COLEOPTEROUS INSECTS. 7,7 



functions which they perform in the economy of 

 nature, and the injurious consequences which not 

 unfrequently result to mankind from their undue di- 

 minution or increase, impart a greater degree of im- 

 portance to their history than attaches to the gene- 

 rality of the insect tribes. 



Coleopterous insects compose the first great sec- 

 tion, or order as it is called, of the class of insects. 

 They are readily distinguished from the other mem- 

 bers of their class, by having the inferior wings co- 

 vered and protected by a hard case or shell. This 

 peculiarity of structure has suggested the name, 

 which is composed of two Greek words, and signi- 

 fies wings in a sheath (xoXeo;, a sheath, and imja, 

 wings). The term was first used by Aristotle, and 

 as the character to which it refers forms a very ob- 

 vious mark of distinction, it has been almost univer- 

 sally adopted by subsequent writers. In several in- 

 stances, however, it fails to be an accurate defini- 

 tion of the order, for there are some beetles without 

 either wings or sheath, and many others in which 

 the latter only is present. To the other characters 

 more recently added, such as the transverse folding 

 of the wings, and the straight sutural line down the 

 middle of the wing-cases, separating them into two 

 equal portions, there are likewise exceptions ; but 

 these are too few and unimportant to invalidate ma- 

 terially the general correctness of the definition. 



The insects to which these characters apply, con- 

 stitute one of the most numerous orders of their 



