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English Pages [56] Year 1962
DAY
reason OHN
Series
Department
of Libraries
Midstate Regional Library
RFD #4 Montpelier, Vt
05602
Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2016 with funding from
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https://archive.org/details/insectsplantsOOadle
The
‘‘Reason Why'’ Series
INSECTS AND
PLANTS Irving
and Ruth Adler
The John Day Company
New An
York Publisher
THE “REASON WHY” BOOKS AIR
ATOMIC ENERGY ATOMS AND MOLECULES THE CALENDAR COAL COMMUNICATION DIRECTIONS AND ANGLES ENERGY THE EARTH’S CRUST EVOLUTION FIBERS
HEAT AND ITS USES HOUSES: FROM CAVES TO SKYSCRAPERS INSECTS AND PLANTS INTEGERS: POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE IRRIGATION: CHANGING DESERTS TO GARDENS LANGUAGE AND MAN LEARNING ABOUT STEEL: THROUGH THE STORY OF A NAIL MACHINES MAGNETS NUMBERS OLD AND NEW NUMERALS: NEW DRESSES FOR OLD NUMBERS OCEANS RIVERS SETS
SHADOWS STORMS
TOUCH AND SMELL THINGS THAT SPIN: FROM TOPS TO ATOMS
TASTE,
TREE PRODUCTS WHY? A BOOK OF REASONS
WHY AND HOW?
A SECOND BOOK OF REASONS
YOUR EARS YOUR EYES
Fourth Impression, 1973
© 1962 by Irving and Ruth Adler All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof,
duced
must not be repro-
any form without permission. Published by The John Day Company, 257 Park Avenue South, New York, N.Y., and in
simultaneously in
Canada by Longman Canada Limited, Toronto.
Library of Congress Catalogue Card Number: 62-19714
ISBN: 0-381-99966-1
MANUFACTURED
IN’
GB
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Contents Insects
and Plants
4
Trillions of Insects
6
An
6
Body Getting Too Big for Insect’s
How
to Raise
Your
Its
8
Skin
Own
8
Butterflies
That Eat Plants
12
Plants That Eat Insects
14
Insects
Insects
That Keep “Cows”
How a Elower Makes Its
16
Seed
\
A
\
Another Team: The Fig and the Fig
Flower-Insect Team:
An
The Yucca and
the Pronuba
Wasp
That
Changed
26
30
Harm Us
Beetle That
24
29
Plants Protect Insects
Insects
Moth
28
That Pay Rent
Air-Conditioned House
How A
20
That Pollinate Elowers
Insects
Insects
18
32 Its
Diet
34
The Root Louse Crosses the Ocean Some Imported Insect Pests An Australian Friend in a Time of Need
34
An All-American
39
Pest
36 38
Getting Rid of Insect Pests
40
Plagues
42
Live
W eed
Killers
42
Honey, Wax, and Ink Insects for Varnish and Dye
44
A Cradle of Silk Word List
47
46 48
Insects
This
is
It tells
sects
do
a
and Plants
book about
insects
plants.
about some of the things that
to plants. It also tells
of the things that insects also tells
plants
and
do
in-
about some
do for
plants. It
about some of the things that to insects
and
for insects.
It
shows how insects and plants are related to
each other.
You
will find out
rent to plants rent-free.
You
about insects that pay
and about
insects that
go
about
in-
will also find out
sects that live in air-conditioned houses.
You
will find out
nice smells
about insects that
and bright
4
colors.
You
like
will
sweets and
them
tliat
keep “cows” that give
find
out about insects and
“milk.”
You
will
plants that cannot live without each other.
You
will learn
on a hunger
You
about an insect that goes
strike.
will find out
about insects that peo-
ple raise because they eat plants. will find out
And you
about insects that people
kill
because they eat plants. You will also learn about plants that eat insects.
You
will find out
about insects that sew
and spin and weave and bore.
And you that people
plants that
will learn
about useful things
make from some work
together.
5
insects
and
Trillions of Insects
There are about a million different kinds of animals. There are elephants and mice, cats and dogs, crabs and earthworms, snakes and
monkeys and people. Most mals are
you
insects. If
Insects live
warm
live.
of the different kinds of ani-
every hundred animals, 75 of
insects!
all
over the world. Most insects live in the
places on the earth
mals also
where most
people to find out
all
how to use learn how to keep
learn
insect has a
insects,
it is
important for
Then they can help them. They can also
they can about them.
insects to insects
An
from harming them.
Insect’s
Body
body with a hard outside
cover protects the soft parts inside.
main
of the other ani-
Most insects get their food by eating plants.
Because there are so many
An
and ladybugs, and
one animal of each kind marched past
in a parade, out of
them would be
flies
fish,
cover.
The body has
The
three
parts.
The
front part of the
body
is
the head.
On
the head
are a pair of eyes, a pair of hairy feelers called antennae
(an-TEN-ee), and mouth parts.
Some
parts that can chew. Other insects
can suck. 6
insects
have mouth
have mouth parts that
The next part of tlie body is called
the thorax (TI IORE-
ax).
Three pairs of
legs are attached to the thorax.
legs
have
they bend
wings.
joints, so
The wings
The back
easily.
Many
insects
part of an insect’s
body
is
the al)domen
Insects that sting have their stinging parts
abdomen. The egg-laying domen,
have
are attached to the thorax, too.
(ab-DOE-inen). The abdomen looks something
worm.
The
parts of insects are
like a
on the
on the ab-
too.
Wings
Thorax
Abdomen Head
\
Antenna Legs
An
insect’s
7
body
Getting Too Big for
Skin
Its
All insects hatch out of eggs.
