i'f ' f ; s I- srz.v urrr .-jks..-7- r.-'?-: 11.: , :f ; u i- j Jgittls EpEatuPESthaf m.mflnuwflus.Mj:i JVpn and'yomBn. By Ellen Robertson-Miller. . J1HERE are some ivotiJerful little I people "dwelling in our very midst, T" ' whose methods, and maneuvers to , get on in the world are usually unknown or ignored by uS as we bustle through life in tent on our own a fairs. . When we do stop for a space and look "about, however, we are certain to find these wee creatures , quite as busy with their small undertakings ai'aJefe with, our larger. ones. Vv::?:. -: '' Have you ever seen a little insect me chanic using tools as it went earnestlyaboul some construction work at hand? Da you know that there are other insects that keep trained servants to labor for themt They are never bothered by the servant-gtrl or hired-man problem, however, as thetr sery vitors are slaves and could not run away if they would. . . .. t Then there are other insect capttaltsti that own herds of "cows" and milk them regularly; certain species' prepare the sol and grow crops of which they are fona gathering them with seeming human i lelligence at harvest time. F IOR example, there ia tie Pronnba moth but a half-men in lengxn, wiuca.ru , Besses a faculty for doing remarkabl It is at niglvt that she performs her strangv misson, and -we must wutch the white yuoc lily if we would see her at work. r " Bhe scrapes the pollen from this with her 'front feet and maxillary palpi, then holds it un der her head with her tentacles while she visits tho ther stamens. ' , ' "When she has secured a pellet the size of a pin's head she pierces the ovary of the flower with her long ovipositor, and lays her eggs in the midst of the embryo seeds. - But what does sho want of the pollen dustl ' lAi, that is her secret, which we are about to -.ow that ner eggs are laid. Madam Pro nubs, alights so that she can insert, her uncoil ed tongue and tentacles into the stigmatio open ing of the pistil which leads to the ovary. As she does this she jams the pilfered pollen upon the style and so fertilizes the plant. ''.. This insect is not the only winged Twitor ' jthat helps to fertilize certain blossoms. There are- other moths and butterflies, and bees as - well, that do the same thing, but they are usual ly inveigled into the service fey the promise of nectar, and. probably are quite unconscious of . the fact that their tippling obliges them to fh - tribute the ripo pollen of their flower , hosts. t , i The yucca offers no treat to the Pronuba ; moth; still she comes unbidden, and intentional 1 ly, not accidentally, gathers the life-giving dust . of the plant, places it upon the opening of the pistil, and so insures the ripening of the seeds. ' Does she realize that without her aid these 1 eould not develop, and that her children in the ' ovary of the flower would then perish! For, . trange as it may seem, a portion of the yucca '. feeds-serve as food for the Pronuba larvae, " while the remainder reproduce the plant. - 1 . How many of us ever consider the wasps as other than buzzing terrors to be. avoided at all hazards t-! Still,5 whten studied, we find that the work which they do is remarkable ; much of it L is' performed instinctively, but these small in jects at times show an intelligence almost be yond belief., ' ' , For instance, Prof essor and Mrs. Pecknam once saw a solitary wasp, Ammophila urnaria, ' grasp tiny stone in her mandibles apd use it as hammer to beat the earth into a smooth, hard surface above her completed nest Here is an example of an insect using a ooL f ' ,Wa frequently -fnd this wasp .during' the' TOE OREGON SUNDAY ' 1 '.-ti.i 'rw - 1 " 1 rv iw '-' ' -3 ' jQPlii 7. Zeerf &tztiertfyX V ; . . . . earlier part of the summer sipping nectar xrom... the flowers. . Later she becomes imbued with the building instinct,- and: begins to dig cells in the ground : f or ner . eggs, ana men to prwy them with caterpillars. - V x . J - jtier metnoa 01 mouuKixig a w "V 0 - it to death,-or,-at least, jo paraiyze iv'".""" it causes neither her nor the maggot that is to Amtwi if ? onv -: inconvenience. : it was onuo thought that waspsintentionally refrained from v ; killings their prey, m oraer ww ,meir V might enjoy fresh food ' for a longer period. . Recent research indicates, however, that this is a mistake, and that Madam Wasp merely stings to quiet the creature which she is appropriat- i v.- It' is ? odd, but this AnOflophila : urnaria, " which goes marketing for caterpillars, will take nothing else, while the mud-daubing u'elopeus " chooses only spiders for her children to live In fact, we find that the nests of different varieties oi wasps are,tuwaj uou r one kind of food, whicH indicates c that these 4 - winged insects have the power of choosing what they consider best. ... ' - u They also, Jhave inherjted notions of how and when to build for the generation which w ' to follow : them. . One , prefers .; decaying wood, 'one the afema of plants, others, like Ammophila Lrato 'tunneli in the eartli leading dt cell chamben. , , build in our atuca, unaer eav, MiagiPB. ina.vuuu Tv; " . . . 