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<h2> CHAPTER 9. THE THEORY OF PARASITISM. </h2>
<p>The Melecta does what she can with the gifts at her disposal. I should
leave it at that, if I had not to take into consideration a grave charge
brought against her. She is accused of having lost, for want of use and
through laziness, the workman's tools with which, so we are told, she was
originally endowed. Finding it to her advantage to do nothing, bringing up
her family free of expense, to the detriment of others, she is alleged to
have gradually inspired her race with an abhorrence for work. The
harvesting-tools, less and less often employed, dwindled and perished as
organs having no function; the species changed into a different one; and
finally idleness turned the honest worker of the outset into a parasite.
This brings us to a very simple and seductive theory of parasitism, worthy
to be discussed with all respect. Let us set it forth.</p>
<p>Some mother, nearing the end of her labours and in a hurry to lay her
eggs, found, let us suppose, some convenient cells provisioned by her
fellows. There was no time for nest-building and foraging; if she would
save her family, she must perforce appropriate the fruit of another's
toil. Thus relieved of the tedium and fatigue of work, freed of every care
but that of laying eggs, she left a progeny which duly inherited the
maternal slothfulness and handed this down in its turn, in a more and more
accentuated form, as generation followed on generation; for the struggle
for life made this expeditious way of establishing yourself one of the
most favourable conditions for the success of the offspring. At the same
time, the organs of work, left unemployed, became atrophied and
disappeared, while certain details of shape and colouring were modified
more or less, so as to adapt themselves to the new circumstances. Thus the
parasitic race was definitely established.</p>
<p>This race, however, was not too greatly transformed for us to be able, in
certain cases, to trace its origin. The parasite has retained more than
one feature of those industrious ancestors. So, for instance, the
Psithyrus is extremely like the Bumble-bee, whose parasite and descendant
she is. The Stelis preserves the ancestral characteristics of the
Anthidium; the Coelioxys-bee recalls the Leaf-cutter.</p>
<p>Thus speak the evolutionists, with a wealth of evidence derived not only
from correspondence in general appearance, but also from similarity in the
most minute particulars. Nothing is small: I am as much convinced of that
as any man; and I admire the extraordinary precision of the details
furnished as a basis for the theory. But am I convinced? Rightly or
wrongly, my turn of mind does not hold minutiae of structure in great
favour: a joint of the palpi leaves me rather cold; a tuft of bristles
does not appear to me an unanswerable argument. I prefer to question the
creature direct and to let it describe its passions, its mode of life, its
aptitudes. Having heard its evidence, we shall see what becomes of the
theory of parasitism.</p>
<p>Before calling upon it to speak, why should I not say what I have on my
mind? And mark me, first of all, I do not like that laziness which is said
to favour the animal's prosperity. I have also believed and I still
persist in believing that activity alone strengthens the present and
ensures the future both of animals and men. To act is to live; to work is
to go forward. The energy of a race is measured by the aggregate of its
action.</p>
<p>No, I do not like it at all, this idleness so much commended of science.
We have quite enough of these zoological brutalities: man, the son of the
Ape; duty, a foolish prejudice; conscience, a lure for the simple; genius,
neurosis; patriotism, jingo heroics; the soul, a product of protoplasmic
energies; God, a puerile myth. Let us raise the war-whoop and go out for
scalps; we are here only to devour one another; the summum bonum is the
Chicago packer's dollar-chest! Enough, quite enough of that, without
having transformism next to break down the sacred law of work. I will not
hold it responsible for our moral ruin; it has not a sturdy enough
shoulder to effect such a breach; but still it has done its worst.</p>
<p>No, once more, I do not like those brutalities which, denying all that
gives some dignity to our wretched life, stifle our horizon under an
extinguisher of matter. Oh, don't come and forbid me to think, though it
were but a dream, of a responsible human personality, of conscience, of
duty, of the dignity of labour! Everything is linked together: if the
animal is better off, as regards both itself and its race, for doing
nothing and exploiting others, why should man, its descendant, show
greater scruples? The principle that idleness is the mother of prosperity
would carry us far indeed. I have said enough on my own account; I will
call upon the animals themselves, more eloquent than I.</p>
<p>Are we so very sure that parasitic habits come from a love of inaction?
