106 IXSECT ARCHITECTURE. 



it where none of those trees, nor any other of the 

 same description, grew. His hees also refiised to 

 make use of bitumen, and other resinous substances, 

 with which he supphed them, though ]Mr Knight, as 

 we shall afterwards see, was more successful,* 



Long before the time of R( aumur, however, Mouf- 

 fet, in his Lisedarum Theatriim, quotes Cordus for 

 the opinion, that propolis is collected from the buds 

 of trees, such as the poplar and birch; and Reim 

 says it is collected from the pine and fir.t Huber 

 at length set the question at rest; and his experi- 

 ments and observations are so interesting, that we 

 shall give them in his own words: — 



^' For many years," says he, '' I had fruitlessly en- 

 deavoured to hnd them on trees producing an ana- 

 logous substance, though multitudes had been seen 

 returning laden with it. 



^' In July, some branches of the wild poplar, which 

 had been cut since spring, with very large buds, full 

 of a reddish, viscous, odoriferous matter, were brought 

 to me, and I planted them in vessels before hives, in 

 the way of the bees going out to forage, so that they 

 could not be insensible of their presence. Within a 

 t^uarter of an hour, they were visited by a bee, which 

 separating the sheath of a bud with its teeth, drew 

 out threads of the viscous substance, and lodged a 

 pellet of it in one of the baskets of its limbs: from 

 another bud it collected another pellet for the oppo- 

 site limb, and departed to the hive. A second bee 

 took the place of the former in a few minutes, fol- 

 lowing the same procedure. Young shoots of poplar, 

 recently cut, did not seem to attract these insects, as 

 their viscous matter had less consistence than the 

 former. J 



* Phil. Trans, for ISOT, p. 212. 



t Schirach, Hist, dos Aheilles, p. 241. 



t Kirby and Sponce observed br;es very bnsy in colloplin.5 



