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<h2> CHAPTER XI. THE BUMBLEBEE FLY </h2>
<p>Underneath the wasp's brown paper manor house, the ground is channeled
into a sort of drain for the refuse of the nest. Here are shot the dead or
weakly larvae which a continual inspection roots out from the cells to
make room for fresh occupants; here, at the time of the autumn massacre,
are flung the backward grubs; here, lastly, lies a good part of the crowd
killed by the first touch of winter. During the rack and ruin of November
and December, this sewer becomes crammed with animal matter.</p>
<p>Such riches will not remain unemployed. The world's great law which says
that nothing edible shall be wasted provides for the consumption of a mere
ball of hair disgorged by the owl. How shall it be with the vast stores of
a ruined wasps' nest! If they have not come yet, the consumers whose task
it is to salve this abundant wreckage for nature's markets, they will not
tarry in coming and waiting for the manna that will soon descend from
above. That public granary, lavishly stocked by death, will become a busy
factory of fresh life. Who are the guests summoned to the banquet?</p>
<p>If the wasps flew away, carrying the dead or sickly grubs with them, and
dropped them on the ground round about their home, those banqueters would
be, first and foremost, the insect-eating birds, the warblers, all of whom
are lovers of small game. In this connection, we will allow ourselves a
brief digression. We all know with what jealous intolerance the
nightingales occupy each his own cantonment. Neighborly intercourse among
them is tabooed. The males frequently exchange defiant couplets at a
distance; but, should the challenged party draw near, the challenger makes
him clear off. Now, not far from my house, in a scanty clump of holly oaks
which would barely give the woodcutter the wherewithal for a dozen
faggots, I used, all through the spring, to hear such full-throated
warbling of nightingales that the songs of those virtuosi, all giving
voice at once and with no attempt at order, degenerated into a deafening
hubbub.</p>
<p>Why did those passionate devotees of solitude come and settle in such
large numbers at a spot where custom decrees that there is just room
enough for one household only? What reasons have made the recluse become a
congregation? I asked the owner of the spinney about the matter.</p>
<p>'It's like that every year,' he said. 'The clump is overrun by
Nightingales.'</p>
<p>'And the reason?'</p>
<p>'The reason is that there is a hive close by, behind that wall.'</p>
<p>I looked at the man in amazement, unable to understand what connection
there could be between a hive and the thronging nightingales.</p>
<p>'Why, yes,' he added, 'there are a lot of nightingales because there are a
lot of bees.</p>
<p>Another questioning look from my side. I did not yet understand. The
explanation came: 'The bees,' he said, 'throw out their dead grubs. The
front of the hive is strewn with them in the mornings; and the
nightingales come and collect them for themselves and their families. They
are very fond of them.'</p>
<p>This time I had solved the puzzle. Delicious food, abundant and fresh each
day, had brought the songsters together. Contrary to their habit, numbers
of nightingales are living on friendly terms in a cluster of bushes, in
order to be near the hive and to have a larger share in the morning
distribution of plump dainties.</p>
<p>In the same way, the nightingale and his gastronomical rivals would haunt
the neighborhood of the wasps' nests, if the dead grubs were cast out on
the surface of the soil; but these delicacies fall inside the burrow and
no little bird would dare to enter the murky cave, even if the entrance
were not too small to admit it. Other consumers are needed here, small in
size and great in daring; the fly is called for and her maggot, the king
of the departed. What the greenbottles, the bluebottles and the flesh
flies do in the open air, at the expense of every kind of corpse, other
flies, narrowing their province, do underground at the Wasps' expense.</p>
<p>Let us turn our attention, in September, to the wrapper of a wasps' nest.
