234 LEPIDOPTEKA. 



and the femora, tibiae and tarsi, slender and very equal in 

 length. There are usually two tibial spurs. The tarsus is 

 five-jointed, the terminal joint ending in two slender claws. 



The scales covering the body of Lepidoptera are simply 

 modified hairs. In stud^dng the wing of the Cecropia moth, 

 we find the hairs of the body and base of the wing gradually 

 passing into the forms represented in Fig. 166. They are 

 attached to the wings and laid partially over one another like 

 the tiles on a roof (Fig. 167). They are inserted in somewhat 

 regular lines, though, as seen in the figure, these lines are often 

 irregular, as shown by the line of scars where the scales have 

 been removed. The scales are beautifully ornamented with mi- 

 croscopic lines. We find, on removing the scales, that the 

 head consists of three well-marked pieces,* ^. e. the occiput 

 or basal piece which lies behind the ocelli ; the epicranium, 

 Ijdng behind the insertion of the antennjE, and carrying the eyes 

 and ocelli, and the cl^q^eus, which constitutes the front of the 

 head. The latter piece is larger than in all other insects, its 

 size being distinctive of the Lepidoptera. There is a general 

 form of this piece for each family, and it affords excellent 

 characters in the different genera, especially among the butter- 

 flies (as Mr. L. Trouvelot has shown us in a series of cli'awings 

 made by him), and the Zygainidm and Bomhycidm. It is 

 largest, and most perfectly shield-shaped, in the Attaci. In the 

 Phalcenidce, it is smaller, and squai'c ; and in the Tine idee 

 it is smaller still, while the occiput and epicranium are 

 larger. 



The labrum is remarkably small and often concealed by the 

 overhanging ch-peus. The labium is small, short, triangular. 

 and the mentum is nearly obsolete. The lingua is obsolete, its 

 place being supplied by the tongue-like maxilhie. The labial 

 palpi are feebly developed, sometimes rudimeutarj', and consist 



* Fig. 108. A, head of Cteniicha Virginica denuded; oc, occiput; «■, eijicranium, 

 with tlio two ocelli, o, and the base of the antennffi, at : e, eye ; c, clypens ; /, la- 

 hnim; m, mandible; w.r, tongue, or maxillw, with the end split apart: B, rudimen- 

 tary maxilla of Actias Luna, with its single-jointed rudimentary palpii.*, showing 

 the mode of attachment to the base of the maxilla; C, two-jointed, rudimentary 

 labial palpus of A. Lunrv; D, the same, single jointed, of Platysamia Cecropia. 



Figs. 1G9, 170. Head of a moth in relation to the pi-othorax (1). FiG. 171, A, B, side 

 view and (C) front view of the head of a moth; «, antenna; fc, eye; ff , the "front;" 

 e, orbit of the eye; /, ocellus; g, maxilla situated between U, the three-jointed la- 

 bial palpi ; i, the maxillary pali)us, sometimes very large and three-jointed. 



