404 



ANALYTICAL INDEX 



368 ; jaw-like legs of S. African, 368 ; 

 majority of resemblances Mullerian 

 and not Batesian, 348. 



Behrens, T. T., capture of herm- 

 aphrodite planemoides, female f. of 

 Pap. dardanus, by, 374 n. 3. 



Belenois, attack of drongo on in- 

 jured specimen of, 284 ; the model of 

 wet f. of Teracolus regina, 341. 



Belenois severina, 311 ; — thysa, 



341- 



Bell, T. R., on tilt of Melanitis, 

 300 n. 5 ; on succulent larval food 

 as the cause of wet season forms of 

 butterflies, 341. 



bellatrix, Callioratis, a distasteful 

 moth seized and dropped by young 

 drongo, 284. 



Belt, T., on epigamic display of 

 white patch by male Dismorphina, 

 240. 



bembeciformis, see crabroniformis, 

 366. 



Bembex, species of, resemble other 

 Hymenoptera in Australia, 278. 



Berlin, Fifth Internat. Zool. Congr. 

 at (1901), 271. 



bernhardus, Pagurus, carrying 

 Sagartia parasitica, 356, 357. 



betularia, Amphidasis, colour of 

 larva as example of acquired char- 

 acter, 143 ; darkening of in Lanca- 

 shire and Yorkshire district, 309. 



Bibliotheca Zoologies, Stuttgart, 



375- 



bicomis, Hymenopus, a flower- 

 like Mantis : mimicry of bug by larva 

 of, 378 n. 3. 



bidentata, Odontopera, colour ad- 

 justment to lichen, &c, by larva of, 

 306. 



bifida, Dicranura, cocoon of at- 

 tacked by birds, 158, 159. 



Biglow Papers, J. R. Lowell, 104. 



bimaculata, Lepidiota, posterior 

 end of, with eye-like spots resem- 

 bling head of shrew-like mammal, 

 368. 



Bingham, T. C, direct evidence of 

 birds capturing butterflies obtained 

 by, 283, 286-92 ; on wings of butter- 

 flies, &c., as pad in nests of Micro- 

 hierax, 290, 291, 291 n. 1 ; on tilt of 

 Melanitis, 289, 300 n. 5. 



Biologia Central! - Americana, 

 F. D. Godman and O. Salvin ; 

 Rhopalocera, F. D. Godman and 



O. Salvin, 240 ; Bhynchota-Homo- 

 ptera, Canon W. W. Fowler, 258 

 (Fig. 6), 259. 



Biological stationsneeded in tropics, 

 89, 90. 



Biometrika, 130 n. 3. 



Bionomics of South African 

 Insects, G. A. K. Marshall, 282. 



Bionomics I, in Colours of 

 Animals, Eneycl. Brit., E. B. 

 Poulton, 293. 



Birds (see also evidence and 

 enemies), evolution of from reptiles, 

 32 : see also 26 ; attempt to select 

 sterility between, 79, 80 ; little modi- 

 fied in Madeira, 84, 84 n. 2 ; greatly 

 modified in Galapagos Islands, 84 

 n. 2 ; intelligence of, 1 16 ; the enemies 

 of pupae in cocoons, 157-9; edu* 

 cation of young, 166-8 ; bearing 

 on mimicry of struggle for existence 

 in young of, 167, 167 n. 2, 168 ; no in- 

 stinctive knowledge of qualities of food 

 possessed by young, 212; northern 

 mimics of the male H. misippus may 

 have been caused by migratory, 217, 

 218, 382 ; experiments on instincts and 

 education of, 268, 269 ; indirect evi- 

 dence of attacks on butterflies by, 

 270, 270 n. 1, 281-3, 290- 2 . 325. 3 2 5 

 n. 1 ; insufficient, but considerable, 

 direct evidence of attacks on butter- 

 flies by, 269, 270 n. 1, 282 n. 1, 283-90; 

 distasteful moths seized and rejected 

 by, 284 ; evidence of difficulty in cap- 

 turing butterflies, 284 ; attacks of on 

 butterflies influenced by climate, 286 ; 

 powers of sight of, 302, 303 ; pupa 

 of L. populi rejected by, 3 1 5-16 ; cryp- 

 tic resemblance to excrement of, 319 ; 

 intimidating attitude of large, 324; 

 Mullerian mimicry in relation to, 

 329-31 ; probably not deceived by 

 mimicry of Precis natalensis, 339; 

 Pap. aristolochiae proved to be dis- 

 tasteful to, 269, 372 ; powerful species 

 mimicked by weak (cuckoos, orioles), 

 367 ; mimetic sounds made by, 324. 



Birmingham Philosophical 

 Society, Proceedings of, 136 n. 1. 



Birmingham University, Author's 

 Huxley Lecture before, the original 

 form of Essay VII, 193. 



bispinosus, Ceratias, phosphor- 

 escent lure of, 378. 



Blackness, J. C. Prichard on strong 

 local development of, 187 ; J. C. 



