412 



ANALYTICAL INDEX 



Mimicry). X. 327-56. See Mimicry 

 Miillerian. For sections and sub- 

 sections of this heading see pp. 295, 

 296. 



Comoro, see Grand Comoro, 373. 



Complete Immunity not im- 

 plied BY Warning Colours, 



X. 317.318. 



Composite mimicry of two models, 



368, 369. 



Composite nature of Mimicr)', 

 240-2. 



Conccahiicnt, aposcmatic forms 

 protected in time of stress by, 317, 

 320. 



Concealment Assisted by 

 Gregarious Habit, X. 304. 



Conception, J. C. Trichard on 

 effect of imagination at the moment 

 of, 186. 



Conclusions on Natural 

 S flection as the Cause of 

 Mimicry, &c., VIII. 267-70. 



Conclusions supporting Mullerian 

 Mimicry. 346, 347. 



Conditions chiefly deter- 

 mined BY Habits and Life- 

 history, VIII. 243, 244. 



Conditions, see environment, 

 external causes, and uniformity. 



Conductivity in interior of earth, 

 10-13 ; and radium, 15 n. 2. 



Conepatus tnapuyito^ 315. 



C0NFIRM.\TI0N OF HISTORY IN- 

 FERRED FROM Mimicry, X. 365, 366. 



cofi/usa^ Methona^ mimics of, 264- 

 6 ; method of attaining transparency 

 in, 265 ; Ecuador form of, 265, 266. 



Congenital, see inherent charac- 

 ters, 141. 



Congo, type f. of /,. chrysippus at 

 Luebo on S. branch of, 321 n. i. 



Coniferae related to Cordaiteae, 



45- 



* Connate varieties of structure . . . 



arc apt to re-appear in . . . offspring ', 



J. C. Prichard (1S26), 179. 



Connate, see inherent characters. 



conspicuousness imputed to 

 Animals Criticized by Thayer, 



X. 321-3. 



Conspicuousness only not the aim 

 of nature, 321, 322; danger of un- 

 necessary, 322 ; relative use of term, 

 322. 



Constitutional, see inherent 

 characters, 141. 



Constricting serpent, aggressive 

 resemblance of, 312. 



Contemporary Review, 161. 



CuNTL.Ms, Kssay X. 293-7. 



Continental Areas, Mimetic 

 Species on, with Non-Mimetic 

 Ance.stor in Island, X. 373-6. 



Continental areas, stability of, 21. 



Continuity and Discontinuity 

 defined, xiv. 



Continuity of the germ-plasm, dia- 

 gram of, described, 127-8, 130-1 ; 

 heredity and, 127-36 ; blastogenic or 

 inherent characters and, 127; soma- 

 togenic or acquired characters and, 

 127, 131, 132 ; relation between 

 transmission of acquired characters 

 and, illustrated in Diagram II, 131, 



^32- 



Continuity the systematist's diffi- 

 culty, .XV. 



Continuous or Discontinuous 

 Eyolution, Introd., .\iv-,\vi. 



Continuous evolution cannot be 

 claimed as Mutation, xx.wiii, .xxxviii 

 n. I , xxxix. 



Contributions to an Insect 

 Fauna of the Amazon Valley, 

 H. W. Bates, 220. 



Conularia in Palaeozoic, 42. 



Conviction, the basis of scientific, 

 201, 202. 



Cooling of the earth, 9-13. 



Cope, E. D., on Natural Selection 

 not creative, xxii ; on origin of fittest, 

 109. 



Coral, protective resemblance to, 



359- 



Corals, place in classification of, 



25 ; slow evolution in, 28. 



Cordaiteae, a group of Palaeozoic 

 Gymnospcrms, 45 ; comparable to 

 Coniferae, 45. 



core^ Ov/j/;V/, captured hy Artamus 

 fuscus, 286 ; mimicked by female of 

 //. lolind, 372 ; mimicked by female 

 of J\ip. castor :in(\ by both sexes of its 

 S. representative, Pnp. dravidantmy 



372. 



cor I ft ft ens, Papilio, evidence of 



capture by swallow of, 284. 



Cork, Prof. J. H. Farmer on utility 

 as no explanation of, xlv, xlvi. 



corftuta, Ccrato/thrvSy allanticryptic 

 resemblance of, 313. 



Correns, rediscovery of Mendel's 

 principle by, xxix ; on limitation of 



