THE EGG. 47 



Eggs are usually small in proportion to the size of the 

 parent; but in man}' minute forms [i.e. Pulex, Pedicidas, etc.) 

 they are proportionately much larger. In shape eggs are 

 either spherical or oblong. In some there are radiating append- 

 ages at one end, as in those of J^ejxi and Eanatra ; or they are 

 provided with a single stalk, as in Chrysojxi, Cymps, and 



The eggs of most Hymenoptera, Diptera, aud many Coleop- 

 tera are usually cylindrical ; those of Lepidoptera are more 

 generally spherical. The eggs of the Mosquito are laid in a 

 boat-shaped mass, which floats on the surface of quiet pools, 

 while those of the ChrysojM, or Lace-winged Fly (Fig. 55), are 



supported on long pedicels. -.^^ \ iffffo ? 



The}' are almost invariably ^"^ Swfft ^'^^^^ \\\\llU 



laid near or upon oltjects des- .^,,^^^^^^^^^^^^c 



tined to be the food of the Fig. 55, 



future larva. Thus the Copris^ or "Tumble-bug," places its 

 egg in a ball of dung which it rolls away to a secure place ; 

 the Flesh-fl}' o\iposits on meat ; and all vegetable-feeders lay 

 their eggs on the food-plant where the larva, upon its exit 

 from the egg^ shall readily find an ample supply of food. 



The posterior end of the egg is more often the fixed one, and 

 it may thus be distinguished from the anterior pole. In the 

 eggs of some Diptera and Orthoptera, the ventral side of the 

 embryo, according to Gerstaecker, corresponds to the convex 

 side of the egg, and the concave side of the latter corresponds 

 to the dorsal region of the embryo. 



The surface of the chorion, or egg-shell, which is dense and 

 brittle, is often covered by a mosaic-work of more or less regu- 

 lar facets. In many small eggs the surface is only minutely 

 granulated, or ornamented with ribs and furrows, as in those 

 of many Butterflies. 



The Micropyle. On the anterior end (though sometimes 

 at both ends) of the egg is one or more pores of exceeding 

 minuteness, through which the spermatozoa (more than one 

 of wliich, according to Darwin, is requisite to fertilize an 

 ovule) enter to fertilize the egg-contents. In some cases 

 these micropyles are scattered over the whole surface of the egg. 

 Fig. 56 a represents the micropyles of Nepa cinerea, consisting 



