Fig. 87.—Four views of the First Abdominal Spiracle (left side). × 70. The bow is shaded in all the figures. (P. americana.)A—The spiracle, seen from the outside;p, lateral pouch;I, internal aperture.B— Do., side view.C— Do., seen from the inside, the aperture open. The occlusor muscle is shown.D—The spiracle, seen from the inside, the aperture shut.Fig. 88.—Abdominal Spiracle (left side) in side view, showing the bow: × 70;p, lateral pouch of spiracle, seen from within. The tesselated structure of the spiracle and trachea is shown atA(× 230), and the margin of the external aperture atB(× 230). (P. americana.)
Fig. 87.—Four views of the First Abdominal Spiracle (left side). × 70. The bow is shaded in all the figures. (P. americana.)A—The spiracle, seen from the outside;p, lateral pouch;I, internal aperture.B— Do., side view.C— Do., seen from the inside, the aperture open. The occlusor muscle is shown.D—The spiracle, seen from the inside, the aperture shut.
Fig. 87.—Four views of the First Abdominal Spiracle (left side). × 70. The bow is shaded in all the figures. (P. americana.)A—The spiracle, seen from the outside;p, lateral pouch;I, internal aperture.B— Do., side view.C— Do., seen from the inside, the aperture open. The occlusor muscle is shown.D—The spiracle, seen from the inside, the aperture shut.
Fig. 87.—Four views of the First Abdominal Spiracle (left side). × 70. The bow is shaded in all the figures. (P. americana.)
A—The spiracle, seen from the outside;p, lateral pouch;I, internal aperture.
B— Do., side view.
C— Do., seen from the inside, the aperture open. The occlusor muscle is shown.
D—The spiracle, seen from the inside, the aperture shut.
Fig. 88.—Abdominal Spiracle (left side) in side view, showing the bow: × 70;p, lateral pouch of spiracle, seen from within. The tesselated structure of the spiracle and trachea is shown atA(× 230), and the margin of the external aperture atB(× 230). (P. americana.)
Fig. 88.—Abdominal Spiracle (left side) in side view, showing the bow: × 70;p, lateral pouch of spiracle, seen from within. The tesselated structure of the spiracle and trachea is shown atA(× 230), and the margin of the external aperture atB(× 230). (P. americana.)
Fig. 88.—Abdominal Spiracle (left side) in side view, showing the bow: × 70;p, lateral pouch of spiracle, seen from within. The tesselated structure of the spiracle and trachea is shown atA(× 230), and the margin of the external aperture atB(× 230). (P. americana.)
Each of the eight abdominal spiracles is constructed on this plan; the first merely differs from the others in its larger size and dorsal position, being carried upon the lateral margin of the first abdominal tergum, whereas the others are placed on the side of the body, each occupying an interspace between two terga and two sterna. The bow is of about the same length in all; hence the apparent disproportion in the figures of different spiracles. The external aperture of the abdominal spiracles is oval or elliptical, placed vertically and directed backwards.
We have already pointed out that the wall of the air-tube, for a short distance from the spiracular orifice, has a tesselated instead of a spiral marking. In the thoracic spiracles the tesselated cells are grouped round regularly placed setæ (fig.85I). The chitinous cuticle within the opening is crowded with fine setæ, which are often arranged so as to form a fringe on one or both sides of the internal aperture. (Supra, p.152.)
In animals with a complete circulation, aërated blood is diffused throughout the body by means of arteries and capillaries, which deliver it under pressure at all points. Such animals usually possess a special aërating chamber (lung or gill), where oxygen is made to combine with the hæmoglobin of the blood. It is otherwise with Insects. Their blood escapes into great lacunæ, where it stagnates, or flows and ebbs sluggishly, and a diffuse form of the internal organs becomes necessary for their free exposure to the nutritive fluid. The blood is not injected into the tissues, but they are bathed by it, and the compact kidney or salivary gland is represented in Insects by tubules, or a thin sheet of finely divided lobules. By a separate mechanism, air is carried along ramified passages to all the tissues. Every organ is its own lung.
We must now consider in more detail how air is made to enter and leave the body of an Insect. The spiracles and the air-tubes have been described, but these are not furnished with any means of creating suction or pressure; and the tubes themselves, though highly elastic, are non-contractile, and must be distended or emptied by some external force. Many Insects, especially such as fly rapidly, exhibit rhythmical movements of the abdomen. There is an alternate contraction and dilatation, which may be supposed to be as capable of setting up expirations and inspirations as the rise and fall of the diaphragm of a Mammal. In many Insects, two sets of muscles serve to contract the abdomen—viz., muscles which compress or flatten, and muscles which approximate or telescope the segments.152In the Cockroach the second set is feebly developed, but the first is more powerful, and causes the terga and sterna alternately to approach and separate with a slow, rhythmical movement; in a Dragon-fly or Humble-bee the action is much more conspicuous, and it is easy to see that the abdomen is bent as well as depressed at each contraction. No special muscles exist for dilating the abdomen, and this seems to depend entirely upon the elasticity of the parts. It waslong supposed that, when the abdomen contracted, air was expelled from the body, and the air passages emptied; that when the abdomen expanded again by its own elasticity, the air passages were refilled, and that no other mechanism was needed. Landois pointed out, however, that this was not enough. Air must be forced into the furthest recesses of the tracheal system, where the exchange of oxygen and carbonic acid is effected more readily than in tubes lined by a dense intima. But in these fine and intricate passages the resistance to the passage of air is considerable, and the renewal of the air could, to all appearance, hardly be effected at all if the inlets remained open. Landois accordingly searched for some means of closing the outlets, and found an elastic ring or spiral, which surrounds the tracheal tube within the spiracle. By means of a special muscle, this can be made to compress the tube, like a spring clip upon a flexible gas pipe. When the muscle contracts, the passage is closed, and the abdominal muscles can then, it is supposed, bring any needful pressure to bear upon the tracheal tubes, much in the same way as with ourselves, when we close the mouth and nostrils, and then, by forcible contraction of the diaphragm and abdominal walls, distend the cheeks or pharynx. Landois describes the occluding apparatus of the Cockroach as completely united with the spiracle. It consists, according to him, of two curved rods, the “bow” and the “band,” one of which forms each lip of the orifice. From the middle of the band projects a blunt process for the attachment of the occlusor muscle, which passes thence to the extremity of the bow. The concave side of each rod is fringed with setæ, and turned towards the opening, which lies between the two. Upon this description of the spiracles of the Cockroach we have to remark that there is no occluding apparatus at all in the thoracic spiracles, which are provided with external valves. In the abdominal spiracles the bow is perfectly distinct, but the “band” of Landois has no separate existence. Though the actual mechanism in this Insect does not altogether agree with Landois’ description, it is capable of performing the physiological office upon which he justly lays so much stress—viz., the closing of the outlets of the tracheal system, in order that pressure may be brought upon the contained air.
