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<h2> CHAPTER XIV. THE BLUEBOTTLE: THE LAYING </h2>
<p>To purge the earth of death's impurities and cause deceased animal matter
to be once more numbered among the treasures of life there are hosts of
sausage queens, including, in our part of the world, the bluebottle
(Calliphora vomitaria, LIN.) and the checkered flesh fly (Sarcophaga
carnaria, LIN.). Every one knows the first, the big, dark-blue fly who,
after effecting her designs in the ill-watched meat safe, settles on our
window panes and keeps up a solemn buzzing, anxious to be off in the sun
and ripen a fresh emission of germs. How does she lay her eggs, the origin
of the loathsome maggot that battens poisonously on our provisions,
whether of game or butcher's meat? What are her stratagems and how can we
foil them? This is what I propose to investigate.</p>
<p>The bluebottle frequents our homes during autumn and a part of winter,
until the cold becomes severe; but her appearance in the fields dates back
much earlier. On the first fine day in February, we shall see her warming
herself, chillily, against the sunny walls. In April, I notice her in
considerable numbers on the laurestinus. It is here that she seems to
pair, while sipping the sugary exudations of the small white flowers. The
whole of the summer season is spent out of doors, in brief flights from
one refreshment bar to the next. When autumn comes, with its game, she
makes her way into our houses and remains until the hard frosts.</p>
<p>This suits my stay-at-home habits and especially my legs, which are
bending under the weight of years. I need not run after the subjects of my
present study; they call on me. Besides, I have vigilant assistants. The
household knows of my plans. Every one brings me, in a little screw of
paper, the noisy visitor just captured against the panes.</p>
<p>Thus do I fill my vivarium, which consists of a large, bell-shaped cage of
wire gauze, standing in an earthenware pan full of sand. A mug containing
honey is the dining room of the establishment. Here the captives come to
recruit themselves in their hours of leisure. To occupy their maternal
cares, I employ small birds—chaffinches, linnets, sparrows—brought
down, in the enclosure, by my son's gun.</p>
<p>I have just served up a Linnet shot two days ago. I next place in the cage
a bluebottle, one only, to avoid confusion. Her fat belly proclaims the
advent of a laying time. An hour later, when the excitement of being put
in prison is allayed, my captive is in labor. With eager, jerky steps, she
explores the morsel of game, goes from the head to the tail, returns from
the tail to the head, repeats the action several times and at last settles
near an eye, a dimmed eye sunk into its socket.</p>
<p>The ovipositor bends at a right angle and dives into the junction of the
beak, straight down to the root. Then the eggs are emitted for nearly half
an hour. The layer, utterly absorbed in her serious business, remains
stationary and impassive and is easily observed through my lens. A
movement on my part would doubtless scare her; but my restful presence
gives her no anxiety. I am nothing to her.</p>
<p>The discharge does not go on continuously until the ovaries are exhausted;
it is intermittent and performed in so many packets. Several times over,
the fly leaves the bird's beak and comes to take a rest upon the wire
gauze, where she brushes her hind legs one against the other. In
particular, before using it again, she cleans, smoothes and polishes her
laying tool, the probe that places the eggs. Then, feeling her womb still
teeming, she returns to the same spot at the joint of the beak. The
delivery is resumed, to cease presently and then begin anew. A couple of
hours are thus spent in alternate standing near the eye and resting on the
wire gauze.</p>
<p>At last, it is over. The fly does not go back to the bird, a proof that
her ovaries are exhausted. The next day, she is dead. The eggs are dabbed
in a continuous layer, at the entrance to the throat, at the root of the
tongue, on the membrane of the palate. Their number appears considerable;
the whole inside of the gullet is white with them. I fix a little wooden
prop between the two mandibles of the beak, to keep them open and enable
me to see what happens.</p>
<p>I learn in this way that the hatching takes place in a couple of days. As
soon as they are born, the young vermin, a swarming mass, leave the place
where they are and disappear down the throat. To inquire further into the
work is useless for the moment. We shall learn more about it later, under
conditions that make examination easier.</p>
<p>The beak of the bird invaded was closed at the start, as far as the
natural contact of the mandibles allowed. There remained a narrow slit at
