Page:Insects - Their Ways and Means of Living.djvu/143

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AND MEANS OF LIVING

speed up these reactions, for otherwise the animal would starve on a full stomach by reason of the slowness of its gastric service. The quickening substances of the diges- tive fluids are called enzymes, and each kind of enzyme acts on only one class of food material. An animal's prac- tical digestive powers, therefore, depend entirely upon the specific enzymes its digestive liquids contain. Lacking this or that enzyme it can not digest the things that depend upon it, and usually its instincts are correlated with its enzymes so that it does not fill its stomach with food it can not digest. A few analyses of the digestive liquids of in- sects have been made, enough to show that their digestive processes depend upon the presence of the same enzymes as those of other animais, including man. The grosser digestive substances, in cooperation with the'enzymes, soon change all the parts of the food ma- terials in the stomach that the animal needs for its suste- nance into soluble compounds which are dissolved in the liquid part of the digestive secretions. Thus is produced a rich, nutrient juice within the alimentary canal which can be absorbed through the walls of the stomach and intes- tine and can so enter the closed cavity of the body. The next problem is that of distribution, for still the food ma- terials must reach the individual cells of the tissues that compose the animal. The insect's way of feeding, of digesting its food, and of absorbing it is not essentially different from that of the higher animais, including ourselves, for alimentation is a very old and fundamental function of all animais. Its means of distributing the digested food within its body, however, is quite different from that of vertebrates. The absorbed pabulum, instead of being received into a set of lymphatic vessels and from these sent into blood-filled tubes to be pumped to all parts of the organism, goes directly from the alimentary walls into the general body cavity, which is filled with a liquid that bathes the inner surfaces of all the body tissues. This body liquid is called

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INSECTS