ANALYTICAL INDEX 



433 



ovum, 133 ; distinguished from multi- 

 ple births, 133 ; development of, 

 shown in Diagram III, 133, 134; 

 after-lives of, 134, 135 ; heredity and, 

 134, 138 n. ; predetermined in the 

 fertilized ovum, 137. 



Idiosyncrasies hereditary, 180. 



ilithyia^ Byblia, intermediate f. 

 bred from wet, 341 ; wet f. conspicu- 

 ous, dry f. procryptic, 341 ; dry 

 warmth apparently the stimulus for 

 pupae to produce the dry f., 341. 



' Illegitimate ' unions of hetero- 

 styled plants, importance of, xxviii, 

 xxviii n. i, 90-2. 



Illogical Geology, Herbert 

 Spencer, 6. 



illunaria,Selema, seasonal changes 

 of, 311. 



Illustrations of Mlmicry, 



CHIEFLY FROM ORIENTAL LEPIDO- 

 PTERA, X. 370-6. 



Illustrations of the Relation- 

 ships existing amongst Natural 

 Objects, &c.. Prof. J. O. Westwood, 

 221. 



Imagination, Prichard on the effect 

 of parental, at the moment of con- 

 ception, 186 ; versus memory, 196-8 ; 

 necessity for the training of, in 

 youth, 199. 



'Immune', an incorrect term ap- 

 plied by Haase to models for 

 mimicry, 318 ; also adopted by Weis- 

 mann, 375. 



Immunity, Warning Colours 

 DO NOT imply Complete, X. 317, 



318. 



Imperforata in the Palaeozoic, 27. 



Importance of Instinctive 

 Attitudes and Movements for 

 Mimicry, X. 363. 



Inborn : see ' inherent characters ', 

 141. 



Independence of mimicry and 

 affinity, 229-37, 336, 345 ; of size as 

 clear in Miillerian as in Batesian 

 mimicry, 363, 366. 



India, 70, 269, 317, 3^4, 342, 349, 



363, 371, 372, 373, 376. 



Indirect evidence of birds attack- 

 ing butterflies, 270, 270 n. i, 281-3, 

 290-2, 325, 325 n. I. 



IndirectEvidenceSupporting 

 Mullerian Mimicry, X. 346, 347. 



Individual Modification tra- 

 verses Diagnosis, II. 73-5. 



Individual Seasonal Changes, 

 X. 310. 



Individual subordinated to the 

 species, 316, 358. 



Individual variation a factor of 

 selection, 95-6 ; difference, W'eis- 

 mann on causes of, 127, 128 ; colour 

 adjustment slow in pupae, 149, 150, 

 152-4, 305, 306 ; in a cocoon, 149 ; in 

 larvae, 152-4, 305-7 ; probable in 

 pupae of U. sanibiicaria^ 150 n. 2 ; 

 colour adjustment rapid in certain 

 Vertebrata, Crustacea, and Cephalo- 

 poda, 300, 305, 313. 



Influences of locality, inconsistent 

 views of J. C. Prichard on, 191, 192. 



Inherent characters, definition of, 

 no. Ill, 122, 123, 141, 142 ; heredity 

 and, 96, 127, 178-85; somatogenic 

 characters less important than, 132-5 ; 

 somatogenic characters compared 

 with, 136 ; other terms used to ex- 

 press, no. III, 123, 141, 142; 

 Weismann's definition of, 142 ; 

 Goodrich's definition of, 142 ; clearly 

 distinguished as congenital or con- 

 nate from acquired characters by 

 J. C. Prichard (1826), 175, 179. 



Injuries to butterfly wings as if 

 caused by enemies, 270, 270 n. i, 

 281-3, 325 : see also 304. 



Innate, see inherent characters, 

 141. 



Innate tendencies, Lamarck's be- 

 lief in, 98. 



inorfiata^ Aniblyornis^ bower of, 



379. 



Insecta, D. Sharp, 257 n. i. 



Insectivora, moles of the, resem- 

 bled in other Mammalian Orders, 



312, 359- 

 Insects, especially Lepido- 



ptera, pre-eminently fitted for 



Discussion on Species, II. 50-4. 



Insects, and the question 

 * Are Acquired Characters 

 Hereditary?' Essay V, 139-72. 



Insects, Variable Protective 

 Resemblance in, V. 152-4. 



Insects, the Instincts of, V. 

 154-7: see also II7-I9j 146, i47i 

 157-66. 



Insects, bearing on supposed 

 Hereditary Transmission of 

 Experience, of Mimicry, ^S:c., in, 

 V. 166-8. 



Insects in the Palaeozoic take 



POULTON 



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