登陆注册
19463300000025

第25章 THE PROBLEM OF THE SCOLIAE(1)

Now that all the facts have been set forth, it is time to collate them. We already know that the Beetle-hunters, the Cerceres (Cf. "The Hunting Wasps": chapters 1 to 3.--Translator's Note.), prey exclusively on the Weevils and the Buprestes, that is, on the families whose nervous system presents a degree of concentration which may be compared with that of the Scolia's victims. Those predatory insects, working in the open air, are exempt from the difficulties which their emulators, working underground, have to overcome. Their movements are free and are directed by the sense of sight; but their surgery is confronted in another respect with a most arduous problem.

The victim, a Beetle, is covered at all points with a suit of armour which the sting is unable to penetrate. The joints alone will allow the poisoned lancet to pass. Those of the legs do not in any way comply with the conditions imposed: the result of stinging them would be merely a partial disorder which far from subduing the insect, would render it more dangerous by irritating it yet further. A sting in the joint of the neck is not admissible: it would injure the cervical ganglia and lead to death, followed by putrefaction. There remains only the joint between the corselet and the abdomen.

The sting, in entering here, has to abolish all movement with a single stab, for any movement would imperil the rearing of the larva. The success of the paralysis, therefore, demands that the motor ganglia, at least the three thoracic ganglia, shall be packed in close contact opposite this point. This determines the selection of Weevils and Buprestes, both of which are so strongly armoured.

But where the prey has only a soft skin, incapable of stopping the sting, the concentrated nervous system is no longer necessary, for the operator, versed in the anatomical secrets of her victim, knows to perfection where the centres of innervation lie; and she wounds them one after another, if need be from the first to the last. Thus do the Ammophilae go to work when dealing with their caterpillars and the Sphex-wasps when dealing with their Locusts, Ephippigers and Crickets.

With the Scoliae we come once again to a soft prey, with a skin penetrable by the sting no matter where it be attacked. Will the tactics of the caterpillar-hunters, who stab and stab again, be repeated here? No, for the difficulty of movement under ground prohibits so complicated an operation.

Only the tactics of the paralysers of armour-clad insects are practicable now, for, since there is but one thrust of the dagger, the feat of surgery is reduced to its simplest terms, a necessary consequence of the difficulties of an underground operation. The Scoliae, then, whose destiny it is to hunt and paralyse under the soil the victuals for their family, require a prey made highly vulnerable by the close assemblage of the nerve-centres, as are the Weevils and Buprestes of the Cerceres; and this is why it has fallen to their lot to share among them the larvae of the Scarabaeidae.

Before they obtained their allotted portion, so closely restricted and so judiciously selected; before they discovered the precise and almost mathematical point at which the sting must enter to produce a sudden and a lasting immobility; before they learnt how to consume, without incurring the risk of putrefaction, so corpulent a prey: in brief, before they combined these three conditions of success, what did the Scoliae do?

The Darwinian school will reply that they were hesitating, essaying, experimenting. A long series of blind gropings eventually hit upon the most favourable combination, a combination henceforth to be perpetuated by hereditary transmission. The skilful co-ordination between the end and the means was originally the result of an accident.

Chance! A convenient refuge! I shrug my shoulders when I hear it invoked to explain the genesis of an instinct so complex as that of the Scoliae. In the beginning, you say, the creature gropes and feels its way; there is nothing settled about its preferences. To feed its carnivorous larvae it levies tribute on every species of game which is not too much for the huntress' power or the nurseling's appetite; its descendants try now this, now that, now something else, at random, until the accumulated centuries lead to the selection which best suits the race. Then habit grows fixed and becomes instinct.

Very well. Let us agree that the Scolia of antiquity sought a different prey from that adopted by the modern huntress. If the family throve upon a diet now discontinued, we fail to see that the descendants had any reason to change it: animals have not the gastronomic fancies of an epicure whom satiety makes difficult to please. Because the race did well upon this fare, it became habitual; and instinct became differently fixed from what it is to-day. If, on the other hand, the original food was unsuitable, the existence of the family was jeopardized; and any attempt at future improvement became impossible, because an unhappily inspired mother would leave no heirs.

