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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ More Hunting Wasps, by J. Henri Fabre
+ </title>
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+
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+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of More Hunting Wasps, 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: More Hunting Wasps
+
+Author: J. Henri Fabre
+
+Release Date: February 12, 2009 [EBook #3462]
+Last Updated: January 22, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MORE HUNTING WASPS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Sue Asscher, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ MORE HUNTING WASPS
+ </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>
+ <h2>
+ TRANSLATOR'S NOTE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The fourteen chapters contained in this volume complete the list of essays
+ in the "Souvenirs entomologiques" devoted to Wasps. The remainder will be
+ found in the two earlier volumes of this collected edition entitled "The
+ Hunting Wasps" and the "Mason-wasps" respectively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chapter 2 has appeared before in my version of "The Life and Love of the
+ Insect," an illustrated volume of extracts translated by myself and
+ published by Messrs. Adam and Charles Black (in America by the Macmillan
+ Co.), and Chapter 10 in a similar miscellany translated by Mr. Bernard
+ Miall published by Messrs. T. Fisher Unwin Ltd. (in America by the Century
+ Co.) under the title of "Social Life in the Insect World." These two
+ chapters are included in the present book by arrangement with the original
+ firms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I wish to place on record my thanks to Mr. Miall for the valuable
+ assistance which he has given me in preparing this translation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ALEXANDER TEIXEIRA DE MATTOS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ventnor, I. W., 6 December, 1920.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> TRANSLATOR'S NOTE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER 1. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE POMPILI.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER 2. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE SCOLIAE.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER 3. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ A DANGEROUS DIET.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER 4. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE CETONIA-LARVA.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER 5. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE PROBLEM OF THE SCOLIAE.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER 6. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE TACHYTES.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER 7. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ CHANGE OF DIET.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER 8. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ A DIG AT THE EVOLUTIONISTS.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER 9. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ RATIONING ACCORDING TO SEX.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER 10. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE BEE-EATING PHILANTHUS.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER 11. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE METHOD OF THE AMMOPHILAE.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER 12. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE METHOD OF THE SCOLIAE.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER 13. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE METHOD OF THE CALICURGI.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER 14. &nbsp;&nbsp;</a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ OBJECTIONS AND REJOINDERS.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> INDEX. </a> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 1. THE POMPILI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ (This essay should be read in conjunction with that on the Black-bellied
+ Tarantula. Cf. "The Life of the Spider," by J. Henri Fabre, translated by
+ Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chapter 1.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ammophila's caterpillar (Cf. "The Hunting Wasps," by J. Henri Fabre,
+ translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chapters 13 and 18 to 20; and
+ Chapter 11 of the present volume.&mdash;Translator's Note.), the Bembex
+ (Cf. idem: chapter 14.&mdash;Translator's Note.), Gad-fly, the Cerceris
+ (Cf. idem: chapters 1 to 3.&mdash;Translator's Note.), Buprestis (A Beetle
+ usually remarkable for her brilliant colouring. Cf. idem: chapter 1.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) and Weevil, the Sphex (Cf. idem: chapter 4 to 10.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), Locust, Cricket and Ephippiger (Cf. "The Life of the Grasshopper,"
+ by J. Henri Fabre, translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chapters 13
+ and 14.&mdash;Translator's Note.): all these inoffensive peaceable victims
+ are like the silly Sheep of our slaughter-houses; they allow themselves to
+ be operated upon by the paralyser, submitting stupidly, without offering
+ much resistance. The mandibles gape, the legs kick and protest, the body
+ wriggles and twists; and that is all. They have no weapons capable of
+ contending with the assassin's dagger. I should like to see the huntress
+ grappling with an imposing adversary, one as crafty as herself, an expert
+ layer of ambushes and, like her, bearing a poisoned dirk. I should like to
+ see the bandit armed with her stiletto confronted by another bandit
+ equally familiar with the use of that weapon. Is such a duel possible?
+ Yes, it is quite possible and even quite common. On the one hand we have
+ the Pompili, the protagonists who are always victorious; on the other hand
+ we have the Spiders, the protagonists who are always overthrown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who that has diverted himself, however little, with the study of insects
+ does not know the Pompili? Against old walls, at the foot of the banks
+ beside unfrequented footpaths, in the stubble after the harvest, in the
+ tangles of dry grass, wherever the Spider spreads her nets, who has not
+ seen them busily at work, now running hither and thither, at random, their
+ wings raised and quivering above their backs, now moving from place to
+ place in flights long or short? They are hunting for a quarry which might
+ easily turn the tables and itself prey upon the trapper lying in wait for
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pompili feed their larvae solely on Spiders; and the Spiders feed on
+ any insect, commensurate with their size, that is caught in their nets.
+ While the first possess a sting, the second have two poisoned fangs. Often
+ their strength is equally matched; indeed the advantage is not seldom on
+ the Spider's side. The Wasp has her ruses of war, her cunningly
+ premeditated strokes: the Spider has her wiles and her set traps; the
+ first has the advantage of great rapidity of movement, while the second is
+ able to rely upon her perfidious web; the one has a sting which contrives
+ to penetrate the exact point to cause paralysis, the other has fangs which
+ bite the back of the neck and deal sudden death. We find the paralyser on
+ the one hand and the slaughterer on the other. Which of the two will
+ become the other's prey?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we consider only the relative strength of the adversaries, the power of
+ their weapons, the virulence of their poisons and their different modes of
+ action, the scale would very often be weighted in favour of the Spider.
+ Since the Pompilus always emerges victorious from this contest, which
+ appears to be full of peril for her, she must have a special method, of
+ which I would fain learn the secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In our part of the country, the most powerful and courageous
+ Spider-huntress is the Ringed Pompilus (Calicurgus annulatus, FAB.), clad
+ in black and yellow. She stands high on her legs; and her wings have black
+ tips, the rest being yellow, as though exposed to smoke, like a bloater.
+ Her size is about that of the Hornet (Vespa crabro). She is rare. I see
+ three or four of her in the course of the year; and I never fail to halt
+ in the presence of the proud insect, rapidly striding through the dust of
+ the fields when the dog-days arrive. Its audacious air, its uncouth gait,
+ its war-like bearing long made me suspect that to obtain its prey it had
+ to make some impossible, terrible, unspeakable capture. And my guess was
+ correct. By dint of waiting and watching I beheld that victim; I saw it in
+ the huntress' mandibles. It is the Black-bellied Tarantula, the terrible
+ Spider who slays a Carpenter-bee or a Bumble-bee outright with one stroke
+ of her weapon; the Spider who kills a Sparrow or a Mole; the formidable
+ creature whose bite would perhaps not be without danger to ourselves. Yes,
+ this is the bill of fare which the proud Pompilus provides for her larva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This spectacle, one of the most striking with which the Hunting Wasps have
+ ever provided me, has as yet been offered to my eyes but once; and that
+ was close beside my rural home, in the famous laboratory of the harmas.
+ (The enclosed piece of waste land on which the author studied his insects
+ in their native state. Cf. "The Life of the Fly," by J. Henri Fabre,
+ translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chapter 1.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) I can still see the intrepid poacher dragging by the leg, at the
+ foot of a wall, the monstrous prize which she had just secured, doubtless
+ at no great distance. At the base of the wall was a hole, an accidental
+ chink between some of the stones. The Wasp inspected the cavern, not for
+ the first time: she had already reconnoitred it and the premises had
+ satisfied her. The prey, deprived of the power of movement, was waiting
+ somewhere, I know not where; and the huntress had gone back to fetch it
+ and store it away. It was at this moment that I met her. The Pompilus gave
+ a last glance at the cave, removed a few small fragments of loose mortar;
+ and with that her preparations were completed. The Lycosa (The Spider in
+ question is known indifferently as the Black-bellied Tarantula and the
+ Narbonne Lycosa.&mdash;Translator's Note.) was introduced, dragged along,
+ belly upwards, by one leg. I did not interfere. Presently the Wasp
+ reappeared on the surface and carelessly pushed in front of the hole the
+ bits of mortar which she had just extracted from it. Then she flew away.
+ It was all over. The egg was laid; the insect had finished for better or
+ for worse; and I was able to proceed with my examination of the burrow and
+ its contents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pompilus has done no digging. It is really an accidental hole with
+ spacious winding passages, the result of the mason's negligence and not of
+ the Wasp's industry. The closing of the cavity is quite as rough and
+ summary. A few crumbs of mortar, heaped up before the doorway, form a
+ barricade rather than a door. A mighty hunter makes a poor architect. The
+ Tarantula's murderess does not know how to dig a cell for her larva; she
+ does not know how to fill up the entrance by sweeping dust into it. The
+ first hole encountered at the foot of a wall contents her, provided that
+ it be roomy enough; a little heap of rubbish will do for a door. Nothing
+ could be more expeditious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I withdraw the game from the hole. The egg is stuck to the Spider, near
+ the beginning of the belly. A clumsy movement on my part makes it fall off
+ at the moment of extraction. It is all over: the thing will not hatch; I
+ shall not be able to observe the development of the larva. The Tarantula
+ lies motionless, flexible as in life, with not a trace of a wound. In
+ short, we have here life without movement. From time to time the tips of
+ the tarsi quiver a little; and that is all. Accustomed of old to these
+ deceptive corpses, I can see in my mind's eye what has happened: the
+ Spider has been stung in the region of the thorax, no doubt once only, in
+ view of the concentration of her nervous system. I place the victim in a
+ box in which it retains all the pliancy and all the freshness of life from
+ the 2nd of August to the 20th of September, that is to say, for seven
+ weeks. These miracles are familiar to us (Cf. "The Hunting Wasps": passim.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.); there is no need to linger over them here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most important matter has escaped me. What I wanted, what I still want
+ to see is the Pompilus engaged in mortal combat with the Lycosa. What a
+ duel, in which the cunning of the one has to overcome the terrible weapons
+ of the other! Does the Wasp enter the burrow to surprise the Tarantula at
+ the bottom of her lair? Such temerity would be fatal to her. Where the big
+ Bumble-bee dies an instant death, the audacious visitor would perish the
+ moment she entered. Is not the other there, facing her, ready to snap at
+ the back of her head, inflicting a wound which would result in sudden
+ death? No, the Pompilus does not enter the Spider's parlour, that is
+ obvious. Does she surprise the Spider outside her fortress? But the Lycosa
+ is a stay-at-home animal; I do not see her straying abroad during the
+ summer. Later, in the autumn, when the Pompili have disappeared, She
+ wanders about; turning gipsy, she takes the open air with her numerous
+ family, which she carries on her back. Apart from these maternal strolls,
+ she does not appear to me to leave her castle; and the Pompilus, I should
+ think, has no great chance of meeting her outside. The problem, we
+ perceive, is becoming complicated: the huntress cannot make her way into
+ the burrow, where she would risk sudden death; and the Spider's sedentary
+ habits make an encounter outside the burrow improbable. Here is a riddle
+ which would be interesting to decipher. Let us endeavour to do so by
+ observing other Spider-hunters; analogy will enable us to draw a
+ conclusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have often watched Pompili of every species on their
+ hunting-expeditions, but I have never surprised them entering the Spider's
+ lodging when the latter was at home. Whether this lodging be a funnel
+ plunging its neck into a hole in some wall, an awning stretched amid the
+ stubble, a tent modelled upon the Arab's, a sheath formed of a few leaves
+ bound together, or a net with a guard-room attached, whenever the owner is
+ indoors the suspicious Pompilus holds aloof. When the dwelling is vacant,
+ it is another matter: the Wasp moves with arrogant ease over those webs,
+ springes and cables in which so many other insects would remain ensnared.
+ The silken threads do not seem to have any hold upon her. What is she
+ doing, exploring those empty webs? She is watching to see what is
+ happening on the adjacent webs where the Spider is ambushed. The Pompilus
+ therefore feels an insuperable reluctance to make straight for the Spider
+ when the latter is at home in the midst of her snares. And she is right, a
+ hundred times over. If the Tarantula understands the practice of the
+ dagger-thrust in the neck, which is immediately fatal, the other cannot be
+ unacquainted with it. Woe then to the imprudent Wasp who presents herself
+ upon the threshold of a Spider of approximately equal strength!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the various instances which I have collected of this cautious reserve
+ on the Spider-huntress' part I will confine myself to the following, which
+ will be sufficient to prove my point. By joining, with silken strands, the
+ three folioles which form the leaf of Virgil's cytisus, a Spider has built
+ herself a green arbour, a horizontal sheath, open at either end. A
+ questing Pompilus comes upon the scene, finds the game to her liking and
+ pops in her head at the entrance of the cell. The Spider immediately
+ retreats to the other end. The huntress goes round the Spider's dwelling
+ and reappears at the other door. Again the Spider retreats, returning to
+ the first entrance. The Wasp also returns to it, but always by the
+ outside. Scarcely has she done so, when the Spider rushes for the opposite
+ opening; and so on for fully a quarter of an hour, both of them coming and
+ going from one end of the cylinder to the other, the Spider inside and the
+ Pompilus outside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The quarry was a valuable one, it seems, since the Wasp persisted for a
+ long time in her attempts, which were invariably defeated; however, the
+ huntress had to abandon them, baffled by this perpetual running to and
+ fro. The Pompilus made off; and the Spider, once more on the watch,
+ patiently awaited the heedless Midges. What should the Wasp have done to
+ capture this much-coveted game? She should have entered the verdant
+ cylinder, the Spider's dwelling, and pursued the Spider direct, in her own
+ house, instead of remaining outside, going from one door to the other.
+ With such swiftness and dexterity as hers, it seemed to me impossible that
+ the stroke should fail: the quarry moved clumsily, a little sideways, like
+ a Crab. I judged it to be an easy matter; the Pompilus thought it highly
+ dangerous. To-day I am of her opinion: if she had entered the leafy tube,
+ the mistress of the house would have operated on her neck and the huntress
+ would have become the quarry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Years passed and the paralyser of the Spiders still refused to reveal her
+ secret; I was badly served by circumstances, could find no leisure, was
+ absorbed in unrelenting preoccupations. At length, during my last year at
+ Orange, the light dawned upon me. My garden was enclosed by an old wall,
+ blackened and ruined by time, where, in the chinks between the stones,
+ lived a population of Spiders, represented more particularly by Segestria
+ perfidia. This is the common Black Spider, or Cellar Spider. She is deep
+ black all over, excepting the mandibles, which are a splendid metallic
+ green. Her two poisoned daggers look like a product of the metal-worker's
+ art, like the finest bronze. In any mass of abandoned masonry there is not
+ a quiet corner, not a hole the size of one's finger, in which the
+ Segestria does not set up house. Her web is a widely flaring funnel, whose
+ open end, at most a span across, lies spread upon the surface of the wall,
+ where it is held in place by radiating threads. This conical surface is
+ continued by a tube which runs into a hole in the wall. At the end is the
+ dining-room to which the Spider retires to devour at her ease her captured
+ prey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With her two hind-legs stuck into the tube to obtain a purchase and the
+ six others spread around the orifice, the better to perceive on every side
+ the quiver which gives the signal of a capture, the Segestria waits
+ motionless, at the entrance of her funnel, for an insect to become
+ entangled in the snare. Large Flies, Drone-flies, dizzily grazing some
+ thread of the snare with their wings, are her usual victims. At the first
+ flutter of the netted Fly, the Spider runs or even leaps forward, but she
+ is now secured by a cord which escapes from the spinnerets and which has
+ its end fastened to the silken tube. This prevents her from falling as she
+ darts along a vertical surface. Bitten at the back of the head, the
+ Drone-fly is dead in a moment; and the Segestria carries him into her
+ lair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thanks to this method and these hunting-appliances&mdash;an ambush at the
+ bottom of a silken whirlpool, radiating snares, a life-line which holds
+ her from behind and allows her to take a sudden rush without risking a
+ fall&mdash;the Segestria is able to catch game less inoffensive than the
+ Drone-fly. A Common Wasp, they tell me, does not daunt her. Though I have
+ not tested this, I readily believe it, for I well know the Spider's
+ boldness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This boldness is reinforced by the activity of the venom. It is enough to
+ have seen the Segestria capture some large Fly to be convinced of the
+ overwhelming effect of her fangs upon the insects bitten in the neck. The
+ death of the Drone-fly, entangled in the silken funnel, is reproduced by
+ the sudden death of the Bumble-bee on entering the Tarantula's burrow. We
+ know the effect of the poison on man, thanks to Antoine Duges'
+ investigations. (Antoine Louis Duges (1797-1838), a French physician and
+ physiologist, author of a "Traite de physiologie comparee de l'homme et
+ des animaux" and other scientific works.&mdash;Translator's Note.) Let us
+ listen to the brave experimenter:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The treacherous Segestria, or Great Cellar Spider, reputed poisonous in
+ our part of the country, was chosen for the principal subject of our
+ experiments. She was three-quarters of an inch long, measured from the
+ mandibles to the spinnerets. Taking her in my fingers from behind, by the
+ legs, which were folded and gathered together (this is the way to catch
+ hold of live Spiders, if you would avoid their bite and master them
+ without mutilating them), I placed her on various objects and on my
+ clothes, without her manifesting the least desire to do any harm; but
+ hardly was she laid on the bare skin of my fore-arm when she seized a fold
+ of the epidermis in her powerful mandibles, which are of a metallic green,
+ and drove her fangs deep into it. For a few moments she remained hanging,
+ although left free; then she released herself, fell and fled, leaving two
+ tiny wounds, a sixth of an inch apart, red, but hardly bleeding, with a
+ slight extravasation round the edge and resembling the wounds produced by
+ a large pin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At the moment of the bite, the sensation was sharp enough to deserve the
+ name of pain; and this continued for five or six minutes more, but not so
+ forcibly. I might compare it with the sensation produced by the
+ stinging-nettle. A whitish tumefaction almost immediately surrounded the
+ two pricks; and the circumference, within a radius of about an inch, was
+ coloured an erysipelas red, accompanied by a very slight swelling. In an
+ hour and a half, it had all disappeared, except the mark of the pricks,
+ which persisted for several days, as any other small wound would have
+ done. This was in September, in rather cool weather. Perhaps the symptoms
+ would have displayed somewhat greater severity at a warmer season."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without being serious, the effect of the Segestria's poison is plainly
+ marked. A sting causing sharp pain and swelling, with the redness of
+ erysipelas, is no trifling matter. While Duges' experiment reassures us in
+ so far as we ourselves are concerned, it is none the less the fact that
+ the Cellar Spider's poison is a terrible thing for insects, whether
+ because of the small size of the victim, or because it acts with special
+ efficacy upon an organization which differs widely from our own. One
+ Pompilus, though greatly inferior to the Segestria in size and strength,
+ nevertheless makes war upon the Black Spider and succeeds in overpowering
+ this formidable quarry. This is Pompilus apicalis, VAN DER LIND, who is
+ hardly larger than the Hive-bee, but very much slenderer. She is of a
+ uniform black; her wings are a cloudy brown, with transparent tips. Let us
+ follow her in her expeditions to the old wall inhabited by the Segestria:
+ we will track her for whole afternoons during the July heats; and we will
+ arm ourselves with patience, for the perilous capture of the game must
+ take the Wasp a long time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Spider-huntress explores the wall minutely; she runs, leaps and flies;
+ she comes and goes, flitting to and fro. The antennae quiver; the wings,
+ raised above the back, continually beat one against the other. Ah, here
+ she is, close to a Segestria's funnel! The Spider, who has hitherto
+ remained invisible, instantly appears at the entrance to the tube; she
+ spreads her six fore-legs outside, ready to receive the huntress. Far from
+ fleeing before the terrible apparition, she watches the watcher, fully
+ prepared to prey upon her enemy. Before this intrepid demeanour the
+ Pompilus draws back. She examines the coveted game, walks round it for a
+ moment, then goes away without attempting anything. When she has gone, the
+ Segestria retires indoors, backwards. For the second time the Wasp passes
+ near an inhabited funnel. The Spider on the lookout at once shows herself
+ on the threshold of her dwelling, half out of her tube, ready for defence
+ and perhaps also for attack. The Pompilus moves away and the Segestria
+ reenters her tube. A fresh alarm: the Pompilus returns; another
+ threatening demonstration on the part of the Spider. Her neighbour, a
+ little later, does better than this: while the huntress is prowling about
+ in the neighbourhood of the funnel, she suddenly leaps out of the tube,
+ with the lifeline which will save her from falling, should she miss her
+ footing, attached to her spinnerets; she rushes forward and hurls herself
+ in front of the Pompilus, at a distance of some eight inches from her
+ burrow. The Wasp, as though terrified, immediately decamps; and the
+ Segestria no less suddenly retreats indoors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, we must admit, is a strange quarry: it does not hide, but is eager
+ to show itself; it does not run away, but flings itself in front of the
+ hunter. If our observations were to cease here, could we say which of the
+ two is the hunter and which the hunted? Should we not feel sorry for the
+ imprudent Pompilus? Let a thread of the trap entangle her leg; and it is
+ all up with her. The other will be there, stabbing her in the throat. What
+ then is the method which she employs against the Segestria, always on the
+ alert, ready for defence, audacious to the point of aggression? Shall I
+ surprise the reader if I tell him that this problem filled me with the
+ most eager interest, that it held me for weeks in contemplation before
+ that cheerless wall? Nevertheless, my tale will be a short one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On several occasions I see the Pompilus suddenly fling herself on one of
+ the Spider's legs, seize it with her mandibles and endeavour to draw the
+ animal from its tube. It is a sudden rush, a surprise attack, too quick to
+ permit the Spider to parry it. Fortunately, the latter's two hind-legs are
+ firmly hooked to the dwelling; and the Segestria escapes with a jerk, for
+ the other, having delivered her shock attack, hastens to release her hold;
+ if she persisted, the affair might end badly for her. Having failed in
+ this assault, the Wasp repeats the procedure at other funnels; she will
+ even return to the first when the alarm is somewhat assuaged. Still
+ hopping and fluttering, she prowls around the mouth, whence the Segestria
+ watches her, with her legs outspread. She waits for the propitious moment;
+ she leaps forward, seizes a leg, tugs at it and springs out of reach. More
+ often than not, the Spider holds fast; sometimes she is dragged out of the
+ tube, to a distance of a few inches, but immediately returns, no doubt
+ with the aid of her unbroken lifeline.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pompilus' intention is plain: she wants to eject the Spider from her
+ fortress and fling her some distance away. So much perseverance leads to
+ success. This time all goes well: with a vigorous and well-timed tug the
+ Wasp has pulled the Segestria out and at once lets her drop to the ground.
+ Bewildered by her fall and even more demoralized by being wrested from her
+ ambush, the Spider is no longer the bold adversary that she was. She draws
+ her legs together and cowers into a depression in the soil. The huntress
+ is there on the instant to operate on the evicted animal. I have barely
+ time to draw near to watch the tragedy when the victim is paralysed by a
+ thrust of the sting in the thorax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here at last, in all its Machiavellian cunning, is the shrewd method of
+ the Pompilus. She would be risking her life if she attacked the Segestria
+ in her home; the Wasp is so convinced of it that she takes good care not
+ to commit this imprudence; but she knows also that, once dislodged from
+ her dwelling, the Spider is as timid, as cowardly as she was bold at the
+ centre of her funnel. The whole point of her tactics, therefore, lies in
+ dislodging the creature. This done, the rest is nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Tarantula-huntress must behave in the same manner. Enlightened by her
+ kinswoman, Pompilus apicalis, my mind pictures her wandering stealthily
+ around the Lycosa's rampart. The Lycosa hurries up from the bottom of her
+ burrow, believing that a victim is approaching; she ascends her vertical
+ tube, spreading her fore-legs outside, ready to leap. But it is the Ringed
+ Pompilus who leaps, seizes a leg, tugs and hurls the Lycosa from her
+ burrow. The Spider is henceforth a craven victim, who will let herself be
+ stabbed without dreaming of employing her venomous fangs. Here craft
+ triumphs over strength; and this craft is not inferior to mine, when,
+ wishing to capture the Tarantula, I make her bite a spike of grass which I
+ dip into the burrow, lead her gently to the surface and then with a sudden
+ jerk throw her outside. For the entomologist as for the Pompilus, the
+ essential thing is to make the Spider leave her stronghold. After this
+ there is no difficulty in catching her, thanks to the utter bewilderment
+ of the evicted animal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two contrasting points impress me in the facts which I have just set
+ forth: the shrewdness of the Pompilus and the folly of the Spider. I will
+ admit that the Wasp may gradually have acquired, as being highly
+ beneficial to her posterity, the instinct by which she first of all so
+ judiciously drags the victim from its refuge, in order there to paralyse
+ it without incurring danger, provided that you will explain why the
+ Segestria, possessing an intellect no less gifted than that of the
+ Pompilus, does not yet know how to counteract the trick of which she has
+ so long been the victim. What would the Black Spider need to do to escape
+ her exterminator? Practically nothing: it would be enough for her to
+ withdraw into her tube, instead of coming up to post herself at the
+ entrance, like a sentry, whenever the enemy is in the neighbourhood. It is
+ very brave of her, I agree, but also very risky. The Pompilus will pounce
+ upon one of the legs spread outside the burrow for defence and attack; and
+ the besieged Spider will perish, betrayed by her own boldness. This
+ posture is excellent when waiting for prey. But the Wasp is not a quarry;
+ she is an enemy and one of the most dreaded of enemies. The Spider knows
+ this. At the sight of the Wasp, instead of placing herself fearlessly but
+ foolishly on her threshold, why does she not retreat into her fortress,
+ where the other would not attack her? The accumulated experience of
+ generations should have taught her this elementary tactical device, which
+ is of the greatest value to the prosperity of her race. If the Pompilus
+ has perfected her method of attack, why has not the Segestria perfected
+ her method of defence? Is it possible that centuries upon centuries should
+ have modified the one to its advantage without succeeding in modifying the
+ other? Here I am utterly at a loss. And I say to myself, in all
+ simplicity: since the Pompili must have Spiders, the former have possessed
+ their patient cunning and the other their foolish audacity from all time.
+ This may be puerile, if you like to think it so, and not in keeping with
+ the transcendental aims of our fashionable theorists; the argument
+ contains neither the subjective nor the objective point of view, neither
+ adaptation nor differentiation, neither atavism nor evolutionism. Very
+ well, but at least I understand it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us return to the habits of Pompilus apicalis. Without expecting
+ results of any particular interest, for in captivity the respective
+ talents of the huntress and the quarry seem to slumber, I place together,
+ in a wide jar, a Wasp and a Segestria. The Spider and her enemy mutually
+ avoid each other, both being equally timid. A judicious shake or two
+ brings them into contact. The Segestria, from time to time, catches hold
+ of the Pompilus, who gathers herself up as best she can, without
+ attempting to use her sting; the Spider rolls the insect between her legs
+ and even between her mandibles, but appears to dislike doing it. Once I
+ see her lie on her back and hold the Pompilus above her, as far away as
+ possible, while turning her over in her fore-legs and munching at her with
+ her mandibles. The Wasp, whether by her own adroitness or owing to the
+ Spider's dread of her, promptly escapes from the terrible fangs, moves to
+ a short distance and does not seem to trouble unduly about the buffeting
+ which she has received. She quietly polishes her wings and curls her
+ antennae by pulling them while standing on them with her fore-tarsi. The
+ attack of the Segestria, stimulated by my shakes, is repeated ten times
+ over; and the Pompilus always escapes from the venomous fangs unscathed,
+ as though she were invulnerable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is she really invulnerable? By no means, as we shall soon have proved to
+ us; if she retires safe and sound, it is because the Spider does not use
+ her fangs. What we see is a sort of truce, a tacit convention forbidding
+ deadly strokes, or rather the demoralization due to captivity; and the two
+ adversaries are no longer in a sufficiently warlike mood to make play with
+ their daggers. The tranquillity of the Pompilus, who keeps on jauntily
+ curling her antennae in face of the Segestria, reassures me as to my
+ prisoner's fate; for greater security, however, I throw her a scrap of
+ paper, in the folds of which she will find a refuge during the night. She
+ instals herself there, out of the Spider's reach. Next morning I find her
+ dead. During the night the Segestria, whose habits are nocturnal, has
+ recovered her daring and stabbed her enemy. I had my suspicions that the
+ parts played might be reversed! The butcher of yesterday is the victim of
+ to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I replace the Pompilus by a Hive-bee. The interview is not protracted. Two
+ hours later, the Bee is dead, bitten by the Spider. A Drone-fly suffers
+ the same fate. The Segestria, however, does not touch either of the two
+ corpses, any more than she touched the corpse of the Pompilus. In these
+ murders the captive seems to have no other object than to rid herself of a
+ turbulent neighbour. When appetite awakes, perhaps the victims will be
+ turned to account. They were not; and the fault was mine. I placed in the
+ jar a Bumble-bee of average size. A day later the Spider was dead; the
+ rude sharer of her captivity had done the deed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us say no more of these unequal duels in the glass prison and complete
+ the story of the Pompilus whom we left at the foot of the wall with the
+ paralysed Segestria. She abandons her prey on the ground and returns to
+ the wall. She visits the Spider's funnels one by one, walking on them as
+ freely as on the stones; she inspects the silken tubes, dipping her
+ antennae into them, sounding and exploring them; she enters without the
+ least hesitation. Whence does she now derive the temerity thus to enter
+ the Segestria's haunts? But a little while ago, she was displaying extreme
+ caution; at this moment, she seems heedless of danger. The fact is that
+ there is no danger really. The Wasp is inspecting uninhabited houses. When
+ she dives down a silken tunnel, she very well knows that there is no one
+ in, for, had the Segestria been there, she would by this time have
+ appeared on the threshold. The fact that the householder does not show
+ herself at the first vibration of the neighbouring threads is a certain
+ proof that the tube is vacant; and the Pompilus enters in full security. I
+ would recommend future observers not to take the present investigations
+ for hunting-tactics. I have already remarked and I repeat: the Pompilus
+ never enters the silken ambush while the Spider is there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the funnels inspected one appears to suit her better than the
+ others; she returns to it frequently in the course of her investigations,
+ which last for nearly an hour. From time to time she hastens back to the
+ Spider lying on the ground; she examines her, tugs at her, drags her a
+ little closer to the wall, then leaves her the better to reconnoitre the
+ tunnel which is the object of her preference. Lastly she returns to the
+ Segestria and takes her by the tip of the abdomen. The quarry is so heavy
+ that she has great difficulty in moving it along the level ground. Two
+ inches divide it from the wall. She gets to the wall, not without effort;
+ nevertheless, once the wall is reached, the job is quickly done. We learn
+ that Antaeus, the son of Mother Earth, in his struggle with Hercules,
+ received new strength as often as his feet touched the ground; the
+ Pompilus, the daughter of the wall, seems to increase her powers tenfold
+ once she has set foot on the masonry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For here is the Wasp hoisting her prey backwards, her enormous prey, which
+ dangles beneath her. She climbs now a vertical plane, now a slope,
+ according to the uneven surface of the stones. She crosses gaps where she
+ has to go belly uppermost, while the quarry swings to and fro in the air.
+ Nothing stops her; she keeps on climbing, to a height of six feet or more,
+ without selecting her path, without seeing her goal, since she goes
+ backwards. A lodge appears no doubt reconnoitred beforehand and reached,
+ despite the difficulties of an ascent which did not allow her to see it.
+ The Pompilus lays her prey on it. The silken tube which she inspected so
+ lovingly is only some eight inches distant. She goes to it, examines it
+ rapidly and returns to the Spider, whom she at length lowers down the
+ tube.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shortly afterwards I see her come out again. She searches here and there
+ on the wall for a few scraps of mortar, two or three fairly large pieces,
+ which she carries to the tube, to close it up. The task is done. She flies
+ away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day I inspect this strange burrow. The Spider is at the bottom of the
+ silken tube, isolated on every side, as though in a hammock. The Wasp's
+ egg is glued not to the ventral surface of the victim but to the back,
+ about the middle, near the beginning of the abdomen. It is white,
+ cylindrical and about a twelfth of an inch long. The few bits of mortar
+ which I saw carried have but very roughly blocked the silken chamber at
+ the end. Thus Pompilus apicalis lays her quarry and her eggs not in a
+ burrow of her own making, but in the Spider's actual house. Perhaps the
+ silken tube belongs to this very victim, which in that event provides both
+ board and lodging. What a shelter for the larva of this Pompilus: the warm
+ retreat and downy hammock of the Segestria!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here then, already, we have two Spider-huntresses, the Ringed Pompilus and
+ P. apicalis, who, unversed in the miner's craft, establish their offspring
+ inexpensively in accidental chinks in the walls, or even in the lair of
+ the Spider on whom the larva feeds. In these cells, acquired without
+ exertion, they build only an attempt at a wall with a few fragments of
+ mortar. But we must beware of generalizing about this expeditious method
+ of establishment. Other Pompili are true diggers, valiantly sinking a
+ burrow in the soil, to a depth of a couple of inches. These include the
+ Eight-spotted Pompilus (P. octopunctatus, PANZ.), with her
+ black-and-yellow livery and her amber wings, a little darker at the tips.
+ For her game she chooses the Epeirae (E. fasciata, E. sericea) (For the
+ Garden-spiders known as the Banded Epeira and the Silky Epeira cf. "The
+ Life of the Spider": chapters 11, 13, 14 et passim.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), those fat Spiders, magnificently adorned, who lie in wait at the
+ centre of their large, vertical webs. I am not sufficiently acquainted
+ with her habits to describe them; above all, I know nothing of her
+ hunting-tactics. But her dwelling is familiar to me: it is a burrow, which
+ I have seen her begin, complete and close according to the customary
+ method of the Digger-wasps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 2. THE SCOLIAE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Were strength to take precedence over the other zoological attributes, the
+ Scoliae would hold a predominant place in the front rank of the Wasps.
+ Some of them may be compared in size with the little bird from the north,
+ the Golden-crested Wren, who comes to us at the time of the first autumn
+ mists and visits the rotten buds. The largest and most imposing of our
+ sting-bearers, the Carpenter-bee, the Bumble-bee, the Hornet, cut a poor
+ figure beside certain of the Scoliae. Of this group of giants my district
+ possesses the Garden Scolia (S. hortorum, VAN DER LIND), who is over an
+ inch and a half in length and measures four inches from tip to tip of her
+ outspread wings, and the Hemorrhoidal Scolia (S. haemorrhoidalis, VAN DER
+ LIND), who rivals the Garden Scolia in point of size and is distinguished
+ more particularly by the bundle of red hairs bristling at the tip of the
+ abdomen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A black livery, with broad yellow patches; leathery wings, amber-coloured,
+ like the skin of an onion, and watered with purple reflections; thick,
+ knotted legs, covered with sharp hairs; a massive frame; a powerful head,
+ encased in a hard cranium; a stiff, clumsy gait; a low, short, silent
+ flight: this gives you a concise description of the female, who is
+ strongly equipped for her arduous task. The male, being a mere
+ philanderer, sports a more elegant pair of horns, is more daintily clad
+ and has a more graceful figure, without altogether losing the quality of
+ robustness which is his consort's leading characteristic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not without a certain alarm that the insect-collector finds himself
+ for the first time confronted by the Garden Scolia. How is he to capture
+ the imposing creature, how to avoid its sting? If its effect is in
+ proportion to the Wasp's size, the sting of the Scolia must be something
+ terrible. The Hornet, though she unsheath her weapon but once, causes the
+ most exquisite pain. What would it be like if one were stabbed by this
+ colossus? The prospect of a swelling as big as a man's fist and as painful
+ as the touch of a red-hot iron passes through our mind at the moment when
+ we are bringing down the net. And we refrain, we beat a retreat, we are
+ greatly relieved not to have aroused the dangerous creature's attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, I confess to having run away from my first Scoliae, anxious though I
+ was to enrich my budding collection with this magnificent insect. There
+ were painful recollections of the Common Wasp and the Hornet connected
+ with this excess of prudence. I say excess, for to-day, instructed by long
+ experience, I have quite recovered from my former fears; and, when I see a
+ Scolia resting on a thistle-head, I do not scruple to take her in my
+ fingers, without any precaution whatever, however large she may be and
+ however menacing her aspect. My courage is not all that it seems to be; I
+ am quite ready to tell the Wasp-hunting novice this. The Scoliae are
+ notably peaceable. Their sting is an implement of labour far more than a
+ weapon of war; they use it to paralyse the prey destined for their
+ offspring; and only in the last extremity do they employ it in
+ self-defence. Moreover, the lack of agility in their movements nearly
+ always enables us to avoid their sting; and, even if we be stung, the pain
+ is almost insignificant. This absence of any acute smarting as a result of
+ the poison is almost constant in the Hunting Wasps, whose weapon is a
+ surgical lancet and devised for the most delicate physiological
+ operations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the other Scoliae of my district I will mention the Two-banded
+ Scolia (S. bifasciata, VAN DER LIND), whom I see every year, in September,
+ working at the heaps of leaf-mould which are placed for her benefit in a
+ corner of my paddock; and the Interrupted Scolia (S. interrupta, LATR.),
+ the inhabitant of the sandy soil at the foot of the neighbouring hills.
+ Much smaller than the two preceding insects, but also much commoner, a
+ necessary condition of continuous observation, they will provide me with
+ the principal data for this study of the Scoliae.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I open my old note book; and I see myself once more, on the 6th of August,
+ 1857, in the Bois des Issards, that famous copse near Avignon which I have
+ celebrated in my essay on the Bembex-wasps. (Cf. "The Hunting Wasps":
+ chapter 14.&mdash;Translator's Note.) Once again, my head crammed with
+ entomological projects, I am at the beginning of my holidays which, for
+ two months, will allow me to indulge in the insect's company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fig for Mariotte's flask and Toricelli's tube! (Edme Mariotte
+ (1620-1684), a French chemist who discovered, independently of Robert
+ Boyle the Irishman (1627-1691), the law generally known as Boyle's law,
+ which states that the product of the volume and the temperature of a gas
+ is constant at constant temperature. His flask is an apparatus contrived
+ to illustrate atmospheric pressure and ensure a constant flow of liquid.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) (Evangelista Toricelli (1608-1647), a disciple of Galileo and
+ professor of philosophy and mathematics at Florence. His "tube" is our
+ mercury barometer. He was the first to obtain a vacuum by means of
+ mercury; and he also improved the microscope and the telescope.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) This is the thrice-blest period when I cease to be a schoolmaster
+ and become a schoolboy, the schoolboy in love with animals. Like a
+ madder-cutter off for his day's work, I set out carrying over my shoulder
+ a solid digging-implement, the local luchet, and on my back my game-bag
+ with boxes, bottles, trowel, glass tubes, tweezers, lenses and other
+ impedimenta. A large umbrella saves me from sunstroke. It is the most
+ scorching hour of the hottest day in the year. Exhausted by the heat, the
+ Cicadae are silent. The bronze-eyed Gad-flies seek a refuge from the
+ pitiless sun under the roof of my silken shelter; other large Flies, the
+ sobre-hued Pangoniae, dash themselves recklessly against my face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spot at which I have installed myself is a sandy clearing which I had
+ recognized the year before as a site beloved of the Scoliae. Here and
+ there are scattered thickets of holm-oak, whose dense undergrowth shelters
+ a bed of dead leaves and a thin layer of mould. My memory has served me
+ well. Here, sure enough, as the heat grows a little less, appear, coming I
+ know not from whence, some Two-banded Scoliae. The number increases; and
+ it is not long before I see very nearly a dozen of them about me, close
+ enough for observation. By their smaller size and more buoyant flight,
+ they are easily known for males. Almost grazing the ground, they fly
+ softly, going to and fro, passing and repassing in every direction. From
+ time to time one of them alights on the ground, feels the sand with his
+ antennae and seems to be enquiring into what is happening in the depths of
+ the soil; then he resumes his flight, alternately coming and going.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What are they waiting for? What are they seeking in these evolutions of
+ theirs, which are repeated a hundred times over? Food? No, for close
+ beside them stand several eryngo-stems, whose sturdy clusters are the
+ Wasps' usual resource at this season of parched vegetation; and not one of
+ them settles upon the flowers, not one of them seems to care about their
+ sugary exudations. Their attention is engrossed elsewhere. It is the
+ ground, it is the stretch of sand which they are so assiduously exploring;
+ what they are waiting for is the arrival of some female, who bursting the
+ cocoon, may appear from one moment to the next, issuing all dusty from the
+ ground. She will not be given time to brush herself or to wash her eyes:
+ three or four more of them will be there at once, eager to dispute her
+ possession. I am too familiar with the amorous contests of the
+ Hymenopteron clan to allow myself to be mistaken. It is the rule for the
+ males, who are the earlier of the two, to keep a close guard around the
+ natal spot and watch for the emergence of the females, whom they pester
+ with their pursuit the moment they reach the light of day. This is the
+ motive of the interminable ballet of my Scoliae. Let us have patience:
+ perhaps we shall witness the nuptials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hours go by; the Pangoniae and the Gad-flies desert my umbrella; the
+ Scoliae grow weary and gradually disappear. It is finished. I shall see
+ nothing more to-day. I repeat my laborious expedition to the Bois des
+ Issards over and over again; and each time I see the males as assiduous as
+ ever in skimming over the ground. My perseverance deserved to succeed. It
+ did, though the success was very incomplete. Let me describe it, such as
+ it was; the future will fill up the gaps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A female issues from the soil before my eyes. She flies away, followed by
+ several males. With the luchet I dig at the point of emergence; and, as
+ the excavation progresses, I sift between my fingers the rubbish of sand
+ mixed with mould. In the sweat of my brow, as I may justly say, I must
+ have removed nearly a cubic yard of material, when at last I make a find.
+ This is a recently ruptured cocoon, to the side of which adheres an empty
+ skin, the last remnant of the game on which the larva fed that wrought the
+ said cocoon. Considering the good condition of its silken fabric, this
+ cocoon may have belonged to the Scolia who has just quitted her
+ underground dwelling before my eyes. As for the skin accompanying it, this
+ has been so much spoilt by the moisture of the soil and by the grassy
+ roots that I cannot determine its origin exactly. The cranium, however,
+ which is better-preserved, the mandibles and certain details of the
+ general configuration lead me to suspect the larva of a Lamellicorn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is getting late. This is enough for to-day. I am worn out, but amply
+ repaid for my exertions by a broken cocoon and the puzzling skin of a
+ wretched grub. Young people who make a hobby of natural history, would you
+ like to discover whether the sacred fire flows in your veins? Imagine
+ yourselves returning from such an expedition. You are carrying on your
+ shoulder the peasant's heavy spade; your loins are stiff with the
+ laborious digging which you have just finished in a crouching position;
+ the heat of an August afternoon has set your brain simmering; your eyelids
+ are tired by the itch of an inflammation resulting from the overpowering
+ light in which you have been working; you have a devouring thirst; and
+ before you lies the dusty prospect of the miles that divide you from your
+ well-earned rest. Yet something stings within you; forgetful of your
+ present woes you are absolutely glad of your excursion. Why? Because you
+ have in your possession a shred of rotten skin. If this is so, my young
+ friends, you may go ahead, for you will do something, though I warn you
+ that this does not mean, by a long way, that you will get on in the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I examined this shred of skin with all the care that it deserved. My first
+ suspicions were confirmed: a Lamellicorn, a Scarabaeid in the larval
+ state, is the first food of the Wasp whose cocoon I have just unearthed.
+ But which of the Scarabaeidae? And does this cocoon, my precious booty,
+ really belong to the Scoliae? The problem is beginning to take shape. To
+ attempt its solution we must go back to the Bois des Issards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did go back and so often that my patience ended by being exhausted
+ before the problem of the Scoliae had received a satisfactory solution.
+ The difficulties are great indeed, under the conditions. Where am I to dig
+ in the indefinite stretch of sandy soil to light upon a spot frequented by
+ the Scoliae? The luchet is driven into the ground at random; and almost
+ invariably I find none of what I am seeking. To be sure, the males, flying
+ level with the ground, give me a hint, at the outset, with their certainty
+ of instinct, as to the spots where the females ought to be; but their
+ hints are very vague, because they go so far in every direction. If I
+ wished to examine the soil which a single male explores in his flight,
+ with its constantly changing course, I should have to turn over, to the
+ depth of perhaps a yard, at least four poles of earth. This is too much
+ for my strength and the time at my disposal. Then, as the season advances,
+ the males disappear, whereupon I am suddenly deprived of their hints. To
+ know more or less where I should thrust my luchet, I have only one
+ resource left, which is to watch for the females emerging from the ground
+ or else entering it. With a great expenditure of time and patience I have
+ at last had this windfall, very rarely, I admit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Scoliae do not dig a burrow which can be compared with that of the
+ other Hunting Wasps; they have no fixed residence, with an unimpeded
+ gallery opening on the outer world and giving access to the cells, the
+ abodes of the larvae. They have no entrance- and exit-doors, no corridor
+ built in advance. If they have to make their way underground, any point
+ not hitherto turned over serves their purpose, provided that it be not too
+ hard for their digging-tools, which, for that matter, are very powerful;
+ if they have to come out, the point of exit is no less indifferent. The
+ Scolia does not bore the soil through which she passes: she excavates and
+ ploughs it with her legs and forehead; and the stuff shifted remains where
+ it lies, behind her, forthwith blocking the passage which she has
+ followed. When she is about to emerge into the outer world, her advent is
+ heralded by the fresh soil which heaps itself into a mound as though
+ heaved up by the snout of some tiny Mole. The insect sallies forth; and
+ the mound collapses, completely filling up the exit-hole. If the Wasp is
+ entering the ground, the digging-operations, undertaken at an arbitrary
+ point, quickly yield a cavity in which the Scolia disappears, separated
+ from the surface by the whole track of shifted material.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I can easily trace her passage through the thickness of the soil by
+ certain long, winding cylinders, formed of loose materials in the midst of
+ compact and stable earth. These cylinders are numerous; they sometimes run
+ to a depth of twenty inches; they extend in all directions, fairly often
+ crossing one another. Not one of them ever exhibits so much as a suspicion
+ of an open gallery. They are obviously not permanent ways of communication
+ with the outer world, but hunting-trails which the insect has followed
+ once, without going back to them. What was the Wasp seeking when she
+ riddled the soil with these tunnels which are now full of running sands?
+ No doubt the food for her family, the larva of which I possess the empty
+ skin, now an unrecognizable shred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I begin to see a little light: the Scoliae are underground workers. I
+ already expected as much, having before now captured Scoliae soiled with
+ little earthy encrustations on the joints of the legs. The Wasp, who is so
+ careful to keep clean, taking advantage of the least leisure to brush and
+ polish herself, could never display such blemishes unless she were a
+ devoted earth-worker. I used to suspect their trade, now I know it. They
+ live underground, where they burrow in search of Lamellicorn-grubs, just
+ as the Mole burrows in search of the White Worm. (The larva of the
+ Cockchafer. This grub takes three years or more to arrive at maturity
+ underground.&mdash;Translator's Note.) It is even possible that, after
+ receiving the embraces of the males, they but very rarely return to the
+ surface, absorbed as they are by their maternal duties; and this, no
+ doubt, is why my patience becomes exhausted in watching for their entrance
+ and their emergence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is in the subsoil that they establish themselves and travel to and fro;
+ with the help of their powerful mandibles, their hard cranium, their
+ strong, prickly legs, they easily make themselves paths in the loose
+ earth. They are living ploughshares. By the end of August, therefore, the
+ female population is for the most part underground, busily occupied in
+ egg-laying and provisioning. Everything seems to tell me that I should
+ watch in vain for the appearance of a few females in the broad daylight; I
+ must resign myself to excavating at random.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result was hardly commensurate with the labour which I expended on
+ digging. I found a few cocoons, nearly all broken, like the one which I
+ already possessed, and, like it, bearing on their side the tattered skin
+ of a larva of the same Scarabaeid. Two of these cocoons which are still
+ intact contained a dead adult Wasp. This was actually the Two-banded
+ Scolia, a precious discovery which changed my suspicions into a certainty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I also unearthed some cocoons, slightly different in appearance,
+ containing an adult inmate, likewise dead, in whom I recognized the
+ Interrupted Scolia. The remnants of the provisions again consisted of the
+ empty skin of a larva, also a Lamellicorn, but not the same as the one
+ hunted by the first Scolia. And this was all. Now here, now there, I
+ shifted a few cubic yards of soil, without managing to find fresh
+ provisions with the egg or the young larva. And yet it was the right
+ season, the egg-laying season, for the males, numerous at the outset, had
+ grown rarer day by day until they disappeared entirely. My lack of success
+ was due to the uncertainty of my excavations, in which I had nothing to
+ guide me over the indefinite area covered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I could at least identify the Scarabaeidae whose larvae form the prey
+ of the two Scoliae, the problem would be half solved. Let us try. I
+ collect all that the luchet has turned up: larvae, nymphs and adult
+ Beetles. My booty comprises two species of Lamellicorns: Anoxia villosa
+ and Euchlora Julii, both of whom I find in the perfect state, usually
+ dead, but sometimes alive. I obtain a few of their nymphs, a great piece
+ of luck, for the larval skin which accompanies them will serve me as a
+ standard of comparison. I come upon plenty of larvae, of all ages. When I
+ compare them with the cast garment abandoned by the nymphs, I recognize
+ some as belonging to the Anoxia and the rest to the Euchlora.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these data, I perceive with absolute certainty that the empty skin
+ adhering to the cocoon of the Interrupted Scolia belongs to the Anoxia. As
+ for the Euchlora, she is not involved in the problem: the larva hunted by
+ the Two-banded Scolia does not belong to her any more than it belongs to
+ the Anoxia. Then with which Scarabaeid does the empty skin which is still
+ unknown to me correspond? The Lamellicorn whom I am seeking must exist in
+ the ground which I have been exploring, because the Two-banded Scolia has
+ established herself there. Later&mdash;oh, very long afterwards!&mdash;I
+ recognized where my search was at fault. In order not to find a network of
+ roots beneath my luchet and to render the work of excavation lighter, I
+ was digging the bare places, at some distance from the thickets of
+ holm-oak; and it was just in those thickets, which are rich in vegetable
+ mould, that I should have sought. There, near the old stumps, in the soil
+ consisting of dead leaves and rotting wood, I should certainly have come
+ upon the larva so greatly desired, as will be proved by what I have still
+ to say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here ends what my earlier investigations taught me. There is reason to
+ believe that the Bois des Issards would never have furnished me with the
+ precise data, in the form in which I wanted them. The remoteness of the
+ spot, the fatigue of the expeditions, which the heat rendered intensely
+ exhausting, the impossibility of knowing which points to attack would
+ undoubtedly have discouraged me before the problem had advanced a step
+ farther. Studies such as these call for home leisure and application, for
+ residence in a country village. You are then familiar with every spot in
+ your own grounds and the surrounding country and you can go to work with
+ certainty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty-three years have passed; and here I am at Serignan, where I have
+ become a peasant, working by turns on my writing-pad and my cabbage-patch.
