects, is very like what we see in the coleo- pterous genus Paussus ; and one of the latter, the P. armatus, in the spine of its head, has an analogy to the spine upon the head of the Nahis lividus of Latreille. A further resemblance between the two is the ocelli said to be observed in several species of Paussi. In some, — Pirates, for instance, — the anterior and intermediate tibiae are dilated at their apex beneath, into a vesicular sole ; this structure gives them a facility for adhering with greater tenacity to what they wish to attach themselves. A small and very elegant species of Holoptilus, from New Holland, has its antennse densely fringed with hair, and the posterior tibiae still more thickly so with longer curled hair ; which, from that peculiarity, look exceedingly like the legs of the genus Ancyloscelis among the bees. The refinement of modern science will, probably, form this into a new genus ; the proportions of the two last joints of the antennae differing from the typical Holoptilus, the penul- timate joint being curved, and the terminal one clavate, and inserted before the apex of the preceding. Coranus subapterus, and Prostemma guttula, which are British insects, offer us instances in this group, also, of perfect insects in a sub-apterous state. There are three genera in this family which we must still notice, from their THE NEPIDiB. 125 departing considerably from the usual form of the in- sects contained in it. These are Ernesa, Cerascopus, and Ploiarta, which are very elongate and slender, — indeed, perfectly filiform. The two former occur in America, and the latter in Europe, Their anterior legs are raptorial, and, we believe, rarely used in pro- gression, but kept vibrating with the antennae, which are exceedingly slender and angulated : the interme- diate and posterior legs are also very long; and it is upon them that these insects stalk about seeking their prey. They are found chiefly in houses. (116.) Our next group, the Nepid^, will detain us but a few moments. The genera differ considerably from each other in form : thus, JVepa itself is broad, ovate, and quite flat; Ranatra, very elongate and cylindrical; Belostoma, nearly ellipsoidal ; and Naucoris, almost cir- cular, and slightly convex. These insects all inhabit the water, as all of the preceding were occupants of the land. They are very predacious, which is sufficiently evinced by their powerful anterior predatorial legs. It is probable that the Galgulini should form a component portion of this group ; for, excepting that their posterior legs are cursorial instead of being ciliated for swimming, they very closely resemble Naucoris. From structure, •as we observe above, they are distinctly land, as the others are water insects, and inhabit the banks, forming holes in the ground, where they lurk for their prey. (117.) Velia, Gerris, and their allies, appear quite as typical of a group as any of the preceding. Although much resembling Ranatra among the last, and Eme&a among the Reduvii, they possess peculiarities of struc- ture and habits which at once distinctly estrange them from both. In the first place, they inhabit the surface of the water, where they run with considerable velocity; and thus appear a sort of analogy among haustellate insects to what we observe in Gyrinus among the natatorial Coleoptera. The relative proportions of their legs differ ; thus, in Velia, Gerris, and Hydroessa, the intermediate legs are the longest, and the anterior usually kept bent : 126 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OP INSECTS. in these, the head is short, and the antenna; nearly as long as the anterior legs. This is the case also in Ha~ lobates, which is an extremely remarkable insect, found only upon the surface of the sea, within the tropics, and at a considerable distance from land. They must, ne- cessarily, be exposed to the worst vicissitudes of a sea life, being unprovided with wings, to accelerate their transposition from place to place. It is also a very curious subject for speculation, what may be their pecu- liar economy and habits, and where they may deposit their eggs. Of the other genera, all are British. The pretty little Velias, with their black bodies studded with white spots, and the gay crimson of their abdomen, pre- sent a pleasing appearance upon brooks ; and the ex- tremely minute Hydroessa has all the appearance of a microscopic aquatic Pentatoma. [(11 4 — 1 17-) W.E. Sh.] (118.) The Cicada, or singing insects, have been already shown to constitute the sub-typical group of the present order. Like the Cimicides, they have a suctorial proboscis folded downwards and reposing on the breast ; but their wings do not cross each other, but are deflexed when the insect is at rest. Their antennae, instead of being at once conspicuous, and ending in well-defined joints, are so short that they often appear as wanting. On a close examination, however, two fine ■ hairs or bristles are discovered, placed close to the eye : these bristles stand upon short and thick stems, which are more or less jointed at the base. The wings are always distinctly nerved ; the upper pair being stronger and thicker than the lower, and either transparent, or ornamented with colours. The head is usually very large, thick, and transverse ; — that is, much wider from side to side than from the front to the back ; the fore- head consequently is uncommonly broad, and this throws the eyes very far apart : between the true eyes, by the aid of a glass, three little ocelli, or false eyes, will be discovered *, shining like morsels of glass ; while the • Excepting in the Membracida;. THE CICADA. 127 bugs have two of them only. The legs deserve great attention ; with very few exceptions, the hinder pair are remarkably longer than the others, and are formed for leaping and for defence. The common froghopper, called by some the cuckoo spit (which in its grub state lives in a drop of froth upon plants), is a small but fa- miliar example of this order, and easily procured in summer. The hind legs, it will be perceived, are not only very long, but armed with sharp spines, much in the same manner as those of the grasshoppers. Every body knows what prodigious leaps are taken by these little insects, when disturbed ; and if one is captured, and held between the fingers, the struggles it makes to get free will show the effect which the sj^ines would have on any other occasion. We have said that the upper or superior wings are either clear, or opake and coloured ; this colouring, however, is not farinaceous, except in one family (^Flatidce), where the wings seem covered with a white powder. It is by this, or similar insects, that an easy passage is formed to the Lepi- doptera, and the two orders brought into immediate conjunction. (11 9-) The natural habits and economy of the Ci- cadcB are very different from those of the Citnicides. The majority of the latter are predacious insects, living upon the juices of others, which they seize by surprise when hunting among foliage ; and having wounded their prey by their proboscis, suck the blood. The Cicades, on the other hand, mostly live upon the juices of plants, which they pierce in the same way ; such, at least, is the case with nearly all those found in Great Britain : but there are very many (more especially those which may be considered typical), which have the fore legs raptorial ; that is, formed for seizing, similar to the MantidcP, and other families which are known to live upon smaller insects : in all such groups, these legs are very thick and robust, and are armed with sharp spines, which serve to secure and even to kill their prey. The common Italian cicada shows a full developement of 128 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. this structure ; and unless it be supposed that the insect uses these feet to press out the juices of plants, we may fairly suspect that they are employed in seizing and wounding smaller insects. There can be no doubt that these vegetable suckers tend, in general, to the healthiness of the plant they feed upon, although their numbers frequently cause much injury. They are, in fact, the phlebotomists of vegetables ; attacking them when in the full vigour of their growth, and feasting upon that superabundance of sap with which they then abound. The plant lice, or Aphides, are the most expert suckers of any of their tribe. The little family of Mem- bracina, which represent these insects in Tropical Ame- rica, are found clustered on the rich luxuriant shoots of the Guava and other fruit trees, busily employed in tapping the stem and sucking the juice.* As to the geographic distribution of the tribe, we have very few in Europe, and these are mostly of a small size : the rest are distributed in the hot latitudes of the Old, but chiefly in those of the New World. The pre-eminent types (^CicadidcB^, as is usual throughout nature, are universal, and one has been discovered of late years in the New Forest in Hampshire. Many family groups, and nearly all the natural sub-genera, are restricted to certain geographic limits. Several of these are interest- ing, either from the singularity of their form, or their habits, the chief of which will be subsequently noticed. ( 1 20. ) The affinities of the Cicades to the Chnicides on one hand, and to the lepidopterous order on the other, have already been intimated ; but so much of error, of late years, has been introduced about "orders" in the reigning systems, that we shall here again return to the subject, by quoting the opinion of others. The union of this tribe to the typical Hemiptera is so obvious, that it has been well observed, " the affinity cannot be disputed, without a distortion of some of the most evi- • Mr. Westwood attributes the first announcement of this fact to an author who mentions it ten years after it fell under our own observation ill Brazil ; and then flippantly eays, I was ignorant of the circumstance. THEIR AFFINITIES. 129 dant facts in natural history, being accompanied with an utter disregard to the authority of all entomologists." * The same author also states that " the transition is effected through the medium of the Notonectidce (or boat flies), and other Hydrocorisa of Latreille ; which coincide with the Cicadides, in the small developeinent of their antennae and conical rostrum ; and with the true (or typical) Hemiptera, in their rostrum being frontal, their elytra coriaceous, and their body generally de- pressed. With proper caution, however, the same learned author, not having entered upon the necessary analysis, observes, '^ it would at present be very blama- ble in me to pretend to determine whether these insects (the NotonectidcB) come nearest to the hemipterous or homopterous (or Cicades) type ; but I may observe that the probability is on the side of the latter supposition, since the genus Ranatra bears a strong analogy to the EphemercB. We perceive, however, the wings of the HydrocoriscB becoming gradually more coriaceous, or rather corneous, and opake; we perceive them crossing one another more and more, in order to make room for the enlargement of the scutellum, which, with the true ocelli, and quadri-articulate rostrum, is the typical cha- racter of the true Hemiptera (or our Cimicides),"1r Our analysis of this group has, in a great measure, confirmed these views : we consider the NotonectidcB as one of the aberrant divisions of the order ; and, from its obvious analogy to the natatorial birds and quadrupeds, we should term this division the natatorial family of the Cicadex. Now, as the Nepidce are obviously the corresponding group among the Cimicides, it follows that this is the point of junction between the two ; although the precise I sub-genus by which this passage is effected, has not yet I been ascertained. The second affinity regards the con- nection of the Cicades (the Homoptera of some authors) to the Lepidoptera ; and here, again, we shall make use of the same authority in support of own decided opinions * Hor. Eiit., p. 376. t Her. Ent., p. 377. 130 NATtUAL AURANGEMENl OF INSECTS. on this point. " The immediate means of transition from homopterous insects to the lepidopterous, is probably exemplified in the genus Aleyrodes of LatreilJe, the Tinea proletella of Linnseus, and the Phalene cnHciforme of Geoffroy. The history of this minute insect is the sub- ject of one of Reaumur's most interesting Memoires; and when we learn that it undergoes an obtect" (or com- plete) "metamorphosis; that in its pupa state it is inactive, and in its adult is covered with a farinaceous powder ; we are as little surprised that this great physiologist should have considered it to be lepidopterous, as that Latreille, reasoning from its articulated rostrum, shoidd have pronounced it to be homopterous. We are only asto- nished that the latter should have adopted any arrange- ment which would lead us to fancy that he believed his observations on Aleyrodes contradicted those of Reau- mur." It is thus, as our author truly observes, "that the greatest naturalists, in every department of nature, are often right and wrong at the same time, with respect to the same animal; and that a person in search of natural affinities, has generally reason to conclude himself to be perfectly correct, when he has combined all their posi- tive observations, and rejected their negative inferences." The farinaceous wings of the Flatidce, subsequently no- ticed, induced our author to pronounce them as " mani- festly bearing a distant affinity to certain extreme Lepi- doptera." These insects, indeed, so completely resemble moths, that they may be justly called the moth cicadas. (121.) The primary groups under which we shall now arrange the cicadas, wiU be considered in the light of families, and may be thus concisely enumerated: — 1. The true Cicadidce, or singing insects ; so named from their musical powers. — 2. The Flatidce, or moth-like cicadas, having their wings generally covered with a white farinaceous powder. — 3. The Centronotidce, or spined cicadas, remarkable for their small size, and the spines upon their bodies. — 4. The Notonectidce, or water cicadas, ^-ulgarly called boat flies: these are few ii number, and, as their name denotes, are aquatic. The THE CICADIN^. 131 5th type is uncertain, and may possibly be represented by such insects as have the greatest resemblance to the Coccidee. (122.) The true cicadas (^Cicadidce) stand at the head of the tribe, as the pre-eminent typical family : they vary considerably in size ; and comprise, with but two or three exceptions, the largest insects in the wholo tribe yet discovered, as well as some of the smallest. Amid this diversity, there is one character, however, by which nearly the whole may be recognised, — that of having the antennae placed directly in front of, or before, the eyes. The front of the head is always swollen as if inflated ; and these inflated parts are always crossed by very fine transverse or horizontal lines, not unlike the plaiting of a shirt frill. Of what use this singular structure is to the insect, we know not ; but it is so generally prevalent, that we may attach some weight to its variation. There is a considerable variation in the neuration or nerves of the wings : some groups have these members transparent ; while in others, the upper or larger pair are opake, and ornamented with bands, spots, and other markings : these differences give rise to further separations or sub-families, each of which seem to possess some peculiarity of economy; hence we can easily discriminate two leading divisions ; — 1. the Ci- cadince, or singing group ; and, 2. the CercopincB, or hopping cicadas. (123.) The singing cicadas (Cicadince) are conspi- cuous for their bulk, and have been long celebrated for their economy. Many of the exotic species, when their wings are expanded, measure six inches in extreme length, — a size superior to that of many of the humming birds. The body is remarkably thick and robust ; and they fly with such rapidity, that the eye cannot follow them. With the exception of one species. Cicada An- glica, these insects are unknown in our misty islands, are children of the sun, and love to bask in more genial climates. As this power of rapid flight is one of the great peculiarities of these creatures, so the members K 2 132 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. by which this is effected deserve attention. The wings are long, and pointed towards the end, — a form pecu- liarly adapted for swiftness : in general, they are clear and transparent, but some few from India and Africa have the anterior or largest pair opake and coloured ; in both, however, they are marked by regular distinct nerves, which are divided into large cells towards the thorax, and into numerous smaller ones at the edges. But what more especially distinguishes these insects, when alive, is their faculty of emitting a very loud, and — according to some authors — a not unmusical noise. It may be readily supposed that a power so very unusual among insects, would excite great attention; and we ac- cordingly find that the cicada Avas one of the most celebrated insects of antiquity. Philosophers did not disdain to write upon it; while the fictions of the early poets invested it with perpetual youth, and exalted it to the rank of a demigod. We find the cicada perpe- tually extolled as an emblem of constant gaiety and uninterrupted happiness, as little cheerful beings, " be- loved by gods and men." Anacreon, in his celebrated Ode to the Cicada, describes in glowing colours the un- interrupted felicity of this creature. The Athenian patricians wore golden ornaments representing the ci- cada in their hair, to denote their national antiquity, or to intimate that, like these insects, they were the first-born of the earth. It has been ingeniously remarked, that, in the infant state of music, man seems to have preferred the natural sounds of some animals to those of their uncouth instruments, and that hence arose the extra- vagant praise bestowed upon the cicada. The ancient Locri, a people of Greece, are related to have been so charmed with its song, that they erected a statue to its honour. The following fable, relative to the same people, is too poetic to be passed over. A certain mu- sician of Locris, contesting with another, would have lost the chance of victory, by the breaking of two strings of his lyre, but at this critical moment a cicada flew to his aid, and resting on the broken instrument. HABITS OF THE CICADIN.E. 133 sang so well, that the Locrian was declared victor. His countrymen, in testimony of their gratitude, erected a statue to the insect. There is a beautiful antique gem, which we saw either at Rome or Florence, commemo- rating this supposed event : it represents the figure of the player, with the insect perched upon his lyre. No author we have met with has given a better idea of the singing of a cicada, than old Marcgrave, who says its tune begins with gir, guir, and continues with sis, sis, sis. This, we can affirm from experience, exactly expresses their long-continued and monotonous chirp. In the olive plantations of Italy and of Sicily, and those which cover the beautiful plain of Athens, we have heard innumerable hosts of these merry creatures during summer ; and the noise is so loud, that it may be heard at the distance of half a mile. Strange to say, however, the traveller is not able to see one of these creatures, although hundreds surround him on all sides : while thus recreating themselves, they invariably perch on the branches or stems of trees, some dis- tance from the ground ; while their plain dusky colours assimilate so closely to that of the bark, that the most practised eye can scarcely detect them. It generally happens that the concert is begun by one, who seems to have more power than the rest : he commences with all his might ; and in a minute or two, all the surround- ing trees seem to join in full chorus. Many fables among the ancients, and much erroneous matter by the moderns, has been published regarding the means by which this singing is produced. Reaumur, however, with his usual patience and accuracy, solved the diffi- culty : he discovered two large muscles, which at their point of union formed a space almost square ; by moving these backwards and forwards, he discovered, to his no small astonishment, that he could make a cicada sing that had been dead some weeks ! The sound is emitted through two large apertures, one on each side of the body, which are partly covered by valves : in some species from Brazil, these apertures K 3 134 NATURAL ARRANGEBIENT OF INSECTS. are extended to the upper side of the abdomen, where they have a considerable resemblance to those in the pipes of an organ. The female cicada, however, is entirely without this apparatus ; hence the old Greek adage that the CicadcB were particularly happy, because they had silent wives. Aristotle mentions them as de- licious food ; but maccaroni lias long supplanted them in the estimation both of the modern Greeks and the Italians. (124.) The second division of this family is composed of the CiRcopiN^, or jumping cicadas. They are all of a very small size ; and very different, in their exter- nal appearance, to the last: they have no musical powers; and their long hinder legs are saltatorial, or adapted for leaping. These little creatures are abundant in all verdant situations during summer, particularly among the foliage of trees, and high grass. The larva or grub, as before observed, has the singular property of producing a frothy liquid, precisely like human saliva, in which its. soft tender body is secure, and in the middle of which it constantly resides : hence the vulgar names of cuckow spit given to the larva, and frog- hopper to the adult or perfect insect : the ocelli, or siinple eyes, in this group, are only two ; and the supe- rior wings, called by some the elytra (we think im- properly so), are nerved in a very different manner to those of the true cicada. The genus Ledra is the only one wherein the thorax is ornamented with horns or other excrescences; and this appears to represent, in its own circles, the Centronotidce. The foreign jumping cicadas are innumerable, and are so little known, that out of more than seventy species we discovered in South America, we believe that not one half have been described. (125.) The moth cicadas, or the Flatid.e, compose the second great division or family of the tribe. As the CicadidcB form the typical, so this constitutes the suh- typical group ; and every one can perceive how beauti- fully it represents the order of Lepidoptera. They are, \ DEFINITION OF THE FLATIN^. 135 in factj cicadas disguised as butterflies and moths : like these latter, their wings are very broad, obtuse, and, in many genera, covered with minute scales, which appear to the eye like a fine powder. Even in such as have not their wings so covered, this powdery substance is found upon the body, or on other parts : here, however, the resemblance ceases, so far as the structure of the two orders are concerned. The moth cicadas are nearly all confined to the tropics of the Old and New World : their representatives in Britain are the small aberrant genera of Issus Fab., and Cijcius Leach ; these live in thickets, and may be found by beating the hedges in summer. The form of the head, and the position of the antenniE, joined to the shape of the wings just alluded to, offer the best and most prevalent characters for this family. We have seen that the front of the head, in the Cicadidce, is swollen, or at least convex ; but in these insects it is either perfectly flat, as if cut off", or divided into two concave hollows, at the bottom of which, immediately beneath the eye, is placed their very small antennae : the front is also destitute of those fine horizontal lines so prevalent in the first great division (Cicadiadce).* A remarkable exception occurs to the generally truncate shape of the head, in the genus Ful- gora, where this part is lengthened and swollen to an enormous size, more analogous to the snout of an ele- phant, or the horn of a rhinoceros, than any thing else. This structure, however strange, is in strict accordance with one of the most prevalent laws of nature. The FulgorincB, in the circle of the FlatidcB, seems to be the rasorial type in regard to birds, and the thysanuri- form with reference to insects ; both of which, as is well known, are remarkable for the appendages which adorn their heads, which are frequently so strange as to give them the most grotesque appearance. But the analogies of the Fulgora do not rest here : on its lower * It may be as well to observe here, that Dr. Leach has mistaken the mode of insertion of the antennie in his genus Cercopis, and has thus made his third stirps both erroneous and artificial K 4 136 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. •wings we have the eye-like iridescent spot of the raso- rial peacocks, as if Nature intended to show how beauti- fully she could make a bird and an insect represent each other. Gallinaceous birds, pachydermatous quadrupeds (like the elephant), stag beetles {Lucanidce) among Co- leoptera,sxe always the largest of their respective groups; and consequently Fulgora, which represents all these, is not only the largest of the moth cicadas, but is equal in size to the most bulky of its own tribe. We had no intention of touching upon this analogy, beautiful as it is, but we recollected that some explanation was neces- sary for deviating so much from the usual arrangement of this group. The Fulgoree are called lantern flies; and, if what has been said of them be correct, the name is peculiarly appropriate. IMadame Merian, well known for her work upon Surinam insects, relates an amusing anecdote about the great lantern fly of that country. It seems that she had caught several of these insects during the day, when they emit no light; and being ignorant of their possessing this property, she put them, with some leaves, into a box, which was laid upon her bed- room table. In the middle of the night, her captives, finding themselves debarred from their usual nocturnal excursions (for these insects repose during the day), began to buzz about and made every effort to escape. The noise thus produced awoke Mad. Merian, who, find- ing it impossible to sleep with all this fluttering, got up and opened the box to release her prisoners. What was her surprise at seeing it filled, as she thought, with large sparks of fire ! — in her momentary fright, she let the whole fall to the ground : the insects, thus released, be- gan flying about the room in all directions, like so many moving candles. Our authoress goes on to state, that by the aid of two of these living lights, she was able to read the smallest print. Another conspicuous species, F. Candelnria, although much inferior in size, is found in India; but Europe possesses no such wonders. There is, indeed, a small insect called Fulgora Europcea, but which is of a different genus to the true lantern flies,— THE CENTRONOTIDjE. 13? these latter being exclusively tropical. Two or three small but curiously shaped genera, as Delphax, 8cc., are placed at the end of this family, although their affini- ties are at present uncertain. (126). The horned cicadas, or the CentronotidjE, constitute our third great division. The whole insect world cannot produce such extraordinary and eccentric shapes as are exhibited among these little creatures : were they of a moderately large size, any one might be exhibited as a monster, and the most fanciful imagin- ation would be sorely taxed to invent any thing more grotesque than Nature herself has produced. The Cen- tronotidce, with very few exceptions, are exclusively found in the forests of Tropical America, where they live, fre- quently in little societies of their own, upon the young shoots of plants, which they probe and suck as the Aphides do in Europe; for these latter insects, so far as our own personal observations have gone, are not found in these regions. This fact affords an additional rea- son in support of our belief that these two families are analogous, and that both are types of the ruminating quadrupeds, in other words, rasorial. How little the Cen- tronotidce are known, may be gathered from the fact, that out of near a hundred species found by us in Tropical America, not more than one half are described in books. Yet, abundant as those insects are in those regions, which may be termed their metropolis, only two species appear to inhabit England. One of these, however, Centronot us cornutus, is not uncommon, and gives a very good idea of the whole family. Its head and breast are larger than all the rest of the body; the former is thick, broad, and truncate, but of a very different form to any among the CicadidcB or the FlatldcB. The chief singularity, however, lies in the thorax, which is enormously deve- loped: on each side arises an acute spine, pointing outwards, so as to resemble the horns of a bull, or rumi- nating quadruped; while the hinder part is prolonged into another spine parallel with the body, and which it is obviously intended to protect : the wings are transparent. 138 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OP INSECTS. and, both in their form and neuration, much more resem- ble the typical cicadas than they do the Flatidce. V^^o that looks upon this singular little creature, will not be immediately reminded of a bull ? The truth is, that the mind of man is instinctively prone to comparison ; for the imagination will frequently associate together two or more things, having not a single property in common, yet so shaped as to suggest the same ideas. No better proof of this can be mentioned, than the resemblance which people very often imagine they can trace in the faces of animals (particularly sheep) to those of their acquaintances. Now there is as much diversity of phy- siognomy in one race as in the other ; yet the analogy between them is so remote, that, although it may strike the imagination with irresistible force, it would fre- quently be difficult to state the reason of the similitude. Now, this is precisely the case with those remote analo- gies, or representations. In the present case, however, we have more certain grounds to go upon, A glance at some of the Brazilian types of this extraordinary family may here be taken. The largest species yet discovered {Memhra- cis spinosa Fab.), in its general shape, exactly resembles a very large thorn from the stem of a rose tree; and the spine upon its thorax is so formidable, that we have had our fingers severely wounded in attempting to capture it. Another (Bocidiiim glohulare) has a httle fanciful diadem of round balls and spines rising from the thorax ; and this is so spread over the insect, that every part of its body is protected. In another group (^Polyglppta), all these spines disappear, and the thorax is lengthened out in front into a snout-shaped process, as long as the whole body ; thus giving to them aU the aspect of lan- tern flies. Another genus (^Darnis) might at first be taken for a coleopterous insect; for it is entirely cased over with a hard shell, without any external appearance of wings, which lie concealed beneath, as in Scufel- lera. In these cicadas, also, the head, although broad, is particularly short, and is so bent down as to be almost liid : the antennte are shaped like those of Cercopis; I THE NOTONECTID^. 139 but instead of being in y^on^ of the eye, they are placed in a hollow beneath it, similar to the FlatidcB. Such are the primary^ or typical, characters of this family ; but to attempt the definition of all those intervening links by which it is connected with the preceding, would far exceed our limits. There are several small groups, peculiar to India and Australia, to which Nature has obviously assigned an intervening station ; for all her paces are slow and measured : if they appear otherwise, as they certainly do in some few instances, we must set it down to our own ignorance of her productions, rather than to her departure from her usual principle of gra- dual developement. (127.) The fourth family of this tribe appears com- posed of the NoTONECTiD^, or boat flies, constituting the natatorial or swimming type of the whole group. Our reasons for including these insects in this tribe, rather than in the last, cannot be entered upon in this place. It will be sufficient if the reader is made acquainted with the general form of these insects, and their peculiar ha- bits. For this purpose, let him fancy that a minute insect, whose shape immediately reminds him of the British Centronotus GenistcB, but whose hinder feet are formed for swimming, he will thus liave a very good idea of the general form of the boat flies ; and more especially of the genus Ploa, or the minute Sigara of Dr. Leach. Without touching upon their other pecu- liarities, it will be sufficient to state that the Notonec- tidce are immediately known by their long hinder legs, the tarsi of which are so compressed and fringed as to resemble oars ; these enable the insect to swim with great rapidity. The shape of the body is thick and tri- angular ; and the outer half of the superior wings fold over each other. Dr. Leach very properly divides this family into two groups ; one (^Notonectu) having the shield {scutcUum) large; the other, as in Corixa, being entirely without this part. On a fine summer's day, they may be observed basking in the sun, close to the surface of the water, in clear ponds or ditches; here 140 NATURAL ARRANGKMENT OF INSKCTS. they will continue immovable for several minutes^ with their hinder legs stretched out^ in the same attitude which a boat's crew assume when ready for a sudden start. The Notonectidce, like the Nepidee among the bugs, are rapacious, — living upon small insects, whose juices they suck. The attitude we have just described, although apparently one of listlessness, is really that of extreme watchfulness : the insect is lying in wait for its prey ; and the moment a luckless wanderer passes within reach, it darts upon it with the utmost rapidity, and is out of sight in a moment. Another singular habit belongs to these insects : they not only swim, but repose, upon their backs ; that is, with the under side of their body turned uppermost : this is a wise provision of Nature, and admirably suited to the nature of their pursuits ; — by resting in this position, their eyes are directed fully to that quarter where they are to look for their prey ; while, if they assumed the usual position of other insects, they would gaze upon objects either upon the surface, or above it, (128.) Let us now look to the analogies which these insects possess to other classes of beings. The Noto- nectidce are clearly an aquatic type, and offer an imme- diate point of union with the typical Hemiptera; their close affinity with the NepadcB is admitted by all writers ; and we have frequently observed, both among annulose and vertebrate animals, that one of the transitions of nature is made by an aquatic group. All natatori;il types, among birds, represent the shrikes and the fly- catchers, who have the peculiar habit of watching for their prey from a fixed station, and seizing it, not by pursuit, but by surprise, just as the insects now be- fore us. Natatorial types, moreover, have always the largest heads ; witness the hippopotamus among the pachydermatous quadrupeds, the whale among theCeta- cea, and the HesperidcB in the circle of diurnal butterflits. (129-) In regard to the remaining family of the pre- sent tribe, we can say but little. If we merely looked to those genera which showed the greatest deviation THE APIIID^. 14.1 from the families already enumerated, we might sup- pose that Asiraca or Livia would probably form part of another great division, or that some of the lanigerous genera, resembling Coccus, would here intervene ; but we do not, at present, venture to act upon such vague suspicion, and shall therefore leave this part of the series for future investigation. (130.) Having now gone through the two typical groups of the order Hemiptera, we shall at once proceed to the three others, which appear to form the aberrant divisions, — namely, 1. the Aphides, or plant suckers ; 2. the Coccides, or meal bugs ; and, 3. the Aleyrodes. (131.) The Aphides, or plant lice, as we have already observed, are aU of a very small, and often minute, size, and live for the most part in societies. Three of these faraiUes are represented by the Linmean genera Chermes, Aphis, and Thrips; while that of Leach's Eriosoma is a type of the fourth. Of the Chermes, we possess, comparatively, but few species ; they are found on the leaves, young shoots, and bark of dift'erent plants : in their larva state, they seem to ex- hibit a considerable affinity to the Coccides, or plant bugs ; and we think it is to that family, rather than to this, that some of them really belong : like the Coccides, many of them are coated, particularly towards the tail, with a flocculent or cottony substance of a white colour, and of a clammy tenacious nature, which exudes from the pores of the animal. These flocculent cotton-like fila- ments are very conspicuous in the Chermes Alni, which may be found, during summer, on the leaves and shoots of the alder tree. The larva, as described by Dr. Shaw, is entirely covered about the hinder part by thickly fasciculated heaps of viscid down or cotton, which, if purposely rubbed off, are quickly reproduced by the ani- mal, which secretes the white fibres from large pores placed in a circle at some distance from the vent. These larvse, or grubs, are gregarious; often appearing in such numbers on the tree, that the whole of the shoot they 142 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OP INSECTS. are upon appears covered with white cotton, which, if touched by the tinger, separates into distinct tufts, — an effect produced by the animals being suddenly disturbed, and then moving in all directions. \Vhen this cotton is brushed off, the larva appears of a pale green colour, varied with black spots, ^^'hen arrived at its complete or perfect state, by casting its pupa skin, it is entirely green, with transparent wings. If disturbed, it leaps with great agility, frequently flying at the same time.* (132.) The true Aphides, or plant lice, are well known to infest the early buds of the rose tree and other plants, upon which they continue to multiply during the whole of summer. The habits and economy of these singular insects are so well known, that we shall here chiefly confine our remarks to their external cha- racters, and their general history. The body is thick, fat, and round, having, towards the end, three horn-like bristles, one of which is on each side, the other at the vent ; these terminate ia a little knob, and are move- able ; their use, however, does not appear to have been detected : the head and eyes are very small, — the latter prominent; while the antennae, unlike those of aU the other families, are as long as the body, slender, filiform, and composed of seven joints : the Avings also differ greatly from aU other hemipterous insects ; they are perfectly transparent, and distinctly veined, — assimi- lating, in short, to those of the hyraenopterous order. Like those insects, they have likewise the power of forming a honey-like secretion from the vegetable juices upon which they subsist, although by a totally different process. In most species of the Aphides, both males and females acquire wings at certain seasons; but in this respect they are subject to great variation, — there being some males and some females that never have wings ; again, there are some females that become winged, while others of the same species do not. The Aphides are the most defenceless of aU insects, for they can nei- * Shaw, Gen. Zool., vi. 1187. HABITS OF THE APHID^. 143 ther fly nor run sufficiently fast to avoid danger : they seem never to make use of their wings, but for the pur- pose of finally leaving the little society in which they were born, and establishing for themselves a distinct colony ; while the feet, although perfect, are remarkably slender, and only enable the animal to walk very slow. (133.) The honey-dew, according to the observations of the late Mr. Curtis, is chiefly, if not entirely, occa- sioned by these insects. " Were a person," observes our ingenious author, '^ to take up a book in which it was gravely asserted that in some countries there were certain animals which voided liquid sugar, he would soon lay it down, regarding it as a fabulous tale, calculated to impose on the credulity of the ignorant; and yet such is literally the truth. The superior size of the Aphis Salicis, or willow plant-sucker, will enable the most in- credulous observer to satisfy himself on this head. On looking stedfastly for a few minutes on a group of these insects, while feeding on the bark of the willow, a few of them will be perceived to elevate their bodies, and a transparent substance evidently drop from them; which is immediately followed by a similar motion, and a dis- charge like a small shower, from a great number of others. On placing a piece of writing paper under a mass of these insects, it soon became thickly spotted ; holding it a longer time, the spots became united from the addition of others, and the whole surface assumed a glossy appearance. I tasted it, and found it as sweet as sugar. I had the less hesitation in doing this, having observed that wasps, flies, ants, and insects without number, devoured it as quickly as it was produced. In the height of summer, when the weather is hot and dry, and the Aphides are most abundant, the foliage of the trees and plants upon which they reside, is found covered by this substance, generally known by the name of honey-dew." After combating the opinions that this was either exuded from the plants, or had fallen from the atmosphere, Mr. Curtis observes: — " As far as my own observation has extended, there never exists any 144 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. honey-dew but where there are Aphides: such, how- ever, often pass unnoticed, being hid on the under side of the leaf. We have some grounds for beheving," Mr. Curtis adds, " that a saccharine substance, similar to that of the Aphis, drops from the Coccus also. (134.) The astonishing fecundity of these insects has no parallel in the animal creation. In summer, the young are produced alive from the body of the parent ; but in autumn, the female deposits eggs on the stems of plants, near the embryo shoots, and these are hatched by the sun early in the spring. How beautiful is this care of the Creator for the meanest of his creatures ! If the last autumnal brood of the Aphides was brought forth as the former, the frosts of winter would inevitably kill all, and exterminate the race ; while the same sun which brings the eggs to maturity in spring, expands the young leaves upon which the parent insect intended her future progeny should feed : thus both leaves and insects come into life at the same time. But the most wonderful part of their history is the power of con- tinued impregnation through a great many descents. A pregnant female, kept by itself, produces perfectly formed young ones, which, though kept separate, will, in a short time, produce others ; and thus several gene- rations follow each other. The male insects only appear in autumn ; and this may explain why the last autumnal brood is enclosed in eggs. Reaumur com- putes that each Aphis may produce about 90 young ; and that, in consequence, in five generations, the de- scendants from a single insect would amount to the astonishing number of 5,904,900,000. Were it not that these immense multitudes are called into being to furnish food for other races, they would be sufficient to destroy vegetation, and annihilate the empire of Flora. We accordingly find that, in " due season," they become the prey of many other animals, both in the bird and insect world. During most years, observes Mr. Curtis, the natural enemies of the Aphides are suf- ficient to keep them in check, and to prevent them from HABITS OF THRIPS. 145 doing essential injury to plants. But seasons sometimes occur, when their increase is so prodigious that severe damage ensues, both to the crops of the husbandman, and to vegetation generally. Among the hop plant- ations, for instance, the Aphides are so prevalent, that the scarcity or abundance of the crop entirely depends upon their ordinary prevalence or unusual plenty ; and hence the frequent reports on this subject in the news- papers. Vain would be the attempt to clear a hop garden of these pernicious insects, or to rescue any ex- tensive crop from their baneful ravages. Even violent rain has but a partial effect in destroying them. Mr. Curtis immersed, in a glass of water, the footstalk of a leaf of considerable length, from a stove plant beset with Aphides. On immersion, they did not quit the stalk, but immediately their bodies assumed a kind of luminous appearance, from the minute bubbles of air which issued from them. After an immersion of six- teen hours, they were taken out and placed in the sun- shine, when some of them almost immediately showed signs of life, and, upon an average, not one out of four was killed. So little effect, indeed, had this cold bath upon the rest, that one out of the survivors, a male, very soon after became winged, and another, a female, was delivered of a young one ! (135.) The Thripsoi Linnaeus are such exceedingly minute insects, that to the naked eye they seem but as little specks, or rather like short lines, not exceeding the length and thickness of the letter i. In spring, these minute creatures may be found running about the petals of flowers, particularly the dandelion ; but in summer and autumn, they fly into houses, if not in swarms, at least in considerable numbers ; they alight upon the hands and face, and occasion that troublesome irritation which many people experience during hot weather, without knowing the cause. Minute as these creatures are, Mr. Kirby considers them as highly noxious to the farmer, by deriving their nourishment from the embryo grains of the wheat plant. L 146 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. (ISG.) In a scientific point of view, the Thrips is a still more interesting insect, since it unquestionably unites a suctorial order with another that is masticating. So naturally is this genus connected to the Aphides, the Chermes, and the Cocci, that neither M.Latreille, nor any of the subsequent reformers, have materially disturbed this arrangement ; they include Thrips and Aphis in the same family, placing the Cocci immediately after. All entomologists admit that Thrips is a mandibulated type ; although, from the excessive minuteness of the species, and the consequent difficulty of understanding with accuracy the parts of the mouth, we are somewhat de- ficient in figures and descriptive details. Sufficient evidence, however, is before us, to show that this genus connects the Hemiptera, which is a suctorial order, with some other which is both suctorial and mandibulated, or furnished with jaws. The question, therefore, which remains to be settled, is, to what mandibulated order this genus leads. Now, there is only one in the whole of the Annulosa, where the mouth, in the same manner, is provided both with jaws and a proboscis ; and this order is the Hyjyienoptera. The very aspect of the figure of Thrips given by Reaumur, bears no slight resemblance to the genus Scolia ; and that species figured by Mr. Westwood, no less reminds us of a hymenopterous insect. Great credit is due to Mr. Haliday, one of our best entomologists, for his valuable memoir on these insects ; although we cannot entertain his idea of erecting them into an order. To his paper, and to Mr. Westwood's valuable figures and dissections*, we must refer the reader, — contenting ourselves with retaining the opinion of Latreille, that Thrips enters into the circle of the Aphides. (137.) The Aphides present us with some of the most extraordinary analogies in nature. These singular crea- tures, as will appear by analogical comparison, represent, in their own circle, the hymenopterous order among tlie * Modern Classification of Insects, ii. I. fig. 57. HABITS OF THE APHIDES. 147 Ptilota, the rasorial order among birds, and the rumi- nating tribe ( Ungulata) among quadrapeds. Dissimilar as these groups are from each other in outward appear- ance, the reader will be nevertheless surprised when he learns how many things they possess in common. One of the chief peculiarities of the Hymenoptera, is their power of producing honey, — a faculty which is given to no other insects but to them and the Aphides : both are eminently gregarious — living in large societies or swarms ; and in both do we find that one female is generally the parent of a whole community, which feed and live together. The wings of the Aphides are clear and transparent ; and the structure of their nervures are more Hke those of hymenopterous insects, than of any other order ; while the Thrips, as we have before inti- mated, bring these groups into immediate contact. Next compare the Aphides with the scansorial and ra- sorial birds ; all these are typically gregarious, feeding only upon vegetables, and uncommonly prolific. The great developement of the tail is one of the chief cha- racters of these birds ; while the Aphides are almost the only Cicades which have caudal appendages. It gene- rally happens, as a necessary consequence of remote comparison, that the more dissimilar are the objects compared, the fainter are their analogies : but some- times this is not the case ; and a remarkable exception to the rule is presented to us on the present occasion. Every one knows that it is from the ruminating ani- mals alone that man derives that healthful and salubri- ous beverage which in the early ages of society formed his chief nourishment. No other vertebrate animal has been intended by nature to supply us with milk. Now, if we look to the annulose circle, and inquire whether Nature has bestowed upon any of these the same power of secreting a fluid destined to feed other crea- tures than its own young, the reply is in the affirm- ative : the Aphides exclusively possess this faculty. When Linnaeus, therefore, with so much reason, termed these little creatures the milch cows of the ants, and L 2 148 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. •when all subsequent naturalists have wondered at the beauty of the analogy, we may well be struck with admiration at finding this relation confirmed by those definite principles of the law of representation which we advocate. If the circular group which includes the Aphides be compared with all those which comprehend their prototype here mentioned, all these parallel rela- tions will come out. (138.) The Coccides, or plant bugs, succeed the last tribe : these are also of a very small size, and in their ordinary appearance resemble a scale ; all the parts of the body being concealed underneath. They live on the bark and leaves of vegetables, whose juices they suck ; and are great pests to our hothouse and greenhouse plants. The males have wings, and are much smaller than the females, which are apterous. The Coccus Adonidum Linn, is a familiar example of this family: its shape has been aptly compared to that of an Oniscus, or wood-louse : the whole insect is of a pale rose colour, and appears more or less covered with a fine white meal or powder: the male is very small, likewise rose-coloured, somewhatmealy, with semi-transparent milk-white wings, and four long filaments at the tail : the young are hatched under the husk or body of the parent, and afterwards disperse to feed separately. In regard to their technical characters, the Cocci have many peculiar to themselves. The female alone is furnished with a rostrum, or sucker, while the male has only two- large membranaceous wings : this circumstance would seem to throw a suspicion on the propriety of placing these in- sects in an order where the number of wings are inva- riably four ; more particularly, as Latreille remarks that the Coccus Ulmi has two poisers. But the whole characters, and more especially the innumerable analo- gies of these insects, show they are the most aberrant of Hemiptera, and therefore contain such insects as are most defective in the powers of flight, just as are the Coleoptera in the circle of the Ptilota; while their ana- logy to the CassidcB, Oniscus, and other chelonian types. ANALOGY OF THE COCCI TO THE CASSID^E. 140 is remarkably beautiful. However destructive these insects may be to our fruit trees, they seldom attack such as are in a sound and healthy state. The Coccus cacti, or cochineal, has long been celebrated for the beau- tiful scarlet colour it imparts by dying, and which forms such an important article of commerce with the Western World. We may here advert to a common error, still prevalent among unscientific persons, who suppose that the cochineal dye is extracted from a berry. This lias originated from the appearance of the animal when dead: the female, in its full-grown pregnant or torpid state, swells to such a size, that the legs, antennae, and pro- boscis become so small in respect to the rest of the animal, as hardly to be discovered, except by a good eye, or by the assistance of a glass ; so that, on a general view, it bears a greater resemblance to a berry than to an insect. We may also advert to another error, viz. that the cochineal was a species of Coccinella, or ladybird. This seems to have taken its rise from specimens of the Coccinella Cacti being sometimes accidentally intermixed with the cochineal in gathering and drying. (139.) The analogy which this group bears to the Cassidce, the tortoises, and other onisciform types, has already been brought before the reader; but, if he wish to have this resemblance placed in the strongest light, let him look to the figure of the Coccus cataphractus of Dr. Shaw *, where he will see even the plates which compose the shell of the tortoise, actually defined in the most exact manner upon this pigmy representative of the chelonian reptiles. The whole animal, as Dr. Shaw observes, " being coated on the upper parts, in the most curious manner, in a complete suit of milk-white armour, as if cased in ivory." Again, in allusion to the resemblance which the Coccides have to a wood-louse, he remarks, that " their general appearance is very much that of an Oniscns, or millipede ; the antennoe in both having a strong resem- blance to a pair of forceps, being each curved inwards * Nat. Mis. vol. v. ■L 3 1.50 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. ami pointed." Again, in reference to the Coccus Ado- nidiim, he remarks, "It has the appearance of a small millepede, or Oniscus; being of an oval shape, and slightly convex above, with the body divided into many trans- verse segments, projecting sharply on the sides, and furnished with small processes or points." Now, these words, intended to describe a Coccus, are equally just when applied to an Oniscus; and, with very little vari- ation, would be suited to the armadillos among qua- drupeds, and to the larvae of the Ericinian butterflies. CHAP. IV. THE HYMENOPTERA. (140.) The order Hymenoptera, according to the sei-ies laid down in our last chapter, follows that of the Hemiptera. If a zoologist, versed in the other classes of animals, was called upon to select that character which he considered as the most essential, it would be, that these insects have an appendage to the tail, either in the form of a sting, or an oviduct. This character, in fact, is so general, that it only disappears in a portion of the order (Tenthredo Linn.) which is aberrant, and where we should naturally expect some one or more of the typical characters would be lost. It is by this, also, that the analogy of the Hymenoptera to the thysanuri- form larva is produced ; and both these, as will be clearly shown, are modifications of the ungulated type of qua- drupeds. Other characters, not so universal as this, are exhibited in their wings and mouth. The first, where they exist, are membranaceous and transparent, furnished with corneous veins, arranged longitudinally and trans- versely, leaving large spaces, — a structure very different \ DISTRIBUTION OF THE HYMENOPTERA. 