Page:Insects - Their Ways and Means of Living.djvu/135

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WAYS AND MEANS OF LIVING

one bud became contiguous with the one before, or became enveloped by it, a relation would be established between the two buds similar to that which exists between successive generations of life forms. The so-called parent generation, in other words, contains the germs of the succeeding generation, but it does not produce them. Each generation is simply the custodian of the germ cells entrusted to it, and the "offspring" resembles the parent, not because it is a chip off the parental block, but because both parent and offspring are developed from the same line of germ cells.

Fig. 64. The leg of a young grasshopper, showing the typical segmentation of an insect's leg

The leg is supported on a pleural plate (Pl) in the lateral wall of its segment. The basal segment of the free part of the leg is the coxa (Cx), then comes a small trochanter (Tr), next a long femur (F) separated by the knee bend from the tibia (Tb), and lastly the foot, consisting of a sub-segmented tarsus (Tar), and a pair of terminal claws (Cl) with an adhesive lobe between them

Parents create the conditions under which the germ cells will develop; they nourish and protect them during the period of their development; and, when each generation has served the purpose of its existence, it sooner or later dies. But the individuals produced from its germ cells do the same for another set of germ cells produced simultaneously with themselves, and so on as long as the species persists.

To express the facts of succession in each specific form of animal, then, we should analyze each generation into germ cells and an accompanying mass of protective cells which

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