+ On the 14th of August, 1880, Favier (An ex-soldier who acted as the
+ author's gardener and factotum.&mdash;Translator's Note.) clears away a
+ heap of mould consisting of vegetable refuse and of leaves stacked in a
+ corner against the wall of the paddock. This clearance is considered
+ necessary because Bull, when the lovers' moon arrives, uses this hillock
+ to climb to the top of the wall and thence to repair to the canine wedding
+ the news of which is brought to him by the effluvia borne upon the air.
+ His pilgrimage fulfilled, he returns, with a discomfited look and a slit
+ ear, but always ready, once he has had his feed, to repeat the escapade.
+ To put an end to this licentious behaviour, which has cost him so many
+ gaping wounds, we decided to remove the heap of soil which serves him as a
+ ladder of escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Favier calls me while in the midst of his labours with the spade and
+ barrow:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here's a find, sir, a great find! Come and look."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I hasten to the spot. The find is a magnificent one indeed and of a nature
+ to fill me with delight, awakening all my old recollections of the Bois
+ des Issards. Any number of females of the Two-banded Scolia, disturbed at
+ their work, are emerging here and there from the depth of the soil. The
+ cocoons also are plentiful, each lying next to the skin of the victim on
+ which the larva has fed. They are all open but still fresh: they date from
+ the present generation; the Scoliae whom I unearth have quitted them not
+ long since. I learnt later, in fact, that the hatching took place in the
+ course of July.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same heap of mould is a swarming colony of Scarabaeidae in the form
+ of larvae, nymphs and adult insects. It includes the largest of our
+ Beetles, the common Rhinoceros Beetle, or Oryctes nasicornis. I find some
+ who have been recently liberated, whose wing-cases, of a glossy brown, now
+ see the sunlight for the first time; I find others enclosed in their
+ earthen shell, almost as big as a Turkey's egg. More frequent is her
+ powerful larva, with its heavy paunch, bent into a hook. I note the
+ presence of a second bearer of the nasal horn, Oryctes Silenus, who is
+ much smaller than her kinswoman, and of Pentodon punctatus, a Scarabaeid
+ who ravages my lettuces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the predominant population consists of Cetoniae, or Rosechafers, most
+ of them enclosed in their egg-shaped shells, with earthen walls encrusted
+ with dung. There are three different species: C. aurata, C. morio and C.
+ floricola. Most of them belong to the first species. Their larvae, which
+ are easily recognized by their singular talent for walking on their backs
+ with their legs in the air, are numbered by the hundred. Every age is
+ represented, from the new born grub to the podgy larva on the point of
+ building its shell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This time the problem of the victuals is solved. When I compare the larval
+ slough sticking to the Scolia's cocoons with the Cetonia-larvae or,
+ better, with the skin cast by these larvae, under cover of the cocoon, at
+ the moment of the nymphal transformation, I establish an absolute
+ identity. The Two-banded Scolia rations each of her eggs with a
+ Cetonia-grub. Behold the riddle which my irksome searches in the Bois des
+ Issards had not enabled me to solve. To-day, at my threshold, the
+ difficult problem becomes child's play. I can investigate the question
+ easily to the fullest possible extent; I need not put myself out at all;
+ at any hour of the day, at any period that seems favourable, I have the
+ requisite elements before my eyes. Ah, dear village, so poor, so
+ countrified, how happily inspired was I when I came to ask of you a
+ hermit's retreat, where I could live in the company of my beloved insects
+ and, in so doing, set down not too unworthily a few chapters of their
+ wonderful history!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the Italian observer Passerini, the Garden Scolia feeds her
+ family on the larvae of Oryctes nasicornis, in the heaps of old tan-waste
+ removed from the hot-houses. I do not despair of seeing this colossal Wasp
+ coming to establish herself one day in my heaps of leaf-mould, in which
+ the same Scarabaeid is swarming. Her rarity in my part of the country is
+ probably the only cause that has hitherto prevented the realization of my
+ wishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have just shown that the Two-banded Scolia feeds in infancy on
+ Cetonia-larvae and particularly on those of C. aurata, C. morio and C.
+ floricola. These three species dwell together in the rubbish-heap just
+ explored; their larvae differ so little that I should have to examine them
+ minutely to distinguish the one from the other; and even then I should not
+ be certain of succeeding. It seems probable that the Scolia does not
+ choose between them, that she uses all three indiscriminately. Perhaps she
+ even assails other larvae, inhabitants, like the foregoing, of heaps of
+ rotting vegetable-matter. I therefore set down the Cetonia genus generally
+ as forming the prey of the Two-banded Scolia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lastly, round about Avignon, the Interrupted Scolia used to prey upon the
+ larva of the Shaggy Anoxia (A. villosa). At Serignan, which is surrounded
+ by the same kind of sandy soil, without other vegetation than a few sparse
+ seed-bearing grasses, I find her rationing her young with the Morning
+ Anoxia (A. matutinalis). Oryctes, Cetoniae and Anoxiae in the larval
+ state: here then is the prey of the three Scoliae whose habits we know.
+ The three Beetles are Lamellicorns, Scarabaeidae. We shall have occasion
+ later to consider the reason of this very striking coincidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the moment, the business in hand is to move the heap of leaf-mould to
+ some other place, with the wheelbarrow. This is Favier's work, while I
+ myself collect the disturbed population in glass jars, in order to put
+ them back into the new rubbish-heap with all the consideration which my
+ plans owe to them. The laying-time has not yet set in, for I find no eggs,
+ no young Scolia-larvae. September apparently will be the propitious month.
+ But there are bound to be many injured in the course of this upheaval;
+ some of the Scoliae have flown away who will perhaps have a certain
+ difficulty in finding the new site; I have disarranged everything in the
+ overturned heap. To allow tranquility to be restored and habit to resume
+ its rounds, to give the population time to increase and replace the
+ fugitives and the injured, it would be best, I think, to leave the heap
+ alone this year and not to resume my investigations until the next. After
+ the thorough confusion due to the removal, I should jeopardize success by
+ being too precipitate. Let us wait one year more. I decide accordingly,
+ curb my impatience and resign myself. We will simply confine ourselves to
+ enlarging the heap, when the leaves begin to fall, by accumulating the
+ refuse that strews the paddock, so that we may have a richer field of
+ operations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the following August, my visits to the mound of leaf-mould become a
+ daily habit. By two o'clock in the afternoon, when the sun has cleared the
+ adjacent pine-trees and is shining on the heap, numbers of male Scoliae
+ arrive from the neighbouring fields, where they have been slaking their
+ thirst on the eryngo-heads. Incessantly coming and going with an indolent
+ flight, they circle round the heap. If some female rise from the soil,
+ those who have seen her dart forward. A not very turbulent affray decides
+ which of the suitors shall be the possessor; and the couple fly away over
+ the wall. This is a repetition of what I used to see in the Bois des
+ Issards. By the time that August is over. The males have ceased to show
+ themselves. The mothers do not appear either: they are busy underground,
+ establishing their families.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 2nd of September, I decide upon a search with my son Emile, who
+ handles the fork and the shovel, while I examine the clods dug up.
+ Victory! A magnificent result, finer than any that my fondest ambition
+ would have dared to contemplate! Here is a vast array of Cetonia-larvae,
+ all flaccid, motionless, lying on their backs, with a Scolia's egg
+ sticking to the centre of their abdomen; here are young Scolia-larvae
+ dipping their heads into the entrails of their victims; here are others
+ farther advanced, munching their last mouthfuls of a prey which is drained
+ dry and reduced to a skin; here are some laying the foundation of their
+ cocoons with a reddish silk, which looks as if it had been dyed in
+ Bullock's blood; here are some whose cocoons are finished. There is plenty
+ of everything, from the egg to the larva whose period of activity is over.
+ I mark the 2nd of September as a red-letter day; it has given me the final
+ key to a riddle which has kept me in suspense for nearly half a century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I place my spoils religiously in shallow, wide-mouthed glass jars
+ containing a layer of finely sifted mould. In this soft bed, which is
+ identical in character with the natal surroundings, I make some faint
+ impressions with my fingers, so many cavities, each of which receives one
+ of my subjects, one only. A pane of glass covers the mouth of the
+ receptacle. In this way I prevent a too rapid evaporation and keep my
+ nurselings under my eyes without fear of disturbing them. Now that all
+ this is in order, let us proceed to record events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cetonia-larvae which I find with a Scolia's egg upon their ventral
+ surface are distributed in the mould at random, without special cavities,
+ without any sign of some sort of structure. They are smothered in the
+ mould, just as are the larvae which have not been injured by the Wasp. As
+ my excavations in the Bois des Issards told me, the Scolia does not
+ prepare a lodging for her family; she knows nothing of the art of
+ cell-building. Her offspring occupies a fortuitous abode, on which the
+ mother expends no architectural pains. Whereas the other Hunting Wasps
+ prepare a dwelling to which the provisions are carried, sometimes from a
+ distance, the Scolia confines herself to digging her bed of leaf-mould
+ until she comes upon a Cetonia-larva. When she finds a quarry, she stabs
+ it on the spot, in order to immobilize it; and, again on the spot, she
+ lays an egg on the ventral surface of the paralysed creature. That is all.
+ The mother goes in quest of another prey without troubling further about
+ the egg which has just been laid. There is no effort of carting or
+ building. At the very spot where the Cetonia-grub is caught and paralysed,
+ the Scolia-larva hatches, grows and weaves its cocoon. The establishment
+ of the family is thus reduced to the simplest possible expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 3. A DANGEROUS DIET.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Scolia's egg is in no way exceptional in shape. It is white,
+ cylindrical, straight and about four millimetres long by one millimetre
+ thick. (About.156 x.039 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.) It is fixed, by
+ its fore-end, upon the median line of the victim's abdomen, well to the
+ rear of the legs, near the beginning of the brown patch formed by the mass
+ of food under the skin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I watch the hatching. The grub, still wearing upon its hinder parts the
+ delicate pellicle which it has just shed, is fixed to the spot to which
+ the egg itself adhered by its cephalic extremity. A striking spectacle,
+ that of the feeble creature, only this moment hatched, boring, for its
+ first mouthful, into the paunch of its enormous prey, which lies stretched
+ upon its back. The nascent tooth takes a day over the difficult task. Next
+ morning the skin has yielded; and I find the new-born larva with its head
+ plunged into a small, round, bleeding wound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In size the grub is the same as the egg, whose dimensions I have just
+ given. Now the Cetonia-larva, to meet the Scolia's requirements, averages
+ thirty millimetres in length by nine in thickness (1.17 x.35 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), whence follows that its bulk is six or seven hundred times as
+ great as that of the newly-hatched grub of the Scolia. Here certainly is a
+ quarry which, were it active and capable of wriggling and biting, would
+ expose the nurseling to terrible attacks. The danger has been averted by
+ the mother's stiletto; and the fragile grub attacks the monster's paunch
+ with as little hesitation as though it were sucking the breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Day by day the young Scolia's head penetrates farther into the Cetonia's
+ belly. To pass through the narrow orifice made in the skin, the fore-part
+ of the body contracts and lengthens out, as though drawn through a
+ die-plate. The larva thus assumes a rather strange form. Its hinder half,
+ which is constantly outside the victim's belly, has the shape and fulness
+ usual in the larvae of the Digger-wasps, whereas the front half, which,
+ once it has dived under the skin of the exploited victim, does not come
+ out again until the time arrives for spinning the cocoon, tapers off
+ suddenly into a snake-like neck. This front part is moulded, so to speak,
+ by the narrow entrance-hole made in the skin and henceforth retains its
+ slender formation. As a matter of fact, a similar configuration recurs, in
+ varying degrees, in the larvae of the Digger-wasps whose ration consists
+ of a bulky quarry which takes a long time to consume. These include the
+ Languedocian Sphex, with her Ephippiger, and the Hairy Ammophila, with her
+ Grey Worm. There is none of this sudden constriction, dividing the
+ creature into two disparate halves, when the victuals consist of numerous
+ and comparatively small items. The larva then retains its usual shape,
+ being obliged to pass, at brief intervals, from one joint in its larder to
+ the next.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the first bite of the mandibles, until the whole head of game is
+ consumed, the Scolia-larva is never seen to withdraw its head and its long
+ neck from inside the creature which it is devouring. I suspect the reason
+ of this persistence in attacking a single point; I even seem to perceive
+ the need for a special art in the manner of eating. The Cetonia-larva is a
+ square meal in itself, one large dish, which has to retain a suitable
+ freshness until the end. The young Scolia, therefore, must attack with
+ discretion, at the unvarying point chosen by the mother on the ventral
+ surface, for the entrance-hole is at the exact point where the egg was
+ fixed. As the nurseling's neck lengthens and dives deeper, the victim's
+ entrails are nibbled gradually and methodically: first, the least
+ essential; next, those whose removal leaves yet a remnant of life; lastly,
+ those whose loss inevitably entails death, followed very soon by
+ putrefaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the first bites we see the victim's blood oozing through the wound. It
+ is a highly-elaborated fluid, easy of digestion, and forms a sort of
+ milk-diet for the new-born grub. The little ogre's teat is the bleeding
+ paunch of the Cetonia-larva. The latter will not die of the wound, at
+ least not for some time. The next thing to be tackled is the fatty
+ substance which wraps the internal organs in its delicate folds. This
+ again is a loss which the Cetonia can suffer without dying then and there.
+ Now comes the turn of the muscular layer which lines the skin; now, that
+ of the essential organs; now, that of the nerve-centres and the trachean
+ network, whereupon the last gleam of light is extinguished and the Cetonia
+ reduced to a mere bag, empty but intact, save for the entrance-hole made
+ in the middle of the belly. From now onwards, these remains may rot if
+ they will: the Scolia, by its methodical fashion of consuming its
+ victuals, has succeeded in keeping them fresh to the very last; and now
+ you may see it, replete, shining with health, withdraw its long neck from
+ the bag of skin and prepare to weave the cocoon in which its development
+ will be completed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is possible that I may not be quite accurate as to the precise order in
+ which the organs are consumed, for it is not easy to perceive what happens
+ inside the exploited larva's body. The ruling feature in this scientific
+ method of eating, which proceeds from the parts less to the parts more
+ necessary to preserve a remnant of life, is none the less obvious. If
+ direct observation did not already to some degree confirm it, a mere
+ examination of the half-eaten larva would do so in the most positive
+ fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cetonia-larva is at first a plump grub. Drained by the Scolia's tooth,
+ it gradually becomes limp and wrinkled. In a few days' time it resembles a
+ shrivelled bit of bacon-fat and then a bag whose two sides have fallen in.
+ Yet this bit of bacon and this bag have the same characteristic look of
+ fresh meat as had the grub before it was bitten into. Despite the
+ persistent nibbling of the Scolia, life continues, holding at bay the
+ inroads of putrefaction until the mandibles have given their last bites.
+ Does not this remnant of tenacious vitality in itself show that the organs
+ of primary importance are the last to be attacked? Does it not prove that
+ there is a progressive dismemberment passing from the less essential to
+ the indispensable?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Would you like to see what becomes of a Cetonia-larva when the organism is
+ wounded in its vital centres at the very beginning? The experiment is an
+ easy one; and I made a point of trying it. A sewing-needle, first softened
+ and flattened into a blade, then retempered and sharpened, gives me a most
+ delicate scalpel. With this instrument I make a fine incision, through
+ which I remove the mass of nerves whose remarkable structure we shall soon
+ have occasion to study. The thing is done: the wound, which does not look
+ serious, has left the creature a corpse, a real corpse. I lay my victim on
+ a bed of moist earth, in a jar with a glass lid; in fact, I establish it
+ in the same conditions as those of the larvae on which the Scoliae feed.
+ By the next day, without changing shape, it has turned a repulsive brown;
+ presently it dissolves into noisome putrescence. On the same bed of earth,
+ under the same glass cover, in the same moist, warm atmosphere, the larvae
+ three-quarters eaten by the Scoliae retain, on the contrary, the
+ appearance of healthy flesh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If a single stroke of my dagger, fashioned from the point of a needle,
+ results in immediate death and early putrefaction; if the repeated bites
+ of the Scolia gut the creature's body and reduce it almost to a skin
+ without completely killing it, the striking contrast between these two
+ results must be due to the relative importance of the organs injured. I
+ destroy the nerve-centres and inevitably kill my larva, which is putrid by
+ the following day; the Scolia attacks the reserves of fat, the blood, the
+ muscles and does not kill its victim, which will provide it with wholesome
+ food until the end. But it is clear that, if the Scolia were to set to
+ work as I did, there would be nothing left, after the first few bites, but
+ an actual corpse, discharging fluids which would be fatal to it within
+ twenty-four hours. The mother, it is true, in order to assure the
+ immobility of her prey, has injected the poison of her sting into the
+ nerve-centres. Her operation cannot be compared with mine in any respect.
+ She practises the method of the skilful physiologist who induces
+ anaesthesia; I go to work like the butcher who chops, cuts and
+ disembowels. The sting leaves the nerve-centres intact. Deprived of
+ sensibility by the poison, they have lost the power of provoking muscular
+ contractions; but who can say that, numbed as they are, they no longer
+ serve to maintain a faint vitality? The flame is extinguished, but there
+ is still a glowing speck upon the wick. I, a rough blunderer, do more than
+ blow out the lamp: I throw away the wick and all is over. The grub would
+ do the same if it bit straight into the mass of nerves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything confirms the fact: the Scolia and the other Hunting Wasps whose
+ provisions consist of bulky heads of game are gifted with a special art of
+ eating, an exquisitely delicate art which saves a remnant of life in the
+ prey devoured, until it is all consumed. When the prey is a small one,
+ this precaution is superfluous. Consider, for instance, the Bembex-grubs
+ in the midst of their heap of Flies. The prey seized upon is broached on
+ the back, the belly, the head, the thorax, indifferently. The larva
+ munches a given spot, which it leaves to munch a second, passing to a
+ third and a fourth, at the bidding of its changing whims. It seems to
+ taste and select, by repeated trials, the mouthfuls most to its liking.
+ Thus bitton at several points, covered with wounds, the Fly is soon a
+ shapeless mass which would putrefy very quickly if the meagre dish were
+ not devoured at a single meal. Allow the Scolia-grub the same unlicensed
+ gluttony: it would perish beside its corpulent victim, which should have
+ kept fresh for a fortnight, but which almost from the beginning would be
+ no more than a filthy putrescence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This art of careful eating does not seem easy to practise: at least, the
+ larva, if ever so little diverted from its usual courses, is no longer
+ able to apply its talent as a capable trencherman. This will be proved by
+ experiment. I must begin by observing that, when I spoke of my larva which
+ turned putrid within twenty-four hours, I adopted an extreme case for the
+ sake of greater clearness. The Scolia, taking its first bite, does not and
+ cannot go to such lengths. Nevertheless it behooves us to enquire whether,
+ in the consumption of the victuals, the initial point of attack is a
+ matter of indifference and whether the rummaging through the entrails of
+ the victim entails a determined order, without which success is uncertain
+ or even impossible. To these delicate questions no one, I think, can
+ reply. Where science is silent, perhaps the grub will speak. We will try.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I move from its position a Scolia-grub which has attained a quarter or a
+ third of its full growth. The long neck plunged into the victim's belly is
+ rather difficult to extract, because of the need of molesting the creature
+ as little as possible. I succeed, by means of a little patience and
+ repeated strokes with the tip of a paint-brush. I now turn the
+ Cetonia-larva over, back uppermost, at the bottom of the little hollow
+ made by pressing my finger in the layer of mould. Lastly, I place the
+ Scolia on its victim's back. Here is my grub under the same conditions as
+ just now, with this difference, that the back and not the belly of its
+ victim is presented to its mandibles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I watch it for a whole afternoon. It writhes about; it moves its little
+ head now in this direction, now in that, frequently laying it on the
+ Cetonia, but without fixing it anywhere. The day draws to a close; and
+ still it has accomplished nothing. There are restless movements, nothing
+ more. Hunger, I tell myself, will eventually induce it to bite. I am
+ wrong. Next morning I find it more anxious than the day before and still
+ groping about, without resolving to fix its mandibles anywhere. I leave it
+ alone for half a day longer without obtaining any result. Yet twenty-four
+ hours of abstinence must have awakened a good appetite, above all in a
+ creature which, if left undisturbed, would not have ceased eating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Excessive hunger cannot induce it to nibble at an unlawful spot. Is this
+ due to feebleness of the teeth? By no means: the Cetonia's skin is no
+ tougher on the back than on the belly; moreover, the grub is capable of
+ perforating the skin when it leaves the egg; a fortiori, it must be more
+ capable of doing so now that it has attained a sturdy growth. Thus we see
+ no lack of ability, but an obstinate refusal to nibble at a point which
+ ought to be respected. Who knows? On this side perhaps the grub's dorsal
+ vessel would be wounded, its heart, an organ indispensable to life. The
+ fact remains that my attempts to make the grub tackle its victim from the
+ back have failed. Does this mean that it entertains the least suspicion of
+ the danger which it might incur were it to produce putrefaction by
+ awkwardly carving its victuals from the back? It would be absurd to give
+ such an idea a moment's consideration. Its refusal is dictated by a
+ preordained decree which it is bound to obey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My Scolia-grubs would die of starvation if I left them on their victim's
+ back. I therefore restore matters as they were, with the Cetonia-larva
+ belly uppermost and the young Scolia on top. I might utilise the subjects
+ of my previous experiments; but, as I have to take precautions against the
+ disturbance which may have been caused by the test already undergone, I
+ prefer to operate on new patients, a luxury in which the richness of my
+ menagerie allows me to indulge. I move the Scolia from its position,
+ extract its head from the entrails of the Cetonia-larva and leave it to
+ its own resources on its victim's belly. Betraying every symptom of
+ uneasiness, the grub gropes, hesitates, casts about and does not insert
+ its mandibles anywhere, though it is now the ventral surface which it is
+ exploring. It would not display greater hesitation if placed on the back
+ of the larva. I repeat, who knows? On this side it might perhaps injure
+ the nervous plexus, which is even more essential than the dorsal vessel.
+ The inexperienced grub must not drive in its mandibles at random; its
+ future is jeopardized if it gives a single ill-judged bite. If it gnaws at
+ the spot where I myself operated with my needle wrought into a scalpel,
+ its victuals will very soon turn putrid. Once more, then, we witness an
+ absolute refusal to perforate the skin of the victim elsewhere than at the
+ very point where the egg was fixed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mother selects this point, which is undoubtedly that most favourable
+ to the future prosperity of the larva, though I am not able clearly to
+ discern the reasons for her choice; she fixes the egg to it; and the place
+ where the opening is to be made is henceforth determined. It is here that
+ the grub must bite: only here, never elsewhere. Its invincible refusal to
+ tackle the Cetonia in any other part, even though it should die of
+ starvation, shews us how rigorous is the rule of conduct with which its
+ instinct is inspired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As it gropes about, the grub laid on the victim's ventral surface sooner
+ or later rediscovers the gaping wound from which I have removed it. If
+ this takes too long for my patience, I can myself guide its head to the
+ place with the point of a paint-brush. The grub then recognizes the hole
+ of its own making, slips its neck into it and little by little dives into
+ the Cetonia's belly, so that the original state of affairs appears to be
+ exactly restored. And yet its successful rearing is henceforth highly
+ problematical. It is possible that the larva will prosper, complete its
+ development and spin its cocoon; it is also possible&mdash;and the case is
+ not unusual&mdash;that the Cetonia-larva will soon turn brown and putrid.
+ We then see the Scolia itself turn brown, distended as it is with
+ putrescent foodstuffs, and then cease all movement, without attempting to
+ withdraw from the sanies. It dies on the spot, poisoned by its excessively
+ high game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What can be the meaning of this sudden corruption of the victuals,
+ followed by the death of the Scolia, when everything appeared to have
+ returned to its normal condition? I see only one explanation. Disturbed in
+ its activities and diverted from its usual courses by my interference, the
+ grub, when replaced on the wound from which I extracted it, was unable to
+ rediscover the lode at which it was working a few minutes earlier; it
+ thrust its way at random into the victim's entrails; and a few untimely
+ bites extinguished the last sparks of vitality. Its confusion rendered it
+ clumsy; and the mistake cost it its life. It dies poisoned by the rich
+ food which, if consumed according to the rules, should have made it grow
+ plump and lusty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was anxious to observe the deadly effects of a disturbed meal in another
+ fashion. This time the victim itself shall disorder the grub's activities.
+ The Cetonia-larva, as served up to the young Scolia by its mother, is
+ profoundly paralysed. Its inertia is complete and so striking that it
+ constitutes one of the leading features of this narrative. But we will not
+ anticipate. For the moment, the thing is to substitute for this inert
+ larva a similar larva, but one not paralysed, one very much alive. To
+ ensure that it shall not double up and crush the grub, I confine myself to
+ reducing it to helplessness, leaving it otherwise just as I extracted it
+ from its burrow. I must also be careful of its legs and mandibles, the
+ least touch of which would rip open the nurseling. With a few turns of the
+ finest wire I fix it to a little slab of cork, with its belly in the air.
+ Next, to provide the grub with a ready-made hole, knowing that it will
+ refuse to make one for itself, I contrive a slight incision in the skin,
+ at the point where the Scolia lays her egg. I now place the grub upon the
+ larva, with its head touching the bleeding wound, and lay the whole on a
+ bed of mould in a transparent beaker protected by a pane of glass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unable to move, to wriggle, to scratch with its legs or snap with its
+ mandibles, the Cetonia-larva, a new Prometheus bound, offers its
+ defenceless flanks to the little Vulture destined to devour its entrails.
+ Without too much hesitation, the young Scolia settles down to the wound
+ made by my scalpel, which to the grub represents the wound whence I have
+ just removed it. It thrusts its neck into the belly of its prey; and for a
+ couple of days all seems to go well. Then, lo and behold, the Cetonia
+ turns putrid and the Scolia dies, poisoned by the ptomaines of the
+ decomposing game! As before, I see it turn brown and die on the spot,
+ still half inside the toxic corpse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fatal issue of my experiment is easily explained. The Cetonia-larva is
+ alive in every sense. True, I have, by means of bonds, suppressed its
+ outward movements, in order to provide the nurseling with a quiet meal,
+ devoid of danger; but it was not in my power to subdue its internal
+ movements, the quivering of the viscera and muscles irritated by its
+ forced immobility and by the Scolia's bites. The victim is in possession
+ of its full power of sensation; and it expresses the pain experienced as
+ best it may, by contractions. Embarrassed by these tremors, these twitches
+ of suffering flesh, incommoded at every mouthful, the grub chews away at
+ random and kills the larva almost as soon as it has started on it. In a
+ victim paralysed by the regulation sting, the conditions would be very
+ different. There are no external movements, nor any internal movements
+ either, when the mandibles bite, because the victim is insensible. The
+ grub, undisturbed in any way, is then able, with an unfaltering tooth, to
+ pursue its scientific method of eating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These marvellous results interested me too much not to inspire me with
+ fresh devices when I pursued my investigations. Earlier enquiries had
+ taught me that the larvae of the Digger-wasps are fairly indifferent to
+ the nature of the game, though the mother always supplies them with the
+ same diet. I had succeeded in rearing them on a great variety of prey,
+ without paying regard to their normal fare. I shall return to this subject
+ later, when I hope to demonstrate its great philosophical significance.
+ Let us profit by these data and try to discover what happens when we give
+ the Scolia food which is not properly its own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I select from my heap of garden-mould, that inexhaustible mine, two larvae
+ of the Rhinoceros Beetle, Oryctes nasicornis, about one-third full-grown,
+ so that their size may not be out of proportion to the Scolia's. It is in
+ fact almost identical with the size of the Cetonia. I paralyse one of them
+ by giving an injection of ammonia in the nerve-centres. I make a fine
+ incision in its belly and I place the Scolia on the opening. The dish
+ pleases my charge; and it would be strange indeed if this were not so,
+ considering that another Scolia-grub, the larva of the Garden Scolia,
+ feeds on the Oryctes. The dish suits it, for before long it has burrowed
+ half-way into the succulent paunch. This time all goes well. Will the
+ rearing be successful? Not a bit of it! On the third day, the Oryctes
+ decomposes and the Scolia dies. Which shall we hold responsible for the
+ failure, myself or the grub? Myself who, perhaps too unskilfully,
+ administered the injection of ammonia, or the grub which, a novice at
+ dissecting a prey differing from its own, did not know how to practise its
+ craft upon a changed victim and began to bite before the proper time?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In my uncertainty, I try again. This time I shall not interfere, so that
+ my clumsiness cannot be to blame. As I described when speaking of the
+ Cetonia-larva, the Oryctes-larva now lies bound, quite alive, on a strip
+ of cork. As usual, I make a small opening in the belly, to entice the grub
+ by means of a bleeding wound and facilitate its access. I obtain the same
+ negative result. In a little while, the Oryctes is a noisome mass on which
+ the nurseling lies poisoned. The failure was foreseen: to the difficulties
+ presented by a prey unknown to my charge was added the commotion caused by
+ the wriggling of an unparalysed animal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will try once more, this time with a victim paralysed not by me, an
+ unskilled operator, but by an adept whose ability ranks so high that it is
+ beyond discussion. Chance favours me to perfection: yesterday, in a warm
+ sheltered corner, at the foot of a sandy bank, I discovered three cells of
+ the Languedocian Sphex, each with its Ephippiger and the recently laid
+ egg. This is the game I want, a corpulent prey, of a size suited to the
+ Scolia and, what is more, in splendid condition, artistically paralysed
+ according to rule by a master among masters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As usual, I install my three Ephippigers in a glass jar, on a bed of
+ mould; I remove the egg of the Sphex and on each victim, after slightly
+ incising the skin of the belly, I place a young Scolia-grub. For three or
+ four days my charges feed upon this game, so novel to them, without any
+ sign of repugnance or hesitation. By the fluctuations of the digestive
+ canal I perceive that the work of nutrition is proceeding as it should;
+ things are happening just as if the dish were a Cetonia-larva. The change
+ of diet, complete though it is, has in no way affected the appetite of the
+ Scolia-grubs. But this prosperous condition does not last long. About the
+ fourth day, a little sooner in one case, a little later in another, the
+ three Ephippigers become putrid and the Scoliae die at the same time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This result is eloquent. Had I left the egg of the Sphex to hatch, the
+ larva coming out of it would have fed upon the Ephippiger; and for the
+ hundredth time I should have witnessed an incomprehensible spectacle, that
+ of an animal which, devoured piecemeal for nearly a fortnight, grows thin
+ and empty, shrivels up and yet retains to the very end the freshness
+ peculiar to living flesh. Substitute for this Sphex-larva a Scolia-larva
+ of almost the same size; let the dish be the same though the guest is
+ different; and healthy live flesh is promptly replaced by pestilent rotten
+ flesh. That which under the mandibles of the Sphex would for a long while
+ have remained wholesome food promptly becomes a poisonous liquescence
+ under the mandibles of the Scolia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible to explain the preservation of the victuals until finally
+ consumed by supposing that the venom injected by the Wasp when she
+ delivers her paralysing stings possesses antiseptic properties. The three
+ Ephippigers were operated on by the Sphex. Able to keep fresh under the
+ mandibles of the Sphex-larvae, why did they promptly go bad under the
+ mandibles of the Scolia-larvae? Any idea of an antiseptic must needs be
+ rejected: a liquid preservative which would act in the first case could
+ not fail to act in the second, as its virtues would not depend on the
+ teeth of the consumer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those of you who are versed in the knowledge attaching to this problem,
+ investigate, I beg you, search, sift, see if you can discover the reason
+ why the victuals keep fresh when consumed by a Sphex, whereas they
+ promptly become putrid when consumed by a Scolia. For me, I see only one
+ reason; and I very much doubt whether any one can suggest another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both larvae practise a special art of eating, which is determined by the
+ nature of the game. The Sphex, when sitting down to an Ephippiger, the
+ food that has fallen to its lot, knows thoroughly how to consume it and
+ how to preserve, to the very end, the glimmer of life which keeps it
+ fresh; but, if it has to browse upon a Cetonia-grub, whose different
+ structure would confuse its talents as a dissector, it would soon have
+ nothing before it but a heap of putrescence. The Scolia, in its turn, is
+ familiar with the method of eating the Cetonia-grub, its invariable
+ portion; but it does not understand the art of eating the Ephippiger,
+ though the dish is to its taste. Unable to dissect this unknown species of
+ game, its mandibles slash away at random, killing the creature outright as
+ soon as they take their first bites of the deeper tissues of the victim.
+ That is the whole secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One more word, on which I shall enlarge in another chapter. I observe that
+ the Scoliae to which I give Ephippigers paralysed by the Sphex keep in
+ excellent condition, despite the change of diet, so long as the provisions
+ retain their freshness. They languish when the game goes high; and they
+ die when putridity supervenes. Their death, therefore, is due not to an
+ unaccustomed diet, but to poisoning by one or other of those terrible
+ toxins which are engendered by animal corruption and which chemistry calls
+ by the name of ptomaines. Therefore, notwithstanding the fatal outcome of
+ my three attempts, I remain persuaded that the unfamiliar method of
+ rearing would have been perfectly successful had the Ephippigers not gone
+ bad, that is, if the Scoliae had known how to eat them according to the
+ rules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What a delicate and dangerous thing is the art of eating in these
+ carnivorous larvae supplied with a single victim, which they have to spend
+ a fortnight in consuming, on the express condition of not killing it until
+ the very end! Could our physiological science, of which, with good reason,
+ we are so proud, describe, without blundering, the method to be followed
+ in the successive mouthfuls? How has a miserable grub learnt what our
+ knowledge cannot tell us? By habit, the Darwinians will reply, who see in
+ instinct an acquired habit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before deciding this serious matter, I will ask you to reflect that the
+ first Wasp, of whatever kind, that thought of feeding her progeny on a
+ Cetonia-grub or on any other large piece of game demanding long
+ preservation could necessarily have left no descendants unless the art of
+ consuming food without causing putrescence had been practised, with all
+ its scrupulous caution, from the first generation onwards. Having as yet
+ learnt nothing by habit or by atavistic transmission, since it was making
+ a first beginning, the nurseling would bite into its provender at random.
+ It would be starving, it would have no respect for its prey. It would
+ carve its joint at random; and we have just seen the fatal consequence of
+ an ill-directed bite. It would perish&mdash;I have just proved this in the
+ most positive manner&mdash;it would perish, poisoned by its victim,
+ already dead and putrid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To prosper, it would have, although a novice, to know what was permitted
+ and what forbidden in ransacking the creature's entrails; nor would it be
+ enough for the larva to be approximately in possession of this difficult
+ secret: it would be indispensable that it should possess the secret
+ completely, for a single bite, if delivered before the right moment, would
+ inevitably involve its own demise. The Scoliae of my experiments are not
+ novices, far from it: they are the descendants of carvers that have
+ practised their art since Scoliae first came into the world; nevertheless
+ they all perish from the decomposition of the rations supplied, when I try
+ to feed them on Ephippigers paralysed by the Sphex. Very expert in the
+ method of attacking the Cetonia, they do not know how to set about the
+ business of discreetly consuming a species of game new to them. All that
+ escapes them is a few details, for the trade of an ogre fed on live flesh
+ is familiar to them in its general features; and these unheeded details
+ are enough to turn their food into poison. What, then, happened in the
+ beginning, when the larva bit for the first time into a luscious victim?
+ The inexperienced creature perished; of that there is not a shadow of
+ doubt, unless we admit an absurdity and imagine the larva of antiquity
+ feeding upon those terrible ptomaines which so swiftly kill its
+ descendants to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing will ever make me admit and no unprejudiced mind can admit that
+ what was once food has become a horrible poison. What the larva of
+ antiquity ate was live flesh and not putrescence. Nor can it be admitted
+ that the chances of fortune can have led at the first trial to success in
+ a system of nourishment so full of pit-falls: fortuitous results are
+ preposterous amid so many complications. Either the feeding is strictly
+ methodical at the beginning, in conformity with the organic exigencies of
+ the prey devoured, and the Wasp established her race; or else it was
+ hesitating, without determined rules, and the Wasp left no successor. In
+ the first case we behold innate instinct; in the second acquired habit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A strange acquisition, truly! An acquisition presumed to be made by an
+ impossible creature; an acquisition supposed to develop in no less
+ impossible successors! Though the snow-ball, slowly rolling, at last
+ becomes an enormous sphere, it is still necessary that the starting-point
+ shall not have been NIL. The big ball implies the little ball, as small as
+ you please. Now, in harking back to the origin of these acquired habits,
+ if I interrogate the possibilities I obtain zero as the only answer. If
+ the animal does not know its trade thoroughly, if it has to acquire
+ something, all the more if it has to acquire everything, it perishes: that
+ is inevitable; without the little snow-ball the big snow-ball cannot be
+ rolled. If it has nothing to acquire, if it knows all that it needs to
+ know, it flourishes and leaves descendants behind it. But then it
+ possesses innate instinct, the instinct which learns nothing and forgets
+ nothing, the instinct which is steadfast throughout time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The building up of theories has never appealed to me: I suspect them one
+ and all. To argue nebulously upon dubious premises likes me no better. I
+ observe, I experiment and I let the facts speak for themselves. We have
+ just heard these facts. Let each now decide for himself whether instinct
+ is an innate faculty or an acquired habit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 4. THE CETONIA-LARVA.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Scolia's feeding-period lasts, on the average, for a dozen days or so.
+ By then the victuals are no more than a crumpled bag, a skin emptied of
+ the last scrap of nutriment. A little earlier, the russet-yellow tint
+ announces the extinction of the last spark of life in the creature that is
+ being devoured. The empty skin is pushed back to make space; the
+ dining-room, a shapeless cavity with crumbling walls, is tidied up a
+ little; and the Scolia-grub sets to work on its cocoon without further
+ delay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first courses form a general scaffolding, which finds a support here
+ and there on the earthen walls, and consist of a rough, blood-red fabric.
+ When the larva is merely laid, as required by my investigations, in a
+ hollow made with the finger-tip in the bed of mould, it is not able to
+ spin its cocoon, for want of a ceiling to which to fasten the upper
+ threads of its network. To weave its cocoon, every spinning larva is
+ compelled to isolate itself in a hammock slung in an open-work enclosure,
+ which enables it to distribute its thread uniformly in all directions. If
+ there be no ceiling, the upper part of the cocoon cannot be fashioned,
+ because the worker lacks the necessary points of support. Under these
+ conditions my Scolia-grubs contrive at most to upholster their little pit
+ with a thick down of reddish silk. Discouraged by futile endeavours, some
+ of them die. It is as if they had been killed by the silk which they omit
+ to disgorge because they are unable to make the right use of it. This, if
+ we were not watchful, would be a very frequent cause of failure in our
+ attempts at artificial rearing. But, once the danger has been perceived,
+ the remedy is simple. I make a ceiling over the cavity by laying a short
+ strip of paper above it. If I want to see how matters are progressing, I
+ bend the strip into a semicircle, into a half-cylinder with open ends.
+ Those who wish to play the breeder for themselves will be able to profit
+ by these little practical details.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In twenty-four hours the cocoon is finished; at least, it no longer allows
+ us to see the grub, which is doubtless making the walls of its dwelling
+ still thicker. At first the cocoon is a vivid red; later it changes to a
+ light chestnut-brown. Its form is that of an ellipsoid, with a major axis
+ 26 millimetres in length, while the minor axis measures 11 millimetres.
+ (1.014 x.429 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.) These dimensions, which
+ incidentally are inclined to vary slightly, are those of the female
+ cocoons. In the other sex they are smaller and may measure as little as 17
+ millimetres in length by 7 millimetres in width. (.663 x.273 inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two ends of the ellipsoid have the same form, so much so that it is
+ only thanks to an individual peculiarity, independent of the shape, that
+ we can tell the cephalic from the anal extremity. The cephalic pole is
+ flexible and yields to the pressure of my tweezers; the anal pole is hard
+ and unyielding. The wrapper is double, as in the cocoons of the Sphex.
+ (Cf. "The Hunting Wasps": chapters 4 to 10 et passim.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) The outer envelope, consisting of pure silk, is thin, flexible and
+ offers little resistance. It is closely superimposed upon the inner
+ envelope and is easily separated from it everywhere, except at the anal
+ end, where it adheres to the second envelope. The adhesion of the two
+ wrappers at one end and the non-adhesion at the other are the cause of the
+ differences which the tweezers reveal when pinching the two ends of the
+ cocoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inner envelope is firm, elastic, rigid and, to a certain point,
+ brittle. I do not hesitate to look upon it as consisting of a silken
+ tissue which the larva, towards the end of its task, has steeped
+ thoroughly in a sort of varnish prepared not by the silk-glands but by the
+ stomach. The cocoons of the Sphex have already shown us a similar varnish.
+ This product of the chylific ventricle is chestnut-brown. It is this
+ which, saturating the thickness of the tissue, effaces the bright red of
+ the beginning and replaces it by a brown tint. It is this again which,
+ disgorged more profusely at the lower end of the cocoon, glues the two
+ wrappers together at that point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The perfect insect is hatched at the beginning of July. The emergence
+ takes place without any violent effraction, without any ragged rents. A
+ clean, circular fissure appears at some distance from the top; and the
+ cephalic end is detached all of a piece, as a loose lid might be. It is as
+ though the recluse had only to raise a cover by butting it with her head,
+ so exact is the line of division, at least as regards the inner envelope,
+ the stronger and more important of the two. As for the outer wrapper, its
+ lack of resistance enables it to yield without difficulty when the other
+ gives way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cannot quite make out by what knack the Wasp contrives to detach the cap
+ of the inner shell with such accuracy. Is it the art practised by the
+ tailor when cutting his stuff, with mandibles taking the place of
+ scissors? I hardly venture to admit as much: the tissue is so tough and
+ the circle of division so precise. The mandibles are not sharp enough to
+ cut without leaving a ragged edge; and then what geometrical certainty
+ they would need for an operation so perfect that it might well have been
+ performed with the compasses!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I suspect therefore that the Scolia first fashions the outer sac in
+ accordance with the usual method, that is, by distributing the silk
+ uniformly, without any special preparation of one part of the wall more
+ than of another, and that it afterwards changes its method of weaving in
+ order to attend to the main work, the inner shell. In this it apparently
+ imitates the Bembex (Cf. "The Hunting Wasps": chapters 14 to 16.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), which weaves a sort of eel-trap, whose ample mesh allows it to
+ gather grains of sand outside and encrust them one by one in the silky
+ network, and completes the performance with a cap fitting the entrance to
+ the trap. This provides a circular line of least resistance, along which
+ the casket breaks open afterwards. If the Scolia really works in the same
+ manner, everything is explained: the eel-trap, while still open, enables
+ it to soak with varnish both the inside and the outside of the inner
+ shell, which has to acquire the consistency of parchment; lastly, the cap
+ which completes and closes the structure leaves for the future a circular
+ line capable of splitting easily and neatly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is enough on the subject of the Scolia-grub. Let us go back to its
+ provender, of whose remarkable structure we as yet know nothing. In order
+ that it may be consumed with the delicate anatomical discretion imposed by
+ the necessity of having fresh food to the last, the Cetonia-grub must be
+ plunged into a state of absolute immobility: any twitchings on its part&mdash;as
+ the experiments which I have undertaken go to prove&mdash;would discourage
+ our nibbling larva and impede the work of carving, which has to be
+ effected with so much circumspection. It is not enough for the victim to
+ be unable to move from place to place beneath the soil: in addition to
+ this, the contractible power in its sturdy muscular organism must be
+ suppressed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In its normal state, this larva, at the very least disturbance, curls
+ itself up, almost as the Hedgehog does; and the two halves of the ventral
+ surface are laid one against the other. You are quite surprised at the
+ strength which the creature displays in keeping itself thus contracted. If
+ you try to unroll it, your fingers encounter a resistance far greater than
+ the size of the animal would have caused you to suspect. To overcome the
+ resistance of this sort of spring coiled upon itself, you have to force
+ it, so much so that you are afraid, if you persist, of seeing the
+ indomitable spiral suddenly burst and shoot forth its entrails.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A similar muscular energy is found in the larvae of the Oryctes (Also
+ known as the Rhinoceros Beetle.&mdash;Translator's Note.), the Anoxia (A
+ Beetle akin to the Cockchafer.&mdash;Translator's Note.), the Cockchafer.
+ Weighed down by a heavy belly and living underground, where they feed
+ either on leaf-mould or on roots, these larvae all possess the vigorous
+ constitution needed to drag their corpulence through a resisting medium.
+ All of them also roll themselves into a hook which is not straightened
+ without an effort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now what would become of the egg and the new-born grub of the Scoliae,
+ fixed under the belly, at the centre of the Cetonia's spiral, or inside
+ the hook of the Oryctes or the Anoxia? They would be crushed between the
+ jaws of the living vice. It is essential that the arc should slacken and
+ the hook unbend, without the least possibility of their returning to a
+ state of tension. Indeed, the well-being of the Scoliae demands something
+ more: those powerful bodies must not retain even the power to quiver, lest
+ they derange a method of feeding which has to be conducted with the
+ greatest caution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cetonia-grub to which the Two-banded Scolia's egg is fastened fulfils
+ the required conditions admirably. It is lying on its back, in the midst
+ of the mould, with its belly fully extended. Long accustomed though I be
+ to this spectacle of victims paralysed by the sting of the Hunting Wasp, I
+ cannot suppress my astonishment at the profound immobility of the prey
+ before my eyes. In the other victims with flexible skins, Caterpillars,
+ Crickets, Mantes, Ephippigers, I perceived at least some pulsations of the
+ abdomen, a few feeble contortions under the stimulus of a needle. There is
+ nothing of the sort here, nothing but absolute inertia, except in the
+ head, where I see, from time to time, the mouth-parts open and close, the
+ palpi give a tremor, the short antennae sway to and fro. A prick with the
+ point of a needle causes no contraction, no matter what the spot pricked.
