426 



ANALYTICAL INDEX 



pseudepisematic (alluring) resem- 

 blance to, 378, 378 n. 3. 



Fly-catcher seen capturing butter- 

 fly, 283 ; seen chasing Lycaenid, 283. 



Foes, see enemies. 



Food, climate, &c, as cause of 

 mimicry, 224, 272 (see also External 

 Causes) ; concealment effected by 

 colour of, 314. 



Foraminifera in classification, 25 ; 

 persistence in geological time of, 27, 

 28. 



Forest country in S. Africa, defini- 

 tion of, 340. 



Form,seasonal change of,in butter- 

 flies' wings, 206-8, 310, 311. 



formica, Synemosyna, mimicry of 

 ant by, 253 (Fig. 1 B). 



Fossils, limited information con- 

 veyed by, 100, 107. 



Fossores (see also classification of 

 examples of mimicry, 389-93) : in- 

 stincts of, 118, 118 n. 1, 119, 160-4; 

 prophetic instinct of, 119, 163, 164 ; 

 resemblances between other stinging 

 insects and, 278, 376 ; see also 232. 



Foster, Sir Michael, on curiosity 

 as the true incentive to inquiry, 

 xlvii ; on indirect methods of nature, 

 101. 



Fowler, Rev. Canon W. W., on 

 ant-like Membracidae, 258 (Fig. 6), 

 259. 



Fox, Arctic, aggressive seasonal 

 change of, 313. 



France and Lamarck's theory, 98. 



France, Societe Entomologique 

 de, Annales, 211, 326; Bulletin, 

 381,382. 



fringillarius, Microhierax, nest of, 

 290, 291. 



Fritillaries, pupae of, 152. 



Fritillary, resemblance of A. levana 

 to, 342. 



Frog, Roux's experiments on egg 

 of, 128-30 ; allanticryptic resem- 

 blance of, 313. 



Frohawk on P.phlaeas, 87 n. 1. 



From the Greeks to Darwin, 

 H. F. Osborn, 56 n. 2, 141 n. 1, 175. 



Fry, Sir Edward, on definitions of 

 acquired characters, 143-4. 



fuciformis, Haemorrhagia, loss of 

 scales by, 365. 



Fulgoridae of Commentry Car- 

 boniferous, 36. 



Fungi, leaf-attacking, effects of 



resembled by butterflies, 205, 206; 

 by moths and Locustids, 302. 



Further Indirect Evidence 

 supporting a mljllerian or 

 Synaposematic Interpretation, 

 X. 346, 347. 



fuscus, Artamus, capturing Craslia 

 core, 286. 



Fusilina in the Carboniferous, 27. 



G 



gagatcs ,Polyrrhachis , with ant-like 

 bug, 254, 255. 



Gahan, C. J., on mimicry in Coleo- 

 ptera, 236, 237 ; on Miillerian and 

 Batesian mimicry in beetles, 237 ; on 

 life-history and mimicry, 243 ; on 

 mimicry of weevils by diurnal Longi- 

 corns, 250 ; on Longicorns mimick- 

 ing weevils and Hispidae, 261 ; on 

 Cingalese Clytinae as models for 

 other Longicorns, 349. 



Galapagos Islands, birds greatly 

 modified in, 84 n. 2 ; dull colours of 

 animals in, 225. 



Galton, Francis, on ' recession to- 

 wards mediocrity', 109, no; on trans- 

 fusion of blood and pangenesis, 125 ; 

 on 'identical' turns, 132, 134, 135, 

 138 n. ; on effect of cessation of selec- 

 tion, 138; definition of acquired 

 characters by, 143 ; on invisibility of 

 zebra, 298. 



Gametes, see germ-cells. 



Ganoid fish in early Palaeozoic, 30. 



Garden White butterflies (P. 

 brassicae and P. rapae), 93, 147, 148, 

 213, 301. 



Gartner on sterility between 

 selected races, 78. 



Gastropacha quercifolia, 299, 307. 



Gastropoda in early Palaeozoic, 

 30 ; Pteropoda arose from, 41, 42 ; 

 evolution in, 42; appear in Cambrian, 



4 2 - 



Gauchos, skill in killing cattle, 161. 



Gazaland, S.E. Rhodesia, attacks 

 of birds on butterflies, &c, witnessed 

 in, 284. 



Geddes, P., on anabolic and kata- 

 bolic tendencies, 100-1 ; on internal 

 causes of mimicry, 224. 



Geikie, Sir Archibald, on age of 

 the stratified rocks, 16, 17 ; on geo- 

 logical record of time, 19. 



Gemmuies of pangenesis, 124-6. 



Genera subjective, 65. 