the base, sufficient at most to admit the passage of a horsehair. It was
through this that the laying was performed. Lengthening her ovipositor
like a telescope, the mother inserted the point of her implement, a point
slightly hardened with a horny armor. The fineness of the probe equals the
fineness of the aperture. But, if the beak were entirely closed, where
would the eggs be laid then?</p>
<p>With a tied thread, I keep the two mandibles in absolute contact; and I
place a second bluebottle in the presence of the linnet, which the
colonists have already entered by the beak. This time, the laying takes
place on one of the eyes, between the lid and the eyeball. At the
hatching, which again occurs a couple of days later, the grubs make their
way into the fleshy depths of the socket. The eyes and the beak,
therefore, form the two chief entrances into feathered game.</p>
<p>There are others; and these are the wounds. I cover the linnet's head with
a paper hood which will prevent invasion through the beak and eyes. I
serve it, under the wire gauze bell, to a third egg layer. The bird has
been struck by a shot in the breast, but the sore is not bleeding: no
outer stain marks the injured spot. Moreover, I am careful to arrange the
feathers, to smooth them with a hair pencil, so that the bird looks quite
smart and has every appearance of being untouched.</p>
<p>The fly is soon there. She inspects the linnet from end to end; with her
front tarsi she fumbles at the breast and belly. It is a sort of
auscultation by sense of touch. The insect becomes aware of what is under
the feathers by the manner in which these react. If scent comes to her
assistance, it can only be very slightly, for the game is not yet high.
The wound is soon found. No drop of blood is near it, for it is closed by
a plug of down rammed into it by the shot. The fly takes up her position
without separating the feathers or uncovering the wound. She remains here
for two hours without stirring, motionless, with her abdomen concealed
beneath the plumage. My eager curiosity does not distract her from her
business for a moment.</p>
<p>When she has finished, I take her place. There is nothing either on the
skin or at the mouth of the wound. I have to withdraw the downy plug and
dig to some depth before discovering the eggs. The ovipositor has
therefore lengthened its extensible tube and pushed beyond the feather
stopper driven in by the lead. The eggs are in one packet; they number
about three hundred.</p>
<p>When the beak and eyes are rendered inaccessible, when the body, moreover,
has no wounds, the laying still takes place, but, this time, in a
hesitating and niggardly fashion. I pluck the bird completely, the better
to watch what happens; also, I cover the head with a paper hood to close
the usual means of access. For a long time, with jerky steps, the mother
explores the body in every direction; she takes her stand by preference on
the head, which she sounds by tapping on it with her front tarsi. She
knows that the openings which she needs are there, under the paper; but
she also knows how frail are her grubs, how powerless to pierce their way
through the strange obstacle which stops her as well and interferes with
the work of her ovipositor. The cowl inspires her with profound distrust.
Despite the tempting bait of the veiled head, not an egg is laid on the
wrapper, slight though it may be.</p>
<p>Weary of vain attempts to compass this obstacle, the Fly at last decides
in favor of other points, but not on the breast, belly or back, where the
hide would seem too tough and the light too intrusive. She needs dark
hiding places, corners where the skin is very delicate. The spots chosen
are the cavity of the axilla, corresponding with our armpit, and the
crease where the thigh joins the belly. Eggs are laid in both places, but
not many, showing that the groin and the axilla are adopted only
reluctantly and for lack of a better spot.</p>
<p>With an unplucked bird, also hooded, the same experiment failed: the
feathers prevent the fly from slipping into those deep places. Let us add,
in conclusion, that, on a skinned bird, or simply on a piece of butcher's
meat, the laying is effected on any part whatever, provided that it be
dark. The gloomiest corners are the favorite ones.</p>
<p>It follows from all this that, to lay the eggs, the Bluebottle picks out
either naked wounds or else the mucous membranes of the mouth or eyes,
which are not protected by a skin of any thickness. She also needs
darkness. We shall see the reasons for her preference later on.</p>
<p>The perfect efficiency of the paper bag, which prevents the inroads of the
worms through the eye sockets or the beak, suggests a similar experiment
with the whole bird. It is a matter of wrapping the body in a sort of
artificial skin which will be as discouraging to the fly as the natural
