CATTLE. 



INDEX. 



CUCKOO. 



325 



Oattle destroying fir-trees, i. 88. 

 ■—^ destroyed by tlies in Paraguay, 



, breeds of, locally extinct, i. 134. 



, fertility of Indian and Euro- 

 pean breeds, ii. 10. 



, Indian, i. 21 ; ii. 10. 



'-'ave, inhabitants of, blind, i. 170. 



Cecidomyia, ii. 239. 



Celts, proving antiquity of man, 

 i. 21. 



Centres of Creation, ii. 135. 



Cephalopodse, structures of eyes, i. 

 236, 



, development of^ ii 244. 



Cercopitheous, tail of, i. 294. 



Ceroxvlus laceratus, i. 284. 



Cervulus, ii. 9. 



Cetacea, teeth and hair, 1. 179. 



, development of the vrhale- 



bone, L 285. 



Cetaceans, i. 285. 



Ceylon, plants of, ii. 164. 



Chalk formation, ii. 100. 



Characters, divergence of, i. 134. 



, sexual, variable, i. 185, 191. 



, adaptive or analogical, ii. 218. 



Charlock, L 94. 



Checks, to increase, i. 83. 



, mutual, i. 86. 



Chelffi of Crustaceans, i. 300. 



Chickens, instinctive lameness of, 

 i. 329. 



Chironomus. its asexual reproduc- 

 tion, ii. 240. 



Chthamalinse, ii. 59. 



Chthamalus, cretaoean species of, 

 u. 81. 



Circumstances favourable to selec- 

 tion of domestic products, i. 46. 



to natural selection, i. 124. 



Cirripedes capable of crossing, i. 124. 



, carapace aborted, i. 184. 



, their ovigerous frena, i. 232. 



, fossil, ii. 80. 



, larvae of, ii. 243. 



ClaparMe, Prof., on the hair-clasp- 

 ers of the Acaridsp, i. 239. 



Clarke, Kev. W. B., on old glaciers 

 in Australia, ii. 159. 



Classification, ii. 202. _ 



Clift, Mr., on the succession ot types, 

 ii. 121. ^ , . . 



Climate, effects of, m checking in- 

 crease of beings, i. 84 



, adaptation of, to organisms, i. 



174. 



Climbing plants, i. 230. 



, development of, L 305. 



Clover visited by bees, i. 117. 

 Cobites, intestine of, i. 229. 

 Cockroach, i. 93. 

 Collections, palaeontologioal, poor, 



ii. 58. 

 Colour, influenced by climate, i. 165. 

 , in relation to attack by files, 



i. 248. 

 Columba livia, parent of domestic 



pigeons, 

 !oly 



Colymbetes, ii. 174. 



Compensation of growth, i. 182. 



Compositae, fiowers and seeds of, i. 

 179. 



, outer and inner fiorets of, i. 



270. 



, male flowers of, ii. 257. 



Conclusion, general, ii. 293. 



Conditions, slight changes in, fa- 

 vourable to fertility, ii. 27. 



Convergence of genera, i. 156. 



Coot, i. 222. 



Cope; Prof., on the acceleration or 

 retardation of the period of repro- 

 duction, i. 232. 



Coral-islands, seeds drifted to, ii. 

 145. 



reefs, indicating movements of 



earth, ii. 145. 



Corn-crake, i. 223. 



Correlated variation in domestic 

 productions, i. 13. 



Coryanthes, i. 241. 



Creation, single centres of, ii. 135. 



Crinima, ii. 6. 



Croll, Mr., on subacrial denudation, 

 ii. 53, 56. 



, on the age of our oldest for- 

 mations, ii. 83. 



, on alternate Glacial periods 



in the North and South, ii. 160. 



Crosses, reciprocal, ii. 14. 



Crossing of domestic animals, im- 

 portance in altering breeds, i. 23. 



, advantages of, 1. 119, 120. 



, unfavourable to selection, L 



125. 



Cmger, Dr., on Coyanthes, i. 241. 



Crustacea of New Zealand, ii. 164. 



Crustacean, blind, i. 171. 



air-breathers, i. 238. 



Crustaceans, their chelae, L 300. 



Cryptooerus, i. 359. 



Ctenomys, blind, i. 170. 



Cuckoo, instinct of, i. 819, 330. 



