F. G. Bing, « Curious behaviour of Caddis-Worm », Londres, Science-Gossip, vol. II, n° 15, mai 1895, p. 82.
Archives de l’auteur : Hubert
A l’abri des contacts trop rudes
Alfred Binet, Psychologie de la création littéraire : Œuvres choisies IV, Paris, l’Harmattan, (1895- 1904) 2006.
Rapid transportation
John Henry Comstock & Anna Botsford Comstock, A Manual for the study of Insects, Ithaca New York, The Comstock Publishing Company, 1895, pp. 187-188.
Aide-mémoire
Henri Girard, Aide-mémoire de Zoologie, Paris, J.-B. Baillière & fils, 1895, p. 147.
Duckweed (2)
Hy. B. Guppy, « Caddis-worms & Duckweed » Science-Gossip, Londres, vol. II, n° 13 mars 1895, p. 11.
Ducweed
F. G. Bing, « Curious behaviour of Caddis-Worm », Londres, Science-Gossip, vol. II, n° 15, mai 1895, p. 82.
Mr. H. B. Guppy’s note on « Caddis-Worms and Duckweed » (ante page 11) reminds me of a curious and amusing incident which took place in my aquarium last summer. I had three specimens of these larvae, and found great interest in watching their movements and habits. Two of them had cases composed entirely of sand grains and very small fragments of other material, whilst the third was distinguished by the addition of a small twig and a piece of straw, bothof which overlapped the extremity of his case by about a quarter of an inch. I noticed that i twas continually followed about by one of the other caddis larvae, which was often to be found hanging on to the end of the twig. In about three days it had succeeded in detaching the portion of the twig that projected from its neighbour’s habitation, and was wearing it about upon its own back. Not even then satisfied, it shortly afterwards commenced a similar attack upon the piece of straw, and on securing possession of a fragment, perche dit sideways just over its head. I ought to mention that there was plenty of sand and pieces of water-plants eaten off by snails in the aquarium, so that lack of building material cannot be urged as the reason for this caddis worm’s behaviour.
The castle
Aubyn Bernard Rochfort Trevor-Battye, Pictures in Prose of Nature, Wild Sport and Humble Life, Longmans, 1894, p. 224.
Kant was to be scraped like a caddis
Anonyme, The Contemporary Review, Londres, A. Strahan, 1894, p. 732.
Hôtes de nos étangs
Henri Coupin, « Le carnaval chez les animaux », L’illustration, Paris, n° 2658, samedi 3 février 1894, p. 86-87. Lire la suite
Tout entomologiste sait
Gustave Gilson, Recherches sur les Cellules sécrétantes, I, La soie & les appareils séricigènes, 1893, p.43
Ouvriers du bâtiment
Anonyme, « Ouvriers du bâtiment », Le Rappel, Paris, 26 septembre 1893. Lire la suite
Ready-made
Frank Bolles, Land of the Lingering Snow, Chronicles of a Stroller in New England from January to June, Boston/ New York, Houghton Mifflin, 1893, p. 68. Lire la suite
A muddy and miserable world
John A. Hamilton, « The Caddis Worm, A Talk to Young People », The Sydney Mail, Sydney, 19 novembre 1892, p. 1155. Lire la suite
The limits of the city of Boston
Cora H. Clarke, « Caddis-worms of Stony Brook », Psyche6, Cambridge, Cambridge Entomological Club, 1891, p. 153-158.
Elle y porte un grain de sable en guise de lest
Marquis de Nadaillac, Le Correspondant, Paris, Bureaux du Correspondant,vol. 165, 1891, p. 1084- 1085.