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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Bramble-bees and Others, by J. Henri Fabre
+ </title>
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+
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Bramble-bees and Others, by J. Henri Fabre
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Bramble-bees and Others
+
+Author: J. Henri Fabre
+
+Release Date: January 17, 2009 [EBook #3421]
+Last Updated: January 22, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BRAMBLE-BEES AND OTHERS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Sue Asscher, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ BRAMBLE-BEES AND OTHERS
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ by J. HENRI FABRE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ TRANSLATED BY ALEXANDER TEIXEIRA DE MATTOS, F.Z.S.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h3>
+ TRANSLATOR'S NOTE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ In this volume I have collected all the essays on Wild Bees scattered
+ through the "Souvenirs entomologiques," with the exception of those on the
+ Chalicodomae, or Mason-bees proper, which form the contents of a separate
+ volume entitled "The Mason-bees."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first two essays on the Halicti (Chapters 12 and 13) have already
+ appeared in an abbreviated form in "The Life and Love of the Insect,"
+ translated by myself and published by Messrs. A. &amp; C. Black (in
+ America by the Macmillan Co.) in 1911. With the greatest courtesy and
+ kindness, Messrs. Black have given me their permission to include these
+ two chapters in the present volume; they did so without fee or
+ consideration of any kind, merely on my representation that it would be a
+ great pity if this uniform edition of Fabre's Works should be rendered
+ incomplete because certain essays formed part of volumes of extracts
+ previously published in this country. Their generosity is almost
+ unparalleled in my experience; and I wish to thank them publicly for it in
+ the name of the author, of the French publishers and of the English and
+ American publishers, as well as in my own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the remaining chapters, one or two have appeared in the "English
+ Review" or other magazines; but most of them now see the light in English
+ for the first time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have once more, as in the case of "The Mason-bees," to thank Miss
+ Frances Rodwell for the help which she has given me in the work of
+ translation and research; and I am also grateful for much kind assistance
+ received from the staff of the Natural History Museum and from Mr.
+ Geoffrey Meade-Waldo in particular.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ALEXANDER TEIXEIRA DE MATTOS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chelsea, 1915.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER 1. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ BRAMBLE-DWELLERS.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER 2. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE OSMIAE.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER 3. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE SEXES.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER 4. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE MOTHER DECIDES THE SEX OF THE EGG.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER 5. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ PERMUTATIONS OF SEX.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER 6. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ INSTINCT AND DISCERNMENT.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER 7. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ ECONOMY OF ENERGY.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER 8. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE LEAF-CUTTERS.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER 9. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE COTTON-BEES.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER 10. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE RESIN-BEES.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER 11. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE POISON OF THE BEE.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER 12. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE HALICTI: A PARASITE.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER 13. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE HALICTI: THE PORTRESS.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER 14. &nbsp;&nbsp;</a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE HALICTI: PARTHENOGENESIS.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 1. BRAMBLE-DWELLERS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The peasant, as he trims his hedge, whose riotous tangle threatens to
+ encroach upon the road, cuts the trailing stems of the bramble a foot or
+ two from the ground and leaves the root-stock, which soon dries up. These
+ bramble-stumps, sheltered and protected by the thorny brushwood, are in
+ great demand among a host of Hymenoptera who have families to settle. The
+ stump, when dry, offers to any one that knows how to use it a hygienic
+ dwelling, where there is no fear of damp from the sap; its soft and
+ abundant pith lends itself to easy work; and the top offers a weak spot
+ which makes it possible for the insect to reach the vein of least
+ resistance at once, without cutting away through the hard ligneous wall.
+ To many, therefore, of the Bee and Wasp tribe, whether honey-gatherers or
+ hunters, one of these dry stalks is a valuable discovery when its diameter
+ matches the size of its would-be inhabitants; and it is also an
+ interesting subject of study to the entomologist who, in the winter,
+ pruning-shears in hand, can gather in the hedgerows a faggot rich in small
+ industrial wonders. Visiting the bramble-bushes has long been one of my
+ favourite pastimes during the enforced leisure of the wintertime; and it
+ is seldom but some new discovery, some unexpected fact, makes up to me for
+ my torn fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My list, which is still far from being complete, already numbers nearly
+ thirty species of bramble-dwellers in the neighbourhood of my house; other
+ observers, more assiduous than I, exploring another region and one
+ covering a wider range, have counted as many as fifty. I give at foot an
+ inventory of the species which I have noted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (Bramble-dwelling insects in the neighbourhood of Serignan [Vaucluse]:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 1. MELLIFEROUS HYMENOPTERA.
+ Osmia tridentata, DUF. and PER.
+ Osmia detrita, PEREZ.
+ Anthidium scapulare, LATR.
+ Heriades rubicola, PEREZ.
+ Prosopis confusa, SCHENCK.
+ Ceratina chalcites, GERM.
+ Ceratina albilabris, FAB.
+ Ceratina callosa, FAB.
+ Ceratina coerulea, VILLERS.
+
+ 2. HUNTING HYMENOPTERA.
+ Solenius vagus, FAB. (provisions, Diptera).
+ Solenius lapidarius, LEP. (provisions, Spiders?).
+ Cemonus unicolor, PANZ. (provisions, Plant-lice).
+ Psen atratus (provisions, Black Plant-lice).
+ Tripoxylon figulus, LIN. (provisions, Spiders).
+ A Pompilus, unknown (provisions, Spiders).
+ Odynerus delphinalis, GIRAUD.
+
+ 3. PARASITICAL HYMENOPTERA.
+ A Leucopsis, unknown (parasite of Anthidium scapulare).
+ A small Scoliid, unknown (parasite of Solenius vagus).
+ Omalus auratus (parasite of various bramble-dwellers).
+ Cryptus bimaculatus, GRAV. (parasite of Osmia detrita).
+ Cryptus gyrator, DUF. (parasite of Tripoxylon figulus).
+ Ephialtes divinator, ROSSI (parasite of Cemonus unicolor).
+ Ephialtes mediator, GRAV. (parasite of Psen atratus).
+ Foenus pyrenaicus, GUERIN.
+ Euritoma rubicola, J. GIRAUD (parasite of Osmia detrita).
+
+ 4. COLEOPTERA.
+ Zonitis mutica, FAB. (parasite of Osmia tridentata).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Most of these insects have been submitted to a learned expert, Professor
+ Jean Perez, of Bordeaux. I take this opportunity of renewing my thanks for
+ his kindness in identifying them for me.&mdash;Author's Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They include members of very diverse corporations. Some, more industrious
+ and equipped with better tools, remove the pith from the dry stem and thus
+ obtain a vertical cylindrical gallery, the length of which may be nearly a
+ cubit. This sheath is next divided, by partitions, into more or less
+ numerous storeys, each of which forms the cell of a larva. Others, less
+ well-endowed with strength and implements, avail themselves of the old
+ galleries of other insects, galleries that have been abandoned after
+ serving as a home for their builder's family. Their only work is to make
+ some slight repairs in the ruined tenement, to clear the channel of its
+ lumber, such as the remains of cocoons and the litter of shattered
+ ceilings, and lastly to build new partitions, either with a plaster made
+ of clay or with a concrete formed of pith-scrapings cemented with a drop
+ of saliva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You can tell these borrowed dwellings by the unequal size of the storeys.
+ When the worker has herself bored the channel, she economizes her space:
+ she knows how costly it is. The cells, in that case, are all alike, the
+ proper size for the tenant, neither too large nor too small. In this box,
+ which has cost weeks of labour, the insect has to house the largest
+ possible number of larvae, while allotting the necessary amount of room to
+ each. Method in the superposition of the floors and economy of space are
+ here the absolute rule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there is evidence of waste when the insect makes use of a bramble
+ hollowed by another. This is the case with Tripoxylon figulus. To obtain
+ the store-rooms wherein to deposit her scanty stock of Spiders, she
+ divides her borrowed cylinder into very unequal cells, by means of slender
+ clay partitions. Some are a centimetre (.39 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) deep, the proper size for the insect; others are as much as two
+ inches. These spacious rooms, out of all proportion to the occupier,
+ reveal the reckless extravagance of a casual proprietress whose
+ title-deeds have cost her nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, whether they be the original builders or labourers touching up the
+ work of others, they all alike have their parasites, who constitute the
+ third class of bramble-dwellers. These have neither galleries to excavate
+ nor victuals to provide; they lay their egg in a strange cell; and their
+ grub feeds either on the provisions of the lawful owner's larva or on that
+ larva itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the head of this population, as regards both the finish and the
+ magnitude of the structure, stands the Three-pronged Osmia (Osmia
+ tridentata, DUF. and PER.), to whom this chapter shall be specially
+ devoted. Her gallery, which has the diameter of a lead pencil, sometimes
+ descends to a depth of twenty inches. It is at first almost exactly
+ cylindrical; but, in the course of the victualling, changes occur which
+ modify it slightly at geometrically determined distances. The work of
+ boring possesses no great interest. In the month of July, we see the
+ insect, perched on a bramble-stump, attack the pith and dig itself a well.
+ When this is deep enough, the Osmia goes down, tears off a few particles
+ of pith and comes up again to fling her load outside. This monotonous
+ labour continues until the Bee deems the gallery long enough, or until, as
+ often happens, she finds herself stopped by an impassable knot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next comes the ration of honey, the laying of the egg and the
+ partitioning, the last a delicate operation to which the insect proceeds
+ by degrees from the base to the top. At the bottom of the gallery, a pile
+ of honey is placed and an egg laid upon the pile; then a partition is
+ built to separate this cell from the next, for each larva must have its
+ special chamber, about a centimetre and a half (.58 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) long, having no communication with the chambers adjoining. The
+ materials employed for this partition are bramble-sawdust, glued into a
+ paste with the insects' saliva. Whence are these materials obtained? Does
+ the Osmia go outside, to gather on the ground the rubbish which she flung
+ out when boring the cylinder? On the contrary, she is frugal of her time
+ and has better things to do than to pick up the scattered particles from
+ the soil. The channel, as I said, is at first uniform in size, almost
+ cylindrical; its sides still retain a thin coating of pith, forming the
+ reserves which the Osmia, as a provident builder, has economized wherewith
+ to construct the partitions. So she scrapes away with her mandibles,
+ keeping within a certain radius, a radius that corresponds with the
+ dimensions of the cell which she is going to build next; moreover, she
+ conducts her work in such a way as to hollow out more in the middle and
+ leave the two ends contracted. In this manner, the cylindrical channel of
+ the start is succeeded, in the worked portion, by an ovoid cavity
+ flattened at both ends, a space resembling a little barrel. This space
+ will form the second cell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the rubbish, it is utilized on the spot for the lid or cover that
+ serves as a ceiling for one cell and a floor for the next. Our own
+ master-builders could not contrive more successfully to make the best use
+ of their labourers' time. On the floor thus obtained, a second ration of
+ honey is placed; and an egg is laid on the surface of the paste. Lastly,
+ at the upper end of the little barrel, a partition is built with the
+ scrapings obtained in the course of the final work on the third cell,
+ which itself is shaped like a flattened ovoid. And so the work goes on,
+ cell upon cell, each supplying the materials for the partition separating
+ it from the one below. On reaching the end of the cylinder, the Osmia
+ closes up the case with a thick layer of the same mortar. Then that
+ bramble-stump is done with; the Bee will not return to it. If her ovaries
+ are not yet exhausted, other dry stems will be exploited in the same
+ fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The number of cells varies greatly, according to the qualities of the
+ stalk. If the bramble-stump be long, regular and smooth, we may count as
+ many as fifteen: that, at least, is the highest figure which my
+ observations have supplied. To obtain a good idea of the internal
+ distribution, we must split the stalk lengthwise, in the winter, when the
+ provisions have long been consumed and when the larvae are wrapped in
+ their cocoons. We then see that, at regular intervals, the case becomes
+ slightly narrower; and in each of the necks thus formed a circular disk is
+ fixed, a partition one or two millimetres thick. (.039 to.079 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) The rooms separated by these partitions form so many little barrels
+ or kegs, each compactly filled with a reddish, transparent cocoon, through
+ which the larva shows, bent into a fish-hook. The whole suggests a string
+ of rough, oval amber beads, touching at their amputated ends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this string of cocoons, which is the oldest, which the youngest? The
+ oldest is obviously the bottom one, the one whose cell was the first
+ built; the youngest is the one at the top of the row, the one in the cell
+ last built. The oldest of the larvae starts the pile, down at the bottom
+ of the gallery; the latest arrival ends it at the top; and those in
+ between follow upon one another, according to age, from base to apex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us next observe that there is no room in the shaft for two Osmiae at a
+ time on the same level, for each cocoon fills up the storey, the keg that
+ belongs to it, without leaving any vacant space; let us also remark that,
+ when they attain the stage of perfection, the Osmiae must all emerge from
+ the shaft by the only orifice which the bramble-stem boasts, the orifice
+ at the top. There is here but one obstacle, easy to overcome: a plug of
+ glued pith, of which the insect's mandibles make short work. Down below,
+ the stalk offers no ready outlet; besides, it is prolonged underground
+ indefinitely by the roots. Everywhere else is the ligneous fence,
+ generally too hard and thick to break through. It is inevitable therefore
+ that all the Osmiae, when the time comes to quit their dwelling, should go
+ out by the top; and, as the narrowness of the shaft bars the passage of
+ the preceding insect as long as the next insect, the one above it, remains
+ in position, the removal must begin at the top, extend from cell to cell
+ and end at the bottom. Consequently, the order of exit is the converse to
+ the order of birth: the younger Osmiae leave the nest first, their elders
+ leave it last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The oldest, that is to say, the bottom one, was the first to finish her
+ supply of honey and to spin her cocoon. Taking precedence of all her
+ sisters in the whole series of her actions, she was the first to burst her
+ silken bag and to destroy the ceiling that closes her room: at least, that
+ is what the logic of the situation takes for granted. In her anxiety to
+ get out, how will she set about her release? The way is blocked by the
+ nearest cocoons, as yet intact. To clear herself a passage through the
+ string of those cocoons would mean to exterminate the remainder of the
+ brood; the deliverance of one would mean the destruction of all the rest.
+ Insects are notoriously obstinate in their actions and unscrupulous in
+ their methods. If the Bee at the bottom of the shaft wants to leave her
+ lodging, will she spare those who bar her road?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The difficulty is great, obviously; it seems insuperable. Thereupon we
+ become suspicious: we begin to wonder if the emergence from the cocoon,
+ that is to say, the hatching, really takes place in the order of
+ primogeniture. Might it not be&mdash;by a very singular exception, it is
+ true, but one which is necessary in such circumstances&mdash;that the
+ youngest of the Osmiae bursts her cocoon first and the oldest last; in
+ short, that the hatching proceeds from one chamber to the next in the
+ inverse direction to that which the age of the occupants would lead us to
+ presume? In that case, the whole difficulty would be removed: each Osmia,
+ as she rent her silken prison, would find a clear road in front of her,
+ the Osmiae nearer the outlet having gone out before her. But is this
+ really how things happen? Our theories very often do not agree with the
+ insect's practice; even where our reasoning seems most logical, we should
+ be more prudent to see what happens before venturing on any positive
+ statements. Leon Dufour was not so prudent when he, the first in the
+ field, took this little problem in hand. He describes to us the habits of
+ an Odynerus (Odynerus rubicola, DUF.) who piles up clay cells in the shaft
+ of a dry bramble-stalk; and, full of enthusiasm for his industrious Wasp,
+ he goes on to say:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Picture a string of eight cement shells, placed end to end and closely
+ wedged inside a wooden sheath. The lowest was undeniably made first and
+ consequently contains the first-laid egg, which, according to rules,
+ should give birth to the first winged insect. How do you imagine that the
+ larva in that first shell was bidden to waive its right of primogeniture
+ and only to complete its metamorphosis after all its juniors? What are the
+ conditions brought into play to produce a result apparently so contrary to
+ the laws of nature? Humble yourself in the presence of the reality and
+ confess your ignorance, rather than attempt to hide your embarrassment
+ under vain explanations!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If the first egg laid by the busy mother were destined to be the
+ first-born of the Odyneri, that one, in order to see the light immediately
+ after achieving wings, would have had the option either of breaking
+ through the double walls of his prison or of perforating, from bottom to
+ top, the seven shells ahead of him, in order to emerge through the
+ truncate end of the bramble-stem. Now nature, while refusing any way of
+ escape laterally, was also bound to veto any direct invasion, the brutal
+ gimlet-work which would inevitably have sacrificed seven members of one
+ family for the safety of an only son. Nature is as ingenious in design as
+ she is fertile in resource, and she must have foreseen and forestalled
+ every difficulty. She decided that the last-built cradle should yield the
+ first-born child; that this one should clear the road for his next oldest
+ brother, the second for the third and so on. And this is the order in
+ which the birth of our Odyneri of the Brambles actually takes place.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, my revered master, I will admit without hesitation that the
+ bramble-dwellers leave their sheath in the converse order to that of their
+ ages: the youngest first, the oldest last; if not invariably, at least
+ very often. But does the hatching, by which I mean the emergence from the
+ cocoon, take place in the same order? Does the evolution of the elder wait
+ upon that of the younger, so that each may give those who would bar his
+ passage time to effect their deliverance and to leave the road clear? I
+ very much fear that logic has carried your deductions beyond the bounds of
+ reality. Rationally speaking, my dear sir, nothing could be more accurate
+ than your inferences; and yet we must forgo the theory of the strange
+ inversion which you suggest. None of the Bramble-bees with whom I have
+ experimented behaves after that fashion. I know nothing personal about
+ Odynerus rubicola, who appears to be a stranger in my district; but, as
+ the method of leaving must be almost the same when the habitation is
+ exactly similar, it is enough, I think, to experiment with some of the
+ bramble-dwellers in order to learn the history of the rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My studies will, by preference, bear upon the Three-pronged Osmia, who
+ lends herself more readily to laboratory experiments, both because she is
+ stronger and because the same stalk will contain a goodly number of her
+ cells. The first fact to be ascertained is the order of hatching. I take a
+ glass tube, closed at one end, open at the other and of a diameter similar
+ to that of the Osmia's tunnel. In this I place, one above the other,
+ exactly in their natural order, the ten cocoons, or thereabouts, which I
+ extract from a stump of bramble. The operation is performed in winter. The
+ larvae, at that time, have long been enveloped in their silken case. To
+ separate the cocoons from one another, I employ artificial partitions
+ consisting of little round disks of sorghum, or Indian millet, about half
+ a centimetre thick. (About one-fifth of an inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ This is a white pith, divested of its fibrous wrapper and easy for the
+ Osmia's mandibles to attack. My diaphragms are much thicker than the
+ natural partitions; this is an advantage, as we shall see. In any case, I
+ could not well use thinner ones, for these disks must be able to withstand
+ the pressure of the rammer which places them in position in the tube. On
+ the other hand, the experiment showed me that the Osmia makes short work
+ of the material when it is a case of drilling a hole through it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To keep out the light, which would disturb my insects destined to spend
+ their larval life in complete darkness, I cover the tube with a thick
+ paper sheath, easy to remove and replace when the time comes for
+ observation. Lastly, the tubes thus prepared and containing either Osmiae
+ or other bramble-dwellers are hung vertically, with the opening at the
+ top, in a snug corner of my study. Each of these appliances fulfils the
+ natural conditions pretty satisfactorily: the cocoons from the same
+ bramble-stick are stacked in the same order which they occupied in the
+ native shaft, the oldest at the bottom of the tube and the youngest close
+ to the orifice; they are isolated by means of partitions; they are placed
+ vertically, head upwards; moreover, my device has the advantage of
+ substituting for the opaque wall of the bramble a transparent wall which
+ will enable me to follow the hatching day by day, at any moment which I
+ think opportune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The male Osmia splits his cocoon at the end of June and the female at the
+ beginning of July. When this time comes, we must redouble our watch and
+ inspect the tubes several times a day if we would obtain exact statistics
+ of the births. Well, during the six years that I have studied this
+ question, I have seen and seen again, ad nauseam; and I am in a position
+ to declare that there is no order governing the sequence of hatchings,
+ absolutely none. The first cocoon to burst may be the one at the bottom of
+ the tube, the one at the top, the one in the middle or in any other part,
+ indifferently. The second to be split may adjoin the first or it may be
+ removed from it by a number of spaces, either above or below. Sometimes
+ several hatchings occur on the same day, within the same hour, some
+ farther back in the row of cells, some farther forward; and this without
+ any apparent reason for the simultaneity. In short, the hatchings follow
+ upon one another, I will not say haphazard&mdash;for each of them has its
+ appointed place in time, determined by impenetrable causes&mdash;but at
+ any rate contrary to our calculations, based on this or the other
+ consideration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had we not been deceived by our too shallow logic, we might have foreseen
+ this result. The eggs are laid in their respective cells at intervals of a
+ few days, of a few hours. How can this slight difference in age affect the
+ total evolution, which lasts a year? Mathematical accuracy has nothing to
+ do with the case. Each germ, each grub has its individual energy,
+ determined we know not how and varying in each germ or grub. This excess
+ of vitality belongs to the egg before it leaves the ovary. Might it not,
+ at the moment of hatching, be the cause why this or that larva takes
+ precedence of its elders or its juniors, chronology being altogether a
+ secondary consideration? When the hen sits upon her eggs, is the oldest
+ always the first to hatch? In the same way, the oldest larva, lodged in
+ the bottom storey, need not necessarily reach the perfect state first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A second argument, had we reflected more deeply on the matter, would have
+ shaken our faith in any strict mathematical sequence. The same brood
+ forming the string of cocoons in a bramble-stem contains both males and
+ females; and the two sexes are divided in the series indiscriminately. Now
+ it is the rule among the Bees for the males to issue from the cocoon a
+ little earlier than the females. In the case of the Three-pronged Osmia,
+ the male has about a week's start. Consequently, in a populous gallery,
+ there is always a certain number of males, who are hatched seven or eight
+ days before the females and who are distributed here and there over the
+ series. This would be enough to make any regular hatching-sequence
+ impossible in either direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These surmises accord with the facts: the chronological sequence of the
+ cells tells us nothing about the chronological sequence of the hatchings,
+ which take place without any definite order. There is, therefore, no
+ surrender of rights of primogeniture, as Leon Dufour thought: each insect,
+ regardless of the others, bursts its cocoon when its time comes; and this
+ time is determined by causes which escape our notice and which, no doubt,
+ depend upon the potentialities of the egg itself. It is the case with the
+ other bramble-dwellers which I have subjected to the same test (Osmia
+ detrita, Anthidium scapulare, Solenius vagus, etc.); and it must also be
+ the case with Odynerus rubicola: so the most striking analogies inform us.
+ Therefore the singular exception which made such an impression on Dufour's
+ mind is a sheer logical illusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An error removed is tantamount to a truth gained; and yet, if it were to
+ end here, the result of my experiment would possess but slight value.
+ After destruction, let us turn to construction; and perhaps we shall find
+ the wherewithal to compensate us for an illusion lost. Let us begin by
+ watching the exit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first Osmia to leave her cocoon, no matter what place she occupies in
+ the series, forthwith attacks the ceiling separating her from the floor
+ above. She cuts a fairly clean hole in it, shaped like a truncate cone,
+ having its larger base on the side where the Bee is and its smaller base
+ opposite. This conformation of the exit-door is a characteristic of the
+ work. When the insect tries to attack the diaphragm, it first digs more or
+ less at random; then, as the boring progresses, the action is concentrated
+ upon an area which narrows until it presents no more than just the
+ necessary passage. Nor is the cone-shaped aperture special to the Osmia: I
+ have seen it made by the other bramble-dwellers through my thick disks of
+ sorghum-pith. Under natural conditions, the partitions, which, for that
+ matter, are very thin, are destroyed absolutely, for the contraction of
+ the cell at the top leaves barely the width which the insect needs. The
+ truncate, cone-shaped breach has often been of great use to me. Its wide
+ base made it possible for me, without being present at the work, to judge
+ which of the two neighbouring Osmiae had pierced the partition; it told me
+ the direction of a nocturnal migration which I had been unable to witness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first-hatched Osmia, wherever she may be, has made a hole in her
+ ceiling. She is now in the presence of the next cocoon, with her head at
+ the opening of the hole. In front of her sister's cradle, she usually
+ stops, consumed with shyness; she draws back into her cell, flounders
+ among the shreds of the cocoon and the wreckage of the ruined ceiling; she
+ waits a day, two days, three days, more if necessary. Should impatience
+ gain the upper hand, she tries to slip between the wall of the tunnel and
+ the cocoon that blocks the way. She even undertakes the laborious work of
+ gnawing at the wall, so as to widen the interval, if possible. We find
+ these attempts, in the shaft of a bramble, at places where the pith is
+ removed down to the very wood, where the wood itself is gnawed to some
+ depth. I need hardly say that, although these lateral inroads are
+ perceptible after the event, they escape the eye at the moment when they
+ are being made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we would witness them, we must slightly modify the glass apparatus. I
+ line the inside of the tube with a thick piece of whity-brown
+ packing-paper, but only over one half of the circumference; the other half
+ is left bare, so that I may watch the Osmia's attempts. Well, the captive
+ insect fiercely attacks this lining, which to its eyes represents the
+ pithy layer of its usual abode; it tears it away by tiny particles and
+ strives to cut itself a road between the cocoon and the glass wall. The
+ males, who are a little smaller, have a better chance of success than the
+ females. Flattening themselves, making themselves thin, slightly spoiling
+ the shape of the cocoon, which, however, thanks to its elasticity, soon
+ recovers its first condition, they slip through the narrow passage and
+ reach the next cell. The females, when in a hurry to get out, do as much,
+ if they find the tube at all amenable to the process. But no sooner is the
+ first partition passed than a second presents itself. This is pierced in
+ its turn. In the same way will the third be pierced and others after that,
+ if the insect can manage them, as long as its strength holds out. Too weak
+ for these repeated borings, the males do not go far through my thick
+ plugs. If they contrive to cut through the first, it is as much as they
+ can do; and, even so, they are far from always succeeding. But, in the
+ conditions presented by the native stalk, they have only feeble tissues to
+ overcome; and then, slipping, as I have said, between the cocoon and the
+ wall, which is slightly worn owing to the circumstances described, they
+ are able to pass through the remaining occupied chambers and to reach the
+ outside first, whatever their original place in the stack of cells. It is
+ just possible that their early eclosion forces this method of exit upon
+ them, a method which, though often attempted, does not always succeed. The
+ females, furnished with stronger tools, make greater progress in my tubes.
+ I see some who pierce three or four partitions, one after the other, and
+ are so many stages ahead before those whom they have left behind are even
+ hatched. While they are engaged in this long and toilsome operation,
+ others, nearer to the orifice, have cleared a passage whereof those from a
+ distance will avail themselves. In this way, it may happen that, when the
+ width of the tube permits, an Osmia in a back row will nevertheless be one
+ of the first to emerge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the bramble-stem, which is of exactly the same diameter as the cocoon,
+ this escape by the side of the column appears hardly practicable, except
+ to a few males; and even these have to find a wall which has so much pith
+ that by removing it they can effect a passage. Let us then imagine a tube
+ so narrow as to prevent any exit save in the natural sequence of the
+ cells. What will happen? A very simple thing. The newly-hatched Osmia,
+ after perforating his partition, finds himself faced with an unbroken
+ cocoon that obstructs the road. He makes a few attempts upon the sides
+ and, realizing his impotence, retires into his cell, where he waits for
+ days and days, until his neighbour bursts her cocoon in her turn. His
+ patience is inexhaustible. However, it is not put to an over long test,
+ for within a week, more or less, the whole string of females is hatched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When two neighbouring Osmiae are released at the same time, mutual visits
+ are paid through the aperture between the two rooms: the one above goes
+ down to the floor below; the one below goes up to the floor above;
+ sometimes both of them are in the same cell together. Might not this
+ intercourse tend to cheer them and encourage them to patience? Meanwhile,
+ slowly, doors are opening here and there through the separating walls; the
+ road is cleared by sections; and a moment arrives when the leader of the
+ file walks out. The others follow, if ready; but there are always laggards
+ who keep the rear-ranks waiting until they are gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To sum up, first, the hatching of the larvae takes place without any
+ order; secondly, the exodus proceeds regularly from summit to base, but
+ only in consequence of the insect's inability to move forward so long as
+ the upper cells are not vacated. We have here not an exceptional
+ evolution, in the inverse ratio to age, but the simple impossibility of
+ emerging otherwise. Should a chance occur of going out before its turn,
+ the insect does not fail to seize it, as we can see by the lateral
+ movements which send the impatient ones a few ranks ahead and even release
+ the more favoured altogether. The only remarkable thing that I perceive is
+ the scrupulous respect shown to the as yet unopened neighbouring cocoon.
+ However eager to come out, the Osmia is most careful not to touch it with
+ his mandibles: it is taboo. He will demolish the partition, he will gnaw
+ the side-wall fiercely, even though there be nothing left but wood, he
+ will reduce everything around him to dust; but touch a cocoon that
+ obstructs his way? Never! He will not make himself an outlet by breaking
+ up his sisters' cradles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may happen that the Osmia's patience is in vain and that the barricade
+ that blocks the way never disappears at all. Sometimes, the egg in a cell
+ does not mature; and the unconsumed provisions dry up and become a
+ compact, sticky, mildewed plug, through which the occupants of the floors
+ below could never clear themselves a passage. Sometimes, again, a grub
+ dies in its cocoon; and the cradle of the deceased, now turned into a
+ coffin, forms an everlasting obstacle. How shall the insect cope with such
+ grave circumstances?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the many bramble-stumps which I have collected, some few have
+ presented a remarkable peculiarity. In addition to the orifice at the top,
+ they had at the side one and sometimes two round apertures that looked as
+ though they had been punched out with an instrument. On opening these
+ stalks, which were old, deserted nests, I discovered the cause of these
+ very exceptional windows. Above each of them was a cell full of mouldy
+ honey. The egg had perished and the provisions remained untouched: hence
+ the impossibility of getting out by the ordinary road. Walled in by the
+ unsurmountable obstacle, the Osmia on the floor below had contrived an
+ outlet through the side of the shaft; and those in the lower storeys had
+ benefited by this ingenious innovation. The usual door being inaccessible,
+ a side-window had been opened by means of the insect's jaws. The cocoons,
+ torn, but still in position in the lower rooms, left no doubt as to this
+ eccentric mode of exit. The same fact, moreover, was repeated, in several
+ bramble-stumps, in the case of Osmia tridentata; it was likewise repeated
+ in the case of Anthidium scapulare. The observation was worth confirming
+ by experiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I select a bramble-stem with the thinnest rind possible, so as to
+ facilitate the Osmiae's work. I split it in half, thus obtaining a
+ smooth-sided trough which will enable me to judge better of future exits.
+ The cocoons are next laid out in one of the troughs. I separate them with
+ disks of sorghum, covering both surfaces of the disk with a generous layer
+ of sealing-wax, a material which the Osmia's mandibles are not able to
+ attack. The two troughs are then placed together and fastened. A little
+ putty does away with the joint and prevents the least ray of light from
+ penetrating. Lastly, the apparatus is hung up perpendicularly, with the
+ cocoons' heads up. We have now only to wait. None of the Osmiae can get
+ out in the usual manner, because each of them is confined between two
+ partitions coated with sealing-wax. There is but one resource left to them
+ if they would emerge into the light of day, that is, for each of them to
+ open a side-window, provided always that they possess the instinct and the
+ power to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In July, the result is as follows: of twenty Osmiae thus immured, six
+ succeed in boring a round hole through the wall and making their way out;
+ the others perish in their cells, without managing to release themselves.
+ But, when I open the cylinder, when I separate the two wooden troughs, I
+ realize that all have attempted to escape through the side, for the wall
+ of each cell bears traces of gnawing concentrated upon one spot. All,
+ therefore, have acted in the same way as their more fortunate sisters;
+ they did not succeed, because their strength failed them. Lastly, in my
+ glass tubes, part-lined with a thick piece of packing-paper, I often see
+ attempts at making a window in the side of the cell: the paper is pierced
+ right through with a round hole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This then is yet another result which I am glad to record in the history
+ of the bramble-dwellers. When the Osmia, the Anthidium and probably others
+ are unable to emerge through the customary outlet, they take an heroic
+ decision and perforate the side of the shaft. It is the last resource,
+ resolved upon after other methods have been tried in vain. The brave, the
+ strong succeed; the weak perish in the attempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Supposing that all the Osmiae possessed the necessary strength of jaw as
+ well as the instinct for this sideward boring, it is clear that egress
+ from each cell through a special window would be much more advantageous
+ than egress through the common door. The Bee could attend to his release
+ as soon as he was hatched, instead of postponing it until after the
+ emancipation of those who come before him; he would thus escape long
+ waits, which too often prove fatal. In point of fact, it is no uncommon
+ thing to find bramble-stalks in which several Osmiae have died in their
+ cells, because the upper storeys were not vacated in time. Yes, there
+ would be a precious advantage in that lateral opening, which would not
+ leave each occupant at the mercy of his environment: many die that would
+ not die. All the Osmiae, when compelled by circumstances, resort to this
+ supreme method; all have the instinct for lateral boring; but very few are
+ able to carry the work through. Only the favourites of fate succeed, those
+ more generously endowed with strength and perseverance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the famous law of natural selection, which is said to govern and
+ transform the world, had any sure foundation; if really the fittest
+ removed the less fit from the scene; if the future were to the strongest,
+ to the most industrious, surely the race of Osmiae, which has been
+ perforating bramble-stumps for ages, should by this time have allowed its
+ weaker members, who go on obstinately using the common outlet, to die out
+ and should have replaced them, down to the very last one, by the stalwart
+ drillers of side-openings. There is an opportunity here for immense
+ progress; the insect is on the verge of it and is unable to cross the
+ narrow intervening line. Selection has had ample time to make its choice;
+ and yet, though there be a few successes, the failures exceed them in very
+ large measure. The race of the strong has not abolished the race of the
+ weak: it remains inferior in numbers, as doubtless it has been since all
+ time. The law of natural selection impresses me with the vastness of its
+ scope; but, whenever I try to apply it to actual facts, it leaves me
+ whirling in space, with nothing to help me to interpret realities. It is
+ magnificent in theory, but it is a mere gas-bubble in the face of existing
+ conditions. It is majestic, but sterile. Then where is the answer to the
+ riddle of the world? Who knows? Who will ever know?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us waste no more time in this darkness, which idle theorizing will not
+ dispel; let us return to facts, humble facts, the only ground that does
+ not give way under our feet. The Osmia respects her neighbour's cocoon;
+ and her scruples are so great that, after vainly trying to slip between
+ that cocoon and the wall, or else to open a lateral outlet, she lets
+ herself die in her cell rather than effect an egress by forcing her way
+ through the occupied cells. When the cocoon that blocks the way contains a
+ dead instead of a live grub, will the result be the same?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In my glass tubes, I let Osmia-cocoons containing a live grub alternate
+ with Osmia-cocoons in which the grub has been asphyxiated by the fumes of
+ sulphocarbonic acid. As usual, the storeys are separated by disks of
+ sorghum. The anchorites, when hatched, do not hesitate long. Once the
+ partition is pierced, they attack the dead cocoons, go right through them,
+ reducing the dead grub, now dry and shrivelled, to dust, and at last
+ emerge, after wrecking everything in their path. The dead cocoons,
+ therefore, are not spared; they are treated as would be any other obstacle
+ capable of attack by the mandibles. The Osmia looks upon them as a mere
+ barricade to be ruthlessly overturned. How is she apprised that the
+ cocoon, which has undergone no outward change, contains a dead and not a
+ live grub? It is certainly not by sight. Can it be by sense of smell? I am
+ always a little suspicious of that sense of smell of which we do not know
+ the seat and which we introduce on the slightest provocation as a
+ convenient explanation of that which may transcend our explanatory powers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My next test is made with a string of live cocoons. Of course, I cannot
+ take all these from the same species, for then the experiment would not
+ differ from the one which we have already witnessed; I take them from two
+ different species which leave their bramble-stem at separate periods.
+ Moreover, these cocoons must have nearly the same diameter to allow of
+ their being stacked in a tube without leaving an empty space between them
+ and the wall. The two species adopted are Solenius vagus, which quits the
+ bramble at the end of June, and Osmia detrita, which comes a little
+ earlier, in the first fortnight of the same month. I therefore alternate
+ Osmia-cocoons and Solenius-cocoons, with the latter at the top of the
+ series, either in glass tubes or between two bramble-troughs joined into a
+ cylinder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result of this promiscuity is striking. The Osmiae, which mature
+ earlier, emerge; and the Solenius-cocoons, as well as their inhabitants,
+ which by this time have reached the perfect stage, are reduced to shreds,
+ to dust, wherein it is impossible for me to recognize a vestige, save
+ perhaps here and there a head, of the exterminated unfortunates. The
+ Osmia, therefore, has not respected the live cocoons of a foreign species:
+ she has passed out over the bodies of the intervening Solenii. Did I say
+ passed over their bodies? She has passed through them, crunched the
+ laggards between her jaws, treated them as cavalierly as she treats my
+ disks. And yet those barricades were alive. No matter: when her hour came,
+ the Osmia went ahead, destroying everything upon her road. Here, at any
+ rate, is a law on which we can rely: the supreme indifference of the
+ animal to all that does not form part of itself and its race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what of the sense of smell, distinguishing the dead from the living?
+ Here, all are alive; and the Bee pierces her way as through a row of
+ corpses. If I am told that the smell of the Solenii may differ from that
+ of the Osmiae, I shall reply that such extreme subtlety in the insect's
+ olfactory apparatus seems to me a rather far-fetched supposition. Then
+ what is my explanation of the two facts? The explanation? I have none to
+ give! I am quite content to know that I do not know, which at least spares
+ me many vain lucubrations. And so I do not know how the Osmia, in the
+ dense darkness of her tunnel, distinguishes between a live cocoon and a
+ dead cocoon of the same species; and I know just as little how she
+ succeeds in recognizing a strange cocoon. Ah, how clearly this confession
+ of ignorance proves that I am behind the times! I am deliberately missing
+ a glorious opportunity of stringing big words together and arriving at
+ nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bramble-stump is perpendicular, or nearly so; its opening is at the
+ top. This is the rule under natural conditions. My artifices are able to
+ alter that state of things; I can place the tube vertically or
+ horizontally; I can turn its one orifice either up or down; lastly, I can
+ leave the channel open at both ends, which will give two outlets. What
+ will happen under these several conditions? That is what we shall examine
+ with the Three-pronged Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tube is hung perpendicularly, but closed at the top and open at the
+ bottom; in fact, it represents a bramble-stump turned upside down. To vary
+ and complicate the experiment, the strings of cocoons are arranged
+ differently in different tubes. In some of them, the heads of the cocoons
+ are turned downwards, towards the opening; in others, they are turned
+ upwards, towards the closed end; in others again, the cocoons alternate in
+ direction, that is to say, they are placed head to head and rear to rear,
+ turn and turn about. I need not say that the separating floors are of
+ sorghum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result is identical in all these tubes. If the Osmiae have their heads
+ pointing upwards, they attack the partition above them, as happens under
+ normal conditions; if their heads point downwards, they turn round in
+ their cells and set to work as usual. In short, the general outward trend
+ is towards the top, in whatever position the cocoon be placed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We here see manifestly at work the influence of gravity, which warns the
+ insect of its reversed position and makes it turn round, even as it would
+ warn us if we ourselves happened to be hanging head downwards. In natural
+ conditions, the insect has but to follow the counsels of gravity, which
+ tells it to dig upwards, and it will infallibly reach the exit-door
+ situated at the upper end. But, in my apparatus, these same counsels
+ betray it: it goes towards the top, where there is no outlet. Thus misled
+ by my artifices, the Osmiae perish, heaped up on the higher floors and
+ buried in the ruins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It nevertheless happens that attempts are made to clear a road downwards.
+ But it is rare for the work to lead to anything in this direction,
+ especially in the case of the middle or upper cells. The insect is little
+ inclined for this progress, the opposite to that to which it is
+ accustomed; besides, a serious difficulty arises in the course of this
+ reversed boring. As the Bee flings the excavated materials behind her,
+ these fall back of their own weight under her mandibles; the clearance has
+ to be begun anew. Exhausted by her Sisyphean task, distrustful of this new
+ and unfamiliar method, the Osmia resigns herself and expires in her cell.
+ I am bound to add, however, that the Osmiae in the lower storeys, those
+ nearest the exit&mdash;sometimes one, sometimes two or three&mdash;do
+ succeed in escaping. In that case, they unhesitatingly attack the
+ partitions below them, while their companions, who form the great
+ majority, persist and perish in the upper cells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was easy to repeat the experiment without changing anything in the
+ natural conditions, except the direction of the cocoons: all that I had to
+ do was to hang up some bramble-stumps as I found them, vertically, but
+ with the opening downwards. Out of two stalks thus arranged and peopled
+ with Osmiae, not one of the insects succeeded in emerging. All the Bees
+ died in the shaft, some turned upwards, others downwards. On the other
+ hand, three stems occupied by Anthidia discharged their population safe
+ and sound. The outgoing was effected at the bottom, from first to last,
+ without the least impediment. Must we take it that the two sorts of Bees
+ are not equally sensitive to the influences of gravity? Can the Anthidium,
+ built to pass through the difficult obstacle of her cotton wallets, be
+ better-adapted than the Osmia to make her way through the wreckage that
+ keeps falling under the worker's feet; or, rather, may not this very
+ cotton-waste put a stop to these cataracts of rubbish which must naturally
+ drive the insect back? This is all quite possible; but I can say nothing
+ for certain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us now experiment with vertical tubes open at both ends. The
+ arrangements, save for the upper orifice, are the same as before. The
+ cocoons, in some of the tubes, have their heads turned down; others, up;
+ in others again, their positions alternate. The result is similar to what
+ we have seen above. A few Osmiae, those nearest the bottom orifice, take
+ the lower road, whatever the direction first occupied by the cocoon; the
+ others, composing by far the larger number, take the higher road, even
+ when the cocoon is placed upside down. As both doors are free, the
+ outgoing is effected at either end with success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What are we to conclude from all these experiments? First, that gravity
+ guides the insect towards the top, where the natural door is, and makes it
+ turn in its cell when the cocoon has been reversed. Secondly, I seem to
+ suspect an atmospheric influence and, in any case, some second cause that
+ sends the insect to the outlet. Let us admit that this cause is the
+ proximity of the outer air acting upon the anchorite through the
+ partitions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The animal then is subject, on the one hand, to the promptings of gravity,
+ and this to an equal degree for all, whatever the storey inhabited.
+ Gravity is the common guide of the whole series from base to top. But
+ those in the lower boxes have a second guide, when the bottom end is open.
+ This is the stimulus of the adjacent air, a more powerful stimulus than
+ that of gravity. The access of the air from without is very slight,
+ because of the partitions; while it can be felt in the nethermost cells,
+ it must decrease rapidly as the storeys ascend. Wherefore the bottom
+ insects, very few in number, obeying the preponderant influence, that of
+ the atmosphere, make for the lower outlet and reverse, if necessary, their
+ original position; those above, on the contrary, who form the great
+ majority, being guided only by gravity when the upper end is closed, make
+ for that upper end. It goes without saying that, if the upper end be open
+ at the same time as the other, the occupants of the top storeys will have
+ a double incentive to take the ascending path, though this will not
+ prevent the dwellers on the lower floors from obeying, by preference, the
+ call of the adjacent air and adopting the downward road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have one means left whereby to judge of the value of my explanation,
+ namely, to experiment with tubes open at both ends and lying horizontally.
+ The horizontal position has a twofold advantage. In the first place, it
+ removes the insect from the influence of gravity, inasmuch as it leaves it
+ indifferent to the direction to be taken, the right or the left. In the
+ second place, it does away with the descent of the rubbish which, falling
+ under the worker's feet when the boring is done from below, sooner or
+ later discourages her and makes her abandon her enterprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are a few precautions to be observed for the successful conduct of
+ the experiment; I recommend them to any one who might care to make the
+ attempt. It is even advisable to remember them in the case of the tests
+ which I have already described. The males, those puny creatures, not built
+ for work, are sorry labourers when confronted with my stout disks. Most of
+ them perish miserably in their glass cells, without succeeding in piercing
+ their partitions right through. Moreover, instinct has been less generous
+ to them than to the females. Their corpses, interspersed here and there in
+ the series of the cells, are disturbing causes, which it is wise to
+ eliminate. I therefore choose the larger, more powerful-looking cocoons.
+ These, except for an occasional unavoidable error, belong to females. I
+ pack them in tubes, sometimes varying their position in every way,
+ sometimes giving them all a like arrangement. It does not matter whether
+ the whole series comes from one and the same bramble-stump or from
+ several: we are free to choose where we please; the result will not be
+ altered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first time that I prepared one of these horizontal tubes open at both
+ ends, I was greatly struck by what happened. The series consisted of ten
+ cocoons. It was divided into two equal batches. The five on the left went
+ out on the left, the five on the right went out on the right, reversing,
+ when necessary, their original direction in the cell. It was very
+ remarkable from the point of view of symmetry; moreover, it was a very
+ unlikely arrangement among the total number of possible arrangements, as
+ mathematics will show us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us take n to represent the number of Osmiae. Each of them, once
+ gravity ceases to interfere and leaves the insect indifferent to either
+ end of the tube, is capable of two positions, according as she chooses the
+ exit on the right or on the left. With each of the two positions of this
+ first Osmia can be combined each of the two positions of the second,
+ giving us, in all, 2 x 2 = (2 squared) arrangements. Each of these (2
+ squared) arrangements can be combined, in its turn, with each of the two
+ positions of the third Osmia. We thus obtain 2 x 2 x 2 = (2 cubed)
+ arrangements with three Osmiae; and so on, each additional insect
+ multiplying the previous result by the factor 2. With n Osmiae, therefore,
+ the total number of arrangements is (2 to the power n.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But note that these arrangements are symmetrical, two by two: a given
+ arrangement towards the right corresponds with a similar arrangement
+ towards the left; and this symmetry implies equality, for, in the problem
+ in hand, it is a matter of indifference whether a fixed arrangement
+ correspond with the right or left of the tube. The previous number,
+ therefore, must be divided by 2. Thus, n Osmiae, according as each of them
+ turns her head to the right or left in my horizontal tube, are able to
+ adopt (2 to the power n - 1) arrangements. If n = 10, as in my first
+ experiment, the number of arrangements becomes (2 to the power 9) = 512.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Consequently, out of 512 ways which my ten insects can adopt for their
+ outgoing position, there resulted one of those in which the symmetry was
+ most striking. And observe that this was not an effect obtained by
+ repeated attempts, by haphazard experiments. Each Osmia in the left half
+ had bored to the left, without touching the partition on the right; each
+ Osmia in the right half had bored to the right, without touching the
+ partition on the left. The shape of the orifices and the surface condition
+ of the partition showed this, if proof were necessary. There had been a
+ spontaneous decision, one half in favour of the left, one half in favour
+ of the right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The arrangement presents another merit, one superior to that of symmetry:
+ it has the merit of corresponding with the minimum expenditure of force.
+ To admit of the exit of the whole series, if the string consists of n
+ cells, there are originally n partitions to be perforated. There might
+ even be one more, owing to a complication which I disregard. There are, I
+ say, at least n partitions to be perforated. Whether each Osmia pierces
+ her own, or whether the same Osmia pierces several, thus relieving her
+ neighbours, does not matter to us: the sum-total of the force expended by
+ the string of Bees will be in proportion to the number of those
+ partitions, in whatever manner the exit be effected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there is another task which we must take seriously into consideration,
+ because it is often more troublesome than the boring of the partition: I
+ mean the work of clearing a road through the wreckage. Let us suppose the
+ partitions pierced and the several chambers blocked by the resulting
+ rubbish and by that rubbish only, since the horizontal position precludes
+ any mixing of the contents of different chambers. To open a passage for
+ itself through these rubbish-heaps, each insect will have the smallest
+ effort to make if it passes through the smallest possible number of cells,
+ in short, if it makes for the opening nearest to it. These smallest
+ individual efforts amount, in the aggregate, to the smallest total effort.
+ Therefore, by proceeding as they did in my experiment, the Osmiae effect
+ their exit with the least expenditure of energy. It is curious to see an
+ insect apply the 'principle of least action,' so often postulated in
+ mechanics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An arrangement which satisfies this principle, which conforms to the law
+ of symmetry and which possesses but one chance in 512, is certainly no
+ fortuitous result. It is determined by a cause; and, as this cause acts
+ invariably, the same arrangement must be reproduced if I renew the
+ experiment. I renewed it, therefore, in the years that followed, with as
+ many appliances as I could find bramble-stumps; and, at each new test, I
+ saw once more what I had seen with such interest on the first occasion. If
+ the number be even&mdash;and my column at that time consisted usually of
+ ten&mdash;one half goes out on the right, the other on the left. If the
+ number be odd&mdash;eleven, for instance&mdash;the Osmia in the middle
+ goes out indiscriminately by the right or left exit. As the number of
+ cells to be traversed is the same on both sides, her expenditure of energy
+ does not vary with the direction of the exit; and the principle of least
+ action is still observed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was important to discover if the Three-pronged Osmia shared her
+ capacity, in the first place, with the other bramble-dwellers and, in the
+ second, with Bees differently housed, but also destined laboriously to cut
+ a new road for themselves when the hour comes to quit the nest. Well,
+ apart from a few irregularities, due either to cocoons whose larva
+ perished in my tubes before developing, or to those inexperienced workers,
+ the males, the result was the same in the case of Anthidium scapulare. The
+ insects divided themselves into two equal batches, one going to the right,
+ the other to the left. Tripoxylon figulus left me undecided. This feeble
+ insect is not capable of perforating my partitions; it nibbles at them a
+ little; and I had to judge the direction from the marks of its mandibles.
+ These marks, which are not always very plain, do not yet allow me to
+ pronounce an opinion. Solenius vagus, who is a skilful borer, behaved
+ differently from the Osmia. In a column of ten, the whole exodus was made
+ in one direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, I tested the Mason-bee of the Sheds, who, when emerging
+ under natural conditions, has only to pierce her cement ceiling and is not
+ confronted with a series of cells. Though a stranger to the environment
+ which I created for her, she gave me a most positive answer. Of a column
+ of ten laid in a horizontal tube open at both ends, five made their way to
+ the right and five to the left. Dioxys cincta, a parasite in the buildings
+ of both species of Mason-bees, the Chalicodoma of the Sheds and the
+ Chalicodoma of the Walls (Cf. "The Mason-bees" by J. Henri Fabre,
+ translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: passim.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), provided me with no precise result. The Leaf-cutting Bee
+ (Megachile apicalis, SPIN. (Cf. Chapter 8 of the present volume.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)), who builds her leafy cups in the old cells of the Chalicodoma of
+ the Walls, acts like the Solenius and directs her whole column towards the
+ same outlet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Incomplete as it is, this symmetry shows us how unwise it were to
+ generalize from the conclusions to which the Three-pronged Osmia leads us.
+ Whereas some Bees, such as the Anthidium and the Chalicodoma, share the
+ Osmia's talent for using the twofold exit, others, such as the Solenius
+ and the Leaf-cutter, behave like a flock of sheep and follow the first
+ that goes out. The entomological world is not all of a piece; its gifts
+ are very various: what one is capable of doing another cannot do; and
+ penetrating indeed would be the eyes that saw the causes of these
+ differences. Be this as it may, increased research will certainly show us
+ a larger number of species qualified to use the double outlet. For the
+ moment, we know three; and that is enough for our purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will add that, when the horizontal tube has one of its ends closed, the
+ whole string of Osmiae makes for the open end, turning round to do so, if
+ need be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now that the facts are set forth, let us, if possible, trace the cause. In
+ a horizontal tube, gravity no longer acts to determine the direction which
+ the insect will take. Is it to attack the partition on the right or that
+ on the left? How shall it decide? The more I look into the matter, the
+ more do my suspicions fall upon the atmospheric influence which is felt
+ through the two open ends. Of what does this influence consist? Is it an
+ effect of pressure, of hygrometry, of electrical conditions, of properties
+ that escape our coarser physical attunement? He were a bold man who should
+ undertake to decide. Are not we ourselves, when the weather is about to
+ alter, subject to subtle impressions, to sensations which we are unable to
+ explain? And yet this vague sensitiveness to atmospheric changes would not
+ be of much help to us in circumstances similar to those of my anchorites.
+ Imagine ourselves in the darkness and the silence of a prison-cell,
+ preceded and followed by other similar cells. We possess implements
+ wherewith to pierce the walls; but where are we to strike to reach the
+ final outlet and to reach it with the least delay? Atmospheric influence
+ would certainly never guide us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet it guides the insect. Feeble though it be, through the
+ multiplicity of partitions, it is exercised on one side more than on the
+ other, because the obstacles are fewer; and the insect, sensible to the
+ difference between those two uncertainties, unhesitatingly attacks the
+ partition which is nearer to the open air. Thus is decided the division of
+ the column into two converse sections, which accomplish the total
+ liberation with the least aggregate of work. In short, the Osmia and her
+ rivals 'feel' the free space. This is yet one more sensory faculty which
+ evolution might well have left us, for our greater advantage. As it has
+ not done so, are we then really, as many contend, the highest expression
+ of the progress accomplished, throughout the ages, by the first atom of
+ glair expanded into a cell?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 2. THE OSMIAE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ February has its sunny days, heralding spring, to which rude winter will
+ reluctantly yield place. In snug corners, among the rocks, the great
+ spurge of our district, the characias of the Greeks, the jusclo of the
+ Provencals, begins to lift its drooping inflorescence and discreetly opens
+ a few sombre flowers. Here the first Midges of the year will come to slake
+ their thirst. By the time that the tip of the stalks reaches the
+ perpendicular, the worst of the cold weather will be over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another eager one, the almond-tree, risking the loss of its fruit, hastens
+ to echo these preludes to the festival of the sun, preludes which are too
+ often treacherous. A few days of soft skies and it becomes a glorious dome
+ of white flowers, each twinkling with a roseate eye. The country, which
+ still lacks green, seems dotted everywhere with white-satin pavilions.
