<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br/> THE CASE OF THE RED SILVERWING</SPAN></h2>
<p>Having dealt briefly with the transformations
of butterflies in general, it may be well
to examine more closely into those of a single
representative species. For this purpose I have
chosen <i>Dione vanillae</i>, known as the Red Silverwing,
and have described each stage and transition
in considerable detail. The following paragraphs
are extracts from the daily records
of a study I made in southern Kansas, the
northern limit of <i>vanillae’s</i> usual range.</p>
<h3 class="center">OVIPOSITION</h3>
<p>“One of the females, alighting upon the upper
side of a leaf within ten inches of my face,
suddenly elevated the forward part of the body,
brought the wings together vertically, curved
the abdomen slightly forward, and drew its tip
slowly across the surface of the leaf for a
distance of approximately 12 mm. Remaining
quiet for an instant, it lifted the abdomen,
showing an egg firmly attached to the leaf.
The eggs are laid singly, usually in the upper
middle of the leaf. I have never seen more
than one upon the same leaf.”</p>
<h3 class="center">THE EGG</h3>
<p>“The egg measures about 1.12 mm. in height
and .7 mm. in diameter at the widest part,
barrel-shaped, with fourteen vertical ribs. A<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>
brilliant yellow at first, it assumes after about
thirty-six hours a reddish brown color. A few
hours later an irregular, whitish broken ring,
not quite circling the egg, appears about one-third
of the distance from the top. When
within an hour or so of hatching the shell
becomes very thin and transparent and reflects
the light with a sort of frosted-glass
effect. The large black head of the larva
inside gives the upper one-third of the egg a
black, metallic appearance, while the yellowish
body may be seen curled up in the lower part.
The incubation period seems to vary greatly
with the temperature, from forty-seven hours
to seven days.”</p>
<h3 class="center">THE EMERGENCE OF THE CATERPILLAR</h3>
<p>“At 2:15 p. m. the larva was clearly visible
through the shell. Slight bodily movements
were noted, then the very large, shining black
head was thrust out at a point on one side of
the egg, just below the top. The entire structure
rocked and swayed slowly back and forth,
inclining toward the side from which the head
projected.</p>
<p>“At 2:19 the larva emerged very slowly, head
first. The head and the final segment appeared
very large. The entire length was
about 1.5 mm. The body yellowish red; prolegs
and caudal segment lemon yellow; the head,
legs and spines black. The latter bear no visible
branches, and appear as stiff, black hairs,
each growing out of a slight black protuberance.</p>
<p>“The beautiful egg-shell remains erect, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>
form being unchanged. There is a ragged hole
in it, but it is scarcely noticeable, and appears
hardly large enough for the egress of the
caterpillar.”</p>
<h3 class="center">THE CATERPILLAR</h3>
<p>“The newly emerged larva does not venture
far from the egg-shell and does not move about
much for the first five or six hours. It sometimes
devours the shell, but this is not usually
the case. At the age of six hours it appears
darker, and the black spots from which the
hairlike spines protrude have become more conspicuous.
Has not eaten any of the leaf, and
has increased in size very little if at all.”</p>
<p>“At the age of twenty-seven hours the larva
attains a length of 2.3 mm. and has eaten several
small holes in the center of a large leaf,
gnawing through the leaf to the transparent
epidermis on the opposite side, which is left
intact. Usually works from the upper side, but
by no means invariably.”</p>
<p>“These smaller larvae seem to be always attached
to the leaf with silk, although the
threads are very few and fine. More mature
larvae feed differently; they grip the petiole
with the prolegs, and eat from the edge inward
and forward, swinging the head toward the midrib,
with practically no lateral motion.”</p>
<p>“The caterpillar is cylindrical and bears six
rows of black, branching spines, twelve in each
row. As regards color, there are besides the reddish,
newly hatched creature described above,
two well-defined types: the orange-drab and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>
drab-orange. In the first the body appears
orange with three narrow drab stripes, and a
very narrow lateral line just above the prolegs.
In the second the drab markings become very
much more prominent, so that the body now
appears drab with four narrow orange stripes.