151 from that of the Neuroptera : the mouth is provided with horny mandibles and a lengthened rostrum, formed by the maxills ; this encloses the tongue, which is used to lick up the food. The metamorphosis is variable, and shows how little can be depended upon this character when taken in a primary sense. The larva, in the great majority, is apod or vermiform ; but in one of the aber- rant groups it resembles that of the Lepidopfera ; while the pupa is inactive in all. Such, concisely, are the main characters of the order before us. It is distributed over the whole of the world; and is, of all insects (excepting those which produce silk), that which, by the production of %vax and honey, is exceedingly ser- viceable to man. When we add, that it comprises the bees, ants, and gall flies, together with the wasps, and ichneumons, it will be apparent that the Hymenoptera are the most intelligent of all insects. (141.) Looking to the characteristics discovered in all circular groups of the animal kingdom which have been minutely investigated, we shall take these for our guide ; and thus, by synthesis, we presume the follow- ing to be the primary divisions of the class before us : — First, the Apides, or bees, which live almost entirely on vegetable substances : the body is short, thick, and hairy; the antennae short and bent, and the legs comparatively short: they are nearly all nectivorous, and eminently social. The ants (^FormicidcB) appear to be the most aberrant family of this tribe. 2. The Sphecides, or wasps, which live, either in the larva or perfect state, upon other in- sects, which are either killed and devoured, or wounded and stored up by the parent for the support of the young: the most typical (^Pepsis Fab.) are solitary; only a few, like the European wasps {Vespa), build their nests in common. The body is lengthened, generally slender, and frequently petiolated ; that is, as if placed on a slender stalk : the antennae are slender and curved, but usually geniculated ; and the legs are long, slender, and •frequently serrated or spined externally. None of these insects collect the pollen of flowers, although many feed L i 152 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. upon their nectar. The MutilUdce appear to enter into this group, and to represent, rather than to associate with, the Formicidce. 3. The Ichncumonides, or ichneumons, where the appendage to the tail, whicli has hitherto been a sting, now assumes the office of an ovipositor, being em- ployed to deposit the eggs: the enormous developement of this organ in the typical group [Finipla, Fab.) is very remarkable : this, with the parasitic habits of all these insects, their very slender filiform antenna, and their linear bodies, which are frequently compressed, appear to separate them as a distinct tribe from our fourth di- vision, the Cynipsides, including the Chalcidites, or gall flies. With few exceptions, these latter are very small, and even minute, insects, known at once by several remarkable peculiarities : their antennae are almost al- ways geniculated, and sometimes pectinated; the body and limbs are usually ornamented with brilliant metallic colours ; and the hind legs, like those of the coleo- pterous genus Haltica, are sometimes thickened ; and like them, according to Latreille, many have the power of leaping. They resemble the ichneumons in being pa- rasitical in their larva state, and the ants by some genera being without wings. The fifth is the most isolated group of the whole ; yet the Tenthredines, or saw flies, are so obviously allied to some of the typical Hymenoptera, that they cannot possibly be removed from this order, merely because their preparatory state or metamorphosis is differ- ent. The perfect insect is immediately known by the ab- domen being sessile, or joined to the thorax throughout its whole thickness ; it consequently has no separate motion, like that possessed by all the other tribes of this order. As it is not our purpose to enter into the in- ternal arrangement of these groups, in reference to what may be the circular succession of their aflSnities, we shall at once proceed to their analogies, as being the chief basis upon which the foregoing arrangement of the tribes is founded. ANALOGIES OF THE HYMENOPTERA. 15' Analogies of the Hymenoptera to the Ptilota. Tribes of the ^„„,_,„ Orders of the Hymenoptera. Analogies. Ptilota. 'Pre-eminently typical; proboscis T r Pre-eminently typical; proboscis T Apides. -s or tongue very long ; nectivo- >• Lepidopteba. C reus. J SPHEClDES. [^t'o"scTshort"'^"'''°"^'' ^'■°"] H««"^=«*- IcHNEUMONiDES. [ Caudal appendages highly deve- 1 hymenopteba. Cynipsides. The most aberrant of their circles. Coleoptera. Tenthredines. {"rodysS!'°'"°"'"^ ''''^^'I Neuroptera. We ground the correctness of the first two analo- gies upon the unquestionable facts, that the bees are the most typical, and that the Sphecides are the rapto- rial, tribes of the order. This arrangement coincides not merely with the corresponding tribes of the Ptilota, but with every tribe in the vertebrate and other circles contained in our precedingvolumes. The superior length of the tongue in the typical bees and butterflies is well worth remarking, and is strongly contrasted with the universal shortness of this organ in the raptorial He- miptera {Rediivius Fab.), and the equally raptorial wasps. The ichneumons, corresponding to the greater part of the Pupivora of Latreille, as representatives of the order in the entire circle, possesses one — and only one — of the typical characters in the highest state of develope- ment, — a circumstance which we have frequently had occasion to point out is universal in all natural groups ; and thus we consider the first three series of our table to be substantially natural. Respecting the fourth, in which we place the Cynipsides (including the Chalci- didce) as a tribe distinct from the ichneumons, we are not sufficiently clear. For a long time we were dis- posed to adopt Mr. MacLeay's opinion, that the ants (Formicidce) constituted one of the primary types of the order; in which case they would have stood in the most aberrant position, as types of the Coleoptera ; but 154 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. their strong affinity to the more perfect and social Hy- menoptera, and the impossibility of discovering the least relation between them and the Tenthredines, has induced us to doubt the correctness of this opinion, and to substi- tute, for the present, the Cynipsides including the Chalci- dites. The singular prolongation of the scutellum in some of these insects, which Latreille very justly compares to Scutellera, gives them, at first sight, a closer resemblance to Coleoptera than any other insects of this order yet dis- covered : this, at least, we can say, — that two or three species found by us in Brazil have this aspect so strongly, that we mistook them, at first, for MordellcB. The pe- culiarity also mentioned by Latreille, of most of the Fabrician Chalcididce enjoying the faculty of leaping, is another point wherein they resemble the most aberrant tribe of the Coleoptera, no less than the Syphonostoma, or fleas, the acknowledged representatives of the beetles among apterous insects. Families, again, in which me- tallic colours run through the great majority of the species, are invariably the most aberrant in their own circles. We find this true in the humming birds, the tanagrine genus Agla'ia, the. metallic pheasants of India, and the prismatic mouse of the same region. It is again seen in the Chrysomelidce in the circle of the Coleoptera, in the Buprestidce, in that of the Lamellicornes, and in the Curculionidce among the Caprkornes. However unprepared we may therefore be, to offer any opinion worth adopting on the rank of the Chalcidites and of the ants, we have not a doubt that both they and the genus Chrysis, together with the Mutillidce, are all repre- sentatives of the Coleoptera, wherever their actual lo- cation in nature may be. As for the latter group, — the Mutillidce, — we look upon them as more related to the true ants by analogy than by affinity: they agree only in being apterous, — a circumstance so common in widely different groups of this order, that it is by no means sufficient to constitute an affinity. The analogies of the saw flies (^Tenthredines) to the aberrant Neuroptera, (or the Phryyanidce), although not so apparent, perhaps. PARASITISM OF THE HYMENOPTERA. 155 in the perfect insects, are yet sufficiently strong to cor- roborate the idea of their being related to each other ; for both have their larvte eruciform. But in what manner, if any, the Tenthredines are connected to the more typical bees, must be determined by analysis. Characters founded upon any one single organ are ge- nerally artificial : yet it is very remarkable that, in the two typical groups of our arrangement of this order, the caudal appendage performs the office of a sting, while in the three aberrant divisions it assumes the functions of an ovipositor. Should our theory of the primary types be correct, no better characteristic of them can be given. (142 ) Preliminary to our special treatment of the habits, economy, distribution, and peculiarities of struc- ture of the successive groups into which the Hymeno- ptera have thus resolved themselves, we propose making a few observations upon the order collectively. In the first place, we may remark that sexual discrepancies are as perplexing to the entomologist here, as in the other or- ders, and there is as frequently a difficulty in associating together the partners of a species : this is conspicuously the case among the bees. In the aculeated division of the Hymenoptera, there is, however, a tangible cha- racter whereby the sex of the individual may be discri- minated ; for the males have one joint more to the antennae and the abdomen than the females. In the preceding orders of which we have treated, we have had occasion to observe the parasitical habits of many of the species, which occur moie or less considerably throughout all insects. Here, however, although it is found very extensively amongst the Diptera also, it reaches its maximum ; for one group, the /c/meMjrwnirfes, as we here consider them, are almost exclusively para- sites. The term will receive its explanation by our ex- hibiting the characteristic and discriminating features whereby it distinguishes itself in the several tribes in which it occurs. The Ichneumonides, or, as they were named by Latreille, Pupivora, from the peculiarity in- 1 .}() NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. cidentil to their mode of parasitism, deposit their eggs either upon or within the egg or larva of the insect upon which they are parasitical. The young, when dis- closed, if deposited upon the surface, eats its way into the insect upon which it preys ; but yet, guided by its instinct, it feeds so cautiously as not to interrupt the vital functions, and the creature progresses to the ma- turity of the pupa state, but, of course, in a sickly con- dition. Having undergone this change, its insidious enemy still lurking within it, its existence then draws to a close, for the parasite, becoming less restricted in its diet, consumes all before it; and having by that time acquired its full growth, it transforms either within the husk of the insect upon which it had preyed, or it pierces through this and spins its cocoon, and therein takes its metamorphosis upon the surface of this case. Sometimes a larva feeds but one of these parasites, when it consists of the larger normal Ichneumones ; but myriads at other times inhabit it, when these are com- posed of Chalcidites. In these last instances, more than one species frequently prey at the same time upon the devoted victim, as we have repeatedly had occasion to observe, and much to our vexation; for, after having used every precaution to rear some rare lepidopterous larva, we have found all our assidous exertions thwarted by these tiny foes. It is not, however, the Lepidoptera alone that are subjected to these attacks, but some prey likewise on the Coleoptera ; and it is not improbable that all the orders may be infested by them, they having so little fellow feeling as to be destructive even to their own order. The second kind of parasites are those which occur in our group of Sphecides : these deposit their eggs within the nests of other Spheces, frequently of the same genus as themselves, for the purpose of being nurtured at the expense of the young, by consuming the food laid up in store by the provident parent; and, doubtlessly, these insects, being predatorial and carni- vorous, feed upon the unhappy larva itself. An awk- ward collision must of course sometimes occur, where PARASITISM OF THE HYMENOPTERA. 157 the developement of the parasitic larva is less rapid than that of its intended victim, and this, by acquiring early sufficient strength, neutralises the object of the parents, and turns " the tables " upon its progeny. A subdivision of this parasitical mode of breeding we observe among the bees, which more resemble that of the cuckoo than either of the other; and from this circumstance, those genera of bees wherein it occurs have been called cuckoo bees. Here it is merely the food that is laid up in store, that has been preyed upon by the larva of the parasite; for the bee not being at all carnivorous, the genuine inhabitant for whom the provi- sion was made is starved by its abstraction by this intruder. In the bees that possess this habit, it is always an entire genus, and not a portion of a genus, as we have ob- served among the Sphecides ; although the same object of resemblance is frequently obtained, by these parasitic bees belonging very generally, from structural character, to a cognate division of the group, as we shall have oc- casion to instance below. With regard to structure, we may here remark, that it occurs in a less fully developed state throughout this second division of parasites ; but this is compensated by the superior instinct with which they are endowed, to enable them to evade the sagacity of the insects upon which they prey. Instances, how- ever, of fearful retribution we shall record below, when we treat specially of the groups; and where we shall show that severe punishment has followed the heedless temerity of the parasite, when it has too rashly exposed itself to the indignation of the enraged parent. Al- though we have already observed that there are apparent deficiencies in the analogical structure of these latter parasites, we are not to note these as defects, but as a further exemplification of the universal economy exhi- bited every where in nature, which, fitting every thing to its end, is never lavish in superfluous, and consequently useless, implements. (143.) In speaking here of the parasitic habits of the Hymenoptera, we may notice, that they are them- 158 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. selves exposed to the parasitical propensities of indi- viduals belonging to other orders. This we here merely glance at, as we shall have further occasion to notice it ; and it therefore remains for us to observe, in these general remarks, that we think it very probable that this order of the Hymenoptera will, eventually, when it shall have obtained all the attention from entomologists that it so well merits, prove numerically as extensive, or perhaps more extensive, than any other. In cor- roboration of the plausibility of this supposition, we have only to advert to the hosts of minute Hymenoptera discovered throughout the small area of our own country, and described by JNIessrs. ^Valker and Haliday ; and when we reflect upon the prolific exuberance of more genial climates, exemplified in the multitudes of insects of the favourite orders of Lepidoptera and Co~ leoptera which the zeal of collectors have brought together, we may rationally expect that an assiduity equivalent to INIr. Darwin's would speedily advance the species of Hymenoptera to a triumphant competition in number with the most numerous of the recorded orders. (144.) The Apides, or bees, compose our first large group. These insects are well known, from tlie uni- versal reputation of the typical genus Apis, the do- mestic bee, which, from its social habits, has ever been esteemed emblematical of the monarchical government ; whilst its steady industry, in storing up provision for the contingencies of a barren period, have been the admired theme of sages and moraUsts, who have con- stantly referred to it to rouse the inertness of indolence, and have cited it as an example of prudential foresight. These have thus given a name to a large group of insects, which, upon the progress of systematic ento- mology, were found to possess certain analogous pecu- liarities of structure. It must not, however, be inferred, because the bee most extensively known is social in its habits, and has been domesticated by man to con- tribute to his luxuries and comforts, that all bees par- GENERAL HABITS OF THE BEES. 159 ticipate in these instincts^ and are equally fitted for a similar subjugation. This opinion would be erroneous, for it is among the social bees only that we find those thus serviceable; and, although a few other genera of bees are also social, we are not aware that any have been domesticated like our common hive bee, or its congeners, although the nests of the other social species are constantly plundered by the natives and inhabitants of the countries wheie they are found. The large ma- jority of bees are, indeed, solitary in their habits, form- ing either cylindrical burrows in a variety of substances according to the species, or a cluster of small oval cells, placed usually within a cavity, either found or formed by the insect ; and these cells are constructed sometimes of small particles of earth, or of a moulded clay.* They then deposit within them a store of food, con- sisting of a paste, formed by a mixture of pollen and honey, to serve as provision for the young. Having laid up this magazine, in the due proportions of which the mother insect is guided by an unerring instinct, she then deposits her egg upon it, and encloses an adequate space for the developement of her larva, and of its transformation. As we observed above, the several genera and species select different substances, wherein they nidificate ; and they also follow diiferent modes in the occupation of these burrows, for some line them with various substances, and others occupy them bare as they occur, but perfectly smooth within. Some, also, make them suit a succession of cells ; and others deposit but one egg, and food but for one young one, in each; but we shall have further opportunity below to notice these different habitations, wherever they present any remarkable peculiarity of structure. These insects themselves are frequently very hairy, although many are completely smooth ; and they are * An exotic genus, closely allied to Osmia, appears to form its cells of a rude kind of wax. This is a reiiiarkatile iiistaiice of any but a social bee using wax. We should not, however, thence infer, that, as in the other cases, it was a secretion of the insi'<:t, but possibly a vegetable production, or perhaps the result of plunder from one of the social kinds. lOO NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. generally of sombre and uniform colours : but some are adorned with the gayest metallic and party-coloured vestments ; yet it is chiefly among the parasitic tribes tliat a gaudy costume is conspicuous. The purpose which bees have to fulfil in the economy of nature, is to collect the superfluous pollen of flowers, and whilst collecting it, to convey it from plant to plant, whereby the impregnation of these is more securely effected than if it were left to the accidental agency of the wind ; and, although this object is partially concealed beneath the instinctive propensity to collect nutriment for their young, yet is it so conspicuous, and has been so fully proved by the careful researches and observations of Sprengel and Kohlenreuter, that it must excite universal admiration at the comparatively simple, yet certain, means. Nature so frequently adopts to obtain important results, — one process accomplishing manifold purposes. To effect this end, they are of course furnished with adequate organs ; and they are assisted to convey it, whilst collecting it from flower to flower, usually by means of a dense brush of hair, sometimes surrounding the posterior tibite and basal joint of the tarsus, but which is placed occasionally merely externally upon those members : in conjunction with this brush, there is frequently a long curled lock of hair at the base of the femur beneath ; and where this occurs, the whole of that member is fringed, or the sides of the metathorax behind are very hairy. In others, the clothing of the legs is superseded by a very thick brush, occupying the under side of the abdomen ; but, in the social genera, in lieu of the brush upon the posterior tibiae, these, as well as the basal tarsal joint, are considerably dilated, and hollowed or flattened externally, and the margin fringed with hair, which thus forms a receptacle called a corbicitlum, or basket, for the clodded masses of pollen and honey made into a paste by these social insects, or for the other stores of different materials that they may require in their domestic economy. Having thus briefly noticed these generalities, we will SUBDIVISION OF THE BEES. l6l now proceed to the investigation of the contents of this group of insects. (145.) It has been found convenient by systematists to subdivide the bees into two large groups, which are determined by the mode in which the tongue or probos- cis is folded in repose, and the comparative length of that organ. Of course, it was to be expected that a lengthy organ, as this usually is, must be folded, to en- able it to be brought within the protection of the horny parts of the mouth. Thus, in the AndreyiidcB, which constitute the first large division, we find the proboscis folding only at its base ; and this, from the comparative shortness of the organ, draws it sufficiently within its protecting cases ; or at most the extreme apex (the lingua) is recurved, and thus the large angle is placed behind, the tongue lying in front of it and forwards. In the Apidce, however, we find a double flexure, there being still a small basal bend ; but another larger one occurs in front, at the insertion of the maxillary palpi ; and this throws the tongue backwards beneath, and whither the apical half of the raaxillse follow it, and cover it with their horny protect f.n. The distri- bution into genera, of the insects composing these two divisions, has been effected by studying the compara- tive proportions of the proboscis, and the varying num- bers and forms of the articulations of the palpi, taken either independently, or in conjunction with other peculiarities of structure, such as the form of the legs and tarsi, their clothing, the clothing of the venter, and neuration of the wings ; and the correctness of this mode of investigation is corroborated by its always as- sociating insects nearly identical in form and habits. To the Rev. Mr. Kirby we are indebted for this in- valuable arrangement, and the work wherein it is re- corded, the Monographia Apum Anglice, will remain the noblest monument of his entomological immortality. It is much to be regretted, that certain fastidious views with respect to nomenclature interfered with his giving names to the sections into which he broke up this 31 l62 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. large concourse of insects ; for, by omitting to do it, it has unfortunately happened that names have been ap- plied to them by Illiger, Latreille, and other continental authors, whereby our countryman has partly been de- prived of the well-earned universal record of his labours. We must not, however, complain of the candour of these authors, for they have done ample justice to the originality and merits of Mr. Kirby's treatise, which we cannot too strongly recommend to the diligent and careful study of young entomologists. They will find that it will teach them to digest thoroughly their plans ; and it will enlarge their views beyond the feverish expectancy of a precocious and questionable celebrity, so easily and unworthily attainable, by the establish- ment of insulated remarkable genera ; for it is only by taking up groups, and thoroughly discussing them, that the progress of the science can be at all promoted. (146.) We find that it is by CoUetesin theANDRENiDjE that the bees are most intimately connected with the Spheces and wasps ; its bilobated tongue exhibits the point of contact with some of the extreme genera of fossorial aculeates. This genus is also remarkable from its mode of nidification, and the silken cells it forms ; and by its possessing two parasites, — one the beautifully variegated Epeolus, a cuckoo bee, and the other the dipterous genus Miltogramma. The peculiarities of the other genera of the Andrenidce are, the wood bur- rowing parasitic Hylaus, which, when caught, emits a delightful and powerful fragrance of lemons ; and Sphecodes: the insects upon which these are parasitical, the most careful research has not yet discovered. We next have the extensive genus HaUctus, which is pecu- liar for the caudal vertical incision in the females, and the cylindrical body and length of antennas in the males. We here find another exemplification of the divergence of extensive genera from their types ; for we observe forms in this genus which seem to point in a variety of directions. Although the genus occurs thi-oughout the world, it is found most extensively in f GENERA OF ANDRENIDJE. iGS America and Europe; but it is in the former that its most eccentric species occur. The approximate genus Nomia, which is also found throughout the world, ap- pears to represent HaRctus in India, where possibly it is of similar extent, if we may judge analogically from the diversities of form that occur in the species we have seen. This genus is distinguished by the usually very enormously enlarged and curiously spined posterior femora and tibiae, and elongated tarsi of the males, and the frequently very large tegulae of both sexes. A re- markable species of this genus we are acquainted with from the Cape, which has the anterior tarsi dilated like the first section of Megachile. In this division we will only further allude to the extremely elegant Dasypoda, which derives its name from its densely hairy posterior tibiae and tarsi, and which are furnished with an in- creased facility for retaining the large masses of pollen they enable the insect to convey, by each hair giving off on each side, throughout its whole length, other in- numerable very short and slender hairs.* The re- markable genus Macropis Klug (the Mcgilla lahiata of Fabricius) has recently been added to the British fauna ; and we owe the possession of this unique insect to the liberality of the captor, Mr. Walton, who took it in the New Forest ; but we introduce the notice of it here, only to observe that it distinctly points in many peculiarities to the fourth division of the solitary bees (the Scopuli- pedes). The typical genus Andrena is perhaps of still greater extent than Halictus; but its range, both struc- tural and geographical, is more confined, indeed, it rarely presents abnormal species. It was upon one of this genus {A. nigrocBnea) that Mr. Kirby made the inter- esting discovery of the very singular parasite Stylops, Various kinds of tliis peculiar structure occur in different genera, and none of which have before been noticed : it has also modiKcations w'hich accomplish the same purpose; thus, in Fanurgus, insteadof the hairs being pilose, they are crenulated towards their extremity. That it only accom- panies certain peculiarities of economy is proved bvmany of the very hairy- legged divisions of the bees (the Scupulipedes) having these hairs eniirely simple, I am preparing a paper on the subject, in which all these peciilU antics will be shown.— W. E. Sli. M 2 16-i NATURAL ARKANGEMENT OF INSECTS. ,;he peculiarities of the natural history of which we shall give in its proper place ; and it is also upon An^ drena that the little hexapod creatures occur, called, we think very correctly, Pediculi by Mr. Kirby, but which have been asserted to be the larvae of Melo'e : the correctness of this opinion we dispute ; but shall leave the notice of our reasons for doing so until we arrive at the Coleoptera. We are further acquainted with many undescribed exotic forms among the Andrenid^B) some of which are highly interesting. (14-7.) We now enter the division of the Apid^, or genuine bees, where the diversities of form and struc- ture are greater than in the preceding division, and which consequently has given rise to a more extensive subdivision into genera. It is, however, very probable, judging from the contents of the collections which we possess and have seen, that the species are not nume- rically greater than in the Andrenidce. The Apidce re- solve themselves very naturally into two subdivisions, the solitary bees and social bees. The first of these sub- divisions, the solitary bees, may be conveniently grouped according to very obvious structural peculiarities, and which, as usual, concur with the habits of the insects. (148.) We have. Firstly, the Andrenoides, or those approaching, both in structure and habits, to the Andre- nidce. These make their burrows in a similar way to the typical portion of that group, and have their posterior tarsi formed upon the same structural model : they also, hke those insects, generally frequent syngenesious plants. The most remarkable genera are Rophites, which has the apex of the abdomen in the male denticulated be- neath ; and Systropha, which in that sex has the ex- tremity of the antennse very singularly curved. The general structure of Nomada includes it better within this group than Avith the other cuckoo bees, with which, from habits, it might otherwise be associated. These gay and wasplike insects are parasitical upon various species of Andrena and Halictus, but one infests Eucera. SUBDIVISIONS OF THE AFIDiE. l65 (149.) The second subdivision of the solitary bees^ the Dasygaatrcp, are thus named from the hirsute clothing of their venter, by which they carry their provisions, and never by their legs, which is the case in all other bees. They constitute a large group, some of the genera of which are very extensive in species, and many of these have received vernacular names. Thus, we have the Leaf-cutter Bees, Megachile, for instance, a very nu- merous genus, extending all over the known world, and tolerably equally distributed. The males of some of the species have the anterior tarsi considerably dilated. It is upon these insects that the coleopterous genus Clerus is probably parasitical. They derive their name from the habit many of them possess of cutting semicircular pieces of leaves from different plants, and with which they line their burrows, usually formed in soft and de- caying wood, whence they have sometimes been called carpenter bees, which is perhaps better restricted to Xy- locopa. It is upon the cognate genus Chelostoma that Mr. Marsham observed the Ichneumon, Pimpla Manifes- tator, which has so largely a developed ovipositor, to be parasitical. In this group there is no genus, excepting only Lithurgus, which does not occur in Great Britain. (150.) We have next the Mason Bees, Osmice, the majority of this group form their nests in the third mode we have described above ; and Anthidium, insects gaily marked with yellow bands and spots. In this genus the males are greatly larger than the females, and under the impulse of passion convey her off into the upper air. This genus is further remarkable for the habit it has of lining its nests with the downy coating of plants. It does not, in this country, make its appearance much before the summer solstice. (151.) Upon these follow the Cuckoo Bees, which are all parasites ; but although it is convenient to group together a certain number of these on structural accounts, yet shall we find some genera of parasitic bees strag- gling into the following subdivisions that we have to notice. Here we have Melecta, that infests the grega- M 3 l66 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. rious Anthophora and Eucera; the very gay Crocisa, (Ustinguished for its beautiful white and cerulean mark- ings ; the pretty httle Ammohates, PhUerennm, and Eppoluft, parasitical upon CoUctes, and CaMoxys whose young is reared at the expense of that of Megachile. We further observe the exotic resplendently metallic Aglai', Mesonychm, and Mesoeheira ; Ischvocera, with its exceecHngly attenuated and nodose antennoe in the males. The three last of these are conspicuous for the structure of the calcar of the intermediate legs, which are furcated towards the apex, and one of the branches muitidentate, resembling an expanded hand with its thumb and fingers. It is very probable, also, that the beautiful and large genus Acanthopus belongs to this group, for the female is not known, and it has a similarly constructed inter- mediate spur : the furcation of this organ probably su- persedes the possession of the usual pair. With the exception of Mclecta and Crocisa, which are cosmopo- litans, we have detected these parasitic genera to be natives only of Europe and America ; and the richly metallic species being, as far as we are yet acquainted with them, restricted to Tropical America and the M'est Indian islands. (152.) The last large subdivision of the solitary bees, the Scopulipedes , or Hairy-Legs, collectively present the most assiduous collectors of pollen among the bees : the posterior tibia and basal joint of the tarsus are densely hirsute in all ; and in many it is difficult to detect the form of the limb for the hair : the thickened and dis- torted structure of the legs of the males of many of them is very remarkable. The habits of a few only are known, the majority being exotic ; and the collectors of exotic insects have rarely cared to notice or record the habits of their captures. Our native genera consist of Eucera, named from the length of the antennae of its male ; Saropoda, and the gregarious Anthophora, the tones of the hum of the different species of which are so peculiar and distinctive. Here also shoidd be placed the small Southern African genus Allodapa; and our HABITS OF XYLOCOPA. 16? pretty little Ceratina may be inserted contiguous to the continental and exotic Xylocopa. The latter constitute a very numerous genus, for we are acquainted with more than a hundred species, and they are the largest and most bulky of all known bees ; the female of the oriental X. latipes being more than an inch in length, and two inches in expansion. These are most truly carpenter bees ; and as they occur numerously in countries fertile in timber, and of an exuberant vegetation, one purpose of their economy may be to hasten its decomposition when dead, by exposing it to the internal access of wet and fungi, by the large lengthy longitudinal perforations they make to deposit their young in security. They are subjected in the "\Fest Indies to the parasitical attacks of the cole- opterous genus Horia ; and probably, in other countries, other parasites prey on them. This genus presents some difficulties in its study, arising from the uniform in- tensely black colour of the greatest number of the species : their wings, which are of a brilliantly metallic steely blue or coppery colour, have been referred to as affording safe specific diagnostics ; but we think incorrectly, for they are liable to aU the contingencies of age and use : the sculpture of the clypeus we consider presents a safer clue. In the great majority of this genus, nothing but direct observation can bring together the genuine partners of the same species, as in very many instances the males are yellow or fulvous, and the females black or metallic. Here, as in Nomia and Halictus, we ob- serve the species diverging in structure from the type. In some males we detect a dilatation of the anterior tarsi, as in Megachile; but these appear linked to the more normal form by means of the fulvous species, which have the anterior tarsi densely ciliated. Another diver- gent form from Western Africa, which has the inter- mediate legs very long and spined, and with curled locks of hair, has been raised, unduly we think, to the rank of a genus, by the name of Mesotrichia, and has been con- sidered as linking Xylocopa to Anthophora, by means of those species of the latter which also have males with M 4 l68 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. elongated intermediate legs : these are, however, also, abnormal species, and ought not to be considered typical. This subdivision contains very many more genera, such as Epicharis, Centris, Oxcea, Sec. ; the mere names of which, as they convey neither information nor amusement, we will pass over : we may, however, state tliat it is in this subdivision that bees with the longest and most highly organised tongues are found. (153.) The last division of the bees, the social tribe, are doubtlessly the most interesting of all, from their habits, economy, and uses. Our space will not admit of our going particularly into these circumstances ; and it is the less necessary, as there is no treatise on Ento- mology but what abounds with details upon them ; and we shall therefore only speak of those particulars that have been hitherto least noticed. The genera of these insects consist of Bombus Linn., and its parasite Psi- thyrus St. Farg., Euglossa Fab., and the identical Ciie- midiuni Pty., and EuMma St. Farg., with their parasite Chrysantheda Pty.: MelMpona and Trigona of Latreille, and lastly Apis itself. The species of the genus Bombus form or seek cavities in the ground, which some line with a warm coating of moss interwoven together, and within which they build a series of irregularly clustered oval cells constructed of a very coarse kind of wax: others do not form this mossy lining, but instinctively seek a very sheltered situation. Bombus appears to be a northern and chiefly European and American genus: there are very few intertropical species ; and we only know two oriental. The genus Psithyrus so closely resembles the insects upon which they are parasitical, that they readily escape detection, and are not uncom- monly confounded with them by naturalists. It is still uncertain if Euglossa is social, and if their communities consist of three kinds of individuals. This has been assumed, upon the analogous structure of their posterior legs, which much resemble those of MelUpona and Tri. gona : the majority of the species are splendidly me- tallic ; and we think both Cnemidium and Eulaima too THE SOCIAL BKES. IGQ closely like them to admit of generic subdivision. Chry- santheda, we have not the least doubt^ is parasitical upon the metallic Euglossce. These insects belong exclusively to the western hemisphere, and it has been stated that such is the case also with Mellipona and Trigona ; but we are acquainted with species of the latter, which were brought from Java by Dr. Horsfield, and from Sumatra by sir Stamford Raffles, and St. Fargeau has also de- scribed one from Timor. From the vicinity of the latter island to New Holland, it is, therefore, not impro- bable that this genus may be discovered there; for we have yet seen no genuine bee from that country, ex- cepting such as have been imported by colonists, nor do we know any insect that does there represent it. These insects, Mellipona and Trigona, are likewise frequently found in gum anime and copal. The occurrence of bees without stings is an anomaly that we are scarcely prepared to expect, especially where there are such rich stores to defend as these insects form ; and yet this is reputed to be the case with the indigenous social and honey-making bees of America. Those of the genus Apis which are found there were originally introduced by colonists; but they have now permanently naturalised themselves, and occur at large in the woods. Much obscurity still hangs over the natural history of Mel- lipona and Trigona, and we are yet insufficiently ac-. quainted with their sexes. The marquis Spinola has recently helped to clear away some of the difficulties involving these insects, and has shown that we are scarcely to expect here those great sexual discre- pancies that we meet with in the genuine Apis. These insects are usually very small; and all that we know of their natural history is, that their nests consist of large assemblies of individuals, which form their waxen hives within hollow trees or the cavities of rocks. They make large quantities of wax, and are not, apparently, so economical in its use as Apis; for, from the figure given of a portion of one- of their nests by Huber, in the Transactions of the Society of Natural History of Ge- 170 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. neva, it appears more carelessly and less ingeniously fomied, although the hexagonal structure of the cells still predominates in it. Some, it is said, form nests of irregularly attached oval cells, like our Bombi. It is quite impossible to think of giving here, where we are so cramped for space, any thing like a suitable account of the economy of the hive bee (^Apis domcstica) and its congeners; but as this is dwelt upon in every book treating upon insects, we shall merely mention the extent of its distribution. Thirteen have hitherto been described, and others we know: two species only seem to occur in Europe, — one confined to the North (our do- mestic bee), and the other to the South. Others, we surmise, might possibly be found in Spain, from its proximity to Africa, were that fine country diligently searched. AVestern Africa and India appear to produce the greatest number of species ; but we believe they are not as diligently cultivated in those countries as in Europe and Egypt, although this might be supposed to be the case in Western Africa, from the large quantities of wax that are imported thence, and %vhich are brought from the interior. It would be trite to remark upon the uses of these industrious little insects to man, prior to the discovery of the sugar-cane. They must also have abounded in Judea — that land flowing with milk and honey; and the allusions of the oriental poets show the extent of their appropriation throughout the east. The enormous consumption of wax in catholic countries, both now, and when Europe was wholly catholic, and before it coiild be substituted by a vegetable extract, and the produce of a w^hale, exhibits the little insect in another light, — that of contributing to the religious rites of man ; and this further shows what extensive employment they must have afforded to multitudes of individuals : but we will close the subject with ex- pressing our gratitude for its adaptation to the wants and the comforts of man, and our great admiration of the wonders of its economy ^nd instincts. AVe have dwelt purposely longer upon this group of insects, from ECONOMY OF THE FORMICIDjE. 171 the universal interest that attaches to them, than we shall be able to do with the other groups of the Hymen- optera, or than otherwise our prescribed and limited space would have authorised. (154.) The FoRJiiciD^, or ants, are the next large group of which we shall treat ; but the connection be- tween them and the bees is any thing but apparent, as they seem allied only by their social habits. These habits present us with very many interesting peculiar- ities, which, however, have been studied only in a few European species. To judge from the eccentricities of form presented by the majority of exotic species, we may rationally conclude that their diversities of structure run parallel with differences in their economy and manners. Wherever Nature presents a peculiarity of workmanship, it is not a merely futile display of power, but it has a direct tendency to a specific purpose, which, although not always obvious, is necessarily to be inferred from the unvarying evidence we already possess wherever we Can trace it to its object. All the species of this group comprise three individuals ; or sometimes four, if the fourth, where it occurs, maybe considered otherwise than as a modification of the third. These consist of males, females, and neuters, or workers ; to Avhich, in some species, another class — that of soldiers — appears to be added. Whether these neuters, as in the social bees, are to be considered as abortive females; and whether the ants possess the means, like the bees, of supplying any accidental contingency in the nest, by developing the sexual inertness of these neuters, through any par- ticular course of nurture, has not yet been ascertained. There seems to be no'uniformity,even amongstcongeners, in their habits or architecture, for we observe species of the same genus following different modes of life. As amongst the social bees, some possess stings, and some are without these formidable weapons, which are, how- ever, supplied by a very powerful acid secreted by them, and ejected in defence, and which is doubtlessly quite as effectual in protecting them from their natural enemies. 172 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OP INSECTS. It is within the tropics that these insects chiefly abound, and where they are excessively destructive ; and nothing seems efficiently protective against their incursions. The group has been divided according to the structure of the abdomen ; which in some has but one node only to its peduncle, but in others it has two. It is in the first division that we find the stingless genera, namely, For- mica Linn., Formicina Shkd., Polyergus Latr., PolyrhcL- chis Shkd., and Dolichoderus Lund, besides several other yetuncharacterised genera, which we shall shortly publish. (155.) The Formicina rufa, or horse ant, forms those large nests of dry leaves and sticks we so frequently ob- serve in the woods ; and within these nests two genera of Staphylini appear to be parasitical — Lomechusa and Fella; and in their deepest recesses innumerable wood- lice (Onisci) are constantly found. The nature of the connection between these insects has not yet been ascer- tained, but perhaps it may be analogous to what has been observed between other species and the Aphides. It has been said that the larva of Cistela lepturoides also lives in the nest of this species. Another singular Sta- phylinus (the minute Claviger), which is totally blind, and otherwise remarkable in structure, inhabits the nests of the Formicina flava, where it has once been dis- covered in this country. Some of the species and genera of this tribe, it is said, exclusively of the FormicidcB, seek in the nests of other species, but always of the same tribe, the auxiliaries, upon which they impose all the " out-door " labours of the community ; but it is the genus Polyergus which is most distinguished for its sub- jugation of " helots," or " slaves." Cercopis and Mem- bracis, two genera of Hemiptera, supply the place of the " Cow Aphis " to the Brazilian genus Dolichoderus. All the FormicidcB are extremely pugnacious, and fight with inveterate obstinacy ; and frequently issue from their nests in close columns, for the purpose of attacking neighbouring colonies; this, of course, with variable suc- cess, but great slaughter is always made. Odontomachus constitutes the transition from the stingless to the acu- SUBDIVISIONS OF THE FORMICIDyE. 173 leated division of the Formicidie. These insects construct their nests in hollow trees, and are exclusively found in the New World and its islands ; but we are acquainted with a yet uncharacterised genus from Ceylon, which closely links the latter with the next genus, Ponera. The latter is of universal distribution, butexceedingly variable in form ; it at present evidently incorporates many other very distinct genera, which we propose separating from it. By the strangulation of the second segment of its abdomen, it makes a very convenient passage to the next division of the group, — those with two nodes to that portion of the body. We are unacquainted with its habits ; but in the absence of any account of extensive building or mining, Avhich could scarcely have escaped observation, from the multitude of species that have been collected, we surmise that its powerful mandibles indi- cate very destructive propensities. The communities of the European species (which also occurs in this country), P. contracta, are said to be small, and to live under stones; and, indeed, the neuters only, of one sub-genus in particular, the Ponera gigantea, have come under our notice; which, from its conspicuous size, would cer- tainly have attracted attention, had they formed large dwellings, or associated in numerous bodies. In the division with two nodes to the peduncle, we have some doubt if Condylodon Lund, be truly an ant, for its form greatly resembles some of the Mutillidce. Lund, during the whole of his residence in the Brazils, observed only a single specimen of the genus. We are, however, ac- quainted with nine species, all apterous, and all of which seem very rare ; and this circumstance, even if they be social, would of course imply that their societies were small. Myrmecia, of which the type is the F. gu- losa Fab., is exclusively confined to New Holland and its adjacent islands ; it appears to be very numerous in distinct species, which differ considerably in size, — even more so than we usually observe in natural genera, which generally present a tolerable uniformity. Eciton is exclusively American ; and its type, the F. hamuta. 