166 HINTS ON THE ANCESTRY OF INSECTS. 



their strange forms. From the non-segmented, sac-like larva, 

 it passes directly into the pupa state. 



The last egg-parasite noticed by Ganin, is Teleas, whose 

 development resembles that of Platygaster. It is a parasite in 

 the eggs of Gerris, the Water Boatman. Figure 197 A repre 

 sents the egg; B, C, and D, the first stage of the larva, the 

 abdomen (or posterior division of the body) being furnished 

 with a series of bristles on each side. (B represents the ven 

 tral, C the dorsal, and D the profile view; at, antennae; rud, 

 hook-like mandibles ; mo, mouth ; b, bristles ; TO, intestine ; sto, 

 the tail; ul, under lip or labium.) In the second larval stage, 

 which is oval in form, and not segmented, the primitive baud 

 is formed. 



In concluding the account of his remarkable discoveries, 

 Ganin. draws attention to the great differences in the formation 

 of the eggs and the germs of these parasites from what occurs 

 in other insects. The egg has no nutritive cells ; the formation 

 of the primitive band, usually the first indication of the germ, 

 is retarded till the second larval stage is attained; and the 

 embryonal membrane is not homologous with the so-called 

 &quot;amnion&quot; of other insects, but may possibly be compared with 

 the skin developed on the upper side of the low, worm-like aca- 

 rian, Pentastomum, and the &quot;larval skin&quot; of the embryos of 

 many low Crustacea. He says, also, that we cannot, perhaps, 

 find the homologues of the provisional organs of the larva?, such 

 as the singularly shaped antenna;, the claw-like mandibles, the 

 tongue- or ear-like appendages, in other Arthropoda (insects 

 and Crustacea); but that they may be found in the parasitic 

 Lernaean crustaceans, and in the leeches, such as Histriobella. 

 He is also struck by the similarity in the development of these 

 egg-parasites to that of a kind of leech (Nephelis), the embryo 

 of which is provided with cilise, recalling the larva of Teleas 

 (Fig. 197 B, &amp;lt;7), while in the true leeches (Hirudo) the primi 

 tive band is not developed until after they have passed through 

 a provisional larval stage. 



This complicated metamorphosis of the egg-parasites, Ganin 

 also compares to the so-called &quot;hyper-metamorphosis&quot; of cer 

 tain insects (Meloe, Sitaris, and the Stylopida?) made known by 

 Siebold, Newport and Fabre, and he considers it to be of the 

 same nature. 



He also, in closing, compares such early larval forms as those 



