216 
COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 
This is one of the most universal facts in nature. Ev¬ 
ery development ends in diversity. All know that no 
two individuals of a family, human or brute, are abso-^ 
lutely alike. There are always individual differences by 
which they can be distinguished. Evidently a parent 
does not project precisely the same line of influences upon 
each of its offspring. 
This variability makes possible an indefinite modifica¬ 
tion of the forms of life. For the variation extends to 
the whole being, even to every organ and mental char¬ 
acteristic as well as to form and color. It is very slight 
from generation to generation; but it can be accumulated 
Dy choosing from a large number of individuals those 
which possess any given variation in a marked degree, 
and breeding from these. Nature does this by the very 
gradual process of “ natural selection Man hastens it, so 
to speak, by selecting extreme varieties. Hence we have 
in our day remarkable specimens of Poultry, Cattle, and 
Hogs, differing widely from the wild races. 
Sometimes we notice that children resemble, not then 
parents, but their grandparents or remoter ancestors. This 
tendency to revert to an ancestral type is called atavism. 
Occasionally, stripes appear on the legs and shoulders of 
the Horse, in imitation of the aboriginal Horse, which was 
striped like the Zebra. Sheep have a tendency to revert 
to dark colors. 
The laws governing inheritance are unknown. No one 
can say why one peculiarity is transmitted from father to 
son, and not another; or why it appears in one member 
of the family, and not in all. Among the many causes 
which tend to modify animals after birth are the quality 
and quantity of food, amount of temperature and light, 
pressure of the atmosphere, nature of the soil or water, 
habits of fellow-animals, etc. 
Occasionally animals occur, widely different in struct* 
