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قراءة كتاب Garden Pests in New Zealand A Popular Manual for Prictical Gardeners, Farmers and Schools

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Garden Pests in New Zealand
A Popular Manual for Prictical Gardeners, Farmers and Schools

Garden Pests in New Zealand A Popular Manual for Prictical Gardeners, Farmers and Schools

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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of muscles. The heart is a delicate tube lying along the middle of the back or dorsal surface of the body, immediately under the skin, and extends almost from one end of the insect to the other; in an almost similar position, close to the lower or ventral surface of the body, the nervous system is situated, and consists of a chain of nerve centres, or ganglia, connected by a double nerve cord, the most anterior of these ganglia being in the head and forming the brain, the following three lying in the thorax, one to each segment, while the remainder are confined to the abdomen, one ganglion to each segment, as in the thorax. In many insects the number of nerve centres is reduced, owing to the fusion of two or more. The reproductive organs are located in the abdomen.

The digestive system consists of a tube (Fig. 3), with its appendages, opening at the mouth and at the posterior end of the body; this alimentary canal may be straight and simple, or convoluted and complex, according to the insect and the nature of its food. Respiration in insects is carried on by means of a system of air tubes (Fig. 3), which branch and re-branch to form an intricate system of delicate tubular airways, carrying the atmosphere to all tissues of the body; the main air tubes open at the surface by a series of breathing pores normally arranged along each side of the body, except on the head; these pores are best seen on a caterpillar or on the abdomen of adult insects.


CHAPTER IV.


Life Histories of Insects.


No doubt owing to the endless assortment of sizes, from mere specks to giants of a few inches, a widespread idea has arisen, particularly in regard to such insects as have a general resemblance to one another, that the smaller individuals are the younger stages of the larger. Though gradation in size may be a sign of successive ages in certain insects, the presence of functioning wings denotes that growth has ceased; in the case of wingless insects, the characters of maturity may be less conspicuous. Although there may be at times a fairly wide range in size among fully-grown individuals of the one species, such variation is not due to age, but to certain factors influencing the insect during growth, such as the abundance or scarcity of food supply, and favourable or unfavourable climatic conditions. On the other hand, the sex to which an individual belongs is often responsible for difference in size, males very frequently being smaller than females. Size, therefore, is by no means a sign of age, and the smaller winged insects must not be regarded as the young of the larger ones, no matter how close is the resemblance.

Insects, with the exception of certain species giving birth to living young, are reproduced from eggs laid by the females; with few exceptions, the latter take no further interest in the eggs beyond placing them in surroundings offering the most favourable conditions for their well-being, and a sufficient food supply for the forthcoming young; each egg is protected by a delicate shell, through which the young insect makes its way on hatching.

On emerging from the egg, the young insect commences to feed and grow in size, until very soon a stage is reached when the cuticle or shell becomes too small for the enclosed insect; a fluid then collects between the cuticle and the underlying skin, and a new and more roomy cuticle is secreted by the latter; on this process being completed, the old chitinous covering splits, and the insect withdraws itself. This moulting takes place several times, until the body is fully grown, when the cuticle formed at the last moult is retained by the now adult insect for the rest of its life.

The different stages through which an insect passes from egg to adult constitute its life history, or life cycle, and the relation of the latter to the seasons, its seasonal history. According to the species, a full twelve months or even more may be necessary for the complete life cycle, or the cycle may be repeated several times within the year; when the cycle occupies twelve months, the insect is single-brooded; but two, three, or four-brooded, etc., when the cycle is repeated two, three, or four times, respectively, in the year. Climatic and food-supply conditions have a distinct influence on the number of broods, the one species in many cases being single-brooded in colder, and two or three-brooded in warmer climates. During the winter, when the temperature is low enough, insects are more or less dormant in some stage of their life cycle; such a state is the period of hibernation.

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