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Fig. 46.—Various forms of mandibles. A, right and left of Termopsis. A′, showing at the shaded portion the “molar” of Smith. B, Termes flavipes, soldier; md, its mandible. C, Panorpa.


Fig. 47.—Chiasognathus grantii, reduced. Male.—After Darwin.


Fig. 48.—Mandible of Campodea: l, prostheca or lacinia; g, galea; f, f, flexor muscles; e, extensor; r, r, retractor; rt, muscle retaining the mandible in its place.—After Meinert. A, extremity of the same.—After Nassonow.


Fig. 49.—Mandible of Passalus cornutus with the prostheca (l): A, that of a Nicaraguan species; a, inside, b, outside view, with the muscle.

He also refers to the prostheca of Kirby and Spence (Fig. 49), which he thinks appears to be a mandibular lacinia homologous with it in Staphylinidæ and other beetles (J. B. Smith also considers it as “homologous to the lacinia of the maxilla”), and on examining it in P. cornutus and a Nicaragua species (Fig. 49), we adopt his view, since we have found that it is freely movable and attached by a tendon and muscle to the galea. In the rove beetles (Goërius, Staphylinus, etc.) and in the subaquatic Heteroceridæ, instead of a molar process, is a membranous setose appendage not unlike the coxal appendages of Scolopendrella, movably articulated to the jaw, which he thinks answers to the molar branch of the jaws in Blatta and Machilis. “It has its homologue in the diminutive Trichopterygidæ in the firmly chitinized quadrant-shaped second mandibular joint, which is used in a peculiar manner in crushing the food”; also in the movable tooth of the Passalidæ, and in the membranous inner lobe of the mandibles of the goliath-beetles, etc.


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