On the outer surface and there alone, this wrapper is strewn with a
multitude of big, white, elliptical dots, firmly fixed to the brown paper
and measuring about two millimeters and a half long by one and a half
wide. Flat below, convex above and of a lustrous white, these dots
resemble very neat drops fallen from a tallow candle. Lastly, their backs
are streaked with faint transversal lines, an elegant detail perceptible
only with the lens. These curious objects are scattered all over the
surface of the wrapper, sometimes at a distance from one another,
sometimes gathered into more or less dense groups. They are the eggs of
the Volucella, or bumblebee fly (Volucella zonaria, LIN.)</p>
<p>Also stuck to the brown paper of the outer wrapper and mixed up with the
Volucella's are a large number of other eggs, chalk white, spear-shaped
and ridged lengthwise with seven or eight thin ribs, after the manner of
the seeds of certain Umbelliferae. The finishing touch to their delicate
beauty is the fine stippling all over the surface. They are smaller by
half than the others. I have seen grubs come out of them which might
easily be the earliest stage of some pointed maggots which I have already
noticed in the burrows. My attempts to rear them failed; and I am not able
to say which fly these eggs belong to. Enough for us to note the nameless
one in passing. There are plenty of others, which we must make up our
minds to leave unlabelled, in view of the jumbled crowd of feasters in the
ruined wasps' nest. We will concern ourselves only with the most
remarkable, in the front rank of which stands the bumblebee Fly.</p>
<p>She is a gorgeous and powerful fly; and her costume, with its brown and
yellow bands, shows a vague resemblance to that of the wasps. Our
fashionable theorists have availed themselves of this brown and yellow to
cite the Volucella as a striking instance of protective mimicry. Obliged,
if not on her own behalf, at least on that of her family, to introduce
herself as a parasite into the wasp's home, she resorts, they tell us, to
trickery and craftily dons her victim's livery. Once inside the wasps'
nest, she is taken for one of the inhabitants and attends quietly to her
business.</p>
<p>The simplicity of the wasp, duped by a very clumsy imitation of her garb,
and the depravity of the fly, concealing her identity under a counterfeit
presentment, exceed the limits of my credulity. The wasp is not so silly
nor the Volucella so clever as we are assured. If the latter really meant
to deceive the Wasp by her appearance, we must admit that her disguise is
none too successful. Yellow sashes round the abdomen do not make a wasp.
It would need more than that and, above all, a slender figure and a nimble
carriage; and the Volucella is thickset and corpulent and sedate in her
movements. Never will the wasp take that unwieldy insect for one of her
own kind. The difference is too great.</p>
<p>Poor Volucella, mimesis has not taught you enough. You ought—this is
the essential point—to have adopted a wasp's shape; and that you
forgot to do: you remained a fat fly, easily recognizable. Nevertheless,
you penetrate into the terrible cavern; you are able to stay there for a
long time, without danger, as the eggs profusely strewn on the wrapper of
the wasps' nest show. How do you set about it?</p>
<p>Let us, first of all, remember that the bumblebee fly does not enter the
enclosure in which the combs are heaped: she keeps to the outer surface of
the paper rampart and there lays her eggs. Let us, on the other hand,
recall the Polistes [a tree nesting wasp] placed in the company of the
wasps in my vivarium. Here of a surety is one who need not have recourse
to mimicry to find acceptance. She belongs to the guild, she is a wasp
herself. Any of us that had not the trained eye of the entomologist would
confuse the two species. Well, this stranger, as long as she does not
become too importunate, is quite readily tolerated by the caged wasps.
None seeks to pick a quarrel with her. She is even admitted to the table,
the strip of paper smeared with honey. But she is doomed if she
inadvertently sets foot upon the combs. Her costume, her shape, her size,
which tally almost exactly with the costume, shape and size of the wasp,
do not save her from her fate. She is at once recognized as a stranger and
attacked and slaughtered with the same vigor as the larvae of the Hylotoma
sawfly and the Saperda beetle, neither of which bears any outward
resemblance to the larva of the wasps.</p>
<p>Seeing that identity of shape and costume does not save the Polistes, how
will the Volucella fare, with her clumsy imitation? The wasp's eye, which
is able to discern the dissimilar in the like, will refuse to be caught.
