Page:Insects - Their Ways and Means of Living.djvu/260

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forward a few steps and begins work on another nest, which is completed in the same fashion. Some series consist of only three or four nests, while others contain as many as twenty and a few even more, but perhaps eight to twelve are the usual numbers. When the female bas finished what she deems sufficient on one twig, she flies away and is said to make further layings elsewhere, till she has disposed of her 4c?o to 6c?o eggs,, but the writer made no observations covering this point. Probably the cicada feels it saler not to intrust all her eggs to one tree, on the principle of not putting all your money in the same bank.

DEATH OF THE ADULTS The din of music in the trees continues with monot- onous regularity into the second week of June, by which time the mating season is over. Soon thereafter the per- formers lose their vitality; large numbers of them drop to the earth where many perish from an internaI fungus disèase that eats off the terminal rings of the body; others are mutilated and destroyed by birds, and the rest perhaps just die a naturaI death. Beneath the trees, where a great swarm has but recently given such abundant evidence of lire, the ground is now strewn with the dead or dying. A large percentage of the living are in various stages of disfigurement--wings are torn off, abdomens are broken open or gone entirely, mere fragments crawl about, stiI1 alive if the head and thorax are intact. In the ma]es often the great muscle coIumns of" the drums are exposed and visibly quivering, and many of" the insects, gaine to the end, even in their diIapidated condition stiII utter purring remnants of their song. From now on tiI1 the latter part of JuIy, the onIy evi- dence of the Iate swarm of noisy visitors wiI1 be the scarred twigs on the trees and bushes that have received the eggs and the red-brown patches of dying Ieaves that every- where disfigure the oaks and hickories.


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