skin. Linnets, some with deep wounds, others almost intact, are placed one
by one in paper envelopes similar to those in which the nursery gardener
keeps his seeds, envelopes just folded, without being stuck. The paper is
quite ordinary and of average thickness. Torn pieces of newspaper serve
the purpose.</p>
<p>These sheaths with the corpses inside them are freely exposed to the air,
on the table in my study, where they are visited, according to the time of
day, in dense shade and in bright sunlight. Attracted by the effluvia from
the dead meat, the bluebottles haunt my laboratory, the windows of which
are always open. I see them daily alighting on the envelopes and very
busily exploring them, apprised of the contents by the gamy smell. Their
incessant coming and going is a sign of intense cupidity; and yet none of
them decides to lay on the bags. They do not even attempt to slide their
ovipositor through the slits of the folds. The favorable season passes and
not an egg is laid on the tempting wrappers. All the mothers abstain,
judging the slender obstacle of the paper to be more than the vermin will
be able to overcome.</p>
<p>This caution on the fly's part does not at all surprise me: motherhood
everywhere has gleams of great perspicacity. What does astonish me is the
following result. The parcels containing the linnets are left for a whole
year uncovered on the table; they remain there for a second year and a
third. I inspect the contents from time to time. The little birds are
intact, with unrumpled feathers, free from smell, dry and light, like
mummies. They have become not decomposed, but mummified.</p>
<p>I expected to see them putrefying, running into sanies, like corpses left
to rot in the open air. On the contrary, the birds have dried and
hardened, without undergoing any change. What did they want for their
putrefaction? Simply the intervention of the fly. The maggot, therefore,
is the primary cause of dissolution after death; it is, above all, the
putrefactive chemist.</p>
<p>A conclusion not devoid of value may be drawn from my paper game bags. In
our markets, especially in those of the South, the game is hung
unprotected from the hooks on the stalls. Larks strung up by the dozen
with a wire through their nostrils, thrushes, plovers, teal, partridges,
snipe, in short, all the glories of the spit which the autumn migration
brings us, remain for days and weeks at the mercy of the flies. The buyer
allows himself to be tempted by a goodly exterior; he makes his purchase
and, back at home, just when the bird is being prepared for roasting, he
discovers that the promised dainty is alive with worms. O horror! There is
nothing for it but to throw the loathsome, verminous thing away.</p>
<p>The bluebottle is the culprit here. Everybody knows it; and nobody thinks
of seriously shaking off her tyranny: not the retailer, nor the wholesale
dealer, nor the killer of the game. What is wanted to keep the maggots
out? Hardly anything: to slip each bird into a paper sheath. If this
precaution were taken at the start, before the flies arrive, any game
would be safe and could be left indefinitely to attain the degree of
ripeness required by the epicure's palate.</p>
<p>Stuffed with olives and myrtle berries, the Corsican blackbirds are
exquisite eating. We sometimes receive them at Orange, layers of them,
packed in baskets through which the air circulates freely and each
contained in a paper wrapper. They are in a state of perfect preservation,
complying with the most exacting demands of the kitchen. I congratulate
the nameless shipper who conceived the bright idea of clothing his
blackbirds in paper. Will his example find imitators? I doubt it.</p>
<p>There is, of course, a serious objection to this method of preservation.
In its paper shroud, the article is invisible; it is not enticing; it does
not inform the passer by of its nature and qualities. There is one
resource left which would leave the bird uncovered: simply to case the
head in a paper cap. The head being the part most threatened, because of
the mucus membrane of the throat and eyes, it would be sufficient, as a
rule, to protect the head, in order to keep off the Flies and to thwart
their attempts.</p>
<p>Let us continue to study the bluebottle, while varying our means of
information. A tin, about four inches deep, contains a piece of butcher's
meat. The lid is not put in quite straight and leaves a narrow slit at one
point of its circumference, allowing, at most, of the passage of a fine
needle. When the bait begins to give off a gamy scent, the mothers come.
Singly or in numbers. They are attracted by the odor which, transmitted
through a thin crevice, hardly reaches my nostrils.</p>
<p>They explore the metal receptacle for some time, seeking an entrance.