A
newly hatched baby grasshopper looks a
grown-up grasshopper. But As
it
grows,
it is
gets too big for
it
its
skins in hayfields.
and
a
small and has no wings. skin.
and the baby grasshopper walks out skin behind in the grass.
lot like
Then the of
it
skin splits
and leaves the
You can find empty grasshopper
The grasshopper keeps on growing
splitting its skin. Its
wings develop. Finally
it is
full-
grown.
Other insects change a few times before they become full-grown or adult (a-DULT). This flies,
for example.
So you can watch
own Monarch
all
true of butter-
butterflies are easy to raise.
these changes
when you
raise
your
butterflies.
How You begin
Monarch
is
to Raise
to see the
Your
Own
Monarch
Butterflies
butterfly in fields
and
gardens in the northern part of the United States in
May
and June. The butterfly has brown wings with black on them, and rows of white dots near the edges.
lines
8
The female Monarcli butterfly always lays its eggs on the milkweed plant. The milkweed is the only food the newly hatched babies will eat. You can find Monarch eggs on the underneath side of young leaves. They are white and about the size of a pinhead. The picture shows you what they look
like.
Pick the milkweed leaves with the eggs on them, and
put them into a big glass
jar.
Make
the cover
air holes in
of the jar.
After a few days the eggs will hatch.
Monarch baby does not look is
The newly hatched
at all like
an adult
insect. It
a tiny caterpillar with yellow, black and white stripes.
It is
called the larva of the insect.
to eat the leaves of the
time.
way
It
grows very
milkweed.
want
to
It
fast. It splits its
the baby grasshopper does.
two inches
The
It
long. This takes about
is
keeps eating
skin a
grows
all
the
few times, the
until
it is
about
two weeks. You
keep fresh milkweed leaves
caterpillar
caterpillar begins
in the jar
will
while the
growing. You will also want to clean out
caterpillar droppings.
Egg (drawn many times larger) 9
Then
the caterpillar stops eating.
of the jar,
where
it
weaves a
little
It
mat
crawls to the top
part of the caterpillar hooks into the silk pillar
hangs with
its
its
and becomes short and
isn't
pupa
wiggles and twists so hard its
head.
stripes of the caterpillar
pupa (PEW-pa)
caterpillar
It
pulls together
thick. It hasn't the yellow,
a caterpillar any more.
into a
It
skin splits, starting at
and white
silk.
head down. Then the
begins to wiggle and twist. that
The back mat. The cater-
of
The
black
any more. In fact
caterpillar has
it
changed
or chrysalis (KRISS-a-lis).
The
looks like a pea-green jewel with golden nails.
The pupa hangs from its silk mat without moving for about 10 days. You must be careful not to shove or bang the jar at this time. If you look at the pupa every day, you will notice that it is changing. First the pupa begins to
Then it becomes so clear that you can You can see a Monarch butterfly folded up
turn gray.
see in-
side
inside.
it.
The caterpillar changes
10
into a
pupa
The
butterfly
Now you fly
the adult insect.
the butterfly
will
is
out.
with
its
If
you are lucky,
splits
and the butter-
ready to hatch.
be watching when the pupa
comes
legs,
is
The newly hatched butterfly hangs by head down. Its abdomen is very fat.
wings are very small. You can see something
its
Its
like a heart-
beat mo\ ing in the abdomen. With each beat, the abdo-
men
gets smaller
beat, blood
When to
is
and the wings get bigger. With each
pumped from
the
abdomen
into the wings.
the wings are full of blood, the butterfly begins
walk around. You can hold
time and
it
will not fly
in
It
your hand for a long
cannot
wet. After a few hours,
wings are
still
are dry,
will fly
it
away.
it
fly,
because
when
its
its
wings
away.
After the male and female butterflies mate, the female is
ready to lay eggs. She looks for a milkweed plant. Then
you can
start raising butterflies again.
The newly hatched 11
butterfly
Cabbage worm
Cabbage
butterfly
Insects That Eat Plants
The cabbage plants in the
lays
biitterflij
cabbage family.
its
It
eggs on the leaves of
lays
its
eggs on nastur-
tiums, too. These plants are the only food that
the cabbage
worm,
will eat. If
If
die.
go on a hunger
But they can be fooled into eating other
the sap of cabbages or nasturtiums
leaves of other plants, the
larva,
cabbage worms are moved
to other kinds of plants, they will
and
its
is
strike
plants.
rubbed on the
cabbage worms
will
begin to
eat these plants, too.
Many
plant-eating insects, like cabbage worms, are
free feeders. Free feeders
can move around easily over
the plant on which they are feeding.
Some
plant-eating insects are trapped on the plants
on which they feed. Scale insects and trapped in
this
Male adult
gall insects are
way.
scale insects
The female
cannot
eat.
mouth
parts to the plants
have no mouth
parts.
adults attach themselves
So they
by
their
on which they feed. Their bod12
make a scaly stuff. Tlie scale of some insects is waxy. The scale of other insects is cottony. The scale covers the ies
feeding insects and hides them.
It
looks like part of the
plant on which the insects are feeding.
The female
gall insect lays
in a leaf or twig.
leaf or
way.
the egg hatches into a larva, the
twig around the larva begins to grow in a strange
It
round
When
her egg in a hole she makes
grows into a
nut.
gall,
which looks something
As the larva grows, the
gall
grows
too.
like a
So the
larva always has plenty of food.
Most plants have many About 1,000 different kinds
Some by a
of
gall.
them are
insects that feed
of insects feed
gall insects.