+ Though I stab it through and through, the creature does not stir, be it
+ ever so little. A corpse is not more inert. Never, since my remotest
+ investigations, have I witnessed so profound a paralysis. I have seen many
+ wonders due to the surgical talent of the Wasp; but to-day's marvel
+ surpasses them all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am doubly surprised when I consider the unfavourable conditions under
+ which the Scolia operates. The other paralysers work in the open air, in
+ the full light of day. There is nothing to hinder them. They enjoy full
+ liberty of action in seizing the prey, holding it in position and
+ sacrificing it; they are able to see the victim and to parry its means of
+ defence, to avoid its spears, its pincers. The spot or spots to be
+ attained are within their reach; they drive the dagger in without let or
+ hindrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What difficulties, on the other hand, await the Scolia! She hunts
+ underground, in the blackest darkness. Her movements are laboured and
+ uncertain, owing to the mould, which is continually giving way all round
+ her; she cannot keep her eyes on the terrible mandibles, which are capable
+ of cutting her body in two with a single bite. Moreover, the Cetonia-grub,
+ perceiving that the enemy is approaching, assumes its defensive posture,
+ rolls itself up and makes a shield for its only vulnerable part, the
+ ventral surface, with its convex back. No, it cannot be an easy operation
+ to subdue the powerful larva in its underground retreat and to stab with
+ the precision which immediate paralysis requires.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We wish that we might witness the struggle between the two adversaries and
+ see at first hand what happens, but we cannot hope to succeed. It all
+ takes place in the mysterious darkness of the soil; in broad daylight, the
+ attack would not be delivered, for the victim must remain where it is and
+ then and there receive the egg, which is unable to thrive and develop
+ except under the warm cover of vegetable mould. If direct observation is
+ impracticable, we can at least foresee the main outlines of the drama by
+ allowing ourselves to be guided by the warlike manoeuvres of other
+ burrowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I picture things thus: digging and rummaging through the heap of mould,
+ guided perhaps by that singular sensibility of the antennae which enables
+ the Hairy Ammophila to discover the Grey Worm (The caterpillar of the
+ Turnip Moth. Cf. "The Hunting Wasps": chapters 18 to 20.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) underground, the Scolia ends by finding a Cetonia-larva, a good
+ plump one, in the pink of condition, having reached its full growth, just
+ what the grub which is to feed on it requires. Forthwith, the assaulted
+ victim, contracting desperately, rolls itself into a ball. The other
+ seizes it by the skin of the neck. To unroll it is impossible to the
+ insect, for I myself have some trouble in doing so. One single point is
+ accessible to the sting: the under part of the head, or rather of the
+ first segments, which are placed outside the coil, so that the grub's hard
+ cranium makes a rampart for the hinder extremity, which is less well
+ defended. Here the Wasp's sting enters and here only can it enter, within
+ a narrowly circumscribed area. One stab only of the lancet is given at
+ this point, one only because there is no room for more; and this is
+ enough: the larva is absolutely paralysed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nervous functions are abolished instantly; the muscular contractions
+ cease; and the animal uncoils like a broken spring. Henceforth motionless,
+ it lies on its back, its ventral surface fully exposed from end to end. On
+ the median line of this surface, towards the rear, near the brown patch
+ due to the alimentary broth contained in the intestine, the Scolia lays
+ her egg and without more ado, leaves everything lying on the actual spot
+ where the murder was committed, in order to go in search of another
+ victim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is how the deed must be done: the results prove it emphatically. But
+ then the Cetonia-grub must possess a very exceptional structure in its
+ nervous organization. The larva's violent contraction leaves but a single
+ point of attack open to the sting, the under part of the neck, which is
+ doubtless uncovered when the victim tries to defend itself with its
+ mandibles; and yet a stab in this one point produces the most thorough
+ paralysis that I have ever seen. It is the general rule that larvae
+ possess a centre of innervation for each segment. This is so in particular
+ with the Grey Worm, the sacrificial victim of the Hairy Ammophila. The
+ Wasp is acquainted with this anatomical secret: she stabs the caterpillar
+ again and again, from end to end, segment by segment, ganglion by
+ ganglion. With such an organization the Cetonia-grub, unconquerably coiled
+ upon itself would defy the paralyser's surgical skill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the first ganglion were wounded, the others would remain uninjured; and
+ the powerful body, actuated by these last, would lose none of its powers
+ of contraction. Woe then to the egg, to the young grub held fast in its
+ embrace! And how insurmountable would be the difficulties if the Scolia,
+ working in the profound darkness amid the crumbling soil and confronted by
+ a terrible pair of mandibles, had to stab each segment in turn with her
+ sting, with the certainty of method displayed by the Ammophila! The
+ delicate operation is possible in the open air, where nothing stands in
+ the way, in broad daylight, where the sight guides the scalpel, and with a
+ patient which can always be released if it becomes dangerous. But in the
+ dark, underground, amidst the ruins of a ceiling which crumbles in
+ consequence of the conflict and at close quarters with an opponent greatly
+ her superior in strength, how is the Scolia to guide her sting with the
+ accuracy that is essential if the stabs are to be repeated?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So profound a paralysis; the difficulty of vivisection underground; the
+ desperate coiling of the victim: all these things tell me that the
+ Cetonia-grub, as regards its nervous system, must possess a structure
+ peculiar to itself. The whole of the ganglia must be concentrated in a
+ limited area in the first segments, almost under the neck. I see this as
+ clearly as though it had been revealed to me by a post-mortem dissection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never was anatomical forecast more fully confirmed by direct examination.
+ After forty-eight hours in benzine, which dissolves the fat and renders
+ the nervous system more plainly visible, the Cetonia-grub is subjected to
+ dissection. Those of my readers who are familiar with these investigations
+ will understand my delight. What a clever school is the Scolia's! It is
+ just as I thought! Admirable! The thoracic and abdominal ganglia are
+ gathered into a single nervous mass, situated within the quadrilateral
+ bounded by the four hinder legs, which legs are very near the head. It is
+ a tiny, dull-white cylinder, about three millimetres long by half a
+ millimetre wide. (.117 x.019 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.) This is the
+ organ which the Scolia's sting must attack in order to secure the
+ paralysis of the whole body, excepting the head, which is provided with
+ special ganglia. From it run numbers of filaments which actuate the feet
+ and the powerful muscular layer which is the creature's essential motor
+ organ. When examined merely through the pocket-lens, this cylinder appears
+ to be slightly furrowed transversely, a proof of its complex structure.
+ Under the microscope, it is seen to be formed by the close juxtaposition,
+ the welding, end to end, of the ganglia, which can be distinguished one
+ from the other by a slight intermediate groove. The bulkiest are the
+ first, the fourth and the tenth, or last; these are all very nearly of
+ equal size. The rest are barely half or even a third as large as those
+ mentioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Interrupted Scolia experiences the same hunting and surgical
+ difficulties when she attacks, in the crumbling, sandy soil, the larvae of
+ the Shaggy Anoxia or of the Morning Anoxia, according to the district; and
+ these difficulties, if they are to be overcome, demand in the victim a
+ concentrated nervous system, like the Cetonia's. Such is my logical
+ conviction before making my examination; such also is the result of direct
+ observation. When subjected to the scalpel, the larva of the Morning
+ Anoxia shows me its centres of innervation for the thorax and the abdomen,
+ gathered into a short cylinder, which, placed very far forward, almost
+ immediately after the head, does not run back beyond the level of the
+ second pair of legs. The vulnerable point is thus easily accessible to the
+ sting, despite the creature's posture of defence, in which it contracts
+ and coils up. In this cylinder I recognize eleven ganglia, one more than
+ in the Cetonia. The first three, or thoracic, ganglia are plainly
+ distinguishable from one another, although they are set very close
+ together; the rest are all in contact. The largest are the three thoracic
+ ganglia and the eleventh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After ascertaining these facts, I remembered Swammerdam's investigations
+ into the grub of the Monoceros, our Oryctes nasicornis. (Jan Swammerdam
+ (1637-1680), the Dutch naturalist and anatomist.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ I chanced to possess an abridgement of the "Biblia naturae," the masterly
+ work of the father of insect anatomy. I consulted the venerable volume. It
+ informed me that the learned Dutchman had been struck, long before I was,
+ by an anatomical peculiarity similar to that which the larvae of the
+ Cetoniae and Anoxiae had shown me in their nerve-centres. Having observed
+ in the Silk-worm a nervous system formed of ganglia distinct one from the
+ other, he was quite surprised to find that, in the grub of the Oryctes,
+ the same system was concentrated into a short chain of ganglia in
+ juxtaposition. His was the surprise of the anatomist who, studying the
+ organ qua organ, sees for the first time an unusual conformation. Mine was
+ of a different nature: I was amazed to see the precision with which the
+ paralysis of the victim sacrificed by the Scolia, a paralysis so profound
+ in spite of the difficulties of an underground operation, had guided my
+ forecast as to structure when, anticipating the dissection, I declared in
+ favour of an exceptional concentration of the nervous system. Physiology
+ perceived what anatomy had not yet revealed, at all events to my eyes, for
+ since then, on dipping into my books, I have learnt that these anatomical
+ peculiarities, which were then so new to me, are now within the domain of
+ current science. We know that, in the Scarabaeidae, both the larva and the
+ perfect insect are endowed with a concentrated nervous system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Garden Scolia attacks Oryctes nasicornis; the Two-banded Scolia the
+ Cetonia; the Interrupted Scolia the Anoxia. All three operate below
+ ground, under the most unfavourable conditions; and all three have for
+ their victim a larva of one of the Scarabaeidae, which, thanks to the
+ exceptional arrangement of its nerve-centres, lends itself, alone of all
+ larvae, to the Wasp's successful enterprises. In the presence of this
+ underground game, so greatly varied in size and shape and yet so
+ judiciously selected to facilitate paralysis, I do not hesitate to
+ generalize and I accept, as the ration of the other Scoliae, larvae of
+ Lamellicorns whose species will be determined by future observation.
+ Perhaps one of them will be found to give chase to the terrible enemy of
+ my crops, the voracious White Worm, the grub of the Cockchafer; perhaps
+ the Hemorrhoidal Scolia, rivalling in size the Garden Scolia and like her,
+ no doubt, requiring a copious diet, will be entered in the insects' "Who's
+ Who" as the destroyer of the Pine-chafer, that magnificent Beetle, flecked
+ with white upon a black or brown ground, who of an evening, during the
+ summer solstice, browses on the foliage of the fir-trees. Though unable to
+ speak with certainty or precision, I am inclined to look upon these
+ devourers of Scarabaeus-grubs as valiant agricultural auxiliaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cetonia-larva has figured hitherto only in its quality of a paralysed
+ victim. We will now consider it in its normal state. With its convex back
+ and its almost flat ventral surface, the creature is like a semi-cylinder
+ in shape, fuller in the hinder portion. On the back, each of the segments,
+ except the last, or anal, segment, puckers into three thick pads,
+ bristling with stiff, tawny hairs. The anal segment, much wider than the
+ rest, is rounded at the end and coloured a deep brown by the contents of
+ the intestine, which show through the translucent skin; it bristles with
+ hairs like the other segments, but is level, without pads. On the ventral
+ surface, the segments have no creases; and the hairs, though abundant, are
+ rather less so than on the back. The legs, which are quite well-formed,
+ are short and feeble in comparison with the animal's size. The head has a
+ strong, horny cap for a cranium. The mandibles are powerful, with bevelled
+ tips and three or four teeth on the edge of the bevel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Its mode of locomotion marks it as an idiosyncratic, exceptional,
+ fantastic creature, having no fellow, that I know of, in the insect world.
+ Though endowed with legs&mdash;a trifle short, it is true, but after all
+ as good as those of a host of other larvae&mdash;it never uses them for
+ walking. It progresses on its back, always on its back, never otherwise.
+ By means of wriggling movements and the purchase afforded by the dorsal
+ bristles, it makes its way belly upwards, with its legs kicking the empty
+ air. The spectator to whom these topsy-turvy gymnastics are a novelty
+ thinks at first that the creature must have had a fright of some sort and
+ that it is struggling as best it can in the face of danger. He puts it
+ back on its belly; he lays it on its side. Nothing is of any use; it
+ obstinately turns over and resumes its dorsal progress. That is its manner
+ of travelling over a flat surface; it has no other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This reversal of the usual mode of walking is so peculiar to the
+ Cetonia-larva that it is enough in itself to reveal the grub's identity to
+ the least expert eyes. Dig into the vegetable mould formed by the decayed
+ wood in the hollow trunks of old willow-trees, search at the foot of
+ rotten stumps or in heaps of compost; and, if you come upon a plumpish
+ grub moving along on its back, there is no room for doubt: your discovery
+ is a Cetonia-larva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This topsy-turvy progress is fairly swift and is not less in speed to that
+ of an equally fat grub travelling on its legs. It would even be greater on
+ a polished surface, where walking on foot is hampered by incessant slips,
+ whereas the numerous hairs of the dorsal pads find the necessary support
+ by multiplying the points of contact. On polished wood, on a sheet of
+ paper and even on a strip of glass, I see my grubs moving from point to
+ point with the same ease as on a surface of garden mould. In the space of
+ one minute, on the wood of my table, they cover a distance of eight
+ inches. The pace is no swifter on a horizontal bed of sifted mould. A
+ strip of glass reduces the distance covered by one half. The slippery
+ surface only half paralyses this strange method of locomotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will now place side by side with the Cetonia-grub the larva of the
+ Morning Anoxia, the prey of the Interrupted Scolia. It is very like the
+ larva of the Common Cockchafer. It is a fat, pot-bellied grub, with a
+ thick, red cap on its head and armed with strong, black mandibles, which
+ are powerful implements for digging and cutting through roots. The legs
+ are sturdy and end in a hooked nail. The creature has a long, heavy, brown
+ paunch. When placed on the table, it lies on its side; it struggles
+ without being able to advance or even to remain on its belly or back. In
+ its usual posture it is curled up into a narrow hook. I have never seen it
+ straighten itself completely; the bulky abdomen prevents it. When placed
+ on a surface of moist sand, the ventripotent creature is no better able to
+ shift its position: curved into a fish-hook, it lies on its side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To dig into the earth and bury itself, it uses the fore-edge of its head,
+ a sort of weeding-hoe with the two mandibles for points. The legs take
+ part in this work, but far less effectually. In this way it contrives to
+ dig itself a shallow pit. Then, bracing itself against the wall of the
+ pit, with the aid of wriggling movements which are favoured by the short,
+ stiff hairs bristling all over its body, the grub changes its position and
+ plunges into the sand, but still with difficulty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apart from a few details, which are of no importance here, we may repeat
+ this sketch of the Anoxia-grub and we shall have, if the size be at least
+ quadrupled, a picture of the larva of Oryctes nasicornis, the monstrous
+ prey of the Garden Scolia. Its general appearance is the same: there is
+ the same exaggeration of the belly; the same hook-like curve; the same
+ incapacity for standing on its legs. And as much may be said of the larva
+ of Scarabaeus pentodon, a fellow-boarder of the Oryctes and the Cetonia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 5. THE PROBLEM OF THE SCOLIAE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Now that all the facts have been set forth, it is time to collate them. We
+ already know that the Beetle-hunters, the Cerceres (Cf. "The Hunting
+ Wasps": chapters 1 to 3.&mdash;Translator's Note.), prey exclusively on
+ the Weevils and the Buprestes, that is, on the families whose nervous
+ system presents a degree of concentration which may be compared with that
+ of the Scolia's victims. Those predatory insects, working in the open air,
+ are exempt from the difficulties which their emulators, working
+ underground, have to overcome. Their movements are free and are directed
+ by the sense of sight; but their surgery is confronted in another respect
+ with a most arduous problem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The victim, a Beetle, is covered at all points with a suit of armour which
+ the sting is unable to penetrate. The joints alone will allow the poisoned
+ lancet to pass. Those of the legs do not in any way comply with the
+ conditions imposed: the result of stinging them would be merely a partial
+ disorder which far from subduing the insect, would render it more
+ dangerous by irritating it yet further. A sting in the joint of the neck
+ is not admissible: it would injure the cervical ganglia and lead to death,
+ followed by putrefaction. There remains only the joint between the
+ corselet and the abdomen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sting, in entering here, has to abolish all movement with a single
+ stab, for any movement would imperil the rearing of the larva. The success
+ of the paralysis, therefore, demands that the motor ganglia, at least the
+ three thoracic ganglia, shall be packed in close contact opposite this
+ point. This determines the selection of Weevils and Buprestes, both of
+ which are so strongly armoured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But where the prey has only a soft skin, incapable of stopping the sting,
+ the concentrated nervous system is no longer necessary, for the operator,
+ versed in the anatomical secrets of her victim, knows to perfection where
+ the centres of innervation lie; and she wounds them one after another, if
+ need be from the first to the last. Thus do the Ammophilae go to work when
+ dealing with their caterpillars and the Sphex-wasps when dealing with
+ their Locusts, Ephippigers and Crickets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the Scoliae we come once again to a soft prey, with a skin penetrable
+ by the sting no matter where it be attacked. Will the tactics of the
+ caterpillar-hunters, who stab and stab again, be repeated here? No, for
+ the difficulty of movement under ground prohibits so complicated an
+ operation. Only the tactics of the paralysers of armour-clad insects are
+ practicable now, for, since there is but one thrust of the dagger, the
+ feat of surgery is reduced to its simplest terms, a necessary consequence
+ of the difficulties of an underground operation. The Scoliae, then, whose
+ destiny it is to hunt and paralyse under the soil the victuals for their
+ family, require a prey made highly vulnerable by the close assemblage of
+ the nerve-centres, as are the Weevils and Buprestes of the Cerceres; and
+ this is why it has fallen to their lot to share among them the larvae of
+ the Scarabaeidae.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before they obtained their allotted portion, so closely restricted and so
+ judiciously selected; before they discovered the precise and almost
+ mathematical point at which the sting must enter to produce a sudden and a
+ lasting immobility; before they learnt how to consume, without incurring
+ the risk of putrefaction, so corpulent a prey: in brief, before they
+ combined these three conditions of success, what did the Scoliae do?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Darwinian school will reply that they were hesitating, essaying,
+ experimenting. A long series of blind gropings eventually hit upon the
+ most favourable combination, a combination henceforth to be perpetuated by
+ hereditary transmission. The skilful co-ordination between the end and the
+ means was originally the result of an accident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chance! A convenient refuge! I shrug my shoulders when I hear it invoked
+ to explain the genesis of an instinct so complex as that of the Scoliae.
+ In the beginning, you say, the creature gropes and feels its way; there is
+ nothing settled about its preferences. To feed its carnivorous larvae it
+ levies tribute on every species of game which is not too much for the
+ huntress' power or the nurseling's appetite; its descendants try now this,
+ now that, now something else, at random, until the accumulated centuries
+ lead to the selection which best suits the race. Then habit grows fixed
+ and becomes instinct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very well. Let us agree that the Scolia of antiquity sought a different
+ prey from that adopted by the modern huntress. If the family throve upon a
+ diet now discontinued, we fail to see that the descendants had any reason
+ to change it: animals have not the gastronomic fancies of an epicure whom
+ satiety makes difficult to please. Because the race did well upon this
+ fare, it became habitual; and instinct became differently fixed from what
+ it is to-day. If, on the other hand, the original food was unsuitable, the
+ existence of the family was jeopardized; and any attempt at future
+ improvement became impossible, because an unhappily inspired mother would
+ leave no heirs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To escape falling into this twofold trap, the theorists will reply that
+ the Scoliae are descended from a precursor, an indeterminate creature, of
+ changeable habits and changing form, modifying itself in accordance with
+ its environment and with the regional and climatic conditions and
+ branching out into races each of which has become a species with the
+ attributes which distinguish it to-day. The precursor is the deus ex
+ machina of evolution. When the difficulty becomes altogether too
+ importunate, quick, a precursor, to fill up the gaps, quick, an imaginary
+ creature, the nebulous plaything of the mind! This is seeking to lighten
+ the darkness with a still deeper obscurity; to illumine the day by piling
+ cloud upon cloud. Precursors are easier to find than sound arguments.
+ Nevertheless, let us put the precursor of the Scoliae to the test.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What did she do? Being capable of everything, she did a bit of everything.
+ Among its descendants were innovators who developed a taste for tunnelling
+ in sand and vegetable mould. There they encountered the larvae of the
+ Cetonia, the Oryctes, the Anoxia, succulent morsels on which to rear their
+ families. By degrees the indeterminate Wasp adopted the sturdy proportions
+ demanded by underground labour. By degrees she learnt to stab her plump
+ neighbours in scientific fashion; by degrees she acquired the difficult
+ art of consuming her prey without killing it; at length, by degrees, aided
+ by the richness of her diet, she became the powerful Scolia with whom we
+ are familiar. Having reached this point, the species assumes a permanent
+ form, as does its instinct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here we have a multiplicity of stages, all of the slowest, all of the most
+ incredible nature, whereas the Wasp cannot found a race except on the
+ express condition of complete success from the first attempt. We will not
+ insist further upon the insurmountable objection; we will admit that, amid
+ so many unfavourable chances, a few favoured individuals survive, becoming
+ more and more numerous from one generation to the next, in proportion as
+ the dangerous art of rearing the young is perfected. Slight variations in
+ one and the same direction form a definite whole; and at long last the
+ ancient precursor has become the Scolia of our own times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the aid of a vague phraseology which juggles with the secret of the
+ centuries and the unknown things of life, it is easy to build up a theory
+ in which our mental sloth delights, after being discouraged by difficult
+ researches whose final result is doubt rather than positive statement. But
+ if, so far from being satisfied with hazy generalities and adopting as
+ current coin the terms consecrated by fashion, we have the perseverance to
+ explore the truth as far as lies in our power, the aspect of things will
+ undergo a great change and we shall discover that they are far less simple
+ than our overprecipitate views declared them to be. Generalization is
+ certainly a most valuable instrument: science indeed exists only by virtue
+ of it. Let us none the less beware of generalizations which are not based
+ upon very firm and manifold foundations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When these foundations are lacking, the child is the great generalizer.
+ For him, the feathered world consists merely of birds; the race of
+ reptiles merely of snakes, the only difference being that some are big and
+ some are little. Knowing nothing, he generalizes in the highest degree; he
+ simplifies, in his inability to perceive the complex. Later he will learn
+ that the Sparrow is not the Bullfinch, that the Linnet is not the
+ Greenfinch; he will particularize and to a greater degree each day, as his
+ faculty of observation becomes more fully trained. In the beginning he saw
+ nothing but resemblances; he now sees differences, but still not plainly
+ enough to avoid incongruous comparisons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his adult years he will almost to a certainty commit zoological
+ blunders similar to those which my gardener retails to me. Favier, an old
+ soldier, has never opened a book, for the best of reasons. He barely knows
+ how to cipher: arithmetic rather than reading is forced upon us by the
+ brutalities of life. Having followed the flag over three-quarters of the
+ globe, he has an open mind and a memory crammed with reminiscences, which
+ does not prevent him, when we chat about animals, from making the most
+ crazy assertions. For him the Bat is a Rat that has grown wings; the
+ Cuckoo is a Sparrow-hawk retired from business; the Slug is a Snail who
+ has lost his shell with the advance of years; the Nightjar (Known also as
+ the Goatsucker, because of the mistaken belief that the bird sucks the
+ milk of Goats, and, in America, as the Whippoorwill.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), the Chaoucho-grapaou, as he calls her, is an elderly Toad, who,
+ becoming enamoured of milk-food, has grown feathers, so that she may enter
+ the byres and milk the Goats. It is impossible to drive these fantastic
+ ideas out of his head. Favier himself, as will be seen, is an evolutionist
+ after his own fashion, an evolutionist of a very daring type. In
+ accounting for the origin of animals nothing gives him pause. He has a
+ reply to everything: "this" comes from "that." If you ask him why, he
+ answers:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Look at the resemblance!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shall we reproach him with these insanities, when we hear another, misled
+ by the Monkey's build, acclaim the Pithecanthropus as man's precursor?
+ Shall we reject the metamorphosis of the Chaoucho-grapaou, when people
+ tell us in all seriousness that, in the present stage of scientific
+ knowledge, it is absolutely proved that man is descended from some
+ rough-hewn Ape? Of the two transformations, Favier's strikes me as the
+ more credible. A painter of my acquaintance, a brother of the great
+ composer Felicien David (Felicien Cesar David (1810-1876). His chief work
+ was the choral symphony "Le Desert":&mdash;Translator's Note.), favoured
+ me one day with his reflections on the human structure:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ve, moun bel ami," he said. "Ve, l'home a lou dintre d'un por et lou
+ defero d'uno mounino." "See, my dear friend, see: man has the inside of a
+ pig and the outside of a monkey."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I recommend the painter's aphorism to those who might like to discover
+ man's origin in the Hog when the Ape has gone out of fashion. According to
+ David, descent is proved by internal resemblances:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "L'home a lou dintre d'un por."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inventory of precursory types sees nothing but organic resemblances
+ and disdains the differences of aptitude. By consulting only the bones,
+ the vertebrae, the hair, the nervures of the wings, the joints of the
+ antennae, the imagination may build up any sort of genealogical tree that
+ will fit with our theories of classification, for, when all is said, the
+ animal, in its widest generalization, is represented by a digestive tube.
+ With this common factor, the way lies open to every kind of error. A
+ machine is judged not by this or that train of wheels, but by the nature
+ of the work accomplished. The monumental roasting-jack of a waggoners' inn
+ and a Breguet chronometer both have trains of cogwheels geared in almost a
+ similar fashion. (Louis Breguet (1803-1883), a famous Parisian watchmaker
+ and physicist.&mdash;Translator's Note.) Are we to class the two
+ mechanisms together? Shall we forget that the one turns a shoulder of
+ mutton before the hearth, while the other divides time into seconds?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same way, the organic scaffolding is dominated from on high by the
+ aptitudes of the animal, especially that superior characteristic, the
+ psychical aptitudes. That the Chimpanzee and the hideous Gorilla possess
+ close resemblances of structure to our own is obvious. But let us for a
+ moment consider their aptitudes. What differences, what a dividing gulf!
+ Without exalting ourselves as high as the famous reed of which Pascal
+ speaks, that reed which, in its weakness, by the mere fact that it knows
+ itself to be crushed, is superior to the world that crushes it, we may at
+ least ask to be shown, somewhere, an animal making an implement, which
+ will multiply its skill and its strength, or taking possession of fire,
+ the primordial element of progress. (Blaise Pascal(1623-1662). The
+ allusion is to a passage in the philosopher's "Pensees." Pascal describes
+ man as a reed, the weakest thing in nature, but "a thinking reed."&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) Master of implements and of fire! These two aptitudes, simple
+ though they be, characterize man better than the number of his vertebrae
+ and his molars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You tell us that man, at first a hairy brute, walking on all fours, has
+ risen on his hind-legs and shed his fur; and you complacently demonstrate
+ how the elimination of the hairy pelt was effected. Instead of bolstering
+ up a theory with a handful of fluff gained or lost, it would perhaps be
+ better to settle how the original brute became the possessor of implements
+ and fire. Aptitudes are more important than hair; and you neglect them
+ because it is there that the insurmountable difficulty really resides. See
+ how the great master of evolution hesitates and stammers when he tries, by
+ fair means or foul, to fit instinct into the mould of his formulae. It is
+ not so easy to handle as the colour of the pelt, the length of the tail,
+ the ear that droops or stands erect. Yes, our master well knows that this
+ is where the shoe pinches! Instinct escapes him and brings his theory
+ crumbling to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us return to what the Scoliae teach us on this question, which
+ incidentally touches on our own origin. In conformity with the Darwinian
+ ideas, we have accepted an unknown precursor, who by dint of repeated
+ experiment, adopted as the victuals to be hoarded the larvae of the
+ Scarabaeidae. This precursor, modified by varying circumstances, is
+ supposed to have subdivided herself into ramifications, one of which,
+ digging into vegetable mould and preferring the Cetonia to any other game
+ inhabiting the same heap, became the Two-banded Scolia; another, also
+ addicted to exploring the soil, but selecting the Oryctes, left as its
+ descendant the Garden Scolia; and a third, establishing itself in sandy
+ ground, where it found the Anoxia, was the ancestress of the Interrupted
+ Scolia. To these three ramifications we must beyond a doubt add others
+ which complete the series of the Scolia. As their habits are known to me
+ only by analogy, I confine myself to mentioning them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three species at least, therefore, with which I am familiar would
+ appear to be derived from a common precursor. To traverse the distance
+ from the starting-point to the goal, all three have had to contend with
+ difficulties, which are extremely grave if considered one by one and are
+ aggravated even more by this circumstance, that the overcoming of one
+ would lead to nothing unless the others were surmounted as successfully.
+ Success, then, is contingent upon a series of conditions, each one of
+ which offers almost no chance of victory, so that the fulfilment of them
+ all becomes a mathematical absurdity if we are to invoke accident alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, in the first place, how was it that the Scolia of antiquity, having
+ to provide rations for her carnivorous family, adopted for her prey only
+ those larvae which, owing to the concentration of their nervous systems,
+ form so remarkable and so rare an exception in the insect order? What
+ chance would hazard offer her of obtaining this prey, the most suitable of
+ all because the most vulnerable? The chance represented by unity compared
+ with the indefinite number of entomological species. The odds are as one
+ to immensity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us continue. The larva of the Scarabaeid is snapped up underground,
+ for the first time. The victim protests, defends itself after its fashion,
+ coils itself up and presents to the sting on every side a surface on which
+ a wound entails no serious danger. And yet the Wasp, an absolute novice,
+ has to select, for the thrust of its poisoned weapon, one single point,
+ narrowly restricted and hidden in the folds of the larva's body. If she
+ miscalculates, she may be killed: the larva, irritated by the smarting
+ puncture, is strong enough to disembowel her with the tusks of its
+ mandibles. If she escapes the danger, she will nevertheless perish without
+ leaving any offspring, since the necessary provisions will be lacking.
+ Salvation for herself and her race depends on this: whether at the first
+ thrust she is able to reach the little nervous plexus which measures
+ barely one-fiftieth of an inch in width. What chance has she of plunging
+ her lancet into it, if there is nothing to guide her? The chance
+ represented by unity compared with the number of points composing the
+ victim's body. The odds are as one against immensity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us proceed still further. The sting has reached the mark; the fat grub
+ is deprived of movement. At what spots should the egg now be laid? In
+ front, behind, on the sides, the back or the belly? The choice is not a
+ matter of indifference. The young grub will pierce the skin of its
+ provender at the very spot on which the egg was fixed; and, once an
+ opening is made, it will go ahead without hesitation. If this point of
+ attack is ill-chosen, the nurseling runs the risk of presently finding
+ under its mandibles some essential organ, which should have been respected
+ until the end in order to keep the victuals fresh. Remember how difficult
+ it is to complete the rearing when the tiny larva is moved from the place
+ chosen by the mother. The game promptly becomes putrid and the Scolia
+ dies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible for me to state the precise motives which lead to the
+ adoption of the spot on which the egg is laid; I can perceive general
+ reasons, but the details escape me, as I am not well enough versed in the
+ more delicate questions of anatomy and entomological physiology. What I do
+ know with absolute certainty is that the same spot is invariably chosen
+ for laying the egg. With not a single exception, on all the victims
+ extracted from the heap of garden mould&mdash;and they are numerous&mdash;the
+ egg is fixed behind the ventral surface, on the verge of the brown patch
+ formed by the contents of the digestive system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there be nothing to guide her, what chance has the mother of gluing her
+ egg to this point, which is always the same because it is that most
+ favourable to successful rearing? A very small point, represented by the
+ ratio of two or three square millimetres (About 1/100 square inch.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) to the entire surface of the victim's body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is this all? Not yet. The grub is hatched; it pierces the belly of the
+ Cetonia-larva at the requisite point; it plunges its long neck into the
+ entrails, ransacking them and filling itself to repletion. If it bite at
+ random, if it have no other guide in the selection of tit-bits than the
+ preference of the moment and the violence of an imperious appetite, it
+ will infallibly incur the danger of being poisoned by putrid food, for the
+ victim, if wounded in those organs which preserve a remnant of life in it,
+ will die for good and all at the first mouthfuls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ample joint must be consumed with prudent skill: this part must be
+ eaten before that and, after that, some other portion, always according to
+ method, until the time approaches for the last bites. This marks the end
+ of life for the Cetonia, but it also marks the end of the Scolia's
+ feasting. If the grub be a novice in the art of eating, if no special
+ instinct guide its mandibles in the belly of the prey, what chance has it
+ of completing its perilous meal? As much as a starving Wolf would have of
+ daintily dissecting his Sheep, when he tears at her gluttonously, rends
+ her into shreds and gulps them down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These four conditions of success, with chance so near to zero in each
+ case, must all be realized together, or the grub will never be reared. The
+ Scolia may have captured a larva with close-packed nerve-centres, a
+ Cetonia-grub, for instance; but this will go for nothing unless she direct
+ her sting towards the only vulnerable point. She may know the whole secret
+ of the art of stabbing her victim, but this means nothing if she does not
+ know where to fasten her egg. The suitable spot may be found, but all the
+ foregoing will be useless if the grub be not versed in the method to be
+ followed in devouring its prey while keeping it alive. It is all or
+ nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who would venture to calculate the final chance on which the future of the
+ Scolia, or of her precursor, is based, that complex chance whose factors
+ are four infinitely improbable occurrences, one might almost say four
+ impossibilities? And such a conjunction is supposed to be a fortuitous
+ result, to which the present instinct is due! Come, come!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From another point of view again, the Darwinian theory is at variance with
+ the Scoliae and their prey. In the heap of garden mould which I exploited
+ in order to write this record, three kinds of larvae dwell together,
+ belonging to the Scarabaeid group: the Cetonia, the Oryctes and Scarabeus
+ pentodon. Their internal structure is very nearly similar; their food is
+ the same, consisting of decomposing vegetable matter; their habits are
+ identical: they live underground in tunnels which are frequently renewed;
+ they make a rough egg-shaped cocoon of earthy materials. Environment,
+ diet, industry and internal structure are all similar; and yet one of
+ these three larvae, the Cetonia's, reveals a most singular dissimilarity
+ from its fellow-trenchermen: alone among the Scarabaeidae and, more than
+ that, alone in all the immense order of insects, it walks upon its back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the differences were a matter of a few petty structural details,
+ falling within the finical department of the classifier, we might pass
+ them over without hesitation; but a creature that turns itself upside down
+ in order to walk with its belly in the air and never adopts any other
+ method of locomotion, though it possesses legs and good legs at that,
+ assuredly deserves examination. How did the animal acquire its fantastic
+ mode of progress and why does it think fit to walk in a fashion the exact
+ contrary of that adopted by other beasts?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To these questions the science now in fashion always has a reply ready:
+ adaptation to environment. The Cetonia-larva lives in crumbling galleries
+ which it bores in the depths of the soil. Like the sweep who obtains a
+ purchase with his back, loins and knees to hoist himself up the narrow
+ passage of a chimney, it gathers itself up, applies the tip of its belly
+ to one wall of its gallery and its sturdy back to another; and the
+ combined effort of these two levers results in moving it forward. The
+ legs, which are used very little, indeed hardly at all, waste away and
+ tend to disappear, as does any organ which is left unemployed; the back,
+ on the other hand, the principal motive agent, grows stronger, is furrowed
+ with powerful folds and bristles with grappling-hooks or hairs; and
+ gradually, by adaptation to its environment, the creature loses the art of
+ walking, which it does not practise, and replaces it by that of crawling
+ on its back, a form of progress better suited to underground corridors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far so good. But now tell me, if you please, why the larvae of the
+ Oryctes and the Scarabaeus, living in vegetable mould, the larva of the
+ Anoxia, dwelling in the sand, and the larva of the Cockchafer in our
+ cultivated fields have not also acquired the faculty of walking on their
+ backs? In their galleries they follow the chimney-sweep's methods quite as
+ cleverly as the Cetonia-grub; to move forward they make valiant use of
+ their backs without yet having come to ambling with their bellies in the
+ air. Can they have neglected to accommodate themselves to the demands of
+ their environment? If evolution and environment cause the topsy-turvy
+ progress of the one, I have the right, if words have any meaning whatever,
+ to demand as much of the others, since their organization is so much alike
+ and their mode of life identical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have but little respect for theories which, when confronted with two
+ similar cases, are unable to interpret the one without contradicting the
+ other. They make me laugh when they become merely childish. For example:
+ why has the tiger a coat streaked black and yellow? A matter of
+ environment, replies one of our evolutionary masters. Ambushed in bamboo
+ thickets where the golden radiance of the sun is intersected by stripes of
+ shadow cast by the foliage, the animal, the better to conceal itself,
+ assumed the colour of its environment. The rays of the sun produced the
+ tawny yellow of the coat; the stripes of shadow added the black bars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there you have it. Any one who refuses to accept the explanation must
+ be very hard to please. I am one of these difficult persons. If it were a
+ dinner-table jest, made over the walnuts and the wine, I would willingly
+ sing ditto; but alas and alack, it is uttered without a smile, in a solemn
+ and magisterial manner, as the last word in science! Toussenel, in his
+ day, asked the naturalists an insidious question. (Alphonse Toussenel
+ (1803-1885), the author of a number of learned and curious works on
+ ornithology.&mdash;Translator's Note.) Why, he enquired, have Ducks a
+ little curly feather on the rump? No one, so far as I know, had an answer
+ for the teasing cross-examiner: evolution had not been invented then. In
+ our time the reason why would be forthcoming in a moment, as lucid and as
+ well-founded as the reason why of the tiger's coat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Enough of childish nonsense. The Cetonia-grub walks on its back because it
+ has always done so. The environment does not make the animal; it is the
+ animal that is made for the environment. To this simple philosophy, which
+ is quite antiquated nowadays, I will add another, which Socrates expressed
+ in these words:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What I know best is that I know nothing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 6. THE TACHYTES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The family of Wasps whose name I inscribe at the head of this chapter has
+ not hitherto, so far as I know, made much noise in the world. Its annals
+ are limited to methodical classifications, which make very poor reading.
+ The happy nations, men say, are those which have no history. I accept
+ this, but I also admit that it is possible to have a history without
+ ceasing to be happy. In the conviction that I shall not disturb its
+ prosperity, I will try to substitute the living, moving insect for the
+ insect impaled in a cork-bottomed box.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been adorned with a learned name, derived from the Greek Tachytes,
+ meaning rapidity, suddenness, speed. The creature's godfather, as we see,
+ had a smattering of Greek; its denomination is none the less unfortunate:
+ intended to instruct us by means of a characteristic feature, the name
+ leads us astray. Why is speed mentioned in this connection? Why a label
+ which prepares the mind for an exceptional velocity and announces a race
+ of peerless coursers? Nimble diggers of burrows and eager hunters the
+ Tachytes are, to be sure, but they are no better than a host of rivals.
+ Not the Sphex, nor the Ammophila, nor the Bembex, nor many another would
+ admit herself beaten in either flying or running. At the nesting-season,
+ all this tiny world of huntresses is filled with astounding activity. The
+ quality of a speedy worker being common to all, none can boast of it to
+ the exclusion of the rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had I had a vote when the Tachytes was christened, I should have suggested
+ a short, harmonious, well-sounding name, meaning nothing else than the
+ thing meant. What better, for example, than the term Sphex? The ear is
+ satisfied and the mind is not corrupted by a prejudice, a source of error
+ to the beginner. I have not nearly as much liking for Ammophila, which
+ represents as a lover of the sands an animal whose establishments call for
+ compact soil. In short, if I had been forced, at all costs, to concoct a
+ barbarous appellation out of Latin or Greek in order to recall the
+ creature's leading characteristic, I should have attempted to say, a
+ passionate lover of the Locust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Love of the Locust, in the broader sense of the Orthopteron, an exclusive,
+ intolerant love, handed down from mother to daughter with a fidelity which
+ the centuries fail to impair, this, yes, this indeed depicts the Tachytes
+ with greater accuracy than a name smacking of the race-course. The
+ Englishman has his roast-beef; the German his sauerkraut; the Russian his
+ caviare; the Neapolitan his macaroni; the Piedmontese his polenta; the man
+ of Carpentras his tian. The Tachytes has her Locust. Her national dish is
+ also that of the Sphex, with whom I boldly associate her. The methodical
+ classifier, who works in cemeteries and seems to fly the living cities,
+ keeps the two families far removed from each other because of
+ considerations and attaching to the nervures of the wings and the joints
+ of the palpi. At the risk of passing for a heretic, I bring them together
+ at the suggestion of the menu-card.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To my own knowledge, my part of the country possesses five species, one
+ and all addicted to a diet of Orthoptera. Panzer's Tachytes (T. Panzeri,
+ VAN DER LIND), girdled with red at the base of the abdomen, must be pretty
+ rare. I surprise her from time to time working on the hard roadside banks
+ and the trodden edges of the footpaths. There, to a depth of an inch at
+ most, she digs her burrows, each isolated from the rest. Her prey is an
+ adult, medium-sized Acridian (Locust or Grasshopper.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), such as the White-banded Sphex pursues. The captive of the one
+ would not be despised by the other. Gripped by the antennae, according to
+ the ritual of the Sphex, the victim is trailed along on foot and laid
+ beside the nest, with the head pointing towards the opening. The pit,
+ prepared in advance, is closed for the time being with a tiny flagstone
+ and some bits of gravel, in order to avoid either the invasion of a
+ passer-by or obstruction by landslips during the huntress' absence. A like
+ precaution is taken by the White-banded Sphex. Both observe the same diet
+ and the same customs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Tachytes clears the entrance to the home and goes in alone. She
+ returns, puts out her head and, seizing her prey by the antennae,
+ warehouses it by dragging backwards. I have repeated, at her expense, the
+ tricks which I used to play on the Sphex. (For the author's experiments
+ with the Languedocian, the Yellow-winged and the White-edged Sphex, cf.
+ "The Hunting Wasps": chapter 11.&mdash;Translator's Note.) While the
+ Tachytes is underground, I move the game away. The insect comes up again
+ and sees nothing at its door; it comes out and goes to fetch its Locust,
+ whom it places in position as before. This done, it goes in again by
+ itself. In its absence I once more pull back the prey. Fresh emergence of
+ the Wasp, who puts things to rights and persists in going down again,
+ still by herself, however often I repeat the experiment. Yet it would be
+ very easy for her to put an end to my teasing: she would only have to
+ descend straightway with her game, instead of leaving it for a moment on
+ her doorstep. But, faithful to the usages of her race, she behaves as her
+ ancestors behaved before her, even though the ancient custom happen to be
+ unprofitable. Like the Yellow-winged Sphex, whom I have teased so often
+ during her cellaring-operations, she is a narrow conservative, learning
+ nothing and forgetting nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us leave her to do her work in peace. The Locust disappears
+ underground and the egg is laid upon the breast of the paralysed insect.
+ That is all: one carcase for each cell, no more. The entrance is stopped
+ at last, first with stones, which will prevent the trickling of the
+ embankment into the chamber; next with sweepings of dust, under which
+ every vestige of the subterranean house disappears. It is now done: the
+ Tachytes will come here no more. Other burrows will occupy her,
+ distributed at the whim of her vagabond humour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A cell provisioned before my eyes on the 22nd of August, in one of the
+ walls in the harmas, contained the finished cocoon a week later. (The
+ harmas was the piece of enclosed waste land in which the author used to
+ study 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.) I have not noted many examples of so rapid a development. This
+ cocoon recalls, in its shape and texture, that of the Bembex-wasps. It is
+ hard and mineralized, this is to say, the warp and woof of silk are hidden
+ by a thick encrustation of sand. This composite structure seems to me
+ characteristic of the family; at all events I find it in the three species
+ whose cocoons I know. If the Tachytes are nearly related to the Spheges in
+ diet, they are far removed from them in the industry of their larvae. The
+ first are workers in mosaic, encrusting a network of silk and sand; the
+ second weave pure silk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of smaller size and clad in black with trimmings of silvery down on the
+ edge of the abdominal segments, the Tarsal Tachytes frequents the ledges
+ of soft limestone in fairly populous colonies. (T. tarsina, LEP.)
+ (According to M. J. Perez, to whom I submitted the Wasp of which I am
+ about to speak, this Tachytes might well be a new species, if it is not
+ Lepelletier's T. tarsina or its equivalent, Panzer's T. unicolor. Any one
+ wishing to clear up this point will always recognize the quarrelsome
+ insect by its behaviour. A minute description seems useless to me in the
+ type of investigation which I am pursuing.&mdash;Author's Note.) August
+ and September are the season of her labours. Her burrows, very close to
+ one another when an easily-worked vein presents itself, afford an ample
+ harvest of cocoons once the site is discovered. In a certain gravel-pit in
+ the neighbourhood, with vertical walls visited by the sun, I have been
+ able within a short space of time to collect enough to fill the hollow of
+ my hand completely. They differ from the cocoons of the preceding species
+ only in their smaller size. The provisions consist of young Acridians,
+ varying from about a quarter to half an inch in length. The adult insect
+ does not appear in the assorted bags of game, being no doubt too tough for
+ the feeble grub. All the carcases consist of Locust-larvae, whose budding
+ wings leave the back uncovered and put one in mind of the short skirts of
+ a skimpy jacket. Small so that it may be tender, the game is numerous so
+ that it may suffice all needs. I count from two to four carcases to a
+ cell. When the time comes we will discover the reason for these
+ differences in the rations served.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mantis-killing Tachytes wears a red scarf, like her kinswoman,
+ Panzer's Tachytes. (The Mantis-hunting Tachytes was submitted to
+ examination by M. J. Perez, who failed to recognize her. This species may
+ well be new to our fauna. I confine myself to calling her the
+ Mantis-killing Tachytes and leave to the specialists the task of adorning
+ her with a Latin name, if it be really the fact that the Wasp is not yet
+ catalogued. I will be brief in my delineation. To my thinking the best
+ description is this: mantis-hunter. With this information it is impossible
+ to mistake the insect, in my district of course. I may add that it is
+ black, with the first two abdominal segments, the legs and the tarsi a
+ rusty red. Clad in the same livery and much smaller than the female, the
+ male is remarkable for his eyes, which are of a beautiful lemon-yellow
+ when he is alive. The length is nearly half an inch for the female and a
+ little more than half this for the male.&mdash;Author's Note.) I do not
+ think that she is very widely distributed. I made her acquaintance in the
+ Serignan woods, where she inhabits, or rather used to inhabit&mdash;for I
+ fear that I have depopulated and even destroyed the community by my
+ repeated excavations&mdash;where she used to inhabit one of those little
+ mounds of sand which the wind heaps up against the rosemary clumps.
+ Outside this small community, I never saw her again. Her history, rich in
+ incident, will be given with all the detail which it deserves. I will
+ confine myself for the moment to mentioning her rations, which consist of
+ Mantis-larvae, those of the Praying Mantis predominating. (Cf. "The Life
+ of the Grasshopper": chapters 6 to 9.&mdash;Translator's Note.) My lists
+ record from three to sixteen heads for each cell. Once again we note a
+ great inequality of rations, the reason for which we must try to discover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What shall I say of the Black Tachytes (T. nigra, VAN DER LIND) that I
+ have not already said in telling the story of the Yellow-winged Sphex?
+ ("The Hunting Wasps": chapters 4 to 6.&mdash;Translator's Note.) I have
+ there described her contests with the Sphex, whose burrow she seems to me
+ to have usurped; I show her dragging along the ruts in the roads a
+ paralysed Cricket, seized by the hauling-ropes, his antennae; I speak of
+ her hesitations, which lead me to suspect her for a homeless vagabond, and
+ finally on her surrender of her game, with which she seems at once
+ satisfied and embarrassed. Save for the dispute with the Sphex, an unique
+ event in my records as observer, I have seen all the rest many a time, but
+ never anything more. The Black Tachytes, though the most frequent of all
+ in my neighbourhood, remains a riddle to me. I know nothing of her
+ dwelling, her larvae, her cocoons, her family-arrangements. All that I can
+ affirm, judging by the invariable nature of the prey which one sees her
+ dragging along, is that she must feed her larvae on the same non-adult
+ Cricket that the Yellow-winged Sphex chooses for hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is she a poacher, a pillager of other's property, or a genuine huntress?
+ My suspicions are persistent, though I know how chary a man should be of
+ suspicions. At one time I had my doubts about Panzer's Tachytes, whom I
+ grudged a prey to which the White-banded Sphex might have laid claim.
+ To-day I have no such doubts: she is an honest worker and her game is
+ really the result of her hunting. While waiting for the truth to be
+ revealed and my suspicions set aside, I will complete the little that I
+ know of her by noting that the Black Tachytes passes the winter in the
+ adult form and away from her cell. She hibernates, like the Hairy
+ Ammophila. In warm, sheltered places, with low, perpendicular, bare banks,
+ dear to the Wasps, I am certain of finding her at any time during the
+ winter, however briefly I investigate the earthen surface, riddled with
+ galleries. I find the Tachytes cowering singly in the hot oven formed by
+ the end of a tunnel. If the temperature be mild and the sky clear, she
+ emerges from her retreat in January and February and comes to the surface
+ of the bank to see whether spring is making progress. When the shadows
+ fall and the heat decreases, she reenters her winter-quarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Anathema Tachytes (T. anathema, VAN DER LIND), the giant of her race,
+ almost as large as the Languedocian Sphex and, like her, decorated with a
+ red scarf round the base of the abdomen, is rarer than any of her
+ congeners. I have come upon her only some four or five times, as an
+ isolated individual and always in circumstances which will tell us of the
+ nature of her game with a probability that comes very near to certainty.
+ She hunts underground, like the Scoliae. In September I see her go down
+ into the soil, which has been loosened by a recent light shower; the
+ movement of the earth turned over keeps me informed of her subterranean
+ progress. She is like the Mole, ploughing through a meadow in pursuit of
+ his White Worm. She comes out farther on, nearly a yard from the spot at
+ which she went in. This long journey underground has taken her only a few
+ minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is this due to extraordinary powers of excavation on her part? By no
+ means: the Anathema Tachytes is an energetic tunneller, no doubt, but,
+ after all, is incapable of performing so great a labour in so short a
+ time. If the underground worker is so swift in her progress, it is because
+ the track followed has already been covered by another. The trail is ready
+ prepared. We will describe it, for it is clearly defined before the
+ intervention of the Wasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the surface of the ground, for a length of two paces at most, runs a
+ sinuous line, a beading of crumbled soil, roughly the width of my finger.
