قراءة كتاب An Introduction to Entomology: Vol. IV (of 4) or Elements of the Natural History of the Insects
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An Introduction to Entomology: Vol. IV (of 4) or Elements of the Natural History of the Insects
href="@public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@43579@[email protected]#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor pginternal" tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">[82] of insects, as of other animals, are white filaments running from the brain and spinal marrow to every part of the body which they are destined to animate; and their numerous ramifications, when delineated, form no unpleasing picture[83]. In the caterpillar of the goat-moth the accurate Lyonet counted forty-five pairs of them, and two single ones, making in all ninety-two nerves; whereas in the human body anatomists count only seventy-eight[84]. From the brain issue several pairs, which go to the eyes, antennæ, palpi, and other parts of the mouth: sometimes those that render to the mandibles issue from the first ganglion, as in the larva of Dytiscus marginalis, the stag-beetle, &c.[85]; those both of mandibles and palpi in the great Hydrophilus[86]; and in Blatta some which act also upon the antennæ[87].
The optic are usually the most conspicuous and remarkable of the nerves. In some insects with large eyes, as many Neuroptera, Hymenoptera, and Diptera, their size is considerable; in the hive-bee they present the appearance of a pair of kidney-shaped lobes, larger than the brain[88]; in the dragon-flies, whose brain consists of two very minute lobes, these nerves dilate into two large plates of a similar shape, which line all the inner surface of the eyes[89]; in the stag-beetle they are pear-shaped, and terminate in a bulb, from which issue an infinity of minute nerves[90]; it is probable that this takes place in all cases, and that a separate nerve renders to every separate lens in a compound eye[91]; the optic nerve in Dytiscus and Carabus is pyramidal, with the base of the pyramid at the eye and the summit at the brain[92]; in Eristalis tenax it is very large, cylindrical, and of a diameter equal to the length of the last-mentioned part, upon the side of which it is supported; it terminates in a very large bulb corresponding to the eye[93]: in Scolopendra morsitans the optic nerves divide into four branches long before they arrive at the eyes, and in this insect the nerves which render to the antennæ are so thick as to appear portions of the brain, which they equal in diameter[94]. Swammerdam discovered in the grub of the rhinoceros-beetle and in the caterpillar of the silk-worm, a pair of nerves which he regarded as analogous to the recurrent nerves in the human subject, and therefore he distinguishes them by the same name[95]: they issue from the lower surface of the brain, or that which rests on the œsophagus, and at first go towards the mouth, but afterwards turn back, and uniting form a small ganglion; this produces a single nerve, which passing below the brain follows the œsophagus to the stomach, where it swells into another ganglion, from which issue some small nerves that render to the stomach, and one more considerable which accompanies the intestinal canal, producing at intervals lateral filaments which lose themselves in the tunics of that tube[96]. Lyonet afterwards discovered these nerves in the caterpillar of the goat-moth[97], and Cuvier in other insects[98].
The other nerves which issue from the brain exhibit no remarkable features. Those which originate in the spinal marrow are mostly derived from the ganglions, and are sometimes interwoven with the muscles, as the woof with the warp in a piece of cloth[99]; those from the three or four first commonly rendering to the muscles of the legs, wings, and other parts of the trunk, and those from the remainder to the abdomen. After their origin they often divide and subdivide, and terminate in numerous ramifications that connect every part of the body with the sensorium commune. A pair of nerves is the most usual number that proceeds from each side of a ganglion[100]; but this is by no means constant, since in the louse, the hive-bee, and several other insects, only a single nerve thus proceeds[101]; and in the larva of Ephemeræ, while two pairs issue from the six first ganglions, only a single one is emitted by the five