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Nature10.10.1872
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 10. Oktober 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] be followed out in ignorance and obscurity?” And, after stating the fact of the burying beetles, who, after laying their eggs in the bodies of small dead animals, bury them in order that they may not be devoured by birds and beasts of prey, he continues :— [...]
[...] Siebold published his observations on bees, demonstrating what had been previously supposed, viz., that the queen-bee exhausts her store of received sperm in fertilising eggs which give rise to females only, and that then she lays unfertilised eggs, which become drones only, whilst the unfertilised worker-females also lay eggs which [...]
[...] readily recognised in plants, in the multiplication by seed, by cuttings or shoots, and by separable buds. A broad line was drawn between “buds” and “eggs,” however egg-like the for mer might appear, in the assumption that eggs were special bodies of a peculiar structure, destined to be “fertilised ” by the [...]
[...] cently acquired knowledge of the process of fertilisation or im pregnation. Then came the demonstration by Siebold of the capacity for development of true eggs, even when not impreg nated. The sharpness of the limit between buds and eggs was by this at once destroyed ; and the closely following researches [...]
[...] exception, the question has now shifted, and, since the essential identity in reproductive power of cuttings, buds, pseudova, and eggs is proved, the problem before naturalists is rather, “Why are eggs ever fertilised P' in short, “What is the use of the male sex at all 2’” We have animals and plants multiplying by [...]
[...] tion to Leydig, on account of its nerve supply, Siebold holds to be contractile. Atter waiting some days Siebold had the grati fication of finding the first eggs laid in the cells of several of the nests from which he had removed queen, eggs, and larvae, and he felt convinced that they could only have been laid by the [...]
[...] were there, and the virgins watched and worked with the same assiduity as had done their queen-mother. In some cases Siebold actually saw a worker deposit an egg, and such egg laying workers, when anatomically tested, showed, firstly, in the presence of corpora lutea (the precise signification of which the [...]
[...] presence of corpora lutea (the precise signification of which the investigator had ascertained by his histological studies of the ovary) that eggs had been extruded, and, secondly, in the com plete absence of spermatozoa from the receptaculum seminis, that the insect was a virgin. Out of a hundred nests which he had [...]
[...] evidence of the sex. In all cases the parthenogenetic offspring was without exception male. The queen-wasps as we have mentioned also late in the season lay eggs which produce drones, which are easily distinguished from the drones parthenogenetically produced by their larger size. It occurred to Siebold when he [...]
[...] latter at the beginning ; and, furthermore, as we have noticed above, it is not till still later (August), when the experimental cells were long since all occupied with eggs, that the power and desire of sexual activity comes to these drones. E. R. LAN KESTER [...]
Nature30.12.1869
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 30. Dezember 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Colouring of the Cuckow’s Egg [...]
[...] are yearly ſound in nests of the Hedge-Sºrrow in this country, without ever bearing the ſaintest similar iſy to its well-known green blue eggs. One may grant that an ordinary English Cuckow’s egg will pass well enough, in the eyes of the dupe, for * Where I have quoted from this paper, I have quoted from the transla [...]
[...] according to my experience are the most common foster-parents of the Cuckow in this country; and indeed one may say, per haps, that such an egg is a compromise between the three, or a resultant, perhaps, of the three opposing forces; but any likeness between the Aſedge-Sparrow's egg and the Cuckow’s so often found [...]
[...] Tree Pipit (Anthus arboreus); if I myself had not taken out of the nests of the Red-backed Shrike (Zanius collurio) this red dish and this green-greyish peculiarly marked Cuckoo's egg, one might indeed entertain doubts whether this variously-coloured collection—these green eggs, with and without markings : these [...]
[...] grey, yellow brown, yellow red, wine red, brown red, dark brown and black ; these spotted, streaked, speckled, grained and marbled eggs could one and all be the eggs of our Cuckoo ! And yet this is indeed the fact ." How different this from the much more cautious and limited statement of Professor Newton, [...]
