CHAPTER VIII
INSECTS
The Grasshopper
Suggestions.—Collect grasshoppers, both young and full-grown, and keep alive in broad bottles or tumblers and feed on fresh grass or lettuce. When handling a live grasshopper, never hold it by its legs, as the joints are weak. To keep them for some time and observe their moults, place sod in the bottom of a box and cover the box with mosquito netting or wire gauze.
Fig. 106.—A Grasshopper.
What is the general shape of its body? (Fig. [106].) Where is the body thickest? Is it bilaterally symmetrical, that is, are the two sides of the body alike? Is the skeleton, or hard part of the body, internal or external? Is the skeleton as stiff and thick as that of a crayfish? What is the length of your specimen? Its colour? Why does it have this coloration? In what ways does the grasshopper resemble the crayfish? Differ from it?
The Three Regions of the Body.—The body of the grasshopper is divided into three regions—the head, the thorax, and the abdomen. Which of these three divisions has no distinct subdivisions? The body of the grasshopper, like that of the earth worm, is made of ringlike segments. Are the segments most distinct in the head, the thorax, or the abdomen? Which region is longest? Shortest? Strongest? Why? Which region bears the chief sense organs? The appendages for taking food? The locomotory appendages? Which division of the body is most active in breathing?
The Abdomen.—About how many segments or rings in the abdomen? Do all grasshoppers have the same number of rings? (Answer for different species and different individuals of the same species.) The first segment and the last two are incomplete rings. Does the flexibility of the abdomen reside in the rings or in the joints between the rings? Is there merely a thin, soft line between the rings, or is there a fold of the covering? Does one ring slip into the ring before it or behind it when the abdomen is bent?
Fig. 107.—A Grasshopper Dissected.