ANALYTICAL INDEX 



455 



antimac/ms, 366 ; — antinoriiy yj-J^, 

 374, 374 n. i, 375 ; — arctiirus, 285 ; 



— argent us, 57 n. i ; — aristolcchtae, 

 269, 372, 373, 375 ; — castor, 372 ; — 

 caudius, 57 n. i ; — caufius, 291 ; — 

 chaon, 372 ; — corinneus, 284 ; — 

 de7nodocus, 283 ; — dravidartan, 372 ; 



— echerioides, 375 ; — erithonhes, 

 288, 291 ; — hector, 2>7?)'i — hiwibloti, 

 yjZ'^ — laglaizeiy 37 1 ; — macareus, 

 288 ; — ine?'io7ies, 245, 373 ; — ino7-- 

 ania, 52 n. i ; — Jioinius., 285 ; — 

 poly dor, 285; — polytes (pmnmon), 

 373 I — protetior, 371 ; — sarpedon, 

 288, 290 ; — torqitatmus, 57 n. i ; — 

 torguatus, 57 n. i ; — xe7tocles, 288. 



P apiHo7ii7iae (see also Papilio: see 

 also classification of examples of mimi- 

 cry, 385, 387-9) : compared with Itho- 

 7}iii7tae as regards number of colours, 

 234, 277 ; as models for Pieri7iae, 



262 ; pigments of, different from 

 those of their Pierine mimics, 262, 



263 ; an Indian species of, proved un- 

 palatable, 269 ; value of ' tails ' of 

 hind wings of, 281, 282 ; mimetic 

 not attacked by bee-eaters, 288 ; 

 unpleasant scent in African, 316 ; 

 eye-spots of, 326 ; Dixey's evidence 

 of entrance into Miillerian com- 

 binations of, 343 ; P. agestor as 

 probable Miillerian mimic, 371 ; 

 mimicry in species of, probably 

 Miillerian, 372-3, 375- 



Pard,fly from, mimicking Hymeno- 

 ptera, 257 n. i. 



Paradise fly-catcher capturing 

 butterflies, 283. 



Paradise Lost, John Milton, 56. 



Paradise of Birds, W. J. 

 Courthope, 103, 104. 



paralekta, Kalli7>ia, difference 

 between sexes of, 207. 



Para7itica, the Danaine model of 

 E. tats, upper side, 353. 



Parasites, attacks of, on specially 

 defended insects, 318 ; concealed on 

 hair or skin of host, 359. 



parasitica, Sagartia, carried by 

 Pagiirus ber7ihardtis, 356, 357' 



Parents, Prichard on comparison 

 between hereditary influences of, 185. 



Paris, Jardin des Plantes, O. la- 

 77iarckiana originally described from. 



XXI. 



Parodies on theories of evolution, 

 102-4. 



Part-nuclei of germ-cells con- 

 cerned in fertilization, xxxi, 80-1. 



Passive, Lamarckism and structures 

 whose use is, 112; development 

 together of active structures and, 

 113; defence of insects essentially, 

 156. 



Patagonia, J. C. Prichard on 

 height of man in, 187 ; dull colours 

 of animals in, 225. 



Pattern of under surface tends to 

 be the more conspicuous in apose- 

 matic species, 323 ; cryptic effect of, 

 321 ; often similar on the two sur- 

 faces of aposematic species, 323. 



Peas, Alendel's researches upon, 

 xxxi-xxxiii. 



Peat, procryptic colour of G. obscu- 

 7'ata on, 307, 308. 



Peckham, George W. and Eliza- 

 beth G., on instincts of Fossorial 

 Hymenoptera, 118, 162, 163; on 

 ant-like spiders, 252, 253, 253 (Fig. i) ; 

 on the courtship of Attid spiders, 

 380. 



Pedipalpi in Carboniferous, 40. 



Penard, Prof. E., direct evidence 

 of attack by bird on white butterfly 

 by, 282 n. I. 



Pe7ioa deioTtc, 373. 



Pentatomid bug mimicked by 

 caterpillar, 369. 



Perforata, six existing genera of, 

 in Carboniferous, 27. 



Pericopidae, 264, 266 : see Hypsid- 

 ae. 



Peripatoidea in classification, y^. 



Peripatus derived from Chaetopod- 

 like ancestor, 27 ; ancestral nature 

 0^5 33, 34 ; ^o approximation of 

 earliest fossil insects or Myriapods 

 towards, 38. 



Perlidae (Protoperlidae) of Com- 

 mentry Carboniferous, 'i^d, 2>7- 



Permian, Foraminifera, 27. 



Perry, Professor John, on the 

 changing shape of the earth, 8 ; on 

 the cooling of the earth, 9-13: on 

 the life of the sun, 14: on Radium 

 and the age of the sun, 15 n. 2; 

 letter from Lord Kelvin to, 19. 



per saltuin evolution, Rothschild 

 and Jordan on, xvi ; Huxley on, 4, 



195. . . 



perseics, Mycalesis, wmgs of, in 



nest oi Microhierax, 291. 



pe7-spicillata, T€rpsipho7i€, cap- 