1 1 1 mum 1 n 11 11 glccU Mid up, rmg Won rmg. 07 u son. Aim u uacn yoce 7 ZIZ txsfi laid in thafr Bia.W- t 1 eute t aeaiM. ana, or ueg, hr di ... niahAd thv ara Tro rare aflaea. ween i rare aoaea. nucu, nu. " JV"" ft,.- teol by a rough ovenng of mud befow they f The Eumene f raterns also woij 1- - JiTonnt mtrnM. In ftCt. Sn t be calledlur VJ before tnenrsi crua pwiwj 7" ry Zl of sV was busy modeling ana nangior " ar- r ? . . 1 t A.;rir. intj il 11111 mora so. Of course,!11 know that A ant colony, ontain oueens. males, workersand soldiers. JTfn, in some nests, tXre are ve. W alTrv exists in iflBvanv w "i"- cording to xir i oun A'"r"v" ? ,TJi 4 a 1 in a tint t na tmukdi imavuM iam wa 1 an 1 different times an overs uvfv mnA nunaa in the nests, whidr . i 4 . fn ftiaA. and thsPthese tranwr ants iwere suffered to remain and woric for their captors. f ' , , . ' ' We have a reddish ant which haa oeoome so dependent upon its slaves that it can no longer feed itseU, make its own toilet, care for it young, orr in fact, perform any pf th duties of tho nest aside from fighting and laying eggs. I once saw such a colony en route to its 1: ..J v kia.v aluTflN carried not only '.. i the eggs,(larvae and, pupae of their, mistresses, When we discover a colony in which there are two varieties of ants, it does not necessarily 11 iv.. tm ..mnt fit tnn other, as there JCUIOW VUBV WW V bj.- ' - , . , Is very small ant wita a very 4mg n persists in making it home in, the walls of a arger ant, and greatly xo 11s nosis wuojrou. Our .common garaen an ; m uwi''j ind upon-the stems and leaves 01 piams, hotbobbing with those wee pests, tne pianwice or ifehids. We soon learn there ia a reason lor thiitrange companionship. bese plant-uce nave iwo nowj iu their Btocks, from which a sweet liquid is ex uded. She ants beg for tins in quite a numaa way, anpay for the treat oy guarmng no only the Ibhids, but, in many cases, their eggs .aTwelL e-aphids are called the "cows" of the ants: aM are often maintained in aroves by tho la- ITS AS FARMERS In the ICS there is a species of ant which cuts hits green leaves, carries them s them in a mass. When ants use it as a bed in to the nests, and the mass decays which to grow a ! I U'tlma of mushroom, -greatly A friend who oe watched an army ol these leaf -cutters told e that guards were sta tioned the length of t tree trunk, and that whenever an ant appear! , with a dry or dead kaf, she was halted and tuVned back, apparently to do her work over, and iat if he objected and refused to obey, she ws ruthlessly killed and torn to pieces by the sentinels. Another interesting species is the agricul tural 'ant, found sin Texas, Florida and other southern states. Dr. McCooky a noted Mwor ity on the subject, thinks it doubtful if these ants sow seed, but he is certain that they cul - tivate rice-grass and harvest the graini whicn they store in , underground granaries. v v. . , . The Vanessa antiopa, the cosmopoUtan member, of the butterfly family, is also a clever insect, which at times performs in quite as re markable a way as does the yucca moth, the Am mophila urnana and the harvesting ants. But her efforts always seem to tend toward self preservation rather than toward the preserva tion of her eggs or her friends.' - , The uppor surf aces of this butterfly's wings are dark, velvety brown, ornamenxea wui Tiiv 8pots, and an edge of dull yellow; but under? neath they are very different, as we learn when Bueniy lose sight of a gay little rover hich but a 8econ(i . before was nitting ana . froHcking about us in the spring sunshine. TLim tv..4.tofltr- vaniaheil nn if bv maffick and then reappears as mysteriously and we wonder how it was done, until we discover that it is a trick of the wings, csucn a simpie The antiopajust closes them, and, presto! It , is a 4 case .01 protective ooiur a uyu. tho under surfaces of the wings are mottled and blotched in grays and browns until they ( blend quite perfectly with the bark or earth where the insect usually alights. ;; ; . The male Vanessa antiopa is said to have a trick all his own. During his courting days ha manipulates his wings in such a manner that they produce "musical" tones. It is pretty, fancy, this Of a butterfly's serenading his lady ; love But' I am still waiting to hear the melody.' - To return 'to ;facts, however, there is in the ' East Indies a gorgeous 4 butterfly, banded with orange and purple,; which can when oc casion demands, alight among brown leaves and become ' s like them in appearance that the eye is rarely able to distinguish one "oni the 'other. i U 'i?ytih'0y" ' i-: .: V;-