Journal of researches during H. M. S. Beagle's Voyage round the world.
WHEN on board H.M.S. Beagle, as naturalist, I was much struck with certain facts in the distribution of the inhabitants of South America, and in the geological relations of the present to the past inhabitants of that continent. These facts seemed to me to throw some light on the origin of species -- that mystery of mysteries, as it has been called by one of our greatest philosophers. On my return home, it occurred to me, in 1837, that something might perhaps be made out on this question by patiently accumulating and reflecting on all sorts of facts which could possibly have any bearing on it. After five years' work I allowed myself to speculate on the subject, and drew up some short notes; these I enlarged in 1844 into a sketch of the conclusions, which then seemed to me probable: from that period to the present day I have steadily pursued the same object. I hope that I may be excused for entering on these personal details, as I give them to show that I have not been hasty in coming to a decision.
My work is now nearly finished; but as it will take me two or three
more years to complete it, and as my health is far from strong, I have
been urged to publish this Abstract. I have more especially been
induced to do this, as Mr Wallace, who is now studying the
This Abstract, which I now publish, must necessarily be imperfect.
I cannot here give references and authorities for my I much regret that want of space prevents my having the
satisfaction of acknowledging the generous assistance which I have
received from very many naturalists, some of them personally unknown
to me. I cannot, however,
In considering the Origin of Species, it is quite conceivable that
a naturalist, reflecting on the mutual affinities of organic beings,
on their embryological relations, their geographical distribution,
geological succession, and other such facts, might come to the
conclusion that each species had not been independently created, but
had descended, like varieties, from other species. Nevertheless, such
a conclusion, even if well founded, would be unsatisfactory, until it
could be shown how the innumerable species inhabiting this world have
been modified so as to acquire that perfection of structure and
co-adaptation which most justly excites our admiration. Naturalists
continually refer to external conditions, such as climate, food,
&c., as the only possible cause of variation. In one very limited
sense, as we shall hereafter see, this may be true; but it is
preposterous to attribute to mere external conditions, the structure,
for instance, of the woodpecker, with its feet, tail, beak, and
tongue, so admirably adapted to The author of the 'Vestiges of Creation' would, I presume, say
that, after a certain unknown number of
It is, therefore, of the highest importance to gain a clear insight
into the means of modification and coadaptation. At the commencement
of my observations it seemed to me probable that a careful study of
domesticated animals and of cultivated plants would offer the best
chance of making out this obscure problem. Nor have I been
disappointed; in this and in all other perplexing cases I have
invariably found that our knowledge, imperfect though it be, of
variation under domestication, afforded the best and safest clue. I
may venture to express my conviction of the high value of such
studies, although they have been very commonly neglected by
naturalists.
From these considerations, I shall devote the first chapter of this
Abstract to Variation under Domestication. We shall thus see that a
large amount of hereditary modification is at least possible, and,
what is equally or more important, we shall see how great is the power
of man in accumulating by his Selection successive slight variations.
I will then pass on to the variability of species in a state of
nature; but I shall, unfortunately, be compelled to treat this subject
far too briefly, as it can be treated properly only by giving long
catalogues of facts. We shall, however, be enabled to discuss what
circumstances are most favourable This fundamental subject of Natural Selection will be treated at
some length in the fourth chapter; and we shall then see how Natural
Selection almost inevitably causes much Extinction of the less
improved forms of life and induces what I have called Divergence of
Character. In the next chapter I shall discuss the complex and little
known laws of variation and of correlation of growth. In the four
succeeding chapters, the most apparent and gravest difficulties on the
theory will be given: namely, first, the difficulties of transitions,
or understanding how a simple being or a simple organ can be changed
and perfected into a highly developed being or elaborately constructed
organ; secondly the subject of Instinct, or the mental powers of
animals, thirdly, Hybridism, or the infertility of species and the
fertility of varieties when intercrossed; and fourthly, the
imperfection of the Geological Record. In the next chapter I shall
consider the geological succession of organic beings throughout time;
in the eleventh and twelfth, their geographical distribution
throughout space; in the thirteenth, their classification or mutual
affinities, both when mature and in an embryonic condition. In the last
chapter I shall give a
No one ought to feel surprise at much remaining as yet unexplained
in regard to the origin of species and varieties, if he makes due
allowance for our profound ignorance in regard to the mutual relations
of all the beings which live around us. Who
WHEN we look to the individuals of the same variety or sub-variety of our
older cultivated plants and animals, one of the first points which
strikes us, is, that they generally differ much more from each other,
than do the individuals of any one species or variety in a state of
nature. When we reflect on the vast diversity of the plants and
animals which have been cultivated, and which have varied during all
ages under the most different climates and treatment, I think we are
driven to conclude that this greater variability is simply due to our
domestic productions having been raised under conditions of life not
so uniform as, and somewhat different from, those to which the
parent-species have been exposed under nature. There is, also, I
think, some probability in the view propounded by Andrew Knight, that
this variability may be partly connected with excess of food. It seems
pretty clear that organic beings must be exposed during several
generations to the new conditions of life to cause any appreciable
amount of variation; and that when the organisation has once begun to
vary, it generally continues to vary for many generations.
It has been disputed at what period of time the causes of Sterility has been said to be the bane of horticulture; but on this
view we owe variability to the same cause which produces sterility;
and variability is the source of all the choicest productions of the
garden. I may add, that as some organisms will breed most freely under
the most unnatural conditions (for instance, the rabbit and ferret
kept in hutches), showing that their reproductive system has not been
thus affected; so will some animals and plants withstand domestication
or cultivation, and vary very slightly -- perhaps hardly more
than in a state of nature.
A long list could easily be given of 'sporting plants;' by this
term gardeners mean a single bud or offset, which suddenly assumes a
new and sometimes very different character from that of the rest of
the plant.
Seedlings from the same fruit, and the young of the same litter,
sometimes differ considerably from each other, though both the young
and the parents, as Muller has remarked, have apparently been exposed
to exactly the same conditions of life; and this shows how unimportant
the direct effects of the conditions of life are in comparison with
the laws of reproduction, and of growth, and of inheritance; for had
the action of the conditions been direct, if any of the young had
varied, all would probably have varied in the same manner. To judge
how much, in the case Habit also has a deciding influence, as in the period of flowering
with plants when transported from one climate to another. In animals
it has a more marked effect; for instance, I find in the domestic duck
that the bones of the wing weigh less and the bones of the leg more,
in proportion to the whole skeleton, than do the same bones in the
wild-duck; and I presume that this change may be safely attributed to
the domestic duck flying much less, and walking more, than its wild
parent. The great and inherited development of the udders in cows and
goats in countries where they are habitually milked, in comparison
with the state of these organs in other countries, is another instance
of the effect of use. Not a single domestic animal can be named which
has not in some country drooping ears; and the view suggested by some
authors, that the drooping is due to the disuse of the muscles of the
ear, from the animals not being much alarmed by danger, seems
probable.
There are many laws regulating variation, some few of which can be
dimly seen, and will be hereafter briefly mentioned. I will here only
allude to what may be called correlation of growth. Any change in the
embryo or larva will almost certainly entail changes in the mature
animal. In monstrosities, the correlations between quite distinct
parts are very curious; and many instances are given in Isidore
Geoffroy St Hilaire's great work on this subject. Breeders believe
that long limbs are almost always The result of the various, quite unknown, or dimly seen laws of
variation is infinitely complex and diversified. It is well worth
while carefully to study the several treatises published on some of
our old cultivated plants, as on the hyacinth, potato, even the
dahlia, &c.; and it is really surprising to note the endless
points in structure and constitution in which the varieties and sub
varieties differ slightly from each other. The whole organization
seems to have become plastic, and tends to depart in some small degree
from that of the parental type.