+ From this line of ramifications (others) shoot out to left and right, much
+ shorter and irregularly distributed. One need not be a great entomological
+ scholar to recognize, at the first glance, in these pads of raised earth,
+ the trail of a Mole-cricket, the Mole among insects. It is the
+ Mole-cricket who, seeking for a root to suit her, has excavated the
+ winding tunnel, with investigation-galleries grafted to either side of the
+ main road. The passage is free therefore, or at most blocked by a few
+ landslips, of which the Tachytes will easily dispose. This explains her
+ rapid journey underground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what does she do there? For she is always there, in the few
+ observations which chance affords me. A subterranean excursion would not
+ attract the Wasp if it had no object. And its object is certainly the
+ search for some sort of game for her larvae. The inference becomes
+ inevitable: the Anathema Tachytes, who explores the Mole-cricket's
+ galleries, gives her larvae this same Mole-cricket as their food. Very
+ probably the specimen selected is a young one, for the adult insect would
+ be too big. Besides, to this consideration of quantity is added that of
+ quality. Young and tender flesh is highly appreciated, as witness the
+ Tarsal Tachytes, the Black Tachytes and the Mantis-killing Tachytes, who
+ all three select game that is not yet made tough by age. It goes without
+ saying that the moment the huntress emerged from the ground I proceeded to
+ dig up the track. The Mole-cricket was no longer there. The Tachytes had
+ come too late; and so had I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, how right was I to define the Tachytes as a Locust lover! What
+ constancy in the gastronomic rules of the race! And what tact in varying
+ the game, while keeping within the order of the Orthoptera! What have the
+ Locust, the Cricket, the Praying Mantis and the Mole-cricket in common, as
+ regards their general appearance? Why, absolutely nothing! None of us, if
+ he were unfamiliar with the delicate associations dictated by anatomy,
+ would think of classing them together. The Tachytes, on the other hand,
+ makes no mistake. Guided by her instinct, which rivals the science of a
+ Latreille, she groups them all together. (Pierre Andre Latreille
+ (1762-1833), one of the founders of entomological science, a professor at
+ the Musee d'histoire naturelle and member of the Academie des sciences.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This instinctive taxonomy becomes more surprising still if we consider the
+ variety of the game stored in a single burrow. The Mantis-killing
+ Tachytes, for instance, preys indiscriminately upon all the Mantides that
+ occur in her neighbourhood. I see her warehousing three of them, the only
+ varieties, in fact, that I know in my district. They are the following:
+ the Praying Mantis (M. religiosa, LIN.), the Grey Mantis (Ameles decolor,
+ CHARP. (Cf. "The Life of the Grasshopper": chapter 10.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)) and the Empusa (E. pauperata, LATR. (Cf. idem: chapter 9.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)). The numerical predominance in the Tachytes' cells belongs to the
+ Praying Mantis; and the Grey Mantis occupies second place. The Empusa, who
+ is comparatively rare on the brushwood in the neighbourhood, is also rare
+ in the store-houses of the Wasp; nevertheless her presence is repeated
+ often enough to show that the huntress appreciates the value of this prey
+ when she comes across it. The three sorts of game are in the larval state,
+ with rudimentary wings. Their dimensions, which vary a good deal,
+ fluctuate between two-fifths and four-fifths of an inch in length.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Praying Mantis is a bright green; she boasts an elongated prothorax
+ and an alert gait. The other Mantis is ash-grey. Her prothorax is short
+ and her movements heavy. The coloration therefore is no guide to the
+ huntress, any more than the gait. The green and the grey, the swift and
+ the slow are unable to baffle her perspicacity. To her, despite the great
+ difference in appearance, the two victims are Mantes. And she is right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what are we to say of the Empusa? The insect world, at all events in
+ our parts, contains no more fantastic creature. The children here, who are
+ remarkable for finding names which really depict the animal, call the
+ larva "the Devilkin." It is indeed a spectre, a diabolical phantom worthy
+ of the pencil of a Callot. (Jacques Callot (1592-1635), the French
+ engraver and painter, famous for the grotesque nature of his subjects.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) There is nothing to beat it in the extravagant medley of figures in
+ his "Temptation of Saint Anthony." Its flat abdomen, scalloped at the
+ edges, rises into a twisted crook; its peaked head carries on the top two
+ large, divergent, tusk-shaped horns; its sharp, pointed face, which can
+ turn and look to either side, would fit the wily purpose of some
+ Mephistopheles; its long legs have cleaver-like appendages at the joints,
+ similar to the arm-pieces which the knights of old used to bear upon their
+ elbows. Perched high upon the shanks of its four hind-legs, with its
+ abdomen curled, its thorax raised erect, its front-legs, the traps and
+ implements of warfare, folded against its chest, it sways limply from side
+ to side, on the tip of the bough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Any one seeing it for the first time in its grotesque pose will give a
+ start of surprise. The Tachytes knows no such alarm. If she catches sight
+ of it, she seizes it by the neck and stabs it. It will be a treat for her
+ children. How does she manage to recognize in this spectre the near
+ relation of the Praying Mantis? When frequent hunting-expeditions have
+ familiarized her with the last-named and suddenly, in the midst of the
+ chase, she encounters the Devilkin, how does she become aware that this
+ strange find makes yet another excellent addition to her larder? This
+ question, I fear, will never receive an adequate reply. Other huntresses
+ have already set us the problem; others will set it to us again. I shall
+ return to it, not to solve it, but to show even more plainly how obscure
+ and profound it is. But we will first complete the story of the
+ Mantis-killing Tachytes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colony which forms the subject of my investigations is established in
+ a mound of fine sand which I myself cut into, a couple of years ago, in
+ order to unearth a few Bembex larvae. The entrances to the Tachytes'
+ dwelling open upon the little upright bank of the section. At the
+ beginning of July the work is in full swing. It must have been going on
+ already for a week or two, for I find very forward larvae, as well as
+ recent cocoons. There are here, digging into the sand or returning from
+ expeditions with their booty, some hundred females, whose burrows, all
+ very close to one another, cover an area of barely a square yard. This
+ hamlet, small in extent, but nevertheless densely populated, shows us the
+ Mantis-slayer under a moral aspect which is not shared by the Locust
+ slayer, Panzer's Tachytes, who resembles her so closely in costume. Though
+ engaged in individual tasks, the first seeks the society of her kind, as
+ do certain of the Sphex-wasps, while the second establishes herself in
+ solitude, after the fashion of the Ammophila. Neither the personal form
+ nor the nature of the occupation determines sociability.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crouching voluptuously in the sun, on the sand at the foot of the bank,
+ the males lie waiting for the females, to plague them as they pass. They
+ are ardent lovers, but cut a poor figure. Their linear dimensions are
+ barely half those of the other sex, which implies a volume only one-eighth
+ as great. At a short distance they appear to wear on their heads a sort of
+ gaudy turban. At close quarters this headgear is seen to consist of the
+ eyes, which are very large and a bright lemon-yellow and which almost
+ entirely surround the head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At ten o'clock in the morning, when the heat begins to grow intolerable to
+ the observer, there is a continual coming and going between the burrows
+ and the tufts of grass, everlasting, thyme and wormwood, which constitute
+ the Tachytes' hunting-grounds within a moderate radius. The journey is so
+ short that the Wasp brings her game home on the wing, usually in a single
+ flight. She holds it by the fore-part, a very judicious precaution, which
+ is favourable to rapid stowage in the warehouse, for then the Mantis' legs
+ stretch backwards, along the axis of the body, instead of folding and
+ projecting sideways, when their resistance would be difficult to overcome
+ in a narrow gallery. The lanky prey dangles beneath the huntress, all
+ limp, lifeless and paralysed. The Tachytes, still flying, alights on the
+ threshold of the home and immediately, contrary to the custom of Panzer's
+ Tachytes, enters with her prey trailing behind her. It is not unusual for
+ a male to come upon the scene at the moment of the mother's arrival. He is
+ promptly snubbed. This is the time for work, not for amusement. The
+ rebuffed male resumes his post as a watcher in the sun; and the housewife
+ stows her provisions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she does not always do so without hindrance. Let me recount one of the
+ misadventures of this work of storage. There is in the neighbourhood of
+ the burrows a plant which catches insects with glue. It is the Oporto
+ silene (S. portensis), a curious growth, a lover of the sea-side dunes,
+ which, though of Portuguese origin, as its name would seem to indicate,
+ ventures inland, even as far as my part of the country, where it
+ represents perhaps a survivor of the coastal flora of what was once a
+ Pliocene sea. The sea has disappeared; a few plants of its shores have
+ remained behind. This Silene carries in most of its internodes, in those
+ both of the branches and of the main stalk, a viscous ring, two- to
+ four-fifths of an inch wide, sharply delimited above and below. The
+ coating of glue is of a pale brown. Its stickiness is so great that the
+ least touch is enough to hold the object. I find Midges, Plant-lice and
+ Ants caught in it, as well as tufted seeds which have blown from the
+ capitula of the Cichoriaceae. A Gad-fly, as big as a Blue bottle, falls
+ into the trap before my eyes. She has barely alighted on the perilous
+ perch when lo, she is held by the hinder tarsi! The Fly makes violent
+ efforts to take wing; she shakes the slender plant from top to bottom. If
+ she frees her hinder tarsi she remains snared by the front tarsi and has
+ to begin all over again. I was doubting the possibility of her escape
+ when, after a good quarter of an hour's struggle, she succeeded in
+ extricating herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, where the Gad-fly has got off, the Midge remains. The winged Aphis
+ also remains, the Ant, the Mosquito and many another of the smaller
+ insects. What does the plant do with its captures? Of what use are these
+ trophies of corpses hanging by a leg or a wing? Does the vegetable
+ bird-limer, with its sticky rings, derive advantage from these
+ death-struggles? A Darwinian, remembering the carnivorous plants, would
+ say yes. As for me, I don't believe a word of it. The Oporto silene is
+ ringed with bands of gum. Why? I don't know. Insects are caught in these
+ snares. Of what use are they to the plant? Why, none at all; and that's
+ all about it. I leave to others, bolder than myself, the fantastic idea of
+ taking these annular exudations for a digestive fluid which will reduce
+ the captured Midges to soup and make them serve to feed the Silene. Only I
+ warn them that the insects sticking to the plant do not dissolve into
+ broth, but shrivel, quite uselessly, in the sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us return to the Tachytes, who is also a victim of the vegetable
+ snare. With a sudden flight, a huntress arrives, carrying her drooping
+ prey. She grazes the Silene's lime-twigs too closely. Behold the Mantis
+ caught by the abdomen. For twenty minutes at least the Wasp, still on the
+ wing, tugs at her, tugging again and again, to overcome the cause of the
+ hitch and release the spoil. The hauling-method, a continuation of the
+ flight, comes to nothing; and no other is attempted. At last the insect
+ wearies and leaves the Mantis hanging to the Silene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now or never was the moment for the intervention of that tiny glimmer of
+ reason which Darwin so generously grants to animals. Do not, if you
+ please, confound reason with intelligence, as people are too prone to do.
+ I deny the one; and the other is incontestable, within very modest limits.
+ It was, I said, the moment to reason a little, to discover the cause of
+ the hitch and to attack the difficulty at its source. For the Tachytes the
+ matter was of the simplest. She had but to grab the body by the skin of
+ the abdomen immediately above the spot caught by the glue and to pull it
+ towards her, instead of persevering in her flight without releasing the
+ neck. Simple though this mechanical problem was, the insect was unable to
+ solve it, because she was not able to trace the effect back to the cause,
+ because she did not even suspect that the stoppage had a cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ants doting on sugar and accustomed to cross a foot-bridge in order to
+ reach the warehouse are absolutely prevented from doing so when the bridge
+ is interrupted by a slight gap. They would only need a few grains of sand
+ to fill the void and restore the causeway. They do not for a moment dream
+ of it, plucky navvies though they be, capable of raising miniature
+ mountains of excavated soil. We can get them to give us an enormous cone
+ of earth, an instinctive piece of work, but we shall never obtain the
+ juxtaposition of three grains of sand, a reasoned piece of work. The Ant
+ does not reason, any more than the Tachytes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you bring up a tame Fox and set his platter of food before him, this
+ creature of a thousand tricks confines himself to tugging with all his
+ might at the leash which keeps him a step or two from his dinner. He pulls
+ as the Tachytes pulls, exhausts himself in futile efforts and then lies
+ down, with his little eyes leering fixedly at the dish. Why does he not
+ turn round? This would increase his radius; and he could reach then the
+ food with his hind-foot and pull it towards him. The idea never occurs to
+ him. Yet another animal deprived of reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friend Bull, my Dog, is no better-endowed, despite his quality as a
+ candidate for humanity. In our excursions through the woods, he happens to
+ get caught by the paw in a wire snare set for rabbits. Like the Tachytes,
+ he tugs at it obstinately and only pulls the noose tighter. I have to
+ release him when he does not himself succeed in snapping the wire by his
+ hard pulling. When he tries to leave the room, if the two leaves of the
+ door are just ajar, he contents himself with pushing his muzzle, like a
+ wedge, into the too narrow aperture. He moves forward, pushing in the
+ direction which he wishes to take. His simple, dog-like method has one
+ unfailing result: the two leaves of the door, when pushed, merely shut
+ still closer. It would be easy for him to pull one of them towards him
+ with his paw, which would make the passage wider; but this would be a
+ movement backward, contrary to his natural impulse; and so he does not
+ think of it. Yet another creature that does not reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Tachytes, who stubbornly persists in tugging at her limed Mantis and
+ refuses to acknowledge any other method of wresting her from the Silene's
+ snare, shows us the Wasp in an unflattering light. What a very poor
+ intellect! The insect becomes only the more wonderful, therefore, when we
+ consider its supreme talent as an anatomist. Many a time I have insisted
+ upon the incomprehensible wisdom of instinct; I do so again at the risk of
+ repeating myself. An idea is like a nail: it is not to be driven in save
+ by repeated blows. By hitting it again and again, I hope to make it enter
+ the most rebellious brains. This time I shall attack the problem from the
+ other end, that is, I shall first allow human knowledge to have its say
+ and shall then interrogate the insect's knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The outward structure of the Praying Mantis would of itself be enough to
+ teach us the arrangement of the nerve-centres which the Tachytes has to
+ injure in order to paralyse its victim, which is destined to be devoured
+ alive but harmless. A narrow and very long prothorax divides the front
+ pair of legs from the two hinder pairs. There must therefore be an
+ isolated ganglion in front and two ganglia, close to each other, about
+ two-fifths of an inch back. Dissection confirms this forecast completely.
+ It shows us three fairly bulky thoracic ganglia, arranged in the same
+ manner as the legs. The first which actuates the fore-legs, is placed
+ opposite their roots. It is the largest of the three. It is also the most
+ important, for it presides over the insect's weapons, over the two
+ powerful arms, toothed like saws and ending in harpoons. The other two,
+ divided from the first by the whole length of the prothorax, each face the
+ origin of the corresponding legs; consequently they are very near each
+ other. Beyond them are the abdominal ganglia, which I pass over in
+ silence, as the operating insect does not have to trouble about them. The
+ movements of the belly are mere pulsations and are in no way dangerous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now let us do a little reasoning on behalf of our non-reasoning insect.
+ The sacrificer is weak; the victim is comparatively powerful. Three
+ strokes of the lancet must abolish all offensive movement. Where will the
+ first stroke be delivered? In front is a real engine of warfare, a pair of
+ powerful shears with toothed jaws. Let the fore-arm close upon the upper
+ arm; and the imprudent insect, crushed between the two saw-blades, will be
+ torn to pieces; wounded by the terminal hook, it will be eviscerated. This
+ ferocious mechanism is the great danger; it is this that must be mastered
+ at the outset, at the risk of life; the rest is less urgent. The first
+ blow of the stylet, cautiously directed, is therefore aimed at the lethal
+ fore-legs, which imperil the vivisector's own existence. Above all, there
+ must be no hesitation. The blow must be accurate then and there, or the
+ sacrificer will be caught in the vice and perish. The two other pairs of
+ legs present no danger to the operator, who might neglect them if she had
+ only her own security to think of; but the surgeon is operating with a
+ view to the egg, which demands complete immobility in the provisions.
+ Their centres of innervation will therefore be stabbed as well, with the
+ leisure which the Mantis, now put out of action, permits. These legs, as
+ well as their nervous centres, are situated very far behind the first
+ point attacked. There is a long neutral interval, that of the prothorax,
+ into which it is quite useless to drive the sting. This interval has to be
+ crossed; by a backward movement conforming with the secrets of the
+ victim's internal anatomy, the second ganglion must be reached and then
+ its neighbour, the third. In short, the surgical operation may be
+ formulated thus: a first stab of the lancet in front; a considerable
+ movement to the rear, measuring about two-fifths of an inch; lastly, two
+ lancet-thrusts at two points very close together. Thus speaks the science
+ of man; thus counsels reason, guided by anatomical structure. Having said
+ this much let us observe the insect's practice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no difficulty about seeing the Tachytes operate in our presence;
+ we have only to resort to the method of substitution, which has already
+ done me so much service, that is, to deprive the huntress of her prey and
+ at once to give her, in exchange, a living Mantis of about the same size.
+ This substitution is impracticable with the majority of the Tachytes, who
+ reach the threshold of their dwelling in a single flight and at once
+ vanish underground with their game. A few of them, from time to time,
+ harassed perhaps by their burden, chance to alight at a short distance
+ from their burrow, or even drop their prey. I profit by these rare
+ occasions to witness the tragedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dispossessed Wasp recognizes instantly, from the proud bearing of the
+ substituted Mantis, that she is no longer embracing and carrying off an
+ inoffensive carcase. Her hovering, hitherto silent, develops a buzz,
+ perhaps to overawe the victim; her flight becomes an extremely rapid
+ oscillation, always behind the quarry. It is as who should say the quick
+ movement of a pendulum swinging without a wire to hang from. The Mantis,
+ however, lifts herself boldly upon her four hind-legs; she raises the
+ fore-part of her body, opens, closes and again opens her shears and
+ presents them threateningly at the enemy; using a privilege which no other
+ insect shares, she turns her head this way and that, as we do when we look
+ over our shoulders; she faces her assailant, ready to strike a return blow
+ wheresoever the attack may come. It is the first time that I have
+ witnessed such defensive daring. What will be the outcome of it all?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Wasp continues to oscillate behind the Mantis, in order to avoid the
+ formidable grappling-engine; then, suddenly, when she judges that the
+ other is baffled by the rapidity of her manoeuvres, she hurls herself upon
+ the insect's back, seizes its neck with her mandibles, winds her legs
+ round its thorax and hastily delivers a first thrust of the sting, to the
+ front, at the root of the lethal legs. Complete success! The deadly shears
+ fall powerless. The operator then lets herself slip as she might slide
+ down a pole, retreats along the Mantis' back and, going a trifle lower,
+ less than a finger's breadth, she stops and paralyses, this time without
+ hurrying herself, the two pairs of hind-legs. It is done: the patient lies
+ motionless; only the tarsi quiver, twitching in their last convulsions.
+ The sacrificer brushes her wings for a moment and polishes her antennae by
+ passing them through her mouth, an habitual sign of tranquillity returning
+ after the emotions of the conflict; she seizes the game by the neck, takes
+ it in her legs and flies away with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What do you say to it all? Do not the scientist's theory and the insect's
+ practice agree most admirably? Has not the animal accomplished to
+ perfection what anatomy and physiology enabled us to foretell? Instinct, a
+ gratuitous attribute, an unconscious inspiration, rivals knowledge, that
+ most costly acquisition. What strikes me most is the sudden recoil after
+ the first thrust of the sting. The Hairy Ammophila, operating on her
+ caterpillar, likewise recoils, but progressively, from one segment to the
+ next. Her deliberate surgery might receive a quasi-explanation if we
+ ascribe it to a certain uniformity. With the Tachytes and the Mantis this
+ paltry argument escapes us. Here are no lancet-pricks regularly
+ distributed; on the contrary, the operating-method betrays a lack of
+ symmetry which would be inconceivable, if the organization of the patient
+ did not serve as a guide. The Tachytes therefore knows where her prey's
+ nerve-centres lie; or, to speak more correctly, she behaves as though she
+ knew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This science which is unconscious of itself has not been acquired, by her
+ and by her race, through experiments perfected from age to age and habits
+ transmitted from one generation to the next. It is impossible, I am
+ prepared to declare a hundred times, a thousand times over, it is
+ absolutely impossible to experiment and to learn an art when you are lost
+ if you do not succeed at the first attempt. Don't talk to me of atavism,
+ of small successes increasing by inheritance, when the novice, if he
+ misdirected his weapon, would be crushed in the trap of the two saws and
+ fall a prey to the savage Mantis! The peaceable Locust, if missed,
+ protests against the attack with a few kicks; the carnivorous Mantis, who
+ is in the habit of feasting on Wasps far more powerful than the Tachytes,
+ would protest by eating the bungler; the game would devour the hunter, an
+ excellent catch. Mantis-paralysing is a most perilous trade and admits of
+ no half-successes; you have to excel in it from the first, under pain of
+ death. No, the surgical art of the Tachytes is not an acquired art. Whence
+ then does it come, if not from the universal knowledge in which all things
+ move and have their being!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What would happen if, in exchange for her Praying Mantis, I were to give
+ the Tachytes a young Grasshopper? In rearing insects at home, I have
+ already noted that the larvae put up very well with this diet; and I am
+ surprised that the mother does not follow the example of the Tarsal
+ Tachytes and provide her family with a skewerful of Locusts instead of the
+ risky prey which she selects. The diet would be practically the same; and
+ the terrible shears would no longer be a danger. With such a patient would
+ her operating-method remain the same; should we again see a sudden recoil
+ after the first stab under the neck; or would the vivisector modify her
+ art in conformity with the unfamiliar nervous organization?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This second alternative is highly improbable. It would be nonsense to
+ expect to see the paralyser vary the number and the distribution of the
+ wounds according to the genus of the victim. Supremely skilled in the task
+ that has fallen to its lot, the insect knows nothing further.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first alternative seems to offer a certain chance and deserves a test.
+ I offer the Tachytes, deprived of her Mantis, a small Grasshopper, whose
+ hind-legs I amputate to prevent his leaping. The disabled Acridian jogs
+ along the sand. The Wasp flies round him for a moment, casts a
+ contemptuous glance upon the cripple and withdraws without attempting
+ action. Let the prey offered be large or small, green or grey, short or
+ long, rather like the Mantis or quite different, all my efforts miscarry.
+ The Tachytes recognizes in an instant that this is no business of hers;
+ this is not her family game; she goes off without even honouring my
+ Grasshoppers with a peck of her mandibles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This stubborn refusal is not due to gastronomical causes. I have stated
+ that the larvae reared by my own hands feed on young Grasshoppers as
+ readily as on young Mantes; they do not seem to perceive any difference
+ between the two dishes; they thrive equally on the game chosen by me and
+ that selected by the mother. If the mother sets no value on the
+ Grasshopper, what then can be the reason of her refusal? I can see only
+ one: this quarry, which is not hers, perhaps inspires her with fear, as
+ any unknown thing might do; the ferocious Mantis does not alarm her, but
+ the peaceable Grasshopper terrifies her. And then, if she were to overcome
+ her apprehensions, she does not know how to master the Acridian and, above
+ all, how to operate upon him. To every man his trade, to every Wasp her
+ own way of wielding her sting. Modify the conditions ever so slightly; and
+ these skilful paralysers are at an utter loss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To every insect also its own art of fashioning the cocoon, an art which
+ varies greatly, an art in which the larva displays all the resources of
+ its instincts. The Tachytes, the Bembeces, the Stizi, the Palari and other
+ burrowers build composite cocoons, hard as fruit-stones, formed of an
+ encrustation of sand in a network of silk. We are already acquainted with
+ the work of the Bembex. I will recall the fact that their larva first
+ weaves a conical, horizontal bag of pure white silk, with wide meshes,
+ held in place by interlaced threads which fix it to the walls of the cell.
+ I have compared this bag, because of its shape, with a fishtrap. Without
+ leaving this hammock, stretching its neck through the orifice, the worker
+ gathers from without a little heap of sand, which it stores inside its
+ workshop. Then, selecting the grains one by one, it encrusts them all
+ around itself in the fabric of the bag and cements them with the fluid
+ from its spinnerets, which hardens at once. When this task is finished,
+ the house has still to be closed, for it has been wide open all this time
+ to permit of the renewal of the store of sand as the heap inside becomes
+ exhausted. For this purpose a cap of silk is woven across the opening and
+ finally encrusted with the materials which the larva has retained at its
+ disposal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Tachytes builds in quite another fashion, although its work, once
+ finished, does not differ from that of the Bembex. The larva surrounds
+ itself, to begin with, about the middle of its body with a silken girdle
+ which a number of threads, very irregularly distributed, hold in place and
+ connect with the walls of the cell. Sand is collected, within reach of the
+ worker, on this general scaffolding. Then begins the work of minor
+ masonry, with grains of sand for rubble and the secretion of the
+ spinnerets for cement. The first course is laid upon the fore-edge of the
+ suspensory ring. When the circle is completed, a second course of grains
+ of sand, stuck together by the fluid silk, is raised upon the hardened
+ edge of what has just been done. Thus the work proceeds, by ring-shaped
+ courses, laid edge to edge, until the cocoon, having acquired half of its
+ proper length, is rounded into a cap and finally is closed. The
+ building-methods of the Tachytes-larva remind me of a mason constructing a
+ round chimney, a narrow tower of which he occupies the centre. Turning on
+ his own axis and using the materials placed to his hand, he encloses
+ himself little by little in his sheath of masonry. In the same way the
+ worker encloses itself in its mosaic. To build the second half of the
+ cocoon, the larva turns round and builds in the same way on the other edge
+ of the original ring. In about thirty-six hours the solid shell is
+ completed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am rather interested to see the Bembex and the Tachytes, two workers in
+ the same guild, employ such different methods to achieve the same result.
+ The first begins by weaving an eel-trap of pure silk and next encrusts the
+ grains of sand inside; the second, a bolder architect, is economical of
+ the silk envelope, confines itself to a hanging girdle and builds course
+ by course. The building-materials are the same: sand and silk; the
+ surroundings amid which the two artisans work are the same: a cell in a
+ soil of sandy gravel; yet each of the builders possesses its individual
+ art, its own plan, its one method.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nature of the food has no more effect upon the larva's talents than
+ the environment in which it lives or the materials employed. The proof of
+ this is furnished by Stiza ruficornis, another builder of cocoons in
+ grains of sand cemented with silk. This sturdy Wasp digs her burrows in
+ soft sandstone. Like the Mantis-killing Tachytes, she hunts the various
+ Mantides of the countryside, consisting mainly of the Praying Mantis; only
+ her large size requires them to be more fully developed, without however
+ having attained the form and the dimensions of the adult. She places three
+ to five of them in each cell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In solidity and volume her cocoon rivals that of the largest Bembex; but
+ it differs from it, at first sight, by a singular feature of which I know
+ no other example. From the side of the shell, which is uniformly smoothed
+ on every side, a rough knob protrudes, a little clod of sand stuck on to
+ the rest. The work of Stizus ruficornis can at once be recognized, among
+ all the other cocoons of a similar nature, by this protuberance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Its origin will be explained by the method which the larva follows in
+ constructing its strong-box. At the beginning, a conical bag is woven of
+ pure white silk; you might take it for the initial eel-trap of the
+ Bembeces, only this bag has two openings, a very wide one in front and
+ another, very narrow one at the side. Through the front opening the Stizus
+ provides itself with sand as and when it spends this material on
+ encrusting the interior. This strengthens the cocoon; and the cap which
+ closes it is made next. So far it is exactly like the work of the Bembex.
+ We now have the worker enclosed, engaged in perfecting the inner wall. For
+ these final touches a little more sand is needed. It obtains it from
+ outside by means of the aperture which it has taken the precaution of
+ contriving in the side of its building, a narrow dormer-window just large
+ enough to allow its slender neck to pass. When the store has been taken
+ in, this accessory orifice, which is used only during the last few
+ moments, is closed with a mouthful of mortar, thrust outward from within.
+ This forms the irregular nipple which projects from the side of the shell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the present I shall not expatiate further upon Stizus ruficornis,
+ whose complete biography would be out of place in this chapter. I will
+ limit myself to mentioning its method of constructing strong-boxes in
+ order to compare it with that of the Bembex and above all with that of the
+ Tachytes, a consumer, like itself, of Praying Mantes. From this parallel
+ it seems to me to follow that the conditions of life in which men see
+ to-day the origin of instincts&mdash;the type of food, the surroundings
+ amid which the larval life is passed, the materials available for a
+ defensive wrapper and other factors which the evolutionists are accustomed
+ to invoke&mdash;have no actual influence upon the larva's industry. My
+ three architects in glued sand, even when all the conditions, down to the
+ nature of the provisions, are the same, adopt different means to execute
+ an identical task. They are engineers who have not graduated from the same
+ school, who have not been educated on the same principles, though the
+ lesson of things is almost the same for all of them. The workshop, the
+ work, the provisions have not determined the instinct. The instinct comes
+ first; it lays down laws instead of being subject to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 7. CHANGE OF DIET.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Brillat-Savarin, when pronouncing his famous maxim, "Tell me what you eat
+ and I will tell you what you are," certainly never suspected the signal
+ confirmation which the entomological world would bestow upon his saying.
+ Our gastrosopher was speaking only of the culinary caprices of man
+ rendered fastidious by the sweets of life; but he might, in a more serious
+ department of thought, have given his formula a wider and more general
+ bearing and applied it to the dishes which vary so greatly according to
+ latitude, climate and customs; he might above all have taken into his
+ reckoning the harsh realities suffered by the common people, when perhaps
+ his ideal of moral worth would have been found in a platter of chick-peas
+ oftener than in a pot of pate de foie gras. No matter: his aphorism, the
+ mere whimsical sally of an epicure, becomes an imperious truth if we
+ forget the luxury of the table and look into what is eaten by the little
+ world which swarms around us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To each its mess. The cabbage Pieris consumes the pungent leaves of the
+ Cruciferae as the food of her infancy; the Silkworm disdains any foliage
+ other than that of the mulberry-tree. The Spurge Hawk-moth requires the
+ caustic milk-sap of the tithymals: the Corn-weevil the grain of wheat; the
+ Pea-weevil, the seeds of the Leguminosae; the Balaninus (A genus of
+ Beetles including the Acorn-weevil, the Nut-weevil and others.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) the hazel-nut, the chestnut, the acorn; the Brachycera (A division
+ of Flies including the Gad-flies and Robber-flies.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) the clove of garlic. Each has its diet, each its plant; and each
+ plant has its customary guests. Their relations are so precise that in
+ many cases one might determine the insect by the vegetable which supports
+ it, or the vegetable by the insect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you know the lily, you may name as a Crioceris the tiny scarlet
+ Scarabaeid that inhabits it and peoples its leaves with larvae which keep
+ themselves cool beneath an overcoat of ordure. (For the Lily-beetle, or
+ Crioceris merdigera, cf. "The Glow-worm and Other Beetles," by J. Henri
+ Fabre, translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chapters 16 and 17.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) If you know the Crioceris, you may name as a lily the plant which
+ she devastates. It will not perhaps be the common or white lily, but some
+ other representative of the same family&mdash;Turk's cap lily, orange
+ lily, scarlet Martagon, lancifoliate lily, tiger-spotted lily, golden lily&mdash;hailing
+ from the Alps or the Pyrenees, or brought from China or Japan. Relying on
+ the Crioceris, who is an expert judge of exotic as well as of native
+ Liliaceae, you may name as a lily the plant with which you are
+ unacquainted and trust the word of this singular botanical master. Whether
+ the flower be red, yellow, ruddy-brown or sown with crimson spots,
+ characteristics so unlike the immaculate whiteness of the familiar flower,
+ do not hesitate, adopt the name dictated by the Beetle. Where man is
+ liable to mistake the insect is never mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This insect botany, a cause of such grievous tribulations, has always
+ impressed the worker in the fields, who for all that, is a very
+ indifferent observer. The man who was the first to see his cabbage-plot
+ devastated by caterpillars made the acquaintance of the Pieris. Science
+ completed the process, in its desire to serve a useful purpose or merely
+ to seek truth for truth's sake; and to-day the relations between the
+ insect and the plant form a collection of records as important from the
+ philosophical as from the practical, agricultural point of view. What is
+ much less familiar to us, because it touches us less nearly, is the
+ zoology of the insect, that is to say, the selection which it makes, to
+ feed its larva, of this or that animal species, to the exclusion of
+ others. The subject is so vast that a volume were not sufficient to
+ exhaust it; besides, data are lacking in the vast majority of cases. It is
+ reserved for a still very distant future to raise this point of biology to
+ the level already reached by the question of vegetable diet. It will be
+ enough if I contribute a few observations scattered through my writings or
+ my notes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What does the Wasp addicted to a predatory life eat, of course in the
+ larval state? Now, to begin with, we see natural sections which adopt as
+ their prey different species of one and the same order, in one and the
+ same group. Thus the Ammophilae hunt exclusively the larvae of the
+ night-flying Moths. This taste is shared by the Eumenes, a very different
+ genus. (Cf. "The Mason-wasps" by J. Henri Fabre, translated by Alexander
+ Teixeira de Mattos: chapter 1.&mdash;Translator's Note.) The Spheges and
+ Tachytes are addicted to Orthoptera; the Cerceres, apart from a few
+ exceptions, are faithful to the Weevil; both the Philanthi and the Palari
+ capture only Hymenoptera; the Pompili specialize in hunting the Spider;
+ the Astata revels in the flavour of Bugs; the Bembeces want Flies and
+ nothing else; the Scoliae enjoy the monopoly of the Lamellicorn-grubs; the
+ Pelopaei favour the young Epeirae (Or Garden Spiders. Cf. "The Life of the
+ Spider": chapters 9 to 14 and appendix.&mdash;Translator's Note.), the
+ Stizi vary in opinion: of the two in my neighbourhood, one, S. ruficornis,
+ fills her larder with Mantes and the other, S. tridentatus, fills it with
+ Cicadellae (Cf. "The Life of the Grasshopper": chapter 20.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.); lastly, the Crabronidae (Any Flies akin to the House-fly.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.). levy tribute upon the rabble of the Muscidae. (Hornets.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Already you see what a magnificent classification of these game-hunters
+ might be made with a faithfully listed bill of fare. Natural groups stand
+ out, characterized merely by the identity of their victuals. I trust that
+ the methodical science of the future will take account of these
+ gastronomic laws, to the great relief of the entomological novice, who is
+ too often hampered by the snares of the mouth-parts, the antennae and the
+ nervures of the wings. I call for a classification in which the insect's
+ aptitudes, its diet, its industry and its habits shall take precedence of
+ the shape of a joint in its antennae. It will come; but when?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If from generalities we descend to details, we shall see that the very
+ species may, in many instances, be determined from the nature of its
+ victuals. The number of burrows of Philanthus apivorus which I have
+ inspected since I have been rummaging the hot roadside embankments, to
+ enquire into their population, would seem hyperbolical were I able to
+ state the figures. (For the Bee-eating Philanthus cf. Chapter 10 of the
+ present volume.&mdash;Translator's Note.) They must amount, it seems to
+ me, to thousands. Well, in this multitude of food-stores, whether recent
+ or ancient, uncovered for a purpose or encountered by chance, I have not
+ once, not as often as once, discovered other remains than those of the
+ Hive-bee: the imperishable wings, still connected in pairs, the cranium
+ and thorax enveloped in a violet shroud, the winding-sheet which time
+ throws over these relics. To-day as when I was a beginner, ever so long
+ ago; in the north as in the south of the country which I explored; in
+ mountainous regions as on the plains, the Philanthus follows an unvarying
+ diet: she must have the Hive-bee, always the Bee and never any other,
+ however closely various other kinds of game resemble the Bee in quality.
+ If, therefore, when exploring sunny banks, you find beneath the soil a
+ small parcel of mutilated Bees, that will be enough to point to the
+ existence of a local colony of Philanthus apivorus. She alone knows the
+ recipe for making potted Bee-meat. The Crioceris was but now teaching us
+ all about the lily family; and here the mildewed body of the Bee tells us
+ of the Philanthus and her lair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Similarly the female Ephippiger helps us to identify the Languedocian
+ Sphex: her relics, the cymbals and the long sabre, are the unmistakable
+ sign of the cocoon to which they adhere. The black Cricket, with his
+ red-braided thighs, is the infallible label of the Yellow-winged Sphex;
+ the larva of Oryctes nasicornis tells us of the Garden Scolia as certainly
+ as the best description; the Cetonia-grub proclaims the Two-banded Scolia
+ and the larva of the Anoxia announces the Interrupted Scolia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After these exclusive ones, who disdain to vary their meals, let us
+ mention the eclectics, who, in a group which is generally well-defined,
+ are able to select among different kinds of game appropriate to their
+ bulk. The Great Cerceris (Cerceris tuberculata. Cf. "The Hunting Wasps":
+ chapters 2 and 3.&mdash;Translator's Note.) favours above all Cleonus
+ ophthalmicus, one of the largest of our Weevils; but at need she accepts
+ the other Cleoni, as well as the kindred genera, provided that the capture
+ be of an imposing size. Cerceris arenaria (Cf. idem: chapter 1.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) extends her hunting-grounds farther afield: any Weevil of average
+ dimensions is to her a welcome capture. The Buprestis-hunting Cerceris
+ adopts all the Buprestes indiscriminately, so long as they are not beyond
+ her strength. The Crowned Philanthus (P. coronatus, FAB.) fills her
+ underground warehouses with Halicti chosen among the biggest. (Cf.
+ "Bramble-bees and Others" by J. Henri Fabre, translated by Alexander
+ Teixeira de Mattos: chapters 12 to 14.&mdash;Translator's Note.) Much
+ smaller than her kinswoman, Philanthus raptor, LEP., stores away Halicti
+ chosen among the less large species. Any adult Acridian approaching an
+ inch in length suits the White-banded Sphex. The various tidae of the
+ neighbourhood are admitted to the larder of Stizus ruficornis and of the
+ Mantis-hunting Tachytes on the sole condition of being young and tender.
+ The largest of our Bembeces (B. rostrata, FAB., and B. bidentata, VAN DER
+ LIND (For the Rostrate Bembex and the Two-pronged Bembex, cf. "The Hunting
+ Wasps": chapter 14.&mdash;Translator's Note.)) are eager consumers of
+ Gad-flies. With these chief dishes they associate relishes levied
+ indifferently from the rest of the Fly clan. The Sandy Ammophila (A.
+ sabulosa, VAN DER LIND (Cf. idem: chapter 13.&mdash;Translator's Note.))
+ and the Hairy Ammophila (A. hirsuta, KIRB.) cram into each burrow a single
+ but corpulent caterpillar, always of the Moth tribe and varying greatly in
+ coloration, which denotes distinct species. The Silky Ammophila (A.
+ holosericea, VAN DER LIND. (Cf. idem: chapter 14.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)) has a better assorted diet. She requires for each banqueter three
+ or four items, which include the Measuring-worms, or Loopers, and the
+ caterpillars of ordinary Moths, all of which are equally appreciated. The
+ Brown-winged Solenius (S. fascipennis, LEP.), who elects to dwell in the
+ soft dead wood of old willow-trees, has a marked preference for Virgil's
+ Bee, Eristalis tenax (Actually the Common Drone-fly and somewhat
+ resembling a Bee in appearance. Cf. "The Hunting Wasps": chapter 14.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), willingly adding, sometimes as a side-dish, sometimes as the
+ principal game, Helophilus pendulus, whose costume is very different. On
+ the faith of indistinguishable remains, we must no doubt enter a number of
+ other Flies in her game-book. The Golden-mouthed Hornet (Crabro
+ chrysostomus, LEP.) another burrower in old willow-trees, prefers the
+ Syrphi, without distinction of species. (The Syrphi, like the Eristales,
+ resemble Bees through having the abdomen transversely banded with yellow.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) The Wandering Solenius (S. vagus, LEP. (For this Fly-hunting insect
+ cf. "Bramble-bees and Others": chapters 1 and 3.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)), an inmate of the dry bramble-stems and of the dwarf-elder, lays
+ under contribution for her larder the genera Syritta, Sphaerophoria,
+ Sarcophaga, Syrphus, Melanophora, Paragus and apparently many others. The
+ species which recurs most frequently in my notes is Syritta pipiens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without pursuing this tedious list any farther, we plainly perceive the
+ general result. Each huntress has her characteristic tastes, so much so
+ that, when we know the bill of fare, we can tell the genus and very often
+ the species of the guest, thus proving the proud truth of the maxim, "Tell
+ me what you eat and I will tell you what you are."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are some which always need the same prey. The offspring of the
+ Languedocian Sphex religiously consume the Ephippiger, that family dish so
+ dear to their ancestors and no less dear to their descendants; no
+ innovation in the ancient usages can tempt them. Others are better suited
+ by variety, for reasons connected with flavour or with facility of supply;
+ but then the selection of the game is kept within fixed limits. A natural
+ group, a genus, a family, more rarely almost a whole order: this is the
+ hunting-ground beyond which poaching is strictly forbidden. The law is
+ absolute; and one and all scrupulously refrain from transgressing it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the place of the Praying Mantis, offer the Mantis-hunting Tachytes an
+ equivalent in the shape of a Locust. She will scorn the morsel, though it
+ would seem to be of excellent flavour, seeing that Panzer's Tachytes
+ prefers it to any other form of game. Offer her a young Empusa, who
+ differs so widely from the Mantis in shape and colour: she will accept
+ without hesitation and operate before your eyes. Despite its fantastic
+ appearance, the Devilkin is instantly recognized by the Tachytes as a
+ Mantid and therefore as game falling within her scope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In exchange for her Cleonus, give to the Great Cerceris a Buprestis, the
+ delight of one of her near kinsfolk. She will have nothing to say to the
+ sumptuous dish. Accept that! She, a Weevil-eater! Never in this world!
+ Present her with a Cleonus of a different species, or any other large
+ Weevil, of a sort which she has most probably never seen before, since it
+ does not figure on the inventory of the provisions in her burrows. This
+ time there is no show of disdain: the victim is seized and stabbed in the
+ regulation manner and forthwith stored away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Try to persuade the Hairy Ammophila that Spiders have a nutty flavour, as
+ Lalande asserts; and you will see how coldly your hints are received.
+ (Joseph Jerome Le Francois de Lalande (1732-1807), the astronomer. Even
+ after he had achieved his reputation, he sought means, outside the domain
+ of science, to make himself talked about and found these in the display
+ partly of odd tastes, such as that for eating Spiders and caterpillars,
+ and partly of atheistical opinions.&mdash;Translator's Note.) Try merely
+ to convince her that the caterpillar of a Butterfly is as good to eat as
+ the caterpillar of a Moth. You will not succeed. But, if you substitute
+ for her underground larva, which I suppose to be grey, another underground
+ larva striped with black, yellow, rusty-red or any other tint, this change
+ of coloration will not prevent her from recognizing, in the substituted
+ dish, a victim to her liking, an equivalent of her Grey Worm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So with the rest, so far as I have been able to experiment with them. Each
+ obstinately refuses what is alien to her hunting-preserves, each accepts
+ whatever belongs to them, always provided that the game substituted is
+ much the same in size and development as that whereof the owner has been
+ deprived. Thus the Tarsal Tachytes, an appreciative epicure of tender
+ flesh, would not consent to replace her pinch of young Acridian-grubs with
+ the one big Locust that forms the food of Panzer's Tachytes; and the
+ latter, in her turn, would never exchange her adult Acridian for the
+ other's menu of small fry. The genus and the species are the same, but the
+ age differs; and this is enough to decide the question of acceptance or
+ refusal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When its depredations cover a somewhat extensive group, how does the
+ insect manage to recognize the genera, the species composing her allotted
+ portion and to distinguish them from the rest with an assured vision which
+ the inventory of her burrows proves never to be at fault? Is it the
+ general appearance that guides her? No, for in some Bembex-burrows we
+ shall find Sphaerophoriae, those slender, thong-like creatures, and
+ Bombylii, looking like velvet pincushions; no again, for in the pits of
+ the Silky Ammophila we shall see, side by side, the caterpillar of the
+ ordinary shape and the Measuring-worm, a living pair of compasses which
+ progresses by alternately opening out and closing; no, once more, for in
+ the storerooms of Stizus ruficornis and the Mantis-hunting Tachytes we see
+ stacked beside the Mantis the Empusa, her unrecognizable caricature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it the colouring? Not at all. There is no lack of instances. What a
+ variety of hues and metallic reflections, distributed in a host of
+ different fashions, appear in the Buprestes that are hunted by the
+ Cerceris celebrated by Leon Dufour. (Jean Marie Leon Dufour (1780-1865)
+ was an army surgeon who served with distinction in several campaigns and
+ subsequently practised as a doctor in the Landes. He attained great
+ eminence as a naturalist. Cf. "The Hunting Wasps": chapter 1; also "The
+ Life of the Spider": chapter 1.&mdash;Translator's Note.) A painter's
+ palette, containing crushed gold, bronze, ruby and amethyst, would find it
+ difficult to rival these sumptuous colours. Nevertheless the Cerceris
+ makes no mistake: all this nation of insects, so indifferently attired,
+ represents to her, as to the entomologist, the nation of the Buprestes.
+ The inventory of the Hornet's larder will include Diptera clad in grey or
+ russet frieze; others are girdled with yellow, flecked with white, adorned
+ with crimson lines; others are steel-blue, ebony black, or coppery green;
+ and underneath this variety of dissimilar costumes we find the invariable
+ Fly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us take a concrete example. Ferrero's Cerceris (C. Ferreri, VAN DER
+ LIND) consumes Weevils. Her burrows are usually lined with Phynotomi and
+ Sitones both an indeterminate grey, and Otiorhynchi, black or
+ tan-coloured. Now I have sometimes happened to unearth from her cells a
+ collection of veritable jewels which, thanks to their bright metallic
+ lustre, made a most striking contrast with the sombre Otiorhynchus. These
+ were the Rhynchites (R. betuleti), who roll the vine-leaves into cigars.
+ Equally magnificent, some of them were azure blue, others copper gilt, for
+ the cigar-roller has a twofold colouring. How did the Cerceris manage to
+ recognize in these jewels the Weevil, the near relative of the vulgar
+ Phynotomus? Any such encounters probably found her lacking in expert
+ knowledge; her race cannot have handed down to her other than very
+ indeterminate propensities, for she does not appear to make frequent use
+ of the Rhynchites, as is proved by my infrequent discovery of them amid
+ the mass of my numerous excavations. For the first time, perhaps, passing
+ through a vineyard, she saw the rich Beetle gleaming on a leaf; it was not
+ for her a dish in current consumption, consecrated by the ancient usages
+ of the family. It was something novel, exceptional, extraordinary. Well,
+ this extraordinary creature is recognized with certainty as a Weevil and
+ stored away as such. The glittering cuirass of the Rhynchites goes to take
+ its place beside the grey cloak of the Phynotomus. No, it is not the
+ colour that guides the choice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither is it the shape. Cerceris arenaria hunts any medium-sized Weevil.
+ I should be putting the reader's patience to too great a test if I
+ attempted to give in this place a complete inventory of the specimens
+ identified in her larder. I will mention only two, which my latest
+ searches around my village have revealed. The Wasp goes hunting on the
+ holm-oaks of the neighbouring hills the Pubescent Brachyderes (B.
+ pubescens) and the Acorn-weevil (Balaninus glandium). What have these two
+ Beetles in common as regards shape? I mean by shape not the structural
+ details which the classifier examines through his magnifying-glass, not
+ the delicate features which a Latreille would quote when drawing up a
+ technical description, but the general picture, the general outline that
+ impresses itself upon the vision even of an untrained eye and makes the
+ man who knows nothing of science and above all the child, a most
+ perspicacious observer, connect certain animals together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this respect, what have the Brachyderes and the Balaninus in common in
+ the eyes of the townsman, the peasant, the child or the Cerceris?
+ Absolutely nothing. The first has an almost cylindrical figure; the
+ second, squat, short and thickset, is conical in front and elliptical, or
+ rather shaped like the ace of hearts, behind. The first is black, strewn
+ with cloudy, mouse-grey spots; the second is yellow ochre. The head of the
+ first ends in a sort of snout; the head of the second tapers into a curved
+ beak, slender as a horse-hair and as long as the rest of the body. The
+ Brachyderes has a massive proboscis, cut off short; the Balaninus seems to
+ be smoking an insanely long cigarette-holder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who would think of connecting two creatures so unlike, of calling them by
+ the same name? Outside the professional classifiers, no one would dare to.
+ The Cerceris, more perspicacious, knows each of them for a Weevil, a
+ quarry with a concentrated nervous system, lending itself to the surgical
+ feat of her single stroke of the lancet. After obtaining an abundant booty
+ at the cost of the blunt-mouthed insect, with which she sometimes stuffs
+ her cellars to the exclusion of any other fare, according to the hazards
+ of the chase, she now suddenly sees before her the creature with the
+ extravagant proboscis. Accustomed to the first, will she fail to know the
+ second? By no means: at the first glance she recognizes it as her own; and
+ the cell already furnished with a few Brachyderes receives its complement
+ of Balanini. If these two species are to seek, if the burrows are far from
+ the holm-oaks, the Cerceris will attack Weevils displaying the greatest
+ variety of genus, species, form and coloration, levying tribute
+ indifferently on Sitones, Cneorhini, Geonemi, Otiorhynchi, Strophosomi and
+ many others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In vain do I rack my brains merely to guess at the signs upon which the
+ huntress relies as a guide, without going outside one and the same group,
+ in the midst of such a variety of game; above all by what characteristics
+ she recognizes as a Weevil the strange Acorn Balaninus, the only one among
+ her victims that wears a long pipe-stem. I leave to evolutionism, atavism
+ and other transcendental "isms" the honour and also the risk of explaining
+ what I humbly recognize as being too far beyond my grasp. Because the son
+ of the bird-catcher who imitates the call of his victims has been fed on
+ roast Robins, Linnets and Chaffinches, shall we hastily conclude that this
+ education through the stomach will enable him later, without other
+ initiation than that of the spit, to know his way about the ornithological
+ groups and to avoid confusing them when his turn comes to set his limed
+ twigs? Will the digesting of a ragout of little birds, however often
+ repeated by him or his ascendants, suffice to make him a finished
+ bird-catcher? The Cerceris has eaten Weevil; her ancestors have all eaten
+ Weevil, religiously. If you see in this the reason that makes the Wasp a
+ Weevil-expert endowed with a perspicacity unrivalled save by that of a
+ professional entomologist, why should you refuse to admit that the same
+ consequences would follow in the bird-catcher's family?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I hasten to abandon these insoluble problems in order to attack the
+ question of provisions from another point of view. Every Hunting Wasp is
+ confined to a certain genus of game, which is usually strictly limited.