[...] much more cautious and limited statement of Professor Newton, first quoted, which would entirely sweep away some of these varieties, especially those resembling the eggs of the Redstart or the Hedge-Sparrow, for the eggs of these two species do not differ much from each other, and what might be said of the eggs of the [...]
[...] of Dr. Baldamus' selected species, for, a little further on, he gives a list of the various species from the nests of which Cuckoo's eggs have been taken resembling those of the foster-parent. Of the eggs of the Redstart he says:– “These four specimens, which were found in the nests of Auticiſła phanicurus, are [...]
[...] of Dr. Dehne, which is uniformly light-greenish blue, without any markings whatsoever.” Of the single specimen of the egg resembling that of the Hedge Sparrow, No. 15 in his list, he says:–“One of the most interest ing of the Cuckoo's eggs is a beautiful blue-green one, which was [...]
[...] ensured and facilitated the preservation of a species otherwise much exposed to danger, and that she has attained this object by investing every hen Cuckoo with the faculty of laying eggs coloured exactly like the eggs of the bird of whose nest she preſers to make use, according to the locality. Now if this were [...]
[...] himself the exceptions are numerous, and Professor Newton would make them still more numerous, and would no doubt be quite right in doing so. How, then, do the eggs in the excep tional cases prosper? Does the Hedge-Sparrow or the Redstart throw the egg of the Cuckoo out of its nest because it does not [...]
Nature04.07.1872
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 04. Juli 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] WIS II to say a few words for the benefit of those engaged in collecting oological specimens. Twenty years ago all eggs were blown with two holes—one at each end, and until within ten years most eggs have been emptied with two holes as above, or at the side. Very many of [...]
[...] at each end, and until within ten years most eggs have been emptied with two holes as above, or at the side. Very many of the eggs which I now receive in myſexchanges are similarly pre pared. At the present time no experienced collector ever makes but one hole to remove the contents of the egg, using a blowpipe [...]
[...] in some form to accomplish this object. The following rules should invariably be followed : 1. Prepare your eggs meat and clean. There is no excuse for having a dirty set of eggs where water, soap, and a tooth-brush can be found. Some eggs will not bear washing, as the shell is [...]
[...] thing else. 2. Make but one hole, and that a small one in the middle of the egg; cover this hole, when the contents are removed, and the specimen is dry, with gold-beater skin or the paper number indi cating the bird. Use an egg drill or a pointed wire of four or six [...]
[...] sides to make the opening. 3. If the blowpipe does not readily remove the contents of the egg, inject water and shake the specimen thoroughly, then blow again, and repeat the operation until every particle of the egg is removed. [...]
[...] few days the contents will become sufficiently decomposed to take away. y After removing the contents of any egg, cleanse the shell thoroughly. Fill it with clean water and shake vigorously, blow out the contents and repeat the operation until the specimen is [...]
[...] thoroughly. Fill it with clean water and shake vigorously, blow out the contents and repeat the operation until the specimen is perfectly clean. This is particularly desirable in white eggs, as black spots will show through the shell after a time if the least particle of the egg or blood stains remains inside. [...]
[...] 6. Save all your eggs in sets—that is, keep all the eggs each bºrd lays by themselves. This is the only way to form a correct knowledge of the eggs of any species, as a single egg, particularly [...]
[...] markings in the same species and in the same nest. 7. Keep a memorandum of the place and date of collecting each set of eggs. 8. Use some kind of blowpipe in preparing your eggs for the cabinet. The common blowpipe, with the addition of a fine [...]
[...] THE SciENTIFIc RELATIONs of GERMANY, FRANCE, AND ENGLAND. By M. BERTHELot . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .191 Instructions for PREPARING Birds' Eggs. By W. Wood, M.D. 19.1 Scientific Serials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 192 Societies and Academies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 192 [...]
