INDEX. 387 



Blaine, on Lord Alford's hounds, 198; on inherited tendency to bark in 



sporting doge, li36. 

 Blue-bird, local variation of instinct of, 210, 216. 

 Blyth, on a fox feigning death, 304. 

 Bod, on carnivorous habits of wasp, 215. 

 Bond, on variation in nest of nut-batch, 182. 

 Bonclli, Professor, on a migration of butterflies, 2S6. 

 Brain, relation of intelligence to mass of, 4-1-6. 

 Brehm, on old birds educating young, 226. 

 Brent, on instincts of crossed canaries, 199. 

 Brewster, Sir D., on unconscious inference in perception, 321. 

 Brodie, Sir B., on infants remembering taste of particular milk, 115 ; on 



inheritance of instinct as due to cerebral organization, 264, 

 Brunelli, on stridulation of grasshopper, 86. 

 Bryden, Dr. W., on a monkey feigning death, 312-13. 

 Buceola, Dr. Gr., on length of the reaction-time in perception among the 



uneducated and idiotic, 138. 

 Buchanan, Professor, on imperfect instincts of young ferrets, 228. 

 Bnchner, on individual dispositions shown by ants, 183. 

 Bull, wildness of cross between Indian and common cow, 199 ; Brahmin 



feigning death, 313-14. 

 Bnrdach, on imagination in animals, 151. 

 Borrowing, instinct of, 248-9. 



Burton, F. M., on mistaken instinct of a moth, 167. 

 Butterflies, littoral, continuing to frequent an area whence the sea has retired, 



246 ; migration of, 285-6. 



0. 



Caddice-fly, inetineteof the, 191. 



Caldi-rwood, Professor, on the relation of intelligence to the mass of the brain, 



4 k 

 Callin, O., on sense of direction in man, 293. 

 Cameleon, mom of colon? in the, 98. 

 Canary, direraiti of individual disposition of the, 182; instincts of crossed 



b r e e d* of the, 199 ■, instinctive nidificatioa of the, 226. 

 Capon, inatincta of i lie, 171. 

 Carpenter, Dr. W. 1!., on discrimination shown by protoplasmic organisms; 



on aoquired habits, 181 ; on cats not howling m S. America, 860 ; on a 



e im of conehing for cataract, 822 ; on inheritance of handwriting, 1*J4. 



Carter, II. J., <m Mnafttion in WUxopoda, HO. 



Caatration, ohangea produced by, on inatinot, 171-2. 



Oat, i li'i-\ ncri'icM of the, as regards mousing, 1 S2 ; associating with hare*, 



I B t ; hereditary diapoaitton to beg in a family of the, 196 ; rearing 

 progeny of other animeJe, 217—18] loss of inatinotire wildneaa of the, 

 under domestication, 281 ; not howling in 8, America. 249 •"><>; lenae of 

 direction in the, i-'M'.t ; cruelty and benevolence in the, 315-6; under- 

 standing of mechaniim by the, 861. 



Caterpillar, inatincta of the prooeaeional, 842 3. 



Caterpillars, migrations of, 286< 



Cattle, learning to moid poUOnOUl herbs, 2-1, L'1'7 ; instincts of will 

 Under dome-it nation, 291 ; dwindling of natural inatincta uf in Licr- 



many, ~-vi ; sucking hone-, 2 \7 -, aenaa of direction in, B90L 

 I .i, appreciated i>_\ animal-, 155-y. 