+ She pursues her appointed quarry and regards anything outside it with
+ suspicion and distaste. The tricks of the experimenter, who drags her prey
+ from under her and flings her another in exchange, the emotions of the
+ possessor deprived of her property and immediately recovering it, but
+ under another form, are powerless to put her on the wrong scent.
+ Obstinately she refuses whatever is alien to her portion; instantly she
+ accepts whatever forms part of it. Whence arises this insuperable
+ repugnance for provisions to which the family is unaccustomed? Here we may
+ appeal to experiment. Let us do so: its dictum is the only one that can be
+ trusted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first idea that presents itself and the only one, I think, that can
+ present itself is that the larva, the carnivorous nurseling, has its
+ preferences, or we had better say its exclusive tastes. This kind of game
+ suits it; that does not; and the mother provides it with food in
+ conformity with its appetites, which are unchangeable in each species.
+ Here the family dish is the Gad-fly; elsewhere it is the Weevil; elsewhere
+ again it is the Cricket, the Locust and the Praying Mantis. Good in
+ themselves, in a general way, these several victuals may be noxious to a
+ consumer who is not used to them. The larva which dotes on Locust may find
+ caterpillar a detestable fare; and that which revels in caterpillar may
+ hold Locust in horror. It would be hard for us to discover in what manner
+ Cricket-flesh and Ephippiger-flesh differ as juicy, nourishing foodstuffs;
+ but it does not follow that the two Sphex-wasps addicted to this diet have
+ not very decided opinions on the matter, or that each of them is not
+ filled with the highest esteem for its traditional dish and a profound
+ dislike for the other. There is no discussing tastes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, the question of health may well be involved. There is nothing to
+ tell us that the Spider, that treat for the Pompilus, is not poison, or at
+ least unwholesome food, to the Bembex, the lover of Gad-flies; that the
+ Ammophila's succulent caterpillar is not repugnant to the stomach of the
+ Sphex fed upon the dry Acridian. The mother's esteem for one kind of game
+ and her distrust of another would in that case be due to the likes and
+ dislikes of her larvae; the victualler would regulate the bill of fare by
+ the gastronomic demands of the victualled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This exclusiveness of the carnivorous larva seems all the more probable
+ inasmuch as the larva reared on vegetable food refuses in any way to lend
+ itself to a change of diet. However pressed by hunger, the caterpillar of
+ the Spurge Hawk-moth, which browses on the tithymals, will allow itself to
+ starve in front of a cabbage leaf which makes a peerless meal for the
+ Pieris. Its stomach, burned by pungent spices, will find the Crucifera
+ insipid and uneatable, though its piquancy is enhanced by essence of
+ sulphur. The Pieris, on its part, takes good care not to touch the
+ tithymals: they would endanger its life. The caterpillar of the
+ Death's-head Hawk-moth requires the solanaceous narcotics, principally the
+ potato, and will have nothing else. All that is not seasoned with solanin
+ it abhors. And it is not only larvae whose food is strongly spiced with
+ alkaloids and other poisonous substances that refuse any innovation in
+ their food; the others, even those whose diet is least juicy, are
+ invincibly uncompromising. Each has its plant or its group of plants,
+ beyond which nothing is acceptable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I remember a late frost which had nipped the buds of the mulberry-trees
+ during the night, just when the first leaves were out. Next day there was
+ great excitement among my neighbours: the Silk-worms had hatched and the
+ food had suddenly failed. The farmers had to wait for the sun to repair
+ the disaster; but how were they to keep the famishing new-born grubs alive
+ for a few days? They knew me for an expert in plants; by collecting them
+ as I walked through the fields I had earned the name of a medical
+ herbalist. With poppy-flowers I prepared an elixir which cleared the
+ sight; with borage I obtained a syrup which was a sovran remedy for
+ whooping-cough; I distilled camomile; I extracted the essential oil from
+ the wintergreen. In short, botany had won for me the reputation of a quack
+ doctor. After all, that was something.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The housewives came in search of me from every point of the compass and
+ with tears in their eyes explained the situation. What could they give
+ their Silk-worms while waiting for the mulberry to sprout afresh? It was a
+ serious matter, well worthy of commiseration. One was counting on her
+ batch to buy a length of cloth for her daughter, who was on the point of
+ getting married; another told me of her plans for a Pig to be fattened
+ against the coming winter; all deplored the handful of crown-pieces which,
+ hoarded in the hiding-place in the cupboard, would have afforded help in
+ difficult times. And, full of their troubles, they unfolded, before my
+ eyes, a scrap of flannel on which the vermin were swarming:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Regardas, moussu! Venoun d'espeli; et ren per lour douna! Ah, pecaire!"
+ "Look, sir! The frost has come and we've nothing to give them! Oh, what a
+ misfortune!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor people! What a harsh trade is yours: respectable above all others,
+ but of all the most uncertain! You work yourselves to death; and, when you
+ have almost reached your goal, a few hours of a cold night, which comes
+ upon you suddenly, destroys your harvest. To help these afflicted ones
+ seemed to me a very difficult thing. I tried, however, taking botany as my
+ guide; it suggested to me, as substitutes for the mulberry, the members of
+ closely-related families: the elm, the nettle-tree, the nettle, the
+ pellitory. Their nascent leaves, chopped small, were offered to the
+ Silk-worms. Other and far less logical attempts were made, in accordance
+ with the inspiration of the individuals. Nothing came of them. To the last
+ specimen, the new-born Silk-worms died of hunger. My renown as a quack
+ must have suffered somewhat from this check. Was it really my fault? No,
+ it was the fault of the Silk-worm, which remained faithful to its mulberry
+ leaf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was therefore in nearly the certainty of non-fulfilment that I made my
+ first attempts at rearing carnivorous larvae with a quarry which did not
+ conform with the customary regimen. For conscience' sake, more or less
+ perfunctorily, I endeavoured to achieve something that seemed to me bound
+ to end in pitiful failure. Only the Bembex-wasps, which are plentiful in
+ the sand of the neighbouring hills, might still afford me, without too
+ prolonged a search, a few subjects on which to experiment. The Tarsal
+ Bembex furnished me with what I wanted: larvae young enough to have still
+ before them a long period of feeding and yet sufficiently developed to
+ endure the trials of a removal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These larva are exhumed with all the consideration which their delicate
+ skin demands; a number of head of game are likewise unearthed intact,
+ having been recently brought by the mother. They consist of various
+ Diptera, including some Anthrax-flies. (Cf. "The Life of the Fly":
+ chapters 2 and 4.&mdash;Translator's Note.) An old sardine-box, containing
+ a layer of sifted sand and divided into compartments by paper partitions,
+ receives my charges, who are isolated one from another. These Fly-eaters I
+ propose to turn into Grasshopper-eaters; for their Bembex-diet I intend to
+ substitute the diet of a Sphex or a Tachytes. To save myself tedious
+ errands devoted to provisioning the refectory, I accept what good fortune
+ offers me at the very threshold of my door. A green Locustid, with a short
+ sabre bent into a reaping-hook, Phaneroptera falcata, is ravaging the
+ corollae of my petunias. Now is the time to indemnify myself for the
+ damage which she has caused me. I pick her young, half to three-quarters
+ of an inch in length; and I deprive her of movement, without more ado, by
+ crushing her head. In this condition she is served up to the Bembex-larvae
+ in place of their Flies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the reader has shared my convictions of failure, convictions based on
+ very logical motives, he will now share my profound surprise. The
+ impossible becomes possible, the senseless becomes reasonable and the
+ expected becomes the opposite of the real. The dish served on the
+ Bembeces' table for the first time since Bembeces came into the world is
+ accepted without any repugnance and consumed with every mark of
+ satisfaction. I will here set down the detailed diary of one of my guests;
+ that of the others would only be a repetition, save for a few variations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 AUGUST, 1883.&mdash;The larva of the Bembex, as I extract it from its
+ burrow, is about half-developed. Around it I find only some scanty relics
+ of its meals, consisting chiefly of Anthrax-wings, half-diaphanous and
+ half-clouded. The mother would appear to have completed the victualling by
+ fresh contributions, added day by day. I give the nurseling, which is an
+ Anthrax-eater, a young Phaneroptera. The Locustid is attacked without
+ hesitation. This profound change in the character of its victuals does not
+ seem in the least to disturb the larva, which bites straight into the rich
+ morsel with its mandibles and does not let go until it has exhausted it.
+ Towards evening the drained carcase is replaced by another, quite fresh,
+ of the same species but bulkier, measuring over three-quarters of an inch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3 AUGUST.&mdash;Next day I find the Phaneroptera devoured. Nothing remains
+ but the dry integuments, which are not dismembered. The entire contents
+ have disappeared; the game has been emptied through a large opening made
+ in the belly. A regular Grasshopper-eater could not have operated more
+ skilfully. I replace the worthless carcase by two small Locustidae. At
+ first the larva does not touch them, being amply sated with the copious
+ meal of the day before. In the afternoon, however, one of the items is
+ resolutely attacked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4 AUGUST.&mdash;I renew the victuals, although those of the day before are
+ not finished. For the rest, I do the same daily, so that my charge may
+ constantly have fresh food at hand. High game might upset its stomach. My
+ Locustidae are not victims at the same time living and inert, operated
+ upon according to the delicate method of the insects that paralyse their
+ prey; they are corpses, procured by a brutal crushing of the head. With
+ the temperature now prevailing, flesh soon becomes tainted; and this
+ compels me frequently to renew the provisions in my sardine-box refectory.
+ Two specimens are served up. One is attacked soon afterwards; and the
+ larva clings to it assiduously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5 AUGUST.&mdash;The ravenous appetite of the start is becoming assuaged.
+ My supplies may well be too generous; and it might be prudent to try a
+ little dieting after this Gargantuan good cheer. The mother certainly is
+ more parsimonious. If all the family were to eat at the same rate as my
+ guest, she would never be able to keep pace with their demands. Therefore,
+ for reasons of health, this is a day of fasting and vigil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6 AUGUST.&mdash;Supplies are renewed with two Phaneropterae. One is
+ consumed entirely; the other is bitten into.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7 August.&mdash;To-day's ration is tasted and then abandoned. The larva
+ seems uneasy. With its pointed mouth it explores the walls of its chamber.
+ This sign denotes the approach of the time for making the cocoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8 AUGUST.&mdash;During the night the larva has spun its silken eel-trap.
+ It is now encrusting it with grains of sand. Then follow, in due time, the
+ normal phases of the metamorphosis. Fed on Locustidae, a diet unknown to
+ its race, the larva passes through its several stages without any more
+ difficulty than its brothers and sisters fed on Flies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I obtained the same success in offering young Mantes for food. One of the
+ larvae thus served would even incline me to believe that it preferred the
+ new dish to the traditional diet of its race. Two Eristales, or
+ Drone-flies, and a Praying Mantis an inch long composed its daily
+ allowance. The Drone-flies are disdained from the first mouthful; and the
+ Mantis, already tasted and apparently found excellent, causes the Fly to
+ be completely forgotten. Is this an epicure's preference, due to the
+ greater juiciness of the flesh? I am not in a position to say. At all
+ events, the Bembex is not so infatuated with Fly as to refuse to abandon
+ it for other game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The failure which I foresaw has proved a magnificent success. It is fairly
+ convincing, is it not? Without the evidence of experiment, what can we
+ rely upon? Beneath the ruins of so many theories which appeared to be most
+ solidly erected I should hesitate to admit that two and two make four if
+ the facts were not before me. My argument had the most tempting
+ probability on its side, but it had not the truth. As it is always
+ possible to find reasons after the event in support of an opinion which
+ one would not at first admit, I should now argue as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plant is the great factory in which are elaborated, with mineral
+ materials, the organic principles which are the materials of life. Certain
+ products are common to the whole vegetable series, but others, far less
+ numerous, are prepared in special laboratories. Each genus, each species
+ has its trade-mark. Here essential oils are manufactured; here alkaloids;
+ here starches, fatty substances, resins, sugars, acids. Hence result
+ special energies, which do not suit every herbivorous animal. It assuredly
+ requires a stomach made expressly for the purpose to digest aconite,
+ colchicum, hemlock or henbane; those who have not such a stomach could
+ never endure a diet of that sort. Besides, the Mithridates fed on poison
+ resist only a single toxin. (Mithridates VI. King of Pontus (d. B.C. 63)
+ is said to have secured immunity from poison by taking increased doses of
+ it.&mdash;Translator's Note.) The caterpillar of the Death's-head
+ Hawk-moth, which delights in the solanin of the potato, would be killed by
+ the acrid principle of the tithymals that form the food of the
+ Spurge-caterpillar. The herbivorous larvae are therefore perforce
+ exclusive in their tastes, because different genera of vegetables possess
+ very different properties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this variety in the products of the plant, the animal, a consumer far
+ more than a producer, contrasts the uniformity in its own products. The
+ albumen in the egg of the Ostrich or the Chaffinch, the casein in the milk
+ of the Cow or the Ass, the muscular flesh of the Wolf or the Sheep, the
+ Screech-owl or the Field-mouse, the Frog or the Earth-worm: these remain
+ albumen, casein or fibrin, edible if not eaten. Here are no excruciating
+ condiments, no special acridities, no alkaloids fatal to any stomach other
+ than that of the appointed consumer; so that animal food is not confined
+ to one and the same eater. What does not man eat, from that delicacy of
+ the arctic regions, soup made of Seal's blood and a scrap of Whale-blubber
+ wrapped in a willow-leaf for a vegetable, to the Chinaman's fried
+ Silk-worm or the Arab's dried Locust? What would he not eat, if he had not
+ to overcome the repugnance dictated by habit rather than by actual
+ necessity? The prey being uniform in its nutritive principles, the
+ carnivorous larva ought to accommodate itself to any sort of game, above
+ all if the new dish be not too great a departure from consecrated usage.
+ Thus should I argue, with no less probability on my side, had I to begin
+ all over again. But, as all our arguments have not the value of a single
+ fact, I should be forced in the end to resort to experiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did so the next year, on a larger scale and with a greater variety of
+ subjects. I shrink from a continuous narrative of my experiments and of my
+ personal education in this new art, where the failure of one day taught me
+ the way to succeed on the morrow. It would be long and tedious. Enough if
+ I briefly state my results and the conditions which must be fulfilled in
+ order to run the delicate refectory as it should be run.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, first, we must not dream of detaching the egg from its natural prey
+ to lay it on another. The egg adheres pretty firmly, by its cephalic pole,
+ to the quarry. To remove it from its place would inevitably jeopardize its
+ future. I therefore let the larva hatch and acquire sufficient strength to
+ bear the removal without peril. For that matter, my excavations most often
+ provide me with my subjects in the form of larvae. I adopt for
+ rearing-purposes the larvae that are a quarter to a half developed. The
+ others are too young and risky to handle, or too old and limited to a
+ short period of artificial feeding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secondly, I avoid bulky heads of game, a single one of which would suffice
+ for the whole growing-stage. I have already said and I here repeat how
+ nice a matter it is to consume a victim which has to keep fresh for a
+ couple of weeks and not to finish dying until it is almost entirely
+ devoured. Death here leaves no corpse; when life is extinct, the body has
+ disappeared, leaving only a shred of skin. Larvae with only one large prey
+ have a special art of eating, a dangerous art, in which a clumsy bite
+ would prove fatal. If bitten before the proper time at such a point, the
+ victim becomes putrid, which promptly causes death by poisoning in the
+ consumer. When diverted from its plan of attack, deprived of its clue, the
+ larva is not always able to rediscover the lawful morsels in good time and
+ is killed by the decomposition of its badly dissected prey. What will
+ happen if the experimenter gives it a game to which it is not accustomed?
+ Not knowing how to eat it according to rule, the larva will kill it; and
+ by next day the victuals will have become so much toxic putrescence. I
+ have already told how I found it impossible to rear the Two-banded Scolia
+ on Oryctes-larvae, fastened down to deprive them of movement, or even on
+ Ephippigers, paralysed by the Languedocian Sphex. In both cases the new
+ diet was accepted without hesitation, a proof that it suited the
+ nurseling; but in a day or two putrescence supervened and the Scolia
+ perished on the fetid morsel. The method of preserving the Ephippiger, so
+ well known to the Sphex, was unknown to my boarder; in this was enough to
+ convert a delicious food into poison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even so did my other attempts miscarry wretchedly, attempts at feeding
+ with the single dish consisting of one big head of game to replace the
+ normal ration. Only one success is recorded in my notebooks, but that was
+ so difficult that I would not undertake to obtain it a second time. I
+ succeeded in feeding the larva of the Hairy Ammophila with an adult black
+ Cricket, who was accepted as readily as the natural game, the caterpillar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To avoid putrefaction of victuals which last overlong and are not consumed
+ according to the method indispensable to their preservation, I employ
+ small game, each piece of which can be finished by the larva at a single
+ sitting, or at most in a single day. It matters little then that the
+ victim is slashed and dismembered at random; decomposition has no time to
+ seize upon its still quivering tissues. This is the procedure of those
+ larvae which gulp down their food, snapping at random without
+ distinguishing one part from another, such as the Bembex-larvae, which
+ finish the Fly into which they have bitten before beginning another in the
+ heap, or the Cerceris-larvae, which drain their Weevils methodically one
+ after another. With the first strokes of the mandibles the victim broached
+ may be mortally wounded. This is no disadvantage: a brief spell suffices
+ to make use of the corpse, which is saved from putrefaction by being
+ promptly consumed. Close beside it, the other victims, quite alive though
+ motionless, await their respective turns and supply reserves of victuals
+ which are always fresh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am too unskilful a butcher to imitate the Wasp and myself to resort to
+ paralysis; moreover, the caustic liquid injected into the nerve-centres,
+ ammonia in particular, would leave traces of smell or flavour which might
+ put off my boarders. I am therefore compelled to deprive my insects of the
+ power of movement by killing them outright. This makes it impracticable to
+ provide a sufficiency of provisions beforehand in a single supply: while
+ one item of the ration was being consumed the rest would spoil. One
+ expedient alone remains to me, one which entails constant attendance: it
+ is to renew the provisions each day. When all these conditions are
+ fulfilled, the success of artificial feeding is still not without its
+ difficulties; nevertheless, with a little care and above all plenty of
+ patience, it is almost certain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was thus that I reared the Tarsal Bembex, which eats Anthrax-flies and
+ other Diptera, on young Locustidae or Mantidae; the Silky Ammophila, whose
+ diet consists chiefly of Measuring-worms, on small Spiders; the pot-making
+ Pelopaeus, a Spider-eater, on tender Acridians; the Sand Cerceris, a
+ passionate lover of Weevils, on Halicti; the Bee-eating Philanthus, which
+ feeds exclusively on Hive-bees, on Eristales and other Flies. Without
+ succeeding in my final aim, for reasons which I have just explained, I
+ have seen the Two-banded Scolia feasting greedily on the grub of the
+ Oryctes, which was substituted for that of the Cetonia, and putting up
+ with an Ephippiger taken from the burrow of the Sphex; I have been present
+ at the repast of three Hairy Ammophilae accepting with an excellent
+ appetite the Cricket that replaced their caterpillar. One of them, as I
+ have related, contrived to keep its ration fresh, which enabled it to
+ reach its full development and to spin its cocoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These examples, the only ones to which my experiments have extended
+ hitherto, seem to me sufficiently convincing to allow me to conclude that
+ the carnivorous larva does not have exclusive tastes. The ration supplied
+ to it by the mother, so monotonous, so limited in quality, might be
+ replaced by others equally to its taste. Variety does not displease the
+ larva; it does it as much good as uniformity; indeed, it would be of
+ greater benefit to the race, as we shall see presently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 8. A DIG AT THE EVOLUTIONISTS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To rear a caterpillar-eater on a skewerful of Spiders is a very innocent
+ thing, unlikely to compromise the security of the State; it is also a very
+ childish thing, as I hasten to confess, and worthy of the schoolboy who,
+ in the mysteries of his desk, seeks as best he may some diversion from the
+ fascinations of his exercise in composition. And I should not have
+ undertaken these investigations, still less should I have spoken them, not
+ without some satisfaction, if I had not discerned, in the results obtained
+ in my refectory, a certain philosophic import, involving, so it seemed to
+ me, the evolutionary theory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is assuredly a majestic enterprise, commensurate with man's immense
+ ambitions, to seek to pour the universe into the mould of a formula and
+ submit every reality to the standard of reason. The geometrician proceeds
+ in this manner: he defines the cone, an ideal conception; then he
+ intersects it by a plane. The conic section is submitted to algebra, an
+ obstetrical appliance which brings forth the equation; and behold,
+ entreated now in one direction, now in another, the womb of the formula
+ gives birth to the ellipse, the hyperbola, the parabola, their foci, their
+ radius vectors, their tangents, their normals, their conjugate axes, their
+ asymptotes and the rest. It is magnificent, so much so that you are
+ overcome by enthusiasm, even when you are twenty years old, an age hardly
+ adapted to the austerities of mathematics. It is superb. You feel as if
+ you were witnessing the creation of a world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a matter of fact, you are merely observing the same idea from different
+ points of view, which are illumined by the successive phases of the
+ transformed formula. All that algebra unfolds for our benefit was
+ contained in the definition of the cone, but it was contained as a germ,
+ under latent forms which the magic of the calculus converts into explicit
+ forms. The gross value which our mind confided to the equation it returns
+ to us, without loss or gain, in coins stamped with every sort of effigy.
+ And here precisely is that which constitutes the inflexible rigour of the
+ calculus, the luminous certainty before which every cultivated mind is
+ forced to bow. Algebra is the oracle of the absolute truth, because it
+ reveals nothing but what the mind had hidden in it under an amalgam of
+ symbols. We put 2 and 2 into the machine; the rollers work and show us 4.
+ That is all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But to this calculus, all-powerful so long as it does not leave the domain
+ of the ideal, let us submit a very modest reality: the fall of a grain of
+ sand, the pendular movement of a hanging body. The machine no longer
+ works, or does so only by suppressing almost everything that is real. It
+ must have an ideal material point, an ideal rigid thread, an ideal point
+ of suspension; and then the pendular movement is translated by a formula.
+ But the problem defies all the artifices of analysis if the oscillating
+ body is a real body, endowed with volume and friction; if the suspensory
+ thread is a real thread, endowed with weight and flexibility; if the point
+ of support is a real point, endowed with resistance and capable of
+ deflection. So with other problems, however simple. The exact reality
+ escapes the formula.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, it would be a fine thing to put the world into an equation, to assume
+ as the first principle a cell filled with albumen and by transformation
+ after transformation to discover life under its thousand aspects as the
+ geometrician discovers the ellipse and the other curves by examining his
+ conic section. Yes, it would be magnificent and enough to add a cubit to
+ our stature. Alas, how greatly must we abate our pretensions! The reality
+ is beyond our reach when it is only a matter of following a grain of dust
+ in its fall; and we would undertake to ascend the river of life and trace
+ it to its source! The problem is a more arduous one than that which
+ algebra declines to solve. There are formidable unknown quantities here,
+ more difficult to decipher than the resistances, the deflections and the
+ frictions of the pendulum. Let us eliminate them, that we may more easily
+ propound the theory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very well; but then my confidence in this natural history which repudiates
+ nature and gives ideal conceptions precedence over real facts is shaken.
+ So, without seeking the opportunity, which is not my business, I take it
+ when it presents itself; I examine the theory of evolution from every
+ side; and, as that which I have been assured is the majestic dome of a
+ monument capable of defying the ages appears to me to be no more than a
+ bladder, I irreverently dig my pin into it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is the latest dig. Adaptability to a varied diet is an element of
+ well-being in the animal, a factor of prime importance for the extension
+ and predominance of its race in the bitter struggle for life. The most
+ unfortunate species would be that which depended for its existence on a
+ diet so exclusive that no other could replace it. What would become of the
+ Swallow if he required, in order to live, one particular Gnat, a single
+ Gnat, always the same? When once this Gnat had disappeared&mdash;and the
+ life of the Mosquito is not a long one&mdash;the bird would die of
+ starvation. Fortunately for himself and for the happiness of our homes,
+ the Swallow gulps them all down indiscriminately, together with a host of
+ other insects that perform aerial ballets. What would become of the Lark
+ were his gizzard able to digest only one seed, invariably the same? When
+ the season for this seed was over&mdash;and the season is always a short
+ one&mdash;the haunter of the furrows would perish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is not man's complaisant stomach, adapted to the largest variety of
+ nourishment, one of his great zoological privileges? He is thus rendered
+ independent of climates, seasons and latitudes. And the Dog: how is it
+ that of all the domestic animals he alone is able to accompany us
+ everywhere, even on the most arduous expeditions? The Dog again is
+ omnivorous and therefore a cosmopolitan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The discovery of a new dish, said Brillat-Savarin, is of greater
+ importance to humanity than the discovery of a new planet. The aphorism is
+ nearer to the truth than it appears to be in its humorous form. Certainly
+ the man who was the first to think of crushing wheat, kneading flour and
+ cooking the paste between two hot stones was more deserving than the
+ discoverer of the two-hundredth asteroid. The invention of the potato is
+ certainly as valuable as that of Neptune, glorious as the latter was. All
+ that increases our alimentary resources is a discovery of the first merit.
+ And what is true of man cannot be other than true of animals. The world
+ belongs to the stomach which is independent of specialities. This truth is
+ of the kind that has only to be stated to be proved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us now return to our insects. If I am to believe the evolutionists,
+ the various game-hunting Wasps are descended from a small number of types,
+ which are themselves derived, by an incalculable number of concatenations,
+ from a few amoebae, a few monera and lastly from the first clot of
+ protoplasm which was casually condensed. Let us not go back as far as
+ that; let us not plunge into the fogs where illusion and error too easily
+ find a lurking-place. Let us consider a subject with exact limits to it;
+ this is the only way to understand one another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sphegidae are descended from a single type, which itself was already a
+ highly-developed descendant and, like its successors, fed its family on
+ prey. The close similarity in form, in colouring and, above all, in habits
+ seem to refer the Tachytes to the same origin. This is ample; let us be
+ satisfied with it. And now please tell me, what did this prototype of the
+ Sphegidae hunt? Was its diet varied or uniform? If we cannot decide, let
+ us examine the two cases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The diet was varied. I heartily congratulate the first born of the
+ Sphex-wasps. She enjoyed the most favourable conditions for leaving a
+ prosperous offspring. Accommodating herself to any kind of prey not
+ disproportionate to her strength, she avoided the dearth of a given
+ species of game at this or that time and in this or that place; she always
+ found the wherewithal to endow her family magnificently, they being, for
+ that matter, fairly indifferent to the nature of the victuals, provided
+ that these consisted of fresh insect-flesh, as the tastes of their cousins
+ many times removed prove to this day. This matriarch of the Sphex clan
+ bore within herself the best chances of assuring victory to her offspring
+ in that pitiless fight for existence which eliminates the weakly and
+ incapable and allows none but the strong and industrious to survive; she
+ possessed an aptitude of great value which atavism could not fail to hand
+ down and which her descendants, who are greatly interested in preserving
+ this magnificent inheritance, must have permanently adopted and even
+ accentuated from one generation to the next, from one branch, one
+ offshoot, to another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of this unscrupulously omnivorous race, levying booty upon every
+ kind of game, to its very great advantage, what do we see to-day? Each
+ Sphex is stupidly limited to an unvarying diet; she hunts only one kind of
+ prey, though her larva accepts them all. One will have nothing but the
+ Ephippiger and must have a female at that; another will have nothing but
+ the Cricket. This one hunts the Locust and nothing else; that one the
+ Mantis and the Empusa. Yet another is addicted to the Grey Worm and
+ another to the Looper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fools! How great was your mistake in allowing the wise eclecticism of your
+ ancestress, whose relics now repose in the hard mud of some lacustrian
+ stratum, to become obsolete! How much better would things be for you and
+ yours! Abundance is assured; painful and often fruitless searches are
+ avoided; the larder is crammed without being subject to the accidents of
+ time, place and climate. When Ephippigers run short, you fall back upon
+ Crickets; when there are no Crickets, you capture Grasshoppers. But no, my
+ beautiful Sphex-wasps, you were not such fools as that. If in our days you
+ are each confined to a standing family-dish, it is because your ancestress
+ of the lacustrian schists never taught you variety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Could she have taught you uniformity? Let us suppose that the Sphex of
+ antiquity, a novice in the gastronomic art, prepared her potted meats with
+ a single kind of game, no matter what. It was then her descendants who,
+ subdivided into groups and constituted into so many distinct species by
+ the slow travail of the centuries, realized that in addition to the
+ ancestral fare there existed a host of other foods. Tradition being
+ abandoned, there was nothing to guide their choice. They therefore tried a
+ bit of everything in the way of insect game, at hap-hazard; and each time
+ the larva, whose tastes alone had to be consulted, was satisfied with the
+ food supplied, as it is to-day in the refectory provisioned by my care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every attempt led to the invention of a new dish, an important event,
+ according to the masters, an inestimable resource for the family, who were
+ thereby delivered from the menace of death and enabled to thrive over
+ large areas whence the absence or rarity of a uniform game would have
+ excluded it. And, after making use of a host of different viands in order
+ to attain the culinary variety which is to-day adopted by the whole of the
+ Sphex nation, lo and behold, each species confines itself to a single sort
+ of game, outside which every specimen is obstinately refused, not at
+ table, of course, but in the hunting-field! By your experiments, from age
+ to age, to have discovered variety in diet; to have practised it, to the
+ great advantage of your race, and to end up with uniformity, the cause of
+ decadence; to have known the excellent and to repudiate it for the
+ middling: oh, my Sphex-wasps, it would be stupid if the theory of
+ evolution were correct!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To avoid insulting you and also from respect for common sense, I prefer
+ therefore to believe that, if in our days you confine your hunting to a
+ single kind of game, it is because you have never known any other. I
+ prefer to believe that your common ancestress, your precursor, whether her
+ tastes were simple or complex, is a pure chimera, for, if they were any
+ relationship between you, having tested everything in order to arrive at
+ the actual food of each species, having eaten everything and found it
+ grateful to the stomach, you would now, from first to last, be
+ unprejudiced consumers, omnivorous progressives. I prefer to believe, in
+ short, that the theory of evolution is powerless to explain your diet.
+ This is the conclusion drawn from the dining-room installed in my old
+ sardine-box.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 9. RATIONING ACCORDING TO SEX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Considered in respect of quality, the food has just disclosed our profound
+ ignorance of the origins of instinct. Success falls to the blusterers, to
+ the imperturbable dogmatists, from whom anything is accepted if only they
+ make a little noise. Let us discard this bad habit and admit that really,
+ if we go to the bottom of things, we know nothing about anything.
+ Scientifically speaking, nature is a riddle to which human curiosity finds
+ no definite solution. Hypothesis follows hypothesis; the theoretical
+ rubbish-heap grows bigger and bigger; and still truth escapes us. To know
+ how to know nothing might well be the last word of wisdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Considered in respect of quantity, the food sets us other problems, no
+ less obscure. Those of us who devote ourselves assiduously to studying the
+ customs of the game-hunting Wasps soon find our attention arrested by a
+ very remarkable fact, at the time when our mind, refusing to be satisfied
+ with sweeping generalities, which our indolence too readily makes shift
+ with, seeks to enter as far as possible into the secret of the details, so
+ curious and sometimes so important, as and when they become better-known
+ to us. This fact, which has preoccupied me for many a long year, is the
+ variable quantity of the provisions packed into the burrow as food for the
+ larva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each species is scrupulously faithful to the diet of its ancestors. For
+ more than a quarter of a century I have been exploring my district; and I
+ have never known the diet to vary. To-day, as thirty years ago, each
+ huntress must have the game which I first saw her pursuing. But, though
+ the nature of the victuals is constant, the quantity is not so. In this
+ respect the difference is so great that he would need to be a very
+ superficial observer who should fail to perceive it on his first
+ examination of the burrows. In the beginning, this difference, involving
+ two, three, four times the quantity and more, perplexed me extremely and
+ led me to the conclusions which I reject to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, among the instances most familiar to me, are some examples of these
+ variations in the number of victims provided for the larva, victims, of
+ course, very nearly identical in size. In the larder of the Yellow-winged
+ Sphex, after the victualling is completed and the house shut up, two or
+ three Crickets are sometimes found and sometimes four. Stizus ruficornis
+ (Cf. "The Hunting Wasps": chapter 20; also "Bramble-bees and Others":
+ chapter 9.&mdash;Translator's Note.), established in some vein of soft
+ sandstone, places three Praying Mantes in one cell and five in another. Of
+ the caskets fashioned by Amedeus' Eumenes (Cf. "The Mason-wasps": chapter
+ 1.&mdash;Translator's Note.) out of clay and bits of stone, the more
+ richly endowed contain ten small caterpillars, the more poorly furnished
+ five. The Sand Cerceris (Cf. "The Hunting Wasps": chapter 2.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) will sometimes provide a ration of eight Weevils and sometimes one
+ of twelve or even more. My notes abound in abstracts of this kind. It is
+ unnecessary for the purpose in hand to quote them all. It will serve our
+ object better if I give the detailed inventory of the Bee-eating
+ Philanthus and of the Mantis-hunting Tachytes, considered especially with
+ regard to the quantity of the victuals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The slayer of Hive-bees is frequently in my neighbourhood; and I can
+ obtain from her with the least trouble the greatest number of data. In
+ September I see the bold filibuster flying from clump to clump of the pink
+ heather pillaged by the Bee. The bandit suddenly arrives, hovers, makes
+ her choice and swoops down. The trick is done: the poor worker, with her
+ tongue lolling from her mouth in the death-struggle, is carried through
+ the air to the underground den, which is often a very long way from the
+ spot of the capture. The trickling of earthy refuse, on the bare banks, or
+ on the slopes of footpaths, instantly reveals the dwellings of the
+ ravisher; and, as the Philanthus always works in fairly populous colonies,
+ I am able, by noting the position of the communities, to make sure of
+ fruitful excavations during the forced inactivity of winter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sapping is a laborious task, for the galleries run to a great depth.
+ Favier wields the pick and spade; I break the clods which he brings down
+ and open the cells, whose contents&mdash;cocoons and remnants of
+ provisions&mdash;I at once pour into a little screw of paper. Sometimes,
+ when the larva is not developed, the stack of Bees is intact; more often
+ the victuals have been consumed; but it is always possible to tell the
+ number of items provided. The heads, abdomens and thoraxes, emptied of
+ their fleshy substance and reduced to the tough outer skin, are easily
+ counted. If the larva has chewed these overmuch, the wings at least are
+ left; these are sapless organs which the Philanthus absolutely scorns.
+ They are likewise spared by moisture, putrefaction and time, so much so
+ that it is no more difficult to take an inventory of a cell several years
+ old than one of a recent cell. The essential thing is not to overlook any
+ of these tiny relics while placing them in the paper bag, amid the
+ thousand incidents of the excavation. The rest of the work will be done in
+ the study, with the aid of the lens, taking the remains heap by heap; the
+ wings will be separated from the surrounding refuse and counted in sets of
+ four. The result will give the amount of the provisions. I do not
+ recommend this task to any one who is not endowed with a good stock of
+ patience, nor above all to any one who does not start with the conviction
+ that results of great interest are compatible with very modest means.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My inspection covers a total of one hundred and thirty-six cells, which
+ are divided as in the table below:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 2 cells each containing 1 Bee
+ 52 cells each containing 2 Bees
+ 36 cells each containing 3 Bees
+ 36 cells each containing 4 Bees
+ 9 cells each containing 5 Bees
+ 1 cell containing 6 Bees
+ &mdash;-
+ 136
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Mantis-hunting Tachytes consumes its heap of Mantes, the horny
+ envelope included, without leaving any remains but scanty crumbs, quite
+ insufficient to establish the number of items provided. After the meal is
+ completed, any inventory of the rations becomes impossible. I therefore
+ have recourse to the cells which still contain the egg or the very young
+ larva and, above all, to those whose provisions have been invaded by a
+ tiny parasitic Gnat, a Tachina (Cf. "The Hunting Wasps": chapters 4 and
+ 16.&mdash;Translator's Note.), which drains the game without cutting it up
+ and leaves the whole skin intact. Twenty-five larders, put to the count,
+ give me the following result:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 8 cells each containing 3 items
+ 5 cells each containing 4 items
+ 4 cells each containing 6 items
+ 3 cells each containing 7 items
+ 2 cells each containing 8 items
+ 1 cell containing 9 items
+ 1 cell containing 12 items
+ 1 cell containing 16 items
+ &mdash;-
+ 25
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The predominant game is the Praying Mantis, green; next comes the Grey
+ Mantis, ash-coloured. A few Empusae make up the total. The specimens vary
+ in dimensions within fairly elastic limits: I measure some which are a
+ third to a half inch long, averaging two-thirds to one inch long, and some
+ which are two-fifths, averaging three quarters. I see pretty plainly that
+ their number increases in proportion as their size diminishes, as though
+ the Tachytes were seeking to make up for the smallness of the game by
+ increasing the amount; none the less I find it quite impossible to detect
+ the least equivalence by combining the two factors of number and size. If
+ the huntress really estimates the provisions, she does so very roughly;
+ her household accounts are not at all well kept; each head of game, large
+ or small, must always count as one in her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Put on my guard, I look to see whether the honey-gathering Bees have a
+ double service, like the game-hunting Wasps'. I estimate the amount of
+ honeyed paste; I gauge the cups intended to contain it. In many cases the
+ result resembles the first obtained: the abundance of provisions varies
+ from one cell to another. Certain Osmiae (O. cornuta and O. tricornis (Cf.
+ "Bramble-bees and Others": passim; and, in particular, chapters 3 to 5.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)) feed their larvae on a heap of pollen-dust moistened in the middle
+ with a very little disgorged honey. One of these heaps may be three or
+ four times the size of some other in the same group of cells. If I detach
+ from its pebble the nest of the Mason-bee, the Chalicodoma of the Walls, I
+ see cells of large capacity, sumptuously provisioned; close beside these I
+ see others, of less capacity, with victuals parsimoniously allotted. The
+ fact is general; and it is right that we should ask ourselves the reason
+ for these marked differences in the relative quantity of foodstuffs and
+ for these unequal rations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I at last began to suspect that this is first and foremost a question of
+ sex. In many Bees and Wasps, indeed, the male and the female differ not
+ only in certain details of internal or external structure&mdash;a point of
+ view which does not affect the present problem&mdash;but also in length
+ and bulk, which depend in a high degree on the quantity of food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us consider in particular the Bee-eating Philanthus. Compared with the
+ female, the male is a mere abortion. I find that he is only a third to
+ half the size of the other sex, as far as I can judge by sight alone. To
+ obtain exactly the respective quantities of substance, I should need
+ delicate balances, capable of weighing down to a milligramme. My clumsy
+ villager's scales, on which potatoes may be weighed to within a kilogramme
+ or so, do not permit of this precision. I must therefore rely on the
+ evidence of my sight alone, evidence, for that matter, which is amply
+ sufficient in the present instance. Compared with his mate, the
+ Mantis-hunting Tachytes is likewise a pigmy. We are quite astonished to
+ see him pestering his giantess on the threshold of the burrows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We observe differences no less pronounced of size&mdash;and consequently
+ of volume, mass and weight&mdash;in the two sexes of many Osmiae. The
+ differences are less emphatic, but are still on the same side, in the
+ Cerceres, the Stizi, the Spheges, the Chalicodomae and many more. It is
+ therefore the rule that the male is smaller than the female. There are of
+ course some exceptions, though not many; and I am far from denying them. I
+ will mention certain Anthidia where the male is the larger of the two.
+ Nevertheless, in the great majority of cases the female has the advantage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And this is as it should be. It is the mother, the mother alone, who
+ laboriously digs underground galleries and chambers, kneads the plaster
+ for coating the cells, builds the dwelling-house of cement and bits of
+ grit, bores the wood and divides the burrow into storeys, cuts the disks
+ of leaf which will be joined together to form honey-pots, works up the
+ resin gathered in drops from the wounds in the pine-trees to build
+ ceilings in the empty spiral of a Snail-shell, hunts the prey, paralyses
+ it and drags it indoors, gathers the pollen-dust, prepares the honey in
+ her crop, stores and mixes the paste. This severe labour, so imperious and
+ so active, in which the insect's whole life is spent, manifestly demands a
+ bodily strength which would be quite useless to the male, the amorous
+ trifler. Thus, as a general rule, in the insects which carry on an
+ industry the female is the stronger sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Does this pre-eminence imply more abundant provisions during the larval
+ stage, when the insect is acquiring the physical growth which it will not
+ exceed in its future development? Simple reflection supplies the answer:
+ yes, the aggregate growth has its equivalent in the aggregate provisions.
+ Though so slight a creature as the male Philanthus finds a ration of two
+ Bees sufficient for his needs, the female, twice or thrice as bulky, will
+ consume three to six at least. If the male Tachytes requires three Mantes,
+ his consort's meal will demand a batch of something like ten. With her
+ comparative corpulence, the female Osmia will need a heap of paste twice
+ or thrice as great as that of her brother, the male. All this is obvious;
+ the animal cannot make much out of little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Despite this evidence, I was anxious to enquire whether the reality
+ corresponded with the previsions of the most elementary logic. Instances
+ are not unknown in which the most sagacious deductions have been found to
+ disagree with the facts. During the last few years, therefore, I have
+ profited by my winter leisure to collect, from spots noted as favourable
+ during the working-season, a few handfuls of cocoons of various
+ Digger-wasps, notably of the Bee-eating Philanthus, who has just furnished
+ us with an inventory of provisions. Surrounding these cocoons and thrust
+ against the wall of the cell were the remnants of the victuals&mdash;wings,
+ corselets, heads, wing-cases&mdash;a count of which enabled me to
+ determine how many head of game had been provided for the larva, now
+ enclosed in its silken abode. I thus obtained the correct list of
+ provisions for each of the huntress' cocoons. On the other hand, I
+ estimated the quantities of honey, or rather I gauged the receptacles, the
+ cells, whose capacity is proportionate to the mass of the provisions
+ stored. After making these preparations, registering the cells, cocoons
+ and rations and putting all my figures in order, I had only to wait for
+ the hatching-season to determine the sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, I found that logic and experiment were in perfect agreement. The
+ Philanthus-cocoons with two Bees gave me males, always males; those with a
+ larger ration gave me females. From the Tachytes-cocoons with double or
+ treble that ration I obtained females. When fed upon four or five
+ Nut-weevils, the Sand Cerceris was a male; when fed upon eight or ten, a
+ female. In short, abundant provisions and spacious cells yield females;
+ scanty provisions and narrow cells yield males. This is a law upon which I
+ may henceforth rely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the stage which we have now reached a question arises, a question of
+ major importance, touching the most nebulous aspect of embryogeny. How is
+ it that the larva of the Philanthus, to take a particular case, receives
+ three to five Bees from its mother when it is to become a female and not
+ more than two when it is to become a male? Here the various head of game
+ are identical in size, in flavour, in nutritive properties. The food-value
+ is precisely in proportion to the number of items supplied, a helpful
+ detail which eliminates the uncertainties wherein we might be left by the
+ provision of game of different species and varying sizes. How is it, then,
+ that a host of Bees and Wasps, of honey-gatherers as well as huntresses,
+ store a larger or smaller quantity of victuals in their cells according as
+ the nurselings are to become females or males?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The provisions are stored before the eggs are laid; and these provisions
+ are measured by the needs of the sex of an egg still inside the mother's
+ body. If the egg-laying were to precede the rationing, which occasionally
+ takes place, as with the Odyneri (Cf. "The Hunting Wasps": chapters 2 and
+ 8.&mdash;Translator's Note.), for example, we might imagine that the
+ gravid mother enquires into the sex of the egg, recognizes it and stacks
+ victuals accordingly. But, whether destined to become a male or a female,
+ the egg is always the same; the differences&mdash;and I have no doubt that
+ there are differences&mdash;are in the domain of the infinitely subtle,
+ the mysterious, imperceptible even to the most practised embryogenist.
+ What can a poor insect see&mdash;in the absolute darkness of its burrow,
+ moreover&mdash;where science armed with optical instruments has not yet
+ succeeded in seeing anything? And besides, even were it more discerning
+ than we are in these genetic obscurities, its visual discernment would
+ have nothing whereupon to practice. As I have said, the egg is laid only
+ when the corresponding provisions are stored. The meal is prepared before
+ the larva which is to eat it has come into the world. The supply is
+ generously calculated by the needs of the coming creature; the dining-room
+ is built large or small to contain a giant or a dwarf still germinating in
+ the ovarian ducts. The mother, therefore, knows the sex of her egg
+ beforehand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A strange conclusion, which plays havoc with our current notions! The
+ logic of the facts leads us to it directly. And yet it seems so absurd
+ that, before accepting it, we seek to escape the predicament by another
+ absurdity. We wonder whether the quantity of food may not decide the fate
+ of the egg, originally sexless. Given more food and more room, the egg
+ would become a female; given less food and less room, it would become a
+ male. The mother, obeying her instincts, would store more food in this
+ case and less in that; she would build now a large and now a small cell;
+ and the future of the egg would be determined by the conditions of food
+ and shelter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us make every test, every experiment, down to the absurd: the crude
+ absurdity of the moment has sometimes proved to be the truth of the
+ morrow. Besides, the well-known story of the Hive-bee should make us wary
+ of rejecting paradoxical suppositions. Is it not by increasing the size of
+ the cell, by modifying the quality and quantity of the food, that the
+ population of a hive transforms a worker larva into a female or royal
+ larva? It is true that the sex remains the same, since the workers are
+ only incompletely developed females. The change is none the less
+ miraculous, so much so that it is almost lawful to enquire whether the
+ transformation may not go further, turning a male, that poor abortion,
+ into a sturdy female by means of a plentiful diet. Let us therefore resort
+ to experiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have at hand some long bits of reed in the hollow of which an Osmia, the
+ Three-horned Osmia, has stacked her cells, bounded by earthen partitions.
+ I have related elsewhere (Cf. "Bramble-bees and Others": chapters 2 to 5.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) how I obtain as many of these nests as I could wish for. When the
+ reed is split lengthwise, the cells come into view, together with their
+ provisions, the egg lying on the paste, or even the budding larva.
+ Observations multiplied ad nauseam have taught me where to find the males
+ and where the females in this apiary. The males occupy the fore-part of
+ the reed, the end next to the opening; the females are at the bottom, next
+ to the knot which serves as a natural stopper to the channel. For the
+ rest, the quantity of the provisions in itself points to the sex: for the
+ females it is twice or thrice as great as for the males.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the scantily-provided cells, I double or treble the ration with food
+ taken from other cells; in the cells which are plentifully supplied, I
+ reduce the portion to a half or a third. Controls are left: that is to
+ say, some cells remain untouched, with their provisions as I found them,
+ both in the part which is abundantly provided and in that which is more
+ meagrely rationed. The two halves of the reed are then restored to their
+ original position and firmly bound with a few turns of wire. We shall see,
+ when the time comes, whether these changes increasing or decreasing the
+ victuals have determined the sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is the result: the cells which at first were sparingly provided, but
+ whose supplies were doubled or trebled by my artifice, contain males, as
+ foretold by the original amount of victuals. The surplus which I added has
+ not completely disappeared, far from it: the larva has had more than it
+ needed for its evolution as a male; and, being unable to consume the whole
+ of its copious provisions, it has spun its cocoon in the midst of the
+ remaining pollen-dust. These males, so richly supplied, are of handsome
+ but not exaggerated proportions; you can see that the additional food has
+ profited them to some small extent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cells with abundant provisions, reduced to a half or a third by my
+ intervention, contain cocoons as small as the male cocoons, pale,
+ translucent and limp, whereas the normal cocoons are dark-brown, opaque
+ and firm to the touch. These, we perceive at once, are the work of
+ starved, anaemic weavers, who, failing to satisfy their appetite and
+ having eaten the last grain of pollen, have, before dying, done their best
+ with their poor little drop of silk. Those cocoons which correspond with
+ the smallest allowance of food contain only a dead and shrivelled larva;
+ others, in whose case the provisions were less markedly decreased, contain
+ females in the adult form, but of very diminutive size, comparable with
+ that of the males, or even smaller. As for the controls which I was
+ careful to leave, they confirm the fact that I had males in the part near
+ the orifice of the reed and females in the part near the knot closing the
+ channel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is this enough to dispose of the very improbable supposition that the
+ determination of the sex depends on the quantity of food? Strictly
+ speaking, there is still one door open to doubt. It may be said that
+ experiment, with its artifices, does not succeed in realizing the delicate
+ natural conditions. To make short work of all objections, I cannot do
+ better than have recourse to facts in which the experimenter's hand has
+ not intervened. The parasites will supply us with these facts; they will
+ show us how alien the quantity and even the quality of the food are from
+ either specific or sexual characters. The subject of enquiry thus becomes
+ double, instead of single as it was when I plundered one cell in my split
+ reeds to enrich another. Let us follow this double current for a little
+ while.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An Ammophila, the Silky Ammophila (Cf. "The Hunting Wasps": chapter 13.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), which feeds on Looper caterpillars (Known also as Measuring-worms,
+ Inchworms, Spanworms and Surveyors: the caterpillars of the Geometrid
+ Moths.&mdash;Translator's Note.), has just been reared in my refectory on
+ Spiders. Replete to the regulation point, it spins its cocoon. What will
+ emerge from this? If the reader expects to see any modifications, caused
+ by a diet which the species, left to itself, had never effected, let him
+ be undeceived and that quickly. The Ammophila fed on Spiders is precisely
+ the same as the Ammophila fed on caterpillars, just as man fed on rice is
+ the same as man fed on wheat. In vain I pass my lens over the product of
+ my art: I cannot distinguish it from the natural product; and I defy the
+ most meticulous entomologist to perceive any difference between the two.