Did the parasite become what he is because he found it excellent to do
nothing? Is repose so great an advantage to him that he abjured his
ancient customs in order to obtain it? Well, since I have been studying
the Bee who endows her family with the property of others, I have not yet
seen anything in her that points to slothfulness. On the contrary, the
parasite leads a laborious life, harder than that of the worker. Watch her
on a slope blistered by the sun. How busy she is, how anxious! How briskly
she covers every inch of the radiant expanse, how indefatigable she is in
her endless quests; in her visits, which are generally fruitless! Before
coming upon a nest that suits her, she has dived a hundred times into
cavities of no value, into galleries not yet victualled. And then, however
kindly her host, the parasite is not always well received in the hostelry.
No, it is not all roses in her trade. The expenditure of time and labour
which she finds necessary in order to house an egg may easily equal or
even exceed that of the worker in building her cell and filling it with
honey. That industrious one has regular and continuous work, an excellent
condition for success in her egg-laying; the other has a thankless and
precarious task, at the mercy of a thousand accidents which endanger the
great undertaking of installing the eggs. One has only to watch the
prolonged hesitation of a Coelioxys seeking for the Leaf-cutters' cells to
recognize that the usurpation of another's nest is not effected without
serious difficulties. If she turned parasite in order to make the rearing
of her offspring easier and more prosperous, certainly she was very
ill-inspired. Instead of rest, hard work; instead of a flourishing family,
a meagre progeny.</p>
<p>To generalities, which are necessarily vague, we will add some precise
facts. A certain Stelis (Stelis nasuta, LATR.) is a parasite of the
Mason-bee of the Walls. When the Chalicodoma has finished building her
dome of cells upon her pebble, the parasite appears, makes a long
inspection of the outside of the home and proposes, puny as she is, to
introduce her eggs into this cement fortress. Everything is most carefully
closed: a layer of rough plaster, at least two-fifths of an inch thick,
entirely covers the central accumulation of cells, which are each of them
sealed with a thick mortar plug. And it is the honey of these well-guarded
chambers that has to be reached by piercing a wall almost as hard as rock.</p>
<p>The parasite pluckily sets to; the idler becomes a glutton for work. Atom
by atom, she perforates the general enclosure and scoops out a shaft just
sufficient for her passage; she reaches the lid of the cell and gnaws it
until the coveted provisions appear in sight. It is a slow and painful
process, in which the feeble Stelis wears herself out, for the mortar is
much the same as Roman cement in hardness. I myself find a difficulty in
breaking it with the point of my knife. What patient effort, then, the
task requires from the parasite, with her tiny pincers!</p>
<p>I do not know exactly how long the Stelis takes to make her
entrance-shaft, as I have never had the opportunity or rather the patience
to follow the work from start to finish; but what I do know is that a
Chalicodoma of the Walls, incomparably larger and stronger than the
parasite, when demolishing before my eyes the lid of a cell sealed only
the day before, was unable to complete her undertaking in one afternoon. I
had to come to her assistance in order to discover, before the end of the
day, the object of her housebreaking. When the Mason-bee's mortar has once
set, its resistance is that of stone. Now the Stelis has not only to
pierce the lid of the honey-store; she must also pierce the general casing
of the nest. What a time it must take her to get through such a task, a
gigantic one for her poor tools!</p>
<p>It is done at last, after infinite labour. The honey appears. The Stelis
slips through and, on the surface of the provisions, side by side with the
Chalicodoma's eggs, the number varying from time to time. The victuals
will be the common property of all the new arrivals, whether the son of
the house or strangers.</p>
<p>The violated dwelling cannot remain as it is, exposed to marauders from
without; the parasite must herself wall up the breach which she has
contrived. The quondam housebreaker becomes a builder. At the foot of the
pebble, the Stelis collects a little of that red earth which characterizes
our stony plateaus grown with lavender and thyme; she makes it into mortar
by wetting it with saliva; and with the pellets thus prepared she fills up
the entrance-shaft, displaying all the care and art of a regular
master-mason. Only, the work clashes in colour with the Chalicodoma's. The