The moment she is recognized, the stranger is killed on the spot. As to
that there is not the shadow of a doubt.</p>
<p>In the absence of bumblebee flies at the moment of experimenting, I employ
another fly, Milesia fulminans, who, thanks to her slim figure and her
handsome yellow bands, presents a much more striking likeness to the wasp
than does the fat Volucella zonaria. Despite this resemblance, if she
rashly venture on the combs, she is stabbed and slain. Her yellow sashes,
her slender abdomen deceive nobody. The stranger is recognized behind the
features of a double.</p>
<p>My experiments under glass, which varied according to the captures which I
happened to make, all lead me to this conclusion: as long as there is more
propinquity, even around the honey, the other occupants are tolerated
fairly well; but, if they touch the cells, they are assaulted and often
killed, without distinction of shape or costume. The grubs' dormitory is
the sanctum sanctorum which no outsider must enter under pain of death.</p>
<p>With these caged captives I experiment by daylight, whereas the free wasps
work in the absolute darkness of their underground retreat. Where light is
absent, color goes for nothing. Once, therefore, that she has entered the
cavern, the bumblebee fly derives no benefit from her yellow bands, which
are supposed to be her safeguard. Whether garbed as she is or otherwise,
it is easy for her to effect her purpose in the dark, on condition that
she avoids the tumultuous interior of the wasps' nest. So long as she has
the prudence not to hustle the passers by, she can dab her eggs, without
danger, on the paper wall. No one will know of her presence. The dangerous
thing is to cross the threshold of the burrow in broad daylight, before
the eyes of those who go in and out. At that moment alone, protective
mimicry would be convenient. Now does the entrance of the Volucella into
the presence of a few wasps entail such very great risks? The wasps' nest
in my enclosure, the one which was afterwards to perish in the sun under a
bell glass, gave me the opportunity for prolonged observations, but
without any result upon the subject of my immediate concern. The bumblebee
fly did not appear. The period for her visits had doubtless passed; for I
found plenty of her grubs when the nest was dug up.</p>
<p>Other flies rewarded me for my assiduity. I saw some—at a respectful
distance, I need hardly say—entering the burrow. They were
insignificant in size and of a dark gray color, not unlike that of the
housefly. They had not a patch of yellow about them and certainly had no
claim to protective mimicry. Nevertheless, they went in and out as they
pleased, calmly, as though they were at home. As long as there was not too
great a number at the door, the wasps left them alone. When there was
anything of a crowd, the gray visitors waited near the threshold for a
less busy moment. No harm came to them.</p>
<p>Inside the establishment, the same peaceful relations prevail. In this
respect I have the evidence of my excavations. In the underground charnel
house, so rich in Fly grubs, I find no corpses of adult flies. If the
strangers had been slaughtered in passing through the entrance hall, or
lower down, they would fall to the bottom of the burrow anyhow, with the
other rubbish. Now in this charnel house, as I said, there are never any
dead bumblebee flies, never a fly of any sort. The incomers are respected.
Having done their business, they go out unscathed.</p>
<p>This tolerance on the part of the wasps is surprising. And a suspicion
comes to one's mind: can it be that the Volucella and the rest are not
what the accepted theories of natural history call them, namely, enemies,
grub killers sacking the wasps' nest? We will look into this by examining
them when they are hatched. Nothing is easier, in September and October,
than to collect the Volucella's eggs in such numbers as we please. They
abound on the outer surface of the wasps' nest. Moreover, as with the
larvae of the wasp, it is some time before they are suffocated by the
petroleum fumes; and so most of them are sure to hatch. I take my
scissors, cut the most densely populated bits from the paper wall of the
nest and fill a jar with them. This is the warehouse from which I shall
daily, for the best part of the next two months, draw my supply of nascent
grubs.</p>
<p>The Volucella's egg remains where it is, with its white color always
strongly marked against the brown of the background. The shell wrinkles
and collapses; and the fore end tears open. From it there issues a pretty
little white grub, thin in front, swelling slightly in the rear and
bristling all over with fleshy protuberances. The creature's papillae are
set on its sides like the teeth of a comb; at the rear, they lengthen and
spread into a fan; on the back, they are shorter and arranged in four
longitudinal rows. The last section but one carries two short, bright red
breathing tubes, standing aslant and joined to each other. The fore part,
near the pointed mouth, is of a darker, brownish color. This is the biting
and motor apparatus, seen through the skin and consisting of two fangs.