+ It is the same with my other boarders who have had their diet altered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I see the objection coming. The differences may be inappreciable, for my
+ experiments touch only a first rung of the ladder. What would happen if
+ the ladder were prolonged, if the offspring of the Ammophila fed on
+ Spiders were given the same food generation after generation? These
+ differences, at first imperceptible, might become accentuated until they
+ grew into distinct specific characters; the habits and instincts might
+ also change; and in the end the caterpillar-huntress might become a
+ Spider-huntress, with a shape of her own. A species would be created, for,
+ among the factors at work in the transformation of animals, the most
+ important of all is incontestably the type of food, the nature of the
+ thing wherewith the animal builds itself. All this is much more important
+ than the trivialities which Darwin relies upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To create a species is magnificent in theory, so that we find ourselves
+ regretting that the experimenter is not able to continue the attempt. But,
+ once the Ammophila has flown out of the laboratory to slake her thirst at
+ the flowers in the neighbourhood, just to try to find her again and induce
+ her to entrust you with her eggs, which you would rear in the refectory,
+ to increase the taste for Spiders from generation to generation! Merely to
+ dream of it were madness. Shall we, in our helplessness, admit ourselves
+ beaten by the evolutionary effects of diet? Not a bit of it! One
+ experiment&mdash;and you could not wish for a more decisive&mdash;is
+ continually in progress, apart from all artifices, on an enormous scale.
+ It is brought to our notice by the parasites.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They must, we are told, have acquired the habit of living on others in
+ order to save themselves work and to lead an easier life. The poor
+ wretches have made a sorry blunder. Their life is of the hardest. If a few
+ establish themselves comfortably, dearth and dire famine await most of the
+ rest. There are some&mdash;look at certain of the Oil-beetles&mdash;exposed
+ to so many chances of destruction that, to save one, they are obliged to
+ procreate a thousand. They seldom enjoy a free meal. Some stray into the
+ houses of hosts whose victuals do not suit them; others find only a ration
+ quite insufficient for their needs; others&mdash;and these are very
+ numerous&mdash;find nothing at all. What misadventures, what
+ disappointments do these needy creatures suffer, unaccustomed as they are
+ to work! Let me relate some of their misfortunes, gleaned at random.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Girdled Dioxys (D. cincta) loves the ample honey-stores of the
+ Chalicodoma of the Pebbles. There she finds abundant food, so abundant
+ that she cannot eat it all. I have already passed censure on this waste.
+ (Cf. "The Mason-bees": chapter 10.&mdash;Translator's Note.) Now a little
+ Osmia (O. cyanoxantha, Perez) makes her nest in the Mason's deserted
+ cells; and this Bee, a victim of her ill-omened dwelling, also harbours
+ the Dioxys. This is a manifest error on the parasite's part. The nest of
+ the Chalicodoma, the hemisphere of mortar on its pebble, is what she is
+ looking for, to confide her eggs to it. But the nest is now occupied by a
+ stranger, by the Osmia, a circumstance unknown to the Dioxys, who comes
+ stealing up to lay her egg in the mother's absence. The dome is familiar
+ to her. She could not know it better if she had built it herself. Here she
+ was born; here is what her family wants. Moreover, there is nothing to
+ arouse her suspicions: the outside of the home has not changed its
+ appearance in any respect; the stopper of gravel and green putty, which
+ later will form a violent contrast with its white front, is not yet
+ constructed. She goes in and sees a heap of honey. To her thinking this
+ can be nothing but the Chalicodoma's portion. We ourselves would be
+ beguiled, in the Osmia's absence. She lays her eggs in this deceptive
+ cell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her mistake, which is easy to understand, does not in any way detract from
+ her great talents as a parasite, but it is a serious matter for the future
+ larva. The Osmia, in fact, in view of her small dimensions, collects but a
+ very scanty store of food: a little loaf of pollen and honey, hardly the
+ size of an average pea. Such a ration is insufficient for the Dioxys. I
+ have described her as a waster of food when her larva is established,
+ according to custom, in the cell of the Mason-bee. This description no
+ longer applies; not in the very least. Inadvertently straying to the
+ Osmia's table, the larva has no excuse for turning up its nose; it does
+ not leave part of the food to go bad; it eats up the lot without having
+ had enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This famine-stricken refectory can give us nothing but an abortion. As a
+ matter of fact, the Dioxys subjected to this niggardly test does not die,
+ for the parasite must have a tough constitution to enable it to face the
+ disastrous hazards which lie in wait for it; but it attains barely half
+ its ordinary dimensions, which means one-eighth of its normal bulk. To see
+ it thus diminished, we are surprised at its tenacious vitality, which
+ enables it to reach the adult form in spite of the extreme deficiency of
+ food. Meanwhile, this adult is still the Dioxys; there is no change of any
+ kind in her shape or colouring. Moreover, the two sexes are represented;
+ this family of pigmies has its males and females. Dearth and the
+ farinaceous mess in the Osmia's cell has had no more influence over
+ species or sex than abundance and flowing honey in the Chalicodoma's home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same may be said of the Spotted Sapyga (S. punctata (A parasitic Wasp.
+ Cf. "The Mason-bees": chapters 9 and 10.&mdash;Translator's Note.)),
+ which, a parasite of the Three-pronged Osmia, a denizen of the bramble,
+ and of the Golden Osmia, an occupant of empty Snail-shells, strays into
+ the house of the Tiny Osmia (O. parvula (This bee makes her home in the
+ brambles. Cf. "Bramble-dwellers and Others": chapters 2 and 3.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)), where, for lack of sufficient food, it does not attain half its
+ normal size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Leucopsis (Cf. "The Mason-bees": chapter 11.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ inserts her eggs through the cement wall of our three Chalicodomae. I know
+ her under two names. When she comes from the Chalicodoma of the Pebbles or
+ Walls, whose opulent larva saturates her with food, she deserves by her
+ large size the name of Leucopsis gigas, which Fabricius bestows upon her;
+ when she comes from the Chalicodoma of the Sheds, she deserves no more
+ than the name of L. grandis, which is all that Klug grants her. With a
+ smaller ration "the giant" is to some degree diminished and becomes no
+ more than "the large." When she comes from the Chalicodoma of the Shrubs,
+ she is smaller still; and, if some nomenclator were to seek to describe
+ her, she would no longer deserve to be called more than middling. From
+ dimension 2 she has descended to dimension 1 without ceasing to be the
+ same insect, despite the change of diet; and at the same time both sexes
+ are present in the three nurselings, despite the variation in the quantity
+ of victuals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I obtain Anthrax sinuata ("The Mason-bees": chapters 8, 10 and 11.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) from various bees' nests. When she issues from the cocoons of the
+ Three-horned Osmia, especially the female cocoons, she attains the
+ greatest development that I know of. When she issues from the cocoons of
+ the Blue Osmia (O. cyanea, KIRB.), she is sometimes hardly one-third the
+ length which the other Osmia gives her. And we still have the two sexes&mdash;that
+ goes without saying&mdash;and still identically the same species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two Anthidia, working in resin, A. septemdentatum, LATR., and A.
+ bellicosum, LEP. (For these Resin-bees, cf. "Bramble-bees and Others":
+ chapter 10.&mdash;Translator's Note.), establish their domicile in old
+ Snail-shells. The second harbours the Burnt Zonitis (Z. proeusta (Cf. "The
+ Glow-worm and Other Beetles": chapter 6.&mdash;Translator's Note.)). Amply
+ nourished this Meloe then acquires her normal size, the size in which she
+ usually figures in the collections. A like prosperity awaits her when she
+ usurps the provisions of Megachile sericans. (For this Bee, the Silky
+ Leaf-cutter, cf. "Bramble-bees and Others": chapter 8.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) But the imprudent creature sometimes allows itself to be carried
+ away to the meagre table of the smallest of our Anthidia (A. scapulare,
+ LATR. (A Cotton-bee, cf. idem: chapter 9.&mdash;Translator's Note.)), who
+ makes her nests in dry bramble-stems. The scanty fare makes a wretched
+ dwarf of the offspring belonging to either sex, without depriving them of
+ any of their racial features. We still see the Burnt Zonitis, with the
+ distinctive sign of the species: the singed patch at the tip of the
+ wing-cases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the other Meloidae&mdash;Cantharides, Cerocomae, Mylabres (For these
+ Blister-beetles or Oil-beetles, cf. "The Glow-worm and Other Beetles":
+ chapter 6.&mdash;Translator's Note.)&mdash;to what inequalities of size
+ are they not subject, irrespective of sex! There are some&mdash;and they
+ are numerous&mdash;whose dimensions fall to a half, a third, a quarter of
+ the regular dimensions. Among these dwarfs, these misbegotten ones, these
+ victims of atrophy, there are females as well as males; and their
+ smallness by no means cools their amorous ardour. These needy creatures, I
+ repeat, have a hard life of it. Whence do they come, these diminutive
+ Beetles, if not from dining-rooms insufficiently supplied for their needs?
+ Their parasitical habits expose them to harsh vicissitudes. No matter: in
+ dearth as well as in abundance the two sexes appear and the specific
+ features remain unchanged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is unnecessary to linger longer over this subject. The demonstration is
+ completed. The parasites tell us that changes in the quantity and quality
+ of food do not lead to any transformation of species. Fed upon the larva
+ of the Three-horned Osmia or of the Blue Osmia, Anthrax sinuata, whether
+ of handsome proportions or a dwarf, is still Anthrax sinuata; fed upon the
+ allowance of the Anthidium of the empty Snail-shells, the Anthidium of the
+ brambles, the Megachile or doubtless many others, the Burnt Zonitis is
+ still the Burnt Zonitis. Yet variation of diet ought to be a very
+ potential factor in the problem of progress towards another form. Is not
+ the world of living creatures ruled by the stomach? And the value of this
+ factor is unity, changing nothing in the product.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same parasites tell us&mdash;and this is the chief object of my
+ digression&mdash;that excess or deficiency of nutriment does not determine
+ the sex. So we are once more confronted with the strange proposition,
+ which is now more positive than ever, that the insect which amasses
+ provisions in proportion to the needs of the egg about to be laid knows
+ beforehand what the sex of this egg will be. Perhaps the reality is even
+ more paradoxical still. I shall return to the subject after discussing the
+ Osmiae, who are very weighty witnesses in this grave affair. (Cf.
+ "Bramble-bees and Others": chapters 3 to 5. The student is recommended to
+ read these three chapters in conjunction with the present chapter, to
+ which they form a sequel, with that on the Osmiae (chapter 2 of the above
+ volume) intervening.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 10. THE BEE-EATING PHILANTHUS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To meet among the Wasps, those eager lovers of flowers, a species that
+ goes hunting more or less on its own account is certainly a notable event.
+ That the larder of the grub should be provided with prey is natural
+ enough; but that the provider, whose diet is honey, should herself make
+ use of the captives is anything but easy to understand. We are quite
+ astonished to see a nectar-drinker become a blood-drinker. But our
+ astonishment ceases if we consider things more closely. The double method
+ of feeding is more apparent than real: the crop which fills itself with
+ sugary liquid does not gorge itself with game. The Odynerus, when digging
+ into the body of her prey, does not touch the flesh, a fare absolutely
+ scorned as contrary to her tastes; she satisfies herself with lapping up
+ the defensive drop which the grub (The Larva of Chrysomela populi, the
+ Poplar Leaf-beetle.&mdash;Translator's Note.) distils at the end of its
+ intestine. This fluid no doubt represents to her some highly-flavoured
+ beverage with which she seasons from time to time the staple diet fetched
+ from the drinking-bar of the flowers, some appetizing condiment or perhaps&mdash;who
+ knows?&mdash;some substitute for honey. Though the qualities of the
+ delicacy escape me, I at least perceive that the Odynerus does not covet
+ anything else. Once its jar is emptied, the larva is flung aside as
+ worthless offal, a certain sign of a non-carnivorous appetite. Under these
+ conditions, the persecutor of the Chrysomela ceases to surprise us by
+ indulging in the crying abuse of a double diet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We even begin to wonder whether other species may not be inclined to
+ derive a direct advantage from the hunting imposed upon them for the
+ maintenance of the family. The Odynerus' method of work, the splitting
+ open of the anal still-room, is too far removed from the obvious procedure
+ to have many imitators; it is a secondary detail and impracticable with a
+ different kind of game. But there is sure to be a certain variety in the
+ direct means of utilizing the capture. Why, for instance, when the victim
+ paralysed by the sting contains a delicious broth in some part of its
+ stomach, should the huntress scruple to violate her dying prey and force
+ it to disgorge without injuring the quality of the provisions? There must
+ be those who rob the dead, attracted not by the flesh but by the exquisite
+ contents of the crop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In point of fact, there are; and they are even numerous. We may mention in
+ the first rank the Wasp that hunts Hive-bees, the Bee-eating Philanthus
+ (P. apivorus, LATR.). I long suspected her of perpetrating these acts of
+ brigandage on her own behalf, having often surprised her gluttonously
+ licking the Bee's honey-smeared mouth; I had an inkling that she did not
+ always hunt solely for the benefit of her larvae. The suspicion deserved
+ to be confirmed by experiment. Also, I was engaged in another
+ investigation, which might easily be conducted simultaneously with the one
+ suggested: I wanted to study, with all the leisure of work done at home,
+ the operating-methods employed by the different Hunting Wasps. I therefore
+ made use, for the Philanthus, of the process of experimenting under glass
+ which I roughly outlined when speaking of the Odynerus. It was even the
+ Bee-huntress who gave me my first data in this direction. She responded to
+ my wishes with such zeal that I believed myself to possess an unequalled
+ means of observing again and again, even to excess, what is so difficult
+ to achieve on the actual spot. Alas, the first-fruits of my acquaintance
+ with the Philanthus promised me more than the future held in store for me!
+ But we will not anticipate; and we will place the huntress and her game
+ together under the bell-glass. I recommend this experiment to whoever
+ would wish to see with what perfection in the art of attack and defence a
+ Hunting Wasp wields the stiletto. There is no uncertainty here as to the
+ result, there is no long wait: the moment when she catches sight of the
+ prey in an attitude favourable to her designs, the bandit rushes forward
+ and kills. I will describe how things happen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I place under the bell-glass a Philanthus and two or three Hive-bees. The
+ prisoners climb the glass wall, towards the light; they go up, come down
+ again and try to get out; the vertical polished surface is to them a
+ practicable floor. They soon quiet down; and the spoiler begins to notice
+ her surroundings. The antennae are pointed forwards, enquiringly; the
+ hind-legs are drawn up with a little quiver of greed in the tarsi; the
+ head turns to right and left and follows the evolutions of the Bees
+ against the glass. The miscreant's posture now becomes a striking piece of
+ acting: you can read in it the fierce longings of the creature lying in
+ ambush, the crafty waiting for the moment to commit the crime. The choice
+ is made: the Philanthus pounces on her prey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turn by turn tumbling over and tumbled, the two insects roll upon the
+ ground. The tumult soon abates; and the murderess prepares to strangle her
+ capture. I see her adopt two methods. In the first, which is more usual
+ than the other, the Bee is lying on her back; and the Philanthus, belly to
+ belly with her, grips her with her six legs while snapping at her neck
+ with her mandibles. The abdomen is now curved forward from behind, along
+ the prostrate victim, feels with its tip, gropes about a little and ends
+ by reaching the under part of the neck. The sting enters, lingers for a
+ moment in the wound; and all is over. Without releasing her prey, which is
+ still tightly clasped, the murderess restores her abdomen to its normal
+ position and keeps it pressed against the Bee's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the second method, the Philanthus operates standing. Resting on her
+ hind-legs and on the tips of her unfurled wings, she proudly occupies an
+ erect attitude, with the Bee held facing her between her four front legs.
+ To give the poor thing a position suited to receive the dagger-stroke, she
+ turns her round and back again with the rough clumsiness of a child
+ handling its doll. Her pose is magnificent to look at. Solidly planted on
+ her sustaining tripod, the two hinder tarsi and the tips of the wings, she
+ at last crooks her abdomen upwards and again stings the Bee under the
+ chin. The originality of the Philanthus' posture at the moment of the
+ murder surpasses the anything that I have hitherto seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The desire for knowledge in natural history has its cruel side. To learn
+ precisely the point attacked by the sting and to make myself thoroughly
+ acquainted with the horrible talent of the murderess, I have investigated
+ more assassinations under glass than I would dare to confess. Without a
+ single exception, I have always seen the Bee stung in the throat. In the
+ preparations for the final blow, the tip of the abdomen may well come to
+ rest on this or that point of the thorax or abdomen; but it does not stop
+ at any of these, nor is the sting unsheathed, as can readily be
+ ascertained. Indeed, once the contest is opened, the Philanthus becomes so
+ entirely absorbed in her operation that I can remove the cover and follow
+ every vicissitude of the tragedy with my pocket-lens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After recognizing the invariable position of the wound, I bend back and
+ open the articulation of the head. I see under the Bee's chin a white
+ spot, measuring hardly a twenty-fifth of an inch square, where the horny
+ integuments are lacking and the delicate skin is shown uncovered. It is
+ here, always here, in this tiny defect in the armour, that the sting
+ enters. Why is this spot stabbed rather than another? Can it be the only
+ vulnerable point, which would necessarily determine the thrust of the
+ lancet? Should any one entertain so petty a thought, I advise him to open
+ the articulation of the corselet, behind the first pair of legs. He will
+ there see what I see: the bare skin, quite as fine as under the neck, but
+ covering a much larger surface. The horny breast-plate offers no wider
+ breach. If the Philanthus were guided in her operation solely by the
+ question of vulnerability, it is here certainly that she ought to strike,
+ instead of persistently seeking the narrow slit in the neck. The weapon
+ would not need to hesitate and grope; it would obtain admission into the
+ tissues off-hand. No, the stroke of the lancet is not forced upon it
+ mechanically: the assassin scorns the large defect in the corselet and
+ prefers the place under the chin, for eminently logical reasons which we
+ will now attempt to unravel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immediately after the operation I take the Bee from the Philanthus. What
+ strikes me is the sudden inertia of the antennae and the mouth-parts,
+ organs which in the victims of most of the Hunting Wasps continue to move
+ for so long a time. There are here not any of the signs of life to which I
+ have been accustomed in my old studies of insect paralysis: the antennary
+ threads waving slowly to and fro, the palpi quivering, the mandibles
+ opening and closing for days, weeks and months on end. At most, the tarsi
+ tremble for a minute or two; that constitutes the whole death-struggle.
+ Complete immobility ensues. The inference drawn from this sudden inertia
+ is inevitable: the Wasp has stabbed the cervical ganglia. Hence the
+ immediate cessation of movement in all the organs of the head; hence the
+ real instead of the apparent death of the Bee. The Philanthus is a butcher
+ and not a paralyser.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is one step gained. The murderess chooses the under part of the chin
+ as the point attacked in order to strike the principal nerve-centres, the
+ cephalic ganglia, and thus to do away with life at one blow. When this
+ vital seat is poisoned by the toxin, death is instantaneous. Had the
+ Philanthus' object been simply to effect paralysis, the suppression of
+ locomotor movements, she would have driven her weapon into the flaw in the
+ corselet, as the Cerceres do with the Weevils, who are much more
+ powerfully armoured than the Bee. But her intention is to kill outright,
+ as we shall see presently; she wants a corpse, not a paralytic patient.
+ This being so, we must agree that her operating-method is supremely
+ well-inspired: our human murderers could achieve nothing more thorough or
+ immediate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must also agree that her attitude when attacking, an attitude very
+ different from that of the paralysers, is infallible in its death-dealing
+ efficacy. Whether she deliver her thrust lying on the ground or standing
+ erect, she holds the Bee in front of her, breast to breast, head to head.
+ In this posture all that she need do is to curve her abdomen in order to
+ reach the gap in the neck and plunge the sting with an upward slant into
+ her captive's head. Suppose the two insects to be gripping each other in
+ the reverse attitude, imagine the dirk to slant slightly in the opposite
+ direction; the results would be absolutely different and the sting, driven
+ downwards, would pierce the first thoracic ganglion and produce merely
+ partial paralysis. What skill, to sacrifice a wretched Bee! In what
+ fencing-school was the slayer taught her terrible upward blow under the
+ chin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If she learnt it, how is it that her victim, such a past mistress in
+ architecture, such an adept in socialistic polity, has so far learnt no
+ corresponding trick to serve in her own defence? She is as powerful as her
+ executioner; like the other, she carries a rapier, an even more formidable
+ one and more painful, at least to my fingers. For centuries and centuries
+ the Philanthus has been storing her away in her cellars; and the poor
+ innocent meekly submits, without being taught by the annual extermination
+ of her race how to deliver herself from the aggressor by a well-aimed
+ thrust. I despair of ever understanding how the assailant has acquired her
+ talent for inflicting sudden death, when the assailed, who is better-armed
+ and quite as strong, wields her dagger anyhow and therefore ineffectively.
+ If the one has learnt by prolonged practice in attack, the other should
+ also have learnt by prolonged practice in defence, for attack and defence
+ possess a like merit in the fight for life. Among the theorists of the
+ day, is there one clear-sighted enough to solve the riddle for us?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If so, I will take the opportunity of putting to him a second problem that
+ puzzles me: the carelessness, nay, more, the stupidity of the Bee in the
+ presence of the Philanthus. You would be inclined to think that the victim
+ of persecution, learning gradually from the misfortunes suffered by her
+ family, would show distress at the ravisher's approach and at least
+ attempt to escape. In my cages I see nothing of the sort. Once the first
+ excitement due to incarceration under the bell-glass or the wire-gauze
+ cover has passed, the Bee seems hardly to trouble about her formidable
+ neighbour. I see one side by side with the Philanthus on the same honeyed
+ thistle-head: assassin and future victim are drinking from the same flask.
+ I see some one who comes heedlessly to enquire who that stranger can be,
+ crouching in wait on the table. When the spoiler makes her rush, it is
+ usually at a Bee who meets her half-way, and, so to speak, flings herself
+ into her clutches, either thoughtlessly or out of curiosity. There is no
+ wild terror, no sign of anxiety, no tendency to make off. How comes it
+ that the experience of the ages, that experience which, we are told,
+ teaches the animal so many things, has not taught the Bee the first
+ element of apiarian wisdom: a deep-seated horror of the Philanthus? Can
+ the poor wretch take comfort by relying on her trusty dagger? But she
+ yields to none in her ignorance of fencing; she stabs without method, at
+ random. However, let us watch her at the supreme moment of the killing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the ravisher makes play with her sting, the Bee does the same with
+ hers and furiously. I see the needle now moving this way or that way in
+ space, now slipping, violently curved, along the murderess' convex
+ surface. These sword-thrusts have no serious results. The manner in which
+ the two combatants are at grips has this effect, that the Philanthus'
+ abdomen is inside and the Bee's outside. The latter's sting therefore
+ finds under its point only the dorsal surface of the foe, a convex,
+ slippery surface and so well armoured as to be almost invulnerable. There
+ is here no breach into which the weapon can slip by accident; and so the
+ operation is conducted with absolute surgical safety, notwithstanding the
+ indignant protests of the patient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the fatal stroke has been administered, the murderess remains for a
+ long time belly to belly with the dead, for reasons which we shall shortly
+ perceive. There may now be some danger for the Philanthus. The attitude of
+ attack and defence is abandoned; and the ventral surface, more vulnerable
+ than the other, is within reach of the sting. Now the deceased still
+ retains the reflex use of her weapon for a few minutes, as I learnt to my
+ cost. Having taken the Bee too early from the bandit and handling her
+ without suspecting any risk, I received a most downright sting. Then how
+ does the Philanthus, in her long contact with the butchered Bee, manage to
+ protect herself against that lancet, which is bent upon avenging the
+ murder? Is there any chance of a commutation of the death-penalty? Can an
+ accident ever happen in the Bee's favour? Perhaps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One incident strengthens my faith in this perhaps. I had placed four Bees
+ and as many Eristales under the bell-glass at the same time, with the
+ object of estimating the Philanthus' entomological knowledge in the matter
+ of the distinction of species. Reciprocal quarrels break out in the mixed
+ colony. Suddenly, in the midst of the fray, the killer is killed. She
+ tumbles over on her back, she waves her legs; she is dead. Who struck the
+ blow? It was certainly not the excitable but pacific Drone-fly; it was one
+ of the Bees, who struck home by accident during the thick of the fight.
+ Where and how? I cannot tell. The incident occurs only once in my notes,
+ but it throws a light upon the question. The Bee is capable of
+ withstanding her adversary; she can then and there slay her would-be
+ slayer with a thrust of the sting. That she does not defend herself to
+ better purpose, when she falls into her enemy's clutches, is due to her
+ ignorance of fencing and not to the weakness of her weapon. And here again
+ arises, more insistently than before, the question which I asked above:
+ how is it that the Philanthus has learnt for offensive what the Bee has
+ not learnt for defensive purposes? I see but one answer to the difficulty:
+ the one knows without having learnt; the other does not know because she
+ is incapable of learning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us now consider the motives that induce the Philanthus to kill her Bee
+ instead of paralysing her. When the crime has been perpetrated, she
+ manipulates her dead victim without letting go of it for a moment, holding
+ its belly pressed against her own six legs. I see her recklessly, very
+ recklessly, rooting with her mandibles in the articulation of the neck,
+ sometimes also in the larger articulation of the corselet, behind the
+ first pair of legs, an articulation of whose delicate membrane she is
+ perfectly well aware, even though, when using her sting, she did not take
+ advantage of this point, which is the most readily accessible of all. I
+ see her rough-handling the Bee's belly, squeezing it against her own
+ abdomen, crushing it in the press. The recklessness of the treatment is
+ striking; it shows that there is no need for keeping up precautions. The
+ Bee is a corpse; and a little hustling here and there will not deteriorate
+ its quality, provided there be no effusion of blood. In point of fact,
+ however rough the handling, I fail to discover the slightest wound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These various manipulations, especially the squeezing of the neck, at once
+ bring about the desired results: the honey in the crop mounts to the Bee's
+ throat. I see the tiny drops spurt out, lapped up by the glutton as soon
+ as they appear. The bandit greedily, over and over again, takes the dead
+ insect's lolling, sugared tongue into her mouth; then she once more digs
+ into the neck and thorax, subjecting the honey-bag to the renewed pressure
+ of her abdomen. The syrup comes and is instantly lapped up and lapped up
+ again. In this way the contents of the crop are exhausted in small
+ mouthfuls, yielded one at a time. This odious meal at the expense of a
+ corpse's stomach is taken in a sybaritic attitude; the Philanthus lies on
+ her side with the Bee between her legs. The atrocious banquet sometimes
+ lasts for half an hour or longer. At last the drained Bee is discarded,
+ not without regret, it seems, for from time to time I see the manipulation
+ renewed. After taking a turn round the top of the bell-jar, the robber of
+ the dead returns to her prey and squeezes it, licking its mouth until the
+ last trace of honey has disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This frenzied passion of the Philanthus for the Bee's syrup is declared in
+ yet another fashion. When the first victim has been sucked dry, I slip
+ under the glass a second victim, which is promptly stabbed under the chin
+ and then subjected to pressure to extract the honey. A third follows and
+ undergoes the same fate without satisfying the bandit. I offer a fourth
+ and a fifth. They are all accepted. My notes mention one Philanthus who in
+ front of my eyes sacrificed six Bees in succession and squeezed out their
+ crops in the regulation manner. The slaughter came to an end not because
+ the glutton was sated but because my functions as a purveyor were becoming
+ rather difficult: the dry month of August causes the insects to avoid my
+ harmas, which at this season is denuded of flowers. Six crops emptied of
+ their honey: what an orgy! And even then the ravenous creature would very
+ likely not have scorned a copious additional course, had I possessed the
+ means of supplying it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no reason to regret this break in the service; the little that I
+ have said is more than enough to prove the singular characteristics of the
+ Bee-slayer. I am far from denying that the Philanthus has an honest means
+ of earning her livelihood; I find her working on the flowers as
+ assiduously as the other Wasps, peacefully drawing her honeyed beakers.
+ The males even, possessing no lancet, know no other manner of refreshment.
+ The mothers, without neglecting the table d'hote of the flowers, support
+ themselves by brigandage as well. We are told of the Skua, that pirate of
+ the seas, that he swoops down upon the fishing birds, at the moment when
+ they rise from the water with a capture. With a blow of the beak delivered
+ in the pit of the stomach he makes them give up their prey, which is
+ caught by the robber in mid-air. The despoiled bird at least gets off with
+ nothing worse than a contusion at the base of the throat. The Philanthus,
+ a less scrupulous pirate, pounces on the Bee, stabs her to death and makes
+ her disgorge in order to feed upon her honey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I say feed and I do not withdraw the word. To support my statement I have
+ better reasons than those set forth above. In the cages in which various
+ Hunting Wasps, whose stratagems of war I am engaged in studying, are
+ waiting till I have procured the desired prey&mdash;not always an easy
+ thing&mdash;I have planted a few flower-spikes, a thistle-head or two, on
+ which are placed drops of honey renewed at need. Here my captives come to
+ take their meals. With the Philanthus, the provision of honeyed flowers,
+ though favourably received, is not indispensable. I have only to let a few
+ live Bees into her cage from time to time. Half a dozen a day is about the
+ proper allowance. With no other food than the syrup extracted from the
+ slain, I keep my insects going for a fortnight or three weeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is as plain as a pikestaff: outside my cages, when the opportunity
+ offers, the Philanthus must also kill the Bee on her own account. The
+ Odynerus asks nothing from the Chrysomela but a mere condiment, the
+ aromatic juice of the rump; the other extracts from her victim an ample
+ supplement to her victuals, the crop full of honey. What a hecatomb of
+ Bees must not a colony of these freebooters make for their personal
+ consumption, not to mention the stored provisions! I recommend the
+ Philanthus to the signal vengeance of our Bee-masters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us go no deeper into the first causes of the crime. Let us accept
+ things as we know them for the moment, with their apparent or real
+ atrocity. To feed herself, the Philanthus levies tribute on the Bee's
+ crop. Having made sure of this, let us consider the bandit's method more
+ closely. She does not paralyse her capture according to the rites
+ customary among the Hunting Wasps; she kills it. Why kill it? If the eyes
+ of our understanding be not closed, the need for sudden death is clear as
+ daylight. The Philanthus proposes to obtain the honeyed broth without
+ ripping up the Bee, a proceeding which would damage the game when it is
+ hunted on behalf of the larvae, without resorting to the murderous
+ extirpation of the crop. She must, by able handling, by skilful pressure,
+ make the Bee disgorge, she must milk her, in a manner of speaking. Suppose
+ the Bee stung behind the corselet and paralysed. That deprives her of her
+ power of locomotion, but not of her vitality. The digestive organs in
+ particular retain or very nearly retain their normal energy, as is proved
+ by the frequent excretions that take place in the paralysed prey, so long
+ as the intestine is not empty, as is proved above all by the victims of
+ the Languedocian Sphex (Cf. "The Hunting Wasp": chapters 8 to 10.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), those helpless creatures which I used to keep alive for forty days
+ on end with a soup consisting of sugar and water. It is absurd to hope,
+ without therapeutic means, without a special emetic, to coax a sound
+ stomach into emptying its contents. The stomach of the Bee, who is jealous
+ of her treasure, would lend itself to the process even less readily than
+ another. When paralysed, the insect is inert; but there are always
+ internal energies and organic forces which will not yield to the
+ manipulator's pressure. The Philanthus will nibble at the throat and
+ squeeze the sides in vain: the honey will not rise to the mouth so long as
+ a vestige of life keeps the crop closed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Things are different with a corpse. The tension is relaxed, the muscles
+ become slack, the resistance of the stomach ceases and the bag of honey is
+ emptied by the robber's vigorous pressure. You see, therefore, that the
+ Philanthus is expressly obliged to inflict a sudden death, which will do
+ away at once with the elasticity of the organs. Where is the lightning
+ stroke to be delivered? The slayer knows better than we do, when she
+ sticks the Bee under the chin. The cerebral ganglia are reached through
+ the little hole in the neck and death ensues immediately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The relation of these acts of brigandage cannot satisfy my distressing
+ habit of following each reply obtained with a fresh question, until the
+ granite wall of the unknowable rises before me. If the Philanthus is an
+ expert in killing Bees and emptying crops swollen with honey, this cannot
+ be merely an alimentary resource, especially when, in common with the
+ others, she has the banqueting-hall of the flowers. I cannot accept her
+ atrocious talent as inspired merely by the craving for a feast obtained at
+ the expense of an empty stomach. Something certainly escapes us: the why
+ and wherefore of that crop drained dry. A creditable motive may lie hidden
+ behind the horrors which I have related. What is it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Any one can understand the vagueness of the observer's mind when he first
+ asks himself this question. The reader is entitled to be treated with
+ consideration. I will spare him the recital of my suspicions, my gropings
+ and my failures and will come straight to the results of my long
+ investigation. Everything has its harmonious reason for existence. I am
+ too fully persuaded of this to believe that the Philanthus pursues her
+ habit of profaning corpses solely to satisfy her greed. What does the
+ emptied crop portend? May it not be that...? Why, yes.... After all, who
+ knows?... Let us try along these lines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mother's first care is the welfare of the family. So far, we have seen
+ the Philanthus hunting only for her stomach's sake; let us watch her
+ hunting as a mother. Nothing is easier than to distinguish the two
+ performances. When the Wasp wants a few good mouthfuls and nothing more,
+ she scornfully abandons the Bee after picking her crop. The Bee is to her
+ a worthless remnant, which will shrivel where it lies and be dissected by
+ the Ants. If, on the other hand, she wants to stow away the Bee as a
+ provision for her larvae, she clasps her in her two intermediate legs and,
+ walking on the other four, goes round and round the edge of the
+ bell-glass, seeking for an outlet through which to fly off with her prey.
+ When she recognizes the circular track as impossible, she climbs up the
+ sides, this time holding the Bee by the antennae with her mandibles and
+ clinging to the polished and perpendicular surface with her six feet. She
+ reaches the top of the glass, stays for a little while in the hollow of
+ the knob at the top, returns to the ground, resumes her circling and her
+ climbing and does not decide to relinquish her Bee until she has
+ stubbornly attempted every means of escape. This persistence on her part
+ to retain her hold on the cumbrous burden tells us pretty plainly that the
+ game would go straight to the cells if the Philanthus had her liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, these Bees intended for the larvae are stung under the chin like the
+ others; they are real corpses; they are manipulated, squeezed, drained of
+ their honey exactly as the others are. In all these respects, there is no
+ difference between the hunt conducted to provide food for the larvae and
+ the hunt conducted merely to gratify the mother's appetite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the worries of captivity might well be the cause of a few anomalies in
+ the insect's actions, I felt that I ought to enquire how things happen in
+ the open. I lay in wait near some colonies of Philanthi, for longer
+ perhaps than the question deserved, as it had already been settled by what
+ had happened under glass. My tedious watches were rewarded from time to
+ time. Most of the huntresses returned home immediately, with the Bee under
+ their abdomen; some halted on the brambles hard by; and here I saw them
+ squeezing the dead Bee and making her disgorge the honey, which was
+ greedily lapped up. After these preliminaries the corpse was stored. Every
+ doubt is therefore removed: the provisions of the larva are first
+ carefully drained of their honey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since we are on the spot, let us prolong our stay and enquire into the
+ customs of the Philanthus in a state of liberty. Serving dead prey, which
+ goes bad in a few days, the Bee-huntress cannot adopt the method of
+ certain insects which paralyse a number of separate heads of game and fill
+ the cell with provisions, completing the ration before laying the egg. She
+ needs the method of the Bembex, whose larva receives the necessary
+ nourishment at intervals, as it grows larger. The facts confirm this
+ deduction. Just now I described as tedious my watches near the colonies of
+ the Philanthi. They were tedious in fact, even more so perhaps than those
+ which the Bembeces used to inflict upon me in the old days. Outside the
+ burrows of the Great Cerceris and other Weevil-lovers, outside those of
+ the Yellow-winged Sphex, the Cricket-slayer, there is plenty of
+ distraction, thanks to the bustling movement of the hamlet. The mother has
+ hardly come back home before she goes out again, soon returning laden with
+ a new prey and once more setting out upon the chase. The going and coming
+ is repeated at close intervals until the warehouse is full.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The burrow of the Philanthus is far from showing any such animation, even
+ in a populous colony. In vain were my watches prolonged for whole mornings
+ or afternoons; it was but very rarely that the mother whom I had seen go
+ in with a Bee came out again for a second expedition. Two captures at most
+ by the same huntress was all that I was able to see during my long vigils.
+ Feeding from day to day involves this deliberation. Once the family is
+ supplied with a sufficient ration for the moment, the mother suspends her
+ hunting-trips until further need arises and occupies herself with
+ mining-work in her underground house. Cells are dug; I see the rubbish
+ gradually pushed up to the surface. Beyond this there is not a sign of
+ activity; it is as though the burrow were deserted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inspection of the site is no easy matter. The shaft descends to a
+ depth of nearly three feet in a compact soil, either vertically or
+ horizontally. The spade and pick, wielded by stronger but less expert
+ hands than mine, are indispensable, for which reason the process of
+ excavation is far from satisfying me fully. At the end of this long
+ tunnel, which the straw which I use for sounding despairs of ever
+ reaching, the cells are at last encountered, oval cavities with a
+ horizontal major axis. Their number and general arrangement escape me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of them already contain the cocoon, which is slender and
+ semitransparent, like those of the Cerceris, and, like them, suggests the
+ shape of certain homoeopathic phials, with oval bellies surmounted by a
+ tapering neck. The cocoon is fastened to the end of the cell by the tip of
+ this neck, which is darkened and hardened by the larva's excrement; it has
+ no other support. It looks like a short club fixed by the end of the
+ handle along the horizontal axis of the nest. Other cells contain the
+ larva in a more or less advanced stage. The grub is munching the last
+ morsel served to it, with the scraps of the victuals already consumed
+ lying around it. Others lastly show me a Bee, one only, still untouched
+ and bearing an egg laid on her breast. This is the first partial ration;
+ the others will come as and when the grub grows larger. My anticipations
+ are thus confirmed: following the example of the Bembeces, the
+ Fly-killers, the Philanthus, the Bee-killer, lays her egg on the first
+ piece warehoused and at intervals adds to her nurselings' repast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The problem of the dead game is solved. There remains this other problem,
+ one of incomparable interest: why are the Bees robbed of their honey
+ before being served to the larvae? I have said and I say again that the
+ killing and squeezing cannot be explained and excused simply by reference
+ to the Philanthus' love of gormandizing. Robbing the worker of her booty
+ is nothing out of the way: we see it daily; but cutting her throat in
+ order to empty her stomach is going beyond a joke. And, as the Bees packed
+ away in the cellar are squeezed dry just as much as the others, the
+ thought occurs to my mind that a rumpsteak with jam is not to everybody's
+ liking and that the game stuffed with honey might well be a distasteful or
+ even unwholesome dish for the Philanthus' larvae. What will the grub do
+ when, sated with blood and meat, it finds the Bee's honey-bag under its
+ mandibles and especially when, nibbling at random, it rips open the crop
+ and spoils its venison with syrup? Will it thrive on the mixture? Will the
+ little ogre pass without repugnance from the gamy flavour of a carcase to
+ the scent of flowers? A blunt statement or denial would serve no purpose.
+ We must see. Let us see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I rear some young Philanthus-grubs, already waxing large; but, instead of
+ supplying them with the prey taken from the burrows, I give them game of
+ my own catching, game replete with nectar from the rosemaries. My Bees,
+ whom I kill by crushing their heads, are readily accepted; and I at first
+ see nothing that corresponds with my suspicions. Then my nurselings
+ languish, disdain their food, give a careless bite here and there and end
+ by perishing, from the first to the last, beside their unfinished
+ victuals. All my attempts miscarry: I do not once succeed in rearing my
+ larvae to the stage of spinning the cocoon. And yet I am no novice in the
+ functions of a foster-father. How many pupils have not passed through my
+ hands and reached maturity in my old sardine-boxes as comfortably as in
+ their natural burrows!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will not draw rash conclusions from this check; I am conscientious
+ enough to ascribe it to another cause. It may be that the atmosphere of my
+ study and the dryness of the sand serving as a bed have had a bad effect
+ on my charges, whose tender skins are accustomed to the warm moisture of
+ the subsoil. Let us therefore try another expedient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is hardly feasible to decide positively by the methods which I have
+ been following whether the honey is or is not repugnant to the grubs of
+ the Philanthus. The first mouthfuls consist of meat; and then nothing
+ particular occurs: it is the natural diet. The honey is met with later,
+ when the morsel has been largely bitten into. If hesitation and lack of
+ appetite are displayed at this stage, they come too late in the day to be
+ conclusive: the larva's discomfort may be due to other, known or unknown,
+ causes. The thing to do would be to offer the grub honey from the first,
+ before artificial rearing has affected its appetite. It is useless, of
+ course, to make the attempt with pure honey: no carnivorous creature would
+ touch it, though it were starving. The jam-sandwich is the only device
+ favourable to my plans, a meagre jam-sandwich, that is to say, the dead
+ Bee lightly smeared or varnished with honey by means of a camel's-hair
+ pencil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under these conditions, the problem is solved with the first few
+ mouthfuls. The grub that has bitten into the honeyed prey draws back in
+ disgust, hesitates a long time and then, urged by hunger, begins again,
+ tries this side and that and ends by refusing to touch the dish. For a few
+ days it pines away on top of its almost intact provisions; then it dies.
+ All that are subjected to this regimen succumb. Do they merely perish of
+ inanition in the presence of an unaccustomed food, which revolts their
+ appetite, or are they poisoned by the small quantity of honey absorbed
+ with the early mouthfuls? I cannot tell. The fact remains that, whether
+ poisonous or repugnant, the Bee in the state of bread and jam is death to
+ them; and this result explains, more clearly than the unfavourable
+ circumstance of my former experiment, my failures with the Bee that had
+ not been made to disgorge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This refusal to touch the unwholesome or distasteful honey is connected
+ with principles of nutrition which are too general to constitute a
+ gastronomic peculiarity of the Philanthus. The other carnivorous larvae,
+ at least in the order of the Hymenoptera, are bound to share it. Let us
+ try. We will go to work as before. I unearth the larvae when they have
+ attained a medium size, to avoid the weakness of infancy; I take away the
+ natural provisions, smear the carcases separately with honey and, when
+ this is done, restore its victuals to each of the grubs. I had to make a
+ choice: not every subject was equally suited to my experiments. I must
+ reject the larvae which are fed on one fat joint, such as those of the
+ Scolia. The grub in fact attacks its prey at a determined point, dips its
+ head and neck into the insect's body, rooting skilfully in the entrails to
+ keep the game fresh until the end of the meal, and does not withdraw from
+ the breach until the whole skin is emptied of its contents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To make it let go with the object of coating the inside of the venison
+ with honey had two drawbacks: I should be compromising the lingering
+ vitality which saves the insect that is being devoured from going bad and,
+ at the same time, I should be disturbing the delicate art of the devouring
+ insect, which, if removed from the lode which it was working, would no
+ longer be able to recover it or to distinguish between the lawful and the
+ unlawful morsels. The larva of the Scolia, consuming its Cetonia-grub, has
+ taught us all that we want to know on this subject in my earlier volume.
