428 



ANALYTICAL INDLX 



breed, 87 ; (lr>' f. of. bred from wet, 

 341 ; wet f. of, a mimic of A. scrcna 

 type, dry f. prot ryptic, 341. 



Gouty diathesis, transmission of, 

 discussed by J. C. I'richard, 183, 184. 



("iK.MilAI. PKliDOMlNANCK OF 

 Mr LLhRIAN Ml.MlCKV, X. 342 4. 



drafted tissues and pangenesis, 

 125-6. 



(".rainier, Hcnjamin, of Derby, 

 distinction between inherent and 

 acquiretl characters suggested to 

 J. C. I'richard by, 179. 



Grammostomum in Carboniferous, 



-7- 



Grand Comoro, non-mimetic Piip. 



humhloti in, yj},. 



Grapta C-a/l'Ufn, 203-5. 



Graptolites in Palaeozoic, 28. 



Grasses, protective resemblance 

 t<^» 107 ; syncryptic resemblance to, 

 312; concealment among roots of, 



3i5i, 323. 



Grasshoppers (At r/tf/iddc) o( Coxn- 



mcntry Carboniferous, 36. 37 ; 



mimicry of leaf-carrying ants by, 



260 ; value of bright hind wings of, 



303, 304, 325 ; colour adjustment of, 



307 ; observations on the courtship 



of, 380. 



Gravitation, evidence for, com- 

 pared with that for Mimicry, xxvi ; 

 accepted, though nature not ex- 

 plained, 97 ; accepted because con- 

 sistent with the facts of the Cosmos, 

 219, 271. 



Gravity, Effect on Shape of 

 Pupae of, \'. 15 1-2; effect of on 

 pupae not hereditary, 152. 



Gray, Asa, see Asa Gray, xxvi, 

 66, 67, 68, 194 n. I. 



Great Rift Valley. I. \V. Gregory, 



304- 



Green. K. E., on tilt of Meliinitis^ 



300 n. 5. 



Green Hairstreak Butterfly, 301. 



GREGARIOU.S HAprr, Conceal- 

 ment ASSISTEI* BY, X. 304. 



(iregarious habit in aposematic 

 defence, 318, 323; larvae, transition 

 from cr>'ptic to aposematic defence 

 of, 319,320. 



Gregory, Darwin's work on the 

 primrose compared with that of 

 Hateson and, xxvii-xxxiv. 



Gregory, Professor J. W,, on 

 flower-like Flatidne, 304. 



Greyhound, origin of, 83 n. 2. 



c;roovi: of Pierinf Pipae, 

 Oric.in of. \'. 147-9. 



*(iroup', use of, contrasted with 

 'combination' or 'association', 293. 



Grove, \V. H., on leaf-perforating 

 fungi, 205 n. I. 



(iROWlHOF MiJLLERlAN RKSEM- 

 HLANCE, AnVANTAf'.E CONFERRED 

 DURiNc;, X. 329 31 : sec also 349. 



Ciuianas, character of the ( hief 

 llhomiine-centrtd combin.ition in, 

 350: see also IJritish Guiana. 



Guinea, J. C. Prichard on black- 

 ness in man and animals in, 187. 



(iymnomyxa, the most primitive 

 animal forms, 25. 



Gymnosperms in the Palaeozoic, 



45- 



II 



Haase, Erich, on distasteful moths 

 mimicking Coleoptera and Hymeno- 

 ptera,23i ; on evidence of distasteful- 

 ncss of Glaucopid moths. 231 n. 2 ; 

 erroneous ideas on ' immune ' species 

 ofi 318, 375 ; figures of, erroneously 

 reproduced in W'eismann's Evolu- 

 tion Theory, 375, 376. 



Habit and Instinct. C. Lloyd 

 Morgan, 170, 171, 212, 268. 



Ha PITS AND LlFE-HISTORY, IM- 

 PORTANCE OF IN dp:ierminin(i 

 Conditions, \'III. 243, 244. 



Habits, see Instinct. 



Jldeniorrhagia fuit'/orfnis, 365 ; 

 — tityus (= bo m by I if or mi s)^ 365. 



Hair, of Angora breeds, J. C. 

 Prichard on, 187; protective resem- 

 blance to skin or, 359. 



Iid/ia, Lycoren, possible increase 

 in mimetic likeness since 1825-7, 



356- 



Halisarcidac unsuited for fossiliza- 



tion, 28. 



luilithcrscs^ Eunpus, one female 

 f. of mimics D. diocletiatius {rhnda- 

 matithus), another /'. dcionc^ 373. 



Hambantotte, Ceylon, dorippus 

 f. of L. i/irysippus at, 70 n. 2. 



Hamm, A. 11., on cryptic attitude 

 of//. Icucophacaria^ 156; on birds at- 

 tacking cocoons of iJ/. ticustrin, 157 ; 

 results obtained by, quoted in Essay 

 X, 293 ; on cryptic attitudes of British 

 moths, 301 ; on choice of resting- 

 sites by butterflies and moths, 301. 



4 