+ 'Twould be a callous heart indeed that could resist the magic of this
+ awakening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The insect nation is represented at these rites by a few of its more
+ zealous members. There is first of all the Honey-bee, the sworn enemy of
+ strikes, who profits by the least lull of winter to find out if some
+ rosemary is not beginning to open somewhere near the hive. The droning of
+ the busy swarm fills the flowery vault, while a snow of petals falls
+ softly to the foot of the tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Together with the population of harvesters there mingles another, less
+ numerous, of mere drinkers, whose nesting-time has not yet begun. This is
+ the colony of the Osmiae, with their copper-coloured skin and bright-red
+ fleece. Two species have come hurrying up to take part in the joys of the
+ almond-tree: first, the Horned Osmia, clad in black velvet on the head and
+ breast and in red velvet on the abdomen; and, a little later, the
+ Three-horned Osmia, whose livery must be red and red only. These are the
+ first delegates despatched by the pollen-gleaners to ascertain the state
+ of the season and attend the festival of the early blooms. 'Tis but a
+ moment since they burst their cocoon, the winter abode: they have left
+ their retreats in the crevices of the old walls; should the north wind
+ blow and set the almond-tree shivering, they will hasten to return to
+ them. Hail to you, O my dear Osmiae, who yearly, from the far end of the
+ harmas (The piece of waste ground in which the author studied his insects
+ in their natural state. Cf. "The Life of the Fly" by J. Henri Fabre,
+ translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chapter 1.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), opposite snow-capped Ventoux (A mountain in the Provencal Alps,
+ near Carpentras and Serignan, 6,271 feet.&mdash;Translator's Note.), bring
+ me the first tidings of the awakening of the insect world! I am one of
+ your friends; let us talk about you a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most of the Osmiae of my region have none of the industry of their
+ kinswomen of the brambles, that is to say, they do not themselves prepare
+ the dwelling destined for the laying. They want ready-made lodgings, such
+ as the old cells and old galleries of Anthophorae and Chalicodomae. If
+ these favourite haunts are lacking, then a hiding-place in the wall, a
+ round hole in some bit of wood, the tube of a reed, the spiral of a dead
+ Snail under a heap of stones are adopted, according to the tastes of the
+ several species. The retreat selected is divided into chambers by
+ partition-walls, after which the entrance to the dwelling receives a
+ massive seal. That is the sum-total of the building done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this plasterer's rather than mason's work, the Horned and the
+ Three-horned Osmia employ soft earth. This material is different from the
+ Mason-bee's cement, which will withstand wind and weather for many years
+ on an exposed pebble; it is a sort of dried mud, which turns to pap on the
+ addition of a drop of water. The Mason-bee gathers her cementing-dust in
+ the most frequented and driest portions of the road; she wets it with a
+ saliva which, in drying, gives it the consistency of stone. The two Osmiae
+ who are the almond-tree's early visitors are no chemists: they know
+ nothing of the making and mixing of hydraulic mortar; they limit
+ themselves to gathering natural soaked earth, mud in short, which they
+ allow to dry without any special preparation on their part; and so they
+ need deep and well-sheltered retreats, into which the rain cannot
+ penetrate, or the work would fall to pieces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While exploiting, in friendly rivalry with the Three-horned Osmia, the
+ galleries which the Mason-bee of the Sheds good-naturedly surrenders to
+ both, Latreille's Osmia uses different materials for her partitions and
+ her doors. She chews the leaves of some mucilaginous plant, some mallow
+ perhaps, and then prepares a sort of green putty with which she builds her
+ partitions and finally closes the entrance to the dwelling. When she
+ settles in the spacious cells of the Masked Anthophora (Anthophora
+ personata, ILLIG.), the entrance to the gallery, which is wide enough to
+ admit one's finger, is closed with a voluminous plug of this vegetable
+ paste. On the earthy banks, hardened by the sun, the home is then betrayed
+ by the gaudy colour of the lid. It is as though the authorities had closed
+ the door and affixed to it their great seals of green wax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far then as their building-materials are concerned, the Osmiae whom I
+ have been able to observe are divided into two classes: one building
+ compartments with mud, the other with a green-tinted vegetable putty. The
+ first section includes the Horned Osmia and the Three-horned Osmia, both
+ so remarkable for the horny tubercles on their faces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great reed of the south, the Arundo donax, is often used, in the
+ country, for rough garden-shelters against the mistral or just for fences.
+ These reeds, the ends of which are chopped off to make them all the same
+ length, are planted perpendicularly in the earth. I have often explored
+ them in the hope of finding Osmia-nests. My search has very seldom
+ succeeded. The failure is easily explained. The partitions and the
+ closing-plug of the Horned and of the Three-horned Osmia are made, as we
+ have seen, of a sort of mud which water instantly reduces to pap. With the
+ upright position of the reeds, the stopper of the opening would receive
+ the rain and would become diluted; the ceilings of the storeys would fall
+ in and the family would perish by drowning. Therefore the Osmia, who knew
+ of these drawbacks before I did, refuses the reeds when they are placed
+ perpendicularly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same reed is used for a second purpose. We make canisses of it, that
+ is to say, hurdles, which, in spring, serve for the rearing of silk-worms
+ and, in autumn, for the drying of figs. At the end of April and during
+ May, which is the time when the Osmiae work, the canisses are indoors, in
+ the silk-worm nurseries, where the Bee cannot take possession of them; in
+ autumn, they are outside, exposing their layers of figs and peeled peaches
+ to the sun; but by that time the Osmiae have long disappeared. If,
+ however, during the spring, an old, disused hurdle is left out of doors,
+ in a horizontal position, the Three-horned Osmia often takes possession of
+ it and makes use of the two ends, where the reeds lie truncated and open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are other quarters that suit the Three-horned Osmia, who is not
+ particular, it seems to me, and will make shift with any hiding-place, so
+ long as it has the requisite conditions of diameter, solidity, sanitation
+ and kindly darkness. The most original dwellings that I know her to occupy
+ are disused Snail-shells, especially the house of the Common Snail (Helix
+ aspersa). Let us go to the slope of the hills thick with olive-trees and
+ inspect the little supporting-walls which are built of dry stones and face
+ the south. In the crevices of this insecure masonry, we shall reap a
+ harvest of old Snail-shells, plugged with earth right up to the orifice.
+ The family of the Three-horned Osmia is settled in the spiral of those
+ shells, which is subdivided into chambers by mud partitions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us inspect the stone-heaps, especially those which come from the
+ quarry-works. Here we often find the Field-mouse sitting on a grass
+ mattress, nibbling acorns, almonds, olive-stones and apricot-stones. The
+ Rodent varies his diet: to oily and farinaceous foods he adds the Snail.
+ When he is gone, he has left behind him, under the overhanging stones,
+ mixed up with the remains of other victuals, an assortment of empty
+ shells, sometimes plentiful enough to remind me of the heap of Snails
+ which, cooked with spinach and eaten country-fashion on Christmas Eve, are
+ flung away next day by the housewife. This gives the Three-horned Osmia a
+ handsome collection of tenements; and she does not fail to profit by them.
+ Then again, even if the Field-mouse's conchological museum be lacking, the
+ same broken stones serve as a refuge for Garden-snails who come to live
+ there and end by dying there. When we see Three-horned Osmiae enter the
+ crevices of old walls and of stone-heaps, there is no doubt about their
+ occupation: they are getting free lodgings out of the old Snail-shells of
+ those labyrinths.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Horned Osmia, who is less common, might easily also be less ingenious,
+ that is to say, less rich in varieties of houses. She seems to scorn empty
+ shells. The only homes that I know her to inhabit are the reeds of the
+ hurdles and the deserted cells of the Masked Anthophora.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the other Osmiae whose method of nest-building I know work with green
+ putty, a paste made of some crushed leaf or other; and none of them,
+ except Latreille's Osmia, is provided with the horned or tubercled armour
+ of the mud-kneaders. I should like to know what plants are used in making
+ the putty; probably each species has its own preferences and its little
+ professional secrets; but hitherto observation has taught me nothing
+ concerning these details. Whatever worker prepare it, the putty is very
+ much the same in appearance. When fresh, it is always a clear dark green.
+ Later, especially in the parts exposed to the air, it changes, no doubt
+ through fermentation, to the colour of dead leaves, to brown, to
+ dull-yellow; and the leafy character of its origin is no longer apparent.
+ But uniformity in the materials employed must not lead us to believe in
+ uniformity in the lodging; on the contrary, this lodging varies greatly
+ with the different species, though there is a marked predilection in
+ favour of empty shells. Thus Latreille's Osmia, together with the
+ Three-horned Osmia, uses the spacious structures of the Mason-bee of the
+ Sheds; she likes the magnificent cells of the Masked Anthophora; and she
+ is always ready to establish herself in the cylinder of any reed lying
+ flat on the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have already spoken of an Osmia (O. cyanoxantha, PEREZ) who elects to
+ make her home in the old nests of the Mason-bee of the Pebbles. (Cf. "The
+ Mason-bees": chapter 10.&mdash;Translator's Note.) Her closing-plug is
+ made of a stout concrete, consisting of fair-sized bits of gravel sunk in
+ the green paste; but for the inner partitions she employs only unalloyed
+ putty. As the outer door, situated on the curve of an unprotected dome, is
+ exposed to the inclemencies of the weather, the mother has to think of
+ fortifying it. Danger, no doubt, is the originator of that gritty
+ concrete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Golden Osmia (O. aurulenta, LATR.) absolutely insists on an empty
+ Snail-shell as her residence. The Brown or Girdled Snail, the Garden Snail
+ and especially the Common Snail, who has a more spacious spiral, all
+ scattered at random in the grass, at the foot of the walls and of the
+ sun-swept rocks, furnish her with her usual dwelling-house. Her dried
+ putty is a kind of felt full of short white hairs. It must come from some
+ hairy-leaved plant, one of the Boragineae perhaps, rich both in mucilage
+ and the necessary bristles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Red Osmia (O. rufo-hirta, LATR.) has a weakness for the Brown Snail
+ and the Garden Snail, in whose shells I find her taking refuge in April
+ when the north-wind blows. I am not yet much acquainted with her work,
+ which should resemble that of the Golden Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Green Osmia (O. viridana, MORAWITZ) takes up her quarters, tiny
+ creature that she is, in the spiral staircase of Bulimulus radiatus. It is
+ a very elegant, but very small lodging, to say nothing of the fact that a
+ considerable portion is taken up with the green-putty plug. There is just
+ room for two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Andrenoid Osmia (O. andrenoides, LATR.), who looks so curious, with
+ her naked red abdomen, appears to build her nest in the shell of the
+ Common Snail, where I discover her refuged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Variegated Osmia (O. versicolor, LATR.) settles in the Garden Snail's
+ shell, almost right at the bottom of the spiral.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Blue Osmia (O. cyanea, KIRB.) seems to me to accept many different
+ quarters. I have extracted her from old nests of the Mason-bee of the
+ Pebbles, from the galleries dug in a roadside bank by the Colletes (A
+ short-tongued Burrowing-bee known also as the Melitta.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) and lastly from the cavities made by some digger or other in the
+ decayed trunk of a willow-tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morawitz' Osmia (O. Morawitzi, PEREZ) is not uncommon in the old nests of
+ the Mason-bee of the Pebbles, but I suspect her of favouring other
+ lodgings besides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Three-pronged Osmia (O. tridentata, DUF. and PER.) creates a home of
+ her own, digging herself a channel with her mandibles in dry bramble and
+ sometimes in danewort. It mixes a few scrapings of perforated pith with
+ the green paste. Its habits are shared by the Ragged Osmia (O. detrita,
+ PEREZ) and by the Tiny Osmia (O. parvula, DUF.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chalicodoma works in broad daylight, on a tile, on a pebble, on a
+ branch in the hedge; none of her trade-practises is kept a secret from the
+ observer's curiosity. The Osmia loves mystery. She wants a dark retreat,
+ hidden from the eye. I would like, nevertheless, to watch her in the
+ privacy of her home and to witness her work with the same facility as if
+ she were nest-building in the open air. Perhaps there are some interesting
+ characteristics to be picked up in the depths of her retreats. It remains
+ to be seen whether my wish can be realized.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When studying the insect's mental capacity, especially its very retentive
+ memory for places, I was led to ask myself whether it would not be
+ possible to make a suitably-chosen Bee build in any place that I wished,
+ even in my study. And I wanted, for an experiment of this sort, not an
+ individual but a numerous colony. My preference leant towards the
+ Three-horned Osmia, who is very plentiful in my neighbourhood, where,
+ together with Latreille's Osmia, she frequents in particular the monstrous
+ nests of the Chalicodoma of the Sheds. I therefore thought out a scheme
+ for making the Three-horned Osmia accept my study as her settlement and
+ build her nests in glass tubes, through which I could easily watch the
+ progress. To these crystal galleries, which might well inspire a certain
+ distrust, were to be added more natural retreats: reeds of every length
+ and thickness and disused Chalicodoma-cells taken from among the biggest
+ and the smallest. A scheme like this sounds mad. I admit it, while
+ mentioning that perhaps none ever succeeded so well with me. We shall see
+ as much presently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My method is extremely simple. All I ask is that the birth of my insects,
+ that is to say, their first seeing the light, their emerging from the
+ cocoon, should take place on the spot where I propose to make them settle.
+ Here there must be retreats of no matter what nature, but of a shape
+ similar to that in which the Osmia delights. The first impressions of
+ sight, which are the most long-lived of any, shall bring back my insects
+ to the place of their birth. And not only will the Osmiae return, through
+ the always open windows, but they will always nidify on the natal spot if
+ they find something like the necessary conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so, all through the winter, I collect Osmia-cocoons, picked up in the
+ nests of the Mason-bee of the Sheds; I go to Carpentras to glean a more
+ plentiful supply in the nests of the Hairy-footed Anthophora, that old
+ acquaintance whose wonderful cities I used to undermine when I was
+ studying the history of the Oil-beetles. (This study is not yet translated
+ into English; but cf. "The Life of the Fly": chapters 2 and 4.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) Later, at my request, a pupil and intimate friend of mine, M. Henri
+ Devillario, president of the civil court at Carpentras, sends me a case of
+ fragments broken off the banks frequented by the Hairy-footed Anthophora
+ and the Anthophora of the Walls, useful clods which furnish a handsome
+ adjunct to my collection. Indeed, at the end, I find myself with handfuls
+ of cocoons of the Three-horned Osmia. To count them would weary my
+ patience without serving any particular purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I spread out my stock in a large open box on a table which receives a
+ bright diffused light but not the direct rays of the sun. The table stands
+ between two windows facing south and overlooking the garden. When the
+ moment of hatching comes, those two windows will always remain open to
+ give the swarm entire liberty to go in and out as it pleases. The glass
+ tubes and the reed-stumps are laid here and there, in fine disorder, close
+ to the heap of cocoons and all in a horizontal position, for the Osmia
+ will have nothing to do with upright reeds. The hatching of some of the
+ Osmiae will therefore take place under cover of the galleries destined to
+ be the building-yard later; and the site will be all the more deeply
+ impressed on their memory. When I have made these comprehensive
+ arrangements, there is nothing more to be done; and I wait patiently for
+ the building-season to open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My Osmiae leave their cocoons in the second half of April. Under the
+ immediate rays of the sun, in well-sheltered nooks, the hatching would
+ occur a month earlier, as we can see from the mixed population of the
+ snowy almond-tree. The constant shade in my study has delayed the
+ awakening, without, however, making any change in the nesting-period,
+ which synchronizes with the flowering of the thyme. We now have, around my
+ working-table, my books, my jars and my various appliances, a buzzing
+ crowd that goes in and out of the windows at every moment. I enjoin the
+ household henceforth not to touch a thing in the insects' laboratory, to
+ do no more sweeping, no more dusting. They might disturb the swarm and
+ make it think that my hospitality was not to be trusted. I suspect that
+ the maid, wounded in her self-esteem at seeing so much dust accumulating
+ in the master's study, did not always respect my prohibitions and came in
+ stealthily, now and again, to give a little sweep of the broom. At any
+ rate, I came across a number of Osmiae who seemed to have been crushed
+ under foot while taking a sunbath on the floor in front of the window.
+ Perhaps it was I myself who committed the misdeed in a heedless moment.
+ There is no great harm done, for the population is a numerous one; and,
+ notwithstanding those crushed by inadvertence, notwithstanding the
+ parasites wherewith many of the cocoons are infested, notwithstanding
+ those who may have come to grief outside or been unable to find their way
+ back, notwithstanding the deduction of one-half which we must make for the
+ males: notwithstanding all this, during four or five weeks I witness the
+ work of a number of Osmiae which is much too large to allow of my watching
+ their individual operations. I content myself with a few, whom I mark with
+ different-coloured spots to distinguish them; and I take no notice of the
+ others, whose finished work will have my attention later.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first to appear are the males. If the sun is bright, they flutter
+ around the heap of tubes as if to take careful note of the locality; blows
+ are exchanged and the rival swains indulge in mild skirmishing on the
+ floor, then shake the dust off their wings and fly away. I find them,
+ opposite my window, in the refreshment-bar of the lilac-bush, whose
+ branches bend with the weight of their scented panicles. Here the Bees get
+ drunk with sunshine and draughts of honey. Those who have had their fill
+ come home and fly assiduously from tube to tube, placing their heads in
+ the orifices to see if some female will at last make up her mind to
+ emerge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One does, in point of fact. She is covered with dust and has the
+ disordered toilet that is inseparable from the hard work of the
+ deliverance. A lover has seen her, so has a second, likewise a third. All
+ crowd round her. The lady responds to their advances by clashing her
+ mandibles, which open and shut rapidly, several times in succession. The
+ suitors forthwith fall back; and they also, no doubt to keep up their
+ dignity, execute savage mandibular grimaces. Then the beauty retires into
+ the arbour and her wooers resume their places on the threshold. A fresh
+ appearance of the female, who repeats the play with her jaws; a fresh
+ retreat of the males, who do the best they can to flourish their own
+ pincers. The Osmiae have a strange way of declaring their passion: with
+ that fearsome gnashing of their mandibles, the lovers look as though they
+ meant to devour each other. It suggests the thumps affected by our yokels
+ in their moments of gallantry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ingenious idyll is soon over. By turns greeting and greeted with a
+ clash of jaws, the female leaves her gallery and begins impassively to
+ polish her wings. The rivals rush forward, hoist themselves on top of one
+ another and form a pyramid of which each struggles to occupy the base by
+ toppling over the favoured lover. He, however, is careful not to let go;
+ he waits for the strife overhead to calm down; and, when the
+ supernumeraries realize that they are wasting their time and throw up the
+ game, the couple fly away far from the turbulent rivals. This is all that
+ I have been able to gather about the Osmia's nuptials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The females, who grow more numerous from day to day, inspect the premises;
+ they buzz outside the glass galleries and the reed dwellings; they go in,
+ stay for a while, come out, go in again and then fly away briskly into the
+ garden. They return, first one, then another. They halt outside, in the
+ sun, on the shutters fastened back against the wall; they hover in the
+ window-recess, come inside, go to the reeds and give a glance at them,
+ only to set off again and to return soon after. Thus do they learn to know
+ their home, thus do they fix their birthplace in their memory. The village
+ of our childhood is always a cherished spot, never to be effaced from our
+ recollection. The Osmia's life endures for a month; and she acquires a
+ lasting remembrance of her hamlet in a couple of days. 'Twas there that
+ she was born; 'twas there that she loved; 'tis there that she will return.
+ Dulces reminiscitur Argos. ('Now falling by another's wound, his eyes He
+ casts to heaven, on Argos thinks and dies.'&mdash;"Aeneid," Book 10
+ Dryden's translation.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last each has made her choice. The work of construction begins; and my
+ expectations are fulfilled far beyond my wishes. The Osmiae build nests in
+ all the retreats which I have placed at their disposal. The glass tubes,
+ which I cover with a sheet of paper to produce the shade and mystery
+ favourable to concentrated toil, do wonderfully well. All, from first to
+ last, are occupied. The Osmiae quarrel for the possession of these crystal
+ palaces, hitherto unknown to their race. The reeds and the paper tubes
+ likewise do wonderfully. The number provided is too small; and I hasten to
+ increase it. Snail-shells are recognized as excellent abodes, though
+ deprived of the shelter of the stone-heap; old Chalicodoma-nests, down to
+ those of the Chalicodoma of the Shrubs (Cf. "The Mason-bees": chapters 4
+ and 10.&mdash;Translator's Note.), whose cells are so small, are eagerly
+ occupied. The late-comers, finding nothing else free, go and settle in the
+ locks of my table-drawers. There are daring ones who make their way into
+ half-open boxes containing ends of glass tubes in which I have stored my
+ most recent acquisitions: grubs, pupae and cocoons of all kinds, whose
+ evolution I wished to study. Whenever these receptacles have an atom of
+ free space, they claim the right to build there, whereas I formally oppose
+ the claim. I hardly reckoned on such a success, which obliges me to put
+ some order into the invasion with which I am threatened. I seal up the
+ locks, I shut my boxes, I close my various receptacles for old nests, in
+ short I remove from the building-yard any retreat of which I do not
+ approve. And now, O my Osmiae, I leave you a free field!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The work begins with a thorough spring-cleaning of the home. Remnants of
+ cocoons, dirt consisting of spoilt honey, bits of plaster from broken
+ partitions, remains of dried Mollusc at the bottom of a shell: these and
+ much other insanitary refuse must first of all disappear. Violently the
+ Osmia tugs at the offending object and tears it out; and then off she
+ goes, in a desperate hurry, to dispose of it far away from the study. They
+ are all alike, these ardent sweepers: in their excessive zeal, they fear
+ lest they should block up the place with a speck of dust which they might
+ drop in front of the new house. The glass tubes, which I myself have
+ rinsed under the tap, are not exempt from a scrupulous cleaning. The Osmia
+ dusts them, brushes them thoroughly with her tarsi and then sweeps them
+ out backwards. What does she pick up? Not a thing. It makes no difference:
+ as a conscientious housewife, she gives the place a touch of the broom
+ nevertheless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now for the provisions and the partition-walls. Here the order of the work
+ changes according to the diameter of the cylinder. My glass tubes vary
+ greatly in dimensions. The largest have an inner width of a dozen
+ millimetres (Nearly half an inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.); the narrowest
+ measure six or seven. (About a quarter of an inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) In the latter, if the bottom suit her, the Osmia sets to work
+ bringing pollen and honey. If the bottom do not suit her, if the
+ sorghum-pith plug with which I have closed the rear-end of the tube be too
+ irregular and badly-joined, the Bee coats it with a little mortar. When
+ this small repair is made, the harvesting begins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the wider tubes, the work proceeds quite differently. At the moment
+ when the Osmia disgorges her honey and especially at the moment when, with
+ her hind-tarsi, she rubs the pollen-dust from her ventral brush, she needs
+ a narrow aperture, just big enough to allow of her passage. I imagine
+ that, in a straitened gallery, the rubbing of her whole body against the
+ sides gives the harvester a support for her brushing-work. In a spacious
+ cylinder, this support fails her; and the Osmia starts with creating one
+ for herself, which she does by narrowing the channel. Whether it be to
+ facilitate the storing of the victuals or for any other reason, the fact
+ remains that the Osmia housed in a wide tube begins with the partitioning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her division is made by a dab of clay placed at right angles to the axis
+ of the cylinder, at a distance from the bottom determined by the ordinary
+ length of a cell. This wad is not a complete round; it is more
+ crescent-shaped, leaving a circular space between it and one side of the
+ tube. Fresh layers are swiftly added to the dab of clay; and soon the tube
+ is divided by a partition which has a circular opening at the side of it,
+ a sort of dog-hole through which the Osmia will proceed to knead the
+ Bee-bread. When the victualling is finished and the egg laid upon the
+ heap, the hole is closed and the filled-up partition becomes the bottom of
+ the next cell. Then the same method is repeated, that is to say, in front
+ of the just completed ceiling a second partition is built, again with a
+ side-passage, which is stouter, owing to its distance from the centre, and
+ better able to withstand the numerous comings and goings of the housewife
+ than a central orifice, deprived of the direct support of the wall, could
+ hope to be. When this partition is ready, the provisioning of the second
+ cell is effected; and so on until the wide cylinder is completely stocked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The building of this preliminary party-wall, with a narrow, round
+ dog-hole, for a chamber to which the victuals will not be brought until
+ later is not restricted to the Three-horned Osmia; it is also frequently
+ found in the case of the Horned Osmia and of Latreille's Osmia. Nothing
+ could be prettier than the work of the last-named, who goes to the plants
+ for her material and fashions a delicate sheet in which she cuts a
+ graceful arch. The Chinaman partitions his house with paper screens;
+ Latreille's Osmia divides hers with disks of thin green cardboard
+ perforated with a serving-hatch which remains until the room is completely
+ furnished. When we have no glass houses at our disposal, we can see these
+ little architectural refinements in the reeds of the hurdles, if we open
+ them at the right season.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By splitting the bramble-stumps in the course of July, we perceive also
+ that the Three-pronged Osmia, notwithstanding her narrow gallery, follows
+ the same practice as Latreille's Osmia, with a difference. She does not
+ build a party-wall, which the diameter of the cylinder would not permit;
+ she confines herself to putting up a frail circular pad of green putty, as
+ though to limit, before any attempt at harvesting, the space to be
+ occupied by the Bee-bread, whose depth could not be calculated afterwards
+ if the insect did not first mark out its confines. Can there really be an
+ act of measuring? That would be superlatively clever. Let us consult the
+ Three-horned Osmia in her glass tubes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Osmia is working at her big partition, with her body outside the cell
+ which she is preparing. From time to time, with a pellet of mortar in her
+ mandibles, she goes in and touches the previous ceiling with her forehead,
+ while the tip of her abdomen quivers and feels the pad in course of
+ construction. One might well say that she is using the length of her body
+ as a measure, in order to fix the next ceiling at the proper distance.
+ Then she resumes her work. Perhaps the measure was not correctly taken;
+ perhaps her memory, a few seconds old, has already become muddled. The Bee
+ once more ceases laying her plaster and again goes and touches the front
+ wall with her forehead and the back wall with the tip of her abdomen.
+ Looking at that body trembling with eagerness, extended to its full length
+ to touch the two ends of the room, how can we fail to grasp the
+ architect's grave problem? The Osmia is measuring; and her measure is her
+ body. Has she quite done, this time? Oh dear no! Ten times, twenty times,
+ at every moment, for the least particle of mortar which she lays, she
+ repeats her mensuration, never being quite certain that her trowel is
+ going just where it should.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, amid these frequent interruptions, the work progresses and the
+ partition gains in width. The worker is bent into a hook, with her
+ mandibles on the inner surface of the wall and the tip of her abdomen on
+ the outer surface. The soft masonry stands between the two points of
+ purchase. The insect thus forms a sort of rolling-press, in which the mud
+ wall is flattened and shaped. The mandibles tap and furnish mortar; the
+ end of the abdomen also pats and gives brisk trowel-touches. This anal
+ extremity is a builder's tool; I see it facing the mandibles on the other
+ side of the partition, kneading and smoothing it all over, flattening the
+ little lump of clay. It is a singular implement, which I should never have
+ expected to see used for this purpose. It takes an insect to conceive such
+ an original idea, to do mason's work with its behind! During this curious
+ performance, the only function of the legs is to keep the worker steady by
+ spreading out and clinging to the walls of the tunnel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The partition with the hole in it is finished. Let us go back to the
+ measuring of which the Osmia was so lavish. What a magnificent argument in
+ favour of the reasoning-power of animals! To find geometry, the surveyor's
+ art, in an Osmia's tiny brain! An insect that begins by taking the
+ measurements of the room to be constructed, just as any master-builder
+ might do! Why, it's splendid, it's enough to cover with confusion those
+ horrible sceptics who persist in refusing to admit the animal's
+ 'continuous little flashes of atoms of reason!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O common-sense, veil your face! It is with this gibberish about continuous
+ flashes of atoms of reason that men pretend to build up science to-day!
+ Very well, my masters; the magnificent argument with which I am supplying
+ you lacks but one little detail, the merest trifle: truth! Not that I have
+ not seen and plainly seen all that I am relating; but measuring has
+ nothing to do with the case. And I can prove it by facts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, in order to see the Osmia's nest as a whole, we split a reed
+ lengthwise, taking care not to disturb its contents; or, better still, if
+ we select for examination the string of cells built in a glass tube, we
+ are forthwith struck by one detail, namely, the uneven distances between
+ the partitions, which are placed almost at right angles to the axis of the
+ cylinder. It is these distances which fix the size of the chambers, which,
+ with a similar base, have different heights and consequently unequal
+ holding-capacities. The bottom partitions, the oldest, are farther apart;
+ those of the front part, near the orifice, are closer together. Moreover,
+ the provisions are plentiful in the loftier cells, whereas they are
+ niggardly and reduced to one-half or even one-third in the cells of lesser
+ height.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here are a few examples of these inequalities. A glass tube with a
+ diameter of 12 millimetres (.468 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.), inside
+ measurement, contains ten cells. The five lower ones, beginning with the
+ bottom-most, have as the respective distances between their partitions, in
+ millimetres:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11, 12, 16, 13, 11. (.429,.468,.624,.507,.429 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The five upper ones measure between their partitions:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7, 7, 5, 6, 7. (.273,.273,.195,.234,.273 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A reed-stump 11 millimetres (.429 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.) across
+ the inside contains fifteen cells; and the respective distances between
+ the partitions of those cells, starting from the bottom, are:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13, 12, 12, 9, 9, 11, 8, 8, 7, 7, 7, 6, 6, 6, 7. (.507,.468,.468,
+ .351,.351,.429,.312,.312,.273,.273,.273,.234,.234,.234, .273 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the diameter of the tunnel is less, the partitions can be still
+ further apart, though they retain the general characteristic of being
+ closer to one another the nearer they are to the orifice. A reed of five
+ millimetres (.195 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.) in diameter, gives me
+ the following distances, always starting from the bottom:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22, 22, 20, 20, 12, 14. (.858,.858,.78,.78,.468,.546 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another, of 9 millimetres (.351 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.), gives me:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15, 14, 11, 10, 10, 9, 10. (.585,.546,.429,.39,.39,.351,.39 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A glass tube of 8 millimetres (.312 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ yields:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15, 14, 20, 10, 10, 10. (.585,.546,.78,.39,.39,.39 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could fill pages and pages with such figures, if I cared to print all my
+ notes. Do they prove that the Osmia is a geometrician, employing a strict
+ measure based on the length of her body? Certainly not, because many of
+ those figures exceed the length of the insect; because sometimes a higher
+ number follows suddenly upon a lower; because the same string contains a
+ figure of one value and another figure of but half that value. They prove
+ only one thing: the marked tendency of the insect to shorten the distance
+ between the party-walls as the work proceeds. We shall see later that the
+ large cells are destined for the females and the small ones for the males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is there not at least a measuring adapted to each sex? Again, not so; for
+ in the first series, where the females are housed, instead of the interval
+ of 11 millimetres, which occurs at the beginning and the end, we find, in
+ the middle of the series, an interval of 16 millimetres, while in the
+ second series, reserved for the males, instead of the interval of 7
+ millimetres at the beginning and the end, we have an interval of 5
+ millimetres in the middle. It is the same with the other series, each of
+ which shows a striking discrepancy in its figures. If the Osmia really
+ studied the dimensions of her chambers and measured them with the
+ compasses of her body, how could she, with her delicate mechanism, fail to
+ notice mistakes of 5 millimetres, almost half her own length?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, all idea of geometry vanishes if we consider the work in a tube
+ of moderate width. Here, the Osmia does not fix the front partition in
+ advance; she does not even lay its foundation. Without any boundary-pad,
+ with no guiding mark for the capacity of the cell, she busies herself
+ straightway with the provisioning. When the heap of Bee-bread is judged
+ sufficient, that is, I imagine, when her tired body tells her that she has
+ done enough harvesting, she closes up the chamber. In this case, there is
+ no measuring; and yet the capacity of the cell and the quantity of the
+ victuals fulfil the regular requirements of one or the other sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then what does the Osmia do when she repeatedly stops to touch the front
+ partition with her forehead and the back partition, the one in the course
+ of building, with the tip of her abdomen? I have no idea what she does or
+ what she has in view. I leave the interpretation of this performance to
+ others, more venturesome than I. Plenty of theories are based on equally
+ shaky foundations. Blow on them and they sink into the quagmire of
+ oblivion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The laying is finished, or perhaps the cylinder is full. A final partition
+ closes the last cell. A rampart is now built, at the orifice of the tube
+ itself, to forbid the ill-disposed all access to the home. This is a thick
+ plug, a massy work of fortification, whereon the Osmia spends enough
+ mortar to partition off any number of cells. A whole day is not too long
+ for making this barricade, especially in view of the minute
+ finishing-touches, when the Osmia fills up with putty every chink through
+ which the least atom could slip. The mason completing a wall smooths his
+ plaster and brings it to a fine surface while it is still wet; the Osmia
+ does the same, or almost. With little taps of the mandibles and a
+ continual shaking of her head, a sign of her zest for the work, she
+ smooths and polishes the surface of the lid for hours at a time. After
+ such pains, what foe could visit the dwelling?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet there is one, an Anthrax, A. sinuata (Cf. "The Life of the Fly":
+ chapters 2 and 4.&mdash;Translator's Note.), who will come later on, in
+ the height of summer, and succeed, invisible bit of thread that she is, in
+ making her way to the grub through the thickness of the door and the web
+ of the cocoon. In many cells, mischief of another kind has already been
+ done. During the progress of the works, an impudent Midge, one of the
+ Tachina-flies, who feeds her family on the victuals amassed by the Bee,
+ hovers in front of the galleries. Does she penetrate to the cells and lay
+ her eggs there in the mother's absence? I could never catch the sneak in
+ the act. Does she, like that other Tachina who ravages cells stocked with
+ game (The cells of the Hunting Wasps.&mdash;Translator's Note.), nimbly
+ deposit her eggs on the Osmia's harvest at the moment when the Bee is
+ going indoors? It is possible, though I cannot say for certain. The fact
+ remains that we soon see the Midge's grub-worms swarming around the larva,
+ the daughter of the house. There are ten, fifteen, twenty or more of them
+ gnawing with their pointed mouths at the common dish and turning the food
+ into a heap of fine, orange-coloured vermicelli. The Bee's grub dies of
+ starvation. It is life, life in all its ferocity even in these tiny
+ creatures. What an expenditure of ardent labour, of delicate cares, of
+ wise precautions, to arrive at...what? Her offspring sucked and drained
+ dry by the hateful Anthrax; her family sweated and starved by the infernal
+ Tachina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The victuals consist mostly of yellow flour. In the centre of the heap, a
+ little honey is disgorged, which turns the pollen-dust into a firm,
+ reddish paste. On this paste the egg is laid, not flat, but upright, with
+ the fore-end free and the hind-end lightly held and fixed in the plastic
+ mass. When hatched, the young grub, kept in its place by its rear-end,
+ need only bend its neck a little to find the honey-soaked paste under its
+ mouth. When it grows stronger, it will release itself from its support and
+ eat up the surrounding flour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this is touching, in its maternal logic. For the new-born, dainty
+ bread-and-honey; for the adolescent, dry bread. In cases where the
+ provisions are all of a kind, these delicate precautions are superfluous.
+ The victuals of the Anthophorae and the Chalicodomae consist of flowing
+ honey, the same throughout. The egg is then laid at full length on the
+ surface, without any particular arrangement, thus compelling the new-born
+ grub to take its first mouthfuls at random. This has no drawback, as the
+ food is of the same quality throughout. But, with the Osmia's provisions&mdash;dry
+ powder on the edges, jam in the centre&mdash;the grub would be in danger
+ if its first meal were not regulated in advance. To begin with pollen not
+ seasoned with honey would be fatal to its stomach. Having no choice of its
+ mouthfuls because of its immobility and being obliged to feed on the spot
+ where it was hatched, the young grub must needs be born on the central
+ mass, where it has only to bend its head a little way in order to find
+ what its delicate stomach calls for. The place of the egg, therefore,
+ fixed upright by its base in the middle of the red jam, is most
+ judiciously chosen. What a contrast between this exquisite maternal
+ forethought and the horrible destruction by the Anthrax and the Midge!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The egg is rather large for the size of the Osmia. It is cylindrical,
+ slightly curved, rounded at both ends and transparent. It soon becomes
+ cloudy, while remaining diaphanous at each extremity. Fine lines, hardly
+ perceptible to the most penetrating lens, show themselves in transverse
+ circles. These are the first signs of segmentation. A contraction appears
+ in the front hyaline part, marking the head. An extremely thin opaque
+ thread runs down either side. This is the cord of tracheae communicating
+ between one breathing-hole and another. At last, the segments show
+ distinctly, with their lateral pads. The grub is born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first, one would think that there was no hatching in the proper sense
+ of the word&mdash;that is to say, no bursting and casting of a wrapper.
+ The most minute attention is necessary to show that appearances are
+ deceptive and that actually a fine membrane is thrown off from front to
+ back. This infinitesimal shred is the shell of the egg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The grub is born. Fixed by its base, it curves into an arc and bends its
+ head, until now held erect, down to the red mass. The meal begins. Soon a
+ yellow cord occupying the front two-thirds of the body proclaims that the
+ digestive apparatus is swelling out with food. For a fortnight, consume
+ your provender in peace, my child; then spin your cocoon: you are now safe
+ from the Tachina! Shall you be safe from the Anthrax' sucker later on?
+ Alack!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 3. THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE SEXES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Does the insect know beforehand the sex of the egg which it is about to
+ lay? When examining the stock of food in the cells just now, we began to
+ suspect that it does, for each little heap of provisions is carefully
+ proportioned to the needs at one time of a male and at another of a
+ female. What we have to do is to turn this suspicion into a certainty
+ demonstrated by experiment. And first let us find out how the sexes are
+ arranged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not possible to ascertain the chronological order of a laying,
+ except by going to suitably-chosen species. Digging up the burrows of
+ Cerceris-, Bembex- or Philanthus-wasps will never tell us that this grub
+ has taken precedence of that in point of time nor enable us to decide
+ whether one cocoon in a colony belongs to the same family as another. To
+ compile a register of births is absolutely impossible here. Fortunately
+ there are a few species in which we do not find this difficulty: these are
+ the Bees who keep to one gallery and build their cells in storeys. Among
+ the number are the different inhabitants of the bramble-stumps, notably
+ the Three-pronged Osmiae, who form an excellent subject for observation,
+ partly because they are of imposing-size&mdash;bigger than any other
+ bramble-dwellers in my neighbourhood&mdash;partly because they are so
+ plentiful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us briefly recall the Osmia's habits. Amid the tangle of a hedge, a
+ bramble-stalk is selected, still standing, but a mere withered stump. In
+ this the insect digs a more or less deep tunnel, an easy piece of work
+ owing to the abundance of soft pith. Provisions are heaped up right at the
+ bottom of the tunnel and an egg is laid on the surface of the food: that
+ is the first-born of the family. At a height of some twelve millimetres
+ (About half an inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.), a partition is fixed,
+ formed of bramble saw-dust and of a green paste obtained by masticating
+ particles of the leaves of some plant that has not yet been identified.
+ This gives a second storey, which in its turn receives provisions and an
+ egg, the second in order of primogeniture. And so it goes on, storey by
+ storey, until the cylinder is full. Then a thick plug of the same green
+ material of which the partitions are formed closes the home and keeps out
+ marauders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this common cradle, the chronological order of births is perfectly
+ clear. The first-born of the family is at the bottom of the series; the
+ last-born is at the top, near the closed door. The others follow from
+ bottom to top in the same order in which they followed in point of time.
+ The laying is numbered automatically; each cocoon tells us its respective
+ age by the place which it occupies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To know the sexes, we must wait for the month of June. But it would be
+ unwise to postpone our investigations until that period. Osmia-nests are
+ not so common that we can hope to pick one up each time that we go out
+ with that object; besides, if we wait for the hatching-period before
+ examining the brambles, it may happen that the order has been disturbed
+ through some insects' having tried to make their escape as soon as
+ possible after bursting their cocoons; it may happen that the male Osmiae,
+ who are more forward than the females, are already gone. I therefore set
+ to work a long time beforehand and devote my leisure in winter to these
+ investigations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bramble-sticks are split and the cocoons taken out one by one and
+ methodically transferred to glass tubes, of approximately the same
+ diameter as the native cylinder. These cocoons are arranged one on top of
+ the other in exactly the same order that they occupied in the bramble;
+ they are separated from one another by a cotton plug, an insuperable
+ obstacle to the future insect. There is thus no fear that the contents of
+ the cells may become mixed or transposed; and I am saved the trouble of
+ keeping a laborious watch. Each insect can hatch at its own time, in my
+ presence or not: I am sure of always finding it in its place, in its
+ proper order, held fast fore and aft by the cotton barrier. A cork or
+ sorghum-pith partition would not fulfil the same purpose: the insect would
+ perforate it and the register of births would be muddled by changes of
+ position. Any reader wishing to undertake similar investigations will
+ excuse these practical details, which may facilitate his work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We do not often come upon complete series, comprising the whole laying,
+ from the first-born to the youngest. As a rule, we find part of a laying,
+ in which the number of cocoons varies greatly, sometimes falling as low as
+ two, or even one. The mother has not deemed it advisable to confide her
+ whole family to a single bramble-stump; in order to make the exit less
+ toilsome, or else for reasons which escape me, she has left the first home
+ and elected to make a second home, perhaps a third or more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We also find series with breaks in them. Sometimes, in cells distributed
+ at random, the egg has not developed and the provisions have remained
+ untouched, but mildewed; sometimes, the larva has died before spinning its
+ cocoon, or after spinning it. Lastly, there are parasites, such as the
+ Unarmed Zonitis (Zonitis mutica, one of the Oil-beetles.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) and the Spotted Sapyga (A Digger-wasp.&mdash;Translator's Note.),
+ who interrupt the series by substituting themselves for the original
+ occupant. All these disturbing factors make it necessary to examine a
+ large number of nests of the Three-pronged Osmia, if we would obtain a
+ definite result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have been studying the bramble-dwellers for seven or eight years and I
+ could not say how many strings of cocoons have passed through my hands.
+ During a recent winter, in view particularly of the distribution of the
+ sexes, I collected some forty of this Osmia's nests, transferred their
+ contents into glass tubes and made a careful summary of the sexes. I give
+ some of my results. The figures start in their order from the bottom of
+ the tunnel dug in the bramble and proceed upwards to the orifice. The
+ figure 1 therefore denotes the first-born of the series, the oldest in
+ date; the highest figure denotes the last-born. The letter M, placed under
+ the corresponding figure, represents the male and the letter F the female
+ sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 F F M F M F M M F F F F M F M
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the longest series that I have ever been able to procure. It is
+ also complete, inasmuch as it comprises the entire laying of the Osmia. My
+ statement requires explaining, otherwise it would seem impossible to know
+ whether a mother whose acts one has not watched, nay more, whom one has
+ never seen, has or has not finished laying her eggs. The bramble-stump
+ under consideration leaves a free space of nearly four inches above the
+ continuous string of cocoons. Beyond it, at the actual orifice, is the
+ terminal stopper, the thick plug which closes the entrance to the gallery.
+ In this empty portion of the tunnel there is ample accommodation for
+ numerous cocoons. The fact that the mother has not made use of it proves
+ that her ovaries were exhausted; for it is exceedingly unlikely that she
+ has abandoned first-rate lodgings to go laboriously digging a new gallery
+ elsewhere and there continue her laying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You may say that, if the unoccupied space marks the end of the laying,
+ nothing tells us that the beginning is actually at the bottom of the
+ cul-de-sac, at the other end of the tunnel. You may also say that the
+ laying is done in shifts, separated by intervals of rest. The space left
+ empty in the channel would mean that one of these shifts was finished and
+ not that there were no more eggs ripe for hatching. In answer to these
+ very plausible explanations, I will say that, the sum of my observations&mdash;and
+ they have been extremely numerous&mdash;is that the total number of eggs
+ laid not only by the Osmiae but by a host of other Bees fluctuates round
+ about fifteen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, when we consider that the active life of these insects lasts
+ hardly a month; when we remember that this period of activity is disturbed
+ by dark, rainy or very windy days, during which all work is suspended;
+ when lastly we ascertain, as I have done ad nauseam in the case of the
+ Three-horned Osmia, the time required for building and victualling a cell,
+ it becomes obvious that the total laying must be kept within narrow bounds
+ and that the mother has no time to lose if she wishes to get fifteen cells
+ satisfactorily built in three or four weeks interrupted by compulsory
+ rests. I shall give some facts later which will dispel your doubts, if any
+ remain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I assume, therefore, that a number of eggs bordering on fifteen represents
+ the entire family of an Osmia, as it does of many other Bees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us consult some other complete series. Here are two:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 F F M F M F M F F F F M F F M F F F M F F M
+ F M
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In both cases, the laying is taken as complete, for the same reasons as
+ above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will end with some series that appear to me incomplete, in view of the
+ small number of cells and the absence of any free space above the pile of
+ cocoons:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 M M F M M M M M M M F M F M M M F M F F M M M M M F M F F
+ F F M M M F M
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These examples are more than sufficient. It is quite evident that the
+ distribution of the sexes is not governed by any rule. All that I can say
+ on consulting the whole of my notes, which contain a good many instances
+ of complete layings&mdash;most of them, unfortunately, spoilt through gaps
+ caused by parasites, the death of the larva, the failure of the egg to
+ hatch and other accidents&mdash;all that I can say in general is that the
+ complete series begins with females and nearly always ends with males. The
+ incomplete series can teach us nothing in this respect, for they are only
+ fragments starting we know not whence; and it is impossible to tell
+ whether they should be ascribed to the beginning, to the end, or to an
+ intermediate period of the laying. To sum up: in the laying of the
+ Three-pronged Osmia, no order governs the succession of the sexes; only,
+ the series has a marked tendency to begin with females and to finish with
+ males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The brambles, in my district, harbour two other Osmiae, both of much
+ smaller size: O. detrita, PEREZ, and O. parvula, DUF. The first is very
+ common, the second very rare; and until now I have found only one of her
+ nests, placed above a nest of O. detrita, in the same bramble. Here,
+ instead of the lack of order in the distribution of the sexes which we
+ find with O. tridentata, we have an order remarkable for consistency and
+ simplicity. I have before me the list of the series of O. detrita
+ collected last winter. Here are some of them:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. A series of twelve: seven females, beginning with the bottom of the
+ tunnel, and then five males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. A series of nine: three females first, then six males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. A series of eight: five females followed by three males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. A series of eight: seven females followed by one male.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. A series of eight: one female followed by seven males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. A series of seven: six females followed by one male.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first series might very well be complete. The second and fifth appear
+ to be the end of layings, of which the beginning has taken place
+ elsewhere, in another bramble-stump. The males predominate and finish off
+ the series. Nos. 3, 4 and 6, on the other hand, look like the beginnings
+ of layings: the females predominate and are at the head of the series.
+ Even if these interpretations should be open to doubt, one result at least
+ is certain: with O. detrita, the laying is divided into two groups, with
+ no intermingling of the sexes; the first group laid yields nothing but
+ females, the second, or more recent, yields nothing but males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was only a sort of attempt with the Three-pronged Osmia&mdash;who, it
+ is true, begins with females and ends with males, but muddles up the order
+ and mixes the two sexes anyhow between the extreme points&mdash;becomes a
+ regular law with her kinswoman. The mother occupies herself at the start
+ with the stronger sex, the more necessary, the better-gifted, the female
+ sex, to which she devotes the first flush of her laying and the fullness
+ of her vigour; later, when she is perhaps already at the end of her
+ strength, she bestows what remains of her maternal solicitude upon the
+ weaker sex, the less-gifted, almost negligible male sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O. parvula, of whom I unfortunately possess but one series, repeats what
+ the previous witness has just shown us. This series, one of nine cocoons,
+ comprises five females followed by four males, without any mixing of the
+ sexes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next to these disgorgers of honey and gleaners of pollen-dust, it would be
+ well to consult other Hymenoptera, Wasps who devote themselves to the
+ chase and pile their cells one after the other, in a row, showing the
+ relative age of the cocoons. The brambles house several of these: Solenius
+ vagus, who stores up Flies; Psen atratus, who provides her grubs with a
+ heap of Plant-lice; Trypoxylon figulus, who feeds them with Spiders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Solenius vagus digs her gallery in a bramble-stick that is lopped short,
+ but still fresh and green. The house of this Fly-huntress, therefore,
+ suffers from damp, as the sap enters, especially on the lower floors. This
+ seems to me rather insanitary. To avoid the humidity, or for other reasons
+ which escape me, the Solenius does not dig very far into her bramble-stump
+ and consequently can stack but a small number of cells in it. A series of
+ five cocoons gives me first four females and then one male; another
+ series, also of five, contains first three females, with two males
+ following. These are the most complete that I have for the moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I reckoned on the Black Psen, or Psen atratus, whose series are pretty
+ long; it is a pity that they are nearly always greatly interfered with by
+ a parasite called Ephialtes mediator. (Cf. "The Life of the Fly": chapter
+ 2.&mdash;Translator's Note.) I obtained only three series free from gaps:
+ one of eight cocoons, comprising only females; one of six, likewise
+ consisting wholly of females; lastly, one of eight, formed exclusively of
+ males. These instances seem to show that the Psen arranges her laying in a
+ succession of females and a succession of males; but they tell us nothing
+ of the relative order of the two series.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the Spider-huntress, Trypoxylon figulus, I learnt nothing decisive.
+ She appeared to me to rove about from one bramble to the next, utilizing
+ galleries which she has not dug herself. Not troubling to be economical
+ with a lodging which it has cost her nothing to acquire, she carelessly
+ builds a few partitions at very unequal heights, stuffs three or four
+ compartments with Spiders and passes on to another bramble-stump, with no
+ reason, so far as I know, for abandoning the first. Her cells, therefore,
+ occur in series that are too short to give us any useful information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is all that the bramble-dwellers have to tell us; I have enumerated
+ the list of the principal ones in my district. We will now look into some
+ other Bees who arrange their cocoons in single files: the Megachiles (Cf.
+ Chapter 8 of the present volume.&mdash;Translator's Note.), who cut disks
+ out of leaves and fashion the disks into thimble-shaped receptacles; the
+ Anthidia (Cf. Chapters 9 and 10 of the present volume.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), who weave their honey-wallets out of cotton-wool and arrange their
+ cells one after the other in some cylindrical gallery. In most cases, the
+ home is the produce of neither the one nor the other. A tunnel in the
+ upright, earthy banks, the old work of some Anthophora, is the usual
+ dwelling. There is no great depth to these retreats; and all my searches,
+ zealously prosecuted during a number of winters, procured me only series
+ containing a small number of cocoons, four or five at most, often one
+ alone. And, what is quite as serious, nearly all these series are spoilt
+ by parasites and allow me to draw no well-founded deductions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I remembered finding, at rare intervals, nests of both the Anthidium and
+ the Megachile in the hollows of cut reeds. I thereupon installed some
+ hives of a new kind on the sunniest walls of my enclosure. They consisted
+ of stumps of the great reed of the south, open at one end, closed at the
+ other by the natural knot and gathered into a sort of enormous pan-pipe,
+ such as Polyphemus might have employed. The invitation was accepted:
+ Osmiae, Anthidia and Megachiles came in fairly large numbers, especially
+ the first, to benefit by the queer installation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this way I obtained some magnificent series of Anthidia and Megachiles,
+ running up to a dozen. There was a melancholy side to this success. All my
+ series, with not one exception, were ravaged by parasites. Those of the
+ Megachile (M. sericans, FONSCOL), who fashions her goblets with robinia-,
+ holm-, and terebinth-leaves, were inhabited by Coelioxys octodentata (A
+ Parasitic Bee.&mdash;Translator's Note.); those of the Anthidium (A.
+ florentinum, LATR.) were occupied by a Leucopsis. Both kinds were swarming
+ with a colony of pigmy parasites whose name I have not yet been able to
+ discover. In short, my pan-pipe hives, though very useful to me from other
+ points of view, taught me nothing about the order of the sexes among the
+ Leaf-cutters and the cotton-weavers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was more fortunate with three Osmiae (O. tricornis, LATR., O. cornuta,
+ LATR., and O. Latreillii, SPIN.), all of whom gave me splendid results,
+ with reed-stumps arranged either against the walls of my garden, as I have
+ just said, or near their customary abode, the huge nests of the Mason-bee
+ of the Sheds. One of them, the Three-horned Osmia, did better still: as I
+ have described, she built her nests in my study, as plentifully as I could
+ wish, using reeds, glass tubes and other retreats of my selecting for her
+ galleries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will consult this last, who has furnished me with documents beyond my
+ fondest hopes, and begin by asking her of how many eggs her average laying
+ consists. Of the whole heap of colonized tubes in my study, or else out of
+ doors, in the hurdle-reeds and the pan-pipe appliances, the best-filled
+ contains fifteen cells, with a free space above the series, a space
+ showing that the laying is ended, for, if the mother had any more eggs
+ available, she would have lodged them in the room which she leaves
+ unoccupied. This string of fifteen appears to be rare; it was the only one
+ that I found. My attempts at indoor rearing, pursued during two years with
+ glass tubes or reeds, taught me that the Three-horned Osmia is not much
+ addicted to long series. As though to decrease the difficulties of the
+ coming deliverance, she prefers short galleries, in which only a part of
+ the laying is stacked. We must then follow the same mother in her
+ migration from one dwelling to the next if we would obtain a complete
+ census of her family. A spot of colour, dropped on the Bee's thorax with a
+ paint-brush while she is absorbed in closing up the mouth of the tunnel,
+ enables us to recognize the Osmia in her various homes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this way, the swarm that resided in my study furnished me, in the first
+ year, with an average of twelve cells. Next year, the summer appeared to
+ be more favourable and the average became rather higher, reaching fifteen.
+ The most numerous laying performed under my eyes, not in a tube, but in a
+ succession of Snail-shells, reached the figure of twenty-six. On the other
+ hand, layings of between eight and ten are not uncommon. Lastly, taking
+ all my records together, the result is that the family of the Osmia
+ fluctuates round about fifteen in number.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have already spoken of the great differences in size apparent in the
+ cells of one and the same series. The partitions, at first widely spaced,
+ draw gradually nearer to one another as they come closer to the aperture,
+ which implies roomy cells at the back and narrow cells in front. The
+ contents of these compartments are no less uneven between one portion and
+ another of the string. Without any exception known to me, the large cells,
+ those with which the series starts, have more abundant provisions than the
+ straitened cells with which the series ends. The heap of honey and pollen
+ in the first is twice or even thrice as large as that in the second. In
+ the last cells, the most recent in date, the victuals are but a pinch of
+ pollen, so niggardly in amount that we wonder what will become of the
+ larva with that meagre ration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One would think that the Osmia, when nearing the end of the laying,
+ attaches no importance to her last-born, to whom she doles out space and
+ food so sparingly. The first-born receive the benefit of her early
+ enthusiasm: theirs is the well-spread table, theirs the spacious
+ apartments. The work has begun to pall by the time that the last eggs are
+ laid; and the last-comers have to put up with a scurvy portion of food and
+ a tiny corner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The difference shows itself in another way after the cocoons are spun. The
+ large cells, those at the back, receive the bulky cocoons; the small ones,
+ those in front, have cocoons only a half or a third as big. Before opening
+ them and ascertaining the sex of the Osmia inside, let us wait for the
+ transformation into the perfect insect, which will take place towards the
+ end of summer. If impatience gets the better of us, we can open them at
+ the end of July or in August. The insect is then in the nymphal stage; and
+ it is easy, under this form, to distinguish the two sexes by the length of
+ the antennae, which are larger in the males, and by the glassy
+ protuberances on the forehead, the sign of the future armour of the
+ females. Well, the small cocoons, those in the narrow front cells, with
+ their scanty store of provisions, all belong to males; the big cocoons,
+ those in the spacious and well-stocked cells at the back, all belong to
+ females.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conclusion is definite: the laying of the Three-horned Osmia consists
+ of two distinct groups, first a group of females and then a group of
+ males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With my pan-pipe apparatus displayed on the walls of my enclosure and with
+ old hurdle-reeds left lying flat out of doors, I obtained the Horned Osmia
+ in fair quantities. I persuaded Latreille's Osmia to build her nest in
+ reeds, which she did with a zeal which I was far from expecting. All that
+ I had to do was to lay some reed-stumps horizontally within her reach, in
+ the immediate neighbourhood of her usual haunts, namely, the nests of the
+ Mason-bee of the Sheds. Lastly, I succeeded without difficulty in making
+ her build her nests in the privacy of my study, with glass tubes for a
+ house. The result surpassed my hopes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With both these Osmiae, the division of the gallery is the same as with
+ the Three-horned Osmia. At the back are large cells with plentiful
+ provisions and widely-spaced partitions; in front, small cells, with
+ scanty provisions and partitions close together. Also, the larger cells
+ supplied me with big cocoons and females; the smaller cells gave me little
+ cocoons and males. The conclusion therefore is exactly the same in the
+ case of all three Osmiae.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before dismissing the Osmiae, let us devote a moment to their cocoons, a
+ comparison of which, in the matter of bulk, will furnish us with fairly
+ accurate evidence as to the relative size of the two sexes, for the thing
+ contained, the perfect insect, is evidently proportionate to the silken
+ wrapper in which it is enclosed. These cocoons are oval-shaped and may be
+ regarded as ellipsoids formed by a revolution around the major axis. The
+ volume of one of these solids is expressed in the following formula:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 / 3 x pi x a x (b squared),
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ in which 2a is the major axis and 2b the minor axis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, the average dimensions of the cocoons of the Three-horned Osmia are
+ as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2a = 13 mm. (.507 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.), 2b = 7 mm. (.273 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) in the females;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2a = 9 mm. (.351 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.), 2b = 5 mm. (.195 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) in the males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ratio therefore between 13 x 7 x 7 = 637 and 9 x 5 x 5 = 225 will be
+ more or less the ratio between the sizes of the two sexes. This ratio is
+ somewhere between 2 to 1 and 3 to 1. The females therefore are two or
+ three times larger than the males, a proportion already suggested by a
+ comparison of the mass of provisions, estimated simply by the eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Horned Osmia gives us the following average dimensions:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2a = 15 mm. (.585 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.), 2b = 9 mm. (.351 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) in the females;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2a = 12 mm. (.468 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.), 2b = 7 mm. (.273 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) in the males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once again, the ratio between 15 x 9 x 9 = 1215 and 12 x 7 x 7 = 588 lies
+ between 2 to 1 and 3 to 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the Bees who arrange their laying in a row, I have consulted
+ others whose cells are grouped in a way that makes it possible to
+ ascertain the relative order of the two sexes, though not quite so
+ precisely. One of these is the Mason-bee of the Walls. I need not describe
+ again her dome-shaped nest, built on a pebble, which is now so well-known
+ to us. (Cf. "The Mason-bees": chapter 1.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each mother chooses her stone and works on it in solitude. She is an
+ ungracious landowner and guards her site jealously, driving away any Mason
+ who even looks as though she might alight on it. The inhabitants of the
+ same nest are therefore always brothers and sisters; they are the family
+ of one mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, if the stone presents a large enough surface&mdash;a condition
+ easily fulfilled&mdash;the Mason-bee has no reason to leave the support on
+ which she began her laying and go in search of another whereon to deposit
+ the rest of her eggs. She is too thrifty of her time and of her mortar to
+ involve herself in such expenditure except for grave reasons.
