We are not aware that any modern writers have described or referred to the epipharynx of the mandibulate orders of insects. Although Dr. G. Joseph speaks of finding taste-organs on the palate of almost every order of insects, especially plant-feeding forms, we are unable to find any specific references, his detailed observations being apparently unpublished.

The epipharynx is so intimately associated with the elongated labium of certain Diptera, that, with Dr. Dimmock, we may refer to the double organ as the labrum-epipharynx; and where, as in the lepidopterous Micropteryx semipurpurella, described and figured by Walter, and the Panorpidæ (Panorpa and Boreus), the labrum seems pieced out with a thin, pale membranous fold which appears to be an extension of the epipharynx, building up the dorsal end of the labrum, this term is a convenient one to use.

In the lower orders of truly mandibulate insects, from the Thysanura to the Coleoptera, excluding those which suck in liquid food, such as the Diptera, Lepidoptera, and Hymenoptera, and the Mecoptera (Panorpidæ) with their elongated head and feeble, small mandibles, the epipharynx forms a simple membranous palatal lining of the clypeus and labrum. In such insects there is no soft projecting or pendant portion, fitted to close the throat or to complete a partially tubular arrangement of the first and second maxillæ.

In all the mandibulate insects, then, the epipharynx forms simply the under surface or pharyngeal lining of the clypeus and labrum, the surface being uniformly moderately convex, and corresponding in extent to that of the clypeus and labrum, posteriorly merging into the palatal wall of the pharynx; the armature of peculiar gathering-hairs sometimes spreading over its base, being continuous with those lining the mouth and beginning of the œsophagus. The suture separating the labrum from the clypeus does not involve the epipharynx, though since certain gustatory fields lie under the front edge of the clypeus, as well as labrum, one may in describing them refer to certain fields or groups of cups or pits as occupying a labral or clypeal region or position.

The lack of traces of a suture in the epipharynx corresponding to the labral suture above, suggests that the labrum does not represent a pair of coalesced appendages, and that it, with the clypeus, simply forms the solid cuticular roof of the mouth.

The only soft structures seen between the epipharynx and labrum, besides the nerves of special sense, are the elevator muscles of the labrum, and two tracheæ, one on each side.

The structure and armature of the epipharyngeal surface even besides the taste-pits, taste-cups and rods, is very varied, the setæ assuming very different shapes. There seem to be two primary forms of setæ, (1) the normal forms which arise from a definite cell; and (2) soft, flattened, often hooked hairs which are cylindrical towards the end, but arise from a broad triangular base, without any cell-wall. These are like the “gathering hairs” of Cheshire, situated on the bees’ and wasps’ tongue; they also line the walls of the pharynx and extend toward the œsophagus. They are also similar to the “hooked hairs” of Will. The first kind, or normal setæ, are either simply defensive, often guarding the sense-cups or sensory fields on which the sense-cups are situated, or they have a nerve extending to them and are simply tactile in function.

The surface of the epipharynx, then, appears to be highly sensitive, and to afford the principal seat of the gustatory organs, which are described under the head of organs of taste.

LITERATURE ON THE EPIPHARYNX

Réaumur. Mémoires pour servir à l’histoire des insectes, v, 1740, p. 318, Pl. 28, Figs. 4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 l.