To escape falling into this twofold trap, the theorists will reply that the Scoliae are descended from a precursor, an indeterminate creature, of changeable habits and changing form, modifying itself in accordance with its environment and with the regional and climatic conditions and branching out into races each of which has become a species with the attributes which distinguish it to-day. The precursor is the deus ex machina of evolution.

When the difficulty becomes altogether too importunate, quick, a precursor, to fill up the gaps, quick, an imaginary creature, the nebulous plaything of the mind! This is seeking to lighten the darkness with a still deeper obscurity; to illumine the day by piling cloud upon cloud. Precursors are easier to find than sound arguments. Nevertheless, let us put the precursor of the Scoliae to the test.

What did she do? Being capable of everything, she did a bit of everything.

同类推荐
  • 全宋文

    全宋文

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 墨子城守各篇简注

    墨子城守各篇简注

    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。
  • 何一自禅师语录

    何一自禅师语录

    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。
  • 宣验记

    宣验记

    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。
  • 史讳举例

    史讳举例

    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
  • 梦幻法兰西

    梦幻法兰西

    《我来过,我看见,我征服》在这个梦开始的地方!!让我们一起鉴证!!!友情的珍贵,爱情的无悔!竞技的残酷,荣誉的迷醉!精彩内容,一切尽在梦幻法兰西......新书求推荐!!!收藏!!!打赏!!!支持!!!
  • 霸道总裁:娇妻难驯服

    霸道总裁:娇妻难驯服

    一次意外,她导致他跟心爱女人宣告失败。一次纠葛,他成了她要相亲的对象。他是冷血总裁,腹黑,霸道,狂妄。她是平凡的普通女人,一次次沦陷在他的魅力之下。究竟是冷情的他降服了她?还是平凡的她收服了他?
  • 仙凡逆

    仙凡逆

    天地不仁,以万物为刍狗!何为凡,何为仙?不过弹指一念间!请看兰辰夜最新作品:《仙凡逆》
  • 墨云天

    墨云天

    墨影重重墨帝现,柳随风起云帝来。执零刃,掌零印,率零军,奔袭而来,神挡杀神,佛挡诛佛,只为求得一处安身之所。零,既是结束,也是开始。
  • 重炮狙击

    重炮狙击

    平板可变重炮,V信更强于电台。林成语正想为抗战添砖加瓦,却发现事情远非那么简单。一个疯子带来的一场异变,将带着整个世界走向崩溃。只有他可以阻止这一切。
  • 画江湖之不良人的良

    画江湖之不良人的良

    “一天是不良人,一辈子都是!”青衣扶剑,一身孤影自飘零,书生捧卷,一条不归路上行……
  • 大正句王经

    大正句王经

    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。
  • The Ivory Child

    The Ivory Child

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 仙路绝尘

    仙路绝尘

    一个活泼机灵的少年意外卷入一场江湖纷争,得知自己的身世之后开始了一段追求真相的复仇之路,但是真相之外似乎还有着另外的故事。结局还是开始?。。。。。。。且看一个勇敢的少年在逆境中不断前行,在修炼的道路上一骑绝尘,勇往直前的创造一个只属于自己的异界天堂的故事。
  • 紫花开:永相伴

    紫花开:永相伴

    她,千芷夕,是一国公主,是头牌花魁,还是一教圣女,看她在重生之后如何登上世界顶峰,受尽万人瞩目。(呀!一不小心霸气测漏啦!)…在转世之前,她被伤的彻底,这一世,她会再次被伤的体无完肤,还是寻觅到了自己的爱情……(千芷夕:其实我只想在薰衣草开遍时与我爱的人相依相偎。君泠墨:可以呀,这不有我吗?千:你?你知道什么是薰衣草吗?君:呃…^_^???)