The injection of air by muscular pressure into a system of very fine tubes may, however, appear to the reader, as it formerly did to ourselves, extremely difficult or even impossible. Can any pressure be applied to tubes within the body of an Insect which will force air along the passages of (say) ·0001 in. diameter? It may well seem that no pressure would suffice to distend these minute tubules, in which the actual replacement of carbonic acid by oxygen takes place, but that the air would either contract to a smaller volume or burst the tissues.
If we question the physical possibility of Landois’ explanation, an alternative is still open to us. The late Prof. Graham has applied the principle of Diffusion to the respiration of animals, and has shown how by a diffusion-process the carbonic acid produced in the remote cavities would be moved along the smaller tubes, and emptied into wider tubes, from which it could be expelled by muscular action. The carbonic acid is not merely exchanged for oxygen, but for a larger volume of oxygen (O 95 : CO281); and there is consequently a tendency to accumulation within the tubes, which is counteracted by the elasticity of the air vessels, as well as by special muscular contractions.153
Whether diffusion or injection by muscular pressure is the chief means of effecting the interchange of gases between the outer air and the inner tissues of the Insect, is a question to be dealt with by physical enquiry.
If we suppose two reservoirs of different gases at slightly different pressures to be connected by a capillary tube of moderate dimensions, such as one of the larger tracheæ of the Cockroach, transference by the molecular movements of diffusion would be small compared with that effected by the flow of the gas in mass. But if the single tube were replaced by a number of others, of the same total area, but of the fineness (say) of the pores in graphite, the flow of the gas would be stopped, and the transference would be effected by diffusion only. We may next consider tubes of intermediate fineness, say a tracheal tubule of the Cockroach at the pointwhere the spiral thread ceases, and where the exchange of gases through the wall of the tubule becomes comparatively unobstructed. Such a tubule is about ·0001 in. diameter. If we may extend to such tubules the laws which hold good for the flow of gases in capillary tubes of much greater diameter, the quantity of air which might be transmitted in a given time by muscular pressure of known amount can be determined. Suppose the difference of pressure at the two ends of the tubule to be one-hundredth of an atmosphere, and further, that the tubule is a quarter of an inch long and ·0001 in. diameter. The tubule would then be cleared out every four seconds. Such a flow of air along innumerable tubules might well suffice for the respiratory needs of the Cockroach. Without laying too much stress upon this calculation, for which exact data are wanting, we may be satisfied that an appreciable quantity of air may be made by muscular pressure to flow along even the finer air passages of an Insect.154
By FÉLIX PLATEAU, Professor in the University of Ghent.
The respiratory movements of large Insects are in general very apparent, and many observers have said something about what they have seen in various species. It is only since the publication of Rathke’s memoir, however, that precise views have been gained as to the mechanism of these movements. This remarkable work, treating of the respiratory movements in Insects, the movable skeletal plates, and the respiratory muscles characteristic of all the principal groups, filled an important blank in our knowledge. But, notwithstanding the skill displayed in this research, many questions still remained unanswered, which required more exact methods than mere observation with the naked eye or the simple lens.
The writer, who was followed a year later by Langendorff, conceived the idea of studying, by such graphic methods as are now familiar, the respiratory movements of perfect Insects. Hehas made use of two modes of investigation. The first, or graphic method, in the strict sense of the term, consisted in recording upon a revolving cylinder of smoked paper the respiratory movements, transmitted by means of very light levers of Bristol board, attached to any selected part of the Insect’s exoskeleton. Unfortunately, this plan is only applicable to insects of more than average size. A second method, that of projection, consisted in introducing the Insect, carried upon a small support, into a large magic lantern fitted with a good petroleum lamp. When the amplification does not exceed 12 diameters, a sharp profile may be obtained, upon which the actual displacements may be measured, true to the fraction of a millimetre. Placing a sheet of white paper upon the lantern screen, the outlines of the profile are carefully traced in pencil so as to give two superposed figures, representing the phases of inspiration and expiration respectively. By altering the position of the Insect, so as to obtain profiles of transverse section, or of the different parts of the body, and, further, by gluing very small paper slips to parts whose movements are hard to observe, the successive positions of the slips being then drawn, complete information is at last obtained of every detail of the respiratory movements: nothing is lost.
