OCR Text |
Show 390 SEXUAL SELECTION. PAnT II. are nearly alike and wonderfully splendid; in another, the male is coloured in a similarly gorgeous manner, whilst the whole upper surface of the female is of a dull uniform brown. Our common little English blue butterflies of the genus Lycrena, illustrate the various differences in colour between the sexes, almost as well, though not in so striking a manner, as the above exotic genera. In Lyct:ena agestis both sexes have wings of a brown colour, bordered with small ocellated orange spots, and are consequently alike. In L. mgon the wings of the male are of a fine blue, bordered with black; whilst the wings of the female are brown, with a similar border, and closely resemble those of L. agestis. Lastly, in L. arion both sexes are of a blue colour and nearly alike, though in the female the edges of the wings are rather duskier, with the black spots plainer; and in a bright blue Indian species both sexes are still more closely alike. I have given the foregoing cases in some detail in order to shew, in the first place, that when the sexes of butterflies differ, the male as a general rule is the most beautiful, and departs most from the usual type of colouring of the group to which the species belongs. Hence in most groups the females of the several species resemble each other much more closely than do the males. In some exceptional cases, however, to which I shall hereafter allude, the females are coloured more splendidly than the males. In the second place these cases have been given to bring clearly before the mind that within the same genus, the two sexes frequently present every gradation from no difference in colour to so great a difference that it was long before the two were placed by entomologists in the same genus. In the third place, we have seen that when the sexes nearly resemble each other, this apparently may be due either to the •CHAP. XI. BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS. .391 male having transferred his colours to the female, ·Or to the male having retained, or perhaps recovered, the primordial colours of the genus to which the species belongs. It also deserves notice that in those groups in which the sexes present any difference of ·Colour, the females usually rese~ble the males to a certain extent, so that when the males are beautiful to an ·extraordinary degree, the females almost invariably exhibit some degree of beauty. From the numerous cases Df gradation in the amount of difference between the sexes, and from the prevalence of the same general type of coloration throughout the whole of the same group, we may conclude that the causes, whatever they may ~be, which have determined the brilliant colouring of the males alone of some species, and of both sexes in a more or less equal degree of other species, have generally been the same. As so many gorgeous butterflies inhabit the tropics, it .has often been supposed that they owe their colours to the great heat and moisture of these zones; but Mr. Bates 4 has shewn by the comparison of various closely- allied groups of insects from the temperate and tropical regions, that this view cannot be maintained; and the -evidence becomes conclusive when brilliantly-coloured males and plain-coloured females of the same species inhabit the same district, feed on the same food, and follow exactly the same habits of life. Even when ;the sexes resemble each other, we can hardly believe that their brilliant and beautifully-arranged colours are the purposeless result of the nature of the tissues, and .the action of the surrounding conditions. vVith animals of all kinds, whenever colour has been .modified for some special purpose, this has been, as fa.r 4 'The Naturalist on the Amazons,' vol. i. 18G3, p. 19. |