Page:The Formation of Vegetable Mould through the Action of Worms (1881).djvu/107

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Chap. II.
THEIR INTELLIGENCE.
93

petioles of foreign plants, wholly unknown to the progenitors of the worms which act in the described manner. Nor are their actions so unvarying or inevitable as are most true instincts.

As worms are not guided by special instincts in each particular case, though possessing a general instinct to plug up their burrows, and as chance is excluded, the next most probable conclusion seems to be that they try in many different ways to draw in objects, and at last succeed in some one way. But it is surprising that an animal so low in the scale as a worm should have the capacity for acting in this manner, as many higher animals have no such capacity. For instance, ants may he seen vainly trying to drag an object transversely to their course, which could be easily drawn longitudinally; though after a time they generally act in a wiser mariner. M. Fabre states[1] that a Sphex—an insect belonging to the same highly-endowed order with ants—stocks its nest with paralysed

  1. See his interesting work, 'Souvenirs entomologiques,' 1879, p. 168–177.