PunchTitelblatt Bd. 011 1846
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 01. Januar 1846
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] this mighty Pudding. Up early—down late—the marvellous work has been the sole possessing object of his life. How has he not laboured to obtain the best ingredients! For, as the immortal Soyer profoundly observes: “Some eggs are much larger than others; some pepper stronger; salt salter; and even some sugar sweeter.” Therefore Punch, knowing that he was making a Pudding for the whole Human Race—(a very different thing, mind you, from the Pudding that your dear Mrs. CAUDLE, Sir, makes for you and all the little C.'s; though, may that [...]
[...] Eggs (Golden) from the bird, the property of Mother Goose; with the Egg of a Phoenix—the only one ever laid—taken from a nest of Cinnamon-sticks, and found in a Nutmeg Tree, in Arabia Felix. Beat well in a crystal bowl with a spoon of satin-wood. [...]
All the year round11.02.1871
  • Datum
    Samstag, 11. Februar 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] house. Learning nothing by experience, yet not forgetting that it is her mission to lay eggs, the foolish hen lays another and another, cackles and is robbed as before. If by chance chickens are produced from [...]
[...] another, cackles and is robbed as before. If by chance chickens are produced from any of her eggs, it is by their being warmed into life under the feathery breast of some vicarious mother, whose capacity [...]
[...] point of view—from this counting of chickens before they are hatched, it comes that from so many eggs so few chickens are produced. But it is not hens alone which cackle when they have done, or [...]
[...] discovery being denied or doubted. They cackled, and their nests were robbed, and their eggs were hatched by others less scrupulous, but more industrious and per severing, than themselves. Trace the his [...]
[...] arty which places them in power, the latter to the constituencies which elect them. The eggs which they lay and cackle over are not often stolen, because they are seldom worth stealing, and they are as [...]
[...] addled or not very assiduously sat upon; indeed, they are generally what are called in some parts of the country wind eggs. Diplomatists are supposed never to cackle, but the excessive care they take to mystify [...]
[...] the world as to what they are about, in itself leads to discovery. When they do hatch their eggs, it is remarkable that there is never any certainty whether they may not produce innocent ducklings, as [...]
[...] nuisance to her neighbours. Napoleon the Third, one of the nume rous progeny of that same egg, offered one of the latest examples of cackling too soon when he announced so melo-dramatically [...]
[...] too soon, as is proved by the present un happy war; but they have not lost their egg, which was laid more than eighteen hundred years ago, nor has it become addled. The successful hatching is only [...]
[...] But fool as a hen proves herself to be when she cackles, because she has laid an egg, she is not half such a fool as when she sits upon eggs and hatches ducks, and does not know that they are not chickens until [...]
Nature23.12.1869
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 23. Dezember 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Cuckow’s Eggs [...]
[...] as I have always taken great interest in the breeding of the cuckow. I cannot quite agree with Professor Newton that cuckows' eggs as a rule are subject to great variety. The eggs of the Great Spotted Cuckow (Oxylophus glandarius) are cer tainly not subject to much variety; for in a large series from [...]
[...] the usual type. Qf those I possess in my own collection, the most peculiar variety is a large egg, the ground colour of which is a dirty grey, sparingly spotted and blotched with light brown, and somewhat resembling some varieties of the eggs of the Garden [...]
[...] grey, sparingly spotted and blotched with light brown, and somewhat resembling some varieties of the eggs of the Garden Warbler (Sylvia horſensis). This egg was found by the late Mr. E. Seidensacher, of Cilli, Styria, in a nest of the creeper (Cer. thia familiaris), with four eggs of the foster-parent, and was sent [...]
[...] My friend at Coblentz wrote to me some time ago, stating that he had observed that the same female cuckow generally produces similarly coloured eggs, and that he had found in a nest of 7 urdus merula a peculiar and abnormally coloured egg of the common cuckow, closely resembling that of the common bunting [...]
