402 



ANALYTICAL LNDEX 



Asilidae^ mimicry of Hynienoptera 

 by, 257 n. I, 276, 27S, 37b' ; mimicry 

 of Hymenopter.i by, probably not 

 aggressive, 37S ; attacking specially 

 cklended insects, 318. 



ASFLCTS, VaRIOI'S, OF MiMICRY, 



Illustrated ky Orikntal and 



OTHER LEI'IDOrrERA, X. 370-6. 



Ass and horse, sterile progeny of, 



78. 



asstfNiliSy liuchani^ii^ capturing 

 probably Catopsilia florcUa, 283 ; 

 chasing a Belcnois', capturing and 

 rejecting distasteful moths, 284. 



' Association ' or ' Combination ', 

 use of, contrasted \vith 'group', 293. 



asterie, PrciiSy the wet f. of /'. ni- 

 mana, 340, 341. 



Asteroidea, 30. 



astvdfiiiv^ Limcnitis {Basil archia)^ 

 extends into Mexico, 274. 



ASYMPATRV AS CAUSE OK ASYN- 

 C.AMY, II. 84, 85. 



Asympatry, definition of, 62. 



Asyngamy, definition of, 60 ; the 

 true interspecific barrier, 65, 84 ; 

 sections dealing with various causes 

 of, 84-91 ; caused without selection, 



89. 



Atavism, relation to pangenesis of, 

 125. 



AtcUa phalatitha, 283. 



liter. Die runts ^ attacking J\if>i/io 

 and capturing I'cifiessa, 285. 



a//iam<iSf C/tiiraxes, eaten by bee- 

 eater, 288. 



Athyma and Limenitis, Resem- 

 blance OF Males to Male Hypo- 

 LiMNAS Misippus, X. 38 1, 382: see 

 also 217, 218. 



/J///J ;;///. conspicuous and probably 

 distasteful, 218. 



Athyma {Pantoporia) cama^ 382 ; 

 punctata, 217, 38 1, 382. 



Atlantic, swarm of //. misippus in 

 mid-, 216 n. 2. 



Atmosphere, energy of sun may 

 have been conserved by, 14. 



Atta {Oecoiioma) cepha/otcs, 259, 

 259 (Fig. 7), 260, 280, 377. 



Attidae, mimicking ants, 252, 253 ; 

 courtship of spiders belonging to, 

 380. 



ATTITUDE, Reduction of 

 Shadow by, X. 300, 301. 



Attitudes and Moyements, 

 Importance of Instinctive, for 



Protectiye Resemblance, X. 301, 

 302: see also 289, 298. 300, 301, 

 318. 



a'ltitudes and moyements, 

 Importance of Instinctive, in 

 Display ok Warning Colours, 

 ^- 323, 3-4: see also 319, 320. 



AruTUDEs, Intimidating, X. 



324, 325- 



Attitudes and Moyements, 

 Importance of Instinctive, for 

 Mimicry, X. 363 : see also 241, 319, 



341. 



August Thorn Moth, 149, 150. 



Augustine, St., on the method of 

 creation, 55. 



Auk, 299. 



Aurivillus, Prof. Chr.,on Amauris 

 niavius and its form dominicanus, 68. 



aurora, Alcidis^ mimicked by Pap. 

 laglaizei, 371. 



Australia, form of P. cardui of, 

 85 n. I ; uniformity among wasps 

 and Fossores of, 278. 



Australian and Oriental Regions, 

 Euploeini nearly restricted to, 333, 

 353 ; mimicry in the Elymniinac of, 



353- 



Australian Region, see Australia, 



Austro-Malayan, New (iuinea, 371, 



379; Polynesia, 333; Ternate, 194. 



Austria, hereditary transmission 

 of inherent peculiarity of lip in Royal 

 House of, 180. 



Austro - Malayan sub - Region, 

 mimicry in the Ely)nniinac of, 353. 



Autobiography, Charles Darwin, 

 xxix. 92. 



Avebury, Lord, on instincts of 

 Fossorial Hymenoptera, 160, 161. 



B 



Bacon, Francis, on transmutation 

 of species, 54, 55; on ' vivification 

 from putrefaction', 54. 55; on re- 

 straining power of seed, 55. 



Bairdia, persistence through geo- 

 logical time of, 39. 



Palanoi^lossuSy 26, y:> ; conclusions 

 of Balcson from study of, xliii. 



Baldwin, Professor J. Mark, 312 

 n. 2 ; on modification and variation, 

 73, 73 n. I, 142. 



Balfour, F. M., on Peripatus, l^. 



Ballad of the Ichthyosaurus, 

 May Kendall, 104. ■ I 



