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DARWINISM 
CHAP. 
to Surinam (1810), had already explained the matter. He 
says : “ The colour and even the shape of the hair are much 
like withered moss, and serve to hide the animal in the trees, 
but particularly when it has that orange-coloured spot between 
the shoulders and lies close to the tree ; it looks then exactly 
like a piece of branch where the rest has been broken off, by 
which the hunters are often deceived.” Even such a huge 
animal as the giraffe is said to be perfectly concealed by its 
colour and form when standing among the dead and broken 
trees that so often occur on the outskirts of the thickets where 
it feeds. The large blotch-like spots on the skin and the 
strange shape of the head and horns, like broken branches, so 
tend to its concealment that even the keen-eyed natives have 
been known to mistake trees for giraffes or giraffes for trees. 
Innumerable examples of this kind of protective colouring 
occur among insects; beetles mottled like the bark of trees or 
resembling the sand or rock or moss on which they live, with 
green caterpillars of the exact general tints of the foliage they 
feed on ; but there are also many cases of detailed imitation of 
particular objects by insects that must be briefly described. 1 
Protective Imitation of Particular Objects. 
The insects which present this kind of imitation most per¬ 
fectly are the Phasmidse, or stick and leaf insects. The well- 
1 With reference to this general resemblance of insects to their environment 
the following remarks by Mr. Ponltou are very instructive. He says: 
“ Holding the larva of Sphinx ligustri in one hand and a twig of its food- 
plant in the other, the wonder we feel is, not at the resemblance but at the 
difference ; we are surprised at the difficulty experienced in detecting so con¬ 
spicuous an object. And yet the protection is very real, for the larvae will be 
passed over by those who are not accustomed to their appearance, although the 
searcher may be told of the presence of a large caterpillar. An experienced 
entomologist may also fail to find the larvae till after a considerable search. 
This is general protective resemblance, and it depends upon a general harmony 
between the appearance of the organism and its whole environment. It is 
impossible to understand the force of this protection for any larva, without 
seeing it on its food-plant and in an entirely normal condition. The artistic 
effect of green foliage is more complex than we often imagine ; numberless 
modifications are wrought by varied lights and shadows upon colours which are 
in themselves far from uniform. In the larva of Papilio machaon the pro¬ 
tection is very real when the larva is on the food-plant, and can hardly 
be appreciated at all when the two are apart.” Numerous other examples are 
given in the chapter on “Mimicry and other Protective Resemblances among 
Animals,” in my Contributions to the Theory of Natural Selection. 
