By the above apparatus these aquatic animals are enabled to separate the air from the water, as the fish by their gills; but how this separation is made has not been precisely explained. The false gills in many species are kept in continual and intense agitation. When they move briskly to one side, Reaumur conjectures they may receive the air, and when they return back they may emit it[248]. This brisk motion probably disengages it from the water. In many species, when in repose, they are laid upon the back of the animal[249], but in others they are not[250].

The larvæ of the Agrionidæ appear to respire like those of the Ephemeræ, &c. by means of long foliaceous laminæ or false gills filled with air-vessels; but instead of being ventral, they proceed from the anus. They are three in number, one dorsal and two lateral, perpendicular to the horizon, of a lanceolate shape, beautifully veined, with a longitudinal middle nervure, from which others diverge towards the margin, which are probably bronchiæ. They are used by the animal, which swims like a fish, as fins, but it does not appear to imbibe the water like the other Libellulinæ, nor to propel itself by ejecting it,—a circumstance which furnishes an additional argument for the more received opinion, that this action in them is for the purpose of respiration as much as for motion[251].

The larvæ and pupæ of the Libellulinæ, receive the water and air that they respire by a large anal aperture, which is closed at the will of the animal by five hard, moveable, triangular, concavo-convex pieces, all very acute and fringed with hairs. These pieces are placed so that there is one above, which is the largest of all; one on each side, which are the smallest, and two below; when these are closed they form together a conical point[252]. Sometimes only three of these pieces are conspicuous[253]: three other cartilaginous pieces, resembling the valves of a bivalve shell, close the passage within the pointed pieces[254]. At this orifice the water is received; and when, by an internal process to be described afterwards, it has parted with its oxygen, is again expelled.

Under this head I shall mention a fact which may be connected with respiration of the insects concerned. In dissecting a moth related to Catocala Pronuba, but I do not recollect the particular species,—at the base of the abdomen of the male I discovered two bunches of long fawn-coloured parallel hairs, planted each in an oval plate, plane above, but below convex and fleshy; while the plates remained attached to the insect, they appeared to have a distinct pulsation. The hairs, which are about half an inch long, diverge a little, and form a tuft not very unlike a shaving-brush[255]. I have not since met with this species, but I have preserved the brush and scale. Somewhere in Bonnet's works, but I do not recollect where, I have since found mention of a similar fact in another moth.

II. Having considered the external respiratory organs of insects, by which the air is received, we are next to consider the internal ones, by which it is distributed. These are gills; tracheæ and bronchiæ; and sacs or pouches[256].

i. Gills (Branchiæ[257]). Having lately described what may be denominated false gills, or branchiform appendages, I shall now call your attention to what may be denominated true ones, which are peculiar to the Arachnida Class: but what is remarkable, the animals that breathe by them are very rarely inhabitants of the water, so that their functions cannot be perfectly analogous to those of fishes.

In the Scorpion, on each side of the four first ventral segments a spiracle may be discovered, which has no lip as in other insects, but is merely a circular orifice. These orifices do not lead to tracheæ or vesicles, but to true gills, which are situated below a muscular web which clothes the internal surface of the crust. Each gill consists of many semicircular very thin plates, of a dead milky white, which are connected together at the dorsal end like the leaves of a book. There appear to be more than twenty of these leaves, which when strongly magnified look transparent and destitute of any vessels. Each gill is fastened at the back to the spiracle[258]. In the spiders also, gills are discoverable, but differently circumstanced. On the under side of the abdomen, near the base, is a transverse depression, on each side of which is a longitudinal opening leading to a cavity, which is covered from above by a cartilaginous plate. In this cavity is situated a true gill, which is white, triangular, and covered with a fine skin; the leaves of this gill are far more numerous and much finer and softer than those of the gills of the scorpion. On account of their softness they have often the appearance of a slimy skin; but their laminated structure shows itself very clearly in old specimens, and in such as have been immersed in boiling water[259].

