ANALYTICAL INDEX 



443 



Meteors, sun's energy perhaps 

 increased by, 14. 



Methona co?tjfusa, 264-6. 



Metschnikoff, Dr. Elias, on the 

 lactic acid bacillus, 121 n. i. 



Mexico, L. astyanax enters from 

 N., 274. 



Microhierax coerulescens, 289-91 ; 

 — etdohnus, 290 ; — friftgillarziis, 

 290. 



inidciDia^ Callamesia, belonging 

 to the distasteful Zygaenidae {Chal- 

 cosmtae), a Miillerian mimic of 

 Euploeas, 372, 376 ; moths allied to, 

 are similarly Miillerian mimics of 

 same Oriental models, 376. 



Midland Naturalist, 120, 142 

 n. I. 



Midland Union of Natural 

 History Societies. Authors Presi- 

 dential Address (1889) the 

 foundation of Essay IV, 120. 



Migration and History may 

 BE Inferred from Mimicry, X. 



363-5. 



Migration of insects, 93 ; of butter- 

 flies in Ceylon, 285 ; in Burma, 289; 

 history and, to be inferred from 

 Miillerian mimicry no less than from 

 Batesian, 363-5. 



Migratory birds of \V. China, 

 interest in the study of, 217, 218, 

 382. 



Mikado, 302. 



Milton, John, influence of, on belief 

 in special creation, 55, 56. 



Mimetic, see mimicry. 



Mimetic Attraction, F. A. Dixey, 

 328 n. I. 



Mimicry, E. B. Poulton, in Diet, 

 philos. and psychol., J. M. Baldwin, 

 312 n. 2, 360 n. I. 



Mimicry between Butterflies 

 of Protected Genera, R. Meldola, 



234. 



Mimicry in Butterflies of the 

 Genus Hypolimnas, E. B. Poulton, 

 247 n. I. 



Mimicry, &c., bearing of, upon 

 supposed Hereditary Trans- 

 mission OF Experience, V. 166-8. 



Mimicry, new Interpretation 



OF AN OLD example OF, VII. 2II-18. 



Mimicry, Natural Selection 

 the cause of Common Warning 

 Colours and (Theories of 

 Mimicry), Essay VIII, 220-70. 



Mimicry and Natural Se- 

 lection, Essay IX, 271-82 ; Appen- 

 dix to Essay IX, containing evidence 

 of birds attacking butterflies, 282-92. 



Mimicry, Place of, in a 

 Scheme of Defensive Colora- 

 tion, Essay X, 293-382 ; for divi- 

 sions, sub-divisions, sections, iSic, of 

 Essay X see Contents, pp. 293-7. 



Mimicry Ml'llerian, Conlmon 

 Warning or Synaposematic 

 Colours, X. 327-56 ; for sections 

 and sub-sections see 295-6. 



Mimicry Miillerian (Synaposem- 

 atic or Common Warning Colours) 

 see under Mimicry Protective, &c.. 

 Historical Account, where the refer- 

 ences to both theories are combined : 

 see also under Mimicry Protective, 

 &c.. Relation to Miillerian Mimicry, 

 and Bearing jtpo?t Theories of Evo- 

 lution ; order in which to undertake 

 study of examples of, xxv, xxvi, 336 ; 

 long delay in appearance of (1862- 

 1879), 327 n. I ; reasons for slow ac- 

 ceptance of, 213 ; place of in a 

 scheme of the bionomic uses of 

 colour, 226 ; logically a section of 

 warning colours, 327 ; mimetic 

 patterns derived from warning and 

 remaining warning, 349 ; protective 

 (pseudaposematic) mimicry is decep- 

 tive while Miillerian (synaposematic) 

 is a genuine warning, 360; e\olu- 

 tion of a hypothetical example of, 

 329-31; associations of, with special 

 (aposematic) protection, 335, 336 ; 

 between models themselves, 211-15, 

 222 ; effect of mimics on stability of 

 model in, 336 ; uniformity in 

 nauseous groups of butterflies, 234, 

 277-9 1 uniformity in species of 

 wasps and Fossores, 278, yjd', high 

 degree of special protection accom- 

 panied by, 335 ; perfect in highest 

 degree when special protection 

 highest, 335, 336; young enemies 

 and the evolution of, 167, 167 n. 2, 

 212, 268,329-31,366; terms 'com- 

 bination' or 'association' used in 

 connexion with, 293 ; a combina- 

 tion exhibiting, called 'Mimicry- 

 Ring' by Professor Weismann, 376; 

 methods of defence in the same com- 

 bination may be various, 230 ; more 

 evidence wanted of simultaneous 

 occurrence of members of combina- 



