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Show 4.38 BOETHit'S. INDEX. BTIA"CN. occurrence of sub-species of pigcnns, i. 204; notice of pip;con-faucicrs in Del hi, &c., i. 206; hybrids of Gallus Sonnemtii and the domestic hen, i. 234:; supposed hybridity of Gallus Temminckii, i. 235 ; variations and domesticn,tion of Gallus bankiva, i. 235-236, 237; crossin.g of wild and tame fowls in Burmah, i. 236; restricted range of the larger gallinaccou' 3 birds, i. 237; feral fowls in tho Nicobar islands, i. 238; blnck-skinned fowls occurring ncar Calcutta, i. 256; weight of Gallus bcwkira, i.. 272; dogonomtion of tho tmkey in Intlin, i. 2[)4, ii. 278; on the colour of gold-fi sh, i. 2[)6; on tho Ghor-li.hur (Asinus indicus), ii. 4:2; on Asinus hemimms, ii. 43; number of eggs of Galh~s bankira, ii. 112; on tho breeding of birds in cap· tivity, ii. 157; co-oxi stoncc of large n,nd small breeds in the same country, ii. 27[); on the drooping curs of the elephant, ii. 301; homology of leg and wing feathers, ii. 323. BoETHllJS on Scotch wild cattle, i. 85. BorTAnD a.nd Cm·bic, on the breeds of pigeons, i. 132; Lillo pouter pigeon, i. 138; notice of a gliding pigeon, i. 156; variety of the pouter pigf\on, i. 1G2; dove-cot pigeon, i. 185; crossing pigeons, i. 1[)2-1[)3, ii. D7, 12G; sterility of hybrids of tmtlo-<loves, i. 19:~; reversion of crossed pigeons, i. 1!)7, ii. 4:0; on the fantail, i. 208, ii. G6; on the trumpeter, ii. G6; prepotency of trnnsmission in silky fantail, ii. 67, 69; SOL'Ondary scxtml characters in pigeons, ii. 74; crossing of white and coloured tnrtle-dovcs, ii. 92 ; fertility of pigeons, ii. 112. Bo•mYCIDJE, wingl ess females of, ii. 299. Bombyx hesperus, ii. 304. B omby.r Htdtoni, i. 3112. Bombyx mori, i. 300-30-L BoNAI>ors, on maize, i. 320, 321. BONAPARTE, number of species of Colum-bium, i. 1:33; number of tail-feathers in pi g- ons, i. 158; size of 1ho f<.:ct in Columbitlro, i. 174; on Columba gtdnect, i. 182 ; Columba t·urricolc~, rupestris, and Schimpe1·i, i. 181. Bo11atea speciosa, development of ovary of, i. •103. BoNAVIA, Dr., growth of caulifiowors in India, ii. 310. BoNES, removal of portions of, ii. 296 ; regeneration of, ii. 294 ; growth and repair of, ii. 381-382. BoNNET, on the salamander, ii. 15, 341, 358,385; theory of repro<luction, ii. 385. BonCIDIEYER, experiments with tile scell~ of tho weeping ush, ii. 19. DomwoLg, i. 323. BOilELLT on Polish fowls, i. 247. BonNEo,' fowls of, with 1ail-bands, i. 235. BoRNE'l' E., condition of the ovary in hy-brid 1Cisti, i. 389 ; sclf~impotenco of hybrid Cisti, ii. 140. BoRnow, G., on pointers, i. 42. DonYclo Saint-Vincent,on gold-fish,i. 2D7. Bas probable origin of Europen.n domestic c~ttl e from three species of, i. 83. Bas j1·ontosus, i.. 79, 81-82. Bas indicus, i. 79. Bo · lona1J1·ons, i. 79, 81. Bas 1J1'imiaenius, i. 70- 81, 119. B os sonclc~icus, ii. 206. Bos tatwus, i. 79. B os t1·ochoceros, i. 81. Bose, heredity in foliage-varieties of the elm, i. 3G2. BossE, production of double flowers from old sect!, ii. 1G7. Bossr, on brooding dark-coloured silkworms, i. 302. Bo'CCHARDAT, 011 the vine uiscasc, i. 334. BouDIN, on local diseases, ii. 276; ro ·istancc .. to c"old of dark-complcxioucu men, n . 