There are
insects that
13
The oak
on them.
on oak
''apple”
is
trees.
made
even feed on poison
ivy.
Plants That Eat Insects Plants get water
and chemicals from the
soil
through
The water and chemicals help make the grow. Some plants do not have big roots. They
their roots.
plants
grow
in soil that
does not have
all
the chemicals they
need. These plants get the chemicals from insects that
they catch and
The
eat.
pitcher plant grows in
leaves are reddish-green.
Its ers.
wet places
They
Insects that crawl into the
woods.
in the
are shaped like pitch-
open pitcher cannot get
out again. There are rows of hairs on the inside, near the
open end
work side.
of the pitcher.
like a
The
The
hairs all face
down. They
barbed-wire fence, and keep the insects
insects fall to the
bottom
of the pitcher
and
in-
die.
Chemicals in the pitcher plant change the insects into
make the plant grow. The sundew is another plant
food to
sects. Its leaves
that catches
and
eats in-
look like fuzzy caterpillars at the end of
Pitcher plant
long thin
on the
steins.
A sticky
sap comes out of the fuzzy hairs
caught
leaves. Insects get
an insect
is
it
cannot get away. Chemicals in the
change the
The Venus's
insects into food for the
sundew.
flytrap catches insects with the
speed of
a mousetrap. At the end of each wide leaf looks like a round box, with a hinge
The edges
When
caught, the hairs bend over and hold the in-
sect tightly, so that
sticky sap
in the sticky sap.
of the trap
end
in a
row
of
is
down stiff,
There are tiny hairs on the inside of the
a trap that
the middle.
pointed hairs.
trap, too. Insects
go inside the trap because of a sweet sap they find there.
When
an insect steps on the tiny
the trap close very quickly.
together the
hands.
The
icals inside icals that
way your
insect
is
The
fingers
hairs, the
stiff,
two parts
pointed hairs
of
come
do when you clasp your
trapped and cannot get out. Chem-
the trap change the insect into other chem-
the plant can use as food.
A Venus's
flytrap catches
an insect
An ant and
Insects That
People it
who park
its
“cow”
Keep ^'Cows^
their cars
on tree-lined
hard to keep their cars clean and shiny. The cars are
soon covered with tiny drops of a sticky is
streets find
honey dew.
It is
made by
(AFF-id). The aphid
is
stuff.
This
a small insect called an aphid
a sucking insect.
It
has
mouth
parts that look like a drinking straw. It sucks the sap
the leaves of the trees. aphid’s
body
into sweet
stuff
The sap
from
changed inside the
is
honeydew. There are two
little
openings at the back end of the aphid from which the
honeydew
flows.
there aren’t
Ants come to drink the honeydew.
enough ants
to gather all the
If
honeydew, the
sticky drops fall to the ground.
There are tree ants the
way
a farmer cares for his cows.
the leaves of trees to aphids. thread.
in India that take care of aphids
The
make
a shed in
They sew together
which they keep the
ants use a live needle that
The needle
is
one of their 16
own
makes
larvae.
its
own
The thread
spun by
The
is silk
that
some
of the ants pull the edges of
is
tlie
larvae.
Other ants hold the larvae larvae back and forth
As they do
this,
picture shows
two leaves together.
in their jaws.
the larvae spin a sticky
make
They push the
between the edges
thread sticks to the edges of the leaves. together to
of the leaves.
thread.
silk
It
many
places,
aphids to stay
who
a dry shed for the ant '‘cows.”
Then
it
alive.
deeper
plants.
gets too cold in the wintertime for the
These aphids are cared
gather their honeydew.
to places
The
sews the leaves
There are aphids that feed on the roots of corn In
how
in the
The
for
by ants
ants carry the aphids
ground where
it
is
not as cold.
the aphids do not die. In the springtime, the ants
carry the aphids back to the corn plant.
Ants “sewing” a
17
leaf
shed
How Many
a Flower
Makes
male parts and female
make a fine yellow powder called
Seed
make
plants have flowers that
flowers have
Its
The
their seeds.
The male To make a
parts.
pollen.
parts seed,
pollen must be brought from a male part to a female part.
This
is
called pollination
plants the
work
(
poll-in-
of pollination
The male part of a flower is men). The anther (AN-ther) of the stamen. Pollen
The female till).
is
made
done by
is
called the is
a
little
)
.
For some
insects.
stamen (STAY-
knob
at the
end
in the anther.
part of a flower
The bottom
A Y-shun
is
part of the pistil
called the pistil (PISis
shaped
like a large,
Stigma Anther
Petal
Pistil
Style
-Stamen Ovary
Egg
The parts
of a flower
18
cell
round bead. This part There are eggs called the
is
called the ovary (O-va-ree).
The end stigma (STIG-inaj. The stigma cells in
the ovary.
of the pistil is
is
attached to
the ovary by a thin tube called the style. Insects that pollinate flowers carry the pollen from the
anther of one flower to the stigma of another flower.
stigma
is
usually sticky, so the pollen
is
held there.
the pollen grain grows a long thin tube.
down into the ovary. Some of goes down the tube into the with an egg
cell in
(FUR-till-ized).
the ovary.
The
The Then
The tube goes
the stuff inside the pollen ovary.
It
comes together
The egg has been
fertilized
fertilized
egg becomes a flower
seed.
The
pistil is in
are around the
the stamens.
the center of the flower.
pistil.
The
The
petals are
petals often
The stamens
around the
have bright
colors.
bright colors help bring insects to the flowers.
