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Letter. Page.

L. On Entomological Instruments; and the best Methods of collecting, breeding, and preserving Insects 528-559

Appendix 575-584 Authors quoted 585-602 Explanation of the Plates 603-614 Indexes 615-683

AN INTRODUCTION TO ENTOMOLOGY.

SENSATION.

Head. Trunk. Abdomen.

It can admit of no reasonable doubt that one of the principal intentions of these changes is to accommodate the nervous system to the altered functions of the animal in its new stage of existence, in which the antennae, eyes, and other organs of the senses, as well as the limbs and muscles moving them, and the sexual organs, being very different from those of the larva, and if not wholly new, yet expanded from minute germs to their full size, may well demand corresponding changes in the structure of the nervous system by which they are acted upon.

This illustration is doubtless at the first glance very striking and plausible: but a closer examination will, I think, show, that, as in so many other instances in metaphysical reasoning, when fanciful analogies are substituted for a rigid adherence to stubborn facts, it is satisfactory only on a superficial view, and will not stand the test of investigation; and as this is a question intimately connected with what I have advanced on the subject of instinct in a former letter, I must be permitted to go somewhat into detail in considering it.

That Dr. Virey should regard instinct in insects as purely mechanical was the natural consequence of his denying them any portion of intellect; but his opinion cannot I think be consistently assented to, if it be the fact, as I have just shown, that they are not wholly devoid of the intellectual principle. Whatever is merely mechanical, must, under similar circumstances, always act precisely in the same way. An automaton once constructed, whilst its machinery remains in order, will invariably perform the same actions; and Des Cartes, when he had constructed his celebrated female automaton, imagined that he had irrefragably proved his principle, that brutes are mere machines. But if, instead of losing himself in the wilds of metaphysical speculation, he had soberly attended to facts, he would have seen that the instinct of animals can be modified and counteracted by their intellect, and consequently cannot be regarded as simply mechanical. Though the instinctive impulse of an empty stomach powerfully impel a dog to gratify his appetite, yet, if he be well tutored, the fear of correction will make him abstain from the most tempting dainties: and in like manner a bee will quit the nectary of a flower, however amply replenished with sweets, if alarmed by any interruption. The ants on which Buonaparte amused himself with experiments at St. Helena, though they stormed his sugar-basin when defended by a fosse of water, controlled their instinct and desisted when it was surrounded with vinegar: and in the remarkable instance communicated to Dr. Leach by Sir Joseph Banks, the instinct of a crippled spider so completely changed, that from a sedentary web-weaver it became a hunter. There is evidently, therefore, no analogy between actions strictly mechanical and instincts, which, though they may often seem to be excited by mechanical causes, are liable to be restrained or modified by the connexion of the instinctive and intellectual faculties; and while we are ignorant how this connexion takes place, it is obviously impossible to reason logically on the subject.

I am, &c.

FOOTNOTES:

?? ??????????.

Cuvier seems not to have been aware that Swammerdam was the first discoverer of these nerves, since he attributes their name to Lyonet.

Ibid. ii. 322, 323--; 338. 339--.

Ibid. FIG. 2.

Ibid. FIG. 5.

Ibid. FIG. 6.

See above, p. 23.

Ibid. p. 503.

See above, p. 21.

RESPIRATION.

But for the first series of experiments ascertaining the necessity of a supply of air to insects, and their conversion of it into carbonic acid, we are indebted to the illustrious Scheele; and his experiments have been repeated and confirmed by Spallanzani, Vauquelin, and other chemists. The former found, that when caterpillars and maggots were confined in vessels containing only about eleven cubic inches of atmospheric air, though furnished with sufficient food, they soon died, and sooner when the space was more confined. He ascertained too, that a larva weighing only a few grains consumed, in a given time, as much oxygen as an amphibious animal a thousand times as voluminous. A male grasshopper in six cubic inches of oxygen lived but eighteen hours, and the female placed in eight cubic inches of atmospheric air, only thirty-six hours. The usual tests in both instances detected the conversion of the oxygen present into carbonic acid. Precisely the same result was obtained by Sorg and Ellis, who, having placed a number of flies in nine cubic inches of atmospheric air, found them all dead by the third day, the oxygen intirely vanished, and a quantity of carbonic acid nearly equal in bulk produced.

I am, &c.

FOOTNOTES:

Moldenhawers affirms that the spiracles of most insects are quite closed: but Sprengel has satisfactorily refuted that opinion.

Ibid. 8.

Ibid. FIG. 15. a.

Ibid. FIG. 14, 15. b.

vi. 398.

De Geer, ii. 635.

They are particularly visible in an undescribed East Indian species, with scuta alternately black and yellow.

Reaum. iv. 607.

Reaum. vi. 465.

Lyonet 102.

Lyonet 411.

De Geer vi. 374.

De Geer ii. 667, 675.

Reaum. vi. 394--.

Reaum. i. 136.

De Geer ii. 117.

See above, p. 50.

Reaum. iv. 520.

De Geer ii. 946--.

Reaum. i. 399--. De Geer i. 37--.

Reaum. i. 400.

De Geer ii. 129.

See above, p. 51--.

Ibid. 68--.

Ibid. p. 211.

Reaum. v. 540.

CIRCULATION.

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