CHAP, II.] DISPERSAL AND MIGRATION. 33 
and pup of insects have their abode in solid timber, that they 
might survive being floated immense distances. Great numbers 
of tropical insects have been captured in the London docks, 
where they have been brought in foreign timber ; and some have 
emerged from furniture after remaining torpid for many years. 
Most insects have the power of existing weeks or months with- 
out food, and some are very tenacious of life. Many beetles 
will survive immersion for hours in strong spirit ; and water a 
few degrees below the boiling point will not always kill them. 
We can therefore easily understand how, in the course of ages 
insect’ may become dispersed by means which would be quite 
inadequate in the case of the higher animals. The drift-wood and 
tropical fruits that reach Ireland and the Orkneys; the double 
cocoa-nuts that cross the Indian ocean from the Seychelle Islands 
to the coast of Sumatra; the winds that carry volcanic dust and 
ashes for. thousands of miles; the hurricanes that travel in their 
revolving course over wide oceans; all indicate means by which 
a few insects may, at rare intervals be carried to remote regions, 
and become the progenitors of a group of allied forms. 
But the dispersal of msects requires to be looked at from 
another point of view. They are, of all animals, perhaps the 
most wonderfully adapted for special conditions ; and are so often 
fitted to fill one place in nature and one only, that the barriers 
against their permanent displacement are almost as numerous 
and as effective as their means of dispersal. Hundreds of species 
of lepidoptera, for example, can subsist in the larva state only on 
one species of plant; so that even if the perfect insects were 
carried to a new country, the continuance of the race would de- 
pend upon the same or a closely allied plant being abundant 
there. Other insects require succulent vegetable food all the 
year round, and are therefore confined to tropical regions ; 
some can live only in deserts, others in forests; some are de- 
pendent on water-plants, some on mountain-vegetation. Many 
are so intimately connected with other insects during some 
part of their existence that they could not live without them ; 
such are the parasitical hymenoptera and diptera, and those 
mimicking species whose welfare depends upon their being 
