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Show 29& Tli:IE PRINCIPLES OF PART II~ of the same species of butterfly, in which certain coloured marks are confined to one sex, whilst other marks are common to both sexes. A difference of this kind in the period of development is not so improbable. as it may at first appear; for with the Orthoptera, whiC~ assume their adult state, not by a single metamorphosis, but ~y a succession of moults, the young males of some specie& at first resemble the females, and acquire their distinctive masculine characters only during a later moult. Strictly analogous cases occur during the successive· moults of certain male crustaceans. vV e have as yet only considered the transference. o:L characters, relatively to their period of development, with species in a natural state ; we will now turn to domesticated animals; first touching on monstrosities and diseases. The presence of supernumerary digits, and the absence of certain phalanges, must be determined at an early embryonic period-the tendency to profuse bleeding is at least congenital, as is probably colourblindness- yet these peculiarities, and other similar· ones, are often limited in their transmission to one sex ; so that the rule that characters which are developed at an early period tend to be transmitted to both sexes,. here wholly fails. But this rule, as before remarked,. does not appear to be nearly so generally true as the converse proposition, namely, that characters which appear late in life in one sex are transmitted exclu-· sively to the same sex. From the fact of the above abnormal peculiarities becoming attached to one sex,. long before the sexual functions are active, we may infer that there must be a difference of some kind between the sexes at an extremely early age. With respect to sexually-limited diseases, we know too little of the period at which they originate, to draw any fair conclusion. Gout, however, seems to fall under· oCHAP. VIII. SEXUAL SELECTION'. 2D3 our rule; for it is generally caused by intemperance after early youth, and is transmitted from the father to his sons in a much more marked manner than to his daughters. Iu the various domestic breeds of sheep, goats, and cattle, the males differ from their respective females in the shape or development of their horns, forehead, mane, dewlap, tail, and hump on the shoulders; and these peculiarities, in accordance with our rule, are not fully developed until rather late in life. With dogs, the sexes do not differ, except that in certain breeds, -especially in the Scotch deer-hound, the male is much larger and heavier than the female; and as we shall see in a future chapter, the male goes on increasing in size to an unusually late period of life, which will account, according to our rule, for his increased size being transmitted to his male o:ff::;pring alone. On the other hand, the tortoise-shell colour of the hair, which is confined to female cats, is quite distinct at birth, and this case violates our rule. There is a breed of pigeons in which the males alone are streaked with black, and the streaks ·can be detected even in the nestlings; but they become more conspicuous at each successive monlt, so that this -case partly opposes and partly supports the rule. vVith the English Carrier and Pouter pigeon the full development of the wattle and the crop occurs rather late in life, and these characters, conformably with our rule, are transmitted in full perfection to the males alone. "l,he following cases perhaps come within the class previously alluded to, in which the two sexes have varied in the same manner at a rather late period of life, and have consequently transferred their new characters to both sexes at a corresponding late period ; and if so, .such cases are not opposed to our rule. Thus there .are sub-breeds of the pigeon, described by N enmeis- |