Fig. 367.—Scent-tufts: 1, of Leucarctia acræa; 2, of Pyrrarctia isabella.—After Smith.

In the noctuid genus, Patula, the costal half of the hind wing is modified to form a large scent-gland, and in consequence the venation has been modified. The still greater distortion of the veins in the allied genus, Argida, was attributed by the author to its once having possessed a similar scent-gland, now become rudimentary by disuse. (Hampson.)

Peculiar white or orange-colored, hairy, thread-like processes have been found protruding from narrow openings near the tip of the abdomen of Arctian moths (Fig. 367), which throw off, according to J. B. Smith, “an intense odor, somewhat like the smell of laudanum.” We have perceived the same unpleasant odor emanating from the males of Spilosoma virginica and Arctia virgo, as well as Leucarctia acræa.

We are informed by C. Dury that similar but longer hairy appendages are thrust out by the male of Haploa clymene. Many glaucopid moths protrude similar glandular processes. Thus Müller tells us that on seizing a glaucopid female by the wings, nearly the whole body became enveloped in a large cloud of snow-white wool which came out of a sort of pouch on the ventral side of the abdomen.

The male of a glaucopid was seen to dart out a pair of long hollow hairy retractile filaments which in some species exceed the whole body in length. The apparatus secretes a peculiar odor, probably serving to allure the female (Nature), and certain Zygænidæ have on the inner side of the paranal lobes (Afterklappen) glands filled with a sweetly scented fluid. Smith has detected a peculiar brush of hair-like scales in a groove between the dorsal and ventral parts of the basal two segments of the abdomen of Schinia marginata (family Noctuidæ), and when removed it exhaled a laudanum-like smell.

The pupa of Citheronia regalis gives out from the end of the abdomen a scent reminding us of laudanum.

Fig. 368.—Scent-tufts on middle legs of Catocala concumbens.—After Bailey.

Another mode of disseminating pleasant, alluring odors is that of the males of certain moths, which bear pencils and tufts on their fore or hind legs, and in the case of an Indian butterfly on the greatly elongated palpi. Those on the legs are ordinarily concealed in cavities or furrows in the leg, and may be thrust out and expanded so as to widely diffuse their odor. Such are those of the males of Catocala (Fig. 368), which resemble an artist’s fitch brush. In Hepialus hecta, where the arrangements for protecting the tufts are quite abnormal, Bertkau has detected the cells which secrete the odorous fluid. In the male of another Hepialus (H. humuli) a peculiar scent proceeds from the curiously aborted and altered hind tibiæ. (Barrett.) In one case, that of a geometrid moth (Bapata dichroa of New Guinea), these pencils occur on all the legs. (Haase). In many species a distinct odor is perceptible when the leg bearing the pencil or tuft is crushed.

These eversible scent-glands have been supposed to be mostly restricted to the Lepidoptera, and to a single known case in the Trichoptera, but similar alluring male glands also occur in the Orthoptera (Locustidæ). H. Garman has described and figured in the cave cricket (Hadenœcus subterraneus) “a pair of white fleshy appendages protruding from slits between the terga of the 9th and 10th abdominal somites, the nature of which is not clear,” adding, “the slits through which the organs appear are situated one on each side anterior to and a little within the cerci. When fully protruded, the glands are white, cylindrical, a little tapering, and are about one-eighth of an inch long.” He believes that they are protruded during the period of sexual excitement, and suggests that “the sense of smell is certainly the one best calculated to bring the sexes together in the darkness of caves.” We had previously noticed these organs in alcoholic specimens, but supposed that they were fungous growths. On dissecting and making microscopic sections of them, the gland is, when extended (Fig. 369), seen to be a long, ensiform, sharp, band-like process, with numerous retractor muscular fibres. When at rest each gland is folded about five times, forming a bundle lying on each side of the end of the intestine. The walls are formed of a single layer of epithelium, as seen in Fig. 369, B.