Finding naught that enables them to reach the coveted morsel, they decide
to lay their eggs on the tin, just beside the aperture. Sometimes, when
the width of the passage allows of it, they insert the ovipositor into the
tin and lay the eggs inside, on the very edges of the slit. Whether
outside or in, the eggs are dabbed down in a fairly regular and absolutely
white layer. I as it were shovel them up with a little paper scoop. I thus
obtain all the germs that I require for my experiments, eggs bearing no
trace of the stains which would be inevitable if I had to collect them on
tainted meat.</p>
<p>We have seen the bluebottle refusing to lay her eggs on the paper bag,
notwithstanding the carrion fumes of the Linnet enclosed; yet now, without
hesitation, she lays them on a sheet of metal. Can the nature of the floor
make any difference to her? I replace the tin lid by a paper cover
stretched and pasted over the orifice. With the point of my knife, I make
a narrow slit in this new lid. That is quite enough: the parent accepts
the paper.</p>
<p>What determined her, therefore, is not simply the smell, which can easily
be perceived even through the uncut paper, but, above all, the crevice,
which will provide an entrance for the vermin, hatched outside, near the
narrow passage. The maggots' mother has her own logic, her prudent
foresight. She knows how feeble her wee grubs will be, how powerless to
cut their way through an obstacle of any resistance; and so, despite the
temptation of the smell, she refrains from laying so long as she finds no
entrance through which the newborn worms can slip unaided.</p>
<p>I wanted to know whether the color, the shininess, the degree of hardness
and other qualities of the obstacle would influence the decision of a
mother obliged to lay her eggs under exceptional conditions. With this
object in view, I employed small jars, each baited with a bit of butcher's
meat. The respective lids were made of different colored paper, of
oilskin, or of some of that tinfoil, with its gold or coppery sheen, which
is used for sealing liqueur bottles. On not one of these covers did the
mothers stop, with any desire to deposit their eggs; but, from the moment
that the knife had made the narrow slit, all the lids were, sooner or
later, visited and all of them, sooner or later, received the white shower
somewhere near the gash. The look of the obstacle, therefore, does not
count; dull or brilliant, drab or colored: these are details of no
importance; the thing that matters is that there should be a passage to
allow the grubs to enter.</p>
<p>Though hatched outside, at a distance from the coveted morsel, the newborn
worms are well able to find their refectory. As they release themselves
from the egg, without hesitation, so accurate is their scent, they slip
beneath the edge of the ill-joined lid, or through the passage cut by the
knife. Behold them entering upon their promised land, their reeking
paradise.</p>
<p>Eager to arrive, do they drop from the top of the wall? Not they! Slowly
creeping, they make their way down the side of the jar; they use their
fore part, ever in quest of information, as a crutch and grapnel in one.
They reach the meat and at once install themselves upon it.</p>
<p>Let us continue our investigation, varying the conditions. A large
test-tube, measuring nine inches high, is baited at the bottom with a lump
of butcher's meat. It is closed with wire gauze, whose meshes, two
millimeters wide, do not permit of the fly's passage. The bluebottle comes
to my apparatus, guided by scent rather than sight. She hastens to the
test tube whose contents are veiled under an opaque cover with the same
alacrity as to the open tube. The invisible attracts her quite as much as
the visible.</p>
<p>She stays a while on the lattice of the mouth, inspects it attentively;
but, whether because circumstances have failed to serve me, or because the
wire network inspires her with distrust, I never saw her dab her eggs upon
it for certain. As her evidence was doubtful, I had recourse to the flesh
fly (Sarcophaga carnaria).</p>
<p>This fly is less finicky in her preparations, she has more faith in the
strength of her worms, which are born ready-formed and vigorous, and
easily shows me what I wish to see. She explores the trellis-work, chooses
a mesh through which she inserts the tip of her abdomen and, undisturbed
by my presence, emits, one after the other, a certain number of grubs,
about ten or so. True, her visits will be repeated, increasing the family
at a rate of which I am ignorant.</p>
<p>The newborn worms, thanks to a slight viscidity, cling for a moment to the
wire gauze; they swarm, wriggle, release themselves and leap into the
chasm. It is a nine inch drop at least. When this is done, the mother
makes off, knowing for a certainty that her offspring will shift for
