ANALYTICAL INDEX 



45i 



on mimicry between species of 

 Danaine genus Amanris, 335 ; on 

 examples of Diaposematic Resem- 

 blance, 345 ; on African mimics of 

 L. chrysippus preferring station 

 different from that of their model, 

 349 ; on terror inspired in natives by 

 African snake-like caterpillar, 367 

 n. 2 ; discovery of mimicry in 

 planemoides, female f. of Pap. 

 dardanus, by, 374 n. 3. 



Neaves, Lord, parody of Darwin- 

 ism by, 103. 



Nebalia, forms allied to in Cam- 

 brian, &c, 39. 



Necydalinae, mimicry of Hymeno- 

 ptera by, 252. 



Negroes, unchanged by many 

 generations in United States, 178 ; 

 J. C. Prichard on adaptation to 

 tropics of, 190. 



Nematophora in classification, 25 ; 

 relation to ancestry of Vertebrata, 

 26 ; earliest forms of not primitive, 

 28. 



Neobrotica mimicking Diabrotica, 

 236, 237. 



Neotropical Region, see America, 

 South, and America, Central ; the 

 study of mimicry should reach its 

 climax in, xxvi. 



Neotropinae, see Ithomiinae. 



Nervous system, see also instinct 

 and intelligence ; evolution of, rapid 

 in higher animals, 29; evolution in 

 Mammalian, 107, 108 ; in man, 108 ; 

 ' instinctive ' mechanisms of the, 

 versus the ' individually acquired ', 

 166 ; in adjustable Protective Resem- 

 blance, 305 ; epigamic characters 

 closely associated with, 380. 



Nest of MicroAierax with wings of 

 butterflies, &c, 290, 291, 291 n. 1. 



Neuropteraof Commentry Carboni- 

 ferous, 35-7 ; unique interest of the 

 social, 52 ; wide difference between 

 the forms of the social, 72. 



neustria, Malacosoma, cocoons of, 

 opened by birds, 157. 



Neutralization of Shadow, 

 X. 299-300. 



Neutralization, Adjustable, 

 of Shadow, X. 300. 



Neutralization of shadow in Ag- 

 gressive Resemblance, 313. 



Mew Factor in Evolution, Prof. 

 J. Mark Baldwin, 142 n. 2. 



G 



New Guinea, Papilio mimicking 

 Uraniid moth in, 371 ; bower of 

 Amblyornis of, 379. 



New Interpretation of old 

 example of mimicry, vii. 2ii-i8. 



New Phytologist, 74 n. 2. 



New World, see America. 



Newcomb, Prof. Simon, on loss of 

 heat by the sun, 13 n. 2, 14. 



Newt, Herlitzka's experiments on 

 egg of, 130. 



Newton and Gravitation, 97. 



Newtonian theory, confirmation of, 

 compared with that of Natural 

 Selection, xxvi, 97, 219, 271. 



niavius,Amauris, see also domini- 

 canns ; transitional into dominicanns 

 f. at the V. Nyanza, xxxv, 68, 69, 

 338 ; corresponding changes in Papil- 

 ionine and Nymphaline mimics, 338 ; 

 mimicked by hippocoon female f. of 

 Pap. dardanus, sub-sp. merope, 338, 

 374, 375 ; niavius figured by Weis- 

 mann in place of its eastern f. domi- 

 nicanus, 375. 



Niger mouths to Sahara, exclusive 

 occurrence of alcippus f. of L. 

 chrysippus from, 321, 364. 



nigricornis, Nitocris, mimics Hy- 

 menopteron during life, 363. 



nigrofulva, Eueides, an outlying 

 member of the great distasteful com- 

 bination of B. Guiana, 332. 



Nineteenth Century, 101. 



Niphoninae, mimicry of weevils in 

 isolated section of, 250. 



Nitocris nigricornis, 363. 



Nodosaria, an existing genus in 

 the Carboniferous, 27. 



nomius, Papilio, frequenting wet 

 mud, 285. 



Non-Mimetic Male: Mimetic 

 Female, X. 372: see also 215-17, 



244-7, 279. 347. 353. 373-5- 



Non-Mimetic Ancestor Pre- 

 served on Islands, &c. : Remark- 

 able Case of Papilio dardanus 

 (merope), X. 373-6. 



North America, see America, 

 North. 

 Worth. British Review, xl, xl 



"• 3> 3- 



North India, see under India. 



North, J.W., A.R.A., assistance in 

 the study of paper rendered by, 172. 



North Kanara, experience in, 

 bearing on seasonal forms, 341. 



g 2 



