398 



ANALYTICAL INDEX 



ffetenois, 341 ; no seasonal change in, 



341, 342. 



Age of stratified rocks, 16, 17. 



AGE OF THE EARTH, A NATURA- 

 LIST ON THE, Essay I. 1-45. 



Age of the Earth, argument from 

 tidal retardation and length of day, 

 7-9; from cooling of earth, 9-13; 

 from life of sun, 13-15 ; radium and, 

 15 n. 2 ; geological argument on, 16, 



17- 



agestor, Papilio, in some respects 

 more conspicuous than model, 

 Caduga tytia, 371. 



AGGRESSIVE MIMICRY INCLUDING 

 ALLURING COLOURS : PSEUDEPISE- 

 MATIC RESEMBLANCE, X. 377, 378 : 

 see also Mimicry Aggressive, &c. 



AGGRESSIVE OR ANTICRYPTIC 

 RESEMBLANCE, X. 312, 313. 



AGGRESSIVE RESEMBLANCE AD- 

 VENTITIOUS OR ALLOCRYPTIC, X. 



313,314- 



Aggressive or Anticryptic Resem- 

 blance, place of in bionomic uses of 

 colour, 226 ; defined, 297 ; general 

 and special, 312; elimination of 

 shadow in, 313 ; seasonal change in, 

 313 ; adjustable resemblance in, 313 ; 

 to upright stems and their shadows, 

 313 ; to supposed images of sun, 313. 



aglaia, Arg-ynm's, probable effect 

 of gravity on pupal shape of, 152. 



Akya Chaung (branch of Haun- 

 draw R.), Burma, bee-eaters capturing 

 butterflies at, 287, 288. 



Alastor, species of, resemble other 

 Hymenoptera in Australia, 278. 



albimaculata and echeria,Amauris, 

 western Amauris mimicked by, 335, 

 337 ; dominant models in E. Africa, 

 336; mimicked by the cenea female 

 f. of three sub-sp. of Pap. dardanus, 

 337, 338, 355, 374 ; by female of Pap. 



echerioides, 375. 



Albinos, sudden 

 185. 



origin of in man, 



albomaculata, Limenitis of W. 

 China mimetic of male H. misippus, 

 217 ; male only mimics misippus, 

 381 ; male probably a secondary 

 mimic of male A. punctata, 381 ; 

 female resembles female of this 

 species, 381; distribution of, 382. 



alcippina f. of Acraea encedon, 

 relation to alcippus f. of L. chrys- 

 ippus of, 364. 



{. of Limnas chrystppus, 

 increased conspicuousness suggested 

 as interpretation of, 321 ; distribution 

 of, 321, 321 n. I ; predominance of on 

 W. coast of Africa recent, 364. 



Alcyonaria, resemblance between 

 Palaeozoic and living forms of, 28. 



Aletis-Eup/iaedra, Miillerian com- 

 bination, 232 ; in certain characters 

 more conspicuous than primary 

 model, L. chrysippus^ 347 n. 3. 



Aletis helcita, 232. 



Algae, special resemblance to 

 floating, 298 ; as covering of Stenor- 

 rhynchus, 3 1 3 ; allopro- and allanti- 

 cryptic use of by Hyas, 314. 



A Liberal Education, T. H. 

 Huxley, 198. 



aliris, Amesia, with allied Chal- 

 cosiine moths, rough Miillerian 

 mimics of blue Oriental Euploeas, 

 376. 



Allanticryptic colours of Cerato- 

 phrys, 313 ; of Myrmeleon larva, 

 313; oiHyas, 314. 



ALLAPOSEMATIC OR ADVENTI- 

 TIOUS WARNING COLOURS, X. 356, 

 357 ; see also 315. 



Allelomorphs or germinal precur- 

 sors of Mendelian characters, infer- 

 ences as to the, xxxi-xxxiii. 



Allepigamic collections of bower- 

 birds, 379. 



Allier, fossil insects of Department 

 of, 35-8. 



ALL- IMPORTANCE OF INSTINCT 

 FOR PROTECTIVE RESEMBLANCE, X. 

 301, 302. 



ALL - IMPORTANCE OF INSTINC- 

 TIVE ATTITUDES AND MOVEMENTS 

 IN THE DISPLAY OF WARNING 

 COLOURS, X. 323, 324. 



ALL- IMPORTANCE OF INSTINCTIVE 

 ATTITUDES AND MOVEMENTS IN 

 THE ATTAINMENT OF MIMETIC 

 RESEMBLANCE, X. 363. 



ALLOCRYPTIC OR ADVENTITIOUS 

 PROTECTIVE (AND AGGRESSIVE) 

 RESEMBLANCE, X. 313, 314. 



Allocryptic resemblance defined, 

 297 ; examples of, 313, 314. 



Alloprocryptic colouring of Stenor- 

 rhynchus, 313; of Hyas, 314. 



ALLURING COLOURS AND AG- 

 GRESSIVE MIMICRY : PSEUDEPI- 

 SEMATIC RESEMBLANCE, X. 377, 

 378 ; see Mimicry Aggressive, &c. 



