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The ovipositor.
Morphologically, the ovipositor is composed of three pairs of unjointed styles (rhabdites of Lacaze-Duthiers, gonapophyses of Huxley), which are closely appressed to or sheathed within each other, the eggs passing out from the end of the oviduct, which lies, as Dewitz states, between the two styles of the lowest or innermost pair, and under the cross-bars or at the base of the stylets mentioned; the styles or blades spreading apart to allow of the passage of the egg.
Fig. 185.—Saw of Hylotoma: a, lateral scale; i, saw; f, gorget; 7t, 7th tergite; 6s, 6th sternite; ov, oviduct; in, intestine.—After Lacaze-Duthiers.
The ovipositor is best developed in the Thysanura (Fig. 179, Campodea excepted), in Orthoptera (Fig. 184), in the Odonata, Hemiptera, certain Physapoda, Rhaphiidæ, and in the phytophagous Hymenoptera, where it is curiously modified to form a rather complicated saw for cutting slits in wood or leaves (Fig. 185). It is wanting or quite imperfect in Coleoptera, Diptera, and Lepidoptera.