174 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OP INSECTS, presents us with the most singular structure of the man- dibles observable in the Formicidce : these organs^ which are slender, are protruded in a curve to a great length, and are at their apex recurved upon each other. We think it probable that this form is merely a modifica- tion of the neuter of the Formica curvidentata ; for, with the exception of the mandibles, both have an iden- tity of organisation, and exhibit the smallest eyes of any of the group. We may, indeed, here observe generally, that the eyes of the FormicidoB present greater differ- ences of size and position than we detect in any other natural group of insects, and in several they are totally wanting. Eciton appears also numerous in species, and neuters only do we know, but these are evidently genuine ants. The universally distributed Crematogaster dis- plays a singularly recurved and heart-shaped abdomen, which has its peduncle inserted from above. Myrmica, and a few small cognate forms, are the only ones of this division that occur in Great Britain. The At- tidcB, which offer such an enormously developed head in the modification of the neuter individuals, takes a more southern range; and the genus (Ecodoma, the type of which is the Form, cephalotes, appears to be tropical and American ; but we know allied forms from the east, which, perhaps, possess equally destructive propensities, and constitute as numerous communities. We must, however, hasten on; for a volume bulkier than the pre- sent would scarcely do justice to all the peculiarities of habits and organisation that we meet with in the For- micidce: but we cannot quit them without noticing the spider-like form of Cryptocerus ; and, indeed, Lund informs us that its habits and movements as much re- semble those of a spider as does its form. It is com- paratively solitary, although consisting of three indi- viduals; and is -usually found upon or beneath leaves, lurking, curled up, ready to spring upon its unwary prey. It derives its name from the structure of the- head, which has, on each side, a deep lateral channel ; wherein, in repose, the antenniie are inserted and con- i THE DORYLID^. 175 cealed. The male has not yet been noticed, and per- haps not before known, as it differs in this particular from its female. The genus has hitherto been con- sidered wholly American; but we possess a species from New Holland, and we are acquainted with a closely allied genus from the east. It appears to us, from a careful review of an extensive collection of the Formi- cidcE, that the genera hitherto established, with a few exceptions only, constitute the types of as many natural families. Contiguous to the Formtcidce we observe the DorylidcE, a small and very natural group of insects, one sex only (the males) of which, throughout its four very distinct and marked forms, have yet come to Eu- rope; and this is the more striking, as the genera con- sist of several species. We have hazarded the hypo- thesis*, foundedupon analogous peculiarities of structure both with these and the contiguous groups, that certain blind and apterous insects, ant-like in their appearance, from Africa and the West Indies (^Anomma Shkd. and TyphloponeWest.), may possibly be the females of some; but this is merely conjecture. Two forms of this group, Dorylus and Rhogmus, occur in Africa; the former, how- ever, extend to India. The latter continent exhibits another form peculiar to itself (^(Enictus Shkd.), which links, by participating in the structure of both, Dorylus with that form of the group (Labidus^ found exclu- sively in America and its dependencies. These insects are further remarkable from the sexual organ of the male exhibiting specific differences. (156.) It is perhaps convenient from this point to enter the Sphecides, through the medium of the Mutil- lidcB. Although we here observe apterous individuals, we think the circumstance scarcely a link of affinity with the Formicidce ; for, in the Mutillidce, it is the prolific female which is apterous, which is never the case in the former ; and we have already hazarded a doubt if the neuters be positively abortive females. In- * See Shuckard's " Monograph of the Dorylids," June, 1S40. 116 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. deed, the occurrence of apterous genera is a circum- stance far from uncommon in all large groups of insects ; and it perhaps merits consideration whether, naturally, Latreille's solitary Heterogyna do not disperse themselves throughout the aculeated Fossores, instead of being col- lected together ; which is, possibly, merely a systematic convenience, although it is in some measure confirmed by the structure of the prothorax of the males. The numerous typical genus Mutilla offers a repeated in- stance of what we had occasion to observe in the genus Halictus ; the divergence, namely, of extensive genera from their types. We are acquainted with nearly 200 species of this genus ; and it is, perhaps, the most nu- merous, excepting only Ichneumon, throughout the Hy- menoptera. The occurrence of pectinated antenna is extremely rare amongst the fossorial aculeates ; we have seen it only in Psammotherma, belonging to this group, but it is said to be found also in one of the PonipHidce, among the typical Spheces. Apferogyna is remarkable for the constriction of the basal segments of the ab- domen in both sexes, and also for the evanescence of the apical nervures of the wings. Thyrmus and its numerous cognate genera enter here, for its females are all apterous. Many species, and the legitimate partners of several of them, are now known to us: the latter, however, could only be ascertained in consequence of the difterences of their colour, sculpture, and form from the males, from the direct observation of friends in New HoUand, where, with the exception of two or three genera, the whole of the family which they ne- cessarily constitute are found. It is into this family doubtlessly that the Ells of Fabricius {Mysine partly of Latr.) enters; for they cannot longer be associated with My sine (Plesia Jurine), as we know the males of the latter. The females of the Thynnidce, especially those of the more typical genera, present many remarkable structural characters, in the form of their legs, and of the terminal segment of the abdomen ; and in seme tliere are singular longitudinal and transverse deep sul- HABITS OF THE SPHECES. 177 cations of the head and face, which give it a cruciated appearance. The males vary considerably, from a short ovate form, similar to Bcmbex, to a long and cylindrical shape. Elis, only, is found in Europe ; the others that are not Australian occur in America. (157.) We now enter the normal group of Spheces, which are all winged insects. The point of contact seems naturally to be the ScoUadee. With the excep- tion of the few parasites that occur in it, these insects are all predaceous ; but this term, as regards them, must receive explanation, as it would imply that they themselves prey upon and devour other insects. This is not the case ; at least, no instance of it is yet known to us; and it is better thus to modify the assertion ; for we constantly and hourly detect that Nature, in her discursive progress, will not be tied to the rules we lay down from the observation of a few facts. From what has been observed, it appears that these insects seek their prey merely to provision their cells with nutri- ment for their young; and they themselves, for their food, visit flowers only. In the perfect state, they seem to require but little nourishment ; for, excepting a few genera, they are rarely found upon flowers; and this is the more remarkable, as their mouths are of a very highly organised structure. Parasites, amongst them, have not yet been proved, and have been assumed from the circumstance of certain species being divested of the prevailing characteristic of the fossorial tribes, which consists in a long external fringe of setiE to the anterior tarsi, generally coincident with posterior tibiae armed externally either with a longitudinal serration or succession of spines. That this is not invariably the case in the predacious tribes among them, we have already fully shown *, from direct observation. Nor is it the diagnostic exclusively of those which burrow in wood, which we once thought might be the case ; and the theory appeared plausible, as it of course could * See Shuckard's Essay on the Fossorial Hynjenoptera, pastrm. 178 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF IXSECTS. only be those which burrow in sand, and similar con- crete substances, that would require such a brush-like implement. But we subsequently found, that even some truly predaceous sand burrowers (for we caught them with their prey) were unfurnished with this structure. This circumstance strongly proves how un- safe it is to theorise too hastily upon a few facts only. The wood burrowers, however, seem to possess a less variable peculiarity, which is in intimate connection with their economy and habits. They are generally lengthy insects, and have short legs ; but their dis- tinguishing feature is to have either very large and strong mandibles, dilating towards their extremity ; or where these are smaller, not dilated, and parallel, they are then shorter and more compact, and the head is then considerably enlarged, to give room for the exer- cise of powerful muscles. We thus see how provident Nature is of her creatures ; she endows them with peculiar instincts, and, for the exercise of those in- stincts, furnishes them with the requisite instruments. A lengthened body and short legs is not confined to the wood burrowers, for we find it conspicuous in the ScoliadcB, Crahronidce, and Philantliidce. The characters upon which these insects have been collected into families are not sufficiently precise; and very many forms, we have not the least doubt, still remain to be discovered. The Scoliadce and Pompilidce are the only families among them which present a thorax con- structed similarly to that observed in the male Mu- tillidce, and which is more or less developed according \ to the genera, and extends backwards as far as the i insertion of the superior wings. We perceive a modi- fication of this structure in the Ampulicidce, which forms the transition to the collar of the rest of this group. Their eyes are usually lateral and ovate ; but in some they are kidney-shaped, whicli indicates a de- parture to that normal form found in the Vespidcp. In the Scoliadce, Scolia itself exhibits to us the most bulky insects in the group. This genus is of universal distri- THE POMPILID^. 179 bution. Meria appears confined to Southern Europe and Africa ; whereas Myzine (Plesia Jurine) is found every where excepting in Europe ; and this circum- stance corroborates the assumption that Elis Fab. (^My- zine partly Latr.), cannot possibly be the males; were not this independently proved by our possession of two genuine males of the genus, which, in form, closely re- semble the females, have not the ventral segments con- stricted, nor the anal segment spined ; and they confirm the situation of the genus in this family by the slight sexual differences observable in the neuration of the wings which occur throughout it. Epomediopteron, of which we are acquainted with three species, is limited to the New World, but Tiphia occurs every where except in New Holland. (158.) In the family of the PompilidcB, Pompilus is of universal occurrence, an extensive genus, and of di- vergent structure within itself. Pepsis embraces the giants of the group, and, as yet constituted, is found both in the Old and New \Forld; but a small, although evi- dently important, distinction separates them into two di- visions. Thus, in those of the New World, and to which we would retain the name of Pepsis, the first recurrent nervure is inserted at the basal end of the second submar- ginal cell ; whereas in those of the rest of the world, to which we have given the name of Mygnimia, this recur- rent nervure extends to the apex of that cell. AU these insects display great brilliancy in the colouring of their wings ; and, in a collection of them, rich blue, deep violet, purple, green, fiery red, and black, with a limpid apex, vie with each other in beauty and variety ; and these are again contrasted with party colours, and wings elegantly spotted with silvery white. The size and strength of these insects are adapted for competition with the ferocity or size of their prey, which consists either of the large inter- tropical spiders, or of the monstrous caterpillars of the larger Lepidoptera. Other interesting forms occur in the family, such as Saliiis, with its largely developed pro thorax ; Planiceps, with its flattened head and rap- ]80 N.vTinAL arrange:.ient of inskcts. torial anterior legs, as well as produced prothorax ; Me- gascelis, wiih its large coxae, and intermediate thighs; and Exeira Shkd., wherein the form of the prothorax passes off into the usual transverse collar. In this last genus, which is from New Holland, we observe the only in- stance of a petiolated submarginal cell ; a structure found in every one of the families of the fossorial aculeates, but which was not known in this until the description of this insect. It is strange that the Ampulicidce should have been allowed to remain so long incorporated in the midst of the family Sphegidce, presenting, as they do, so many distinctive characters. In the first place, the hete- roclite structure of the abdomen, which not only distin- guishes them from the rest, but is also sexual ; for in the male it is exceediijgly obtuse and rounded, and in the fe- male very acute, and either compressed or conical at its apex ; and the second segment of which is the most largely developed, in some genera occupying nearly the whole of the abdomen, and in all with which we are yet acquainted, the segments, after the third, are very small. The majority of these genera also exhibit a remarkably sculptured me- tathorax, armed at its extremity with a couple of spines ; their clypeus is produced generally into a sort of aqui- line nose ; but the most remarkable circumstance in their structure is the pulviUus of the under side of the penul- timate joint of the tarsus, — an organisation observable no where else among the aculeated Hymenoptera, ex- cepting in some of the social Vespidce. They are said to prey upon the Blattce, and some one genus of them is found in all quarters of the world : the majority are brilliantly metallic, either blue or green, which is agree- ably contrasted, occasionally, with red femora. Very few, excepting the European DoZ/cAwrMS, and New Hol- land Conocercus, are black. The next family, theSphe- cidcB, are distinguished by a pedunculated abdomen, ■which is frequently of great length, and very slender. These insects, like the Pompilidce, also prey upon spiders and caterpillars. Chlorion is distinguished for its metal- lic colours, as also Pron^u*; the latter, which is African, THE CRABRONIDiE. 181 has large falcated mandibles. The universal Sphex appears to contain a second very distinct type, and is connected with AtnmophUa by means of the singular and apparently rare American Trigonopsis, named from its triangular and protruded head. Both sections o? Ammophila are of extensive distribution ; and Pelopceus, also, has a wide geographical range : this genus forms clusters of cells of mud against walls, and beneath the eaves of houses, and has thence, in America, been called the mud-chick. The next family, the Bembecidce, are remarkable for the anal denticulations of the males; and the venter beneath in this sex has frequently a large curved tooth, and some oneor other of the apical joints of their antenuiEarehooked. It is upon species of these insects that Parnopes of the Chrysididce is parasitical, and which offers the remarkable circumstance of an elongated proboscis, thus resembling the insect upon which it is parasitical. In several of the genera of the Larridce, we observe the two posterior of the three usual stemmata becoming obsolete. Mono- matium presents us with a petiolated submarginal cell ; in Dicranorhina we observe the abdomen pedunculated. The excessively active and numerous genus Tachytes is found every where but in New Holland, where it seems to be supplanted by Pison, which has reniform eyes. In the CrabronideB we are acquainted with several yet undescribed forms, for instance, Spalagia, closely allied to Nysson; Sericophorus to Oxybelus; Nephi-itomma to Trypoxylon; Megalommus to Gorytes ; Miscothyris connecting the latter with Alyson; and Aspidion, appa- rently intervening between Gorytes and Philanthus. An observation or two upon the latter and Cerceris will close our rapid survey of the fossorial Hymenoptera. The former, although of general distribution, appears to have its metropolis in Africa; as far as it habits are known, it has been observed to prey upon the genus Apis. The gay Cerceris is, perhaps, of more extensive distribution than Philanthus, and certainly extends fur- ther nortli ; and the food it stores up as provision for its young consists of small Cumdios. N 3 182 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. (159.) ^Ve enter the group of Vespidce by means of Ceraniius. This group appears to contain a well- defined assemblage of insects, held together chiefly by its tongue, furnished at the apex with glands, and the lateral sweep of its prothorax. Other characters are common to the normal genera, such as to the folding of the superior Avings longitudinally and the reniform eyes ; but which are lost in some of the aberrant genera, such as Ceramius, Masaris, and Paragia. The Vespides re- solve themselves into solitary and social tribes, both ex- hibiting a great variety of structure, and many genera: we can only briefly notice the most conspicuous. The majority of the males of these insects have the antennee terminating in a recurved hook ; in others, this is re- placed by that portion curling round; and in others, there are no means of distinguishing it from the same organs of the female, but by the number of its articulations. The typical Synagris exhibits a large horn affixed to the base of the mandible of its male; and the same sex of another species has two large curved spines placed be- neath the second ventral segment. Abispa is apparently the largest of the solitary wasps, and comes from New Holland, whence we have yet seen no genuine Vespa, the place of which, Mr. MacLeay says.. is supplied by this Abispa, the type of which is the Vespa Ephippium of Fabricius, synonymous with the Ab. Australiana of MacL.: the genus appears to consist of several species. The resembling and numerous Rhynchium is very widely distributed, as is also Odynerus, which is nearly related to it. Eumenes, a solitary and numerous genus, con- sists of large and usually gaily coloured insects ; it has a very long petiole and pyrifoim abdomen. Zethus has a long and exceedingly slender petiole. There is but a slight distinction between Eumenes and some of the exotic social genera, such as Epipona and other closely allied insects. The distinction consists chiefly in the form of the mandibles, which in Eumenes are very elongate, slender, and forcipate ; whereas in the social kinds they are more robust and ddated, and denticu- ECONOMY OF THE VESPIDjE. 183 lated at the extremity. This structure is required to enable them to collect and manufacture the material of which their densely populated nests are constructed, and which are protected by a covering thicker than, but closely resembling, coarse vellum or card-board, which is totally impervious to the vicissitudes of the weather. Within this, the cells are affixed to the un- der side of horizontal or downwardly curved and parallel layers, which are sometimes formed of a substance similar to the external envelope, but frequently less substantial. Others form their nests of a kind of pale clay intermixed with small particles of the fibre of straw : these nests are of various forms ; some conical, with truncated extremities ; others rounded, generally ventricose, but sometimes with their sides parallel ; but the envelope is always in a continuous sheet, whereby they differ from the genus Veupa itself, the envelope of which consists of a succession of layers placed in superposition, that which is most external being the last finished. They are variously situated according to specific pecu- liarities ; sometimes high on trees, or upon low shrubs near the ground. Reaumur has described all the pecu- liarities of several of these nests ; and we are in expect- ation of having a memoir upon them by Mr. White, who, having all the ample materials at his command which the British Museum affords, will have every op- portunity of duly treating the subject, which is one of considerable interest. It has long been known that a species of wasp, the Vespa Lecheguana, collects honey in store within its nest. This appeared at fkst so start- ling a fact that naturalists would not credit it, until it became confirmed by the testimony of a duly qua- lified scientific observer, Geoffrey de St. Hilaire, who brought with him to Europe specimens of the in- sect, as well as of their nest and its contents. The insect itself is identical with the Brachygastra* analis of * The name Brachygaster having been applied, many years ago, by Leach to the Evaniaminuta Oliv., it is requisite to change the name of the present genus: we therefore propose in lieu of it, Nectari.na, N 4 184 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OP INSECTS. Perty. We were, therefore, not so much surprised the other day, at finding, upon the section being made of a large nest at the British Museum, that all the inner cells of the intermediate layers were filled with a store of honey. The inhabitant of this nest is a small wasp, its first segment forming a long eumeniform petiole ; and it is entirely of a deep black, excepting only its scutel- lum, and post-dorsolum, which are of a bright yellow. This insect, accordingly, differs considerably from the Fespa Lecheguana, in which the first segment is very short, the second exceedingly large and globose, en- closing within it the succeeding segments. The cells wherein this honey is deposited are, of course, of the usual papyraceous material of Avhich wasps' cells are formed ; for it is not to be supposed that, because these insects collect honey, they also necessarily secrete wax, for they have no organ whereby the pollen could be collected, and whence, by feeding upon it, wax is se- creted ; whereas the honey, as in the bees, is congested in their stomachs, and, when it has undergone its proper process, it is regurgitated into the cells which receive it. Polistes, a social genus of extensive distribution, but composing very small communities, forms an exposed nest, which consists of a layer of cells attached by a peduncle to either a plant, tree, or wall. It is strange that the genus Vespa, which contains the largest and most robust of the social wasps, should form nests of a much more delicate and fragile substance than any of the others. These, as in the others, consist of a suc- cession of parallel and horizontal layers, covered over with a series of envelopes, which give a perfect nest very much of the appearance of a reversed close cabbage. All of these insects are of a courageous character, bold in the resentment of an injury, and which they will not allow to pass with impunity ; and their sting, as is well known, inflicts severe pain. There appear to be three different forms of aberrant Vespidce, each of which have but two silbmarginal cells. In the Masarides, which are distinguished by their short THE ICHNEUMONIDES. 185 knobbed antennae, the eyes are reniform, and the wings Ibid longitudinally : this latter character is lost in Ce- ramius; and in a species we possess from New Holland, the eyes become ovate : and in the genus Paragia Shkd., which is so like a true Vespa as to be easily mistaken for one until closely examined, the wings are never folded, and the eyes are ovate ; but it has the glandular tongue, peculiar prothorax, and pulvillulated under side of the tarsal joints, found in Vespa; whence we have inferred that it may possibly be the representative of Vespa in New Holland. But, if social, the communities will scarcely be large, as but two specimens, each a distinct species, have yet come under our observation; the second differing from the first, formerly described, in being spotted with white. (16'0.) The IcHNEUMONiDES constitute the next group of the circle of the Hymenoptera. These, as we before remarked, are all parasites, and they form the most nu- merous division of the order. Amongst them we observe, in their lower divisions, a departure from the typical neuration of the wings; these organs in many becoming entirely destitute of those distinguishing characters. Among the Chalcidites we also detect a further depar- ture from the normal, and all but universal, pentamerous structure in the tarsi of the Hymenoptera. This group offers, besides, considerable differences of form, the most conspicuous peculiarities of which we shall notice, as it evinces itself in the larger divisions. The tribe of Ich- neumones are distinguished from all the rest by the con- fluence of the second discoidal and first submarginal cells of the superior wings ; and where there is an in- tervenient submarginal cell, by that being very small : they also have always two recurrent nerves, and they present varieties of form which we will -apidly survey. 1st. The IchneumonidcB proper have the body elongate, ovate, and depressed ; with the ovipositor, which in the whole of this group supplants the sting, not, or scarcely, exserted. It is in this family that the splendid exotic Joppa occurs, which in one sex has the antennae sud- 186 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. denly dilated at its apex, and compressed. 2dly. Tlie Tryphonidce, in which the abdomen is generally clavated, and either subsessile or petiolated, with also a scarcely exserted ovipositor. Two species, the Tryphon vari- tarsus and pinguis, carry their eggs attached beneath the apex of the venter. Sdly. In the CryptidcB, the ab- domen is always petiolated, and the ovipositor exserted, and usually as long as the body. It is in this family that the genus Pesomachus occurs, all of which are ap- terous. 4thly. The PimpUdce succeed ; and in these the abdomen is subsessile and depressed, and usually very elongate, and with an elongated ovipositor, parti- cularly conspicuous in the typical genera Pimpla and Jihyssa; and Glypta exhibits its abdomen marked above on each segment with two convergent depressions. Eu- ceros, in this family, exhibits, like Joppa in the Ichneu- monides, a suddenly compressed enlargement of the antennae. In the 5th family, the OphionidcB, the ab- domen is laterally compressed, and shaped like a scimitar, especially in the typical genera. In Pristomerus, in this family, the femora are armed beneath with long spines, — a structure found also in Odontomerus, in the next family, the 6th, or Xorididce, which are chiefly distinguished by their globose heads. This tribe is suc- ceeded by the Ichneumones adsciti, or Bracones. These are distinguishable from the former, by having but one recurrent nervure, and by the second submarginal cell, when extant, being frequently larger than the first. These have been separated into two primary divisions, according to the structure of the mandibles : into, 1st, the Endodontees, in which these organs close as usual; and, 2dly, the Exodontees, in which they are apparentiy distorted, curving outwards when closed, and never meet- ing. The first division have been subdivided into Po- lymorphi, consisting, as their name implies, of insects of a variety of forms, and which seem a convenient recep- tacle for such as will not associate with the other sub- divisions ; and here Streblocera is conspicuous for its remarkably distorted antenns. The second division is THE CHALCIDITKS. 187 the Cryptogastri, in which the external integument of the abdomen is not usually separated into distinct segments, but consists of one entire piece. Sd, the Areolarii, which have a small second submarginal cell, and in the typical genus the mouth is produced into a proboscis ; and, lastly, the Cyclostomi, in which the clypeus has a deep excision, which, when the mandibles are closed, give it the appearance of a circular cavity. The Exodontees we have above sufficiently characterised. They form a very small assemblage of genera, but amongst which Chasmodon is remarkable for being ap- terous, and Alysia is the type. Throughout both these large divisions of the Ichneumonides, the normal and abnormal, we are acquainted with very many exotic forms which have not yet been characterised. It is, doubtlessly, contiguous to these groups that the eccentric and extraordinary family Evaniadre, comprising within it Aulacus a; id Fcenus, are to be inserted. Somewhere in this vicinity, also, those anomalous forms, Stephanus and Peleciiius, must, of course, come ; and in a proxi- mate situation to the Adsciti must, we expect, be the place for Trigonalis, of which a second form has cowie under our notice. But time and subsequent discoveries will determine these points. (161.) We now enter upon the large group of Chal- ciDiTES, which, in the majority, are minute insects. They comprise an enormous host, the most of which are splendid little creatures gaudily arrayed in the most brilliant metallic colours. It is in this country chiefly that attention has been paid to them, and we must be grateful to Mr. Walker for his elaborate investigation of the tribe. The more typical forms are the least me- tallic, and are distinguished by their enlarged and elon- gated posterior femora. Leucospis is singular for the recurving of its ovipositor over the abdomen, and from resembing the Vespidce in the superior wings being lon- gitudinally folded. The group exhibits, besides, many peculiarities — not tlse least of which is the reduced number of the joints of the tarsi in the Eulophi; and 188 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. the whole of them have but an obsolete neuration of the wings. We have already referred to the remarkable Thoracnntha. Our space admits of no more than alluding to the Proctotrupidcp, and the interesting genera they include; and, among others, the ant-like form of Gona- topus, with its extraordinarily chelated anterior tarsi; Inostemma, with its recurved abdominal spine ; and the elegant little Mymar, with its pedunculated and beau- tifully ciliated wings. (162.) We must spare a few words for the Chrysi- didce, which present the only instance throughout the Hymcnoptera of a tubuliferous ovipositor: their bodies, also, are formed in a singular manner, being more or less fornicate; and their abdominal segments are more or less reduced in number, from what we observe else- where ; and we are acquainted with an African species in which only tAvo are apparent. Parnopes, of which we know three species, presents a sexual difference in the number of these segments, the male having one more than the female. 1 1 has also an elongated rostrum, like Bembex, upon which it is parasitical. These insects are all richly metallic, and they are all parasites; and amongst them Cleptes appears to lead off to Meria in the circle of the fossorial aculeates. (163.) The remainder of the Hymenoptera are all, in their larva state, vegetable feeders. The Cynipsidce, or gall flies, form a marked and distinct group, although of but limited extent. Their young are reared within the galls which the parent insect produces by the punc- ture it makes upon the different parts of plants : the juice it instils, and what is secreted by the larva, causes the plant to throw out excrescences, which all differ ac- cording to the species which excites them. We cannot here go into their particulars. This group seems to pass, by means of Oryssus, through the Siricidce, into our last large group, the aberrant Tenthredines. The preceding have all been internal feeders in their larva state ; the Siricidce feeding within trees generally of the &t tribe. They are large and conspicuous insects, and THE TENTHREDINES. 1 Sj) present a formidable appearance with their exserted ovi- positor. The majority of the larvae of the Tenthredines, however, feed externally upon the leaves of plants, re- sembling much the caterpillars of the Lepidoptera ; and, in some cases, they are very destructive to our crops, — instanced in the devastation among turnips, caused by what is technically called the blacks, which is the larva of Atha/ia centifolia. Some of these insects show an in- direct connection with the Cynipsidce, for they form and reside in galls ; but the paramount distinction of the Tenthredines, from all the rest of the Hymenoptera, consists in their possessing, in lieu of an ovipositor, a serrated apparatus formed of two parallel plates, and retractile, when not in use, within a sheath at the apex of the abdomen. When in use, they have an alternate motion, whereby their serrated edge perforates the ve- getable substance to which it is applied, with a longi- tudinal incision, wherein they deposit their eggs. The bodies of these insects are always sessile, and generally robust. Their first division, with knobbed antennae, the CimbicidcB, do not possess the emarginated spine at the apex of the anterior tibiae, which corresponds with a similar excision in the basal joint of the tarsus, and with which the rest of the Hymenoptera cleanse their antenna; : in lieu of this, this division has two spurs at the apex of that limb. Many of the species of this group possess also a couple of articulated spurs, placed half way up the tibia : the apex of all these spurs, and the underside of their tarsi, are very frequently also vesi- cular : and, when we take into consideration the greater expansion of their wings, and its more elaborate reticu- lation, and view in conjunction their pedated larvae, we shall no longer cause surjirise at considering them aberrant. The more remarkable genera are, Pergu, which is exclusively from New Holland, and which broods over its young like a hen over her chickens ; Schizoeerits, with its furcated antennte ; Lophyrus and Pterygophorus, which have those organs elegantly pec- tinated in their males; Tarpa and Lyda, with their 1 190 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. enormous heads, and beautifully coloured bodies. Prox imate to this group, — but where is doubtful, — should be placed the interesting but perplexing genus Xyela Dalm. The abnormal structure in the neuration of its wings, its singular antennae, with their third joint very much elongated, and its lengthy exserted ovipositor, tend in combination to perplex us, but it appears to be probably the transition from the securiform ovipositor to the valvular one. Having thus finished our rapid survey of the Hymenoptera, Ave can only regret that we could not spare more room for the investigation of so interesting an order. All that we have been able to do in this limited space has been to notice the most remarkable forms, and loosely generalise their most striking peculiarities ; and, in doing so, we have pre- ferred dwelling upon those groups which offered the most extensive interest. [(142 — 163.) W. E. Sh.] CHAP. V. THE COLEOPTERA. ON THE COLEOPTERA GENERALLY. (164.) The coleopterous order of insects is composed entirely of those which, in popular language, are called Beetles ; that is, of insects covered by a hard crust or shell analogous to that of the tortoise, and which, m both, protects the soft parts of the body from external injury. This is manifestly a wise and a merciful pro- vision for their safety, because these insects are not only the most terrestrial of all others of the Ptilota, but they are also the most imperfect fliers. From these circumstances, it follows that the Coleoptera are more exposed to injury than are any of this class; but, to counterbalance these disadvantages, and to give them a defence which no others enjoy. Nature has clothed them FLIGHT OF THE COLEOPTEBA. 191 in a complete suit of natural armour ; diversified, indeed, in the most astonishing manner, according to the differ- ent tribes and families, but adapted, with infinite skilly to the great object of their preservation. A beetle, in fact, is an insect cased in armour of proof. Let us take a chafer, for instance, or one of those dors, whose ** drowsy hum " breaks the stillness of a summer's eve, and examine it closely ; with what admirable precision does all the parts of its armour join and fit into each other! It will be almost impossible, in fact, to insert the head of a pin between any of the joints ; and yet the insect moves about without the slightest embarrassment. Not only is every joint, the most minute, either of the an- tennas or the palpi, completely cased, but even the eyes are often defended in the same manner. This remark- able structure, joined to the circumstance of the wings being protected by two of these pieces, is sufficient to characterise the insects now before us. It may be fur- ther remarked, that the name of the order, devised by Aristotle (^koXeoc, -a-Tepor), happily alludes to the wings being protected or covered by a sheath. (]6"5.) The power of flight enjoyed by coleopterous insects, as before remarked, is much more limited than in any other of the Ptilota; while the Lepidoptera soar in mid air, and use their feet only as rests to support the body: and, while the Hymenoptera transport themselves by flight alone, a coleopterous insect appears to use the limited power of its wings as a last resource, or only upon great emergency. Touch a beetle, and, instead of spreading his wings, he either counterfeits death, or he quickens his pace ; but do the same to a moth, a bee, or nearly any other winged insect, and he flies away in a mo- ment. Flight, among the Coleoptera, appears, in short, a subordinate faculty. A casual observer would not suspect that a beetle had wings; for they are completely hidden by the two convex plates, or elytra, beneath which they lie folded, first longitudinally, and then transversely. These members, among all the other Pti~ lota, are four ; but in these insects they are only two in 192 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OP INSECTS. number ; their cases, or covers, occupying the situation of the larger or superior wings of the other orders. Every thing, in short, points out to us that the Colen- ptera, in regard io flight, are the most imperfect of four- winged insects ; and it therefore follows that they are the most aberrant. (166.) On the other hand, when we look to the strength and structure of their legs, we perceive that the defi- ciency o? flight has been amply made up to them in the power of walking. No insects run with such swiftness, or retain their hold with so much security. The whole race of predaceous beetles (^Predatores) are remarkable for their swiftness, — a quality which seems to be one of their typical perfections. The tiger beetles (^Cicindeli- d(B) fully illustrate this fact ; and every one may have witnessed the rapidity with which the small shining Carabidce course along the footpaths of our fields on a bright spring day. How suddenly again do the water beetles (Dytiscidce) dart down to the bottom of a pool, by the aid of their powerful oar-like legs. In those fa- milies, again, which live among foliage, the same strength of foot, and tenacity of grasp, is equally ap- parent. Whoever has handled a chafer (Melolontha vulgaris Linn.) knows how difficult it is to take the in- sect from the leaf or spray to which, with its long and acutely hooked claws, it tenaciously holds. So admir- ably, indeed, are the feet of arboreal beetles constructed for grasping, that they will cling to the naked hand with as much ease as to a leaf or a twig. The Coleoptera, in short, seem conscious of their superiority in this re- spect ; for, upon all occasions of attack, there are very few which do not depend more upon their feet for es- caping harm than upon their wings. These latter mem- bers, however, are of great and essential use ; though not employed for removing to every short distance, they are always used upon long excursions. ^V^hen the food upon one tree is exhausted, or the flowers of one plant have been visited, a coleopterous insect crawls to the edge of a slight eminence, and, after a moment's consi- NUSlERICAIi EXTENT OF THE COLEOPTERA. IpS deration, begins to throw up his elytra, expands his wings, and slowly and steadily mounts into the air. Some few, indeed, of the predaceous tribe, particularly the Cicindelidce, increase the natural speed of their course by alternately flying and running ; while others, slow in their motions, counterfeit death, and seem to fall to the ground : this latter, however, is usually but a second deception ; for these crafty little creatures generally con- trive, by means of their hooked claws, to grasp hold of a leaf, or spray, in their fall, and thus save themselves the toil of again ascending to their former station, when the cause of alarm has subsided : these latter habits be- long to the greatest part of the Curculionidce, or snout beetles — a family containing several thousands of species. All these circumstances, connected with the use of the feet, lead us to infer that the Coleoptera, as a whole, is the most ambulating among the Ptilota, and hence pe- culiarly deserve the name of terrestrial insects. (167.) The beetles are, perhaps, the most numerous of all the orders, M. Latreille expresses an opinion, that there are probably not fewer than twenty-five thousand I already existing in European cabinets ; and this number, I great as it is, is perhaps not more than one third, or at I most one half, of those yet to be discovered. When we ! consider that each species of this immense assemblage j has its own peculiar economy, and its especial task to i perform, in the great scheme of creation, the mind is i scarcely able to conceive how the form and structure of Ij fifty thousand beetles can be so varied, that no two are (| alike ; still more impossible is it to imagine those deli- 'A cate shades of difference in their habits and economy, I which experience has shown invariably to accompany a (i difference of species. We should remember, also, that [i this vast multitude all belong but to one order of insects ; K which order forms but a small portion of the countless Y\ myriads of animated beings, which live and move, and do the work of Him who made them. The astonishing variety of differently formed creatures which swarm o 194) NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. upon the earth, strikes the mind of every reflecting man ; although the number of those which he has seen, are but as a unit to the thousands which he has not seen. This interminable diversity of differently formed agents seems, in part, to be explained by one of the fundamental laws of nature, by which it is ordained that the same effect shall be produced by different means and different agents. This truth is too apparent to need illustration, and a slight notice on the economy of the order will confirm the fact. (168.) In regard to the food of the Coleopiera, we find them devouring every thing — each confining itself to some peculiar substance ; but if there is any one de- scription of nourishment more especially assigned to beetles, it appears to be that derived from living and decayed vegetable matter, but particularly such as is of a hard and solid texture. The great family of Capricorne-i, or Capricorn beetles, not only feed, in their grub state, on the pith, fibres, and internal substance of trees, but many actually saw off, with their strong jaws, the ex- terior branches, as if to hasten the removal of the de- caying tree. Thousands of a more puny race (^Bostrichi), unable to penetrate the solid wood, take up their resi- dence in the bark, which they perforate in all directions, so that the elements soon effect decomposition, or thus prepare caverns of shelter for other tribes : many, again, have a different office assigned them ; their business is to loosen the external bark from the internal wood ; and, accordingly, they are only found in such situations. These habits, so essential to facilitate the removal of su- perabundant vegetation, are almost peculiar to coleopte- rous insects. But foliage is a more abundant nutriment than wood ; and hence we find that thousands and tens of thousands of the smaller tribes live entirely upon the leaves of trees and plants. Flowers appear assigned more particularly to the Hymenoptera, the Lepidoptera, and (he Diptera ; but several families of beetles are known to partake of this delicate food, and their structure is HABITS OF THE COLEOPTERA, 195 accordingly fashioned for this purpose : of these, we need only mention the petalocerous or lamellicorn beetles, of which our green rose chafer (Ce^onm aurata) is a beau- tiful example. The Curculionidce, a large and very sin- gularly shaped family, live upon the internal juices of vegetables, without encasing themselves in the substance from which they draw their nourishment. All these, however diversified their operations, are phytophagous, or feeders upon vegetables ; but, as in every natural group there is a type of evil, or in other words, a pecu- liar division whose habits are rapacious, cruel, and blood- thirsty, so we find, in the order before us, one tribe answering to this description. The predaceous beetles live entirely upon other insects, which they pursue and capture in a living state, or devour when hastening to decay. By far the greater part of these lions and tigers of the beetle world roam about the ground, " seeking whom they may devour," and are hence called Geodephagous. Some few, as the Dytiscidee, habitually live in fresh water; from which circumstance they have been named Hydrodephagous. It seems, indeed, certain, that a portion of nearly every substance in the animal and vegetable world is assigned as food to coleopterous insects ; for not only do they feed upon such things as are produced naturally, but they evince a decided relish for such as are artificially prepared by man. Those fa- milies of the predaceous' beetles, which are furthest re- moved from the perfection of their tribe, greedily devour bacon, lard, cheese, and other stores of our kitchen : some show a partiality for leather, even after it has been prepared by the tanner and manufactured by the book- binder. This is, perhaps, the last indication of the car- nivorous habit ; and, as natural transitions are always gradual, we find that many of these very insects feed on I other substances wholly vegetable. (l69). The structure of beetles is in every way adapted to the various functions we have just enumerated. As their food is of a much more solid nature than that 0 2 196 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. assigned to any other order, we find that they have the strongest and the most complicated jaws, or organs of mastication ; thus showing another great departure from the typical structure of the PtUota. They are, in short, of all insects, the most perfect masticators ; and had Nature really divided the insect world into two primary groups (^Mandibulnta and Hauatel/atn), as some have imagined, the Coleoptera would stand at the head of the former. ' Their actions and habits require great mus- cular power, and they are consequently endowed with a degree of strength perfectly surprising for creatures so small. If any of our readers wish to verify this fact, let him confine a chafer, or any other beetle, in his clenched hand for a few minutes, and it is ten to one but that the little prisoner, by main force, will effect his escape between the fingers, or, by striking the spines of his legs against the skin, oblige his tormentor to open his hand. Beetles have no stings; but some bite furiously and effectually with their upper jaws, which are pointed at the tips, and serrated or toothed inside: with these they seize their food; which is then masti- cated by the help of a pair of under jaws {majcillce), and the upper lip {Jabruvi), which protects the other organs. The situation of all these is analogous to those in the mouth of a vertebrate animal ; and they are accompanied by the feelers {palpi), which are either two or four. (170.) We have said that coleopterous insects are known by the two elytra, or sheaths, which cover the wings and body, and which meet in a straight suture down the back ; but if every insect in the whole order really exhibited this character. Nature would then have made a sudden halt, and would have passed, by an ab- rupt transition, from a bee to a beetle, or from the Co- leoptera to the Neuroptera. On this, as on every other occasion, the chain of affinity is therefore graduated, and one order of beings is not suffered to stand isolated and unconnected. Hence it is, that, at the confines of 3 THK COLEOPTERA ABERHANT. 197 this order, we find the coleopterous structure so modi- fied, that some of its distinguishing characteristics begin to disappear. Thus, in the Malacodermi, or soft Coleo- ptera, the wing-cases, as the name of the tribe implies, are so thin as to be pliable. In the genus Meloe, and several others, they are so small as scarcely to cover one half of the body, nor do they form a straight suture : others, having their wing-cases perfect, are destitute of wings. In Buprestis, again, these latter members are so short as not to require a transverse fold ; while the females of the glowworms have not the least vestige either of wings or sheaths. It is by these deviations, — few, indeed, in comparison to the bulk of the order, but definitelyand strongly marked, — that the graduated scale of nature is preserved in harmony, and the symbols of the animal world are shown. All these deviations either show the passage to the Hymenoptera on one side, or to the Neuroptera on the other ; or they will evince clear and strongly marked types of analogy, by which the other orders of the Annulosa and the Vertebrata are represented. (171.) Having now stated the leading distinctions of the Coleoptera as an order, and touched upon those par- ticular functions they appear intended to perform, we may inquire what other tribes in the animal creation these insects are intended to represent, or, in other words, what are their true analogies in the scale of animal life. If, in the class of Ptilota, we find an order agreeing with the rest in most of their characters, yet possessing only two effective wings, instead of four, we cannot hesitate in pronouncing it the most aberrant, or least typical, division of its class. Now, this is pre- cisely the station in nature which the Coleoptera appear to hold. Hence it follows, that they should represent aU of the most aberrant groups in the animal kingdom. This is not merely a theoretical conclusion, but, as we shall subsequently show, is the result of analysis. We have said that the Coleoptera, in their external aspect, o 3 198 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. have a greater resemblance to the tortoises than to any other vertebrate animals ; it must follow, therefore, if this anak)gy is not a mere fancy, tliat, on the circle of Ptilota (of which this order forms a part) being comjiared with that of the Reptilia, the Coleoptera and the Chelonia stand opposite to, and represent, each other: this they accordingly do, as seen in the following table: — Analogies of the Ptilota and the Reptilia. OrieKot Reptilia. Serpents. Orders of the Ptilota. Lepidoptera. Hemiptera. HvMEJiOPTERA. Coleoptera. Neuroptera. 1. Typical. Ophioes. 2. Sub-typical. Saures. 3. Aberrant. CHAMffiLIONES. Chelonia. Elaniosauri. Lizards. ChamelionS' Tortoises. Fish Lizards. The fact, therefore, of the beetles being really in- tended by Nature to represent the tortoises among winged insects, may be safely inferred, because these two groups stand opposite to each other in their re- spective series; which series, it must be remembered, being founded upon affinity, is entirely independent of all analogous considerations. (172.) Let us now make another comparison. Every entomologist knows that the Coleoptera are the most gnawing of all insects: they have the strongest jaws; and both in the larva and perfect state, thousands employ these organs in gnawing solid woods. Where; therefore, do we find, among vertebrate animals, a si- milar faculty displayed.? Obviously in the order Glires, or mice-Uke quadrupeds, named by ]\I. Cuvier, from this very circumstance. Rodent ia. On placing the se- ries of quadrupeds, therefore, opposite to that of the Ptilota, we find these two particular groups come into parallel relations. ANALOGIES OF THE COLEOPTEBA. 