This method, similar to that employed by the English physiologist, Hutchinson,155is valuable, because it enables us, with a little practice, to investigate readily the respiratory movements of very small Arthropods, such as Flies or Lady-birds. It has this advantage over all others, that it leaves no room for errors of interpretation.
Not satisfied with mere observation by such means as these, of the respiratory movements of Insects, the writer has also studied the muscles concerned, and, in common with other physiologists (Faivre, Barlow, Luchsinger, Dönhoff, and Langendorff), has examined the action of the various nervous centres upon the respiratory organs. The results at which he has arrived may be summarised asfollows:—
1. There is no close relation between the character of the respiratory movements of an Insect and its position in the zoological system. Respiratory movements are similar onlywhen the arrangement of the abdominal segments, and especially when the disposition of the attached muscles are almost identical. Thus, for example, the respiratory movements of a Cockroach are different from those of other Orthoptera, but resemble those of Hemiptera Heteroptera.
2. The respiratory activity of resting Insects is localised in the abdomen. V. Graber has expressed this fact in a picturesque form, by saying that in Insects the chest is placed at the hinder end of the body.
3. In most cases the thoracic segments do not share in the respiratory movements of an Insect at rest. Among the singular exceptions to this rule is the Cockroach (P. orientalis), in which the terga of the meso- and meta-thoracic segments perform movements exactly opposite in direction to those of the abdomen. (See fig. 89,Ms. th.,Mt. th.)
Fig. 89.—Profile of Cockroach (P. orientalis). The black surface represents the expiratory contour, while the inspiratory is indicated by a thin line. The arrows show the direction of the expiratory movement.Ms. th., mesothorax;Mt. th., metathorax. Reduced from a magic-lantern projection.
Fig. 89.—Profile of Cockroach (P. orientalis). The black surface represents the expiratory contour, while the inspiratory is indicated by a thin line. The arrows show the direction of the expiratory movement.Ms. th., mesothorax;Mt. th., metathorax. Reduced from a magic-lantern projection.
Fig. 89.—Profile of Cockroach (P. orientalis). The black surface represents the expiratory contour, while the inspiratory is indicated by a thin line. The arrows show the direction of the expiratory movement.Ms. th., mesothorax;Mt. th., metathorax. Reduced from a magic-lantern projection.
4. Leaving out of account all details and all exceptions, the respiratory movements of Insects may be said to consist of alternate contraction and recovery of the figure of the abdomen in two dimensions—viz., vertical and transverse. During expiration the diameters in question are reduced, while during respiration they revert to their previous amounts. The transverse expiratory contraction is often slight, and may be imperceptible. On the other hand, the vertical expiratory contraction is never absent, and usually marked. In the Cockroach (P. orientalis) it amounts to one-eighth of the depth of the abdomen (between segments 2 and 3).
5. Three principal types of respiratory mechanism occur in Insects, and these admit of furthersubdivision:—
(a) Sterna usually stout and very convex, yielding but little. Terga mobile, rising and sinking appreciably. To this class belong all Coleoptera, Hemiptera Heteroptera, and Blattina (Orthoptera).
(a) Sterna usually stout and very convex, yielding but little. Terga mobile, rising and sinking appreciably. To this class belong all Coleoptera, Hemiptera Heteroptera, and Blattina (Orthoptera).
Fig. 90.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Lamellicorn Beetle. The position of the terga and sterna after an inspiration, is indicated by the thick line; the dotted line shows their position after an expiration, and the arrow marks the direction of the expiratory movement.Fig. 91.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Cockroach (P. orientalis).
Fig. 90.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Lamellicorn Beetle. The position of the terga and sterna after an inspiration, is indicated by the thick line; the dotted line shows their position after an expiration, and the arrow marks the direction of the expiratory movement.
Fig. 90.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Lamellicorn Beetle. The position of the terga and sterna after an inspiration, is indicated by the thick line; the dotted line shows their position after an expiration, and the arrow marks the direction of the expiratory movement.
Fig. 90.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Lamellicorn Beetle. The position of the terga and sterna after an inspiration, is indicated by the thick line; the dotted line shows their position after an expiration, and the arrow marks the direction of the expiratory movement.
Fig. 91.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Cockroach (P. orientalis).
Fig. 91.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Cockroach (P. orientalis).
Fig. 91.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Cockroach (P. orientalis).
In the Cockroach (Periplaneta) the sterna are slightly raised during expiration. (See figs. 89 and 91.)(b) Terga well developed, overlapping the sterna on the sides of the body, and usually concealing the pleural membrane, which forms a sunk fold. The terga and sterna approach and recede alternately, the sterna being almost always the more mobile. To this type belong Odonata, Diptera, aculeate Hymenoptera, and Acridian Orthoptera. (Fig. 92.)
In the Cockroach (Periplaneta) the sterna are slightly raised during expiration. (See figs. 89 and 91.)
(b) Terga well developed, overlapping the sterna on the sides of the body, and usually concealing the pleural membrane, which forms a sunk fold. The terga and sterna approach and recede alternately, the sterna being almost always the more mobile. To this type belong Odonata, Diptera, aculeate Hymenoptera, and Acridian Orthoptera. (Fig. 92.)
(c) The pleural membrane, connecting the terga with the sterna, is well developed and exposed on the sides of the body. The terga and sterna approach and recede alternately, while the pleural zone simultaneously becomes depressed or returns to its original figure. To this type the writer assigns the Locustidæ, the Lepidoptera and the true Neuroptera (excluding Phryganidæ). (Fig. 93.)