Taken all round, the grub is a pretty little thing, with its bristling
whiteness, which gives it the appearance of a tiny snowflake. But this
elegance does not last long: grown big and strong, the bumblebee fly's
grub becomes soiled with sanies, turns a russety brown and crawls about in
the guise of a hulking porcupine.</p>
<p>What becomes of it when it leaves the egg? This my warehousing jar tells
me, partly. Unable to keep its balance on sloping surfaces, it drops to
the bottom of the receptacle, where I find it, daily, as hatched,
wandering restlessly. Things must happen likewise at the wasps'. Incapable
of standing on the slant of the paper wall, the newborn grubs slide to the
bottom of the underground cavity, which contains, especially at the end of
the summer, a heaped up provender of deceased wasps and dead larvae
removed from the cells and flung outside the house, all nice and gamy, as
proper maggot's food should be. The Volucella's offspring, themselves
maggots, notwithstanding their snowy apparel, find in this charnel house
victuals to their liking, incessantly renewed. Their fall from the high
walls might well be not accidental, but rather a means of reaching,
quickly and without searching, the good things down at the bottom of the
cavern. Perhaps, also, some of the white grubs, thanks to the holes that
make the wrapper resemble a spongy cover, manage to slip inside the Wasps'
nest. Still, most of the Volucella's grubs, at whatever stage of their
development, are in the basement of the burrow, among the carrion remains.
The others, those settled in the wasps' home itself, are comparatively
few.</p>
<p>These returns are enough to show us that the grubs of the bumblebee fly do
not deserve the bad reputation that has been given them. Satisfied with
the spoils of the dead, they do not touch the living; they do not ravage
the wasps' nest: they disinfect it.</p>
<p>Experiment confirms what we have learnt in the actual nests. Over and over
again, I bring wasp grubs and Volucella grubs together in small test
tubes, which are easy to observe. The first are well and strong; I have
just taken them from their cells. The others are in various stages, from
that of the snowflake born the same day to that of the sturdy porcupine.
There is nothing tragic about the encounter. The grubs of the bumblebee
fly roam about the test-tube without touching the live tidbit. The most
that they do is to put their mouths for a moment to the morsel; then they
take it away again, not caring for the dish.</p>
<p>They want something different: a wounded, a dying grub; a corpse
dissolving into sanies. Indeed, if I prick the wasp grub with a needle,
the scornful ones at once come and sup at the bleeding wound. If I give
them a dead grub, brown with putrefaction, the worms rip it open and feast
on its humors. Better still: I can feed them quite satisfactorily with
wasps that have turned putrid under their horny rings; I see them greedily
suck the juices of decomposing Rosechafer grubs; I can keep them thriving
with chopped up butcher's meat, which they know how to liquefy by the
method of the common maggot. And these unprejudiced ones, who accept
anything that comes their way, provided it be dead, refuse it when it is
alive. Like the true flies that they are, frank body snatchers, they wait,
before touching a morsel, for death to do its work.</p>
<p>Inside the wasps' nest, robust grubs are the rule and weaklings the rare
exception, because of the assiduous supervision which eliminates anything
that is diseased and like to die. Here, nevertheless, Volucella grubs are
found, on the combs, among the busy wasps. They are not, it is true, so
numerous as in the charnel house below, but still pretty frequent. Now
what do they do in this abode where there are no corpses? Do they attack
the healthy? Their continual visits from cell to cell would at first make
one think so; but we shall soon be undeceived if we observe their
movements closely; and this is possible with my glass roofed colonies.</p>
<p>I see them fussily crawling on the surface of the combs, curving their
necks from side to side and taking stock of the cells. This one does not
suit, nor that one either; the bristly creature passes on, still in
search, thrusting its pointed fore part now here, now there. This time,
the cell appears to fulfil the requisite conditions. A larva, glowing with
health, opens wide its mouth, believing its nurse to be approaching. It
fills the hexagonal chamber with its bulging sides.</p>
<p>The gluttonous visitor bends and slides its slender fore part, a blade of
exquisite suppleness, between the wall and the inhabitant, whose slack
rotundity yields to the pressure of this animated wedge. It plunges into
the cell, leaving no part of itself outside but its wide hind quarters,
with the red dots of the two breathing tubes.</p>
<p>It remains in this posture for some time, occupied with its work at the
bottom of the cell. Meanwhile, the wasps present do not interfere, remain
impassive, showing that the grub visited is in no peril. The stranger, in
fact, withdraws with a soft, gliding motion. The chubby babe, a sort of