+ Consequently, each nest, at least when it is new, when the Bee herself has
+ laid the first foundations, contains the entire laying. It is a different
+ thing when an old nest is restored and made into a place for depositing
+ the eggs. I shall come back later to such houses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A newly-built nest then, with rare exceptions, contains the entire laying
+ of one female. Count the cells and we shall have the total list of the
+ family. Their maximum number fluctuates round about fifteen. The most
+ luxuriant series will occasionally reach as many as eighteen, though these
+ are very scarce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the surface of the stone is regular all around the site of the first
+ cell, when the mason can add to her building with the same facility in
+ every direction, it is obvious that the groups of cells, when finished,
+ will have the oldest in the central portion and the more recent in the
+ surrounding portion. Because of this juxtaposition of the cells, which
+ serve partly as a wall to those which come next, it is possible to form
+ some estimate of the chronological order of the cells in the Chalicodoma's
+ nest and thus to discover the sequence of the two sexes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In winter, by which time the Bee has long been in the perfect state, I
+ collect Chalicodoma-nests, removing them bodily from their support with a
+ few smart sideward taps of the hammer on the pebbles. At the base of the
+ mortar dome the cells are wide agape and display their contents. I take
+ the cocoon from its box, open it and take note of the sex of the insect
+ enclosed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I should probably be accused of exaggeration if I mentioned the total
+ number of the nests which I have gathered and the cells which I have
+ inspected by this method during the last six or seven years. I will
+ content myself with saying that the harvest of a single morning sometimes
+ consisted of as many as sixty nests of the Mason-bee. I had to have help
+ in carrying home my spoils, even though the nests were removed from their
+ stones on the spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the enormous number of nests which I have examined, I am able to
+ state that, when the cluster is regular, the female cells occupy the
+ centre and the male cells the edges. Where the irregularity of the pebble
+ has prevented an even distribution around the initial point, the same rule
+ has been observed. A male cell is never surrounded on every side by female
+ cells: either it occupies the edges of the nest, or else it adjoins, at
+ least on some sides, other male cells, of which the last form part of the
+ exterior of the cluster. As the surrounding cells are obviously of a later
+ date than the inner cells, it follows that the Mason-bee acts like the
+ Osmiae: she begins her laying with females and ends it with males, each of
+ the sexes forming a series of its own, independent of the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some further circumstances add their testimony to that of the surrounded
+ and surrounding cells. When the pebble projects sharply and forms a sort
+ of dihedral angle, one of whose faces is more or less vertical and the
+ other horizontal, this angle is a favourite site with the Mason, who thus
+ finds greater stability for her edifice in the support given her by the
+ double plane. These sites appear to me to be in great request with the
+ Chalicodoma, considering the number of nests which I find thus doubly
+ supported. In nests of this kind, all the cells, as usual, have their
+ foundations fixed to the horizontal surface; but the first row, the row of
+ cells first built, stands with its back against the vertical surface.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, these older cells, which occupy the actual edge of the dihedral
+ angle, are always female, with the exception of those at either end of the
+ row, which, as they belong to the outside, may be male cells. In front of
+ this first row come others. The female cells occupy the middle portion and
+ the male the ends. Finally, the last row, closing in the remainder,
+ contains only male cells. The progress of the work is very visible here:
+ the Mason has begun by attending to the central group of female cells, the
+ first row of which occupies the dihedral angle, and has finished her task
+ by distributing the male cells round the outside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the perpendicular face of the dihedral angle be high enough, it
+ sometimes happens that a second row of cells is placed above the first row
+ backing on to that plane; a third row occurs less often. The nest is then
+ one of several storeys. The lower storeys, the older, contain only
+ females; the upper, the more recent storey, contains none but males. It
+ goes without saying that the surface layer, even of the lower storeys, can
+ contain males without invalidating the rule, for this layer may always be
+ looked upon as the Chalicodoma's last work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything therefore contributes to show that, in the Mason-bee, the
+ females take the lead in the order of primogeniture. Theirs is the central
+ and best-protected part of the clay fortress; the outer part, that most
+ exposed to the inclemencies of the weather and to accidents, is for the
+ males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The males' cells do not differ from the females' only by being placed at
+ the outside of the cluster; they differ also in their capacity, which is
+ much smaller. To estimate the respective capacities of the two sorts of
+ cells, I go to work as follows: I fill the empty cell with very fine sand
+ and pour this sand back into a glass tube measuring 5 millimetres (.195
+ inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.) in diameter. From the height of the column
+ of sand we can estimate the comparative capacity of the two kinds of
+ cells. I will take one at random among my numerous examples of cells thus
+ gauged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It comprises thirteen cells and occupies a dihedral angle. The female
+ cells give me the following figures, in millimetres, as the height of the
+ columns of sand:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 40, 44, 43, 48, 48, 46, 47 (1.56, 1.71, 1.67, 1.87, 1.87, 1.79, 1.83
+ inches.&mdash;Translator's Note.),
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ averaging 45. (1.75 inches.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The male cells give me:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32, 35, 28, 30, 30, 31 (1.24, 1.36, 1.09, 1.17, 1.17, 1.21 inches.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.),
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ averaging 31. (1.21 inches.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ratio of the capacity of the cells for the two sexes is therefore
+ roughly a ratio of 4 to 3. The actual contents of the cell being
+ proportionate to its capacity, the above ratio must also be more or less
+ the ratio of provisions and sizes between females and males. These figures
+ will assist us presently to tell whether an old cell, occupied for a
+ second or third time, belonged originally to a female or a male.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chalicodoma of the Sheds cannot give us any information on this
+ matter. She builds under the same eaves, in excessively populous colonies;
+ and it is impossible to follow the labours of any single Mason, whose
+ cells, distributed here and there, are soon covered up with the work of
+ her neighbours. All is muddle and confusion in the individual output of
+ the swarming throng.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have not watched the work of the Chalicodoma of the Shrubs with close
+ enough attention to be able to state definitely that this Bee is a
+ solitary builder. Her nest is a ball of clay hanging from a bough.
+ Sometimes, this nest is the size of a large walnut and then appears to be
+ the work of one alone; sometimes, it is the size of a man's fist, in which
+ case I have no doubt that it is the work of several. Those bulky nests,
+ comprising more than fifty cells, can tell us nothing exact, as a number
+ of workers must certainly have collaborated to produce them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The walnut-sized nests are more trustworthy, for everything seems to
+ indicate that they were built by a single Bee. Here females are found in
+ the centre of the group and males at the circumference, in somewhat
+ smaller cells, thus repeating what the Mason-bee of the Pebbles has told
+ us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One clear and simple rule stands out from this collection of facts. Apart
+ from the strange exception of the Three-pronged Osmia, who mixes the sexes
+ without any order, the Bees whom I studied and probably a crowd of others
+ produce first a continuous series of females and then a continuous series
+ of males, the latter with less provisions and smaller cells. This
+ distribution of the sexes agrees with what we have long known of the
+ Hive-bee, who begins her laying with a long sequence of workers, or
+ sterile females, and ends it with a long sequence of males. The analogy
+ continues down to the capacity of the cells and the quantities of
+ provisions. The real females, the Queen-bees, have wax cells incomparably
+ more spacious than the cells of the males and receive a much larger amount
+ of food. Everything therefore demonstrates that we are here in the
+ presence of a general rule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But does this rule express the whole truth? Is there nothing beyond a
+ laying in two series? Are the Osmiae, the Chalicodomae and the rest of
+ them fatally bound by this distribution of the sexes into two distinct
+ groups, the male group following upon the female group, without any mixing
+ of the two? Is the mother absolutely powerless to make a change in this
+ arrangement, should circumstances require it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Three-pronged Osmia already shows us that the problem is far from
+ being solved. In the same bramble-stump, the two sexes occur very
+ irregularly, as though at random. Why this mixture in the series of
+ cocoons of a Bee closely related to the Horned Osmia and the Three-horned
+ Osmia, who stack theirs methodically by separate sexes in the hollow of a
+ reed? What the Bee of the brambles does cannot her kinswomen of the reeds
+ do too? Nothing, so far as I know, can explain this difference in a
+ physiological act of primary importance. The three Bees belong to the same
+ genus; they resemble one another in general outline, internal structure
+ and habits; and, with this close similarity, we suddenly find a strange
+ dissimilarity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is just one thing that might possibly arouse a suspicion of the
+ cause of this irregularity in the Three-pronged Osmia's laying. If I open
+ a bramble-stump in the winter to examine the Osmia's nest, I find it
+ impossible, in the vast majority of cases, to distinguish positively
+ between a female and a male cocoon: the difference in size is so small.
+ The cells, moreover, have the same capacity: the diameter of the cylinder
+ is the same throughout and the partitions are almost always the same
+ distance apart. If I open it in July, the victualling-period, it is
+ impossible for me to distinguish between the provisions destined for the
+ males and those destined for the females. The measurement of the column of
+ honey gives practically the same depth in all the cells. We find an equal
+ quantity of space and food for both sexes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This result makes us foresee what a direct examination of the two sexes in
+ the adult form tells us. The male does not differ materially from the
+ female in respect of size. If he is a trifle smaller, it is scarcely
+ noticeable, whereas, in the Horned Osmia and the Three-horned Osmia, the
+ male is only half or a third the size of the female, as we have seen from
+ the respective bulk of their cocoons. In the Mason-bee of the Walls there
+ is also a difference in size, though less pronounced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Three-pronged Osmia has not therefore to trouble about adjusting the
+ dimensions of the dwelling and the quantity of the food to the sex of the
+ egg which she is about to lay; the measure is the same from one end of the
+ series to the other. It does not matter if the sexes alternate without
+ order: one and all will find what they need, whatever their position in
+ the row. The two other Osmiae, with their great disparity in size between
+ the two sexes, have to be careful about the twofold consideration of board
+ and lodging. And that, I think, is why they begin with spacious cells and
+ generous rations for the homes of the females and end with narrow,
+ scantily-provisioned cells, the homes of the males. With this sequence,
+ sharply defined for the two sexes, there is less fear of mistakes which
+ might give to one what belongs to another. If this is not the explanation
+ of the facts, I see no other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The more I thought about this curious question, the more probable it
+ appeared to me that the irregular series of the Three-pronged Osmia and
+ the regular series of the other Osmiae, of the Chalicodomae and of the
+ Bees in general were all traceable to a common law. It seemed to me that
+ the arrangement in a succession first of females and then of males did not
+ account for everything. There must be something more. And I was right:
+ that arrangement in series is only a tiny fraction of the reality, which
+ is remarkable in a very different way. This is what I am going to prove by
+ experiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 4. THE MOTHER DECIDES THE SEX OF THE EGG.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I will begin with the Mason-bee of the Pebbles. (This is the same insect
+ as the Mason-bee of the Walls. Cf. "The Mason-bees": passim.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) The old nests are often used, when they are in good enough repair.
+ Early in the season the mothers quarrel fiercely over them; and, when one
+ of the Bees has taken possession of the coveted dome, she drives any
+ stranger away from it. The old house is far from being a ruin, only it is
+ perforated with as many holes as it once had occupants. The work of
+ restoration is no great matter. The heap of earth due to the destruction
+ of the lid by the outgoing tenant is taken out of the cell and flung away
+ at a distance, atom by atom. The remnants of the cocoon are also thrown
+ away, but not always, for the delicate silken wrapper sometimes adheres
+ closely to the masonry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The victualling of the renovated cell is now begun. Next comes the laying;
+ and lastly the orifice is sealed with a mortar plug. A second cell is
+ utilized in the same way, followed by a third and so on, one after the
+ other, as long as any remain unoccupied and the mother's ovaries are not
+ exhausted. Finally, the dome receives, mainly over the apertures already
+ plugged, a coat of plaster which makes the nest look like new. If she has
+ not finished her laying, the mother goes in search of other old nests to
+ complete it. Perhaps she does not decide to found a new establishment
+ except when she can find no second-hand dwellings, which mean a great
+ economy of time and labour. In short, among the countless number of nests
+ which I have collected, I find many more ancient than recent ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How shall we distinguish one from the other? The outward aspect tells you
+ nothing, owing to the great care taken by the Mason to restore the surface
+ of the old dwelling equal to new. To resist the rigours of the winter,
+ this surface must be impregnable. The mother knows that and therefore
+ repairs the dome. Inside, it is another matter: the old nest stands
+ revealed at once. There are cells whose provisions, at least a year old,
+ are intact, but dried up or musty, because the egg has never developed.
+ There are others containing a dead larva, reduced by time to a blackened,
+ curled-up cylinder. There are some whence the perfect insect was never
+ able to issue: the Chalicodoma wore herself out in trying to pierce the
+ ceiling of her chamber; her strength failed her and she perished in the
+ attempt. Others again and very many are occupied by ravagers, Leucopses
+ (Cf. "The Mason-bees": chapter 11.&mdash;Translator's Note.) and
+ Anthrax-flies, who will come out a good deal later, in July. Altogether,
+ the house is far from having every room vacant; there are nearly always a
+ considerable number occupied either by parasites that were still in the
+ egg-stage at the time when the Mason-bee was at work or by damaged
+ provisions, dried grubs or Chalicodomae in the perfect state who have died
+ without being able to effect their deliverance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Should all the rooms be available, a rare occurrence, there still remains
+ a method of distinguishing between an ancient nest and a recent one. The
+ cocoon, as I have said, adheres pretty closely to the walls; and the
+ mother does not always take away this remnant, either because she is
+ unable to do so, or because she considers the removal unnecessary. Thus
+ the base of the new cocoon is set in the bottom of the old cocoon. This
+ double wrapper points very clearly to two generations, two separate years.
+ I have even found as many as three cocoons fitting one into another at
+ their bases. Consequently, the nests of the Mason-bee of the Pebbles are
+ able to do duty for three years, if not more. Eventually they become utter
+ ruins, abandoned to the Spiders and to various smaller Bees or Wasps, who
+ take up their quarters in the crumbling rooms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we see, an old nest is hardly ever capable of containing the
+ Mason-bee's entire laying, which calls for some fifteen apartments. The
+ number of rooms at her disposal is most unequal, but always very small. It
+ is saying much when there are enough to receive about half the laying.
+ Four or five cells, sometimes two or even one: that is what the Mason
+ usually finds in a nest that is not her own work. This large reduction is
+ explained when we remember the numerous parasites that live upon the
+ unfortunate Bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, how are the sexes distributed in those layings which are necessarily
+ broken up between one old nest and another? They are distributed in such a
+ way as utterly to upset the idea of an invariable succession first of
+ females and then of males, the idea which occurs to us on examining the
+ new nests. If this rule were a constant one, we should be bound to find in
+ the old domes at one time only females, at another only males, according
+ as the laying was at its first or at its second stage. The simultaneous
+ presence of the two sexes would then correspond with the transition period
+ between one stage and the next and should be very unusual. On the
+ contrary, it is very common; and, however few cells there may be, we
+ always find both females and males in the old nests, on the sole condition
+ that the compartments have the regulation holding-capacity, a large
+ capacity for the females, a lesser for the males, as we have seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old male cells can be recognized by their position on the outer edges
+ and by their capacity, measuring on an average the same as a column of
+ sand 31 millimetres high in a glass tube 5 millimetres wide. (1.21 x.195
+ inches.&mdash;Translator's Note.) These cells contain males of the second
+ or third generation and none but males. In the old female cells, those in
+ the middle, whose capacity is measured by a similar column of sand 45
+ millimetres high (1.75 inches.&mdash;Translator's Note.), are females and
+ none but females.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This presence of both sexes at a time, even when there are but two cells
+ free, one spacious and the other small, proves in the plainest fashion
+ that the regular distribution observed in the complete nests of recent
+ production is here replaced by an irregular distribution, harmonizing with
+ the number and holding-capacity of the chambers to be stocked. The
+ Mason-bee has before her, let me suppose, only five vacant cells: two
+ larger and three smaller. The total space at her disposal would do for
+ about a third of the laying. Well, in the two large cells, she puts
+ females; in the three small cells, she puts males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we find the same sort of thing in all the old nests, we must needs
+ admit that the mother knows the sex of the egg which she is going to lay,
+ because that egg is placed in a cell of the proper capacity. We can go
+ further and admit that the mother alters the order of succession of the
+ sexes at her pleasure, because her layings, between one old nest and
+ another, are broken up into small groups of males and females according to
+ the exigencies of space in the actual nest which she happens to be
+ occupying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just now, in the new nest, we saw the Mason-bee arranging her total laying
+ into series first of females and next of males; and here she is, mistress
+ of an old nest of which she has not the power to alter the arrangement,
+ breaking up her laying into sections comprising both sexes just as
+ required by the conditions imposed upon her. She therefore decides the sex
+ of the egg at will, for, without this prerogative, she could not, in the
+ chambers of the nest which she owes to chance, deposit unerringly the sex
+ for which those chambers were originally built; and this happens however
+ small the number of chambers to be filled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the nest is new, I think I see a reason why the Mason-bee should
+ seriate her laying into females and then males. Her nest is a half-sphere.
+ That of the Mason-bee of the Shrubs is very nearly a sphere. Of all
+ shapes, the spherical shape is the strongest. Now these two nests require
+ an exceptional power of resistance. Without protection of any kind, they
+ have to brave the weather, one on its pebble, the other on its bough.
+ Their spherical configuration is therefore very practical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nest of the Mason-bee of the Walls consists of a cluster of upright
+ cells backing against one another. For the whole to take a spherical form,
+ the height of the chambers must diminish from the centre of the dome to
+ the circumference. Their elevation is the sine of the meridian arc
+ starting from the plane of the pebble. Therefore, if they are to have any
+ solidity, there must be large cells in the middle and small cells at the
+ edges. And, as the work begins with the central chambers and ends with
+ those on the circumference, the laying of the females, destined for the
+ large cells, must precede that of the males, destined for the small cells.
+ So the females come first and the males at the finish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is all very well when the mother herself founds the dwelling, when
+ she lays the first rows of bricks. But, when she is in the presence of an
+ old nest, of which she is quite unable to alter the general arrangement,
+ how is she to make use of the few vacant rooms, the large and the small
+ alike, if the sex of the egg be already irrevocably fixed? She can only do
+ so by abandoning the arrangement in two consecutive rows and accommodating
+ her laying to the varied exigencies of the home. Either she finds it
+ impossible to make an economical use of the old nest, a theory refuted by
+ the evidence, or else she determines at will the sex of the egg which she
+ is about to lay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Osmiae themselves will furnish the most conclusive evidence on the
+ latter point. We have seen that these Bees are not generally miners, who
+ themselves dig out the foundation of their cells. They make use of the old
+ structures of others, or else of natural retreats, such as hollow stems,
+ the spirals of empty shells and various hiding-places in walls, clay or
+ wood. Their work is confined to repairs to the house, such as partitions
+ and covers. There are plenty of these retreats; and the insect would
+ always find first-class ones if it thought of going any distance to look
+ for them. But the Osmia is a stay-at-home: she returns to her birth-place
+ and clings to it with a patience extremely difficult to exhaust. It is
+ here, in this little familiar corner, that she prefers to settle her
+ progeny. But then the apartments are few in number and of all shapes and
+ sizes. There are long and short ones, spacious ones and narrow. Short of
+ expatriating herself, a Spartan course, she has to use them all, from
+ first to last, for she has no choice. Guided by these considerations, I
+ embarked on the experiments which I will now describe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have said how my study, on two separate occasions, became a populous
+ hive, in which the Three-horned Osmia built her nests in the various
+ appliances which I had prepared for her. Among these appliances, tubes,
+ either of glass or reed, predominated. There were tubes of all lengths and
+ widths. In the long tubes, entire or almost entire layings, with a series
+ of females followed by a series of males, were deposited. As I have
+ already referred to this result, I will not discuss it again. The short
+ tubes were sufficiently varied in length to lodge one or other portion of
+ the total laying. Basing my calculations on the respective lengths of the
+ cocoons of the two sexes, on the thickness of the partitions and the final
+ lid, I shortened some of these to the exact dimensions required for two
+ cocoons only, of different sexes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, these short tubes, whether of glass or reed, were seized upon as
+ eagerly as the long tubes. Moreover, they yielded this splendid result:
+ their contents, only a part of the total laying, always began with female
+ and ended with male cocoons. This order was invariable; what varied was
+ the number of cells in the long tubes and the proportion between the two
+ sorts of cocoons, sometimes males predominating and sometimes females.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The experiment is of paramount importance; and it will perhaps make the
+ result clearer if I quote one instance from among a multitude of similar
+ cases. I give the preference to this particular instance because of the
+ rather exceptional fertility of the laying. An Osmia marked on the thorax
+ is watched, day by day, from the commencement to the end of her work. From
+ the 1st to the 10th of May, she occupies a glass tube in which she lodges
+ seven females followed by a male, which ends the series. From the 10th to
+ the 17th of May, she colonizes a second tube, in which she lodges first
+ three females and then three males. From the 17th to the 25th of May, a
+ third tube, with three females and then two males. On the 26th of May, a
+ fourth tube, which she abandons, probably because of its excessive width,
+ after laying one female in it. Lastly, from the 26th to the 30th of May, a
+ fifth tube, which she colonizes with two females and three males. Total:
+ twenty-five Osmiae, including seventeen females and eight males. And it
+ will not be superfluous to observe that these unfinished series do not in
+ any way correspond with periods separated by intervals of rest. The laying
+ is continuous, in so far as the variable condition of the atmosphere
+ allows. As soon as one tube is full and closed, another is occupied by the
+ Osmia without delay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tubes reduced to the exact length of two cells fulfilled my
+ expectation in the great majority of cases: the lower cell was occupied by
+ a female and the upper by a male. There were a few exceptions. More
+ discerning than I in her estimate of what was strictly necessary,
+ better-versed in the economy of space, the Osmia had found a way of
+ lodging two females where I had only seen room for one female and a male.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This experiment speaks volumes. When confronted with tubes too small to
+ receive all her family, she is in the same plight as the Mason-bee in the
+ presence of an old nest. She thereupon acts exactly as the Chalicodoma
+ does. She breaks up her laying, divides it into series as short as the
+ room at her disposal demands; and each series begins with females and ends
+ with males. This breaking up, on the one hand, into sections in all of
+ which both sexes are represented and the division, on the other hand, of
+ the entire laying into just two groups, one female, the other male, when
+ the length of the tube permits, surely provide us with ample evidence of
+ the insect's power to regulate the sex of the egg according to the
+ exigencies of space.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And besides the exigencies of space one might perhaps venture to add those
+ connected with the earlier development of the males. These burst their
+ cocoons a couple of weeks or more before the females; they are the first
+ who hasten to the sweets of the almond-tree. In order to release
+ themselves and emerge into the glad sunlight without disturbing the string
+ of cocoons wherein their sisters are still sleeping, they must occupy the
+ upper end of the row; and this, no doubt, is the reason that makes the
+ Osmia end each of her broken layings with males. Being next to the door,
+ these impatient ones will leave the home without upsetting the shells that
+ are slower in hatching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I experimented on Latreille's Osmia, using short and even very short
+ stumps of reed. All that I had to do was to lay them just beside the nests
+ of the Mason-bee of the Sheds, nests beloved by this particular Osmia.
+ Old, disused hurdles supplied me with reeds inhabited from end to end by
+ the Horned Osmia. In both cases I obtained the same results and the same
+ conclusions as with the Three-horned Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I return to the latter, nidifying under my eyes in some old nests of the
+ Mason-bee of the Walls, which I had placed within her reach, mixed up with
+ the tubes. Outside my study, I had never yet seen the Three-horned Osmia
+ adopt that domicile. This may be due to the fact that these nests are
+ isolated one by one in the fields; and the Osmia, who loves to feel
+ herself surrounded by her kin and to work in plenty of company, refuses
+ them because of this isolation. But on my table, finding them close to the
+ tubes in which the others are working, she adopts them without hesitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chambers presented by those old nests are more or less spacious
+ according to the thickness of the coat of mortar which the Chalicodoma has
+ laid over the assembled chambers. To leave her cell, the Mason-bee has to
+ perforate not only the plug, the lid built at the mouth of the cell, but
+ also the thick plaster wherewith the dome is strengthened at the end of
+ the work. The perforation results in a vestibule which gives access to the
+ chamber itself. It is this vestibule which is sometimes longer and
+ sometimes shorter, whereas the corresponding chamber is of almost constant
+ dimensions, in the case of the same sex, of course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will first consider the short vestibule, at the most large enough to
+ receive the plug with which the Osmia will close up the lodging. There is
+ then nothing at her disposal except the cell proper, a spacious apartment
+ in which one of the Osmia's females will find ample accommodation, for she
+ is much smaller than the original occupant of the chamber, no matter the
+ sex; but there is not room for two cocoons at a time, especially in view
+ of the space taken up by the intervening partition. Well, in those large,
+ well-built chambers, formerly the homes of Chalicodomae, the Osmia settles
+ females and none but females.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us now consider the long vestibule. Here, a partition is constructed,
+ encroaching slightly on the cell proper, and the residence is divided into
+ two unequal storeys, a large room below, housing a female, and a narrow
+ cabin above, containing a male.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the length of the vestibule permits, allowing for the space required
+ by the outer stopper, a third storey is built, smaller than the second;
+ and another male is lodged in this cramped corner. In this way the old
+ nest of the Mason-bee of the Pebbles is colonized, cell after cell, by a
+ single mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Osmia, as we see, is very frugal of the lodging that has fallen to her
+ share; she makes the best possible use of it, giving to the females the
+ spacious chambers of the Mason-bee and to the males the narrow vestibules,
+ subdivided into storeys when this is feasible. Economy of space is the
+ chief consideration, since her stay-at-home tastes do not allow her to
+ indulge in distant quests. She has to employ the site which chance places
+ at her disposal just as it is, now for a male and now for a female. Here
+ we see displayed, more clearly than ever, her power of deciding the sex of
+ the egg, in order to adapt it judiciously to the conditions of the
+ house-room available.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had offered at the same time to the Osmiae in my study some old nests of
+ the Mason-bee of the Shrubs, which are clay spheroids with cylindrical
+ cavities in them. These cavities are formed, as in the old nests of the
+ Mason-bee of the Pebbles, of the cell properly so-called and of the
+ exit-way which the perfect insect cut through the outer coating at the
+ time of its deliverance. Their diameter is about seven millimetres (.273
+ inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.); their depth at the centre of the heap is
+ 23 millimetres (.897 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.); and at the edge
+ averages 14 millimetres (.546 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deep central cells receive only the females of the Osmia; sometimes
+ even the two sexes together, with a partition in the middle, the female
+ occupying the lower and the male the upper storey. True, in such cases
+ economy of space is strained to the utmost, the apartments provided by the
+ Mason-bee of the Shrubs being very small as it is, despite their
+ entrance-halls. Lastly, the deeper cavities on the circumference are
+ allotted to females and the shallower to males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will add that a single mother peoples each nest and also that she
+ proceeds from cell to cell without troubling to ascertain the depth. She
+ goes from the centre to the edges, from the edges to the centre, from a
+ deep cavity to a shallow cavity and vice versa, which she would not do if
+ the sexes were to follow upon each other in a settled order. For greater
+ certainty, I numbered the cells of one nest as each of them was closed. On
+ opening them later, I was able to see that the sexes were not subjected to
+ a chronological arrangement. Females were succeeded by males and these by
+ females without its being possible for me to make out any regular
+ sequence. Only&mdash;and this is the essential point&mdash;the deep
+ cavities were allotted to the females and the shallow ones to the males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know that the Three-horned Osmia prefers to haunt the habitations of
+ the Bees who nidify in populous colonies, such as the Mason-bee of the
+ Sheds and the Hairy-footed Anthophora. Exercising the very greatest care,
+ I broke up some great lumps of earth removed from the banks inhabited by
+ the Anthophora and sent to me from Carpentras by my dear friend and pupil
+ M. Devillario. I examined them conscientiously in the quiet of my study. I
+ found the Osmia's cocoons arranged in short series, in very irregular
+ passages, the original work of which is due to the Anthophora. Touched up
+ afterwards, made larger or smaller, lengthened or shortened, intersected
+ with a network of crossings by the numerous generations that had succeeded
+ one another in the same city, they formed an inextricable labyrinth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes these corridors did not communicate with any adjoining
+ apartment; sometimes they gave access to the spacious chamber of the
+ Anthophora, which could be recognized, in spite of its age, by its oval
+ shape and its coating of glazed stucco. In the latter case, the bottom
+ cell, which once constituted, by itself, the chamber of the Anthophora,
+ was always occupied by a female Osmia. Beyond it, in the narrow corridor,
+ a male was lodged, not seldom two, or even three. Of course, clay
+ partitions, the work of the Osmia, separated the different inhabitants,
+ each of whom had his own storey, his own closed cell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the accommodation consisted of no more than a simple cylinder, with
+ no state-bedroom at the end of it&mdash;a bedroom always reserved for a
+ female&mdash;the contents varied with the diameter of the cylinder. The
+ series, of which the longest were series of four, included, with a wider
+ diameter, first one or two females, then one or two males. It also
+ happened, though rarely, that the series was reversed, that is to say, it
+ began with males and ended with females. Lastly, there were a good many
+ isolated cocoons, of one sex or the other. When the cocoon was alone and
+ occupied the Anthophora's cell, it invariably belonged to a female.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have observed the same thing in the nests of the Mason-bee of the Sheds,
+ but not so easily. The series are shorter here, because the Mason-bee does
+ not bore galleries but builds cell upon cell. The work of the whole swarm
+ thus forms a stratum of cells that grows thicker from year to year. The
+ corridors occupied by the Osmia are the holes which the Mason-bee dug in
+ order to reach daylight from the deep layers. In these short series, both
+ sexes are usually present; and, if the Mason-bee's chamber is at the end
+ of the passage, it is inhabited by a female Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We come back to what the short tubes and the old nests of the Mason-bee of
+ the Pebbles have already taught us. The Osmia who, in tubes of sufficient
+ length, divides her whole laying into a continuous sequence of females and
+ a continuous sequence of males, now breaks it up into short series in
+ which both sexes are present. She adapts her sectional layings to the
+ exigencies of a chance lodging; she always places a female in the
+ sumptuous chamber which the Mason-bee or the Anthophora occupied
+ originally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Facts even more striking are supplied by the old nests of the Masked
+ Anthophora (A. personata, ILLIG.), old nests which I have seen utilized by
+ the Horned Osmia and the Three-horned Osmia at the same time. Less
+ frequently, the same nests serve for Latreille's Osmia. Let us first
+ describe the Masked Anthophora's nests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a steep bank of sandy clay, we find a set of round, wide-open holes.
+ There are generally only a few of them, each about half an inch in
+ diameter. They are the entrance-doors leading to the Anthophora's abode,
+ doors always left open, even after the building is finished. Each of them
+ gives access to a short passage, sometimes straight, sometimes winding,
+ nearly horizontal, polished with minute care and varnished with a sort of
+ white glaze. It looks as if it had received a thin coat of whitewash. On
+ the inner surface of this passage, in the thickness of the earthy bank,
+ spacious oval niches have been excavated, communicating with the corridor
+ by means of a narrow bottle-neck, which is closed, when the work is done,
+ with a substantial mortar stopper. The Anthophora polishes the outside of
+ this stopper so well, smooths its surface so perfectly, bringing it to the
+ same level as that of the passage, is so careful to give it the white tint
+ of the rest of the wall that, when the job is finished, it becomes
+ absolutely impossible to distinguish the entrance-door corresponding with
+ each cell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cell is an oval cavity dug in the earthy mass. The wall has the same
+ polish, the same chalky whiteness as the general passage. But the
+ Anthophora does not limit herself to digging oval niches: to make her work
+ more solid, she pours over the walls of the chamber a salivary liquid
+ which not only whitens and varnishes but also penetrates to a depth of
+ some millimetres into the sandy earth, which it turns into a hard cement.
+ A similar precaution is taken with the passage; and therefore the whole is
+ a solid piece of work capable of remaining in excellent condition for
+ years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, thanks to the wall hardened by the salivary fluid, the structure
+ can be removed from its matrix by chipping it carefully away. We thus
+ obtain, at least in fragments, a serpentine tube from which hangs a single
+ or double row of oval nodules that look like large grapes drawn out
+ lengthwise. Each of these nodules is a cell, the entrance to which,
+ carefully hidden, opens into the tube or passage. When she wishes to leave
+ her cell, in the spring, the Anthophora destroys the mortar disk that
+ closes the jar and thus reaches the general corridor, which is quite open
+ to the outer air. The abandoned nest provides a series of pear-shaped
+ cavities, of which the distended part is the old cell and the contracted
+ part the exit-neck, rid of its stopper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These pear-shaped hollows form splendid lodgings, impregnable strongholds,
+ in which the Osmiae find a safe and commodious retreat for their families.
+ The Horned Osmia and the Three-horned Osmia establish themselves there at
+ the same time. Although it is a little too large for her, Latrielle's
+ Osmia also appears very well satisfied with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have examined some forty of the superb cells utilized by each of the
+ first two. The great majority are divided into two storeys by means of a
+ transversal partition. The lower storey includes the larger portion of the
+ Anthophora's cell; the upper storey includes the rest of the cell and a
+ little of the bottle-neck that surmounts it. The two-roomed dwelling is
+ closed, in the passage, by a shapeless, bulky mass of dried mud. What a
+ clumsy artist the Osmia is, compared with the Anthophora! Against the
+ exquisite work of the Anthophora, partition and plug strike a note as
+ hideously incongruous as a lump of dirt on polished marble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two apartments thus obtained are of a very unequal capacity, which at
+ once strikes the observer. I measured them with my five-millimetre tube.
+ On an average, the bottom one is represented by a column of sand 50
+ millimetres deep (1.95 inches.&mdash;Translator's Note.) and the top one
+ by a column of 15 millimetres (.585 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.). The
+ holding-capacity of the one is therefore about three times as large as
+ that of the other. The cocoons enclosed present the same disparity. The
+ bottom one is big, the top one small. Lastly, the lower one belongs to a
+ female Osmia and the upper to a male Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Occasionally the length of the bottle-neck allows of a fresh arrangement
+ and the cavity is divided into three storeys. The bottom one, which is
+ always the most spacious, contains a female; the two above, both smaller
+ than the first and one smaller than the other, contain males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us keep to the first case, which is always the most frequent. The
+ Osmia is in the presence of one of these pear-shaped hollows. It is a find
+ that must be employed to the best advantage: a prize of this sort is rare
+ and falls only to fortune's favourites. To lodge two females in it at once
+ is impossible; there is not sufficient room. To lodge two males in it
+ would be undue generosity to a sex that is entitled to but the smallest
+ consideration. Besides, the two sexes must be represented in almost equal
+ numbers. The Osmia decides upon one female, whose portion shall be the
+ better room, the lower one, which is larger, better-protected and more
+ nicely polished, and one male, whose portion shall be the upper storey, a
+ cramped attic, uneven and rugged in the part which encroaches on the
+ bottle-neck. This decision is proved by numerous undeniable facts. Both
+ Osmiae therefore can choose the sex of the egg about to be laid, seeing
+ that they are now breaking up the laying into groups of two, a female and
+ a male, as required by the conditions of the lodging.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have only once found Latreille's Osmia established in the nest of the
+ Masked Anthophora. She had occupied but a small number of cells, because
+ the others were not free, being inhabited by the Anthophora. The cells in
+ question were divided into three storeys by partitions of green mortar;
+ the lower storey was occupied by a female, the two others by males, with
+ smaller cocoons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I came to an even more remarkable example. Two Anthidia of my district, A.
+ septemdentatum, LATR., and A. bellicosum, LEP., adopt as the home of their
+ offspring the empty shells of different snails: Helix aspersa, H. algira,
+ H. nemoralis, H. caespitum. The first-named, the Common Snail, is the most
+ often used, under the stone-heaps and in the crevices of old walls. Both
+ Anthidia colonize only the second whorl of the spiral. The central part is
+ too small and remains unoccupied. Even so with the front whorl, the
+ largest, which is left completely empty, so much so that, on looking
+ through the opening, it is impossible to tell whether the shell does or
+ does not contain the Bee's nest. We have to break this last whorl if we
+ would perceive the curious nest tucked away in the spiral.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We then find first a transversal partition, formed of tiny bits of gravel
+ cemented by a putty made from resin, which is collected in fresh drops
+ from the oxycedrus and the Aleppo pine. Beyond this is a stout barricade
+ made up of rubbish of all kinds: bits of gravel, scraps of earth,
+ juniper-needles, the catkins of the conifers, small shells, dried
+ excretions of Snails. Next come a partition of pure resin, a large cocoon
+ in a roomy chamber, a second partition of pure resin and, lastly, a
+ smaller cocoon in a narrow chamber. The inequality of the two cells is the
+ necessary consequence of the shape of the shell, whose inner space gains
+ rapidly in width as the spiral gets nearer to the orifice. Thus, by the
+ mere general arrangement of the home and without any work on the Bee's
+ part beyond some slender partitions, a large room is marked out in front
+ and a much smaller room at the back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By a very remarkable exception, which I have mentioned casually elsewhere,
+ the males of the genus Anthidium are generally larger than the females;
+ and this is the case with the two species in particular that divide the
+ Snail's spiral with resin partitions. I collected some dozens of nests of
+ both species. In at least half the cases, the two sexes were present
+ together; the female, the smaller, occupied the front cell and the male,
+ the bigger, the back cell. Other cells, which were smaller or too much
+ obstructed at the back by the dried-up remains of the Mollusc, contained
+ only one cell, occupied at one time by a female and at another by a male.
+ A few, lastly, had both cells inhabited now by two males and now by two
+ females. The most frequent arrangement was the simultaneous presence of
+ both sexes, with the female in front and the male behind. The Anthidia who
+ make resin-dough and live in Snail-shells can therefore alternate the
+ sexes regularly to meet the exigencies of the spiral dwelling-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One more thing and I have done. My apparatus of reeds, fixed against the
+ walls of the garden, supplied me with a remarkable nest of the Horned
+ Osmia. The nest is established in a bit of reed 11 millimetres wide
+ inside. (.429 inch&mdash;Translator's Note.) It comprises thirteen cells
+ and occupies only half the cylinder, although the orifice is plugged with
+ the usual stopper. The laying therefore seems here to be complete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, this laying is arranged in a most singular fashion. There is first,
+ at a suitable distance from the bottom or the node of the reed, a
+ transversal partition, perpendicular to the axis of the tube. This marks
+ off a cell of unusual size, in which a female is lodged. After that, in
+ view of the excessive width of the tunnel, which is too great for a series
+ in single file, the Osmia appears to alter her mind. She therefore builds
+ a partition perpendicular to the transversal partition which she has just
+ constructed and thus divides the second storey into two rooms, a larger
+ room, in which she lodges a female, and a smaller, in which she lodges a
+ male. She next builds a second transversal partition and a second
+ longitudinal partition perpendicular to it. These once more give two
+ unequal chambers, stocked likewise, the large one with a female, the
+ smaller one with a male.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this third storey onwards, the Osmia abandons geometrical accuracy;
+ the architect seems to be a little out in her reckoning. The transversal
+ partitions become more and more slanting and the work grows irregular, but
+ always with a sprinkling of large chambers for the females and small
+ chambers for the males. Three females and two males are housed in this
+ way, the sexes alternating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time that the base of the eleventh cell is reached, the transversal
+ partition is once more almost perpendicular to the axis. Here what
+ happened at the bottom is repeated. There is no longitudinal partition;
+ and the spacious cell, covering the whole diameter of the cylinder,
+ receives a female. The edifice ends with two transversal partitions and
+ one longitudinal partition, which mark out, on the same level, chambers
+ twelve and thirteen, both of which contain males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is nothing more curious than this mixing of the two sexes, when we
+ know with what precision the Osmia separates them in a linear series,
+ where the narrow width of the cylinder demands that the cells shall be set
+ singly, one above the other. Here, the Bee is making use of a tube whose
+ diameter is not suited to her work; she is constructing a complex and
+ difficult edifice, which perhaps would not possess the necessary solidity
+ if the ceilings were too broad. The Osmia therefore supports these
+ ceilings with longitudinal partitions; and the unequal chambers resulting
+ from the introduction of these partitions receive females at one time and
+ males at another, according to their capacity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 5. PERMUTATIONS OF SEX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The sex of the egg is optional. The choice rests with the mother, who is
+ guided by considerations of space and, according to the accommodation at
+ her disposal, which is frequently fortuitous and incapable of
+ modification, places a female in this cell and a male in that, so that
+ both may have a dwelling of a size suited to their unequal development.
+ This is the unimpeachable evidence of the numerous and varied facts which
+ I have set forth. People unfamiliar with insect anatomy&mdash;the public
+ for whom I write&mdash;would probably give the following explanation of
+ this marvellous prerogative of the Bee: the mother has at her disposal a
+ certain number of eggs, some of which are irrevocably female and the
+ others irrevocably male: she is able to pick out of either group the one
+ which she wants at the actual moment; and her choice is decided by the
+ holding capacity of the cell that has to be stocked. Everything would then
+ be limited to a judicious selection from the heap of eggs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Should this idea occur to him, the reader must hasten to reject it.
+ Nothing could be more false, as the merest reference to anatomy will show.
+ The female reproductive apparatus of the Hymenoptera consists generally of
+ six ovarian tubes, something like glove-fingers, divided into bunches of
+ three and ending in a common canal, the oviduct, which carries the eggs
+ outside. Each of these glove-fingers is fairly wide at the base, but
+ tapers sharply towards the tip, which is closed. It contains, arranged in
+ a row, one after the other, like beads on a string, a certain number of
+ eggs, five or six for instance, of which the lower ones are more or less
+ developed, the middle ones half-way towards maturity, and the upper ones
+ very rudimentary. Every stage of evolution is here represented,
+ distributed regularly from bottom to top, from the verge of maturity to
+ the vague outlines of the embryo. The sheath clasps its string of ovules
+ so closely that any inversion of the order is impossible. Besides, an
+ inversion would result in a gross absurdity: the replacing of a riper egg
+ by another in an earlier stage of development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore, in each ovarian tube, in each glove-finger, the emergence of
+ the eggs occurs according to the order governing their arrangement in the
+ common sheath; and any other sequence is absolutely impossible. Moreover,
+ at the nesting period, the six ovarian sheaths, one by one and each in its
+ turn, have at their base an egg which in a very short time swells
+ enormously. Some hours or even a day before the laying, that egg by itself
+ represents or even exceeds in bulk the whole of the ovigenous apparatus.
+ This is the egg which is on the point of being laid. It is about to
+ descend into the oviduct, in its proper order, at its proper time; and the
+ mother has no power to make another take its place. It is this egg,
+ necessarily this egg and no other, that will presently be laid upon the
+ provisions, whether these be a mess of honey or a live prey; it alone is
+ ripe, it alone is at the entrance to the oviduct; none of the others,
+ since they are farther back in the row and not at the right stage of
+ development, can be substituted at this crisis. Its birth is inevitable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What will it yield, a male or a female? No lodging has been prepared, no
+ food collected for it; and yet both food and lodging have to be in keeping
+ with the sex that will proceed from it. And here is a much more puzzling
+ condition: the sex of that egg, whose advent is predestined, has to
+ correspond with the space which the mother happens to have found for a
+ cell. There is therefore no room for hesitation, strange though the
+ statement may appear: the egg, as it descends from its ovarian tube, has
+ no determined sex. It is perhaps during the few hours of its rapid
+ development at the base of its ovarian sheath, it is perhaps on its
+ passage through the oviduct that it receives, at the mother's pleasure,
+ the final impress that will produce, to match the cradle which it has to
+ fill, either a female or a male.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereupon the following question presents itself. Let us admit that, when
+ the normal conditions remain, a laying would have yielded m females and n
+ males. Then, if my conclusions are correct, it must be in the mother's
+ power, when the conditions are different, to take from the m group and
+ increase the n group to the same extent; it must be possible for her
+ laying to be represented as m-1, m-2, m-3, etc. females and by n+1, n+2,
+ n+3, etc. males, the sum of m+n remaining constant, but one of the sexes
+ being partly permuted into the other. The ultimate conclusion even cannot
+ be disregarded: we must admit a set of eggs represented by m-m, or zero,
+ females and of n+m males, one of the sexes being completely replaced by
+ the other. Conversely, it must be possible for the feminine series to be
+ augmented from the masculine series to the extent of absorbing it
+ entirely. It was to solve this question and some others connected with it
+ that I undertook, for the second time, to rear the Three-horned Osmia in
+ my study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The problem on this occasion is a more delicate one; but I am also
+ better-equipped. My apparatus consists of two small, closed packing-cases,
+ with the front side of each pierced with forty holes, in which I can
+ insert my glass tubes and keep them in a horizontal position. I thus
+ obtain for the Bees the darkness and mystery which suit their work and for
+ myself the power of withdrawing from my hive, at any time, any tube that I
+ wish, with the Osmia inside, so as to carry it to the light and follow, if
+ need be with the aid of the lens, the operations of the busy worker. My
+ investigations, however frequent and minute, in no way hinder the
+ peaceable Bee, who remains absorbed in her maternal duties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I mark a plentiful number of my guests with a variety of dots on the
+ thorax, which enables me to follow any one Osmia from the beginning to the
+ end of her laying. The tubes and their respective holes are numbered; a
+ list, always lying open on my desk, enables me to note from day to day,
+ sometimes from hour to hour, what happens in each tube and particularly
+ the actions of the Osmiae whose backs bear distinguishing marks. As soon
+ as one tube is filled, I replace it by another. Moreover, I have scattered
+ in front of either hive a few handfuls of empty Snail-shells, specially
+ chosen for the object which I have in view. Reasons which I will explain
+ later led me to prefer the shells of Helix caespitum. Each of the shells,
+ as and when stocked, received the date of the laying and the alphabetical
+ sign corresponding with the Osmia to whom it belonged. In this way, I
+ spent five or six weeks in continual observation. To succeed in an
+ enquiry, the first and foremost condition is patience. This condition I
+ fulfilled; and it was rewarded with the success which I was justified in
+ expecting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tubes employed are of two kinds. The first, which are cylindrical and
+ of the same width throughout, will be of use for confirming the facts
+ observed in the first year of my experiments in indoor rearing. The
+ others, the majority, consist of two cylinders which are of very different
+ diameters, set end to end. The front cylinder, the one which projects a
+ little way outside the hive and forms the entrance-hole, varies in width
+ between 8 and 12 millimetres. (Between.312 to .468 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) The second, the back one, contained entirely within my
+ packing-case, is closed at its far end and is 5 to 6 millimetres (.195
+ to.234 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.) in diameter. Each of the two parts
+ of the double-galleried tunnel, one narrow and one wide, measures at most
+ a decimetre (3.9 inches.&mdash;Translator's Note.) in length. I thought it
+ advisable to have these short tubes, as the Osmia is thus compelled to
+ select different lodgings, each of them being insufficient in itself to
+ accommodate the total laying. In this way I shall obtain a greater variety
+ in the distribution of the sexes. Lastly, at the mouth of each tube, which
+ projects slightly outside the case, there is a little paper tongue,
+ forming a sort of perch on which the Osmia alights on her arrival and
+ giving easy access to the house. With these facilities, the swarm
+ colonized fifty-two double-galleried tubes, thirty-seven cylindrical
+ tubes, seventy-eight Snail-shells and a few old nests of the Mason-bee of
+ the Shrubs. From this rich mine of material I will take what I want to
+ prove my case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every series, even when incomplete, begins with females and ends with
+ males. To this rule I have not yet found an exception, at least in
+ galleries of normal diameter. In each new abode, the mother busies herself
+ first of all with the more important sex. Bearing this point in mind,
+ would it be possible for me, by manoeuvring, to obtain an inversion of
+ this order and make the laying begin with males? I think so, from the
+ results already ascertained and the irresistible conclusions to be drawn
+ from them. The double-galleried tubes are installed in order to put my
+ conjectures to the proof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The back gallery, 5 or 6 millimetres (.195 to.234 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) wide, is too narrow to serve as a lodging for normally developed
+ females. If, therefore, the Osmia, who is very economical of her space,
+ wishes to occupy them, she will be obliged to establish males there. And
+ her laying must necessarily begin here, because this corner is the
+ rear-most part of the tube. The foremost gallery is wide, with an
+ entrance-door on the front of the hive. Here, finding the conditions to
+ which she is accustomed, the mother will go on with her laying in the
+ order which she prefers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us now see what has happened. Of the fifty-two double galleried tubes,
+ about a third did not have their narrow passage colonized. The Osmia
+ closed its aperture communicating with the large passage; and the latter
+ alone received the eggs. This waste of space was inevitable. The female
+ Osmiae, though nearly always larger than the males, present marked
+ differences among one another: some are bigger, some are smaller. I had to
+ adjust the width of the narrow galleries to Bees of average dimensions. It
+ may happen therefore that a gallery is too small to admit the large-sized
+ mothers to whom chance allots it. When the Osmia is unable to enter the
+ tube, obviously she will not colonize it. She then closes the entrance to
+ this space which she cannot use and does her laying beyond it, in the wide
+ tube. Had I tried to avoid these useless apparatus by choosing tubes of
+ larger calibre, I should have encountered another drawback: the
+ medium-sized mothers, finding themselves almost comfortable, would have
+ decided to lodge females there. I had to be prepared for it: as each
+ mother selected her house at will and as I was unable to interfere in her
+ choice, a narrow tube would be colonized or not, according as the Osmia
+ who owned it was or was not able to make her way inside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There remain some forty pairs of tubes with both galleries colonized. In
+ these there are two things to take into consideration. The narrow rear
+ tubes of 5 or 5 1/2 millimetres (.195 to.214 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)&mdash;and these are the most numerous&mdash;contain males and males
+ only, but in short series, between one and five. The mother is here so
+ much hampered in her work that they are rarely occupied from end to end;
+ the Osmia seems in a hurry to leave them and to go and colonize the front
+ tube, whose ample space will leave her the liberty of movement necessary
+ for her operations. The other rear tubes, the minority, whose diameter is
+ about 6 millimetres (.234 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.), contain
+ sometimes only females and sometimes females at the back and males towards
+ the opening. One can see that a tube a trifle wider and a mother slightly
+ smaller would account for this difference in the results. Nevertheless, as
+ the necessary space for a female is barely provided in this case, we see
+ that the mother avoids as far as she can a two-sex arrangement beginning
+ with males and that she adopts it only in the last extremity. Finally,
+ whatever the contents of the small tube may be, those of the large one,
+ following upon it, never vary and consist of females at the back and males
+ in front.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though incomplete, because of circumstances very difficult to control, the
+ result of the experiment is none the less very striking. Twenty-five
+ apparatus contain only males in their narrow gallery, in numbers varying
+ from a minimum of one to a maximum of five. After these comes the colony
+ of the large gallery, beginning with females and ending with males. And
+ the layings in these apparatus do not always belong to late summer or even
+ to the intermediate period: a few small tubes contain the earliest eggs of
+ the Osmiae. A couple of Osmiae, more forward than the others, set to work
+ on the 23rd of April. Both of them started their laying by placing males
+ in the narrow tubes. The meagre supply of provisions was enough in itself
+ to show the sex, which proved later to be in accordance with my
+ anticipations. We see then that, by my artifices, the whole swarm starts
+ with the converse of the normal order. This inversion is continued, at no
+ matter what period, from the beginning to the end of the operations. The
+ series which, according to rule, would begin with females now begins with
+ males. Once the larger gallery is reached, the laying is pursued in the
+ usual order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have advanced one step and that no small one: we have seen that the
+ Osmia, when circumstances require it, is capable of reversing the sequence
+ of the sexes. Would it be possible, provided that the tube were long
+ enough, to obtain a complete inversion, in which the entire series of the
+ males should occupy the narrow gallery at the back and the entire series
+ of the females the roomy gallery in front? I think not; and I will tell
+ you why.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long and narrow cylinders are by no means to the Osmia's taste, not
+ because of their narrowness but because of their length. Remember that for
+ each load of honey brought the worker is obliged to move backwards twice.
+ She enters, head first, to begin by disgorging the honey-syrup from her
+ crop. Unable to turn in a passage which she blocks entirely, she goes out
+ backwards, crawling rather than walking, a laborious performance on the
+ polished surface of the glass and a performance which, with any other
+ surface, would still be very awkward, as the wings are bound to rub
+ against the wall with their free end and are liable to get rumpled or
+ bent. She goes out backwards, reaches the outside, turns round and goes in
+ again, but this time the opposite way, so as to brush off the load of
+ pollen from her abdomen on to the heap. If the gallery is at all long,
+ this crawling backwards becomes troublesome after a time; and the Osmia
+ soon abandons a passage that is too small to allow of free movement. I
+ have said that the narrow tubes of my apparatus are, for the most part,
+ only very incompletely colonized. The Bee, after lodging a small number of
+ males in them, hastens to leave them. In the wide front gallery, she can
+ stay where she is and still be able to turn round easily for her different
+ manipulations; she will avoid those two long journeys backwards, which are
+ so exhausting and so bad for her wings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another reason no doubt prompts her not to make too great a use of the
+ narrow passage, in which she would establish males, followed by females in
+ the part where the gallery widens. The males have to leave their cells a
+ couple of weeks or more before the females. If they occupy the back of the
+ house, they will die prisoners or else they will overturn everything on
+ their way out. This risk is avoided by the order which the Osmia adopts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In my tubes with their unusual arrangement, the mother might well find the
+ dilemma perplexing: there is the narrowness of the space at her disposal
+ and there is the emergence later on. In the narrow tubes, the width is
+ insufficient for the females; on the other hand, if she lodges males
+ there, they are liable to perish, since they will be prevented from
+ issuing at the proper moment. This would perhaps explain the mother's
+ hesitation and her obstinacy in settling females in some of my apparatus
+ which looked as if they could suit none but males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A suspicion occurs to me, a suspicion aroused by my attentive examination
+ of the narrow tubes. All, whatever the number of their inmates, are
+ carefully plugged at the opening, just as separate tubes would be. It
+ might therefore be the case that the narrow gallery at the back was looked
+ upon by the Osmia not as the prolongation of the large front gallery, but
+ as an independent tube. The facility with which the worker turns as soon
+ as she reaches the wide tube, her liberty of action, which is now as great
+ as in a doorway communicating with the outer air, might well be misleading
+ and cause the Osmia to treat the narrow passage at the back as though the
+ wide passage in front did not exist. This would account for the placing of
+ the female in the large tube above the males in the small tube, an
+ arrangement contrary to her custom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will not undertake to decide whether the mother really appreciates the
+ danger of my snares, or whether she makes a mistake in considering only
+ the space at her disposal and beginning with males. At any rate, I
+ perceive in her a tendency to deviate as little as possible from the order
+ which safeguards the emergence of the two sexes. This tendency is
+ demonstrated by her repugnance to colonizing my narrow tubes with long
+ series of males. However, so far as we are concerned, it does not matter
+ much what passes at such times in the Osmia's little brain. Enough for us
+ to know that she dislikes narrow and long tubes, not because they are
+ narrow, but because they are at the same time long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, in fact, she does very well with a short tube of the same diameter.
