DIFFICULTIES OF INDUCTIVE VERIFICATION. 413 



trasts of climate : here great expenditure for the raaintenance 

 of temperature is needed, and there very little ; in one 

 zone an organism is supplied with abundant light all the 

 year round, and in another only for a few months ; this 

 region yields an almost unfailing supply of water,' while that 

 entails the exertion of travelling many miles every night for 

 a draught. 



Permanent differences in the natures and distributions of 

 aliment greatly interfere with the comparisons. The Swal- 

 low goes through more exertion than the Sparrow in securing 

 a given weight of food ; but then their foods are dissimilar 

 in nutritive qualities. There is a want of parallelism between 

 the circumstances of those herbivores that live where the 

 plains are annually covered for a time with rich herbage, 

 but afterwards become parched up, and of those inhabiting 

 more temperate regions. Instcts whose larvae feed on an 

 abundant plant, as those of the genus Vanessa on the JXettle, 

 have practically an environment very unlike that of insects 

 such as DeilephUa Evpliorhiw, whose larvse feed on a com- 

 paratively rare plant — the Sea-Spurge. 



Again, comparisons between creatures otherwise akin in 

 their constitutions and circumstances, are hindered by ine- 

 qualities in their relations to enemies. Two animals, of 

 which one is predatory and has no foes but parasites, while 

 the other is much pursued, cannot properly be contrasted 

 with a view to determining the influence of size or com- 

 plexit3\ 



Without multiplying instances, it will be clear enough 

 then that the aggregate of destructive actions, positive and 

 negative, which each species has to contend with, is so 

 undefinable in the amounts and kinds of its components, 

 that nothing beyond a vague idea of its relative total can 

 be formed. 



§ 331. Besides these immense variations in the outer 

 actions to be counter-balanced, there are immense variations 



