A Familiar Introduction to the History of Insects;: Being a New and Greatly Improved Edition of The Grammar of Entomology |
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Page 155
... setaceous ( fig . 1 ) , attenuantes , when they are long , throughout slender , and yet taper gradually to the apex , and the union of the joints takes place without any marked indentation or protuberance : OF THE ANTENNE . 155.
... setaceous ( fig . 1 ) , attenuantes , when they are long , throughout slender , and yet taper gradually to the apex , and the union of the joints takes place without any marked indentation or protuberance : OF THE ANTENNE . 155.
Page 157
... shaft being generally long , slender , and filiform capitate or capitate ( fig . 17 ) , in which the knob is more abrupt , and strongly marked ; the knob is some- times solid , sometimes consisting of a single joint , OF THE ANTENNE . 157.
... shaft being generally long , slender , and filiform capitate or capitate ( fig . 17 ) , in which the knob is more abrupt , and strongly marked ; the knob is some- times solid , sometimes consisting of a single joint , OF THE ANTENNE . 157.
Page 232
... antenne and wings ; feeds on in- sects . Ceropales , Pompilus , Aporus . Sphexes or Sphecites . Larva and pupa as in Scholiites , the food differing only in the kind of insect provided . Imago vith the antennæ composed of thirteen ...
... antenne and wings ; feeds on in- sects . Ceropales , Pompilus , Aporus . Sphexes or Sphecites . Larva and pupa as in Scholiites , the food differing only in the kind of insect provided . Imago vith the antennæ composed of thirteen ...
Page 258
... antenne much longer , more filiform , and inserted nearer together ; mandibles more acute ; maxilla obtuse ; galea palpiform and articulate ; hind legs incrassated , formed for leaping ; form less globose . Inhabits and feeds on ...
... antenne much longer , more filiform , and inserted nearer together ; mandibles more acute ; maxilla obtuse ; galea palpiform and articulate ; hind legs incrassated , formed for leaping ; form less globose . Inhabits and feeds on ...
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A Familiar Introduction to the History of Insects; Being a New and Greatly ... Edward Newman No preview available - 2013 |
Common terms and phrases
acute alulæ animals antennæ composed ants appears articulate basal bees beetles blade blood body butterflies caterpillar cells chrysalis clap-net clavated cocoon Coleoptera colour corneous covered cylindrical Diptera earth ecdysis eggs elytra Entomological entomologist feeler-jaw feelers female filiform antennæ five-jointed flies flight flowers forceps fore wings four four-jointed furnished galea ground head Hemiptera hind wings honey Hymenoptera ichneumon Imago with antennæ incrassated Inhabits and feeds insects kind labium labourers Larva Larva and pupa Larva elongate Larva inhabits larvæ leaves legs Lepidoptera ligula locust maggot males mandibles maxillæ maxillary feelers mesothorax metathorax minute moniliform moths motion mouth muscles nearly nervures nest obtuse ocelli three organs Orthoptera ovipositor perfect insect perfectly podeon portion possess preceding order prehensile prothorax Pupa changes queen resembling scutellum segments side silk situations six-jointed skin slender sometimes species spiracles stout substance surface tarsi three-jointed tion trees vegetables wasps wood
Popular passages
Page 197 - Vast chain of being! which from God began; Natures ethereal, human, angel, man, Beast, bird, fish, insect, what no eye can see, No glass can reach; from infinite to thee; From thee to nothing — On superior...
Page 131 - To trace in Nature's most minute design, The signature and stamp of power divine, Contrivance intricate expressed with ease, Where unassisted sight no beauty sees, The shapely limb and lubricated joint, Within the small dimensions of a point, Muscle and nerve miraculously spun, His mighty work who speaks and it is done, The invisible in things scarce seen revealed, To whom an atom is an ample field.
Page xv - Learn of the little nautilus to sail, Spread the thin oar, and catch the driving gale. Here too all forms of social union find, And hence let Reason, late, instruct mankind: Here subterranean works and cities see ; There towns aerial on the waving tree. Learn each small people's genius, policies, The ants...
Page 28 - For this purpose they sheath or draw back the hooks almost entirely within the skin, until the two points come close to each other. They then present them to the membrane, and, keeping them parallel till it is pierced through, they expand them in a lateral direction, and...
Page 62 - These apartments compose an intricate labyrinth, which extends a foot or more in diameter from the royal chamber on every side. Here the nurseries and magazines of provisions begin ; and, being separated by small empty chambers and galleries, which surround them, and communicate with each other...
Page 65 - The third order, or the insect in its perfect state, varies its form still more than ever. The head, thorax, and abdomen, differ almost entirely from the same parts in the labourers and soldiers; and, besides this, the animal is now furnished with four fine large brownish transparent wings, with which it is at the time of emigration to wing its way in search of a new settlement.
Page 27 - ... ripe, after which time the slightest application of warmth and moisture is sufficient to bring forth, in an instant, the latent larva. At this time, if the tongue of the horse touches the egg, its operculum is thrown open, and a small active worm is produced, which readily adheres to the moist surface of the tongue, and is from thence conveyed with the food to the stomach.
Page 58 - Africa, that it is scarcely possible to stand upon any open place, such as a rice- plantation or other clear spot, where one or more of these buildings is not to be seen within fifty paces. In some parts near Senegal, as mentioned by Adanson, their number, magnitude, and closeness of situation, make them appear like the villages of the natives.
Page 18 - ... they viewed with a curious eye the common dress of the Chinese, the manufactures of silk, and the myriads of silkworms, whose education (either on trees or in houses) had once been considered as the labour of queens.
Page 54 - The burying-beetles hunt in couples, male and female ; and when six or eight are found in a large animal, they are almost sure to be males and females, in equal numbers : they hunt by scent only, the chase being mostly performed when no other sense would be very available, viz., in the night. When they have found a bird, great comfort is expressed by the male, who wheels round and round above it, like an eagle, — the female settles on it at once, without this testimonial of satisfaction ; the male...