+ Such are the cells in the old nests of the Mason-bee of the Shrubs and the
+ empty shells of the Garden Snail. With the short tube, the two
+ disadvantages of the long tube are avoided. She has very little of that
+ crawling backwards to do when she has a Snail-shell for the home of her
+ eggs and scarcely any when the home is the cell of the Mason-bee.
+ Moreover, as the stack of cocoons numbers two or three at most, the
+ deliverance will be exempt from the difficulties attached to a long
+ series. To persuade the Osmia to nidify in a single tube long enough to
+ receive the whole of her laying and at the same time narrow enough to
+ leave her only just the possibility of admittance appears to me a project
+ without the slightest chance of success: the Bee would stubbornly refuse
+ such a dwelling or would content herself with entrusting only a very small
+ portion of her eggs to it. On the other hand, with narrow but short
+ cavities, success, without being easy, seems to me at least quite
+ possible. Guided by these considerations, I embarked upon the most arduous
+ part of my problem: to obtain the complete or almost complete permutation
+ of one sex with the other; to produce a laying consisting only of males by
+ offering the mother a series of lodgings suited only to males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us in the first place consult the old nests of the Mason-bee of the
+ Shrubs. I have said that these mortar spheroids, pierced all over with
+ little cylindrical cavities, are adopted pretty eagerly by the
+ Three-horned Osmia, who colonizes them before my eyes with females in the
+ deep cells and males in the shallow cells. That is how things go when the
+ old nest remains in its natural state. With a grater, however, I scrape
+ the outside of another nest so as to reduce the depth of the cavities to
+ some ten millimetres. (About two-fifths of an inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) This leaves in each cell just room for one cocoon, surmounted by
+ the closing stopper. Of the fourteen cavities in the nests, I leave two
+ intact, measuring fifteen millimetres in depth. (.585 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) Nothing could be more striking than the result of this experiment,
+ made in the first year of my home rearing. The twelve cavities whose depth
+ had been reduced all received males; the two cavities left untouched
+ received females.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A year passes and I repeat the experiment with a nest of fifteen cells;
+ but this time all the cells are reduced to the minimum depth with the
+ grater. Well, the fifteen cells, from first to last, are occupied by
+ males. It must be quite understood that, in each case, all the offspring
+ belonged to one mother, marked with her distinguishing spot and kept in
+ sight as long as her laying lasted. He would indeed be difficult to please
+ who refused to bow before the results of these two experiments. If,
+ however, he is not yet convinced, here is something to remove his last
+ doubts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Three-horned Osmia often settles her family in old shells, especially
+ those of the Common Snail (Helix aspersa), who is so common under the
+ stone-heaps and in the crevices of the little unmortared walls that
+ support our terraces. In this species, the spiral is wide open, so that
+ the Osmia, penetrating as far down as the helical passage permits, finds,
+ immediately above the point which is too narrow to pass, the space
+ necessary for the cell of a female. This cell is succeeded by others,
+ wider still, always for females, arranged in a line in the same way as in
+ a straight tube. In the last whorl of the spiral, the diameter would be
+ too great for a single row. Then longitudinal partitions are added to the
+ transverse partitions, the whole resulting in cells of unequal dimensions
+ in which males predominate, mixed with a few females in the lower storeys.
+ The sequence of the sexes is therefore what it would be in a straight tube
+ and especially in a tube with a wide bore, where the partitioning is
+ complicated by subdivisions on the same level. A single Snail-shell
+ contains room for six or eight cells. A large, rough earthen stopper
+ finishes the nest at the entrance to the shell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a dwelling of this sort could show us nothing new, I chose for my swarm
+ the Garden Snail (Helix caespitum), whose shell, shaped like a small,
+ swollen Ammonite, widens by slow degrees, the diameter of the usable
+ portion, right up to the mouth, being hardly greater than that required by
+ a male Osmia-cocoon. Moreover, the widest part, in which a female might
+ find room, has to receive a thick stopping-plug, below which there will
+ often be a free space. Under all these conditions, the house will hardly
+ suit any but males arranged one after the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The collection of shells placed at the foot of each hive includes
+ specimens of different sizes. The smallest are 18 millimetres (.7 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) in diameter and the largest 24 millimetres (.936 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) There is room for two cocoons, or three at most, according to their
+ dimensions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now these shells were used by my visitors without any hesitation, perhaps
+ even with more eagerness than the glass tubes, whose slippery sides might
+ easily be a little annoying to the Bee. Some of them were occupied on the
+ first few days of the laying; and the Osmia who had started with a home of
+ this sort would pass next to a second Snail-shell, in the immediate
+ neighbourhood of the first, to a third, a fourth and others still, always
+ close to one another, until her ovaries were emptied. The whole family of
+ one mother would thus be lodged in Snail-shells which were duly marked
+ with the date of the laying and a description of the worker. The faithful
+ adherents of the Snail-shell were in the minority. The greater number left
+ the tubes to come to the shells and then went back from the shells to the
+ tubes. All, after filling the spiral staircase with two or three cells,
+ closed the house with a thick earthen stopper on a level with the opening.
+ It was a long and troublesome task, in which the Osmia displayed all her
+ patience as a mother and all her talents as a plasterer. There were even
+ some who, scrupulous to excess, carefully cemented the umbilicus, a hole
+ which seemed to inspire them with distrust as being able to give access to
+ the interior of the dwelling. It was a dangerous-looking cavity, which for
+ the greater safety of the family it was prudent to block up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the pupae are sufficiently matured, I proceed to examine these
+ elegant abodes. The contents fill me with joy: they fulfil my
+ anticipations to the letter. The great, the very great majority of the
+ cocoons turn out to be males; here and there, in the bigger cells, a few
+ rare females appear. The smallness of the space has almost done away with
+ the sixty-eight Snail-shells colonized. But, of this total number, I must
+ use only those series which received an entire laying and were occupied by
+ the same Osmia from the beginning to the end of the egg-season. Here are a
+ few examples, taken from among the most conclusive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the 6th of May, when she started operations, to the 25th of May, the
+ date at which her laying ceased, the Osmia occupied seven Snail-shells in
+ succession. Her family consists of fourteen cocoons, a number very near
+ the average; and, of these fourteen cocoons, twelve belong to males and
+ only two to females. These occupy the seventh and thirteenth places in
+ chronological order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another, between the 9th and 27th of May, stocked six Snail-shells with a
+ family of thirteen, including ten males and three females. The places
+ occupied by the latter in the series were numbers 3, 4 and 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A third, between the 2nd and 29th of May, colonized eleven Snail-shells, a
+ prodigious task. This industrious one was also exceedingly prolific. She
+ supplied me with a family of twenty-six, the largest which I have ever
+ obtained from one Osmia. Well, this abnormal progeny consisted of
+ twenty-five males and one female, one alone, occupying place 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no need to go on, after this magnificent example, especially as
+ the other series would all, without exception, give us the same result.
+ Two facts are immediately obvious. The Osmia is able to reverse the order
+ of her laying and to start with a more or less long series of males before
+ producing any females. In the first case, the first female appears as
+ number 7; in the third, as number 17. There is something better still; and
+ this is the proposition which I was particularly anxious to prove: the
+ female sex can be permuted with the male sex and can be permuted to the
+ point of disappearing altogether. We see this especially in the third
+ case, where the presence of a solitary female in a family of twenty-six is
+ due to the somewhat larger diameter of the corresponding Snail-shell and
+ also, no doubt, to some mistake on the mother's part, for the female
+ cocoon, in a series of two, occupies the upper storey, the one next to the
+ orifice, an arrangement which the Osmia appears to me to dislike.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This result throws so much light on one of the darkest corners of biology
+ that I must attempt to corroborate it by means of even more conclusive
+ experiments. I propose next year to give the Osmiae nothing but
+ Snail-shells for a lodging, picked out one by one, and rigorously to
+ deprive the swarm of any other retreat in which the laying could be
+ effected. Under these conditions, I ought to obtain nothing but males, or
+ nearly, for the whole swarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There would still remain the inverse permutation: to obtain only females
+ and no males, or very few. The first permutation makes the second seem
+ very probable, although I cannot as yet conceive a means of realizing it.
+ The only condition which I can regulate is the dimensions of the home.
+ When the rooms are small, the males abound and the females tend to
+ disappear. With generous quarters, the converse would not take place. I
+ should obtain females and afterwards an equal number of males, confined in
+ small cells which, in case of need, would be bounded by numerous
+ partitions. The factor of space does not enter into the question here.
+ What artifice can we then employ to provoke this second permutation? So
+ far, I can think of nothing that is worth attempting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is time to conclude. Leading a retired life, in the solitude of a
+ village, having quite enough to do with patiently and obscurely ploughing
+ my humble furrow, I know little about modern scientific views. In my young
+ days I had a passionate longing for books and found it difficult to
+ procure them; to-day, when I could almost have them if I wanted, I am
+ ceasing to wish for them. It is what usually happens as life goes on. I do
+ not therefore know what may have been done in the direction whither this
+ study of the sexes has led us. If I am stating propositions that are
+ really new or at least more comprehensive than the propositions already
+ known, my words will perhaps sound heretical. No matter: as a simple
+ translator of facts, I do not hesitate to make my statement, being fully
+ persuaded that time will turn my heresy into orthodoxy. I will therefore
+ recapitulate my conclusions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bees lay their eggs in series of first females and then males, when the
+ two sexes are of different sizes and demand an unequal quantity of
+ nourishment. When the two sexes are alike in size, the same sequence may
+ occur, but less regularly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This dual arrangement disappears when the place chosen for the nest is not
+ large enough to contain the entire laying. We then see broken layings,
+ beginning with females and ending with males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The egg, as it issues from the ovary, has not yet a fixed sex. The final
+ impress that produces the sex is given at the moment of laying or a little
+ before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So as to be able to give each larva the amount of space and food that
+ suits it according as it is male or female, the mother can choose the sex
+ of the egg which she is about to lay. To meet the conditions of the
+ building, which is often the work of another or else a natural retreat
+ that admits of little or no alteration, she lays either a male egg or a
+ female egg as she pleases. The distribution of the sexes depends upon
+ herself. Should circumstances require it, the order of the laying can be
+ reversed and begin with males; lastly, the entire laying can contain only
+ one sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same privilege is possessed by the predatory Hymenoptera, the Wasps,
+ at least by those in whom the two sexes are of a different size and
+ consequently require an amount of nourishment that is larger in the one
+ case than in the other. The mother must know the sex of the egg which she
+ is going to lay; she must be able to choose the sex of that egg so that
+ each larva may obtain its proper portion of food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Generally speaking, when the sexes are of different sizes, every insect
+ that collects food and prepares or selects a dwelling for its offspring
+ must be able to choose the sex of the egg in order to satisfy without
+ mistake the conditions imposed upon it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question remains how this optional assessment of the sexes is
+ effected. I know absolutely nothing about it. If I should ever learn
+ anything about this delicate point, I shall owe it to some happy chance
+ for which I must wait, or rather watch, patiently. Towards the end of my
+ investigations, I heard of a German theory which relates to the Hive-bee
+ and comes from Dzierzon, the apiarist. (Johann Dzierzon, author of
+ "Theorie und Praxis des neuen Bienenfreundes."&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ If I understand it aright, according to the very incomplete documents
+ which I have before me, the egg, as it issues from the ovary, is said
+ already to possess a sex, which is always the same; it is originally male;
+ and it becomes female by fertilization. The males are supposed to proceed
+ from non-fertilized eggs, the females from fertilized eggs. The Queen-bee
+ would thus lay female eggs or male eggs according as she fertilized them
+ or not while they were passing into her oviduct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Coming from Germany, this theory cannot but inspire me with profound
+ distrust. As it has been given acceptance, with rash precipitancy, in
+ standard works, I will overcome my reluctance to devoting my attention to
+ Teutonic ideas and will submit it not to the test of argument, which can
+ always be met by an opposite argument, but to the unanswerable test of
+ facts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this optional fertilization, determining the sex, the mother's
+ organism requires a seminal reservoir which distils its drop of sperm upon
+ the egg contained in the oviduct and thus gives it a feminine character,
+ or else leaves it its original character, the male character, by refusing
+ it that baptism. This reservoir exists in the Hive-bee. Do we find a
+ similar organ in the other Hymenoptera, whether honey-gatherers or
+ hunters? The anatomical treatises are either silent on this point or,
+ without further enquiry, apply to the order as a whole the data provided
+ by the Hive-bee, however much she differs from the mass of Hymenoptera
+ owing to her social habits, her sterile workers and especially her
+ tremendous fertility, extending over so long a period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I at first doubted the universal presence of this spermatic receptacle,
+ having failed to find it under my scalpel in my former investigations into
+ the anatomy of the Sphex-wasps and some other game-hunters. But this organ
+ is so delicate and so small that it very easily escapes the eye,
+ especially when our attention is not specially directed in search of it;
+ and, even when we are looking for it and it only, we do not always succeed
+ in discovering it. We have to find a globule attaining in many cases
+ hardly as much as a millimetre (About one-fiftieth of an inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) in diameter, a globule headed amidst a tangle of air-ducts and
+ fatty patches, of which it shares the colour, a dull white. Then again,
+ the merest slip of the forceps is enough to destroy it. My first
+ investigations, therefore, which concerned the reproductive apparatus as a
+ whole, might very well have allowed it to pass unperceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to know the rights of the matter once and for all, as the
+ anatomical treatises taught me nothing, I once more fixed my microscope on
+ its stand and rearranged my old dissecting-tank, an ordinary tumbler with
+ a cork disk covered with black satin. This time, not without a certain
+ strain on my eyes, which are already growing tired, I succeeded in finding
+ the said organ in the Bembex-wasps, the Halicti (Cf. Chapters 12 to 14 of
+ the present volume.&mdash;Translator's Note.), the Carpenter-bees, the
+ Bumble-bees, the Andrenae (A species of Burrowing Bees.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) and the Megachiles. (Or Leaf-cutting Bees. Cf. Chapter 8 of the
+ present volume.&mdash;Translator's Note.) I failed in the case of the
+ Osmiae, the Chalicodomae and the Anthophorae. Is the organ really absent?
+ Or was there want of skill on my part? I lean towards want of skill and
+ admit that all the game-hunting and honey-gathering Hymenoptera possess a
+ seminal receptacle, which can be recognized by its contents, a quantity of
+ spiral spermatozoids whirling and twisting on the slide of the microscope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This organ once accepted, the German theory becomes applicable to all the
+ Bees and all the Wasps. When copulating, the female receives the seminal
+ fluid and holds it stored in her receptacle. From that moment, the two
+ procreating elements are present in the mother at one and the same time:
+ the female element, the ovule; and the male element, the spermatozoid. At
+ the egg-layer's will, the receptacle bestows a tiny drop of its contents
+ upon the matured ovule, when it reaches the oviduct, and you have a female
+ egg; or else it withholds its spermatozoids and you have an egg that
+ remains male, as it was at first. I readily admit it: the theory is very
+ simple, lucid and seductive. But is it correct? That is another question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One might begin by reproaching it with making a singular exception to one
+ of the most general rules. Which of us, casting his eyes over the whole
+ zoological progression, would dare to assert that the egg is originally
+ male and that it becomes female by fertilization? Do not the two sexes
+ both call for the assistance of the fertilizing element? If there be one
+ undoubted truth, it is certainly that. We are, it is true, told very
+ curious things about the Hive-bee. I will not discuss them: this Bee
+ stands too far outside the ordinary limits; and then the facts asserted
+ are far from being accepted by everybody. But the non-social Bees and the
+ predatory insects have nothing special about their laying. Then why should
+ they escape the common rule, which requires that every living creature,
+ male as well as female, should come from a fertilized ovule? In its most
+ solemn act, that of procreation, life is one and uniform; what it does
+ here it does there and there and everywhere. What! The sporule of a scrap
+ of moss requires an antherozoid before it is fit to germinate; and the
+ ovule of a Scolia, that proud huntress, can dispense with the equivalent
+ in order to hatch and produce a male? These new-fangled theories seem to
+ me to have very little value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One might also bring forward the case of the Three-pronged Osmia, who
+ distributes the two sexes without any order in the hollow of her reed.
+ What singular whim is the mother obeying when, without decisive motive,
+ she opens her seminal phial at haphazard to anoint a female egg, or else
+ keeps it closed, also at haphazard, to allow a male egg to pass
+ unfertilized? I could imagine impregnation being given or withheld for
+ periods of some duration; but I cannot understand impregnation and
+ non-impregnation following upon each other anyhow, in any sort of order,
+ or rather with no order it all. The mother has just fertilized an egg. Why
+ should she refuse to fertilize the next, when neither the provisions nor
+ the lodgings differ in the smallest respect from the previous provisions
+ and lodgings? These capricious alternations, so unreasonable and so
+ exceedingly erratic, are scarcely appropriate to an act of such
+ importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I promised not to argue and I find myself arguing. My reasoning is too
+ fine for dull wits. I will pass on and come to the brutal fact, the real
+ sledge-hammer blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards the end of the Bee's operations, in the first week of June, the
+ last acts of the Three-horned Osmia become so exceptionally interesting
+ that I made her the object of redoubled observation. The swarm at this
+ time is greatly reduced in numbers. I have still some thirty laggards, who
+ continue very busy, though their work is in vain. I see some very
+ conscientiously stopping up the entrance to a tube or a Snail-shell in
+ which they have laid nothing at all. Others are closing the home after
+ only building a few partitions, or even mere attempts at partitions. Some
+ are placing at the back of a new gallery a pinch of pollen which will
+ benefit nobody and then shutting up the house with an earthen stopper as
+ thick, as carefully made as though the safety of a family depended on it.
+ Born a worker, the Osmia must die working. When her ovaries are exhausted,
+ she spends the remainder of her strength on useless works: partitions,
+ plugs, pollen-heaps, all destined to be left unemployed. The little animal
+ machine cannot bring itself to be inactive even when there is nothing more
+ to be done. It goes on working so that its last vibrations of energy may
+ be used up in fruitless labour. I commend these aberrations to the staunch
+ supporters of reasoning-powers in the animal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before coming to these useless tasks, my laggards have laid their last
+ eggs, of which I know the exact cells, the exact dates. These eggs, as far
+ as the microscopes can tell, differ in no respect from the others, the
+ older ones. They have the same dimensions, the same shape, the same
+ glossiness, the same look of freshness. Nor are their provisions in any
+ way peculiar, being very well suited to the males, who conclude the
+ laying. And yet these last eggs do not hatch: they wrinkle, fade and
+ wither on the pile of food. In one case, I count three or four sterile
+ eggs among the last lot laid; in another, I find two or only one.
+ Elsewhere in the swarm, fertile eggs have been laid right up to the end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those sterile eggs, stricken with death at the moment of their birth, are
+ too numerous to be ignored. Why do they not hatch like the other eggs,
+ which outwardly they resemble in every respect? They have received the
+ same attention from the mother and the same portion of food. The searching
+ microscope shows me nothing in them to explain the fatal ending.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the unprejudiced mind, the answer is obvious. Those eggs do not hatch
+ because they have not been fertilized. Any animal or vegetable egg that
+ had not received the life-giving impregnation would perish in the same
+ way. No other answer is possible. It is no use talking of the distant
+ period of the laying: eggs of the same period laid by other mothers, eggs
+ of the same date and likewise the final ones of a laying, are perfectly
+ fertile. Once more, they do not hatch because they were not fertilized.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And why were they not fertilized? Because the seminal receptacle, so tiny,
+ so difficult to see that it sometimes escaped me despite all my scrutiny,
+ had exhausted its contents. The mothers in whom this receptacle retained a
+ remnant of sperm to the end had their last eggs as fertile as the first;
+ the others, whose seminal reservoir was exhausted too soon, had their
+ last-born stricken with death. All this seems to me as clear as daylight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the unfertilized eggs perish without hatching, those which hatch and
+ produce males are therefore fertilized; and the German theory falls to the
+ ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then what explanation shall I give of the wonderful facts which I have set
+ forth? Why, none, absolutely none. I do not explain facts, I relate them.
+ Growing daily more sceptical of the interpretations suggested to me and
+ more hesitating as to those which I may have to suggest myself, the more I
+ observe and experiment, the more clearly I see rising out of the black
+ mists of possibility an enormous note of interrogation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dear insects, my study of you has sustained me and continues to sustain me
+ in my heaviest trials. I must take leave of you for to-day. The ranks are
+ thinning around me and the long hopes have fled. Shall I be able to speak
+ to you again? (This is the closing paragraph of Volume 3 of the "Souvenirs
+ entomologiques," of which the author has lived to publish seven more
+ volumes, containing over 2,500 pages and nearly 850,000 words.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 6. INSTINCT AND DISCERNMENT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Pelopaeus (A Mason-wasp forming the subject of essays which have not
+ yet been published in English.&mdash;Translator's Note.) gives us a very
+ poor idea of her intellect when she plasters up the spot in the wall where
+ the nest which I have removed used to stand, when she persists in cramming
+ her cell with Spiders for the benefit of an egg no longer there and when
+ she dutifully closes a cell which my forceps has left empty, extracting
+ alike germ and provisions. The Mason-bees (Cf. "The Mason-bees": chapter
+ 7.&mdash;Translator's Note.), the caterpillar of the Great Peacock Moth
+ (Cf. "Social Life in the Insect World" by J.H. Fabre, translated by
+ Bernard Miall: chapter 14.&mdash;Translator's Note.) and many others, when
+ subjected to similar tests, are guilty of the same illogical behaviour:
+ they continue, in the normal order, their series of industrious actions,
+ though an accident has now rendered them all useless. Just like millstones
+ unable to cease revolving though there be no corn left to grind, let them
+ once be given the compelling power and they will continue to perform their
+ task despite its futility. Are they then machines? Far be it from me to
+ think anything so foolish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible to make definite progress on the shifting sands of
+ contradictory facts: each step in our interpretation may find us embogged.
+ And yet these facts speak so loudly that I do not hesitate to translate
+ their evidence as I understand it. In insect mentality, we have to
+ distinguish two very different domains. One of these is INSTINCT properly
+ so called, the unconscious impulse that presides over the most wonderful
+ part of what the creature achieves. Where experience and imitation are of
+ absolutely no avail, instinct lays down its inflexible law. It is instinct
+ and instinct alone that makes the mother build for a family which she will
+ never see; that counsels the storing of provisions for the unknown
+ offspring; that directs the sting towards the nerve-centres of the prey
+ and skilfully paralyses it, so that the game may keep good; that
+ instigates, in fine, a host of actions wherein shrewd reason and
+ consummate science would have their part, were the creature acting through
+ discernment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This faculty is perfect of its kind from the outset, otherwise the insect
+ would have no posterity. Time adds nothing to it and takes nothing from
+ it. Such as it was for a definite species, such it is to-day and such it
+ will remain, perhaps the most settled zoological characteristic of them
+ all. It is not free nor conscious in its practice, any more than is the
+ faculty of the stomach for digestion or that of the heart for pulsation.
+ The phases of its operations are predetermined, necessarily entailed one
+ by another; they suggest a system of clock-work wherein one wheel set in
+ motion brings about the movement of the next. This is the mechanical side
+ of the insect, the fatum, the only thing which is able to explain the
+ monstrous illogicality of a Pelopaeus when misled by my artifices. Is the
+ Lamb when it first grips the teat a free and conscious agent, capable of
+ improvement in its difficult art of taking nourishment? The insect is no
+ more capable of improvement in its art, more difficult still, of giving
+ nourishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, with its hide-bound science ignorant of itself, pure insect, if it
+ stood alone, would leave the insect unarmed in the perpetual conflict of
+ circumstances. No two moments in time are identical; though the background
+ remain the same, the details change; the unexpected rises on every side.
+ In this bewildering confusion, a guide is needed to seek, accept, refuse
+ and select; to show preference for this and indifference to that; to turn
+ to account, in short, anything useful that occasion may offer. This guide
+ the insect undoubtedly possesses, to a very manifest degree. It is the
+ second province of its mentality. Here it is conscious and capable of
+ improvement by experience. I dare not speak of this rudimentary faculty as
+ intelligence, which is too exalted a title: I will call it DISCERNMENT.
+ The insect, in exercising its highest gifts, discerns, differentiates
+ between one thing and another, within the sphere of its business, of
+ course; and that is about all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As long as we confound acts of pure instinct and acts of discernment under
+ the same head, we shall fall back into those endless discussions which
+ embitter controversy without bringing us one step nearer to the solution
+ of the problem. Is the insect conscious of what it does? Yes and no. No,
+ if its action is in the province of instinct; yes, if the action is in
+ that of discernment. Are the habits of an insect capable of modification?
+ No, decidedly not, if the habit in question belongs to the province of
+ instinct; yes, if it belongs to that of discernment. Let us state this
+ fundamental distinction more precisely by the aid of a few examples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pelopaeus builds her cells with earth already softened, with mud. Here
+ we have instinct, the unalterable characteristic of the worker. She has
+ always built in this way and always will. The passing ages will never
+ teach her, neither the struggle for life nor the law of selection will
+ ever induce her to imitate the Mason-bee and collect dry dust for her
+ mortar. This mud nest needs a shelter against the rain. The hiding-place
+ under a stone suffices at first. But should she find something better, the
+ potter takes possession of that something better and instals herself in
+ the home of man. (The Pelopaeus builds in the fire-places of houses.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) There we have discernment, the source of some sort of capacity for
+ improvement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pelopaeus supplies her larvae with provisions in the form of Spiders.
+ There you have instinct. The climate, the longitude or latitude, the
+ changing seasons, the abundance or scarcity of game introduce no
+ modification into this diet, though the larva shows itself satisfied with
+ other fare provided by myself. Its forebears were brought up on Spiders;
+ their descendants consumed similar food; and their posterity again will
+ know no other. Not a single circumstance, however favourable, will ever
+ persuade the Pelopaeus that young Crickets, for instance, are as good as
+ Spiders and that her family would accept them gladly. Instinct binds her
+ down to the national diet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, should the Epeira (The Weaving or Garden Spider. Cf. "The Life of the
+ Spider" by J. Henri Fabre translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos;
+ chapters 9 to 14 and appendix.&mdash;Translator's Note.), the favourite
+ prey, be lacking, must the Pelopaeus therefore give up foraging? She will
+ stock her warehouses all the same, because any Spider suits her. There you
+ have discernment, whose elasticity makes up, in certain circumstances, for
+ the too-great rigidity of instinct. Amid the innumerable variety of game,
+ the huntress is able to discern between what is Spider and what is not;
+ and, in this way, she is always prepared to supply her family, without
+ quitting the domain of her instinct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hairy Ammophila gives her larva a single caterpillar, a large one,
+ paralysed by as many pricks of her sting as it has nervous centres in its
+ thorax and abdomen. Her surgical skill in subduing the monster is instinct
+ displayed in a form which makes short work of any inclination to see in it
+ an acquired habit. In an art that can leave no one to practise it in the
+ future unless that one be perfect at the outset, of what avail are happy
+ chances, atavistic tendencies, the mellowing hand of time? But the grey
+ caterpillar, sacrificed one day, may be succeeded on another day by a
+ green, yellow or striped caterpillar. There you have discernment, which is
+ quite capable of recognizing the regulation prey under very diverse garbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Megachiles build their honey-jars with disks cut out of leaves;
+ certain Anthidia make felted cotton wallets; others fashion pots out of
+ resin. There you have instinct. Will any rash mind ever conceive the
+ singular idea that the Leaf-cutter might very well have started working in
+ cotton, that the cotton-wool-worker once thought or will one day think of
+ cutting disks out of the leaves of the lilac- and the rose-tree, that the
+ resin-kneader began with clay? Who would dare to indulge in any such
+ theories? Each Bee has her art, her medium, to which she strictly confines
+ herself. The first has her leaves; the second her wadding; the third her
+ resin. None of these guilds has ever changed trades with another; and none
+ ever will. There you have instinct, keeping the workers to their
+ specialities. There are no innovations in their workshops, no recipes
+ resulting from experiment, no ingenious devices, no progress from
+ indifferent to good, from good to excellent. To-day's method is the
+ facsimile of yesterday's; and to-morrow will know no other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, though the manufacturing-process is invariable, the raw material is
+ subject to change. The plant that supplies the cotton differs in species
+ according to the locality; the bush out of whose leaves the pieces will be
+ cut is not the same in the various fields of operation; the tree that
+ provides the resinous putty may be a pine, a cypress, a juniper, a cedar
+ or a spruce, all very different in appearance. What will guide the insect
+ in its gleaning? Discernment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These, I think, are sufficient details of the fundamental distinction to
+ be drawn in the insect's mentality; the distinction, that is, between
+ instinct and discernment. If people confuse these two provinces, as they
+ nearly always do, any understanding becomes impossible; the last glimmer
+ of light disappears behind the clouds of interminable discussions. From an
+ industrial point of view, let us look upon the insect as a worker
+ thoroughly versed from birth in a craft whose essential principles never
+ vary; let us grant that unconscious worker a gleam of intelligence which
+ will permit it to extricate itself from the inevitable conflict of
+ attendant circumstances; and I think that we shall have come as near to
+ the truth as the state of our knowledge will allow for the moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus assigned a due share both to instinct and the aberrations of
+ instinct when the course of its different phases is disturbed, let us see
+ what discernment is able to do in the selection of a site for the nest and
+ materials for building it; and, leaving the Pelopaeus, upon whom it is
+ useless to dwell any longer, let us consider other examples, picked from
+ among those richest in variations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mason-bee of the Sheds (Chalicodoma rufitarsis, PEREZ) well deserves
+ the name which I have felt justified in giving her from her habits: she
+ settles in numerous colonies in our sheds, on the lower surface of the
+ tiles, where she builds huge nests which endanger the solidity of the
+ roof. Nowhere does the insect display a greater zeal for work than in one
+ of these colossal cities, an estate which is constantly increasing as it
+ passes down from one generation to another; nowhere does it find a better
+ workshop for the exercise of its industry. Here it has plenty of room: a
+ quiet resting-place, sheltered from damp and from excess of heat or cold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the spacious domain under the tiles is not within the reach of all:
+ sheds with free access and the proper sunny aspect are pretty rare. These
+ sites fall only to the favoured of fortune. Where will the others take up
+ their quarters? More or less everywhere. Without leaving the house in
+ which I live, I can enumerate stone, wood, glass, metal, paint and mortar
+ as forming the foundation of the nests. The green-house with its furnace
+ heat in the summer and its bright light, equalling that outside, is fairly
+ well-frequented. The Mason-bee hardly ever fails to build there each year,
+ in squads of a few dozen apiece, now on the glass panes, now on the iron
+ bars of the framework. Other little swarms settle in the window
+ embrasures, under the projecting ledge of the front door or in the cranny
+ between the wall and an open shutter. Others again, being perhaps of a
+ morose disposition, flee society and prefer to work in solitude, one in
+ the inside of a lock or of a pipe intended to carry the rain-water from
+ the leads; another in the mouldings of the doors and windows or in the
+ crude ornamentation of the stone-work. In short, the house is made use of
+ all round, provided that the shelter be an out-of-door one; for observe
+ that the enterprising invader, unlike the Pelopaeus, never penetrates
+ inside our dwellings. The case of the conservatory is an exception more
+ apparent than real: the glass building, standing wide open throughout the
+ summer, is to the Mason-bee but a shed a little lighter than the others.
+ There is nothing here to arouse the distrust with which anything indoors
+ or shut up inspires her. To build on the threshold of an outer door, or to
+ usurp its lock, a hiding-place to her fancy, is all that she allows
+ herself; to go any farther is an adventure repugnant to her taste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lastly, in the case of all these dwellings, the Mason-bee is man's free
+ tenant; her industry makes use of the products of our own industry. Can
+ she have no other establishments? She has, beyond a doubt; she possesses
+ some constructed on the ancient plan. On a stone the size of a man's fist,
+ protected by the shelter of a hedge, sometimes even on a pebble in the
+ open air, I see her building now groups of cells as large as a walnut, now
+ domes emulating in size, shape and solidity those of her rival, the
+ Mason-bee of the Walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stone support is the most frequent, though not the only one. I have
+ found nests, but sparsely inhabited it is true, on the trunks of trees, in
+ the seams of the rough bark of oaks. Among those whose support was a
+ living plant, I will mention two that stand out above all the others. The
+ first was built in the lobe of a torch-thistle as thick as my leg; the
+ second rested on a stalk of the opuntia, the Indian fig. Had the fierce
+ armour of these two stout cactuses attracted the attention of the insect,
+ which looked upon their tufts of spikes as furnishing a system of defence
+ for its nest? Perhaps so. In any case, the attempt was not imitated; I
+ never saw another installation of the kind. There is one definite
+ conclusion to be drawn from my two discoveries. Despite the oddity of
+ their structure, which is unparalleled among the local flora, the two
+ American importations did not compel the insect to go through an
+ apprenticeship of groping and hesitation. The one which found itself in
+ the presence of those novel growths, and which was perhaps the first of
+ its race to do so, took possession of their lobes and stalks just as it
+ would have done of a familiar site. From the start, the fleshy plants from
+ the New World suited it as well as the trunk of a native tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mason-bee of the Pebbles (Chalicodoma parietina) has none of this
+ elasticity in the choice of a site. In her case, the smooth stone of the
+ parched uplands is the almost invariable foundation of her structures.
+ Elsewhere, under a less clement sky, she prefers the support of a wall,
+ which protects the nest against the prolonged snows. Lastly, the Mason-bee
+ of the Shrubs (Chalicodoma rufescens, PEREZ) fixes her ball of clay to a
+ twig of any ligneous plant, from the thyme, the rock-rose and the heath to
+ the oak, the elm and the pine. The list of the sites that suit her would
+ almost form a complete catalogue of the ligneous flora.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The variety of places wherein the insect instals itself, so eloquent of
+ the part played by discernment in their selection, becomes still more
+ remarkable when it is accompanied by a corresponding variety in the
+ architecture of the cells. This is more particularly the case with the
+ Three-horned Osmia, who, as she uses clayey materials very easily affected
+ by the rain, requires, like the Pelopaeus, a dry shelter for her cells, a
+ shelter which she finds ready-made and uses just as it is, after a few
+ touches by way of sweeping and cleansing. The homes which I see her adopt
+ are especially the shells of Snails that have died under the stone-heaps
+ and in the low, unmortared walls which support the cultivated earth of the
+ hills in shelves or terraces. The use of Snail-shells is accompanied by
+ the no less active use of the old cells of both the Mason-bee of the Sheds
+ and of certain Anthophorae (A. pilipes, A. parietina and A. personata).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must not forget the reed, which is highly appreciated when&mdash;a rare
+ find&mdash;it appears under the requisite conditions. In its natural
+ state, the plant with the mighty hollow cylinders is of no possible use to
+ the Osmia, who knows nothing of the art of perforating a woody wall. The
+ gallery of an internode has to be wide open before the insect can take
+ possession of it. Also, the clean-cut stump must be horizontal, otherwise
+ the rain would soften the fragile edifice of clay and soon lay it low;
+ also, the stump must not be lying on the ground and must be kept at some
+ distance from the dampness of the soil. We see therefore that, without the
+ intervention of man, involuntary in the vast majority of cases and
+ deliberate only on the experimenter's part, the Osmia would hardly ever
+ find a reed-stump suited to the installation of her family. It is to her a
+ casual acquisition, a home unknown to her race before men took it into
+ their heads to cut reeds and make them into hurdles for drying figs in the
+ sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How did the work of man's pruning-knife bring about the abandonment of the
+ natural lodging? How was the spiral staircase of the Snail-shell replaced
+ by the cylindrical gallery of the reed? Was the change from one kind of
+ house to another effected by gradual transitions, by attempts made,
+ abandoned, resumed, becoming more and more definite in their results as
+ generation succeeded generation? Or did the Osmia, finding the cut reed
+ that answered her requirements, instal herself there straightway, scorning
+ her ancient dwelling, the Snail-shell? These questions called for a reply;
+ and they have received one. Let us describe how things happened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Near Serignan are some great quarries of coarse limestone, characteristic
+ of the miocene formation of the Rhone valley. These have been worked for
+ many generations. The ancient public buildings of Orange, notably the
+ colossal frontage of the theatre whither all the intellectual world once
+ flocked to hear Sophocles' "Oedipus Tyrannus," derive most of their
+ material from these quarries. Other evidence confirms what the similarity
+ of the hewn stone tells us. Among the rubbish that fills up the spaces
+ between the tiers of seats, they occasionally discover the Marseilles
+ obol, a bit of silver stamped with the four-spoked wheel, or a few bronze
+ coins bearing the effigy of Augustus or Tiberius. Scattered also here and
+ there among the monuments of antiquity are heaps of refuse, accumulations
+ of broken stones in which various Hymenoptera, including the Three-horned
+ Osmia in particular, take possession of the dead Snail-shell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The quarries form part of an extensive plateau which is so arid as to be
+ nearly deserted. In these conditions, the Osmia, at all times faithful to
+ her birth-place, has little or no need to emigrate from her heap of stones
+ and leave the shell for another dwelling which she would have to go and
+ seek at a distance. Since there are heaps of stone there, she probably has
+ no other dwelling than the Snail-shell. Nothing tells us that the
+ present-day generations are not descended in the direct line from the
+ generations contemporary with the quarryman who lost his as or his obol at
+ this spot. All the circumstances seem to point to it: the Osmia of the
+ quarries is an inveterate user of Snail-shells; so far as heredity is
+ concerned, she knows nothing whatever of reeds. Well, we must place her in
+ the presence of these new lodgings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I collect during the winter about two dozen well-stocked Snail-shells and
+ instal them in a quiet corner of my study, as I did at the time of my
+ enquiries into the distribution of the sexes. The little hive with its
+ front pierced with forty holes has bits of reed fitted to it. At the foot
+ of the five rows of cylinders I place the inhabited shells and with these
+ I mix a few small stones, the better to imitate the natural conditions. I
+ add an assortment of empty Snail-shells, after carefully cleaning the
+ interior so as to make the Osmia's stay more pleasant. When the time comes
+ for nest-building, the stay-at-home insect will have, close beside the
+ house of its birth, a choice of two habitations: the cylinder, a novelty
+ unknown to its race; and the spiral staircase, the ancient ancestral home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nests were finished at the end of May and the Osmiae began to answer
+ my list of questions. Some, the great majority, settled exclusively in the
+ reeds; the others remained faithful to the Snail-shell or else entrusted
+ their eggs partly to the spirals and partly to the cylinders. With the
+ first, who were the pioneers of cylindrical architecture, there was no
+ hesitation that I could perceive: after exploring the stump of reed for a
+ time and recognizing it as serviceable, the insect instals itself there
+ and, an expert from the first touch, without apprenticeship, without
+ groping, without any tendencies bequeathed by the long practice of its
+ predecessors, builds its straight row of cells on a very different plan
+ from that demanded by the spiral cavity of the shell which increases in
+ size as it goes on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The slow school of the ages, the gradual acquisitions of the past, the
+ legacies of heredity count for nothing therefore in the Osmia's education.
+ Without any novitiate on its own part or that of its forebears, the insect
+ is versed straight away in the calling which it has to pursue; it
+ possesses, inseparable from its nature, the qualities demanded by its
+ craft: some which are invariable and belong to the domain of instinct;
+ others, flexible, belonging to the province of discernment. To divide a
+ free lodging into chambers by means of mud partitions; to fill those
+ chambers with a heap of pollen-flour, with a few sups of honey in the
+ central part where the egg is to lie; in short, to prepare board and
+ lodging for the unknown, for a family which the mothers have never seen in
+ the past and will never see in the future: this, in its essential
+ features, is the function of the Osmia's instinct. Here, everything is
+ harmoniously, inflexibly, permanently preordained; the insect has but to
+ follow its blind impulse to attain the goal. But the free lodging offered
+ by chance varies exceedingly in hygienic conditions, in shape and in
+ capacity. Instinct, which does not choose, which does not contrive, would,
+ if it were alone, leave the insect's existence in peril. To help her out
+ of her predicament, in these complex circumstances, the Osmia possesses
+ her little stock of discernment, which distinguishes between the dry and
+ the wet, the solid and the fragile, the sheltered and the exposed; which
+ recognizes the worth or the worthlessness of a site and knows how to
+ sprinkle it with cells according to the size and shape of the space at
+ disposal. Here, slight industrial variations are necessary and inevitable;
+ and the insect excels in them without any apprenticeship, as the
+ experiment with the native Osmia of the quarries has just proved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Animal resources have a certain elasticity, within narrow limits. What we
+ learn from the animals' industry at a given moment is not always the full
+ measure of their skill. They possess latent powers held in reserve for
+ certain emergencies. Long generations can succeed one another without
+ employing them; but, should some circumstance require it, suddenly those
+ powers burst forth, free of any previous attempts, even as the spark
+ potentially contained in the flint flashes forth independently of all
+ preceding gleams. Could one who knew nothing of the Sparrow but her nest
+ under the eaves suspect the ball-shaped nest at the top of a tree? Would
+ one who knew nothing of the Osmia save her home in the Snail-shell expect
+ to see her accept as her dwelling a stump of reed, a paper funnel, a glass
+ tube? My neighbour the Sparrow, impulsively taking it into her head to
+ leave the roof for the plane-tree, the Osmia of the quarries, rejecting
+ her natal cabin, the spiral of the shell, for my cylinder, alike show us
+ how sudden and spontaneous are the industrial variations of animals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 7. ECONOMY OF ENERGY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ What stimulus does the insect obey when it employs the reserve powers that
+ slumber in its race? Of what use are its industrial variations? The Osmia
+ will yield us her secret with no great difficulty. Let us examine her work
+ in a cylindrical habitation. I have described in full detail, in the
+ foregoing pages, the structure of her nests when the dwelling adopted is a
+ reed-stump or any other cylinder; and I will content myself here with
+ recapitulating the essential features of that nest-building.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must first distinguish three classes of reeds according to their
+ diameter: the small, the medium-sized and the large. I call small those
+ whose narrow width just allows the Osmia to go about her household duties
+ without discomfort. She must be able to turn where she stands in order to
+ brush her abdomen and rub off its load of pollen, after disgorging the
+ honey in the centre of the heap of flour already collected. If the width
+ of the tube does not admit of this operation, if the insect is obliged to
+ go out and then come in again backwards in order to place itself in a
+ favourable posture for the discharge of the pollen, then the reed is too
+ narrow and the Osmia is rather reluctant to accept it. The middle-sized
+ reeds and a fortiori the large ones leave the victualler entire liberty of
+ action; but the former do not exceed the width of a cell, a width agreeing
+ with the bulk of the future cocoon, whereas the latter, with their
+ excessive diameter, require more than one chamber on the same floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When free to choose, the Osmia settles by preference in the small reeds.
+ Here, the work of building is reduced to its simplest expression and
+ consists in dividing the tube by means of earthen partitions into a
+ straight row of cells. Against the partition forming the back wall of the
+ preceding cell the mother places first a heap of honey and pollen; next,
+ when the portion is seen to be enough, she lays an egg in the centre of
+ it. Then and then only she resumes her plasterer's work and marks out the
+ length of the new cell with a mud partition. This partition in its turn
+ serves as the rear-wall of another chamber, which is first victualled and
+ then closed; and so on until the cylinder is sufficiently colonized and
+ receives a thick terminal stopper at its orifice. In a word, the chief
+ characteristic of this method of nest-building, the roughest of all, is
+ that the partition in front is not undertaken so long as the victualling
+ is still incomplete, or, in other words, that the provisions and the egg
+ are deposited before the Bee sets to work on the partition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first sight, this latter detail hardly deserves attention: is it not
+ right to fill the pot before we put a lid on? The Osmia who owns a
+ medium-sized reed is not at all of this opinion; and other plasterers
+ share her views, as we shall see when we watch the Odynerus building her
+ nest. (A genus of Mason-wasps, the essays on which have not yet been
+ translated into English.&mdash;Translator's Note.) Here we have an
+ excellent illustration of one of those latent powers held in reserve for
+ exceptional occasions and suddenly brought into play, although often very
+ far removed from the insect's regular methods. If the reed, without being
+ of inordinate width from the point of view of the cocoon, is nevertheless
+ too spacious to afford the Bee a suitable purchase against the wall at the
+ moment when she is disgorging honey and brushing off her load of pollen;
+ the Osmia altogether changes the order of her work; she sets up the
+ partition first and then does the victualling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All round the inside of the tube she places a ring of mud, which, as the
+ result of her constant visits to the mortar, ends by becoming a complete
+ diaphragm minus an orifice at the side, a sort of round dog-hole, just
+ large enough for the insect to pass through. When the cell is thus marked
+ out and almost wholly closed, the Osmia attends to the storing of her
+ provisions and the laying of her eggs. Steadying herself against the
+ margin of the hole at one time with her fore-legs and at another with her
+ hind-legs, she is able to empty her crop and to brush her abdomen; by
+ pressing against it, she obtains a foothold for her little efforts in
+ these various operations. When the tube was narrow, the outer wall
+ supplied this foothold and the earthen partition was postponed until the
+ heap of provisions was completed and surmounted by the egg; but in the
+ present case the passage is too wide and would leave the insect
+ floundering helplessly in space, so the partition with its serving-hatch
+ takes precedence of the victuals. This method is a little more expensive
+ than the other, first in materials, because of the diameter of the reed,
+ and secondly in time, if only because of the dog-hole, a delicate piece of
+ mortar-work which is too soft at first and cannot be used until it has
+ dried and become harder. Therefore the Osmia, who is sparing of her time
+ and strength, accepts medium-sized reeds only when there are no small ones
+ available.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The large tubes she will use only in grave emergencies and I am unable to
+ state exactly what these exceptional circumstances are. Perhaps she
+ decides to make use of those roomy dwellings when the eggs have to be laid
+ at once and there is no other shelter in the neighbourhood. While my
+ cylinder-hives gave me plenty of well-filled reeds of the first and second
+ class, they provided me with but half-a-dozen at most of the third,
+ notwithstanding my precaution to furnish the apparatus with a varied
+ assortment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Osmia's repugnance to big cylinders is quite justified. The work in
+ fact is longer and more costly when the tubes are wide. An inspection of a
+ nest constructed under these conditions is enough to convince us. It now
+ consists not of a string of chambers obtained by simple transverse
+ partitions, but of a confused heap of clumsy, many-sided compartments,
+ standing back to back, with a tendency to group themselves in storeys
+ without succeeding in doing so, because any regular arrangement would mean
+ that the ceilings possessed a span which it is not in the builder's power
+ to achieve. The edifice is not a geometrical masterpiece and it is even
+ less satisfactory from the point of view of economy. In the previous
+ constructions, the sides of the reed supplied the greater part of the
+ walls and the work was limited to one partition for each cell. Here,
+ except at the actual periphery, where the tube itself supplies a
+ foundation, everything has to be obtained by sheer building: the floor,
+ the ceiling, the walls of the many-sided compartment are one and all made
+ of mortar. The structure is almost as costly in materials as that of the
+ Chalicodoma or the Pelopaeus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be pretty difficult, too, when one thinks of its irregularity.
+ Fitting as best she can the projecting angles of the new cell into the
+ recessed corners of the cell already built, the Osmia runs up walls more
+ or less curved, upright or slanting, which intersect one another at
+ various points, so that each compartment requires a new and complicated
+ plan of construction, which is very different from the circular-partition
+ style of architecture, with its row of parallel dividing-disks. Moreover,
+ in this composite arrangement, the size of the recesses left available by
+ the earlier work to some extent decides the assessment of the sexes, for,
+ according to the dimensions of those recesses, the walls erected take in
+ now a larger space, the home of a female, and now a smaller space, the
+ home of a male. Roomy quarters therefore have a double drawback for the
+ Osmia: they greatly increase the outlay in materials; and also they
+ establish in the lower layers, among the females, males who, because of
+ their earlier hatching, would be much better placed near the mouth of the
+ nest. I am convinced of it: if the Osmia refuses big reeds and accepts
+ them only in the last resort, when there are no others, it is because she
+ objects to additional labour and to the mixture of the sexes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Snail-shell, then, is but an indifferent home for her, which she is
+ quite ready to abandon should a better offer. Its expanding cavity
+ represents an average between the favourite small cylinder and the
+ unpopular large cylinder, which is accepted only when there is no other
+ obtainable. The first whorls of the spiral are too narrow to be of use to
+ the Osmia, but the middle ones have the right diameter for cocoons
+ arranged in single file. Here things happen as in a first-class reed, for
+ the helical curve in no way affects the method of structure employed for a
+ rectilinear series of cells. Circular partitions are erected at the
+ required distances, with or without a serving-hatch, according to the
+ diameter. These mark out the first cells, one after the other, which are
+ reserved solely for the females. Then comes the last whorl, which is much
+ too wide for a single row of cells; and here we once more find, exactly as
+ in a wide reed, a costly profusion of masonry, an irregular arrangement of
+ the cells and a mixture of the sexes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having said so much, let us go back to the Osmia of the quarries. Why,
+ when I offer them simultaneously Snail-shells and reeds of a suitable
+ size, do the old frequenters of the shells prefer the reeds, which in all
+ probability have never before been utilized by their race? Most of them
+ scorn the ancestral dwelling and enthusiastically accept my reeds. Some,
+ it is true, take up their quarters in the Snail-shell; but even among
+ these a goodly number refuse my new shells and return to their
+ birth-place, the old Snail-shell, in order to utilize the family property,
+ without much labour, at the cost of a few repairs. Whence, I ask, comes
+ this general preference for the cylinder, never used hitherto? The answer
+ can be only this: of two lodgings at her disposal the Osmia selects the
+ one that provides a comfortable home at a minimum outlay. She economizes
+ her strength when restoring an old nest; she economizes it when replacing
+ the Snail-shell by the reed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can animal industry, like our own, obey the law of economy, the sovran law
+ that governs our industrial machine even as it governs, at least to all
+ appearances, the sublime machine of the universe? Let us go deeper into
+ the question and bring other workers into evidence, those especially who,
+ better equipped perhaps and at any rate better fitted for hard work,
+ attack the difficulties of their trade boldly and look down upon alien
+ establishments with scorn. Of this number are the Chalicodomae, the
+ Mason-bees proper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mason-bee of the Pebbles does not make up her mind to build a
+ brand-new dome unless there be a dearth of old and not quite dilapidated
+ nests. The mothers, sisters apparently and heirs-at-law to the domain,
+ dispute fiercely for the ancestral abode. The first who, by sheer brute
+ force, takes possession of the dome, perches upon it and, for long hours,
+ watches events while polishing her wings. If some claimant puts in an
+ appearance, forthwith the other turns her out with a volley of blows. In
+ this way the old nests are employed so long as they have not become
+ uninhabitable hovels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without being equally jealous of the maternal inheritance, the Mason-bee
+ of the Sheds eagerly uses the cells whence her generation issued. The work
+ in the huge city under the eaves begins thus: the old cells, of which, by
+ the way, the good-natured owner yields a portion to Latreille's Osmia and
+ to the Three-horned Osmia alike, are first made clean and wholesome and
+ cleared of broken plaster and then provisioned and shut. When all the
+ accessible chambers are occupied, the actual building begins with a new
+ stratum of cells upon the former edifice, which becomes more and more
+ massive from year to year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mason-bee of the Shrubs, with her spherical nests hardly larger than
+ walnuts, puzzled me at first. Does she use the old buildings or does she
+ abandon them for good? To-day perplexity makes way for certainty: she uses
+ them very readily. I have several times surprised her lodging her family
+ in the empty rooms of a nest where she was doubtless born herself. Like
+ her kinswoman of the Pebbles, she returns to the native dwelling and
+ fights for its possession. Also, like the dome-builder, she is an
+ anchorite and prefers to cultivate the lean inheritance alone. Sometimes,
+ however, the nest is of exceptional size and harbours a crowd of
+ occupants, who live in peace, each attending to her business, as in the
+ colossal hives in the sheds. Should the colony be at all numerous and the
+ estate descend to two or three generations in succession, with a fresh
+ layer of masonry each year, the normal walnut-sized nest becomes a ball as
+ large as a man's two fists. I have gathered on a pine-tree a nest of the
+ Mason-bee of the Shrubs that weighed a kilogram (2.205 pounds avoirdupois.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) and was the size of a child's head. A twig hardly thicker than a
+ straw served as its support. The casual sight of that lump swinging over
+ the spot on which I had sat down made me think of the mishap that befell
+ Garo. (The hero of La Fontaine's fable, "Le Gland et la Citrouille," who
+ wondered why acorns grew on such tall trees and pumpkins on such low
+ vines, until he fell asleep under one of the latter and a pumpkin dropped
+ upon his nose.&mdash;Translator's Note.) If such nests were plentiful in
+ the trees, any one seeking the shade would run a serious risk of having
+ his head smashed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the Masons, the Carpenters. Among the guild of wood-workers, the
+ most powerful is the Carpenter-bee (Xylocopa violacea (Cf. "The Life of
+ the Spider": chapter 1.&mdash;Translator's Note.)), a very large Bee of
+ formidable appearance, clad in black velvet with violet-coloured wings.
+ The mother gives her larvae as a dwelling a cylindrical gallery which she
+ digs in rotten wood. Useless timber lying exposed to the air, vine-poles,
+ large logs of fire-wood seasoning out of doors, heaped up in front of the
+ farmhouse porch, stumps of trees, vine-stocks and big branches of all
+ kinds are her favourite building-yards. A solitary and industrious worker,
+ she bores, bit by bit, circular passages the width of one's thumb, as
+ clear-cut as though they were made with an auger. A heap of saw-dust
+ accumulates on the ground and bears witness to the severity of the task.
+ Usually, the same aperture is the entrance to two or three parallel
+ corridors. With several galleries there is accommodation for the entire
+ laying, though each gallery is quite short; and the Bee thus avoids those
+ long series which always create difficulties when the moment of hatching
+ arrives. The laggards and the insects eager to emerge are less likely to
+ get in each other's way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After obtaining the dwelling, the Carpenter-bee behaves like the Osmia who
+ is in possession of a reed. Provisions are collected, the egg is laid and
+ the chamber is walled in front with a saw-dust partition. The work is
+ pursued in this way until the two or three passages composing the house
+ are completely stocked. Heaping up provisions and erecting partitions are
+ an invariable feature of the Xylocopa's programme; no circumstance can
+ release the mother from the duty of providing for the future of her
+ family, in the matter both of ready-prepared food and of separate
+ compartments for the rearing of each larva. It is only in the boring of
+ the galleries, the most laborious part of the work, that economy can
+ occasionally be exercised by a piece of luck. Well, is the powerful
+ Carpenter, all unheeding of fatigue, able to take advantage of such
+ fortunate occasions? Does she know how to make use of houses which she has
+ not tunnelled herself? Why, yes: a free lodging suits her just as much as
+ it does the various Mason-bees. She knows as well as they the economic
+ advantages of an old nest that is still in good condition: she settles
+ down, as far as possible, in her predecessors' galleries, after freshening
+ up the sides with a superficial scraping. And she does better still. She
+ readily accepts lodgings which have never known a drill, no matter whose.
+ The stout reeds used in the trellis-work that supports the vines are
+ valuable discoveries, providing as they do sumptuous galleries free of
+ cost. No preliminary work or next to none is required with these. Indeed,
+ the insect does not even trouble to make a side-opening, which would
+ enable it to occupy the cavity contained within two nodes; it prefers the
+ opening at the end cut by man's pruning-knife. If the next partition be
+ too near to give a chamber of sufficient length, the Xylocopa destroys it,
+ which is easy work, not to be compared with the labour of cutting an
+ entrance through the side. In this way, a spacious gallery, following on
+ the short vestibule made by the pruning-knife, is obtained with the least
+ possible expenditure of energy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Guided by what was happening on the trellises, I offered the black Bee the
+ hospitality of my reed-hives. From the very beginning, the insect gladly
+ welcomed my advances; each spring, I see it inspect my rows of cylinders,
+ pick out the best ones and instal itself there. Its work, reduced to a
+ minimum by my intervention, is limited to the partitions, the materials
+ for which are obtained by scraping the inner sides of the reed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As first-rate joiners, next to the Carpenter-bees come the Lithurgi, of
+ whom my district possesses two species: L. cornutus, FAB., and L.
