484 



Saw-flies, Gall-flies, Ichneumons, 



in a loop over her back, with its tip on the bark of the tree, she makes a der- 

 rick out of her body, and proceeds with great skill and precision to drill a 

 hole into the tree. When the Tremex-burrow is reached she deposits an 



egg in it. The larva that hatches from 

 this egg creeps along this burrow until 

 it reaches its victim, and then fastens itself 

 to the horntail larva, which it destroys 

 by sucking its blood. The larva of Tha- 

 lessa when full-grown changes to a pupa 

 within the burrow of its host, and the 

 adult gnaws a hole out through the bark 

 if it does not find a hole already made by 

 the Tremex. Sometimes the adult Tha- 

 lessa, like the adult Tremex, gets her 

 ovipositor wedged in the wood so tightly 



Fig. 681. 



Fig. 682. 



Fig. 681. — Thalessa sp., ichneumon-iiarasite of the pigeon-tremex. (After Jordan and 



Kellogg; natural size.) 

 Fig. 682. — Thalessa hinalor drilling a hole in a tree-trunk, in order to deposit its egg in 



burrow of the pigeon-tremex. (After Comstock; natural size.) 



that it holds her a prisoner until she dies." 



Another curious large parasitic HjTnenopteron is Pehcinus polyturalor 

 (Figs. 683 and 684), the single American representative of the family Pele- 

 cinidce, of whose habits little is known, but which has attracted much atten- 

 tion because of the strange discrepancy in size between male and female. 

 The abdomen of the female is slender and ij inches or more in length, while 