199 Analogies of the Coleoptera to the Orders of Qua- drupeds. Orders of the Ptitota. Analogies. Orders of the Mammalia. Lepidoptera. Typical. QuADRtniANA CuV. Hemiptera. Raptorial. Feh^. Htmenoppera. Social. Ungulata. Coleoptera. Gnawers. Glires. Neuroptera. Aquatic. Cetacea. (173.) It will be curious to see in what manner the armour-like covering of the Coleoptera is represented among other animals. The tortoises are covered with horny plates; and if we look among quadrupeds for a similar structure, we have the Indian ant-eaters, and the armadillos of the New World, both protected in pre- cisely the same manner. These latter animals are at the head of the tribe Edentata, which is the most aberrant division of the hoofed quadrupeds {Ungulata). By bringing these into comparison, we shall here see that the armadillos represent both the tortoises and the beetles, as we have formerly shown. * Analogies of the Coleoptera to Quadrupeds and Reptiles. Orders of the Ptilota. Orders of Reptiles. Tribes of the Ungulated Quadrupeds. Lepidoptera. Serpents. Euminantes. Hemiptera. Lizards. Solipedes. Hymenoptera. Chamtelions. Pachydermata, Coleoptera. Tortoises. Edentata. Keuroptera. Fish Lizards. Anoplotheres. (ly*.) Our former volumes will have sufficiently es- tablished the different circles of the vertebrate animals with which we have now compared the orders of the * Classification of Quadrupeds, p. 180. 0 4 200 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. Ptilota, and to those we must refer the reader who is desirous of further details. It would be highly inter- esting, did our limits permit us to dwell upon all the analogies indicated in these tables; but our present bu- siness is with the order Co/eoptera, and to that only must our remarks be confined. It appears, then, that the three most striking peculiarities of these insects are explained by the most simple process of analogical rea- soning. They are covered with natural armour, because Nature intends them to represent the reptile tortoises, and the quadruped ant-eaters and armadillos : they have the strongest jaws of all perfect annulose animals, because they typify the most gnawing of all perfect qua- drupeds,— namely, the Glires ; and they have two real wings only, because they are the most imperfect ex- amples of the Ptilota. If these analogies are true, they may be extended to hundreds of groups : thus, the Vermes are the most tough-skinned class of the Annu- losa, and are the most aberrant of all the annu- lose divisions: just so are Coleoptera among winged insects. (175.) The station of the coleopterous order is con- sequently between those of the Hymenoptera and the Neuroptera. This conclusion, verified in the foregoing tables, reconciles many of the contradictory opinions entertained by some of our first entomologists. Mr. MacLeay, for instance, has not failed to remark the close resemblance which many ants bear to the beetles; and yet it is probable that the true passage between the orders is made by means of the small parasitical ich- neumons and gaU-flies, forming our tribe Chalcides. Some of these have the thorax prolonged into a plate or spine, which extends the whole length of the body; so that they put on the very form of a Mordella. Among the many singular insects discovered by us in Brazil, is a species of this group, which is so completely disguised in this way, that most persons would consider it, at first sight, as a new sub-genus of Mordella, having the antennae pectinated. On the other hand. Nature COMPONENT DIVISIONS OF THE COLEOPTERA. 201 leaves the Coleoptera for the Neuroptera, by means of the earwigs [Foificulidce), — a passage so apparent, that it has been recognised by almost every writer since the days of LinnEUs. (176-) Having now sufficiently treated of the Coleo- ptera as an order, we may look to its component parts. On examining the structure of the feet of these insects, several remarkable differences will be perceived. In some, the tarsi, which may be said to represent the human finger, consist of four distinct cylindrical joints, tenninated by a forked hook or claws ; while in others, these joints, apparently*, are only three or two, and, instead of being rounded and simple, are flattened, and two-lobed. Now, it is obvious that insects which belong to the first of these groups, — that is, having the tarsus altogether composed of five distinct joints, — are the most perfect in the construction of their feet ; just as insessorial birds (^Insessores), and four-handed quadrupeds (Quadrumana), are the most perfect of their respective classes. AU the great systematists of the present day tacitly concur in this opinion, by placing the pentamerous, or five-jointed beetles, at the head of their systems. Yet among these, again, we find two very different races; — one composed of insects living upon vegetables ; while the other comprehends all such as subsist by pursuing and devouring their weaker brethren, just as do the feline tribe of quadrupeds, or the falcons among birds. Here, then, we see the two great divisions of the pentamerous Coleoptera. The first, pre- eminently typical, herbivorous, and harmless, constitute the tribe of Lamellicornes : so called from the shape of their antennae, which are short, clavate, and lamellar. The second, which is the sub-typical tribe, are predaceous, or live upon animal substances : these form our tribe of Predatores; and have their antennae longer, filiform, and composed of lengthened joints. All other Coleoptera » We say apparently, because there is reason to think that most insects have the full number, but that some are in a rudimentary state. 202 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. come under the aberrant division of the order, composed of those tribes whose tarsi have almost always less than five joints, all of which, excepting the last, are gene- rally flattened and lobed. Among these, again, we find three natural subdivisions or tribes. The first are the Capricornes, or lignivorous beetles; the most striking character of the perfect insect being the great length of their antennas, which are unusually robust, and gene- rally curved, like those of goat or sheep. The second tribe are the Malacodermes, or soft-winged beetles; whose elytrae are soft, flexible, and often very short. The third and last we shall name the Monilicornes: they are to be known by a short, thick, oval, or hemi- spherical body, with the antennae moniliform. Such are the most prominent or typical distinctions of the five great tribes of coleopterous insects, under which we shall arrange the whole order. Before, however, we proceed to enter more fully into details, it may be as well to throw these characters into a tabular form, and designate the groups in a more scientific manner. Primary Divisions and Analogies of the Order COLEOPTERA. Tribes of the t, ■ , ^.i. . Orders of the Coteoptera. typical Characters. Ttilola 1. Typical. Lamellicornes. f Tarsi five-jointed; antennae claOLEPiDOPTERA.' t vate ; herbivorous. J Papitio. 2. Sub-typical. Fredatores. f Tarsi five-jointed; antennae fili- 7 Hemiptera. I form; carnivorous. j Pentatoma'Latr. 3. Aberrant, Malacodermes. Body particularly soft. f ^^LtbeUiUa'^' AIoNiLlcoRNES f Body short, ovate, frequently hid. 7 Coleoptera. I den beneath the shell. J Cassida. Capricornes C Antennae very long; larva apod, 7 Hymenopteha. t enclosed in other substances. J Apis Ichneumon. (1770 The Monilicornes, which include the tor- toise and ladybird beetles (or the genera Cassida and THE MONILICORNES. 203 Coccinella of Linnaeus), are more protected than any others, by that hard covering which is peculiar to the Coleoptera. It might, therefore, be supposed that they should stand at the head of the order ; but this infer- ence by no means follows. Superior perfection of structure is the only true and certain distinction of typical pre-eminence : this we consider as one of the first aphorisms in the Natural System ; for it is that which places the Quadrumana at the head of the Mam- malia, the Insessores as the type of birds, and the Ptilota as the first of the Annulosa : it is equally mani- fest in the least of Nature's groups, as in the greatest ; for it is by this rule that the animal kingdom takes precedence both of the vegetable and the mineral. This perfection of structure in typical groups implies the possession of a greater number of faculties, and, there- fore, a more complicated organisation, than is enjoyed by the rest ; but, in aberrant groups, this perfection is confined only to some one property, which is always accompanied by a diminution of others. Of this latter fact, a famihar example, out of hundreds which might be adduced, wUl suffice. The Scansores, or climbing order of birds, is an aberrant group : the perfection, therefore, of this group is confined to one particular quahty, — that of climbing; and this quality, being most conspicuous in the parrots and the woodpeckers, places these birds at the head of their own order. In like manner are we to judge of the rank of the moni- licorn beetles. That they may represent the Coleoptera, when the contents of the whole order are compared with the other Ptilota, Nature has developed in them one of the leading distinctions in a most extraordinary man- ner ; for, in the Cassidce, we find the members of the body concealed beneath the shield of the head and the wing-cases ; and they thus so closely resemble a che- lonian reptile, that, in all countries, they have acquired the name of tortoise beetles. Yet, notwithstanding this great developement of this one character, we find a pro- 204 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSIXTS. portionate diminution of others ; particularly in the feet, which have only four apparent joints ; and one of these, in a true neighbouring genus, Coccinella, is eva- nescent. We see, therefore, in both the instances here produced, an illustration of the same law. The scan- sorial birds, except in climbing, are as inferior to the perchers (Insessores) , in all other points of general organisation, just as the monilicorn beetles are inferior to the tribes of Lamellicornes and Predatores. (178.) Nothing is, perhaps, more instructive, or more interesting, than to trace the extraordinary man- ner in which the natural arrangement of one order of beings harmonises with another, from which, in point of general appearance, it appears, toto ccelo, to differ. Who would imagine, that, among coleopterous insects, we should find a perfect representation, not only of the leading groups of the Lepidoptera, but also of those of the diurnal butterflies ? Yet such is truly the case : the latter set of analogies, in fact, are dependent upon the former, as will be seen by the following comparison : — Analogies of the Coleoptera to the Lepidoptera. Tribes of the Coleoptera Lamellicornes. Predatores. Malacodermes. Monilicomes. Capricornes. Typical Characters. \. Typical. Antennae clavate. 2. Sub-typical. Antenns attenuated. 3. Aberrant. C Body, either in the larva or imago 1 X state, particularly soft. j f Larva vermiform, or oniscifonn ; 7 i leap entirely or partially. 5 Antennae greatly developed. Tribes of the Lepidoptera. Papiliones. Sphingides. Noctuides. Phalcenides. Bombycides. The soft-bodied Coleoptera thus find their repre- sentatives among the larvae of the Noctuides ; which. COLEOPTERA AND LKPIDOPTERA COMPARED. 205 as a whole, are the most soft and naked of all the 'epidopterous caterpillars. The looper moths, as they are called, or the Geometria of Linnaeus, are well known to move by a sort of leap ; and almost the only Co- leoptera, which really possess this property, belong to the Monilkornes , where we have the whole family of Halticidce, with their thickened thighs. The largest beetles are among the Capricornes ; and the largest Lepidoptera are types of the Bombycides. In both these groups^ also, we find the antennae more developed than in any other insects : in some of the Capricorn beetles, they are five times the length of the body; while, in the silk moths, or Bombycides, their structure is parti- cularly complicated. (179-) We must not be surprised, however, in sub- mitting a natural group to many and diversified tests, that some analogies are more remote than others ; and that others can be traced only in one stage of the insect, and not in another. To show this more clearly, as an inevitable consequence of general analogies, we shall next compare the tribes of the Coleoptera with the families of the Diurnes, or true butterflies. Analogies of the Coleoptera to the Diurnal Lepido- ptera. Tribes Families Tribes of the General Analogies. of tlie of the Coleoptera. Diurnes. Lepidoptera. L»MELLicoRNEs.[The most^perfcct in ee-jp^piii^,a^_ Papiuones. Predatores. P^.tre^gTh/"'"^"' ^"'iNymphalid^.Spm^GlDZs. Malacodermes. Body soft. Hesperida. Noctuides. MoNiLicoRNEs. Larva onisciform. Erycinida:. Phil^enides. Capricornes. Antennse very long. Satyridie. Bombycides. Every entomologist knows that the body of the Hes- perian caterpillars are so soft, and the skin so thin, that the vessels can be seen through it ; and that the insect 206 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. itself, being so little adapted to resist external injury, protects its body by artificial means, and lives concealed within a rolled leaf: the HesperidcB, in fact, are the soft-skinned butterflies, just as are the Malacodermes among the Coleoptera. The next analogy — or that between the Monilicornes and the ErycinidcB — is, perhaps, one of the strongest that can be found. The caterpillar of a Cassida, or tortoise beetle, so completely resembles that of an Erycinian butterfly that they might both be taken for examples of the same tribe of insects. Great developement of the appendages to the head invariably accompanies all those animals which represent the Capricorn beetles ; whether these appendages are horns, as in quadrupeds ; crests, as in birds ; or antennae, as in winged insects. Hence it is, that the antennae of the Satyridce, or wood butterflies, are longer in proportion to their body, than those of any other Lepidoptera in existence. Our own cabinet, peculiarly rich in this splendid tribe, enables us to state this fact with confidence; and the analogy receives still greater confirmation, by the larvje of these butterflies being provided, in almost every instance, with spines on their heads, or appendages to their tails. It thus appears that the arrangement we now propose, for the first leading tribes of the Coleoptera, is in perfect unison with that system upon which we have arranged the animal creation, throughout which it cannot be doubted that one uniform plan, perfect in all its parts, must prevail. THE LAMELLICOKNES. 207 CHAP. VI. coLEOPTERA, Continued. THE LAMELLICOKNES. (180.) We may now take a more particular survey of these tribes ; and endeavour to resolve these, also, into their respective families. The Lamellicornes, or beetles with clavate and lamellate antennse, and five- jointed tarsi, stand as the pre-eminent tribe of the coleopterous order : they may be further recognised by the compression of the tibiie, or shanks, which are more or less toothed on their exterior edge. The antennae are remarkably short ; and so much bent, either towards the middle (as in the Lucanidce), or at the club (as in Cetonia), that the two portions form an angle more or less acute. No general characters can be more definite ; and it is only in the most aberrant divisions that we find any material exceptions. The habits of all this tribe are herbivorous ; that is, they feed entirely upon vegetable matter, either in a green or decomposed state ; while, amid great diversity of form, size, and colour, we find some of the most splendid as well as the most bulky Coleoptera yet discovered. The Cetonia aurata, or the common rose beetle, may be taken as the type of the whole. A glance at this beautiful, although com- mon insect, will convey a better idea of the general shape of the lamellicorn beetles, than the most laboured description. As to their history and natural arrangement, we owe all that is of permanent v^lue to the admi- rable work of Mr. MacLeay. Assisted by his arrange- ment of a part of this tribe, but adhering to those general laws we have traced so extensively in other portions of the animal world, we shall now lay before the reader the result of our own researches in this most 208 NATURAL ARRAXGEMENT OF IXSECTS. interesting group of insects. It may be as well to mention, that the Lamellicornes compose the " Chi- lognathiform Stirps " of Mr. MacLeay, as detailed in the work above mentioned. (181.) The two families of Cetoniad^e and Scara- BJEivs., as it has long ago been demonstrated, compose the typical and sub-typical families of the lameOicorn beetles. They consequently possess, in their full deve- lopement, all the characters here assigned to the tribe. The CetoniadcF, from living on the fresh sap of plants, have been termed Thalerophagous* Their colours, in harmony with the delicacy and pureness of their food, with few exceptions, are elegantly varied, or uncommonly splendid. As a further distinction, Mr. MacLeay men- tions that the elytra do not, as in the ScarabcEidcB, en- tirely cover the abdomen : this, however, although a useful, is but a secondary, and very uncertain character; inasmuch as we are entirely ignorant how far this devi- ation of structure is connected with the habits of the insects in question. As the Cetoniadce feed upon living vegetables, and the Scarabceidce upon such as are de- composed, the student may naturally inquire how these distinctions are to be traced in the cabinet of the ento- mologist who may be altogether ignorant of this differ- ence.'' and what are the external characters which accom- pany such a dissimilarity of habit? These, at least, were the first questions that occurred to us, many years ago, upon commencing the study of the lamellicorn tribe. We cannot discover, however, in the valuable pages of the HorcB Entomologicce, any information which supplies this knowledge. Nevertheless, it may be safely stated, that Nature has marked these two families, in their ex- ternal structure, in as remarkable a manner as she has done in their economy. This difference is manifested * As this group, however, seems to correspond with such as we have termed families in other divisions of the animal kingdom, and as uniformity of nomenclature is so highly desirable in all branches, we shall on this, and all other occasions, take the family name from that division which is the most typical. See our remarks on the rank of groups, in Classification of Animals, p. 373. DISTINCTIONS OF CETONlADiK AND SCARABJEID^E. 209 in the construction of their tarsi. The CetoniadcB are arboreal beetles ; that is, living and moving among those trees, plants, and flowers, which are their natural food. Their feet are accordingly constructed for clinging to objects which afford them such an uncertain footing. The terminal joint of the tarsi, on which are the claws, is that in which the greatest strength is necessary ; and it is therefore invariably longer and stronger than any of the others. Hence these insects cling with the greatest pertinacity, frequently by only two or three of their feet, to any object they catch hold of. The more equal ar- ticulation, also, of all their legs, gives to these members a freedom of motion which is denied to all other of their affinities. In the genera Cetonia and Rutila (which, as being types of the family, possess this structure in the greatest perfection), the claw joint is sometimes as long as the total length of all the others ; and even in the more aberrant groups, the united length of all the tarsi is fully equal to that of the shank. Now, all these characters, in the Scarabceidce, are completely reversed. Hence it is, that the two families admit of the most simple, as well as natural, definition. The entomologist, ill short, has only to remember, that in the arboreal, or Thalerophagous Cetoniadce, the tarsi are as long, and generally longer, than the shank ; while in the terres- trial, or Saprophagous Scarabceidce, the tarsi are invari- ably much shorter than the shank : in other words, that they are long in one, and short in the other. Having now sufficiently defined the present family by its typical peculiarities, we may proceed to its next subordinate divisions, or sub-families. These, with but one excep- tion, we shall distribute according to the arrangement developed by Mr. MacLeay ; not that the groups them- selves have yet been studied with that precision which they require, but because, so far as we have verified this theory, we find it, with but one exception, to har- monise with the general plan upon which all the great divisions of the animal kingdom are founded. (182.) The five principal groups, or sub-families, p 210 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. of the CetoniadcB are as follows : — 1 . the CetonianoB, or floral beetles ; 2. the RutilinfP, or metallic beetles ; 3. the Jlegasomince, or homed beetles ; 4. the Me!o- lonthince, or tree beetles (chafers) ; and, 5. the Gla- phyrnKe, or wasp beetles. The error, as we conceive, which has caused the substitution of the Anoplognathidce (MacLeay) for the Megasomiiue (Sw.), will be sub- sequently noticed. It may safely be asserted, that the arrangement of this and the subsequent family is the only portion of systematic entomology which has been founded on an imperishable basis. Enlarged concep- tions, indeed, of the general laws of nature are fast gaining ground ; but it is not among thos«; who yet tread in the beaten path of isolated classifications, and dis- connected nomenclature. It is the rising generation of naturalists, who begin to study the philosophy of their science, and who, in a few years, will make a complete revolution in entomological science. The stream of ob- livion has already passed over the entomological systems we ourselves once cherished ; and the time is fast ap- proaching, when no system, whatever it may be, which is not founded on the general harmonies of nature, will be regarded by any but mere nomenclators. In this mighty revolution of zoological science, we venture to predict, that the arrangement of the typical Lamelli- cornes, above alluded to, will remain, in all its distin- guishing features, the same, — simply because it is natural. For this reason, we shall devote as much space as possible to the developement of these families. Be- sides, the theory of their arrangement is equally appli- cable to all other natural groups ; so that when once fully understood, the entomologist, in a great measure, will be prepared to investigate any other on the same principles. With this object, we shaU now briefly notice, in further detail, the sub-families of the Cctouiada ; giving to them those names which point out %vhat we consider their relative value with other groups. (183.) The Cetonian^, or floral beetles, on account of the very wide geographic surface over which they are THE CETONIAD^. 211 distributed, joined to other considerations, appear to be more typical than the sub-family Rutiliiice, whose limits are almost entirely restricted to the New "World. The CetoniancE, on the contrary, are common in Europe, Africa, Asia, and Australia. They are at once dis- tinguished by the membranaceous texture of the man- dibles and maxiUfe ; a structure which proves that these insects, in the perfect state, are intended to live on vegetable juices. The Cetonia Morio, and probably many others of the darker coloured species, regale on the sap which flows from the wounds of trees ; while the rose beetle (C. aurata), and its more brilliant com- panions, are only to be found on flowers.* Mr. INIac- Leay is of opinion that Trichius may with safety be regarded as a natural group in this division, although the larvae of these beetles live in putrescent wood. The Cetoniadce may be distinguished, anatomically, from the Glaphyridce (MacLeay), by having their labrum con cealed under the clypeus ; whereas these last have it ex- serted, and very prominent. The larvae live in the richest vegetable soils ; and the perfect insects, as before re- marked, are gaily and elegantly coloured, although rarely possessing that metallic brilliancy which belongs to the next sub-family. (184-.) Although we have just said that this family presents a less metallic appearance than the following, it must be applied only as regards its genera ; for many of the species, certainly, cannot be exceeded in beauty, and, indeed, vie with any in the resplendency of their decorations, especially in the genus Cetonia, as also in some of the GoUathi. Among the anomalies of form in this group, we may mention the cornuted thorax of Cetonia (Ischnostoma) cornuta Fab., which Mr. j\Iac- Leay considers as osculent between the two genera; besides which relation, we may observe that it points certainly very strongly to Pachycnemus, by its thickened posterior legs. A tuberculated thorax we also find in • Hor. Ent., 7*. F 2 212 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. Osmodermn Eremita, which is the largest European in- sect in the group ; and which emits, we are informed, when handled, a powerful scent of Russia leather.* A greatly produced clypeus is not an uncommon cha- racteristic, and is conspicuous in Goliathus, Ischnostoma, Inca, &c. : this is usually a falcated process, with basal ramifications, or it assumes the form of a cross ; it is, however, exclusively restricted to the male insect. The genus Cryptodus, which MacLeay originally placed among the TrogidcB, he has latterly been induced to move into this group, proximate to Cremastocheilus ; the habits of the latter of which, he says, from personal observation on the banks of the Delaware, are to fly, like Cicindrlce, over the sand which there (opposite Phi- ladelphia) lines the bank of that noble river. They are certainly not flower- frequenting insects ; and what they find in the sand to their taste, I do not know.f It thus appears not improbable, from the affinity of Cryptodus with this genus, and from the analogy of the structure of the mouth of Cryptodus to the Trogidce, that the habits of the latter genus may be identical with those of Cremastocheilus. The excessively flattened and broad form of Flatygenia (MacLeay) presents another re- markable aberration from the typical structure of the group, wherein also, we see a curvature of the legs, per- haps only in the male ; and in Campulipus (Kirby) this male characteristic increases so much, that the inter- mediate tibia is bent into an obtuse angle. The other most remarkable genera are Lepitrtjc, for its mimicking resemblance of that section of the gigantic Gotiathi to which the G. giganteus serves as type ; and Anisonyx, for its extreme hairiness, which makes it completely the bear among the Cetoniadce. It is a genus peculiar to the Cape of Good Hope. We have above alluded to the enormous developement of the posterior legs in Pachy- cnemus ; but we may here further remark, that they are, ^ * A circumstance very unusual in the lamellicom Coleoptera. •f- MacLeay's Illustrations of the Zoology of South Africa, " Annulosa." ♦to. Lond. 1838. p. 17. THE RUTILIN^. perhaps, quite as large in proportion, as those of Rep- sirnus among the Anoplognathidre, — a family distin- guished for that peculiarity. We can now only further notice the extraordinary abridgement of the elytra in Valgus, the females of which possess an elongate slender exserted ovipositor ; and the parallelism of Inca, in America, to the genus Goliathus in the Old World; but upon this last gigantic genus we shall have further occa- sion to say a few words below. \^W. E. Sh.] (185.) The Rutilince, in their general aspect, have much resemblance to the insects of the last division ; but their mandibles are not only, in most instances, prominent, but much stronger, while their texture is horny, and not membranaceous : this latter, as it has been observed, is " an obvious and easily seized character of separation ; " but it is one, unfortunately, which requires not only great anatomical skill in the detection, but inevitably leads to the mutilation and injury of the specimen. In our opinion, a more easy, and therefore a preferable, distinction can be drawn between the two groups, by attending to the structure of the feet. In the Cetoniance, the tarsi are comparatively slender, and the claw joint is always shorter than the length oc- cupied by the four preceding ones. In the Rutilince, on the contrary, the tarsi are remarkably thick, the basal articulations very short, and the claw joint so large and long as to be equal in length to all the others. We, of course, include the genus Anoplognathus in this definition of the Rutilince ; for, so intimately is it connected to this group, that even Mr. Mac Leay admits *'we shall experience no trifling difficulty in the at- tempt to separate them." The typical Anoplognathi are almost exclusively found in New Holland, and are among the most splendid metallic insects of this family, — shining with green and golden reflections, changeable in every position. We know little of their history ; but we have heard that the most common species, round Sydney, fly during the dusk of the evening. The Anoplognathi, indeed, have the mandibles concealed p 3 214 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. beneath the clypeus, and the tips of the maxillae more obtuse. But the general aspect of these insects^ and more especially the construction of their feet, are so much in unison with the lintilinrp, that they carry the appearance of belonging to the same natural division, rather than of being types of a distinct sub-family. This, at least, is the opinion acted upon in all the modern works wherein these insects are mentioned. True it is, that such opinions, unsupported by demonstration, can- not possess a paramount authority ; and it unfortu- nately happens, that every one of the sub-families of the Cetoniadce require to be analysed, their minor divisions or genera defined, and their analogies worked out. That there is, in many points of structure, a resem- blance between the Anophgnathi and the Dynastidce, cannot, for a moment, be questioned ; but this resem- blance, as w^e shall subsequently endeavour to demon- strate, is of a subordinate nature. (186.) The most conspicuous genera in this exceed- ingly elegant family are, in the first place, Chrysma, distinguished for its golden green vivacity, whence it has derived its name; and to which genus the celebrated Scarabceus 3Iacropus is to be referred as the male. This name Mr. Francillon applied to it, in consequence of its greatly thickened and elongated posterior legs ; thus exhibiting a strong analogy to the kangaroo, but certainly in developement only, and not in function, as the insect does not leap. This insect, wdiich was so long considered an inestimable treasure, has recently become comparatively common, from the importation of a great quantity from Mexico. The whole of this family is, however, distinguished by the enlargement of the posterior legs in the males, which is especially the case in Repsimus, Anoplognathus, and Chrysochlora. Anoplognathus, Mr. MacLeay surmises, may constitute, in its larva state, a considerable article of food to the barbaric natives of New Holland, where the type of it must occur in great profusion. Geniates, which has been referred to this family, we consider as belonging rather to the Melolonthidce ; and where, consequently^ "we THE MEGASOMIN^. 215 shall notice it. Macraspis and Chasmodia offer us, here, the greatest developement of the scutellum ob- servable among the Petalocera, and the large Peruvian Chrysophora Chrysochlora may vie with all in external beauty. It is of a deep rich coppery green, which takes a golden tinge upon the upper surface of the body, agreeably deadened by the innumerable punctures with which the insect is covered. Further, the very remarkable Heterosternus, which, divested of its an- tennae, upon a superficial glance, might pass for a Buprestis, and whence it has its specific name ; and the anomalous genus Hexodon — the country of which has only recently become known to be Madagascar — one metropolis of extraordinary forms. Three species we are now acquainted with, and they are found in tolerable plenty upon the sandy coasts of that island. [W. E. Sh.] (187.) The McgasomincB are the largest beetles of this family ; and, both from their size and shape, are in no danger of being confounded with either of the preceding. The species, comparatively, are few, — at least, of such as exhibit the typical characters. They are all natives of hot countries, chiefly those in the New World ; and, from what little is yet known of their economy, feed, in the larva state, within the hollows of decayed treesj and in putrescent wood. The perfect insects are clearly arboreal, for their tarsi are all constructed for clinging to vegetables : the articu- lations are cylindrical ; and the first joint, as in all the preceding divisions, is much shorter than the last. In nearly all these gigantic beetles, either the males only, or both the sexes, have singular horn-shaped processes, rising from the head and thorax, giving to them a very grotesque and even formidable appearance. In this respect, they so closely resemble the genuine Dynastidce, belonging to the corresponding sub-family of the Sca- rahceidcB, that, to this day, all entomologists have over- looked those positive distinctions manifested in the diflPerent construction of their tarsi. It may be further p 4> 2l6 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. remarked, that the colours of the Megasomince are sombre, being generally of a dull or livid green. (188.) This family is remarkably distinguished by, besides their gigantic bulk, the processes which almost universally, and with but rare exceptions, arm the head and thorax of their males. The use of these append- ages has not been ascertained, if use they have beyond the sexual distinction, which we may scarcely doubt. A similarity of structure in these frequently grotesque excrescences is but rarely found to be identical, even in cognate species ; and this circumstance has led to the investigation of the character of the trophi, where as remarkable differences have been discovered, as in their external and more obvious distinctions. These, conse- quently, have led to their subdivision into genera ; perhaps upon quite as good grounds for separation, as what are now so extensively adopted throughout the animal kingdom. Nature, in her variety, has always an object ; empty exhibition we should no where find, could we follow her into her laboratory, and there observe the recondite uses which mould form ; for she, like the ancient philosophy, has her esoteric and her exoteric doctrines ; and until we shaU have become the hierophants of her temple, the mysteries of the former will remain inexplicable to us. This family is still called Scarabeeus by the majority of Continental ento- mologists ; but the application of this name, Mr. MacLeay very consistently restricted to those insects which truly represented the Scarabs of the Ancients, the object of worship to the Egyptians. He then gave to the present the name of Dynastes, thus electing them RuLKRs of the insect world ; as it was customary for nations, before the sophistication of hereditary primo- geniture, to select their princes from their most gigantic and powerful compeers. To this name we have, how- ever, given a still further restriction, beyond what it receives by the separation of the following genera, and many others into which it has recently been divided. Xylotrupes, type Sc. Centaurus ; Golopha, type Sc. THE MELOLONTHIN^. 217 Claviger ; Megasoma, type Sc. ActcBon; Megaceras, type Sc. Chorinceus ; Chalcosoma, type Sc. Atlas ; Strategus, type Sc. Alceus ; Temnorynchus, type Sc. Coronafus, &c. &c. We may further notice the excessive elongation of the anterior tibisE and tarsi in the genus Eucheirus Kirby, the type of which is the Sc. longimanus, and the semi-metallic Agacephala with its deeply furcated head. [W. E. Sh.] (I89.) The Melolonthince, or tree beetles, gene- rally called chafers, appear to follow the last, whose lengthened and slender tarsi (so different from that of the Rutilmce and the Cetoniance) prepare us for the great developement of these members universal in the present group. Notwithstanding that a contrary opi- nion has been expressed, we consider the Melolontha vulgaris of Britain, or the chafer of the country people, as one of the true types, to which that of Serica is subordinate. The chief distinction of the Melo~ lonthincB MacL., is their very convex or sub-globose form, — " in which respect they exhibit an excellent parallel to the Trogidce." Great stress has been laid on these insects possessing a transverse suture, " which divides the clypeus into two parts, just before the eyes;" but as it is also admitted that this character is likewise common to the whole of the Anoplognathi, and the greatest part of the RutilincB, we do not perceive how it can be selected as any peculiar character of this group. So far as we have yet proceeded in our analysis, it appears to us that one of its most typical distinctions is found in the lengthy developement of the legs, — a structure admirably suited to the arboreal habits of the insects. The Melolonthinne, for the most part, are duU coloured, being dark brown, or assimilating to the colour of the earth. It is said that they mostly frequent sandy soils — probably in the larva state, for the beetles themselves, as it is well known, are invariably met with in trees : the structure of the feet, in short, is by no means adapted for walking upon an even surface ; hence the perfect insects are strictly arboreal; the tarsus is 218 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. longer than the shank, with the first joint scarcely half the length of the last. These characters, joined to the convexity and pubescence of their bodies, seem to afford the best external distinctions of the Melolonthince. Their food consists almost entirely of leaves ; and they occasionally appear, at uncertain intervals, in amazing swarms. It is, perhaps, one of the most widely distri- buted groups of the arboreal beetles ; since we have before us typical species from Africa, India, America, and Australia : they seem, however, to be more abun- dant in temperate than in tropical countries. The only form which we have yet seen, possessing a rudimentary horn on the thorax, is the genus Pachypus of Fabricius, which we have occasionally captured in Sicily : it is, perhaps, by this genus that the Melolonthince are united to the Megasomincp. (190.) It is a very remarkable circumstance, that a distinguishing feature of the entomology of Southern Africa is the hairy clothing of the majority of its contents. Of this we have a strong exemplification in this family, in Cephalotrichia Kirby, the type of which is Melolontha Alopex, in which all parts of the insect, excepting its elytra, are densely covered with very long down. The general aspect of these insects, both in form and colour, is dull and heavy, — instanced in the type Melolontha itself. Of course, exceptions occur ; and yet, notwithstanding this circumstance, they appear to have a compensation in the great beauty of the elegantly lamellated antennae in the majority of the males. The dilated tarsi are clothed beneath with hair in the genus Geniates, and which is a structure of very rare occurrence in the Petalocera ; it, however. Is found only in the male insect. Many Hoplice are beautifully enlivened with delicate metallic tints, arising from their dense clothing of scales ; and the little New Holland Diphucephalce are equally distinguished for their metallic brilliancy, which, however, is not of so fragile a nature as in the last, — it being the integument itself which is thus coloured. The British Serica is very delicate in texture ; and some i THE GLAPHYRIN^. 219 of the African species are singular for their globose form. We have already above alluded to the Ccelodera Dej. (^Pachypus') of Southern Europe, which is so dif- ferent to its male, that it is not long that they have been united by entomologists ; the abdomen of the fe- male, compared Avith the insect, is very vesiculose ; and it has neither elytra nor wings. QW. E. Sh.] (191 •) The GlaphyrincE, or wasp beetles, follow next in the series. Their typical distinction is the unusual shortness of their elytra, and their soft semi-mem bra- naceous texture : these characters, indeed, are common to all coleopterous insects analogous to this type ; but, among the arboreal CetoniadcB, they are altogether re- stricted to this division. Another, and a very remark- able peculiarity, is the extreme hairiness of these beetles, — a structure by which they are enabled to perfonn the office of bees, in promoting the fecundation of plants. This, and the following facts regarding the Glaphyrince, we can state as the result of personal observation. — On the flowery plains of Sicily, and more particularly of Greece, several species of Amphicoma are found in the greatest profusion during the early spring months : they are to be seen on the wing very early in the morning, flying about from flower to flower, and apparently very busy. There is one species, more especially, found in different parts of Greece, which is, without any doubt, the Melolontha of the Ancients ; so completely does this insect, when in motion, resemble one of the hymenopte- rous order, that we captured it under that belief, and only then discovered it was a beetle. After the month of May, not one of the many Glaphyrince of those coun- tries are to be seen ; and even at tiie proper season, they seem all to retire before the middle of the day. During the early part of May, the plains of Athens may be said to swarm with these green and yellow Glaphyri, so that the entomologist might collect them by thousands. Mr. MacLeay, unacquainted with the fact, supposes that the Trichius fasciatus was the insect alluded to by Eusta- thius ; but, independent of the existence of the species 220 NATURAL AIIIIANGEMENT OF INSECTS. just mentioned, the Tric]iiit.s fasciatus does not appear to have such a southerly range — at least, it was never seen by us, either in Sicily or Greece, during a residence of near seven years in different parts of those countries. In regard to the geograpliic distribution of this group, it seems confined to the Old World, and within zones of 25° breadth on each side the tropics. Mr. MacLeay further adds, that the membranaceous process of the maxillae, the exserted labrum, and subquadrate clypeus, will serve to distinguish them easily from the Melolon- thidis, w\t\\ whicli they have a most obvious connection. (192.) The genera of this family are very few in number, and of which we have nothing further to record beyond what we have observed above. We will merely remark, that here the length of the legs furnishes the features which their thickness supplied in the Rutilince; and which, in the Megasornince , is replaced by the tu- berculated and cornuted head and thorax, and in the Melolonthidce by the enlarged developement of the male antennae ; and this characteristic in the Cetoiiiidce presents itself in the large developement of the mesothoracic epimera. Before we quit the thalerophagous circle, we will take a retrospective glance at the relative proportions of the genera and species contained in each. The Me- lolonthidcB stand pre-eminently the first; for their num- bers are more than double those of either of the other families, and more than equal to the whole combined. Next follow the Cetoniidce, in which there is a greater uniformity of general structure ; but Cetonia itself is the most numerous genus of the circle. The Rutilince fol- low the last in the proportions of form, but the Glaphy- ridie stand very low below either ; and the relative pro- portions of species, in round numbers, are, MelolonthidcB, 26; Cetoniidce, 14; Rutilince, 6; and Glaphyridce, 1. [W. E. Sh.] (193.) Such are the characters we have selected for the five sub-families of the Cetoniad Capricornes. Lamellicornes. Predatobes. i ruminating quadrupeds. f Body sub-globose, convex ; legs \ lyioNiLicoHm!.. I unusually long. j MONILICORNES. Elytra short, thin, flexible. Malacodermbs. It is scarcely possible to conceive greater harmony than that which subsists between these two series. The experienced naturalist, if he wishes to detect innume- rable analogies which result from this exposition, has only to compare the contents of the first circle with all those mentioned in this work, and he will find, in every instance, the same results, however differently varied. They may not, indeed, be striking, because analogies are strong or faint, according to the dissimilarity of the groups compared ; but each comparison will throw light upon the other : we may trace, for instance, the convex body of the Melolonthince through their corresponding type of annulose and vertebrate animals, down to tortoises, or chelonian reptiles, until we arrive at the perfectly cylindrical body of the intestinal worm ; ex- tended, as the latter is, to such a disproportionate length. By this disposition, also, of the thalerophagous groups, Vv'e at once perceive that Nature really has intended the GlaphyrincE to represent the Hymenoptera ; and the Ce- 222 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. t07iian(e to feed ujion the same parts of a plant as nourish the Lepidoptera, — namely, the flower. And here another obscure glimpse of interminable relations opens upon us ; for as these two latter groups are pre-eminently typical, so do they draw nourishment from the most perfect part of a plant, which every one knows to be its flowers. The unusual length of limb, again, possessed by the chafers, and (if the fact be true) their partiality for sandy coun- tries, is at once explained by their being the grallatorial beetles, — that is, by their representing the order of wading birds {Grallatores), which course the sands of all ma- ritime countries, and sometimes congregate, like these beetles, in migratory hordes of countless numbers : both groups are remarkably deficient in bright colouring, for both assume the tint of the naked ground. But we must pause ; for, although analogies equally beautiful crowd upon the mind, we are limited to a mere sketch of this inviting subject. Let it be remembered, how- ever, that " natural groups will stand any test;" and that, unless those of the insect world will bear a comparison with such as belong to all other animals, we may be sa- tisfied that there is, in one or the other, some great error to be detected. (ip-i.) We must now turn to the other great divi- sion of the lamellicorn beetles, — the Scarabceidcs, or the Petalocera saprophaga of MacLeay. The first or most pervading character which strikes the general ob- server, on looking to this assemblage, is the thick and ungraceful form they possess : this, joined to their dark and sombre hue, and the repulsive aspect which many of them possess, give them, altogether, a most uninviting appearance. Their manners and habits are quite in unison with their general aspect : instead of sporting on flowers, living upon pure and uncorrupted food, and enjoying the brightness of day, the whole of these insects live only upon the ground, where they seek out the decayed and corrupting remains of vege- tables, more especially the excrement of herbivorous animals, in which disgusting food they seem to revel THE SCARABiEIN^. 223 with the greatest delight ; within this, or in little suh- terranean caves immediately heneath, which they exca- vate with their fore-feet, do these impure creatures pass the day, — only quitting their retreats to fly abroad after the sun has run its course, and the night has begun. These nocturnal habits, however, are not universal ; for some, as the true Scarab^in^ of warm countries, and the Aphodince of this country, may be seen abroad in the heat of the day ; but they are always in search of the same disgusting food, — shunning the sweets of Flora, as if they were, to them, poison. A few, however, prefer nourishment of a less offensive nature : the large DynastincE subsist entirely upon rotten wood, and take up their stations in the hollows of decayed trees, where both the larva and perfect insect may be found. But these are only slight modifications of the same habits ; for the whole family live entirely upon decayed vege- table matter, in different stages of decomposition: and although some few, as certain Anthophagi, and several of the foreign Scarabaince, are partially ornamented with metallic colours, yet the general hue of the whole of these insects is different shades of black, and dark brown. (195.) The structure of these insects is as peculiar as their general appearance and habits. The body is short, thick, and clumsy ; the thorax so large, as gene- rally to be of the same size ; while the legs are much more spinous than those of the Cetoniadce. Their great characteristic, however, is to be found in the construc- tion of their feet. As the legs of the Cetoniades are so admirably ada])ted for clinging to plants and branches, so are those of the Scarahaidce for walking upon the ground ; although their motion and progress, on such occasions, is neither graceful nor active. The tarsi are universally very short and slender, — often, indeed, nearly obsolete ; and although, in some of the divisions, the five joints are of the same shape, and even present much of the same relative proportion to each other as those of the Cetoniadce, yet they are, collectively, inva- 224 NATURAL ARRANGEMKNT OF INSECTS. riably shorter than the shank of the leg, or that part which forms the middle joint. The different modifi- cations of the tarsi will be found, also, of the greatest use in determining the different sub-families : let tlie entomologist, for instance, examine those of the true Scarahceus and of the common Geotrupes stercorariuf-, whose drowsy hum is so familiar to us in summer ; he will then perceive that, while the first exhibits the greatest possible deviation from iheCetoniadce, by having the first joint of the tarsus larger than any of the others, and the last hardly thicker than that which precedes it, the latter has a miniature resemblance to the long thickened claw joint so prevalent among the floral beetles, with this difference, however, that the preceding joints gradually become smaller from the first, as in all this family, and are defended by strong bristles, which are, no doubt, highly useful in assisting the animal to walk upon the ground. In proportion, also, as we leave this family, and approach the confines of the last, we observe a gradual approximation in the structure of their tarsi, until, upon reaching the bulky DynastincB, the two families insensibly blend into each other; so that much more refined characters must be used to de- termine their respective limits, than has yet been em- ployed by any author who has written upon the lamel- licorn genera. (196.) On looking to the anatomical construction of the ScarabceidcB, we find they exhibit, in the nature of their jaws, the same primary divisions as are observable in the last family. In one (the CetoniadcB), these organs, from being membranaceous, plainly show that the insects live upon juices, and, " as it were, by lick- ing their food ; " while the second, composed of insects which have corneous or crustaceous maxillse, live on more solid species of food, and by mastication.* But without entering further into these analogies, we must at once proceed to enumerate the five leading divisions, * Hor. Ent., 27. THE SCARABjEIN^. 225 or, as we consider them, sub-families, into which the learned author, just quoted, has divided the whole : these are — 1. the Scaraba'hue ; 2. the GeotrupincB ; 3. the Dynastince ; 4. the Trogince ; and, 5. the Apho- diirifB. (197.) The ScarabcBinoB, or true scarabs*, are by- far the most numerous, and, consequently, the most varied of the whole : in this respect they resemble not only their prototypes, the Cetoniance, but nearly all other pre-eminently typical groups in the animal kingdom. Few, however, are found in Britain ; and these, chiefly belonging to the genus Onthophagus, are of a small size : the rest are chiefly inhabitants of tropical, or, at least, of warm latitudes. According to the arrangement we are now chiefly foUovt'ing, the insects placed in this division have all membranaceous mandibles, which are fimbriated at their tip and on their inner side: the mouth is also invariably concealed beneath the cJypeus, or shield, which advances in front of the head ; and this, according to MacLeay, is the most constant cha- racter, as well as the most certain, by which the true Bcarabs may be distinguished from such genera of the next division as make the nearest approach to them. This latter character, therefore, is confessedly of more importance than the first, even in a scientific point of view ; while it is, also, much more adapted for general use. The form of these insects will also materially aid us in distinguishing them : the body is particularly short in comparison to the thorax ; it is also greatly depressed in the majority, although very convex in the genus Copris, which, from other circumstances, does not appear to be typical : the head is large, owing to the great developement of the clypeus, or shield, which projects all round it — often so much as to conceal the largest portion of the eyes and the antennae : the differ- ent modifications of this part of the insect are all very remarkable, and deserve much more attention than they * See the relative rank of these groups in Classification of Animals, p. 273. 