162 



ENTOMOLOGY. 



sive order one should examine a honey-bee. Those that 

 we see in our gardens are the workers; the males, or drones, 

 and the females, or queens, are rarely seen out of the hive. 

 In the first place, see how well-proportioned are the three 

 regions of the body; the head is large in proportion to the 



thorax, which is nearly 

 spherical; and the hind 

 body, which has six visible 

 segments, is short, conical, 

 and attached by a slender 

 waist to the chest. The 

 three regions are more 

 equally developed than in 

 any other order of insects. 

 Moreover, Hymenoptera 



FIG. 205.-Head of a worker hive-bee. A, differ frOHl all other Insects 



front, and B, side view; oc, simple, e, iv. flip flinviY fin all PYr>mit 



compound, eyes; epic, epicranium; cl, m tl16 tllOiaX U n a11 6XCept 



clypeus: tor labruni; md mandible; the Tenthredinidae), COn- 

 mx, maxilla; I. lingua or tongue; Ip, 



labial palpi. Magnified. sistingof four segments, the 



first abdominal during pupation being transferred to the 

 thorax. 



McCook, H. C. The natural history of the agricultural ant of Texas 



(Philad., 1879). 

 - The honey-ants of the Garden of the Gods, and the Occident ants of 



the American plains (Philad., 1882). Also papers on otli'er ants 



(Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc., 1876, and Proc. Acad. Nat. Sc., Phila., 



1877-84). 

 Mayr, G. Formicina Austriaca ; Die Formiciden der Verein. 



Staaten in Nordamerika, 1886; and others papers in Verh, Zool. 



Bot. Ges , Wien, 1855-86. 

 Moggridge, J. T. Harvesting ants and trap-door spiders (London, 



1873-74). 

 Packard, A. S. Revision of the fossorial Hymenoptera of N. A. (Proc. 



Ent. Soc., Phila., 186,5-7). 

 Humble-bees of New England and their parasites (Proc. Essex 



Inst., iv., 1864). 

 Saussure, H de. Studies of the family Vespid* (3 vols., 8vo, 75 



pis. Geneva, 1853-58). 

 Synopsis of American solitary Wasps (Smithsonian Misc. Coll., 



Washington, 1875). 

 Smith, F. Catalogue of Hymenoptera in British Museum (7 parts. 



London, 1853-59). (See also other papers in Trans. Ent. Soc., 



London, 1853-59.) 



Also the papers of Ashmead, Bassett (on Cynipidge 1 ), Norton (on 

 saw-flies), Patton, Riley, Say, and Walsh (on Cynipidae, etc.). 



