Page:Insects - Their Ways and Means of Living.djvu/178

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the belief in aristocracy vindicated by the ancient and honorable line of descent represented by the roaches and flowering in the termites. One particular piece of evidence of the roach ancestry of the termites is furnished by the wings. With most termites the wings (Fig. 83) are not well developed, and

Ftc,. 84. Wings of AIastotermes, the hind wing with a basal expansion similar to that of the hind wing of a roach (fig. suggesting a relationship between termites and roaches

their muscles are partly degenerate. In some forms, how- ever, the wings (Fig. 84) are distinctly of the roach type of structure (Fig. 53), and these forms are undoubtedly more closely representative of the ancestral termites than are the species with the usual termite wing structure. Our termites and those of other temperate regions con- stitute the mere fringes of termite civilization. The ter- mites are particularly insects of warm climates, and it is in the tropics that they find their most congenial environ- ment and attain the full expression of their possibilities. In the tropics the characteristic termites are not those that inhabit dead wood, but species that construct detinite and permanent nests, some placed beneath the ground,

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TERMITES