226 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. have yet received. In the typical genus, Scarabenus, the clypeus is semicircular in front, but deeply marked by obtuse tooth-like divisions, as in S. Sneer, varying in number according to the sub-genera, and even, sometimes, in the sjiecies. None of these, however, have any horns or erect spines, either upon the head or thorax ; and a very few, like the Ateuchus Eyyptiorum, are more or less glossed with metallic green. In Copris, however, the clypeus, although slightly emarginate or notched in front, has the margin otherwise undivided : but in Onthophagus it is almost always entire, and even sometimes pointed, as in the weU-known O. 2\mrns, — a species which is a rare example in this country of this genus possessing well-defined horns upon the head. (198.) The tarsi of this family are very remark- able ; and although little, if any, attention has yet been paid to these organs among the LameUicornes, we feel persuaded they will furnish some of the strongest characters for indicating natural groups. We have al- ready described the hinder tarsus of the typical genus, Scarahceus ; and this will also suffice for that of Copris; but the anterior tarsi of the former are obsolete, while those of the latter, although small, are sufficiently obvious : there is scarcely one natural group, in short, which does not present some modification of the joints, either in shape or proportion, by which such group could be characterised. We do not mean to intimate, by this, an approval of the tarsal system, as it is over- strained by some entomologists ; still less that these characters should take precedence, in all cases, of others. But, as the organs of prehension or of motion are con- fessedly among those of paramount importance among vertebrate animals, so do we conceive they may be, from the nature of the case, equally so in the annidose groups ; and experience has confirmed this supposition. There requires no examination or dissection of the organs of manducation, to determine the two great divi- sions of the typical lamellicorn beetles ; their feet at once determines the point to the most inexperienced GENERA OF SCARAB.EIN-E. 227 observer ; and, although these characters have actually been overlooked, yet they are the only ones of a tan- gible nature which can establish the differences in question. (^99-) This division comprises considerably the greatest number of forms exhibited by the circle of which they constitute a chief component. We have here the de- pressed Scarabceus, Gymopleurus, and Pachysoma, — the latter resembling a couple of conjoined semicircles, and further curious from its very hairy legs. Then we have, next, the very convex Circellium, Chalconotus, Coprobis, Copris, and PhancBus, the last distinguished for the armature of their head and thorax ; the latter usually retuse in front : we have then the irregularly gibbous Sisyphus and Hyboma, — which form merges in the flatter Onthophagus and Coprobices; and this passes through the more elongated Onites and Oniticellus, which terminates in the elongate, parallel, and completely flattened surface of Eurysternus. There is as much diversity in the proportion and structure of the legs of these insects, as in their general form. Thus, the convex forms are the most essentially fossorial in the structure of these limbs, — exhibited in the dilatation, concavo-convex, and ex- ternally considerably denticulated edge of their anterior tibiae ; and in all the legs of these, there is a greater uniformity of size and length. The depressed series makes an easy transition in the comparative slenderness of these limbs, and the increasing length of the posterior pair to the gibbous group, where the latter are very lengthy and considerably curved. In the Onthophagi and their allies, we find a great resemblance to the pre-eminently fossorial structure ; but in Eurysternus we have a third type of structure, where the intermediate legs are the longest. Considering the substances that these creatures frequent, and whence they have been termed the " scavengers of nature," we, of course, ex- pect to see obscurity of tint prevail ; but when we ob- serve the metallic brilliancy of many of the Coprohii, Onthophagi, and Phancei, the splendour of whose co- il 2 228 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. lours will frequently rival any throughout the Coleoptera, we are tempted to exclaim at the caprice of Nature, which has clothed the inhabitants of such nauseous sub- stances m such gay habiliments. It is a striking cir- cumstance, and exhibits an anomalous condition of many of this group as compared with the majority of the Co- leoptera, that their males are dispossessed of anterior tarsi ; but this deficiency is supplied by an elongation of the tibia, which is curved at its extremity. The ob- ject of the elongation of the posterior legs in these in- sects is deduced from the observation of their habits; whence we find that they use them to propel the balls of dung, wherein they have deposited their egg, to the receptacle they have formed for it ; and they thus pro- pel it, walking backwards. Perty *, whose notice of the habits of these insects is the most complete we possess, informs us, that some species of Scarabceus frequent ants' nests during the winter. Hyhoma (if he be right in the genus, which is somewhat doubtful) frequents dung, is not fossorial, and rarely flies. The Coprobii are found in fallen leaves, dung, and also frequenting the exuding sap of wounded trees. The Eurysterni are also not burrowers, but are active on the wing during the day. The conformity of habit in genera is con- firmed by the intertropical Coprides burrowing like our native species. The Fhancei are not very different in habits to Copris, and fly during evening with a loud noise and considerable velocity : they are extremely abundant, even the largest species, the P. Principalis, which is more than two inches long, and an inch and a half broad. It must present an extraordinary appear- ance to an European collector, to witness, for the first time, the air and the earth, in intertropical regions, teeming with their hosts of insects, and these large Coprophagi sweeping through the sky with the velocity we observe in our native species. Many of them are diurnal flyers, but the majority, as here, are crepuscular, * Delectus Animalium Articulat Pref. p. 7. &c. THE GEOTRUPIN^. 229 and boom around, during dusk, with their sonorous hum. [W.E.Sh.] (200.) The next division is composed of the Geo- trupinee, or drone scarabs. " Concisely describing these insects," observes Mr. MacLeay, " it may be said, that they differ from the last by their corneous mandibles, and from the Dynastince by their exserted labrum." " But such characters," as he truly adds, " like all others, are subject to an infinity of shades, and may even altogether disappear in some insects of this family hereafter to be discovered. They are coprophagous, or boletophagous. * Some extreme genera, however, live on roots, and may even be considered lignivorous." Most, if not all, the typical species, which are comparatively few, inhabit temperate latitudes ; while such as are here considered " extreme," or, rather, aberrant, genera, are restricted to warm or tropical climates.f (201.) The common Scarabeeus stercorarius of Lin- naeus, so abundant in this country, is one of the best examples we can adduce of this division. In its short convex body, and, indeed, in general appearance, no less than manner, it presents a strong resemblance to the genus Copris among the ScaruhcBince ; but the position of the hinder legs is different; the head is smaller; and, from not being furnished with a dilated shield, the pro- trusion of the mandibles, which are very strong, horny, and arcuated at their tips, is rendered very evident ; the labium is also exserted, or, as it were, pushed out, — in which respect they strikingly differ from the typical scarabs. The tarsi furnish another important character ; although considerably shorter than the shank, their structure shows an evident approach to what is seen in the floral beetles, or the Cetonida : the claw joint is the longest, and even exceeds the first; the others gradually diminishing downwards : the joints, moreover, are cy- lindrical, and not, as in the former division, compressed. * That is, feeding either upon dung or decayed /wngi'. t Hor. iint., p. 52. Q 3 230 NATl/KAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. Yet, with all these incipient indications of a prehensile foot, these insects are invariahly found upon the ground, — where, however, they walk with much more difficulty than the typical Scarabceince. The sub-genus Ele- phastomiis, with its incurved snout, is one of the most singular insects in this assemblage. (202.) Many of the observations that we have made upon the habits of the Scarabceince at page 227-, will be found to attach to the present group. These insects, however, are never richly metallic ; and they are more exclusively fossorial. They differ less in form, but more in habits, from each other, than that group ; for Lethrus feeds upon the eyes of the vine, and where they abound in the vicinity of vineyards, they do considerable mis- chief. They are more essentially social than any of the Petalocera, for they live in pairs in deep burrows in the ground. Fischer tells us that they are very jealous, and extremely pugnacious ; and their structure would at once convince us that such collision must be very severe, — the mandibles of the male having beneath an enormous process, nearly or quite as large as the organ itself. There are but few genera belonging to this group, and their species also are not numerous ; and these genera have also a more limited geographical range than those of the adjacent families. Thus, Elephastomiis is confined to New Holland; Orphnus, to Africa and India; Geotrupes, to Europe and America ; Lethrus is wholly European, but Bolboceras ranges over the entire world. \W. E. Sh.] (203.) The Dynastince* evidently follow the Geo- trupincB in a natural series, through the medium of such forms as have their bodies rather longer than the Geotrupinoe, but shorter than that of Oryctes nasi- cornis. This latter we shall, for the present, view as the type, not because we really believe it to be such, but because it is the only species of whose habits and economy, as yet, any thing decisive is known. Although * Here separated from the Megasomints, but confounded with them by former writers. THE DYNASTINiE. 231 not found in Britain, it appears by no means uncommon in various parts of the Continent. De Geer once dis- covered a considerable number of them, both in the larva and perfect state, in a heap of rich vegetable mould ; and other writers mention its being found in half-rotten tanpits. This is sufficient evidence that this insect feeds upon decayed wood; and it therefore follows, analogically, that all others, having the same general structure, do the same. The tips of the jaws are rather membranaceous than corneous, and being un- armed with the teeth of the true Dynastince, clearly show that they are employed upon a much softer species of food : in other words, we are brought to the con- viction that the Dynastince — in unison with the pre- dominant character of all the other Scarabceidce — feed upon decayed wood ; and that the Megasomince subsist habitually upon that which is either in a living state, or but just beginning to decay : thus are the two grand and leading characters preserved ; and consumers are provided, in these groups, for every stage of vegetable existence, — from the flowers, on which alone the Ce- toniancB exist, down to the excrement of herbivorous animals, in which the Scarabceince delight to revel. (204.) But without looking merely to those cha- racters upon which so much stress has been laid, — namely, the internal parts of the mouth, — let us see how far the separation here made of the DynastidcB of Mr. MacLeay, into two sub-families, is borne out by the structure of their respective tarsi. We have already ' seen in what manner the two great divisions of terres- trial and arboreal scarabs are thus naturally charac- terised by their feet ; and this becomes apparent even at the point of their junction. The posterior tarsi of the Oryctes nasicornis may be thus described : they are decidedly shorter than the shank ; almost as slender, in proportion to the thickness of the legs, as those of the Geotrupince; the first, or basal joint, is much the largest of the four, — the three others being considerably gra- duated ; the last, or claw joint, is equal in length to Q 4 232 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OP INSECTS. the two preceding; and they are all as well covered with bristles at their articulations, as those of the terrestrial Geotrupince. There is, in fact, so little difference in degree between the posterior tarsus of O. nasicornis and G. stercorarius, that it is quite obvious they both de- serve to be considered terrestrial scarabs, although se- parated into distinct sub-families by the other parts of their organisation : the claw joint, indeed, of Oryctes is is much more developed ; yet still, although longer, it is not so thick as the first tarsal joint, and, in many of the Brazilian species, it is particularly slender. We may now turn to one of the best known insects among the MegasomincB, — viz. the Hercules beetle (ilf. Her- cules'). The hinder tarsi, instead of being shorter, are very considerably longer than the shank; the basal joint, although very slightly thicker, is rather shorter, than the three following, which are all of the same size and length; while the claw joint is so highly developed, that it is equal in length to the three preceding ones : no hairs whatever are upon any of the joints, and the claws themselves are remarkably hooked. Now, it can- not for a moment be doubted that this gigantic insect is completely arboreal, and that its progress upon the ground would be just as slow and unnatural as that of a genuine ScarahcBus upon a branch. We have confined the fore- going comparison to the hinder tarsi of these respective insects, not from any supposition that they are more important than the others, but simply because we judge it unnecessary to enter into similar details respecting the remainder : in point of fact, the same relative pro- portions in the joints will be found in all the other legs; premising, however, that the anterior claw joint in this, and nearly all the arboreal Megasomince, is much more developed, in proportion, than that of the terrestrial Dynastints. (205.) From the foregoing observations, it is, there- fore, evident that the Dynastidce comprise two distinct natural groups of equal value, by which the terrestrial and arboreal lamellicorn beetles are united. This opi- GENERA OF DYNASTIN^. 233 nion can be established upon two distinct grounds : first, on the nature of their food, as indicated both by facts of economy and of structure ; and, secondly, by their or- gans of locomotion. In the latter, indeed, no less than in the former, there are numerous modifications ; and these will, doubtless, indicate some of the most natural of the minor groups, or sub-genera ; but we have yet seen no insects which did not come under one or other of these groups, or which did not fall into the natural series by which they are connected to others. We have had frequent occasion, in our progress through the vertebrate animals, to show how much the peculi- arity of colour enters into the composition of natural groups. The same remarks are applicable, as every experienced entomologist is aware, to insects. In the present case, it may be observed, that the whole of the ^ermme DynastincB are either deep glossy black, or dark brown ; and although very many of the Megasomince, as D. ActcBon, &c., are of the same dark colours, yet the majority have the elytra of a livid green, as if they had been coloured with the weakened sap of the decay- ing trees upon which the insects themselves chiefly fed. This, of course, is mere conjecture, yet it is by no means either impossible or improbable. (206.) The genera we consider the most typical of our Dynastince, are Oryctes, Phileurus, Hoplites (^Ene- ma Kirby), and Archon. This, consequently, is also a limited group ; which, however, is not yet thoroughly analysed as respects our views concerning it. All that we know of the habits of the insects contained in it, we have aheady stated. The forms are more elongate than any of the preceding, and also some- times considerably depressed, as m Phileurus, Enema, and Heteronychus. We do not expect that any of them, in their perfect state, are sessorial, although they have all the requisite structure. They are considerably dis- persed over the world; although Phileurus and Enema are exclusively American ; Cryptodon, African, as well as Heteronychus, 234 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. (207.) The TrogincE are the next great division among the terrestrial scarabs. They have been compared by Mr. MacLeay, and very justly, to the genus Hister: both appear to be fond of cadaverous matter; both " have their head sunk in the thorax in a very peculiar man- ner; and both have the curious habit, when alarmed, of counterfeiting death, by applying their feet and antennae close to the body, and ceasing all motion until their fear may have subsided." We may add to these analogies, the Linnaean genera Ptinus, Dermestes, Cassida, Cur- culio, E later, Buprestis, and several others ; all of which, in their own proper circles, are types of the Monilicor- NES. They are also related to the Melolonthincp, not only by their very convex body and obtuse head, but by the very same habit of counterfeiting death, which the Melolonthince possess in a very high degree.* Here, however, the similarity ceases. The TrogincB, in compa- rison to the other divisions, are remarkably few, and but very little diversified either in colour or in form : they are all small insects ; and possess the peculiarity, almost unknown in others of this family, of having the elytra deeply and thickly marked by excavated hoUows. Some of them are apterous, — another point of analogy they bear to several of the monilicorn types ; while one (^Trox luridus Fab.) is said to have been found in rotten wood.f The external resemblance between these insects and some of the small Melolonthiiup, such as Serica, &c., is well worthy of attention. The TrogidcB, at first sight, seem to be a much more isolated group among the sa- prophagous Petalocera, than what we suspect they really are. Among the smaller types, or sub-genera, of the DynastincE, there are several insects which appear to form a very gradual passage between the two, although we have not yet been able to discover the point of junc- tion : this, however, will not in the least militate * The common cockchafer will continue this deception even if thrown up in the air; instead of spreading its wings, it will fall to the ground as if it were really dead. t Hor. Ent., p. G3. THE APHODIIN^. 235 against the situation that has been assigned them in this circle; for it is quite obvious they can hold no other station. (208.) The Aphodiince form the last sub-family: they are the least in size of the whole ; and, although not very few in point of numbers, the variations in their structure are comparatively slight: they differ anato- mically from the Scarabceince, in having short dilated coriaceous mandibles, and the pairs of feet at equal distances from each other. They are also sufficiently separated from the Trogince, by having their labrum concealed under the clypeus ; and by their mandibles being tliin, compressed, and scarcely to be called corne- ous.* The scutellum is always distinct; and the head and thorax are almost invariably smooth. The species swarm in temperate climates, and are particularly com- mon in our fields during the spring and summer months, — hovering over, and very soon burying them- selves, in the dung of cattle, to which they give a decided preference. Their geographic range is comparatively limited. Mr. MacLeay was unacquainted with any from the Australian range; and we only met with a very few minute species in Tropical America ; while at the Cape of Good Hope, however, where large herbivorous animals abound, they are not uncommon. It appears that, although the majority are coprophagous, yet that many live entirely upon putrid marine plants : thus the former open a passage to the aberrant ScarabcBince, with which we began our survey, while the latter, by frequenting sandy situations, prefer the same localities as the majority of the TrogincB. (209.) The two preceding families — the Trogince and the Aphodiince — are the most limited of the whole circle. We have already sufficiently treated, above, upon their natural history ; and we will only further remark, that we consider the Trogince, within themselves, the most anomalous family of all, as it is scarcely possible to * Hor. Ent., p. 58. 236 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. conceive a proximate affinity between such genera as Acanthocerus and 2Voj\ The former, like Agathidium, has the faculty of rolling itself up into a complete ball, — indeed, so much so, that one we received from the Brazils was transpierced through the elytra, near the scutellum, and again through the head. It is other- wise remarkable for the extremely dilated expansion of its tibiae, which form thin plates, that fold up within a cavity beneath the body ; and thus, when the insect is rolled, there is not the slightest vestige of these limbs to be seen for the tarsi fold back upon the tibisE. The penta- merous tarsi, and lamellated structure of the apex of the antennae, are all that seems to associate it here. If this be admitted, we see no reason why one of the Bostri- chidce, — the Phloeotribus Olece, — which has likewise la- mellated antennte, should not come into thelamellicorn circle. The habits of Acanthocerus, also, are to frequent flowers, and not carrion, or putrescent substances, like all its present associates. Trox, to us, seems to have itself a strong relation, perhaps of affinity — if habits and habit can show this — with Opatrum amongst Latreille's He- teromera. Trox is of universal dissemination ; Acan- tlwcerus is wholly American ; and it is difficult to say what other insects should enter the group. QW. E. Sh.]] (210.) In the AphodiincE, we have greater uniformity of general habit, as also of specific habits ; and this, although a limited group in forms, is, especially in its types, very abundant in species ; for Aphodius numbers as many as any genus, except Onthophagus, within the lamellicorn circles : it is also found every where ex- cepting in New Holland ; and the only departure from the habits of the family is in JEgialia, a small genus, consisting of but two species, — one European and one American, — the European occurring in Great Britain, upon our sandy coasts, Avhere possibly it feeds upon putrescent fish, or the rejectamenta of the sea. The relative proportions of these five groups differ greatly from the parallel series of thalerophagous Petalocera, and would stand thus in round numbers. ScarabceincB I ANALOGIES OF SCARABiEID^ AND CETONIAD^. 237 precede all in genera, as well as species, and overwhelm them with its numbers. In genera, the GeotrupincE follow them. The Dynastince and Aphodiince are about equal ; and the Trogince are the lowest in the scale. In species, their relative proportions are, ScarabcBineB, as 29 ; the Aphodiince, as 7 ; the Geotrupince, as 3 ; and the Trogince and Dynaatince, as 2 each. \W. E. Sh.] (211.) Having now detailed the chief peculiarities of the five great divisions in each of the typical circles of this tribe, we may proceed to verify their accuracy ; first tracing the mutual analogies they present to each other, and then illustrating the subject further by com- paring them with other and more dissimilar groups. The annexed diagram will exhibit, in one view^ the dis- position we have now made of the whole. This diagram at once exhibits both the affinities and the analogies of the two typical divisions of the Lamel- licornes. The first, or the ScaruhceidcB, are the Sa- prophaga of MacLeay ; the second, or the Cetoniidcc, are his Thalerophaga. Furthermore, the entomologist will perceive that we have taken for granted eight out of the ten relations of affinity exhibited in this diagram, on the authority of the same author ; so that the ex- tent of our alteration consists in separating the Dynas- tince into two sub-families. The Megasoinince thus 238 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. occupy the station assigned by Mr. MacLeay to his AnoplognathidcB, — a group which appears to form an aberrant portion of the RutilincB. We feel it necessary to make these observations, as we by no means are sa- tisfied, in our own mind, that the CetoniancB are so far removed from the Megasomince, as they appear to be in this arrangement. These doubts are occasioned by the strong and unquestionable relationship between the gi- gantic DynastiruB of the New World, and their proto- types in the genus (xoZia^Aa, on the opposite coastof West- ern Africa. The question, then, simply resolves itself into this: — Is the obvious relation between these groups one of affinity, or of very strong analogy ? This im- portant point can only be determined by a thorough analysis, not merely of the two groups in question, but also of the RutilincB and the Glaphyrince ; for it is yet by no means clear that Goliatha may not be really within the circle of the latter. At all events, it is per- fectly obvious, that these gigantic insects represent that type which we shall term in this, as in former volumes, the Rasorial. This will be equally true, into what- ever circle they may ultimately be found to enter. Their extreme rarity, and very high price (for they are the most valuable, in a commercial point of view, of aU insects), render it impossible to procure a series of the species for thorough examination.* It is clear, , however, to us, that the GoliathcB of Brazil are much nearer related to the Glaphyrince, through the medium of Trichius, than to these African types ; although nothing, at present, can be stated with safety on the true nature of all these relations. (212.) We may revert to the foregoing diagram, solely with a view to illustrate the analogies, — there ex- * One of these sold for \\l. V)s. Grf. at the sale of Drury's fine collection of insects in 1805. A beautiful figure was ])ub!ished by Martyn of this grand insect, under the name of Scarabceus gigus. Others have been more recently found on the western coast of Africa ; but they are so much prized, that we have heard of 30/. having been offered and refused for a single spe- cimen,— the proprietor demanding SO/. It was subsequently sold, as I un. derstood, for 10/. AFFINITY OF MEGASOMIN^ WITH RUTILIN^. 239 pressed by dotted linesj and founded on the following characters ; — Analogies of the ScARABiEiD^ and the CETONiiDiE. Sub.families of j„„tn„i^„i rh^^^^f^^^ Sub-families of ScarabcEidce. Analogical Characters. Cetoniid ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. Thymalus ; others are found by sweeping in low herb- age, as Typhcea, Mycetcea, and many Cryptophagi; and many occur in heating heaps of garden rejectamenta, as Anisarthria and Trichopteryx, — the latter isdistinguished by being the most minute of all Coleoptera, and having their delicate wings fringed with fine hair, which, when folded beneath their closed elytra, protrude like a couple of pencils. As aberrant forms in this family, we may view such genera as Choleva, Scaphidium, and Leiodes, and their allies, all distinguished by the club of their antennae consisting of five joints, the eighth of the organ, the second of the club, being disproportionally minute. With these associates also Agnthidium, that rolls itself up like a ball, yet less spherical than we have observed in Acanthocerus among the Trogince; and here, conti- guously, r^ust be placed the still more remarkable Clam- bus, which, imder the apprehension of danger, closes its large broad head upon its four anterior legs ; whilst the protection of the posterior pair is referred to the broad enveloping plate, formed, as in Cnemidotus among the Dyti&cidce, by the dilatation of the posterior coxae. All of these, like the majority of \he Nitidulinee, are fun- givorous ; and the Leiodes Cinnamomea feeds upon the truffle. Of course, we here can enumerate only the most conspicuous forms, and must refer the location of the rest to the determination of their affinities. The exotic forms are comparatively few, probably from their being minute, and not having yet had sufficient atten- tion bestowed upon them ; but some among them are sufficiently remarkable; — for instance, the very extraor- dinary Hypocephalus armatus is referred to this group, and placed near the Necrophori. This is, perhaps, one of thfe most grotesque forms the Coleoptera can exhibit. It is a large insect, more than two inches long, with a greatly developed thorax, not unlike that of a Calandra ; its head is small and deflexed ; antennae short and moni- liform, as are also its palpi ; the mandibles are somewhat distorted and curved ; the maxillae large, prominent, and triangular; it has the elytra of a Carabus; the THE PIMELIDiE. 269 four anterior legs very robust ; and the two posterior incrassated like those of Sagra ; with largely developed ccxfe; and the apex of their tibiae flat and vesicular beneath, like the anterior ones of Pirates among the ReduviincB, in the Hemiptera. This incongruous com- pound of anomalies is of a dark chestnut colour, and is a native of the interior of the Brazils, whence it was first brought by prince Maximilian of Neuwied, and was ori- ginally scarcely believed to be more than the unskilful workmanship of some cozening dealer, — so complete a burlesque did it seem upon Nature's general harmony of structure : but others have since been brought, and the authenticity of the monster is confirmed. We possess an undescribed extraordinary Brazilian Nitidula, in which the anterior tibiae are bent inwards, at right angles, at their middle, — the lower half being considerably dilated, and the tarsi inserted before their termination. It is excessively flat; and being a very distinct genus, we pro- pose for it the name Flax adunca. We have before spoken of the very singular Helota, of which several species are now known. (236.) The Pimelidce, which may perhaps fill the place of the Silphidce in this circle of Predatores, form a group of insects of a most extraordinary and repulsive aspect. They are all heteromerous, — that is to say, the posterior pair of tarsi have one joint less than the four anterior ; but this is a peculiarity which extends over a large mass of the Coleoptera, many of which we shall have to consider when we treat of the Malacodermata. For the present, we may state, that an additional cha- racteristic of these insects is, to have the third joint of the antennae the longest ; their elytra soldered together, and frequently hispid with innumerable spines, teeth, or tubercles; and they are, besides, usually of ungainly gib- bous forms. They are pre-eminently the inhabitants of deserts, wastes, and arid sandy tracts, especially Northern and Southern Africa, and Patagonia, where Nature is most inhospitable and cheerless; and they thus partici- pate in the features of the districts they occupy. Their 270 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. colour harmonises with their form, to make them hideous, for they are invariably of a deep black or dirty brown. Epiphysa offers us the most gibbous form anjongst them. In Cryptocheile and Ade-smin, this form is covered with short spines or tubercles, placed either irregularly over the whole surface, or arranged in rows between which there are furrows. In Pimelia proper, and Moluris, we have the gibbous form also greatly developed, but with a deep strangulation between the thorax and abdomen : and in Prionotheca, the same general form is somewhat flattened, and the lateral su- perior edges of the elytra are armed with a coronet of protruding spines. In others, we observe them taking the more general figure of Carabidce, as in Scaurus and Trachynotus ; and in others again they become exceed- ingly flattened with dilated edges, as in Eurychora; and which, in Steira, is furnished above with longitudinal carina. Among the aberrant forms, we may notice the extraordinary Helens, which is very like a black Cassida, with a perforation through the dilated margin of the thorax, for the head to exhibit itself; and in one species the whole of the central convex portion of the insect is covered with erect rigid setse ; and amongst the most he- terogeneous of these forms, MachJa claims a place. The affinities of this group to the circle are obscure, and difficult to trace; their position is suggested for the ana- lytical examination of entomologists. (237.) The StaphyHnid(P, or rove beetles, constitute our fifth group of predatorial insects : their distinguish- ing characteristic, as we have above said, is to have considerably abridged elytra, beneath which their ex- pansive wings are folded up ; and thus there are almost always more, and never fewer, than four segments ex- posed. As in the Coleoptera generally, their antennse consist of eleven joints, rarely of ten, and the apex of their abdomen is usually furnished with a couple of retractile vesicles. There is great diversity in the number of the joints of their tarsi, but the typical number may be considered as five. They are exces- THE STAPHYLINID^. 271 sively active insects^ promptly take wing, and fly with considerable velocity. They frequent coprophagous substances of all kinds, and in which they associate sometimes in considerable multitudes, — so much so, that the very surface of it is sometimes wholly alive with them, and by them it appears transformed into a living mass. They have been subdivided into seven distinct sub- families ; the structure of which differs considerably in minute points of a highly interesting nature, in its in- vestigation, to the systematist. The largest majority of these consist of minute insects, comparatively few of which exceed half an inch in length, and the major part are under a line. They appear to be, with very few exceptions, a northern group, replaced within the tro- pics, in the exercise of the peculiar function awarded to them by the ants ; although some few also occur there. These, especially the Brazilian ones, like the prevailing character of its entomology, are of brilliant metallic splendour. (238.) They consist, first, of the Staphylini proper, which contain the largest species of the whole family, and are chiefly distinguished from the rest by their fissile labrum, and tarsi always pentamerous. They are courageous insects, and resist aggression, and endeavour to intimidate by opening their powerful jaws ; with which, indeed, they can pinch severely. They also have the habit of erecting their tails, to produce inti- midation; and it is by the flexibility of this part of the body that they are enabled promptly to fold their wings beneath the elytra; and the activity with which this is done, is highly interesting. Their larvse are depressed, and have similar habits of life to the perfect insects, and, like them, occur most abundantly during the spring and autumn. The most interesting genera are VeUeius, which has serrated antennae, and is said to frequent the nests of hornets, — whether as a parasite, or in quest of prey, is not determined. Creophilus is the common black large-headed species, mottled with grey, that occurs so frequently in our walks. Emus is a beautiful 272 NATURAL AKRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. insect, densely pubescent, its clothing being party-co- loured, black and bright yellow ; and the Devil's coach- horse, the common Goeriiis, is the frecjuent occupant of our gardens. Oxyporus is remarkable for its moon- shaped palpi ; and a modification of this form occurs in Axtrapceus, Tasgius, and Pelecyphorus. Achenium and Skigoiiium, lastly, have porrected horns upon the head and thorax. (2,'>9.) The second family, the Sten'Hl(P,h-a.ve greatly the appearance of Elaphri, and, indeed, participate with them in their attachment to humid situations. They are nearly cylindrical ; have very prominent eyes, long exserted palpi, and antennae subclavate at the tip. They are very active insects, and seem very predaceous. (240.) The third family are the Oxytelidoe : these are depressed, have very large heads, very serrated tibiae, and usually but three joints to their tarsi, — the terminal one being longer than the rest together. I'here is nothing peculiar in their natural history, beyond the circumstance of their being, perhaps, the most gre- garious of the group, associating in the multitudes we have instanced above, and occurring in dung and putrid substances. (241.) The fourth family are formed by the Oma- lidee, which, as their name indicates, are exceed- ingly depressed ; their tarsi are pentamerous ; and the terminal joint of their palpi is frequently subulated. These insects are often found in flowers, and are in- teresting, from presenting instances of the rare occur- rence of ocelli in the Coleoptera. (242.) The Tachynidce form the fifth family, and are distinguished by their convex tapering forms ; their tarsi are also pentamerous ; and they have, likewise, the habit of frequenting flowers. They are excessively agile, and readily escape capture by the velocity of their motions. There is nothing strikingly distinguishing in them to require notice in a work thus general. (243.) The Aleocharidce constitute the sixth fa- mily : their antenna are inserted below their eyes, THE PSKLAPHID^. 273 which is the only general character which seems to pervade ihem ; for they present numberless diversities of form, and remarkable anomalies in the numerical relations of the joints of their tarsi. The knowledge of these particulars must, of course, be referred to other works. They comprise the greatest number of insects of any of the families of Staphyli)iidce, and differ as much in their habits as their forms. Thus, some, as Fella, Dinarda, Lomechvsa, occur oidy in ants' nests ; Deinopsis, Diglossa, Oaypoda, amongst rejectamenta; Fulagria and Astilbus, in moss ; Homalota and Calo- dera, beneath the bark of trees. Deinopsis, Diglossa, and Myllcena, are remarkable for the protrusion of their labial palpi as setae; and Callicerus has beautifully formed antennae. ('244.) The PselapJiidce form the last family, if pro- perly they be a constituent of the StaphyUnidce ; for they differ so considerably in many particulars, and agree in >.o few, that we think they should compose a distinct group. They are the smallest and the most elegant of the series, and are distinguished by their clavate and frequently nodose antennse ; elongate clavate palpi ; three-jointed tarsi, which terminate in a single claw. The only character they have in common with the Sta- phylinidce, is the abbreviation of their elytra ; for their abdomen is usually bulky, and incapable of reflexion. They occur in the nests of ants, at the roots of grass, and in moss in damp situations. They are very voracious, and feed upon living insects. In the observations on the Hymenoptera, we have already al- luded to the remarkable Claviger; and, by so singular a form, we may quit the Predatores, ^(230 — 244.) W.E.Sh.] T 274" NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. CHAP. VIII. COLEOPTERA, Continued. CAPRICORNES. (245.) From the close affinity, already remarked, be- tween the Lucanidce and the Prionidce, there can be no doubt that the lamellicorn and Capricorn tribes are united. This union, which has long been admitted by modern writers, will now be confirmed by additional evidence, founded on those general laws of natural ar- rangement upon which our entire theory reposes. Mr. Macleay, looking only to the formation of the larvae, or more properly to the metamorphosis, hesitates not to place the capricorn beetles between the Lamellicornes and the Monilicornes. This conclusion we have also come to, from studying the perfect insects, and by test- ing the theory by our own impression of the laws of representation. (246.) Thechief or typical characteristic of this tribe, presented by the adult insect, is the great length of their antenntE, their large and vertical head, and the unusual strength of their jaws : the construction of their tarsi is also peculiar, and they are all, while in their larva state, lignivorous, or, at least, living in the internal substance of vegetables ; chiefly, however, in solid wood. Hence it is, that although many of the groups, which we shall here consider aberrant, are very dif- ferent, in their adult state, to the pre-eminent types, they agree with them much more closely in the general shape of their larvae. This form of larva, by Macleay, is termed Apod, and is defined as " having scarcely the rudiments of antennse, and furnished, instead of feet, with flat fleshy tubercles, which, when continued along CHARACTERISTICS OF THE CAPRICORNES. 275 the back and belly, give the animal a facility of moving in whatever way it may be placed. " Our author cites Curculio or Ceramhyx as examples. It may be observed, however, that these laivte are not completely apodal, since they have the rudiments of six scaly minute legs with joints, yet so small as to be useless for locomotion. We thus find that considerations, drawn from the larva state of an insect, are often of the highest importance, and that in certain cases they may be employed with great advantage, without elevating them too high in the scale of primary and absolute distinctions. Under the impres- sion, therefore, that this tribe contains within itself aU such lignivorous insects as have apod larvae, we have no hesitation in adopting the above views, — more espe- cially as they will be subsequently developed more in detail. (247.) The above definition of the perfect insects of this order is entirely drawn from the two typical families, the Ceramhycidce and the Lepturidce, with which, however, the group connecting it to the Lami'lHcornes (the Prionida') is intimately allied. Of the two others, one (the Curcv- lionidce) is remarkably unlike either of the preceding, and the other is involved in some doubt. Without at- tempting, therefore, to find any more general characters for the Capricornes than those already glanced at, we may at once proceed to characterise with much brevity the primary groups or families into which we divide the tribe. — 1. The Prionidce, at once distinguished by their depressed form, their protruding or exserted jaws, di- rected forwards, and the comparative softness of their wing cases. 2. The Cerambycidce, having their head large and vertical, the jaws short and sharp, the tarsi prehensile, and the thorax nearly as broad as the body : these, like the last, feed both in their larva and perfect state, upon solid or decayed wood, and are strictly lig- nivorous.— 3. The Lepturid(P, or floral capricorns, of a much more delicate and slender form, having the jaws or mandibles more lengthened and straight, the tip T 2 276 NATURAL ARRANGEMEXT OK INSECTS. hooked, the legs cursorial, and the first joint of the tarsi long ; the thorax is always narrower than the body, and is generally either spined or wrinkled : the perfect insect is floral; that is, feeds upon living vegetables and flowers. — Of tlie extent of the 4th family we feel very uncertain ; but we are disposed to consider the major part of the Xylophagi of Latreille as forming a part, at least, of the group, regarding Bostrichus, or Tomicus, as the type of a family of lignivorous insects to which Clerus is unquestionably related either by affinity or analogy. — The oth and last family is the Curculio- nidiT, or snout beetles, connected to the former by means of Bruchus ar.d the Anthrihides, through Hylurgus, &c. Nearly the whole are distinguished by the prolongation of their snout, which forms a rostrum, at the extremity of which is a very minute mouth. The antennae, which in the first three families is usually as long as the body, and generally much longer, is here comparatively short, and is almost always bent into an angle in the middle, as if broken. (248.) The above arrangement of the primary divi- sions is founded partly upon synthesis, and partly from analysis. The situation of the Prionidee cannot be questioned ; because, being united in the most intimate manner to the Lucanidce, it necessarily follows they must be placed in that part of their own circle which brings them into immediate contact with their proto- types among the Lamellicornes. The difficulty respect- ing these insects does not lie in their station, but in ascertaining what other lignivcrous genera are naturally associated with them. It is quite clear that the old genus PHonus contains merely the typical examples ; so that we have no scruple in placing Latreille's Platysoma (in- cluding Cucujus), and perhaps most of his Trogosita, excepting Trogosita itself, as aberrant forms : but how many others, among the host of small or minute ligni- vorous genera (now broken up and elevated to the rank of small genera), are naturally associated with them, it is. THE CERAMBYCIDiE AND LEPTURID^. 277 at present, utterly impossible to say. The whole of the LucanidcB and the Bostrkhidce, no less than the Prionidce, require a thorough analysis ; and until that is done, individual opinion, founded only on conjecture, can alone be offered. The nature of the food, and the form of the larva, indeed, may materially assist us in unravelling the confusion which now involves aU these groups. Details like these, however, belong not to our present plan. We merely seek to establish the primary groups, and to show they exhibit as strong relations of analogy among themselves, as are found in other parts of the animal kingdom. It can hardly be disputed, for instance, that there is a strong relation between Pas- salus and Trogosita, as well as between Cucujus and Hister ; but these, we suspect, will eventually prove merely analogical. (249.) In respect to the two typical families, the Cerambycidce and the Lepturidce, we feel much more confident, — not, indeed, as to their specific contents, but as to the fundamental principles upon which we should base them. As we prefer, upon all occasions, the retention of Linnsean names, when they can be preserved with- out injury to science, we call the first of these the Ceram- bi/cidce, although, strictly speaking, the genus Lamia of Fabricius is the pre-eminent type. The natural history of the L. amputator, so beautifully illustrated by Guild- ing, one of the most accomplished zoologists of the age, completely establishes the fact, if such evidence were wanting, that these insects are lignivorous, both in their larva and perfect state : they feed, in fact, upon hard wood; and even amputate branches, without paying any regard to the leaves ; and their thick, strong, and com- pact structure are in unison with such habits. The Lepturidce, on the other hand, although internal feeders in their larva state, are yet totally incapable of gnawing hard substances when arrived at maturity. W^hether they occasionally feed upon leaves, we know not, but their common resort is flowers, upon which the most inexpe- X 3 278 NATURAI, ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. rienced student has, no doubt, often captured them. Their light and elegant shape, cursorial feet, and small head, ofiPer a contrast to the Cerambyiidce. With regard to the fourth type, we have already expressed our doubts, chiefly arising from a deficiency of analysis. We were long disposed to think that this part of the series was naturally occupied by such genera as Sagra and Crioceris, parti- cularly as Latreille places them immediately in conjunc- tion with Leptura, — a station, after all, they may possibly hold ; but their still closer affinity, as we conceive, to the Cliri/somelidrp, prevents us from following such high authority. Satisfied, for reasons that will presently ap- pear, that the Curculionidce were the most aberrant family of the Capricornes, our next object was to find what group was most likely to connect these, in some degree, with the Lepturldce, by means of Attelabus, which Latreille very judiciously arranges close to the Curculio- nidce. On these grounds have we formed the conjecture that most of the Bostrichi intervene between these two families — more particularly as we do not think they form a part either of the Lucanidce or the Prionidce. By this means, also, the evident afiinity between Bostrichus and Clems may be preserved, if we consider the latter as leading to the Coccinellida and Chrysomdidce, the former of which they resemble by the carnivorous habits of their larvae. All this, however, as we stated before, must be considered a mere matter of opinion, until the groups to which these several insects are in any way related are thoroughly analysed. (250.) We may now turn to the analogies resulting from the above arrangement of the whole tribe ; and as the most difficult of these AviU regard the CurculionidcB, we shall commence by the following comparison. ANALOGIES OF THE CAPBICORNES. 279 Analogies of the Capbicoknes to the Typical Verte- BBATA. Tribes of the COLEOPTERA. Lamellicornes. Predatores. Malacodermes. Monilicomes. Capricornes. Analogies. Orders of the Mammalia. Legs formed for grasping. Quadrumana. f Carnivorous ; and rapa- 7 pg~^ X CiOUE. 5 f Feet shortor none; much } Cetacea \ compressed. 3 Most aberrant. Glires. 'Appendages to the head' highly developed.either ^ u^g^i^ta. in the shape of horns, crests, or antennee. :i' Orders of Birds. Insessores. Raptores. Natatores. GraUatores. Rasores. Without detaining the reader by additional explan- ations on the first four of these resemblances, we shall merely premise that the two last columns are arranged strictly according to their affinities as explained in former volumes, and that the analogies are expressed horizontally. We thus find the Capricorn beetles fall in a line with the ungulated quadrupeds (or the oxen, antelopes, and all other horned genera), the represent- ations, as every zoologist knows, of the peacock, turkey, and other rasorial birds. As this comparison, therefore, establishes the analogy of the two groups in a general way, we may now proceed a step further, and ascertain how far this theory holds good when we come to ex- amine the conteilts of each. Analogies of the Capricorn Tribe and the Ungu- lated Quadrupeds. Families of the Capricornes. Prionid*;. Cerambycid£. Lgpturid^. bostrichid£. CURCULIONin^. Analogies, Size gigantic; body thick, heavy. Strong ; robust. C Slender ; graceful ; horns or an- ) } tenn£B very long. 5 f Thick obtuse snouts; prone as-l \ pect; antenuEB short. 3 r Head produced into a long snout 1 J or rostrum ; mouth terminal, > L very small. j T 4 Tribes of the Vngulata. Pachvdermata. solipedes. ruminantes. Anoplotheres. Edentata. 280 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. (251.) We may here intimate to such of our readers as are unacquainted with the animals composing the Eden- tata, that the long-snouted ant-eaters and the armadillos are here designated ; and so perfectly do the first of these represent, in their long snout, the attenuated rostrum of the Curculmiidce, that it is almost inconceivable how a quadruped and an insect can be such prototype^ of each other. The Pachydermata, or the elephant, the rhino- ceros, &c , are as truly the giants of the ungvdated qua- drupeds, as the bulky Prionidce are of the Capricorn tribe. The inferior developement of the foot in the Ce- rambycid(8 and of the Solipedes, — the tarsi of one cor- responding to the hoof of the other, — is not a little remarkable; while the LepturidcF, with their long and slender legs and their agile movements, find their ap- propriate representatives in the graceful antelopes. The uncertainty that hangs over the BostrichidcB prevents us from offering any conjectures on their analogy to the Anoplotheres ; and this latter group, also, from being chiefly known by its fossil remains, contains but very few types. Upon the whole, however, this is not a matter of much consequence, seeing that the analogies of the other four groups are as perfect as the great distance between the groups themselves, in point of af- finity, will admit. Our main object, in fact, was to draw the reader's attention to the analogy of the snout beetles and the ant-eaters; in doing which, the other resemblances, which previously we had never thought about, came suddenly to light while drawing up the table. That the analogies of the Curculionidce should be more apparent among quadrupeds and birds, than among annulose animals, or even insects of the same order, is not a Uttle singular ; but such is undoubtedly the fact, for there are few other beetles possessing an elongated rostrum. This is additional proof that analogies can never be fully traced or even understood without a general knowledge of all the classes of animals, and that they may be altoge- ther obscure in one gnup, while they become perfectly apparent when sought for in another. COMPARISON OF THE ABEKRANT TRIBES. 