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The clypeus.
The labrum.
The labrum is more or less deeply bilobed, especially in caterpillars and in adult Staphylinidæ, and has been thought by some writers (Kowalevsky, Carrière, and also Chatin) to represent a pair of appendages, but Heymons (1895) refutes this view, stating as his reason that the labrum arises between the two halves of the nervous system (protocerebrum), while all the true appendages arise on each side of the nervous system. (See also Fig. 34.)
Fig. 25.—Front view of the head of C. spretus: E, epicranium; C, clypeus; L, labrum; O, o, ocelli; e, eye; a, antenna; md, mandible; mx, portion of maxilla uncovered by the labrum; p, maxillary palpus; p′, labial palpus.
In the fleas (Siphonaptera) both the clypeus and labrum are wanting.
While it apparently forms an anterior specialized portion of the procephalic lobes, Viallanes regarded it as belonging to the third, or his tritocerebral, segment, since the labral nerves arise from the tritocerebral ganglia. But since in all the early as well as late stages of embryonic life it appears to be situated in front of the mouth, it would seem to belong to the first segment.