What chapter is the mysterious pond in Insects ?

Updated on culture 2024-07-16
3 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    It's the second chapter. List of articles on insects.

    Chapter 1 On Ancestral Traditions.

    Chapter 2: The Mysterious Pond.

    Chapter 3 Stone Silkworm.

    Chapter 4 Dung beetles.

    Chapter 5 Cicadas.

    Chapter 6: The Plasterer Bee.

    Chapter 7: The Praying Mantis.

    Chapter 8 The Bees, the Cats, and the Red Ants.

    Chapter 9: The Mining Bee Opening the Tunnel.

    Chapter 10: Hotaru.

    Chapter 11 Tube worms.

    Chapter 12 The Woodcutter Wasp.

    Chapter 13 Cotton Pickers and Fat Pickers.

    Chapter 14: The Self-Control of the Spanish Rhino.

    Chapter 15: Two Strange Grasshoppers.

    Chapter 16: The Wasp.

    Chapter 17: The Grub's Adventure.

    Chapter 18: Crickets.

    Chapter 19: The Petite Redstriped Bee.

    Chapter 20: Sisis.

    Chapter 21: The Flycatcher.

    Chapter 22: Parasites.

    Chapter 23 The Workers of Metabolism.

    Chapter 24: The Pine Caterpillar.

    Chapter 25: The Cabbage Caterpillar.

    Chapter Twenty-Six: The Peacock Moth.

    Chapter Twenty-Seven: The Beetle Searching for the Blight.

    Chapter Twenty-Eight: Children Who Love Insects.

    Chapter Twenty-Nine: The Striped Spider.

    Chapter 30: Tarantula.

    Chapter 31: The Crushu Spider.

    Chapter 32: The Labyrinth Spider.

    Chapter 33: The Architecture of the Cobweb.

    Chapter 34: The Geometry of Spiders.

    Chapter 35: The Spider's Telegraph Line.

    Chapter 36: Crab Spiders.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Chapter 1 records the interesting habits and instincts of the scarab beetle pushing the dung ball, the arthrophthralis that preys on Gidin, and the yellow-winged locust bee.

    Chapter 2 records the life of the burr sand mud wasp that operated on the larvae of the yellow tiger in the barren rock garden.

    Chapter 3: Records the parasitic behavior and feeding patterns of stone wasps, bee flies, and fold-winged wasps.

    Chapter 4 records the predatory and nesting characteristics of long-bellied wasps, leaf-cutting wasps, fat collecting bees, and longhorn bees, which are driven by instinct.

    Chapter 5 documents the hexagonal hive built by the wasp and how accurately it was calculated.

    Chapter 6: Records the tireless struggle of insects such as tarantulas, rotundane spiders, and scorpions to survive.

    Chapter 7 records the marriage customs and egg laying of insects such as golden beetles, pine gills beetles, swamp iris elephants, fireflies, etc., and gives a detailed introduction.

    Chapter 8: Records the habits of insects such as fragrant tree aphids, bee aphid flies, and ribbon round web spiders.

    Chapter 9: Proving that humans do not exist in isolation, that all life on Earth is in the same closely connected system, and that insects are an indispensable link in the Earth's biological chain.

    Chapter 10: Revealing the deep affection of these insects for their lovers and children, and composing love poems in the insect world in vivid and plain language.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Chapter 1 On Ancestral Traditions.

    Each person has their own unique personality, and sometimes, this personality seems to come from the inheritance of the ancestors, but when you want to ask what this personality comes from, it is very difficult.

    At a very young age, I had a desire to be close to things in the natural world. If you think that I love to observe that the personalities of plants and insects are inherited from ancestors, it is a big joke.

    Because my ancestors were uneducated countrymen, and the only thing they knew and cared about was their own cattle and sheep. Of my grandparents, there was only one person who turned over a book.

    Chapter 2: The Mysterious Pond.

    When I gaze at the pond, I never get bored. In this small green world, I don't know how many busy little lives will be busy endlessly.

    At the edge of the pond, piles of small black tadpoles can be seen chasing everywhere; The salamander, with its red belly, also swayed its broad tail like a rudder, moving slowly; In the reeds, we can also find swarms of stone silkworm larvae, which hide their bodies in small sheaths made of dead branches - small sheaths used to defend against predators and all sorts of unexpected disasters.

    Chapter 3 Stone Silkworm.

    I put some small aquatic animals in the pond called stone silkworms. To be precise, they are the larvae of the stone silkworm moth, which are usually cleverly hidden in small sheaths made of dead branches.

    Stone silkworms originally grew in the reeds in the quagmire swamps. In many cases, it clings to the broken branches of the reeds and drifts with the reeds in the water. That little sheath is its movable house.

    This movable house is actually a very elaborate weaving art, which is made up of the root bark of a plant that has been soaked in water and fallen off.

    Chapter 4 Dung beetles.

    Dung beetles were first talked about six or seven thousand years ago. Ancient Egyptian peasants, when irrigating their fields in the spring, often saw a fat black insect pass by them, busily pushing a ball-like thing backwards. They were of course surprised to notice the strange shape of the rotating object, like the peasants of Brovins today.

    Once upon a time, the Egyptians imagined the sphere to be a model of the earth, and the dung beetle's movements coincided with the movement of the planets in the sky. They thought that this beetle had so much astronomical knowledge that it was therefore very sacred, so they called it the sacred beetle.

    At the same time, they believe that the beetle threw a ball on the ground and rolled inside, and it contained eggs, and the little beetle came out of there. But in fact, it's just its pantry. There are no eggs in it.

    Chapter 5 Cicadas. The worst offender is the ant. I've seen them bite the tip of a cicada's legs, drag its wings, climb its back, and even once a fierce gangster grabbed a cicada's straw in front of me and tried to pull it off.

    In the end, the trouble grew, and in desperation, the singer had no choice but to abandon the well he had made and quietly escaped. So the ant's purpose was attained, and they took possession of the well. However, the well also dried up quickly, and the slurry was eaten up immediately.

    So it looked for another opportunity to rob other wells in order to drink a second time.

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