Any variation which is not inherited is unimportant for us. But the
number and diversity of inheritable deviations of structure, both
those of slight and those of considerable physiological importance, is
endless. Dr Prosper Lucas's treatise, in two large volumes, is the
fullest and the best on this subject. No breeder doubts how strong is
the tendency to inheritance: like produces like is his fundamental
belief: doubts have been thrown on this principle by theoretical
writers alone. When a
The laws governing inheritance are quite unknown; no one can say
why the same peculiarity in different individuals of the same species,
and in individuals of different species, is sometimes inherited and
sometimes not so; why the child often reverts in certain characters to
its grandfather or grandmother or other much more remote ancestor; why
a peculiarity is often transmitted from one sex to both sexes or to
one sex alone, more commonly but not exclusively to the like sex. It
is a fact of some little importance to us, that peculiarities
appearing in the males of our domestic breeds are often transmitted
either exclusively, or in a much greater degree, to males alone. A
much more important rule, which I think may be trusted, is that, at
whatever period of life a peculiarity first appears, it tends to
appear in the offspring at a corresponding age, though sometimes
earlier. In many cases this could
Having alluded to the subject of reversion, I may here refer to a
statement often made by naturalists -- namely, that our domestic
varieties, when run wild, gradually but certainly revert in character
to their aboriginal stocks. Hence it has been argued that no
deductions can be drawn from domestic races to species in a state of
nature. I have in vain endeavoured to discover on what decisive facts
the above statement has so often and so boldly been made. There would
be great difficulty in proving its truth: we may safely conclude that
very many of the most strongly-marked domestic varieties could not
possibly live in a wild state. In many cases we do not know what the
aboriginal stock was, and so could not tell whether or not nearly
perfect reversion had ensued. It would be quite necessary, in order to
prevent the effects of intercrossing, that only a
When we look to the hereditary varieties or races of our domestic
animals and plants, and compare them with species closely allied
together, we generally perceive in each domestic race, as already
remarked, less uniformity of character than in true species. Domestic
races of
When we attempt to estimate the amount of structural difference
between the domestic races of the same species, we are soon involved
in doubt, from not knowing whether they have It has often been assumed that man has chosen for domestication
animals and plants having an extraordinary inherent tendency to vary,
and likewise to withstand diverse climates. I do not dispute that
these capacities have added largely to the value of most of our
domesticated productions; but how could a savage possibly know, when
he first tamed an animal, whether it would vary in succeeding
generations, and whether it would endure other climates? Has the
little variability of the ass or guinea-fowl, or the small power of
endurance of warmth by the reindeer, or of cold by the common camel,
prevented their domestication? I cannot doubt that if other animals
and plants, equal in number to our domesticated productions, and
belonging to equally diverse classes and countries, were taken from a
state of nature, and could be made to breed for an equal number of
generations under domestication, they would vary on an average as
largely as the parent species of our existing domesticated productions
have varied.
In the case of most of our anciently domesticated animals and
plants, I do not think it is possible to come to any definite
conclusion, whether they have descended from one or several species.
The argument mainly relied on by those who believe in the multiple
origin
The whole subject must, I think, remain vague; nevertheless, I may,
without here entering on any details, state that, from geographical
and other considerations, I think it highly probable that our domestic
dogs have descended from several wild species. In regard to sheep and
goats I can form no opinion. I should think, from facts communicated
to me by Mr Blyth, on the habits, voice, and constitution, &c., of
the humped Indian cattle, that these had descended from a different
aboriginal stock from our European cattle; and several competent
judges believe that these latter have had more than one wild parent.
With respect to horses, from reasons which I cannot give here, I am
doubtfully inclined to believe, in opposition to several authors, that
all the races have descended from one wild stock. Mr Blyth, whose
opinion, from his large and varied stores of knowledge, I should value
more than that of almost any one, thinks that all the breeds of
poultry have proceeded from the common wild
The doctrine of the origin of our several domestic races from
several aboriginal stocks, has been carried to an absurd extreme by
some authors. They believe that every race which breeds true, let the
distinctive characters be ever so slight, has had its wild prototype.
At this rate there must have existed at least a score of species of
wild cattle, as many sheep, and several goats in Europe alone, and
several even within Great Britain. One author believes that there
formerly existed in Great Britain eleven wild species of sheep
peculiar to it! When we bear in mind Believing that it is In the skeletons of the several breeds, the development of the
bones of the face in length and breadth and curvature differs
enormously. The shape, as well as the breadth and length of the ramus
of the lower jaw, varies in a highly remarkable manner. The number of
the caudal and sacral vertebrae vary; as does the number of the ribs,
together with their relative breadth and the presence of processes.
The size and shape of the apertures in the sternum are highly
variable; so is the degree of divergence and relative size of the two
arms of the furcula. The proportional width of the gape of mouth, the
proportional length of the eyelids, of the orifice of the nostrils, of
the tongue (not always in strict correlation with the length of beak),
the size of the crop and of the upper part of the oesophagus; the
development and abortion of the oil-gland; the number of the primary
wing and caudal feathers; the relative length of wing and tail to each
other and to the body; the relative length of leg and of the feet; the
number of scutellae on the toes, the development of skin between the
toes, are all points of structure which are variable. The period at
which the perfect plumage is acquired varies, as does the state of the
down with which the nestling birds are clothed when hatched. The shape
and size of the eggs vary. The manner of flight differs remarkably; as
does in some breeds the voice and disposition. Lastly, in certain
breeds, the males and females have come to differ to a slight degree
from each other.
Altogether at least a score of pigeons might be chosen, which if
shown to an ornithologist, and he were told that they were wild birds,
would certainly, I think, be ranked by him as well-defined species.
Moreover, I do not believe that any ornithologist would place
Great as the differences are between the breeds of pigeons, I am
fully convinced that the common opinion of naturalists is correct,
namely, that all have descended from the rock-pigeon An argument, as it seems to me, of great weight, and applicable in
several other cases, is, that the above-specified breeds, though
agreeing generally in constitution, habits, voice, colouring, and in
most parts of their structure, with the wild rock-pigeon, yet are
certainly highly abnormal in other parts of their structure: we may
look in vain throughout the whole great family of Columbidae for a
beak like that of the English carrier, or that of the short-faced
tumbler, or barb; for reversed feathers like those of the jacobin; for
a crop like that of the pouter; for tail-feathers like those of the
fantail. Hence it must be assumed not only that half-civilized man
succeeded in thoroughly domesticating several species, but that he
intentionally or by chance picked out extraordinarily abnormal
species; and further, that these very species have since all become
extinct or unknown. So many strange contingencies seem to me
improbable in the highest degree.
Some facts in regard to the colouring of pigeons well deserve
consideration. The rock-pigeon is of a slaty-blue, and has a white
rump (the Indian sub-species, C. intermedia of Strickland, having it
bluish); the tail has a terminal dark bar, with the bases of the outer
feathers externally edged with white; the wings have two black bars:
some semi-domestic breeds and some apparently truly wild breeds have,
besides the two black bars, the wings chequered with black. These
several marks do not occur together in any other species of the whole
family. Now, in every one of the domestic breeds, taking thoroughly
well-bred birds, all the above marks, even to the white edging of the
outer tail-feathers, sometimes concur perfectly developed. Moreover,
when two birds belonging to two distinct breeds are crossed, neither
of which is blue or has any of the above-specified marks, the mongrel
offspring are very apt suddenly to acquire these characters; for
instance, I crossed some uniformly white fantails with some uniformly
black barbs, and they produced mottled brown and black birds; these I
again crossed together, and one grandchild of the pure white fantail
and pure black barb was of as beautiful a blue colour, with the white
rump, double black wing-bar, and barred and white-edged tail-feathers,
as any wild rock-pigeon! We can understand these facts, on the
well-known principle of Lastly, the hybrids or mongrels from between all the domestic
breeds of pigeons are perfectly fertile. I can state this from my own
observations, purposely made on the most distinct breeds. Now, it is
difficult, perhaps impossible, to bring forward one case of the hybrid
offspring of two animals From these several reasons, namely, the improbability of man In favour of this view, I may add, firstly, that C. livia, or the
rock-pigeon, has been found capable of domestication in Europe and in
India; and that it agrees in habits and in a great number of points of
structure with all the domestic breeds. Secondly, although an English
carrier or short-faced tumbler differs immensely in certain characters
from the rock-pigeon, yet by comparing the several sub-breeds of these
breeds, more especially those brought from distant countries, we can
make an almost perfect series between the extremes of structure.
Thirdly, those characters which are mainly distinctive of each breed,
for instance the wattle and length of beak of the carrier, the
shortness of that of the tumbler, and the number of tail-feathers in
the fantail, are in each breed eminently variable; and the explanation
of this fact will be obvious when we come to treat of selection.