An egg
cell is fertilized
pistil
and
The
A bee gathering
pollen and n
ar
Insects That Pollinate Flowers
Flowers of different plants have different shapes,
and
ors
odors.
Some
flowers have sweet smells.
flowers smell like animal dung. (
NECK-tar
)
.
Nectar
is
and smells
Some
Some flowers make nectar
a sweet liquid that insects gather
The
as food. Insects also gather pollen as food.
colors
col-
shapes,
of flowers bring insects to them.
When an insect visits sticks to the insect’s
a flower to get food,
body. Then,
to another flower of the
same
when
kind,
it
some pollen
the insect
flies
carries pollen to
Bees, butterflies, wasps, moths, beetles
and
flies all
on it.
carry
pollen from one flower to another.
Flowers that are pollinated by bees are usually yellow
and
blue. This
is
because bees cannot see
see mostly yellow smells.
and
Bees will not
blue.
visit
They
Bee flowers have sweet
flowers with
20
all colors.
bad
smells.
Bees
fly
only during the daytime. So
open during
tlie
many bee
daytime and closed
at night.
flowers are
The
petals
some bee flowers come togetlier to make a thin tube. The nectar is at the bottom of the tube. The long thin of
tongue of the bee can gather the nectar of these flowers.
Some
orchids are bee flowers. Peas, violets and clover are
bee flowers,
too.
The nectar tom of a long
of butterfly
and moth flowers
tube, too. Almost
have very long tongues. There 10 inches long. Moths usually night. So
moth
moth
is
at the bot-
all butterflies
and moths
is
a
moth with
fly in
a tongue
the evening and at
flowers do not have bright colors.
flowers are closed during the daytime
in the evening. Morning-glory, tobacco,
Many
and open up
yucca and eve-
ning primroses are moth flowers. Butterflies feed during the daytime.
Red and orange
21
are colors that
some
butter-
flies
can
see.
For
many butterfly flowers are and many lilies are butterfly
this reason,
red and orange. Carnations flowers.
Some
fly
flowers have very
bad
smells. Flies
with short
tongues get most of their food from dung or rotting plants
and animals. So these food they are used
flies visit
plants that smell like the
to.
Beetles visit flowers because of their smell. Beetle flowers usually have big blossoms that roses, tles
pond
are not
They
ing.
and magnolias are beetle
happy
just to
alone.
Wild
flowers. Bee-
gather nectar from flowers.
also eat the petals.
Some visit.
lilies
grow
insects are
trapped for days by the flowers they
Hairs inside the flower keep the insect from escap-
While the
insect
is
ripens on the stamens.
The pond
inside the flower, the pollen
The trapped
lily is
insect gets covered
a beetle flower
22
A
caught
fly
in
a milkweed flower
with pollen. After a few days, the hairs drop insect
is
able to leave the flower.
one
just like the
in
which
it
It flies
off
and the
to another flower
was trapped. Here
it
is
trapped again for a few days. So the pollen the insect carries has plenty of time to rub off.
rubs
off
Some
on the stigma and pollination takes place.
The milkweed
plant
is
it.
There are deep cracks
is
formed. Insects
gather nectar.
slip
They
unkind
to
some
in the anthers
when
slip into
insects that visit
where the pollen
they step on the flower to
the deep cracks, where their
legs get caught. Pollen sticks to their legs.
hard to get
free.
Others lose a leg then
fly
of the pollen
on
Some
insects try
insects never free themselves.
in the struggle.
to another
The
The
insects that get free
milkweed blossom, where the same
thing happens. While they are fighting to free themselves again, they leave
some pollen on the flower 23
s
stigma.
A
Flower-Insect Team: The Yucca and the
Pronuba Moth
The yucca flower and the Pronuba (pron-YOU-ba) moth cannot live without each other. They work together as a team.
The
flowers of yucca plants
moth becomes an adult
open up and the Pronuba
at exactly the
are ready for mating at exactly the
needs the other to help
it
same
same
time.
time.
They
Each one
mate.
The Pronuba moths come to the yucca flower because of its sweet smell. Male and female moths fly around inand mate
side the blossom
moth has
special
mouth
there.
The female Pronuba
parts with
which she can scrape.
After mating, the female
moth scrapes
sticky pollen
from
the anthers of the yucca. She presses the pollen together,
and
rolls it into
way
a child carries a balloon tucked
a ball. She carries the ball of pollen the
carries the ball of pollen to another
makes a hole
in the
Tbe egg
under
his chin.
She
yucca flower. She
ovary of the second flower, and lays
of the
moth
is
now
in the
ovary of the
flower.
After the
moth has
laid her egg, she climbs
up onto the
stigma. She takes part of the ball of pollen that she carries
and pushes
it
into the
opening of the stigma. Then
she lays another egg in the ovary. After laying the second
24
some more pollen
egg, she puslies
lays about five eggs. after each
egg
laid her eggs
is
into the stigma.
She
She pushes pollen into the stigma In this
laid.
way
the female
and pollinated the yucca flower
moth has
at the
same
time.
When formed
the eggs hatch into larvae, seeds have already
in the
ovary of the yucca. The larvae eat some of
the seeds. This help. After a
is
how
month
the yucca pays the
to
to the ground.
be adult moths. They become adults
same time
for
its
of eating seeds, the larvae eat their
way out of the ovary. They fall up
moth
that the yucca flowers
bloom
They grow
at exactly the
again.