Bee goes and gathers her cementing-powder on the adjoining high-road, the
metal of which consists of broken flint-stones, and very seldom uses the
red earth under the pebble supporting the nest. This choice is apparently
dictated by the fact that the chemical properties of the former are more
likely to produce a solid structure. The lime of the road, mixed with
saliva, yields a harder cement than red clay would do. At any rate, the
Chalicodoma's nest is more or less white because of the source of its
materials. When a red speck, a few millimetres wide, appears on this pale
background, it is a sure sign that a Stelis has been that way. Open the
cell that lies under the red stain: we shall find the parasite's numerous
family established there. The rusty spot is an infallible indication that
the dwelling has been violated: at least, it is so in my neighbourhood,
where the soil is as I have described.</p>
<p>We see the Stelis, therefore, at first a rabid miner, using her mandibles
against the rock; next a kneader of clay and a plasterer restoring broken
ceilings. Her trade does not seem one of the least arduous. Now what did
she do before she took to parasitism? Judging from her appearance, the
transformists tell us that she was an Anthidium, that is to say, she used
to gather the soft cotton-wool from the dry stalks of the lanate plants
and fashion it into wallets, in which to heap up the pollen-dust which she
gleaned from the flowers by means of a brush carried on her abdomen. Or
else, springing from a genus akin to the cotton-workers, she used to build
resin partitions in the spiral stairway of a dead Snail. Such was the
trade driven by her ancestors.</p>
<p>Really! So, to avoid slow and painful work, to achieve an easy life, to
give herself the leisure favourable to the settlement of her family, the
erstwhile cotton-presser or collector of resin-drops took to gnawing
hardened cement! She who once sipped the nectar of flowers made up her
mind to chew concrete! Why, the poor wretch toils at her filing like a
galley-slave! She spends more time in ripping up a cell than it would take
her to make a cotton wallet and fill it with food. If she really meant to
progress, to do better in her own interest and that of her family, by
abandoning the delicate occupations of the old days, we must confess that
she has made a strange mistake. The mistake would be no greater if fingers
accustomed to fancy-weaving were to lay aside velvet and silk and proceed
to handle the quarryman's blocks or to break stones on the roadside.</p>
<p>No, the animal does not commit the folly of voluntarily embittering its
lot; it does not, in obedience to the promptings of idleness, give up one
condition to embrace another and a more irksome; should it blunder for
once, it will not inspire its posterity with a wish to persevere in a
costly delusion. No, the Stelis never abandoned the delicate art of
cotton-weaving to break down walls and to grind cement, a class of work
far too unattractive to efface the memory of the joys of harvesting amid
the flowers. Indolence has not evolved her from an Anthidium. She has
always been what she is to-day: a patient artificer in her own line, a
steady worker at the task that has fallen to her share.</p>
<p>That hurried mother who first, in remote ages, broke into the abode of her
fellows to secure a home for her eggs found this unscrupulous method, so
you tell us, very favourable to the success of her race, by virtue of its
economy of time and trouble. The impression left by this new policy was so
profound that heredity bequeathed it to posterity, in ever-increasing
proportions, until at last parasitic habits became definitely fixed. The
Chalicodoma of the Sheds, followed by the Three-horned Osmia, will teach
us what to think of this conjecture.</p>
<p>I have described in an earlier chapter my installation of
Chalicodoma-hives against the walls of a porch facing the south. Here, on
a level with my head, placed so that they can easily be observed, hang
some tiles removed from the neighbouring roofs in winter, together with
their enormous nests and their occupants. Every May, for five or six years
in succession, I have assiduously watched the works of my Mason-bees. From
the mass of my notes on the subject I take the following experiments which
bear upon the matter under discussion.</p>
<p>Long ago, when I used to scatter a handful of Chalicodomae some way from
home, in order to study their capacity for finding their nest again, I
noticed that, if they were too long absent, the laggards found their cells
closed on their return. Neighbours had taken the opportunity to lay their
eggs there, after finishing the building and stocking it with provisions.