[...] (AEmberiza miliaria), and shortly after found in a nest of the Robin (Sylvia rubecula), situated close to the blackbird's nest above referred to, another similar cuckow’s egg. He further states that the cuckow is not a common bird there, and that he had good reasons for supposing that the two eggs were produced [...]
[...] As far as my own experience goes, I cannot testify to the correctness of 10r. Baldamus's theory, as amongst all the cuckows' eggs I have collected, I find scarcely any that resemble those of the foster-parents. I have now before me eggs of our common cuckow taken with the following species, the eggs of which I [...]
[...] cula, Certhia familiaris, Z. mºeriza hortuſana, Sykia Allustris, .S. cinerca, A/ofacilla a/ba, and Accentor modularis, none of which, excepting that found with the eggs of Sylvia cinerea, bear any resemblance to the eggs of the foster-parent. The eggs of the American cow bunting (.jſoło!hrus pºcoris) which, like our [...]
[...] resemble those of the foster-parent, and in the instances that have come under my own observation I have found them to differ very widely from the foster-parent's eggs. On the other hand, the eggs of the Great Spotted Cuckow (Oxylophus glandarius) are so strikingly similar to those of the common Magpie, in whose [...]
[...] Variety and Species.—F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .218 Cuckow’s Eggs.-H. E. DREssºr. . . . . . . . . . . . 218 Physical Meteorology.—Dr. Hudson. . . . . . . . . . 218 A Cyclone in England—F.R.A.S. . . . . . . . . . . . 219 [...]
Punch22.08.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 22. August 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] For the goose without feathers, its master, Fº of genuine gold, at the rate, we were told, f one egg per day, but no faster. [...]
[...] For some time the man-goose was content to make use Qf the egg daily brought by the bird to him, Till fired by disdain of such slow rate of gain, A short-cut to millions occurred to him. [...]
[...] Till fired by disdain of such slow rate of gain, A short-cut to millions occurred to him. If his goose thus could lay one gold egg every day, For him to put by in his būreau, 'Twas an obvious idea, inside her must be a [...]
[...] For him to put by in his būreau, 'Twas an obvious idea, inside her must be a Mine of all the gold eggs in futuro. [...]
[...] The thirst for her murder prevailed when he heard her Cackle loud o'er the egg for the day, As, in proud sense of duty, to say, “Here’s a beauty, At the feet of my master to lay!” [...]
[...] On some Southern Line of his . - Who accustomed his public to humbug or hector, For his daily gold egg put the squeege on, Till at last putting screw on to force out a new one, He finds the more sternly he squeezes, - [...]
[...] Till at last putting screw on to force out a new one, He finds the more sternly he squeezes, - Far from new eggs out-shelled, that the old egg's withheld, And that geese can’t be bled as he pleases' - [...]
[...] E’en on Railway Directors, they’ll reach 'em. If §. cut up your geese, that they’ll not only cease or your needs to lay gold eggs enough, Sir, But the eggs will be lost, and the geese, to your cost, Mill cut up exceedingly rough, Sir. [...]
Nature18.08.1870
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 18. August 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Cuckow’s Eggs [...]
[...] A short time ago I addressed you on the subject of Cuckow’s eggs, giving you some experiences of my own. I now have much pleasure in forwarding to you a portion of a letter on the same subject from an esteemed and observant correspondent, [...]
[...] “Your remarks on the eggs of the cuckow tribe are very in teresting. I confess that I am, a believer in natural selection, and Darwinian in my opinions, but nevertheless in this matter I [...]
[...] parasitic. - “Many of the different species of the cuckows of this country lay white eggs; the whole of those included in the genus Chal. cites produce white eggs, the birds upon which they are parasitic are the various species of Fringillidae, they do not, however, [...]
[...] white unspotted appearance, but for their size also, which is nearly twice that of the Cape canary, and considerably larger than the eggs of the ‘Streep Koppie.’ “I have also found the egg of the ‘Dedric' in the nest of the green Sun-bird (Mectarinia famosa), where it was also much [...]