(c) The pleural membrane, connecting the terga with the sterna, is well developed and exposed on the sides of the body. The terga and sterna approach and recede alternately, while the pleural zone simultaneously becomes depressed or returns to its original figure. To this type the writer assigns the Locustidæ, the Lepidoptera and the true Neuroptera (excluding Phryganidæ). (Fig. 93.)
Fig. 92.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Bee (Bombus).Fig. 93.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Hawk Moth (Sphingina).
Fig. 92.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Bee (Bombus).
Fig. 92.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Bee (Bombus).
Fig. 92.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Bee (Bombus).
Fig. 93.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Hawk Moth (Sphingina).
Fig. 93.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Hawk Moth (Sphingina).
Fig. 93.—Transverse section of Abdomen, Hawk Moth (Sphingina).
6. Contrary to the opinion once general, changes in length of the abdomen, involving protrusion of the segments and subsequent retraction, are rare in the normal respiration of Insects. Such longitudinal movements extend throughout one entire group only—viz., the aculeate Hymenoptera. Isolated examples occur, however, in other zoological divisions.
7. Among Insects sufficiently powerful to give good graphic tracings, it can be shown that the inspiratory movement is slower than the expiratory, and that the latter is often sudden.
8. In most Insects, contrary to what obtains in Mammals, only the expiratory movement is active; inspiration is passive, and effected by the elasticity of the body-wall.
9. Most Insects possess expiratory muscles only. Certain Diptera (Calliphora vomitoriaandEristalis tenax) afford the simplest arrangement of the expiratory muscles. In these types they form a muscular sheet of vertical fibres, connecting the terga with the sterna, and underlying the soft elastic membrane which unites the hard parts of the somites. One of themost frequent complications arises by the differentiation of this sheet of vertical fibres into distinct muscles, repeated in every segment, and becoming more and more separated as the sterna increase in length. (See the tergo-sternal muscles of the Cockroach, fig.36, p. 76.) Special inspiratory muscles occur in Hymenoptera, Acridiidæ, and Phryganidæ.
10. The abdominal respiratory movements of Insects are wholly reflex. Like other physiologists who have examined this side of the question, the writer finds that the respiratory movements persist in a decapitated Insect, as also after destruction of the cerebral ganglia or œsophageal connectives; further, that in Insects whose nervous system is not highly concentrated (e.g., Acridiidæ and Dragon-flies), the respiratory movements persist in the completely-detached abdomen; while all external influences which promote an increased respiratory activity in the uninjured animal, have precisely the same action upon Insects in which the anterior nervous centres have been removed, upon the detached abdomen, and even upon isolated sections of the abdomen.
The view formerly advocated by Faivre, that the metathoracic ganglia play the part of special respiratory centres, must be entirely abandoned. All carefully performed experiments on the nervous system of Arthropoda have shown that each ganglion of the ventral chain is a motor centre, and in Insects a respiratory centre, for the somite to which it belongs. This is what Barlow calls the “self-sufficiency” of the ganglia.
The writer has made similar observations upon the respiration of Spiders and Scorpions;156but to his great surprise he has been unable either by direct observation, or by the graphic method, or by projection, to discover the slightest respiratory movement of the exterior of the body. This can only be explained by supposing that inspiration and expiration in Pulmonate Arachnida are intra-pulmonary, and affect only the proper respiratory organs. The fact is less surprising because of the wide zoological separation between Arachnida and Insects.
The respiratory activity of Insects varies greatly. Warmth, feeding, and movement are found to increase the frequency of their respirations, and also the quantity of carbonic acid exhaled. In Liebe’s157experiments a Carabus produced ·24 mgr. of carbonic acid per hour in September, but only ·09 mgr. per hour in December. A rise of temperature raised the product temporarily to twice its previous amount; but when the same insect was kept under experiment for several days without food, the amount fell in spite of its increased warmth.Treviranus158gives the carbonic acid exhaled by a Humble-bee as varying from 22 to 174, according as the temperature varied from 56° to 74° F.
Larvæ often breathe little, especially such as lie buried in wood, earth, or the bodies of other animals. The respiration of pupæ is also sluggish, and not a few are buried beneath the ground or shrouded in a dense cocoon or pupa-case. Muscular activity originates the chief demand for oxygen, and accordingly Insects of powerful flight are most energetic in respiration.
A rise of temperature proportionate to respiratory activity has been observed in many insects.Newport159tells us how the female Humble-bee places herself on the cells of pupæ ready to emerge, and accelerates her inspirations to 120 or 130 per minute. During these observations he found in some instances that the temperature of a single Bee was more than 20° above that of the outer air.
Some Insects can remain long without breathing. They survive for many hours when placed in an exhausted receiver, or in certain irrespirable gases. Cockroaches in carbonic acid speedily become insensible, but after twelve hours’ exposure to the pure gas they revive, and appear none the worse. H.Müller160says that an Insect, placed in a small, confined space, absorbsallthe oxygen. In Sir Humphry Davy’s “Consolations in Travel”161is a description of the Lago deiTartari, near Tivoli, a small lake whose waters are warm and saturated with carbonic acid. Insects abound on its floating islands; though water birds, attracted by the abundance of food, are obliged to confine themselves to the banks, as the carbonic acid disengaged from the surface would be fatal to them, if they ventured to swim upon it when tranquil.
Kowalewsky, Bütschli, and Hatschek have described the first stages of development of the tracheal system. Lateral pouches form in the integument; these send out anterior and posterior extensions, which anastomose and form the longitudinal trunks. The tracheal ramifications are not formed by a process of direct invagination, but by the separation of chitinogenous cells, which cohere into strings, and then form irregular tubules. The cells secrete a chitinous lining, and afterwards lose their distinct contours, fusing to a continuous tissue, in which the individual cells are indicated only by their nuclei, though by appropriate re-agents the cell boundaries can be defined.