The abandoned property benefited another. On realizing the usurpation, the
Bee returning from her long journey soon consoled herself for the mishap.
She began to break the seals of some cell or other, adjoining her own; the
rest let her have her way, being doubtless too busy with their present
labours to seek a quarrel with the freebooter. As soon as she had
destroyed the lid, the Bee, with a sort of feverish haste that burned to
repay theft by theft, did a little building, did a little victualling, as
though to resume the thread of her occupations, destroyed the egg in
being, laid her own and closed the cell again. Here was a touch of nature
that deserved careful examination.</p>
<p>At eleven o'clock in the morning, when the work is at its height, I mark
half-a-score of Chalicodomae with different colours, to distinguish them
from one another. Some are occupied with building, others are disgorging
honey. I mark the corresponding cells in the same way. As soon as the
marks are quite dry, I catch the ten Bees, place them singly in screws of
paper and shut them all in a box until the next morning. After twenty-four
hours' captivity, the prisoners are released. During their absence, their
cells have disappeared under a layer of recent structures; or, if still
exposed to view, they are closed and others have made use of them.</p>
<p>As soon as they are free, the ten Bees, with one exception, return to
their respective tiles. They do more than this, so accurate is their
memory, despite the confusion resulting from a prolonged incarceration:
they return to the cell which they have built, the beloved stolen cell;
they minutely explore the outside of it, or at least what lies nearest to
it, if the cell has disappeared under the new structures. In cases where
the home is not henceforward inaccessible, it is at least occupied by a
strange egg and the door is securely fastened. To this reverse of fortune
the ousted ones retort with the brutal lex talionis: an egg for an egg, a
cell for a cell. You've stolen my house; I'll steal yours. And, without
much hesitation, they proceed to force the lid of a cell that suits them.
Sometimes they recover possession of their own home, if it is possible to
get into it; sometimes and more frequently they seize upon some one
else's, even at a considerable distance from their original dwelling.</p>
<p>Patiently they gnaw the mortar lid. As the general rough-cast covering all
the cells is not applied until the end of the work, all that they need do
is to demolish the lid, a hard and wearisome task, but not beyond the
strength of their mandibles. They therefore attack the door, the cement
disk, and reduce it to dust. The criminal is allowed to carry out her
nefarious designs without the slightest interference or protest from any
of her neighbours, though these must necessarily include the chief party
interested. The Bee is as forgetful of her cell of yesterday as she is
jealous of her actual cell. To her the present is everything; the past
means nothing; and the future means no more. And so the population of the
tile leave the breakers of doors to do their business in peace; none
hastens to the defence of a home that might well be her own. How
differently things would happen if the cell were still on the stocks! But
it dates back to yesterday, to the day before; and no one gives it another
thought.</p>
<p>It's done: the lid is demolished; access is free. For some time, the Bee
stands bending over the cell, her head half-buried in it, as though in
contemplation. She goes away, she returns undecidedly; at last she makes
up her mind. The egg is snapped up from the surface of the honey and flung
on the rubbish-heap with no more ceremony than if the Bee were ridding the
house of a bit of dirt. I have witnessed this hideous crime again and yet
again; I confess to having repeatedly provoked it. In housing her egg, the
Mason-bee displays a brutal indifference to the fate of her neighbour's
