114 HYMENOPTERA. 



swimming in the adnlt state on the surface of pools, and thej' 

 are the low, minute, degraded Proctotrupids, Prestivichia 

 natans and Polynema nutans described by Mr. Lubbock. The 

 Hymenoptera do not imitate or mimic the forms of other in- 

 sects, but, on the contrary, tlieir forms are extensively copied in 

 the Lepidoptera, and especially the Diptera. A partial excep- 

 tion to this law is seen in tlie antennjTe of the Australian genus 

 TJtaumatosoma, where they are long and slender, and knobbed 

 as in the butterfly, and also in Tetralonia mirabilis of Smith, 

 from lirazil. 



The Hymenoptera, also, show their superiority to all other in- 

 sects in the form of their degraded wingless species, such as 

 PezomacJuts, the workers of Formica and the female of Matilla. 

 In these forms we have no striking resemblances to lower orders 

 and suborders, but a strong adherence to their own Hymenop- 

 terous characters. Again ; in the degradational winged forms, 

 we rarely find the antennae pectinated ; a common occurrence 

 in the lower suborders. In a low species of the Apiarim ^ 

 Lamprocolletes dadocerus^ from Australia, — that land of anom- 

 alies, — the antennjc are pectinated. This, Mr. F. Smith, the 

 best living authority on this suborder, says, "is certainly the 

 most remarkable bee that I have seen, and the only in- 

 stance, to my knowledge, of a bee having pectinated antenna? ; 

 such an occurrence, indeed, in the Aculeate Hymenoptera is 

 onl}' known in two or three instances, as in Psammothenna Jlab- 

 ellata amongst the 3Iatillidce , and again in Ctenocerus Klugii 

 in the Pompilidce ; there is also a modification of it in one or 

 two other species of Pompiilidce ." Among the Tenthre- 

 dinidoi, the male Lopihyrus has well-pectinated antenuiie, as 

 also has Cladomacra macropus of Smith, from New Guinea 

 and Celebes. 



The wings of perhaps the most degraded Hymenoptera, the 

 Proctotrujyidce, are rarely fissured; when this occurs, as in 

 Pteratomus Patnamii, the}^ somewhat resemble those of Ptero- 

 phoi'us, the lowest moth. It is extremely rare that the com- 

 pound eyes are replaced by stemmata, or simple eyes ; in but 

 one instance, the genus Anthophorahia^ are the eyes in the 

 male sex reduced to a simple ocellus. This species lives in the 

 darkness of the cells of Anthophora. 