Pronuba moth
A moth on flower
25
the stigma of a yucca
Another Team: The Fig and the Fig
Wasp
grow on the Smyrna fig trees of Turkey, Italy, and Spain. It is warm and sunny in all these countries. It is also warm and sunny in southern California. So fruitgrowers decided to raise Smyrna figs in southern Sweet
figs
California.
At that sour.
first
the
fig
growers were disappointed. The
grew on California Smyrna
fig trees
figs
were small and
Fig growers wanted to find out the reason for
this.
Their search for the answer was like a detective story.
The clue to the answer was a tiny little wasp. The Smyrna fig is a thick, soft shell shaped
The
flow-
fertilized, a
seed
There are hundreds of flowers inside the ers are all female.
forms.
When
a flower
Each flower makes only one
is
like a pear.
shell.
seed.
A
fig will
Flowers
A
fig with part of
26
it
cut away
be
very sweet
sweet is
if it
many
if
So a
lot of
of
flowers have been pollinated.
its
seeds in
it.
fig will
where the mystery begins. The Smyrna
pollen.
How
There figs
is
do not
do
its
a wild
fig
Here
makes no
flowers get pollinated?
fig
called the caprifig (CAP-ri-fig). Its
taste good.
with plenty of pollen. It
be very
has a
But
A
little
develops inside a wild
flowers are male flowers,
its
fig
wasp has no wings and never
wasp
lives in the caprifig.
and feeds on
it.
The male
leaves the caprifig.
with the female wasp while she
is still
inside the
It
mates
fig.
After
mating, the female crawls out of the caprifig. As she does so,
she gets covered with pollen.
The female wasp has wings. She
flies
to another fig to
lay her eggs. If she lands on a caprifig, she lays her eggs
and new wasps develop.
If
walks around inside the
fig
eggs.
she lands on a
fig,
she
looking for a place to lay her
She does not lay her eggs there, because the eggs develop inside a Smyrna
will not
fig.
But something
happens. Pollen from the caprifig rubs the female flowers of the flowers are fertilized
Smyrna Smyrna
Smyrna
off
figs.
else
her body onto
In this
way
the
and seeds develop, making sweet
figs.
When fig
Smyrna
the figs
wasps
fig
growers of California found out
were pollinated, they brought
to the
sweet Smyrna
United
States.
figs.
27
Now
caprifigs
how and
California grows
Pay Rent
Insects That
There are plants that give insects a place insects, in turn,
pay rent
to live.
The
to the plants for their safe
homes. They pay the plants by keeping away other sects that in this
might harm the plant.
Many
in-
ants help trees
way.
There are long hollow thorns on the hull-horn acacia tree that
grows
in Brazil
live in these thorns.
and Central America. Tiny ants
They
get inside
the pointed end of the thorn. a fine
home
their food
in
which the ants
from the
away from
The hollow
raise their
inside
in
makes
young. They get
They suck a sweet sap from leaves. The ants keep leaf-eating
tree, too.
the stems of the acacia insects
by making a hole
the tree. So the ants always have
plenty of leaf sap for food. At the same time, the ants protect the acacia tree.
An You can weeds
lumps
see
in tlie
Air-Conditioned House of
‘‘spit’’
on
tlie
stems of grass and
springtime and summertime.
If
you take
away tlie spit carefully, you will find out what has made it. You will find a small insect that looks like a tiny frog. It is a young froghopper. The froghopper uses sap that it sucks from the plants for making the spit. Its abdomen is built so that it works like a bicycle pump. The froghopper pumps air into the sap. Air bubbles are trapped in the sap. This makes the sap look like spit. The insect stays inside the lump of spit. It is cool and wet inside. The young froghopper is safe from the hot sun in his air-conditioned house.
29
How
Plants Protect Insects
color or shape of an insect
The
The
or death.
them from
The
color
their
and shape
is
of
often a matter of
many
some
insects
is
shape of the plant on which the insect insect
on the plant, the insect
is
bird enemies do not attack It isn't
like a twig. It
like the
is
cannot be seen
lives.
hard to
When
see.
the
Then,
its
hop around.
name because it looks easily among dead twigs. its
a caterpillar that looks like a twig, too.
twig of the birch
home on
like the color or
easy to see a grasshopper in the green grass
walking-stick insect gets
There
is
birds.
it.
until the grasshopper begins to
The
insects protect
most dangerous enemies,
color or shape of
life
tree.
the birch tree where
A
It
looks
This caterpillar makes it is
hard to
walking-stick insect
see.
its
The thorax
of the thorn treehopper
like a big thorn.
when
it
rests
AngJewing ragged.
on thorn
side of the anglewing
the anglewing
There are some
make them
bar) caterpillar
looks
have wings that look torn and
is
at rest in the
ragged brownish-gray wings look
that
It
trees.
butterflies
When
pointed.
So the thorn treehopper cannot be seen
The underneath
ish-gray.
is
just like
is
brown-
woods,
dead
insects that are protected
by
its
leaves.
colors
The cinnahar-moth (SIN-aan example. The caterpillar has bright
easy to see. is
yellow and black
stripes.
Many
of these caterpillars feed
together on ragwort, a plant with small leaves. So the caterpillar It it
is
not hidden by the plant on which
it
feeds.
can be seen very easily from quite far away. Because can be seen
mies. to eat
The it.
easily, its color protects
caterpillar has a
So,
when
bad
it
taste.
from
its
bird ene-
Birds do not like
birds see the caterpillars feeding to-
gether, they stay away.
The thornhopper looks 31
like a
thorn
Insects That
Some
insects are
Harm Us
harmful because they damage or
even wipe out plants that people use. Then there food for animals that people food for people.
And
raise.