egg.</p>
<p>I see some of them afterwards busy provisioning, disgorging honey and
brushing pollen into the cell already completely provisioned; I see some
masoning a little at the orifice, or at least laying on a few trowels of
mortar. It seems as if the Bee, although the victuals and the building are
just as they should be, were resuming the work at the point at which she
left it twenty-four hours before. Lastly, the egg is laid and the opening
closed up. Of my captives, one, less patient than the rest, rejects the
slow process of eating away the cover and decides in favour of robbery
with violence, on the principle that might is right. She dislodges the
owner of a half-stocked cell, keeps good watch for a long time on the
threshold of the home and, when she feels herself the mistress of the
house, goes on with the provisioning. I follow the ousted proprietress
with my eyes. I see her seize upon a closed cell by breaking into it,
behaving in all respects like my imprisoned Chalicodomae.</p>
<p>The whole occurrence was too significant to be left without further
confirmation. I repeated the experiment, therefore, almost every year,
always with the same success. I can only add that, among the Bees placed
by my artifices under the necessity of making up for lost time, a few are
of a more easy-going temperament. I see some building anew, as if nothing
out of the way had happened; others—this is a very rare course—going
to settle on another tile, as though to avoid a society of thieves; and
lastly a few who bring pellets of mortar and zealously finish the lid of
their own cell, although it contains a strange egg. However, housebreaking
is the usual thing.</p>
<p>One more detail not without value: it is not necessary for you to
intervene and imprison Mason-bees for a time in order to witness the acts
of violence which I have described. If you follow the work of the swarm
assiduously, you may occasionally find a surprise awaiting you. A
Mason-bee will appear and, for no reason known to you, break open a door
and lay her egg in the violated cell. From what goes before, I look upon
the Bee as a laggard, kept away from the workyard by an accident, or else
carried to a distance by a gust of wind. On returning after an absence of
some duration, she finds her place taken, her cell used by another. The
victim of an usurper's villainy, like the prisoners in my paper screws,
she behaves as they do and indemnifies herself for her loss by breaking
into another's home.</p>
<p>Lastly, it was a matter of learning the behaviour, after their act of
violence, of the Masons who have smashed in a door, brutally expelled the
egg within and replaced it by one of their own laying. When the lid is
repaired to look as good as new and everything restored to order, will
they continue their burglarious ways and exterminate the eggs of others to
make room for their own? By no means. Revenge, that pleasure of the gods
and perhaps also of Bees, is satisfied after one cell has been ripped
open. All anger is appeased when the egg for which so much work has been
done is safely housed. Henceforth, both prisoners and stray laggards
resume their ordinary labours, indifferently with the rest. They build
honestly, they provision honestly, nor meditate further evil. The past is
quite forgotten until a fresh disaster occurs.</p>
<p>To return to the parasites: a mother chanced to find herself the mistress
of another's nest. She took advantage of this to entrust her egg to it.
This expeditious method, so easy for the mother and so favourable to the
success of her offspring, made such an impression on her that she
transmitted the maternal indolence to her posterity. Thus the worker
gradually became transformed into a parasite.</p>
<p>Capital! The thing goes like clockwork, as long as we have only to put our
ideas on paper. But let us just consult the facts, if you don't mind;
before arguing about probabilities, let us look into things as they are.
