THE BIG EATERS

Written by jeanhenrifabre | Published 2023/06/15
Tech Story Tags: non-fiction | storybook | hackernoon-books | project-gutenberg | books | jean-henri-fabre | science | the-story-book-of-science

TLDR“INSECTS propagate themselves by eggs, which they lay, with admirable foresight, where the young will be sure to find nourishment. The little creature that comes from the egg is a larva, a feeble grub, which, most often, has to shift for itself, procure at its own risk food and shelter—the most difficult thing in this world. In these painful beginnings it cannot expect any help from its mother, dead some time before; for in insect life the parents generally die before the hatching of the eggs that produce the young. Without delay the little larva sets to work. It eats. It is its sole business, and a serious one, on which its future depends. It eats, not only to keep up its strength from day to day, but above all to acquire the plumpness necessary for its future metamorphosis. I must tell you—and this perhaps will surprise you—that an insect ceases to grow after attaining its final perfect form. It is known, too, that there are insects—among others, the butterfly of the silkworm—that do not take any nourishment at all.via the TL;DR App

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Written by jeanhenrifabre | I was an entomologist, and author known for the lively style of my popular books on the lives of insects.
Published by HackerNoon on 2023/06/15