Then
of the
is
less
also less
there are less cotton, wood, tobacco
and other things that people get from
Only a few
there
is
many
plants.
kinds of insects are harmful.
These insects weren’t always harmful. One way insects
become harmful
is
by being moved from a place where
they have always lived to a place where they have never lived.
Insects that
have been
in a place for a long, long
have made enemies. Their enemies kill
may be
time
diseases that
may be birds or other insects Their enemies kill many of them. So, when
them. Their enemies
that eat them. insects
have been
are usually not so
in a place for a long, long time, there
many
them
of
that they can
do much
harm.
When
insects are
moved
never lived before, they the
number
The
insects
to a place
may
find
where they have
no enemies
there.
So
of insects of that kind gets bigger very fast.
may
still
cause there are so
eat the
many
same kind
insects,
of plant.
But be-
they can eat up
all
the
plants.
When
insects are
moved
to another place they
32
may
begin to eat plants
new cases
never ate before. Then the
some
plants are in danger of being eaten up. In
become harmful when new plants are the place where the insects live. The insects liking to the new plant. Then the insects will
insects
brought to
may
tliat tliey
take a
begin to go to
new
places looking for the
new
plant.
Since the insects have no natural enemies in the places, they
become an
insect pest there.
House
Clothes moth
Cockroach
Some
fly
insect pests
33
new
A potato
A
Beetle That
The Colorado potato beetle.
States
At
first it
Changed
Its
beetle
Diet
beetle wasn’t always a potato
lived only in the southwest of the United
on a diet of weeds.
When
the early American set-
moved west to California they carried potato plants with them. The Colorado beetle liked the taste of potatlers
toes very
much. Wherever potatoes were planted, the
beetles found their
way
to them. In this
spread across the United States. eat their
way from
California to
It
way
the beetles
took them 15 years to
New
York.
The Root Louse Crosses the Ocean For a long time American grape growers tried to grow grapes from vines brought from France. The vines al-
ways louse,
died.
They had been
which spent part of
killed
its life
by an aphid, the root eating the roots of the
grapevine. Grapevines that had always
United States were not damaged by of
American vines were very tough. 34
grown
this insect.
in the
The
roots
About 100 years ago, some American grapevines were brought into France. The root louse came into France on the roots of the vines. In just a few years, all
it
killed almost
the vines in France and in other parts of Europe, too.
The French grape growers found out how they could grow healthy plants. They attached French vines to the tough roots of the American plant. They did this by grafting.
Some good came
out of this terrible experience.
The new vines grew grapes with the fine flavor of French grapes. They were not attacked by the root louse because they had the strong roots of American plants. These new vines were brought back to the United
where they could grow, too. Now American grape growers can grow French grapes in the United States.
States
A slit is made in the stem of an American
Twigs cut from a French
vine
vine...
Roots
the
The
graft
is
covered with wax to protect
it
...are put
in
slit.
Grafting of grape vines
Some Imported Most
of the insects that
Insect Pests
have become pests
in the
United States have been brought in from other countries
where they were not harmful. They became pests
in the
United States because they found no natural enemies to
keep them from spreading.
The gypsy moth was brought
into Massachusetts about
100 years ago by a French scientist
who was
trying to
make silk. Some caterpillars escaped from his laboratory. The caterpillars discovered quickly that they liked eating the leaves of American shade trees.
other states and even to Canada.
People have learned spreading.
how
They spray
to
trees
They spread
to
Many trees were killed.
keep the gypsy moth from with poisons. They also
in-
spect plants that are shipped from one state to another to
make
sure there are no gypsy moths on them.
36
Tlie Japanese beetle
was
States in 1916. It
was
living
first
on some faney Japanese trees
New Jersey.
in a tree nursery in
noticed in the United
People didn’t
harmful the beetle could be, so they beetle spread quickly because
it
found
dreds of other trees and bushes, too. eontrol. It has
even been found
The corn borer
is
left it
It
it
know how alone. The
liked to eat hun-
has been hard to
in airplanes.
the larva of a moth.
It
has always
lived in
Europe and Asia where there was no
found
liked corn
it
from Ameriea. In else.
From
when
faet,
the time
its
a nice, comfortable their
way
have
lots of
in
dead
it
corn was brought to Europe
likes
corn better than anything
eggs hatch in July, the larvae have
home
all
eornstalks.
They bore the plant. They
in the eorn plant.
into tight, dark places inside
food
eorn. It
the time.
One way
They have
a winter
to eontrol corn borers
planting corn at just the right time.
Corn borer larva
...inside an ear of
corn
home is
by
An
Australian Friend in a
The cottony-cushion eats the sap, leaves It
was
fruit
first
found
scale
is
and twigs
Time
of
Need
a small scale insect that of citrus (SIT-rus) trees.
in California orange,
lemon and grape-
orchards about 100 years ago. Within 15 years
citrus trees
their
had been
whole crop of
killed
by the
scale
many
and farmers
lost
citrus fruits.
Some people thought
that the scale
was brought
into
came from Australia. They thought this because they knew that the cottony-cushion scale had lived in Australia for a long time. They also
California on fruit trees that
knew went
that
it
was not an
insect pest in Australia. So they
to Australia to find out
They found
their
answer
why.
in a little
reddish-brown lady
beetle, the vedalia beetle. This beetle
and
its
larvae ate
the larvae and eggs of the cottony-cushion scale
nothing
and
else.
About 500 vedalia beetles were brought fornia from Australia.
into Cali-
There was plenty of food
A
38
vedalia beetle
for
them.
so tliere
were nianv
of
two years there were
them so
in a short time. In less
many
than
vedalia beetles in Cali-
fornia that the cottony-cushion scale stopped being a pest.
