STRUCTURES IMPLICATED [N METAMORPHOSIS. 19 
The joint in the legs of the perfect insect nearest the body 
is called the hip or coxa, the next the thigh or femur; then the 
leg or tibia succeeds, and finally the many jointed tarsus with 
its hooks. 
It has already been noticed that the larve of many kinds of 
insects are entirely destitute of legs and feet. Thus the grubs of 
the hornet, Vespa crabro, are legless; and yet the remarkably 
THE LEGLESS LARVE OF THE BEE. NYMPHS OR PUPAE OF THE BEE. 
active limbs of the perfect insect have to be developed with all 
their muscles and nerves during metamorphosis ; and the apodal 
or legless condition of the larvee and pupz of the worker bees may 
be understood by examining the engraving of them. 
The legs of insects, although true locomotive organs, are often 
adapted to an infinitude of uses, and they are formed in numerous 
shapes, and present innumerable special structural adaptations, so 
CATERPILLAR OF A ‘“LOOPER.”’ 
that their study is really most interesting. Nevertheless, what- 
ever may be the shape of the legs, their uses and functions, or 
their condition of development, they are always formed upon a 
definite plan, and have certain anatomical peculiarities. No better 
idea of the extraordinary development of these locomotive organs 
in the perfect insect, and of their rudimentary condition in the 
larva and before metamorphosis has taken place, can be obtained 
than by comparing the figures of the larva and adult Calosoma. 
The membranous feet are not fully developed in some caterpillars, 
and the “loopers” in particular have rarely more than two instead 
Caz 