The ingenious hypothesis propounded by Gegenbaur, that the tracheal tubes of Insects were originally adapted to aquatic respiration, and that the stigmata arose as the scars of disused tracheal gills, has been discussed in chap.iv. Semper hassuggested162that tracheæ may be modified segmental organs, but the most probable view of their origin is that put forth by Moseley,163that they arose as ramified cutaneous glands. InPeripatusthe openings are distributed irregularly over the body; the external orifices lead to pits, from which simple tubes, with but slight spiral markings, extend into the deeper tissues.
Reproduction.
SPECIAL REFERENCES.Brandt, A.Ueber die Eiröhren der Blatta (Periplaneta) orientalis. Mem. Acad. St. Petersb. Ser. 7, Vol. XXI. (1874). [Ovarian Tubes of Cockroach.]Lacaze-Duthiers.Rech. sur l’armure génitale femelle des Insectes Orthoptères. Ann. Sci. Nat., Zool., 3eSér., Tom. XVII. (1852). [External reproductive organs of female Orthoptera.]Berlese.Ricerde sugli organi genitali degli Ortotteri. Atti della R. Acad. dei Lincei. Ser. 3, Vol. XI. (1882). [Genital Organs of European Orthoptera.]Kadyi.Beitr. zur Vorgänge beim. Eierlegen der Blatta Orientalis. Vorläufige Mittheilung. Zool. Anz., 1879, p. 632. [Formation of egg-capsules of Cockroach.]Brehm.Comparative structure of the reproductive organs in Blatta germanica and Periplaneta orientalis. Mem. Soc. Ent. St. Petersb., Tom. VIII. (1880). In Russian. [Male organs only.]Rajewsky.Ueber die Geschlechtsorgane von Blatta orientalis, &c. Nachr. d. kais. Gesellsch. d. Moskauer Universität., Bd. XVI. (1875). [Testes of Cockroach. The original paper is in Russian; an abstract is given in Hofmann and Schwalbe’s Jahresbericht, 1875, p. 425.]Bütschli.Bau u. Entwickelung d. Samenfäden bei Insekten u. Crustaceen. Zeits. f. wiss. Zool., Bd. XXI., pp. 402–414; 526–534. Pl. xl. xli. (1871). [Spermatozoa and spermatogenesis in the Cockroach.]La Valette St. George.Spermatologische Beiträge, II.Blatta germanica.Arch. f. mikr. Anat., Bd. XXVII. (1886). [Spermatogenesis inB. germanica.]Moravitz.Quædam ad anat. Blattæ germanicæ pertinentia. Dissertatio inauguralis. Dorpat. (1853). [An excellent early account of the anatomy ofB. germanica, including a description of the male and female organs. The figures are not trustworthy.]
SPECIAL REFERENCES.Brandt, A.Ueber die Eiröhren der Blatta (Periplaneta) orientalis. Mem. Acad. St. Petersb. Ser. 7, Vol. XXI. (1874). [Ovarian Tubes of Cockroach.]Lacaze-Duthiers.Rech. sur l’armure génitale femelle des Insectes Orthoptères. Ann. Sci. Nat., Zool., 3eSér., Tom. XVII. (1852). [External reproductive organs of female Orthoptera.]Berlese.Ricerde sugli organi genitali degli Ortotteri. Atti della R. Acad. dei Lincei. Ser. 3, Vol. XI. (1882). [Genital Organs of European Orthoptera.]Kadyi.Beitr. zur Vorgänge beim. Eierlegen der Blatta Orientalis. Vorläufige Mittheilung. Zool. Anz., 1879, p. 632. [Formation of egg-capsules of Cockroach.]Brehm.Comparative structure of the reproductive organs in Blatta germanica and Periplaneta orientalis. Mem. Soc. Ent. St. Petersb., Tom. VIII. (1880). In Russian. [Male organs only.]Rajewsky.Ueber die Geschlechtsorgane von Blatta orientalis, &c. Nachr. d. kais. Gesellsch. d. Moskauer Universität., Bd. XVI. (1875). [Testes of Cockroach. The original paper is in Russian; an abstract is given in Hofmann and Schwalbe’s Jahresbericht, 1875, p. 425.]Bütschli.Bau u. Entwickelung d. Samenfäden bei Insekten u. Crustaceen. Zeits. f. wiss. Zool., Bd. XXI., pp. 402–414; 526–534. Pl. xl. xli. (1871). [Spermatozoa and spermatogenesis in the Cockroach.]La Valette St. George.Spermatologische Beiträge, II.Blatta germanica.Arch. f. mikr. Anat., Bd. XXVII. (1886). [Spermatogenesis inB. germanica.]Moravitz.Quædam ad anat. Blattæ germanicæ pertinentia. Dissertatio inauguralis. Dorpat. (1853). [An excellent early account of the anatomy ofB. germanica, including a description of the male and female organs. The figures are not trustworthy.]
SPECIAL REFERENCES.
Brandt, A.Ueber die Eiröhren der Blatta (Periplaneta) orientalis. Mem. Acad. St. Petersb. Ser. 7, Vol. XXI. (1874). [Ovarian Tubes of Cockroach.]
Lacaze-Duthiers.Rech. sur l’armure génitale femelle des Insectes Orthoptères. Ann. Sci. Nat., Zool., 3eSér., Tom. XVII. (1852). [External reproductive organs of female Orthoptera.]
Berlese.Ricerde sugli organi genitali degli Ortotteri. Atti della R. Acad. dei Lincei. Ser. 3, Vol. XI. (1882). [Genital Organs of European Orthoptera.]