281 (252.) The Curculionidce being, therefore, the most aberrant family of the Capricorn circle, we may glance at those other groups, which are similarly situated among the lamellicorn and predaceous divisions : these are, the Buprestidce in the first, and the Silphidce in the second. Buprestis, indeed, offers two points of analogy with Curcnlio, — in being, like them, internal feeders upon wood, and in the dilatation of their tarsi ; but in all other respects the two groups are widely different, and, in their perfect state, have not the least similarity to- each other. On turning, however, to the Silphidce, or rather to their possible representatives the Pimelidce, the analogy between certain groups is very remarkable : thus, for instance, the large apterous forms among the African Brachyceri, with their globose black bodies, immediately remind us of certain Pimelice, more es- pecially of the Fabrician Pinieliu and Latreille's Mol~ luris ; and in all these are shadowed out the typical form of the ChrysomelidiE, and other Monilicornes, — obscurely, indeed, yet still sufficiently to add additional evidence to that already adduced. (253.) The analogies of this tribe to the Lamellicor- nes, again, is not without interest ; for although the relations, to all appearance, are remote, there is nothing to militate against the supposition that the primary groups represent each other. Analogies of the Capricornes to the Lamellicorn and the Predatorial Beetles. Families of the . ■ ■ Families of the Familiesof the LameUicornes. Analogies Capricornes. Predatores. CETONHD*. [ ^tf^l fc'Xurt^Tt"] L™—- C,c:noeuc«. rForm thick, heavy ; co-^ ScARABiEID^ ] l:^^^L''^:[eU/ed'sub:[cERAMByC.DiE. CaRAB.D^E. ' Stances. 3 r Jaws unusually exsert-1 LucANiD^. -J ed ; elytra sometimes 5- Prionid-E. Staphtlinidjb. C abbreviated. J BUPRBST.O.. pXrsubstatl '"] C.-RCUUO.,o.. S.lph,... HVDR0P111L1D.S. ? BOSTBICHID^ DYTISCID.& 282 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. As the Capricorn and the lamellicorn tribes live upon vegetables, they are of course more analogous to each other, than either of them are to the Predatoj'es, where the food is so totally different. We shall, therefore, say nothing of this last column in our table, but confine our- selves to illustrating the tribe we are now more particu- larly engaged upon. "W^hile rejecting the tarsal system, adopted by our modern nomenclators, as totally at va- riance with all natural classification, we yet attach no small importance to the different construction of the foot, whenever we find it is accompanied by other decided and general characters, whether of economy or of structure. When used with caution, it will assuredly lead to most satisfactory results, of which the arrangement of the two chief lamellicorn families (the CetoniadcB and the Scara- bfpidce') is a striking instance. Now, it is very obvious that each of these find their prototypes among the Capri- corn beetles. The elegant and highly ornamented Ceto- niad(B correspond with the Lepturidce, in having their tarsi long, linear, or cylindrical : both live also upon nearly the same food, and may be even seen upon the same flowers. The Scaruhceidee and the Ceramhycidce, on the other hand, have a form and an economy very different. They are both more bulky and inactive, and have the tarsal joints short, broad, and more or less di- lated on their sides. We look upon these organs, in fact, as only extreme modifications of the same primary structure, just as that which we see in the tarsi of a Leptura and a Cicindela; these latter being both cur- sorial, or adapted for running. Many of the Ceram- bycidce, again, live on decomposed or dead wood, either in their larva or perfect state, or in both ; and all the ScarabcBidee subsist upon decayed or decomposed vege- table matter : the colours of both are dull or dark, and they are equally tardy and heavy in their motions. In short, the parallels between tiiese two typical divisions are as strong as the nature of the case can possibly ad- mit ; nor are there wanting instances where the lamelli- form antennae of one is seen in a much greater degree of THE PRIONID^. 283 developement than in the tribe where this structure is universally prevalent. On the analogy, or rather the affinity, between the PrionidcB and the LucanidcB we have already stated quite sufficient; as well as on those reasons which makes the Buprestidee, however obscurely, the representatives of the Curculionidce. As for the last in our series, wherein the Bostrichidcp sta.nd opposite to the Hydrophilidtp, the same uncertainty exists in this as in the preceding table. If Latreille's Sagrides really fill this station, our difficulty would be removed, since those insects present two tangible points of analogy both to the Hydrophilidce and the DyticidcB; one, in the great developement of their posterior legs, and the other in their aquatic habits. LatreUle remarks that the Donacite, in their larva state, live on the internal parts of the roots of those aquatic plants upon which the perfect insect feeds ; so that in their larva state they are as decidedly aquatic as any of the true water beetles. On the other hand, these analogies may be all perfectly true, and yet the Sagrides may hereafter prove to be no other than some aquatic type within the circle of the Monilicornes, and as such, also, we shall subsequently treat them. (254.) Our first family, the Prionid^, contains, as we have before observed, many of the most gigantic of the Coleoptera. As the term is rather indefinite, a dis- tinct idea will be conveyed, when we say that the Ti- tanus gigas is frequently eight inches long, exclusive of the antennte ; and the Prionus HayesH of Mr. Hope, evidently closely allied to the genus Macrotoma, is four and a half inches in body, but, including its antennae, it is nearly a foot long. There is considerable variation in the structure of these organs in the family before us : that which is most typical, and which occurs chiefly in the genus Prionus itself, is to have them pectinated; although in the larger genera, as Titanus, Enoplocerus, Ctenoscelis, &c., they are filiform : but it must be ob- served, that what is technically called serrated arises from the gradual enlargement from base to apex of each successive joint of the organ, and not from the 284! NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. armature of the joints themselves ; in wliich cd.se Enoplo- cerus, Macrotoma, and others, would also have serrated antennsE, as each joint is thickly set with minute teeth. In Pohjarthron they are flabellated, and consist of forty- seven joints ; whereas, as we have before had occasion to observe, the typical number, as that which most con- stantly occurs, is for the organ to consist of but eleven. We however find in this family frequent aberrations in this particular, as very many exceed the usual number. Its most elegant form is that perhaps, which occurs in the imbricated antennae of the males of Prionus; and the family has received its name from this serrated struc- ture, prion signifying a saw. Other parts, besides the antennae, are likewise thus singularly furnished, espe- cially the legs and sides of the thorax ; the latter being always armed, laterally, with one or more spines, and frequently with a row of very minute and sharp teeth ; and it is from the variation in the number and arrange- ment of these spines and teeth, that Serville has founded his distribution of the large mass they constitute, and has thence broken them into genera. We have adverted to the characteristic of their being usually dark and sombre insects. This must not, however, be adopted with a rigorous application ; nor can, indeed, any cha- racter universally in any group in nature ; for here, even in Megopis, Anacantha, and Ccelodon, the thorax is not denticulated ; in Mallodon, and many others, the legs are not serrated ; in Anacolus and Poecilosoma, the body is gaily coloured ; and in Pyrodes, Psalidognathus, and Cheloderus, it is brilliantly metallic : the latter is remarkable for its concave, small thorax, and is an ex- tremely rare insect from Mexico, whence also Psali- dognathus comes. There is considerable difference in the sexes of the latter ; and, as in most metallic insects, diflferences of colour, some being of a deep blue, and others of a bright green ; whereas Che/oderus is of a rich vinous tint. The leading instance of analogy to the Luca- nidcp. is found in the deflexed, elongated, forcipate man- dibles of the former; but the largest developement of AFFINITIES OF THE PRIONID.E. 285 this structure is in Macrodontia, where they are greatly porrected, and more than twice as long as the head. These insects fly usually at night, and during the day they are lazily affixed to the trunks of trees. The power of flighty of course, implies the possession of wings ; but one genus (Prionapteron) is remarkable for being apte- rous, and having its elytra soldered together. In Anacolus these organs are shorter than the body and the true wings ; and, although the tetramerous tarsal structure is universal among them, yet in Trictenotoma they are heteromerous ; whence M. Solier has combined it with Phrenopates, another anomalous genus, but belonging certainly to a different group ; and he has formed with them an introductory section to his distribution of the Heteromera. We, however, think Trictenotoma appears to have a strong affinity to the Lucanida, into the circle of which, as an aberrant form, it ought possibly to enter ; of which we have a double indication in the structure of the antennae, which present a very elongate Lasal joint, and an indication of a lamellated form at the apex. A similar situation might also, possibly^ be assigned to Parandra, which the majority of sys- tematists have placed contiguous to the Prionidce ; in their general form, however, particularly in that of the clypeus and labrnm, and the thorax, and in the posses- sion of the tarsal plantula and pseudonychia, they are closely related to the LucanidcB, and only want pec- tinated antennae to belong absolutely to that family. But leaving this for future investigation, we have not the least doubt that, by means of the extraordinary Torneutes, a South American insect, nearly three inches long, and not more than half an inch broad, we have a direct intimation of the proximity of Cucvjus and its affinities, as Spondylis equally points to the sub-family of the BostrichidcB. The excessively flattened forms of Cucujus, Brontes, Dendrophagus, &c., is admirably adapted for their peculiar economy, living, as they do, beneath the bark of trees. The allied Palcestes and Passundra follow naturally here^ where we think it 286' NATURAL ATIUANGEMKNT OF INSECTS. probable that CUnidium, Rhysodes, and Cupes, also as- sociate ; indicating another affinity, in the direction of Brenthus, amongst the Curculios. "\\'ithin this circle, possibly, also, but certainly its most aberrant sub- family, may we place the remarkable PaussidcB, —in- sects that sport with the integrity of all previous sys- tems, and present a problem, as to their relations, never yet satisfactorily solved. Indeed, the small lignivorous and fungivorous genera of coleopterous insects are far from having yet been lucidly investigated, or even an approximation made to their affinities and analogies. The PaussidcB not only exhibit a very heterogeneous structure in their antennae, all the species differing con- siderably inter se in their form ; but they present, like- wise, an extraordinary difference in the number of the joints of these organs, in the several genera of which the sub-family is formed : thus, in Cerapterus there are ten, in Pentaplntarthrus there are six ; in Paussus two, the terminal joint being usually variously swollen and denticulated ; but, as if Nature took here a par- ticular pleasure in extraordinary freaks, we have even one in which this joint is perfectly cylindrical. Their legs present similar anomalies, for some are much com- pressed and dilated, and otliers are likewise cylin- drical. [W. E. Sh.] (255.) The Cerambycidte, according to the views already explained, form a family group, in which the front of the head, when viewed in profile, is always more or less vertical. This singular formation, which, as a general character, is found in no other family of the capricorns, is almost essential to the economy which belongs to the whole of this group. Sufficient evi- dence is before us, that the manners of Lamia am- putator, first made known by Guilding, are more or less similar to its numerous congeners : for some pur- pose, which is not yet sufficiently cleared up, these beetles are in the habit of gnawing off the branches of trees; and this is done in such a manner that they THE CERAMBYCID.E. 287 appear to be cut off, in an abruptly transverse direction, as if by the strokes of an axe or hatchet. Now, to accomplish this, it is evident that the head of the in- sect should be considerably bent downwards, that the jaws may cut transversely instead of obliquely. Hence we find, that as stooping the head during this long and toilsome occupation would have been exceedingly wearying to the insect, nature has given to that part a permanent position most suited to the office it has to perform. By this, also, we see the necessity of great muscular power being placed in the jaws, and the con- sequent enlargement of the head : the compact manner, also, in which this part is joined to the thorax, which, by encasing a considerable portion of its base, gives it still greater strength, is likewise in unison with the economy belonging to the family before us ; and is strikingly opposed to the small exserted heads of the Prionidce, and the feeble structure so characteristic of the LepturidcB. We select tliis, therefore, as the pri- mary character of the Cerambycidce ; for it not only per- vades the typical, but, with a very slight diminution, all the aberrant groups. When to this we add the equal breadth of the thorax and the head, the shortness and breadth of the tarsal joints, and the slight degree in which the hinder legs exceed the others, we enable the most unpractised student to determine at once, with- out minute anatomical investigation, the insects be- fore us. (256.) Our analysis of this family has not proceeded sufficiently far to allow of our designating more than the five sub-families, and to offer some remarks upon what appear the typical genera. We arrange the whole in the following divisions : — 1. The Acrocinince, which, as representatives of the Prionida' (with which, indeed, they were once placed), are of a very large size ; having the body considerably depressed, the anterior feet much lengthened, and the elytra spined at their tips : the tarsi in this group are very peculiar, and depart con- 288 NATURAL ARRANGEjfENT OF INSECTS. siderably from the typical structure ; the first joint is nearly as long as all the others, and the third only is lobed, or heart-shaped * : nor is there any " knob or swelling like an articulation,' at the origin of the last," or claw-joint; hence we infer that these insects are much more cursorial than any of their congeners, since their tarsi have a close resemblance to those of the Lepturidce. — 2. The LamiincB, where the typical cha- racters of the family are most conspicuous, appear to follow the last. Their body is nairower, more cylin- drical, and does not much exceed the breadth of the head and thorax ; the front of the former is so broad and flattened, that it is almost square ; and the latter is almost always armed with spines or tubercles. As they walk very slowly, but cling tenaciously, their feet are very different from the last : in the great majority, the two first joints are very short and heart->haped, and the third, as usual, deeply lobed. In some, approach- ing to Acrocinus 111., the anterior tarsi are greatly dilated in one sex, and conspicuously fringed with hairs : few are ornamented with any bright colours, and none that we know of are metallic. — 3. The CerambycincB have a general resemblance to the La- miince, in their cylindrical body being nearly of equal breadth throughout ; but their thorax and head are somewhat narrower, their legs more slender, and the first tarsal joint rather longer than the next : the ap- pearance of these insects, also, is quite different; their elytra are smooth or glossy, and often ornamented with a beautiful admixture of colours. One (^Lophonocerus), from Brazil, covered with bright yellow spots upon a black velvet-like ground, is one of the most elegant capri- cornsof this family. — As a type of the 4th division, we place the genus Lissonotun, which seems to intervene * This is one of the innumerable instances of abuse of primary charac* ters drawn from these organs. Authors begin their definition of this fa. inily by stating that the second and third tarsal joints are heart-shaped, and the last with a knob at the base; whereas all the three are diversified in almost every leading group. THE FIFTH TYPE HOUBTFUL. 289 between this siib-family and the next. These insects are remarkable for their large frequently tuberculated, and wrinkled thorax, and the comparative smallness of their head, which is scarcely vertical. The antenna are very long, and the joints in one sex considerably compressed and widened as they approach their termi- nation. Thus, with the robust form and general structure of the feet of the LamiincB, they begin to put on the characters of the Lcpturidce ; and liere, therefore, do we consider the two are united. — On the 5th type we feel incompetent to speak with any degree of con- fidence. The Saperdce Fab. are too closely allied to the Lamiince to be separated as a distinct sub-family. We have seen in museums certain South American Ceramhy- cidce having flabellifoim or laminated antennae (^Phcenico- cerus) ; but without the power of examining them at this moment, we dare not venture to say how far they are re- lated to Lissonotus, or whether they form a distinct group which would come in as the most aberrant division of this family. Judging theoretically, we should consider this latter supposition more than probable; since such a form is obviously analogous to ]\[elolontha, Elater, and several other types, filling the most aberrant stations in their own circles. Their shape, also, assimilates very much to certain pubescent Prionidce from South Africa ; and thus they may connect the Lissonotince with the Prionidce. These, however, are mere conjectures, useful perhaps in directing the attention of others to the sub- ject, but by no means sufficient to influence their decision on so intricate a point, yet, for the present, we shall consider Dorcadion, Parmena, and their affinities, as occupying this situation. (257.) Hasty and imperfect as the foregoing sketch of this family may be, it is quite sufficient to show there is a mutual relation between those divisions we have characterised, and those belonging to other assem- blages. This will be apparent on looking to the u 290 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. Analogies of the Cerambycid^ and the Capricorn Families. Sub-families of the Ceeumbycid^. Lamiimt. CeramhyciruB. LissonotiiuB. Horcadioniiue. Acrocinime. Analogies. C Antennje excessively long ; typi- 7 l_ cal of their respective groups. J Families of the Capricornea. CERAMBTCIDf. Lepturid*. f AntenriEe moderately long ; sub. 1 t t>'pical ; form more slender. J C Thorax very large and much de- 1 bostrichid*. i veloped; head small. J r Antenna remarkably short; often 1 Cubculionid*. i apterous. 3 Size large ; tarsi sub-cursorial. PaiONIDiE. Without dwelling upon all these resemblances, it may he sufficient to remark that Lissonotus offers a striking analogy to Bostrichus, in the enlargement of its thorax, the comparatively diminutive size of its head, and its short feet, — circumstances which appear to favour our idea, not only that the two groups are analogous (for that is sufficiently obvious), but that they naturally stand in the situation of affinity we have assigned them. A few details on each of these sub-families, and of the general principle which appears to enter into each, Avill conclude our remarks on this division of the capricorns. (258.) The /Icrocnimtf', although mostly large, are few in number, and are chiefly, if not exclusively, confined to Tropical America. The Acrocinus hnginmnus, Lacor- daire informs us, is usually found upon the trunks of trees or near them, and that it rarely occurs beneath their bark; it has an awkward gait, and drags itself along rather than walks. It sometimes takes flight about nightfall, and this it accomplishes heavily, but with a considerable noise. It seems scarcely capable of directing its pro- gress, as it frequently strikes against trees, and then falls to the ground. It possesses the power, Uke many other Cokoptera, especially Capricornes, of producing a loud and sharp noise by the friction of its thorax; and this can be i.1 THE DORCADIONINjK. 291 heard at a considerable distance. It is asserted that the umbones, or movable spines upon the thorax of these in- sects, have no use ; this is merely a confession of igno- rance, for is it at all probable that such an apparatus should be formed for no purpose ? We strongly incline to the opinion of Messrs. Kirby and Spence *, who " hazard the conjecture, that these organs were given to this animal by an all-provident Creator, to enable it to push itself forward, when, in the heart of some tree, it emerges from the pupa, that it may escape from its confinement." The great length of its legs, and from their being folded beneath it, and the confined position it is in, render a provision of this kind essentially requi- site. Macropus, Oreodera, Microplia, &c., enter into this sub-family. (259.) The DorcadioniruB are apterous insects, which sometimes have the elytra soldered together. They chiefly occur upon the ground in sandy districts, and are abundant in the South of Europe, especially on the coasts of the Mediterranean ; others occur at the Cape, and a very few come from the Brazils. These insects have usually an elliptical body and short antenme, and are slow and heavy in their motion : they are usually also of small size. Parmena, Dorcadion, and Morimus constitute the most typical forms, and Phrissoma and Cercpgklion appear more aberrant : the latter are peculiar to the southern hemisphere. The Lhsonotince comprise Megaderus, Tnichyderes, and other allied genera. They are generally gaily marked insects, and are chiefly natives of South America : their elytra are usually smooth and shining; and frequently their thorax is very considerably tuberculated, and the body somewhat depressed and at- teimated posteriorly. A common characteristic of the Capricornes, the elongation of the male antennae, is found considerably developed amongst them. The ge- nuine Cerambycince constitute but a small group, and the typical genus is confined to the old world, where, however, it has a wide distribution, occurring as far * Int. to Ent., iv. 587. u 2 292 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. eastward as the Philippine islands. The Lamiincn form a very large group, and range all over the world. They possess great variety of form, and amongst them are found some of the most eccentric of the entire circle. They are rarely metallic, and their prevalent colours are greys and drabs ; their anterior tarsi are frequently considerably dilated, and their antennae have occasionally a horny hook at the extremity. Some of the most re- markable genera are Gnoma, with its greatly elongated neck, and the terminal joints of its antennae, forming seg- ments of a circle ; these are natives of the larger islands of the South Pacific Ocean : then Tapeina, in which the head is considerably flattened in front, and produced into a lateral plate, behind which the antennae are in- serted ; Trachysoma, with its humped camel-like back ; and Xylorhiza, which has all the appearance of a piece of dead stick. [(258, 259.) W. E. Sh.] (260.) The third, or sub-typical, family of the Capri- corn beetles are the Lepturidce, known at once by their slender form, their small and slightly exserted head, which is triangular in front, and bj their cursorial legs ; the hinder pair of which are more or less lengthened. The most universal character, probably, among these insects, is the prolongation of the first tarsal joint, which is equal in length to all the others, particularly in the hind legs ; the second joint, also, is not heart-shaped or dilated, but more properly resembles the sides of a wedge : the head is narrower than the thorax ; and the eyes are generally oval, instead of kidney-shaped. The profile of the head, no longer vertical, is directed obliquely forward. Under this family we include most of Latreille's restricted genus Ceramhyx, together with all the other floral capricorns, as Leptura, Clytus, Necy- dalis, Sec. (261.) The great majority of these elegant insects, remarkable for their vivid colours and slender form, may be naturally arranged under the following sub- families: — 1. The Stenocorince ; where the body is cylindrical, convex, and of equal breadth throughout; ANALOGIES OF THE LEPTURID^. 293 the thorax ventricose, and the elytra abruptly termi- nated by two acute spines^ similar to those of Acrocina. — 2. The Callichrominee, where the body and elytra are narrowed from the base. — 3. The Lepturince, greatly resembling the last, but head narrow and por- rect at the base: the thorax, also, is narrow in front, and is only spined in one or two types. — 4. The Necydulince. — And, 5. The Dasycervtee, where the general form is not unlike that of Stenocorus ; but the elytra are not spined ; the thorax and head are of equal breadth with the body, — and the former, in the typical genera, is con- siderably lengthened ; the thighs or shanks are nearly all clavate, or suddenly thickened at their outer extremity: and the aspect of very many immediately reminds us of the Saperdce among the Lamiidce. Looking to them as forming a circle, we shall at once arrange them in the following series, for the purpose of determining their analogies in other groups. Analogies of the Lepturid^ and the Lamiad^. Sub-families of LepluridcE. CaLLICHROMINjE. Lepturin*. NeCTDALIN£. DaSYCERIN;E. STEN0C0RIN£. Analogs. Sub-typical. f Pre-eminently typical ; destitute 7 \ of metallic colours. j C Thorax considerably enlarged.and 7 \ ventricose. i f Thorax cylindrical, unarmed, and 7 \ very long. J Elytrse terminating inacute spines. Subfamilies of hamiida;. CERAMBYCIN.E. LAMIIN.E. LlSSONOTlN*. D0RCADI0NIN£. AcROCINiE. (262.) The only confidence we feel in this table, re- sults from the analogies which appear to exist between the respective groups ; and in a conviction that the two series are naturally distinct. But our analysis has not proceeded sufficiently far to determine the rank either of the Dasycerintp or the Dorcadionince : we believe they are representatives of each other ; and as such we have placed them, provisionally, as sub-families. This ana- u 3 294 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. logy may yet hold good ; even if the groups themselves turn out, upon further examination, to be of different or subordinate ranks. (2()3 ) The Stenochorince present us with some very interesting genera. In addition to the spines of the elytra, the apex of the joints of tlie antennae are frequently prolonged into acute spines, as are also in some the extremity of the femora. Uracanthus is dis- tinguished for its narrow very linear form, and Scole- cohrotus for the series of small spines occupying the whole length of each joint of the antennae externally; and Eburia and Ehtphidion are gay insects with ivory- coloured spots ; but Chlorida is distinguished for its pale green elytra. (264.) The CallkhromincB are very elegant insects, usually of brilliant greens and blues, and are frequently of very conspicuous size, especially in the genus Callichroma itself, in which the posterior tibiae are always compressed into a dilated plate. The type of the sub-family is a British insect, namely, the Aromia moschata, which, like its congeners, as also the species of Callichroma, exhale a rich fragrance much resembling the odour of the otto of roses. This is pro- duced by a white milky secretion more liquid than what we have observed in speaking of the exuding secretion of Meloe. Possibly here, the fluid is a sexual lure instead of a means of defence, as it is always found to be strongest prior to their intercourse. Jonthodes and Rosalia are also elegant insects, and the latter is ex- tremely abundant in various parts of Switzerland : the majority of these occur in humid situations, and chiefly inhabit soft wood like the willow. (265.) The Lepturin.e are distinguished from all the rest of the Longicornes by their very distinct neck, which in some, as in Nemotrogus, a large linear Cape insect, is extremely long, as are also the an- tennae, the latter being very slender. The thorax attenuated in front, amply characterises this sub- family, and, together with their porrect mouth, giveS THE NECYDALIN.E. 295 them a peculiarly inquisitive appearance. They are usually very agile, and frequently gaily coloured : this is conspicuous in Leptura, Toxotus, and Strangalia; whereas in Rfiamnusium, Rhagium, and Cometes, the legs are short and their gait is heavy. They are fre- quently found upon flowers and the trunks of trees, and many species are natives of this country. The other sub-families are noticed below. Q(263 — 265.) W.E. Sh.] (266.) On the sub-family A^ec?/rfa/m« we shall venture more at large. After our first theoretical arrangement of the Capricornes, we selected this group for minute ana- lysis, with the object of ascertaining how far the result would demonstrate the accuracy of our general distri- bution of the whole tribe. As we have already ex- plained the distinguishing characters of this group, it will be only necessary to impress upon the reader its true typical perfection. The Necydalince represent the Malacodermes, or soft- winged beetles, in the family of floral Capricornes, precisely the same as do the Sta- phylinidcB in the tribe of Predatores, — with which, in fact, it is naturally analogous. Now, the great peculi- arity of the Malacodermes and the Staphylinidce is this, — that the elytra are soft, and much less developed than in any other type : hence it follows that, as the Necy- dalina represent these two groups, those forms which have the most imperfect elytra become the most typical. They are, in short, pre-eminently imperfect in that particular structure, which distinguishes the Coleoptera. The genus Necydalis of Linnaeus- accordingly stands at the head of this sub-family, because, of all those forms which compose it, these have the shortest and the most imperfect elytra. (267O '^^^ general aspect of these insects, particularly when alive, and running upon flowers, so closely re- sembles that of the hymenopterous sand-flies (^Sphecida) that even an entomologist is often deceived at the first glance. The wing-cases are so short that the true wings are exposed ; and these, unlike most other beetles, have V 4 296 NATURAL ARKANGEMENT OF INSECTS. no transverse fold, but lie upon the long, somewhat pedunculated, body, at their full length. The true Necydali and the Sphecidce frequent the same situations; both are fond of basking in the sun, and feeding upon the nectar of umbelliferous flowers ; and they may often be captured from the very same plant. Their active gait shows that their structure, like that of all the floral Lamellicornes, is adapted for running. 'We consequently find the hinder legs remarkably long, while the basal tarsal joint is double the length of the two next. The most remarkable developement of this singular form of beetle, is seen in the Necydalis major Linn., the European type of the genus, at once dis- tinguished by its very short and abruptly truncated elytra. Other sub-genera occur in Tropical America ; one having the thorax globose, the hinder legs hairy, and the elytra more lengthened and pointed: the other has the thorax cylindrical (^Odontocera), more like the European type, but the tapering elytra are nearly as long as the body : in both these American types, the thighs are considerably and suddenly swollen. — We pass on to the next or sub-typical genus, Vespisoma ( Ves- perus of the French catalogues), where we have the general form of a Necydalis, but with the body shorter, and almost entirely covered by two very narrow elytra, — so narrow, indeed, that the whole body does not exceed the breadth of the thorax. Nature seems to have a pecu- liar pleasure in representing her forms under appropriate disguises; for here (Clytus) we have beetles clothed in the very colours of bees and wasps, — that is, banded and spotted with bright yellow upon a dark ground : the head is short, broad, and abrupt ; and is so much encased in the large globose thorax, as to appear con- founded with it. These, like the Necydali, are fre- quently found upon umbelliferous flowers ; and, under several sub-generic forms, are common both to temperate and tropical countries. The three aberrant genera ap- pear to be represented by Distichocera Kirby, Euryptera, and Cleonia. In regard to the Australian Distichocera, ANALOGIES OF THE NECYDALIN^. 297 however, we cannot speak from personal observation. Mr. Kirby, whose idea we have adopted, expressly mentions its affinity with Necydalis, and its analogy to Rhagium ; and it will be found that both these opinions are verified by the attempt we shall now make to illus- trate their analogies. Analogies of the NECYDALiNiE with the Capricorn Families. Genera of the Necydnlinte. Necydalis. Clytus. DiSTICHOCERA. Cleonia. EtIRYPTERA. Analogies. Head prominent, porrect. f Head obtuse, the base incased 7 i within the thorax.front vertical. J Thorax large, globose. Body lengthened, cylindrical. Mouth and jaws prominent. Families of the Capricornes. LEPTURIOiG. Lamiid^. BoSTRICHIDiE. CuRCULIONIDjE. Prionid* (268.) It is a remarkable circumstance, that one of the most universal distinctions between the floral and the lignivorous Capricorn beetles, namely, the different insertion of the head, is likewise conspicuous in the smaller group. Necydalis and the Lepturidce feed upon flowers : they are, in their respective stations, pre- eminently typical; and both have the head distinctly projecting beyond the thorax. On the other hand, we see, that as Clytus represents the Lamiidce, it accords with these latter insects in several respects : it is more fond of wood than of flowers ; its structure is more ro- bust ; and the head, like that of a Lamia, is so much sunk in the thorax, that there is no indenture between the two parts. Compare the remaining three genera, again, with the aberrant families of the tribe, and the series of analogies follow in the same order. Disti- chocera is remarkable for its large globose thorax; so also is Bostrichus. The most lengthened and slender beetles in existence are found among the Curculionidce ; while Cleonia, in just the same manner, is the most lengthened and cylindrical of all the aberrant Necyda- lina-. But stiU we want another genus to complete the 298 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OP INSECTS. circle ; and this, from all we know of the natural series in other groups, should have exserted jaws, in order to represent the Lucanid(p, the Prionidce, the Staphylinid^, and their corresponding types : no genus of modern systems appears to possess these characters more than Euryptera, a very curious insect we found in Brazil ; its jaws are not, indeed, very decidedly exserted, but the mouth is considerably produced : we are further dis- posed to assign it this station, because it clearly repre- sents Hispu and Lema, which seem to occupy the same station among their congeners as, Euryptera here falls into in the sub-family of NecydulirKB. On looking among the other Leptiiridct, for representations of Euryptera, we are immediately struck with its outward similarity to Stenoderus, in the shape of its elytra ; while the beautiful parallel between Distichocera and Lissonotus is one of those resemblances all can perceive. So far as our analysis has yet extended, the sub-genera of Clytus and Necydalis are in unison with this series of the ge- nera of Necydalince. (269.) ^V^e have frequently called the attention of zoologists to a singular fact, which the structure of Distichocera fully confirms. In the rasorial type (or that which corresponds to it among insects), the antennae are either greatly developed, or are of an unusually complicated structure. The tribe of the Capricornes, which represents the rasorial tribe of birds, are accord- ingly remarkable for the excessive length of these mem- bers. In like manner, as Distichocera represents these tribes in the little circle of the A^ecydalince, so do we find it is distinguished from all the remaining genera by the very same circumstance, — namely, the peculiar developement of its antennae. The great prevalence of this structure is again seen in the tribe of Bomhyci- d(B, or the silk-worm moths, where the antennae are very highly developed ; while, in the very smallest group in nature, we have a sub-genus of Necydalis where the antennae appear as if borrowed from a Bombyx. It by no means follows, however, that all rasorial types possess THE CAPRICORNES FORM THE RASORIAL TYPE. 299 pectinated, or very long antennae ; because, if so, the bulky Dynastklce should have longer antennte than any of the other LameUicornes, which they have not : but here we find the same analogy manifested Vinder another character. Rasorial types are pre-eminently horned, or furnished with crests or tubercles, representing the real horns of ruminating quadrupeds. It is therefore under this form that nature shows us which is the rasorial type among the Cetoniadce; and nearly every entomologist who has mentioned these singular and unwieldy beetles, has com- pared them to horned cattle. All the leading types of nature are to be known by some three or four peculiar characters; but as we recede from the highest point of perfection, some one or more of these will gradually dis- appear : it therefore inevitably follows, that there are comparatively few instances which show a combination of all the typical characters; because, in every group, the typical examples are much fewer than the aberrant. Hence a rasorial type may be indicated by the possession of horns, without any unusual developement of the an- tennse, as is the case with the Dynastince and the Mega- somince. If both these characters are wanting, nature confers upon the type some other of the rasorial cha- racters,— namely, an unusually long neck, as in the Ca- melopardalis, the swan and ostrich among birds, and^^ra and Casnonia among the predaceous beetles, If none of these indications of the rasorial type are seen, nature is still consistent ; for she ornaments her type with ocel- lated or rounded spots, in imitation of the peacock — that bird which stands at the head of the Rasores, and in which she has consequently concentrated all the rasorial characters in the highest perfection. These remarks, although introduced to iWustrate the genus Distichocera, must be considered as applying to all natural groups throughout the animal kingdom. (270.) We shall conclude with a few remarks on the genus Euryptera. Most entomologists, upon a hasty glance, may be tempted to look upon this as a very ano- malous form, whose admission among the Necydalince 300 NATl KAL ARRAXGEMENT OF IXSECTS. appears extremely doubtful. A more attentive examin- ation, however^ will weaken, if not entirely remove, the doubts. In the first place, the very peculiar structure of the antennse is a strong indication of this affinity ; secondly, it is the only form yet discovered in this sub- family, wherein the mouth and jaws are lengthened and prominent. Theoretically, we have abundant evidence that such a form is to be found in every natural genus ; because, without it, we should have no representation of the Prionidce and their corresponding types. Now, the mouth of Euryptera assumes all the lengthened pointed appearance of that of a bee; while the proximity of the antenns, and the wide termination of the elytra, remind us immediately of Hispa and of Lyons, — two groups which, in their own circles, occupy exactly the same station as that we have assigned to Euryptera among the JVecyda- Uiicb: these reasons appear to us much more weighty than others, by which it may be urged that Euryptcrus, from its lengthened muzzle, is more likely to be the type of the Curculionida. If we had to look only to this con- sideration, the analogy is certainly strong ; but how then are we to account for the depressed form of the body, and the dilatation of the elvtra ? The Curculionidce, and all their representations, the Trogidce and the Melo- lonthidce, are eminently thick and convex ; the resem- blance, therefore, does not seem sufficiently strong. If an analogy is true, the whole structure of an insect can be illustrated ; for, by comparing it to numerous others, all holding the same station in their respective circles, we get an insight, by every fresh comparison, explana- tory of some one or other of its peculiarities. What other sub-genera belong to Euryptera, we know not ; but a very remarkable type, which we here delineate, appears to connect it with the LepturincE. (271.) In thus attempting, in some measure, to in- dicate those principles upon which the two typical families of the Cupricornes, as we conceive, are natu- rally distributed, we feel how much remains to be ac- complished. Our views, as it will be readUy perceived, ■jt THE DASYCERA. 301 are completely at variance with those who have gone before us ; and yet they have every appearance of coin- ciding with every thing that we have hitherto written upon the natural system. Thus encouraged, we have had less scruple in giving them to the public ; and we hope it may be instrumental in breaking up the present disjointed and empirical mode of studying animals, and more particularly insects : our great object will then be accomplished. (272.) A few remarks upon the group we have provisionally called Dafiycera will close our present sketch of these capricorns. They (^Cosmisoma, Core- mia, Disaulax, &c.) are commonly termed, by collectors, hottle brushes, from the circumstance of a considerable number having fascicles, or tufts of hairs, situated about halfway on their antennae, and sometimes, though rarely, on their hinder feet. These appendages, however, are sometimes found in certain insects, which in all other respects belong to the Lumiidce ; while in many of those v/hich seem naturally situated among the Lepturidce, there are great differences in all other parts of their structure. Nothing but analysis, therefore, will de- termine whether these resemblances are relations of analogy or of affinity. In the mean time, however, we cannot resist the belief that, between the StenocorincB on one side, and the JVecydalince on the other, a large portion of these insects will intervene, and constitute the most aberrant sub-family of the floral capricorns. Those which ai)pear to us the most typical, have the thorax cylindrical, nearly half as long as the body, and always smooth ; the head smaU, truncate, and sunk ; and all these three parts are nearly of equal breadth throughout. In this respect, they considerably resemble the Saperdce, but in all other points are totally different. The legs are slender, thighs very clavate, and the first tarsal joint lengthened: the elytra are truncated and unarmed; but, in such as show an affinity to the Stenocorince, they are spiaed ; while in others, which remind us of the Necy- dalince, the thorax is short, broadest in the middle, and 302 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. the short antennse much resemble those of Necydalis. It is upon these considerations we ground our belief that the Lepturidce form a natural circle of affinity; and that the Dasycerce correspond, in their own group, to the Sapei-dcB, whatever their respective ranks may be. There is an objection, however, against this location of theDa.^v- cercB, on the score of analogy, which, as few will antici- pate, we shall ourselves mention. If the thorax of insects be urged by some as representing the neck of quadrupeds (a position we cannot admit), then it may be said there is no analogy between the DasycertB and the swan, the giraffe, and other long-necked Vertebrata, be- cause these are rasorial types, and not the most aberrant. But even admitting this, the long thorax of these insects find their representatives in Brentus, among the Curcu- I'wnidce, and even in a whole order of birds ; for the Grallatores, or waders, have the longest necks, as an order, of all others. However this may be, apparent affinities must not be disturbed for the sake of such ab- struse questions as these, which may be safely put aside until natural affinities are better understood — at least, among the Annulosa. (273.) Our fourth family, the Bostrichidre, although of comparatively limited extent, is of a very marked character ; and also, although possessing considerable habitual resemblance, especially between the typical and least aberrant forms, yet in particulars diifer much from each other. The most typical structure is for the head to be retractile within the thorax, which is large, sub- globose, and forms a ventricose hood : the body itself is cylindrical. In the most normal forms, the antenns are geniculated and clavate at their extremity, the knob being sometimes solid. In some genera, as in Hylurgus, Hylastes, Scolytus, the head is prolonged, anteriorly, into a truncated snout ; but in Tomicus, Platypus, &c. it is obtuse; in the latter genus, the tarsi are very long and slender, exceeding the tibiee in length. In the closely allied genus Tesserocerus, the basal joint of the antenna is continued, in the male, considerably beyond THE BOSTRICHID^. 303 the geniculation of the organ, and this process is dilated at its apex into a fornicate appendage with a long fringe, and, in repose, the two combined meet over the forehead and cover it like a cap. In Tomicus, the elytra are fre- quently retuse at their apex. The little Scolytus is no- torious for the devastation it has caused among the elms in the vicinity of the metropolis, but it is a point not yet quite satisfactorily decided, if it is the insect which is the original depredator, or whether, from some other cause, the tree having fallen into a sickly condition, these insects then visit it, and greatly accelerate its total destruction. The majority of this family are sub-cor- tical dwellers, comparatively few of them piercing into the solid wood. Almost every species has a different mode of forming its gangways, and in some cases the channels they elaborate are extremely elegant. Between these, which have the closest affinity to our next family, and Bostric/ius, Apaf.e, Sec, the chief and most marked differences consist in the clava of the antennse being formed of three distinct and separate joints : there is a great difference also in their larvas; those of the latter, where, indeed, the structure of the antenna has a la- mellated indication, being considerably like those of the Lamellicornes, and have long legs, whereas the former are apods, or have but warty tubercles. Those of Apate, &c.also more frequently bore into the solid wood of trees. In Anohium, and its immediate allies, we observe the an- tennsE becoming filiform, the only intinnation of itspreced- ing structure consisting in the elongation of the three ter- minal joints, which sometimes, asin Dryophilus, exceed the length of the remainder of the organ. We thus detect an indication of the proximity of Ftinus, in which, however, there is a departure from the xylophagous habits of the group, pointing evidently towards Durmestes, whence we doubtlessly come into close contact with the circle of the SilphidcB. By means of Nemosoma, and from it through Trogo-sita (for it is here we expect the latter must come, proved by that affinity), we find col- lateral affinities impinging clearly upon the Cucujidcs in .'304' NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. the circle of the PrionidcB. We have not space here to analyse these relations, and can only hint at them to guide the student's further research. As aberrant con- stituents of this circle, we shall, of course, find many of the small xylophagous genera, as Lyctus, Bitomu, &c. &c. (274.) Our fifth family consists of the CurculionidcB. It cannot be expected that we can give more than a very general idea of this enormous concourse of injects, which, in Schonherr's monograph, already occupies five octavo volumes of nearly a thousand pages each, and will possibly require as many more to complete it. The described species considerably exceed 5000 in number. The most striking peculiarity in their economy is their being very extensively carpophagous, or feeders upon seeds and fruits : we have already noticed some of their most prominent features, and thence we may assume that those which have the longest rostra, and most strongly geniculated antennae, must, of course, be the most typi- cal in their own circle ; we therefore find them in the genus Balaninus, our common nut weevil, and its affini- ties. Megarhinus and Antliarhinus also offer us striking instances of this characteristic; in the latter, this rostrum is several times longer than the body, and as slender as a stout bristle. Schonherr, in his very artificial arrangement of these insects, has widely separated these genera ; he has, however, suggested a new arrangement at the com- mencement of his fifth volume, in which he has turned the whole mass, of what he calls the spurious Curcu- lios, round, to follow the Orthoceri, or those which have not the antennae geniculated, but which are usually long-snouted insects. By this means we have them im- mediately succeeding the Cossoni and Rhyncophorce, insects, also, which have long rostra. The filiform Brenthides, as also the Rhinomacerides, Anthribides, and Bruchides, as abnormal forms, are excluded from the genuine series. The most typical Gonatoceri, or those with geniculated antennae, are evidently con- tained in the first division of his Mecorhynchi, — namely, THE CURCULIONID^. 