+ (Chapters 2 to 5 of the present volume contain the whole of the matter
+ referred to above.&mdash;Translator's Note.) The only acceptable larvae
+ are those supplied with a heap of small insects, which are attacked
+ without any special art, dismembered at random and eaten up quickly. Among
+ these I have tested such as chance threw in my way: those of various
+ Bembeces, all fed on Flies, those of the Palarus, whose bill of fare
+ consists of a very large assortment of Hymenoptera; those of the Tarsal
+ Tachytes, supplied with young Locusts; those of the Nest-building
+ Odynerus, furnished with Chrysomela-grubs; those of the Sand Cerceris,
+ endowed with a pinch of Weevils. A goodly variety, as you see, of
+ consumers and consumed. Well, to all of these the seasoning with honey
+ proved fatal. Whether poisoned or disgusted, they all died in a few days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A strange result indeed! Honey, the nectar of the flowers, the sole diet
+ of the Bee-tribe in both its forms and the sole resource of the Wasp in
+ her a adult form, is to the larvae of the latter an object of
+ insurmountable repugnance and probably a toxic dish. Even the
+ transformation of the nymphosis surprises me less than this inversion of
+ the appetite. What happens in the insect's stomach to make the adult seek
+ passionately what the youngster refused lest it should die? This is not a
+ question of organic debility unable to endure a too substantial, too hard,
+ too highly spiced dish. The grub that gnaws the Cetonia-larva, that
+ generous piece of butcher's meat; the glutton that crunches its batch of
+ tough Locusts; the one that battens on nitrobenzine-flavoured game: they
+ certainly own unfastidious gullets and accommodating stomachs. And these
+ robust eaters allow themselves to die of hunger or digestive troubles
+ because of a drop of syrup, the lightest food imaginable, suited to the
+ weakness of extreme youth and a feast for the adult besides! What a gulf
+ of obscurity in the stomach of a wretched grub!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These gastronomical researches called for a counterexperiment. The
+ carnivorous larva is killed by honey. Conversely, is the mellivorous larva
+ killed by animal food? Reservations are needful here, as in the previous
+ tests. We should be courting a flat refusal if we offered a pinch of
+ Locusts to the larvae of the Anthophora or the Osmia, for instance. (For
+ both these Wild Bees cf. "Bramble-bees and Others": passim.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) The honey-fed insect would not bite into it. There would be no use
+ whatever in trying. We must find the equivalent of the jam-sandwich
+ aforesaid; in other words, we must give the larva its natural fare with a
+ mixture of animal food. The addition made by my artifices shall be
+ albumen, as found in the egg of the Hen, albumen the isomer of fibrin,
+ which is the essential factor in any form of prey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, the Three-horned Osmia lends herself most admirably to
+ my plans, because of her dry honey, consisting for the greater part of
+ floury pollen. I therefore knead this honey with albumen, graduating the
+ dose until its weight largely exceeds that of the flour. In this way I
+ obtain pastes of different degrees of consistency, but all firm enough to
+ bear the larva without danger of immersion. With too fluid a mixture there
+ would be a risk of death by drowning. Lastly I install a
+ moderately-developed larva on each of my albuminous cakes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dish of my inventing does not incite dislike: far from it. The grubs
+ attack it without hesitation and consume it with every appearance of the
+ usual appetite. Things could not go better if the food had not been
+ altered by my culinary recipes. Everything goes down, including the
+ morsels in which I feared that I had overdone the addition of albumen. And&mdash;an
+ even more important point&mdash;the Osmia-larvae fed in this manner attain
+ their normal dimensions and spin their cocoons, from which adult insects
+ issue in the following year. Notwithstanding the albuminous regimen, the
+ cycle of the evolution is achieved without impediment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What are we to conclude from all this? I feel greatly embarrassed. Omne
+ vivum ex ovo, the physiologists tell us. Every animal is carnivorous, in
+ its first beginnings: it is formed and nourished at the cost of its egg,
+ in which albumen predominates. The highest, the mammal, adheres to this
+ diet for a long time: it has its mother's milk, rich in casein, another
+ isomer of albumen. The gramnivorous nestling is first fed on grubs, which
+ are better adapted to the niceties of its stomach; many of the minutest
+ new-born creatures, being at once left to their own devices, take to
+ animal food. In this way the original method of nourishment is continued
+ for all alike: the method which allows flesh to be made from flesh and
+ blood from blood, with no chemical process beyond the simplest
+ modification. At maturity, when the stomach has acquired its full
+ strength, vegetable food is adopted, involving a more complicated
+ chemistry but easier to obtain. Milk is followed by fodder, worms by
+ seeds, the prey in the burrow by the nectar of the flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This supplies a partial explanation of the twofold diet of the Hymenoptera
+ with carnivorous larvae: meat first, honey next. But then the note of
+ interrogation is shifted. It stood elsewhere; it now stands here. Why is
+ the Osmia, who as a larva fares so well on albumen, fed on honey at the
+ start? Why do the Bee-tribe receive a vegetable diet when the other
+ members of the order receive an animal diet?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I were a believer in evolution, I should say yes, by the fact of its
+ germ, every animal is originally carnivorous. The insect in particular
+ starts with albuminoid materials. Many larvae adhere to the egg-food, many
+ adult insects do likewise. But the struggle to fill the belly, which after
+ all is the struggle for life, demands something better than the precarious
+ hazards of the chase. Man, at first a ravenous hunter after game, brought
+ the flock into existence and turned shepherd to avoid a time of dearth. An
+ even greater progress inspired him to scrape the earth and to sow seed,
+ which assures him of a living. The evolution from scarcity to moderation
+ and from moderation to plenty has led to the resources of husbandry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The animals forestalled us this path of progress. The ancestors of the
+ Philanthus, in the remote ages of the lacustrian tertiary formations,
+ lived by prey in both the larval and the adult forms: they hunted for
+ themselves as well as for the family. They did not confine themselves to
+ emptying the Bee's crop, as their descendants do to this day: they
+ devoured the deceased. From the beginning to the end they remained
+ flesh-eaters. Later, fortunate innovators, whose race supplanted the
+ laggards, discovered an inexhaustible nourishment, obtained without
+ dangerous conflicts or laborious search: the sugary secretions of the
+ flowers. The costly habit of living on prey, which does not favour large
+ populations, was maintained for the feeble larvae; but the vigorous adult
+ broke herself of it to lead an easier and more prosperous life. Thus,
+ gradually, was formed the Philanthus of our day; thus was acquired the
+ twofold diet of the various predatory insects our contemporaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bee has done better still: from the moment of leaving the egg she
+ delivered herself completely from food-stuffs the acquisition of which
+ depended on chance. She discovered honey, the grubs' food. Renouncing the
+ chase for ever and becoming an agriculturalist pure and simple, the insect
+ attains a degree of physical and moral prosperity which the predatory
+ species are far from sharing. Hence the flourishing colonies of the
+ Anthophorae, the Osmiae, the Eucerae (A genus of long-horned Burrowing
+ Bees.&mdash;Translator's Note.), the Halicti and other
+ honey-manufacturers, whereas the predatory insects work in isolation;
+ hence the societies in which the Bee displays her wonderful tendencies,
+ the supreme expression of instinct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is what I should say if I belonged to that school. It all forms a
+ chain of very logical deductions and proffers itself with a certain air of
+ likelihood which we should be glad to find in a host of evolutionist
+ arguments put forward as irrefutable. Well, I will make a present of my
+ deductive views, without regret, to whoever cares to have them: I don't
+ believe one word of them; and I confess my profound ignorance of the
+ origin of the twofold diet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What I do understand more clearly, after all these investigations, is the
+ tactics of the Philanthus. When witnessing her ferocious feasting, the
+ real reason of which was unknown to me, I heaped the most ill-sounding
+ epithets upon her, calling her a murderess, a bandit, a pirate, a robber
+ of the dead. Ignorance is always evil-tongued; the man who does not know
+ indulges in rude assertions and mischievous interpretations. Now that my
+ eyes have been opened to the facts, I hasten to apologize and to restore
+ the Philanthus to her place in my esteem. In draining the crops of her
+ Bees the mother is performing the most praiseworthy of all actions: she is
+ protecting her family against poison. If she happens to kill on her own
+ account and to abandon the corpse after making it disgorge, I dare not
+ reckon this against her as a crime. When the habit has been formed of
+ emptying the Bee's crop with a good motive, there is a great temptation to
+ do it again with no other excuse than hunger. Besides, who knows? Perhaps
+ there is always at the back of her hunting some thought of game which
+ might be useful for the larvae. Although not carried into effect, the
+ intention excuses the deed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I therefore withdraw my epithets in order to admire the insect's maternal
+ logic and to hold it up to the admiration of others. The honey would be
+ pernicious to the health of the larvae. How does the mother know that the
+ syrup, a treat for her, is unwholesome for her young? To this question our
+ science offers no reply. The honey, I say, would imperil the grubs' lives,
+ The Bee must therefore first be made to disgorge. The disgorging must be
+ effected without lacerating the victim, which the nurseling must receive
+ in the fresh state; and the operation is impracticable on a paralysed
+ insect because of the resistance of the stomach. The Bee must therefore be
+ killed outright instead of being paralysed, or the honey will not be
+ voided. Instantaneous death can be inflicted only by wounding the
+ primordial centre of life. The sting must therefore aim at the cervical
+ ganglia, the seat of innervation on which the rest of the organism
+ depends. To reach them there is only one way, through the little gap in
+ the throat. It is here therefore that the sting must be inserted; and it
+ is here in fact that it is inserted, in a spot hardly as large as the
+ twenty-fifth of an inch square. Suppress a single link of this compact
+ chain, and the Bee-fed Philanthus becomes impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That honey is fatal to carnivorous larvae is a fact which teems with
+ consequences. Several Hunting Wasps feed their families upon Bees. These
+ include, to my knowledge, the Crowned Philanthus (P. coronatus, FAB.), who
+ lines her burrows with big Halicti; the Robber Philanthus (P. raptor,
+ LEP.), who chases all the smaller-sized Halicti, suited to her own
+ dimensions, indifferently; the Ornate Cerceris (C. ornata, FAB.), another
+ passionate lover of Halicti; and the Palarus (P. flavipes, FAB.), who,
+ with a curious eclecticism, stacks in her cells the greater part of the
+ Hymenopteron clan that does not exceed her powers. What do these four
+ huntresses and the others of similar habits do with their victims whose
+ crops are more or less swollen with honey? They must follow the example of
+ the Bee-eating Philanthus and make them disgorge, lest their family perish
+ of a honeyed diet; they must manipulate the dead Bee, squeeze her and
+ drain her dry. Everything goes to show it. I leave it to the future to
+ display these dazzling proofs of my doctrine in their proper light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 11. THE METHOD OF THE AMMOPHILAE. (For these Sand-wasps, cf.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "The Hunting Wasps": chapters 13 and 18 to 20.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My readers may differ in appraising the comparative value of the trifling
+ discoveries which entomology owes to my labours. The geologist, the
+ recorder of forms, will prefer the hypermetamorphosis of the Oil-beetles
+ (The chapter treating of this subject has not yet been translated into
+ English and will appear in a later volume.&mdash;Translator's Note.), the
+ development of the Anthrax (Cf. "The Life of the Fly": chapter 2.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) or larval dimorphism; the embryogenist, searching into the
+ mysteries of the egg, will have some esteem for my enquiries into the
+ egg-laying habits of the Osmia (Cf. "Bramble-bees and Others": chapter 4.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.); the philosopher, racking his brain over the nature of instinct,
+ will award the palm to the operations of the Hunting Wasps. I agree with
+ the philosopher. Without hesitation, I would abandon all the rest of my
+ entomological baggage for this discovery, which happens to be the earliest
+ in date and that of which I have the fondest memories. Nowhere do I find a
+ more brilliant, more lucid, more eloquent proof of the intuitive wisdom of
+ instinct; nowhere does the theory of evolution suffer a more obstinate
+ check.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darwin, a true judge, made no mistake about it. (Charles Robert Darwin,
+ born the 12th of February, 1809, at Shrewsbury, died at Down, in Kent, on
+ the 19th of April, 1882. For an account of certain experiments which the
+ author conducted on his behalf, cf. "The Mason-bees": chapter 4.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.) He greatly dreaded the problem of the instincts. My first results
+ in particular left him very anxious. If he had known the tactics of the
+ Hairy Ammophila, the Mantis-hunting Tachytes, the Bee-eating Philanthus,
+ the Calicurgi and other marauders, his anxiety, I believe, would have
+ ended in a frank admission that he was unable to squeeze instinct into the
+ mould of his formula. Alas, the philosopher of Down quitted this world
+ when the discussion, with experiments to support it, had barely begun: a
+ method superior to any argument! The little that I had published at that
+ time left him with still some hope of an explanation. In his eyes,
+ instinct was always an acquired habit. The predatory Wasps killed their
+ prey at first by stabbing it at random, here and there, in the softest
+ parts. By degrees they found the spot where the sting was most effectual;
+ and the habit once formed became a true instinct. Transitions from one
+ method of operation to the other, intermediary changes, sufficed to
+ bolster up these sweeping assertions. In a letter of the 16th of April,
+ 1881, he asks G.J. Romanes to consider the problem:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not know," he says "whether you will discuss in your book on the
+ mind of animals any of the more complex and wonderful instincts. It is
+ unsatisfactory work, as there can be no fossilised instincts, and the sole
+ guide is their state in other members of the same order, and mere
+ PROBABILITY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But if you do discuss any (and it will perhaps be expected of you), I
+ should think that you could not select a better case than that of the
+ sand-wasps which paralyse their prey as described by Fabre in his
+ wonderful paper in the 'Anales des sciences naturelles,' and since
+ amplified in his admirable 'Souvenirs...'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thank you, O illustrious master, for your eulogistic expressions,
+ proving the keen interest which you took in my studies of instinct, no
+ ungrateful task&mdash;far from it&mdash;when we tackle it as it should be
+ tackled: from the front, with the aid of facts, and not from the flank,
+ with the aid of arguments. Arguments are here out of place, if we wish to
+ maintain our position in the light. Besides, where would they lead us? To
+ evoking the instincts of bygone ages, which have not been preserved by
+ fossilization? Any such appeal to the dim and distant past is quite
+ unnecessary, if we wish for variations of instinct, leading by degrees,
+ according to you, from one instinct to another; the present world offers
+ us plenty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each operator has her particular method, her particular kind of game, her
+ particular points of attack and tricks of fence; but in the midst of this
+ variety of talents we observe, immutable and predominant, the perfect
+ accordance of the surgery with the victim's organization and the larva's
+ needs. The art of one will not explain the art of another, no less exact
+ in the delicacy of its rules. Each operator has her own tactics, which
+ tolerate no apprenticeship. The Ammophila, the Scolia, the Philanthus and
+ the others all tell us the same thing: none can leave descendants if she
+ be not from the outset the skilful paralyser or slayer that she is to-day.
+ The "almost" is impracticable when the future of the race is at stake.
+ What would have become of the first-born mammal but for its perfect
+ instinct of suckling?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then, to suppose the impossible: a Wasp discovers by chance the
+ operative method which will be the saving attribute of her race. How are
+ we to admit that this fortuitous act, to which the mother has vouchsafed
+ no more attention than to her other less fortunate attempts, could leave a
+ profound trace behind it and be faithfully transmitted by heredity? Is it
+ not going beyond reason, going beyond the little that is known to us as
+ certain, if we grant to atavism this strange power, of which our present
+ world knows no instance? There is a good deal to be said for this point of
+ view, my revered master! But, once more, arguments are here out of place;
+ there is room only for facts, of which I will resume the recital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hitherto I had but one means of studying the operative methods of the
+ spoilers: to surprise the Wasp in possession of her capture, to rob her of
+ her prey and immediately to give her in exchange a similar prey, but a
+ living one. This method of substitution is an excellent expedient. Its
+ only defect&mdash;a very grave one&mdash;is that it subjects observation
+ to very uncertain chances. There is little prospect of meeting the insect
+ dragging its victim along; and, in the second place, should good fortune
+ suddenly smile upon you, preoccupied as you are with other matters you
+ have not the substitute at hand. If we provide ourselves with the
+ necessary head of game in advance, the huntress is not there. We avoid one
+ reef to founder on another. Moreover, these unlooked for observations,
+ made sometimes on the public highway, the worst of laboratories, are only
+ half-satisfactory. In the case of swiftly-enacted scenes, which it is not
+ in our power to renew again and again until perfect conviction is reached,
+ we always fear lest we may not have seen accurately, may not have seen
+ everything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A method which could be controlled at will would offer the best
+ guarantees, above all if employed at home, under comfortable conditions,
+ favourable to precision. I wished, therefore, to see my insects at work on
+ the actual table at which I am writing their history. Here very few of
+ their secrets would escape me. This wish of mine was an old one. As a
+ beginner, I made some experiments under glass with the Great Cerceris (C.
+ tuberculata) and the Yellow-winged Sphex. Neither of them responded to my
+ desires. The refusal of each to attack respectively her Cleonus or her
+ Cricket discouraged further progress in this direction. I was wrong to
+ abandon my attempts so soon. Now, very long afterwards, the idea occurs to
+ me to place under glass the Bee-eating Philanthus, whom I sometimes
+ surprise in the open engaged in forcing a bee to disgorge her honey. The
+ captive massacres her bees in such a spirited fashion that the old hope
+ revives stronger than ever. I contemplate reviewing all the wielders of
+ the stiletto and forcing each to reveal her tactics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was obliged to abate these ambitions considerably. I had some successes
+ and many more failures. I will tell you of the former. My insect-cage is a
+ spacious dome of wire-gauze resting on a bed of sand. Here I keep in
+ reserve the captives of my hunting-expeditions. I feed them on honey,
+ placed in little drops on spikes of lavender, on heads of thistle, or
+ field eryngo, or globe-thistle, according to the season. Most of my
+ prisoners do well on this diet and seem scarcely affected by their
+ internment; others pine away and die in two or three days. These victims
+ of despair nearly always throw me back, because of the difficulty of
+ obtaining the necessary prey at short notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed it entails no small trouble to secure in the nick of time the game
+ demanded by the huntress who has recently fallen a captive to my net. As
+ assistant-purveyors I have a few small schoolboys, who, released from the
+ tedium of their declensions and conjugations, set out, on leaving the
+ classroom, to inspect the greenswards and beat the bushes in the
+ neighbourhood on my behalf. The gros sou, the penny-piece, if you please,
+ stimulates their zeal; but with misadventurous results! What I need to-day
+ is Crickets. The band sallies forth and returns with not a single Cricket,
+ but numbers of Ephippigers, for which I asked the day before yesterday and
+ which I no longer need, my Languedocian Sphex being dead. General surprise
+ at this sudden change of market. My young scatterbrains find it hard to
+ understand that the beast which was so precious two days ago is now of no
+ value whatever. When, owing to the chances of my net, a renewed demand for
+ the Ephippiger sets in, then they will bring me the Cricket, the despised
+ Cricket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a trade could never hold out if now and again my speculators were not
+ encouraged by some success. At the moment when urgent necessity is sending
+ up prices, one of them brings me a magnificent Gad-fly intended for the
+ Bembex. For two hours, when the sun was at its height, he kept watch on
+ the threshing-floor hard by, waiting for the blood-sucker, in order to
+ catch him on the buttocks of the Mules which trot round and round
+ trampling the corn. This gallant fellow shall have his gros sou and a
+ slice of bread and jam as well. A second, no less fortunate, has found a
+ fat Spider, the Epeira, for whom my Pompili are waiting. To the two sous
+ of this fortunate youth I add a little picture for his missal. Thus are my
+ purveyors kept going; and, after all, their help would be very inadequate
+ if I did not take upon myself the main burden of these wearisome quests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once in possession of the requisite prey, I transfer the huntress from my
+ warehouse, the wire-gauze cage, to a bell-glass varying in capacity from
+ one to three or four litres (1 3/4 to 5 or 7 pints.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), according to the size and habits of the combatants; I place the
+ victim in the arena; I expose the bell-glass to the direct rays of the
+ sun, without which condition the executioner as a rule declines to
+ operate; I arm myself with patience and await events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will begin with the Hairy Ammophila, my neighbour. Year after year,
+ when April comes, I see her in considerable numbers, very busy on the
+ paths in my enclosure. Until June I see her digging her burrows and
+ searching for the Grey Worm, to be placed in the meat-cellar. Her tactics
+ are the most complex that I know and more than any other deserves to be
+ thoroughly studied. To capture the cunning vivisector, to release her and
+ catch her again I find an easy matter for the best part of a month; she
+ works outside my door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have still to obtain the Grey Worm. This means a repetition of the
+ disappointments which I had before, when, to find a caterpillar, I was
+ obliged to watch the Ammophila while hunting and to be guided by her
+ hints, as the truffle-hunter is guided by the scent of his Dog. A patient
+ exploration of the harmas, one tuft of thyme after another, does not give
+ me a single worm. My rivals in this search are finding their game at every
+ moment; I cannot find it even once. Yet one more reason for bowing to the
+ superiority of the insect in the management of her affairs. My band of
+ schoolboys get to work in the surrounding fields. Nothing, always nothing!
+ I in my turn explore the outer world; and for ten days the pursuit of a
+ caterpillar torments me till I lose my power of sleep. Then, at last,
+ victory! At the foot of a sunny wall, under the budding rosettes of the
+ panicled centaury, I find a fair supply of the precious Grey Worm or its
+ equivalent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behold the worm and the Ammophila face to face beneath the bell-glass.
+ Usually the attack is prompt enough. The caterpillar is grabbed by the
+ neck with the mandibles, wide, curved pincers capable of embracing the
+ greater part of the living cylinder. The creature thus seized twists and
+ turns and sometimes, with a blow of its tail, sends the assailant rolling
+ to a distance. The latter is unconcerned and thrusts her sting thrice in
+ rapid succession into the thorax, beginning with the third segment and
+ ending with the first, where the weapon is driven home with greater
+ determination than elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The caterpillar is then released. The Ammophila stamps on the ground; with
+ her quivering tarsi she taps the cardboard on which the bell-glass stands;
+ she lies down flat, drags herself along, gets up again, flattens herself
+ once more. The wings jerk convulsively. From time to time the insect
+ places its mandibles and forehead on the ground, then rears high upon its
+ hind-legs as though to turn head over heels. In all this I see a
+ manifestation of delight. We rub our hands when rejoicing at a success;
+ the Ammophila is celebrating her triumph over the monster in her own
+ fashion. During this fit of delirious joy, what is the wounded caterpillar
+ doing? It can no longer walk; but all the part behind the thorax struggles
+ violently, curling and uncurling when the Ammophila sets a foot upon it.
+ The mandibles open and shut menacingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SECOND ACT.&mdash;When the operation is resumed, the caterpillar is seized
+ by the back. From front to rear, in order, all the segments are stung on
+ the ventral surface, except the three operated on. All serious danger is
+ averted by the stabs of the first act; therefore, the Wasp is now able to
+ work upon her patient without the haste displayed at the outset.
+ Deliberately and methodically she drives in her lancet, withdraws it,
+ selects the spot, stabs it and begins again, passing from segment to
+ segment, taking care, each time, to lay hold of the back a little more to
+ the rear, in order to bring the segment to be paralysed within reach of
+ the needle. For the second time, the caterpillar is released. It is
+ absolutely inert, except the mandibles, which are still capable of biting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THIRD ACT.&mdash;The Ammophila clasps the paralysed victim between her
+ legs; with the hooks of her mandibles she seizes the back of its neck, at
+ the base of the first thoracic segment. For nearly ten minutes she munches
+ this weak spot, which lies close to the cerebral nerve-centres. The
+ pincers squeeze suddenly but at intervals and methodically, as though the
+ manipulator wished each time to judge of the effect produced; the squeezes
+ are repeated until I am tired of trying to count them. When they cease,
+ the caterpillar's mandibles are motionless. Then comes the transportation
+ of the carcase, a detail which is not relevant in this place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have set forth the complete tragedy, as it is fairly often enacted, but
+ not always. The insect is not a machine, unvarying in the effect of its
+ mechanism; it is allowed a certain latitude, enabling it to cope with the
+ eventualities of the moment. Any one expecting to see the incidents of the
+ struggle unfolding themselves exactly as I have described will risk
+ disappointment. Special instances occur&mdash;they are even numerous&mdash;which
+ are more or less at variance with the general rule. It will be well to
+ mention the more important, in order to put future observers on their
+ guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not infrequently the first act, that of paralysing the thorax, is
+ restricted to two thrusts of the sting instead of three, or even to one,
+ which is then delivered in the foremost segment. This, it would seem, from
+ the persistency with which the Ammophila inflicts it, is the most
+ important prick of all. Is it unreasonable to suppose that the operator,
+ when she begins by pricking the thorax, intends to subdue her capture and
+ to make it incapable of injuring her, or even of disturbing her when the
+ moment comes for the delicate and protracted surgery of the second act?
+ This idea seems to me highly admissible; and then, instead of three
+ dagger-thrusts, why not two only, why not merely one, if this would
+ suffice for the time being? The amount of vigour displayed by the
+ caterpillar must be taken into consideration. Be this as it may, the
+ segments spared in the first act are stabbed in the second. I have
+ sometimes even seen the three thoracic segments stung twice over: at the
+ beginning of the attack and again when the Wasp returned to her vanquished
+ prey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ammophila's triumphant transports beside her wounded and writhing
+ victim are also subject to exceptions. Sometimes, without releasing its
+ prey for a moment, the insect proceeds from the thorax to the next
+ segments and completes its operation in a single spell. The joyous
+ entr'acte does not take place; the convulsive movements of the wings and
+ the acrobatic postures are suppressed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rule is paralysis of all the segments, however many, in regular order
+ from front to back, including even the anal segment if this boast of legs.
+ By a fairly frequent exception the last two or three segments are spared.
+ Another exception, but a very rare one, of which I have observed only a
+ single instance, consists in the inversion of the dagger-thrusts of the
+ second act, the thrusts being delivered from back to front. The
+ caterpillar is then seized by its hinder extremity; and the Ammophila,
+ progressing towards the head, stings in reverse order, passing from the
+ succeeding to the preceding segment, including the thorax already stabbed.
+ This reversal of the usual tactics I am inclined to attribute to
+ negligence on the insect's part. Negligence or not, the inverted method
+ has the same final result as the direct method: the paralysis of all the
+ segments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lastly, the compression of the neck by the mandibulary pincers, the
+ munching of the weak spot between the base of the skull and the first
+ segment of the thorax, is sometimes practised and sometimes neglected. If
+ the caterpillar's jaws open and threaten, the Ammophila stills them by
+ biting the neck; if they are already growing quiescent, she refrains.
+ Without being indispensable, this operation is useful at the moment of
+ carting the prey. The caterpillar, too heavy to be carried on the wing, is
+ dragged, head first, between the Ammophila's legs. If the mandibles are
+ working, the least clumsiness may render them dangerous to the carrier,
+ who is exposed to their bite without any means of defence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, once on the way, thickets of grass are traversed in which the
+ Grey Worm can seize a blade and offer a desperate resistance to the
+ traction. Nor is this all. The Ammophila does not as a rule trouble about
+ her burrow, or at least does not complete it, until she has caught her
+ caterpillar. During the mining-operations, the game is laid somewhere high
+ up, out of reach of the Ants, on some tuft of grass, or the twigs of a
+ shrub, whither the huntress, from time to time, stopping her well-sinking,
+ hastens to see if her quarry is still there. For her this is a means of
+ refreshing her memory of the spot where she has laid it, often at some
+ distance from the burrow, and of preventing attempts at robbery. When the
+ moment comes for removing the game from its hiding-place, the difficulty
+ would be insurmountable were the worm, gripping the shrub with all the
+ might of its jaws, to anchor itself there. Hence inertia of the powerful
+ hooks, which are the paralysed creature's sole means of resistance,
+ becomes essential during the carting. The Ammophila obtains it by
+ compressing the cerebral ganglia, by munching the neck. The inertia is
+ temporary; it wears off sooner or later; but by this time the carcase is
+ in the cell and the egg, prudently laid at a distance on the ventral
+ surface of the worm, has nothing to fear from the caterpillar's grapnels.
+ No comparison is permissible between the methodical squeezes of the
+ Ammophila benumbing the cephalic nerve-centres and the brutal
+ manipulations of the Philanthus emptying the crop of her Bee. The huntress
+ of Grey Worms induces a temporary torpor of the mandibles; the ravisher of
+ Bees makes them eject their honey. No one gifted with the least
+ perspicacity will confound the two operations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the moment we will not dwell any longer on the method of the Hairy
+ Ammophila; we will see instead how her kinswomen behave. After protracted
+ refusals the Sandy Ammophila (A. sabulosa, FAB.),on whom I experimented in
+ September, ended by accepting the proffered prey, a powerful caterpillar
+ as thick as a lead-pencil. The surgical method did not differ from that
+ employed by the Hairy Ammophila when operating on her Grey Worm in one
+ spell. All the segments, excepting the last three, were stung from front
+ to back, beginning with the prothorax. This single success with a
+ simplified method left me in ignorance of the accessory manoeuvres, which
+ I do not doubt must more or less closely recall those of the preceding
+ species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am all the more inclined to accept these secondary manoeuvres, not as
+ yet recorded&mdash;the transports of triumph and the compressions of the
+ neck&mdash;inasmuch as I see them practised upon the Looper caterpillars,
+ which differ so greatly from the others in external structure, exactly as
+ I have described them in the case of the Grey Worm, which is of the
+ ordinary form. Two species, the Silky Ammophila (A. holoserica, FAB.) and
+ Jules' Ammophila (See in the first volume of the "Souvenirs
+ entomologiques" what I mean by this denomination.&mdash;Author's Note.),
+ affect this curious prey, which moves with the stride of a pair of
+ compasses. The first, often renewed under glass during the greater part of
+ August, has always refused my offers; the second, her contemporary, has,
+ on the contrary, promptly accepted them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I present Jules' Ammophila with a slender, brownish Looper which I caught
+ on the jasmine. The attack is not slow in coming. The caterpillar is
+ grabbed by the neck: lively contortions of the victim, which rolls the
+ aggressor over and drags her along, now uppermost, now undermost in the
+ struggle. First the thorax is stung, in its three rings, from back to
+ front. The sting lingers longest near the throat, in the first segment.
+ This done, the Ammophila releases her victim and proceeds to stamp her
+ tarsi, to polish her wings, to stretch herself. Again I observe the
+ acrobatic postures, the forehead touching the ground, the hinder part of
+ the body raised. This mimic triumph is the same as that of the huntress of
+ the Grey Worm. Then the Looper is once more seized. Despite its
+ contortions, which are not in the least abated by the three wounds in the
+ thorax, it is stung from front to back in each segment still unwounded, no
+ matter how many, whether supplied with legs or not. I expected to see the
+ sting refrain more or less in the long interval which separates the true
+ legs in front from the pro-legs at the back (Fleshy legs found on the
+ abdominal segments of caterpillars and certain other larvae.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.): segments devoid of organs of defence or locomotion did not seem to
+ me to deserve conscientious surgery. I was mistaken: not a segment of the
+ Looper is spared, not even the last ones. It is true that these, being
+ eminently capable of catching hold with their false legs, would be
+ dangerous later were the Wasp to neglect them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I observe, however, that the lancet works more rapidly in the second part
+ of the operation than in the first, either because the caterpillar, half
+ subjugated by the triple wound at the outset, is easier to reach with the
+ sting, or because the segments more remote from the head are rendered
+ harmless with a smaller injection of poison. Nowhere do we see repeated
+ the care expended upon paralysing the thorax, still less the insistent
+ attention to the first segment. On returning to her Looper after the
+ entr'acte devoted to the joys of success, the Ammophila stabs so swiftly
+ that, on one occasion, I saw her obliged to begin all over again. Lightly
+ stung along its whole length, the victim still struggles. Without
+ hesitation, the operator unsheathes her scalpel for the second time and
+ operates on the Looper afresh, with the exception of the thorax, which was
+ already sufficiently anaesthetized. This done, all is in order; there is
+ no more movement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the stiletto the hooks of the mandibles rarely fail to intervene.
+ Long and curved, they nibble at the paralysed victim's neck, sometimes
+ from above, sometimes from below. It is a repetition of what the Hairy
+ Ammophila showed us: the same sudden squeezes of the pincers, with rather
+ long intervals between. These intervals, these measured bites and the
+ insect's watchful attitude have every appearance of telling us that the
+ operator is noting the effect produced before giving a fresh pinch of the
+ nippers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be seen how valuable is the evidence of Jules' Ammophila: it tells
+ us that the immolaters of Looper caterpillars and those of ordinary
+ caterpillars follow precisely the same method; that victims displaying
+ very dissimilar external structure do not entail any modification of the
+ operative tactics so long as the internal organization remains the same.
+ The number, arrangement and degree of mutual independence of the
+ nerve-centres guide the sting; the anatomy of the game, rather than its
+ form, controls the huntress' tactics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me mention, before I dismiss the subject, a superb example of this
+ marvellous anatomical discrimination. I once took from between the legs of
+ a Hairy Ammophila, which had just paralysed it, a caterpillar of Dicranura
+ vinula. What a strange capture compared with the ordinary caterpillar!
+ Bridling in thick folds beneath its pink neckerchief, its fore-part raised
+ in a sphinx-like attitude, its hinder-part slowly waving two long caudal
+ threads, the curious animal is no caterpillar to the schoolboy who brings
+ it to me, nor to the man who comes upon it while cutting his bundle of
+ osiers; but it is a caterpillar to the Ammophila, who treats it
+ accordingly. I explore the queer creature's segments with the point of a
+ needle. All are insensitive; all therefore have been stung.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 12. THE METHOD OF THE SCOLIAE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After the Ammophilae, the paralysers who multiply their lancet-thrusts to
+ destroy the influence of the various nerve-centres, excepting those of the
+ head, it seemed advisable to interrogate other insects which also are
+ accustomed to a naked prey, vulnerable at all points save the head, but
+ which deliver only a single thrust of the sting. Of these two conditions
+ the Scoliae fulfilled one, with their regular quarry, the tender Cetonia-,
+ Oryctes-or Anoxia-larva, according to the Scolia's species. Did they
+ fulfil the second? I was convinced beforehand that they did. From the
+ anatomy of the victims, with their concentrated nervous system, I foresaw,
+ when compiling my history of the Scoliae, that the sting would be
+ unsheathed once only; I even mentioned the exact spot into which the
+ weapon would be plunged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were assertions dictated by the anatomist's scalpel, without the
+ slightest direct proof derived from observed facts. Manoeuvres executed
+ underground escaped the eye, as it seemed to me that they must always do.
+ How indeed could I hope that a creature whose art is practised in the
+ darkness of a heap of mould would decide to work in broad daylight? I did
+ not reckon upon it all. Nevertheless, to salve my conscience, I tried
+ bringing the Scolia into contact with her prey under the bell-glass. I was
+ well-advised to do so, for my success was in inverse ratio to my hopes.
+ Next to the Philanthus, none of the Hunting Wasps displayed such ardour in
+ attacking under artificial conditions. All the insects experimented upon,
+ some sooner, some later, rewarded me for my patience. Let us watch the
+ Two-banded Scolia (S. bifasciata, VAN DER LIND) operating on her Cetonia
+ grub.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The incarcerated larva strives to escape its terrible neighbour. Lying on
+ its back, it fiercely wends its way round and round the glass circus.
+ Presently the Scolia's attention awakens and is betrayed by a continued
+ tapping with the tips of the antennae upon the table, which now represents
+ the accustomed soil. The Wasp attacks the game, delivering her assault
+ upon the monster's hinder end. She climbs upon the Cetonia-grub, obtaining
+ a purchase with the tip of her abdomen. The quarry merely travels the more
+ quickly on its back, without coiling itself into a defensive posture. The
+ Scolia reaches the fore-part, with tumbles and other accidents which vary
+ greatly with the amount of tolerance displayed by the larva, her
+ improvised steed. With her mandibles she nips a point of the thorax, on
+ the upper surface; she places herself athwart the beast, arches herself
+ and makes every effort to reach with the end of her abdomen the region
+ into which the sting is to be driven. The arch is a little too narrow to
+ embrace almost the whole circumference of her corpulent prey; and she
+ renews her attempts and efforts for a long time. The tip of the belly
+ tries every conceivable expedient, touching here, there and everywhere,
+ but as yet stopping nowhere. This persistent search in itself demonstrates
+ the importance which the paralyser attaches to the point at which her
+ lancet is to penetrate the flesh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the larva continues to move along on its back. Suddenly it
+ curls up; with a stroke of its head it hurls the enemy to a distance.
+ Undiscouraged by all her set-backs, the Wasp picks herself up, brushes her
+ wings and resumes her attack upon the colossus, almost always by mounting
+ the larva's hinder end. At last after all these fruitless attempts, the
+ Scolia succeeds in achieving the correct position. She is seated athwart
+ the Cetonia-grub; the mandibles grip a point on the dorsal surface of the
+ thorax; the body, bent into a bow, passes under the larva and with the tip
+ of the belly reaches the region of the neck. The Cetonia-grub, placed in
+ serious peril, writhes, coils and uncoils itself, spinning round upon its
+ axis. The Scolia does not interfere. Holding the victim tightly gripped,
+ she turns with it, allows herself to be dragged upwards, downwards,
+ sidewards, following its contortions. Her obstinacy is such that I can now
+ remove the bell-glass and follow the details of the drama in the open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Briefly, in spite of the turmoil, the tip of the abdomen feels that the
+ right spot has been found. Then and only then the sting is unsheathed. It
+ plunges in. The thing is done. The larva, at first plump and active,
+ suddenly becomes flaccid and inert. It is paralysed. Henceforth there are
+ no movements save of the antennae and the mouthparts, which will for a
+ long time yet bear witness to a remnant of life. The point wounded has
+ never varied in the series of combats under glass: it occupies the middle
+ of the line of demarcation between the prothorax and the mesothorax, on
+ the ventral surface. Note that the Cerceres, operating on Weevils, whose
+ nervous system is as compact as the Cetonia-grub's, drive in the needle at
+ the same spot. Similarity of nervous organization occasions similarity of
+ method. Note also that the Scolia's sting remains in the wound for some
+ time and roots about with marked persistence. Judging by the movements of
+ the tip of the abdomen, one would certainly say that the weapon is
+ exploring and selecting. Free to shift in one direction or the other,
+ within narrow limits, its point is most probably seeking for the little
+ mass of nerve-tissue which must be pricked, or at least sprinkled with
+ poison, to obtain overwhelming paralysis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will not close this report of the duel without relating a few further
+ facts, of minor importance. The Two-banded Scolia is a fierce persecutor
+ of the Cetonia. In one sitting the same mother stabs three larvae, one
+ after the other, in front of my eyes. She refuses the fourth, perhaps
+ owing to fatigue or to exhaustion of the poison-bag. Her refusal is only
+ temporary. Next day, she begins again and paralyses two grubs; the day
+ after that, she does the same, but with a zeal that decreases from day to
+ day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other Hunting Wasps that pursue the chase far afield grip, drag, carry
+ their prey, after depriving it of movement, each in her own fashion and,
+ laden with their burden, make prolonged attempts to escape from the
+ bell-glass and to gain the burrow. Discouraged by these futile endeavours,
+ they abandon them at last. The Scolia does not remove her quarry, which
+ lies on its back for an indefinite time on the actual spot of the
+ sacrifice. When she has withdrawn her dagger from the wound, she leaves
+ her victim where it lies and, without taking further notice of it, begins
+ to flutter against the side of the glass. The paralysed carcase is not
+ transported elsewhere, into a special cellar; there where the struggle has
+ occurred it receives, upon its extended abdomen, the egg whence the
+ consumer of the succulent tit-bit will emerge, thus saving the expense of
+ setting up house. It goes without saying that under the bell-glass the
+ laying does not take place: the mother is too cautious to abandon her egg
+ to the perils of the open air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why then, recognizing the absence of her underground burrow, does the
+ Scolia uselessly pursue the Cetonia with the frantic ardour of the
+ Philanthus flinging herself upon the Bee? The action of the Philanthus is
+ explained by her passion for honey; hence the murders committed in excess
+ of the needs of her family. The Scolia leaves us perplexed: she takes
+ nothing from the Cetonia-grub, which is left without an egg; she stabs,
+ though well aware of the uselessness of her action: the heap of mould is
+ lacking and it is not her custom to transport her prey. The other
+ prisoners, once the blow is struck, at least seek to escape with their
+ capture between their legs; the Scolia attempts nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After due reflection, I lump together in my suspicions all these surgeons
+ and ask myself whether they possess the slightest foresight, where the egg
+ is concerned. When, exhausted by their burden, they recognize the
+ impossibility of escape, the more expert among them ought not to begin all
+ over again; yet they do so begin a few minutes later. These wonderful
+ anatomists know absolutely nothing about anything, they do not even know
+ what their victims are good for. Admirable artists in killing and
+ paralysis, they kill or paralyse at every favourable opportunity, no
+ matter what the final result as regards the egg. Their talent, which
+ leaves our science speechless, has not a shadow of consciousness of the
+ task accomplished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A second detail strikes me: the desperate persistence of the Scolia. I
+ have seen the struggle continue for more than a quarter of an hour, with
+ frequent alternations of good luck and bad, before the Wasp achieved the
+ required position and reached with the end of her abdomen the spot where
+ the sting should penetrate. During these assaults, which were resumed as
+ soon as they were repulsed, the aggressor repeatedly applied the tip of
+ her belly to the larva, but without unsheathing, as I could see by the
+ absence of the start which the larva gives when it feels the pain of the
+ sting. The Scolia therefore does not prick the Cetonia anywhere until the
+ weapon covers the requisite spot. If no wounds are inflicted elsewhere,
+ this is not in any way due to the structure of the larva, which is soft
+ and vulnerable all over, except in the head. The point sought by the sting
+ is no more unprotected than any other part of the skin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the scuffle, the Scolia, curved into a bow, is sometimes seized by the
+ vice-like grip of the Cetonia-grub, which is violently coiling and
+ uncoiling. Heedless of the powerful grip, the Wasp does not let go for a
+ moment, either with her mandibles or with the tip of her abdomen. At such
+ times the two creatures, locked in a mutual embrace, turn over and over in
+ a mad whirl, each of them now on top, now underneath. When it contrives to
+ rid itself of its enemy, the larva uncoils again, stretches itself out and
+ proceeds to make off upon its back with all possible speed. Its defensive
+ ruses are exhausted. Formerly, before I had seen things for myself, taking
+ probability as my guide I willingly granted to the larva the trick of the
+ Hedgehog, who rolls himself into a ball and sets the Dog at defiance.
+ Coiled upon itself, with an energy which my fingers have some difficulty
+ in overcoming, the larva, I thought, would defy the Scolia, powerless to
+ unroll it and disdaining any point but the one selected. I hoped and
+ believed that it possessed this means of defence, a means both efficacious
+ and extremely simple. I had presumed too much upon its ingenuity. Instead
+ of imitating the Hedgehog and remaining contracted, it flees, belly in
+ air; it foolishly adopts the very posture which allows the Scolia to mount
+ to the assault and to reach the spot for the fatal stroke. The silly beast
+ reminds me of the giddy Bee who comes and flings herself into the clutches
+ of the Philanthus. Yet another who has learnt no lesson from the struggle
+ for life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us proceed to further examples. I have just captured an Interrupted
+ Scolia (Colpa interrupta, LATR.), exploring the sand, doubtless in search
+ of game. It is a matter of making the earliest possible use of her, before
+ her spirit is chilled by the tedium of captivity. I know her prey, the
+ larva of Anoxia australis (The Anoxia are a genus of Beetles akin to the
+ Cockchafers.&mdash;Translator's Note.); I know, from my past excavations,
+ the points favoured by the grub: the mounds of sand heaped up by the wind
+ at the foot of the rosemaries on the neighbouring hill-sides. It will be a
+ hard job to find it, for nothing is rarer than the common if one wants it
+ then and there. I appeal for assistance to my father, an old man of
+ ninety, still straight as a capital I. Under a sun hot enough to broil an
+ egg, we set off, shouldering a navvy's shovel and a three-pronged luchet.
+ (The local pitchfork of southern France.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ Employing our feeble energies in turns, we dig a trench in the sand where
+ I hope to find the Anoxia. My hopes are not disappointed. After having by
+ the sweat of our brow&mdash;never was the expression more justified&mdash;removed
+ and sifted two cubic yards at least of sandy soil with our fingers, we
+ find ourselves in possession of two larvae. If I had not wanted any, I
+ should have turned them up by the handful. But my poor and costly harvest
+ is sufficient for the moment. To-morrow I will send more vigorous arms to
+ continue the work of excavation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now let us reward ourselves for our trouble by studying the tragedy in
+ the bell-glass. Clumsy, awkward in her movements, the Scolia slowly goes
+ the round of the circus. At the sight of the game, her attention is
+ aroused. The struggle is announced by the same preparations as those
+ displayed by the Two-banded Scolia: the Wasp polishes her wings and taps
+ the table with the tips of her antennae. And view, halloo! The attack
+ begins. Unable to move on a flat surface, because of its short and feeble
+ legs, deprived moreover of the Cetonia-larva's eccentric means of
+ travelling on its back, the portly grub has no thought of fleeing; it
+ coils itself up. The Scolia, with her powerful pincers, grips its skin now
+ here, now elsewhere. Curved into a circle with the two ends almost
+ touching, she strives to thrust the tip of her abdomen into the narrow
+ opening in the coil formed by the larva. The contest is conducted calmly,
+ without violent bouts at each varying accident. It is the determined
+ attempt of a living split ring trying to slip one of its ends into another
+ living split ring, which with equal determination refuses to open. The
+ Scolia holds the victim subdued with her legs and mandibles; she tries one
+ side, then the other, without managing to unroll the circle, which
+ contracts still more as it feels its danger increasing. The actual
+ circumstances make the operation more difficult: the prey slips and rolls
+ about the table when the insect handles it too violently; there are no
+ points of purchase and the sting cannot reach the desired spot; the
+ fruitless efforts are continued for more than an hour, interrupted by
+ periods of rest, during which the two adversaries represent two narrow,
+ interlocked rings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What ought the powerful Cetonia-grub to do to defy the Two-banded Scolia,
+ who is far less vigorous than her victim? It should imitate the
+ Anoxia-larva and remain rolled up like a Hedgehog until the enemy retires.
+ It tries to escape, unrolls itself and is lost. The other does not stir
+ from its posture of defence and resists successfully. Is this due to
+ acquired caution? No, but to the impossibility of doing otherwise on the
+ slippery surface of a table. Clumsy, obese, weak in the legs, curved into
+ a hook like the common White Worm (The larva of the Cockchafer.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.), the Anoxia-larva is unable to move along a smooth surface; it
+ writhes laboriously, lying on its side. It needs the shifting soil in
+ which, using its mandibles as a plough-share, it digs into the ground and
+ buries itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us try if sand will shorten the struggle, for I see no end to it yet,
+ after more than an hour of waiting. I lightly powder the arena. The attack
+ is resumed with a vengeance. The larva, feeling the sand, its native
+ element, tries to escape. Imprudent creature! Did I not say that its
+ obstinacy in remaining rolled up was due to no acquired prudence but to
+ the necessity of the moment? The sad experience of past adversities has
+ not yet taught it the precious advantage which it might derive from
+ keeping its coils closed so long as danger remains. For that matter, on
+ the unyielding support of my table, they are not one and all so cautious.
+ The larger seem even to have forgotten what they knew so well in their
+ youth: the defensive art of coiling themselves up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I continue my story with a fine-sized specimen, less likely to slip under
+ the Scolia's onslaught. When attacked, the larva does not curl up, does
+ not shrink into a ring as did the last, which was younger and only half as
+ large. It struggles awkwardly, lying on its side, half-open. For all
+ defence it twists about; it opens, closes and reopens the great hooks of
+ its mandibles. The Scolia grabs it at random, clasps it in her shaggy legs
+ and for nearly a quarter of an hour battles with the luscious tit-bit. At
+ last, after a not very tumultuous struggle, when the favourable position
+ is attained and the propitious moment has come, the sting is implanted in
+ the creature's thorax, in a central point, below the throat, level with
+ the fore-legs. The effect is instantaneous: total inertia, except of the
+ appendages of the head, the antennae and mouth-parts. I achieved the same
+ results, the same prick at a definite, invariable point, with my several
+ operators, renewed from time to time by some lucky cast of the net.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us mention, in conclusion, that the attack of the Interrupted Scolia
+ is far less fierce than that of the Two-banded Scolia. The Wasp, a rough
+ sand-digger, has a clumsy gait; her movements are stiff and almost
+ automatic. She does not find it easy to repeat her dagger-thrust. Most of
+ the specimens with which I experimented refused a second victim on the
+ first two days after their exploits. As though somnolent, they did not
+ stir unless excited by my teasing them with a bit of straw. Although more
+ active and more ardent in the chase, the Two-banded Scolia likewise does
+ not draw her weapon every time that I invite her. For all these huntresses
+ there are moments of inaction which the presence of a fresh prey is
+ powerless to disturb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Scoliae have taught me nothing further, in the absence of subjects
+ belonging to other species. No matter: the results obtained represent no
+ small triumph for my ideas. Before seeing the Scoliae operate, I said,
+ guided solely by the anatomy of the victims, that the Cetonia-, Anoxia-
+ and Oryctes-larvae must be paralysed by a single thrust of the lancet; I
+ even named the point where the sting must strike, a central point, in the
+ immediate vicinity of the fore-legs. Of the three genera of paralysers,
+ two have allowed me to witness their surgical methods, which the third, I
+ feel certain, will confirm. In both cases, a single thrust of the lancet;
+ in both cases, injection of the venom at a predetermined point. A
+ calculator in an observatory could not compute the position of his planet
+ with greater accuracy. An idea may be taken as proved when it attains to
+ this mathematical forecast of the future, this certain knowledge of the
+ unknown. When will the acclaimers of chance achieve a like success? Order
+ appeals to order; and chance knows no laws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 13. THE METHOD OF THE CALICURGI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The non-armoured victims, vulnerable by the sting over almost their whole
+ body, ordinary caterpillars and Looper caterpillars, Cetonia- and
+ Anoxia-larvae, whose only means of defence, apart from their mandibles,
+ consists of rollings and contortions, called for the testimony of another
+ victim, the Spider, almost as ill-protected, but armed with formidable
+ poison-fangs. How, in particular, will the Ringed Calicurgus set to work
+ in operating on the Black-bellied Tarantula, the terrible Lycosa, who with
+ a single bite kills the Mole or the Sparrow and endangers the life of man?
+ How does the bold Pompilus overcome an adversary more powerful than
+ herself, better-equipped with virulent poison and capable of making a meal
+ of her assailant? Of all the Hunting Wasps, none risks such unequal
+ conflicts, in which appearances would proclaim the aggressor to be the
+ victim and the victim the aggressor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The problem was one deserving patient study. True, I foresaw, from the
+ Spider's organization, a single sting in the centre of the thorax; but
+ that did not explain the victory of the Wasp, emerging safe and sound from
+ her tussle with such a quarry. I had to see what occurred. The chief
+ difficulty was the scarcity of the Calicurgus. It is easy for me to obtain
+ the Tarantula at the desired moment: the part of the plateau in my
+ neighbourhood left untilled by the vine-growers provides me with as many
+ as are necessary. To capture the Pompilus is another matter. I have so
+ little hope of finding her that special quests are regarded as useless. To
+ search for her would perhaps be just the way not to find her. Let us rely
+ on the uncertainties of chance. Shall I get her or shall I not?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I've got her. I catch her unexpectedly on the flowers. Next day I supply
+ myself with half a dozen Tarantulae. Perhaps I shall be able to employ
+ them one after the other in repeated duels. As I return from my
+ Lycosa-hunt, luck smiles upon me again and crowns my desires. A second
+ Calicurgus offers herself to my net; she is dragging her heavy, paralysed
+ Spider by one leg, in the dust of the highway. I attach great value to my
+ find: the laying of the egg has become a pressing matter; and the mother,
+ I believe, will accept a substitute for her victim without much
+ hesitation. Here then are my two captives, each under her bell-glass with
+ her Tarantula.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am all eyes. What a tragedy there will be in a moment! I wait,
+ anxiously... But... but... what is this? Which of the two is the assailed?
+ Which is the assailant? The characters seem to be inverted. The
+ Calicurgus, unable to climb up the smooth glass wall, strides round the
+ ring of the circus. With a proud and rapid gait, her wings and antennae
+ vibrating, she goes and returns. The Lycosa is soon seen. The Calicurgus
+ approaches her without the least sign of fear, walks round her and appears
+ to have the intention of seizing one of her legs. But at that moment the
+ Tarantula rises almost vertically on her four hinder legs, with her four
+ front legs lifted and outspread, ready for the counterstroke. The
+ poison-fangs gape widely; a drop of venom moistens their tips. The very
+ sight of them makes my flesh creep. In this terrible attitude, presenting
+ her powerful thorax and the black velvet of her belly to the enemy, the
+ Spider overawes the Pompilus, who suddenly turns tail and moves away. The
+ Lycosa then closes her bundle of poisoned daggers and resumes her natural
+ pose, standing on her eight legs; but, at the slightest attempt at
+ aggression on the Wasp's part, she resumes her threatening position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She does more: suddenly she leaps and flings herself upon the Calicurgus;
+ swiftly she clasps her and nibbles at her with her fangs. Without wielding
+ her sting in self-defence, the other disengages herself and merges
+ unscathed from the angry encounter. Several times in succession I witness
+ the attack; and nothing serious ever befalls the Wasp, who swiftly
+ withdraws from the fray and appears to have received no hurt. She resumes
+ her marching and countermarching no less boldly and swiftly than before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is this Wasp invulnerable, that she thus escapes from the terrible fangs?
+ Evidently not. A real bite would be fatal to her. Big, sturdily built
+ Acridians succumb (Locusts and Grasshoppers.&mdash;Translator's Note.);
+ how is it that she, with her delicate organism, does not! The Spider's
+ daggers, therefore, make no more than an idle feint; their points do not
+ enter the flesh of the tight-clasped Wasp. If the strokes were real, I
+ should see bleeding wounds, I should see the fangs close for a moment on
+ the part seized; and with all my attention I cannot detect anything of the
+ kind. Then are the fangs powerless to pierce the Wasp's integuments? Not
+ so. I have seen them penetrate, with a crackling of broken armour, the
+ corselet of the Acridians, which offers a far greater resistance. Once
+ again, whence comes this strange immunity of the Calicurgus held between
+ the legs and assailed by the daggers of the Tarantula? I do not know.