Kadyi.Beitr. zur Vorgänge beim. Eierlegen der Blatta Orientalis. Vorläufige Mittheilung. Zool. Anz., 1879, p. 632. [Formation of egg-capsules of Cockroach.]
Brehm.Comparative structure of the reproductive organs in Blatta germanica and Periplaneta orientalis. Mem. Soc. Ent. St. Petersb., Tom. VIII. (1880). In Russian. [Male organs only.]
Rajewsky.Ueber die Geschlechtsorgane von Blatta orientalis, &c. Nachr. d. kais. Gesellsch. d. Moskauer Universität., Bd. XVI. (1875). [Testes of Cockroach. The original paper is in Russian; an abstract is given in Hofmann and Schwalbe’s Jahresbericht, 1875, p. 425.]
Bütschli.Bau u. Entwickelung d. Samenfäden bei Insekten u. Crustaceen. Zeits. f. wiss. Zool., Bd. XXI., pp. 402–414; 526–534. Pl. xl. xli. (1871). [Spermatozoa and spermatogenesis in the Cockroach.]
La Valette St. George.Spermatologische Beiträge, II.Blatta germanica.Arch. f. mikr. Anat., Bd. XXVII. (1886). [Spermatogenesis inB. germanica.]
Moravitz.Quædam ad anat. Blattæ germanicæ pertinentia. Dissertatio inauguralis. Dorpat. (1853). [An excellent early account of the anatomy ofB. germanica, including a description of the male and female organs. The figures are not trustworthy.]
Fig. 94.—Female Reproductive Organs.Od, oviduct;CG, colleterial gland. × 14.
Fig. 94.—Female Reproductive Organs.Od, oviduct;CG, colleterial gland. × 14.
Fig. 94.—Female Reproductive Organs.Od, oviduct;CG, colleterial gland. × 14.
The ovaries of the two sides of the body are separated, as in most Insects, and consist on each side of eight tubes, four dorsal and four ventral, which open into the inner side of a common oviduct. The two oviducts unite behind, and form a very short uterus. Tracheæ and fat-cells tie the ovarian tubesof each side together into a spindle-shaped bundle. Each tube is about ·4 in. long, and has a beaded appearance, owing to the eggs which distend its elastic wall. It gradually tapers in front; then suddenly narrows to a very small diameter; and lastly, joins with the extremities of the other tubes to form a slender solid filament, which passes towards the heart, and becomes lost in the fat-body. The wall of an ovarian tube consists of a transparent elastic membrane, lined by epithelium, and invested externally by a peritoneal layer of connective tissue.
Fig. 95.—Ovarian Tube (acetic acid preparation), showing scattered nuclei (upper figure), which ultimately form follicles around the ova (lower figure). Copied from Brandt,loc. cit.
Fig. 95.—Ovarian Tube (acetic acid preparation), showing scattered nuclei (upper figure), which ultimately form follicles around the ova (lower figure). Copied from Brandt,loc. cit.
Fig. 95.—Ovarian Tube (acetic acid preparation), showing scattered nuclei (upper figure), which ultimately form follicles around the ova (lower figure). Copied from Brandt,loc. cit.
The epithelium of an ovarian tube presents some remarkable peculiarities which disguise its true character. High up in the tube, the narrow lumen is occupied by a clear protoplasm, in which nuclei, but no cell walls, can be discerned. Where the tube suddenly widens, large rounded and nucleated masses of protoplasm appear, interspersed with nuclei entangled in anetwork of protoplasm. Passing down the tube, the large cells, which can now be recognised as eggs, arrange themselves in a single row, to the number of about twenty. They are at first polygonal or squarish, but gradually become cylindrical, and finally oval. Between and around the eggs the nuclei gradually arrange themselves into one-layered follicles, which are attached, not to the wall of the tube, but to the eggs, and travel downwards with them. As the eggs descend, the yolk which they contain increases rapidly, and the germinal vesicleand spot (nucleus and nucleolus), which were at first very plain, disappear. A vitelline membrane is secreted by the inner surface, and a chitinous chorion by the outer surface of the egg-follicle.
The lowest egg in an ovarian tube is nearly or altogether of the full size; it is of elongate-oval figure, and slightly curved, the convexity being turned towards the uterus. It is filled with a clear albuminous fluid, which mainly consists of yolk. The chorion now forms a transparent yellowish capsule, which under the microscope appears to be divided up into very many polygonal areas, defined by rows of fine dots. These areas probably correspond to as many follicular cells. The convex surface of the chorion is perforated by numerous micropyles, fine pores through which it is probable the spermatozoa gain access to the interior of the egg.
The uterus has a muscular wall and a chitinous lining. Two repeatedly branched colleterial glands open into its under side. Of these the left is much the larger, and overlies the other. It consists of many dichotomous tubes, some of which are a little dilated at their blind ends. The gland is much entangled with fat-cells, which make it difficult to unravel. The right gland is probably of no functional importance; the left gland is filled with a milky substance, containing many crystals and a coagulable fluid, out of both of which the egg-capsule is formed.164
At its hinder end the uterus opens by a median vertical slit, which lies in the 8th sternum, into a genital pouch which represents part of the external integument, folded back far into the interior of the abdomen. (See fig. 96.) Upon the dorsal wall of the genital pouch the orifice of the spermatheca is situated.165This is a short tube dilated at the end, and woundinto a spiral of about one turn. From the tube a cæcal process is given off, which may correspond with the accessory gland attached to the duct of the spermatheca in many Insects (e.g., Coleoptera, Hymenoptera, and some Lepidoptera). The spermatheca is filled during copulation, and is always found to contain spermatozoa in the fertile female.166The spermatozoa are no doubt passed into the genital pouch from time to time, and there fertilise the eggs descending from the ovarian tubes.
