<h2 id="chapter-2"><ANTIMG src="images/i_031.jpg" alt="" /><br/> CHAPTER II<br/> <span class="chapter-title">THE CADDIS-WORM</span></h2>
<p class="note">[The caddis-worm is the grub of the caddis-fly,
which is like a small moth and is often seen flitting
over our streams and ponds. There are about one
hundred and fifty species of this fly in America.]</p>
<p class="first"><span class="upper">Whom</span> shall I lodge in my glass trough,
kept always wholesome by the action of
the water-weeds? I shall keep Caddis-worms, those
insects which clothe themselves with little sticks and
other materials. They are among the most ingenious
of the self-clothing insects.</p>
<p>The particular species of Caddis-worm I have
chosen is found in muddy-bottomed, stagnant pools
crammed with small reeds. It is the little grub that
carries through the still waters a bundle of tiny fragments
fallen from the reeds. Its sheath, a traveling
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house, is an elaborate piece of work, made of
many different materials.</p>
<p>The young worms, the beginners, start with a
sort of deep basket in wicker-work, made of small,
stiff roots, long steeped and peeled under water.
The grub that has made a find of these fibers saws
them with its jaws and cuts them into little straight
sticks, which it fixes one by one to the edge of its
basket, always crosswise. This pile of spikes is a
fine protection, but hard to steer through the tangle
of water-plants. Sooner or later the worm forsakes
it, and builds with round bits of wood, browned by
the water, often as wide as a thick straw and a
finger’s breadth long, more or less—taking them as
chance supplies them.</p>
<p>It does not always use wood, however. If there
are plenty of small, dead Pond-snails in the pond, all
of the same size, the Caddis-worm makes a splendid
patchwork scabbard; with a cluster of slender roots,
reduced by rotting to their stiff, straight, woody axis,
it manufactures pretty specimens of wicker-work like
baskets. With grains of rice, which I gave the
grubs in my glass pond as an experiment, they built
themselves magnificent towers of ivory. Next to the
sheaths of snail-shells, this was the prettiest thing I
ever saw the Caddis-worms make.</p>
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<h3>THE PIRATES’ ATTACK</h3>
<p>What is the use of these houses which the Caddis-worms
carry about with them? I catch a glimpse
of the reason for making them. My glass pond was
at first occupied by a dozen Water-beetles, whose
diving performances are so curious to watch. One
day, meaning no harm and for want of a better place
to put them, I fling among them a couple of handfuls
of Caddis-worms. Blunderer that I am, what have I
done! The pirate Water-beetles, hiding in the
rugged corners of the rockwork, at once perceive the
windfall. They rise to the surface with great
strokes of their oars; they hasten and fling themselves
upon the crowd of carpenter Caddis-worms.
Each Beetle grabs a sheath by the middle and tries
to rip it open by tearing off shells and sticks. While
this is going on, the Caddis-worm, close-pressed, appears
at the mouth of the sheath, slips out, and
quickly escapes under the eyes of the Water-beetle,
who appears to notice nothing.</p>
<p>The brutal ripper of sheaths does not see the little
worm, like a white sausage, that slips between his
legs, passes under his fangs, and madly flees. He
continues to tear away the outer case and to tug
at the silken lining. When the breach is made, he is
quite crestfallen at not finding what he expected.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_034.jpg" alt="The pirate Water-beetles" /></div>
<p>Poor fool! Your victim went out under your nose
and you never saw it. The worm has sunk to the
bottom and taken refuge in the mysteries of the rockwork.
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If things were happening in a larger, outdoor
pond, it is clear that, with their clever way of removing
themselves, most of the worms would escape scot-free.
Fleeing to a distance and recovering from
the sharp alarm, they would build themselves a new
scabbard, and all would be over until the next attack,
which would be foiled all over again by the very
same trick!</p>
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<h3>AN INSECT SUBMARINE</h3>
<p>Caddis-worms are able to remain on the level of
the water indefinitely with no other support than
their house; they can rest in unsinkable flotillas and
can even shift their place by working the rudder.</p>
<p>How do they do it? Do their sticks make a sort
of raft? Can the shells contain a few bubbles of air
and serve as floats? Let us see.</p>
<p>I remove a number of Caddis-worms from their
sheaths and put the sheaths in the water. Not one
of them floats, neither those made of shells nor
those of woody materials. The Worm also, when
removed from its tube, is unable to float.</p>
<p>This is how the Worm manages. When at rest,
at the bottom of the pond, it fills the whole of the
tube of its sheath. When it wishes to reach the top
of the pond, it climbs up the reeds, dragging its house
of sticks with it; then it sticks the front of its body
out of the sheath, leaving a vacant space in the rear,
like the vacuum in a pump when one draws out the
piston. This promptly fills with air, enabling the
Worm to float, sheath and all, just as the air in a
life-preserver holds a person up in the water. The
Caddis-worm does not need to cling to the grasses
any longer. It can move about on the surface of the
pond, in the glad sunlight.</p>
<p>To be sure, it is not very talented as a boatman.
But it can turn round, tack about and shift its place
slightly by using the front part of its body, which is
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out of the tube, as a rudder and paddle; and that is
all it wishes to do. When it has had enough of the
sun, and thinks it time to return to the quiet of the
mud-bed at the bottom, it draws itself back into its
sheath, expelling the air, and at once begins to sink.</p>
<p>We have our submarines—the Caddis-worms
have theirs. They can come out of the water, they
can dip down and even stop at mid-depth by releasing
gradually the surplus air. And this apparatus,
so perfectly balanced, so skillful, requires no knowledge
on the part of its maker. It comes into being
of itself, in accordance with the plans of the universal
harmony of things.</p>
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