登陆注册
25531200000096

第96章 THE HALICTI: PARTHENOGENESIS.(5)

The same mode of life is continued throughout October, but the males become less numerous from day to day as the stormy season approaches and fewer females remain to be wooed. By the time that the first cold weather comes, in November, complete solitude reigns over the burrows. I once more have recourse to the spade. I find none but females in their cells. There is not one male left. All have vanished, all are dead, the victims of their life of pleasure and of the wind and rain. Thus ends the cycle of the year for the Cylindrical Halictus.

In February, after a hard winter, when the snow had lain on the ground for a fortnight, I wanted once more to look into the matter of my Halicti. I was in bed with pneumonia and at the point of death, to all appearances. I had little or no pain, thank God, but extreme difficulty in living. With the little lucidity left to me, being able to do no other sort of observing, I observed myself dying; I watched with a certain interest the gradual falling to pieces of my poor machinery. Were it not for the terror of leaving my family, who were still young, I would gladly have departed. The after-life must have so many higher and fairer truths to teach us.

My hour had not yet come. When the little lamps of thought began to emerge, all flickering, from the dusk of unconsciousness, I wished to take leave of the Hymenopteron, my fondest joy, and first of all of my neighbour, the Halictus. My son Emile took the spade and went and dug the frozen ground. Not a male was found, of course; but there were plenty of females, numbed with the cold in their cells.

A few were brought for me to see. Their little chambers showed no efflorescence of rime, with which all the surrounding earth was coated. The waterproof varnish had been wonderfully efficacious. As for the anchorites, roused from their torpor by the warmth of the room, they began to wander about my bed, where I followed them vaguely with my fading eyes.

May came, as eagerly awaited by the sick man as by the Halicti. Ileft Orange for Serignan, my last stage, I expect. While I was moving, the Bees resumed their building. I gave them a regretful glance, for I had still much to learn in their company. I have never since met with such a mighty colony.

These old observations on the habits of the Cylindrical Halictus may now be followed by a general summary which will incorporate the recent data supplied by the Zebra Halictus and the Early Halictus.

The females of the Cylindrical Halictus whom I unearth from November onwards are evidently fecundated, as is proved by the assiduity of the males during the preceding two months and most positively confirmed by the couples discovered in the course of my excavations.

These females spend the winter in their cells, as do many of the early-hatching melliferous insects, such as Anthophorae and Mason-bees, who build their nests in the spring, the larvae reaching the perfect state in the summer and yet remaining shut up in their cells until the following May. But there is this great difference in the case of the Cylindrical Halictus, that in the autumn the females leave their cells for a time to receive the males under ground. The couples pair and the males perish. Left alone, the females return to their cells, where they spend the inclement season.

The Zebra Halicti, studied first at Orange and then, under better conditions, at Serignan, in my own enclosure, have not these subterranean customs: they celebrate their weddings amid the joys of the light, the sun and the flowers. I see the first males appear in the middle of September, on the centauries. Generally there are several of them courting the same bride. Now one, then another, they swoop upon her suddenly, clasp her, leave her, seize hold of her again. Fierce brawls decide who shall possess her. One is accepted and the others decamp. With a swift and angular flight, they go from flower to flower, without alighting. They hover on the wing, looking about them, more intent on pairing than on eating.

The Early Halictus did not supply me with any definite information, partly through my own fault, partly through the difficulty of excavation in a stony soil, which calls for the pick-axe rather than the spade. I suspect her of having the nuptial customs of the Cylindrical Halictus.

There is another difference, which causes certain variations of detail in these customs. In the autumn, the females of the Cylindrical Halictus leave their burrows seldom or not at all. Those who do go out invariably come back after a brief halt upon the flowers. All pass the winter in the natal cells. On the other hand, those of the Zebra Halictus move their quarters, meet the males outside and do not return to the burrows, which my autumn excavations always find deserted. They hibernate in the first hiding-places that offer.

In the spring, the females, fecundated since the autumn, come out:

the Cylindrical Halicti from their cells, the Zebra Halicti from their various shelters, the Early Halicti apparently from their chambers, like the first. They work at their nests in the absence of any male, as do also the Social Wasps, whose whole brood has perished excepting a few mothers also fecundated in the autumn. In both cases, the assistance of the males is equally real, only it has preceded the laying by about six months.

So far, there is nothing new in the life of the Halicti; but here is where the unexpected appears: in July, another generation is produced; and this time without males. The absence of masculine assistance is no longer a mere semblance here, due to an earlier fecundation: it is a reality established beyond a doubt by the continuity of my observations and by my excavations during the summer season, before the emergence of the new Bees. At this period, a little before July, if my spade unearth the cells of any one of my three Halicti, the result is always females, nothing but females, with exceedingly rare exceptions.

