Fig. 152.—Rudimentary wing of young nymph of Blatta, with the five principal veins developed.
The primitive mode of origin of the wings may, therefore, be best understood by observing the early stages of those insects, such as the Orthoptera and Hemiptera, which have an incomplete metamorphosis. If the student will examine the nymphs of any locust in their successive stages, he will see that the wings arise as simple expansions downward and backward of the lateral edges of the meso- and metanotum. In the second nymphal stage this change begins to take place, but it does not become marked until the succeeding stage, when the indications of veins begin to appear, and the lobe-like expansion of the notum is plainly enough a rudimentary wing.
Graber[[26]] thus describes the mode of development of the wings in the nymph of the cockroach:
“If one is looking only at the exterior of the process, he will perceive sooner or later on the sides of the meso- and metathorax pouch-like sacs, which increase in extent with the dorsal integument and at the same time are more and more separated from the body. These wing-covers either keep the same position as in the flat-bodied Blattidæ, or in insects with bodies more compressed the first rudiments hang down over the sides of the thorax. As soon as they have exceeded a certain length, these wing-covers are laid over on the back. However, if we study the process of development of the wings with a microscope, by means of sections made obliquely through the thorax, the process appears still more simple. The chief force of all evolution is and remains the power of growth in a definite direction. In regard to the skin this growth is possible in insects only in this way; namely, that the outer layer of cells is increased by the folds which are forced into the superficial chitinous skin. These folds naturally grow from one moult to another in proportion to the multiplication of the cells, and are not smoothed out until after the moulting, when the outer resistance is overcome.
Fig. 153.—Partial metamorphosis of Melanoplus femur-rubrum, showing the five nymph stages, and the gradual growth of the wings, which are first visible externally in 3, 3b, 3c.—Emerton del.
“As, however, the first wing-layers depend upon the wrinkling of the general integument of the body through the increase in the upper layer, the further growth of the wings depends in the later stages upon the wrinkling of the epidermis of the wing-membrane even, which fact we also observe under the microscope when the new wings drawn forth from the old covers appear at first to be quite creased together. These wing-like wrinkles in the skin are not empty pouches, but contain tissues and organs within, which are connected with the skin, as the fat of the body, the network of tracheæ, muscles, etc. Alongside the tracheæ, running through the former wing-pouches and accompanied by the nerves, there are canals through which the blood flows in and out.
Fig. 154.—Stages in the growth of the wings of the nymph of Termes flavipes: A, young; a, a wing enlarged. B, older nymph; b, fore wing; n, a vein. C, wings more advanced;—D, mature.