805 the Erirhinides, two forms of which we have already noticed. The position of the legs, the structure and number of the joints of the flagellum of the antenns, the form of the pectus, of the rostrum, and of the lateral channel in tlie latter, into which the insect can with- draw its antennae, supply the leading characters in the generic distribution of this host of insects. Thus, in some, as in the Cryptorhynchi, the insect has the power of burying its long rostrum in a groove in the breast. Zygops, in this same group, is remarkable for the size and contiguity of its eyes, as also for the com- pression of its legs, and Mononychus for the single claw at the apex of its tarsi. In Mecopus the anterior legs of the male are exceedingly lengthy. We also find lengthy anterior legs among the Rhynchophora, which have not the power of concealing their long ros- trum in the breast. In the latter, the tarsi are con- siderably developed, and they contain the largest genuine weevils, aU being ti'uly carpophagous. Protocerius colossum is more than two inches long, and of a pro- portionate bulk ; in length, however, as compared with bulk, the Brenthides are the most conspicuous, for Brenthus barbicornis, a New Zealand insect, is usually two inches and three quarters long, and at its widest part it is not more than two lines wide : but the most bulky of this group are to be found in the short-snouted division, in the genus Brachycerus, wherein we have a species more than an inch and three quarters long, and an inch broad, and all its limbs of a proportionate ro- bustness. These latter insects, which are apterous, occur in sandy deserts, and we have already had occasion to compare them with some of the Pimelias, with which, in habits, they completely agree : they occur in abundance in Southern Africa, Patagonia, and the French coast of the Mediterranean. Apterous insects are very frequent in this group, which also, although it presents very many obscure and black insects, is chiefly remarkable for the brilliant splendour of the majority of its members. A well-known instance of this splendid clothing, and one 306 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. not easily surpassed, is to be found in the common dia- mond beetle, Entimus imperialis, and its neighbour E. splendidus, insects usually so abundant in the Brazils, that the trees which they inhabit — a species of Acacia — are more densely covered with them than with their leaves, and which would thus happily prefigurate the gardens of the Hesperides with their golden fruit, here refulgent with the most delicate and varied tints of gems and metals. Cyphus also is very rich in its vestments, yet few surpass the elegant little Coniates Taniarisci, which, upon a golden green ground, has a couple of oblique bands of a bright coppery hue. The colour of these insects, for which we have significantly used the term clothing above, is produced by the imbrication of a multitude of minute scales of a variety of forms, and which under the microscope, for which they prove ad- mirable test objects, exhibit differences of sculpture ; and this, froin its various reflection of the rays of light, produces all their diversities of tint. Although the colour of the majoiity of these insects is usually produced by the scales, yet some of intensely brilliant hues are to- tally without them, as in the genus Eurhinus, where we have greens, blues, and purples — the colouring of the integument itself — unsurpassed in the whole cir- cle of the Coleoptera : these are smooth insects ; but in Rhynchitefi, a softened tone is given to their tints by a multiplicity of minute punctures, whence a lengthy pubescence envelopes th« creature. One of the most splendid of the latter is the Rhj/nchites Bacchus, an insect which has derived its specific name from its attachment to the vine, which unfortunately, however, it " loves to destroy," for in the vineyards of the Continent it is frequently very detrimental. We are prepared to expect many eccentricities of structure in so large a group of insects, and of which we witness on all sides remarkable exemplifications : the thickened snout of Hipporhinus ; the two curved spines of the propectus of Diorymerus, as also its humped thorax ; the remarkable obesity of Guioperus ; the conspicuous THE CURCULIONID^. 307 central strangulation of Hyphantus ; the tabular flat- ness of Homalonotus ; the spinose and tuberculatecl backs of many Hipporhini and Amycteri, and the very obtuse snouts of the latter ; as also the gibbous forms of Byrsops ; the thickened antennse of Ulocerus and Episus ; the remarkably slender antennae of a small new genus from Van Diemen's Land^ in which these organs are longer than the body ; and Eurhamphus, one of the largest of this group, which has its body covered with scattered tufts of erect brown and white hair, — all offer striking instances. Being chiefly phy- tophagous insects, — for Brachycerus, and some few others, form remarkable exceptions— they are, of course, the natives of all countries ; and the more luxuriant vegetation becomes, the greater is their population, which is strongly confirmed by their abundance in the Brazils. It is chiefly from the aberrant portions of this large group, that we trace their more direct affinities; thus, by means of R/iinomacer, we have a passage marked towards Mycterus and Salpingus, in the heteromerous division of our Malacodermata, and through Rhinotia to Lycus, in its pentamerous division. In Bruchus, they direct, by their flabellated antennse, to the Lamellicornes, and by their enlarged posterior thighs to Sagra, in the monilicorn circle; but it is by Mecocerus and Ptychoderes, among the Anthribides , that we have the most evident affinitv indicated with the normal Capricornes. Here, also, in the broad short snout of Euparius, Plafyrhinus, and Lagopezus, we have an affinity shown with the ScolytidcE^ in the circle of the Bostrichidce, which is further con- firmed in a different part, namely, to Anohiurn, &c., by the serrated clava of Arcecerus. If we may venture an analogy with the Predatores, we have it hinted at in the lengthened neck of Apoderus, which much resembles Casnonia; whence Linnaeus mistook one of the latter for an Attelahus, with which he considered Apoderus as congenerical. [(273, 274.) W. E. Sh.] X 2 508 NATURAL AHRAXGEAfENT OP INSECTS. CHAP. IX. COLEOPTERA, Continued. THE MONILICORNES. (275.) The Monilicornes appear a most natural tribe of the Coleoptera, when we look only to the chief types ; but until those, which we shall here term the aberrant forms, are better studied, their precise situ- ation in the series is rather surmised than asserted. This division is eminently distinguished from the Ca- pricornes, both by the habits and form of the larvse, no less than of the perfect insects. In one sense they are the most typical of all Coleoptera, whUe in another they are the most aberrant ; a paradox which may be thus explained : — The whole tenour of our remarks upon this order, when looked at as a whole, goes far to prove that the developement of the superior wings, under the form of hard cases, and great powers of walking, are two of the principal characters of the order. Now, the first of these are more conspicuous among the mo- nilicorn beetles, than in any other tribe ; the elytra not merely cover the body in the ordinary manner, but actually, in the typical families, are so much dilated as to project beyond the body, so as to protect the legs; while the thorax, in a similar manner, forms a shield which encircles the head, and completely hides it when viewed from above. These, in fact, are the universal characters of the numerous family of the Cassidee, standing at the head of the tribe ; and which, from thus being concealed, as it were, by a buckler over their bodies and joints, are called tor- toise beetles. Their inferiority, again, to all other THE MONILICORNES. 309 Cokoptera, is shown in a different way. They have the shortest tarsi of all others, and composed of the fewest joints * ; they are consequently the slowest walkers. We thus verify our second proposition^ of their being the most aberrant of all Coleoptera, when viewed in op- position to the Cicindelidcp, — the most pre-emineiuly typical of the order in the powers of locomotion. (276.) Looking, therefore, to the Cassidce, and their near neighbours, the CoccinelUdce, or ladybirds, and the Chrysomelidce, we see a numerous assemblage of small, thick, globose beetles, with the body very convex on the upper part ; the thorax nearly as broad as the elytra : the head is always small, either sunk in front of the thorax, or concealed beneath it : the antennae are moni- liform, or resembling a string of beads : the legs are short and thick, with the tarsi dilated and heart-shaped; the first joint of the tarsus, in the typical group, being scarcely longer than the second. Primary characters, however, taken from these organs, in the present group, are ab- solutely of no value whatever, for they vary in the most remarkable manner in almost every family ; nay, some- times, in the most natural genera. Among these insects, the Cassidce are most remarkable for the singularity of their forms, and the Chrysomelidce for the brilliancy of their metallic colours. MacLeay, looking also to other characters, perceived it was one of the most natural groups in the whole order. He defines it as having " a hexapod and distinctly antenniferous larva, with a sub- ovate, rather conical body, of which the second segment is longer, and of a different form from the others, so as to give the appearance of a thorax." This definition is more especially taken from the larvae of Cassida and Coecinella, the two typical families of the tribe. Among * Mr. MacLeay, long ago, completely exposed the artificial nature of the tarsal system {Linn. Trans, xv.), by showing, that what the French thought were tetramerous beetles, are in fact pentamerous ; and that those which were called trimerous, were actually tetramerous! And yet we tind this exploded system taken up again, and called " Modern Classification," be- cause " it is in general use, and of easy application : " so is the binary system of Kennie. X 3 olO NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS, the aberrant groups, however, there are several modifi- cations, more or less influenced by their affinity to in- sects beyond their own circle, and by the analogies they bear to others. The great majority of the Monilicorncs live upon the leaves of plants; but there is an extraor- dinary exception in regard to the Coccinellince, or lady- birds, whose larvae are carnivorous, — feeding most vora- ciously, as is well known, upon the Aphides, or plant lice. This is another marked instance, within this order, of herbivorous and raptorial insects being actually as- sociated in the same group ; and yet, that they follow each other in a natural series, there can be no doubt. This carnivorous propensity seems to be shared also by the Hispklce, but is quite unknown among the larvae of the other families. Did our space permit, it would not be difficult to show that the ladybirds correspond in their own circle to the predatorial tribe, just as the Cassidce represent the Lamellicornes. (277-) The three aberrant families which we consider as more or less connected with the two preceding, are the Clythridtp, the Erotylidce, and the Hispidce, — each differ- ing, in a striking manner, from the other, both in their larva and perfect state, yet all possessing certain cha- racters by which they approximate to the typical structure. In regard to Cryptocephalus, it is impossible to determine, without analysis, whether the insects form a part of the Chryso77ie!>dce, or of a distinct family. The nature of their larvae, which is stated to be unknown*, might help us to determine this question. However this may be, we have no doubt that the genus Clythra is the type of a dis- tinct family, analogous to i\\e Acrocinince by the elongated fore-legs of the perfect insect, and to the Hesperid NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. extending considerably beyond the abdomen : their an- tennae are dilated into an abrupt, compressed, three- jointed clava ; and in some the inside of the anterior tibia of the male has, towards its apex, a long decumbent spine. Other cognate genera have not the sides of the elytra enlarged. (279-) Our next sub-family, the Chrysomelidce, are convex insects, generally ovate : they differ from our second section of the preceding, in having four obvious joints to the tarsi ; antenna not clavate ; and their larvae, at least those of the type, are naked, and feed upon the leaves, of plants, leaving nothing but the fibrous skeleton. The Galerucidce, which contain also Haltica, — but we think very incorrectly, considering the different structure and habits both of larva and imago, — are a component portion of the present family : the latter are remarkable for the great enlargement of their posterior legs, which gives them the power of leaping ; and they are the only insects, throughout the phyto- phagous division of the Coleoptera, that possess this power. Their larvae and themselves are exceedingly destructive to plants ; and our farmers have frequent occasion to execrate their existence, on account of their spoliation of turnip crops, — one of these little skipping insects being the well-known and formidable turnip fly ; their larvae feed between the membrane of leaves, upon the parenchyma. Tritoma and Triplax, which British entomologists have usually associated with the Engid(e, evidently come into this group somewhere ad- jacent to ChrysomeJa : they are fungi vorous insects ; and some of the exotic species are very conspicuous for size. The types of the sub-family Galeruca are formed like the preceding, but they do not jump, and occur chiefly in humid situations. (280.) Our next family, the ClythridcB, are all insects of a heavy obtuse form ; sometimes, as in Chlamys, of a rough and very unequal surface, more resembling a cluster of irregular crystals than an insect : it is exclusively American, Clythra itself is more THE EROTYLID^. 315 elongate, nearly cylindrical, and very obtuse at both extremities ; it has short serrated antennje. Cryptoce- phalus is of a somewhat similar form ; but its antennae are usually very long, especially in the males, and slightly clavate at the apex. Its head, also, is retractile within the thorax, whence its name ; whereas in Clythra it is deflexed, and has very prominent mandibles. The latter appears confined to the Old World ; whereas Cryptocephalus, which is a very numerous genus, nearly 200 species being known, has a universal range. The larviE of the insects of this family have a peculiar ap- pearance, very unlike the neighbouring families, and more like those of the LamelUcornes, — being consider- ably swollen at the posterior extremity, and frequently curved. Like the Cassidce, these insects use their ex- crement as a protection, — forming a case of it, into which they retire, protruding only their heads and legs. Many other genera — as the beautiful Colaspis, Eumol- pus, and Lamprosoma — belong to this group ; the latter exclusively American, and of considerable refulgence, as we have before observed, and whence Mr. Kirby named it generically. (281.) The ErotylidcB are our next family, and have, like the Eumorphi, an enlarged compressed club to the antennse ; the body very gibbous, the gibbosity almost angTilated ; and they have also longer legs than the cognate families : they are fungivorous insects. It is exceedingly remarkable, that several truly heteromerous genera find their complete analogies within this circular group of insects ; for we cannot consider them close affinities, although the resemblance is frequently so great, that any but a skilled entomologist would, from their appearance, place them with the genera they re- semble. This shows how important it is to divest ourselves of the influence of appearance, and to examine carefully ; for it is particulars only that can confirm identity. As instances of these deceptive forms, I need mention but a few ; namely, Sphcniscus, Nilio, Cossy- phus, and Helceus. Although the structure of parts 3l6 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. would justify our placing Languria in this sub-family, yet its general form is so dissimilar, — it being very elon- gate and linear, — that we consider systematists ought to find a more appropriate place for it. AV'e cannot think that, like Tritoma and Trip/ax, it is fungivorous. (282.) The Hispidce are our fifth family, and, from their close affinity to the Cassidce, thus complete, as we have before observed, the circle. They are depressed insects, with shcrt legs, and porrect moniUforra an- tenna. The typical genus is usually surrounded by spines, which give it a formidable appearance, as well as a name. Although the structure of the perfect in- sect associates it very closely with our first family, yet the form and habits of its larva as widely separate them ; for the larva of the present feeds, like that of Haltica, between the membranes of leaves, upon their parenchyma. This larva is robust and of a tapering form, and undergoes all its transformations within the leaves ; different species frequenting different plants. The largest insect of the group is contained in this family, in the Brazilian genus Alurnus, which seems to replace there the Hispa of the Old World ; and yet this insect is only comparatively large ; and the character of the whole group is to contain insects of small dimensions. (283.) There being no greater difference between Hispa and Cassida than we find between Haltica and Galeruca, we may still hesitate whether we might not introduce Sagra, and its affinities, into the place of the HispidcE, and transpose these into the circle of the Cassidces but whether this be their confirmed position or not, we cannot have a better opportunity to notice the few conspicuous genera that would otherwise want a locality. Sagra is eminently distinguished for the enormous size of its posterior femora, and its long curved posterior tibiae, — thus greatly resembling the structm-e of Leucospis and Chulcis among the Hymenoptera ; for as, in them, this structure is unaccompanied with the power of leaping, a similar incapacity and structure we observe nAUITS OP DONACIA. 317 also in Bruchus. The Sagrce. are beautifully coloured insects, of a green, blue, or a rich purple vinous tint. We find this family containing other genera of a similar form, — as Megamerus, a rare New Holland genus ; and Mfigalopus, from South America ; and we know other African forms yet undescribed. A closely allied genus, Donacia, is, perhaps, one of the most beautiful of the Coleoptera; they are metallic, and of every variety of tint: their larvs feed within sub-aquatic plants j and it is upon these that the perfect insect is found, for a short time, about midsummer : these may be termed, also, sub-aquatic, for they have the power of walking down water plants considerably beneath the surface — it is presumed, to deposit their eggs; and to enable them to retain their hold, we find them furnished with very powerful claws, by which they tenaciously adhere. This is a structure evidently appropriated to this purpose ; for we find it again, but with increased developement, in Macroplea, which has similar habits, and belongs to the same family ; and in Macronychus, which has the habit of clinging to floating wood in strong currents, and be- longs to a group closely allied to Parnus and Dryops. The geims Lenta, or Crioceris, will terminate our notice of the monilicorn Coleoptera. These insects seem a con- necting link between Galeruca and the Sagridce; like the former, they are frequently very destructive : the little black larva of one species especially, the C. Asparagi, de- stroying the crops of asparagus, and the C. Merdigera being equally obnoxious to the white lily ; here, however, less detrimental to the results of men's industry and ex- pectations, than in the preceding case. They are elegant and gaUy coloured insects. [(278—283.) W. E. Sh.] 318 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OV INSECTS. CHAP. X. COLEOPTERA, Continued. ON THE MALACODEBMES. (284.) The Malacodermes, or winged tribe of beetles, is composed of those genera, where the elytra are either remarkably soft, or much abbreviated : of these, the ge- nera following, mostly representing sub-families, seem to be the chiefly tyincaX: —Lampyris, Meloe, Cantharis, Lytta, Lycus, Dictyoptera, &c. We adopt the expressive name given to the majority of these insects by Latreille ; but we by no means include all he has arranged among his Malacodermes, and we incorporate others, as is ap- parent even in the foregoing list, which he has placed in widely different situations. Mr. MacLeay seems to be the only naturalist who has had any clear conception of this group, — one of the most natural in the whole order, to a philosophic mind, but altogether incomprehensible to a mere methodist, who is guided by methods built on the form of the palpi or the joints of the tarsi. True it is, that soft-bodied insects, with imperfectly formed elytra, are scattered in many other tribes, — as the Staphy- linidcB among the Predatores, several forms belonging to PrionidcB, and many others in the LepturidcB, as Necy- dalis, &c. ; but as, in other parts of their structure, they retain all the characters of the groups to which they severally belong, there is no danger of their being mistaken or confounded with the true Malacodermes, — they are merely representatives, not congeners. In the slight sketch we are now employed ypon, any attempt to define a group so varied, by precise characters appli- cable to the whole, would be altogether premature, even THE LAMPYRID^. 319 were it practicable. It is sufficient to state, therefore, that not merely the elytra, but the whole body and limbs, of these beetles are soft ; that nearly all are very much depressed ; that the elytra do not embrace the body, as in ordinary beetles ; and that the head is never sunk in the thorax. Whether any subordinate characters may be furnished by the larvae, it is impossible to say. It seems, however, that in more than one instance, among the typical forms, these are furnished with cau- dal appendages, — a circumstance which tends, in this in- stance also, to corroborate MacLeay's impression of this being the thysanuriform type of the Coleoptera; in which case it would be perfectly analogous to Podura by its larva, to Staphylinus by the perfect insect, and to all others related by analogy to these groups. (285.) As we are now proceeding by synthesis, we shall make no attempt to throw these insects into a circular series, — a process which might rather tend to retard the investigation they require, than to strengthen our present theory. Nevertheless, as some mode of ar- rangement becomes absolutely necessary, we shall inti- mate what appear to us — for reasons subsequently stated — the primary types or families of the whole. These may be represented by the following five genera : — 1. Lampyris ; 2. Meloe ; 3. Lymexilon; 'i. Mor- della; and, 5. Lycus. (286.) The Lampyridce, or glowworms, if not the most typical, are certainly the sub-typical family, of the whole order. Its most predominating character is to have the thorax dilated into a shield, the margins of which project on every side, and very often entirely con- ceal the head ; the legs are short, with all the joints un- usually compressed, the tarsi of nearly equal thickness throughout, and the apparent joints only four. The an- tenna are variable in the different genera : in some, they are remarkably pectinated ; in others serrated ; many are merely compressed; while, in the aberrant divisions, they are almost filiform. The body is always long, generally narrow, and remarkably soft. The genus Amydetcs, 320 NATURAL ARRANGEMKNT OF INSECTS. where the antennae are remarkably developed, and the head completely hidden under the dilated margin of the thorax, is probably the most typical form : it contains, no doubt, its own sub-genera ; but the variations of the antennae are so numerous, differing in almost every spe- cies, that no reliance must be placed upon these mo- difications, for sub-generic characters.* It is generally imagined, that the great majority of the typical Lampy- ridre, like those of the South of Europe, are luminous : this supposition, however, is against our personal expe- rience. We have seen, on a summer's night, in the suburbs of Genoa, the air perfectly illuminated with millions of one of these species; but this we never wit- nessed in Brazil. We do not remember, indeed, to have remarked the luminosity of any one of the numerous Lampyridce found in that country, during any part of our travels in Tropical America. Several other forms, more or less related to these insects, enter within the family : those, for instance, having theexserted head of Latreille's Pyrochroides, — as our Pyrochroa riibens, where the tho- rax is still nearly orbicular, but reduced to the ordinary dimensions, — serves to indicate the passage between this family and the CantharidcB ; while the approach, on the other side, to Lycus, is still more evident. Latieille, indeed, includes the latter insects as a part of the Lam- pyridcB; and the analogies of both may, possibly, show he is quite correct in this, — particularly as we should then have but little scruple in raising his Cleri to the rank of one of the aberrant families : but at present we are chiefly guided by synthesis ; and when we see so strong a resemblance between many of the Brazilian species of Lycus and of Hispa, we cannot but suspect that these two groups, standing at the confines of their respective circles, connect the Monilicornes with the Malaco- dermes, — in other words, that this is a relation of affi- nity, rather than of analogy. (287-) The next typical family, or the Cantharidce, * See figures 4, 5, and 6. on plate 39. of Griftith's Cuvier, vol. xiv. STRUCTURE OF THE MALACODERMES. 321 may be represented either by Lyttn Fab., or Meloe. These insects differ most materially from the former; the thorax, instead of being large, dilated, and flattened, is small, very narroAv, and convex ; while the head is broader than the thorax, large, cordiform, and bent considerably downwards ; it is so much exserted, or de- tached from the thorax, that the neck is seen externally: the tarsi are unlike all other insects out of this tribe ; they are rather compressed than depressed, and are so nearly of the same thickness, that their slightly cu- neated shape is not at first perceived; — such, at least, is the case with Meloe, Mylahris, and certain forms more allied to the typical CaritharidcB ; but in others, these parts are considerably modified : in Lytta, for instance, they are much more lengthened, often very slender, and the claws on the joint appear as if double. The great enlargement of the head, in comparison to the thorax, appears to us the most prevalent character running through this family, and is more especially developed in Horia. (288.) We have seen that, in Meloe, the elytra are more abbreviated than in anyother group yet noticed; but in some of the Lymexyloni(kE,ihese organs are generally re- duced so much as merely to resemble a small scale, ahnost precisely like those of many of the Staphylinidce. Like them, also, they have the thorax square, and the body greatly depressed, — particularly seen in the individuals of the genus Atractocerus. Many of these singular forms so much resemble the Cantharidce, that Linnaeus included them in that and the genus Meloe. Upon these grounds, we consider the Lyme.vylonidcp as forming a distinct family, which, by means of the Pselaphi and the Staphylinidce, connect the two extremes of the entire order of Coleoptera, and unite the five tribes into one great circle. (289.) The two remaining groups, which appear to form aberrant famihes in this tribe, are represented by the genera Mordella, and either Lycus or Clerus : the former appears to us to be almost certain ; but, as we Y 322 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. have before observed, some difficulty arises in deciding which of the two latter should stand in this situation. The short obtuse head of the MordelUdcE, of equal breadth, and almost sunk in tlie fore part of the thora?i, is without parallel in this tribe, and immediately re- minds us of the Elateridce and other analogous forms, — a resemblance rendered doubly evident by the enlarge- ment of the thorax. If the Cleri do not form a sub- ordinate group in the family of the Cantharidce, then it will take the place, in all probability, of Lycu.s, and thus present a direct analogy to its prototype Bostrichus, in the capricorn circle. If, on the other hand, Lycus intervenes between Mordella and Lampyru.f, there are not wanting species of the former, which, in their pec- tinated and nearly serrated antennae, the rugosity of their elytra, and the form of their thorax, render such a passage in some degree probable. It is obvious, how- ever, that, in the rapid manner we are now proceeding (imposed upon us from the vastness of the subject), all such minor difficulties must be left for analysis. If, in constructing the tribe before us, we have brought together the elements of a natural group, and thereby placed, under one head, a multitude of insects now scat- tered over the whole of the Coleoptera, our chief object will be gained. The next step will be to analyse these groups, and appropriate to each its respective genera and sub-genera. This task must be undertaken by those who confine their attention to small divisions, without embracing, as we have done, the whole animal kingdom. Although we shall not attempt, under these circum- stances, to construct a regular table of analogies for this tribe, there are, nevertheless, some resemblances which are too striking to be passed over. Setting aside the obvious similarity between Hispa and Lycus, which we deem, for the present, an affinity, it is not a little singular how strongly the Cassidce are represented by the Lawpyridte : in both, the elytra project considerably over the sides of the body, without embracing it ; and in both^ the margins of the thorax are dilated so much THE HABITS OF THE MALACODERMES. 323 as to hide the head either partially or entirely. Thus we find the two typical families, at least, have their direct analogies in the neighbouring circle of the Moid, licornes; and this fact, although insufficient to com- pensate for the absence of the other analogies, tends to show that, in the typical groups, at least, we cannot greatly err. (290.) The habits of the insects are of a mixed cha- racter : many are exclusively carnivorous, — for instance, those whicli are parasitical ; others are only carnivorous in their larva state. ; whereas, in others, in this state, they are herbivorous, and their taste for flesh is acquired only on assuming their perfect condition. We find in this group, likewise, structural peculiarities of a very marked character, for we have here both heteromerous and pentamerous insects. We have already mentioned some of the chief distinctions of bur first family, the Lampyridce, for instance, — namely, their phosphorescent luminosity, which we are assured is the beacon of love, the females being frequently apterous ; and as a seem- ing corroboration of this, it is the female which is the most brilliant. They appear to possess a control over its exhibition, and which is evidently a wise provision ; for this " beaming lamp " would attract their enemies as well as their friends ; and what was intended for their preservation and continuance, would otherwise be the guide to their destruction. It is the under side of the terminal segments of the abdomen which display this brilliancy ; and although we have stated above, that we never observed this phosphorescence in the Brazils, we do not mean to say that it is improbable, for the Brazil- ian species equally possess the analogous pale spots and segments, whence the light issues in those European species we are acquainted with, This family is very numerous, and contains many very natural genera : the most remarkable are those with greatly developed an- tenna, as Amydetes, in which they consist of at least twenty joints, each of which throws off a long curving plume ; Fhengodes, also, where, however, the antenna Y 2 324 NATURAL ARRANCJEMENT OF INSECTS. retain the normal number of eleven joints, are not outvied in their beauty by the last, — for here each joint emits a double convoluted feather. In Lamprocera, which also throws out from each joint a double branch, these are porrect and divergent ; but in others, the antennte are simple. In the typical Lampyris, the females are apterous ; and in the proximate Phosphfpnes the elytra are abbreviated : in Luciola, they are entire ; and the species of the latter are sometimes so prolific, that on a summer's night they completely fill the air, and sparkle about in their erratic vagaries, presenting an agreeable spectacle, and one which the Luciola Italica constantly exhibits to our absentee countrymen. Species of the three last are those which chiefly occur in Europe ; the type, only, ranging as far north as our island. Tropical countries, and especially South Ame- rica, seems to exuberate in them ; thus compensating in an additional instance, in those regions, by the prolific energy of physical phenomena and powers, for the debasement and enervation of intellectual ar.d moral characteristics. Like the neighbouring genus Di-ilus, Lampyris feeds upoti snails ; and the former genus is remarkable for its fleshy larva-form female, which, we believe, wholly lives within the shells of snails. (291 •) Passing to the next family, we appear to enter it by its pentamerous division, or those insects which have the greatest affinity to the preceding. We thus proceed by means of Telephorus, — a genus of universal distribution : Malthinus is distinguished for its abbre- viated elytra and prominent eyes ; and in the next sub-family, the Mdyrino', we observe Malachius, which has the power of projecting from various parts of its thorax, under excitement and irritation, large fleshy ve- sicular appendages, the uses of which are not correctly known. By means of the next sub- family, the Dasytes, we have an intimation of the proximity of the Cleri to this circle, if not constituting a family of it : a very easy transition is effected from the Telephorhia to the typical heteromerous Cantharidce ; for in general habit THE CLAIMS OF INSECTS TO ATTENTION. S'iS the insects are remarkably similar, especially to an in- experienced eye. It is from this sub-family that we obtain the officinal Cantharidfis, so extensively used as a vesicatory. Insects here, again, put forth a claim to our consideration and notice, and are not such trivial objects, or so despicable, as it pleases many to consider them. For, thus having with the silkworm clothed us, and this clothing then gaily coloured and decorated by the cochineal insect (^Coccus Cacti), the bee lights up our houses with its wax, and with its honey it furnishes our tables with a luscious luxury; and when the intem- perate enjoyment of this produces repletion and inflam- mation, another insect is offered us, in the blister beetle, to cool our fever, and to restore us to health. Nor are the uses of insects confined to these few ; and perhaps the indirect benefits we derive from them are more sub- stantial tl)an those which are more obvious; yet these necessarily involve the reflection of how many thousands of our fellow creatures are daily occupied in, and derive their whole means of living from, the cultivation and produce, and the manufacture of the produce, of these creatures. If we view their study, even merely with the eyes of the political economist, all this must strike us; and besides, who can say that an insect may not be discovered, which shall surpass all yet known in confer- ring benefit on the human race : and surely, when we reflect on the devastation and injury caused by others, the study ought to be promoted upon the principle of self-defence. With all these, and the additional and superior object to be obtained from their study, by its opening to us a large chapter of the wisdom and good- ness of God in the creation, pray let us hear no more of entomology being talked of as an idle and frivolous pur- suit. To return from this digression : the insect called " the Spanish fly," is a beetle of a richly brilliant green colour; it is found throughout Europe; and within the last few years, it has occurred in great abundance in various parts of the South of England. Whether our native species would be as efficient for medicinal pur- Y 3 ] i S26 NATURAL ARRANGEMKN'T OF INSECTS. poses, as those coming from a hotter climate, we are un- prepared, in the absence of the requisite experiments, to say; but it is certainly to be regretted that such have not been made, and that, in Ueu of it, paupers were employed in Suffolk and Essex to collect them and to burn them. In the East, various species of Mylahris and Liftta seem equally well known to possess, and are used for similar purposes. We may here, again, further remark, that almost the whole of this family is excessively prolific in the produce of individuals; for, of the majority, in their proper season, their peculiar habitats literally swarm with them. In this sub-family we observe very many striking structural peculiarities, notwithstanding a tolerably general uniformity of ap- pearance, excepting only in a few instances. Thus, in this type, we have moniliform antennse ; in Ht/' ckus, Mijlahris, Sec, these organs are considerably enlarged at their apex, differing generally in the num- ber of their joints. CEnas has them fusiform ; and in Lytta they are attenuated towards their apex. They are all more or less peculiar for the structure of the claws of their tarsi : thus, in Lydus these are strongly serrated beneath, and in Tetraonyx they are bifid, as well also in other genera, and particularly so in MeloS, which presents, perhaps, the greatest divergence from typical characters, if we except only some apterous females, of any insects throughout the Coleoptera. They are soft, swollen insects, apterous, but having abbre- viated elytra, which are rounded at their extremity, and lap over each other. They possess the property of exuding, when captured, a yellow, oleaginous liquid, which stains the fingers, and has a somewhat foetid or faint smell, not unlike that ejected by Coccinella; whereas that of Timarcha, among the Chrysomelid equal, with the neuration of the disk obsolete, — a charac- ^ ter not found elsewhere among the Neuroptera ; and the - apterous individuals have strong mandibles. There is fl some diversity of opinion respecting the latter; and na- turalists are not decided whether they are the prehmi- nary stages of the insect, or independent and perfect states of existence : they, however, constitute the major part of the community, and execute all its labours. The information that we possess upon their internal economy is very imperfect. All that we know as certain is, that the different species construct different nests made of a kind of hard mortar, consisting of earth or sand agglu- tinated together, — some of which are like a cluster of sugar-loaves of different sizes, — the largest being eight ] I THE TERMITINiE. 34-3 or ten feet high ; the nests of others are cylindrical^ and are not more than two feet above the ground, with a roof extending on all sides beyond the lateral walls ; others, again, build in the upper branches of trees, sixty or eighty feet from the ground; and in countries where trees abound, they excavate and occupy their in- terior. These insects always work under cover, and, unless by accident, they are never exposed to sight ; and they thus construct subterranean galleries from their nests, wherever their destructive propensities incline them to wander; and in attacking houses, they eat into its timbers, gnawing their galleries longitudinally in its centre, leaving only the external crust ; and thus, when their depredations have been extensive, not an article of furniture in a house is free from this dilapidation, and upon the least forcible touch, or first wind, all falls to pieces. The fecundity of the females is truly astonish- ing; and she is as much an object of solicitude to the workers, as is the queen among the bees. She and her partner are incarcerated in a cell by the neuters, and they are there regularly supplied with food ; and after impregnation, upon the enlargement of the ovaries, her abdomen swells to the enormous size of 1500 or 2000 times the rest of the body; and as soon as she begins to lay eggs, these are conveyed away by the neuters to their prepared cells, which, in conjunction with their maga- zines of provisions, occupy the interior of these nests. It is said that she lays as many as 80,000 of these eggs in the course of twenty-four hours, — a fecundity that would speedily overwhelm the earth, were it not pro- vided that but comparatively few reach maturity, and the great majority serve as food to birds^ and beasts, and fishes; and the natives, also, of the tropical regions where they occur, cook them and eat them as a delicacy. From the great resemblance of their manners to those of ants, they have been called " White Ants." But the true ants are their mortal enemies, and prey upon them with the greatest voracity, especially at the period of their swarmingj at the commencement of the tro- z 4 344 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. pical rains, — the only time when they voluntarily make their appearance abroad. Although, probably, all are of tropical origin, a few species have located themselves in the South of Europe; but it is to be hoped that the tem- perature of our climate is too variable and cold to suit the constitution of these insects ; and although commerce has imported many evils in concurrence with its bene- fits, we heartily deprecate the possible introduction of such unwelcome guests. Other allied forms, but which are not social in their habits, are found in Embia and Olyntha. (304.) The last sub-family of this first circle, the Rhaphidiince, have, in the structure of some of its con- stituents, a direct intimation of the proximity of the next circle; for the genus Mantispa, with its lengthened neck, and raptorial anterior legs, is a complete resem- blance of Mantis itself. It has short clavate antennie ; but the elongated neck is also the characteristic of the family, — for the genus Rhaphidia, of which it is besides formed, likewise possesses it in a remarkable degree. The latter insect, in its larva state, is very voracious, preying upon every other insect it can seize upon ; it occurs chiefly in woods, upon the stems of oaks. The genus is as yet known only as European, and all the recorded species we possess in this country. Of Man- tispa, the greatest number of species appears to occur in America, although it is found all over the world ex- cepting New H oUand. Some of the species seem to ' indicate a strong affinity, in the structure of their wmgs, to the genuine Orthoptera, — the anterior half of those organs being occasionally semi-coriaceous, which is a departure from the otherwise exclusively membrana- ceous structure of those limbs tliroughout the circle before us. (305.) We now enter the family of the Gryllid^; the first sub-family of which, the Mantina, contains two very different types of form, — namely. Mantis and Phasma. Their habits differ as much as their structure : the latter being herbivorous ; whereas the A> :l THE MANTIN^. 345 former are carnivorous, and of a very sanguinary and rapacious disposition. They are long and slender : tlie head transverse and small, with a pair of long, slender, setaceous antennae at the junction of the head and thorax : the latter is attenuated, but dilates immediately, forming a linear, parallel, somewhat flattened tube, with its sides margined ; and which has an articulated flexi- bility at its junction with the mesothorax, and is more than a third the length of the body. Attached to this in front, and approximate to the head, are a pair of comparatively stout legs, the peculiar construction of which, adapted for the seizure and retention of prey, has acquired for them the name of raptorial. The insect itself being slow, and without much muscular energy, and its nature requiring a large supply of food, it is furnished with this organisation, that, when lurking insidiously about, its purpose is disguised under its form, which considerably resembles the parts of a plant, although not so much so as we shall observe in the Phasmince; and when arrived within a convenient dis- tance of its prey, it darts forth these limbs and captures it. To give them the power of greater expansion, the coxae are elongated, being nearly as long as the femur; and the trochanters are so articulated, that they admit of great variety of motion. The tibiae, which are half the length of the femora, fold back upon them, which admits of the two latter acting in concert as prehen- sorial organs; and that they may effectually secure their prey, they are densely serrated longitudinally with a double row of short and acute teeth ; and the tibia is furnished, besides, at its extremity, with a long curved hook, and, together with the long tarsus, which is at- tached externally to the latter, thus acquiring additional and wider range of action, draw conjunctively within the scope of the raptorial apparatus their destined victims. A striking illustration of how easily man is deluded by hypocrisy and false appearances, is afforded by the variety of names and religious character this blood-thirsty creature has acquired in all countries 346 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. that it inhabits. By the attitude it assumes when lurking for its prey, or advancing upon it — which is done by the support of the four posterior slender legs only, whilst the head and prothorax are raised perpendicularly from the body, and the anterior raptorial organs are folded in front, — it greatly resembles a person praying; whence in France it is called le Preeheur ; in Provence, Prego-Dlou ; and in other countries it has similar names. The Turk says it points to Mecca ; and the Hottentot pays it religious observances. Burmeister acquaints us, from the information of Zimmerman, with some singular facts connected with the North American species, the 31. Carolina. He says, a specimen he possessed "was caught on the 2d of October; on the 3d, it laid its eggs : this was noted down. I was now prepared to expect the death of my Mantis. This, however, did not take place ; for she continued to devour daily some dozens of flies, and occasionally large grasshoppers and young frogs; and it even consumed lizards three times its own length, as w^ell as many large fat cater- pillars. By this abundant fare, its abdomen began to swell considerably ; and on the S-ith of October, it laid eggs a second time ; and after this business was over, which occupied several hours, it recommenced feeding upon every living thing that was put in its way : its abdomen swelled up again, and I fully expected to see it lay eggs a third time; but this was doubtlessly pre- vented by the increasing cold of the November nights ; and in December, I observed that the tarsi of the crea- ture had dried up and become useless. Its death now evidently approached, and this took place on the 27th of the same month. Whether it was impregnated before it came into my possession, I do not know ; but from the beginning of October to the end of December, it lived solitary in a glass. The eggs of the first gene- ration were hatched upon the 26th of May of the fol- lo^ving year. An interval of three weeks had elapsed between the laying of the first and the second lots : I therefore thought a similar time would intervene THE PHASMIN^. ^47 between their hatching; but in this I was deceived, for the second brood left their shells three days after the first, viz. on the 29th of May. I now had my room full of young Mantes, I fed some with small flies, and their actions and mode of feeding were precisely like those of the older ones." The antenna of the males of some are bipectinated, as in Empusa, Blcpharis, and Harpax ; and the resemblance to vegetables is considerably in- creased in others, by the foliaceous appendages of their legs and prothorax, as in Hymenopus, Phyllocrania, &c.; and this resemblance is enhanced by their usually green or grey colours, and it is rarely that they exhibit a me- tallicbrilHancy ; the genus ilfete//e«. 362 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. such instance, in fact, can be cited. Cuvier, indeed, has done this in the case of the Syngnathida' among fishes, — a single genus, which, because its branchia? are in tufts, instead of being pectinated, as in most of the other osseous fishes, he detaches as the type of a distinct order; and yet the genus Heterobranchus, which has two sorts of branchiae*, (a structure unexampled among the whole class of Pisces,) is left with its natural allies, and is only distinguished as a genus in the fa- mily of SiluridcB. Among the testaceous Mollusca, again, the variations in the mode of breathing are still more remarkable ; and yet they are considered but of very inferior moment, when compared with other points of structure. Still more is it apparent in the class of Amphibia, where we find the branchia? external in one group, internal in another, and absent in a third ; while, among the salamanders ( Urodelci), the young have ex- ternal branchiae, and the adult is furnished with cellular lungs. The frogs (^Anoura), when tadpoles, have ex- ternal branchiae, which disappear in the perfect animal, and become internal. The whole of the Animal King- dom, in short, exhibits instances of this. It has been observed by a well-known writer, that Cuvier never made a more palpable mistake, than when he attempted to arrange the Mollusca according to their several systems of generation and — respiration. (321.) Reverting, then, to the enlarged views of the early writers relative to the Aptera, we shall at once look to the class before us as composed of the five following orders, whose relations to the corresponding group of Ptilota will be subsequently noticed : — I. The Arach- nid a, or spiders, consisting of insects whose head is confounded with the thorax, and whose mandibles assume the appearance of fangs, or hooks, from which they are capable of ejecting a poisonous liquor : the body is ge- nerally short, oval, and pedunculated ; and the legs are eight. — II. The Mykiapoda, or centipedes, having the • Classification of Fishes, i. 359. THE SUCTORIA. 363 body gieatly lengthened, the head distinct, and a great number of feet. — III. The Crustacea, or crabs, which are enveloped by a hard or crustaceous covering ; live in the water, and breathe by branchis ; the head being apparently confounded with the thorax. — IV. The Suc- TORiA, or fleas : the body is compressed, and covered transversely with hard and polished plates, and with four minute scales, which indicate the position of the wings of flying insects. — V. The Diptera, or two-winged insects, which, like the last order, imbibe their nourish- ment by suction, (322.) The isolated position which belongs to the fourth of these orders, is, we apprehend, entirely caused by the fact of its containing not more individual species than would form a sub-genus, while, in itself, it ranks as an order : this rank has been assigned to it ever since the days of De Geer, who was the first writer that thus detached it ; and whose name of Suctoria we shall retain, in common justice to so great a man. We shall not enter into the conflicting opinions of the moderns re- lative to the situation of these singular insects ; for a chapter might be so filled, and the reader, in the end, left pretty nearly in the same state of uncertainty as at first. We would simply call the attention, even of the most unscientific, to those little crustaceous insects so common among sea- weed on sandy shores, and then ask him what insects can possibly be more like, in habits and appearance, than these are to fleas .?• their very name of sand fleas at once shows that this resemblance is so strong that every body perceives it ; and however the two may differ, when we come to anatomical details and technical refinements, these will never alter the similitude, or persuade an unscientific person that they do not come wonderfully near to each other. We consider, therefore, that the order Suctoria is more clearly related, by affi- nity, to the Crustacea than to any other ; but this being admitted, we confess our entire ignorance of what re- semblance it has to the Diptera, beyond the fact of both being perfectly suctorial orders. The only great hiatus. 364> NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. or interruption, therefore, of the circular succession of the Aptera, as here arranged, appears to be at this point ; since the resemblance which certain extreme Crustacea possess to such forms as Oniscus, renders the union of both sufficiently clear. From the Diptera, therefore, to the Arachnidn, the passage is at once opened by Nyc- teribia ; from the spiders to the centipedes, and from these to the Crustacea, the line of affinity is preserved; while what has been said of the resemblance between the marine and the land fleas, is all but demonstra- tive that the whole form a circle, — since the situations of Diptera and Suctoria are established, not by their own union, but by their connection to the orders which either precede or follow them. (323.) We now come to the analogies, which may be thus exhibited as referring to the Ptilota. Analogies of the Aptera to the Ptilota. Orders of the ji„„7„„:^. Orders of the Aptera. Analogies. p^.,^^^_ . f Sub-typical: feet the same in their 1 xt^„„ ,„ „. Arachnida. \ larva and perfect state. j Neuhoptera. C Pre-eminently typical of their own T Mtriapoda. < circles ; feet variable in their \ Lepidoptera. C larva and perfect state. J Crustacea. Head large. Aquatic. Neuroptera. Suctoria. Body encased in hard plates. Coleoptera. Diptera. Winged in their adult state. Hymenoptera. (324.) In our former volumes, we have had frequent occasion to notice the occasional transportation, as it were, of the analogies of the typical groups in two dif- ferent circles ; as a consequence of some variation in the dispositions of the groups, thus brought into parallel comparison, for which we were unable to account. We have before observed that the tendency of metamor- phosis in the Ptilota is to give wings to the perfect in- sect ; while, in that of our Aptera, it is to give an increase in the number of feet. Now, if this theo- retically be true, the philosophical inference will be, that the Myriapoda are the types of the Ptilota ; ANALOGIES OF THE APTERA. 