themselves. If they fall on the meat, well and good; if they fall
elsewhere, they can reach the morsel by crawling.</p>
<p>This confidence in the unknown factor of the precipice, with no indication
but that of smell, deserves fuller, investigation. From what height will
the flesh fly dare to let her children drop? I top the test-tube with
another tube, the width of the neck of a claret bottle. The mouth is
closed either with wire gauze, or with a paper cover with a slight cut in
it. Altogether, the apparatus measures twenty-five inches in height. No
matter: the fall is not serious for the lithe backs of the young grubs;
and, in a few days, the test-tube is filled with larvae, in which it is
easy to recognize the flesh fly's family by the fringed coronet that opens
and shuts at the maggot's stern like the petals of a little flower. I did
not see the mother operating: I was not there at the time; but there is no
doubt possible of her coming nor of the great dive taken by the family:
the contents of the test-tube furnish me with a duly authenticated
certificate.</p>
<p>I admire the leap and, to obtain one better still, I replace the tube by
another, so that the apparatus now stands forty-six inches high. The
column is erected at a spot frequented by flies, in a dim light. Its
mouth, closed with a wire gauze cover, reaches the level of various other
appliances, test-tubes and jars, which are already stocked or awaiting
their colony of vermin. When the position is well known to the flies, I
remove the other tubes and leave the column, lest the visitors should turn
aside to easier ground.</p>
<p>From time to time, the bluebottle and the flesh fly perch on the
trellis-work, make a short investigation and then decamp. Throughout the
summer season, for three whole months, the apparatus remains where it is,
without the least result: never a worm. What is the reason? Does the
stench of the meat not spread, coming from that depth? Certainly it
spreads: it is unmistakable to my dulled nostrils and still more so to the
nostrils of my children, whom I call to bear witness. Then why does the
flesh fly, who but now was dropping her grubs from a goodly height, refuse
to let them fall from the top of a column twice as high? Does she fear
lest her worms should be bruised by an excessive drop? There is nothing
about her to point to anxiety aroused by the length of the shaft. I never
see her explore the tube or take its size. She stands on the trellised
orifice; and there the matter ends. Can she be apprised of the depth of
the chasm by the comparative faintness of the offensive odors that arise
from it? Can the sense of smell measure the distance and judge whether it
be acceptable or not? Perhaps.</p>
<p>The fact remains that, despite the attraction of the scent, the flesh fly
does not expose her worms to disproportionate falls. Can she know
beforehand that, when the chrysalides break, her winged family, knocking
with a sudden flight against the sides of a tall chimney, will be unable
to get out? This foresight would be in agreement with the rules which
order maternal instinct according to future needs.</p>
<p>But when the fall does not exceed a certain depth, the budding worms of
the flesh fly are dropped without a qualm, as all our experiments show.
This principle has a practical application which is not without its value
in matters of domestic economy. It is as well that the wonders of
entomology should sometimes give us a hint of commonplace utility.</p>
<p>The usual meat safe is a sort of large cage with a top and bottom of wood
and four wire gauze sides. Hooks fixed into the top are used whereby to
hang pieces which we wish to protect from the flies. Often, so as to
employ the space to the best advantage, these pieces are simply laid on
the floor on the cage. With these arrangements, are we sure of warding off
the fly and her vermin?</p>
<p>Not at all. We may protect ourselves against the Bluebottle, who is not
much inclined to lay her eggs at a distance from the meat; but there is
still the flesh fly, who is more venturesome and goes more briskly to work
and who will slip the grubs through a hole in the meshes and drop them
inside the safe. Agile as they are and well able to crawl, the worms will
easily reach anything on the floor; the only things secure from their
attacks will be the pieces hanging from the ceiling. It is not in the
nature of maggots to explore the heights, especially if this implies
climbing down a string in addition.</p>
<p>People also use wire gauze dish covers. The trellised dome protects the
contents even less than does the meat safe. The flesh fly takes no heed of
it. She can drop her worms through the meshes on the covered joint.</p>
<p>Then what are we to do? Nothing could be simpler. We need only wrap the
birds which we wish to preserve—thrushes, partridges, snipe and so