Fourthly, pigeons have been watched, and tended with the utmost care,
and loved by many people. They have been domesticated for thousands of
years in several quarters of the world; the earliest known record of
pigeons is in the fifth &Aelig;gyptian dynasty, about 3000 B.C., as was
pointed out to me by Professor Lepsius; but Mr Birch informs me that
pigeons are given in a bill
I have discussed the probable origin of domestic pigeons at some,
yet quite insufficient, length; because when I first kept pigeons and
watched the several kinds, knowing well how true they bred, I felt
fully as much difficulty in believing that they could ever have
descended from a common parent, as any naturalist could in coming to a
similar conclusion in regard to the many species of finches, or other
large groups of birds, in nature. One circumstance has struck me much;
namely, that all the breeders of the various domestic animals and the
cultivators of plants, with whom I have ever conversed, or whose
treatises I have read, are firmly convinced that the several breeds to
which each has attended, are descended from so many aboriginally
distinct species.
Let us now briefly consider
the steps by which domestic races have been produced, either from one
or from several allied species. Some little effect may, perhaps, be
attributed to the direct action of the external conditions of life,
and some little to habit; but he would be a bold man who would account
by such agencies for the differences of a dray and race horse, a
greyhound and bloodhound, a carrier and tumbler pigeon. One of the
most remarkable features in our domesticated races
The great power of this principle of selection is not hypothetical.
It is certain that several of our eminent breeders have, even within a
single lifetime, modified to
What English breeders have actually effected is proved by the
enormous prices given for animals with a good pedigree; and these have
now been exported to almost every quarter of the world. The
improvement is by no means generally due to crossing different breeds;
The same principles are followed by horticulturists; but the
variations are here often more abrupt. No one supposes that our
choicest productions have been produced by a single variation from the
aboriginal stock. We have proofs that this is not so in some cases, in
which exact records have been kept; thus, to give a very trifling
instance, the steadily-increasing size of the common gooseberry may be
quoted. We see an astonishing improvement in many florists' flowers,
when the flowers of the present day are compared with drawings made
only twenty or thirty years ago. When a race of plants is once pretty
well established, the seed-raisers do not pick out the best plants,
but merely go over their seed-beds, and pull up the 'rogues,' as they
call the plants that deviate from the proper standard. With animals
this
In regard to plants, there is another means of observing the
accumulated effects of selection -- namely, by comparing the
diversity of flowers in the different varieties of the same species in
the flower-garden; the diversity of leaves, pods, or tubers, or
whatever part is valued, in the kitchen-garden, in comparison with the
flowers of the same varieties; and the diversity of fruit of the same
species in the orchard, in comparison with the leaves It may be objected that the principle of selection has been reduced
to methodical practice for scarcely more than three-quarters of a
century; it has certainly been more attended to of late years, and
many treatises have been published on the subject; and the result, I
may add, has been, in a corresponding degree, rapid and important. But
it is very far from true that the principle is a modern discovery. I
could give several references to the full acknowledgement of the
importance of the principle in works of high antiquity. In rude and
At the present time, eminent breeders try by methodical selection,
with a distinct object in view, to make a new strain or sub-breed,
superior to anything existing in the country. But, for our purpose, a
kind of Selection, which may be called Unconscious, and which results
from every one trying to possess and breed from the best individual
animals, is more important. Thus, a man who intends keeping pointers
naturally tries to get as good dogs as he can, and afterwards breeds
from his own best dogs, but he has no wish or expectation of
permanently altering the breed. Nevertheless I cannot
By a similar process of selection, and by careful training, the
whole body of English racehorses have come to surpass in Youatt gives an excellent illustration of the effects of a course
of selection, which may be considered as unconsciously followed, in so
far that the breeders could never have expected or even have wished to
have produced the result which ensued -- namely, the production
of two distinct strains. The two flocks of Leicester sheep kept by Mr
Buckley and Mr Burgess, as Mr Youatt remarks, 'have been purely bred
from the original stock of Mr Bakewell for upwards of fifty years.
There is not a suspicion existing in the mind of any one at all
acquainted with the subject that the owner of either of them has
deviated in any one instance from the pure blood of Mr Bakewell's
flock, and yet the difference between the sheep possessed by these two
gentlemen is so great that they have the appearance of being quite
different varieties.'
If there exist savages so barbarous as never to think of the
inherited character of the offspring of their domestic animals, yet
any one animal particularly useful to them, for any special purpose,
would be carefully preserved during famines and other accidents, to
which savages are so liable, and such choice animals would thus
generally leave more offspring than the inferior ones; so that in this
case there would be a kind of unconscious selection going on. We see
the value set on animals even by the barbarians of Tierra del Fuego,
by their killing and devouring their old women, in times of dearth, as
of less value than their dogs.
In plants the same gradual process of improvement, through the
occasional preservation of the best individuals, whether or not
sufficiently distinct to be ranked
A large amount of change in our cultivated plants, thus slowly and
unconsciously accumulated, explains, as I believe, the well-known
fact, that in a vast number of cases we cannot recognise, and
therefore do not know, the wild parent-stocks of the plants which have
been longest cultivated in our flower and kitchen gardens. If it has
taken centuries or thousands of years to improve
In regard to the domestic animals kept by uncivilised man, it
should not be overlooked that they almost always have to struggle for
their own food, at least during certain seasons. And in two countries
very differently circumstanced, individuals of the same species,
having slightly different constitutions or structure, would often
succeed better in the one country than in the other, and thus by a
process of 'natural selection,' as will hereafter be more fully
explained, two sub-breeds might be formed. This, perhaps, partly
explains what has been remarked by some authors, namely, that the
varieties kept by savages have more of the character of species than
the varieties kept in civilised countries.
On the view here given of the all-important part which selection by
man has played, it becomes at once obvious, how it is that our
domestic races show adaptation in their structure or in their habits
to man's wants or fancies. We can, I think, further understand the
frequently abnormal character of our domestic races, and likewise
their differences being so great in external characters and relatively
so slight in internal parts or organs. Man can hardly select, or only
with much difficulty, any deviation of structure excepting such as is
externally visible; and indeed he rarely cares for what is internal.
He can never act by selection, excepting on variations
Nor let it be thought that some great deviation of structure would
be necessary to catch the fancier's eye: he perceives extremely small
differences, and it is in human nature to value any novelty, however
slight, in one's own possession. Nor must the value which would
formerly be set on any slight differences in the individuals of the
same species, be judged of by the value which would now be set on
them, after several breeds have once fairly been established. Many
slight differences might, and indeed do now, arise amongst pigeons,
which are rejected as faults or deviations from the standard of
perfection of each breed. The common goose has not given rise to any
marked varieties; hence the Thoulouse and the common breed, which
differ only in colour, that I think these views further explain what has sometimes been noticed
-- namely that we know nothing about the origin or history of any
of our domestic breeds. But, in fact, a breed, like a dialect of a
language, can hardly be said to have had a definite origin. A man
preserves and breeds from an individual with some slight deviation of
structure, or takes more care than usual in matching his best animals
and thus improves them, and the improved individuals slowly spread in
the immediate neighbourhood. But as yet they will hardly have a
distinct name, and from being only slightly valued, their history will
be disregarded. When further improved by the same slow and gradual
process, they will spread more widely, and will get recognised as
something distinct and valuable, and will then probably first receive
a provincial name. In semi-civilised countries, with little free
communication, the spreading and knowledge of any new sub-breed will
be a slow process. As soon as the points of value of the new sub-breed
are once fully acknowledged, the principle, as I have called it, of
unconscious selection will always tend, -- perhaps more at one
period than at another, as the breed rises or I must now say a few words on the circumstances, favourable, or the
reverse, to man's power of selection. A high degree of variability is
obviously favourable, as freely giving the materials for selection to
work on; not that mere individual differences are not amply
In the case of animals with separate sexes, facility in preventing
crosses is an important element of success in the formation of new
races, -- at least, in a country which is already stocked with
other races. In this respect enclosure of the land plays a part.
Wandering savages or the inhabitants of open plains rarely possess
more than one breed of the same species. Pigeons can be mated for
life, and this is a great convenience to the fancier, for thus many
races may be kept true, though mingled in the same aviary; and this
circumstance must have largely favoured the improvement and formation
of new breeds. Pigeons, I may add, can be propagated in great numbers
and at a very quick rate, and inferior birds may be freely rejected,
as when killed they serve for food. On the other hand, cats, from
their nocturnal rambling habits, cannot be matched, and, although so
much valued by women and children, we hardly ever see a distinct breed
kept up; such breeds as we do sometimes see are almost always imported
from some other country, often from islands. Although I do not doubt
that some domestic animals vary less than others, yet the rarity or
absence of distinct breeds of the cat, the donkey, peacock, goose,
&c., may be attributed in main part to selection not having been
brought into play: in cats, from the difficulty in pairing them; in
donkeys, from only a few being kept by poor people, and little
attention paid to their breeding; in peacocks, from not being very
easily reared and a large stock not kept; in geese, from being
valuable only for two purposes, food and feathers, and more especially
from no pleasure having been felt in the display of distinct breeds.
