Nerve-winged Insects; Scorpion-tiies; Caddis-flies 241 



laid longitudinally or transversely and with projecting ends. Small snail- 

 shells or bits of leaves and grass may serve for building materials. One kind 

 of caddis- worm makes a small, coiled case which so much resembles a snail- 

 shell that it has actually been described as a shell by conchologists. Some 

 cases in California streams gleam and sparkle in the water like gold; bits 

 of mica and iron pyrites were mixed with other bits of mineral picked up 

 from the stream - bed to form 

 these brilliant houses. An Eng- 

 lish student removed a caddis- 

 worm from its case, and pro- 

 vided it only with small pieces 

 of clear mica, hoping it would 

 build a case of transparent walls. 

 This it really did, and inside its 

 glass house the behavior of the 

 caddis -worm at home was ob- 

 served. While most of the cases 

 are free and are carried about by 

 the worm in its ramblings, some 

 are fastened to the 

 rock banks or bed of the stream. 

 These fixed cases are usually com- 

 posed of bits of stone or smooth 

 pebbles irregularly tied together with silken threads. In all the cases silk 

 spun by the caddis-worm is used to tie or cement together the foreign build- 

 ing materials, and often a complete inner silken lining is made. 



331- *"G. 332a- 



boulders or Fig. 331. — Two cases of caddis-worms, 

 ral size.) 

 Fig. 332. — Two cases of caddis-worms with the 

 larval insects within showing head and thorax 

 projecting. (Natural size.) 



Fig. 333. — Halesus indistinclus. (.After Ncedham; enlarged.) 



The larvae within the cases are worm- or caterpillar-like, with head and 

 thora.x usually brown and horny-walled, while the rest of the body is soft 

 and whitish. The head with the mouth-parts, and the thora.x with the long 

 strong legs, are the only parts of the body that project from the protecting 

 case, and hence need to be specially hardened. At the posterior tip of the 



