200 



AN INTRODUCTION TO ENTOMOLOGY 



i e 



the antennae of the adult are developed from histoblasts within the 

 head and during the latter part of the larval life are folded like the 



bellows of a closed accor- 

 dian; at the close of this 

 period they become eva- 

 ginated, but the definitive 

 form is not assumed until 

 the emergence of the adult. 

 A similar course of devel- 

 opment of the antenna? 

 takes place in vermiform 

 larvae (Fig. 218).' 



m.v 



h 



d. THE DEVELOPMENT OF 

 THE MOUTH-PARTS 



Great differences exist 

 among insects with refer- 



Fig. 218. Sagittal section through head of old 

 larva of Simidium, showing forming imaginal 

 head parts within. Ic, larval cuticula; id, 

 imaginal head-wall; la, larval antenna; ia, 

 imaginal antenna; ie, imaginal eye; Imd, 

 larval mandible; imd, imaginal mandible; ence to the comparative 

 Imx, larval maxilla; imx, imaginal maxilla; f h r t u p : r mnnfV, 



71*1 111' ; * 111* /T\ Owl LAV- LU.1CT \JL L11C11 lll^Llt'll" 



lit, larval labium; ui, imaginal labmm (rrom 



Kellogg). parts in their immature 



and adult instars. In 



some insects the immature instars have essentially the same type of 

 mouth-parts as the adults ; in most of these cases, the mouth-parts are 

 of the biting types, but in the Homoptera and Heteroptera both 

 nymphs and adults have them fitted for sucking; in many other 

 insects, the mouth-parts of the larva? are fitted for biting while those of 

 adults are fitted for sucking; and in still others, as certain maggots, the 

 development of the mouth-parts is so retarded that they are first 

 functional in the adult insect. Correlated with these differences are 

 differences in the method of development of these organs. 



In those insects that have a gradual or incomplete metamorphosis 

 and in the Neuroptera, the Coleoptera, and the Hymenoptera in part, 

 the mouth-parts of the immature and adult instars are essentially of 

 the same type. In these insects the mouth-parts of each instar are 

 developed within the corresponding mouth-parts of the preceding 

 instar. At each ecdysis there is a molting of the old cuticula, a 

 stretching of the new one before it is hardened, a result of the growth 

 in size of the appendages, and sometimes an increase in the number 

 of the segments of the appendage. In a word, the mouth-parts of the 

 adult are developed from those of the immature instar in a compara- 

 tively direct manner. In some cases, however, where the mouth- 