To sum up on the origin of our Domestic Races of animals and
plants. I believe that the conditions of life, from their action on
the reproductive system, are so far of the highest importance as
causing variability. I do not believe that variability is an
BEFORE applying the principles arrived at in the last chapter to organic
beings in a state of nature, we must briefly discuss whether these
latter are subject to any variation. To treat this subject at all
properly, a long catalogue of dry facts should be given; but these I
shall reserve for my future work. Nor shall I here discuss the various
definitions which have been given of the term species. No one
definition has as yet satisfied all naturalists; yet every naturalist
knows vaguely what he means when he speaks of a species. Generally the
term includes the unknown element of a distinct act of creation. The
term 'variety' is almost equally difficult to define; but here
community of descent is almost universally implied, though it can
rarely be proved. We have also what are called monstrosities; but they
graduate into varieties. By a monstrosity I presume is meant some
considerable deviation of structure in one part, either injurious to
or not useful to the species, and not generally propagated. Some
authors use the term 'variation' in a technical sense, as implying a
modification directly due to the physical conditions of life; and
'variations' in this sense are supposed not to be inherited: but who
can say that the dwarfed condition of shells in the brackish waters of
the Baltic, or dwarfed
Again, we have many slight differences which may be called There is one point connected with individual differences, which
seems to me extremely perplexing: I refer to those genera which have
sometimes been called 'protean' or 'polymorphic,' in which the species
present an inordinate amount of variation; and hardly two naturalists
can agree which forms to rank as species and which as varieties. We
may instance Rubus, Rosa, and Hieracium amongst plants, several genera
of insects, and several genera of Brachiopod shells. In most
polymorphic genera some of the species have fixed and definite
characters. Genera which are polymorphic in one country seem to be,
with some few exceptions, polymorphic in other countries, and
likewise, judging from Brachiopod shells, at former periods of time.
These facts seem to be very perplexing, for they seem to show that
this kind of variability is independent of the conditions of life. I
am inclined to suspect that we see in these polymorphic genera
variations in points of structure which are of no service or
disservice to the species, and which consequently have not been seized
on and rendered definite by natural selection, as hereafter will be
explained.
Those forms which possess in some considerable degree the character
of species, but which are so closely similar to some other forms, or
are so closely linked to them by intermediate gradations, that
naturalists do not like to rank them as distinct species, are in
several respects the most important for us. We have every reason to
believe that many of these doubtful and closely-allied forms have
permanently retained their characters in their own country for a long
time; for as long, as far as we know, as have good and true species.
practically, when a naturalist can unite two forms together by others
having intermediate characters, he treats the one as a variety of the
other, ranking the most common, but sometimes the one first described,
as the species, and the other as the variety. But cases of great
difficulty, which I will not here enumerate, sometimes occur in
deciding whether or not to rank one form as a variety of another, even
when they are closely connected by intermediate links; nor will the
commonly-assumed hybrid nature of the intermediate links always remove
the difficulty. In very many cases, however, one form is ranked as a
variety of another, not Hence, in determining whether a form should be ranked as a species
or a variety, the opinion of naturalists having sound judgement and
wide experience seems the only guide to follow. We must, however, in
many cases, decide by a majority of naturalists, for few well-marked
and well-known varieties can be named which have not been ranked as
species by at least some competent judges.
That varieties of this doubtful nature are far from uncommon cannot
be disputed. Compare the several floras of Great Britain, of France or
of the United States, drawn up by different botanists, and see what a
surprising number of forms have been ranked by one botanist as good
species, and by another as mere varieties. Mr H. C. Watson, to whom I
lie under deep obligation for assistance of all kinds, has marked for
me 182 British plants, which are generally considered as varieties,
but which have all been ranked by botanists as species; and in making
this list he has omitted many trifling varieties, but which
nevertheless have been ranked by some botanists as species, and he has
entirely omitted several highly polymorphic genera. Under genera,
including the most polymorphic forms, Mr Babington gives 251 species,
whereas Mr Bentham gives only 112, -- a difference of 139
doubtful forms! Amongst animals which unite for each birth, and which
are highly locomotive, doubtful forms, ranked by one zoologist as a
species and by another as a variety, can rarely be found within the
same country, but are common in separated areas. How many of those
birds and insects in North America and Europe, which differ very
slightly from each other, have been ranked by one eminent naturalist
as undoubted species, and by another as varieties, or, as they are
often called, as geographical races! Many years ago, when comparing,
and seeing others compare, the birds from the separate islands of the
Galapagos Archipelago, both one with another, and with those from the
American mainland, I was much struck how entirely vague and arbitrary
is the distinction between species and varieties. On the Many of the cases of strongly-marked varieties or doubtful species
well deserve consideration; for several interesting lines of argument,
from geographical distribution, analogical variation, hybridism,
&c., have been brought to bear on the attempt to determine their
rank. I will here give only a single instance, -- the well-known
one of the primrose and cowslip, or Primula veris and elatior. These
plants differ considerably in appearance; they have a different
flavour and emit a different odour; they flower at slightly different
periods; they grow in somewhat different stations; they ascend
mountains to different heights; they have different geographical
ranges; and lastly, according to very numerous experiments made during
several years by
Close investigation, in most cases, will bring naturalists to an
agreement how to rank doubtful forms. Yet it must be confessed, that
it is in the best-known countries that we find the greatest number of
forms of doubtful value. I have been struck with the fact, that if
any animal or plant in a state of nature be highly useful to man, or
from any cause closely attract his attention, varieties of it will
almost universally be found recorded. These varieties, moreover, will
be often ranked by some authors as species. Look at the common oak,
how closely it has been studied; yet a German author makes more than a
dozen species out of forms, which are very generally considered as
varieties; and in this country the highest botanical authorities and
practical men can be quoted to show that the sessile and pedunculated
oaks are either good and distinct species or mere varieties.
When a young naturalist commences the study of a group of organisms
quite unknown to him, he is at first much perplexed to determine what
differences to consider as specific, and what as varieties; for he
knows nothing of the amount and kind of variation to which the group
is subject; and this shows, at least, how very generally there is some
variation. But if he confine his attention to one class within one
country, he will soon make up his mind how to rank most of the
doubtful forms. His
Certainly no clear line of demarcation has as yet been drawn
between species and sub-species -- that is, the forms which in
the opinion of some naturalists come very near to, but do not quite
arrive at the rank of species; or, again, between sub-species and
well-marked varieties, or between lesser varieties and individual
differences. These differences blend into each other in an insensible
series; and a series impresses the mind with the idea of an actual
passage.
Hence I look at individual differences, though of small interest to
the systematist, as of high importance for us, as being the first step
towards such slight varieties as are barely thought worth recording in
works on natural history. And I look at varieties which are in any
degree more distinct and permanent, as steps leading to more
It need not be supposed that all varieties or incipient species
necessarily attain the rank of species. They may whilst in this
incipient state become extinct, or they may endure as varieties for
very long periods, as has been shown to be the case by Mr Wollaston
with the varieties of certain fossil land-shells in Madeira. If a
variety were to flourish so as to exceed in numbers From these remarks it will be seen that I look at the term species,
as one arbitrarily given for the sake of convenience to a set of
individuals closely resembling each other, and that it does not
essentially differ from the term variety, which is given to less
distinct and more fluctuating forms. The term variety, again, in
comparison with mere individual differences, is also applied
arbitrarily, and for mere convenience sake.
Guided by theoretical considerations, I thought that some
interesting results might be obtained in regard to the nature and
relations of the species which vary most, by tabulating all the
varieties in several well-worked floras. At first this seemed a
simple task; but Mr H. C. Watson, to whom I am much indebted for
valuable advice and assistance on this subject, soon convinced me that
there were many difficulties, as did subsequently Dr Hooker, even in
stronger terms. I shall reserve for my future work the discussion of
these difficulties, and the tables themselves of the proportional
numbers of the varying species. Dr Hooker permits me to add, that
after having carefully read my manuscript, and examined the tables, he
thinks that the following statements are fairly well established. The
whole subject, however, treated as it necessarily here is with much
brevity, is rather perplexing, and allusions cannot be avoided to the
'struggle for existence,' 'divergence of character,' and other
questions, hereafter to be discussed.
