426 



ANALYTICAL INDEX 



pseudepisematic (alluring) resem- 

 blance to, 378, 378 n. 3. 



Fly-catcher seen capturing butter- 

 fly, 283 ; seen chasing Lycacnid, 283. 



Foes, see enemies. 



Food, climate, &.C., as cause of 

 mimicry, 224, 272 (see also Fxlernal 

 Causes) ; concealment etTcctcd by 

 colour of, 514. 



Foraminiftra in classification, 25 ; 

 persistence in geological time of, 27, 

 28. 



Forest country in S. Africa, defini- 

 tion of, 340. 



Form, seasonal change of,in butter- 

 flies' wings, 206-S, 310, 311. 



/orfniiii, Sy/tc/ftosy/ia, mimicry of 

 ant by, 253 (Fig. I />'). 



Fossils, limited information con- 

 veyed by, 100, 107. 



Fossores (see also classification of 

 examples of mimicry, 3S9-93) : in- 

 stincts of, 118, 118 n. I, 119, 160-4; 

 prophetic instinct of, 119, 163, 164 ; 

 resemblances between other stinging 

 insects and, 278, 376 ; see also 232. 



Foster, vSir Michae], on curiosity 

 as the true incentive to incjuiry, 

 xlvii ; on indirect methods of nature, 

 loi. 



Fowler, Rev. Canon W. W., on 

 ant-like Membractiiac, 258 (Fig. 6), 

 259. 



Fox, Arctic, aggressive seasonal 

 change of, 313. 



France and Lamarck's thcor)', 98. 



France, 8oci6t6 Entomologique 

 de, Annales, 211, 326; Bulletin, 

 381, 382. 



frini^iliaritis, Microhiernx, nest of, 

 290, 291. 



Fritillaries, pupae of, i 52. 



Friiillary, resemblance of A./c-7'ii/i(i 

 to, 342. 



Frog, Roux's experiments on egg 

 of, 128-30 ; allanticryptic resem- 

 blance of, 313. 



Frohawk on P. phlacas^ 87 n. i. 



From, the Greeks to Darwin, 

 H. F. Osbom, 56 n. 2, 141 n. i, 175. 



Fr)', Sir Edward, on definitions of 

 acquired characters, 143-4. 



fuci/onnis, JlacmorrJio^ia, loss of 

 scales by, 365. 



Fulgoridae of Commentry Car- 

 boniferous. 36. 



Fungi, leaf-attacking, effects of 



resembled by butterflies, 205, 206; 

 by moths and Locustids, 302. 

 FiKTHKR Indirect Evidence 



SITPORTING A M 1^1,1, ERIAN OR 

 SVNAI'OSEMATIC IN TERPKErA IION, 



X. 346, 347. 



fuscus, Arttiffius, capturing Crtistia 

 corc^ 286. 



Fusilina in the Carboniferous, 27. 



gai^attS^Polyrrhachisy with ant like 

 bug,'254, 255.' 



(iahan,C. J., on mimicry in Coleo- 

 ptera, 236, 237 ; on Milllerian and 

 ' Hatesian mimicry in beetles, 237 ; on 

 I life-history and mimicry, 243 ; on 

 ' mimicry of weevils by diurnal Longi- 

 corns, 250 ; on Longicorns mimick- 

 ing weevils and Hispidac, i(i\ ; on 

 Cingalese Clytiuae as models for 

 other Longicorns, 349. 



Galapagos Islands, birds greatly 

 modified in, 84 n. 2 ; dull colours of 

 animals in, 225. 



Galton, Francis, on * recession to- 

 wards mediocrity', 109,110: on trans- 

 fusion of blood and pangenesis, 125 ; 

 I on 'identical' turns, 132, 134, 135, 

 138 n. ; on effect of cessation of selec- 

 tion, 138; definition of acquired 

 characters by, 143 ; on invisibility of 

 zebra, 29S. 



Gametes, see germ-cells. 



Ganoid fish in early Palaeozoic, 30. 



Garden White butterflies (/'. 

 brassiiac and P. tapae)^ 93, 147, 148, 

 213, 301. 



Gartner on sterility between 

 selected races, 78. 



Gastropacha queviifolia^ 299, 307. 



Gastropoda in early Palaeozoic, 

 30; rteropoda arose from, 41, 42; 

 evolution in, 42; appear in Cambrian, 

 42. 



Gauchos, skill in killing rattle, i6r. 



(iazaland, S.I'.. Rhodesia, attacks 

 of birds on butterflies, <S:c., witnessed 

 in, 284. 



Gcddes, P., on anabolic and kata- 

 bolic tendencies, 100- 1 ; on internal 

 causes of mimicry, 224. 



Geikie, Sir Archibald, on age of 

 the stratified rocks, 16, 17 ; on geo- 

 logical record of time, 19. 



Gemmules of pangenesis, 124-6. 



Genera subjective, 65. 