India rubber bag, resumes its original volume without having suffered any
harm, as its appetite proves. A nurse offers it a mouthful, which it
accepts with every sign of unimpaired vigor. As for the Volucella grub, it
licks its lips after its own fashion, pushing its two fangs in and out;
then, without further loss of time, goes and repeats its probing
elsewhere.</p>
<p>What it wants down there, at the bottom of the cells, behind the grubs,
cannot be decided by direct observation; it must be guessed at. Since the
visited larva remains intact, it is not prey that the Volucella grub is
after. Besides, if murder formed part of its plans, why descend to the
bottom of the cell, instead of attacking the defenseless recluse straight
way? It would be much easier to suck the patient's juices through the
actual orifice of the cell. Instead of that, we see a dip, always a dip
and never any other tactics.</p>
<p>Then what is there behind the wasp grub? Let us try to put it as decently
as possible. In spite of its exceeding cleanliness, this grub is not
exempt from the physiological ills inseparable from the stomach. Like all
that eats, it has intestinal waste matter with regard to which its
confinement compels it to behave with extreme discretion. Like so many
other close-cabined larvae of Wasps and Bees, it waits until the moment of
the transformation to rid itself of its digestive refuse. Then, once and
for all, it casts out the unclean accumulation whereof the pupa, that
delicate, reborn organism, must not retain the least trace. This is found
later, in any empty cell, in the form of a dark purple plug. But, without
waiting for this final purge, this lump, there are, from time to time,
slight excretions of fluid, clear as water. We have only to keep a Wasp
grub in a little glass tube to recognize these occasional discharges.
Well, I see nothing else to explain the action of the Volucella's grubs
when they dip into the cells without wounding the larvae. They are looking
for this liquid, they provoke its emission. It represents to them a dainty
which they enjoy over and above the more substantial fare provided by the
corpses.</p>
<p>The bumblebee fly, that sanitary inspector of the Vespine city, fulfils a
double office: she wipes the wasp's children and she rids the nest of its
dead. For this reason, she is peacefully received, as an auxiliary, when
she enters the burrow to lay her eggs; for this reason, her grub is
tolerated, nay more, respected, in the very heart of the dwelling, where
none might stray with impunity. I remember the brutal reception given to
the Saperda and Hylotoma grubs when I place them on a comb. Forthwith
grabbed, bruised and riddled with stings, the poor wretches perish. It is
quite a different matter with the offspring of the Volucella. They come
and go as they please, poke about in the cells, elbow the inhabitants and
remain unmolested. Let us give some instances of this clemency, which is
very strange in the irascible Wasp.</p>
<p>For a couple of hours, I fix my attention on a Volucella grub established
in a cell, side by side with the Wasp grub, the mistress of the house. The
hind quarters emerge, displaying their papillae. Sometimes also the fore
part, the head, shows, bending from side to side with sudden, snake-like
motions. The wasps have just filled their crops at the honey pot; they are
dispensing the rations, are very busily at work; and things are taking
place in broad daylight, on the table by the window.</p>
<p>As they pass from cell to cell, the nurses repeatedly brush against and
stride across the Volucella grub. There is no doubt that they see it. The
intruder does not budge, or, if trodden on, curls up, only to reappear the
next moment. Some of the wasps stop, bend their heads over the opening,
seem to be making inquiries and then go off, without troubling further
about the state of things. One of them does something even more
remarkable: she tries to give a mouthful to the lawful occupant of the
cell; but the larva, which is being squeezed by its visitor, has no
appetite and refuses. Without the least sign of anxiety on behalf of the
nursling which she sees in awkward company, the wasp retires and goes to
distribute its ration elsewhere. In vain I prolong my examination: there
is no fluster of any kind. The Volucella grub is treated as a friend, or
at least as a visitor that does not matter. There is no attempt to
dislodge it, to worry it, to put it to flight. Nor does the grub seem to
trouble greatly about those who come and go. Its tranquillity, tells us
that it feels at home.</p>
<p>Here is some further evidence: the grub has plunged, head downwards, into
an empty cell, which is too small to contain the whole of it. Its
hindquarters stick out, very visibly. For long hours, it remains
motionless in this position. At every moment, wasps pass and repass close
by. Three of them, at one time together, at another separately, come and
nibble at the edges of the cell; they break off particles which they
reduce to paste for a new piece of work. The passers by, intent upon their
business, may not perceive the intruder; but these three certainly do.