Alph. De Candolle and others have shown that plants which have very
wide ranges generally present varieties; and this might have been
expected, as they become exposed to diverse physical conditions, and
as they come into competition (which, as we shall hereafter see, is a
far more important circumstance) with different sets of organic
beings. But my tables further show that, in any limited country, the
species which are most common, that is abound most in individuals, and
the species which are most widely diffused within their own country
(and this is If the plants inhabiting a country and described in any Flora be
divided into two equal masses, all those in the larger genera being
placed on one side, and all those in the smaller genera on the other
side, a somewhat larger number of the very common and much diffused or
dominant species will be found on the side of the larger genera. This,
again, might have been anticipated; for the mere fact of many species
of the same genus inhabiting any country, shows that there is
something in the organic or inorganic conditions of that country
favourable to the genus; and, consequently, we might have expected to
have found in the larger genera, or those including many species, a
large proportional number of dominant species. But so many causes
tend to obscure this result, that I am surprised that my tables show
even a small majority on the side of the larger genera. I will here
allude to only two causes of obscurity. Fresh-water and salt-loving
plants have generally very wide ranges and are much diffused, but this
seems to be connected with the nature of the stations inhabited by
them, and has little or no relation to the size of the genera to which
the species belong. Again, plants low in the scale of organisation are
From looking at species as only strongly-marked and well-defined
varieties, I was led to anticipate that the species of the larger
genera in each country would oftener present varieties, than the
species of the smaller genera; for wherever many closely related
species ( To test the truth of this anticipation I have arranged the plants
of twelve countries, and the coleopterous insects of two districts,
into two nearly equal masses, the species of the larger genera on one
side, and those of the smaller genera on the other side, and it has
invariably proved to be the case that a larger proportion of the
species on the side of the larger genera present varieties, than on
the side of the smaller genera. Moreover, the species of the large
genera which present any varieties, invariably present a larger
average number of varieties than do the species of the small genera.
Both these results follow when another division is made, and when all
the smallest genera, with from only one to four species, are
absolutely excluded from the tables. These
There are other relations between the species of large genera and
their recorded varieties which deserve notice. We have seen that there
is no infallible criterion by which to distinguish species and
well-marked varieties; and in those cases in which intermediate links
have not been found between doubtful forms, naturalists are compelled
to come to a determination by the amount of difference between them,
judging by analogy whether or not the amount suffices to raise one or
both to the rank of species. Hence the amount of difference is one
very important criterion in settling whether two forms
Moreover, the species of the large genera are related to each
other, in the same manner as the varieties of any one species are
related to each other. No naturalist pretends that all the species of
a genus are equally distinct from each other; they may There is one other point which seems to me worth notice. Varieties
generally have much restricted ranges: this statement is indeed
scarcely more than a truism, for if a variety were found to have a
wider range than that of its supposed parent-species, their
denominations ought to be reversed. But there is also reason to
believe, that those species which are very closely allied to other
species, and in so far resemble varieties, often have much restricted
ranges. For instance, Mr H. C. Watson has marked for me in the
well-sifted London Catalogue of plants (4th edition) 63 plants which
are therein ranked as species, but which he considers as so closely
allied to other species as to be of doubtful value: these 63 reputed
species range on an average over 6.9 of the provinces into which Mr
Watson has divided Great Britain. Now, in this same catalogue, 53
acknowledged varieties are recorded, and these range over 7.7
provinces; whereas, the species to which these varieties belong range
over 14.3 provinces. So that the acknowledged varieties have very
nearly the same restricted average range, as have those very closely
allied forms, marked for me by Mr Watson as doubtful species, but
which are almost universally ranked by British botanists as good and
true species.
Finally, then, varieties have the same general characters as
species, for they cannot be distinguished from species, --
except, firstly, by the discovery of intermediate linking forms, and
the We have, also, seen that it is the most flourishing and dominant
species of the larger genera which on an average vary most; and
varieties, as we shall hereafter see, tend to become converted into
new and distinct species. The larger genera thus tend to become
larger; and throughout nature the forms of life which are now dominant
tend to become still more dominant by leaving many modified and
dominant descendants. But by steps hereafter to be explained, the
larger genera also tend to break up into smaller genera. And thus, the
forms of life throughout the universe become divided into groups
subordinate to groups.
i.e. species of the same genus)
have been formed, many varieties or incipient species ought, as a
general rule, to be now forming. Where many large trees grow, we
expect to find saplings. Where many species of a genus have been
formed through variation, circumstances have been favourable for
variation; and hence we might expect that the circumstances would
generally be still favourable to variation. On the other hand, if we
look at each species as a special act of creation, there is no
apparent reason why more varieties should occur in a group having many
species, than in one having few.
BEF0RE entering on the
subject of this chapter, I must make a few preliminary remarks, to
show how the struggle for existence bears on Natural Selection. It has
been seen in the last chapter that amongst organic beings in a state
of nature there is some individual variability; indeed I am not aware
that this has ever been disputed. It is immaterial for us whether a
multitude of doubtful forms be called species or sub-species or
varieties; what rank, for instance, the two or three hundred doubtful
forms of British plants are entitled to hold, if the existence of any
well-marked varieties be admitted. But the mere existence of
individual variability and of some few well-marked varieties, though
necessary as the foundation for the work, helps us but little in
understanding how species arise in nature. How have all those
exquisite adaptations of one part of the organisation to another part,
and to the conditions of life, and of one distinct organic being to
another being, been perfected? We see these beautiful co-adaptations
most plainly in the woodpecker and missletoe; and only a little less
plainly in the humblest parasite which clings
Again, it may be asked, how is it that varieties, which I have
called incipient species, become ultimately converted into good and
distinct species, which in most cases obviously differ from each other
far more than do the varieties of the same species? How do those
groups of species, which constitute what are called distinct genera,
and which differ from each other more than do the species of the same
genus, arise? All these results, as we shall more fully see in the
next chapter, follow inevitably from the struggle for life. Owing to
this struggle for life, any variation, however slight and from
whatever cause proceeding, if it be in any degree profitable to an
individual of any species, in its infinitely complex relations to
other organic beings and to external nature, will tend to the
preservation of that individual, and will generally be inherited by
its offspring. The offspring, also, will thus have a better chance of
surviving, for, of the many individuals of any species which are
periodically born, but a small number can survive. I have called this
principle, by which each slight variation, if useful, is preserved, by
the term of Natural Selection, in order to mark its relation to man's
power of selection. We have seen that man by selection can certainly
produce great results, and can adapt organic beings to his own uses,
through the accumulation of slight but useful variations, given to him
by the hand of Nature. But Natural Selection, as we shall hereafter
see, is a power incessantly ready for action, and is as immeasurably
superior to man's feeble efforts, as the works of Nature are to those
of Art.
We will now discuss in a little more detail the struggle for
existence. In my future work this subject shall be treated, as it well
deserves, at much greater length. The elder De Candolle and Lyell have
largely and philosophically shown that all organic beings are exposed
to severe competition. In regard to plants, no one has treated this
subject with more spirit and ability than W. Herbert, Dean of
Manchester, evidently the result of his great horticultural knowledge.
Nothing is easier than to admit in words the truth of the universal
struggle for life, or more difficult -- at least I have found it
so -- than constantly to bear I should premise that I use the term Struggle for Existence in a
large and metaphorical sense, including dependence of one being on
another, and including (which is more important) not only the life of
the individual, but success in leaving progeny. Two canine animals in
a time of dearth, may be truly said to struggle with each other which
shall get food and live. But a plant on the edge of a desert is said
to struggle for life against the drought, though more properly it
should be said to be dependent on the moisture. A A struggle for existence inevitably follows from the high rate at
which all organic beings tend to increase. Every being, which There is no exception to the rule that every organic being
naturally increases at so high a rate, that if not destroyed, the
earth would soon be covered by the progeny of a single pair. Even
slow-breeding man has doubled in twenty-five years, and at this rate,
in a few thousand years, there would literally not be standing room
for his progeny. Linnaeus has calculated that if an annual plant
produced only two seeds -- and there is no plant so unproductive
as this -- and their seedlings next year produced two, and so on,
then in twenty years there would be a million plants. The elephant is
reckoned to be the slowest breeder of all known animals, and I have
taken some pains to estimate its probable minimum rate of natural
increase: it will be under the mark to assume that it breeds when
thirty years old, and goes on breeding till ninety years old, bringing
forth three pairs of young in this interval; if this be so, at the end
of the fifth century there would be alive fifteen million elephants,
descended from the first pair.