Here is the Mason-bee of the Sheds teaching us something very curious. To
smash the lid of a cell that does not belong to her, to throw the egg out
of doors and put her own in its place is a practice which she has followed
since time began. There is no need of my interference to make her commit
burglary: she commits it of her own accord, when her rights are prejudiced
as the result of a too-long absence. Ever since her race has been kneading
cement, she has known the law of retaliation. Countless ages, such as the
evolutionists require, have made her adopt forcible usurpation as an
inveterate habit. Moreover, robbery is so incomparably easy for the
mother. No more cement to scratch up with her mandibles on the hard
ground, no more mortar to knead, no more clay walls to build, no more
pollen to gather on hundreds and hundreds of journeys. All is ready, board
and lodging. Never was a better opportunity for allowing one's self a good
time. There is nothing against it. The others, the workers, are
imperturbable in their good-humour. Their outraged cells leave them
profoundly indifferent. There are no brawls to fear, no protests. Now or
never is the moment to tread the primrose path.</p>
<p>Besides, your progeny will be all the better for it. You can choose the
warmest and wholesomest spots; you can multiply your laying-operations by
devoting to them all the time that you would have to spend on irksome
occupations. If the impression produced by the violent seizure of
another's property is strong enough to be handed down by heredity, how
deep should be the impression of the actual moment when the Mason-bee is
in the first flush of success! The precious advantage is fresh in the
memory, dating from that very instant; the mother has but to continue in
order to create a method of installation favourable in the highest degree
to her and hers. Come, poor Bee! Throw aside your exhausting labours,
follow the evolutionists' advice and, as you have the means at your
disposal, become a parasite!</p>
<p>But no, having effected her little revenge, the builder returns to her
masonry, the gleaner to her gleaning, with unquenchable zeal. She forgets
the crime committed in a moment of anger and takes good care not to hand
down any tendency towards idleness to her offspring. She knows too well
that activity is life, that work is the world's great joy. What myriads of
cells has she not broken open since she has been building; what
magnificent opportunities, all so clear and conclusive, has she not had to
emancipate herself from drudgery! Nothing could convince her: born to
work, she persists in an industrious life. She might at least have
produced an offshoot, a race of housebreakers, who would invade cells by
demolishing doors. The Stelis does something of the kind; but who would
think of proclaiming a relationship between the Chalicodoma and her? The
two have nothing in common. I call for a scion of the Mason-bee of the
Sheds who shall live by the art of breaking through ceilings. Until they
show me one, the theorists will only make me smile when they talk to me of
erstwhile workers relinquishing their trade to become parasitic sluggards.</p>
<p>I also call, with no less insistence, for a descendant of the Three-horned
Osmia, a descendant given to demolishing party-walls. I will describe
later how I managed to make a whole swarm of these Osmiae build their
nests on the table in my study, in glass tubes that enabled me to see the
inmost secrets of the work of the Bee. (Cf. "Bramble-bees and Others", by
J. Henri Fabre, translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos: chapters 1 to
7.—Translator's Note.) For three or four weeks, each Osmia is
scrupulously faithful to her tube, which is laboriously filled with a set
of chambers divided by earthen partitions. Marks of different colours
painted on the thorax of the workers enable me to recognize individuals in
the crowd. Each crystal gallery is the exclusive property of one Osmia; no
other enters it, builds in it or hoards in it. If, through heedlessness,
through momentary forgetfulness of her own house in the tumult of the
city, some neighbour so much as comes and looks in at the door, the owner
soon puts her to flight. No such indiscretion is tolerated. Every Bee has
her home and every home its Bee.</p>
<p>All goes well until just before the end of the work. The tubes are then
closed at the orifice with a thick plug of earth; nearly the whole swarm
has disappeared; there remain on the spot a score of tatterdemalions in
threadbare fleeces, worn out by a month's hard toil. These laggards have
not finished their laying. There is no lack of unoccupied tubes, for I
take care to remove some of those which are full and to replace them by
others that have not yet been used. Very few of the Bees decide to take
possession of these new homes, which differ in no particular from the
earlier ones; and even then they build only a small number of cells, which
