HAKE-LIP. 



INDEX. 



HEWITT. 



457 



sterility of the, in confinement, ii. 

 135 ; }>refcrence of, for particular 

 plants, ii. 218. 



Hare-lip, inheritance of, i. 466. 



Harlan, Dr:j on hereditary diseases, i. 

 451. 



Hartman, on the wild ass, i. 05. 



Harvev, Mr., monstrous red and white 

 African bull, i. 95. 



Harvey, Prof., singular form of Begonia ' 

 frigida, i. 389 ; ejects of cross-breed- 

 ing on the female, i. 436 ; monstrous 

 saxifrage, ii. 150. 



Hasora wheat, i. 331. 



Hautbois strawberry, i. 375. 



Hawker, Col., on call or decoy ducks, 

 i. 296. 



Hawthorn, varieties of, i. 385, 387 ; py- 

 ramidal, i. 385 ; pendulous hybridised, 

 i. 461; changes of, by age, i. 387, 

 413 ; bud-variation in the, i, 402 ; 

 flower buds of, attacked by bull- 

 finches, ii. 217. 



Hayes, Dr., character of Esquimaux 

 dogs, i. 22. 



Haywood, W., o:i the feral rabbits of 

 Porto Santo, i. 117. 



Hazel, purple-leaved, i, 385, 419, ii. 

 324. 



Head of wild boar and Yorkshire pig, 

 figured, i. 75. 



Head and limbs, correlated variability 

 of, ii. 315. 



Headache, inheritance of, ii. 55. 



Heartsease, i. 391-393 ; change pro- 

 duced in the, by transplantation, i. 

 413 ; reversion in, ii. 4, 22 ; effects of 

 selection on, ii. 184; scorching of, ii. 

 214 ; effects of seasonal conditions on 

 the, ii. 263 ; annual varieties of the, 

 ii. 295. 



Heat, effect of, upon the fleece of sheep, 

 i. 102. 



Heber, Bishop, on the breeding of the 

 rhinoceros in captivity, ii. 132. 



Hebrides, cattle of the, i. 84 ; pigeons 

 of the, i. 192. 



Heer, 0., on the plants of the Swiss 

 lake-dwellings, i. 326, ii. 200, 422 ; 

 on the cereals, i. 335-337 ; on the 

 peas, i. 345 ; on the vine growing in 

 Italy in the Bronze age, i. 352. 



Heimann, potato-grafting, i. 422. 



Helix lactea, ii. 270. 



Henicrocallis ful ca and flaca, interchang* 

 ing by bud-variation, i. 412. 



Hemlock, yields no conicine in Scotl/nd, 

 ii. 264. 



Hemp, differences of, in various parts of 

 India, ii. 148 ; climatal difference in 

 products of, ii. 264. 



Hempseed, effect of, upon the colour of 

 birds, ii. 269. 



Hermaphrodite flowers, occurrence of, 

 in maize, i. 339. 



Hen, assumption of male characters by 

 the, ii. 26, 29 ; development of spurs 

 in the, ii. 310. 



"HENNlES,"or hen-like male fowls,!. 

 264. 



Henry, T. A., a variety of the ash pro- 

 duced by grafting, i. 418; crossing 

 of species o( lihodudendron and Arabis, 

 i. 431. 



Henslow, Prof., individual variation in 

 wheat, i. 332 ; bud-variation in the 

 Austrian bramble rose, i. 406 ; partial 

 reproduction of the weeping ash by 

 seed, i. 462. 



Hepatica, changed by transplantation, 

 i. 412. 



Herbert, Dr., variations of T'7o'a 

 g)-andifiora, i. 392 ; bud-variation in 

 camellias, i. 401 ; seedlings from 

 reverted Cyfisus adam, i. 414 ; 

 crosses of Swedish and other turnips, 

 ii. 71 ; on hollyhocks, ii. 185; breed- 

 ing of hybrids, ii. 112 ; self-impotence 

 in hybrid hippeastrums, ii. 120, 121 ; 

 hybrid Gladiolus, ii. 121; or Zephyr- 

 anthes Candida, ii. 147 ; fertility of 

 the crocus, ii. 148 ; on contabescence, 

 ii. 149 ; hybrid Ehododendron, ii. 

 253. 



Herculaneum, figure of a pig found 

 in, i. 71. 



Heron, Sir R., appearance of "black- 

 shouldered " among ordinary pea- 

 cocks, i. 306,307 ; non-inheritance of 

 monstrous characters by gold-fish, i. 

 313; crossing of white and coloured 

 Angora rabbits, ii. 70 ; crosses of 

 solid-hoofed pigs, ibid. 



Herpestes fascia us and griseus, ii. 134. 



Heusinger, on the sheep of the Taren- 

 tino, ii. 212; on correlated constita* 

 tional peculiarities, ii. 331. 



Hewitt, Mr., reversion in bantam cocks, 