An All-American
Pest
The boll weevil is a little black bug with a long snout. It came from Mexico. It likes to eat only the cotton plant. The adult eats the leaves of the cotton plant. With its snout, the female bores holes in the plant.
buds of the cotton
She lays her eggs inside the buds. Larvae hatch
from the eggs. The larvae eat the inside of the bud. Then the
bud never grows
into a cotton boll.
in the cotton bolls, too.
the boll, so that
The Texas
it
The
larvae spoil the cotton inside
cannot be used.
boll weevil
came
in 1892. It
can be found
growing
She lays her eggs
into the
states in the South.
United States through
now
in all the cotton-
Cotton farmers can keep
it
under control by using good seed and taking good care of their land.
A
39
boll weevil
Getting Rid of Insect Pests Insect pests trees.
do a
lot of
harm. They eat crops and hurt
They damage houses and
get rid of
all
insect pests.
clothing.
But we can learn
We
can never
how to control
them.
One way
to control insect pests
by finding
is
their
natural enemies. Chinese citrus-fruit growers controlled insect pests this
way
for a long time.
China are bothered by a small black the natural enemies of the citrus
put these ants into their citrus ‘'ant
bridges” out of
bamboo
The
Certain ants are
fly.
fly.
trees.
poles, to
citrus trees of
The fruitgrowers They even make make it easier for
the ants to go from one tree to another. There are people
who make Germs
a living raising ants for the fruitgrowers.
are sometimes natural enemies of insects.
germs that hurt
insects but
do not hurt animals or people
are sometimes sprayed on plants
Another way
the
same kind
which
to control insect pests
plants that insects like
insects eat.
is
to stop
growing
and grow instead another plant
that insects
So
do not
like.
The Hessian
of fly
used to be a pest on American wheat. So scientists looked
wheat that the Hessian
They found such a wheat plant in southern Europe. They brought this plant to the United States. The European for a
wheat grew well
in the
sian fly did not like
United
it.
40
fly
would not
States,
eat.
because the Hes-
Another way
to control insect pests
on the plants on which gerous.
It
is
insects live. This
to spray poison
way can be dan-
can be dangerous, when poisons are used on
food plants. The poisons can hurt people. gerous, too, because the poisons can
mies of the insect pests insect pests It
come back
at the
kill
same
It
can be dan-
the natural ene-
time. Then,
if
the
again, they spread very quickly.
can be dangerous because the poisons can go into the
soil
and poison the streams. This happened
when pest.
a poison
was used
Not only were the
fish in
in Florida
to control the sand-fly, sand-flies killed,
but
an insect all
of the
the area were killed, too.
Another way
to control insects
is
to
keep them from
spreading from one country to another. This can be done
by making sure
that
all
plants that
come
into a country
have no insects on them.
USDA photograph
Plagues It is
as the
a bright sunny day. There are fields of grain as far
eye can
The wind makes
see.
the grain ripple, so
that the fields look like a great golden sea.
Suddenly
it
becomes very dark. The sun
hind a black cloud. But
this
is
is
hidden be-
not a storm cloud.
The
cloud moves very quickly, and makes a loud buzzing noise. It
made up
a cloud
is
looking for a
new place
of millions of grasshoppers
to live.
After the grasshoppers have passed, the fields are bare.
The
trees are bare.
The grasshoppers have eaten
every-
thing.
When
this
happened a long time ago,
it
was very
ter-
rible.
People had no food because the grasshoppers had
eaten
it all.
Thousands
(PLAYG)
grasshopper
Grasshoppers ally don’t die all
of people died. This
still
when
do a
did.
lot of
damage. But people usu-
grasshoppers eat their crops. People
over the world try to help each other.
part of the world do not have
If
people in one
enough food, people
other parts of the world often help
them
was what a
in
them by sending
food.
Live
Weeds
are plants
wanted. They grow in
Weed
Killers
grow where they are not gardens and fields crowding out
that
42
plants that are raised for food.
We It is
usually don't think of the cactus plant as a weed.
a pretty desert plant in the United States.
keep
it
The
as a
even
house plant.
became a weed in Australia. It was Australia by accident in 1787. But the cac-
cactus plant
brought into tus
We
had no natural enemies
quickly.
By 1925
in Australia.
So
it
millions of acres of land
spread very
were
filled
with the weed. Nothing else could grow in them.
came to America to see if they could find the natural enemy of the cactus plant. They brought many different insects back with them. The inAustralian scientists
sects kept the cacti
them
from spreading, but did not wipe
out. Finally, after ten years of searching, the right
insect-enemy was found. Argentina. Billions of
seven years
all
its
It
was
a
moth
that lived in
eggs were sent to Australia. In
of the cactus plants
were wiped
out.
Then
the land could be used again for crops and pasture. Cactus plants before ...
... and after the moths came.
Cells in a
honey comb
A honey bee
A bee
hive
Honey, Wax, and Ink
Some
when we take things from them. when we make things from them.
insects help us
Other insects help us
44
We take honey
and wax from
and wax from the nectar they
The wax forms making gether
gather.
in small scales
abdomen. The wax
of the bee's
little
make
six-sided
make honey
bees. Bees
on the underneath side is
used by the bees for
rooms called
Many
cells.
a comb. Eggs are laid in the
cells to-
cells.
Some
of the
nectar the bee swallows goes into the honey sac.
Chem-
The bee makes honey icals
change the nectar
honey up.