But we have better evidence on this subject than mere theoretical
calculations, namely, the numerous recorded cases of the astonishingly
rapid increase of various animals in a state of nature, when
circumstances have been favourable to them during two or three
following seasons. Still more striking is the evidence from our
domestic animals of many kinds which have In a state of nature almost every plant produces seed, and amongst
animals there are very few which do not annually pair. Hence we may
confidently assert, that all plants and animals are tending to
increase at a geometrical ratio, that all would most rapidly stock
every station in which they could any how exist, and that the
geometrical tendency to increase must be checked by destruction at
some period of life. Our familiarity with the larger domestic animals
tends, I think, to mislead us: we see no great destruction falling on
them, and we forget that thousands are annually slaughtered for food,
and that in a state of nature an equal number would have somehow to be
disposed of.
The only difference between organisms which annually produce eggs
or seeds by the thousand, and those which produce extremely few, is,
that the slow-breeders would require a few more years to people, under
favourable In looking at Nature, it is most necessary to keep the foregoing
considerations always in mind -- never to forget that every
single organic being around us may be said to be striving to the
utmost to increase in numbers; that each lives by a struggle at some
period of its life; that heavy destruction inevitably falls either on
the young or old, during each generation or at recurrent intervals.
Lighten any check, mitigate the
What checks the natural tendency of each species to increase in
number is most obscure. Look at the most vigorous species; The amount of food for each species of course gives the extreme
limit to which each can increase; but very frequently it is not the
obtaining food, but the serving as prey to other animals, which
determines the average numbers of a species. Thus, there seems to be
little doubt that the stock of partridges, grouse, and hares on any
large estate depends chiefly on the destruction of vermin. If not one
head of game were shot during the next twenty years in England, and,
at the same time, if no vermin were destroyed, there would, in all
probability, be less game than at present, although hundreds of
thousands of game animals are now annually killed. On the other hand,
in some cases, as with Climate plays an important part in determining the average numbers
of a species, and periodical seasons of extreme cold or drought, I
believe to be the most effective of all checks. I estimated that the
winter of 1854-55 destroyed four-fifths of the birds in my own
grounds; and this is a tremendous destruction, when we remember that
ten per cent. is an extraordinarily severe mortality from epidemics
with man. The action of climate seems at first sight to be quite
independent of the struggle for existence; but in so far as climate
chiefly acts in reducing food, it brings on the most severe struggle
between the individuals, whether of the same or of distinct species,
which subsist on the same kind of food. Even when climate, for
instance extreme
That climate acts in main part indirectly by favouring other
species, we may clearly see in the prodigious number of plants in our
gardens which can perfectly well endure our climate, but which never
become naturalised, for they cannot compete with our native plants,
nor resist destruction by our native animals.
When a species, owing to highly favourable circumstances, increases
inordinately in numbers in a small tract, epidemics -- at least,
this seems generally to occur with our game animals -- often
ensue: and here we have a limiting check independent of the struggle
for life. But even some of these so-called epidemics appear to be due
to parasitic worms, which have from some cause, possibly in part
through facility of diffusion amongst the crowded animals, been
disproportionably favoured: and here comes in a sort of struggle
between the parasite and its prey.
On the other hand, in many cases, a large stock of individuals of
the same species, relatively to the numbers of its enemies, is
absolutely necessary for its preservation. Thus we can easily raise
plenty of corn and rape-seed, &c., in our fields, because the
seeds are in great excess compared with the number of birds which feed
on them; nor can the birds, though having a superabundance of food at
this one season, increase in number proportionally to the supply of
seed, as their numbers are checked during winter: but any one who has
tried, knows how troublesome it is to get seed from a few wheat or
other such plants in a garden; I have in this case lost every single
seed. This view of the necessity of a large stock of the same species
for its preservation, explains, I believe, some singular facts in
nature, such as that of very rare plants being sometimes extremely
abundant in the few spots where they do occur; and that of some social
plants being social, that is, abounding in individuals, even on the
extreme confines of their range. For in such cases, we may believe,
that a plant could exist only where the conditions of its life were so
favourable that many could exist together, and thus save each other
from utter destruction. I should add that the good effects of frequent
intercrossing, and the ill effects
Many cases are on record showing how complex and unexpected are the
checks and relations between organic beings, which have to struggle
together in the same country. I will give only a single instance,
which, though a simple one, has interested me. In Staffordshire, on
the estate of a relation where I had ample means of investigation,
there was a large and extremely barren heath, which had never been
touched by the hand of man; but several hundred acres of exactly the
same nature had been enclosed twenty-five years previously and planted
with Scotch fir. The change in the native vegetation of the planted
part of the heath was most remarkable, more than is generally seen in
passing from one quite different soil to another: not only the
proportional numbers of the heath-plants were wholly changed, but
twelve species of plants (not counting grasses and carices) flourished
in the plantations, which could not be found on the heath. The effect
on the insects must have been still greater, for six insectivorous
birds were very common in the plantations, which were not to be seen
on the heath; and the heath was frequented by two or three distinct
insectivorous birds. Here we see how potent has been the effect of the
introduction of a single tree, nothing whatever else having been done,
with the exception that the land had been enclosed, so that cattle
could not enter. But how important an element enclosure is, I plainly
saw near Farnham, in Surrey. Here there are extensive heaths, with a
few clumps of old Scotch firs on the distant hill-tops: within the
last ten years large spaces have been enclosed, and self-sown firs are
now springing up in multitudes, so close together that all cannot
live.
Here we see that cattle absolutely determine the existence of the
Scotch fir; but in several parts of the world insects determine the
existence of cattle. Perhaps Paraguay offers the most curious instance
of this; for here neither cattle nor horses nor dogs have ever run
wild, though they swarm southward and northward in a feral state; and
Azara and Rengger have shown that this is caused by the greater number
in Paraguay of a certain fly, which lays its eggs in the navels of
these animals when first born. The increase of these flies, numerous
as they are, must be habitually checked by some means, probably by
birds. Hence, if certain insectivorous birds (whose numbers are
probably regulated by hawks or beasts of prey) were to increase in
Paraguay, the flies would decrease -- then cattle and horses
would become feral, and this would certainly greatly alter (as
I am tempted to give one more instance showing how plants and
animals, most remote in the scale of nature, are bound In the case of every species, many different checks, acting at
different periods of life, and during different seasons or years,
probably come into play; some one check or some few being generally
the most potent, but all concurring in determining the average number
or even the existence of the species. In some cases it can be shown
that widely-different checks act on the same species in different
districts. When we look at the plants and bushes clothing an entangled
bank, we are tempted to attribute their proportional numbers and kinds
to what we call chance. But how false a view is this! Every one has
heard that The dependency of one organic being on another, as of a parasite on
its prey, lies generally between beings remote in the scale of nature.
This is often the case with those which may strictly be said to
struggle with each other for existence, as in the case of locusts and
grass-feeding quadrupeds. But the struggle almost invariably will be
most severe between the individuals of the same species, for they
frequent the same districts, require the same food, and are exposed to
the same dangers. In the case of varieties of the same species, the
struggle will generally be almost equally severe, and we sometimes see
the contest soon decided: for instance, if several varieties of wheat
be sown together, and the mixed seed be resown, some of the varieties
which best suit the soil or climate, or are naturally the most
fertile, will beat the others and so yield more seed, and will
consequently in a few years quite supplant the other varieties. To
keep up a mixed stock of even such extremely close varieties as the
variously coloured sweet-peas, they must be each year harvested
separately, and the seed then mixed in due proportion, As species of the same genus have usually, though by no means
invariably, some similarity in habits and constitution, and always in
structure, the struggle will generally be more severe between species
of the same genus, when they come into competition with each other,
than between species of distinct genera. We see this in the recent
extension over parts of the United States of one species of swallow
having caused the decrease of another species. The recent increase of
the missel-thrush in parts of Scotland has caused the decrease of the
song-thrush. How frequently we hear of one species of rat taking the
place of another species under the most different climates! In Russia
the small Asiatic cockroach has everywhere driven before it its great
congener. One species of charlock will supplant another, and so in
other cases. We can dimly see why the competition should be most
severe between allied forms, which fill nearly the same place in the
economy of nature; but probably in no one case could we precisely say
why one species has been victorious over another in the great battle
of life.