[...] “I have also found the egg of the ‘Dedric' in the nest of the green Sun-bird (Mectarinia famosa), where it was also much larger than the grey speckled eggs of the sun-bird, and likewise dissimilar from its pure white colour. - “The egg of Cuculus solitarius is of a dark mahogany brown, [...]
[...] norius phanicurus), when its difference was obvious both in size and colour, my son (F. H. Barber) found one of these dark brown eggs in the nest of the Cape canary 1 and despite its great dissimilarity compared to the small white speckled eggs of that bird, the work of incubation was quietly going on. [...]
[...] posed upon. Birds in general have no suspicion on this score, they suspect no trickery, and are therefore willing to incubate any kind of egg, provided it is not too large to fill up the nest. I think I told you how I had occasionally changed the eggs of various species of birds from one nest to another, making fearful [...]
[...] A REMEDY has been found for the “borer" that ravages Indian and Ceylon coffee plantations, by applying carbolic acid before the eggs are hatched. [...]
[...] Cuckow’s Eggs.-E.D. LAYARD . . . . . . . . . . . . . Special Modification of Colour in the Cushat.—W. C. McIntosh . Colour Blindness. --R. B. HAyward . . . . . . . . . .314 [...]
All the year roundInhaltsverzeichnis 03.1876/04.1876/05.1876/06.1876/07.1876/08.1876/09.1876
  • Datum
    Mittwoch, 01. März 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] ºnal, Prevention of Cruelty ECru * “.” . . . .354 || India. scenes at Railway Arewe Ready? . . . 326 | Edmund Kean . . . . . .80 stations . . . . . ; Arm e y?. - - . 444 Eggs on the Island of Sylt. . 399 || India, The Army in . . . 300 y in India.The . . . . 300 | Eminent Pirates. . . . . 127 | Indian Muslin . . . . .2% Arti , Militia, Volunteers, &c. . 444 | English Diet in Cromwell's Time 35 India, Sir Salar Jung in . . 4:1 [...]
[...] Closer than a Brother . 84, 109 Old Murch's Treasure . 373, 395 The King of the Eggs . . 299 My Zulu Chawles . - . 280 Snow Flood, The . - . 417 [...]
[...] Sun, More Work for the . . 490 Sylt Island. The King of the Eggs - - - - - TAILs, Men with . • . . . 32 Taylor (Mr.), Theatrical [...]
Punch31.10.1868
  • Datum
    Samstag, 31. Oktober 1868
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] Swan Egg Lane, E.C. [...]
[...] should take care how you use baking powders, not merely because if you don't you may use vermin powders, instead. In the first place —witness the Lance!—the baking powders, if egg powders, may be coloured with chromate of lead; in which case you might nearly, as well use vermin powders. In the next, baking powders are, accordi [...]
[...] tartaric acid, with a small quantity of rice or flour, and act by producing a sham fermentation. You would, perhaps, prefer the real. Egg powders not containing chromat of lead may be innocuous, Ladies, but they are innutritious...They may be very good to make puddings for children and others with whom eggs disagree. Otherwise [...]
[...] Ladies, but they are innutritious...They may be very good to make puddings for children and others with whom eggs disagree. Otherwise there is nothing so true than, as the popular saying affirms, that “eggs is eggs”–and that nothing else is. And the worst of these powders, be they ever so harmless is, Ma'am, that if cooks are not looked sharp [...]
[...] is eggs”–and that nothing else is. And the worst of these powders, be they ever so harmless is, Ma'am, that if cooks are not looked sharp after, there will be eggs in your bills, but, in lieu of eggs, egg powder in your puddings and pies. or further.information on this subject, see a fourpenny pamphlet, [...]
[...] xx with eggs - - - - - - . . More egºspensive. Sitting-room, Three to Five Shillings. Standing room, gratis. Attendance charged in the bill, but waiting in the passage. [...]