16 



THE CLASS OF INSECTS. 



Fig. 20. 



gradually incurved toward the base (Fig. 18), and the thi'ee 

 pairs of rhabdites approach each other so closely that the two 

 outer ones completely ensheath the inner, until a complete 

 extensible tube is foi'med, which is gradually withcbawn enth-ely 

 within the body. 



The male genital organ is originally composed of tln-ee pairs 

 (two pairs, apparently, in ^s- 

 l.^ chna, Fig. 19) of tubercles all 

 arising from the ninth abdominal 

 ring, being sternal outgrowths 

 and placed on each side of the 

 mesial line of the body, two be- 

 ing anterior, and very unequal in size, and the 

 Fig. 19. third pair nearer the base of the abdomen. The ex- 

 ternal genital organs are to be considered 

 as probably homologous with the limbs, as 

 Ganin has shown that they bud out in the 

 same manner from (see p. 704 

 fig. G55) the arthromere.* 

 ■& This view will apply to the 

 Fig. 21. genital armor of all Insects, so 

 far as we have been able to observe. It is 

 so in the pupa of JEsclina (Fig. 21), and 

 the pupa of Agrion (Fig. 22), which com- 

 pletely repeats, in its essential featm-es, the 

 structure of the ovipositor of Bomhus. Thus in ^schna and 

 Agrion the ovipositor consists of a pair of closely appressed ensi- 

 form processes which grow out from under the posterior edge of 

 the eighth abdominal ring, and are embraced between two pairs 



*This term is proposed as better defining the ideal ring, or primary zoological 

 element of an articulated animal than the terms somite or zoonite, which seem too 

 vague; we also propose the term arthroderm for the outer crust, or body walls, of 

 Articulates, and arthropleura for the pleural, or limb-bearing region, of the body, 

 bemg that portion of the arthromere situated between the tergite and sternite. 



Fig. 19. The rudiments of the male intromittent organ of the pupa of ^schna, 

 consisting of two flattened tubercles situated on the ninth ring; the outer pair 

 large and rounded inclosing the smaller linear oval pair. 



Fig. 20. The same in the Humble-bee, but consisting of three pairs of tubercles, 

 X, y, z; 8,9, 10, the last three segments of the abdomen. 



Fig. 21. The rudimentary ovipositor of the pupa of JSschna, a Dragon-fly. 



Fig. 22. The same in pupa of Agrion, a small Dragon-fly. Here the rudiments 

 of the eleventh abdominal ring are seen, d, the base of one of the abdominal false 

 gills. The ovipositor of Cicada is formed in the same way. — Figs. 14-22 original. 



Fig. 22. 



