452 MEANS OF DEFENCE OF INSECTS. ^ 



In the Coleoptera order a very common beetle, the whirlwig (Gyrinus 

 natntor), will infect your finger for a long time with a disagreeable rancid 

 smell ; while two other species, G. minutus and villosiis, are scentless. 

 Those unclean feeders, the carrion beetles (Siljjha L.), as might be 

 expected from the nature of their food, are at the same time very fetid. 

 Pliny tells us of a Blatta, which, from his description, is evidently the 

 darkling-beetle (^Blaps mortisaga), and which he recommends as an infal- 

 lible nostrum, when applied with oil extracted from the cedar, in other- 

 wise incurable ulcers, that was an object of general disgust on account of 

 its ill scent, a character which it still maintains^ ; which scent, from Mr. 

 Thwaites's investigation of the internal anatomy of this insect, proceeds 

 from two small oblong vesicles near the anus, the fluid contents of which, 

 when they are extracted and dissected under water, rise in a bubble to 

 the surface, and there becoming vaporized diffuse the fetid smell peculiar 

 to this species. Numbers of the ground-beetles (Eutrechina) that are 

 found under stones, and in places that have not a free circulation of air, 

 exhale a most disagreeable and penetrating odor, which De Geer observes 

 resembles that of rancid butter, and is not soon got rid of. It is produced, 

 he says, from an unctuous matter that transpires through the body^; but 

 I am rather inclined to think it proceeds iVom the extremity. I have 

 noticed that some small beetles of the Omalium genus, for instance O. 

 rivulare, and another species that I once found in abundance on the prim- 

 rose (O. Primulce K. Ms.), especially the latter, are abominably fetid 

 when taken, and that it requires more than one washing to free the fingers 

 from it. Every one knows that the cock-roach (Blatta orientalis), belong- 

 ing to the Orthoptera order, is not remarkable for a pleasant scent; but 

 none are more notorious for their bad character in this respect than the 

 bug tribe (Gcocorisce), which almost universally exhale an odor that mixes 

 with the scent of cucumbers another extremely unpleasant and annoying. 

 Some, however, are less disgusting, particularly Lygams Hyosci/ami, which 

 yields, De Geer found, an agreeable odor of thyme."' — Several lepidopte- 

 rous larvae are defended by their ill smell; but I shall only particularize 

 the silk-worms, which on that account are said to be unwholesome. — Phry- 

 ganca grand is, 0. kind of May-fly, is a trichopterous '\nseci that offends 

 the nostrils in this way ; but a worse is Chrysopa Pcrin, a golden-eyed 

 and lace-winged fly, of the next order, whose beauty is counterbalanced 

 by a strong scent of human ordure that proceeds from it. — Numberless 

 Ilymcnoptera act upon the olefactory nerves by their ill or powerful efllu- 

 via. One of them, an ant (Formica /(etida De Geer, fatcns Oliv.), has 

 the same smell with the insect last mentioned."* Our common black ant 

 (^F. fuliginosa) , whose cm'ious nests in trees have been before described 

 to you, is an insect of a powerful and penetrating scent, which it imparts 

 to every thing with which it comes in contact ; and Fabricius distinguishes 

 another (P. analis \jtitr., fcetens F.) by an cphhet (fcpf id issima) wluch 

 sufliciently declares its properties. Many wild bees (Aiulrcna) are dis- 

 tinguished by their pungent alliaceous smell. Crabro U-jiavum, a wasp- 

 like insect, is remarkable for the penetrating and spirituous efiluvia of ether 

 that it exhales.^ Indeed there is scarcely any species in this order that 



» Hist. Nat. 1. xxix. c. 6. » iv 86. ^ pg Geer, iii. 249. 374. 



« De Geer, iii. 611. » Kirby, Mon. Ap. Angl. i. 136. note a. 