33::>. '' BorLANs,'' i. 137. "BouTON d'Alep," ii. 276. BowEN, Prof., clou bts as to the importnnco of inheritance, ii. 3. Bow~JAN, Mr., hereditary pocu1inrities in the lmm?'.n eye, ii. 8-10; hereditary cataract, u. 79. BRACE, Mr., on Hungn.rian cnttlo, i. 80. Bmchycome ibericlifolic~, ii. 2()1. BHACTS, unusual development of, in gooseberries, i. 355. BRADLEY, Mr., effect of grafts upon tho stock in the ash; i. 3U4; cifcct of foreign pollen upon a,pplcs, i. 401; on chn,ngc of soil, ii. 146. "B8AIDfA Pooh·as," a new breed offowls, i, 2c!5. BnAJN, proportion of, in hares and rabbits i. 126-129. ' BnA~DT, origin of the goat, i. 101. Br.c~ss ica, varieties of, with culm·gcd ~:.terns, ll. 34:8. Brass icc~ asperifolia, ii. 343. Bmssicct napus, i. 325. Brc~ssica olcrarea, i. 323. Bmssica mpc~, i. 325, ii. 165. BnAlJN, A., bud·variatiun in the vinr, i. 375; in the currant, i. 37G; in Mirabilis jalctpa, i. 382 ; in Cyt isus admni, i. 388; on 1·eversion in tho fuliago of tree·, i. 3':l2; spontaneous production of Cytisus purpureo-elongatus, i. 390; reversion of flowers by stripes anu blotches, ii. 37; excess of nourishment a source of variu.bility, ii. 257. BRAZIL. INDEX. BUD-VARIATION. 439 BRAZIL, cattle of, i. 88. BnEAD-FUUIT, varieties of, ii. 25G; sterility anJ variability of, ii. 2G2. BREE, W. 1'., bud-variation in Gerani~~m prcdense and Centau1·ea C1Janus, i. 379 ; by tubers in the dahlia, i. 385 ; on the dcnfnoss of white cats witll blue eyes, ii. 329. BnEEDING, high, dcpenucnt on inheritance, ii. 3-4:. Bm:.Eus, domestic, persistency of, ii. 246, 4·28-429 ; artificial and natural, ii. 41B-414; extinction of, ii. 425; of· domestic cats, i. 45-47 ; of pigs produced by crossing, i. 78; of cattle, i. 86-87, 91-93; of goats, i. 101. BrmnM, on Columbct amalim, i. 183. BRENT, B. P., number of mammre in rabbits, i. 106; habits of the tumbler pigeon, i. 151 ; Laugher pigeon, i. 155; colouring of tho kite tumbler, i. 1GO; crossing of the pigeon with Col~tmba mnas, i.1D3; mongrds of the trumpeter pigeon, ii. 66; close interbreeding of pigeons, ii. 126 ; opinion on Aldrovandi's fowls, i. 247; on stripes in chickens, i. 249-250; on tho combs of fowls, i. 253; cloublo-spurrod Dm·king fowl s, i. 255 ; effect of crossing on colour of plumage in fowls, i. 258; incubatory in tinct of mongrels between non-sitting varieties of fowls, ii. 44:; origin of the domestic duck, i. 277; fertility of the h ook-billed duck, ibicl. ; occurrence of tho plumage of the wild cluck in domestic breeds, i. 280 ; voice of ducks, i. 281; occurrence of a short upper mandible in crosses of hook-billed and common ducks, i. 281 ; reversion in ducks produced by crossing, ii. 40; Yariation of the canary-bird, i. 295 ; fashion in the canary, ii. 