+ chrysurus, BOY. By what aberration of nomenclature was the name of
+ Lithurgus, a worker in stone, given to insects which work solely in wood?
+ I have caught the first, the stronger of the two, digging galleries in a
+ large block of oak that served as an arch for a stable-door; I have always
+ found the second, who is more widely distributed, settling in dead wood&mdash;mulberry,
+ cherry, almond, poplar&mdash;that was still standing. Her work is exactly
+ the same as the Xylocopa's, on a smaller scale. A single entrance-hole
+ gives access to three or four parallel galleries, assembled in a serried
+ group; and these galleries are subdivided into cells by means of saw-dust
+ partitions. Following the example of the big Carpenter-bee, Lithurgus
+ chrysurus knows how to avoid the laborious work of boring, when occasion
+ offers: I find her cocoons lodged almost as often in old dormitories as in
+ new ones. She too has the tendency to economize her strength by turning
+ the work of her predecessors to account. I do not despair of seeing her
+ adopt the reed if, one day, when I possess a large enough colony, I decide
+ to try this experiment on her. I will say nothing about L. cornutus, whom
+ I only once surprised at her carpentering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Anthophorae, those children of the precipitous earthy banks, show the
+ same thrifty spirit as the other members of the mining corporation. Three
+ species, A. parietina, A. personata and A. pilipes, dig long corridors
+ leading to the cells, which are scattered here and there and one by one.
+ These passages remain open at all seasons of the year. When spring comes,
+ the new colony uses them just as they are, provided that they are well
+ preserved in the clayey mass baked by the sun; it increases their length
+ if necessary, runs out a few more branches, but does not decide to start
+ boring in new ground until the old city, which, with its many labyrinths,
+ resembles some monstrous sponge, is too much undermined for safety. The
+ oval niches, the cells that open on those corridors, are also profitably
+ employed. The Anthophora restores their entrance, which has been destroyed
+ by the insect's recent emergence; she smooths their walls with a fresh
+ coat of whitewash, after which the lodging is fit to receive the heap of
+ honey and the egg. When the old cells, insufficient in number and moreover
+ partly inhabited by diverse intruders, are all occupied, the boring of new
+ cells begins, in the extended sections of the galleries, and the rest of
+ the eggs are housed. In this way, the swarm is settled at a minimum of
+ expense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To conclude this brief account, let us change the zoological setting and,
+ as we have already spoken of the Sparrow, see what he can do as a builder.
+ The simplest form of his nest is the great round ball of straw, dead
+ leaves and feathers, in the fork of a few branches. It is costly in
+ material, but can be set up anywhere, when the hole in the wall or the
+ shelter of a tile are lacking. What reasons induced him to give up the
+ spherical edifice? To all seeming, the same reasons that led the Osmia to
+ abandon the Snail-shell's spiral, which requires a fatiguing expenditure
+ of clay, in favour of the economical cylinder of the reed. By making his
+ home in a hole in the wall, the Sparrow escapes the greater part of his
+ work. Here, the dome that serves as a protection from the rain and the
+ thick walls that offer resistance to the wind both become superfluous. A
+ mere mattress is sufficient; the cavity in the wall provides the rest. The
+ saving is great; and the Sparrow appreciates it quite as much as the
+ Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This does not mean that the primitive art has disappeared, lost through
+ neglect; it remains an ineffaceable characteristic of the species, ever
+ ready to declare itself should circumstances demand it. The generations of
+ to-day are as much endowed with it as the generations of yore; without
+ apprenticeship, without the example of others, they have within
+ themselves, in the potential state, the industrial aptitude of their
+ ancestors. If aroused by the stimulus of necessity, this aptitude will
+ pass suddenly from inaction to action. When, therefore, the Sparrow still
+ from time to time indulges in spherical building, this is not progress on
+ his part, as is sometimes contended; it is, on the contrary, a
+ retrogression, a return to the ancient customs, so prodigal of labour. He
+ is behaving like the Osmia who, in default of a reed, makes shift with a
+ Snail-shell, which is more difficult to utilize but easier to find. The
+ cylinder and the hole in the wall stand for progress; the spiral of the
+ Snail-shell and the ball-shaped nest represent the starting-point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have, I think, sufficiently illustrated the inference which is borne out
+ by the whole mass of analogous facts. Animal industry manifests a tendency
+ to achieve the essential with a minimum of expenditure; after its own
+ fashion, the insect bears witness to the economy of energy. On the one
+ hand, instinct imposes upon it a craft that is unchangeable in its
+ fundamental features; on the other hand, it is left a certain latitude in
+ the details, so as to take advantage of favourable circumstances and
+ attain the object aimed at with the least possible expenditure of time,
+ materials and work, the three elements of mechanical labour. The problem
+ in higher geometry solved by the Hive-bee is only a particular case&mdash;true,
+ a magnificent case,&mdash;of this general law of economy which seems to
+ govern the whole animal world. The wax cells, with their maximum capacity
+ as against a minimum wall-space, are the equivalent, with the
+ superaddition of a marvellous scientific skill, of the Osmia's
+ compartments in which the stonework is reduced to a minimum through the
+ selection of a reed. The artificer in mud and the artificer in wax obey
+ the same tendency: they economize. Do they know what they are doing? Who
+ would venture to suggest it in the case of the Bee grappling with her
+ transcendental problem? The others, pursuing their rustic art, are no
+ wiser. With all of them, there is no calculation, no premeditation, but
+ simply blind obedience to the law of general harmony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 8. THE LEAF-CUTTERS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is not enough that animal industry should be able, to a certain extent,
+ to adapt itself to casual exigencies when choosing the site of a nest; if
+ the race is to thrive, something else is required, something which
+ hide-bound instinct is unable to provide. The Chaffinch, for instance,
+ introduces a great quantity of lichen into the outer layer of his nest.
+ This is his method of strengthening the edifice and making a stout
+ framework in which to place first the bottom mattress of moss, fine straw
+ and rootlets and then the soft bed of feathers, wool and down. But, should
+ the time-honoured lichen be lacking, will the bird refrain from building
+ its nest? Will it forgo the delight of hatching its brood because it has
+ not the wherewithal to settle its family in the orthodox fashion?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, the chaffinch is not perplexed by so small a matter; he is an expert
+ in materials, he understands botanical equivalents. In the absence of the
+ branches of the evernias, he picks the long beards of the usneas, the
+ wartlike rosettes of the parmelias, the membranes of the stictises torn
+ away in shreds; if he can find nothing better, he makes shift with the
+ bushy tufts of the cladonias. As a practical lichenologist, when one
+ species is rare or lacking in the neighbourhood, he is able to fall back
+ on others, varying greatly in shape, colour and texture. And, if the
+ impossible happened and lichen failed entirely, I credit the Chaffinch
+ with sufficient talent to be able to dispense with it and to build the
+ foundations of his nest with some coarse moss or other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What the worker in lichens tells us the other weavers of textile materials
+ confirm. Each has his favourite flora, which hardly ever varies when the
+ plant is easily accessible and which can be supplemented by plenty of
+ others when it is not. The bird's botany would be worth examining; it
+ would be interesting to draw up the industrial herbal of each species. In
+ this connection, I will quote just one instance, so as not to stray too
+ far from the subject in hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Red-backed Shrike (Lanius collurio), the commonest variety in my
+ district, is noteworthy because of his savage mania for forked gibbets,
+ the thorns in the hedgerows whereon he impales the voluminous contents of
+ his game-bag&mdash;little half-fledged birds, small Lizards, Grasshoppers,
+ caterpillars, Beetles&mdash;and leaves them to get high. To this passion
+ for the gallows, which has passed unnoticed by the country-folk, at least
+ in my part, he adds another, an innocent botanical passion, which is so
+ much in evidence that everybody, down to the youngest bird's-nester, knows
+ all about it. His nest, a massive structure, is made of hardly any other
+ materials than a greyish and very fluffy plant, which is found everywhere
+ among the corn. This is the Filago spathulata of the botanists; and the
+ bird also makes use, though less frequently, of the Filago germanica, or
+ common cotton-rose. Both are known in Provencal by the name herbo dou
+ tarnagas, or Shrike-herb. This popular designation tells us plainly how
+ faithful the bird is to its plant. To have struck the agricultural
+ labourer, a very indifferent observer, the Shrike's choice of materials
+ must be remarkably persistent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Have we here a taste that is exclusive? Not in the least. Though
+ cotton-roses of all species are plentiful on level ground, they become
+ scarce and impossible to find on the parched hills. The bird, on its side,
+ is not given to journeys of exploration and takes what it finds to suit it
+ in the neighbourhood of its tree or hedge. But on arid ground, the
+ Micropus erectus, or upright micropus, abounds and is a satisfactory
+ substitute for the Filago so far as its tiny, cottony leaves and its
+ little fluffy balls of flowers are concerned. True, it is short and does
+ not lend itself well to weaver's work. A few long sprigs of another
+ cottony plant, the Helichrysum staechas, or wild everlasting, inserted
+ here and there, will give body to the structure. Thus does the Shrike
+ manage when hard up for his favourite materials: keeping to the same
+ botanical family, he is able to find and employ substitutes among the fine
+ cotton-clad stalks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is even able to leave the family of the Compositae and to go gleaning
+ more or less everywhere. Here is the result of my botanizings at the
+ expense of his nests. We must distinguish between two genera in the
+ Shrike's rough classification: the cottony plants and the smooth plants.
+ Among the first, my notes mention the following: Convolvulus cantabrica,
+ or flax-leaved bindweed; Lotus symmetricus, or bird's-foot trefoil;
+ Teucrium polium, or poly; and the flowery heads of the Phragmites
+ communis, or common reed. Among the second are these: Medicago lupulina,
+ or nonesuch; Trifolium repens, or white clover; Lathyrus pratensis, or
+ meadow lathyrus; Capsella bursa pastoris, or shepherd's purse; Vicia
+ peregrina, or broad-podded vetch; Convolvulus arvensis, or small bindweed;
+ Pterotheca nemausensis, a sort of hawkweed; and Poa pratensis, or
+ smooth-stalked meadow-grass. When it is downy, the plant forms almost the
+ whole nest, as is the case with the flax-leaved bindweed; when smooth, it
+ forms only the framework, destined to support a crumbling mass of
+ micropus, as is the case with the small bindweed. When making this
+ collection, which I am far from giving as the birds' complete herbarium, I
+ was struck by a wholly unexpected detail: of the various plants, I found
+ only the heads still in bud; moreover, all the sprigs, though dry,
+ possessed the green colouring of the growing plant, a sign of swift
+ desiccation in the sun. Save in a few cases, therefore, the Shrike does
+ not collect the dead and withered remains: it is from the growing plants
+ that he reaps his harvest, mowing them down with his beak and leaving the
+ sheaves to dry in the sun before using them. I caught him one day hopping
+ about and pecking at the twigs of a Biscayan bindweed. He was getting in
+ his hay, strewing the ground with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evidence of the Shrike, confirmed by that of all the other workers&mdash;weavers,
+ basket-makers or woodcutters&mdash;whom we may care to call as witnesses,
+ shows us what a large part must be assigned to discernment in the bird's
+ choice of materials for its nest. Is the insect as highly gifted? When it
+ works with vegetable matter, is it exclusive in its tastes? Does it know
+ only one definite plant, its special province? Or has it, for employment
+ in its manufactures, a varied flora, in which its discernment exercises a
+ free choice? For answers to these questions we may look, above all, to the
+ Leaf-cutting Bees, the Megachiles. Reaumur has told the story of their
+ industry in detail; and I refer the reader who wishes for further
+ particulars to the master's Memoirs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man who knows how to use his eyes in his garden will observe, some day
+ or other, a number of curious holes in the leaves of his lilac- and
+ rose-trees, some of them round, some oval, as if idle but skilful hands
+ had been at work with the pinking-iron. In some places, there is scarcely
+ anything but the veins of the leaves left. The author of the mischief is a
+ grey-clad Bee, a Megachile. For scissors, she has her mandibles; for
+ compasses, producing now an oval and anon a circle, she has her eye and
+ the pivot of her body. The pieces cut out are made into thimble-shaped
+ wallets, destined to contain the honey and the egg: the larger, oval
+ pieces supply the floor and sides; the smaller, round pieces are reserved
+ for the lid. A row of these thimbles, placed one on top of the other, up
+ to a dozen or more, though often there are less: that is, roughly, the
+ structure of the Leaf-cutter's nest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When taken out of the recess in which the mother has manufactured it, the
+ cylinder of cells seems to be an indivisible whole, a sort of tunnel
+ obtained by lining with leaves some gallery dug underground. The real
+ thing does not correspond with its appearance: under the least pressure of
+ the fingers, the cylinder breaks up into equal sections, which are so many
+ compartments independent of their neighbours as regards both floor and
+ lid. This spontaneous break up shows us how the work is done. The method
+ agrees with those adopted by the other Bees. Instead of a general scabbard
+ of leaves, afterwards subdivided into compartments by transverse
+ partitions, the Megachile constructs a string of separate wallets, each of
+ which is finished before the next is begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A structure of this sort needs a sheath to keep the pieces in place while
+ giving them the proper shape. The bag of leaves, in fact, as turned out by
+ the worker, lacks stability; its numerous pieces, not glued together, but
+ simply placed one after the other, come apart and give way as soon as they
+ lose the support of the tunnel that keeps them united. Later, when it
+ spins its cocoon, the larva infuses a little of its fluid silk into the
+ gaps and solders the pieces to one another, especially the inner ones, so
+ much so that the insecure bag in due course becomes a solid casket whose
+ component parts it is no longer possible to separate entirely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The protective sheath, which is also a framework, is not the work of the
+ mother. Like the great majority of the Osmiae, the Megachiles do not
+ understand the art of making themselves a home straight away: they want a
+ borrowed lodging, which may vary considerably in character. The deserted
+ galleries of the Anthophorae, the burrows of the fat Earth-worms, the
+ tunnels bored in the trunks of trees by the larva of the Cerambyx-beetle
+ (The Capricorn, the essay on which has not yet been published in English.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), the ruined dwellings of the Mason-bee of the Pebbles, the
+ Snail-shell nests of the Three-horned Osmia, reed-stumps, when these are
+ handy, and crevices in the walls are all so many homes for the
+ Leaf-cutters, who choose this or that establishment according to the
+ tastes of their particular genus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the sake of clearness, let us cease generalizing and direct our
+ attention to a definite species. I first selected the White-girdled
+ Leaf-cutter (Megachile albocincta, PEREZ), not on account of any
+ exceptional peculiarities, but solely because this is the Bee most often
+ mentioned in my notes. Her customary dwelling is the tunnel of an
+ Earth-worm opening on some clay bank. Whether perpendicular or slanting,
+ this tunnel runs down to an indefinite depth, where the climate would be
+ too damp for the Bee. Besides, when the time comes for the hatching of the
+ adult insect, its emergence would be fraught with peril if it had to climb
+ up from a deep pit through crumbling rubbish. The Leaf-cutter, therefore,
+ uses only the front portion of the Worm's gallery, two decimetres at most.
+ (7.8 inches.&mdash;Translator's Note.) What is to be done with the rest of
+ the tunnel? It is an ascending shaft, tempting to an enemy; and some
+ underground ravager might come this way and destroy the nest by attacking
+ the row of cells at the back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The danger is foreseen. Before fashioning her first honey-bag, the Bee
+ blocks the passage with a strong barricade composed of the only materials
+ used in the Leaf-cutter's guild. Fragments of leaves are piled up in no
+ particular order, but in sufficient quantities to make a serious obstacle.
+ It is not unusual to find in the leafy rampart some dozens of pieces
+ rolled into screws and fitting into one another like a stack of
+ cylindrical wafers. For this work of fortification, artistic refinement
+ seems superfluous; at any rate, the pieces of leaves are for the most part
+ irregular. You can see that the insect has cut them out hurriedly,
+ unmethodically and on a different pattern from that of the pieces intended
+ for the cells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am struck with another detail in the barricade. Its constituents are
+ taken from stout, thick, strong-veined leaves. I recognize young
+ vine-leaves, pale-coloured and velvety; the leaves of the whitish
+ rock-rose (Cistus albidus), lined with a hairy felt; those of the
+ holm-oak, selected among the young and bristly ones; those of the
+ hawthorn, smooth but tough; those of the cultivated reed, the only one of
+ the Monocotyledones exploited, as far as I know, by the Megachiles. In the
+ construction of cells, on the other hand, I see smooth leaves
+ predominating, notably those of the wild briar and of the common acacia,
+ the robinia. It would appear, therefore, that the insect distinguishes
+ between two kinds of materials, without being an absolute purist and
+ sternly excluding any sort of blending. The very much indented leaves,
+ whose projections can be completely removed with a dexterous snip of the
+ scissors, generally furnish the various layers of the barricade; the
+ little robinia-leaves, with their fine texture and their unbroken edges,
+ are better suited to the more delicate work of the cells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A rampart at the back of the Earth-worm's shaft is a wise precaution and
+ the Leaf-cutter deserves all credit for it; only it is a pity for the
+ Megachiles' reputation that this protective barrier often protects nothing
+ at all. Here we see, under a new guise, that aberration of instinct of
+ which I gave some examples in an earlier chapter. My notes contain
+ memoranda of various galleries crammed with pieces of leaves right up to
+ the orifice, which is on a level with the ground, and entirely devoid of
+ cells, even of an unfinished one. These were ridiculous fortifications, of
+ no use whatever; and yet the Bee treated the matter with the utmost
+ seriousness and took infinite pains over her futile task. One of these
+ uselessly barricaded galleries furnished me with some hundred pieces of
+ leaves arranged like a stack of wafers; another gave me as many as a
+ hundred and fifty. For the defence of a tenanted nest, two dozen and even
+ fewer are ample. Then what was the object of the Leaf-cutter's ridiculous
+ pile?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I wish I could believe that, seeing that the place was dangerous, she made
+ her heap bigger so that the rampart might be in proportion to the danger.
+ Then, perhaps, at the moment of starting on the cells, she disappeared,
+ the victim of an accident, blown out of her course by a gust of wind. But
+ this line of defence is not admissible in the Megachile's case. The proof
+ is palpable: the galleries aforesaid are barricaded up to the level of the
+ ground; there is no room, absolutely none, to lodge even a single egg.
+ What was her object, I ask again, when she persisted in obstinately piling
+ up her wafers? Has she really an object?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not hesitate to say no. And my answer is based upon what the Osmiae
+ taught me. I have described above how the Three-horned Osmia, towards the
+ end of her life, when her ovaries are depleted, expends on useless
+ operations such energy as remains to her. Born a worker, she is bored by
+ the inactivity of retirement; her leisure requires an occupation. Having
+ nothing better to do, she sets up partitions; she divides a tunnel into
+ cells that will remain empty; she closes with a thick plug reeds
+ containing nothing. Thus is the modicum of strength of her decline
+ exhausted in vain labours. The other Builder-bees behave likewise. I see
+ Anthidia laboriously provide numerous bales of cotton to stop galleries
+ wherein never an egg was laid; I see Mason-bees build and then religiously
+ close cells that will remain unvictualled and uncolonized.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The long and useless barricades then belong to the last hours of the
+ Megachile's life, when the eggs are all laid; the mother, whose ovaries
+ are exhausted, persists in building. Her instinct is to cut out and heap
+ up pieces of leaves; obeying this impulse, she cuts out and heaps up even
+ when the supreme reason for this labour ceases. The eggs are no longer
+ there, but some strength remains; and that strength is expended as the
+ safety of the species demanded in the beginning. The wheels of action go
+ on turning in the absence of the motives for action; they continue their
+ movement as though by a sort of acquired velocity. What clearer proof can
+ we hope to find of the unconsciousness of the animal stimulated by
+ instinct?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us return to the Leaf-cutter's work under normal conditions.
+ Immediately after a protective barrier comes the row of cells, which vary
+ considerably in number, like those of the Osmia in her reed. Strings of
+ about a dozen are rare; the most frequent consist of five or six. No less
+ subject to variation is the number of pieces joined to make a cell: pieces
+ of two kinds, some, the oval ones, forming the honey-pot; others, the
+ round ones, serving as a lid. I count, on an average, eight to ten pieces
+ of the first kind. Though all cut on the pattern of an ellipse, they are
+ not equal in dimensions and come under two categories. The larger, outside
+ ones are each of them almost a third of the circumference and overlap one
+ another slightly. Their lower end bends into a concave curve to form the
+ bottom of the bag. Those inside, which are considerably smaller, increase
+ the thickness of the sides and fill up the gaps left by the first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Leaf-cutter therefore is able to use her scissors according to the
+ task before her: first, the large pieces, which help the work forward, but
+ leave empty spaces; next, the small pieces, which fit into the defective
+ portions. The bottom of the cell particularly comes in for after-touches.
+ As the natural curve of the larger pieces is not enough to provide a cup
+ without cracks in it, the Bee does not fail to improve the work with two
+ or three small oval pieces applied to the imperfect joins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another advantage results from the snippets of unequal size. The three or
+ four outer pieces, which are the first placed in position, being the
+ longest of all, project beyond the mouth, whereas the next, being shorter,
+ do not come quite up to it. A brim is thus obtained, a ledge on which the
+ round disks of the lid rest and are prevented from touching the honey when
+ the Bee presses them into a concave cover. In other words, at the mouth
+ the circumference comprises only one row of leaves; lower down it takes
+ two or three, thus restricting the diameter and securing an hermetic
+ closing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cover of the pot consists solely of round pieces, very nearly alike
+ and more or less numerous. Sometimes I find only two, sometimes I count as
+ many as ten, closely stacked. At times, the diameter of these pieces is of
+ an almost mathematical precision, so much so that the edges of the disk
+ rest upon the ledge. No better result would be obtained had they been cut
+ out with the aid of compasses. At times, again, the piece projects
+ slightly beyond the mouth, so that, to enter, it has to be pressed down
+ and curved cupwise. There is no variation in the diameter of the first
+ pieces placed in position, those nearest to the honey. They are all of the
+ same size and thus form a flat cover which does not encroach on the cell
+ and will not afterwards interfere with the larva, as a convex ceiling
+ would. The subsequent disks, when the pile is numerous, are a little
+ larger; they only fit the mouth by yielding to pressure and becoming
+ concave. The Bee seems to make a point of this concavity, for it serves as
+ a mould to receive the curved bottom of the next cell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the row of cells is finished, the task still remains of blocking up
+ the entrance to the gallery with a safety-stopper similar to the earthen
+ plug with which the Osmia closes her reeds. The Bee then returns to the
+ free and easy use of the scissors which we noticed at the beginning when
+ she was fencing off the back part of the Earth-worm's too deep burrow; she
+ cuts out of the foliage irregular pieces of different shapes and sizes and
+ often retaining their original deeply-indented margins; and with all these
+ pieces, very few of which fit at all closely the orifice to be blocked,
+ she succeeds in making an inviolable door, thanks to the huge number of
+ layers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us leave the Leaf-cutter to finish depositing her eggs in other
+ galleries, which will be colonized in the same manner, and consider for a
+ moment her skill as a cutter. Her edifices consist of a multitude of
+ fragments belonging to three categories: oval pieces for the sides of the
+ cells; round pieces for the lids; and irregular pieces for the barricades
+ at the front and back. The last present no difficulty: the Bee obtains
+ them by removing from the leaf some projecting portion, as it stands, a
+ serrate lobe which, owing to its notches, shortens the insect's task and
+ lends itself better to scissor-work. So far, there is nothing to deserve
+ attention: it is unskilled labour, in which an inexperienced apprentice
+ might excel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the oval pieces, it becomes another matter. What model has the
+ Megachile when cutting her neat ellipses out of the delicate material for
+ her wallets, the robinia-leaves? What mental pattern guides her scissors?
+ What system of measurement tells her the dimensions? One would like to
+ picture the insect as a living pair of compasses, capable of tracing an
+ elliptic curve by a certain natural inflexion of its body, even as our arm
+ traces a circle by swinging from the shoulder. A blind mechanism, the mere
+ outcome of its organization, would alone be responsible for its geometry.
+ This explanation would tempt me if the large oval pieces were not
+ accompanied by much smaller ones, also oval, which are used to fill the
+ empty spaces. A pair of compasses which changes its radius of its own
+ accord and alters the curve according to the plan before it appears to me
+ an instrument somewhat difficult to believe in. There must be something
+ better than that. The circular pieces of the lid suggest it to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, by the mere flexion inherent in her structure, the Leaf-cutter
+ succeeds in cutting out ovals, how does she succeed in cutting out rounds?
+ Can we admit the presence of other wheels in the machinery for the new
+ pattern, so different in shape and size? Besides, the real point of the
+ difficulty does not lie there. These rounds, for the most part, fit the
+ mouth of the jar with almost exact precision. When the cell is finished,
+ the Bee flies hundreds of yards away to make the lid. She arrives at the
+ leaf from which the disk is to be cut. What picture, what recollection has
+ she of the pot to be covered? Why, none at all: she has never seen it; she
+ does her work underground, in utter darkness! At the utmost, she can have
+ the indications of touch: not actual indications, of course, for the pot
+ is not there, but past indications, useless in a work of precision. And
+ yet the disk to be cut out must have a fixed diameter: if it were too
+ large, it would not go in; if too small, it would close badly, it would
+ slip down on the honey and suffocate the egg. How shall it be given its
+ correct dimensions without a pattern? The Bee does not hesitate for a
+ moment. She cuts out her disk with the same celerity which she would
+ display in detaching any shapeless lobe that might do for a stopper; and
+ that disk, without further measurement, is of the right size to fit the
+ pot. Let whoso will explain this geometry, which in my opinion is
+ inexplicable, even when we allow for memory begotten of touch and sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One winter evening, as we were sitting round the fire, whose cheerful
+ blaze unloosed our tongues, I put the problem of the Leaf-cutter to my
+ family:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Among your kitchen-utensils,' I said, 'you have a pot in daily use; but
+ it has lost its lid, which was knocked over and broken by the Tomcat
+ playing among the shelves. To-morrow is market-day and one of you will be
+ going to Orange to buy the week's provisions. Would she undertake, without
+ a measure of any kind, with the sole aid of memory, which we would allow
+ her to refresh before starting by a careful examination of the object, to
+ bring back exactly what the pot wants, a lid neither too large nor too
+ small, in short the same size as the top?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was admitted with one accord that nobody would accept such a commission
+ without taking a measure with her, or at least a bit of string giving the
+ width. Our memory for sizes is not accurate enough. She would come back
+ from the town with something that 'might do'; and it would be the merest
+ chance if this turned out to be the right size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, the Leaf-cutter is even less well-off than ourselves. She has no
+ mental picture of her pot, because she has never seen it; she is not able
+ to pick and choose in the crockery-dealer's heap, which acts as something
+ of a guide to our memory by comparison; she must, without hesitation, far
+ away from her home, cut out a disk that fits the top of her jar. What is
+ impossible to us is child's-play to her. Where we could not do without a
+ measure of some kind, a bit of string, a pattern or a scrap of paper with
+ figures upon it, the little Bee needs nothing at all. In housekeeping
+ matters she is cleverer than we are.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One objection was raised. Was it not possible that the Bee, when at work
+ on the shrub, should first cut a round piece of an approximate diameter,
+ larger than that of the neck of the jar, and that afterwards, on returning
+ home, she should gnaw away the superfluous part until the lid exactly
+ fitted the pot? These alterations made with the model in front of her
+ would explain everything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is perfectly true; but are there any alterations? To begin with, it
+ seems to me hardly possible that the insect can go back to the cutting
+ once the piece is detached from the leaf: it lacks the necessary support
+ to gnaw the flimsy disk with any precision. A tailor would spoil his cloth
+ if he had not the support of a table when cutting out the pieces for a
+ coat. The Megachile's scissors, so difficult to wield on anything not
+ firmly held, would do equally bad work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, I have better evidence than this for my refusal to believe in the
+ existence of alterations when the Bee has the cell in front of her. The
+ lid is composed of a pile of disks whose number sometimes reaches half a
+ score. Now the bottom part of all these disks is the under surface of the
+ leaf, which is paler and more strongly veined; the top part is the upper
+ surface, which is smooth and greener. In other words, the insect places
+ them in the position which they occupy when gathered. Let me explain. In
+ order to cut out a piece, the Bee stands on the upper surface of the leaf.
+ The piece detached is held in the feet and is therefore laid with its top
+ surface against the insect's chest at the moment of departure. There is no
+ possibility of its being turned over on the journey. Consequently, the
+ piece is laid as the Bee has just picked it, with the lower surface
+ towards the inside of the cell and the upper surface towards the outside.
+ If alterations were necessary to reduce the lid to the diameter of the
+ pot, the disk would be bound to get turned over: the piece, manipulated,
+ set upright, turned round, tried this way and that, would, when finally
+ laid in position, have its top or bottom surface inside just as it
+ happened to come. But this is exactly what does not take place. Therefore,
+ as the order of stacking never changes, the disks are cut, from the first
+ clip of the scissors, with their proper dimensions. The insect excels us
+ in practical geometry. I look upon the Leaf-cutter's pot and lid as an
+ addition to the many other marvels of instinct that cannot be explained by
+ mechanics; I submit it to the consideration of science; and I pass on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Silky Leaf-cutter (Megachile sericans, FONSCOL.; M. Dufourii, LEP.)
+ makes her nests in the disused galleries of the Anthophorae. I know her to
+ occupy another dwelling which is more elegant and affords a more roomy
+ installation: I mean the old dwelling of the fat Capricorn, the denizen of
+ the oaks. The metamorphosis is effected in a spacious chamber lined with
+ soft felt. When the long-horned Beetle reaches the adult stage, he
+ releases himself and emerges from the tree by following a vestibule which
+ the larva's powerful tools have prepared beforehand. When the deserted
+ cabin, owing to its position, remains wholesome and there is no sign of
+ any running from its walls, no brown stuff smelling of the tan-yard, it is
+ soon visited by the Silky Megachile, who finds in it the most sumptuous of
+ the apartments inhabited by the Leaf-cutters. It combines every condition
+ of comfort: perfect safety, an even temperature, freedom from damp, ample
+ room; and so the mother who is fortunate enough to become the possessor of
+ such a lodging uses it entirely, vestibule and drawing-room alike.
+ Accommodation is found for all her family of eggs; at least, I have
+ nowhere seen nests as populous as here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of them provides me with seventeen cells, the highest number appearing
+ in my census of the Megachile clan. Most of them are lodged in the nymphal
+ chamber of the Capricorn; and, as the spacious recess is too wide for a
+ single row, the cells are arranged in three parallel series. The
+ remainder, in a single string, occupy the vestibule, which is completed
+ and filled up by the terminal barricade. In the materials employed,
+ hawthorn-and paliurus-leaves predominate. The pieces, both in the cells
+ and in the barrier, vary in size. It is true that the hawthorn-leaves,
+ with their deep indentations, do not lend themselves to the cutting of
+ neat oval pieces. The insect seems to have detached each morsel without
+ troubling overmuch about the shape of the piece, so long as it was big
+ enough. Nor has it been very particular about arranging the pieces
+ according to the nature of the leaf: after a few bits of paliurus come
+ bits of vine and hawthorn; and these again are followed by bits of bramble
+ and paliurus. The Bee has collected her pieces anyhow, taking a bit here
+ and there, just as her fancy dictated. Nevertheless, paliurus is the
+ commonest, perhaps for economical reasons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I notice, in fact, that the leaves of this shrub, instead of being used
+ piecemeal, are employed whole, when they do not exceed the proper
+ dimensions. Their oval form and their moderate size suit the insect's
+ requirements; and there is therefore no necessity to cut them into pieces.
+ The leaf-stalk is clipped with the scissors and, without more ado, the
+ Megachile retires the richer by a first-rate bit of material.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Split up into their component parts, two cells give me altogether
+ eighty-three pieces of leaves, whereof eighteen are smaller than the
+ others and of a round shape. The last-named come from the lids. If they
+ average forty-two each, the seventeen cells of the nest represent seven
+ hundred and fourteen pieces. These are not all: the nest ends, in the
+ Capricorn's vestibule, with a stout barricade in which I count three
+ hundred and fifty pieces. The total therefore amounts to one thousand and
+ sixty-four. All those journeys and all that work with the scissors to
+ furnish the deserted chamber of the Cerambyx! If I did not know the
+ Leaf-cutter's solitary and jealous disposition, I should attribute the
+ huge structure to the collaboration of several mothers; but there is no
+ question of communism in this case. One dauntless creature and one alone,
+ one solitary, inveterate worker, has produced the whole of the prodigious
+ mass. If work is the best way to enjoy life, this one certainly has not
+ been bored during the few weeks of her existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I gladly award her the most honourable of eulogies, that due to the
+ industrious; and I also compliment her on her talent for closing the
+ honey-pots. The pieces stacked into lids are round and have nothing to
+ suggest those of which the cells and the final barricade are made.
+ Excepting the first, those nearest the honey, they are perhaps cut a
+ little less neatly than the disks of the White-girdled Leaf-cutter; no
+ matter: they stop the jar perfectly, especially when there are some ten of
+ them one above the other. When cutting them, the Bee was as sure of her
+ scissors as a dressmaker guided by a pattern laid on the stuff; and yet
+ she was cutting without a model, without having in front of her the mouth
+ to be closed. To enlarge on this interesting subject would mean to repeat
+ oneself. All the Leaf-cutters have the same talent for making the lids of
+ their pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A less mysterious question than this geometrical problem is that of the
+ materials. Does each species of Megachile keep to a single plant, or has
+ it a definite botanical domain wherein to exercise its liberty of choice?
+ The little that I have already said is enough to make us suspect that the
+ insect is not restricted to one plant; and this is confirmed by an
+ examination of the separate cells, piece by piece, when we find a variety
+ which we were far from imagining at first. Here is the flora of the
+ Megachiles in my neighbourhood, a very incomplete flora and doubtless
+ capable of considerable amplification by future researches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Silky Leaf-cutter gathers the materials for her pots, her lids and her
+ barricades from the following plants: paliurus, hawthorn, vine, wild
+ briar, bramble, holm-oak, amelanchier, terebinthus, sage-leaved rock-rose.
+ The first three supply the greater part of the leaf-work; the last three
+ are represented only by rare fragments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hare-footed Leaf-cutter (Megachile lagopoda, LIN.) which I see very
+ busy in my enclosure, though she only collects her materials there,
+ exploits the lilac and the rose-tree by preference. From time to time, I
+ see her also cutting bits out of the robinia, the quince-tree and the
+ cherry-tree. In the open country, I have found her building with the
+ leaves of the vine alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Silvery Leaf-cutter (Megachile argentata, FAB.), another of my guests,
+ shares the taste of the aforesaid for the lilac and the rose, but her
+ domain includes in addition the pomegranate-tree, the bramble, the vine,
+ the common dogwood and the cornelian cherry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The White-girdled Leaf-cutter likes the robinia, to which she adds, in
+ lavish proportions, the vine, the rose and the hawthorn and sometimes, in
+ moderation, the reed and the whitish-leaved rock-rose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Black-tipped Leaf-cutter (Megachile apicalis, SPIN.) has for her abode
+ the cells of the Mason-bee of the Pebbles and the ruined nests of the
+ Osmiae and Anthidia in the Snail-shells. I have not known her to use any
+ other materials than the wild briar and the hawthorn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Incomplete though it be, this list tells us that the Megachiles do not
+ have exclusive botanical tastes. Each species manages extremely well with
+ several plants differing greatly in appearance. The first condition to be
+ fulfilled by the shrub exploited is that it be near the nest. Frugal of
+ her time, the Leaf-cutter declines to go on distant expeditions. Whenever
+ I come upon a recent Megachile-nest, I am not long in finding in the
+ neighbourhood, without much searching, the tree or shrub from which the
+ Bee has cut her pieces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another main condition is a fine and supple texture, especially for the
+ first disks used in the lid and for the pieces which form the lining of
+ the wallet. The rest, less carefully executed, allows of coarser stuff;
+ but even then the piece must be flexible and lend itself to the
+ cylindrical configuration of the tunnel. The leaves of the rock-roses,
+ thick and roughly fluted, fulfil this condition unsatisfactorily, for
+ which reason I see them occurring only at very rare intervals. The insect
+ has gathered pieces of them by mistake and, not finding them good to use,
+ has ceased to visit the unprofitable shrub. Stiffer still, the leaf of the
+ holm-oak in its full maturity is never employed: the Silky Leaf-cutter
+ uses it only in the young state and then in moderation; she can get her
+ velvety pieces better from the vine. In the lilac-bushes so zealously
+ exploited before my eyes by the Hare-footed Leaf-cutter occur a medley of
+ different shrubs which, from their size and the lustre of their leaves,
+ should apparently suit that sturdy pinker. They are the shrubby
+ hare's-ear, the honeysuckle, the prickly butcher's-broom, the box. What
+ magnificent disks ought to come from the hare's-ear and the honeysuckle!
+ One could get an excellent piece, without further labour, by merely
+ cutting the leaf-stalk of the box, as Megachile sericans does with her
+ paliurus. The lilac-lover disdains them absolutely. For what reason? I
+ fancy that she finds them too stiff. Would she think differently if the
+ lilac-bush were not there? Perhaps so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, apart from the questions of texture and proximity to the nest,
+ the Megachile's choice, it seems to me, must depend upon whether a
+ particular shrub is plentiful or not. This would explain the lavish use of
+ the vine, an object of widespread cultivation, and of the hawthorn and the
+ wild briar, which form part of all our hedges. As these are to be found
+ everywhere, the fact that the different Leaf-cutters make use of them is
+ no reflection upon a host of equivalents varying according to the
+ locality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we had to believe what people tell us about the effects of heredity,
+ which is said to hand down from generation to generation, ever more firmly
+ established, the individual habits of those who come before, the
+ Megachiles of these parts, experienced in the local flora by the long
+ training of the centuries, but complete novices in the presence of plants
+ which their race encounters for the first time, ought to refuse as unusual
+ and suspicious any exotic leaves, especially when they have at hand plenty
+ of the leaves made familiar by hereditary custom. The question was
+ deserving of separate study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two subjects of my observations, the Hare-footed and the Silvery
+ Leaf-cutter, both of them inmates of my open-air laboratory, gave me a
+ definite answer. Knowing the points frequented by the two Megachiles, I
+ planted in their work-yard, overgrown with briar and lilac, two outlandish
+ plants which seemed to me to fulfil the required conditions of suppleness
+ of texture, namely, the ailantus, a native of Japan, and the Virginian
+ physostegia. Events justified the selection: both Bees exploited the
+ foreign flora with the same assiduity as the local flora, passing from the
+ lilac to the ailantus, from the briar to the physostegia, leaving the one,
+ going back to the other, without drawing distinctions between the known
+ and the unknown. Inveterate habit could not have given greater certainty,
+ greater ease to their scissors, though this was their first experience of
+ such a material.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Silvery Leaf-cutter lent herself to an even more conclusive test. As
+ she readily makes her nest in the reeds of my apparatus, I was able, up to
+ a certain point, to create a landscape for her and select its vegetation
+ myself. I therefore moved the reed-hive to a part of the enclosure stocked
+ chiefly with rosemary, whose scanty foliage is not adapted for the Bee's
+ work, and near the apparatus I arranged an exotic shrubbery in pots,
+ including notably the smooth lopezia, from Mexico, and the long-fruited
+ capsicum, an Indian annual. Finding close at hand the wherewithal to build
+ her nest, the Leaf-cutter went no further afield. The lopezia suited her
+ especially, so much so that almost the whole nest was composed of it. The
+ rest had been gathered from the capsicum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another recruit, whose co-operation I had in no way engineered, came
+ spontaneously to offer me her evidence. This was the Feeble Leaf-cutter
+ (Megachile imbecilla, GERST.). Nearly a quarter of a century ago, I saw
+ her, all through the month of July, cutting out her rounds and ellipses at
+ the expense of the petals of the Pelargonium zonale, the common geranium.
+ Her perseverance devastated&mdash;there is no other word for it&mdash;my
+ modest array of pots. Hardly was a blossom out, when the ardent Megachiles
+ came and scalloped it into crescents. The colour was indifferent to her:
+ red, white or pink, all the petals underwent the disastrous operation. A
+ few captures, ancient relics of my collecting-boxes by this time,
+ indemnified me for the pillage. I have not seen this unpleasant Bee since.
+ With what does she build when there are no geranium-flowers handy? I do
+ not know; but the fact remains that the fragile tailoress used to attack
+ the foreign flower, a fairly recent acquisition from the Cape, as though
+ all her race had never done anything else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These details leave us with one obvious conclusion, which is contrary to
+ our original ideas, based on the unvarying character of insect industry.
+ In constructing their jars, the Leaf-cutters, each following the taste
+ peculiar to her species, do not make use of this or that plant to the
+ exclusion of the others; they have no definite flora, no domain faithfully
+ transmitted by heredity. Their pieces of leaves vary according to the
+ surrounding vegetation; they vary in different layers of the same cell.
+ Everything suits them, exotic or native, rare or common, provided that the
+ bit cut out be easy to employ. It is not the general aspect of the shrub,
+ with its fragile or bushy branches, its large or small, green or grey,
+ dull or glossy leaves, that guides the insect: such advanced botanical
+ knowledge does not enter into the question at all. In the thicket chosen
+ as a pinking-establishment, the Megachile sees but one thing: leaves
+ useful for her work. The Shrike, with his passion for plants with long,
+ woolly sprigs, knows where to find nicely-wadded substitutes when his
+ favourite growth, the cotton-rose, is lacking; the Megachile has much
+ wider resources: indifferent to the plant itself, she looks only into the
+ foliage. If she finds leaves of the proper size, of a dry texture capable
+ of defying the damp and of a suppleness favourable to cylindrical curving,
+ that is all she asks; and the rest does not matter. She has therefore an
+ almost unlimited field for her labour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These sudden and wholly unprovoked changes give cause for reflection. When
+ my geranium-flowers were devastated, how had the obtrusive Bee, untroubled
+ by the profound dissimilarity between the petals, snow-white here, bright
+ scarlet there, how had she learnt her trade? Nothing tells us that she
+ herself was not for the first time exploiting the plant from the Cape;
+ and, if she really did have predecessors, the habit had not had time to
+ become inveterate, considering the modern importation of the geranium.
+ Where again did the Silvery Megachile, for whom I created an exotic
+ shrubbery, make the acquaintance of the lopezia, which comes from Mexico?
+ She certainly is making a first start. Never did her village or mine
+ possess a stalk of that chilly denizen of our hot-houses. She is making a
+ first start; and behold her straightway a graduate, versed in the art of
+ carving unfamiliar foliage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ People often talk of the long apprenticeships served by instinct, of its
+ gradual acquirements, of its talents, the laborious work of the ages. The
+ Megachiles affirm the exact opposite. They tell me that the animal, though
+ invariable in the essence of its art, is capable of innovation in the
+ details; but at the same time they assure me that any such innovation is
+ sudden and not gradual. Nothing prepares the innovations, nothing improves
+ them or hands them down; otherwise a selection would long ago have been
+ made amid the diversity of foliage; and the shrub recognized as the most
+ serviceable, especially when it is also plentiful, would alone supply all
+ the building-materials needed. If heredity transmitted industrial
+ discoveries, a Megachile who thought of cutting her disks out of
+ pomegranate-leaves and found them satisfactory ought to have instilled a
+ liking for similar materials into her descendants; and we should this day
+ find Leaf-cutters faithful to the pomegranate-leaves, workers who remained
+ exclusive in their choice of the raw material. The facts refute these
+ theories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ People also say:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Grant us a variation, however small, in the insect's industry; and that
+ variation, accentuated more and more, will produce a new race and finally
+ a fixed species.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This trifling variation is the fulcrum for which Archimedes clamoured in
+ order to lift the world with his system of levers. The Megachiles offer us
+ one and a very great one: the indefinite variation of their materials.
+ What will the theorists' levers lift with this fulcrum? Why, nothing at
+ all! Whether they cut the delicate petals of the geranium or the tough
+ leaves of the lilac-bushes, the Leaf-cutters are and will be what they
+ were. This is what we learn from the persistence of each species in its
+ structural details, despite the great variety of the foliage employed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 9. THE COTTON-BEES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The evidence of the Leaf-cutters proves that a certain latitude is left to
+ the insect in its choice of materials for the nest; and this is confirmed
+ by the testimony of the Anthidia, the cotton-manufacturers. My district
+ possesses five: A. Florentinum, LATR., A. diadema, LATR., A. manicatum,
+ LATR., A. cingulatum, LATR., A. scapulare, LATR. None of them creates the
+ refuge in which the cotton goods are manufactured. Like the Osmiae and the
+ Leaf-cutters, they are homeless vagrants, adopting, each to her own taste,
+ such shelter as the work of others affords. The Scapular Anthidium is
+ loyal to the dry bramble, deprived of its pith and turned into a hollow
+ tube by the industry of various mining Bees, among which figure, in the
+ front rank, the Ceratinae, dwarf rivals of the Xylocopa, or Carpenter-bee,
+ that mighty driller of rotten wood. The spacious galleries of the Masked
+ Anthophora suit the Florentine Anthidium, the foremost member of the genus
+ so far as size is concerned. The Diadem Anthidium considers that she has
+ done very well if she inherits the vestibule of the Hairy-footed
+ Anthophora, or even the ordinary burrow of the Earth-worm. Failing
+ anything better, she may establish herself in the dilapidated dome of the
+ Mason-bee of the Pebbles. The Manicate Anthidium shares her tastes. I have
+ surprised the Girdled Anthidium cohabiting with a Bembex-wasp. The two
+ occupants of the cave dug in the sand, the owner and the stranger, were
+ living in peace, both intent upon their business. Her usual habitation is
+ some hole or other in the crevices of a ruined wall. To these refuges, the
+ work of others, we can add the stumps of reeds, which are as popular with
+ the various cotton-gatherers as with the Osmiae; and, after we have
+ mentioned a few most unexpected retreats, such as the sheath provided by a
+ hollow brick or the labyrinth furnished by the lock of a gate, we shall
+ have almost exhausted the list of domiciles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like the Osmiae and the Leaf-cutters, the Anthidium shows an urgent need
+ of a ready-made home. She never houses herself at her own expense. Can we
+ discover the reason? Let us first consult a few hard workers who are
+ artificers of their own dwellings. The Anthophora digs corridors and cells
+ in the road-side banks hardened by the sun; she does not erect, she
+ excavates; she does not build, she clears. Toiling away with her
+ mandibles, atom by atom, she manages to contrive the passages and chambers
+ necessary for her eggs; and a huge business it is. She has, in addition,
+ to polish and glaze the rough sides of her tunnels. What would happen if,
+ after obtaining a home by dint of long-continued toil, she had next to
+ line it with wadding, to gather the fibrous down from cottony plants and
+ to felt it into bags suitable for the honey-paste? The hard-working Bee
+ would not be equal to producing all these refinements. Her mining calls
+ for too great an expenditure of time and strength to leave her the leisure
+ for luxurious furnishing. Chambers and corridors, therefore, will remain
+ bare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Carpenter-bee gives us the same answer. When with her joiner's wimble
+ she has patiently bored the beam to a depth of nine inches, would she be
+ able to cut out and place in position the thousand and one pieces which
+ the Silky Leaf-cutter employs for her nest? Time would fail her, even as
+ it would fail a Megachile who, lacking the Capricorn's chamber, had
+ herself to dig a home in the trunk of the oak. Therefore the
+ Carpenter-bee, after the tedious work of boring, gets the installation
+ done in the most summary fashion, simply running up a sawdust partition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two things, the laborious business of obtaining a lodging and the
+ artistic work of furnishing, seem unable to go together. With the insect
+ as with man, he who builds the house does not furnish it, he who furnishes
+ it does not build it. To each his share, because of lack of time. Division
+ of labour, the mother of the arts, makes the workman excel in his
+ department; one man for the whole work would mean stagnation, the worker
+ never getting beyond his first crude attempts. Animal industry is a little
+ like our own: it does not attain its perfection save with the aid of
+ obscure toilers, who, without knowing it, prepare the final masterpiece. I
+ see no other reason for this need of a gratuitous lodging for the
+ Megachile's leafy basket or the Anthidia's cotton purses. In the case of
+ other artists who handle delicate things that require protection, I do not
+ hesitate to assume the existence of a ready-made home. Thus Reaumur tells
+ us of the Upholsterer-bee, Anthocopa papaveris, who fashions her cells
+ with poppy-petals. I do not know the flower-cutter, I have never seen her;
+ but her art tells me plainly enough that she must establish herself in
+ some gallery wrought by others, as, for instance, in an Earth-worm's
+ burrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have but to see the nest of a Cotton-bee to convince ourselves that its
+ builder cannot at the same time be an indefatigable navvy. When and
+ newly-felted and not yet made sticky with honey, the wadded purse is by
+ far the most elegant known specimen of entomological nest-building,
+ especially where the cotton is of a brilliant white, as is frequently the
+ case in the manufacturers of the Girdled Anthidium. No bird's-nest,
+ however deserving of our admiration, can vie in fineness of flock, in
+ gracefulness of form, in delicacy of felting with this wonderful bag,
+ which our fingers, even with the aid of tools, could hardly imitate, for
+ all their dexterity. I abandon the attempt to understand how, with its
+ little bales of cotton brought up one by one, the insect, no otherwise
+ gifted than the kneaders of mud and the makers of leafy baskets, manages
+ to felt what it has collected into a homogeneous whole and then to work
+ the product into a thimble-shaped wallet. Its tools as a master-fuller are
+ its legs and its mandibles, which are just like those possessed by the
+ mortar-kneaders and Leaf-cutters; and yet, despite this similarity of
+ outfit, what a vast difference in the results obtained!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To see the Cotton-bees' talents in action seems an undertaking fraught
+ with innumerable difficulties: things happen at a depth inaccessible to
+ the eye; and to persuade the insect to work in the open does not lie in
+ our power. One resource remained and I did not fail to turn to it, though
+ hitherto I have been wholly unsuccessful. Three species, Anthidium
+ diadema, A. manicatum and A. florentinum&mdash;the first-named in
+ particular&mdash;show themselves quite ready to take up their abode in my
+ reed-apparatus. All that I had to do was to replace the reeds by glass
+ tubes, which would allow me to watch the work without disturbing the
+ insect. This stratagem had answered perfectly with the Three-horned Osmia
+ and Latreille's Osmia, whose little housekeeping-secrets I had learnt
+ thanks to the transparent dwelling-house. Why should it not answer for its
+ Cotton-bees and, in the same way, with the Leaf-cutters? I almost counted
+ on success. Events betrayed my confidence. For four years I supplied my
+ hives with glass tubes and not once did the Cotton-weavers or the
+ Leaf-cutters condescend to take up their quarters in the crystal palaces.
+ They always preferred the hovel provided by the reed. Shall I persuade
+ them one day? I do not abandon all hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, let me describe the little that I saw. More or less stocked
+ with cells, the reed is at last closed, right at the orifice, with a thick
+ plug of cotton, usually coarser than the wadding of the honey-satchels. It
+ is the equivalent of the Three-horned Osmia's barricade of mud, of the
+ leaf-putty of Latreille's Osmia, of the Megachiles' barrier of leaves cut
+ into disks. All these free tenants are careful to shut tight the door of
+ the dwelling, of which they have often utilized only a portion. To watch
+ the building of this barricade, which is almost external work, demands but
+ a little patience in waiting for the favourable moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Anthidium arrives at last, carrying the bale of cotton for the
+ plugging. With her fore-legs she tears it apart and spreads it out; with
+ her mandibles, which go in closed and come out open, she loosens the hard
+ lumps of flock; with her forehead she presses each new layer upon the one
+ below. And that is all. The insect flies off, returns the richer by
+ another bale and repeats the performance until the cotton barrier reaches
+ the level of the opening. We have here, remember, a rough task, in no way
+ to be compared with the delicate manufacturer of the bags; nevertheless,
+ it may perhaps tell us something of the general procedure of the finer
+ work. The legs do the carding, the mandibles the dividing, the forehead
+ the pressing; and the play of these implements produces the wonderful
+ cushioned wallet. That is the mechanism in the lump; but what of the
+ artistry?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us leave the unknown for facts within the scope of observation. I will
+ question the Diadem Anthidium in particular, a frequent inmate of my
+ reeds. I open a reed-stump about two decimetres long by twelve millimetres
+ in diameter. (About seven and three-quarter inches by half an inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) The end is occupied by a column of cotton-wool comprising ten
+ cells, without any demarcation between them on the outside, so that their
+ whole forms a continuous cylinder. Moreover, thanks to a close felting,
+ the different compartments are soldered together, so much so that, when
+ pulled by the end, the cotton edifice does not break into sections, but
+ comes out all in one piece. One would take it for a single cylinder,
+ whereas in reality the work is composed of a series of chambers, each of
+ which has been constructed separately, independently of the one before,
+ except perhaps at the base.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this reason, short of ripping up the soft dwelling, still full of
+ honey, it is impossible to ascertain the number of storeys; we must wait
+ until the cocoons are woven. Then our fingers can tell the cells by
+ counting the knots that resist pressure under the cover of wadding. This
+ general structure is easily explained. A cotton bag is made, with the
+ sheath of the reed as a mould. If this guiding sheath were lacking, the
+ thimble shape would be obtained all the same, with no less elegance, as is
+ proved by the Girdled Anthidium, who makes her nest in some hiding-place
+ or other in the walls or the ground. When the purse is finished, the
+ provisions come and the egg, followed by the closing of the cell. We do
+ not here find the geometrical lid of the Leaf-cutters, the pile of disks
+ tight-set in the mouth of the jar. The bag is closed with a cotton sheet
+ whose edges are soldered by a felting-process to the edges of the opening.
+ The soldering is so well done that the honey-pouch and its cover form an
+ indivisible whole. Immediately above it, the second cell is constructed,
+ having its own base. At the beginning of this work, the insect takes care
+ to join the two storeys by felting the ceiling of the first to the floor
+ of the second. Thus continued to the end, the work, with its inner
+ solderings, becomes an unbroken cylinder, in which the beauties of the
+ separate wallets disappear from view. In very much the same fashion, but
+ with less adhesion among the different cells, do the Leaf-cutters act when
+ stacking their jars in a column without any external division into
+ storeys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us return to the reed-stump which gives us these details. Beyond the
+ cotton-wool cylinder wherein ten cocoons are lodged in a row comes an
+ empty space of half a decimetre or more. (About two inches.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) The Osmiae and the Leaf-cutters are also accustomed to leave these
+ long, deserted vestibules. The nest ends, at the orifice of the reed, with
+ a strong plug of flock coarser and less white than that of the cells. This
+ use of closing-materials which are less delicate in texture but of greater
+ resisting-power, while not an invariable characteristic, occurs frequently
+ enough to make us suspect that the insect knows how to distinguish what is
+ best suited now to the snug sleeping-berth of the larvae, anon to the
+ defensive barricade of the home. Sometimes the choice is an exceedingly
+ judicious one, as is shown by the nest of the Diadem Anthidium. Time after
+ time, whereas the cells were composed of the finest grade of white cotton,
+ gathered from Centaurea solsticialis, or St. Barnaby's thistle, the
+ barrier at the entrance, differing from the rest of the work in its yellow
+ colouring, was a heap of close-set bristles supplied by the scallop-leaved
+ mullein. The two functions of the wadding are here plainly marked. The
+ delicate skin of the larvae needs a well-padded cradle; and the mother
+ collects the softest materials that the cottony plants provide. Rivalling
+ the bird, which furnishes the inside of the nest with wool and strengthens
+ the outside with sticks, she reserves for the grubs' mattress the finest
+ down, so hard to find and collected with such patience. But, when it
+ becomes a matter of shutting the door against the foe, then the entrance
+ bristles with forbidding caltrops, with stiff, prickly hairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This ingenious system of defence is not the only one known to the
+ Anthidia. More distrustful still, the Manicate Anthidium leaves no space
+ in the front part of the reed. Immediately after the column of cells, she
+ heaps up, in the uninhabited vestibule, a conglomeration of rubbish,
+ whatever chance may offer in the neighbourhood of the nest: little pieces
+ of gravel, bits of earth, grains of sawdust, particles of mortar,
+ cypress-catkins, broken leaves, dry Snail-droppings and any other material
+ that comes her way. The pile, a real barricade this time, blocks the reed
+ completely to the end, except about two centimetres (About three-quarters
+ of an inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.) left for the final cotton plug.
