Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - A summary of each chapter of entomology

A summary of each chapter of entomology

The first chapter: recorded the interesting life habits and superb instinct of dung beetles pushing dung balls, mud bees with knotted abdomen preying on Chitin and yellow-winged mud bees.

The second chapter: recorded the living conditions of Sapium sebiferum, which operated on the black cutworm larvae, in the barren stone garden.

Chapter 3: The parasitic behaviors and feeding habits of stone bees, bee flies and winged bees were recorded.

The fourth chapter: recorded the predation and nesting characteristics of long-bellied bees, leaf-cutting bees, fat-picking bees and longicorn beetles driven by instinct.

Chapter 5: Record the hexagonal honeycomb built by wasps and its geometric accuracy.

Chapter 6: Recorded the images of tarantulas, spiders, scorpions and other insects making unremitting efforts for survival.

Chapter 7: The marriage customs and oviposition knowledge of insects such as scarab, pine gill scarab, swamp iris and firefly are recorded and introduced in detail.

Chapter 8: Record the habits of insects such as fragrant tree aphid, bee aphid fly and ribbon web spider.

Chapter 9: Prove that human beings do not exist in isolation. All life on the earth is in the same closely connected system, and insects are an indispensable link in the biological chain of the earth.

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

Extended information article introduction:

Entomology is a long biological work written by Jean-Henri casimir Fables, a French entomologist and writer. It is an insect biology work, which summarizes the species, characteristics, habits and mating habits of insects, records the real life of insects, expresses the spirituality of insects in struggle for existence, and also records Fabers' motivation, life ambition, knowledge background and living conditions of being obsessed with insect research.

The author combines the colorful life of insects with his own life feelings, treats insects with a human attitude, and reveals his respect and love for life between the lines.

Writing background:

When fabrice was 3 1 year-old, he obtained a doctorate in natural science. During this period, he successively created a series of biological works such as Plants and Uncle Paul's Talk on Pests.

1854, Fabres published his observation of arthropods in the French natural science yearbook. Three years later, he published the research results of Metamorphosis of Coleoptera, which impressed his peers with its excellent academic quality and great theoretical significance. 1879, he compiled the first volume of entomology for more than 20 years and finally came out.

1880, Fabres bought an old house with the money he saved. He used the local Provencal language to give the house a nickname-Waste Stone Garden. Year after year, Fables wore a farmer's wool coat and dug around with a sharp pick and a flat shovel, thus an insect paradise was built. He wrote the fruits of his labor into volume after volume of Insects. Until 1907, the tenth volume of entomology came out.