INDEX 



285 



Collingwood, Dr., on mimicry, 



123-4. 



Colombia, 184. 

 Colorado, 176, 180. 

 Colorado R., Grand Canyon of 



the, 37. 

 Colour, value of, in the struggle 



for life, vii, 92-143. 

 Colours of Animals, Poulton, 115. 

 ' Coming of Age of the Origin ', 



Huxley, 54, 67. 

 Comptes Bendus, 224 n. 1. 

 Comstock and Needham, system 



of, 211. 



Contemporary Review, 32, 269. 

 continental extension, 246 n. 2 ; 



Darwin opposed to views of 



Lyell, &c., on, 45 ; supported 



by Dana, 2, 45. 

 ' continuity of the germ-plasm ', 



33, 34; discovery by Weis- 



mann of, 39-40. 

 continuous or discontinuous 



evolution, 48-51 ; mimicry 



and, 138-9, 147-8, 200,208; 



fossils of the white chalk and, 



280 n. 1. 

 Cook, J. H., on stripeless L. 



archippus, 166 n. 2, 210-12; 



lanthanis var. named by 



Watson and, 212. 

 Cope, E. D., American Palae- 

 ontology and, 2. 

 Coprid beetles as mimics, 120-1. 

 Coral islands, Darwin's theory 



of, 75 ; supported by A. Agas- 



siz, 2 ; confirmed, 45. 

 Cordilleras, 34. 

 Cornhill Mag., 73. 

 cornuta, Disa, 220 n. 1. 

 Cosmodesmus, both sexes of, 



mimetic, 137, 179 ; mimics of 



Pharmacophagus, 137, 177-9 ; 



ofDanainae, &c., 137, 179. 

 Coulter, J. M., on oecology and 



natural selection, x, xi, 143. 

 Courtney, Lord, on Shakespeare, 



Newton, and Darwin, 77. 

 Coventry, A. F., 79. 

 Crassula, mistaken for birds' 



dung by Burchell, 102-3. 



ci'oesus, Ornithoptera, 233 n. 1. 

 Cross and Self Fertilisation in the 



Vegetable Kingdom, C. Darwin, 



228_n. 2. 



Cryptic colouring, see 'Protec- 

 tive Resemblance '. 

 curcatus, Neoclytus, 115. 

 cuttle-fish, variable protective 



resemblance of, 108, 109. 

 Cyllo (Melanitis) leda, Darwin 



and Trimen on, 230 n. 2, 233, 



233 n. 2. 

 Cypripedium, Dai-win's error in 



fertilization of, 224-5, 224 n. 2. 



Dakota, 170. 



Dana, support to Darwin by, 2, 



45. 



Danaida, four of Moore's genera 



sunk in, 158-9, 204 ; Old World 



affinity of, 160-1 ; invasion of 



N. America from Asia, by way 



of N., and of S. America by 



way of N. America, proved 



by mimetic relationships of, 



155, 159-64, 173-7, 204. 



Danaida (Tasitia) lerenice, 154, 



157-9, 162-3, 168-72, 



204-5 ; f. strigosa, 171- 



2, 204-5. 



(Limnas) chrysippus, 156- 



9, 158 n. 3, 160-1. 

 (Salatura) decipiens, 160 ; 

 yenutia, 158-9, 158n. 3, 

 161-2; iiisolata, 160. 

 (Anosia) plexippns, 152 

 n. 1, 154, 158-9, 158 

 n.3, 161-4,168-73, 177, 

 204. 



Danainae, as models, 133, 137-8, 

 178-9, 239 ; relationship be- 

 tween New and Old World 

 species of, 152-9. 

 Danaini, a section of the Da- 

 nainae, q. v., 152 ; mimicry 

 between Euploeini and, 160. 

 Danais, as models, 239. 

 ! ' Danaoid Heliconidae ' of Bates, 



153. 



dardanus (merope), Papilio, 132, 

 139, 236-7, 278. 



