Excerpt from Insect Miscellanies
It was well said by the distinguished Danish naturalist, Fabricius, that "nothing in natural history is more abstruse and difficult than an accurate description of the senses of animals" This inherent complexity of the subject appears to have induced Lehmann to undertake the investigation of the senses of insects. He collected into a focus all that was known previous to his time, though he has added very little from his own observation; but since that period much has been done by Marcel de Serres, Wollaston, Muller, and others.
The chief difficulty of the subject arises from the great physical differences which exist between animals furnished with bones and warm blood, and insects that have neither, rendering all inference from analogy much less to be depended on than if the physical structure of each were similar.
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