210 INSECT TRANSFORMATIONS. 



Curtis; for the French journalists gravely asserted 

 that part of the caterpillars were produced by spiders; 

 and that these spiders, and not the caterpillars, con- 

 structed the webs of the slime of snails, which they 

 were said to have been seen collecting lor the pur- 

 pose! 'Verily,' exclaims Reaumur, ' there is more 

 ignorance in our age than one might believe.' 



It is justly remarked by Curtis, that the caterpillar 

 of the brown-tail "moth is not so limited a feeder as 

 some, nor so indiscriminate as others; but that it always 

 confines itself to trees or shrubs, and is never found on 

 herbaceous plants, whose low growth would seldom 

 supply a suitable foundation for its web. Hence the 

 absurdity of supposing it would attack the herbage 

 of the field, and produce a famine among cattle. 

 Curtis says, it is found on the ' hawthorn most plen- 

 tifully, oak the same, elm very plentifully, most truit- 

 trees the same, black thorn plentifully, rose-trees the 

 same, bramble the same, on the willow and poplar 

 scarce. None have been noticed on the elder, walnut, 

 ash, fir, or herbaceous plants. With respect to fruit- 

 trees the injuries they sustain are most serious, as, in 

 destroying the blossoms as yet in the bud, they also 

 destroy the fruit in embryo; the owners of orchards, 

 therefore, have great reason to be alarmed.' 



The sudden appearance of great numbers of these 

 caterpillars in particular years, and their scarcity in 

 others, is in some degree explained by a flict stated 

 by Mr Salisbury. ' A gentleman of Chelsea,' he 

 says, ' has informed me that he once took a nest 

 of moths and bred them; that some of the eggs 

 came the first year, some the second, and others of 

 the same nest did not hatch till the third season,'* 

 We reared, during 1829, several nests both of 

 the brown-tails and of the golden-tails, and a num- 

 ber of the females deposited their eggs in our nurse- 



* tSalisbury, Hints on Orchards, p. .53. 