are often mere attempts at partitions.</p>
<p>They want something different: a nest belonging to some one else. They
bore through the stopper of the inhabited tubes, a work of no great
difficulty, for we have here not the hard cement of the Chalicodoma, but a
simple lid of dried mud. When the entrance is cleared, a cell appears,
with its store of provisions and its egg, with her brutal mandibles; she
rips it open and goes and flings it away. She does worse: she eats it on
the spot. I had to witness this horror many times over before I could
accept it as a fact. Note that the egg devoured may very well contain the
criminal's own offspring. Imperiously swayed by the needs of her present
family, the Osmia puts her past family entirely out of her mind.</p>
<p>Having perpetrated this child-murder, the depraved creature does a little
provisioning. They all experience the same necessity to go backwards in
the sequence of actions in order to pick up the thread of their
interrupted occupations. Her next work is to lay her egg and then she
conscientiously restores the demolished lid.</p>
<p>The havoc can be more sweeping still. One of these laggards is not
satisfied with a single cell; she needs two, three, four. To reach the
most remote, the Osmia wrecks all those which come before it. The
partitions are broken down, the eggs eaten or thrown away, the provisions
swept outside and often even carried to a distance in great lumps. Covered
with dust from the loose plaster of the demolition, floured all over with
the rifled pollen, sticky with the contents of the mangled eggs, the
Osmia, while at her brigand's work, is altered beyond recognition. Once
the place is cleared, everything resumes its normal course. Provisions are
laboriously brought to take the place of those which have been thrown
away; eggs are laid, one on each heap of food; the partitions are built up
again; and the massive plug sealing the whole structure is made as good as
new.</p>
<p>Crimes of this kind recur so often that I am obliged to interfere and
place in safety the nests which I wish to keep intact. And nothing as yet
explains this brigandage, bursting forth at the end of the work like a
moral epidemic, like a frenzied delirium. I should say nothing if the site
were lacking; but the tubes are there, close by, empty and quite fit to
receive the eggs. The Osmia refuses them, she prefers to plunder. Is it
from weariness, from a distaste for work after a period of fierce
activity? Not at all; for, when a row of cells has been stripped of its
contents, after the ravage and waste, she has to come back to ordinary
work, with all its burdens. The labour is not reduced; it is increased. It
would pay the Bee infinitely better, if she wants to continue her laying,
to make her home in an unoccupied tube. The Osmia thinks differently. Her
reasons for acting as she does escape me. Can there be ill-conditioned
characters among her, characters that delight in a neighbour's ruin? There
are among men.</p>
<p>In the privacy of her native haunts, the Osmia, I have no doubt, behaves
as in my crystal galleries. Towards the end of the building-operations,
she violates others' dwellings. By keeping to the first cell, which it is
not necessary to empty in order to reach the next, she can utilize the
provisions on the spot and shorten to that extent the longest part of her
work. As usurpations of this kind have had ample time to become
inveterate, to become inbred in the race, I ask for a descendant of the
Osmia who eats her grandmother's egg in order to establish her own egg.</p>
<p>This descendant I shall not be shown; but I may be told that she is in
process of formation. The outrages which I have described are preparing a
future parasite. The transformists dogmatize about the past and dogmatize
about the future, but as seldom as possible talk to us about the present.
Transformations have taken place, transformations will take place; the
pity of it is that they are not actually taking place. Of the three
tenses, one is lacking, the very one which directly interests us and which
alone is clear of the incubus of theory. This silence about the present
does not please me overmuch, scarcely more than the famous picture of "The
Crossing of the Red Sea" painted for a village chapel. The artist had put
upon the canvas a broad ribbon of brightest scarlet; and that was all.</p>
<p>'Yes, that's the Red Sea,' said the priest, examining the masterpiece
before paying for it. 'That's the Red Sea, right enough; but where are the
Israelites?'</p>
<p>'They have passed,' replied the painter.</p>
<p>'And the Egyptians?'</p>
<p>'They are on the way.'</p>
<p>Transformations have passed, transformations are on the way. For mercy's
sake, cannot they show us transformations in the act? Must the facts of
the past and the facts of the future necessarily exclude the facts of the
present? I fail to understand.</p>
