ming bird, though the smaller of our species, the one I find visiting the arbutus,[1] is more suggestive of a bumblebee. They have long tongues, curled up when not in use, through which they suck the nectar of flowers. Unlike most moths, which fly at dusk or after dark, the sesias are abroad in the bright sunlight.
Occasionally one of the early spring butterflies, especially the American tortoise-shell[2] and the mourning cloak,[3] may be seen hovering over the blossoms.
The insect visitors so far considered are all useful to the mayflower. They fly rapidly from head to head and plant to plant, carrying the pollen which sticks to them from the anthers of the staminate blossoms to the stigmas of the pistillate ones, thus causing the fertilization of the embryos and the development