2-10; hybrids of canary and finches, ii. 45. BmcimJJL, on raising nectarines from seed, i. 340; on tho horses of North Carolina, ii. 300. DnmGES, l\Ir., on the dogs of Tierra del Fuego, i. 09 ; on the selection of dogs by tho Fucgians, ii. 207. BnmGl\JAN, W. K., reproduction of abnormal foms, i. 383, ii. 379. Bmccs, J. J., regeneration of portions of the fiJ1S of fisbcs, ii. 15. BROCA, P., on the intercrossing of clogs, i. Bl-32; on hybrids of hare and rabbit, i. 105; on the rumplPSS fowl, i. 259; on the character of half-castes, ii. 47; degree of fertility of mongrels, ii. 100; sterility of descendants of wild animals bred in ca.ptivity, ii. 1GO. BtwccoLT, i. 328; rudimentary flowers in, ii. 3lli; tenderness of, ii. 010. BnmmnEAD, W., doubling of the Canterbury bell by selection, ii. 200. BnoMFillLD, Dr., sterility of the ivy and Aco1·us calamus, ii. 170. Bromus secalintts, i. 314. BRoNN, H. G., bud-variation in Antlzemls, i. 379; eflccts of cross-breeding on the female i. 404; on heredity in a onehorned' cow, ii. 12, 13; propagation of a pendulous peach by seed, ii. 18; absorP.tion of tho minority in crossed races, n. 88; on tho crossing of horses, ii. 92 ; fertility of tame rabbits and sheep, ii. 112; changes of plumage in captivity, ii. 158 ; on the dahlia, ii. 261. BIWNZE period, dog of, i. 18. BnowN, G., variations in tho dentition of tho hm·sp, i. 50. BnowN-SBQVAHD, Dr., inheritance of artificially- produced epilepsy in the guineapig, ii. 24:. Bmnswiaia, ii. 139. BR"CSSELS Sprouts, i. 323, ii. 429. Bubo maximus, ii. 151. BucKLAND, F., on oysters, ii. 2RO; number of eggs in a codfish, ii. 379. Bt:CKLE, Mr., doubts as to the importance of inheritance, ii. 3. BecKLEY, Miss, carrier-pigeons roosting in trees, i. 181. BucKliiAN, Prof., cultivation of Avena jatua, i. 313; cultivation of the wild parsnip, i. 326, ii. 20J, 277; reversion in the parsnip, ii. 31. BlJCKWHEAT, injurious to white pigs, when in flower, ii. 337. BoD and seed, close analogy of, i. 411. BOD-REVERSION, ii. 37. Bt;DS, adventitious, ii. 384. BUD-VARIATION, i. 373-111, ii. 254, 287- 288, 291; contrasted with seminal reproduction, i. 373; peculiar to plants, i. 374; in the peach, i. 340, 374; in plums, i. 375; in tile cherry, ibicl.; in grapes, ibid. ; in the gooseberry, currant, pear, and apple, i. 376; in the banana, camellia, hawthorn, Azalect indica, and Cistus t1·icuspis, i. 377 ; in the hollyhock and pclargonium, i. 378; in Geranium pratense and the chi ys lnthcmum, i. 379; in roses, i. 3G7, 370-381; in sweet williams, carnations, pinks, stocks, and snapdragons,i. 381 ; in wall-flowers, cyclamen, CEnothera biennis, Gladiolus colvillii, fuchsias, and llfimbilis ialapC£, i. 382 ; in foliage of various trees, i. 382-384; in cryptogamic plants, i. 383 ; by suckers in Phlox and barberry, i. 384; hy tubers in the potato, ibid. ; in tho dahlia, i. 385; by bulbs in hyacinths, Imatophyllum miniatum, and tulips, i. 385_; in 'I'igriclia conchiflora, i. 38G ; in |