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Fig. 23.—Primitive band or germ of a Sphinx moth, with the segments indicated, and their rudimentary appendages: c, upper lip; at, antennæ; md, mandibles; mx, mx′, first and second maxillæ; l, l′, l″, legs; al, abdominal legs.—After Kowalevsky.
Graber also calls attention to the fact that this insect limb differs in one important respect from that of land vertebrates. The leverage system in the last is divided at the end into five parallel divisions or digits. In arthropods, on the contrary, all the joints succeed one another in a linear series.
In insects, as well as in other arthropods, modifications of the limbs usually take the form of a simple reduction in the number of segments. Thus while the normal number of tarsal joints is five, we have trimerous and dimerous Coleoptera, and in certain Scarabæidæ the anterior tarsi are lost.
Savigny was the first, in 1816, in his great work, “Théorie des organes de la bouche des Crustacés et des Insectes,” to demonstrate that not only were the buccal appendages of biting insects homologous with those of bugs, moths, flies, etc., but that they were homologous with the thoracic legs, and that thus a unity of structure prevails throughout the appendages of the body of all arthropods. Oken also observed that “the maxillæ are only repeated feet.”