During their work of demolition, they touch the grub with their legs,
their antennae, their palpi; and yet none of them minds it. The fat grub,
so easily recognized by its queer figure, is left alone; and this in broad
daylight, where everybody can see it. What must it be when the profound
darkness of the burrows protects the visitor with its mysteries!</p>
<p>I have been experimenting all along with big Volucella grubs, colored with
the dirty red which comes with age. What effect will pure white produce? I
sprinkle on the surface of the combs some larvae that have lately left the
egg. The tiny, snow-white grubs make for the nearest cells, go down into
them, come out again and hunt elsewhere. The wasps peaceably let them go
their way, as heedless of the little white invaders as of the big red
ones. Sometimes, when it enters an occupied cell, the little creature is
seized by the owner, the wasp grub, which nabs it and turns and returns it
between its mandibles. Is this a defensive bite? No, the wasp grub has
merely blundered, taking its visitor for a proffered mouthful. There is no
great harm done. Thanks to its suppleness, the little grub emerges from
the grip intact and continues its investigations.</p>
<p>It might occur to us to attribute this tolerance to some lack of
penetration in the wasps' vision. What follows will undeceive us: I place
separately, in empty cells, a grub of Saperda scalaria and a Volucella
grub, both of them white and selected so as not to fill the cell entirely.
Their presence is revealed only by the paleness of the hind part which
serves as a plug to the opening. A superficial examination would leave the
nature of the recluse undecided. The wasps make no mistake: they extirpate
the Saperda grub, kill it, fling it on the dust heap; they leave the
Volucella grub in peace.</p>
<p>The two strangers are quite well recognized in the secrecy of the cells:
one is the intruder that must be turned out; the other is the regular
visitor that must be respected. Sight helps, for things take place in the
daylight, under glass; but the wasps have other means of information in
the dimness of the burrow. When I produce darkness by covering the
apparatus with a screen, the murder of the trespassers is accomplished
just the same. For so say the police regulations of the wasps' nest: any
stranger discovered must be slain and thrown on the midden.</p>
<p>To thwart this vigilance, the real enemies need to be masters of the art
of deceptive immobility and cunning disguise. But there is no deception
about the Volucella grub. It comes and goes, openly, wheresoever it will;
it looks round amongst the wasps for cells to suit it. What has it to make
itself thus respected? Strength? Certainly not. It is a harmless creature,
which the wasp could rip open with a blow of her shears, while a touch of
the sting would mean lightning death. It is a familiar guest, to whom no
denizen of a wasps' nest bears any ill will. Why? Because it renders good
service: so far from working mischief, it does the scavenging for its
hosts. Were it an enemy or merely an intruder, it would be exterminated;
as a deserving assistant, it is respected.</p>
<p>Then what need is there for the Volucella to disguise herself as a wasp?
Any fly, whether clad in drab or motley, is admitted to the burrow
directly she makes herself useful to the community. The mimicry of the
bumblebee fly, which was said to be one of the most conclusive cases, is,
after all, a mere childish notion. Patient observation, continually face
to face with facts, will have none of it and leaves it to the armchair
naturalists, who are too prone to look at the animal world through the
illusive mists of theory.</p>
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