Economic entomology for the farmer Economic entomology for the farmer and the fruit grower, and for use as a text-book in agricultural schools and colleges; economicentomol00smit Year: 1906 THE INSECT WORLD. 411 IG. 470. small cells, each containing a supply of food sufficient for a single larva. The mother bee constructs a cell, fills it with a mixture of pollen and honey, and lays an o^^^ in it. Then she closes up the chamber, and her work as to this particular larva is com- pleted. When the q^^ hatches, the larva finds a food supply im- mediately at hand sufficient to bring it to maturity.
Economic entomology for the farmer Economic entomology for the farmer and the fruit grower, and for use as a text-book in agricultural schools and colleges; economicentomol00smit Year: 1906 THE INSECT WORLD. 411 IG. 470. small cells, each containing a supply of food sufficient for a single larva. The mother bee constructs a cell, fills it with a mixture of pollen and honey, and lays an o^^^ in it. Then she closes up the chamber, and her work as to this particular larva is com- pleted. When the q^^ hatches, the larva finds a food supply im- mediately at hand sufficient to bring it to maturity. When it is fully grown it changes to a pupa, and eventually to an adult, which then makes its way from the earth- en home into the sunlight. The mother bee having completed one cell, at once begins the construc- tion of another, and thus the w^ork is continued until the supply of eggs is exhausted. The open face of sand- or clay-banks is a favorite place for these insects, and sometimes they build their nests together in great numbers. The long-tongued bees are so called because the ligula or glossa is extended into a flexible ribbon- like structure, ringed but not seg- mented, set with circles of long hair, and frequently tipped with a little button-like structure. This enables the insect to reach the honey in deep flowers like the clovers, and in fact there are only certain bumble-bees with a tongue long enough to reach the nectaries of the red clover flowers ; hence they are entirely dependent upon these for pollination. Destroy the bumble-bees, and no red clover-seed can be obtained. It is a suggestive fact that in many localities where ruthless war is waged vrv^ Buiiowol in ii ita show 1111; lcIIs 111 ...der v^f ^l^,.., .a c», last aty, in which an egg has just been laid.
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