JEVONS. 



INDEX. 



KIRBY. 



653 



the habits of Lobivanellus, 366 ; on 

 the spoonbill, 374 ; on the drum- 

 ming of the Kalij-j heasant, 376; 

 on Indian bu=tards, 378 ; on Otis 

 bengalensis, 381 ; on the ear-tui'ts 

 of Sypheotides auritus, 384 ; on the 

 double moults of certain birds, 391 ; 

 on the moulting of the honey- 

 suckers, 392 ; on the moulting of 

 bustards, plovers, and drongos, 393 ; 

 on the spring change of colour in 

 some finches, 393 ; on display in 

 male birds, 394 ; on the display of 

 the under-tail coverts by the male 

 bulbul, 402 ; on the Indian honey- 

 buzzard, 424 ; on sexual differences 

 in the colour of the eyes of horn- 

 bills, 425 ; on the markings of the 

 Tragopan pheasant, 428 ; on the 

 nidihcation of the Orioles, 453 ; on 

 the nidincation of the hornbills, 

 454 ; on the Sultan yellow-tit, 458 ; 

 on Palosornis javaniciis, 461 ; on the 

 immature plumage of birds, 465 

 et seq. ; on representative species of 

 birds, 468 ; on the habits of Tumix, 

 476; on the continued increase of 

 beauty of the peacock, 485 ; on 

 coloration in the 2[enus Palccomis, 

 494. 



Jevons, W. S., on the migrations ol 

 man, 47. 



Jews, ancient use of flint tools by the, 

 145 ; uniformity of, in various 

 parts of the world, 193 ; numerical 

 proportion of male and female 

 births among the, 243 ; ancient, 

 tattooing practised by, 574. 



Johnstone, Lieut., on the Indian ele- 

 phant, 218. 



Jollofs, fine appearance of the, 587. 



Jones, Albert, proportion of sexes of 

 Lepidoptera, reared by, 253. 



Juan Fernandez, humming-birds of, 

 487. 



Junonia, sexual differences of colour- 

 ing in species of, 310. 



Jupiter, comparison with Assyrian 

 effigies, 581. 



X. 



Kaffir skull, occurrence of the dia- 

 stema in a, 40. 

 Kaffirs, their cruelty to atimals, 118 ; 



lice of the, 170 ; colour ot the, 

 579 ; engrossment of the hand- 

 somest women by the chiefs of the, 

 595 ; marriage-customs of the, 598. 



Kalij-pheasant, drumming of the 

 male, 375 ; young of, 468. 



Eallima, resemblance of, to a withered 

 leaf, 311. 



Kalmucks, general beardlessness of, 

 560 ; aversion of, to hairs on the 

 face, 581 ; marriage-customs of 

 the, 598. 



Kangaroo, great red, sexual difference 

 in the colour of, 533. 



Kant, Imm., on duty, 97 ; on self- 

 restraint, 110; on the number of 

 species of man, 174. 



Katy-did, stridulation of the, 283. 



Keen, Dr., on the mental powers of 

 snakes, 352. 



Keller, Dr., on the difficulty of 

 fashioning stone implements, 49. 



Kent, W. S-, elongation of dorsal fin 

 of Gallionymus lyra, 336 ; court- 

 ship of Labrus mixtus, 341 ; colours 

 and courtship of C intharus li/ieatus, 

 341. 



Kestrels, new mates found by, 408. 



Kidney, one, doing double work in 

 disease, 32. 



King, W. ft., on the vocal organs of 

 Tetrao cupido, 371 ; on the drum- 

 ming of grouse, 376 ; on the rein- 

 deer, 503; on the attraction of 

 male deer by the voice of the 

 female, 526. 



King and Fitzroy, on the marriage 

 customs of the Fuegians, 599. 



King-crows, nidihcation of, 453. 



Kingfisher, 37 1; racket -shaped feathers 

 in the tail of a, 3S4. 



Kingfishers, colours and nidification 

 of the, 455, 457, 459 ; immature 

 plumage of the, 467, 468 ; young 

 of the, 481. 



King Lory, 457 ; immature plumage 

 of the, 467. 



Kingsley, C, on the sounds produced 

 by Umbrina, 347. 



Kirby and Spence, on sexual differ- 

 ences in the length of the snout in 

 Curculionidae, 208; on the court- 

 ship of insects, 221 ; on the elytra 

 of Dyiiscus, 276 ; on peculiarities 

 in the legs of male insects, 276 ; 