<p>I call for a descendant of the Chalicodoma and a descendant of the Osmia
who have robbed their neighbours with gusto, when occasion offered, since
the origin of their respective races, and who are working industriously to
create a parasite happy in doing nothing. Have they succeeded? No. Will
they succeed? Yes, people maintain. For the moment, nothing. The Osmiae
and Chalicodomae of to-day are what they were when the first trowel of
cement or mud was mixed. Then how many ages does it take to form a
parasite? Too many, I fear, for us not to be discouraged.</p>
<p>If the sayings of the theorists are well-founded, going on strike and
living by shifts was not always enough to assure parasitism. In certain
cases, the animal must have had to change its diet, to pass from live prey
to vegetarian fare, which would entirely subvert its most essential
characteristics. What should we say to the Wolf giving up mutton and
browsing on grass, in obedience to the dictates of idleness? The boldest
would shrink from such an absurd assumption. And yet transformism leads us
straight to it.</p>
<p>Here is an example: in July, I split some bramble-stems in which Osmia
tridentata has built her nests. In the long series of cells, the lower
already hold the Osmia's cocoons, while the upper contain the larva which
has nearly finished consuming its provisions and the topmost show the
victuals untouched, with the Osmia's egg upon them. It is a cylindrical
egg, rounded at both extremities, of a transparent white and measuring
four to five millimetres in length. (.156 to.195 inch.—Translator's
Note.) It lies slantwise, one end of it resting on the food and the other
sticking up at some distance above the honey. Now, by multiplying my
visits to the fresh cells, I have on several occasions made a very
valuable discovery. On the free end of the Osmia's egg, another egg is
fixed; an egg quite different in shape, white and transparent like the
first, but much smaller and narrower, blunt at one end and tapering into a
rather sharp point at the other. It is two millimetres long by half a
millimetre wide. (.078 and.019 inch.—Translator's Note.) It is
undeniably the egg of a parasite, a parasite which compels my attention by
its curious method of installing its family.</p>
<p>It opens before the Osmia's egg. The tiny grub, as soon as it is born,
begins to drain the rival egg, of which it occupied the top part, high up
above the honey. The extermination soon becomes perceptible. You can see
the Osmia's egg turning muddy, losing its brilliancy, becoming limp and
wrinkled. In twenty-four hours, it is nothing but an empty sheath, a
crumpled bit of skin. All competition is now removed; the parasite is the
master of the house. The young grub, when demolishing the egg, was active
enough: it explored the dangerous thing which had to be got rid of
quickly, it raised its head to select and multiply the attacking-points.
Now, lying at full length on the surface of the honey, it no longer shifts
its position; but the undulations of the digestive canal betray its greedy
absorption of the Osmia's store of food. The provisions are finished in a
fortnight and the cocoon is woven. It is a fairly firm ovoid, of a very
dark-brown colour, two characteristics which at once distinguish it from
the Osmia's pale, cylindrical cocoon. The hatching takes place in April or
May. The puzzle is solved at last: the Osmia's parasite is a Wasp called
the Spotted Sapyga (Sapyga punctata, V.L.)</p>
<p>Now where are we to class this Wasp, a true parasite in the strict sense
of the word, that is to say, a consumer of others' provisions. Her general
appearance and her structure make it clear to any eye more or less
familiar with entomological shapes that she belongs to a species akin to
that of the Scoliae. Moreover, the masters of classification, so
scrupulous in their comparison of characteristics, agree in placing the
Sapygae immediately after the Scoliae and a little before the Mutillae.
The Scoliae feed their grubs on prey; so do the Mutillae. The Osmia's
parasite, therefore, if it really derives from a transformed ancestor, is
descended from a flesh-eater, though it is now an eater of honey. The Wolf
does more than become a Sheep: he turns himself into a sweet-tooth.</p>
<p>'You will never get an apple-tree out of an acorn,' Franklin tells us,
with that homely common-sense of his.</p>
<p>In this case, the passion for jam must have sprung from a love of venison.
Any theory might well be deficient in balance when it leads to such
vagaries as this.</p>
<p>I should have to write a volume if I would go on setting forth my doubts.
I have said enough for the moment. Man, the insatiable enquirer, hands
down from age to age his questions about the whys and wherefores of
origins. Answer follows answer, is proclaimed true to-day and recognized
as false tomorrow; and the goddess Isis continues veiled.</p>
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