ii. Tracheæ and Bronchiæ[260]. Parallel with each side of the body of most insects and extending its whole length, run two cylindrical tubes[261], which communicate with the spiracles[262], and from which issue, at points opposite to those organs, other tubes which ramify ad infinitum, and are distributed to every part of the body[263]. The first of these tubes are called the tracheæ and the latter the bronchiæ. This structure appears, however, not to be universal: it is to be found in caterpillars and many Dipterous larvæ; but in that of the rhinoceros-beetle and other Lamellicorns, the bronchiæ branch directly from the spiracle, the bottom or interior mouth of which is lined by a membrane from which they proceed[263]: something similar has been observed to take place in many insects in other states, as the common cockchafer[264]; in the pupa of Smerinthus Populi[265]; in the Cicadæ[266]; in the Locust tribe[267]; and many others. In the Cossus, or larva of the great goat-moth, the trachea commences with the first spiracle, and finishes a little beyond the last, after which it diminishes considerably in diameter, and terminates in several branches or bronchiæ, which proceed to the anal extremity of the body[268]. The bronchiæ which originate from the tracheæ in the vicinity of each spiracle, may be considered as consisting in general of three packets;—dorsal ones, which are distributed to the back and sides of the animal; visceral ones, which enter the cavity of the body, and are lost amongst the viscera and the caul; and ventral ones, which dipping from the tracheæ overrun the lower part of the sides and belly[269].

The tracheæ and bronchiæ consist of three tunics[270]: the first or external one is a thickish membrane, strengthened by a vast number of fibres or vessels, which form round it a number of irregular circles; the second is a membrane more thin and transparent, without a vascular covering[271]; the third is formed of a cartilaginous thread running in a spiral direction, which may be easily unwound[272]. This structure gives a great elasticity to these organs, so that they are capable of considerable tension, after which they return to their usual length[273]. The Bronchiæ are cylindrical or slightly conical, insensibly diminishing in size as they leave the trunk, in which they originate. In larvæ, after losing their spiral fibre, they appear to terminate in membrane, but in perfect insects they pass into vesicles[274]. In the Cossus the trachea is flattened, and in every segment, except the first and two last, is bound by a fleshy cord four or five times as thick as its threads. Where this occurs, there is a slight constriction,—probably here is a sphincter, by the contraction of which Lyonet supposes the trachea may be shut when it is necessary to stop the passage of the air, and direct it to any particular point[275]. The structure here described is admirably adapted for the purpose it is intended to serve; for had these vessels been composed of membrane, they could not possibly have been prevented from collapsing; but by the intervention of a spiral cartilaginous thread this accident is effectually guarded against, and the necessary tension of the tubes provided for. However violent the contortions of the insect, however small the diameter of these vessels, they are sure to remain constantly open, and pervious to the air. And by this circumstance they may be always distinguished from the other organs of the animal, and likewise by their pearly or silvery hue, for from being constantly filled with air, these tubes, when viewed under a powerful microscope in a recently dissected insect, present a most beautiful and brilliant appearance, resembling a branching tree of highly polished silver or pearl:—though sometimes they are blue, or of a lead colour, and sometimes assume a tint of gold. In the dead insect the larger tubes soon turn brown, but the finer ones preserve their lustre several weeks[276]. The ramifications of the tracheal tree may be seen without dissection through the transparent skin of the common louse[277] and most of the thin skinned larvæ.

You will not expect to view in this way the minuter ramifications of the bronchiæ, when I have mentioned their number and incredible smallness. Nothing but the scalpel of a Lyonet and the most powerful lenses are adequate to trace the extremities of these vessels; and even with every help, they at last become so inconceivably slender as to elude the most piercing sight. That illustrious anatomist found that the two tracheæ of the larva of the Cossus gave birth to 236 bronchial tubes, and that these ramify into no less than 1336 smaller tubes, to which, if 232, the number of the detached bronchiæ, be added, the whole will amount to 1804 branches[278]. Surprising as this number may appear, it is not greater than we may readily conceive to be necessary for communicating with so many different parts. For, like the arterial and venous trees, which convey and return the blood to and from every part of the body in vertebrate animals, the bronchiæ are not only carried along the intestines and spinal marrow, each ganglion of which they penetrate and fill, but they are distributed also to the skin and every organ of the body, entering and traversing the legs and wings, the eyes, antennæ, and palpi, and accompanying the most minute nerves through their whole course[279]. How essential to the existence of the animal must the element be that is thus anxiously conveyed by a thousand channels, so exquisitely formed, to every minute part and portion of it! Upon considering this wonderful apparatus we may well exclaim, This hath God wrought, and this is the work of his hands.