4io 



ANALYTICAL INDEX 



Changes Seasonal in the 

 Individual, X. 310. 



Changes in mode of defence at 

 different stages of life-history, 319. 



chaon, Papilio, mimicked by male 

 of Pap. castor, 372. 



Chapman, T. A., on evidence of 

 preferential mating, 87 n. 1 ; on 

 choice of resting-sites by butterflies, 

 301. 



Charaxes, value of ' tails ' of hind 

 wings of, 281, 282 ; wing of, in nest 

 of Microhierax, 291. 



Charaxes athamas, 288 ; — psaphon, 

 286 ; — scheiberi, 292. 



Charles Darwin and the Theory 

 of Natural Selection, E. B. Poulton, 

 83 n. 1, 162 n. 2, 219, 225, 233 n. 1, 

 272 n. 1. 



chelicutensis, Halcyon, capturing 

 Junonia cebrene and Catopsilia 

 florella, 283. 



Chief Characteristics of 

 Mimetic Resemblance and 

 Attempt to Explain their 

 Evolution, X. 362, 363: see also 

 Essay VIII, 220-70. 



China, 88, 217, 333, 382. 



chinensis, Estigmena, mimicked 

 by Estigmenida variabilis, 261. 



Chinese goose fertile with 

 Common, 83. 



Chiricahua Mountains, Arizona, 

 examples of mimicry from, 231. 



Chiton, in early Palaeozoic, 30, 42 ; 

 an ancestral form, 42. 



Chlorophyll derived from food, use 

 of by insects, 314; by larva of T. 

 pronuba, 314 n. 2 ; passing through 

 egg into larva of next generation, 

 314 n. 2. 



Choerocampa, snake-like Bornean 

 species of, 367 n. 2 ; terror inspired 

 by snake-like African species of, and 

 the British C. elpenor, 367 n. 2. 



Choerocampa elpenor, 319, 326, 

 367, 367 n. 2, 368, 376. 



Choice of Appropriate Sur- 

 faces for resting on, X. 301. 



Chrysalis, see pupa. 



chrysippus, Limnas, forms of, with 

 theirgeographical distribution : — dis- 

 tribution of dorippus and type forms 

 of, 70, 71 ; peculiarity of far eastern 

 forms of, 88; 'Syngamic chain' 

 probably formed by, 88, 89 ; type f. 

 of ancestral, 321 n. I ; type f. of, very 



rare in Camaroons as compared with 

 alcippus {., 321 n. I ; geographical 

 transition from aposematic to cryptic 

 defence of, 320, 321 ; desert form of, 

 321 ; two of three forms of sharply 

 marked off, 364 ; corresponding 

 forms of mimics transitional into 

 one another, 364, 365 n. 1. 



— Mimics of: — as model for mimi- 

 cry, 215 ; Miillerian mimicry of by 

 Aletis helcita and its mimics, 232; 

 Natal mimics of with model, in Hope 

 Department, 249 ; a dominant model 

 in E. Africa, 336 ; preferring station 

 different from that of certain of its 

 African mimics, 349; mimicked by 

 one f. of female A. esebria, 354, 355 ; 

 advantage of resemblance to, as well 

 as to Amauris, 355 ; three forms of, 

 mimicked respectively by three 

 forms of A. encedon, 355, 364, 365, 

 365 n. 1 ; also by three forms of 

 female H. misippus, 355, 364, 365, 

 365 n. 1, 372 ; alcippus f. of, shown 

 by mimics to be only recently domi- 

 nant in W. Africa, 364; shown by 

 mimicry to be ancient inhabitant of 

 Africa, but a recent intruder into 

 Oriental Region, 364 ; mimicked by 

 trophonius, female f. of four sub- 

 species of Papilio dardanus, 374. 



Church Quarterly Eeview, 

 56 n. 3. 



Cicada, wings of, in nest of Micro- 

 kierax, 291 n. 1. 



Cinnabar moth, 230 ; larva of, 

 318. 



Circumcision, results of, not here- 

 ditary in spite of antiquity, 182. 



Cirrhipedes, continuity the diffi- 

 culty in Darwin's systematic work 

 on, xv, 59, 60, 67 ; in Silurian, 39. 



Classification of animals, 25 ; of 

 bionomic uses of animal colours, 

 226; of examples of mimicry, 383-93. 



Claws of Crustacea, Lamarckism 

 and, 113, 114 ; value of the power of 

 throwing off, 113, 114, 325 ; pseudepi- 

 sematic or alluring use by Hyas of, 



3I4- 

 ' Clearwings ', transparency of 



scales in, 366. 



Cleavage, position of future embryo 

 and planes of, 130. 



cleodora, Eronia, captured by fly- 

 catcher, 283 ; choice of resting-site 

 by, 301. 