on—in separate paper envelopes; and the same with our beef and
mutton. This defensive armor alone, while leaving ample room for the air
to circulate, makes any invasion by the worms impossible, even without a
cover or a meat safe: not that paper possesses any special preservative
virtues, but solely because it forms an impenetrable barrier. The
Bluebottle carefully refrains from laying her eggs upon it and the flesh
fly from bringing forth her offspring, both of them knowing that their
newborn young are incapable of piercing the obstacle.</p>
<p>Paper is equally successful in our strife against the Moths, those plagues
of our furs and clothes. To keep away these wholesale ravages, people
generally use camphor, naphthalene, tobacco, bunches of lavender and other
strong-scented remedies. Without wishing to malign those preservatives, we
are bound to admit that the means employed are none too effective. The
smell does very little to prevent the havoc of the moths.</p>
<p>I would therefore counsel our housewives, instead of all this chemist's
stuff, to use newspapers of a suitable shape and size. Take whatever you
wish to protect—your furs, your flannel or your clothes—and
pack each article carefully in a newspaper, joining the edges with a
double fold, well pinned. If this joining is properly done, the Moth will
never get inside. Since my advice has been taken and this method employed
in my household, the old damage has never been repeated.</p>
<p>To return to the fly. A piece of meat is hidden in a jar under a layer of
fine, dry sand, a finger's-breadth thick. The jar has a wide mouth and is
left quite open. Let whoever come that will, attracted by the smell. The
Bluebottles are not long in inspecting what I have prepared for them: they
enter the jar, go out and come back again, inquiring into the invisible
thing revealed by its fragrance. A diligent watch enables me to see them
fussing about, exploring the sandy expanse, tapping it with their feet,
sounding it with their proboscis. I leave the visitors undisturbed for a
fortnight or three weeks. None of them lays any eggs.</p>
<p>This is a repetition of what the paper bag, with its dead bird, showed me.
The flies refuse to lay on the sand, apparently for the same reasons. The
paper was considered an obstacle which the frail vermin would not be able
to overcome. With sand, the case is worse. Its grittiness would hurt the
newborn weaklings, its dryness would absorb the moisture indispensable to
their movements. Later, when preparing for the metamorphosis, when their
strength has come to them, the grubs will dig the earth quite well and be
able to descend; but, at the start, that would be very dangerous for them.
Knowing these difficulties, the mothers, however greatly tempted by the
smell, abstain from breeding. As a matter of fact, after long waiting,
fearing lest some packets of eggs may have escaped my attention, I inspect
the contents of the jar from top to bottom. Meat and sand contain neither
larvae nor pupae: the whole is absolutely deserted.</p>
<p>The layer of sand being only a finger's-breadth thick, this experiment
requires certain precautions. The meat may expand a little, in going bad,
and protrude in one or two places. However small the fleshy eyots that
show above the surface, the flies come to them and breed. Sometimes also
the juices oozing from the putrid meat soak a small extent of the sandy
floor. That is enough for the maggot's first establishment. These causes
of failure are avoided with a layer of sand about an inch thick. Then the
bluebottle, the flesh fly and other flies whose grubs batten on dead
bodies are kept at a proper distance.</p>
<p>In the hope of awakening us to a proper sense of our insignificance,
pulpit orators sometimes make an unfair use of the grave and its worms.
Let us put no faith in their doleful rhetoric. The chemistry of man's
final dissolution is eloquent enough of our emptiness: there is no need to
add imaginary horrors. The worm of the sepulchre is an invention of
cantankerous minds, incapable of seeing things as they are. Covered by but
a few inches of earth, the dead can sleep their quiet sleep: no fly will
ever come to take advantage of them.</p>
<p>At the surface of the soil, exposed to the air, the hideous invasion is
possible; ay, it is the invariable rule. For the melting down and
remolding of matter, man is no better, corpse for corpse, than the lowest
of the brutes. Then the fly exercises her rights and deals with us as she
does with any ordinary animal refuse. Nature treats us with magnificent
indifference in her great regenerating factory: placed in her crucibles,
animals and men, beggars and kings are one and all alike. There you have
true equality, the only equality in this world of ours: equality in the
presence of the maggot.</p>
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