It spits
The honey
is
in its
honey
into honey.
sac.
Then
the bee spits the
the honey into the cells of the comb.
food for the larvae that hatch from the eggs.
Beekeepers fool the bees into making extra
cells
and
them with honey, even though no eggs have been in these cells. Special machines remove the honey
filling
laid
from these
cells.
This
is
the honey that the beekeepers
sell.
They
get beeswax
Beeswax makes a
We
make
by melting down old honeycombs.
fine polish.
a very
small wasp. These
good writing ink with the help of a little
wasps feed on oak
trees in the
western part of Asia, near the city of Aleppo. These
wasps are
gall insects.
They make Aleppo
galls.
A very fine black ink is made from Aleppo galls. Under the laws of Massachusetts, this ink must be used for writing
all
public records.
45
A
Insects for Varnish
Varnish
is
often used on
varnish has lac in lives in the
Many
it.
Lac
is
cochineal insect
and Dye
wood instead of paint. Good made from a scale insect that
Far East.
lac insects live together
on the twigs of
trees.
The female has a pointed beak. She sucks sap through her beak. Most of the sap passes out of her body. It forms a scale of lac on her back. Because the insects are
crowded together on the to
make
a sheet.
The
twig, the scales
insects
come together
keep feeding under
this
sheet of lac.
Lac-covered twigs are then cut from the scale
and
insects are separated
the twigs in hot water.
Lac
The
from the wood by putting
for varnish
scale. Artists' colors called '‘lakes
dead
trees.
'
is
are
made from made from
the the
insects.
Beautiful red dye
(KOTCH-i-neel) on cactus
is
made from
insect, a scale insect
the cochineal
found
in
Mexico.
abdomen is dark red. Most cochineal insects are female. Dye is made from female insects that are filled with eggs. The female is very large then. It takes 70,000 insects to make a pound of dye. It lives
plants. Its
46
A silkworm ...
• •
A There are
caterpillars that
times to
pillar spins
its
cocoon
Silk
make
silk.
The
caterpillar
wraps the thread around itself make a cocoon (kuh-KOON). The cater-
spins a silk thread.
many
Cradle of
3nd
It
about a half mile of thread to make
This caterpillar
is
called the silhivovin.
a large white moth.
It eats
It is
its
cocoon.
the larva of
the leaves of mulberry trees.
kill Silkgrowers gather the cocoons and heat them to silk of the the caterpillars inside. Then they unwind the
on
Several stiands of
cocoons and wind
it
twisted together to
make thread
It
reels.
for
is
not
are
weaving and sewing.
make I pound of silk. used very much today. Man-made fibers like
takes about 3,000 cocoons to
Silk
silk
rayon and nylon have taken its place. Most silk comes from China and Japan. 47
WORD — The
Adult (a-DULT)
full-grown insect.
- An
Antennae (an-TEN-ee)
They
like stiff hairs.
insect’s feelers.
They
look
are attached to the insect’s head.
— The
Anther (AN-ther)
LIST
male part of a
flower. It
makes
pollen.
Chrysalis (KRISS-a-liss) into.
— What
a caterpillar changes
Later the chrysalis changes into an adult insect.
Cocoon (kuh-KOON) — The blanket of silk thread in which some caterpillars wrap themselves. It is the
pupa
of
some
insects.
Fertilize (FUR-till-ize)
len
and an egg
Larva (LAR-va) caterpillar
is
cell to
—
make
a seed.
hatches from an insect’s egg.
A
— A sweet syrup made by some flow-
gathered by insects as food.
Ovary (O-va-ree) egg
It
In a flower, the joining of pol-
a larva.
Nectar (NECK-tar) ers. It is
—
- The
bottom part of the
made in the ovary. Pistil (PIS-till) The female part of a flower. Pollen POLL-en — A yellow dust made by
pistil.
The
cells are
(
)
of a flower. It
flower to
make
the anther
comes together with the egg
cell of a
a seed.
— Same as chrysalis. (STIG-ma) — The top part of
Pupa (PEW-pa) Stigma
ceives the pollen.
48
the
pistil.
It re-
'
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Insects and Rlants
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insectsplantsOOadle insectsplantsOOadle
WHY
REASON
Th©
S6ri6S
by
Irving
and Ruth Adler
“They are excellent”-New York Herald Tribune
The best of the matter is that, with authors like .the Adlers, their name One can be certain that not only is the exposition clear and logical, but
is
a guarantee.
that the scientific
matters presented are correct and up-to-date.”
-The Horn Book Magazine
THINGS THAT SPIN ‘A helpful and stimulating book.
—The Horn Book Magazine
the story _ lesenting a truly excellent account Clear, well-labelled drawings;
A
recommended.”
—Library Journal
SHADOWS
An ,
of a nail
of the historical development of the steel industry.
easily
understood explanation of the causes and uses of shadows.”
-ALA Booklist
NUMBERS OLD AND NEW
fascinating book for the student interested in mathematics.” ,1
,
,
—American Library Association
,
how we came
iixceptional book about
to
count as
we do.” —Child Study Association of America
WHY? A
„
Book of Reasons
I
suggest that it be given to a child with an inquiring collecting unrelated facts.
mind and
acijuisitive instinct for t/—V irginia Kirkus ;
RIVERS “Contains a wealth of information, and the illustrations add clarification tor tlmd-giaders and informative enougli for fifth-graders.
.
,
.
simple enough ^
Recommended.”
OCEANS
—Library Journal
AIR public libraries will find
“lies are well written and scientifically accurate. Schools and .
.
.
these useful.”
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