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Show 46 DARWINISM. CHAP. wings, on which generic and family distinctions arc often established, are al o subject to variation. The Rev. R. P. Murray, in 1872, laid before the Entomological Society examples of such variation in six species of butterflies, and other cases have been since described. The larvro of butterflies nnd moths arc also very variable, and one observer recorded in the P?'oceedin,qs of the Entomological Society for 18 7 0 no less than sixteen varieties of the caterpillar of the bedstraw hawk-moth (Deilephcla galii). Variation among Lizards. Passing on from the lower animals to the vertebrata, we find more abundant and more definite evidence as to the extent and amount of individual variation. I will first give a case among the Reptilia frqm some of Mr. Darwin's unpublished MSS., which have been kindly lent me by Mr. Francis Darwin. "M. Milne Edwards (Annales des Sci. Nat., 1 scr., tom. xvi. p. 50) has given a curious table of measurement. of fourteen specimens of Lacerta muralis ; and, taking the length of the head as a standard, he finds the neck, trunk, tail, front and hind legs, colour, and femoral pores, all varying wonderfully; and so it is more or less with other species. So apparently trifling a character as the scales on the bead affording almost the only constant characters." As the table of measurements above referred to would give no clear conception of the nature and amount of the variation without a laborious study and comparison of the fi gures, I have endeavoured to find a method of presenting the facts to the eye, so that they may be easily grasped and appreciated. In the diagram opposite, the comparative variations of the different organs of this species are given by means of variously bent lines. The head is represented by a straight line because it presented (apparently) no Vf1riation. The body is next given, the specimens being arranged in the order of their size from No. 1, the smallest, to No. 14, the largest, the actual lengths being laid down from a base line at a sui table distance below, in this case two inches below the centre, the ~can length of the body of the fourteen specimens being two mches. The respective lengths of the neck, legs, and toe of 111 DIAGRAM OF VARIATION 47 3 5 7 9 11 14 Head. _____ - _v 8 od y ·-------------·-_ v f.-v Mean length. 2in. N eo h ·------- ------ / - ""' ........... ........... - - - / ........: - / " Mean length. 1.18in. Fore Leg. _____ r-v ........... / ............ ............ _/ ........... I Mean length. 1.05in. " !....-!-....... I ~ / t'--.... """ I ~ Hind Leg. y r---. Mean length. 1.90in. ""' v Toe of Hind Foot _ _ v ' ....-....-- ~ - r-- - --v - Meao length. 0. lOin. J 3 5 7 9 11 14 The leng.ths in the table are giuen in millimetres. which are he.rereduc:ed to inches for the means. FIG. I.-Variations of Lacerta muralis. |