646 ZODLOriY skct. 



abbreviated and often greatly modified shape, the stages through 

 which the group to which the animal belongs has passed in the 

 course of its evolution from lower forms. This supposition — the 

 " biogenetic law," or " recapitulation theory," as it is termed — 

 though it cannot be accepted without great modifications and 

 reservations, yet covers a number of facts which distinctly demand 

 a process of evolution for their explanation.^ 



The phenomenon of retrograde metamorphosis observable in 

 many animals, for the most part parasitic in the adult condition, 

 also affords evidence in favour of evolution. It would be difficult 

 to give any other explanation than that afforded by a theory of 

 descent, of the life-history of such animals as Sacculina (Vol. I., 

 p. 599), the parasitic Copepoda (p. 598), or the Ascidians (Vol. IT., 

 p. 87). The relatively high organisation of the larva of Sacculina, 

 for example, with its well-marked Crustacean features, can only be 

 explained on the supposition that the shapeless, unsegmented 

 adult has been derived by a process of retrograde development 

 from more normally constructed ancestors. 



Most Birds and Mammals, and many animals of lower groups, 

 exhibit a more or less strongly marked sexual dimorphism, the 

 males differing from the females in various other respects besides 

 the character of the sexual organs. Such differences can onl}' be 

 explained on the supposition that they are the result of a gradual 

 process of modification brought about in accordance with the 

 more special adaptation of each sex to its special functions. 



Falaeontolog^ical Evidence. — A second body of evidence in 

 favour of a theory of evolution comes from the side of Pale- 

 ontology. It might, perhaps, on first considering the subject, be 

 supposed that, had a process of evolution taken place, we ought to 

 be able to find in the rocks belonging to the various geological 

 formations a complete series of animal- and plant-remains repre- 

 sentincf all the stages in the evolution of the highest forms from 

 the lowest. Beginuinsr with those strata in which evidence of life 

 first appears, we ought, it might be supposed, to be able to trace 

 upwards, through all the series of fossil-bearing strata, continuous, 

 unbroken lines of descent showing the gradual evolution of all the 

 various forms of plant- and animal-life. But such a supposition 



' As an instance of tlie difficulties in the way of tlie acceptance of the 

 l)iogeuetic law as such, it may be pointed out liere that the ovum is by no 

 means equivalent to the simple cell with which the phylogenetic series must 

 be supposed to have begun. On the contrary, the ovum of one of the higher 

 animals must be an extremelj' complex structure, and in reality widely 

 different from the Protozoan which, according to the biogenetic law, shoidd 

 be its prototjpe. The ovum of the higher animal is, it is true, a single cell ; 

 but it is a cell whicii compiises potentially within itself the entire complex 

 adult organism, and is thus essentially an entirely different thing from the 

 unicellular Protozoan. The same holds good of later developmental stages : 

 the\' may rtf<tmhk tlie adult condition of lower groups ; but they differ from the 

 latter in the same way as the ovum differs from the Protozoan. 