+ Though in mortal peril from the enemy confronting her, the Lycosa
+ threatens her with her fangs and cannot decide to bite, owing to a
+ repugnance which I do not undertake to explain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Obtaining nothing more than alarums and excursions of no great
+ seriousness, I think of modifying the gladiatorial arena and approximating
+ it to natural conditions. The soil is very imperfectly represented by my
+ work-table; and the Spider has not her fortress, her burrow, which plays a
+ part of some importance both in attack and in defence. A short length of
+ reed is planted perpendicularly in a large earthenware pan filled with
+ sand. This will be the Lycosa's burrow. In the middle I stick some heads
+ of globe-thistle garnished with honey as a refectory for the Pompilus; a
+ couple of Locusts, renewed as and when consumed, will sustain the
+ Tarantula. These comfortable quarters, exposed to the sun, receive the two
+ captives under a wire-gauze dome, which provides adequate ventilation for
+ a prolonged residence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My artifices come to nothing; the session closes without result. A day
+ passes, two days, three; still nothing happens. The Pompilus is assiduous
+ in her visits to the honeyed flower-clusters; when she has eaten her fill,
+ she clambers up the dome and makes interminable circuits of the netting;
+ the Tarantula quietly munches her Locust. If the other passes within
+ reach, she swiftly raises herself and waves her off. The artificial
+ burrow, the reed-stump, fulfills its purpose excellently. The Lycosa and
+ the Pompilus resort to it in turns, but without quarrelling. And that is
+ all. The drama whose prologue was so full of promise appears to be
+ indefinitely postponed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have a last resource, on which I base great hopes: it is to remove my
+ two Calicurgi to the very site of their investigations and to install them
+ at the door of the Spider's lodging, at the top of the natural burrow. I
+ take the field with an equipment which I am carrying across the country
+ for the first time: a glass bell-jar, a wire-gauze cover and the various
+ implements needed for handling and transferring my irascible and dangerous
+ subjects. My search for burrows among the pebbles and the tufts of thyme
+ and lavender is soon successful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is a splendid one. I learn by inserting a straw that it is inhabited
+ by a Tarantula of a size suited to my plans. The soil around the aperture
+ is cleared and flattened to receive the wire-gauze, under which I place a
+ Pompilus. This is the time to light a pipe and wait, lying on the
+ pebbles...Yet another disappointment. Half an hour goes by; and the Wasp
+ confines herself to travelling round and round the netting as she did in
+ my study. She gives no sign of greed when confronted with the burrow,
+ though I can see the Tarantula's diamond eyes glittering at the bottom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trellised wall is replaced by the glass wall, which, since it does not
+ allow her to scale its heights, will oblige the Wasp to remain on the
+ ground and at last to take cognizance of the shaft, which she seems to
+ ignore. This time we have done the trick!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a few circuits of her cage, the Calicurgus notices the pit yawning
+ at her feet. She goes down it. This daring confounds me. I should never
+ have ventured to anticipate as much. That she should suddenly fling
+ herself upon the Tarantula when the latter is outside her stronghold, well
+ and good; but to rush into the lair, when the terrible monster is waiting
+ for you below with those two poisoned daggers of hers! What will come of
+ such temerity? A buzzing of wings ascends from the depths. Run to earth in
+ her private apartments, the Lycosa is no doubt at grips with the intruder.
+ That hum of wings is the Calicurgus' paean of triumph, until it be her
+ death-song. The slayer may well be the slain. Which of the two will come
+ up alive?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the Lycosa, who hurriedly scampers out and posts herself just over
+ the orifice of the burrow, in her posture of defence, her fangs open, her
+ four front legs uplifted. Can the other have been stabbed? Not at all, for
+ she emerges in her turn, not without receiving on the way a cuff from the
+ Spider, who immediately regains her lair. Dislodged from her basement a
+ second and yet a third time, the Tarantula always comes up unwounded; she
+ always awaits her adversary on her threshold, administers punishment and
+ reenters her dwelling. In vain do I try my two Pompili alternately and
+ change the burrow; I do not succeed in observing anything else. Certain
+ conditions not realized by my stratagems are lacking to complete the
+ tragedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Discouraged by the repetition of my futile attempts, I throw up the game,
+ the richer however by one fact of some value: the Calicurgus, without the
+ least fear, descends into the Tarantula's den and dislodges her. I imagine
+ that things happen in the same fashion outside my cages. When expelled
+ from her dwelling, the Spider is more timid and more vulnerable to attack.
+ Moreover, while hampered by a narrow shaft, the operator would not wield
+ her lancet with the precision called for by her designs. The bold
+ irruption shows us once again, more plainly than the tussles on my table,
+ the Lycosa's reluctance to sink her fangs into her enemy's body. When the
+ two are face to face at the bottom of the lair, then or never is the
+ moment to have it out with the foe. The Tarantula is in her own house,
+ with all its conveniences; every nook and corner of the bastion is
+ familiar to her. The intruder's movements are hampered by her ignorance of
+ the premises. Quick, my poor Lycosa, quick, a bite; and it's all up with
+ your persecutor! But you refrain, I know not why, and your reluctance is
+ the saving of the rash invader. The silly Sheep does not reply to the
+ butcher's knife by charging with lowered horns. Can it be that you are the
+ Pompilus' Sheep?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My two subjects are reinstalled in my study under their wire-gauze covers,
+ with bed of sand, reed-stump burrow and fresh honey, complete. Here they
+ find again their first Lycosae, fed upon Locusts. Cohabitation continues
+ for three weeks without other incidents than scuffles and threats which
+ become less frequent day by day. No serious hostility is displayed on
+ either side. At last the Calicurgi die: their day is over. A pitiful end
+ after such an enthusiastic beginning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shall I abandon the problem? Why, not a bit of it! I have encountered
+ greater difficulties, but they have never deterred me from a
+ warmly-cherished project. Fortune favours the persevering. She proves as
+ much by offering me, in September, a fortnight after the death of my
+ Tarantula-huntresses, another Calicurgus, captured for the first time.
+ This is the Harlequin Calicurgus (C. scurra, LEP.), who sports the same
+ gaudy costume as the first and is almost of the same size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now what does this newcomer, of whom I know nothing, want? A Spider, that
+ is certain; but which? A huntress like this will need a corpulent quarry:
+ perhaps the Silky Epeira (E. serica), perhaps the Banded Epeira (E.
+ fasciata), the largest Spiders in the district, next to the Tarantula. The
+ first of these spreads her large upright net, in which Locusts are caught,
+ from one clump of brushwood to another. I find her in the copses on the
+ neighbouring hills. The second stretches hers across the ditches and the
+ little streams frequented by the Dragon-flies. I find her near the Aygues,
+ beside the irrigation-canals fed by the torrent. A couple of trips
+ procures me the two Epeirae, whom I offer to my captive next day, both at
+ the same time. It is for her to choose according to her taste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The choice is soon made: the Banded Epeira is the one preferred. But she
+ does not yield without protest. On the approach of the Wasp, she rises and
+ assumes a defensive attitude, just like that of the Lycosa. The Calicurgus
+ pays no attention to threats: under her harlequin's coat, she is violent
+ in attack and quick on her legs. There is a rapid exchange of fisticuffs;
+ and the Epeira lies overturned on her back. The Pompilus is on top of her,
+ belly to belly, head to head; with her legs she masters the Spider's legs;
+ with her mandibles she grips the cephalothorax. She curves her abdomen,
+ bringing the tip of it beneath her; she draws her sting and...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One moment, reader, if you please. Where is the sting about to strike?
+ From what we have learnt from the other paralysers, it will be driven into
+ the breast, to suppress the movement of the legs. That is your opinion; it
+ was also mine. Well, without blushing too deeply at our common and very
+ excusable error, let us confess that the insect knows better than we do.
+ It knows how to assure success by a preparatory manoeuvre of which you and
+ I had never dreamt. Ah, what a school is that of the animals! Is it not
+ true that, before striking the adversary, you should take care not to get
+ wounded yourself? The Harlequin Pompilus does not disregard this counsel
+ of prudence. The Epeira carries beneath her throat two sharp daggers, with
+ a drop of poison at their points; the Calicurgus is lost if the Spider
+ bites her. Nevertheless, her anaesthetizing demands perfect steadiness of
+ the lancet. What is to be done in the face of this danger which might
+ disconcert the most practised surgeon? The patient must first be disarmed
+ and then operated on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in fact the Calicurgus' sting, aimed from back to front, is driven
+ into the Epeira's mouth, with minute precautions and marked persistency.
+ On the instant, the poison-fangs close lifelessly and the formidable
+ quarry is powerless to harm. The Wasp's abdomen then extends its arc and
+ drives the needle behind the fourth pair of legs, on the median line,
+ almost at the junction of the belly and the cephalothorax. At this point
+ the skin is finer and more easily penetrable than elsewhere. The remainder
+ of the thoracic surface is covered with a tough breast-plate which the
+ sting would perhaps fail to perforate. The nerve-centres, the source of
+ the leg-movements, are situated a little above the wounded point, but the
+ back-to-front direction of the sting makes it possible to reach them. This
+ last wound results in the paralysis of all the eight legs at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To enlarge upon it further would detract from the eloquence of this
+ performance. First of all, to safeguard the operator, a stab in the mouth,
+ that point so terribly armed, the most formidable of all; then, to
+ safeguard the larva, a second stab in the nerve-centres of the thorax, to
+ suppress the power of movement. I certainly suspected that the slayers of
+ robust Spiders were endowed with special talents; but I was far from
+ expecting their bold logic, which disarms before it paralyses. So the
+ Tarantula-huntress must behave, who, under my bell-glasses, refused to
+ surrender her secret. I now know what her method is; it has been divulged
+ by a colleague. She throws the terrible Lycosa upon her back, pricks her
+ prickers by stinging her in the mouth and then, in comfort, with a single
+ thrust of the lancet, obtains paralysis of the legs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I examine the Epeira immediately after the operation and the Tarantula
+ when the Calicurgus is dragging her by one leg to her burrow, at the foot
+ of some wall. For a little while longer, a minute at most, the Epeira
+ convulsively moves her legs. So long as these throes continue, the
+ Pompilus does not release her prey. She seems to watch the progress of the
+ paralysis. With the tips of her mandibles she explores the Spider's mouth
+ several times over, as though to ascertain if the poison-fangs are really
+ innocuous. When all movement subsides, the Pompilus makes ready to drag
+ her prey elsewhere. It is then I take charge of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What strikes me more than anything else is the absolute inertia of the
+ fangs, which I tickle with a straw without succeeding in rousing them from
+ their torpor. The palpi, on the other hand, their immediate neighbours,
+ wave at the least touch. The Epeira is placed in safety, in a flask, and
+ undergoes a fresh examination a week later. Irritability has in part
+ returned. Under the stimulus of a straw, I see her legs move a little,
+ especially the lower joints, the tibiae and tarsi. The palpi are even more
+ irritable and mobile. These different movements, however, are lacking in
+ vigour and coordination; and the Spider cannot employ them to turn over,
+ much less to escape. As for the poison-fangs, I stimulate them in vain: I
+ cannot get them to open or even to stir. They are therefore profoundly
+ paralysed and in a special manner. The peculiar insistence of the sting
+ when the mouth was stabbed told me as much in the beginning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of September, almost a month after the operation, the Epeira is
+ in the same condition, neither dead nor alive: the palpi still quiver when
+ touched with a straw, but nothing else moves. At length, after six or
+ seven weeks' lethargy, real death supervenes, together with its comrade,
+ putrefaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Tarantula of the Ringed Calicurgus, as I take her from the owner at
+ the moment of transportation, presents the same peculiarities. The
+ poison-fangs are no longer irritable when tickled with my straw: a fresh
+ proof, added to those of analogy, to show that the Lycosa, like the
+ Epeira, has been stung in the mouth. The palpi, on the other hand, are and
+ will be for weeks highly irritable and mobile. I wish to emphasise this
+ point, the importance of which will be recognized presently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I found it impossible to provoke a second attack from my Harlequin
+ Calicurgus: the tedium of captivity did not favour the exercise of her
+ talents. Moreover, the Epeira sometimes had something to do with her
+ refusals; a certain ruse de guerre which was twice employed before my eyes
+ may well have baffled the aggressor. Let me describe the incident, if only
+ to increase our respect a little for these foolish Spiders, who are
+ provided with perfected weapons and do not dare to make use of them
+ against the weaker but bolder assailant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Epeira occupies the wall of the wire-gauze cage, with her eight legs
+ wide-spread upon the trelliswork; the Calicurgus is wheeling round the top
+ of the dome. Seized with panic at the sight of the approaching enemy, the
+ Spider drops to the ground, with her belly upwards and her legs gathered
+ together. The other dashes forward, clasps her round the body, explores
+ her and prepares to sting her in the mouth. But she does not bare her
+ weapon. I see her bending attentively over the poisoned fangs, as though
+ to investigate their terrible mechanism; she then goes away. The Spider is
+ still motionless, so much so that I really believe her dead, paralysed
+ unknown to me, at a moment when I was not looking. I take her from the
+ cage to examine her comfortably. No sooner is she placed on the table than
+ behold, she comes to life again and promptly scampers off! The cunning
+ creature was shamming death beneath the Wasp's stiletto, so artfully that
+ I was taken in. She deceived an enemy more cunning than myself, the
+ Pompilus, who inspected her very closely and took her for a corpse
+ unworthy of her dagger. Perhaps the simple creature, like the Bear in the
+ fable of old, already noticed the smell of high meat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This ruse, if ruse it be, appears to me more often than not to turn to the
+ disadvantage of the Spider, whether Tarantula, Epeira or another. The
+ Calicurgus who has just put the Spider on her back after a brisk fight
+ knows quite well that her prostrate foe is not dead. The latter, thinking
+ to protect itself, simulates the inertia of a corpse; the assailant
+ profits by this to deliver her most perilous blow, the stab in the mouth.
+ Were the fangs, each tipped with its drop of poison, to open then; were
+ they to snap, to give a desperate bite, the Pompilus would not dare to
+ expose the tip of her abdomen to their deadly scratch. The shamming of
+ death is exactly what enables the huntress to succeed in her dangerous
+ operation. They say, O guileless Epeirae, that the struggle for life has
+ taught you to adopt this inert attitude for purposes of defence. Well, the
+ struggle for life was a very bad counsellor. Trust rather to common sense
+ and learn, by degrees, at your own cost, that to hit back, above all if
+ you can do so promptly, is still the best way to intimidate the enemy.
+ (Fabre does not believe in the actual shamming of death by animals. Cf.
+ "The Glow-worm and Other Beetles," by J. Henri Fabre, translated by
+ Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chapters 8 to 15.&mdash;Translator's Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remainder of my observations on these insects under glass is little
+ more than a long series of failures. Of two operators on Weevils, one, the
+ Sandy Cerceris (C. arenaria), persistently scorned the victims offered;
+ the other, Ferrero's Cerceris (C. Ferreri), allowed herself to be empted
+ after two days' captivity. Her tactical method, as I expected, is
+ precisely that of the Cleonus-huntress, the Great Cerceris, with whom my
+ investigations commenced. When confronted with the Acorn-weevil, she
+ seizes the insect by the snout, which is immensely long and shaped like a
+ pipe-stem, and plants her sting in its body to the rear of the prothorax,
+ between the first and second pair of legs. It is needless to insist: the
+ spoiler of the Cleoni has taught us enough about this mode of operation
+ and its results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ None of the Bembex-wasps, whether chosen among the huntresses of the
+ Gadfly or among the lovers of the House-fly rabble, satisfied my
+ aspirations. Their method is as unknown to me now as at the distant period
+ when I used to watch it in the Bois des Issards. (Cf. "The Hunting Wasps":
+ chapters 14 to 18.&mdash;Translator's Note.) Their impetuous flight, their
+ love of long journeys are incompatible with captivity. Stunned by
+ colliding with the walls of their glass or wire-gauze prison, they all
+ perish within twenty-four hours. Swifter in their movements and apparently
+ satisfied with their honeyed thistle-heads, the Spheges, huntresses of
+ Crickets or Ephippigers, die as quickly of nostalgia. All I offer them
+ leaves them indifferent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor can I get anything out of the Eumenes, notably the biggest of them,
+ the builder of gravel cupolas, Amedeus' Eumenes. All the Pompili, except
+ the Harlequin Calicurgus, refuse my Spiders. The Palarus, who preys upon
+ an indefinite number of the Hymenopteron clan, refuses to tell me if she
+ drinks the honey of the Bees, as does the Philanthus, or if she lets the
+ others go without manipulating them to make them disgorge. The Tachytes do
+ not vouchsafe their Locusts a glance; Stizus ruficornis promptly gives up
+ the ghost, disdaining the Praying Mantis which I provide for her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is the use of continuing this list of checks? The rule may be
+ gathered from these few examples: occasional successes and many failures.
+ What can be the reason? With the exception of the Philanthus, tempted from
+ time to time by a bumper of honey, the predatory Wasps do not hunt on
+ their own account; they have their victualling-time, when the egg-laying
+ is imminent, when the family calls for food. Outside these periods, the
+ finest heads of game might well leave these nectar-bibbers indifferent. I
+ am careful therefore, as far as possible, to capture my subjects at the
+ proper season; I give preference to mothers caught upon the threshold of
+ the burrow with their prey between their legs. This diligence of mine by
+ no means always succeeds. There are demoralized insects which, once under
+ glass, even after a brief delay, no longer care about the equivalent of
+ their prize.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the species do not perhaps pursue their game with the same ardour;
+ mood and temperament are more variable even than conformation. To these
+ factors, which are of the nicest order, we may add that of the hour, which
+ is often unfavourable when the subject is caught at haphazard on the
+ flowers, and we shall have more than enough to explain the frequency of
+ the failures. After all, I must beware of representing my failures as the
+ rule: what does not succeed one day may very well succeed another day,
+ under different conditions. With perseverance and a little skill, any one
+ who cares to continue these interesting studies will, I am sure, fill up
+ many gaps. The problem is difficult but not impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will not quit my bell-jars without saying a word on the entomological
+ tact of the captives when they decide to attack. One of the pluckiest of
+ my subjects, the Hairy Ammophila, was not always provided with the
+ hereditary dish of her family, the Grey Worm. I offered her
+ indiscriminately any bare-skinned caterpillars that I chanced to find.
+ Some were yellow, some green, some brown with white edges. All were
+ accepted without hesitation, provided that they were of suitable size.
+ Tasty game was recognized wonderfully under very dissimilar liveries. But
+ a young Zeuzera-caterpillar, dug out of the branches of a lilac-tree, and
+ a silkworm of small dimensions were definitely refused. The over-fed
+ products of our silkworm-nurseries and the mystery-loving caterpillar
+ which gnaws the inner wood of the lilac inspired her with suspicion and
+ disgust, despite their bare skin, which favoured the sting, and their
+ shape, which was similar to that of the victims accepted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another ardent huntress, the Interrupted Scolia, refused the Cetonia-grub,
+ which is of like habits with the Anoxia-larva; the Two-banded Scolia also
+ refused the Anoxia. The Philanthus, the headlong murderess of Bees, saw
+ through my trickery when I confronted her with the Virgilian Bee, the
+ Eristalis (E. tenax). She, a Philanthus, take this Fly for a Bee! What
+ next! The popular idea is mistaken; antiquity too is mistaken, as witness
+ the "Georgics," which make the putrid remains of a sacrificed Bull give
+ birth to a swarm; but the Wasp makes no mistake. In her eyes, which see
+ farther than ours, the Eristalis is an odious Dipteron, a lover of
+ corruption, and nothing more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER 14. OBJECTIONS AND REJOINDERS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ No idea of any scope can begin its soaring flight but straightway the
+ curmudgeons are after it, eager to break its wings and to stamp the
+ wounded thing under foot. My discovery of the surgical methods that give
+ the Hunting Wasps their preserved foodstuffs has undergone the common
+ rule. Let theories be discussed, by all means: the realm of the
+ imagination is an untilled domain, in which every one is free to plant his
+ own conceptions. But realities are not open to discussion. It is a bad
+ policy to deny facts with no more authority than one's wish to find them
+ untrue. No one that I know of has impugned by contrary observations what I
+ have so long been saying about the anatomical instinct of the Wasps that
+ hunt their prey; instead, I am met with arguments. Mercy on us! First use
+ your eyes and then you shall have leave to argue! And, to persuade people
+ to use their eyes, I mean to reply, since we have time to spare, to the
+ objections which have been or may be raised. Of course, I pass over in
+ silence those in which childish disparagement shows its nose too plainly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sting, I am told, is directed at one point rather than another because
+ that is the only vulnerable point. The insect cannot choose what wound it
+ will inflict; it stings where it must. Its wonderful operative method is
+ the necessary result of the victim's structure. Let us first, if we attach
+ any importance to lucidity, come to an understanding about the word
+ "vulnerable." Do you mean by this that the point or rather points wounded
+ by the sting are the only points at which a lesion will suddenly cause
+ either death or paralysis? If so, I share your opinion; not only do I
+ share it, but I was the first to proclaim it. My whole thesis is contained
+ in that. Yes, a hundred times yes, the points wounded are the only
+ vulnerable points; they are even very vulnerable; they are the only points
+ which lend themselves to the infliction of sudden death or else paralysis,
+ according to the operator's intention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this is not how you understand the matter: you mean accessible to the
+ sting, in a word, penetrable. Here we part company. I have against me, I
+ admit, the Weevils and the Buprestes of the Cerceres. These mailed ones
+ hardly give the sting a chance, save behind the prothorax, the point at
+ which the lancet is actually directed. If I were one to stand on trifles,
+ I might observe that in front of the prothorax, under the throat, is an
+ accessible spot and that the Cerceres will have nothing to do with it. But
+ let us proceed; I give up the horn-clad Beetle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What are we to say of the Grey Worm and other caterpillars beloved of the
+ Ammophilae? Here are victims accessible to the sting underneath, on the
+ back, on the sides, fore and aft, everywhere with the same facility,
+ excepting the top of the head. And of this infinity of points, which are
+ equally penetrable, the Wasp selects ten, always the same, differing in no
+ way from the rest, unless it be by the close proximity of the
+ nerve-centres. What are we to say of the Cetonia- and Anoxia-larvae, which
+ are always attacked in the first thoracic segment, after long and painful
+ struggles, when the assailant can sting the grub freely at whatever point
+ she chooses, since it is quite naked and offers no greater resistance to
+ the lancet at one point than at another?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What are we to think of the Sphex' Crickets and Ephippigers, stabbed three
+ times on the side of the thorax, which is fairly well defended, whereas
+ the abdomen, soft and bulky, into which the sting would sink like a needle
+ into a pat of butter, is neglected? Do not let us forget the Philanthus,
+ who takes no account either of the fissures beneath the abdominal plates
+ or of the wide hiatus behind the corselet, but plunges her weapon, at the
+ base of the throat, through a gap of a fraction of a millimetre. Let us
+ just mention the Mantis-hunting Tachytes. Does she make for the most
+ undefended point when she stabs, first of all, at its base, the Mantis'
+ dreadful engine&mdash;the arm-pieces each fitted with a double saw&mdash;at
+ the risk of being seized, transfixed and crunched on the spot if she
+ misses her blow? Why does she not strike at the creature's long abdomen?
+ That would be quite easy and free from danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the Calicurgi, if you please. Are they also unskilled duelists,
+ plunging the dirk into the only easily accessible point, when their very
+ first move is to paralyse the poison-fangs? If there is one point about
+ the Tarantula and the Epeira that is dangerous and difficult to attack, it
+ is certainly the mouth which bites with its two poisoned harpoons. And
+ these desperadoes dare to brave that deadly trap! Why do they not follow
+ your judicious advice? They should sting the plump belly, which is wholly
+ unprotected. They do not; and they have their reasons, as have the others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All, from the first to the last, show us, clear as water from the rock,
+ that the outer structure of the victims operated on counts for nothing in
+ the method of operating. This is determined by the inner anatomy. The
+ points wounded are not stung because they are the only points penetrable
+ by the lancet; they are stung because they fulfil an important condition,
+ without which penetrability loses its value. This condition is none other
+ than the immediate proximity of the nerve-centres whose influence has to
+ be suppressed. When at close quarters with her prey, whether soft or
+ armour-clad, the huntress behaves as if she understood the nervous system
+ better than any of us. The thoughtless objection about the only penetrable
+ points is, I hope, swept aside forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am also told:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is possible, if it comes to that, for the sting to be delivered in the
+ neighbourhood of the nerve-centres; in a victim at most three or four
+ centimetres long, distances are very small. But a casual there or
+ thereabouts is a very different thing from the precision of which you
+ speak."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, they are "thereabouts," are they? We shall see! You want figures,
+ millimetres, fractions? You shall have them!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First I call to witness the Interrupted Scolia. If the reader no longer
+ has her method of operating in mind, I will beg him to refresh his memory.
+ The two adversaries, in the preliminary conflict, may be fairly well
+ represented by two rings interlocked not in the same plane but at right
+ angles. The Scolia grips a point of the Anoxia-grub's thorax; she curves
+ her body underneath it and, while encircling the grub, gropes with the tip
+ of her abdomen along the median line of the larva's neck. Owing to her
+ transversal position, the assailant is now free to aim her weapon in a
+ slightly slanting direction, whether towards the head or towards the
+ thorax, at the same point of entry in the larva's throat. Between the two
+ opposite slants of the sting, which is itself very short, what can the
+ distance be? Two millimetres (.078 inch.&mdash;Translator's Note.),
+ perhaps less. That is very little. No matter: let the operator make a
+ mistake of this length&mdash;negligible, you may tell me&mdash;let the
+ sting slant towards the head instead of slanting towards the thorax; and
+ the result of the operation will be entirely different. With a slant
+ towards the head, the cerebral ganglia are wounded and their lesion causes
+ sudden death. This is the stroke of the Philanthus, who kills her Bee by
+ stinging her from below, under the chin. The Scolia needed a motionless
+ but not dead victim, one that would supply fresh victuals; she will now
+ have only a corpse, which will soon go bad and poison the larva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a slant towards the thorax, the sting wounds the little mass of
+ nerve-cells in the thorax. This is the regulation stroke, the one which
+ will induce paralysis and leave the small amount of life needed to keep
+ the provisions fresh. A millimetre higher kills; a millimetre lower
+ paralyses. On this tiny deviation the salvation of the Scolia race
+ depends. You need not fear that the operator will make any mistake in this
+ micrometrical performance: her sting always slants towards the thorax,
+ although the opposite inclination is just as practicable and easy. What
+ would be the outcome of a there or thereabouts under these conditions?
+ Very often a corpse, a form of food fatal to the grub.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Two-banded Scolia stings a little lower down, on the line of
+ demarcation between the first two thoracic segments. Her position is
+ likewise transversal in relation to the Cetonia-grub; but the distance of
+ the cervical ganglia from the point where the sting enters would possibly
+ not allow the weapon turned towards the head to inflict a lesion followed
+ by sudden death as in the above instance. I am calling this witness with
+ another object. It is extremely unusual for the operator, no matter what
+ her prey or her method, to make a slight mistake and sting merely
+ somewhere near the requisite point. I see them all groping with the tip of
+ the abdomen, sometimes seeking persistently, before unsheathing. They
+ thrust only when the point beneath the sting is precisely that at which
+ the wound will produce its full effect. The Two-banded Scolia in
+ particular will struggle with the Cetonia-grub for half an hour at a time
+ to enable herself to drive in the stiletto at the right spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wearied by an endless scuffle, one of my captives committed before my eyes
+ a slight blunder, an unprecedented thing. Her weapon entered a little to
+ one side, not quite a millimetre from the central point and still, of
+ course, on the line of demarcation between the first two thoracic
+ segments. I at once laid hold of the precious specimen, which was to teach
+ me curious matters about the effects of an ill-delivered stroke. If I
+ myself had made the insect sting at this or that point, there would have
+ been no particular interest in it: the Scolia, held between the
+ finger-tips, would wound at random, like a Bee defending herself; her
+ undirected sting would inject the poison at haphazard. But here everything
+ happened by rule, except for the little error of position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, the victim of this clumsy operation has its legs paralysed only on
+ the left side, the side towards which the weapon was deflected; it is a
+ case of hemiplegia. The legs on the right side move. If the operation had
+ been performed in the normal fashion the result would have been sudden
+ inertia of all six legs. The hemiplegia, it is true does not last long.
+ The torpor of the left half rapidly gains the right half of the body and
+ the creature lies motionless, incapable of burying itself in the mould,
+ without, however, realizing the conditions indispensable to the safety of
+ the egg or the young grub. If I seize one of its legs or a point of the
+ skin with the tweezers, it suddenly shrivels and curls up and swells out
+ again, as it does when in complete possession of its energies. What would
+ become of an egg laid on such victuals? At the first closing of this
+ ruthless vice, at the first contraction, it would be crushed, or at least
+ detached from its place; and any egg removed from the point where the
+ mother has fastened it is bound to perish. It needs, on the Cetonia's
+ abdomen, a yielding support which the bites of the new-born larva will not
+ set aquiver. The slightly eccentric sting gives none of this soft mass of
+ fat, always outstretched and quiescent. Only on the following day, after
+ the torpor has made progress, does the larva become suitably inert and
+ limp. But it is too late; and in the meantime the egg would be in serious
+ danger on this half-paralysed victim. The sting, by straying less than a
+ millimetre, would leave the Scolia without progeny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I promised fractions. Here they are. Let us consider the Tarantula and the
+ Epeira on whom the Calicurgi have just operated. The first thrust of the
+ sting is delivered in the mouth. In both victims the poison-fangs are
+ absolutely lifeless: tickling with a bit of straw never once succeeds in
+ making them open. On the other hand, the palpi, their very near
+ neighbours, their adjuncts as it were, possess their customary mobility.
+ Without any previous touches, they keep on moving for weeks. In entering
+ the mouth the sting did not reach the cervical ganglia, or sudden death
+ would have ensued and we should have before our eyes corpses which would
+ go bad in a few days, instead of fresh carcases in which traces of life
+ remain manifest for a long time. The cephalic nerve-centres have been
+ spared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is wounded then, to procure this profound inertia of the
+ poison-fangs? I regret that my anatomical knowledge leaves me undecided on
+ this point. Are the fangs actuated by a special ganglion? Are they
+ actuated by fibres issuing from centres exercising further functions? I
+ leave to anatomists equipped with more delicate instruments than I the
+ task of elucidating this obscure question. The second conjecture appears
+ to me the more probable, because of the palpi, whose nerves, it seems to
+ me, must have the same origin as those of the fangs. Basing our argument
+ on this latter hypothesis, we see that the Calicurgus has only one means
+ of suppressing the movement of the poisoned pincers without affecting the
+ mobility of the palpi, above all without injuring the cephalic centres and
+ thus producing death, namely, to reach with her sting the two fibres
+ actuating the fangs, fibres as fine as a hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I insist upon this point. Despite their extreme delicacy, these two
+ filaments must be injured directly; for, if it were enough for the sting
+ to inject its poison "there or thereabouts," the nerves of the palpi, so
+ close to the first, would undergo the same intoxication as the adjacent
+ region and would leave those appendages motionless. The palpi move; they
+ retain their mobility for a considerable period; the action of the poison,
+ therefore, is evidently situated in the nerves of the fangs. There are two
+ of these nerve-filaments, very fine, very difficult to discover, even by
+ the professional anatomist. The Calicurgus has to reach them one after the
+ other, to moisten them with her poison, possibly to transfix them, in any
+ case to operate upon them in a very restricted manner; so that the
+ diffusion of the virus may not involve the adjoining parts. The extreme
+ delicacy of this surgery explains why the weapon remains in the mouth so
+ long; the point of the sting is seeking and eventually finds the tiny
+ fraction of a millimetre where the poison is to act. This is what we learn
+ from the movements of the palpi close to the motionless fangs; they tell
+ us that the Calicurgi are vivisectors of alarming accuracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we accept the hypothesis of a special nerve-centre for the mandibles,
+ the difficulty would be a little less, without detracting from the
+ operator's talent. The sting would then have to reach a barely visible
+ speck, an atom in which we should hardly find room for the point of a
+ needle. This is the difficulty which the various paralysers solve in
+ ordinary practice. Do they actually wound with their dirks the ganglion
+ whose influence is to be done away with? It is possible, but I have tried
+ no test to make sure, the infinitely tiny wound appearing to be too
+ difficult to detect with the optical instruments at my disposal. Do they
+ confine themselves to lodging their drop of poison on the ganglion, or at
+ all events in its immediate neighbourhood? I do not say no.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I declare moreover, that, to provoke lightning paralysis, the poison, if
+ it is not deposited inside the mass of nervous substance, must act from
+ somewhere very near. This assertion is merely echoing what the Two-banded
+ Scolia has just shown us: her Cetonia-grub, stung less than a millimetre
+ from the regular spot, did not become motionless until next day. There is
+ no doubt, judging by this instance, that the effect of the virus spreads
+ in all directions within a radius of some extent; but this diffusion is
+ not enough for the operator, who requires for her egg, which is soon to be
+ laid, absolute safety from the very first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, the actions of the paralysers argue a precise search
+ for the ganglia, at all events for the first thoracic ganglion, the most
+ important of all. The Hairy Ammophila, among others, affords us an
+ excellent example of this method. Her three thrusts in the caterpillar's
+ thorax and especially the last, between the first and second pair of legs,
+ are more prolonged than the stabs distributed among the abdominal ganglia.
+ Everything justifies us in believing that, for these decisive
+ inoculations, the sting seeks out the corresponding ganglion and acts only
+ when it finds it under its point. On the abdomen this peculiar insistence
+ ceases; the sting passes swiftly from one segment to another. For these
+ segments, which are less dangerous, the Ammophila perhaps relies on the
+ diffusion of her venom; in any case, the injections, though hastily
+ administered, do not diverge from a close vicinity of the ganglia, for
+ their field of action is very limited, as is proved by the number of
+ inoculations necessary to induce complete torpor, or, more simply, by the
+ following example.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Grey Worm which had just received its first sting on the third thoracic
+ segment repulses the Ammophila and with a jerk hurls her to a distance. I
+ profit by the occasion and take hold of the grub. The legs of this third
+ segment only are paralysed; the others retain their usual mobility.
+ However helpless in the two injured legs, the animal can walk very well;
+ it buries itself in the earth, returning to the surface at night to gnaw
+ the stump of lettuce with which I have served it. For a fortnight my
+ paralytic retains perfect liberty of action, except in the segment
+ operated on; then it dies, not of its wound but accidentally. All this
+ time the effect of the poison has not spread beyond the inoculated
+ segment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At any point where the sting enters, anatomy informs us of the presence of
+ a nervous nucleus. Is this centre directly smitten by the weapon? Or is it
+ poisoned with virus, from a very small distance, by the progressive
+ impregnation of the neighbouring tissues? This is the doubtful point,
+ though it does not in any way invalidate the precision of the abdominal
+ injections, which are comparatively neglected. As for those in the
+ caterpillar's thorax, their precision is beyond dispute. After the
+ Ammophilae, the Scoliae and, above all, the Calicurgi, is it really
+ necessary to bring into court yet other witnesses, who would all swear
+ that, with modifications of detail, the movement of their lancet is
+ strictly regulated by the nervous system of the prey? This ought to be
+ enough. The proof is established for those who have ears to hear with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Others delight in objections whose oddity surprises me. They see in the
+ poison of the Hunting Wasps an antiseptic liquid and in victuals stored in
+ their burrows preserved meats which are kept fresh not by a remnant of
+ life but by the virus and its microbes. Come, my learned masters, let us
+ just talk the matter over, between ourselves. Have you ever seen the
+ larder of a skilled Hunting Wasp, a Sphex for instance, a Scolia, an
+ Ammophila? You haven't, have you? I thought as much. Yet it would be
+ better to begin by doing so, before bringing the preservative microbe on
+ the scene. The slightest examination would have shown you that the
+ victuals cannot be compared exactly with smoked hams. The thing moves,
+ therefore it is not dead. There you have the whole matter, in its artless
+ simplicity. The palpi move, the mandibles open and shut, the tarsi quiver,
+ the antennae and the abdominal filaments wave to and fro, the abdomen
+ throbs, the intestine rejects its contents, the animal reacts to the
+ stimulus of a needle, all of which signs are hardly compatible with the
+ idea of pickled meat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Have you had the curiosity to look through the pages in which I set forth
+ the detailed results of my observations? You haven't, have you? Again, I
+ thought as much. It is a pity. You would there find, in particular, the
+ history of certain Ephippigers who, after being stung by the Sphex
+ according to rule, were reared by myself by hand. You must agree that
+ these are queer preserves to be produced by the use of an antiseptic
+ fluid. They accept the mouthfuls which I offer them on the tip of a straw;
+ they feed, they sit up and take nourishment. I shall never live to see
+ tinned sardines doing as much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will avoid tedious repetition and content myself with adding to my old
+ sheaf of proofs a few facts which have not yet been related. The
+ Nest-building Odynerus showed us in her cells a few Chrysomela-larvae
+ fixed by the hinder part to the side of the reed. The grub fastens itself
+ in this way to the poplar-leaf to obtain a purchase when the moment has
+ come for leaving the larval slough. Do not these preparations for the
+ nymphosis tell us plainly that the creature is not dead?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hairy Ammophila affords us an even better example. A number of
+ caterpillars operated on before my eyes attained, some sooner, some later,
+ the chrysalis stage. My notes are explicit on the subject of some of them,
+ taken on Verbascum sinuatum. Sacrificed on the 14th of April, they were
+ still irritable when tickled with a straw a fortnight after. A little
+ later, the pale-green colouring of the early stages is replaced by a
+ reddish brown, except on two or three segments of the median ventral
+ surface. The skin wrinkles and splits, but does not come detached of its
+ own accord. I can easily remove it in shreds. Under this slough appears
+ the firm, chestnut-brown horn integument of the chrysalis. The development
+ of the nymphosis is so correct that for a moment the crazy hope occurs to
+ me that I may see a Turnip-moth come out of this mummy, the victim of a
+ dozen dagger-thrusts. For the rest, there is no attempt at spinning a
+ cocoon, no jet of silky threads flung out by the caterpillar before
+ turning into a chrysalis. Perhaps under normal conditions metamorphosis
+ takes place without this protection. However, the moth whom I expected to
+ see was beyond the limits of the possible. In the middle of May, a month
+ after the operation on the caterpillars, my three chrysalids, still
+ incomplete underneath, in the three or four middle segments, withered and
+ at last went mouldy. Is the evidence conclusive this time? Who can
+ conceive such a silly idea as that a prey really dead, a corpse preserved
+ from putrefaction by an antiseptic, could contain what is perhaps the most
+ delicate work of life, the development of the grub into the perfect
+ insect?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The truth must be driven into recalcitrant brains with great blows of the
+ sledge-hammer. Let us once more employ this method. In September I unearth
+ from a heap of mould five Cetonia-grubs, paralysed by the Two-banded
+ Scolia and bearing on the abdomen the as yet unhatched egg of the Wasp. I
+ remove the eggs and install the helpless creatures on a bed of leaf-mould
+ with a glass cover. I propose to see how long I can keep them fresh, able
+ to move their mandibles and palpi. Already the victims of various Hunting
+ Wasps had instructed me on a similar matter; I knew that traces of life
+ linger for two, three, four weeks and longer. For instance, I had seen the
+ Ephippigers of the Languedocian Sphex continue the waving of their
+ antennae and their paralytic shudders for forty days of artificial feeding
+ by hand; and I used to wonder whether the more or less early death of the
+ other victims was not due to lack of nourishment quite as much as to the
+ operation which they had undergone. However, the insect in its adult form
+ usually has a very brief existence. It soon dies, killed by the mere fact
+ of living, without any other accident. A larva is preferable for these
+ investigations. Its constitution is livelier, better able to support
+ protracted abstinence, above all during the winter torpor. The
+ Cetonia-grub, a regular lump of bacon, nourished by its own fat during the
+ winter season, fulfils the needful conditions to perfection. What will
+ become of it, lying belly upwards on its bed of leaf-mould? Will it
+ survive the winter?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of a month, three of my grubs turn brown and lapse into
+ rottenness. The other two keep perfectly fresh and move their antennae and
+ palpi at the touch of a straw. The cold weather comes and tickling no
+ longer elicits these signs of life. The inertia is complete; nevertheless
+ their appearance remains excellent, without a trace of the brownish tinge,
+ the sign of deterioration. At the return of the warm weather, in the
+ middle of May, there is a sort of resurrection. I find my two larvae
+ turned over, belly downwards; much more: they are half-buried in the
+ mould. When teased, they coil up lazily; they move their legs as well as
+ their mouth-parts, but slowly and without vigour. Then their strength
+ seems to revive. The convalescent, resuscitated grubs dig with clumsy
+ efforts into their bed of mould; they dive into it and disappear to a
+ depth of about two inches. Recovery seems to be imminent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am mistaken. In June I unearth the invalids. This time, the larvae are
+ dead; their brown colour tells me as much. I expected better things. Never
+ mind: this is no trifling success. For nine months, nine long months, the
+ grubs stabbed by the Scolia kept fresh and alive. Towards the end, torpor
+ was dispelled, strength and movement returned, sufficiently to enable them
+ to leave the surface where I had placed them and to regain the depths by
+ boring a passage through the soil. I really think that after this
+ resurrection there will be no more talk of antiseptics, unless and until
+ tinned Herrings begin to frolic in their brine. (The subject of this and
+ the preceding chapters is continued in an essay entitled "The Poison of
+ the Bee" for which cf. "Bramble-bees and Others": chapter 11.&mdash;Translator's
+ Note.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INDEX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Acorn-weevil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amedeus' Eumenes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ameles decolor (see Grey Mantis).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ammophila (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ammophila hursuta (see Hairy Ammophila).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ammophila holoserica (see Silky Ammophila).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ammophila Julii (see Jules' Ammophila).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ammophila sabulosa (see Sandy Ammophila).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anathema Tachytes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anoxia (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anoxia australis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anoxia matutinalis (see Morning Anoxia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anoxia villosa (see Shaggy Anoxia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthidium (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthidium bellicosum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthidium scapulare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthidium septemdentatum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthophora.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthrax (see also Anthrax sinuata).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthrax sinuata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aphis (see Plant-louse).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Astata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Balaninus (see also Balaninus glandum).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Balaninus glandum (see Acorn-weevil).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Banded Epeira.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bee (see also Bumble-bee, Hive-bee, Mason-bee).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bee-eating Philanthus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beetle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bembex (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bembex bidentata (see Two-pronged Bembex).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bembex rostrata (see Rostrate Bembex).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Black, Adam and Charles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Black-bellied Tarantula.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Black Spider (see Cellar Spider).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Black Tachytes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blister-beetle (see Oil-beetle).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bluebottle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blue Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bombylius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boyle, Robert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brachycera.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brachyderes pubescens (see Pubescent Brachyderes).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Breguet, Louis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brillat-Savarin, Anthelme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brown-winged Solenius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bug.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bull.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bull, the author's Dog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bullock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bumble-bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buprestis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buprestis-hunting Cerceris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burnt Zonitis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Butterfly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cabbage Pieris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calicurgus (see Pompilus and the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calicurgus annulatus (see Ringed Calicurgus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calicurgus scurra (see Harlequin Calicurgus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Callot, Jacques.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cantharides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carpenter-bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cellar Spider.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Century co.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerceris (see also Buprestis-hunting Cerceris and the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerceris arenaria (see Sand Cerceris).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerceris Ferreri (see Ferrero's Cerceris).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerceris ornata (see Ornate Cerceris).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerceris tuberculata (see Great Cerceris).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cerocoma.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cetonia (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cetonia aurata (see Golden Cetonia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cetonia morio.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chaffinch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chalicodoma (see Mason-bee).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chaoucho-grapaou (see Nightjar).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chimpanzee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chrysomela populi (see Poplar Leaf-beetle).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cicada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cicadella.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cleonus (see also Cleonus ophthalmicus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cleonus ophthalmicus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cneorhinus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cockchafer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colpa interrupta (see Interrupted Scolia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Common Cockchafer (see Cockchafer).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Common Wasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cotton-bee (see Anthidium scapulare).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crab.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crabro (see Hornet).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crabro chrysostomus (see Golden-mouthed Hornet).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cricket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crowned Philanthus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cuckoo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darwin, Charles Robert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ David the painter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ David, Felicien Cesar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Death's-head Hawk-moth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Devilkin (see Empusa).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dicranura vinula.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dioxys cincta (see Girdled Dioxys).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dog (see also Bull).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Drone-fly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dufour, Jean Marie Leon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Duges, Louis Antoine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Earth-worm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eight-spotted Pompilus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Empusa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Epeira (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Epeira fasciata (see Banded Epeira).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Epeira serica (see Silky Epeira).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ephippiger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eristalis E. tenax (see Drone-fly).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eucera.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Euchlora Julii.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eumenes (see also Amedeus Eumenes).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fabricius, Johan Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Favier, the author's factotum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ferrero's Cerceris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Field-mouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fly (see also Gad-fly, House-fly).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fox.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gad-fly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Galileo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Garden Scolia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Garden Spider (see Epeira).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geonomus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Girdled Dioxys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gnat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Goat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Goatsucker (see Nightjar).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Golden Cetonia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Golden-crested Wren.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Golden-mouthed Hornet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Golden Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gorilla.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grasshopper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great Cellar Spider (see Cellar Spider).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great Cerceris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grey Mantis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grey Worm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hairy Ammophila.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Halictus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harlequin Calicurgus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hedgehog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helophilus pendulus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hemorrhoidal Scolia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hive-bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hornet (see also Golden-mouthed Hornet).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ House-fly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Interrupted Scolia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jules, Ammophila.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Klug.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lalande, Joseph Jerome Le Francais de.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lamellicorn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Languedocian Sphex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Latreille, Pierre Andre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leucopsis gigas, L. grandis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily-beetle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Linnet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Locust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Looper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lycosa (see Black-bellied Tarantula).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Macmillan Co.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mantis (see also Grey Mantis, Praying Mantis).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mantis-hunting Tachytes (see Mantis-killing Tachytes).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mantis-killing Tachytes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mariotte, Edme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mason-bee (see also the Anthophora and 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>
+ Measuring-worm (see Looper).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Megachile sericans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Melanophora.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meloe (see Oil-beetle).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miall, Bernard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Midge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mithradates VI.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mole-cricket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monkey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monoceros (see Oryctes nasicornis).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morning Anoxia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mosquito.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Muscid (see House-fly).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mylabris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Narbonne Lycosa (see Black-bellied Tarantula).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nest-building Odynerus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nightjar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nut-weevil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Odynerus (see also Nest-building Odynerus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oil-beetle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ornate Cerceris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oryctes nasicornis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oryctes Silenus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia cyanea (see Blue Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia cyanoxantha.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia Latreillii (see Latreille's Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia parvula (see Tiny Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osmia tricornis (see Three-horned Osmia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ostrich.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Otiorhynchus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Palarus (see also Palarus flavipes).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Palarus flavipes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pangonia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Panzer's Tachytes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paragus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pascal, Blaise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Passerini.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pea-weevil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pelopaeus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pentodon punctatus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perez, J.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Phaneropteron falcata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philanthus (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philanthus apivorus (see Bee-eating Philanthus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philanthus coronatus (see Crowned Philanthus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philanthus raptor (see Robber Philanthus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Phynotomus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pieris (see Cabbage Pieris).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pine-chafer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pithecanthropus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plant-louse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pompilus (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pompilus annulatus (see Ringed Calicurgus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pompilus apicalis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pompilus octopunctatus (see Eight-spotted Pompilus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poplar Leaf-Beetle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Praying Mantis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pubescent Brachyderes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Resin-bee (see Anthidium bellicosum, Anthidium septemdentatum).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rhinoceros Beetle (see Oryctes nasicornis).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rhynchites betuleti.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ringed Calicurgus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ringed Pompilus (see Ringed Calicurgus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robber Philanthus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robber-fly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Romanes, George John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rose-chafer (see Cetonia, Golden Cetonia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rostrate Bembex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sand Cerceris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sandy Ammophila.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sapyga punctata (see Spotted Sapyga).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sarcophaga.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarabaeid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarabaeus pentodon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scolia (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scolia bifasciata (see Two-banded Scolia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scolia haemorrhoidalis (see Hemorrhoidal Scolia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scolia hortorum (see Garden Scolia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scolia interrupta (see Interrupted Scolia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Screech-owl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Segestria perfidia (see Cellar Spider).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shaggy Anoxia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silkworm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silky Ammophila.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silky Epeira.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silky Leaf-cutter (see Megachile sericans).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sitones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skua.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slug.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Snail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Socrates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Solenius fascipennis (see Brown-winged Solenius).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Solenius vagus (see Wandering Solenius).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sparrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sparrow-hawk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sphaerophoria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sphex (see also Languedocian Sphex, White-banded Sphex, Yellow-winged
+ Sphex.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spider (see also Black-bellied Tarantula, Cellar Spider, Epeira.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spotted Sapyga.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spurge Hawk-moth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stizus (see also the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stizus ruficornis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stizus tridentatus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strophosomus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swallow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swammerdam, Jan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Syritta perpens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Syrphus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tachytes (see also Mantis-killing Tachytes and the varieties below).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tachytes anathema (see Anathema Tachytes).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tachytes nigra (see Black Tachytes).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tachytes Panzeri (see Panzer's Tachytes).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tachytes tarsina (see Tarsal Tachytes).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tachytes unicolor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tarantula (see Black-bellied Tarantula).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tarsal Bembex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tarsal Tachytes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Teixeira de Mattos, Alexander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three-horned Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tiny Osmia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toricelli, Evangelista.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toussenel, Alphonse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turkey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turnip Moth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two-banded Scolia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two-pronged Bembex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unwin, T. Fisher, Ltd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vespa crabro (see Hornet).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Virgilian Bee, Virgil's Bee (see Drone-fly).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wandering Solenius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wasp (see Common Wasp).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Weevil (see also Acorn-weevil, Nut-weevil, Pea-weevil).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whippoorwill (see Nightjar).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ White-banded Sphex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ White Worm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wolf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yellow-winged Sphex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Zeuzera.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Zonitis praeusta (see Burnt Zonitis).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of More Hunting Wasps, by J. Henri Fabre
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>