. Cuvier's animal kingdom : arranged according to its organization. Animals. ORTIIOPTERA. 5(îl Mijrmecophila {Spheeriitm, ), is destitute of wings, and has the body oval. M. acet-vorum is of very small size, and lives in Ants' nests [on the Continent], Others [having, Uke the last, a talc-like spot at the base of the wing-covers in the male], have these organs disposed like a roof, and the tarsi have four joints ; the antennae are very long and filiform. The females have the ovipositor always exserted, com- pressed, and sabre or cutlass-shaped. These insects are herbivorous, and form
. Cuvier's animal kingdom : arranged according to its organization. Animals. ORTIIOPTERA. 5(îl Mijrmecophila {Spheeriitm, ), is destitute of wings, and has the body oval. M. acet-vorum is of very small size, and lives in Ants' nests [on the Continent], Others [having, Uke the last, a talc-like spot at the base of the wing-covers in the male], have these organs disposed like a roof, and the tarsi have four joints ; the antennae are very long and filiform. The females have the ovipositor always exserted, com- pressed, and sabre or cutlass-shaped. These insects are herbivorous, and form the genus. LocusTA, Geoffr. [Gryllus, or Gryllidte, of English authors]. [The Great Green Grasshopper, with long antennae], .._ »jrêv,--^, _ -feîvisîrsE ,- Z,. fù-;rfmm«, is two inches long, green, without spots ; y^ë^.^^;.^^^^^-^-*^-^-^---—*^*^^8«»^- the ovipositor of the female is straight. „ „„ , . ... Many species of this genus are destitute of wings, or Fig. 92.—L. viridissima. ' ' " ° ' have wing-covers only, but of very small size. [The species of this genus, or rather, family, have been distributed into a considerable number of generic groups by Thunberg, Serville, Latreille, Burmeister, and others, founded upon external variations of form.] The others have the antennaj filiform and cylindric, sword-shaped, or thickened at the tips, and as long as the head and thorax ; the wings and mng-covers are roof-shaped when inactive, and the tarsi are 3-jointed. The tonguelet, in the majority, has only two divisions; the ocelli are three in number, and constantly distinct ; the mandibles much toothed ; the abdomen conical, and compressed at the sides. They leap with much more energy than the preceding, and have a much longer sustained flight. They feed upon vegetables with great voracity. They may be united into a single genus, that of AcRYDiuM, Geoffr.,— \\1iich [lias been greatly divided into genera and subgenera by Serville, Burmeister, and Tliunbe
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, bookpublishe, booksubjectanimals