365 for the first have the greatest developement of the feet, just as the other has of the wings. It is not a little extraordinary, indeed, that the first have the fewest, and the latter have the most, feet, in their larva state : here, then, is certainly an analogy, although it cannot be expressed succinctly in words. On the other hand, the iRlidce, again, which are certainly the types of the Myriupoda, agree with the Lepidoptera in not being carnivorous ; and this is a material point of similitude ; so that we see the two pre-eminently typical groups agree in many important particulars : on the other hand, when we consider that the spiders and the lepido- j)terous larvae, are the only insects having the power of spinning, we are tempted to believe, that they are true representations of each other ; and that the Myriapoda represent the Hemiptera — not the Lepidoptera. We state all these circumstances, leaving the question to be decided by others, although we ourselves believe the former to be the correct mode of viewing the subject. The analogy which many authors, particularly MacLeay, conceive the Suctoria to have with the Coleoptera, is strengthened by the foregoing table; and it is quite clear they represent each other, just as the Crustacea typify the aquatic Neuroptera : as for the resemblance between the Diptera and the Hymenoptera, it is not merely an analogy, but an affinity, — and this so close as to be ob- vious to every one. The analogies, in fact, between the two great typical classes of insects, are so complete, as to leave no doubt that they are founded in nature. (325.) The use of these comparisons, however, is not merely confined to the developement of analogies. They prove, if any thing can prove, the rank of the divisions belonging to each ; and show, in the clearest manner, that if those in which the Ptilota are at first divided, are really orders, those of the Aptera are nothing higher. The Neuroptera, in fact, are as much entitled to be termed a class, in the usual acceptation of the term, as are the Crustacea; for structure, and not numerical amount, is to be looked to in all questions of this sort ; and if the 366 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. groups in equivalent circles correspond in some one or more characters, peculiar to them alone, they must be inevitably of the same value. (326.) Having now endeavoured to place the primary divisions of apterous insects upon a more determinate footing than has hitherto been done, we shall not attempt to indicate, even by synthesis, the natural division of fa- milies which must belong to each. Our object is to indi- cate the road to natural arrangement, not to follow it up in detail. The groups of the Aptera we have adopted, are those of our predecessors : the only novelty consists in an attempt to determine their relative value, and to establish their relations to other groups. This done, we shall, in the following pages, merely give the general reader an idea of the insects contained in each, without any attempt at determining their limits, or the system- atic order in which the families should stand. CHAP. II. APTERA, continued, ON THE DIPTERA, ARACHNIDA, CRUSTACEA, MYRIAPODA, AND SUCTORIA. (327.) Not having thoroughly analysed the families of which our circle of Aptera consist, we prefer giving a rapid sketch of its contents, as investigated by the latest and best systematists, to leaving the scheme im- perfect by the omission. The first family comprised within this circle are the Dlptera j and, although it may appear a contradiction to speak of so large an order of insects as the Diptera. under the general denomina- tion of Aptern, yet, as they form the most aberrant sub- family in the circle, this difficulty is removed, as they constitute the direct point of contact with the pre- ceding circle of the Ptilota. The Diptera comprise a I STRUCTURE OF THE DIPTERA. 357 host of mse^ ts, the most general character of which is to possess two membranous wings, with their disk variously occupied witli longitudinal uervures and com- paratively few transverse ones, these wings are affixed to the mesothorax, and are thus analogous to the superior wings of those insects which have four genuine wings, or to the elytra or hemelytra of those in which the superior wings are supplanted by such appendages. In addition to these two wings, and attached behind them, are a couple of usually clavated organs, having a moderate peduncle ; these are called halteres, or poisers ; they are articulated organs, but the uses of which are not known, although they may not be considered as analogous to the secondary wings of the other orders. In addition to these organs, very many possess a con- cavo-convex scale, which covers the halteres, and v/hich is called the alula, or winglet. Being exclusively suc- torial insects, and feeding upon liquids, their trophi, or organs whereby they take their food, consist of a flexible proboscis, modified in a variety of ways in the different families, but always analogous to the structure we have before described in mandibulated insects : thus, we find the theca, or sheath, which represents the labium, and which encases the proboscis ; further, the haustellum, which consists most generally of two pieces analogous to the labrum ; occasionally of two others, which are called the cultelli, or knives, which possibly represent the mandibles ; and there are rarely two others, called the scalpella, which may remind us of the maxillae ; and there are, in addition to these, two palpi. It thus amply differs from the trophi of all other haustellate insects. These are the most general characters, whereby the entire order is distinguished. Within themselves, the modifications of structure which they exhibit, furnish the characters upon which their distribution is founded. The most prominent of these are supplied by their antenna?, which, considered typically, consist of but three joints ; but, attached to the third, we frequently detect a setaceous appcnda e. In the first division. 368 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OP INSKCTS. however, they have never less than six joints, and usually more than twelve. The eyes of the Dipteru exliibit some remarkable peculiarities, and frequently sexual discrepancies : these organs, in the male, often occupying nearly the whole of the head ; and they are often densely clothed with hair, — a structure that would almost seem to impede vision ; and another singular circumstance is, that, although the hexagonal structure of the facets of which the composite eyes are composed is universal, yet the several families, genera, s])ecies, and sexes exhibit peculiar arrangements of different sizes of these facets in the same eyes ; a fact, which, although exhibited by Hook in his enlarged eye of Tabanus, was left unnoticed by himself, and never, subsequently, observed or heeded by systematists or anatomists, although it displays such striking pecu- liarities. (328.) The general integument of these insects is of as fragile a texture as in many of the Neuroptera, and the rest of their structure is perfectly analogous to the parts of other insects. All these structural particulars, however, undergo an infinity of modifications which are nowhere stationary; and the forms of their bodies are as variously diflferent. These insects are usually ovi- parous, but they present two remarkable exceptions ; for in Sarcophaga they are viviparous, or produce their larvae hatched ; and in the terminal division, the Pupi- para, they are pupiparous, and bring forth their young advanced to the stage of pupae, — and thus form a re- mote analogy to the marsupial animals. Under the several famihes, we shal^. observe other peculiarities incidental to the prelimmary stages of their existence. The transformation of the majority into the pupa state is also very peculiar ; for, instead of spinning a co- coon, or forming a cell, the skin of the larva hardens, and thus makes a case, within which the changes take place. In their perfect state, they are possibly not inferior to any order in the multiplicity of forms which tliey exhibit ; whereas, in the abundance of SUBDIVISIONS OF THE DIPTERA. SGp individuals, they certainly surpass all ; no place or time is unfurnished with them, and usually in enormous pro- fusion. Life thus multiplies life; "for the multitudes of birds that they support, contributes to vary its exten- sion over the earth; but the chief function that they exercise in the economy of nature, is to contribute to- wards the destruction of those substances which, in a state of corruption, would tend otherwise, by poisoning tlie air, to produce disease and mortality. Further pe- culiarities in their economy we shall briefly notice as we I pass rapidly through the families; and we shall now, I therefore, quit this generaHsation, and proceed to the I investigation of the contents of the order, and their dis- tribution. I (329.) The two primary groups, the Nemoceba and j Brachocera, into which they have been divided, ac- j cording to the number of the joints of their antenna;, are of very unequal extent. The first, or Nemocera, are those which possess more than six joints to the organ, and comprises the Culices and Tipulce. The former are perhaps the most highly organised, in every respect, of all the Diptera; and to the perfection of their suctorial apparatus the majority of us can attest, from our individual experience of what is called the sting of a gnat. Their larvae are aquatic, and are those ij singular little red worms, large at one extremity, that we frequently observe in stagnant waters ; they move by a sort of jump ; and, breathing by means of anal tracheae, they frequently resort to the surface, to imbibe a fresh supply of air. These are all small insects, and all the genera are natives of this country, but Culex is the most abundant in species. The Tipulce,, which form the second group, are less highly organised in the structure of their mouths only. The typical genera are well known as " Father long-legs;" and, in their larva state, many of them are very injurious to the roots of ! grass. They form a large tribe, subdivided by struc- ture, but named from the places or substances they i B B I 370 NATURAL ARRANGEMEXT OF INSECTS. frequent. Thus we have Culiciform T'lpulai, terricole Tipulte, fungicole Tipulce, gallicole TipulcB, and floral Tipulce. They have been very aptly compared, from the multitude of tribes, genera, and species occurring in them, to the large coleopterous families of Curculi- onidce and Carahidm, wherein Nature exhibits an inex- haustible diversity, combined with a typical unity : but we must hasten on, with merely observing, that in the TipulcB they exhibit to us the largest native Diptera; and in Ctenophora we find the most elegant structure of the antennae, which are bipectinated, in the males, with alternate long and short branches. And in Chironoynus we have the extraordinary instance of larvs living in a social community at the bottom of ponds and brooks. We also find amongst them the remarkable little Chio- nea, which, as its name signifies, occurs only on the snow ; and which, from its being apterous, has very much the appearance of a spider : and the North American Bittacomorphn is remarkable for the excessive incrassation of its tarsi. Among the fungivorous Ti- puloE, the genus Gnonsta has a singular elongation of its head and front ; this produced portion being half as long again as the head itself. Ceddomya and Lasi- optera are the representatives of the gallicole Tipulce; and, like the Cynipidce amongst the Hymenoptera, their larvae live in the galls of plants, which the puncture of the parent insect forms ; and it is amongst the former that the terrific destroyer of wheat is found, which is known in America by the name of the " Hessian fly ; " as also in the tribe of floral Tipulce, we find the genus Simulium, which use their anterior tarsi as feelers; and the number of the individuals of which, in some coun- tries, is so great, that they become an oppressive pest to man and animals. (330.) The second division, or Brachocera, have never more than three joints to the antenniE, — the last of which, however, undergoes a multitude of forms, and is usually accompanied with a style, or seta : they are sub- divided into three smaller divisions, depending upon the THE TETRACHjETiE. 371 number of setae that accompany the oral apparatus ; thus, the Hejcachcetce have six^ the TetrachcBtce four, and the DichatcB two. (331.) The first of these subdivisions, or Hexa- cnMTM, comprises insects which, as their very name im- plies, possess a highly organised mouth; and consequently we observe amongst them those which feed upon the blood of the Mammalia, and for which purpose they were furnished with the apparatus of lancets their mouth contains. They are usually insects of a very ro- bust form; and, by the subdivision of the third joint of their antennsc, they appear to indicate their proximity to the Nemocera. Their tarsi are furnished with three vesicles ; and the reticulation of nervures of their wings exhibit high organisation. Amongst these are the Tabani, and their allies, Hcematopota and Chrysops, — all blood-thirsty creatures, and which, in the woods, in summer, constantly alight upon the entomologist's face and hands, and put him to considerable pain. Indeed, it is related that Messrs Kirby and MacLeay were frus- trated in an entomological excursion by the prevalence of these insects, against the severe punctures of which they could find no protection. These are all more or less distinguished for the excessive brilliancy of their eyes whilst alive, which surpass the most vivid gems in lustre, especially the latter genus, which deduces its name from the circumstance. Raphiorhynchus, named from its curved and produced clypeus, and Acanthome- rus, which has spined femora, are large exotic genera peculiar to the Brazils ; and Pangonia longirostris, in which the proboscis is several times longer than the body, is a native of India. (332.) The second subdivision, the TETRACHvETyE, which are deficient in one pair of setae to the mouth, have usually the terminal joint of their antennae simple, or with an apical seta consisting of three divisions, I which seem an obsolete indication of its previously de- veloped structure. They have, further, but two vesi- cular soles to their tarsi, and their wings have Lss com- ii u 2 372 NATURAL ARKANGEMKNT OF INSECTS. plication in their neuration than the preceding. They form a large host, and are divided into three families, viz. the Notacanttia. the Tanyatotna, and the Brachy- stoma. The first family, or Notacantha, are distin- guished by having the third joint of their antennae annulated, — thus somewhat resembling the Hejachcetce. They are all more or less characterised by the spines of their scutellum, whence their name ; and they form three tribes — the Sicarii, the Xylophaga, and the Stra- tiomyce. The larvse of the second of these have been observed to live in putrescent wood. The Brazilian genus, Hermetia, in the same tribe, is peculiar for the pellucid spots at the base of the abdomen. Xylophaga is an extremely rare British genus. The third tribe, the Stratiomyce, are all more or less attached to the water or its vicinity. Thus, Strdtiomya is found only in such situations, and its larva occurs in stagnant pools; this is elongate, and depressed, and attenuated at the posterior extremity ; and these insects are constantly found upon aquatic flowers; whereas the brilliantly me- tallic Sargus settles only upon foliage. The bodies of all these insects are considerably depressed, and their wings have a central, rather large, cell. Ephippium is of very rare occurrence as a British insect ; and is of an intense black, with a bright red thorax : none of the family are of large dimensions. {333.) The second family, or Tanystoina, contains the giants among the Diptera, and includes insects of great variety of habits and of forms. Their combining character is, however, to have the third joint of their antennae simple, with a terminal seta ; a coriaceous ros^- trum, which is usually slender and lengthy. The Asi^ lidcB are probably the most typical; and are very rapa- cious insects, feeding upon every thing else that they can conquer. Megapoda is remarkable for its lengthy slender legs and large size, and is peculiar to the Brazils; whence also Mallophora, with its hairy body, comes, and which, thus much, resemble, the Bombi. Dasypogon, Dioctria, and Asilus ai'e native genera, and the latter THE VESICULOSA. 373 appears to be of universal distribution. But the most gigantic in the tribe are found in the genus Mydas, which are likewise insects of prey, and sometimes nearly two inches long. The third and fourth tribes, the Hyho- tidcB and Empiddce ; and, 3. the ScorpionidcB. The traclieal Arachnidce comprise — 4. the SolpugidcB ; 5. Phalangidce ; and, 6. the Acaridce. Of the first, the AraneidcB, we have a further division into terrestrial and aquatic. The former inhabit the earth, and are either suspended in the air, or cavities in rocks or trees, or they are affixed to plants, or else they oc- cupy holes in the ground ; whereas the aquatic Araneidct dwell in the midst of the water, in a cell filled with air. The former are divided into Theraphoses and Arachnce proper. In the Theraphoses, the mandibles are articu- lated horizontally, having a vertical, motion ; and, in the Arachnce, they are articulated either vertically, or upon an inclined plane, and have a lateral motion. In the former group of Theraphoses, we find the large and powerful Mygale, the most robust insects of the order. The fact has been doubted, of these catching birds in their nets, and feeding upon them ; but the probability of this has been substantiated and confirmed by a com- munication we have recently received from W. S. MacLeay, Esq., who informs us, that in the vicinity of Sydney, N. S. V>^., he has met with a true bird-catching spider, — having himself found one of the Epeiridce actually devouring the young of a Gusterops, that had, no doubt, lately fiown from the nest; and which is not a solitary instance, as his father, A. MacLeay, Esq., had previously observed a similar fact. He therefore retracts his observations upon Mygale in the Zoo- logical Transactions ; for here, evidently, is a spider SUBDIVISIONS OF THE ARACHN^. 383 which feeds upon the juices of a warm-blooded ani- mal.* (344.) The Arachnce may be divided into — 1st. Those which are the Vagahonda, which quit their dwell- ings to chase and catch their prey; 2dly, The Wanderers, which roam about in the vicinity of the nests they have constructed, or the nets they have spread to entangle their j)rey; and, 3dly, Those which are sedentary, which construct large nets for the apprehension of their prey, and in the centre or sides of which they lurk, awaiting it. Among the Vagabonda, we find some with six eyes, and others with eight. Those with six form either tubes or cells of silk, within which they dwell; and these consti- tute the genera Dysdera, Segestria, Uptiotes, &c. The possession of eight eyes, we, however, find the most prevalent peculiarity, being all but universal in this divi- sion. Among the Vagabonda with eight eyes, we observe the Runners, — those which run with agility to catch their prey, including Lycosus, Sphasus, Ctenus, &c. ; the Leapers, — those which leap and jump lightly upon their prey, as Myrmecia, Eresus, Attus, or Sulticus, &c.; and the Walkers, which walk laterally and backwards, and occasionally spread nets to supply themselves with pro- visions. (345.) In the second division, or Wanderers, we find — 1. The Niditiles, which form a web of their nests, whither filaments converge, by which they catch their prey; they consist of Clubiona, Desis, and Drassus: 2. The Filiteles, which spread long filaments of silk wherever they move, to catch theirs; and here we find Clotho, Enyo, Pholcus, Sec: 3. Tayj/Zefes, which manu- facture large webs of a close tissue, and within which they reside, awaiting their prey ; and here we have Tegenaria, Lachesis, &c. : 4. The Orbiteles, which con- struct webs with open meshes, and formed either in regular concentric circles, or in spirals, and which lurk • From a letter to me dated 7th April, 1840, brought by Mr. Gould from Sydney. [W. E. Sh.] S84 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. either in the centre or at the side, awaiting the entan glement of their victims ; here we have Epeira, Tetru- gnutha, Zosis, &c. : 5. The Naptti'les, which spread wide nets of a web of close texture, suspended among irregular chambers ; this, as far as yet observed, is con- fined to the genus Lini/phia : and, 6. and lastly. The Retiteles, which form webs with open meshes and irre- gular chambers, and which lurk in the centre, or at the sides ; these comprise Argus and Therldion, &c. The aquatic Araneidm consists of the single genus Argyro- iieta, which spreads filaments in the water, w-hich catches for them their food. We have not space to notice further the interesting peculiarities incidental to these insects, and have room only to mention tliat it is in the genus Lycosus, among the Vagahonda, that the celebrated Tarantula occurs, — the effects of the venom of which is reputed to be cured only by the violent exertion of a dance produced involuntarily by the music of a guitar. The name of the insect is derived from the city of Tarentum, in Italy, in the vicinity of •-vhich they occur in profusion. (346.) The PhryneidiE, or second division of the pulmonary ArachnidcB, are distinguished from the first, by their anterior legs being not ungulated, and very like antennae, and possibly executing similar functions ; and the maxillary palpi very spinose, and terminating either in hooks or chelie. They consist of two genera — Pltry- nus and Thelyphonus. They are inhabitants of the in- tertropical regions of the Old and New World. The latter is distinguished from the former, by having a long and slender tail, and more robust maxillary palpi. Their habits are not known, but they are much feared in the countries where they occur ; and they are of a malig- nant aspect, and comparatively large. (347-) The scorpions form the third division. These are readily distinguished from all the former, by their enlarged maxillary palpi, which here form a prehensile organ, greatly resembling, to use a familiar illustration, the claw of a lobster : they have an elongate annulated SOLPUGID^j PHALANGID^j AND ACABID^. 385 abdomen, with no deep constriction or separation be- tween the thorax and abdomen ; eight unguiculated legs ; and a tail of six joints, separated from each other by a deep strangulation, — the last bearing a curved hook, whereby the insect inflicts a wound and injects a poison. These are terrific creatures, whose poison becomes the more virulent as they approach the torrid zone. None, fortunately, are natives of this country, but several occur in the South of Europe. (348.) The SoIpuyidcB, the first division of the tracheal Arachnidce, are equally hideous with the last in aspect,— being usually covered with long hairs or spines ; and are said to be also venomous; but, if so, the poison must be injected by the mandibles. They have the head, thorax, and abdomen, separated by a strangula- tion. They have eight legs, — the anterior pair being pal- piform, as are also their maxiUse ; whilst their mandibles form robust didactyle claws ; and their abdomen consists of a succession of segments. They frequent hot coun- tries and sandy districts, especially of the Old World. They run with great rapidity, holding up their heads as if to defend themselves. With these, doubtlessly, Chelifer and Ohisium may be united ; which are minute animals, both natives of our own country, where they frequently occur in moss. The second division consists of the Phalangidce, in which the head, thorax, and abdo- men are united, and the latter not divided into segments, but by its epidermis being frequently folded, — it thus resembles a segmental division. Their mandibles are very robust, and with didactyle claws, eight unguiculated legs, and either slender and filiform or spinose palpi. Their legs are usually exceedingly long and very slender. Some occur in this country, but perhaps the most ec- centric forms among them are found in Gonoleptes and its affinities, from the Brazils. They usually occur run- ning upon the ground or on plants, and are very active ; some also are found under stones, or in moss. (349.) The last tribe of the Arachnidce are the Aca- ridce, or mites. Head, thorax, and abdomen are here c c 386 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. usually united : their abdomen is not divided into seg- ments : they have eight legs ; and their mouth is haus- tellate or consisting of pieces, which form a sucking tube. These comprise an extensive tribe of creatures, which are excessively prolific, consisting also of many genera, as Trombidium, Gamasus, Ixodes, Bddla, &c. The ma- jority are very small, and occur every where beneath stones, in moss, under the barks of trees, in flour, dried provi- sions, old cheese, &c. ; others live as parasites upon the skin or in the flesh of animals ; and some are said to be the cause of certain loathsome diseases which affect humanity, — the itch, for instance: they are found upon other insects, and some have even been observed in the eyes and brain of man. (350.) Our third division of the Aptera consists of the jMyriapoda, or, as they are usually called, hundred legs: they constitute the Chihgnatha and the ChUopoda, and undergo a partial metamorphosis, which consists in their acquiring, with every progressive moult, an addi- tional number of segments and legs. The former have short antenna? ; a convex cylindrical body, surrounded by a hard integument ; neither maxillae nor palpi ; short mandibles, andshort and slender legs. They occur usually in humid situations, and beneath the bark of trees ; and they feed upon both animal and vegetable productions. They consist of Ghmeris, lulus, Polydesmus, &c. &c. The ChUopoda have elongate antennae, a depressed body covered with coriaceous plates, and legs of very variable length : those with unequal legs constitute Scolopendra proper, and its subdivisions, among which is the elec- trical Geophilns. Those with equal legs have those limbs very long, and form the genera Cermatia and Scutigera. All of these run very fast ; they are carni- vorous and nocturnal, and the majority occur beneath stones, the bark of trees, and in humid loose earth. The most of the exotic species are of large size, and are said to be venomous. The rest, which do not undergo a metamorphosis beyond a change of skin, and which form the aberrant portions of the circle, if indeed they belong here, consist of Leach's two orders, Thysanura STRUCTURE OF THE CRUSTACEA. 387 and Anoplura : and are all hexapods, the former are covered with hair or scales, and the tail has filaments or setae whereby they jump ; they are very active, and occur in neglected collections or among rejectamenta and refuse. They comprise Lepisma, Forbicina, Podurn, &c,; in the latter, the forked tail is bent beneath the abdomen, and forms a leaping apparatus. The Ano- plura consist of the lice, which are all parasites, — some one being peculiar to all animals and birds; and one, in particular, is the cause of a disgusting disease, the Phthi- riasis, — instances of which now rarely occur, but which was comparatively common during the middle ages. (351.) The fourth division of the Aptera, the Crus- tacea, is allied to the Myriapoda by means of Oniscus; but here again, in this order, we shall reverse the affi- nities, and proceed in a declining line from the superior to the inferior. The subject of a metamorphosis we have before noticed, in speaking of Mr. Thompson's researches, and shall not resume it here, farther than by observing that it has very recently been confirmed by Rathke.* In speaking of the order generally, we may observe, that although they possess symmetrical forms, yet is it combined with such eccentric extravagance as to outrage all preconceived notions of elegance and beauty. How it was that many of them were ever se- lected as choice comestibles, we know not ; and it must certainly be considered a vagary of human caprice, which can sit down with zest to a lobster or crab salad, that would turn with disgust from a stew of caterpillars, although the latter are by far the most cleanly feeders. Did the public appetite take this turn, we should not then vainly ask for remedies against the destroyers of our crops, but which would thus yield us other crops equally ser- viceable and beneficial ! This division combines structural differences and peculiarities far more varied than we ob- served in the ArachnidcB, but which we must treat more briefly, for our space precludes the amplitude of detail that can alone make such particulars instructive or amusing ; * Wiegman's Archiv., part iii. 1840. C C 2 SSS NATIRAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. and knowing so little as we do of the habits of these crea- tures,— they being chiefly natives of the ocean antl its recesses, — it is, consequently, only from their structural details that they derive an interest. These are as distinc- tively inhabitants of the water as the metamorphotic hexapod Imecta are of the land. Their integument is usually harsh, hard, brittle, and crustaceous ; whence their name : and that which generally covers conjunc- tively the head and thorax, is called, technically, the carapax, or shield. We think this integument cannot be considered thoroughly analogous to the dermo-skele- ton of the hexapod insecta, as it is more independent of muscular attachment. Waiving the difficulties and ques- tion of their preliminary transformations, we find that their growth is subsequently effected by casting their skin, which they, as it were, creep out of ; in which state the animal becomes sickly and seeks sohtude. These creatures have two pairs of antenns, and a mouth furnished latenilly with numerous appendages. It is sometimes true legs which surround the mouth, and which thus perform the double function of maxilla? and legs ; but, in general, many of them are devoted exclusively to the prehension of food ; and, as we descend the series, we observe a proportionate decrease of these appendages, and an increase of the number of legs : the latter are affixed to the thorax; they generally conr sist of five or seven pairs, and their form varies with their function, whether for the use of swunming, walking, or prehension : in the first case, they are broad and more or less membranous ; in the second, slender and lengthy; and, when formed for prehension, they terminate in a claw. Beyond the legs, and attached to the successive segments of the abdomen, there is a double row of appendages which assist them to swim and to carrv their eggs. These few seneralities must suffice : of course, great variations and modifications are found ; but the insects themselves take their definite grouping chiefly from the arrangement, disposition, uses, and structure of the legs. They constitute two large divisions, the masticating and suctorial Crustacea, i I THE HABITS OF THE LAND CRABS. 389 of very unequal extent ; the former being by far the most numerous, and the former are likewise subdivided into two further groups according to whether their eyps are pedunculated or sessile. (352.) Those with pedunculated eyes are subdivided into decapod andstomapodCr«.s^aeea. The former of these contain the greatest number of genera throughout the urroup, and also considerably the largest animals: they have usually five pairs of legs, and are subdivided into, first, decapod Brachyura, known as crabs. The structure of the abdomen of which is very remarkable, forming a sort of leaf, disproportionately small, and which folds back upon the under side of the thorax. It is quite im- possible that we should go into further detail here of their subdivisions ; and aU that we can do, therefore, wiU be to exhibit some of the more prominent genera, distin- guished either by their economical uses or their habits. Amongst them is the genuine crab of our tables, — the Cancer Pagurus, — the type of the entire group, the flesh of which is much esteemed and considerably used. Among the quadrilateral crabs, we observe the genus Thelfjhusa, peculiar for inhabiting fresh waters, and the power they possess of living a week or even a month away from the water. These animals are common in the hmpid lakes and streams of the South of Europe, and are sought as great delicacies. It is this species which is represented upon the ancient coins of Agri- gen turn in Sicily. In this same division we find the genera Gecarcinus and Cardisoma. These are the ce- lebrated Tourlourous, or land crabs, called also violet crabs and white crabs from their colour, and are uatives of the ^Vest India islands and South America. They are very courageous, and try to intimidate by the clatter of their claws, and they pinch very severely. The history of these creatures presents some of the most extraordinary phenomena throughout entomology, that we cannot forbear giving a rapid sketch of it. Their usual habitat is in the mountains, away from the sea and water, where they reside within cavities or burrows c c 3 390 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. of the earth, and rocks, or in hollow trees : they feed variously ; and it is known that they will prey as freely upon putrid carcases, — disputing their possession with the vulture, — as upon fruits and vegetables; and yet they are esteemed and used as delicate and choice articles of food. Their instinct prompts them, at the period of oviposition, to seek the shores of the ocean, and therein to deposit their eggs ; and this migration they execute in such multitudes, that the land is lite- rally covered with them ; and 'their progress is as direct and destructive as a stream of lava, passing over every thing. Having arrived on the coast, they bathe them- selves, and then deposit their eggs ; and this accom- plished, they again seek their former habitats, — but, of course, in a considerably exhausted state ; and they therefore frequently halt, and repose on their journey. Having regained their domicile, they undergo their moult, which is a critical period in their lives ; and to shelter them from external injury, as they are then soft and sickly, their integument resembling wet parch- ment, they closely shut themselves in their burrows ; and it is now that their flesh is most esteemed. Their eggs, meantime, being recastupon the sand,are speedily hatched by a combination of heat and moisture ; when the young hasten to the adjoining fields, where they gradually ac- quire the strength and size requisite to enable them to undertake their migration to the haunts of their parents. They are chiefly nocturnal animals, migrating and prey- ing at night. It is a remarkable fact, that, although furnished with branchife, their vitality is suspended by immersion in water ; and also that they possess a cavity in the vicinity of their respiratory apparatus, which serves as a reservoir for the water requisite to keep those organs constantly moistened. The neighbouring Gelasimus is singular for the excessive developement of one of its claws, which is sometimes larger than the whole of the rest of the body, and serves it to close the aperture of its burrow, when it has retired. The habit it has of raising this, as if calling, has procured it its specific name of G, vocans. The genus Nauiicoyrapsus consists of small THE STOMAPODA. 391 animals, which float about, in the ocean, upon marine plants ; and it is supposed that it was one of these which indicated to Columbus, some days before his discovery, the proximity of the New World. The sub-parasitical Pin- notheres are also singular, from inhabiting, at certain sea- sons, the bivalve shells of some of the Mollusca. Among the curious genera which form the passage from the Brachyura to the Macroura, or large- tailed division of the decapod Crustacea (the lobster), we find those in which the enlarged tail has not yet become the chief organ of progression, by means of its violent and sudden concussion ; and among these, the Pagurus, or hermit lobster, is worthy notice, from its habit, in consequence of its tail being always soft, of seeking for its protection some univalve shell, wherein it buries it; and these shells, with its progressive enlargement, it has the instinct to change. The allied jBjt^ms, which, from its size, cannot find shells convenient for its reception, lives naked, and has the habit of dwelling for a long time, like the land crabs, in cavities of rocks and burrows of the ground. The normal Macroura contain the large Palinurus homarus, or sea crayfish, which has not didactyle claws; the Astacus Gammarus, or lobster; the Astacus fluvia- tilis, or river crayfish, — both with large anterior chelated claws ; the former marine, and the latter inhabiting the fresh water ; the Crangon, or shrimp ; and the Palcemon, or prawn, — delicacies for the breakfast table ; and multi- tudes of others. (353.) Among the Stomapoda, or sea mantises, — named thus from their spined raptorial anterior legs, — occur Squilla and its allies ; and near these, but with- out such legs, we find the genus Phyllosoma : their kaf-like bodies, indicated by their name, are as flat and transparent as a piece of stamped mica ; their head is disproportionately large, and abdomen equally small. (354.) The second division of the Crustacea, the Edriophthalma, or those with sessile eyes, contains three groups ; — the Crustacea Amphipoda, which constitute the various generaof those compressed shrimp-like jump- c c 4 392 NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. ing Crustacea we find so frequently in stagnant waters, such as Talitrus, Gammarus, Phronime, Sec. ; the Crustacea Lcumodipoda contains Cyamus, &c., which live as parasites upon the whale, and others, as Caprel/a, are %vanderers ; the Crustacea Isopoda are broad and depressed, and do not leap : among these we find Oniscus, or the woodlice; the Cymotho'e, which are para- sites, and very broad ; and Idotea, which are equally slender. To this division, the fossil Trilohites very closely approach in general structure. (355.) The Entomostraca form the last division of the Crustacea. In these are the Branchiopodes, con- taining the remarkable forms of Monoculos, or Cyclops, which are very minute and pyriform insects ; Zoe, with its digitated legs ; Apus, with its case covering its body. It is here, doubtlessly, that the extraordinary form of Limulus should come : these are large creatures sometimes two feet long, and peculiar to the seas of America and India ; specimens frequently occur in Chi- nese boxes of insects ; they have a large hemispherical crust covering the anterior portion of the body, and a long and slender tail : and lastly, the Pcecilopoda, which comprise the only truly suctorial Crustacea ; among which there have been observed, in their early stages, con- siderable transformations. They live chiefly as parasites upon other animals, and especially fishes. Amongst them, Argulus has natatorial legs, and Cecrops is short and stout, without legs; and Dichelestion, which is parasitical upon the sturgeon, is long and slender. Naturalists have not fully determined where the Pycnogonidcc should be placed, — Avhether proximate to Phalangium among the ArachnidcB, or with the Crustacea, linking the two orders : Latreille adopts the former view ; but Walcke- naer and Milne Edwards, respectively the greatest au- thorities in their two branches of Arachneology and Crustaceology, concur in considering them crustaceous. They are spider-looking creatures, with eight very long and ungulated legs ; but, in addition to these, the females have two pseudo legs for carrying their eggs. They are occasionally found upon the Cetacea, upon which they ENTOMOLOGY A SOURCE OF INSTKUCXION. 3Q3 are supposed to be parasitical, although they also occur upon marine plants and under stones on the sea shore. They contain the genera Pycnogonon, Nymphon, &c. (^35Q.) Our last division of the Aptera contains the Suctoria ; the most typical of which is the genus Pulex, which undergoes a metamorphosis resembUng that of the Diptera. Wq need not enlarge upon the flea, as the space we could devote to it would not be ample enough to do it justice, and it is sufficiently well known ; we may remark, however, that it contains, besides the com- mon flea, others that are peculiar to certain animals, as well as the renowned Chigo of the West Indies, so injuri- ous to the feet of the negroes. With these insects we conclude our survey of annulose animals. (357.) The synopsis we have thus rapidly passed through, must be considered only as suggestions^ and stimulants to further inquiry ; and should it prove so, we shall have gained our object, as it is but requisite to procure attention to the subject, to invest it with a para- mount interest. The accidental discovery of some frag- ment of man's works, which had been buried for a few cen- turies, and then brought unexpectedly to light, produces a tumult of comment; the learned world, in the frenzy of its excitement, deduces from it, howsoever grotesque and rude, irrefragable proofs of the antiquity of man's civilis- ation, and of the supremacy of his intellect; and Egyptian monsters and Persepolitan figments are unfortunately too frequently esteemed more worthy of investigation than the perfect works of God's hands, — old as the creation of the world, yet descending to us in all their pristine complete- ness, which is not merely external, but also internal, — com- posed, too, of the minutest parts, the ultimate structure of which eludes the microscope's research ; — and both ex- ternal and internal corresponding in so intimate a conca- tenation of cause and effect, and these so harmoniously blended, and so finely united, that even the profoundest speculations of man's boasted intelligence cannot deter- mine which is cause and %vhich effect, — being, as they seem, simultaneous : and into all there is infseud the mysterious spirit of life, making them free and active 394l NATURAL ARRANGEMENT OF INSECTS. agents, endowed, to the extent and variety of their organisation, with perceptions fitted for its fullest en- joyment; and these, so governed by recondite influences that control them, that, in seeking and effecting their own weal, they work concurrently for the common weal of all. The student of this world of wonders can patiently endure the contumely of those, who, busied in tlie noisy mart of social life, sneer with contempt upon his pursuits ; for he knows full well, that a clay will come, when these traffickers in human flesh and human misery, who accumulate wealth distilled from human blood, for no end but accumulation and ostentation, shall be scourged from God's living Temple ; and that the exalted shall be humbled, and the humble exalted. (358.) We cannot better conclude the present work, and the series to which it forms the sequel, than in the words of an eminent advocate of the representative sys- tem. The precursory suffrage of the great Bacon shall terminate our labours : he says *, " Was not the Persian magic a reduction or correspondence of the principles and architectures of Nature to the rules and policy of governments ? Is not the precept of a musician, to fall from a discord or harsh accord upon a concord or sweet accord, alike true in affection? Is not the trope of music, to avoid or slide from the close or cadence, common with the trope of rhetoric, of deceiving expect- ation. Is not the delight of the quavering upon a stop in music, the same with the playing of light upon the water .'' ' Splendet tremulo sub lumine pontus.' Are not the organs of the senses of one kind with the organs of reflection, — the eye with a glass, the ear with a cave, or straight, determined, and bounded ? Neither ARE THESE ONLY SIMILITUDES, AS MEN OF NARROW OB- SERVATION MAY CONCEIVE THEM TO BE, BUT THE SAME FOOTSTEPS OF NaTURE, TREADING OR PRINTING UPON SEVERAL SUBJECTS OR MATTERS." V{327 358.) W E. Sh.] * Advancement of Learning, p. 151. ed. 1825. INDEX. A. Abispa, a solitary wasp, 182. A branches, 20. Acalypteridae, sub-tribes of, 378. Acanthocerus, 236. 268. Acari, 68. AcaridaB, or mites, 385. Acentropus, 355. Achenium, 272. Acrea, larva of, 92. Acridinze, grasshoppers, 349. Acridopeza, sexes of, 349. Acrita, 4. Simple formation, 36. Acronycta, 109, 110. Actora?, of the sea-shore, 379. Actorus popularum, 120. Adesmia, 270. Adsciti, the, 187. .ajgialia, a small insect, 236. Affinities, of natural, 4. Agarista, 101. Agaristidae, the, 102. Agathedrium, rolls up as a ball, 236. Aglae, resplendently metallic, 166. Aglaia, the genus, 154. Aglaura, the head concealed, 25. Agras, 261. Agrion, 338. A. Lucretia, 338. Agrotis, 110. Albionnides, 21. Alciope, 25. AleocharidtE, family, 272. Aleyrodes, 84. 113. Allodapa, African genus, 166. Alysia, typical, 187. Amathusa, of India, 93. Ammophilse, of extensive distri- bution, 181. Amphicoma, 219. Amphynoma, 25. Ampliynomidae, 25. Amphitritidee, golden set^ of, 23. Anacolus, 284. Ancyloscelis, 124. Andrena, 163, 164. 352. Andrenid^, the, 161, 162. 164. Andrenoides Apidje, 164. Animal creation, the great divisions of the, 4. Vertebrata, 1. 81., &c. Testacea, Radiata, Acrita, Annu- losa, compared, 4. Animal kingdom, entomological analogies and affinities with the, 35. 42. 81. 140. 199. 201. Ana- logies to quadrupeds, 49, SO. 64. 66. 93. 136. 240. 279. Annellides, red-blooded worms, their affinity with Annulosa,5, 6. Are aquatic animals, 7. Are ap. proximate to fishes, 8. Long- bodied, 9. Similar conformation with Nudibranchiae, 16. General characters of, 17. 19. 69. Savig- ny's five orders of, 20. Lamarck's arrangement of, 20. Milne Ed- wards's arrangement of, 21. A. apodes, &c., 20. A. chetopodes, 22. A. cephalobranchiffi, 22. A. mesobraiichiie, 22, 23. McLeay's arrangement of, 25. Their ana- logy with the Scansores among birds, 34. Analogies of, 35. Annulosa, general account of, and of the three aberrant classes of. Part I. chap, i., 1. 7. Some most intelligent, yet most minute, 2. Typical, have two or four wings, and six feet, 2. Remote, resemble shell-fish, 3. Parasitic, 3. General model of, 3. Rank of, in the circle of animated na- ture, 4. A perfect class, ,'>. Their connexion with the Annellides and Radiata, 3. Primary divi- sions of annulose animals, 6. Ty- pical and sub-typical groups of, 8, 396 INDEX. 45. 69. Circle of affinity of, 8. Analogies of, to vertebrata, 9. 12. 15. And to testacea, 16. 30. 35. With the animal kingdom, 35. 49, SO. Metamorphosis of, 51. 54. Anobia, larvce of the, 3,'>ii. Anobium, 217. Anoplognathi, 213, 214. AnoplognathidEE, 210. Anoplura, the, 387. Anopluriform type of caterpillars, 61. 65. 70. 72. Antenna of Insects, chief notices of, 86. 90. 102. 1U7. 112. 116. 121. 126. 138. 151. 166. 181. 186. 201. 205. 207. 247,248. 355, et passim. Antherophagus, and other insects consuming flowers, 267. AnthorayidiP, the, 378. Anthophora, gregarious, 166. Anthribides, the, 276. Ants, of, 147. 151. 171. Consist of males, females, and neuters, 171. Termitin;E have been denomi- nated " white ants,"343. Enmity of the true ants to them, 343. Apate, 247. Aphides, or plant-lice, 112. 116. 128. 137. 141, et passim. Aphis, 114. AphodiiniE, sub-family, 235. Aphodius, 255. Aphroditae, 25. Apidae, the genuine bees, 164. Apides, or bees, 151. 158. Apis, 168. A. domestica, 170. Apollo butterfly, 76. 87. Aptera, or wingless insects, 8, 9. Affinities of, 9. 11. 13. 16.80. Ana. logy with the Dentirostres among birds, 34. Sub-typical group, 46. Noxious and disgusting insects of this class, 68 May be termed types of evil, 69. On the class of Apterous Insects, Part 111., 359. Apus, 392. Aquatic insects, various, particu- l.irised, 60. 108. 129, 13U. 140. 192. 248. 263, 264. 335. 353— ;355. Arachnidae, the, 380 — 393. Aranea, tribes of the Araneidse, 381, etseq. Arctiadip, tiger moths, 106. Arenicoles, 23. Consist of Areni- cola and Chetoptera, 23,24. Argulus, 38. 392. Argus butterfly, 92. 95. Aricida?, consist of the genera Ari- cia, Cirratulus, Ophelia, &c., 24. Articulata, affinities with the, 30. Ascalaphus, the genus, 340. Astacus fluviatilis,the crayfish,391. .\stacusgaiiimarus.thelobster,391. Astilbus, dwells in moss, 273. Atomaria, 267. Atractocerus, 331. 3.';2. Attelabus, the genus, 261. Atropos, 3aphoidcs, 121. Millipedes, of, 53. 150. Miltogramma, 162. Miris, 121. Mites, or Acaridx, 385. Molluris, 281. MoUusca, certain insects that bear affinity to the, 7, 22.27.30. Ana- logies with, 35, 36. Monilicornes, tribe of Coleoptera, 1 15. 202—206. General view of, chap. X., 309. Analogies 'of the families of, 311. Monoculos, 392. Monoculi, tribes of, 37. Bivalve, or Ostracoda, 38. Mordella, account of, 321— 32S. Mordellida;, of the,332. Mormolyce, 261. Moth cicadas, the, 127. 130. 134. Moths, of, 60. 77, 78. 86. 108. De- nominations of, 77. 10.5, 106. Muscidae, comprehensive tribe of the, 375, 37a Museum, the British, 1S3, 184. Mutilla, tvjiical genus, 176. MutiUida?; the, 152. 154. 175. Mygale,382. Mvgnimia, 179. Mvlabris, of the East, 32a Myriapoda, 19. 53. 386. Myrmecia, of New Holland, 173. Myrmecoleontins, the, 339. Myrmus miriformis. 120. Mystacides, 355. Myxine, 5, 6. 19. 26. Myzine, 179. N. Nabis lividus, 124. Nais, 23. Natorial, or natatorial conforma- tion, 60. 140., &c. Naucoris, 125. Necrodes, 266. Necrophagus, butyfngheelles, 266. Necrophori, the typical, 267. NecydalinsB, sub-family of, 295. Analogies of the, 297. Necydalis, 295. N. major, 296. Neides, of Latreille, 120. Nematoidea, this order without perceptible joints, 27. Nenioptera, the long-winged, 341. Nepa, 125. Nepada;, the, 129. Nephelys, 21. Nephritomma, 181. Nephtys, 25. Nepidae, group of, 125. 140. Nereids, 18. The feet 'umished with cirrhi, 25. Nereidina, head distinct, 26. Nereis margaritacea, 19. INDEX. 403 Nests, of insects, 151. 156. 159. 165. 169. 183, 184. 273. 343. Neuroptera, aberrant class of Pti- lota, 8, 9. Have no sting, the wings reticulated, 48. Analogy of with fishes, 49, 50. Larv« of, 49.339. Description of, chap, xii., 335. A circle of its own, 337. Night moths, 78. 86. Nitidute, 267. 269. N. proper, 269. NitidulincE, the, 268. Nobiles, swallow-tailed, 63. Noctua sponsa, 102. Noctuides, 78. 86. 104. 108. 204. Nomada, general structure of, 164. Nomia, the genus, 163. Notonecta, large shield of, 139. Notoncctidae, 129, 130. 139 140. Nymphalids, sub-typical group of the butterflies, 68! 75. 90. 92. O. Ochthebius, 249. Odocantha, 261. CEdesmagena, 376. CEiione, 25. GSshna, large eyes of the, 339. ffistrida?, parasitic, .375. ffistrus, 376. Omalida;, family of the, 272. Omophron, gibbous, 'J64. Omus, the large, 2G0. Onibciform \arvis, 65. 72. 95. Onisciform tvpe, 149, li passim. Oniscus, 62. 96. 149. 387. 392. Oiiitis, 227. Oniticellus, 227. Onthophagus, the genus, 225. 227. Opatrum, 236. Ophelia, 24. OphionidjB, the, 1R6. Orthid£E, spinninghawk •moths,101 Orthonotus, structure of, 121. Orthoptera, 56. Oryctes nasicornis, 230. 233. Osmia;, or mason bees, 16.;. Ostracoda, bivalve n-.orioculi, 38. Ovipositor, the, in enlomology, 152. 186 — 188, el passim. Oxycypha, the genus, 354. Oxytelid,-e, beetles, 272. P. Pachycnemus, 211. Pachylis, 119. P.gigas, 119. Pachypus of Fabricuis, 218, 219. Pachysoma, 227. PjBciiopoda, truly suctorial, among the Crustacea, 392. PalEestes, 285. Palmyra, 25. Pamb'orus, 263. Panorpa, the genus, 341. PanorpinjE, the, 341. Papilio of Latreille, 75. Papilio of LinnEEus, 86, 87. Papiliones, the, 10. 54—70. Papilionidse, arrangement of the, 87. True butterflies, 98. Papilioniries, tribe, S6, et seq. PapilioninzB, the, 87, 88. Paragia, the genus, 185. Parasitic insects, of, 68. 162. 164, 165. 168. 177. 181. 329. 332. 334 352, 379. 392. 393. Parenchymata, Ciivier's, 27, 28. ParnassinEB, the, 76. 87. 90. Parnassius, 90. Parnopes, parasite, 181. Parnus, 249. Passalus, devastations by, 243. Passandra, 285. Paussi, genera of the, 124. Paussus, 124. P. armatus, 124. Peacock butterfly, the, 6o. 91. Pectinaria, 23. Peduncles of barnacles, 30. 71. Pelecotoma, 332. Pella, beetles, 273. Pelopjeus, range of, 181. Peltophora, 118. Pentatoma>, the true, 119. P. bi. dens, lis. Pentatomid^, or wood bvigs, 116. Pepsis, typical wasp, 151. 179. Percpates, 25. Perga of New Holland, 189. Perlinae, the, 3.57. Genus Perla, 357. Petalocera, 230. 236. Phala;na, 86. Phalsenip of Linnseus, 104. Phalajnides, 69. 78. 86. 1U7. Phalangidae, the, 385. Phalangium,S92. Phan^i, the, 227, 228. 260. Phasma, description of, 344. 347. Phasminae, 345. 347. Philanthida?, the, 178. Philanthus, 181. Phileurus, 233. Phloitribus Olefe, 236. Pholidotus, 243. Phosphoric light in insects, 246. 323. Phryg.-mid^, the, \Bi. Fifth circle of Neuroptera, 353. 354 Phryganin