676 
ENGLISH INDEX. 
Foot-cushions of insects, ii. 317, 
322; iii. 691. 
Forceps described, iv. 533. 
Forest-frees, insects attack, i. 207. 
Frog'hopper (froth), leaps of, ii. 
311. 
Fungi parasitic on insects, iv. 215. 
Gad-fly, deer and reindeer, i. 159: 
hcrse, 147: ox, 150: man, 136: 
rabbit, 166: sheep, 158. 
, has eight trachea?, iv. 66. 
Gall-nuts, i. 317, 446. 
Garments, insects that attack, i. 
232. 
Gecko (lizard), ii. 321. 
Gentles, i. 64. 
Geometers or Surveyors, a kind of 
caterpillar, ii. 288; iv. 196. 
Gesner, iv. 430. 
G izzard of insects, iv. 106. 
Glow-worm, common, ii. 405 : iv. 
149 : Italian, ii. 420. 
Gnat, agaric, ii. 7 : common, i. 
62, 112; ii. 281 ; iii. 82: gall, i. 
211, 446: horse, 148: wheat, 
i. 28, 171 : winter, ii. 438. 
Goliath beetles belt the globe, iv. 
506. 
Gooseberry, insects that attack, i. 
196. 
Gossamer webs, ii. 330. 
Gould (Rev. W.), the historian of 
English ants, ii. 48. 
Grass, insects that attack, i. 178: 
Indian, how made, i. 287, 337. 
Grasshopper, ii. 390, 394 : large 
green, i. 150; iv. 237. 
Gray (Mr.) characters of Linne's 
orders and genera of insects in 
Latin verse, iv. 457. 
Groups of animal kingdom, iv. 371: 
of insects, 398 : characters of, 
400 : scale of, 402: composition 
of, 406: how to be investigated, 
560 : predominant, 500 : domi- 
nant, 502 : snb-dominant, 504 : 
quiescent, 505 : endemial, 506: 
osculant, iii. 12. 
Gyrations of insects, ii. 366. 
Habit, what, iv. 564. 
Habitations of solitary insects, i. 
434 : of gregarious insects, 473. 
curious ones of Tinei- 
da?, i. 454. 
Hairs, use of to aquatic insects, ii. 
360. 
Handworm, what, i. 92. 
Harvest-man, iv. 121. 
Hawkmoth, bee, i. 212: death's- 
head, 34, 164; ii. 237, 263: hor- 
net, i. 212: humming-bird, ii. 
365, 379 : privet, 234, iii. 265 : 
spurge, 265. 
Haivkmoths, ii. 234, 251. 
Hearing of insects, organ of, iv. 
244. 
Heart of insects, what represented 
by? iv. 83: of Arachnida, 99. 
Heat (vital) of insects, ii. 226: iv. 
77. 
Heliocantharus of the ancients, i. 
255. note. 
Herbage benefited by insects, i. 
252. 
Herod (Agrippa) destroyed by lar- 
vae, i. 98. 
Heteromerous insects, iii. 682. 
Honey, i. 329 : iv. 140. 
comb, i. 482. 
dew, i. 210. 
Hops, insects that attack, i. 1 83. 
Hornet, i. 121, 273. 
Horns of insects, use of, ii. 252. 
Horse, insects that annoy, i. 145. 
Hovering of insects, ii. 364. 
Huber, the historian of the hive- 
bee, i. 486. 
P. the historian of ants, ii. 
48. 
Humble-bees, affection foe their 
young, i. 378 : mode of building 
theirnests, 498 : females, ii. 1 1 3 : 
making cells, i. 499; ii. 116: 
males, 116: workers, 117: hive- 
bees persuade them to yield to 
them their honey, \ 1 7. 
Humeral piece of wings, iii. 619. 
Humming of insects, ii. 375 : iii. 
550, note. 
in the air, ii. 373. 
