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Fig. 84.—Œsophagus (oe), pharynx (ph) with epipharynx and labrum (lbr) of Asilus atricapillus: m, ph, pharyngeal muscle; sr, salivary receptacle; t, twisting; r, l′r, retractor muscles; other lettering as in Fig. 83.—After Meinert.

It has been carefully studied by Meinert in a species of Culex (Fig. 81), Simulium (Fig. 82), Tabanus (Fig. 83), and in Asilus (Fig. 84), where it is seen to attain enormous proportions. In the Hymenoptera, this organ in its most specialized condition is a trough-like rod, adapted for lapping nectar (Fig. 85, 86, hyp). The tongue or hypopharynx of the honey-bee has been elaborately described by Cheshire in his Bees and Bee Keeping.[18] He calls it the tongue or ligula. It is situated in a tube formed by the maxillæ and labial palpi, and can be partially retracted into the mentum. He states that it can move up and down in the tube thus formed, and then describes it as covered by a hairy sheath, its great elasticity being due to a rod running through its centre enabling it to be used as a lapping tongue. The sheath


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