ANALOGY AND HOMOLOGY 161 



ing bats, birds, and insects all have wings and might be classified 

 in one group as "beasts of the air." But study of bats and birds 

 shows that they belong to two entirely different classes, the 

 bats having wings like the arms and fingers of a mammal and 

 the mammary glands of the mammals, while birds have espe- 

 cially modified fore limbs, entirely different bone structure and 

 other organs which place them in the class Aves. Birds and 

 insects are also different both in the character of the wings and 

 in the absence of an internal bony skeleton in the latter. While 

 the functions of wings of birds and insects are the same their 

 anatomy shows an entirely different mode of origin and different 

 secondary structures. In such cases the organs are said to be 

 analogous. When organs have the same ancestry, that is when 

 they come from some common part of an ancestral animal, 

 they are said to be homologous. The wings of a bird have had 

 the same ancestry as the fore-legs of beasts or the arms of man; 

 so too have the wings of a bat, hence arms, fore-legs of beasts, 

 and wings of bat or bird are homologous structures. It is quite 

 otherwise with the wings of a bee or fly. These have had an 

 entirely different ancestry from the wings of a bird and are 

 not homologous with the latter. Wings of different insects, 

 however, are homologous. 



Homology or genetic relationship of organs and structures 

 in general is the ground principle of classification of species. 

 Two organs on different animals may be homologous whether 

 they perform the same functions or not, and conversely the 

 same functions may be performed by organs not homologous. 

 The study of homologies therefore is one of the most important 

 in comparative anatomy and in taxonomy. The walking legs 

 qf^vertebrates and those ofj L _lobster_are.th^ ^P in function 

 a^djare analogous^ organs but no one would Compare them, 

 morphologically and they are not homologous in any sense. It 

 is quite otherwise, however, with the legs of lobsters, of crabs 

 and of shrimps which are homologous, having had a like origin. 

 All of the appendages of a lobster or crab, furthermore, although 

 they have widely different functions and are quite different in 

 form and appearance, are homologous with one another. 