+ Certainly no foe will break in through the double rampart; but he will
+ make an insidious attack from the rear. The Leucopsis will come and, with
+ her long probe, thanks to some imperceptible fissure in the tube, will
+ insert her dread eggs and destroy every single inhabitant of the fortress.
+ Thus are the Manicate Anthidium's anxious precautions outwitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we had not already seen the same thing with the Leaf-cutters, this
+ would be the place to enlarge upon the useless tasks undertaken by the
+ insect when, with its ovaries apparently depleted, it goes on spending its
+ strength with no maternal object in view and for the sole pleasure of
+ work. I have come across several reeds stopped up with flock though
+ containing nothing at all, or else furnished with one, two or three cells
+ devoid of provisions or eggs. The ever-imperious instinct for gathering
+ cotton and felting it into purses and heaping it into barricades persists,
+ fruitlessly, until life fails. The Lizard's tail wriggles, curls and
+ uncurls after it is detached from the animal's body. In these reflex
+ movements, I seem to see not an explanation, certainly, but a rough image
+ of the industrious persistency of the insect, still toiling away at its
+ business, even when there is nothing useful left to do. This worker knows
+ no rest but death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have said enough about the dwelling of the Diadem Anthidium; let us look
+ at the inhabitant and her provisions. The honey is pale-yellow,
+ homogeneous and of a semifluid consistency, which prevents it from
+ trickling through the porous cotton bag. The egg floats on the surface of
+ the heap, with the end containing the head dipped into the paste. To
+ follow the larva through its progressive stages is not without interest,
+ especially on account of the cocoon, which is one of the most singular
+ that I know. With this object in view, I prepare a few cells that lend
+ themselves to observation. I take a pair of scissors, slice a piece off
+ the side of the cotton-wool purse, so as to lay bare both the victuals and
+ the consumer, and place the ripped cell in a short glass tube. During the
+ first few days, nothing striking happens. The little grub, with its head
+ still plunged in the honey, slakes its thirst with long draughts and waxes
+ fat. A moment comes...But let us go back a little farther, before
+ broaching this question of sanitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every grub, of whatever kind, fed on provisions collected by the mother
+ and placed in a narrow cell is subject to conditions of health unknown to
+ the roving grub that goes where it likes and feeds itself on what it can
+ pick up. The first, the recluse, is no more able than the second, the
+ gadabout, to solve the problem of a food which can be entirely
+ assimilated, without leaving an unclean residue. The second gives no
+ thought to these sordid matters: any place suits it for getting rid of
+ that difficulty. But what will the other do with its waste matter, cooped
+ up as it is in a tiny cell stuffed full of provisions? A most unpleasant
+ mixture seems inevitable. Picture the honey-eating grub floating on liquid
+ provisions and fouling them at intervals with its excretions! The least
+ movement of the hinder-part would cause the whole to amalgamate; and what
+ a broth that would make for the delicate nursling! No, it cannot be; those
+ dainty epicures must have some method of escaping these horrors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They all have, in fact, and most original methods at that. Some take the
+ bull by the horns, so to speak, and, in order not to soil things, refrain
+ from uncleanliness until the end of the meal: they keep the dropping-trap
+ closed as long as the victuals are unfinished. This is a radical scheme,
+ but not in every one's power, it appears. It is the course adopted, for
+ instance, by the Sphex-wasps and the Anthophora-bees, who, when the whole
+ of the food is consumed, expel at one shot the residues amassed in the
+ intestines since the commencement of the repast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Others, the Osmiae in particular, accept a compromise and begin to relieve
+ the digestive tract when a suitable space has been made in the cell
+ through the gradual disappearance of the victuals. Others again&mdash;more
+ hurried these&mdash;find means of obeying the common law pretty early by
+ engaging in stercoral manufactures. By a stroke of genius, they make the
+ unpleasant obstruction into building-bricks. We already know the art of
+ the Lily-beetle (Crioceris merdigera. Fabre's essay on this insect has not
+ yet been translated into English; but readers interested in the matter
+ will find a full description in "An Introduction to Entomology," by
+ William Kirby, Rector of Barham, and William Spence: letter 21.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), who, with her soft excrement, makes herself a coat wherein to keep
+ cool in spite of the sun. It is a very crude and revolting art, disgusting
+ to the eye. The Diadem Anthidium belongs to another school. With her
+ droppings she fashions masterpieces of marquetry and mosaic, which wholly
+ conceal their base origin from the onlooker. Let us watch her labours
+ through the windows of my tubes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the portion of food is nearly half consumed, there begins and goes on
+ to the end a frequent defecation of yellowish droppings, each hardly the
+ size of a pin's head. As these are ejected, the grub pushes them back to
+ the circumference of the cell with a movement of its hinder-part and keeps
+ them there by means of a few threads of silk. The work of the spinnerets,
+ therefore, which is deferred in the others until the provisions are
+ finished, starts earlier here and alternates with the feeding. In this
+ way, the excretions are kept at a distance, away from the honey and
+ without any danger of getting mixed with it. They end by becoming so
+ numerous as to form an almost continuous screen around the larva. This
+ excremental awning, made half of silk and half of droppings, is the rough
+ draft of the cocoon, or rather a sort of scaffolding on which the stones
+ are deposited until they are definitely placed in position. Pending the
+ piecing together of the mosaic, the scaffolding keeps the victuals free
+ from all contamination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To get rid of what cannot be flung outside, by hanging it on the ceiling,
+ is not bad to begin with; but to use it for making a work of art is better
+ still. The honey has disappeared. Now commences the final weaving of the
+ cocoon. The grub surrounds itself with a wall of silk, first pure white,
+ then tinted reddish-brown by means of an adhesive varnish. Through its
+ loose-meshed stuff, it seizes one by one the droppings hanging from the
+ scaffold and inlays them firmly in the tissue. The same mode of work is
+ employed by the Bembex-, Stizus-and Tachytes-wasps and other inlayers, who
+ strengthen the inadequate woof of their cocoons with grains of sand; only,
+ in their cotton-wool purses, the Anthidium's grubs substitute for the
+ mineral particles the only solid materials at their disposal. For them,
+ excrement takes the place of pebbles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the work goes none the worse for it. On the contrary: when the cocoon
+ is finished, any one who had not witnessed the process of manufacture
+ would be greatly puzzled to state the nature of the workmanship. The
+ colouring and the elegant regularity of the outer wrapper of the cocoon
+ suggest some kind of basket-work made with tiny bits of bamboo, or a
+ marquetry of exotic granules. I too let myself be caught by it in my early
+ days and wondered in vain what the hermit of the cotton wallet had used to
+ inlay her nymphal dwelling so prettily withal. To-day, when the secret is
+ known to me, I admire the ingenuity of the insect capable of obtaining the
+ useful and the beautiful out of the basest materials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cocoon has another surprise in store for us. The end containing the
+ head finishes with a short conical nipple, an apex, pierced by a narrow
+ shaft that establishes a communication between the inside and the out.
+ This architectural feature is common to all the Anthidia, to the
+ resin-workers who will occupy our attention presently, as well as to the
+ cotton-workers. It is found nowhere outside the Anthidium group.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is the use of this point which the larva leaves bare instead of
+ inlaying it like the rest of the shell? What is the use of that hole, left
+ quite open or, at most, closed at the bottom with a feeble grating of
+ silk? The insect appears to attach great importance to it, from what I
+ see. In point of fact, I watch the careful work of the apex. The grub,
+ whose movements the hole enables me to follow, patiently perfects the
+ lower end of the conical channel, polishes it and gives it an exactly
+ circular shape; from time to time, it inserts into the passage its two
+ closed mandibles, whose points project a little way outside; then, opening
+ them to a definite radius, like a pair of compasses, it widens the
+ aperture and makes it regular.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I imagine, without venturing, however, to make a categorical statement,
+ that the perforated apex is a chimney to admit the air required for
+ breathing. Every pupa breathes in its shell, however compact this may be,
+ even as the unhatched bird breathes inside the egg. The thousands of pores
+ with which the shell is pierced allow the inside moisture to evaporate and
+ the outer air to penetrate as and when needed. The stony caskets of the
+ Bembex- and Stizus-wasps are endowed, notwithstanding their hardness, with
+ similar means of exchange between the vitiated and the pure atmosphere.
+ Can the shells of the Anthidia be air-proof, owing to some modification
+ that escapes me? In any case, this impermeability cannot be attributed to
+ the excremental mosaic, which the cocoons of the resin-working Anthidia do
+ not possess, though endowed with an apex of the very best.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shall we find an answer to the question in the varnish with which the
+ silken fabric is impregnated? I hesitate to say yes and I hesitate to say
+ no, for a host of cocoons are coated with a similar lacquer though
+ deprived of communication with the outside air. All said, without being
+ able at present to account for its necessity, I admit that the apex of the
+ Anthidia is a breathing-aperture. I bequeath to the future the task of
+ telling us for what reasons the collectors of both cotton and resin leave
+ a large pore in their shells, whereas all the other weavers close theirs
+ completely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After these biological curiosities, it remains for me to discuss the
+ principal subject of this chapter: the botanical origin of the materials
+ of the nest. By watching the insect when busy at its harvesting, or else
+ by examining its manufactured flock under the microscope, I was able to
+ learn, not without a great expenditure of time and patience, that the
+ different Anthidia of my neighbourhood have recourse without distinction
+ to any cottony plant. Most of the wadding is supplied by the Compositae,
+ particularly the following: Centaurea solsticialis, or St. Barnaby's
+ thistle; C. paniculata, or panicled centaury; Echinops ritro, or small
+ globe-thistle; Onopordon illyricum, or Illyrian cotton-thistle;
+ Helichrysum staechas, or wild everlasting; Filago germanica, or common
+ cotton-rose. Next come the Labiatae: Marrubium vulgare, or common white
+ horehound; Ballota fetida, or stinking horehound; Calamintha nepeta, or
+ lesser calamint; Salvia aethiopis, or woolly sage. Lastly, the Solanaceae:
+ Verbascum thapsus, or shepherd's club; V. sinuatum, or scollop-leaved
+ mullein.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cotton-bees' flora, we see, incomplete as it is in my notes, embraces
+ plants of very different aspect. There is no resemblance in appearance
+ between the proud candelabrum of the cotton-thistle, with its red tufts,
+ and the humble stalk of the globe-thistle, with its sky-blue capitula;
+ between the plentiful leaves of the mullein and the scanty foliage of the
+ St. Barnaby's thistle; between the rich silvery fleece of the woolly sage
+ and the short hairs of the everlasting. With the Anthidium, these clumsy
+ botanical characteristics do not count; one thing alone guides her: the
+ presence of cotton. Provided that the plant be more or less well-covered
+ with soft wadding, the rest is immaterial to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another condition, however, has to be fulfilled, apart from the fineness
+ of the cotton-wool. The plant, to be worth shearing, must be dead and dry.
+ I have never seen the harvesting done on fresh plants. In this way, the
+ Bee avoids mildew, which would make its appearance in a mass of hairs
+ still filled with sap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Faithful to the plant recognized as yielding good results, the Anthidium
+ arrives and resumes her gleaning on the edges of the parts denuded by
+ earlier harvests. Her mandibles scrape away and pass the tiny fluffs, one
+ by one, to the hind-legs, which hold the pellet pressed against the chest,
+ mix with it the rapidly-increasing store of down and make the whole into a
+ little ball. When this is the size of a pea, it goes back into the
+ mandibles; and the insect flies off, with its bale of cotton in its mouth.
+ If we have the patience to wait, we shall see it return to the same point,
+ at intervals of a few minutes, so long as the bag is not made. The
+ foraging for provisions will suspend the collecting of cotton; then, next
+ day or the day after, the scraping will be resumed on the same stalk, on
+ the same leaf, if the fleece be not exhausted. The owner of a rich crop
+ appears to keep to it until the closing-plug calls for coarser materials;
+ and even then this plug is often manufactured with the same fine flock as
+ the cells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After ascertaining the diversity of cotton-fields among our native plants,
+ I naturally had to enquire whether the Cotton-bee would also put up with
+ exotic plants, unknown to her race; whether the insect would show any
+ hesitation in the presence of woolly plants offered for the first time to
+ the rakes of her mandibles. The common clary and the Babylonian centaury,
+ with which I have stocked the harmas, shall be the harvest-fields; the
+ reaper shall be the Diadem Anthidium, the inmate of my reeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The common clary, or toute-bonne, forms part, I know, of our French flora
+ to-day; but it is an acclimatized foreigner. They say that a gallant
+ crusader, returning from Palestine with his share of glory and bruises,
+ brought back the toute-bonne from the Levant to help him cure his
+ rheumatism and dress his wounds. From the lordly manor, the plant
+ propagated itself in all directions, while remaining faithful to the walls
+ under whose shelter the noble dames of yore used to grow it for their
+ unguents. To this day, feudal ruins are its favourite resorts. Crusaders
+ and manors disappeared; the plant remained. In this case, the origin of
+ the clary, whether historical or legendary, is of secondary importance.
+ Even if it were of spontaneous growth in certain parts of France, the
+ toute-bonne is undoubtedly a stranger in the Vaucluse district. Only once
+ in the course of my long botanizing-expeditions across the department have
+ I come upon this plant. It was at Caromb, in some ruins, nearly thirty
+ years ago. I took a cutting of it; and since then the crusaders' sage has
+ accompanied me on all my peregrinations. My present hermitage possesses
+ several tufts of it: but, outside the enclosure, except at the foot of the
+ walls, it would be impossible to find one. We have, therefore, a plant
+ that is new to the country for many miles around, a cotton-field which the
+ Serignan Cotton-bees had never utilized before I came and sowed it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor had they ever made use of the Babylonian centaury, which I was the
+ first to introduce in order to cover my ungrateful stony soil with some
+ little vegetation. They had never seen anything like the colossal centaury
+ imported from the region of the Euphrates. Nothing in the local flora, not
+ even the cotton-thistle, had prepared them for this stalk as thick as a
+ child's wrist, crowned at a height of nine feet with a multitude of yellow
+ balls, nor for those great leaves spreading over the ground in an enormous
+ rosette. What will they do in the presence of such a find? They will take
+ possession of it with no more hesitation than if it were the humble St.
+ Barnaby's thistle, the usual purveyor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, I place a few stalks of clary and Babylonian centaury, duly
+ dried, near the reed-hives. The Diadem Anthidium is not long in
+ discovering the rich harvest. Straight away the wool is recognized as
+ being of excellent quality, so much so that, during the three or four
+ weeks of nest-building, I can daily witness the gleaning, now on the
+ clary, now on the centaury. Nevertheless the Babylonian plant appears to
+ be preferred, no doubt because of its whiter, finer and more plentiful
+ down. I keep a watchful eye on the scraping of the mandibles and the work
+ of the legs as they prepare the pellet; and I see nothing that differs
+ from the operations of the insect when gleaning on the globe-thistle and
+ the St. Barnaby's thistle. The plant from the Euphrates and the plant from
+ Palestine are treated like those of the district.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus we find what the Leaf-cutters taught us proved, in another way, by
+ the cotton-gatherers. In the local flora, the insect has no precise
+ domain; it reaps its harvest readily now from one species, now from
+ another, provided that it find the materials for its manufactures. The
+ exotic plant is accepted quite as easily as that of indigenous growth.
+ Lastly, the change from one plant to another, from the common to the rare,
+ from the habitual to the exceptional, from the known to the unknown, is
+ made suddenly, without gradual initiations. There is no novitiate, no
+ training by habit in the choice of the materials for the nest. The
+ insect's industry, variable in its details by sudden, individual and
+ non-transmissible innovations, gives the lie to the two great factors of
+ evolution: time and heredity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 10. THE RESIN-BEES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At the time when Fabricius (Johann Christian Fabricius (1745-1808), a
+ noted Danish entomologist, author of "Systema entomologiae" (1775).&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) gave the genus Anthidium its name, a name still used in our
+ classifications, entomologists troubled very little about the live animal;
+ they worked on corpses, a dissecting-room method which does not yet seem
+ to be drawing to an end. They would examine with a conscientious eye the
+ antenna, the mandible, the wing, the leg, without asking themselves what
+ use the insect had made of those organs in the exercise of its calling.
+ The animal was classified very nearly after the manner adopted in
+ crystallography. Structure was everything; life, with its highest
+ prerogatives, intellect, instinct, did not count, was not worthy of
+ admission into the zoological scheme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true that an almost exclusively necrological study is obligatory at
+ first. To fill one's boxes with insects stuck on pins is an operation
+ within the reach of all; to watch those same insects in their mode of
+ life, their work, their habits and customs is quite a different thing. The
+ nomenclator who lacks the time&mdash;and sometimes also the inclination&mdash;takes
+ his magnifying-glass, analyzes the dead body and names the worker without
+ knowing its work. Hence the number of appellations the least of whose
+ faults is that they are unpleasant to the ear, certain of them, indeed,
+ being gross misnomers. Have we not, for instance, seen the name of
+ Lithurgus, or stone-worker, given to a Bee who works in wood and nothing
+ but wood? Such absurdities will be inevitable until the animal's
+ profession is sufficiently familiar to lend its aid in the compiling of
+ diagnoses. I trust that the future will see this magnificent advance in
+ entomological science: men will reflect that the impaled specimens in our
+ collections once lived and followed a trade; and anatomy will be kept in
+ its proper place and made to leave due room for biology.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fabricius did not commit himself with his expression Anthidium, which
+ alludes to the love of flowers, but neither did he mention anything
+ characteristic: as all Bees have the same passion in a very high degree, I
+ see no reason to treat the Anthidia as more zealous looters than the
+ others. If he had known their cotton nests, perhaps the Scandinavian
+ naturalist would have given them a more logical denomination. As for me,
+ in a language wherein technical parade is out of place, I will call them
+ the Cotton-bees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The term requires some limiting. To judge by my finds, in fact, the old
+ genus Anthidium, that of the classifying entomologists, comprises in my
+ district two very different corporations. One is known to us and works
+ exclusively in wadding; the other, which we are about to study, works in
+ resin, without ever having recourse to cotton. Faithful to my extremely
+ simple principle of defining the worker, as far as possible, by his work,
+ I will call the members of this guild the Resin-bees. Thus confining
+ myself to the data supplied by my observations, I divide the Anthidium
+ group into equal sections, of equal importance, for which I demand special
+ generic titles; for it is highly illogical to call the carders of wool and
+ the kneaders of resin by the same name. I surrender to those whom it
+ concerns the honour of effecting this reform in the orthodox fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good luck, the friend of the persevering, made me acquainted in different
+ parts of Vaucluse with four Resin-bees whose singular trade no one had yet
+ suspected. To-day, I find them all four again in my own neighbourhood.
+ They are the following: Anthidium septemdentatum, LATR., A. bellicosum,
+ LEP., A. quadrilobum, LEP., and A. Latreillii, LEP. The first two make
+ their nests in deserted Snail-shells; the other two shelter their groups
+ of cells sometimes in the ground, sometimes under a large stone. We will
+ first discuss the inhabitants of the Snail-shell. I made a brief reference
+ to them in an earlier chapter, when speaking of the distribution of the
+ sexes. This mere allusion, suggested by a study of a different kind, must
+ now be amplified. I return to it with fuller particulars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stone-heaps in the Roman quarries near Serignan, which I have so often
+ visited in search of the nests of the Osmia who takes up her abode in
+ Snail-shells, supply me also with the two Resin-bees installed in similar
+ quarters. When the Field-mouse has left behind him a rich collection of
+ empty shells scattered all round his hay mattress under the slab, there is
+ always a hope of finding some Snail-shells plugged with mud and, here and
+ there, mixed with them, a few Snail-shells closed with resin. The two Bees
+ work next door to each other, one using clay, the other gum. The
+ excellence of the locality is responsible for this frequent cohabitation,
+ shelter being provided by the broken stone from the quarry and lodgings by
+ the shells which the Mouse has left behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At places where dead Snail-shells are few and far between, as in the
+ crevices of rustic walls, each Bee occupies by herself the shells which
+ she has found. But here, in the quarries, our crop will certainly be a
+ double or even a treble one, for both Resin-bees frequent the same heaps.
+ Let us, therefore, lift the stones and dig into the mound until the
+ excessive dampness of the subsoil tells us that it is useless to look
+ lower down. Sometimes at the moment of removing the first layer, sometimes
+ at a depth of eighteen inches, we shall find the Osmia's Snail-shell and,
+ much more rarely, the Resin-bee's. Above all, patience! The job is none of
+ the most fruitful; nor is it exactly an agreeable one. By dint of turning
+ over uncommonly jagged stones, our fingertips get hurt, lose their skin
+ and become as smooth as though we had held them on a grindstone. After a
+ whole afternoon of this work, our back will be aching, our fingers will be
+ itching and smarting and we shall possess a dozen Osmia-nests and perhaps
+ two or three Resin-bees' nests. Let us be content with that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Osmia's shells can be recognized at once, as being closed at the
+ orifice with a clay cover. The Anthidium's call for a special examination,
+ without which we should run a great risk of filling our pockets with
+ cumbersome rubbish. We find a dead Snail-shell among the stones. Is it
+ inhabited by the Resin-bee or not? The outside tells us nothing. The
+ Anthidium's work comes at the bottom of the spiral, a long way from the
+ mouth; and, though this is wide open, the eye cannot travel far enough
+ along the winding stair. I hold up the doubtful shell to the light. If it
+ is completely transparent, I know that it is empty and I put it back to
+ serve for future nests. If the second whorl is opaque, the spiral contains
+ something. What does it contain? Earth washed in by the rain? Remnants of
+ the putrefied Snail? That remains to be seen. With a little pocket-trowel,
+ the inquisitorial implement which always accompanies me, I make a wide
+ window in the middle of the final whorl. If I see a gleaming resin floor,
+ with incrustations of gravel, the thing is settled: I possess an
+ Anthidium's nest. But, oh the number of failures that go to one success!
+ The number of windows vainly opened in shells whose bottom is stuffed with
+ clay or with noisome corpses! Thus picking shells among the overturned
+ stone-heaps, inspecting them in the sun, breaking into them with the
+ trowel and nearly always rejecting them, I manage, after repeated
+ attempts, to obtain my materials for this chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first to hatch is the Seven-pronged Resin-bee (Anthidium
+ septemdentatum). We see her, in the month of April, lumbering along to the
+ rubbish-heaps in the quarries and the low boundary-walls, in search of her
+ Snail-shell. She is a contemporary of the Three-horned Osmia, who begins
+ operations in the last week of April, and often occupies the same
+ stone-heap, settling in the next shell. She is well-advised to start work
+ early and to be on neighbourly terms with the Osmia when the latter is
+ building; in fact, we shall soon see the terrible dangers to which that
+ same proximity exposes her dilatory rival in resin-work, Anthidium
+ bellicosum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shell adopted in the great majority of cases is that of the Common
+ Snail, Helix aspersa. It is sometimes of full size, sometimes
+ half-developed. Helix nemoralis and H. caespitum, which are much smaller,
+ also supply suitable lodgings; and this would as surely apply to any shell
+ of sufficient capacity, if the places which I explore possessed others, as
+ witness a nest which my son Emile has sent me from somewhere near
+ Marseilles. This time, the Resin-bee is settled in Helix algira, the most
+ remarkable of our land-shells because of the width and regularity of its
+ spiral, which is copied from that of the Ammonites. This magnificent nest,
+ a perfect specimen of both the Snail's work and the Bee's, deserves
+ description before any other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a distance of three centimetres (1.17 inches.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) from the mouth, the last spiral whorl contains nothing. At this
+ inconsiderable depth, a partition is clearly seen. The moderate diameter
+ of the passage accounts for the Anthidium's choice of this site to which
+ our eye can penetrate. In the common Snail-shell, whose cavity widens
+ rapidly, the insect establishes itself much farther back, so that, in
+ order to see the terminal partition, we must, as I have said, make a
+ lateral inlet. The position of this boundary-ceiling, which may come
+ farther forward or farther back, depends on the variable diameter of the
+ passage. The cells of the cocoons require a certain length and a certain
+ breadth, which the mother finds by going higher up or lower down in the
+ spiral, according to the shape of the shell. When the diameter is
+ suitable, the last whorl is occupied up to the orifice, where the final
+ lid appears, absolutely exposed to view. This is the case with the adult
+ Helix nemoralis and H. caespitum, and also with the young Common Snail. We
+ will not linger at present over this peculiarity, the importance of which
+ will become manifest shortly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether in the front or at the back of the spiral slope, the insect's work
+ ends in a facade of coarse mosaic, formed of small, angular bits of
+ gravel, firmly cemented with a gum the nature of which has to be
+ ascertained. It is an amber-coloured material, semi-transparent, brittle,
+ soluble in spirits of wine and burning with a sooty flame and a strong
+ smell of resin. From these characteristics it is evident that the Bee
+ prepares her gum with the resinous drops exuded by the Coniferae.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I think that I am even able to name the particular plant, though I have
+ never caught the insect in the act of gathering its materials. Hard by the
+ stone-heaps which I turn over for my collections there is a plentiful
+ supply of brown-berried junipers. Pines are totally absent; and the
+ cypress only appears occasionally near the houses. Moreover, among the
+ vegetable remains which we shall see assisting in the protection of the
+ nest, we often find the juniper's catkins and needles. As the resin-insect
+ is economical of its time and does not fly far from the quarters familiar
+ to it, the gum must have been collected on the shrub at whose foot the
+ materials for the barricade have been gathered. Nor is this merely a local
+ circumstance, for the Marseilles nest abounds in similar remnants. I
+ therefore regard the juniper as the regular resin-purveyor, without,
+ however, excluding the pine, the cypress and other Coniferae when the
+ favourite shrub is absent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bits of gravel in the lid are angular and chalky in the Marseilles
+ nest; they are round and flinty in most of the Serignan nests. In making
+ her mosaic, the worker pays no heed to the form or colour of its component
+ parts; she collects indiscriminately anything that is hard enough and not
+ too large. Sometimes she lights upon treasures that give her work a more
+ original character. The Marseilles nest shows me, neatly encrusted amid
+ the bits of gravel, a tiny whole landshell, Pupa cineres. A nest in my own
+ neighbourhood provides me with a pretty Snail-shell, Helix striata,
+ forming a rose-pattern in the middle of the mosaic. These little artistic
+ details remind me of a certain nest of Eumenes Amadei (A Mason-wasp,
+ forming the subject of an essay which has not yet been published in
+ English.&mdash;Translator's Note.) which abounds in small shells.
+ Ornamental shell-work appears to number its lovers among the insects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the lid of resin and gravel, an entire whorl of the spiral is
+ occupied by a barricade of incongruous remnants, similar to that which, in
+ the reeds, protects the row of cocoons of the Manicate Cotton-bee. It is
+ curious to see exactly the same defensive methods employed by two builders
+ of such different talents, one of whom handles flock, the other gum. The
+ nest from Marseilles has for its barricade bits of chalky gravel,
+ particles of earth, fragments of sticks, a few scraps of moss and
+ especially juniper-catkins and needles. The Serignan nests, installed in
+ Helix aspersa, have almost the same protective materials. I see bits of
+ gravel, the size of a lentil, and the catkins and needles of the
+ brown-berried juniper predominating. Next come the dry excretions of the
+ Snail and a few rare little land-shells. A similar jumble of more or less
+ everything found near the nest forms, as we know, the barricade of the
+ Manicate Cotton-bee, who is also an adept at using the Snail's stercoral
+ droppings after these have been dried in the sun. Let us observe finally
+ that these dissimilar materials are heaped together without any cementing,
+ just as the insect has picked them up. Resin plays no part in the mass;
+ and we have only to pierce the lid and turn the shell upside down for the
+ barricade to come dribbling to the ground. To glue the whole thing
+ together does not enter into the Resin-bee's scheme. Perhaps such an
+ expenditure of gum is beyond her means; perhaps the barricade, if hardened
+ into a solid block, would afterwards form an invincible obstacle to the
+ escape of the youngsters; perhaps again the mass of gravel is an accessory
+ rampart, run up roughly as a work of secondary importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amid these doubtful matters, I see at least that the insect does not look
+ upon its barricade as indispensable. It employs it regularly in the large
+ shells, whose last whorl, too spacious to be used, forms an unoccupied
+ vestibule; it neglects it in the moderate shells, such as Helix nemoralis,
+ in which the resin lid is level with the orifice. My excavations in the
+ stone-heaps supply me with an almost equal number of nests with and
+ without defensive embankments. Among the Cotton-bees, the Manicate
+ Anthidium is not faithful either to her fort of little sticks and stones;
+ I know some of her nests in which cotton serves every purpose. With both
+ of them, the gravel rampart seems useful only in certain circumstances,
+ which I am unable to specify.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other side of the outworks of the fortification, the lid and
+ barricade, are the cells set more or less far down in the spiral,
+ according to the diameter of the shell. They are bounded back and front by
+ partitions of pure resin, without any encrustations of mineral particles.
+ Their number is exceedingly restricted and is usually limited to two. The
+ front room, which is larger because the width of the passage goes on
+ increasing, is the abode of a male, superior in size to the other sex; the
+ less spacious back room contains a female. I have already drawn attention
+ in an earlier chapter to the wonderful problem submitted for our
+ consideration by this breaking up of the laying into couples and this
+ alternation of the males and females. Without calling for other work than
+ the transverse partitions, the broadening stairway of the Snail-shell thus
+ furnishes both sexes with house-room suited to their size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second Resin-bee that inhabits shells, Anthidium bellicosum, hatches
+ in July and works during the fierce heat of August. Her architecture
+ differs in no wise from that of her kinswoman of the springtime, so much
+ so that, when we find a tenanted Snail-shell in a hole in the wall or
+ under the stones, it is impossible to decide to which of the two species
+ the nest belongs. The only way to obtain exact information is to break the
+ shell and split the cocoons in February, at which time the nests of the
+ summer Resin-bee are occupied by larvae and those of the spring Resin-bee
+ by the perfect insect. If we shrink from this brutal method, we are still
+ in doubt until the cocoons open, so great is the resemblance between the
+ two pieces of work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In both cases, we find the same lodging, Snail-shells of every size and
+ every kind, just as they happen to come; the same resin lid, the inside
+ gritty with tiny bits of stone, the outside almost smooth and sometimes
+ ornamented with little shells; the same barricade&mdash;not always present&mdash;of
+ various kinds of rubbish; the same division into two rooms of unequal size
+ occupied by the two sexes. Everything is identical, down to the purveyor
+ of the gum, the brown-berried juniper. To say more about the nest of the
+ summer Resin-bee would be to repeat oneself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is only one thing that requires further investigation. I do not see
+ the reason that prompts the two insects to leave the greater part of their
+ shell empty in front, instead of occupying it entirely up to the orifice
+ as the Osmia habitually does. As the mother's laying is broken up into
+ intermittent shifts of a couple of eggs apiece, is it necessary that there
+ should be a new home for each shift? Is the half-fluid resin unsuitable
+ for the wide-spanned roofs which would have to be constructed when the
+ diameter of the helical passage exceeded certain limits? Is the gathering
+ of the cement too wearisome a task to leave the Bee any strength for
+ making the numerous partitions which she would need if she utilized the
+ spacious final whorl? I find no answer to these questions. I note the fact
+ without interpreting it: when the shell is a large one, the front part,
+ almost the whole of the last whorl, remains an empty vestibule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the spring Resin-bee, Anthidium septemdentatum, this less than half
+ occupied lodging presents no drawbacks. A contemporary of the Osmia, often
+ her neighbour under the same stone, the gum-worker builds her nest at the
+ same period as the mud-worker; but there is no fear of mutual
+ encroachments, for the two Bees, working next door to each other, watch
+ their respective properties with a jealous eye. If attempts at usurpation
+ were to be made, the owner of the Snail-shell would know how to enforce
+ her rights as the first occupant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the summer Resin-bee, A. bellicosum, the conditions are very
+ different. At the moment when the Osmia is building, she is still in the
+ larval, or at most in the nymphal stage. Her abode, which would not be
+ more absolutely silent if deserted, her shell, with its vast untenanted
+ porch, will not tempt the earlier Resin-bee, who herself wants apartments
+ right at the far end of the spiral, but it might suit the Osmia, who knows
+ how to fill the shell with cells up to the mouth. The last whorl left
+ vacant by the Anthidium is a magnificent lodging which nothing prevents
+ the mason from occupying. The Osmia does seize upon it, in fact, and does
+ so too often for the welfare of the unfortunate late-comer. The final
+ resin lid takes the place, for the Osmia, of the mud stopper with which
+ she cuts off at the back the portion of the spiral too narrow for her
+ labours. Upon this lid she builds her mass of cells in so many storeys,
+ after which she covers the whole with a thick defensive plug. In short,
+ the work is conducted as though the Snail-shell contained nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When July arrives, this doubly-tenanted house becomes the scene of a
+ tragic conflict. Those below, on attaining the adult state, burst their
+ swaddling-bands, demolish their resin partitions, pass through the gravel
+ barricade and try to release themselves; those above, larvae still or
+ budding pupae, prisoners in their shells until the following spring,
+ completely block the way. To force a passage from the far-end of those
+ catacombs is beyond the strength of the Resin-bee, already weakened by the
+ effort of breaking out of her own nest. A few of the Osmia's partitions
+ are damaged, a few cocoons receive slight injuries; and then, worn out
+ with vain struggles, the captives abandon hope and perish behind the
+ impregnable wall of earth. And with them perish also certain parasites,
+ even less fit for the prodigious work of clearance: Zonites and Chryses
+ (Chrysis flammea), of whom the first are consumers of provisions and the
+ second of grubs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This lamentable ending of the Resin-bee, buried alive under the Osmia's
+ walls, is not a rare accident to be passed over in silence or mentioned in
+ a few words; on the contrary, it happens very often; and its frequency
+ suggests this thought: the school which sees in instinct an acquired habit
+ treats the slightest favourable occurrence in the course of animal
+ industry as the starting-point of an improvement which, transmitted by
+ heredity and becoming in time more and more accentuated, at last grows
+ into a settled characteristic common to the whole race. There is, it is
+ true, a total absence of positive proofs in support of this theory; but it
+ is stated with a wealth of hypothesis that leaves a thousand loopholes:
+ 'Granting that...Supposing that...It may be...nothing need prevent us from
+ believing... It is quite possible...' Thus argued the master; and the
+ disciples have not yet hit upon anything better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If the sky were to fall,' said Rabelais, 'the larks would all be caught.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, but the sky stays up; and the larks go on flying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If things happened in such and such a way,' says our friend, 'instinct
+ may have undergone variations and modifications.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, but are you quite sure that things happened as you say?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I banish the word 'if' from my vocabulary. I suppose nothing, I take
+ nothing for granted; I pluck the brutal fact, the only thing that can be
+ trusted; I record it and then ask myself what conclusion rests upon its
+ solid framework. From the fact which I have related we may draw the
+ following inference:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You say that any modification profitable to the animal is transmitted
+ throughout a series of favoured ones who, better equipped with tools,
+ better endowed with aptitudes, abandon the ancient usages and replace the
+ primitive species, the victim of the struggle for life. You declare that
+ once, in the dim distance of the ages, a Bee found herself by accident in
+ possession of a dead Snail-shell. The safe and peaceful lodging pleased
+ her fancy. On and on went the hereditary liking; and the Snail-shell
+ proved more and more agreeable to the insect's descendants, who began to
+ look for it under the stones, so that later generations, with the aid of
+ habit, ended by adopting it as the ancestral dwelling. Again by accident,
+ the Bee happened upon a drop of resin. It was soft, plastic, well-suited
+ for the partitioning of the Snail-shell; it soon hardened into a solid
+ ceiling. The Bee tried the resinous gum and benefited by it. Her
+ successors also benefited by it, especially after improving it. Little by
+ little, the rubble-work of the lid and of the gravel barricade was
+ invented: an enormous improvement, of which the race did not fail to take
+ advantage. The defensive fortification was the finishing-touch to the
+ original structure. Here we have the origin and development of the
+ instinct of the Resin-bees who make their home in Snail-shells.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This glorious genesis of insect ways and means lacks just one little
+ thing: probability. Life everywhere, even among the humble, has two
+ phases: its share of good and its share of evil. Avoiding the latter and
+ seeking the former is the rough balance-sheet of life's actions. Animals,
+ like ourselves, have their portion of the sweet and the bitter: they are
+ just as anxious to reduce the second as to increase the first; for, with
+ them as with us,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ De malheurs evites le bonheur se compose.
+ (Bad luck missed is good luck gained.)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If the Bee has so faithfully handed down her casual invention of a resin
+ nest built inside a Snail-shell, then there is no denying that she must
+ have just as faithfully handed down the means of averting the terrible
+ danger of belated hatchings. A few mothers, escaping at rare intervals
+ from the catacombs blocked by the Osmiae, must have retained a lively
+ memory, a powerful impression of their desperate struggle through the mass
+ of earth; they must have inspired their descendants with a dread of those
+ vast dwellings where the stranger comes afterwards and builds; they must
+ have taught them by habit the means of safety, the use of the medium-sized
+ shell, which the nest fills to the mouth. So far as the prosperity of the
+ race was concerned, the discontinuance of the system of empty vestibules
+ was far more important than the invention of the barricade, which is not
+ altogether indispensable: it would have saved them from perishing
+ miserably, behind impenetrable walls, and would have considerably
+ increased the numbers of their posterity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thousands and thousands of experiments have been made throughout the ages
+ with Snail-shells of average dimensions: the thing is certain, because I
+ find many of them to-day. Well, have these life-saving experiments, with
+ their immense importance to the race, become general by hereditary
+ bequest? Not at all: the Resin-bee persists in using big Snail-shells just
+ as though her ancestors had never known the danger of the Osmia-blocked
+ vestibule. Once these facts are duly recognized, the conclusion is
+ irresistible: it is obvious that, as the insect does not hand down the
+ casual modification tending towards the avoidance of what is to its
+ disadvantage, neither does it hand down the modification leading to the
+ adoption of what is to its advantage. However lively the impression made
+ upon the mother, the accidental leaves no trace in the offspring. Chance
+ plays no part in the genesis of the instincts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next to these tenants of the Snail-shells we have two other Resin-bees who
+ never come to the shells for a cabin for their nests. They are Anthidium
+ quadrilobum, LEP., and A. Latreillii, LEP., both exceedingly uncommon in
+ my district. If we meet them very rarely, however, this may well be due to
+ the difficulty of seeing them; for they lead extremely solitary and wary
+ lives. A warm nook under some stone or other; the deserted streets of an
+ Ant-hill in a sun-baked bank; a Beetle's vacant burrow a few inches below
+ the ground; in short, a cavity of some sort, perhaps arranged by the Bee's
+ own care: these are the only establishments which I know them to occupy.
+ And here, with no other shelter than the cover of the refuge, they build a
+ mass of cells joined together and grouped into a sphere, which, in the
+ case of the Four-lobed Resin-bee, attains the size of a man's fist and, in
+ that of Latreille's Resin-bee, the size of a small apple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first sight, we remain very uncertain as to the nature of the strange
+ ball. It is brown, rather hard, slightly sticky, with a bituminous smell.
+ Outside are encrusted a few bits of gravel, particles of earth, heads of
+ large-sized Ants. This cannibal trophy is not a sign of barbarous customs:
+ the Bee does not decapitate Ants to adorn her hut. An inlayer, like her
+ colleagues of the Snail-shell, she gathers any hard granule near at hand
+ capable of strengthening her work; and the dried skulls of Ants, which are
+ frequent around about her abode, are in her eyes building-stones of equal
+ value to the pebbles. One and all employ whatever they can find without
+ much seeking. The inhabitant of the shell, in order to construct her
+ barricade, makes shift with the dry excrement of the nearest Snail; the
+ denizen of the flat stones and of the roadside banks frequented by the
+ Ants does what she can with the heads of the defunct and, should these be
+ lacking, is ready to replace them with something else. Moreover, the
+ defensive inlaying is slight; we see that the insect attaches no great
+ importance to it and has every confidence in the stout wall of the home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The material of which the work is made at first suggests some rustic wax,
+ much coarser than that of the Bumble-bees, or rather some tar of unknown
+ origin. We think again and then recognize in the puzzling substance the
+ semitransparent fracture, the quality of becoming soft when exposed to
+ heat and of burning with a smoky flame, the solubility in spirits of wine&mdash;in
+ short, all the distinguishing characteristics of resin. Here then are two
+ more collectors of the exudations of the Coniferae. At the points where I
+ find their nests are Aleppo pines, cypresses, brown-berried junipers and
+ common junipers. Which of the four supplies the mastic? There is nothing
+ to tell us. Nor is there anything to explain how the native amber-colour
+ of the resin is replaced in the work of both Bees by a dark-brown hue
+ resembling that of pitch. Does the insect collect resin impaired by the
+ weather, soiled by the sanies of rotten wood? When kneading it, does it
+ mix some dark ingredient with it? I look upon this as possible, but not as
+ proved, since I have never seen the Bee collecting her resin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While this point escapes me, another of higher interest appears most
+ plainly; and that is the large amount of resinous material used in a
+ single nest, especially in that of Anthidium quadrilobum, in which I have
+ counted as many as twelve cells. The nest of the Mason-bee of the Pebbles
+ is hardly more massive. For so costly an establishment, therefore, the
+ Resin-bee collects her pitch on the dead pine as copiously as the
+ Mason-bee collects her mortar on the macadamized road. Her workshop no
+ longer shows us the niggardly partitioning of a Snail-shell with two or
+ three drops of resin; what we see is the whole building of the house, from
+ the basement to the roof, from the thick outer walls to the partitions of
+ the rooms. The cement expended would be enough to divide hundreds of
+ Snail-shells, wherefore the title of Resin-bee is due first and foremost
+ to this master-builder in pitch. Honourable mention should be awarded to
+ A. Latreillii, who rivals her fellow-worker as far as her smaller stature
+ permits. The other manipulators of resin, those who build partitions in
+ Snail-shells, come third, a very long way behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now, with the facts to support us, let us philosophize a little. We
+ have here, recognized as of excellent standard by all the expert
+ classifiers, so fastidious in the arrangement of their lists, a generic
+ group, called Anthidium, containing two guilds of workers entirely
+ dissimilar in character: the cotton-fullers and the resin-kneaders. It is
+ even possible that other species, when their habits are better known, will
+ come and increase this variety of manufactures. I confine myself to the
+ little that I know and ask myself in what the manipulator of cotton
+ differs from the manipulator of resin as regards tools, that is to say,
+ organs. Certainly, when the genus Anthidium was set down by the
+ classifiers, they were not wanting in scientific precision: they
+ consulted, under the lens of the microscope, the wings, the mandibles, the
+ legs, the harvesting-brush, in short, all the details calculated to assist
+ the proper delimitation of the group. After this minute examination by the
+ experts, if no organic differences stand revealed, the reason is that they
+ do not exist. Any dissimilarity of structure could not escape the accurate
+ eyes of our learned taxonomists. The genus, therefore, is indeed
+ organically homogeneous; but industrially it is thoroughly heterogeneous.
+ The implements are the same and the work is different.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That eminent Bordeaux entomologist, Professor Jean Perez, to whom I
+ communicated the misgivings aroused in my mind by the contradictory nature
+ of my discoveries, thinks that he has found the solution of the difficulty
+ in the conformation of the mandibles. I extract the following passage from
+ his volume, "Les Abeilles":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The cotton-pressing females have the edge of their mandibles cut out into
+ five or six little teeth, which make an instrument admirably suited for
+ scraping and removing the hairs from the epidermis of the plants. It is a
+ sort of comb or teasel. The resin-kneading females have the edge of the
+ mandible not toothed, but simply curved; the tip alone, preceded by a
+ notch which is pretty clearly marked in some species, forms a real tooth;
+ but this tooth is blunt and does not project. The mandible, in short, is a
+ kind of spoon perfectly fitted to remove the sticky matter and to shape it
+ into a ball.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing better could be said to explain the two sorts of industry: in the
+ one case, a rake which gathers the wool; in the other, a spoon which
+ scoops up the resin. I should have left it at that and felt quite content
+ without further investigation, if I had not had the curiosity to open my
+ boxes and, in my turn, to take a good look, side by side, at the workers
+ in cement and the workers in cotton. Allow me, my learned master, to
+ whisper in your ear what I saw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first that I examine is Anthidium septemdentatum. A spoon: yes, it is
+ just that. Powerful mandibles, shaped like an isosceles triangle, flat
+ above, hollowed out below; and no indentations, none whatsoever. A
+ splendid tool, as you say, for gathering the viscous pellet; quite as
+ efficacious in its kind of work as is the rake of the toothed mandibles
+ for gathering cotton. Here certainly is a creature potently-gifted, even
+ though it be for a poor little task, the scooping up of two or three drops
+ of glue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Things are not quite so satisfactory with the second Resin-bee of the
+ Snail-shells, A. bellicosum. I find that she has three teeth to her
+ mandibles. Still, they are slight and project very little. Let us say that
+ this does not count, even though the work is exactly the same. With A.
+ quadrilobum the whole thing breaks down. She, the queen of Resin-bees;
+ she, who collects a lump of mastic the size of one's fist, enough to
+ subdivide hundreds of her kinswomen's Snail-shells: well, she, by way of a
+ spoon, carries a rake! On the wide edges of her mandibles stand four
+ teeth, as long and pointed as those of the most zealous cotton-gleaner. A.
+ florentinum, that mighty manufacturer of cotton-goods, can hardly rival
+ her in respect of combing-tools. And nevertheless, with her toothed
+ implement, a sort of saw, the Resin-bee collects her great heap of pitch,
+ load by load; and the material is carried not rigid, but sticky,
+ half-fluid, so that it may amalgamate with the previous lots and be
+ fashioned into cells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. Latreillii, without having a very large implement, also bears witness
+ to the possibility of heaping up soft resin with a rake; she arms her
+ mandibles with three or four sharply-cut teeth. In short, out of four
+ Resin-bees, the only four that I know, one is armed with a spoon, if this
+ expression be really suited to the tool's function; the three others are
+ armed with a rake; and it so happens that the most copious heap of resin
+ is just the work of the rake with the most teeth to it, a tool suited to
+ the cotton-reapers, according to the views of the Bordeaux entomological
+ expert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, the explanation that appealed to me so much at first is not
+ admissible. The mandible, whether supplied with teeth or not, does not
+ account at all for the two manufactures. May we, in this predicament, have
+ recourse to the general structure of the insect, although this is not
+ distinctive enough to be of much use to us? Not so either; for, in the
+ same stone-heaps where the Osmia and the two Resin-bees of the
+ Snail-shells work, I find from time to time another manipulator of mastic
+ who bears no structural relationship whatever to the genus Anthidium. It
+ is a small-sized Mason-wasp, Odynerus alpestris, SAUSS. She builds a very
+ pretty nest with resin and gravel in the shells of the young Common Snail,
+ of Helix nemoralis and sometimes of Bulimulus radiatus. I will describe
+ her masterpiece on some other occasion. To one acquainted with the genus
+ Odynerus, any comparison with the Anthidia would be an inexcusable error.
+ In larval diet, in shape, in habits, they form two dissimilar groups, very
+ far removed one from the other. The Anthidia feed their offspring on
+ honey-bread; the Odyneri feed it on live prey. Well, with her slender
+ form, her weakly frame, in which the most clear-seeing eye would seek in
+ vain for a clue to the trade practised, the Alpine Odynerus, the
+ game-lover, uses pitch in the same way as the stout and massive Resin-bee,
+ the honey-lover. She even uses it better, for her mosaic of tiny pebbles
+ is much prettier than the Bee's and no less solid. With her mandibles,
+ this time neither spoon nor rake, but rather a long forceps slightly
+ notched at the tip, she gathers her drop of sticky matter as dexterously
+ as do her rivals with their very different outfit. Her case will, I think,
+ persuade us that neither the shape of the tool nor the shape of the worker
+ can explain the work done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will go further: I ask myself in vain the reason of this or that trade
+ in the case of a fixed species. The Osmiae make their partitions with mud
+ or with a paste of chewed leaves; the Mason-bees build with cement; the
+ Pelopaeus-wasps fashion clay pots; the Megachiles made disks cut from
+ leaves into urns; the Anthidia felt cotton into purses; the Resin-bees
+ cement together little bits of gravel with gum; the Carpenter-bees and the
+ Lithurgi bore holes in timber; the Anthophorae tunnel the roadside slopes.
+ Why all these different trades, to say nothing of the others? How are they
+ prescribed for the insect, this one rather than that?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I foresee the answer: they are prescribed by the organization. An insect
+ excellently equipped for gathering and felting cotton is ill-equipped for
+ cutting leaves, kneading mud or mixing resin. The tool in its possession
+ decides its trade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a very simple explanation, I admit, and one within the scope of
+ everybody: in itself a sufficient recommendation for any one who has
+ neither the inclination nor the time to undertake a more thorough
+ investigation. The popularity of certain speculative views is due entirely
+ to the easy food which they provide for our curiosity. They save us much
+ long and often irksome study; they impart a veneer of general knowledge.
+ There is nothing that achieves such immediate success as an explanation of
+ the riddle of the universe in a word or two. The thinker does not travel
+ so fast: content to know little so that he may know something, he limits
+ his field of search and is satisfied with a scanty harvest, provided that
+ the grain be of good quality. Before agreeing that the tool determines the
+ trade, he wants to see things with his own eyes; and what he observes is
+ far from confirming the sweeping statement. Let us share his doubts for a
+ moment and look into matters more closely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Franklin left us a maxim which is much to the point here. He said that a
+ good workman should be able to plane with a saw and to saw with a plane.
+ The insect is too good a workman not to follow the advice of the sage of
+ Boston. Its industry abounds in instances where the plane takes the place
+ of the saw, or the saw of the plane; its dexterity makes good the
+ inadequacy of the implement. To go no further, have we not just seen
+ different artisans collecting and using pitch, some with spoons, others
+ with rakes, others again with pincers? Therefore, with such equipment as
+ it possesses, the insect would be capable of abandoning cotton for leaves,
+ leaves for resin, resin for mortar, if some predisposition of talent did
+ not make it keep to its speciality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These few lines, which are the outcome not of a heedless pen but of mature
+ reflection, will set people talking of hateful paradoxes. We will let them
+ talk and we will submit the following proposition to our adversaries: take
+ an entomologist of the highest merit, a Latreille (Pierre Andre Latreille
+ (1762-1833), one of the founders of modern entomological science.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), for instance, versed in all the details of the structure of
+ insects but utterly unacquainted with their habits. He knows the dead
+ insect better than anybody, but he has never occupied himself with the
+ living insect. As a classifier, he is beyond compare; and that is all. We
+ ask him to examine a Bee, the first that comes to hand, and to name her
+ trade from her tools.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Come, be honest: could he? Who would dare put him to such a test? Has
+ personal experience not fully convinced us that the mere examination of
+ the insect can tell us nothing about its particular industry? The baskets
+ on its legs and the brush on its abdomen will certainly inform us that it
+ collects honey and pollen; but its special art will remain an utter
+ secret, notwithstanding all the scrutiny of the microscope. In our own
+ industries, the plane denotes the joiner, the trowel the mason, the
+ scissors the tailor, the needle the seamstress. Are things the same in
+ animal industry? Just show us, if you please, the trowel that is a certain
+ sign of the mason-insect, the chisel that is a positive characteristic of
+ the carpenter-insect, the iron that is an authentic mark of the
+ pinking-insect; and as you show them, say:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'This one cuts leaves; that one bores wood; that other mixes cement.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so on, specifying the trade from the tool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You cannot do it, no one can; the worker's speciality remains an
+ impenetrable secret until direct observation intervenes. Does not this
+ incapacity, even of the most expert, proclaim loudly that animal industry,
+ in its infinite variety, is due to other causes besides the possession of
+ tools? Certainly, each of those specialists requires implements; but they
+ are rough and ready implements, good for all sorts of purposes, like the
+ tool of Franklin's workman. The same notched mandible that reaps cotton,
+ cuts leaves and moulds pitch also kneads mud, scrapes decayed wood and
+ mixes mortar; the same tarsus that manufactures cotton and disks cut out
+ of leaves is no less clever at the art of making earthen partitions, clay
+ turrets and gravel mosaics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What then is the reason of these thousand industries? In the light of
+ facts, I can see but one: imagination governing matter. A primordial
+ inspiration, a talent antecedent to the actual form, directs the tool
+ instead of being subordinate to it. The instrument does not determine the
+ manner of industry; the tool does not make the workman. At the beginning
+ there is an object, a plan, in view of which the animal acts,
+ unconsciously. Have we eyes to see with, or do we see because we have
+ eyes? Does the function create the organ, or the organ the function? Of
+ the two alternatives, the insect proclaims the first. It says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'My industry is not imposed upon me by the implement which I possess; what
+ I do is to use the implement, such as it is, for the talent with which I
+ am gifted.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It says to us, in its own way:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The function has determined the organ; vision is the reason of the eye.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, it repeats to us Virgil's profound reflection:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Mens agitat molem'; 'Mind moves matter.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 11. THE POISON OF THE BEE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I have discussed elsewhere the stings administered by the Wasps to their
+ prey. Now chemistry comes and puts a spoke in the wheel of our arguments,
+ telling us that the poison of the Bees is not the same as that of the
+ Wasps. The Bees' is complex and formed of two elements, acid and alkaline.
+ The Wasps' possess only the acid element; and it is to this very acidity
+ and not to the 'so-called' skill of the operators that the preservation of
+ the provisions is due. (The author's numerous essays on the Wasps will
+ form the contents of later works. In the meantime, cf. "Insect Life," by
+ J.H. Fabre, translated by the author of "Mademoiselle Mori": chapters 4 to
+ 12, and 14 to 18; and "The Life and Love of the Insect," by J. Henri
+ Fabre, translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chapters 11, 12 and 17.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Admitting that there is a difference in the nature of the venom, I fail to
+ see that this has any bearing on the problem in hand. I can inoculate with
+ various liquids&mdash;acids, weak nitric acid, alkalis, ammonia, neutral
+ bodies, spirits of wine, essence of turpentine&mdash;and obtain conditions
+ similar to those of the victims of the predatory insects, that is to say,
+ inertia with the persistence of a dull vitality betrayed by the movements
+ of the mouth-parts and antennae. I am not, of course, invariably
+ successful, for there is neither delicacy nor precision in my poisoned
+ needle and the wound which it makes does not bear comparison with the tiny
+ puncture of the unerring natural sting; but, after all, it is repeated
+ often enough to put the object of my experiment beyond doubt. I should add
+ that, to achieve success, we must have a subject with a concentrated
+ ganglionic column, such as the Weevil, the Buprestis, the Dung-beetle and
+ others. Paralysis is then obtained with but a single prick, made at the
+ point which the Cerceris has revealed to us, the point at which the
+ corselet joins the rest of the thorax. In that case, the least possible
+ quantity of the acrid liquid is instilled, a quantity too small to
+ endanger the patient's life. With scattered nervous centres, each
+ requiring a separate operation, this method is impracticable: the victim
+ would die of the excess of corrosive fluid. I am quite ashamed to have to
+ recall these old experiments. Had they been resumed and carried on by
+ others of greater authority than I, we should have escaped the objections
+ of chemistry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When light is so easy to obtain, why go in search of scientific obscurity?
+ Why talk of acid or alkaline reactions, which prove nothing, when it is so
+ simple to have recourse to facts, which prove everything? Before declaring
+ that the hunting insects' poison has preservative properties merely
+ because of its acid qualities, it would have been well to enquire if the
+ sting of a Bee, with its acid and its alkali, could not perchance produce
+ the same effects as that of the paralyser, whose skill is categorically
+ denied. The chemists never gave this a thought. Simplicity is not always
+ welcome in our laboratories. It is my duty to repair that little omission.
