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Due credit, however, should be given to Herold, as the pioneer in these studies, who first described in his excellent work on the development of Pieris brassicæ (1815) the wing-germs in the caterpillar after the third moult. This discovery has been overlooked by recent writers, with the exception of Gonin, whose statement of Herold’s views we have verified. Herold states that the germs of the wings appear on the inside of the second and third thoracic segments, and are recognized by their attachment to the “protoplasmic network” (schleimnetz), which we take to be the hypodermis, the net-like appearance of this structure being due to the cell-walls of the elements of the hypodermal membrane. These germs are, says Herold, also distinguished from the flakes of the fat-body by their regular symmetrical form. Fine tracheæ are attached to the wing-germs, in the same way as to the flakes of the fat-body. It thus appears that Herold in a vague way attributes the origin of these wing-germs, and also the germs of the leg, to the hypodermis, since his schleimnetz is the membrane which builds up the new skin. Herold also studied the later development of the wings, and discovered the mode of origin of the veins, and in a vague way traced the origin of the scales and hairs of the body, as well as that of the colors of the butterfly.