A corollary of the highest importance may be deduced from the
foregoing remarks, namely, that the structure of every organic being
is related, in the most essential yet often hidden manner, to that of
all other organic beings, with which it comes into competition for
food or residence, or from which it has to escape, or on which it
preys. This is obvious in the structure of the teeth and talons of the
tiger; and in that of the legs and claws of the parasite which clings
to the hair on the tiger's body. But in the beautifully plumed seed of
the dandelion, and in the flattened and fringed legs of the
water-beetle, the relation seems The store of nutriment laid up within the seeds of many plants
seems at first sight to have no sort of relation to other plants. But
from the strong growth of young plants produced from such seeds (as
peas and beans), when sown in the midst of long grass, I suspect that
the chief use of the nutriment in the seed is to favour the growth of
the young seedling, whilst struggling with other plants growing
vigorously all around.
Look at a plant in the midst of its range, why does it not double
or quadruple its numbers? We know that it can perfectly well withstand
a little more heat or cold, dampness or dryness, for elsewhere it
ranges
Hence, also, we can see that when a plant or animal is placed in a
new country amongst new competitors, though the climate may be exactly
the same as in its former home, yet the conditions of its life will
generally be changed in an essential manner. If we wished to increase
its average numbers in its new home, we should have to modify it in a
different way to what we should It is good thus to try in our imagination to give any form some
advantage over another. Probably in no single instance should we know
what to do, so as to succeed. It will convince us of our ignorance on
the mutual relations of all organic beings; a conviction as necessary,
as it seems to be difficult to acquire. All that we can do, is to keep
steadily in mind that each organic being is striving to increase at a
geometrical
How will the struggle for existence,
discussed too briefly in the last chapter, act in regard to variation?
Can the principle of selection, which we have seen is so potent in the
hands of man, apply in nature? I think we shall see that it can act
most effectually. Let it be borne in mind in what an endless number of
strange peculiarities our domestic productions, and, in a lesser
degree, those under nature, vary; and how strong the hereditary
tendency is. Under domestication, it may be truly said that the, whole
organisation becomes in some degree plastic. Let it be borne in mind
how infinitely complex and close-fitting are the mutual relations of
all organic beings to each other and to their physical conditions of
life. Can it, then, be thought improbable, seeing that variations
useful to man have undoubtedly occurred, that other variations useful
in some way to each being in the great and complex battle of life,
should sometimes occur in the course of thousands of generations? If
such do occur, can we doubt (remembering
We shall best understand the probable course of natural selection
by taking the case of a country undergoing some physical change, for
instance, of climate. The proportional numbers of its inhabitants
would almost immediately undergo a change, and some species might
become extinct. We may conclude, from what we have seen of the
intimate and complex manner in which the inhabitants of each country
are bound together, that any change in the numerical proportions of
some of the inhabitants, independently of the change of climate
itself, would most seriously affect many of the others. If the country
were open on its borders, new forms would certainly immigrate, and
this also would seriously disturb the relations of some of the former
inhabitants. Let it be remembered how powerful the influence of a
single introduced tree or mammal has been shown to be. But in the case
of an island, or of a country partly surrounded by barriers, into
which new and better adapted forms could not freely enter, we should
then have
We have reason to believe, as stated in the first chapter, that a
change in the conditions of life, by specially acting on the
reproductive system, causes or increases variability; and in the
foregoing case the conditions of life are supposed to have undergone a
change, and this would manifestly be favourable to As man can produce and certainly has produced a great result by his
methodical and unconscious means of selection, what may not nature
effect? Man can act only on external and visible characters: nature
cares nothing for appearances, except in so far as they may be useful
to any being. She can act on every internal organ, on every shade of
constitutional difference, on the whole machinery of life. Man
selects only for his own good; Nature only for that of the being
which she tends. Every selected character is fully exercised by her;
and the being is placed under well-suited conditions of life. Man
keeps the natives of many climates in the same country; he seldom
exercises each selected character in some peculiar and fitting manner;
he feeds a long and a short beaked pigeon on the same food; he does
not exercise It may be said that natural selection is daily and hourly
scrutinising, throughout the world, every variation, even the
slightest; rejecting that which is bad, preserving and adding up all
that is good; silently and insensibly working, whenever and wherever
opportunity offers, at the improvement of each organic being in
relation to its organic and inorganic conditions of life. We see
nothing of these slow changes in progress, until the hand of time has
marked the long lapses of ages, and then so imperfect is our view into
long past geological ages, that we only see that the forms of life are
now different from what they formerly were.
Although natural selection can act only through and for the good of
each being, yet characters and structures, which we are apt to
consider as of very trifling importance, may thus be acted on. When
we see leaf-eating insects green, and bark-feeders mottled-grey; the
alpine ptarmigan white in winter, the red-grouse the colour of
heather, and the black-grouse that of peaty earth, we must believe
that these tints are of service to these birds and insects in
preserving them from danger. Grouse, if not destroyed at some period
of their lives, would increase in countless numbers; they are known to
suffer largely from birds of In looking at many small points of difference between species,
which, as far as our ignorance permits us to judge, seem to be quite
unimportant, we must not forget that climate, food, &c., probably
produce some slight and direct effect. It is, however, far more
necessary to bear in mind that there are many unknown laws of
correlation of growth, which, when one part of the organisation is
modified through variation, and the modifications are accumulated by
natural selection for
As we see that those variations which under domestication appear at
any particular period of life, tend to reappear in the offspring at
the same period; -- for instance, in the seeds of the many
varieties of our culinary and agricultural plants; in the Natural selection will modify the structure of the
Inasmuch as
peculiarities often appear under domestication in one sex and become
hereditarily attached to that sex, the same fact probably occurs under
nature, and if so, natural selection will be able to modify one sex in
its functional relations to the other sex, or in relation to wholly
different habits of life in the two sexes, as is sometimes the case
Amongst birds, the contest is often of a more peaceful character.
