LIGHT AND LIFE. 121 



come from the play of sunlight among the yellow and vio- 

 let substances distributed very curiously under its wrinkled 

 skin. It passes from orange to yellow, from green to blue, 

 through a series of wavering and rainbow-like shades, de- 

 termined by the state of the light's radiation. Darkness 

 blanches it, twilight gives it the most delicate marbled 

 tints, the sun turns it dark. A part of the skin bruised or 

 rubbed remains black, without growing white in the dark. 

 Bruck satisfied himself, moreover, that temperature does 

 not affect these phenomena. 



The influence of light and of the surrounding color on 

 the tint of fish and shell-fish was long ago observed. These 

 creatures change their shade with that of the bottom they 

 live on. Georges Pouchet, a late student of these phenom- 

 ena, found that in such a case light does not act on the 

 skin directly, but on the retina of the eye, which, through 

 the great sympathetic nerve, transmits the modifying in- 

 fluences of luminous vibrations from without to the colored 

 cells ,of the epidermis. Turbots, for instance, placed on a 

 white and a black bottom alternately, become dark or light. 

 But, if their eyes are put out, they do not change color. 



All animals having fur or feathers are darker and more 

 highly colored on the back than on the belly, and their 

 colors are more intense in summer than in winter. Night- 

 butterflies never have the vivid tints of those that fly by 

 day, and among the latter those of spring have clearer, 

 brighter shades than the autumn ones. Night-birds, in the 

 same way, have dark plumage, and the downiness of their 

 coverings contrasts with the stiffness of that in those that 

 fly by daj T . Shells secluded under rocks wear pale shades, 

 compared with those that drink in the light. We have 

 spoken above of cave-animals. What a distinction between 

 those of cold regions and those of equatorial countries I 

 The coloring of birds, mammals, and reptiles, peopling the 

 vast forests or dwelling on the banks of the great rivers in 