Fig. 96.—Diagram to show the theoretical (upper figure) and actual position of the hinder abdominal sterna in the female Cockroach.U, uterus;s, spermatheca. The nerve-cord is introduced into both figures.
Fig. 96.—Diagram to show the theoretical (upper figure) and actual position of the hinder abdominal sterna in the female Cockroach.U, uterus;s, spermatheca. The nerve-cord is introduced into both figures.
Fig. 96.—Diagram to show the theoretical (upper figure) and actual position of the hinder abdominal sterna in the female Cockroach.U, uterus;s, spermatheca. The nerve-cord is introduced into both figures.
The external reproductive organs of the female Cockroach belong to the 7th, 8th, and 9th somites. The 7th sternum is incompletely divided into anterior and posterior sections, and the posterior section is split into lateral halves. These are joined by a flexible membrane, which admits of the wide separation of the halves, when copulation or the passage of the large egg-capsule renders it necessary. The vertical faces of the membrane, which are pressed together when the parts are at rest, are stiffened by chitinous thickenings.
Fig. 97.—Hinder end of abdomen of female Cockroach. In the upper figure the halves of the 7th sternum are closed; in the lower figure they are open.
Fig. 97.—Hinder end of abdomen of female Cockroach. In the upper figure the halves of the 7th sternum are closed; in the lower figure they are open.
Fig. 97.—Hinder end of abdomen of female Cockroach. In the upper figure the halves of the 7th sternum are closed; in the lower figure they are open.
If the succeeding sterna retained their proper place, as they do in some Orthoptera (e.g., the Mole Cricket), the 8th and 9th sterna would project beyond the 7th, while the rectum wouldopen beneath the last tergum, and the uterus between the 8th and 9th sterna. In the adult female Cockroach, however, the 8th and 9th somites are telescoped into the 7th, and completely hidden by it. Their terga are reduced to narrow bands. The 8th sternum forms a semi-transparent plate which slopes downwards and backwards, and is pierced by a vertical slit, the outlet of the uterus. The upper edge of this sternum is hinged upon the projecting basis of the anterior gonapophyses (to be described immediately), and the parts form a kind of spring joint, ordinarily closed, but capable of being opened wide upon occasion. The 9th sternum is a small median crescentic plate, distinct from the 8th; it supports the spermatheca, whose duct traverses an oval plate which projects from the fore-edge of the sternum.
Fig. 98.—External Reproductive Organs of Female.T8, &c., terga;S7, &c., sterna;G, anterior gonapophysis;G′, its base;g, posterior gonapophyses;Od, oviduct;sp, spermatheca;R, rectum. The upper figure shows the parts in oblique profile; the left lower figure is an oblique view from before of the outlet of the uterus, the anterior gonapophyses being cut short; the right lower figure shows the gonapophyses. Arrows indicate the outlet of the oviduct and uterus.
Fig. 98.—External Reproductive Organs of Female.T8, &c., terga;S7, &c., sterna;G, anterior gonapophysis;G′, its base;g, posterior gonapophyses;Od, oviduct;sp, spermatheca;R, rectum. The upper figure shows the parts in oblique profile; the left lower figure is an oblique view from before of the outlet of the uterus, the anterior gonapophyses being cut short; the right lower figure shows the gonapophyses. Arrows indicate the outlet of the oviduct and uterus.
Fig. 98.—External Reproductive Organs of Female.T8, &c., terga;S7, &c., sterna;G, anterior gonapophysis;G′, its base;g, posterior gonapophyses;Od, oviduct;sp, spermatheca;R, rectum. The upper figure shows the parts in oblique profile; the left lower figure is an oblique view from before of the outlet of the uterus, the anterior gonapophyses being cut short; the right lower figure shows the gonapophyses. Arrows indicate the outlet of the oviduct and uterus.
By the telescoping of the 8th and 9th somites the sterna take the position shown in fig.96B, and a new cavity, the genital pouch, is formed by invagination. This receives the extremity of the body of the male during copulation, while it serves as a mould in which the egg-capsule is cast during oviposition. Its chitinous lining resembles that of the outerintegument. The uterus opens into its anterior end, which is bounded by the 8th sternum; the spermatheca opens into its roof, which is supported by the 9th sternum and the gonapophyses; while its floor is completed by the 7th sternum and the infolded chitinous membrane.
A pair of appendages (anterior gonapophyses) are shown by the development of the parts to belong to the 8th somite.They are slender, irregularly bent, and curved inwards at the tips. A small, forked, chitinous slip connects them with both the 8th and 9th terga, but their principal attachment is to the upper (properly, posterior) edge of the 8th sternum. The anterior gonapophyses expand at their bases into broad horizontal plates, which form part of the roof of the genital pouch.
Two pairs of appendages, belonging to the 9th somite, form the posterior gonapophyses. The outer pair are relatively large, soft, and curved: the inner narrow, hard, and straight.167
The anterior gonapophyses form the lower, and the posterior the upper jaw of a forceps, which in many Insects can be protruded beyond the body. Some of the parts are often armed with teeth, and the primary use of the apparatus is to bore holes in earth or wood for the reception of the eggs. Hence the apparatus is often called theovipositor. It forms a prominent appendage of the abdomen in such Insects as Crickets, Saw-flies, Sirex, and Ichneumons. The sting of the Bee is a peculiar adaptation of the same organ to a very different purpose. In the Cockroach the ovipositor is used to grasp the egg-capsule, while it is being formed, filled with eggs, and hardened; and the notched edge (fig.5, p. 23) is the imprint of the inner posterior gonapophyses, made while the capsule is still soft. The shape of the parts in the male and female indicates that the ovipositor is passive in copulation, and is then raised to allow access to the spermatheca.