The narrow drab dorsal line of the younger
caterpillar becomes very conspicuous in the
mature larva, separating the dorsal surface into
two distinct orange areas. As the orange-drab
type seems to embrace all of the smaller larvae,
and as all those about to pupate belong to
the drab-orange type, I have assumed that the
color change is a matter of maturity.”</p>
<h3 class="center">MOULTING</h3>
<p>“1:30 a. m.—Larva about 21 mm., inactive and
very dark, extended on lower side of leaf, front
of body high, head bent, holding with third,
fourth and anal prolegs. A few silk threads
lie flat on leaf near caudal end of body. After
some little rippling of muscle (no violent motion)
the skin of the body separates from that
of the head. The former is very tight; slowly,
segment by segment, it is skinned backward
until finally it is left, a crumpled, prickly black
ball about 4 mm. in diameter, fastened to the
leaf by the aforementioned silk. Meanwhile the
head covering, which is all of a piece and bears
two large spines, slips forward until it appears
to be held in the mandibles as a hat might be
held between the teeth. After a moment it falls
to the ground. The caterpillar now appears
somewhat short and a trifle thickened. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span>
head, legs and prolegs are yellow, the body
orange. The spines are only half size, blunt,
yellow and semi-transparent. The branches appear
as black hairs lying flat along the sides
of the spines.”</p>
<p>“11:33 a. m.—The spines have now attained
practically their normal size, springing out
with astonishing rapidity. They are still blunt,
yellow and semi-transparent, but the black
branches have reached normal size and assumed
their proper position. The two head spines,
which were curled backward, have taken on
the usual angle. The head, body and prolegs
now appear orange rather than yellow, the
head being lightest. The drab dorsal stripe
has appeared, but is very narrow. The row of
depressions, one in the dorsal center of each
segment, is much more conspicuous than usual.”</p>
<p>“11:50 a. m.—Appears quite normal again,
except that the spines are not quite as black,
showing grayish toward the tips. The black
frontal markings appear. Caterpillar rests motionless.”</p>
<p>“12:10 p. m.—Turns about and begins to devour
the cast-off skin. With the lens I watched
it begin at the tip of one of the big spines and
consume it clear to the root, apparently in
about three mouthfuls. The head covering is
never eaten.”</p>
<p>“12:30 p. m.—Skin practically consumed.
Larva rests motionless, a few of the surplus
spines resting beneath the head and thorax.”</p>
<h3 class="center">PUPATION</h3>
<p>“10:00 a. m.—Caterpillar, 37 mm. long, leaves<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>
food plant and begins to wander restlessly
about.</p>
<p>“1:00 p. m.—Extended motionless, clinging to
under side of window frame.</p>
<p>“2:30 p. m.—Same position.</p>
<p>“3:30 p. m.—Begins to lay a sparse, ragged
network of very fine threads flat to the surface,
covering a space of perhaps an inch
square. These threads become thinner toward
the periphery of the net, where they are hardly
visible without a lens.</p>
<p>“4:00 p. m.—Spins a little white silk button
in the center of the network. The head moves
slowly out horizontally in all directions from
the button about one-half inch, swinging always
back to the center. The body is fully extended,
the abdomen being away from the button.</p>
<p>“4:30 p. m.—Interrupted the button-making
to raise high the caudal third of the body,
spreading the anal appendages apart several
times. When a pellet of excrement appeared,
the caterpillar turned about and pulled it out
of the anal opening with the mandibles, holding
it thus a moment before allowing it to fall
to the floor.</p>
<p>“4:45 p. m.—Resting, body extended, clasping
the button with the third prolegs.</p>
<p>“6:00 p. m.—Fastened to the button. The
body is extended horizontally, clinging to the
under surface of the window frame with the
prolegs; head drawn back, legs not touching
the surface.</p>
<p>“8:00 p. m.—Hanging from the button. The
body is thickened a trifle and shortened to 31<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>
mm. Color much lighter; hangs motionless except
for very slight movements of the legs and
prolegs.”</p>
<p>“9:00 a. m.—No change.</p>
<p>“10:00 a. m.—The brilliant colors have practically
disappeared, leaving the body a pearl-gray
color, against which the black spines show
up with startling distinctness. Movements
slight and infrequent. The dorsal thorax is now
the lightest part of the body.</p>
<p>“11:00 a. m.—Begins to wriggle a little.</p>
<p>“11:10 a. m.—I note that the spines appear
closer together at the caudal end of the body;
then see that the skin has split down the back
and that the light-colored head of the chrysalis
is protruding. By a series of vigorous wrigglings
the skin is slowly forced up to where
the tip of the abdomen is attached to the button.
