428 



ANALYTICAL INDEX 



breed, 87 ; dry f. of, bred from wet, 

 341 ; wet f. of, a mimic of A. serena 

 type, dry f. procryptic, 341. 



Gouty diathesis, transmission of, 

 discussed by J. C. Prichard, 183, 184. 



Gradual Predominance of 

 Mullerian Mimicry, X. 342-4. 



Grafted tissues and pangenesis, 

 125-6. 



Grainger, Benjamin, of Derby, 

 distinction between inherent and 

 acquired characters suggested to 

 J. C. Prichard by, 179. 



Grammostomum in Carboniferous, 



Grand Comoro, non-mimetic Pap. 

 Jutmbloti in, 373. 



Grapta C-album, 203-5. 



Graptolites in Palaeozoic, 28. 



Grasses, protective resemblance 

 to, 307 ; syncryptic resemblance to, 

 312 ; concealment among roots of, 



318, 323- 



Grasshoppers (Acridiidae)o{ Com- 

 mentry Carboniferous, 36, 37 ; 

 mimicry of leaf-carrying ants by, 

 260 ; value of bright hind wings of, 

 303, 304, 325 ; colour adjustment of, 

 307 ; observations on the courtship 

 of, 380. 



Gravitation, evidence for, com- 

 pared with that for Mimicry, xxvi ; 

 accepted, though nature not ex- 

 plained, 97 ; accepted because con- 

 sistent with the facts of the Cosmos, 

 219, 271. 



Gravity, Effect on Shape of 

 Pupae of, V. 1 5 1-2 ; effect of on 

 pupae not hereditary, 152. 



Gray, Asa, see Asa Gray, xxvi, 

 66, 67, 68, 194 n. 1. 



Great Rift Valley, J. W. Gregory, 



3°4- 



Green, E. E., on tilt of Melanitis, 

 300 n. 5. 



Green Hairstreak Butterfly, 301. 



Gregarious Habit, Conceal- 

 ment ASSISTED BY, X. 304. 



Gregarious habit in aposematic 

 defence, 318, 323; larvae, transition 

 from cryptic to aposematic defence 

 of, 319, 320. 



Gregory, Darwin's work on the 

 primrose compared with that of 

 Bateson and, xxvii-xxxiv. 



Gregory, Professor J. W., on 

 flower-like Flatidae, 304. 



Greyhound, origin of, 83 n. 2. 



Groove of Pierine Pupae, 

 Origin of, V. 147-9. 



' Group ', use of, contrasted with 

 ' combination ' or ' association ', 293. 



Grove, W. B., on leaf-perforating 

 fungi, 205 n. 1. 



Growth of Mullerian Resem- 

 blance, Advantage conferred 

 during, X. 329-31 : see also 349. 



Guianas, character of the chief 

 Ithomiine-centred combination in, 

 350: see also British Guiana. 



Guinea, J. C. Prichard on black- 

 ness in man and animals in, 187. 



Gymnomyxa, the most primitive 

 animal forms, 25. 



Gymnosperms in the Palaeozoic, 

 45- 



H 



Haase, Erich, on distasteful moths 

 mimicking Coleoptera and Hymeno- 

 ptera, 231 ; on evidence of distasteful- 

 ness of Glaucopid moths, 231 n. 2 ; 

 erroneous ideas on ' immune ' species 

 of, 318, 375 ; figures of, erroneously 

 reproduced in Weismann's Evolu- 

 tion Theory, 375, 376. 



Habit and Instinct, C. Lloyd 

 Morgan, 170, 171, 212, 26S. 



Habits and Life-history, im- 

 portance OF IN DETERMINING 

 Conditions, VIII. 243, 244. 



Habits, see Instinct. 



Haemorrhagia fuciformis , 365 ; 

 — tityus (— bombyliformis), 365. 



Hair, of Angora breeds, J. C. 

 Prichard on, 187 ; protective resem- 

 blance to skin or, 359. 



halia, Lycorea, possible increase 

 in mimetic likeness since 1825-7, 



356. 



Halisarcidae unsuited for fossiliza- 

 tion, 28. 



halithcrses, Euripus, one female 

 f. of mimics D. diocletianus (rhada- 

 manthus), another P. deione, 373. 



Hambantotte, Ceylon, dorippus 

 f. of L. chrysippus at, 70 n. 2. 



Hamm, A. H., on cryptic attitude 

 of H. leitcophaearia, 156; on birds at- 

 tacking cocoons of M. neustria, 157 ; 

 results obtained by, quoted in Essay 

 X, 293 ; on cryptic attitudes of British 

 moths, 301 ; on choice of resting- 

 sites by butterflies and moths, 301. 



