DERMAPTEBA AND QRTUOPTERA. 



345 



elender form, with long, many-jointed antennae, and two 



long, slender, jointed caudal ap- 

 pendages. It lives under stones, 

 and C. Gookei lives in Mammoth 

 Cave. 



Order 2. Dermaptera. — The 

 earwigs {Forficula) have a flat 



Fig. 318.— A Poduran (Tomocerus) and its scales. Much enlarged. 



body, ending in a forceps; while the 

 fore-wings are small, the large hind- 

 wings being folded under them. 



Order 3. Orthoptera. — The insects 

 of this group, so called from the 

 straight-edged fore- wings of the grass- 

 hoppers, locusts, crickets, etc., are 

 characterized by their net- veined 

 wings and incomplete metamov^)hosis. 

 Oi'gans of hearing may be situated 

 either on the fore-legs, as in the green 

 grasshoppers, katydids, or at the base 

 of the abdomen, as in the locusts. 

 Most Orthoptera have a large ovi- 

 positor, by which they burrow in the 

 earth or into soft wood, and deposit 

 their eggs singly or in masses. Mantis 

 (Fig. 330) lays its eggs in a cocoon- 

 like mass. 

 Many Orthoptera, as the crickets, greeii grasshoppers. 



Fig. 319.— Campoaeo. 

 mandibles; &, maxilia. 



