186 



INDEX 



Mantids, as enemies of butterflies, 

 105 



Marshall, on Miillerian mimicry, 

 72 ; on feeding experiments 

 vpith Mantids, 105 ; on birds as 

 enemies of butterflies, 107 ; on 

 feeding experiments with S. 

 African birds, 117; with mon- 

 keys, 121 ; on birds attacking 

 Pierids, 150 



Mechanitis egaensis, XV. 9; M. 

 elisa, XV. 6; M. lysimnia, 151, 

 XV. 8 ; M. methona, XV. 10 ; 

 M. saturata, as model for 

 Dismorphia praxinoe, 57, 62; 

 as member of mimicry ring, 

 134, XV. 7 



Melanic sports in moths, 101 



Melinaea, 135 



Melinda formosa, App. II 



Melittophagus swinhoei, 110 



Merops viridis. 111 



MerrifieldjOn seasonal dimorphism, 

 130 



Methona confusa, XII. 1, XIV. 1 



Migratory birds, suggested in- 

 fluence on mimicry of, 53 



Mimacraea, 35 



Mimetic resemblance, as induced 

 through gradual slight changes, 

 64 



Mimic, occupying same station as 

 model, 51; occupying station 

 apart from model, 53 ; scarcer 

 than model, 56 ; pattern of in 

 relation to allies, 57 



Mimicry, Wallace's conditions of, 

 50; Batesian, 9; Miillerian, 14 



Mimicry rings, 65 ; in S. American 

 butterflies, 134; and natural 

 selection, 136 



Mimicry theory, difficiolties of, 139 



Monkeys, as enemies of butterflies, 

 121 



Moths, mimicry in, 27, 36 



Moulton, on S. American mimicry 

 rings, 134 



Miiller, 14, 72 



Miillerian mimicry, 53, 57, 66; 

 difiiculties of, 72 



Mutation, see Sports 

 Mylothris, 36 



Natural selection and mimicry, 

 10-12, 61, 92, 152 



Neal, on monkeys as enemies of 

 butterflies, 123 



Nepheronia { = Pareronia) hippia, 

 116 



Neptis imitans, 24; N. nemetes, 

 54; N. kamarupa, 121 



North American butterflies, mimi- 

 cry among, 45 



Norton, on rapidity of changes 

 in mixed populations through 

 natural selection, 94, App. I 



Oriental butterflies, mimicry 

 among, 23 



Overlapping in patterns of dif- 

 ferent groups of butterflies, 

 144 



Papilio aristolochiae, as model for 

 female of P. polytes, 13, 26, 

 52, 77; range of, 79; likeness 

 to P. polytes, 80 ; character- 

 istics of, 81; flight of, 82; 

 eaten by lizards, 108; rejected 

 by certain birds, 115, 116; 

 disliked by Tree-shrew, 121, 

 V. 5, 5a; P. agestor, 24, 51, 

 n. 3 ; P. asterius, 46 ; P. 

 backus, App. II ; P. bootes, 27, 

 III. 6 ; P. brasidas, 29, VI. 4 ; 

 P. chamissonia, 44, XIII. 2; 

 P. clytia, 23, 25, 55, I. 7, 8 ; 

 P. coon, 26, 89 ; P. cynorta, 35, 

 36, VII. 10; P. dardanus, in- 

 vestigated by Trimen, 14; 

 mimicry in, 30; breeding ex- 

 periments with, 90; poly- 

 morphic forms of in relation to 

 models, 149 note; var. hum- 

 bloti, 32 ; var. meriones, 32 ; 

 $ cenea, 31, VIII. 4 ; ? dionysus, 

 31, 33; 2 hippocoon, 31, 

 VIII. 3; $ niavioides, 32, 33; 

 $ planemoides, 31 ; ? ruspina, 

 33; ? trimeni, 31, 32, 33; 



