C3G ZOOLOGY sect. 



Order S. — Hymenoptera. 



Insects in which both pairs of wings are present and membran- 

 ous. The mouth parts are adapted both for biting and licking. 

 The prothorax is united with the other segments of the thorax. 

 There is a complete metamorphosis. 



Included in this order are Bees (Fig. 531) and Wasps, Ants 

 (Fig. 532), Gall-flies, and Ichneumons. 



Systematic Position of the Example. 



The Cockroach is a member of the order Orthoptera and of the 

 sub-order Orthoptera genuina, which comprises all the members of 

 the order with the exception of the aberrant group of the Earwigs 

 (sub-order Dermaptera). Of the Orthoptera gcnuinn there are 

 three divisions, the Cursoria, to which the Cockroaches belong ; 

 the Gressoria, comprising the Mantidoe and Phasmickr, or Stick- and 

 Leaf-insects and their allies ; and the Saltaioria, including the 

 Grasshoppers, Locusts, and Crickets. The division Cursoria com- 

 prises the single family of the Cockroaches (Blattidai), characterised 

 by the deflexed head, the flat oval body, the large prothoracic 

 tergum, the long antennsE, the three pairs of legs similar, with 

 large coxce entirely covering the sternal surface of the thorax, the 

 five-jointed tarsi, and the presence of anal cerci. Periplaneta 

 belongs to a section of the family distinguished from the rest by 

 the femora being spiny underneath, and by the valvular character 

 of the last sternum in the female. 



3. General Organisation. 



The exoskeleton of the Insecta (Fig. 515) consists of a chitinous 

 cuticle {cut.), which varies in hardness and thickness in different 

 Insects and in different parts of the 

 body of the same Insect, but is very rarely 

 calcified. Frequently it presents hexa- 

 gonal markings ; sometimes it is perfor- 

 ated by numerous pores ; sometimes it 

 is covered with thin scales ; in many 

 cases it is developed into tactile hairs or 

 '"'■^^ '1^^ setm, which may be scattered over the 



Pio.6i5.-sectioi, through the 'body, Or may bc located only on certain 

 iiitcgnment of an Insect, of the appendages — the antennae, the 



t-ase. basement membrane ; .,, ^^ i i i - i i • i i 



n,t. layers of tiie cuticle ; maxiUary and labial palpi, and the tarsi 



epi. epidermis ; set. seta. rj.ii T 77 j. 



(AftorMiaii .and Denny.) 01 tlic Icgs. In some, gtaiids avB present 

 in the integument — odoriferous, honey- 

 secreting, or wax-forming glands ; poison glands are present in 

 connection with an abdominal sting in certain Insects ; spinning 

 glands, forming a- silky material, are confined to the larvae. 