+ I propose to enquire if the poison of the Bee, the chief of the Apidae, is
+ suitable for a surgery that paralyses without killing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The enquiry bristles with difficulties, though this is no reason for
+ abandoning it. First and foremost, I cannot possibly operate with the Bee
+ just as I catch her. Time after time I make the attempt, without once
+ succeeding; and patience becomes exhausted. The sting has to penetrate at
+ a definite point, exactly where the Wasp's sting would have entered. My
+ intractable captive tosses about angrily and stings at random, never where
+ I wish. My fingers get hurt even oftener than the patient. I have only one
+ means of gaining a little control over the indomitable dart; and that is
+ to cut off the Bee's abdomen with my scissors, to seize the stump
+ instantly with a fine forceps and to apply the tip at the spot where the
+ sting is to enter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everybody knows that the Bee's abdomen needs no orders from the head to go
+ on drawing its weapon for a few instants longer and to avenge the deceased
+ before being itself overcome with death's inertia. This vindictive
+ persistency serves me to perfection. There is another circumstance in my
+ favour: the barbed sting remains where it is, which enables me to
+ ascertain the exact spot pierced. A needle withdrawn as soon as inserted
+ would leave me doubtful. I can also, when the transparency of the tissues
+ permits, perceive the direction of the weapon, whether perpendicular and
+ favourable to my plans, or slanting and therefore valueless. Those are the
+ advantages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The disadvantages are these: the amputated abdomen, though more tractable
+ than the entire Bee, is still far from satisfying my wishes. It gives
+ capricious starts and unexpected pricks. I want it to sting here. No, it
+ balks my forceps and goes and stings elsewhere: not very far away, I
+ admit; but it takes so little to miss the nerve-centre which we wish to
+ get at. I want it to go in perpendicularly. No, in the great majority of
+ cases it enters obliquely and passes only through the epidermis. This is
+ enough to show how many failures are needed to make one success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor is this all. I shall be telling nobody anything new when I recall the
+ fact that the Bee's sting is very painful. That of the hunting insects, on
+ the contrary, is in most cases insignificant. My skin, which is no less
+ sensitive than another's, pays no attention to it: I handle Sphex,
+ Ammophilae and Scoliae without heeding their lancet-pricks. I have said
+ this before; I remind the reader of it because of the matter in hand. In
+ the absence of well-known chemical or other properties, we have really but
+ one means of comparing the two respective poisons; and that is the amount
+ of pain produced. All the rest is mystery. Besides, no poison, not even
+ that of the Rattlesnake, has hitherto revealed the cause of its dread
+ effects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Acting, therefore, under the instruction of that one guide, pain, I place
+ the Bee's sting far above that of the predatory insects as an offensive
+ weapon. A single one of its thrusts must equal and often surpass in
+ efficaciousness the repeated wounds of the other. For all these reasons&mdash;an
+ excessive display of energy; the variable quantity of the virus inoculated
+ by a wriggling abdomen which no longer measures the emission by doses; a
+ sting which I cannot direct as I please; a wound which may be deep or
+ superficial, the weapon entering perpendicularly or obliquely, touching
+ the nerve-centres or affecting only the surrounding tissues&mdash;my
+ experiments ought to produce the most varied results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I obtain, in fact, every possible kind of disorder: ataxy, temporary
+ disablement, permanent disablement, complete paralysis, partial paralysis.
+ Some of my stricken victims recover; others die after a brief interval. It
+ would be an unnecessary waste of space to record in this volume my hundred
+ and one attempts. The details would form tedious reading and be of very
+ little advantage, as in this sort of study it is impossible to marshal
+ one's facts with any regularity. I will, therefore, sum them up in a few
+ examples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A colossal member of the Grasshopper tribe, the most powerful in my
+ district, Decticus verrucivorus (This Decticus has received its specific
+ name of verrucivorus, or Wart-eating, because it is employed by the
+ peasants in Sweden and elsewhere to bite off the warts on their fingers.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), is pricked at the base of the neck, on the line of the fore-legs,
+ at the median point. The prick goes straight down. The spot is the same as
+ that pierced by the sting of the slayer of Crickets and Ephippigers. (A
+ species of Green Grasshopper. The Sphex paralyses Crickets and
+ Grasshoppers to provide food for her grubs. Cf. "Insect Life": chapters 6
+ to 12.&mdash;Translator's Note.) The giantess, as soon as stung, kicks
+ furiously, flounders about, falls on her side and is unable to get up
+ again. The fore-legs are paralysed; the others are capable of moving.
+ Lying sideways, if not interfered with, the insect in a few moments gives
+ no signs of life beyond a fluttering of the antennae and palpi, a
+ pulsation of the abdomen and a convulsive uplifting of the ovipositor;
+ but, if irritated with a slight touch, it stirs its four hind-legs,
+ especially the third pair, those with the big thighs, which kick
+ vigorously. Next day, the condition is much the same, with an aggravation
+ of the paralysis, which has now attacked the middle-legs. On the day after
+ that, the legs do not move, but the antennae, the palpi and the ovipositor
+ continue to flutter actively. This is the condition of the Ephippiger
+ stabbed three times in the thorax by the Languedocian Sphex. One point
+ alone is missing, a most important point: the long persistence of a
+ remnant of life. In fact, on the fourth day, the Decticus is dead; her
+ dark colour tells me so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are two conclusions to be drawn from this experiment and it is well
+ to emphasise them. First, the Bee's poison is so active that a single
+ dagger-thrust aimed at a nervous centre kills in four days one of the
+ largest of the Orthoptera (An order of insects including the Grasshoppers,
+ Locusts, Cockroaches, Mantes and Earwigs, in addition to the Stick- and
+ Leaf-insects, Termites, Dragon-flies, May-flies, Book-lice and others.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), though an insect of powerful constitution. Secondly, the paralysis
+ at first affects only the legs whose ganglion is attacked; next, it
+ spreads slowly to the second pair; lastly, it reaches the third. The local
+ effect is diffused. This diffusion, which might well take place in the
+ victims of the predatory insects, plays no part in the latters' method of
+ operation. The egg, which will be laid immediately afterwards, demands the
+ complete inertia of the prey from the outset. Hence all the nerve-centres
+ that govern locomotion must be numbed instantaneously by the virus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I can now understand why the poison of the predatory Wasps is
+ comparatively painless in its effects. If it possessed the strength of
+ that of the Bee, a single stab would impair the vitality of the prey,
+ while leaving it for some days capable of violent movements that would be
+ very dangerous to the huntress and especially to the egg. More moderate in
+ its action, it is instilled at the different nervous centres, as is the
+ case more particularly with the caterpillars. (Caterpillars are the prey
+ of the Ammophila, which administers a separate stab to each of the several
+ ganglia.&mdash;Translator's Note.) In this way, the requisite immobility
+ is obtained at once; and, notwithstanding the number of wounds, the victim
+ is not a speedy corpse. To the marvels of the paralysers' talent we must
+ add one more: their wonderful poison, the strength of which is regulated
+ by delicate doses. The Bee revenging herself intensifies the virulence of
+ her poison; the Sphex putting her grubs' provender to sleep weakens it,
+ reduces it to what is strictly necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One more instance of nearly the same kind. I prefer to take my subjects
+ from among the Orthoptera, which, owing to their imposing size and the
+ thinness of their skin at the points to be attacked, lend themselves
+ better than other insects to my delicate manipulations. The armour of a
+ Buprestis, the fat blubber of a Rosechafer-grub, the contortions of a
+ caterpillar present almost insuperable obstacles to the success of a sting
+ which it is not in my power to direct. The insect which I now offer to the
+ Bee's lancet is the Great Green Grasshopper (Locusta viridissima), the
+ adult female. The prick is given in the median line of the fore-legs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The effect is overwhelming. For two or three seconds the insect writhes in
+ convulsions and then falls on its side, motionless throughout, save in the
+ ovipositor and the antennae. Nothing stirs so long as the creature is left
+ alone; but, if I tickle it with a hair-pencil, the four hind-legs move
+ sharply and grip the point. As for the fore-legs, smitten in their
+ nerve-centre, they are quite lifeless. The same condition is maintained
+ for three days longer. On the fifth day, the creeping paralysis leaves
+ nothing free but the antennae waving to and fro and the abdomen throbbing
+ and lifting up the ovipositor. On the sixth, the Grasshopper begins to
+ turn brown; she is dead. Except that the vestige of life is more
+ persistent, the case is the same as that of the Decticus. If we can
+ prolong the duration, we shall have the victim of the Sphex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But first let us look into the effect of a prick administered elsewhere
+ than opposite the thoracic ganglia. I cause a female Ephippiger to be
+ stung in the abdomen, about the middle of the lower surface. The patient
+ does not seem to trouble greatly about her wound: she clambers gallantly
+ up the sides of the bell-jar under which I have placed her; she goes on
+ hopping as before. Better still, she sets about browsing the vine-leaf
+ which I have given her for her consolation. A few hours pass and the whole
+ thing is forgotten. She has made a rapid and complete recovery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A second is wounded in three places on the abdomen: in the middle and on
+ either side. On the first day, the insect seems to have felt nothing; I
+ see no sign of stiffness in its movements. No doubt it is suffering
+ acutely; but these stoics keep their troubles to themselves. Next day, the
+ Ephippiger drags her legs a little and walks somewhat slowly. Two days
+ more; and, when laid on her back, she is unable to turn over. On the fifth
+ day, she succumbs. This time, I have exceeded the dose; the shock of
+ receiving three stabs was too much for her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so with the others, down to the sensitive Cricket, who, pricked once
+ in the abdomen, recovers in one day from the painful experience and goes
+ back to her lettuce-leaf. But, if the wound is repeated a few times, death
+ ensues within a more or less short period. I make an exception, among
+ those who pay tribute to my cruel curiosity, of the Rosechafer-grubs, who
+ defy three and four needle-thrusts. They will collapse suddenly and lie
+ outstretched, flabby and lifeless; and, just when I am thinking them dead
+ or paralysed, the hardy creatures will recover consciousness, move along
+ on their backs (This is the usual mode of progression of the Cetonia- or
+ Rosechafer-grub. Cf. "The Life and Love of the Insect": chapter 11.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), bury themselves in the mould. I can obtain no precise information
+ from them. True, their thinly scattered cilia and their breastplate of fat
+ form a palisade and a rampart against the sting, which nearly always
+ enters only a little way and that obliquely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us leave these unmanageable ones and keep to the Orthoperon, which is
+ more amenable to experiment. A dagger-thrust, we were saying, kills it if
+ directed upon the ganglia of the thorax; it throws it into a transient
+ state of discomfort if directed upon another point. It is, therefore, by
+ its direct action upon the nervous centres that the poison reveals its
+ formidable properties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To generalize and say that death is always near at hand when the sting is
+ administered in the thoracic ganglia would be going too far: it occurs
+ frequently, but there are a good many exceptions, resulting from
+ circumstances impossible to define. I cannot control the direction of the
+ sting, the depth attained, the quantity of poison shed; and the stump of
+ the Bee is very far from making up for my shortcomings. We have here not
+ the cunning sword-play of the predatory insect, but a casual blow,
+ ill-placed and ill-regulated. Any accident is possible, therefore, from
+ the gravest to the mildest. Let us mention some of the more interesting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An adult Praying Mantis (Mantis religiosa, so-called because the toothed
+ fore-legs, in which it catches and kills its prey, adopt, when folded, an
+ attitude resembling that of prayer.&mdash;Translator's Note.) is pricked
+ level with the attachment of the predatory legs. Had the wound been in the
+ centre, I should have witnessed an occurrence which, although I have seen
+ it many times, still arouses my liveliest emotion and surprise. This is
+ the sudden paralysis of the warrior's savage harpoons. No machinery stops
+ more abruptly when the mainspring breaks. As a rule, the inertia of the
+ predatory legs attacks the others in the course of a day or two; and the
+ palsied one dies in less than a week. But the present sting is not in the
+ exact centre. The dart has entered near the base of the right leg, at less
+ than a millimetre (.039 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.) from the median
+ point. That leg is paralysed at once; the other is not; and the insect
+ employs it to the detriment of my unsuspecting fingers, which are pricked
+ to bleeding-point by the spike at the tip. Not until to-morrow is the leg
+ which wounded me to-day rendered motionless. This time, the paralysis goes
+ no farther. The Mantis moves along quite well, with her corselet proudly
+ raised, in her usual attitude; but the predatory fore-arms, instead of
+ being folded against the chest, ready for attack, hang lifeless and open.
+ I keep the cripple for twelve days longer, during which she refuses all
+ nourishment, being incapable of using her tongs to seize the prey and lift
+ it to her mouth. The prolonged abstinence kills her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some suffer from locomotor ataxy. My notes recall an Ephippiger who,
+ pricked in the prothorax away from the median line, retained the use of
+ her six limbs without being able to walk or climb for lack of
+ co-ordination in her movements. A singular awkwardness left her wavering
+ between going back and going forward, between turning to the right and
+ turning to the left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some are smitten with semiparalysis. A Cetonia-grub, pricked away from the
+ centre on a level with the fore-legs, has her right side flaccid, spread
+ out, incapable of contracting, while the left side swells, wrinkles and
+ contracts. Since the left half no longer receives the symmetrical
+ cooperation of the right half, the grub, instead of curling into the
+ normal volute, closes its spiral on one side and leaves it wide open on
+ the other. The concentration of the nervous apparatus, poisoned by the
+ venom down one side of the body only, a longitudinal half, explains this
+ condition, which is the most remarkable of all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is nothing to be gained by multiplying these examples. We have seen
+ pretty clearly the great variety of results produced by the haphazard
+ sting of a Bee's abdomen; let us now come to the crux of the matter. Can
+ the Bee's poison reduce the prey to the condition required by the
+ predatory Wasp? Yes, I have proved it by experiment; but the proof calls
+ for so much patience that it seemed to me to suffice when obtained once
+ for each species. In such difficult conditions, with a poison of excessive
+ strength, a single success is conclusive proof; the thing is possible so
+ long as it occurs once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A female Ephippiger is stung at the median point, just a little in front
+ of the fore-legs. Convulsive movements lasting for a few seconds are
+ followed by a fall to one side, with pulsations of the abdomen,
+ flutterings of the antennae and a few feeble movements of the legs. The
+ tarsi cling firmly to the hair-pencil which I hold out to them. I place
+ the insect on its back. It lies motionless. Its state is absolutely the
+ same as that to which the Languedocian Sphex (Cf. "Insect Life": chapter
+ 10.&mdash;Translator's Note.) reduces her Ephippigers. For three weeks on
+ end, I see repeated in all its details the spectacle to which I have been
+ accustomed in the victims extracted from the burrows or taken from the
+ huntress: the wide-open mandibles, the quivering palpi and tarsi, the
+ ovipositor shuddering convulsively, the abdomen throbbing at long
+ intervals, the spark of life rekindled at the touch of a pencil. In the
+ fourth week, these signs of life, which have gradually weakened,
+ disappear, but the insect still remains irreproachably fresh. At last a
+ month passes; and the paralysed creature begins to turn brown. It is over;
+ death has come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have the same success with a Cricket and also with a Praying Mantis. In
+ all three cases, from the point of view of long-maintained freshness and
+ of the signs of life proved by slight movements, the resemblance between
+ my victim and those of the predatory insects is so great that no Sphex and
+ no Tachytes would have disowned the product of my devices. My Cricket, my
+ Ephippiger, my Mantis had the same freshness as theirs; they preserved it
+ as theirs did for a period amply sufficient to allow of the grubs'
+ complete evolution. They proved to me, in the most conclusive manner, they
+ prove to all whom it may interest, that the poison of the Bees, leaving
+ its hideous violence on one side, does not differ in its effects from the
+ poison of the predatory Wasps. Are they alkaline or acid? The question is
+ an idle one in this connection. Both of them intoxicate, derange, torpify
+ the nervous centres and thus produce either death or paralysis, according
+ to the method of inoculation. For the moment, that is all. No one is yet
+ able to say the last word on the actions of those poisons, so terrible in
+ infinitesimal doses. But on the point under discussion we need no longer
+ be ignorant: the Wasp owes the preservation of her grub's provisions not
+ to any special qualities of her poison but to the extreme precision of her
+ surgery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A last and more plausible objection is that raised by Darwin when he said
+ that there were no fossil remains of instincts. And, if there were, O
+ master, what would they teach us? Not very much more than what we learn
+ from the instincts of to-day. Does not the geologist make the erstwhile
+ carcases live anew in our minds in the light of the world as we see it?
+ With nothing but analogy to guide them, he describes how some saurian
+ lived in the jurassic age; there are no fossil remains of habits, but
+ nevertheless he can tell us plenty about them, things worthy of credence,
+ because the present teaches him the past. Let us do a little as he does.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will suppose a precursor of the Calicurgi (The Calicurgus, or Pompilus,
+ is a Hunting Wasp, feeding her larvae on Spiders. Cf. "The Life and Love
+ of the Insect": chapter 12.&mdash;Translator's Note.) dwelling in the
+ prehistoric coal-forests. Her prey was some hideous Scorpion, that
+ first-born of the Arachnida. How did the Hymenopteron master the terrible
+ prey? Analogy tells us, by the methods of the present slayer of
+ Tarantulae. It disarmed the adversary; it paralysed the venomous sting by
+ a stroke administered at a point which we could determine for certain by
+ the animal's anatomy. Unless this was the way it happened, the assailant
+ must have perished, first stabbed and then devoured by the prey. There is
+ no getting away from it: either the precursor of the Calicurgi, that
+ slaughterer of Scorpions, knew her trade thoroughly, or else the
+ continuation of her race became impossible, even as it would be impossible
+ to keep up the race of the Tarantula-killer without the dagger-thrust that
+ paralyses the Spider's poison-fangs. The first who, greatly daring, pinked
+ the Scorpion of the coal-seams was already an expert fencer; the first to
+ come to grips with the Tarantula had an unerring knowledge of her
+ dangerous surgery. The least hesitation, the slightest speculation; and
+ they were lost. The first teacher would also have been the last, with no
+ disciples to take up her work and perfect it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But fossil instincts, they insist, would show us intermediary stages,
+ first, second and third rungs; they would show us the gradual passing from
+ the casual and very incorrect attempt to the perfect practice, the fruit
+ of the ages; with their accidental differences, they would give us terms
+ of comparison wherewith to trace matters from the simple to the complex.
+ Never mind about that, my masters: if you want varied instincts in which
+ to seek the source of the complex by means of the simple, it is not
+ necessary to search the foliations of the coal-seams and the successive
+ layers of the rocks, those archives of the prehistoric world; the present
+ day affords to contemplation an inexhaustible treasury realizing perhaps
+ everything that can emerge from the limbo of possibility. In what will
+ soon be half a century of study, I have caught but a tiny glimpse of a
+ very tiny corner of the realm of instinct; and the harvest gathered
+ overwhelms me with its variety: I do not yet know two species of predatory
+ Wasps whose methods are exactly the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One gives a single stroke of the dagger, a second two, a third three, a
+ fourth nine or ten. One stabs here and the other there; and neither is
+ imitated by the next, who attacks elsewhere. This one injures the cephalic
+ centres and produces death; that one respects them and produces paralysis.
+ Some squeeze the cervical ganglia to obtain a temporary torpor; others
+ know nothing of the effects of compressing the brain. A few make the prey
+ disgorge, lest its honey should poison the offspring; the majority do not
+ resort to preventive manipulations. Here are some that first disarm the
+ foe, who carries poisoned daggers; yonder are others and more numerous,
+ who have no precautions to take before murdering the unarmed prey. In the
+ preliminary struggle, I know some who grab their victims by the neck, by
+ the rostrum, by the antennae, by the caudal threads; I know some who throw
+ them on their backs, some who lift them breast to breast, some who operate
+ on them in the vertical position, some who attack them lengthwise and
+ crosswise, some who climb on their backs or on their abdomens, some who
+ press on their backs to force out a pectoral fissure, some who open their
+ desperately contracted coil, using the tip of the abdomen as a wedge. And
+ so I could go on indefinitely: every method of fencing is employed. What
+ could I not also say about the egg, slung pendulum-fashion by a thread
+ from the ceiling, when the live provisions are wriggling underneath; laid
+ on a scanty mouthful, a solitary opening dish, when the dead prey requires
+ renewing from day to-day; entrusted to the last joint stored away, when
+ the victuals are paralysed; fixed at a precise spot, entailing the least
+ danger to the consumer and the game, when the corpulent prey has to be
+ devoured with a special art that warrants its freshness!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, how can this multitude of varied instincts teach us anything about
+ gradual transformation? Will the one and only dagger-thrust of the
+ Cerceris and the Scolia take us to the two thrusts of the Calicurgus, to
+ the three thrusts of the Sphex, to the manifold thrust of the Ammophila?
+ Yes, if we consider only numerical progression. One and one are two; two
+ and one are three: so run the figures. But is this what we want to know?
+ What has arithmetic to do with the case? Is not the whole problem
+ subordinate to a condition that cannot be translated into cyphers? As the
+ prey changes, the anatomy changes; and the surgeon always operates with a
+ complete understanding of his subject. The single dagger-thrust is
+ administered to ganglia collected into a common cluster; the manifold
+ thrusts are distributed over the scattered ganglia; of the two thrusts of
+ the Tarantula-huntress, one disarms and the other paralyses. And so with
+ the others: that is to say, the instinct is directed each time by the
+ secrets of the nervous organism. There is a perfect harmony between the
+ operation and the patient's anatomy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The single stroke of the Scolia is no less wonderful than the repeated
+ strokes of the Ammophila. Each has her appointed game and each slays it by
+ a method as rational as any that our own science could invent. In the
+ presence of this consummate knowledge, which leaves us utterly confounded,
+ what a poor argument is that of 1 + 1 = 2! And what is that progress by
+ units to us? The universe is mirrored in a drop of water; universal logic
+ flashes into sight in a single sting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, push on the pitiful argument. One leads to two, two lead to
+ three. Granted without dispute. And then? We will accept the Scolia as the
+ pioneer, the foundress of the first principles of the art. The simplicity
+ of her method justifies our supposition. She learns her trade in some way
+ or other, by accident; she knows supremely well how to paralyse her
+ Cetonia-grub with a single dagger-thrust driven into the thorax. One day,
+ through some fortuitous circumstance, or rather by mistake, she takes it
+ into her head to strike two blows. As one is enough for the Cetonia, the
+ repetition was of no value unless there was a change of prey. What was the
+ new victim submitted to the butcher's knife? Apparently, a large Spider,
+ since the Tarantula and the Garden Spider call for two thrusts. And the
+ prentice Scolia, who used at first to sting under the throat, had the
+ skill, at her first attempt, to begin by disarming her adversary and then
+ to go quite low down, almost to the end of the thorax, to strike the vital
+ point. I am utterly incredulous as to her success. I see her eaten up if
+ her lancet swerves and hits the wrong spot. Let us look impossibility
+ boldly in the face and admit that she succeeds. I then see the offspring,
+ which have no recollection of the fortunate event save through the belly&mdash;and
+ then we are postulating that the digestion of the carnivorous larva leaves
+ a trace in the memory of the honey-sipping insect&mdash;I see the
+ offspring, I say, obliged to wait at long intervals for that inspired
+ double thrust and obliged to succeed each time under pain of death for
+ them and their descendants. To accept this host of impossibilities exceeds
+ all my faculties of belief. One leads to two, no doubt; the Ssingle blow
+ of the predatory Wasp will never lead to the blow twice delivered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to live, we all require the conditions that enable us to live:
+ this is a truth worthy of the famous axioms of La Palice. (Jacques de
+ Chabannes, Seigneur de La Palice [circa 1470-1525]), was a French captain
+ killed at the battle of Pavia. His soldiers made up in his honour a
+ ballad, two lines of which, translated, run:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fifteen minutes before he died, He was still alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (Hence the French expression, une verite de La Palice, meaning an obvious
+ truth.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The predatory insects live by their talent. If they do not possess it to
+ perfection, their race is lost. Hidden in the murk of the past ages, the
+ argument based upon the non-existence of fossil instinct is no better able
+ than the others to withstand the light of living realities; it crumbles
+ under the stroke of fate; it vanishes before a La Palice platitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 12. THE HALICTI: A PARASITE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Do you know the Halicti? Perhaps not. There is no great harm done: it is
+ quite possible to enjoy the few sweets of existence without knowing the
+ Halicti. Nevertheless, when questioned persistently, these humble
+ creatures with no history can tell us some very singular things; and their
+ acquaintance is not to be disdained if we would enlarge our ideas upon the
+ bewildering swarm of this world. Since we have nothing better to do, let
+ us look into the Halicti. They are worth the trouble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How shall we recognize them? They are manufacturers of honey, generally
+ longer and slighter than the Bee of our hives. They constitute a numerous
+ group that varies greatly in size and colouring. Some there are that
+ exceed the dimensions of the Common Wasp; others might be compared with
+ the House-fly, or are even smaller. In the midst of this variety, which is
+ the despair of the novice, one characteristic remains invariable. Every
+ Halictus carries the clearly-written certificate of her guild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Examine the last ring, at the tip of the abdomen, on the dorsal surface.
+ If your capture be an Halictus, there will be here a smooth and shiny
+ line, a narrow groove along which the sting slides up and down when the
+ insect is on the defensive. This slide for the unsheathed weapon denotes
+ some member of the Halictus tribe, without distinction of size or colour.
+ No elsewhere, in the sting-bearing order, is this original sort of groove
+ in use. It is the distinctive mark, the emblem of the family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three Halicti will appear before you in this biographical fragment. Two of
+ them are my neighbours, my familiars, who rarely fail to settle each year
+ in the best parts of the enclosure. They occupied the ground before I did;
+ and I should not dream of evicting them, persuaded as I am that they will
+ well repay my indulgence. Their proximity, which allows me to visit them
+ daily at my leisure, is a piece of good luck. Let us profit by it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the head of my three subjects is the Zebra Halictus (H. zebrus,
+ WALCK.), which is beautifully belted around her long abdomen with
+ alternate black and pale-russet scarves. Her slender shape, her size,
+ which equals that of the Common Wasp, her simple and pretty dress, combine
+ to make her the chief representative of the genus here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She establishes her galleries in firm soil, where there is no danger of
+ landslips which would interfere with the work at nesting-time. In my
+ garden, the well-levelled paths, made of a mixture of tiny pebbles and red
+ clayey earth, suits her to perfection. Every spring she takes possession
+ of it, never alone, but in gangs whose number varies greatly, amounting
+ sometimes to as many as a hundred. In this way she founds what may be
+ described as small townships, each clearly marked out and distant from the
+ other, in which the joint possession of the site in no way entails joint
+ work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each has her home, an inviolable manor which none but the owner has the
+ right to enter. A sound buffeting would soon call to order any adventuress
+ who dared to make her way into another's dwelling. No such indiscretion is
+ suffered among the Halicti. Let each keep to her own place and to herself
+ and perfect peace will reign in this new-formed society, made up of
+ neighbours and not of fellow-workers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Operations begin in April, most unobtrusively, the only sign of the
+ underground works being the little mounds of fresh earth. There is no
+ animation in the building-yards. The labourers show themselves very
+ seldom, so busy are they at the bottom of their pits. At moments, here and
+ there, the summit of a tiny mole-hill begins to totter and tumbles down
+ the slopes of the cone: it is a worker coming up with her armful of
+ rubbish and shooting it outside, without showing herself in the open.
+ Nothing more for the moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is one precaution to be taken: the villages must be protected
+ against the passers-by, who might inadvertently trample them under foot. I
+ surround each of them with a palisade of reed-stumps. In the centre I
+ plant a danger-signal, a post with a paper flag. The sections of the paths
+ thus marked are forbidden ground; none of the household will walk upon
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May arrives, gay with flowers and sunshine. The navvies of April have
+ turned themselves into harvesters. At every moment I see them settling,
+ all befloured with yellow, atop of the mole-hills now turned into craters.
+ Let us first look into the question of the house. The arrangement of the
+ home will give us some useful information. A spade and a three-pronged
+ fork place the insect's crypts before our eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A shaft as nearly vertical as possible, straight or winding according to
+ the exigencies of a soil rich in flinty remains, descends to a depth of
+ between eight and twelve inches. As it is merely a passage in which the
+ only thing necessary is that the Halictus should find an easy support in
+ coming and going, this long entrance-hall is rough and uneven. A regular
+ shape and a polished surface would be out of place here. These artistic
+ refinements are reserved for the apartments of her young. All that the
+ Halictus mother asks is that the passage should be easy to go up and down,
+ to ascend or descend in a hurry. And so she leaves it rugged. Its width is
+ about that of a thick lead-pencil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arranged one by one, horizontally and at different heights, the cells
+ occupy the basement of the house. They are oval cavities, three-quarters
+ of an inch long, dug out of the clay mass. They end in a short bottle-neck
+ that widens into a graceful mouth. They look like tiny vaccine-phials laid
+ on their sides. All of them open into the passage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inside of these little cells has the gloss and polish of a stucco
+ which our most experienced plasterers might envy. It is diapered with
+ faint longitudinal, diamond-shaped marks. These are the traces of the
+ polishing-tool that has given the last finish to the work. What can this
+ polisher be? None other than the tongue, that is obvious. The Halictus has
+ made a trowel of her tongue and licked the wall daintily and methodically
+ in order to polish it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This final glazing, so exquisite in its perfection, is preceded by a
+ trimming-process. In the cells that are not yet stocked with provisions,
+ the walls are dotted with tiny dents like those in a thimble. Here we
+ recognize the work of the mandibles, which squeeze the clay with their
+ tips, compress it and purge it of any grains of sand. The result is a
+ milled surface whereon the polished layer will find a solid adhesive base.
+ This layer is obtained with a fine clay, very carefully selected by the
+ insect, purified, softened and then applied atom by atom, after which the
+ trowel of the tongue steps in, diapering and polishing, while saliva,
+ disgorged as needed, gives pliancy to the paste and finally dries into a
+ waterproof varnish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The humidity of the subsoil, at the time of the spring showers, would
+ reduce the little earthen alcove to a sort of pap. The coating of saliva
+ is an excellent preservative against this danger. It is so delicate that
+ we suspect rather than see it; but its efficacy is none the less evident.
+ I fill a cell with water. The liquid remains in it quite well, without any
+ trace of infiltration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tiny pitcher looks as if it were varnished with galenite. The
+ impermeability which the potter obtains by the brutal infusion of his
+ mineral ingredients the Halictus achieves with the soft polisher of her
+ tongue moistened with saliva. Thus protected, the larva will enjoy all the
+ advantages of a dry berth, even in rain-soaked ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Should the wish seize us, it is easy to detach the waterproof film, at
+ least in shreds. Take the little shapeless lump in which a cell has been
+ excavated and put it in sufficient water to cover the bottom of it. The
+ whole earthy mass will soon be soaked and reduced to a mud which we are
+ able to sweep with the point of a hair-pencil. Let us have patience and do
+ our sweeping gently; and we shall be able to separate from the main body
+ the fragments of a sort of extremely fine satin. This transparent,
+ colourless material is the upholstery that keeps out the wet. The Spider's
+ web, if it formed a stuff and not a net, is the only thing that could be
+ compared with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Halictus' nurseries are, as we see, structures that take much time in
+ the making. The insect first digs in the clayey earth a recess with an
+ oval curve to it. It has its mandibles for a pick-axe and its tarsi, armed
+ with tiny claws, for rakes. Rough though it be, this early work presents
+ difficulties, for the Bee has to do her excavating in a narrow gully,
+ where there is only just room for her to pass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rubbish soon becomes cumbersome. The insect collects it and then,
+ moving backwards, with its fore-legs closed over the load, it hoists it up
+ through the shaft and flings it outside, upon the mole-hill, which rises
+ by so much above the threshold of the burrow. Next come the dainty
+ finishing-touches: the milling of the wall, the application of a glaze of
+ better-quality clay, the assiduous polishing with the long-suffering
+ tongue, the waterproof coating and the jarlike mouth, a masterpiece of
+ pottery in which the stopping-plug will be fixed when the time comes for
+ locking the door of the room. And all this has to be done with
+ mathematical precision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, because of this perfection, the grubs' chambers could never be work
+ done casually from day to day, as the ripe eggs descend from the ovaries.
+ They are prepared long beforehand, during the bad weather, at the end of
+ March and in April, when flowers are scarce and the temperature subject to
+ sudden changes. This thankless period, often cold, liable to hail-storms,
+ is spent in making ready the home. Alone at the bottom of her shaft, which
+ she rarely leaves, the mother works at her children's apartments,
+ lavishing upon them those finishing-touches which leisure allows. They are
+ completed, or very nearly, when May comes with the radiant sunshine and
+ wealth of flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see the evidence of these long preparations in the burrows themselves,
+ if we inspect them before the provisions are brought. All of them show us
+ cells, about a dozen in number, quite finished, but still empty. To begin
+ by getting all the huts built is a sensible precaution: the mother will
+ not have to turn aside from the delicate task of harvesting and egg-laying
+ in order to perform rough navvy's work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything is ready by May. The air is balmy; the smiling lawns are gay
+ with a thousand little flowers, dandelions, rock-roses, tansies and
+ daisies, among which the harvesting Bee rolls gleefully, covering herself
+ with pollen. With her crop full of honey and the brushes of her legs
+ befloured, the Halictus returns to her village. Flying very low, almost
+ level with the ground, she hesitates, with sudden turns and bewildered
+ movements. It seems that the weak-sighted insect finds its way with
+ difficulty among the cottages of its little township.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Which is its mole-hill among the many others near, all similar in
+ appearance? It cannot tell exactly save by the sign-board of certain
+ details known to itself alone. Therefore, still on the wing, tacking from
+ side to side, it examines the locality. The home is found at last: the
+ Halictus alights on the threshold of her abode and dives into it quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What happens at the bottom of the pit must be the same thing that happens
+ in the case of the other Wild Bees. The harvester enters a cell backwards;
+ she first brushes herself and drops her load of pollen; then, turning
+ round, she disgorges the honey in her crop upon the floury mass. This
+ done, the unwearied one leaves the burrow and flies away, back to the
+ flowers. After many journeys, the stack of provisions in the cell is
+ sufficient. This is the moment to bake the cake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mother kneads her flour, mingles it sparingly with honey. The mixture
+ is made into a round loaf, the size of a pea. Unlike our own loaves, this
+ one has the crust inside and the crumb outside. The middle part of the
+ roll, the ration which will be consumed last, when the grub has acquired
+ some strength, consists of almost nothing but dry pollen. The Bee keeps
+ the dainties in her crop for the outside of the loaf, whence the feeble
+ grub-worm is to take its first mouthfuls. Here it is all soft crumb, a
+ delicious sandwich with plenty of honey. The little breakfast-roll is
+ arranged in rings regulated according to the age of the nurseling: first
+ the syrupy outside and at the very end the dry inside. Thus it is ordained
+ by the economics of the Halictus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An egg bent like a bow is laid upon the sphere. According to the
+ generally-accepted rule, it now only remains to close the cabin.
+ Honey-gatherers&mdash;Anthophorae, Osmiae, Mason-bees and many others&mdash;usually
+ first collect a sufficient stock of food and then, having laid the egg,
+ shut up the cell, to which they need pay no more attention. The Halicti
+ employ a different method. The compartments, each with its round loaf and
+ its egg&mdash;the tenant and his provisions&mdash;are not closed up. As
+ they all open into the common passage of the burrow, the mother is able,
+ without leaving her other occupations, to inspect them daily and enquire
+ tenderly into the progress of her family. I imagine, without possessing
+ any certain proof, that from time to time she distributes additional
+ provisions to the grubs, for the original loaf appears to me a very frugal
+ ration compared with that served by the other Bees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certain hunting Hymenoptera, the Bembex-wasps, for instance, are
+ accustomed to furnish the provisions in instalments: so that the grub may
+ have fresh though dead game, they fill the platter each day. The Halictus
+ mother has not these domestic necessities, as her provisions keep more
+ easily; but still she might well distribute a second portion of flour to
+ the larvae, when their appetite attains its height. I can see nothing else
+ to explain the open doors of the cells during the feeding-period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the grubs, close-watched and fed to repletion, have achieved the
+ requisite degree of fatness; they are on the eve of being transformed into
+ pupae. Then and not till then the cells are closed: a big clay stopper is
+ built by the mother into the spreading mouth of the jug. Henceforth the
+ maternal cares are over. The rest will come of itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hitherto we have witnessed only the peaceful details of the housekeeping.
+ Let us go back a little and we shall be witnesses of rampant brigandage.
+ In May, I visit my most populous village daily, at about ten o'clock in
+ the morning, when the victualling-operations are in full swing. Seated on
+ a low chair in the sun, with my back bent and my arms upon my knees, I
+ watch, without moving, until dinner-time. What attracts me is a parasite,
+ a trumpery Gnat, the bold despoiler of the Halictus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Has the jade a name? I trust so, without, however, caring to waste my time
+ in enquiries that can have no interest for the reader. Facts clearly
+ stated are preferable to the dry minutiae of nomenclature. Let me content
+ myself with giving a brief description of the culprit. She is a Dipteron,
+ or Fly, five millimetres long. (.195 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.) Eyes,
+ dark-red; face, white. Corselet, pearl-grey, with five rows of fine black
+ dots, which are the roots of stiff bristles pointing backwards. Greyish
+ belly, pale below. Black legs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She abounds in the colony under observation. Crouching in the sun, near a
+ burrow, she waits. As soon as the Halictus arrives from her harvesting,
+ her legs yellow with pollen, the Gnat darts forth and pursues her, keeping
+ behind her in all the turns of her oscillating flight. At last, the Bee
+ suddenly dives indoors. No less suddenly the other settles on the
+ mole-hill, quite close to the entrance. Motionless, with her head turned
+ towards the door of the house, she waits for the Bee to finish her
+ business. The latter reappears at last and, for a few seconds, stands on
+ the threshold, with her head and thorax outside the hole. The Gnat, on her
+ side, does not stir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often, they are face to face, separated by a space no wider than a
+ finger's breadth. Neither of them shows the least excitement. The Halictus&mdash;judging,
+ at least, by her tranquillity&mdash;takes no notice of the parasite lying
+ in wait for her; the parasite, on the other hand, displays no fear of
+ being punished for her audacity. She remains imperturbable, she, the
+ dwarf, in the presence of the colossus who could crush her with one blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In vain I watch anxiously for some sign of apprehension on either side:
+ nothing in the Halictus points to a knowledge of the danger run by her
+ family; nor does the Gnat betray any dread of swift retribution. Plunderer
+ and plundered stare at each other for a moment; and that is all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If she liked, the amiable giantess could rip up with her claw the tiny
+ bandit who ruins her home; she could crunch her with her mandibles, run
+ her through with her stiletto. She does nothing of the sort, but leaves
+ the robber in peace, to sit quite close, motionless, with her red eyes
+ fixed on the threshold of the house. Why this fatuous clemency?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bee flies off. Forthwith, the Gnat walks in, with no more ceremony
+ than if she were entering her own place. She now chooses among the
+ victualled cells at her ease, for they are all open, as I have said; she
+ leisurely deposits her eggs. No one will disturb her until the Bee's
+ return. To flour one's legs with pollen, to distend one's crop with syrup
+ is a task that takes long a-doing; and the intruder, therefore, has time
+ and to spare wherein to commit her felony. Moreover, her chronometer is
+ well-regulated and gives the exact measure of the Bee's length of absence.
+ When the Halictus comes back from the fields, the Gnat has decamped. In
+ some favourable spot, not far from the burrow, she awaits the opportunity
+ for a fresh misdeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What would happen if a parasite were surprised at her work by the Bee?
+ Nothing serious. I see them, greatly daring, follow the Halictus right
+ into the cave and remain there for some time while the mixture of pollen
+ and honey is being prepared. Unable to make use of the paste so long as
+ the harvester is kneading it, they go back to the open air and wait on the
+ threshold for the Bee to come out. They return to the sunlight, calmly,
+ with unhurried steps: a clear proof that nothing untoward has occurred in
+ the depths where the Halictus works.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A tap on the Gnat's neck, if she become too enterprising in the
+ neighbourhood of the cake: that is all that the lady of the house seems to
+ allow herself, to drive away the intruder. There is no serious affray
+ between the robber and the robbed. This is apparent from the
+ self-possessed manner and undamaged condition of the dwarf who returns
+ from visiting the giantess engaged down in the burrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bee, when she comes home, whether laden with provisions or not,
+ hesitates, as I have said, for a while; in a series of rapid zigzags, she
+ moves backwards, forwards and from side to side, at a short distance from
+ the ground. This intricate flight at first suggests the idea that she is
+ trying to lead her persecutress astray by means of an inextricable tangle
+ of marches and countermarches. That would certainly be a prudent move on
+ the Bee's part; but so much wisdom appears to be denied her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not the enemy that is disturbing her, but rather the difficulty of
+ finding her own house amid the confusion of the mole-hills, encroaching
+ one upon the other, and all the alleys of the little township, which,
+ owing to landslips of fresh rubbish, alter in appearance from one day to
+ the next. Her hesitation is manifest, for she often blunders and alights
+ at the entrance to a burrow that is not hers. The mistake is at once
+ perceived from the slight indications of the doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The search is resumed with the same see-sawing flights, mingled with
+ sudden excursions to a distance. At last, the burrow is recognized. The
+ Halictus dives into it with a rush; but, however prompt her disappearance
+ underground, the Gnat is there, perched on the threshold with her eyes
+ turned to the entrance, waiting for the Bee to come out, so that she may
+ visit the honey-jars in her turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the owner of the house ascends, the other draws back a little, just
+ enough to leave a free passage and no more. Why should she put herself
+ out? the meeting is so peaceful that, short of further information, one
+ would not suspect that a destroyer and destroyed were face to face. Far
+ from being intimidated by the sudden arrival of the Halictus, the Gnat
+ pays hardly any attention; and, in the same way, the Halictus takes no
+ notice of her persecutress, unless the bandit pursue her and worry her on
+ the wing. Then, with a sudden bend, the Bee makes off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even so do Philanthus apivorus (The Bee-hunting Wasp. Cf. "Social Life in
+ the Insect World": chapter 13.&mdash;Translator's Note.) and the other
+ game-hunters behave when the Tachina is at their heels seeking the chance
+ to lay her egg on the morsel about to be stored away. Without jostling the
+ parasite which they find hanging around the burrow, they go indoors quite
+ peaceably; but, on the wing, perceiving her after them, they dart off
+ wildly. The Tachina, however, dares not go down to the cells where the
+ huntress stacks her provisions; she prudently waits at the door for the
+ Philanthus to arrive. The crime, the laying of the egg, is committed at
+ the very moment when the victim is about to vanish underground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The troubles of the parasite of the Halictus are of quite another kind.
+ The homing Bee has her honey in her crop and her pollen on her
+ leg-brushes: the first is inaccessible to the thief; the second is powdery
+ and would give no resting-place to the egg. Besides, there is not enough
+ of it yet: to collect the wherewithal for that round loaf of hers, the Bee
+ will have to make repeated journeys. When the necessary amount is
+ obtained, she will knead it with the tip of her mandibles and shape it
+ with her feet into a little ball. The Gnat's egg, were it present among
+ the materials, would certainly be in danger during this manipulation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The alien egg, therefore, must be laid on the finished bread; and, as the
+ preparation takes place underground, the parasite is needs obliged to go
+ down to the Halictus. With inconceivable daring, she does go down, even
+ when the Bee is there. Whether through cowardice or silly indulgence, the
+ dispossessed insect lets the other have its way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The object of the Gnat, with her tenacious lying-in-wait and her reckless
+ burglaries, is not to feed herself at the harvester's expense: she could
+ get her living out of the flowers with much less trouble than her thieving
+ trade involves. The most, I think, that she can allow herself to do in the
+ Halictus' cellars is to take one morsel just to ascertain the quality of
+ the victuals. Her great, her sole business is to settle her family. The
+ stolen goods are not for herself, but for her offspring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us dig up the pollen-loaves. We shall find them most often crumbled
+ with no regard to economy, simply frittered away. We shall see two or
+ three maggots, with pointed mouths, moving in the yellow flour scattered
+ over the floor of the cell. These are the Gnat's progeny. With them we
+ sometimes find the lawful owner, the grub-worm of the Halictus, but
+ stunted and emaciated with fasting. His gluttonous companions, without
+ otherwise molesting him, deprive him of the best of everything. The
+ wretched starveling dwindles, shrivels up and soon disappears from view.
+ His corpse, a mere atom, blended with the remaining provisions, supplies
+ the maggots with one mouthful the more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what does the Halictus mother do in this disaster? She is free to
+ visit her grubs at any moment; she has but to put her head into the
+ passage of the house: she cannot fail to be apprised of their distress.
+ The squandered loaf, the swarming mass of vermin tell their own tale. Why
+ does she not take the intruders by the skin of the abdomen? To grind them
+ to powder with her mandibles, to fling them out of doors were the business
+ of a second. And the foolish creature never thinks of it, leaves the
+ ravagers in peace!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She does worse. When the time of the nymphosis comes, the Halictus mother
+ goes to the cells rifled by the parasite and closes them with an earthen
+ plug as carefully as she does the rest. This final barricade, an excellent
+ precaution when the cot is occupied by an Halictus in course of
+ metamorphosis, becomes the height of absurdity when the Gnat has passed
+ that way. Instinct does not hesitate in the face of this ineptitude: it
+ seals up emptiness. I say, emptiness, because the crafty maggot hastens to
+ decamp the instant that the victuals are consumed, as though it foresaw an
+ insuperable obstacle for the coming Fly: it quits the cell before the Bee
+ closes it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To rascally guile the parasite adds prudence. All, until there is none of
+ them left, abandon the clay homes which would be their undoing once the
+ entrance was plugged up. The earthen niche, so grateful to the tender
+ skin, thanks to its polished coating, so free from humidity, thanks to its
+ waterproof glaze, ought, one would think, to make an excellent
+ waiting-place. The maggots will have none of it. Lest they should find
+ themselves walled in when they become frail Gnats, they go away and
+ disperse in the neighbourhood of the ascending shaft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My digging operations, in fact, always reveal the pupae outside the cells,
+ never inside. I find them enshrined, one by one, in the body of the clayey
+ earth, in a narrow recess which the emigrant worm has contrived to make
+ for itself. Next spring, when the hour comes for leaving, the adult insect
+ has but to creep through the rubbish, which is easy work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another and no less imperative reason compels this change of abode on the
+ parasite's part. In July, a second generation of the Halictus is
+ procreated. The Gnat, reduced on her side to a single brood, remains in
+ the pupa state and awaits the spring of the following year before
+ effecting her transformation. The honey-gather resumes her work in her
+ native village; she avails herself of the pits and cells constructed in
+ the spring, saving no little time thereby. The whole elaborate structure
+ has remained in good condition. It needs but a few repairs to make the old
+ house habitable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now what would happen if the Bee, so scrupulous in matters of cleanliness,
+ were to find a pupa in the cell which she is sweeping? She would treat the
+ cumbersome object as she would a piece of old plaster. It would be no more
+ to her than any other refuse, a bit of gravel, which, seized with the
+ mandibles, crushed perhaps, would be sent to join the rubbish-heap
+ outside. Once removed from the soil and exposed to the inclemencies of the
+ weather, the pupa would inevitably perish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I admire this intelligent foresight of the maggot, which forgoes the
+ comfort of the moment for the security of the future. Two dangers threaten
+ it: to be immured in a casket whence the Fly can never issue; or else to
+ die out of doors, in the unkindly air, when the Bee sweeps out the
+ restored cells. To avoid this twofold peril, it decamps before the door is
+ closed, before the July Halictus sets her house in order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us now see what comes of the parasite's intrusion. In the course of
+ June, when peace is established in the Halictus' home, I dig up my largest
+ village, comprising some fifty burrows in all. None of the sorrows of this
+ underworld shall escape me. There are four of us engaged in sifting the
+ excavated earth through our fingers. What one has examined another takes
+ up and examines; and then another and another yet. The returns are
+ heartrending. We do not succeed in finding one single nymph of the
+ Halictus. The whole of the populous city has perished; and its place has
+ been taken by the Gnat. There is a glut of that individual's pupae. I
+ collect them in order to trace their evolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The year runs its course; and the little russet kegs, into which the
+ original maggots have hardened and contracted, remain stationary. They are
+ seeds endowed with latent life. The heats of July do not rouse them from
+ their torpor. In that month, the period of the second generation of the
+ Halictus, there is a sort of truce of God: the parasite rests and the Bee
+ works in peace. If hostilities were to be resumed straight away, as
+ murderous in summer as they were in spring, the progeny of the Halictus,
+ too cruelly smitten, might possibly disappear altogether. This lull
+ readjusts the balance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In April, when the Zebra Halictus, in search of a good place for her
+ burrows, roams up and down the garden paths with her oscillating flight,
+ the parasite, on its side, hastens to hatch. Oh, the precise and terrible
+ agreement between those two calendars, the calendar of the persecutor and
+ the persecuted! At the very moment when the Bee comes out, here is the
+ Gnat: she is ready to begin her deadly starving-process all over again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Were this an isolated case, one's mind would not dwell upon it: an
+ Halictus more or less in the world makes little difference in the general
+ balance. But, alas, brigandage in all its forms is the rule in the eternal
+ conflict of living things! From the lowest to the highest, every producer
+ is exploited by the unproductive. Man himself, whose exceptional rank
+ ought to raise him above such baseness, excels in this ravening lust. He
+ says to himself that business means getting hold of other people's cash,
+ even as the Gnat says to herself that business means getting hold of the
+ Halictus' honey. And, to play the brigand to better purpose, he invents
+ war, the art of killing wholesale and of doing with glory that which, when
+ done on a smaller scale, leads to the gallows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shall we never behold the realization of that sublime vision which is sung
+ on Sundays in the smallest village-church: Gloria in excelsis Deo, et in
+ terra pax hominibus bonae voluntatis! If war affected humanity alone,
+ perhaps the future would have peace in store for us, seeing that generous
+ minds are working for it with might and main; but the scourge also rages
+ among the lower animals, which in their obstinate way, will never listen
+ to reason. Once the evil is laid down as a general condition, it perhaps
+ becomes incurable. Life in the future, it is to be feared, will be what it
+ is to-day, a perpetual massacre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whereupon, by a desperate effort of the imagination, one pictures to
+ oneself a giant capable of juggling with the planets. He is irresistible
+ strength; he is also law and justice. He knows of our battles, our
+ butcheries, our farm-burnings, our town-burnings, our brutal triumphs; he
+ knows our explosives, our shells, our torpedo-boats, our ironclads and all
+ our cunning engines of destruction; he knows as well the appalling extent
+ of the appetites among all creatures, down to the very lowest. Well, if
+ that just and mighty one held the earth under his thumb, would he hesitate
+ whether he ought to crush it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He would not hesitate...He would let things take their course. He would
+ say to himself:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The old belief is right; the earth is a rotten apple, gnawed by the
+ vermin of evil. It is a first crude attempt, a step towards a kindlier
+ destiny. Let it be: order and justice are waiting at the end.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 13. THE HALICTI: THE PORTRESS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Leaving our village is no very serious matter when we are children. We
+ even look on it as a sort of holiday. We are going to see something new,
+ those magic pictures of our dreams. With age come regrets; and the close
+ of life is spent in stirring up old memories. Then the beloved village
+ reappears, in the biograph of the mind, embellished, transfigured by the
+ glow of those first impressions; and the mental image, superior to the
+ reality, stands out in amazingly clear relief. The past, the far-off past,
+ was only yesterday; we see it, we touch it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For my part, after three-quarters of a century, I could walk with my eyes
+ closed straight to the flat stone where I first heard the soft chiming
+ note of the Midwife Toad; yes, I should find it to a certainty, if time,
+ which devastates all things, even the homes of Toads, has not moved it or
+ perhaps left it in ruins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I see, on the margin of the brook, the exact position of the alder-trees
+ whose tangled roots, deep under the water, were a refuge for the Crayfish.
+ I should say:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It is just at the foot of that tree that I had the unutterable bliss of
+ catching a beauty. She had horns so long...and enormous claws, full of
+ meat, for I got her just at the right time.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I should go without faltering to the ash under whose shade my heart beat
+ so loudly one sunny spring morning. I had caught sight of a sort of white,
+ cottony ball among the branches. Peeping from the depths of the wadding
+ was an anxious little head with a red hood to it. O what unparalleled
+ luck! It was a Goldfinch, sitting on her eggs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Compared with a find like this, lesser events do not count. Let us leave
+ them. In any case, they pale before the memory of the paternal garden, a
+ tiny hanging garden of some thirty paces by ten, situated right at the top
+ of the village. The only spot that overlooks it is a little esplanade on
+ which stands the old castle (The Chateau de Saint-Leons standing just
+ outside and above the village of Saint-Leons, where the author was born in
+ 1823. Cf. "The Life of the Fly": chapters 6 and 7.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) with the four turrets that have now become dovecotes. A steep path
+ takes you up to this open space. From my house on, it is more like a
+ precipice than a slope. Gardens buttressed by walls are staged in terraces
+ on the sides of the funnel-shaped valley. Ours is the highest; it is also
+ the smallest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are no trees. Even a solitary apple-tree would crowd it. There is a
+ patch of cabbages, with a border of sorrel, a patch of turnips and another
+ of lettuces. That is all we have in the way of garden-stuff; there is no
+ room for more. Against the upper supporting-wall, facing due south, is a
+ vine-arbour which, at intervals, when the sun is generous, provides half a
+ basketful of white muscatel grapes. These are a luxury of our own, greatly
+ envied by the neighbours, for the vine is unknown outside this corner, the
+ warmest in the village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A hedge of currant-bushes, the only safeguard against a terrible fall,
+ forms a parapet above the next terrace. When our parents' watchful eyes
+ are off us, we lie flat on our stomachs, my brother and I, and look into
+ the abyss at the foot of the wall bulging under the thrust of the land. It
+ is the garden of monsieur le notaire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are beds with box-borders in that garden; there are pear-trees
+ reputed to give pears, real pears, more or less good to eat when they have
+ ripened on the straw all through the late autumn. In our imagination, it
+ is a spot of perpetual delight, a paradise, but a paradise seen the wrong
+ way up: instead of contemplating it from below, we gaze at it from above.
+ How happy they must be with so much space and all those pears!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We look at the hives, around which the hovering Bees make a sort of russet
+ smoke. They stand under the shelter of a great hazel. The tree has sprung
+ up all of itself in a fissure of the wall, almost on the level of our
+ currant-bushes. While it spreads its mighty branches over the notary's
+ hives, its roots, at least, are on our land. It belongs to us. The trouble
+ is to gather the nuts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I creep along astride the strong branches projecting horizontally into
+ space. If I slip or if the support breaks, I shall come to grief in the
+ midst of the angry Bees. I do not slip and the support does not break.
+ With the bent switch which my brother hands me, I bring the finest
+ clusters within my reach. I soon fill my pockets. Moving backwards, still
+ straddling my branch, I recover terra firma. O wondrous days of litheness
+ and assurance, when, for a few filberts, on a perilous perch we braved the
+ abyss!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Enough. These reminiscences, so dear to my dreams, do not interest the
+ reader. Why stir up more of them? I am content to have brought this fact
+ into prominence: the first glimmers of light penetrating into the dark
+ chambers of the mind leave an indelible impression, which the years make
+ fresher instead of dimmer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Obscured by everyday worries, the present is much less familiar to us, in
+ its petty details, than the past, with childhood's glow upon it. I see
+ plainly in my memory what my prentice eyes saw; and I should never succeed
+ in reproducing with the same accuracy what I saw last week. I know my
+ village thoroughly, though I quitted it so long ago; and I know hardly
+ anything of the towns to which the vicissitudes of life have brought me.