Then comes the violent struggle which
finally loosens the skin, which hangs for a
moment against the ventral abdomen, then
falls to the floor. The entire moult is complete
in less than five minutes.”</p>
<h3 class="center">THE CHRYSALIS</h3>
<p>“When the chrysalis first appears it is nearly
cylindrical; no dorsal depression, no ventral
bulge. The head is bent forward, and the
whole thing has a compact, slug-like appearance.
An hour or so later the head is no longer
bent, and bears two double projections, set
wide apart; the wing cases are bulging and
prominent; on the dorsal side, opposite the
middle of the wing covers, is a U-shaped depression;
there are projections on the third,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>
fifth, sixth, and seventh abdominal segments,
those on the third being the largest. At first
the head, thorax and wing covers are translucent
and nearly white; the abdomen is a little
darker and bears a ventral bluish stripe
on the fourth, fifth and sixth segments. The
four pairs of dorsal protuberances are amber-colored.</p>
<p>“An hour later the head and thorax darken
somewhat, and opaque whitish veins appear
in the wing covers. Distinct black lines mark
the outer borders of the fore wings, and a black
V-shaped mark shows the position of the larger
of the three discal spots.</p>
<p>“Another hour and the translucent appearance
is gone, the abdomen and the dorsal thorax
become much darker, the wing covers grayish
tan, while the bluish ventral stripe turns
gray or white.</p>
<p>“From this time forward the chrysalis does
not change appreciably in form or color (although
the latter varies greatly) until about
twenty-four hours before the emergence of the
butterfly, when the entire body becomes very
dark.</p>
<p>“The average length of the chrysalis is 28
mm., and the white ventral stripe is usually
the most conspicuous marking. After the butterfly
has emerged the color variations of the
chrysalis still persist in the empty shells, some
being much darker than others.</p>
<p>“Not infrequently the cast skin of the larva
is found attached to the anal portion of the
chrysalis. This skin is black excepting the
head, which is gray, and the black branching<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>
spines loom large because of the contraction
of the empty skin.</p>
<p>“Sometimes the chrysalids turn bright yellow;
these are usually infested by parasites. I
have opened many of these pupae, but have
never found the parasitic larva itself; the
pupae and adults I have often taken, the latter
being a small (2.3 mm.), green hymenopterous
insect which I have not as yet had the opportunity
to classify. Some ten or a dozen of these
insects emerge from a small round hole, usually
in the wing cover, in early August.”</p>
<h3 class="center">PUPAL MOVEMENTS</h3>
<p>“The chrysalis seems unable to bend the body
toward the back or toward the wing covers;
sidewise, however, it can turn until the body
is extended nearly parallel to the horizontal
surface from which it is suspended. Six chrysalids
which hung in a north window in September,
1919, and which I observed for fourteen
days, were noted to be invariably and unanimously
pointed inward (toward the warm room,
that is) every morning. During the warmer
part of the day there was no uniformity in
position. Six specimens—fourteen days; it appears
to be more, perhaps, than mere coincidence.
The pupal sensibility to light and
temperature stimulii should be worth investigation.”</p>
<h3 class="center">THE APPEARANCE OF THE BUTTERFLY</h3>
<p>“Two or three weeks after pupation (the
period varies with the temperature, from eight<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>
days in August to twenty-seven in November)
the chrysalis turns nearly black, and a diagonal
fissure appears on either side, extending
from the back of the head down along the
antenna cases, nearly to the middle ventrum.</p>
<p>“About twelve hours later, after some little
wriggling, the ventral triangle formed by the
covering of the head, antennae and mouth parts
falls open trap-door fashion, the antennae covers
serving as hinges and the flexing point being
about one-third of the distance up the wing
covers from the abdomen. There is also a dorsal
cleavage following the medial dorsum to
the first abdominal segment, then the outline
of the wing covers to a point half way to the
end of the antenna covers. The crumpled-winged
imago wriggles out and mounts the
empty shell, to which it clings by the four
hinder limbs, turning the entire body back
and forth as if mounted on a pivot. In each
of these turns the body describes an arc of
nearly 90 degrees, the body being held stiff.
The angle of the body is about 45 degrees from
the vertical, the head being uppermost. The
proboscis is usually partially unrolled. In five
or six hours the soft, wrinkled wings spread
and harden, and the insect is able to fly. A
thin, transparent liquid, and sometimes a thick,
reddish substance, are voided by the newly
emerged butterfly.”</p>
<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />