GENERAL AND GLOSSARIAL INDEX. 



367 



Habit, 127. 

 Habitat, 127. 

 Habits, 127. 



and structure correlative, 



24. 



Halictophagus, 115. 



Halictus, general observations on, 



216. 

 geography of, 68. 



- its enemies, 220. 



list of native species, 215. 



— — natui-al history of, 217. 



parasites that infest it, 219. 



■ peculiar autumnal appear- 

 ance, 218. 



— — scientific description of, 214. 



■ structure of labrum, 30. 



Hastate, halberd shaped. 



Head of bees, 26. 



Hedychrum infests Halictus, 219. 



Heriades, general observations on, 

 288. 



geography of, 76. 



native species of, 288. 



— — soientiSe description of, 288. 



Hindoo Eoosh, supposed cradle of 

 the human race, 3. 



Hirsute, covered with long stifSsh 

 hairs, thickly set. 



Hives, darkness of, 355. 



moved on rafts, 85. 



Homer mentions bees, 6. 



Honey, different kinds of, 87. 



green, 87. 



its use in the East, 83. 



mode of lapping, described 



by Eeaumur, 35. 



mode of storing, 350. 



■ prescribed by Mahomet, 91. 



' quantity in a well-filled hive, 



360. 



sometimes poisonous, 86. 



used in medicine by the 



Egyptians, 90. 



Honey-bee, see " Apis," " Bee," 



"Bees." 

 mode of secreting wax, 



330. 

 Hypopharynx, 29. 



Imago of bees, 28. 



Inosculation, point of close con- 

 tact or attachment. 



Insect-feeding reptiles before gla- 

 cial pei'iod, 5. 



Inserted, where joined. 



Instinct, its applications, 56. 



occasional divergence of, 



55. 



of bees, 55. 



Job mentions bees, 6. 



Kirby's merits, 144. 

 system of bees, 147. 



Labial palpi, 80, 32. 



number of joints invariable, 



32. 



structure in Andrenidse, 32. 



structure in Apidae, 32. 



Labium=lower lip, 30, 31. 



Labrum = upper lip, 28, 30. 



Lacerate, with a roughened irre- 

 gular edge. 



Lanceolate, oblong but gradually 

 tapering. 



LatreiUe's classification not 

 adopted, 168. 



Leg, diagram of, 42. 



Legs, general description of, 41. 



Length of an insect is taken from 

 the front of the head to the apex 

 of the abdomen; the breadth, 

 or the expansion of the wings, 

 it is not usual to give, except- 

 ing under such circumstances 

 as would be particularly men- 

 tioned, viz. in cases of an ex- 

 cessive enlargement or diminish- 

 ment of the typical size. 



Life, duration of, of bees, 54. 



Line, the twelfth part of an inch ; 

 the ordinary measure used in 

 entomology for the fractions of 

 an inch, unless the insect is much 

 more than an inch long. 



Linnaeus, author of the binomial 

 system, 129. 



great merits of, 129. 



Lobated, divided into equal 

 rounded parts. 



