Changes also take place in their internal organs. In the larvæ the respiratory apparatus, especially the tracheal tubes, is often much larger and more ramified than in the imago; and as the former is the principal feeding state, there seems good ground for Mr. B. Clark's opinion—that the respiration is intimately connected with the conversion of the food[326]. In the imago, there appears to be more provision for storing up the air in vesicular reservoirs, than in the larva. Wonderful is the mode in which some of the changes in the internal structure, which these variations indicate, must necessarily take place. They are, however, probably not more singular than those which less obviously occur in the air-vessels of all insects in their great change out of the larva into the pupa state. But having before enlarged on this subject, I need not repeat my observations[327].

The access of air is as necessary to insects even in their egg state[328], and in many cases its presence seems provided for with equal care, by means as beautiful as those Sir H. Davy and Sir E. Home have shown to occur in the oxygenation of the eggs and fœtuses of vertebrate animals[329]. It is only necessary to view the admirable net-work of air-vessels which Swammerdam discovered spread over the surface of the eggs of the hive-bee while in the ovaries[330],—a provision which, from analogy, we may conclude obtains generally; from the importance which nature has attached to the oxygenation of the germ while in the matrix. And judging from analogy, we may infer that the access of this element is as carefully secured after the egg is laid, as before. The eggs of most insects being of a porous texture, often attached to the leaves of plants, and some of them embedded in the very substance of a leaf or twig[331], are in a situation for the abundant absorption of oxygen: and the pouch of silk in which the eggs of spiders and Hydrophili are deposited, may probably, from Count Rumford's experiments, be of utility in the same point of view. In the case of the Trichoptera and other insects[332] whose eggs are dropped into the water enveloped in a mass of jelly, this substance perhaps serves for aërating the included embryo, in the same way with the jelly surrounding the eggs of the frog, dog-fish, &c. It would be desirable to ascertain whether the former jelly be of the same nature as the experiments of Mr. Brande have shown the latter to be[333]. It is not improbable that the singular rays that terminate the eggs of Nepa[334] may in some way be connected with the aëration of the egg.

To what I have before remarked with regard to the vital heat of insects[335], I may under this head very properly add a few further observations. I there stated, that the temperature of these animals is usually that of the medium they inhabit, but that bees, and perhaps other gregarious ones, furnish an exception to this rule[336]. A confirmation of this remark is afforded by Inch, a German writer, who, upon putting a thermometer into a bee-hive in winter, found it stand 27° higher than in the open air; in an anthill, he found it 6° or 7° higher; in a vessel containing many blister-beetles (Cantharis vesicatoria,) 4° or 5° higher. A thermometer, standing in the air at 14° R., put into a glass vessel with Acrida viridissima, in nine minutes rose to 17°, and a similar result was observed with respect to other insects[337]. Dr. Martine says that caterpillars have but two degrees of heat above that of the air they live in[338]. Coleopterous insects are said to move slowly and with difficulty when the thermometer sinks to 36°, to become torpid at 34°, and to lose muscular irritability at a lower degree[339]. I have before observed that some insects will bear to be frozen into an icicle, and yet survive[340]: they share this power with reptiles, fishes, and amphibia. But, however small the excess of it in some insects above that of the medium they inhabit, it proves that they possess the power of generating heat. Whether, like the warm-blooded animals, they generally possess that of resisting heat by perspiration, &c. is not so clear. Yet the heat to which some can bear to be exposed, basking at noon, as Dr. Clarke informs us[341], on rocky and sandy places, exposed to the full action of the sun, appears sufficient, if not resisted by some principle of counteraction, to roast them to a cinder. That bees perspire is well known, but probably not singly.

When the respiration of insects is suspended by immersion in any fluid, it is often resumed, even when it has been long and they are apparently dead, if they be brought into contact with the atmosphere. Reaumur found this to be the case with bees[342]; and Swammerdam tells us that the maggot of the cheese-fly (Tyrophaga Casei) lived six or seven days in rain-water[343]: he found it so difficult to kill the larva of Stratyomis Chamæleon, which he first immersed twenty-four hours in spirits of wine, and then put them several days in water, without killing them,—that he lost his patience, and dissected them alive. He tried to drown them also in vinegar, in which they held out more than two days[344].

That the suspended animation and subsequent death of most terrestrial insects when thrown into water is caused by the want of air, is evident from this,—that the same effect ensues if the spiracles be covered with any oily or fatty matter. In this case too, their vital powers soon become suspended: they revive, if the suffocating matter be soon removed; and if this be not done, infallibly perish. This fact was known to the ancients, for Pliny observes that bees die if dipped in oil or honey[345]. One exception to this law has been before mentioned[346]: a similar contrivance secures the cheese-maggot from having its respiration interrupted by its moist and greasy food; the grub also of Sarcophaga carnaria, and of other Muscidæ probably, has its posterior spiracles placed in a plate at the bottom of a kind of fleshy pouch, which has the shape of a hollow, truncated, and reversed cone. This pouch the grub can close whenever it pleases, so as to cover its spiracles[347]. And numerous other larvæ, both of Diptera and Coleoptera that devour unclean and oily food, have doubtless some protection of this kind for their spiracles and respiratory plates.

I am, &c.


[LETTER XXXIX.]