4io 



ANALYTICAL INDEX 



CHANGES SEASONAL IN THE 

 INDIVIDUAL, X. 310. 



Changes in mode of defence at 

 different stages of life-history, 319. 



chaon, Papilio, mimicked by male 

 of Pap. castor, 372. 



Chapman, T. A., on evidence of 

 preferential mating, 87 n. I ; on 

 choice of resting-sites by butterflies, 

 301. 



Charaxes, value of 'tails' of hind 

 wings of, 281, 282 ; wing of, in nest 

 of Microhierax, 291. 



Charaxes athamas, 288; psaphon, 

 286 ; scheiberi, 292. 



Charles Darwin and the Theory 

 of Natural Selection, E. B. Poulton, 

 83 n. i, 162 n. 2, 219, 225, 233 n. I, 

 272 n. I. 



c he lieu tens is ^ Halcyon, capturing 

 Junonia cebrene and Catopsilia 

 florella, 283. 



CHIEF CHARACTERISTICS OF 

 MIMETIC RESEMBLANCE AND 

 ATTEMPT TO EXPLAIN THEIR 

 EVOLUTION, X. 362, 363: see also 

 Essay VIII, 220-70. 



China, 88, 217, 333, 382. 



chinensis, Estigmena, mimicked 

 by Estigmenida variabilis, 261. 



Chinese goose fertile with 

 Common, 83. 



Chiricahua Mountains, Arizona, 

 examples of mimicry from, 231. 



Chiton, in early Palaeozoic, 30, 42 ; 

 an ancestral form, 42. 



Chlorophyll derived from food, use 

 of by insects, 314; by larva of T. 

 pronuba, 314 n. 2; passing through 

 egg into larva of next generation, 

 314 n. 2. 



Choerocampa, snake-like Bornean 

 species of, 367 n. 2 ; terror inspired 

 by snake-like African species of, and 

 the British C. elpenor, 367 n. 2. 



Choerocampa elpenor, 319, 326, 

 367, 367 n. 2, 368, 376. 



CHOICE OF APPROPRIATE SUR- 

 FACES FOR RESTING ON, X. 301. 



Chrysalis, see pupa. 



chrysippus, Limnas, forms of, with 

 theirgeographical distribution : dis- 

 tribution of dorippus and type forms 

 f| 7, 71 5 peculiarity of far eastern 

 forms of, 88 ; ' Syngamic chain ' 

 probably formed by, 88, 89 ; type f. 

 of ancestral, 321 n. i ; type f. of, very 



rare in Camaroons as compared with 

 alcippus f., 321 n. I ; geographical 

 transition from aposematic to cryptic 

 defence of, 320, 321 ; desert form of, 

 321 ; two of three forms of sharply 

 marked off, 364 ; corresponding 

 forms of mimics transitional into 

 one another, 364, 365 n. I. 



Mimics of: as model for mimi- 

 cry, 215 ; Miillerian mimicry of by 

 Aletis helcita and its mimics, 232 ; 

 Natal mimics of with model, in Hope 

 Department, 249 ; a dominant model 

 in E. Africa, 336 ; preferring station 

 different from that of certain of its 

 African mimics, 349 ; mimicked by 

 one f. of female A. esebria, 354, 355 ; 

 advantage of resemblance to, as well 

 as to Amauris, 355 ; three forms of, 

 mimicked respectively by three 

 forms of A. encedon, 355, 364, 365, 

 365 n. i ; also by three forms of 

 female H. misippus, 355, 364, 365, 

 365 n. I, 372; alcippus f. of, shown 

 by mimics to be only recently domi- 

 nant in W. Africa, 364; shown by 

 mimicry to be ancient inhabitant of 

 Africa, but a recent intruder into 

 Oriental Region, 364 ; mimicked by 

 trophonius, female f. of four sub- 

 species of Papilio dardanus, 374. 



Church Quarterly Review, 

 56 n. 3. 



Cicada, wings of, in nest of Micro- 

 hierax, 291 n. i. 



Cinnabar moth, 230 ; larva of, 

 318. 



Circumcision, results of, not here- 

 ditary in spite of antiquity, 182. 



Cirrhipedes, continuity the diffi- 

 culty in Darwin's systematic work 

 on, xv, 59, 60, 67 ; in Silurian, 39. 



Classification of animals, 25 ; of 

 bionomic uses of animal colours, 

 226; of examples of mimicry, 383-93. 



Claws of Crustacea, Lamarckism 

 and, 113, 114 ; value of the power of 

 throwing off, 113, 114, 325 ; pseudepi- 

 sematic or alluring use by Hyas of, 



3M- 



' Clearwings ', transparency of 

 scales in, 366. 



Cleavage, position of future embryo 

 and planes of, 130. 



cleodora, Eronia, captured by fly- 

 catcher, 283 ; choice of resting-site 

 by, 301. 



