ANALYTICAL INDEX 



399 



almana, Precis, under side ocellated 

 in wet, procryptic in dry season, 

 340 ; wet ocellated f. of (asterie) per- 

 manent in damp Siamese forests, 



341- 



alni, Acronycta, transition from 

 cryptic to aposematic defence in larva 



of, 319- 

 Alpine Hare, seasonal changes of, 



310, 313- 



Alternation from cryptic to apo- 

 sematic defence in dry and wet 

 seasons respectively, 208, 209, 320, 



339. 34o. 



Amathusiinae, see Morphinae. 



Amauris, probable importance of 

 Mendelian principle in the splitting 

 of species of, xxxv ; see also 68, 69 ; 

 black and white species of and Natal 

 mimics in Hope Department, 249 ; 

 Eastern sp. of influenced by Western 

 at overlap, 335, 337 ; Eastern sp. of 

 and mimics replaced at V. Nyanza by 

 Western sp. and mimics, 336-8 ; 

 Western sp. of mimicked by T.. 

 morgeni, 337 ; mimicked by one f. of 

 female, A. esebria, 354, 355 ; advanr 

 tage of resemblance to chrysippus as 

 well as to, 355. 



Amauris albimaculata, 335-7, 

 374, 375 ; — echeria, 249, 335-7, 355, 

 374. 375! — niavius, 68, 69, 336, 

 338, 374. 375; —niavius, sub-sp. 

 dominicanus, 68, 69, 336, 338, 374, 

 374 n. 2, 375 ; — ochlea, 336. 



Amazon, segregation and preferen- 

 tial mating in butterflies of the, 85, 

 86. 



Amazon, Upper, character of chief 

 mimetic butterflies at Ega on the, 



273, 351- 

 Amblyornis inornata, 379. 



America, 187, 315, 323, 324. 



America, Central, 232, 249, 258, 

 350 ; see also Antilles, 247 ; Hon- 

 duras, 235 ; Mexico, 274 ; Neo-tropi- 

 cal, xxvi ; West Indies, 178, 187, 216. 



America, North, 253, 255, 274, 

 333 ; see also Arizona, 231 ; Canada, 

 270, 274; Florida, 216; Hartland, 

 255, 256; Pine Lake, 255, 256; 

 Toronto, 263; United States, 97, 

 100, 178, 274, 378; Wisconsin, 118 

 n. 1, 252, 253, 256, 380. 



America, South,or Tropical, 87, 178, 

 187, 222, 223, 231, 233, 235, 237, 239, 

 243, 247, 249, 2S 2 , 2 58, 259, 264, 273, 



277,280, 302,311,317, 322, 323, 327, 

 333. 334 n- 2, 336, 346, 350, 367, 370, 

 377 ; see also Amazon, 85, 273, 351 ; 

 Andes, 90; Bolivia, 351; Brazil, 

 53 n. 1, 216, 273, 313, 351, 356, 376 ; 

 British Guiana, 259, 259 (Fig. 7), 272, 

 273> 322, 332, 350 ; Demerara, 216 ; 

 Ecuador, 265, 351 ; Ega, 273, 351 ; 

 Guianas, 350 ; Neo-tropical, xxvi ; 

 Par£, 257 n. I ; Patagonia, 187, 225 ; 

 Peru, 351; Potaro, 332; Surinam, 

 235, 272; Trinidad, 235, 350, 351; 

 Venezuela, 273, 350. 



American Addresses, T. H. 

 Huxley, 56. 



American Association for the 

 Advancement of Science, Pro- 

 ceedings of, 215, 217, 247 n. 1, 364. 



American Journal of Science, 



35- 



American Naturalist, 142 n. 2. 



Amesia aliris, 376 ; — sanguiflua, 

 376. . 



Amixia of Weismann, 60. 



Ammophila, stinging ganglia of 

 prey, 161. 



Ammophila urnaria, 163. 



Amphibia, 26 ; rapid colour adjust- 

 ment in, 305. 



Amphidasys betularia, 143, 309. 



Amphimixis of Weismann, 60 n. 3. 



Amphioxus, 26, 30. 



Anaea, resemblance to dead leaf of, 

 205. 



Analogical or Syntechnic Resem- 

 blance, 312, 359. 



Analogy, W. S. Macleay on affinity 

 and, 220 ; Rev. W. Kirby and Prof. 

 J. O. Westwood on affinity and, 220, 

 221. 



Analysis of Mimetic Resem- 

 blance, VIII. 240-2. 



Anatomy and Physiology, 

 Journal of, 128 n. 1, 136 n. 1. 



Ancestor, non-Mimetic of 

 Mimetic Species preserved on 

 Islands, &c, X. 373-6- 



Ancestor, Miillerian mimicry best 

 explains origin of divergent mimicry 

 in descendants of a common mimetic, 

 352, 354. 



Ancestral forms of higher branches 

 of animals, 26, 27. 



Ancestral pattern, effect on origin 

 of mimicry of, 218, 382 ; persistence 

 in non-mimetic males of mimetic 

 females of, 244-7. 2 79 \ occasional 



