i THE ANATOMY OF INVERTEBRATED ANIMALS. 



;nathites are changed in form and function, or become con- 

 uent. 

 The insects which, in this view of their morphological re- 



Fio. 102. Campodea staphylinus, one of the Thysanura (after Lubbock). 1 



lations, occupy the lowest position in the group, are the 

 lembola and Thysanura., the Mallophaga, and the Pedicu- 

 lina, inasmuch as they possess no trace of wings and undergo 

 no metamorphosis. 



The Collembola and Thysanura undergo no metamorpho- 

 sis, and are always wingless. The abdomen contains six seg- 

 ments only in the Collembola (Podura, Smynthurus, Tomo- 

 ceros), in which group the mouth is usually provided with 

 mandibles and maxillae, though these, instead of being artic- 

 1 ulated with the sides of the head, are capable of being re- 

 tracted into its interior. 3 In the genus Anoma the mouth is 

 suctorial. 



1 " Monograph on the Collembola and Thysanura," pi. liii. 



