462 



ANALYTICAL LNDEX 



origin of domestic and natural 

 varieties, xl n. 2. 



Relation between Symmetry 

 of Egg and Symmetry of Embryo 

 in Frog, J. W. Jenkinson, 130. 



Relation ok Mimickv, eK:c., to 

 OTHER Resemblances in Nature, 

 Vlll. 225-8: see also 258-9. 312, 

 358-61. 



Remark AULE anticipation of 

 Modern \"iews on Evolution, 

 Essay \'I, 173-92. 



Remarkable Examples of 

 Mimicry, X. 367-9. 



Renewal of lost parts, explanation 

 of, 136. 



Reorganization of injured parts of 

 egg, 129. 



Repair, explanation of, 136. 



Repose, Choice of Appropriate 

 Surfaces for, X. 301. 



Reproduction the foundation of 

 Syngamy and Epigony, 64. 



Reptiles, 26 ; rapid evolution of 

 brain in higher, 29; the ancestors of 

 birds, 32 ; brain in mammals and, 

 108 ; rapid colour adjustment in, 



305- .^ . 



Research, the ultimate justification 



of, xlvii, xlviii ; importance of earliest, 



197, 198 ; educational value of, 198, 



199. 



Researches into the Physical 

 History of Mankind, Ed. 2, 1S26, 

 j.C. Prichard, 174, 176, and through- 

 out Essay V\, 173-92. 



Researches on Mimicry, Erich 

 Haase, 231, 318, 375. 



Resemblance of Butterflies 

 to Dead Leaves, \'I1. 203-6: see 

 also 206-8, 299, 302, 310, 311, 351, 



353- 



Resemblance, Mimetic, be- 

 tween Species of very Differ- 

 ent Size, X. 366-7. 



Resemblance, Mimetic, to 

 Cryptic Models, X. 369, 370. 



Resemblance, Mimetic, to 

 General Appearance of Un- 

 palatable Group, X. 376. 



Resemblance of W. Chinese 

 Athyma and Limenitis to Male 

 OF Hypolimnas misippus, X. 381, 

 382 : see also 217-18. 



Resemblances, relation between 

 mimetic and other, 225-8, 258-9, 

 312, 35S-61. 



'Responsive' characters, 144, 145. 



Reticulata (Foraminifera) in 

 classification, 25 ; remarkable per- 

 sistence in geological time of, 27, 28. 



rhadiDnanthus^ Ihiniscpa^ see 

 diocletianus, 373. 



RJnnotrai^iniu\ mimicry of II y- 

 mcnoptera by, 252. 



Rhodesia, dorippus f. of /.. chrys- 

 ippus from vS., 71 n. i ; ant-like 

 Locustid and models from, in S., 257 

 n. I ; attacks of birds on Lcpidopteia 

 witnessed in S., 283, 284 : and in 

 S.E. (Gazaland), 284. 



Rhopalocera, see butterflies. 



Rhynchophora, see classification 

 of examples of mimicry, 390 i : sec 

 Anthribidne^ 369, BrentJiidat^ 369, 

 370, Weevils, 250, 261, 307, 369, 370. 



Rhynchota, see Hemiptera and 

 Homoptera. 



Ridley, H. N., discovery of ant- 

 mimic with head represented at 

 posterior end, by, 368. 



Ring Dove, fertile pairing with 

 domestic pigeon of, 83, 84. 



' Ringlet' butterflies, 210. 



Robertson, Captain (Major), on 

 larvae of T. populeti, 157 n. i. 



Rock, CV?;//?r7'rt-covered, resem- 

 bled by MacnHleintnys, 'J^']^. 



Rock Pigeon, 84. 



Rodentia, mole-like forms of, 312, 



359- 



Rolleston, George, President of 



Zoological Section British Associa- 

 tion, 1870, I. 



Romanes, G. ]., hypothesis of 

 'physiological selection' of, 84; on 

 instinct as inherited experience, 118; 

 on transfusion of blood and pangene- 

 sis, 125 ; on Lamarckism and vari- 

 able protective resemblance, 152; 

 on instincts of Fossorial Hymcno- 

 ptera, 160, 161, 164 n. i ; on instinct 

 as lapsed intelligence, 166. 



Roots of grass, protective (pro- 

 cryptic) resemblance to, 323. 



rosa, Crcnis^ recent entrance into 

 Natal of, 52 n 1. 



Rosako, Usaramo, E. Africa, ant- 

 like bug from, 255. 



Ross, Herefordshire, birthplace of 

 J. C. Prichard. 173. 



Ross, Captain James, experiment 

 on seasonal changes of Hudson's 

 Bay Lemming, by, 310. 