同类推荐
  • MARIA

    MARIA

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 后渠杂识

    后渠杂识

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 如来成道经

    如来成道经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 反唐演义全传

    反唐演义全传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 河岳英灵集

    河岳英灵集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 重生嫡女:凰后有点毒

    重生嫡女:凰后有点毒

    她贵为平原王嫡女,一品郡主,是父母的掌上明珠。可是爱上了渣男,误交了绿茶婊。她助她登上皇位,他帮她满门抄斩,最后只是一杯毒酒,她一生不愧于天不愧于地,唯独愧对与为了她放弃皇位,惨死渣男手下的他。一朝重生,她必定灭渣男,杀贱女,不让悲剧再重演。只是,“王爷,我不认识你吧?”某男邪魅一笑,“哦,是吗?我们现在不是认识了?”“我帮你扳倒仇人,你与我一起天下遨游,四海为家。”某女,想了想,点头:“成交。”真好,从来一次,我不负你。
  • 淡黑天下之绝夜冷王

    淡黑天下之绝夜冷王

    她从小和哥哥相依为命,哥哥很疼她。她是一个废柴,而哥哥却很有天赋,但她真的就是一个废柴吗?
  • 神的妄想国

    神的妄想国

    起源树上的妄想国,我们的故事从意识海开始。现实与梦想不符,那就改变现实!以自在永恒之名,吾必粉粹万物,再造乾坤!荒芜虫族、深渊恶魔、异形古圣、混沌邪神、高等灵族、不朽神民……,无数的伟岸存在站在方宁的对面,他的敌人是整个宇宙。而他无所畏惧。QQ群(596312448)有兴趣的书友加一下,探讨剧情。
  • 戏龙记之完全古代

    戏龙记之完全古代

    一个美丽狡黠的女主多多,一个傲慢自负的龙大将军,一个誓与爹爹做情敌的阿璧,一个温文尔雅的美人师父,一个柔情似水的悦悦宝贝,一个阴沉霸道的真龙天子,一个虎落平川的狐狸商融,一个正经八百的东方掌门……还有什么?慢慢看就知道了!
  • 青春为了谁

    青春为了谁

    青春像一首歌,我们就像这首歌里的歌词青春的路上我们都是一个个叛逆的少年
  • 宠物小精灵之小果

    宠物小精灵之小果

    宠物小精灵之巅峰之路,我现在重写,请大家尽请期待!
  • 重生之修仙神女

    重生之修仙神女

    本仙界第一仙主。却遭背叛,自爆重生。“冥冥天道,鸿蒙无则,仙主陨落,神女涅盘,异界重生,九天认主,混沌圣体神女之魂。九天一界,任吾翱翔”一个修仙女重生现代,又会发生怎样的故事呢?敬请期待,重生之修仙神女。
  • 逆天杀手妃:王妃不好惹

    逆天杀手妃:王妃不好惹

    她,是当代第一杀手,出手果断狠毒,美貌无人能敌。但是因为出门没看黄历,执行任务时掉进了一个坑里,竟乌龙的穿越了。你妹,别人穿越都是风华绝代的美女,她丑陋无比,都是隐士高手,她玄气全无。偏偏还有一个视她如粪土的未婚夫…………当她变成她,集斗气师,练药师,召唤师于一身,昔日杀手女王强势回归!他,冷酷无情,杀人果断残忍,偏偏拥有一张人神共愤的脸。但是面对她时,“娘子,我们洞房吧……”某人汗颜了。今后,两人携手共进,称霸江湖,谁与争锋!
  • 弃女重生之相公别乱来

    弃女重生之相公别乱来

    前生相府嫡女活着成了笑话!重回十岁那年,姐妹,欲毁她声名,良人勾三搭四,想暗度陈仓,老娘素手银针走江湖,真金白银当米虫去!可是神马?嫁人?还是有钱有权有势力,无妻无妾无通房的绝种好男人?于是乎——她嫁了!可是尼玛,她亏大了有木有?谁说他不喜欢女人!
  • 骄姝

    骄姝

    上一世,她的出生被视为父亲一生辉煌战绩的耻辱,她恨父亲的不待见,恨父亲娶了继室忘了母亲,恨父亲的继室公然夺了父亲对自己的疼爱,还生下一子一女平分父爱。恨自己生不逢时。于是,为了改变自己所谓的“遭遇”,她害得父兄葬身长兴岭战场,害得姐姐不能成为太子妃,害得父亲的继室流产而逝……重生的她再次回到过去的光阴里,她绝不再为他人做嫁衣裳!心怀鬼胎的大房二房,狠绝的长辈,且看她如何一步一步,素手舞乾坤!