+ An exquisitely sweet link binds us to our native soil; we are like the
+ plant that has to be torn away from the spot where it put out its first
+ roots. Poor though it be, I should love to see my own village again; I
+ should like to leave my bones there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Does the insect in its turn receive a lasting impression of its earliest
+ visions? Has it pleasant memories of its first surroundings? We will not
+ speak of the majority, a world of wandering gipsies who establish
+ themselves anywhere provided that certain conditions be fulfilled; but the
+ others, the settlers, living in groups: do they recall their native
+ village? Have they, like ourselves, a special affection for the place
+ which saw their birth?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, indeed they have: they remember, they recognize the maternal abode,
+ they come back to it, they restore it, they colonize it anew. Among many
+ other instances, let us quote that of the Zebra Halictus. She will show us
+ a splendid example of love for one's birthplace translating itself into
+ deeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Halictus' spring family acquire the adult form in a couple of months
+ or so; they leave the cells about the end of June. What goes on inside
+ these neophytes as they cross the threshold of the burrow for the first
+ time? Something, apparently, that may be compared with our own impressions
+ of childhood. An exact and indelible image is stamped on their virgin
+ memories. Despite the years, I still see the stone whence came the
+ resonant notes of the little Toads, the parapet of currant-bushes, the
+ notary's garden of Eden. These trifles make the best part of my life. The
+ Halictus sees in the same way the blade of grass whereon she rested in her
+ first flight, the bit of gravel which her claw touched in her first climb
+ to the top of the shaft. She knows her native abode by heart just as I
+ know my village. The locality has become familiar to her in one glad,
+ sunny morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She flies off, seeks refreshment on the flowers near at hand and visits
+ the fields where the coming harvests will be gathered. The distance does
+ not lead her astray, so faithful are her impressions of her first trip;
+ she finds the encampment of her tribe; among the burrows of the village,
+ so numerous and so closely resembling one another, she knows her own. It
+ is the house where she was born, the beloved house with its unforgettable
+ memories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, on returning home, the Halictus is not the only mistress of the
+ house. The dwelling dug by the solitary Bee in early spring remains, when
+ summer comes, the joint inheritance of the members of the family. There
+ are ten cells, or thereabouts, underground. Now from these cells there
+ have issued none but females. This is the rule among the three species of
+ Halicti that concern us now and probably also among many others, if not
+ all. They have two generations in each year. The spring one consists of
+ females only; the summer one comprises both males and females, in almost
+ equal numbers. We shall return to this curious subject in our next
+ chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The household, therefore, if not reduced by accidents, above all if not
+ starved by the usurping Gnat, would consist of half-a-score of sisters,
+ none but sisters, all equally industrious and all capable of procreating
+ without a nuptial partner. On the other hand, the maternal dwelling is no
+ hovel; far from it: the entrance-gallery, the principal room of the house,
+ will serve quite well, after a few odds and ends of refuse have been swept
+ away. This will be so much gained in time, ever precious to the Bee. The
+ cells at the bottom, the clay cabins, are also nearly intact. To make use
+ of them, it will be enough for the Halictus to polish up the stucco with
+ her tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, which of the survivors, all equally entitled to the succession, will
+ inherit the house? There are six of them, seven, or more, according to the
+ chances of mortality. To whose share will the maternal dwelling fall?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no quarrel between the interested parties. The mansion is
+ recognized as common property without dispute. The sisters come and go
+ peacefully through the same door, attend to their business, pass and let
+ the others pass. Down at the bottom of the pit, each has her little
+ demesne, her group of cells dug at the cost of fresh toil, when the old
+ ones, now insufficient in number, are occupied. In these recesses, which
+ are private estates, each mother works by herself, jealous of her property
+ and of her privacy. Every elsewhere, traffic is free to all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The exits and entrances in the working fortress provide a spectacle of the
+ highest interest. A harvester arrives from the fields, the feather-brushes
+ of her legs powdered with pollen. If the door be open, the Bee at once
+ dives underground. To tarry on the threshold would mean waste of time; and
+ the business is urgent. Sometimes, several appear upon the scene at almost
+ the same moment. The passage is too narrow for two, especially when they
+ have to avoid any untimely contact that would make the floury burden fall
+ to the floor. The nearest to the opening enters quickly. The others, drawn
+ up on the threshold in order of their arrival, respectful of one another's
+ rights, await their turn. As soon as the first disappears, the second
+ follows after her and is herself swiftly followed by the third and then
+ the others, one by one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes, again, there is a meeting between a Bee about to come out and a
+ Bee about to go in. Then the latter draws back a little and makes way for
+ the former. The politeness is reciprocal. I see some who, when on the
+ point of emerging from the pit, go down again and leave the passage free
+ for the one who has just arrived. Thanks to this mutual spirit of
+ accommodation, the business of the house proceeds without impediment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us keep our eyes open. There is something better than the
+ well-preserved order of the entrances. When an Halictus appears, returning
+ from her round of the flowers, we see a sort of trap-door, which closed
+ the house, suddenly fall and give a free passage. As soon as the new
+ arrival has entered, the trap rises back into its place, almost level with
+ the ground, and closes the entrance anew. The same thing happens when the
+ insects go out. At a request from within, the trap descends, the door
+ opens and the Bee flies away. The outlet is closed forthwith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What can this valve be which, descending or ascending in the cylinder of
+ the pit, after the fashion of a piston, opens and closes the house at each
+ departure and at each arrival? It is an Halictus, who has become the
+ portress of the establishment. With her large head, she makes an
+ impassable barrier at the top of the entrance-hall. If any one belonging
+ to the house wants to go in or out, she 'pulls the cord,' that is to say,
+ she withdraws to a spot where the gallery becomes wider and leaves room
+ for two. The other passes. She then at once returns to the orifice and
+ blocks it with the top of her head. Motionless, ever on the look-out, she
+ does not leave her post save to drive away importunate visitors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us profit by her brief appearances outside to take a look at her. We
+ recognize in her an Halictus similar to the others, which are now busy
+ harvesting; but the top of her head is bald and her dress is dingy and
+ thread-bare. All the nap is gone; and one can hardly make out the handsome
+ stripes of red and brown which she used to have. These tattered, work-worn
+ garments make things clear to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Bee who mounts guard and performs the office of a portress at the
+ entrance to the burrow is older than the others. She is the foundress of
+ the establishment, the mother of the actual workers, the grandmother of
+ the present grubs. In the springtime of her life, three months ago, she
+ wore herself out in solitary labours. Now that her ovaries are dried up,
+ she takes a well-earned rest. No, rest is hardly the word. She still
+ works, she assists the household to the best of her power. Incapable of
+ being a mother for a second time, she becomes a portress, opens the door
+ to the members of her family and makes strangers keep their distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The suspicious Kid (In La Fontaine's fable, "Le Loup, la Chevre et le
+ Chevreau."&mdash;Translator's Note.), looking through the chink, said to
+ the Wolf:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Show me a white foot, or I shan't open the door.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No less suspicious, the grandmother says to each comer:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Show me the yellow foot of an Halictus, or you won't be let in.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ None is admitted to the dwelling unless she be recognized as a member of
+ the family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ See for yourselves. Near the burrow passes an Ant, an unscrupulous
+ adventuress, who would not be sorry to know the meaning of the honeyed
+ fragrance that rises from the bottom of the cellar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be off, or you'll catch it!' says the portress, wagging her neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a rule the threat suffices. The Ant decamps. Should she insist, the
+ watcher leaves her sentry-box, flings herself upon the saucy jade, buffets
+ her and drives her away. The moment the punishment has been administered,
+ she returns to her post.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next comes the turn of a Leaf-cutter (Megachile albocincta, PEREZ), which,
+ unskilled in the art of burrowing, utilizes, after the manner of her kin,
+ the old galleries dug by others. Those of the Zebra Halictus suit her very
+ well, when the terrible Gnat has left them vacant for lack of heirs.
+ Seeking for a home wherein to stack her robinia-leaf honey-pots, she often
+ makes a flying inspection of my colonies of Halicti. A burrow seems to
+ take her fancy; but, before she sets foot on earth, her buzzing is noticed
+ by the sentry, who suddenly darts out and makes a few gestures on the
+ threshold of her door. That is all. The Leaf-cutter has understood. She
+ moves on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes, the Megachile has time to alight and insert her head into the
+ mouth of the pit. In a moment, the portress is there, comes a little
+ higher and bars the way. Follows a not very serious contest. The stranger
+ quickly recognizes the rights of the first occupant and, without
+ insisting, goes to seek an abode elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An accomplished marauder (Caelioxys caudata, SPIN.), a parasite of the
+ Megachile, receives a sound drubbing under my eyes. She thought, the
+ feather-brain, that she was entering the Leaf-Cutter's establishment! She
+ soon finds out her mistake; she meets the door-keeping Halictus, who
+ administers a sharp correction. She makes off at full speed. And so with
+ the others which, through inadvertence or ambition, seek to enter the
+ burrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same intolerance exists among the different grandmothers. About the
+ middle of July, when the animation of the colony is at its height, two
+ sets of Halicti are easily distinguishable: the young mothers and the old.
+ The former, much more numerous, brisk of movement and smartly arrayed,
+ come and go unceasingly from the burrows to the fields and from the fields
+ to the burrows. The latter, faded and dispirited, wander idly from hole to
+ hole. They look as though they had lost their way and were incapable of
+ finding their homes. Who are these vagabonds? I see in them afflicted ones
+ bereft of a family through the act of the odious Gnat. Many burrows have
+ been altogether exterminated. At the awakening of summer, the mother found
+ herself alone. She left her empty house and went off in search of a
+ dwelling where there were cradles to defend, a guard to mount. But those
+ fortunate nests already have their overseer, the foundress, who, jealous
+ of her rights, gives her unemployed neighbour a cold reception. One sentry
+ is enough; two would merely block the narrow guard-room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am privileged at times to witness a fight between two grandmothers. When
+ the tramp in quest of employment appears outside the door, the lawful
+ occupant does not move from her post, does not withdraw into the passage,
+ as she would before an Halictus returning from the fields. Far from making
+ way, she threatens the intruder with her feet and mandibles. The other
+ retaliates and tries to force her way in notwithstanding. Blows are
+ exchanged. The fray ends by the defeat of the stranger, who goes off to
+ pick a quarrel elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These little scenes afford us a glimpse of certain details of the highest
+ interest in the habits of the Zebra Halictus. The mother who builds her
+ nest in the spring no longer leaves her home, once her works are finished.
+ Shut up at the bottom of the burrow, busied with the thousand cares of
+ housekeeping, or else drowsing, she waits for her daughters to come out.
+ When, in the summer heats, the life of the village recommences, having
+ nought to do outside as a harvester, she stands sentry at the entrance to
+ the hall, so as to let none in save the workers of the home, her own
+ daughters. She wards off evilly-disposed visitors. None can enter without
+ the door-keeper's consent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is nothing to tell us that the watcher ever deserts her post. Not
+ once do I see her leave her house to go and seek some refreshment from the
+ flowers. Her age and her sedentary occupation, which involves no great
+ fatigue, perhaps relieve her of the need of nourishment. Perhaps, also,
+ the young ones returning from their plundering may from time to time
+ disgorge a drop of the contents of their crops for her benefit. Fed or
+ unfed, the old one no longer goes out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what she does need is the joys of an active family. Many are deprived
+ of these. The Gnat's burglary has destroyed the busy household. The
+ sorely-tried Bees abandon the deserted burrow. It is they who, ragged and
+ careworn, wander through the village. When they move, their flight is only
+ a short one; more often they remain motionless. It is they who, soured in
+ their tempers, attack their fellows and seek to dislodge them. They grow
+ rarer and more languid from day to day; then they disappear for good. What
+ has become of them? The little Grey Lizard had his eye on them: they are
+ easily snapped up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those settled in their own demesne, those who guard the honey-factory
+ wherein their daughters, the heiresses of the maternal establishment, are
+ at work, display wonderful vigilance. The more I see of them, the more I
+ admire them. In the cool hours of the early morning, when the pollen-flour
+ is not sufficiently ripened by the sun and while the harvesters are still
+ indoors, I see them at their posts, at the top of the gallery. Here,
+ motionless, their heads flush with the earth, they bar the door to all
+ invaders. If I look at them closely, they retreat a little and, in the
+ shadow, await the indiscreet observer's departure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I return when the harvesting is in full swing, between eight o'clock and
+ twelve. There is now, as the Halicti go in or out, a succession of prompt
+ withdrawals to open the door and of ascents to close it. The portress is
+ in the full exercise of her functions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the afternoon, the heat is too great and the workers do not go to the
+ fields. Retiring to the bottom of the house, they varnish the new cells,
+ they make the round loaf that is to receive the egg. The grandmother is
+ still upstairs, stopping the door with her bald head. For her, there is no
+ siesta during the stifling hours: the safety of the household requires her
+ to forgo it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I come back again at nightfall, or even later. By the light of a lantern,
+ I again behold the overseer, as zealous and assiduous as in the day-time.
+ The others are resting, but not she, for fear, apparently, of nocturnal
+ dangers known to herself alone. Does she nevertheless end by descending to
+ the quiet of the floor below? It seems probable, so essential must rest
+ be, after the fatigue of such a vigil!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is evident that, guarded in this manner, the burrow is exempt from
+ calamities similar to those which, too often, depopulate it in May. Let
+ the Gnat come now, if she dare, to steal the Halictus' loaves! Let her lie
+ in wait as long as she will! Neither her audacity nor her slyness will
+ make her escape the lynx eyes of the sentinel, who will put her to flight
+ with a threatening gesture or, if she persist, crush her with her nippers.
+ She will not come; and we know the reason: until spring returns, she is
+ underground in the pupa state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, in her absence, there is no lack, among the Fly rabble, of other
+ batteners on the toil of their fellow insects. Whatever the job, whatever
+ the plunder, you will find parasites there. And yet, for all my daily
+ visits, I never catch one of these in the neighbourhood of the summer
+ burrows. How cleverly the rascals ply their trade! How well aware are they
+ of the guard who keeps watch at the Halictus' door! There is no foul deed
+ possible nowadays; and the result is that no Fly puts in an appearance and
+ the tribulations of last spring are not repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The grandmother who, dispensed by age from maternal bothers, mounts guard
+ at the entrance of the home and watches over the safety of the family,
+ tells us that in the genesis of the instincts sudden births occur; she
+ shows us the existence of a spontaneous aptitude which nothing, either in
+ her own past conduct or in the actions of her daughters, could have led us
+ to suspect. Timorous in her prime, in the month of May, when she lived
+ alone in the burrow of her making, she has become gifted, in her decline,
+ with a superb contempt of danger and dares in her impotence what she never
+ dared do in her strength.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Formerly, when her tyrant, the Gnat, entered the house in her presence,
+ or, more often, stood face to face with her at the entrance, the silly Bee
+ did not stir, did not even threaten the red-eyed bandit, the dwarf whose
+ doom she could so easily have sealed. Was it terror on her part? No, for
+ she attended to her duties with her usual punctiliousness; no, for the
+ strong do not allow themselves to be thus paralysed by the weak. It was
+ ignorance of the danger, it was sheer fecklessness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And behold, to-day, the ignoramus of three months ago knows the peril,
+ knows it well, without serving any apprenticeship. Every stranger who
+ appears is kept at a distance, without distinction of size or race. If the
+ threatening gesture be not enough, the keeper sallies forth and flings
+ herself upon the persistent one. Cowardice has developed into courage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How has this change been brought about? I should like to picture the
+ Halictus gaining wisdom from the misfortunes of the spring and capable
+ thenceforth of looking out for danger; I would gladly credit her with
+ having learnt in the stern school of experience the advantages of a
+ patrol. I must give up the idea. If, by dint of gradual little acts of
+ progress, the Bee has achieved the glorious invention of a janitress, how
+ comes it that the fear of thieves is intermittent? It is true that, being
+ by herself in May, she cannot stand permanently at her door: the business
+ of the house takes precedence of everything else. But she ought, at any
+ rate as soon as her offspring are victimized, to know the parasite and
+ give chase when, at every moment, she finds her almost under her feet and
+ even in her house. Yet she pays no attention to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bitter experience of her ancestors, therefore, has bequeathed nothing
+ to her of a nature to alter her placid character; nor have her own
+ tribulations aught to do with the sudden awakening of her vigilance in
+ July. Like ourselves, animals have their joys and their sorrows. They
+ eagerly make the most of the former; they fret but little about the
+ latter, which, when all is said, is the best way of achieving a purely
+ animal enjoyment of life. To mitigate these troubles and protect the
+ progeny there is the inspiration of instinct, which is able without the
+ counsels of experience to give the Halicti a portress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the victualling is finished, when the Halicti no longer sally forth
+ on harvesting intent nor return all befloured with their spoils, the old
+ Bee is still at her post, vigilant as ever. The final preparations for the
+ brood are made below; the cells are closed. The door will be kept until
+ everything is finished. Then grandmother and mothers leave the house.
+ Exhausted by the performance of their duty, they go, somewhere or other,
+ to die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In September appears the second generation, comprising both males and
+ females. I find both sexes wassailing on the flowers, especially the
+ Compositae, the centauries and thistles. They are not harvesting now: they
+ are refreshing themselves, holding high holiday, teasing one another. It
+ is the wedding-time. Yet another fortnight and the males will disappear,
+ henceforth useless. The part of the idlers is played. Only the industrious
+ ones remain, the impregnated females, who go through the winter and set to
+ work in April.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not know their exact haunt during the inclement season. I expected
+ them to return to their native burrow, an excellent dwelling for the
+ winter, one would think. Excavations made in January showed me my mistake.
+ The old homes are empty, are falling to pieces owing to the prolonged
+ effect of the rains. The Zebra Halictus has something better than these
+ muddy hovels: she has snug corners in the stone-heaps, hiding-places in
+ the sunny walls and many other convenient habitations. And so the natives
+ of a village become scattered far and wide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In April, the scattered ones reassemble from all directions. On the
+ well-flattened garden-paths a choice is made of the site for their common
+ labours. Operations soon begin. Close to the first who bores her shaft
+ there is soon a second one busy with hers; a third arrives, followed by
+ another and others yet, until the little mounds often touch one another,
+ while at times they number as many as fifty on a surface of less than a
+ square yard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One would be inclined, at first sight, to say that these groups are
+ accounted for by the insect's recollection of its birthplace, by the fact
+ that the villagers, after dispersing during the winter, return to their
+ hamlet. But it is not thus that things happen: the Halictus scorns to-day
+ the place that once suited her. I never see her occupy the same patch of
+ ground for two years in succession. Each spring she needs new quarters.
+ And there are plenty of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can this mustering of the Halicti be due to a wish to resume the old
+ intercourse with their friends and relations? Do the natives of the same
+ burrow, of the same hamlet, recognize one another? Are they inclined to do
+ their work among themselves rather than in the company of strangers? There
+ is nothing to prove it, nor is there anything to disprove it. Either for
+ this reason or for others, the Halictus likes to keep with her neighbours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This propensity is pretty frequent among peace-lovers, who, needing little
+ nourishment, have no cause to fear competition. The others, the big
+ eaters, take possession of estates, of hunting-grounds from which their
+ fellows are excluded. Ask a Wolf his opinion of a brother Wolf poaching on
+ his preserves. Man himself, the chief of consumers, makes for himself
+ frontiers armed with artillery; he sets up posts at the foot of which one
+ says to the other:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Here's my side, there's yours. That's enough: now we'll pepper each
+ other.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the rattle of the latest explosives ends the colloquy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Happy are the peace-lovers. What do they gain by their mustering? With
+ them it is not a defensive system, a concerted effort to ward off the
+ common foe. The Halictus does not care about her neighbour's affairs. She
+ does not visit another's burrow; she does not allow others to visit hers.
+ She has her tribulations, which she endures alone; she is indifferent to
+ the tribulations of her kind. She stands aloof from the strife of her
+ fellows. Let each mind her own business and leave things at that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But company has its attractions. He lives twice who watches the life of
+ others. Individual activity gains by the sight of the general activity;
+ the animation of each one derives fresh warmth from the fire of the
+ universal animation. To see one's neighbours at work stimulates one's
+ rivalry. And work is the great delight, the real satisfaction that gives
+ some value to life. The Halictus knows this well and assembles in her
+ numbers that she may work all the better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes she assembles in such multitudes and over such extents of ground
+ as to suggest our own colossal swarms. Babylon and Memphis, Rome and
+ Carthage, London and Paris, those frantic hives, occur to our mind if we
+ can manage to forget comparative dimensions and see a Cyclopean pile in a
+ pinch of earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in February. The almond-tree was in blossom. A sudden rush of sap
+ had given the tree new life; its boughs, all black and desolate, seemingly
+ dead, were becoming a glorious dome of snowy satin. I have always loved
+ this magic of the awakening spring, this smile of the first flowers
+ against the gloomy bareness of the bark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so I was walking across the fields, gazing at the almond-trees'
+ carnival. Others were before me. An Osmia in a black velvet bodice and a
+ red woollen skirt, the Horned Osmia, was visiting the flowers, dipping
+ into each pink eye in search of a honeyed tear. A very small and very
+ modestly-dressed Halictus, much busier and in far greater numbers, was
+ flitting silently from blossom to blossom. Official science calls her
+ Halictus malachurus, K. The pretty little Bee's godfather strikes me as
+ ill-inspired. What has malachurus, calling attention to the softness of
+ the rump, to do in this connection? The name of Early Halictus would
+ better describe the almond-tree's little visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ None of the melliferous clan, in my neighbourhood at least, is stirring as
+ early as she is. She digs her burrows in February, an inclement month,
+ subject to sudden returns of frost. When none as yet, even among her near
+ kinswomen, dares to sally forth from winter-quarters, she pluckily goes to
+ work, shine the sun ever so little. Like the Zebra Halictus, she has two
+ generations a year, one in spring and one in summer; like her, too, she
+ settles by preference in the hard ruts of the country roads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her mole-hills, those humble mounds any two of which would go easily into
+ a Hen's egg, rise innumerous in my path, the path by the almond-trees
+ which is the happy hunting-ground of my curiosity to-day. This path is a
+ ribbon of road three paces wide, worn into ruts by the Mule's hoofs and
+ the wheels of the farm-carts. A coppice of holm-oaks shelters it from the
+ north wind. In this Eden with its well-caked soil, its warmth and quiet,
+ the little Halictus has multiplied her mole-hills to such a degree that I
+ cannot take a step without crushing some of them. The accident is not
+ serious: the miner, safe underground, will be able to scramble up the
+ crumbling sides of the mine and repair the threshold of the trampled home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I make a point of measuring the density of the population. I count from
+ forty to sixty mole-hills on a surface of one square yard. The encampment
+ is three paces wide and stretches over nearly three-quarters of a mile.
+ How many Halicti are there in this Babylon? I do not venture to make the
+ calculation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Speaking of the Zebra Halictus, I used the words hamlet, village,
+ township; and the expressions were appropriate. Here the term city hardly
+ meets the case. And what reason can we allege for these innumerable
+ clusters? I can see but one: the charm of living together, which is the
+ origin of society. Like mingles with like, without the rendering of any
+ mutual service; and this is enough to summon the Early Halictus to the
+ same way-side, even as the Herring and the Sardine assemble in the same
+ waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 14. THE HALICTI: PARTHENOGENESIS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Halictus opens up another question, connected with one of life's
+ obscurest problems. Let us go back five-and-twenty years. I am living at
+ Orange. My house stands alone among the fields. On the other side of the
+ wall enclosing our yard, which faces due south, is a narrow path overgrown
+ with couch-grass. The sun beats full upon it; and the glare reflected from
+ the whitewash of the wall turns it into a little tropical corner, shut off
+ from the rude gusts of the north-west wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the Cats come to take their afternoon nap, with their eyes
+ half-closed; here the children come, with Bull, the House-dog; here also
+ come the haymakers, at the hottest time of the day, to sit and take their
+ meal and whet their scythes in the shade of the plane-tree; here the women
+ pass up and down with their rakes, after the hay-harvest, to glean what
+ they can on the niggardly carpet of the shorn meadow. It is therefore a
+ very much frequented footpath, were it only because of the coming and
+ going of our household: a thoroughfare ill-suited, one would think, to the
+ peaceful operations of a Bee; and nevertheless it is such a very warm and
+ sheltered spot and the soil is so favourable that every year I see the
+ Cylindrical Halictus (H. cylindricus, FAB.) hand down the site from one
+ generation to the next. It is true that the very matutinal, even partly
+ nocturnal character of the work makes the insect suffer less inconvenience
+ from the traffic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The burrows cover an extent of some ten square yards, and their mounds,
+ which often come near enough to touch, average a distance of four inches
+ at the most from one another. Their number is therefore something like a
+ thousand. The ground just here is very rough, consisting of stones and
+ dust mixed with a little mould and held together by the closely interwoven
+ roots of the couch-grass. But, owing to its nature, it is thoroughly well
+ drained, a condition always in request among Bees and Wasps that have
+ underground cells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us forget for a moment what the Zebra Halictus and the Early Halictus
+ have taught us. At the risk of repeating myself a little, I will relate
+ what I observed during my first investigations. The Cylindrical Halictus
+ works in May. Except among the social species, such as Common Wasps,
+ Bumble-bees, Ants and Hive-bees, it is the rule for each insect that
+ victuals its nests either with honey or game to work by itself at
+ constructing the home of its grubs. Among insects of the same species
+ there is often neighbourship; but their labours are individual and not the
+ result of co-operation. For instance, the Cricket-hunters, the
+ Yellow-winged Sphex, settle in gangs at the foot of a sandstone cliff, but
+ each digs her own burrow and would not suffer a neighbour to come and help
+ in piercing the home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the case of the Anthophorae, an innumerable swarm takes possession of a
+ sun-scorched crag, each Bee digging her own gallery and jealously
+ excluding any of her fellows who might venture to come to the entrance of
+ her hole. The Three-pronged Osmia, when boring the bramble-stalk tunnel in
+ which her cells are to be stacked, gives a warm reception to any Osmia
+ that dares set foot upon her property.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let one of the Odyneri who make their homes in a road-side bank mistake
+ the door and enter her neighbour's house: she would have a bad time of it!
+ Let a Megachile, returning with her leafy disk in her legs, go into the
+ wrong basement: she would be very soon dislodged! So with the others: each
+ has her own home, which none of the others has the right to enter. This is
+ the rule, even among Bees and Wasps established in a populous colony on a
+ common site. Close neighbourhood implies no sort of intimate relationship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great therefore is my surprise as I watch the Cylindrical Halictus'
+ operations. She forms no society, in the entomological sense of the word:
+ there is no common family; and the general interest does not engross the
+ attention of the individual. Each mother occupies herself only with her
+ own eggs, builds cells and gathers honey only for her own larvae, without
+ concerning herself in any way with the upbringing of the others' grubs.
+ All that they have in common is the entrance-door and the goods-passage,
+ which ramifies in the ground and leads to different groups of cells, each
+ the property of one mother. Even so, in the blocks of flats in our large
+ towns, one door, one hall and one staircase lead to different floors or
+ different portions of a floor where each family retains its isolation and
+ its independence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This common right of way is extremely easy to perceive at the time for
+ victualling the nests. Let us direct our attention for a while to the same
+ entrance-aperture, opening at the top of a little mound of earth freshly
+ thrown up, like that accumulated by the Ants during their works. Sooner or
+ later we shall see the Halicti arrive with their load of pollen, gathered
+ on the Cichoriaceae of the neighbourhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Usually, they come up one by one; but it is not rare to see three, four or
+ even more appearing at the same time at the mouth of one burrow. They
+ perch on the top of the mound and, without hurrying in front of one
+ another, with no sign of jealousy, they dive down the passage, each in her
+ turn. We need but watch their peaceful waiting, their tranquil dives, to
+ recognize that this indeed is a common passage to which each has as much
+ right as another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the soil is exploited for the first time and the shaft sunk slowly
+ from the outside to the inside, do several Cylindrical Halicti, one
+ relieving the other, take part in the work by which they will afterwards
+ profit equally? I do not believe it for a moment. As the Zebra Halictus
+ and the Early Halictus told me later, each miner goes to work alone and
+ makes herself a gallery which will be her exclusive property. The common
+ use of the passage comes presently, when the site, tested by experience,
+ is handed down from one generation to another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A first group of cells is established, we will suppose, at the bottom of a
+ pit dug in virgin soil. The whole thing, cells and pit, is the work of one
+ insect. When the moment comes to leave the underground dwelling, the Bees
+ emerging from this nest will find before them an open road, or one at most
+ obstructed by crumbly matter, which offers less resistance than the
+ neighbouring soil, as yet untouched. The exit-way will therefore be the
+ primitive way, contrived by the mother during the construction of the
+ nest. All enter upon it without any hesitation, for the cells open
+ straight on it. All, coming and going from the cells to the bottom of the
+ shaft and from the shaft to the cells, will take part in the clearing,
+ under the stimulus of the approaching deliverance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is quite unnecessary here to presume among these underground prisoners
+ a concerted effort to liberate themselves more easily by working in
+ common: each is thinking only of herself and invariably returns, after
+ resting, to toil at the inevitable path, the path of least resistance, in
+ short the passage once dug by the mother and now more or less blocked up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the Cylindrical Halicti, any one who wishes emerges from her cell at
+ her own hour, without waiting for the emergence of the others, because the
+ cells, grouped in small stacks, have each their special outlet opening
+ into the common gallery. The result of this arrangement is that all the
+ inhabitants of one burrow are able to assist, each doing her share, in the
+ clearing of the exit-shaft. When she feels fatigued, the worker retires to
+ her undamaged cell and another succeeds her, impatient to get out rather
+ than to help the first. At last the way is clear and the Halicti emerge.
+ They disperse over the flowers around as long as the sun is hot; when the
+ air cools, they go back to the burrows to spend the night there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days pass and already the cares of egg-laying are at hand. The
+ galleries have never been abandoned. The Bees have come to take refuge
+ there on rainy or very windy days; most, if not all, have returned every
+ evening at sunset, each doubtless making for her own cell, which is still
+ intact and which is carefully impressed upon her memory. In a word, the
+ Cylindrical Halictus does not lead a wandering life; she has a fixed
+ residence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A necessary consequence results from these settled habits: for the purpose
+ of her laying, the Bee will adopt the identical burrow in which she was
+ born. The entrance-gallery is ready therefore. Should it need to be
+ carried deeper, to be pushed in new directions, the builder has but to
+ extend it at will. The old cells even can serve again, if slightly
+ restored.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus resuming possession of the native burrow in view of her offspring,
+ the Bee, notwithstanding her instincts as a solitary worker, achieves an
+ attempt at social life, because there is one entrance-door and one passage
+ for the use of all the mothers returning to the original domicile. There
+ is thus a semblance of collaboration without any real co-operation for the
+ common weal. Everything is reduced to a family inheritance shared equally
+ among the heirs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The number of these coheirs must soon be limited, for a too tumultuous
+ traffic in the corridor would delay the work. Then fresh passages are
+ opened inwards, often communicating with depths already excavated, so that
+ the ground at last is perforated in every direction with an inextricable
+ maze of winding tunnels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The digging of the cells and the piercing of new galleries take place
+ especially at night. A cone of fresh earth on top of the burrow bears
+ evidence every morning to the overnight activity. It also shows by its
+ volume that several navvies have taken part in the work, for it would be
+ impossible for a single Halictus to extract from the ground, convey to the
+ surface and heap up so large a stack of rubbish in so short a time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At sunrise, when the fields around are still wet with dew, the Cylindrical
+ Halictus leaves her underground passages and starts on her foraging. This
+ is done without animation, perhaps because of the morning coolness. There
+ is no joyous excitement, no humming above the burrows. The Bees come back
+ again, flying low, silently and heavily, their hind-legs yellow with
+ pollen; they alight on the earth-cone and at once dive down the vertical
+ chimney. Others come up the pipe and go off to their harvesting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This journeying to and fro for provisions continues until eight or nine in
+ the morning. Then the heat begins to grow intense and is reflected by the
+ wall; then also the path is once more frequented. People pass at every
+ moment, coming out of the house or elsewhence. The soil is so much trodden
+ under foot that the little mounds of refuse surrounding each burrow soon
+ disappear and the site loses every sign of underground habitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All day long, the Halicti remain indoors. Withdrawing to the bottom of the
+ galleries, they occupy themselves probably in making and polishing the
+ cells. Next morning, new cones of rubbish appear, the result of the
+ night's work, and the pollen-harvest is resumed for a few hours; then
+ everything ceases again. And so the work goes on, suspended by day,
+ renewed at night and in the morning hours, until completely finished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The passages of the Cylindrical Halictus descend to a depth of some eight
+ inches and branch into secondary corridors, each giving access to a set of
+ cells. These number six or eight to each set and are ranged side by side,
+ parallel with their main axis, which is almost horizontal. They are oval
+ at the base and contracted at the neck. Their length is nearly twenty
+ millimetres (.78 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.) and their greatest width
+ eight. (.312 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.) They do not consist simply of
+ a cavity in the ground; on the contrary, they have their own walls, so
+ that the group can be taken out in one piece, with a little precaution,
+ and removed neatly from the earth in which it is contained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The walls are formed of fairly delicate materials, which must have been
+ chosen in the coarse surrounding mass and kneaded with saliva. The inside
+ is carefully polished and upholstered with a thin waterproof film. We will
+ cut short these details concerning the cells, which the Zebra Halictus has
+ already shown us in greater perfection, leave the home to itself and come
+ to the most striking feature in the life-history of the Halicti.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cylindrical Halictus is at work in the first days of May. It is a rule
+ among the Hymenoptera for the males never to take part in the fatiguing
+ work of nest-building. To construct cells and to amass victuals are
+ occupations entirely foreign to their nature. This rule seems to have no
+ exceptions; and the Halicti conform to it like the rest. It is therefore
+ only to be expected that we should see no males shooting the underground
+ rubbish outside the galleries. That is not their business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what does astonish us, when our attention is directed to it, is the
+ total absence of any males in the vicinity of the burrows. Although it is
+ the rule that the males should be idle, it is also the rule for these
+ idlers to keep near the galleries in course of construction, coming and
+ going from door to door and hovering above the work-yards to seize the
+ moment at which the unfecundated females will at last yield to their
+ importunities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here, despite the enormous population, despite my careful and
+ incessant watch, it is impossible for me to distinguish a single male. And
+ yet the distinction between the sexes is of the simplest. It is not
+ necessary to take hold of the male. He can be recognized even at a
+ distance by his slenderer frame, by his long, narrow abdomen, by his red
+ sash. They might easily suggest two different species. The female is a
+ pale russet-brown; the male is black, with a few red segments to his
+ abdomen. Well, during the May building-operations, there is not a Bee in
+ sight clad in black, with a slender, red-belted abdomen; in short, not a
+ male.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though the males do not come to visit the environs of the burrows, they
+ might be elsewhere, particularly on the flowers where the females go
+ plundering. I did not fail to explore the fields, insect-net in hand. My
+ search was invariably fruitless. On the other hand, those males, now
+ nowhere to be found, are plentiful later, in September, along the borders
+ of the paths, on the close-set flowers of the eringo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This singular colony, reduced exclusively to mothers, made me suspect the
+ existence of several generations a year, whereof one at least must possess
+ the other sex. I continued therefore, when the building-who was over, to
+ keep a daily watch on the establishment of the Cylindrical Halictus, in
+ order to seize the favourable moment that would verify my suspicions. For
+ six weeks, solitude reigned above the burrows: not a single Halictus
+ appeared; and the path, trodden by the wayfarers, lost its little heaps of
+ rubbish, the only signs of the excavations. There was nothing outside to
+ show that the warmth down below was hatching populous swarms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ July comes and already a few little mounds of fresh earth betoken work
+ going on underground in preparation for an exodus in the near future. As
+ the males, among the Hymenoptera, are generally further advanced than the
+ females and quit their natal cells earlier, it was important that I should
+ witness the first exits made, so as to dispel the least shadow of a doubt.
+ A violent exhumation would have a great advantage over the natural exit:
+ it would place the population of the burrows immediately under my eyes,
+ before the departure of either sex. In this way, nothing could escape from
+ me and I was dispensed from a watch which, for all its attentiveness, was
+ not to be relied upon absolutely. I therefore resolve upon a
+ reconnaissance with the spade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I dig down to the full depth of the galleries and remove large lumps of
+ earth which I take in my hands and break very carefully so as to examine
+ all the parts that may contain cells. Halicti in the perfect state
+ predominate, most of them still lodged in their unbroken chambers. Though
+ they are not quite so numerous, there are also plenty of pupae. I collect
+ them of every shade of colour, from dead-white, the sign of a recent
+ transformation, to smoky-brown, the mark of an approaching metamorphosis.
+ Larvae, in small quantities, complete the harvest. They are in the state
+ of torpor that precedes the appearance of the pupa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I prepare boxes with a bed of fresh, sifted earth to receive the larvae
+ and the pupae, which I lodge each in a sort of half-cell formed by the
+ imprint of my finger. I will await the transformation to decide to which
+ sex they belong. As for the perfect insects, they are inspected, counted
+ and at once released.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the very unlikely supposition that the distribution of the sexes might
+ vary in different parts of the colony, I make a second excavation, at a
+ few yards' distance from the other. It supplies me with another collection
+ both of perfect insects and of pupae and larvae.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the metamorphosis of the laggards is completed, which does not take
+ many days, I proceed to take a general census. It gives me two hundred and
+ fifty Halicti. Well, in this number of Bees, collected in the burrow
+ before any have emerged, I perceive none, absolutely none but females; or,
+ to be mathematically accurate, I find just one male, one alone; and he is
+ so small and feeble that he dies without quite succeeding in divesting
+ himself of his nymphal bands. This solitary male is certainly accidental.
+ A female population of two hundred and forty-nine Halicti implies other
+ males than this abortion, or rather implies none at all. I therefore
+ eliminate him as an accident of no value and conclude that, in the
+ Cylindrical Halictus, the July generation consists of females only.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The building-operations start again in the second week of July. The
+ galleries are restored and lengthened; new cells are fashioned and the old
+ ones repaired. Follow the provisioning, the laying of the eggs, the
+ closing of the cells; and, before July is over, there is solitude again.
+ Let me also say that, during the building-period, not a male appears in
+ sight, a fact which adds further proof to that already supplied by my
+ excavations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the high temperature of this time of the year, the development of the
+ larvae makes rapid progress: a month is sufficient for the various stages
+ of the metamorphosis. On the 24th of August there are once more signs of
+ life above the burrows of the Cylindrical Halictus, but under very
+ different conditions. For the first time, both sexes are present. Males,
+ so easily recognized by their black livery and their slim abdomen adorned
+ with a red ring, hover backwards and forwards, almost level with the
+ ground. They fuss about from burrow to burrow. A few rare females come out
+ for a moment and then go in again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I proceed to make an excavation with my spade; I gather indiscriminately
+ whatever I come across. Larvae are very scarce; pupae abound, as do
+ perfect insects. The list of my captures amounts to eighty males and
+ fifty-eight females. The males, therefore, hitherto impossible to
+ discover, either on the flowers around or in the neighbourhood of the
+ burrows, could be picked up to-day by the hundred, if I wished. They
+ outnumber the females by about four to three; they are also further
+ developed, in accordance with the general rule, for most of the backward
+ pupae give me only females.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once the two sexes had appeared, I expected a third generation that would
+ spend the winter in the larval state and recommence in May the annual
+ cycle which I have just described. My anticipation proved to be at fault.
+ Throughout September, when the sun beats upon the burrows, I see the males
+ flitting in great numbers from one shaft to the other. Sometimes a female
+ appears, returning from the fields, but with no pollen on her legs. She
+ seeks her gallery, finds it, dives down and disappears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The males, as though indifferent to her arrival, offer her no welcome, do
+ not harass her with their amorous pursuits; they continue to visit the
+ doors of the burrows with a winding and oscillating flight. For two
+ months, I follow their evolutions. If they set foot on earth, it is to
+ descend forthwith into some gallery that suits them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not uncommon to see several of them on the threshold of the same
+ burrow. Then each awaits his turn to enter; they are as peaceable in their
+ relations as the females who are joint owners of a burrow. At other times,
+ one wants to go in as a second is coming out. This sudden encounter
+ produces no strife. The one leaving the hole withdraws a little to one
+ side to make enough room for two; the other slips past as best he can.
+ These peaceful meetings are all the more striking when we consider the
+ usual rivalry between males of the same species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No rubbish-mound stands at the mouth of the shafts, showing that the
+ building has not been resumed; at the most, a few crumbs of earth are
+ heaped outside. And by whom, pray? By the males and by them alone. The
+ lazy sex has bethought itself of working. It turns navvy and shoots out
+ grains of earth that would interfere with its continual entrances and
+ exits. For the first time I witness a custom which no Hymenopteron had yet
+ shown me: I see the males haunting the interior of the burrows with an
+ assiduity equalling that of the mothers employed in nest-building.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cause of these unwonted operations soon stands revealed. The females
+ seen flitting above the burrows are very rare; the majority of the
+ feminine population remain sequestered under ground, do not perhaps come
+ out once during the whole of the latter part of summer. Those who do
+ venture out go in again soon, empty-handed of course and always without
+ any amorous teasing from the males, a number of whom are hovering above
+ the burrows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, watch as carefully as I may, I do not discover a single
+ act of pairing out of doors. The weddings are clandestine, therefore, and
+ take place under ground. This explains the males' fussy visits to the
+ doors of the galleries during the hottest hours of the day, their
+ continual descents into the depths and their continual reappearances. They
+ are looking for the females cloistered in the retirement of the cells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little spade-work soon turns suspicion into certainty. I unearth a
+ sufficient number of couples to prove to me that the sexes come together
+ underground. When the marriage is consummated, the red-belted one quits
+ the spot and goes to die outside the burrow, after dragging from flower to
+ flower the bit of life that remains to him. The other shuts herself up in
+ her cell, there to await the return of the month of May.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ September is spent by the Halictus solely in nuptial celebrations.
+ Whenever the sky is fine, I witness the evolutions of the males above the
+ burrows, with their continual entrances and exits; should the sun be
+ veiled, they take refuge down the passages. The more impatient,
+ half-hidden in the pit, show their little black heads outside, as though
+ peeping for the least break in the clouds that will allow them to pay a
+ brief visit to the flowers round about. They also spend the night in the
+ burrows. In the morning, I attend their levee; I see them put their head
+ to the window, take a look at the weather and then go in again until the
+ sun beats on the encampment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same mode of life is continued throughout October, but the males
+ become less numerous from day to day as the stormy season approaches and
+ fewer females remain to be wooed. By the time that the first cold weather
+ comes, in November, complete solitude reigns over the burrows. I once more
+ have recourse to the spade. I find none but females in their cells. There
+ is not one male left. All have vanished, all are dead, the victims of
+ their life of pleasure and of the wind and rain. Thus ends the cycle of
+ the year for the Cylindrical Halictus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In February, after a hard winter, when the snow had lain on the ground for
+ a fortnight, I wanted once more to look into the matter of my Halicti. I
+ was in bed with pneumonia and at the point of death, to all appearances. I
+ had little or no pain, thank God, but extreme difficulty in living. With
+ the little lucidity left to me, being able to do no other sort of
+ observing, I observed myself dying; I watched with a certain interest the
+ gradual falling to pieces of my poor machinery. Were it not for the terror
+ of leaving my family, who were still young, I would gladly have departed.
+ The after-life must have so many higher and fairer truths to teach us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My hour had not yet come. When the little lamps of thought began to
+ emerge, all flickering, from the dusk of unconsciousness, I wished to take
+ leave of the Hymenopteron, my fondest joy, and first of all of my
+ neighbour, the Halictus. My son Emile took the spade and went and dug the
+ frozen ground. Not a male was found, of course; but there were plenty of
+ females, numbed with the cold in their cells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few were brought for me to see. Their little chambers showed no
+ efflorescence of rime, with which all the surrounding earth was coated.
+ The waterproof varnish had been wonderfully efficacious. As for the
+ anchorites, roused from their torpor by the warmth of the room, they began
+ to wander about my bed, where I followed them vaguely with my fading eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May came, as eagerly awaited by the sick man as by the Halicti. I left
+ Orange for Serignan, my last stage, I expect. While I was moving, the Bees
+ resumed their building. I gave them a regretful glance, for I had still
+ much to learn in their company. I have never since met with such a mighty
+ colony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These old observations on the habits of the Cylindrical Halictus may now
+ be followed by a general summary which will incorporate the recent data
+ supplied by the Zebra Halictus and the Early Halictus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The females of the Cylindrical Halictus whom I unearth from November
+ onwards are evidently fecundated, as is proved by the assiduity of the
+ males during the preceding two months and most positively confirmed by the
+ couples discovered in the course of my excavations. These females spend
+ the winter in their cells, as do many of the early-hatching melliferous
+ insects, such as Anthophorae and Mason-bees, who build their nests in the
+ spring, the larvae reaching the perfect state in the summer and yet
+ remaining shut up in their cells until the following May. But there is
+ this great difference in the case of the Cylindrical Halictus, that in the
+ autumn the females leave their cells for a time to receive the males under
+ ground. The couples pair and the males perish. Left alone, the females
+ return to their cells, where they spend the inclement season.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Zebra Halicti, studied first at Orange and then, under better
+ conditions, at Serignan, in my own enclosure, have not these subterranean
+ customs: they celebrate their weddings amid the joys of the light, the sun
+ and the flowers. I see the first males appear in the middle of September,
+ on the centauries. Generally there are several of them courting the same
+ bride. Now one, then another, they swoop upon her suddenly, clasp her,
+ leave her, seize hold of her again. Fierce brawls decide who shall possess
+ her. One is accepted and the others decamp. With a swift and angular
+ flight, they go from flower to flower, without alighting. They hover on
+ the wing, looking about them, more intent on pairing than on eating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Early Halictus did not supply me with any definite information, partly
+ through my own fault, partly through the difficulty of excavation in a
+ stony soil, which calls for the pick-axe rather than the spade. I suspect
+ her of having the nuptial customs of the Cylindrical Halictus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is another difference, which causes certain variations of detail in
+ these customs. In the autumn, the females of the Cylindrical Halictus
+ leave their burrows seldom or not at all. Those who do go out invariably
+ come back after a brief halt upon the flowers. All pass the winter in the
+ natal cells. On the other hand, those of the Zebra Halictus move their
+ quarters, meet the males outside and do not return to the burrows, which
+ my autumn excavations always find deserted. They hibernate in the first
+ hiding-places that offer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the spring, the females, fecundated since the autumn, come out: the
+ Cylindrical Halicti from their cells, the Zebra Halicti from their various
+ shelters, the Early Halicti apparently from their chambers, like the
+ first. They work at their nests in the absence of any male, as do also the
+ Social Wasps, whose whole brood has perished excepting a few mothers also
+ fecundated in the autumn. In both cases, the assistance of the males is
+ equally real, only it has preceded the laying by about six months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far, there is nothing new in the life of the Halicti; but here is where
+ the unexpected appears: in July, another generation is produced; and this
+ time without males. The absence of masculine assistance is no longer a
+ mere semblance here, due to an earlier fecundation: it is a reality
+ established beyond a doubt by the continuity of my observations and by my
+ excavations during the summer season, before the emergence of the new
+ Bees. At this period, a little before July, if my spade unearth the cells
+ of any one of my three Halicti, the result is always females, nothing but
+ females, with exceedingly rare exceptions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, it may be said that the second progeny is due to the mothers who
+ knew the males in autumn and who would be able to nidify twice a year. The
+ suggestion is not admissible. The Zebra Halictus confirms what I say. She
+ shows us the old mothers no longer leaving the home but mounting guard at
+ the entrance to the burrows. No harvesting- or pottery-work is possible
+ with these absorbing doorkeeping-functions. Therefore there is no new
+ family, even admitting that the mothers' ovaries are not depleted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not know if a similar argument is valid in the case of the
+ Cylindrical Halictus. Has she any general survivors? As my attention had
+ not yet been directed on this point in the old days, when I had the insect
+ at my door, I have no records to go upon. For all that, I am inclined to
+ think that the portress of the Zebra Halictus is unknown here. The reason
+ of this absence would be the number of workers at the start.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In May, the Zebra Halictus, living by herself in her winter retreat,
+ founds her house alone. When her daughters succeed her, in July, she is
+ the only grandmother in the establishment and the post of portress falls
+ to her. With the Cylindrical Halictus, the conditions are different. Here
+ the May workers are many in the same burrow, where they dwell in common
+ during the winter. Supposing that they survive when the business of the
+ household is finished, to whom will the office of overseer fall? Their
+ number is so great and they are all so full of zeal that disorder would be
+ inevitable. But we can leave this small matter unsettled pending further
+ information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact remains that females, females exclusively, have come out of the
+ eggs laid in May. They have descendants, of that there is no room for
+ doubt; they procreate though there are no males in their time. From this
+ generation by a single sex, there spring, two months later, males and
+ females. These mate; and the same order of things recommences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To sum up, judging by the three species that form the subject of my
+ investigations, the Halicti have two generations a year: one in the
+ spring, issuing from the mothers who have lived through the winter after
+ being fecundated in the autumn; the other in the summer, the fruit of
+ parthenogenesis, that is to say, of reproduction by the powers of the
+ mother alone. Of the union of the two sexes, females alone are born;
+ parthenogenesis gives birth at the same time to females and males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the mother, the original genitrix, has been able once to dispense
+ with a coadjutor, why does she need one later? What is the puny idler
+ there for? He was unnecessary. Why does he become necessary now? Shall we
+ ever obtain a satisfactory answer to the question? It is doubtful.
+ However, without much hope of succeeding we will one day consult the
+ Gall-fly, who is better-versed than we in the tangled problem of the
+ sexes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ INDEX.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alpine Odynerus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amadeus' Eumenes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ammophila (see also Hairy Ammophila).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrena.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrenoid Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthidium (see the varieties below, Cotton-bee, Resin Bee).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthidium bellicosum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthidium cingulatum (see Girdled Anthidium).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthidium diadema (see Diadem Anthidium).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthidium florentinum (see Florentine Anthidium).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthidium Latreillii (see Latreille's Resin-bee).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthidium manicatum (see Manicate Anthidium).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthidium quadrilobum (see Four-lobed Resin-bee).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthidium scapulare (see Scapular Anthidium).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthidium septemdentatum (see Seven-pronged Resin-bee).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthocopa papaveris (see Upholsterer-bee).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthophora (see also Anthophora of the Walls, Hairy-footed Anthophora,
+ Masked Anthophora).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthophora of the Walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthophora parietina (see Anthophora of the Walls).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthophora pilipes (see Hairy-footed Anthophora).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthrax (see Anthrax sinuata).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthrax sinuata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aphis (see Plant-louse).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archimedes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Augustus, the Emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beetle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bembex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Black, Adam and Charles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Black Plant-louse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Black Psen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Black-tipped Leaf-cutter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blue Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Book-louse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brown Snail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bulimulus radiatus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bumble-bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calicurgus (see Pompilus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Capricorn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carpenter-bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cemonus unicolor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerambyx (see Capricorn).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ceratina (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ceratina albilabris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ceratina callosa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ceratina chalcites.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ceratina coerulea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerceris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cetonia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chaffinch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chalicodoma (see Mason-bee).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chrysis flammea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cockroach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Coelyoxis caudata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Coelyoxis octodentata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colletes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Common Snail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Common Wasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cotton-bee (see also the varieties of Anthidium).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crayfish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cricket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crioceris merdigera (see Lily-beetle).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cryptus bimaculatus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cryptus gyrator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cylindrical Halictus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darwin, Charles Robert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Decticus verrucivorus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Devillario, Henri.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Diadem Anthidium.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dioxys cincta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dragon-fly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dryden, John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dufour, Jean Marie Leon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dung-beetle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dzierzon, Johann.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early Halictus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Earth-worm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Earwig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Epeira (see Garden Spider).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ephialtes divinator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ephialtes mediator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ephippiger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eumenes Amadei (see Amadeus' Eumenes).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Euritema rubicola.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fabre, Emile, the author's son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fabricius, Johann Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Feeble Leaf-cutter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Field-mouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Florentine Anthidium.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fly (see also House-fly).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Foenus pyrenaicus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four-lobed Resin-bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Franklin, Benjamin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Garden Snail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Garden Spider.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Girdled Anthidium.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Girdled Snail (see Brown Snail).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gnat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Golden Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Goldfinch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grasshopper (see also Great Green Grasshopper).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great Green Grasshopper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great Peacock Moth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Green Grasshopper (see Ephippiger, Great Green Grasshopper).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Green Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grey Lizard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hairy Ammophila.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hairy-footed Anthophora.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Halictus (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Halictus cylindricus (see Cylindrical Halictus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Halictus malachurus (see Early Halictus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Halictus zebrus (see Zebra Halictus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hare-footed Leaf-cutter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helix algira.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helix aspersa (see Common Snail).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helix caespitum (see Garden Snail).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helix nemoralis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helix striata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heriades rubicola.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hive-bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Honey-bee (see Hive-bee).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Horned Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ House-dog (see Dog).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ House-fly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kirby, William.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ La Fontaine, Jean de.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lamb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Languedocian Sphex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lanius collurio (see Red-backed Shrike).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ La Palice, Jacques de Chabannes, Seigneur de.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Latreille, Pierre Andre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Latreille's Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Latreille's Resin-bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leaf-cutter, Leaf-cutting Bee (see Megachile).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leaf-insect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leucopsis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily-beetle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lithurgus (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lithurgus chrysurus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lithurgus cornutus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lizard (see also Grey Lizard).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Locust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Locusta viridissima (see Great Green Grasshopper).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Macmillan Co.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mademoiselle Mori", author of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manicate Anthidium.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mantis, Mantis religiosa (see Praying Mantis).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Masked Anthophora.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mason-bee (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mason-bee of the Pebbles (see Mason-bee of the Walls).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mason-bee of the Sheds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mason-bee of the Shrubs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mason-bee of the Walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May-fly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meade-Waldo, Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Megachile (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Megachile albocincta (see White-girdled Leaf-cutter).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Megachile apicalis (see Black-tipped Leaf-cutter).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Megachile argentata (see Silvery Leaf-cutter).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Megachile Dufourii (see Silky Leaf-cutter).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Megachile imbecilla (see Feeble Leaf-cutter).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Megachile lagopoda (see Hare-footed Leaf-cutter).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Megachile sericans (see Silky Leaf-cutter).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Melitta (see Colletes).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miall, Bernard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Midwife Toad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morawitz' Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Odynerus (see also the varieties below)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Odynerus alpestris (see Alpine Odynerus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Odynerus delphinalis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Odynerus rubicola.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oil-beetle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Omalus auratus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia andrenoides (see Andrenoid Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia aurulenta (see Golden Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia cornuta (see Horned Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia cyanea (see Blue Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia cyanoxantha.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia detrita (see Ragged Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia Latreillii (see Latreille's Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia Morawitzi (see Morawitz' Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia parvula (see Tiny Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia rufo-hirta (see Red Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia tricornis (see Three-horned Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia tridentata (see Three-pronged Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia versicolor (see Variegated Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia viridana (see Green Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pelopaeus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perez, Professor Jean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philanthus (see Philanthus apivorus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philanthus apivorus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plant-louse (see also Black Plant-louse).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pompilus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Praying Mantis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prosopis confusa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Psen atratus (see Black Psen).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rabelais, Francois.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ragged Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reaumur, Rene Antoine Ferchault de.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Red-backed Shrike.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Red-Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Resin-bee (see also the varieties).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ringed Calicurgus (see Pompilus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rodwell, Miss Frances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rosechafer (see Cetonia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sapyga (see Spotted Sapyga).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sardine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scapular Anthidium.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scolia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scorpion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seven-pronged Resin-bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shrike (see Red-backed Shrike).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silky Leaf-cutter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silvery Leaf-cutter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Snail (see also the varieties)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Social Wasp (see Common Wasp).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Solenius lapidarius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Solenius vagus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sophocles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sparrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spence, William.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sphex (see also Languedocian Sphex, Yellow-winged Sphex.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spotted Sapyga.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stick-insect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stizus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tachina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tachytes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tarantula.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Teixeira de Mattos, Alexander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Termite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three-horned Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three-pronged Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tiberius, the Emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tiny Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tripoxylon figulus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unarmed Zonitis (see Zonitis mutica).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upholsterer-bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Variegated Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Virgil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wasp (see also Common Wasp).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Weaving Spider.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Weevil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ White-girdled Leaf-cutter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wolf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Worm (see Earth-worm).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Xylocopa violacea (see Carpenter-bee).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yellow-winged Sphex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Zebra Halictus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Zonitis mutica.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
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+</pre>
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