508 



INDEX. 



GUA 



Guana, see Eeptiles 



Guerinzius, on wasps recognising 



persons, 188 

 Guillemots, plundering of by gulls, 



283, 284 ; mode of catching fish, 



285 

 Gulls, plundering guillemots, 283, 



284; mode of challenge, 291 ; 



nidification, 292 

 (luring, Thomas, on intelligence of 



geese, 314,315 



HAGEN, on termites, 202 

 Hague, on powers of commu- 

 nication in ants, 54-7 



Hamilton, R., on fear exhibited by 

 cattle in slaughterhouses, 334 



Hancock, Dr., on fish quitting water, 

 248 ; crows breaking shells by 

 dropping them on stones, 283 



Harding, S., on intelligence of a 

 pig, 340 



Hare, 357-60 



Hartmann, Von, his definition of in- 

 stinct, 15; on fondness of spiders 

 for music, 206 



Harvesting-ants, 96-110; mice, 365, 

 366 



Hawkshaw, J. Clarke, on limpet 

 remembering locality, 28-9 



Hayden, on monkey keeping door 

 open with blanket, 481 



Hayes, Dr., on intelligence of Eskimo 

 dogs, 462 



Heber, Bishop, on sympathy of ele- 

 phant, 289 



Helix pomatia, intelligence of, 26,27 



lleincrobius clirysops, 240 



Hen, maternal instinct of, 272 ; re- 

 moving eggs with neck, 288 ; and 

 young chicken on back, 288, 289 



Henderson, on navigating habits of 

 Iceland mice, 364, 365 



Heron, variations in nest-building, 

 299 



Hogg, on intelligence of his sheep- 

 dog, 448 



Holden, on starlings learning to 

 avoid telegraph wires, 312, 313 



Hollmann, on intelligence oi octopus, 

 30 



HUG 



Homarus marinut, 233 



Hooker, Sir Joseph, on navigating 

 habits of Iceland mice, 364 



Hooper, W. F., on intelligence of a 

 dog, 463 



Horn, Mrs., on reasoning powers of 

 a dog, 462 



Hornet, carrying heavy prey up an 

 elevation in order to fly a\v;iy 

 with it, 196 



Horse, emotions of, 328-30 ; memory, 

 330; general intelligence, 328, 

 330-3 



Horse-fly, tamed, 230, 231 



Horsfall, on dog finding his way 

 about by train, 467, 468 



Hoste, Sir W., on wounded monkey 

 showing its blood to the sports- 

 man, 476 



Houzeau, on hen transporting young 

 chicken on her back, 288, 289 ; 

 parrots not being deceived by 

 mirrors, 310, 311; birds dream- 

 ing, 312 ; mules counting their 

 journeys, 332 ; monkeys destroy- 

 ing poison-fangs of snakes, 483 



Hubbard, Mrs., on intelligence of a 

 cat, 414 



Huber, F. and P., on instinct, 16. On 

 ants : sense of smell in, 33 ; recog- 

 nising companions, 4i ; powers of 

 communication, 49, 50 ; observa- 

 tions on slave-making instinct, 

 65 ; on warfare, 76 ; play, 87, 88 ; 

 harvesting, 97 ; carrying one 

 another, 109 ; intelligence shown 

 in architecture, 128, 129. On 

 bees : sense of hearing in, 144 ; 

 duration of memory, 155 ; powers 

 of communication, 156, 159 ; 

 manipulation and uses of pro- 

 polis, 161 ; battles of queen-bees, 

 164, 165; form of cells, 173; 

 building cells, 177, 178; barri- 

 cading doors against moths, 184 ; 

 strengthening combs, 185 ; biting 

 holes in corollas, 189; ventilating 

 hives, 191, 192 ; effects of remov- 

 ing antennae of bees, 197 



Hudson, on habits of Mdvt\rus, 309| 

 310 



Hugen, on termites, 198 



