CHAP. XIV.] THE NEOTROPICAL REGION. 51 



mainland. The species are here so very few, that the greatest 

 advocate for continental extensions would hardly call such vast 

 causes into action, to account for the presence of these three 

 birds on so small and so remote an island, especially as the 

 union must have continued down to the time of existing species. 

 But if accidental immigration has sufficed here, it will also 

 assuredly have sufficed where the islands are larger, and the 

 chances of reaching them proportionately greater; and it is 

 because an important principle is here illustrated on so small 

 a scale, and in so simple a manner as to be almost undeniable., 

 that we have devoted a paragraph to its elucidation. 



A few Coleoptera from Juan Fernandez present analogous 

 phenomena. All belong to Chilian genera, while a portion of 

 them constitute peculiar species. 



Land-shells are rather plentiful, there being about twenty 

 species belonging to seven genera, all found in the adjacent 

 parts of South America; but all the species are peculiar, 

 as well as four others found on the island of Mas-a-fuera. 



///. TropicaJ, North America, or the Mexican Sub-region. 



This sub-region is of comparatively small extent, consisting of 

 the irregular neck of land, about 1,800 miles long, which 

 connects the North and South American continents. Almost 

 the whole of its area is mountainous, being in fact a con- 

 tinuation of the great range of the Eocky Mountains. In 

 Mexico it forms an extensive table-land, from 6,000 to 9,000 

 feet above the sea, with numerous volcanic peaks from 12,000 to 

 18,000 feet high ; but in Yucatan and Honduras, the country is 

 less elevated, though still mountainous. On the shores of the 

 Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico, there is a margin of low 

 land from 50 to 100 miles wide, beyond which the mountains 

 rise abruptly ; but on the Pacific side this is almost entirely 

 wanting, the mountains rising almost immediately from the sea 

 shore. With the exception of the elevated plateaus of Mexico 

 and Guatemala, and the extremity of the peninsula of Yucatan, 

 the whole of Central America is clothed with forests ; and as its 

 surface is much broken up into hill and valley, and the volcanic 