The male reproductive organs of Insects, in spite of very great superficial diversity, are reducible to a common type, which is exemplified by certain Coleoptera. The essential parts are (1) thetestes, which in their simplest form are paired, convoluted tubes; more commonly they branch into many tubules or vesiculæ, while they may become consolidated into asingle organ; (2) long coiledvasa deferentia, opening into or close to (3) pairedvesiculæ seminales, which discharge into (4) theejaculatory duct, a muscular tube, with chitinous lining, by which the spermatozoa are forcibly expelled. Opening into the vesiculæ seminales, the ejaculatory duct, or by a distinct external orifice, may be found (5)accessory glands, very variable in form, size, and number. More than one set may occur in the same Insect. To these parts, which are rarely deficient, are very often appended an external armature of hooks or claspers.
Fig. 99.—1. Male Organs, ventral view.Ts, testis;VD, vas deferens;DE, ductus ejaculatorius;U, utriculi majores;u, utriculi breviores. 2. Do., dorsal view, showing termination of vasa deferentia. 3. Conglobate gland, and its duct. × 8.
Fig. 99.—1. Male Organs, ventral view.Ts, testis;VD, vas deferens;DE, ductus ejaculatorius;U, utriculi majores;u, utriculi breviores. 2. Do., dorsal view, showing termination of vasa deferentia. 3. Conglobate gland, and its duct. × 8.
Fig. 99.—1. Male Organs, ventral view.Ts, testis;VD, vas deferens;DE, ductus ejaculatorius;U, utriculi majores;u, utriculi breviores. 2. Do., dorsal view, showing termination of vasa deferentia. 3. Conglobate gland, and its duct. × 8.
The male Cockroach will be found to agree with this description. It presents, however, two peculiarities which are uncommon, though not unparalleled. In the first place the testes are functional only in the young male. They subsequently shrivel, and are functionally replaced by the vesiculæ seminales and their appendages, where the later transformations of the sperm-cells are effected. The atrophied testes are nevertheless sufficiently large in the adult to be easily made out. Secondly, the accessory glands are numerous, and differ both in function and insertion. Two sets are attached to the vesiculæ seminales, and the fore end of the ejaculatory duct (utriculi majoresandbreviores); another large conglobate gland opens separately to the exterior. We shall now describe the structure of these parts in more detail.168
Fig. 100.—Male Organs, side view.T7, seventh tergum;S7, seventh sternum;Ts,DE, as before.A,B, see fig.102. × 8.
Fig. 100.—Male Organs, side view.T7, seventh tergum;S7, seventh sternum;Ts,DE, as before.A,B, see fig.102. × 8.
Fig. 100.—Male Organs, side view.T7, seventh tergum;S7, seventh sternum;Ts,DE, as before.A,B, see fig.102. × 8.
The testes may be found in older larvæ or adults beneath the fifth and sixth terga of the abdomen. They lie in the fat-body, from which they are not very readily distinguished. Each testis consists of 30–40 rounded vesicles attached by short tubes to the vas deferens.169The wall of the testisconsists of a peritoneal layer and an epithelium, which is folded inwards along transverse lines. The cells of the epithelium give rise to spermatocysts,170which enclose sperm cells. By division of the nuclei of the sperm cells spermatozoa are formed, which have at first nucleated heads and long tails.Subsequently the enlarged heads disappear. The spermatozoa move actively. In adult males the testes undergo atrophy, but can with care be discovered in the enveloping fat-body.
The vasa deferentia are about ·25 inch in length. They pass backwards from the testes, then turn downwards on each side of the large intestine, and finally curve upwards and forwards, entering the vesiculæ seminales on their dorsal side. Each vas deferens divides once or twice into branches, which immediately reunite; in the last larval stage the termination of the passage dilates into a rounded, transparent vesicle.
The vesiculæ seminales are simple, rounded lobes in the pupa (fig.101), but their appearance is greatly altered in the adult by the development of two sets of utricles (modified accessory glands). The longer utricles (utriculi majores) open separately into the sides of the vesiculæ; nearer to the middle line are the shorter and more numerousutriculi breviores, which open into the fore part of the vesiculæ.
The utricles form the “mushroom-shaped gland” of Huxley, which was long described as the testis. In the adult male the utricles are usually distended with spermatozoa, and of a brilliant opaque white.
The ejaculatory duct is about ·15 inch long, and overlies the 6th-9th sterna. It is wide in front, where it receives the paired outlets of the vesiculæ seminales. Further back it narrows, and widens again near to its outlet, which we find to be between the external chitinous parts, and not into the penis, as described by Brehm. The duct possesses a muscular wall for the forcible ejection of its contents, and in accordance with its origin as a folding-in of the outer surface, it is provided with a chitinous lining. In the adult the fore part of the duct may be distended with spermatozoa.
The ejaculatory duct is originally double (p.194), and its internal cavity is still subdivided in the last larval stage or so-called “pupa.”
Upon the ventral surface of the ejaculatory duct lies an accessory gland of unknown function; it is “composed of dichotomous, monilated tubes, lined by a columnar epithelium, all bound together by a common investment into a flattened, elongated mass.”171The duct of this gland does not enter the penis, as described by Brehm, but opens upon a double hook, which forms part of the external genital armature (fig.99, 3). It may be convenient to distinguish this as the “conglobate gland.”172