440 



ANALYTICAL INDEX 



L. chrysippus, preferred by certain, 



349- 



Lycidae (see also classification of 

 examples of mimicry, 389-91, 393) : 

 moths which mimic are themselves 

 distasteful, 231 ; mimicry in relation 

 to life-history of, 243, 276. 



Lycomorpha latercula,a. Glaucopid 

 moth mimicking Lycinae, 231. 



Lycorea (Danainae) included in 

 Ithomiinae by Bates, 327. 



Lycorea halia, 356. 



Lyell, Sir Charles, on ocean basins, 

 21 ; letters from Darwin to, 56, 75, 

 83 ; letters from Huxley to, 195,200; 

 consulted by Darwin on the joint 

 essay (1858), 194. 



Lygistopterus rubripennis, 231. 



M 



Macan, Dr. R. W., assistance in 

 terminology rendered by, 61 n. 1. 



Macao, L. chrysippus at, 88. 



macareus, Papilio, a mimetic 

 species not attacked by bee-eaters, 

 288. 



Macdougal, Vail, and Shull, fixed 

 hybrids between O. lamarckiana and 

 O. cruciata obtained by, xxi, xxii : 

 see also xix n. 5, xxxv n. 1. 



Macleay, W. S., Huxley's letter to, 

 approving system, 200 ; on the prin- 

 ciple of Analogy, 220. 



Macroclemmys temminckii, 378. 



macrophyllunt, Eupatorium, fre- 

 quented by chief mimetic butterflies 

 of British Guiana, 322. 



Macrura evolved earlier than 

 Brachyura, 40. 



maculosa, Diacrisia, a distasteful 

 moth seized and dropped by a 

 drongo, 284. 



Madagascar, 57 n. I, 216, 245, 



373- 



Madeira, many beetles wingless in, 

 18 ; birds slightly modified in, 84, 84 

 n. 2. 



Maize, Gartner on, 78. 



Malabar Coast, 178, 187 : see also 

 192. 



Malacosoma neustria, 157. 



Malacostraca in Palaeozoic, 39, 40. 



Malaya, 248, 252, 333, 367. 



Male, Mimicry, &c., more 

 characteristic of female than, 

 VIII. 244-7: see also 215-17, 279, 

 372-5. 



Male Mimicking Male of 

 Model, Female its Female, X. 



37i- 



Male and Female Mimicking 

 Different Species, X. 372. 



Male non-Mimetic: Female 

 Mimetic, X. 372. 



Male, ancestral appearance pre- 

 served in non-mimetic, 244-7 > except 

 in mimicry less ancestral than female, 

 245. 



Male parent, Prichard on the sup- 

 posed influence of on offspring, 185. 



Males, non-mimetic, of mimetic 

 females tend to warning colours and 

 to become models, 347 ; rivalry 

 between for possession of females, 



379- 



malelas, Melynias (Elymnias 

 leucocyma), male and female of, 

 mimicking different Euploeas, 372. 



Malvern, Durban, Natal, recent 

 incursion of N. butterflies into 

 neighbourhood of, 52 n. 1 ; attack on 

 butterfly witnessed at, 283. 



Mammalia, disputed remote an- 

 cestry of, 26 ; rapid evolution of brain 

 in higher, 29 ; brain of higher, com- 

 pared with that of man, 29; brain 

 evolution in, 107-8 ; skeleton of and 

 Lamarckism, 112; experiments on 

 Indian insect-eating, 269; warning 

 colours of, 315 ; mimicry by tree- 

 shrews of squirrels, 367, 367 n. 1 ; 

 mimicked by chafer, 368. 



Man, brain of, compared with 

 mammals, 29 ; evolution in brain 

 of, 108 ; division of labour among 

 tissues of, 121 ; J. C. Prichard on 

 adaptation to locality and climate of 

 races of, 190, 191 ; snake-like cater- 

 pillars terrifying monkeys and, 367 

 n. 2. 



Manchester Microscopical So- 

 ciety, Transactions of, 366 n. 1. 



Mandalay, 291 n. 1. 



Manders, Lieut.-Col. N._, on dorip- 

 pus f. of L. chrysippus in Ceylon, 

 70 n. 2. 



Mantidae attacking specially 

 defended insects, 318 ; alluring 

 flower-like colours of, 378, 378 n. 3 ; 

 colouring of, also procryptic, 378 j 

 Reduviid bug mimicked by larvae of, 

 378 n. 3. 



mapurito, Conepatus, warning 

 colours of, 315. 



