438 



ANALVTICAI, INDEX 



Lay Sermons, \:c.. T. H. Huxley, 

 198. 



Leader, 58 n. i, 



' Leal-butlertlics ' {A',i///m,i), 203- 

 8, 302, 310. 



Leaf-carrying ant (Aita) with its 

 leaf mimicked by larval Membracid, 

 259, 259 (Fig. 7), 2rx). 280, 377; 

 mimicked by Acridiaii (7V///.r), 260. 



Leaf-stalk, protective (procryptic), 

 resemblance to, 351. 



Leaves (see also dead leaves) : 

 protective (procryptic) resemblance 

 to, 203-8, 289, 298-9, 300 n. 5, 301, 

 302, 304, 322, 360 ; procryptic 

 resemblance of buttertlies to, 203-8, 

 289, 299, 300, 300 n. 1,301,310,311, 

 322, 351, 353; to shadows cast by 

 dead, 299 ; of moth and Locustid to 

 injuries caused by fungi and larvae 

 in, 302 ; of gregarious lanae to brown 

 patches on, 304 ; colour adjustment 

 of larvae to, 306 ; procryptic resem- 

 blance to drifting, 360 ; aggressive 

 (anticryptic) resemblance to effects 

 of, 313: warning (aposematic) con- 

 fpicuousness against, 318. 



Lecture on Mimicry at Leeds 

 meeting of British Association (1890), 

 E. B. Boulton, 293, 299 n. i , 365, 370, 



376, ?>77y 377 »• 2- 



Lectures to Working Men, 

 T. 11. Huxley, 78. 



Leech Collection, specimens of 

 I.inu'tiitis III bo))iacu lilt ii, AtJiynia 

 ftufii/ii/d, and their model in, 381, 

 3«2. 



Leeches, Chaetopod-like ancestor 

 of, 27. 



Leeds, lecture on Mimicry at, see 

 lecture. 



Leigh, G. F., on dorippus f. of 

 L. chrysippus in Natal, 71 n. i ; 

 males and mimetic females of l\ip. 

 dardiinus bred from single mimetic 

 f. of, by, 72, 72 n. I. 



Lema mimicking Pinbroiica and 

 Cerotoma^ 237. 



Lemming, experiment on seasonal 

 changes of Iludsons Bay, 310; pro- 

 tective (procryptic) seasonal change 



of, 313- 



Le pi dipt a bimacuUita^ 368. 



Lepidoptera especially fitted 

 FOR Discussion on Species, IL 

 50-4. 



Lepidoptera chiefly Orient- 



al, iLLUSTR.VriNG MiMICRY, X. 



370-6. 



Lepidoptera (see also butterflies 

 and mulhs : see also classitication 

 of examples of mimicry, 383-92) : 

 seasonal changes of, see seasonal ; late 

 evolution of, 38 ; as sensitive registers 

 of change, 50-4 ; ' mechanical selec- 

 tion ' in, 85 ; as evidence in discussion 

 of acquired characters, 146: adapta- 

 tion in as evidence for Natural Selec- 

 tion, 203-18; too exclusive study of 

 mimicry in, 229, 272, 273 ; mimicry 

 in paralleled by that in beetles 

 (Coleoptera), 236, 237 ; predominant 

 mimicry in S. .Vmerican, 248 ; 

 mimetic likeness attained in various 

 ways by, 262-6 ; transparency 

 attained in various ways by, 263- 

 6; evidence of distastefulness in 

 mimicked groups of, 279, 279 n. I : 

 see also 268-9, 316-17: majority of 

 mimetic resemblances Mullcrianand 

 not Batesian, 348. 



Lepidopterorum Rossiae Bio- 

 logia, 1890, C. Fortschinski,3i6.324. 



Lepidotic acid, see uric acid, 262-3. 



Leptalidcs, see Disinorphina^ 239- 

 40, 265-6. 



leucocytna^ Elymnias {Mclymas 

 nitdeliis), male and female of. mimick- 

 ing different Kuploeas, 372. 



leucophaearia^ lly hernia^ cryptic 

 attitude of, 156. 



Leuthstrom, Dr. C. A., ant-like 

 beetle in grounds of, 256. 



Uvana, Araschnia, mimetic inter- 

 pretation of seasonal forms of, 342. 



Lewes, G. H.,on instinct as lapsed 

 intelligence, 166. 



Lichen, protective (procryptic) 

 resemblance to, 298, 306, 307 ; syn- 

 cryptic resemblance to, 312, 359 ; 

 colour adjustment of larvae to, 306, 

 307 ; disappearance of, in Lancashire 

 and Yorkshire district, 308. 309. 



Life and Letters of Charles 

 Darwin, F. Darwin, xxvi, xxix, xl 

 n- 3. 3, 4, 6, 59, 60, 66 n. 3, 67, 75, 

 83, 86, 91, 92, 95, 126, 196, 197, 200. 



Life and Letters of Thomas 

 Henry Huxley, L. Huxley, 48, 78, 

 195, 198, 199, 200, 202. 



Life- History and Habits, Lm- 

 portance of, in determining 

 Conditions, VIH. 243, 244. 



Life of sun, see Sun, 



