THE GENERAL NAME, SPECIES. 243 



tiotice agree. No one of these individual crayfishes was 

 exactly like the other; and to give an account of any 

 single crayfish as it existed in nature, its special peculiari- 

 ties must be added to the list of characters given above ; 

 which, considered together with the facts of structure 

 discussed in previous chapters, constitutes a definition, 

 or diagnosis, of the English kind, or species, of crayfish. 

 It follows that the species, regarded as tlie sum of the 

 morphological characters in question and nothing else, 

 does not exist in nature ; but that it is an abstraction, 

 obtained by separating the structural characters in which 

 the actual existences — the individual crayfishes— agree, 

 from those in which they differ, and neglecting the latter. 

 A diagram, embodying the totality of the structural 

 characters thus determined by observation to be common 

 to all our crayfishes, might be constructed; and it 

 would be a picture of nothing which ever existed in 

 nature; though it would serve as a very complete 

 plan of the structure of all the crayfishes which are to 

 be found in tiiis country. The morphological definition 

 of a species is, in fact, nothing but a description of the 

 plan of structure which characterises all the individuals 

 of that species. 



California is separated from these islands bya third of the 

 circumference of the globe, one-half of the interval being 

 occupied by the broad North Atlantic ocean. The fresh 

 waters of Cahfornia, however, contain crayfishes which are 