All those who have attended to the subject,
Thus it is, as I believe, that when the males and females of any
animal have the same general habits of life, but differ in structure,
colour, or ornament, such differences have been mainly caused by
sexual selection; that is, individual males have had, in In order to make it clear how, as I believe, natural
selection acts, I must beg permission to give one or two imaginary
illustrations. Let us take the case of a wolf, which preys on various
animals, securing some by craft, some by strength, and some by
fleetness; and let us suppose that the fleetest prey, a deer for
instance, had from any change in the country increased in numbers, or
that other prey had decreased in numbers, during that season of the
year when the wolf is hardest pressed for food. I can under such
circumstances see no reason to doubt that the swiftest and slimmest
wolves would have the best chance of surviving, and so be preserved or
selected, -- provided always that they retained strength to
master their prey at this or at some other period of the year, when
they might be compelled to prey on other animals. I can see no more
reason to doubt this, than that man can improve the fleetness of his
greyhounds by careful and methodical selection, or by that unconscious
selection which results from each man trying
Even without any change in the proportional numbers of the animals
on which our wolf preyed, a cub might be born with an innate tendency
to pursue certain kinds of prey. Nor can this be thought very
improbable; for we often observe great differences in the natural
tendencies of our domestic animals; Let us now take a more complex case. Certain plants excrete a sweet
juice, apparently for the sake of eliminating something injurious from
their sap: this is
When our plant, by this process of the continued preservation or
natural selection of more and more attractive flowers, had been
rendered highly attractive to insects, they would, unintentionally on
their part, regularly carry pollen from flower to flower; and that
they can most effectually do this, I could easily show by many
striking instances. I will give only one -- not as a very
striking case, but as likewise illustrating one step in the separation
of the sexes of plants, presently to be alluded to. Some holly-trees
bear only male flowers, which have four stamens producing rather a
small quantity of pollen, and a rudimentary pistil; other holly-trees
bear only female flowers; these have a full-sized pistil, and four
stamens with shrivelled anthers, in which not a grain of pollen can be
detected. Having found a female tree exactly sixty yards from a male
tree, I put the stigmas of twenty flowers, taken from different
branches, under the microscope, and on all, without exception, there
were pollen-grains, and on some a profusion of pollen. As the wind had
set for several days from the female to the male tree, the pollen
could not thus have been carried. The weather had been cold and
boisterous, and therefore not favourable to bees, nevertheless every
female flower which I examined had been effectually Let us now turn to the nectar-feeding insects in our imaginary
case: we may suppose the plant of which we have been slowly increasing
the nectar by continued selection, to be a common plant; and that
certain insects depended in main part on its nectar for food. I could
give many facts, showing how anxious bees are to save time; for
instance, their habit of cutting holes and sucking the nectar at the
bases of certain flowers, which they can, with a very little more
trouble, enter by the mouth. Bearing such facts in mind, I can see no
reason to doubt that an accidental deviation in the size and form of
the body, or in the curvature and length of the proboscis, &c.,
far too slight to be appreciated by us, might profit a bee or other
insect, so that an individual so characterised would be able to obtain
its food more quickly, and so have a better chance of living and
leaving descendants. Its descendants would probably inherit a tendency
to a similar slight deviation of structure. The tubes of the corollas
of the common red and incarnate clovers (Trifolium pratense and
incarnatum) do not on a hasty glance appear to differ in length; yet
the hive-bee can easily suck the nectar out of the I am well aware that this doctrine of natural selection,
exemplified in the above imaginary instances, is open to the same
objections which were at first urged against Sir Charles Lyell's noble
views on 'the modern changes of the earth, as illustrative of
geology;' but we now very seldom hear the action, for instance, of the
coast-waves, called a trifling and insignificant cause, when applied
to the excavation of gigantic valleys or to the formation of the
longest lines of inland cliffs. Natural selection can act only by the
preservation and accumulation of infinitesimally small inherited
modifications, each profitable to the preserved being; and as modern
geology has almost banished such views as the excavation of a great
valley by a single diluvial wave, so will natural selection, if it be
a true principle, banish the belief of the continued creation of new
organic
I must here introduce a short digression. In the case of animals and
plants with separated sexes, it is of course obvious that two
individuals must always unite for each birth; but in the case of
hermaphrodites this is far from obvious. Nevertheless I am strongly
inclined to believe that In the first place, I have collected so large a body of facts,
showing, in accordance with the almost universal belief of breeders,
that with animals and plants a cross between different varieties, or
between individuals of the same variety but of another strain, gives
vigour and fertility to the offspring; and on the other hand, that
On the belief that this is a law of nature, we can, I think,
understand several large classes of facts, such as the following,
which on any other view are inexplicable. Every hybridizer knows how
unfavourable exposure to wet is to the fertilisation of a flower, yet
what a multitude of flowers have their anthers and stigmas fully
exposed to the weather! but if an occasional cross be indispensable,
the fullest freedom for the entrance of pollen from another individual
will explain this state of exposure, more especially as the plant's
own anthers and pistil generally stand so close together that
self-fertilisation seems When the stamens of a flower suddenly spring towards the pistil, or
slowly move one after the other towards it, the contrivance seems
adapted solely to ensure self-fertilisation; and no doubt it is useful
for this end: but, the agency of insects is often required to cause
the stamens to spring forward, as Kölreuter has shown to be the case
with the barberry; and curiously in this very genus, which seems to
have a special contrivance for self-fertilisation, it is well known
that if very closely-allied forms or varieties are planted near each
other, it is hardly possible to raise pure seedlings, so largely do
they naturally cross. In many other cases, far from there being any
aids for self-fertilisation, there are special contrivances, as I
could show from the writings of C. C. Sprengel and from my own
observations, which effectually prevent the stigma receiving pollen
from its own flower: for instance, in Lobelia fulgens, there is a
really beautiful and elaborate contrivance by which every one of the
infinitely numerous pollen-granules are swept out of the conjoined
anthers If several varieties of the cabbage, radish, onion, and of some
other plants, be allowed to seed near each other, a large majority, as
I have found, of the seedlings thus raised will turn out mongrels: for
instance, I raised 233 seedling cabbages from some plants of different
varieties growing near each other, and of these only 78 were true to
their kind, and some even of these were not perfectly true. Yet the
pistil of each cabbage-flower is surrounded not only by its own six
stamens, but by those of the many other flowers on the same plant.
How, then, comes it that such a vast number of the seedlings are
mongrelised? I suspect that it must arise from the pollen of a
distinct In the case of a gigantic tree covered with innumerable flowers, it
may be objected that pollen could seldom be carried from tree Turning for a very brief space to animals: on the land there are
some hermaphrodites, as land-mollusca and earth-worms; but these all
pair. As yet I have not found a single case of a terrestrial animal
which fertilises itself. We can understand this remarkable fact, which
offers so strong a contrast with terrestrial plants, on the view of an
occasional cross being indispensable, by considering the medium in
which terrestrial animals live, and the nature of the fertilising
element; for we know of no means, analogous to the action of insects
and of the wind in the case of plants, by which an occasional cross
could be effected with terrestrial animals without the concurrence of
two individuals. Of aquatic animals, there are many self-fertilising
hermaphrodites; but here currents in the water offer an obvious means
for an occasional cross. And, as in the case of flowers, I have as yet
It must have struck most naturalists as a strange anomaly that, in
the case of both animals and plants, species of the same family and
even of the same genus, though agreeing closely with each other in
almost their whole organisation, yet are not rarely, some of them
hermaphrodites, and some of them unisexual. But if, in fact, all
hermaphrodites do occasionally intercross with other individuals, the
difference between hermaphrodites and unisexual species, as far as
function is concerned, becomes very small.
From these several considerations and from the many special facts
which I have collected, but which I am not here able to give, I am
strongly inclined to suspect that, both in the vegetable and animal
kingdoms, an occasional intercross with a distinct individual is a law
of nature. I am well aware that there are, on this view, many cases of
difficulty, some of which I am trying to investigate. Finally then, we
may conclude that in many organic beings, a cross between two
individuals is an obvious necessity for each birth; in many others it
occurs perhaps only at long intervals; but in none, as I suspect, can
self-fertilisation go on for perpetuity.
This
In man's methodical selection, a breeder selects for some definite
object, and free intercrossing will wholly stop his work. But when
many men, without intending to alter the breed, have a nearly common
standard of perfection, and all try to get and breed from the best
animals, much improvement and modification surely but slowly follow
from this unconscious process of selection, notwithstanding a large
amount of crossing with inferior animals. Thus it will be in nature;
for within a confined area, with some place in its polity not so
perfectly occupied as might be, natural selection will always tend to
preserve all the individuals varying in the right direction, though in
different degrees, so as better to fill up the unoccupied place. But
if the area be large, its several districts will almost certainly
present different conditions of life; and then if natural selection be
modifying and improving a species in the several districts, there will
be intercrossing with the other individuals of the same species on the
confines of each. And in this case the effects of intercrossing can
hardly be counterbalanced
Even in the case of slow-breeding animals, which unite for Intercrossing plays a very important part in nature in keeping the
individuals of the same species, or of the same variety, true and
uniform in character. It will obviously thus act far more efficiently
with those animals
Isolation, also, is an important element in the process of natural
selection. In a confined or isolated area, if not very large, the
organic and inorganic conditions of life will generally be in a great
degree uniform; so that natural selection will tend to modify all the
individuals of a varying species throughout the area in the same
manner in relation to the same conditions. Intercrosses, also, with
the individuals of the same species, which otherwise would have
inhabited the surrounding and differently circumstanced districts,
will be prevented. But isolation probably acts more efficiently in
checking the immigration of better adapted organisms, after any
physical change, such as of climate or elevation of the land, &c.;
and thus new places in the natural If we turn to nature to test the truth of these remarks, and look
at any small isolated area, such as an oceanic island, although the
total number of the species inhabiting it, will be found to be small,
as we shall see in our chapter on geographical distribution; yet of
these species a very large proportion are endemic, -- that is,
have been produced there, and nowhere else. Hence an oceanic island at
first sight seems to have been highly favourable for the production of
new species. But we may thus greatly deceive ourselves, for to
ascertain whether a small isolated area, or a large open area like a
continent, has been most favourable for the production of new organic
forms, we ought to make the comparison within equal times; and this we
are incapable of doing.
Although I do not doubt that isolation is of considerable importance
in the production of new species, on the whole I am inclined to
believe that largeness of area is of more importance, more especially
in the production of species, which will prove capable of enduring for
a long period, and of spreading widely. Throughout a great and open
area, not only will there be a better chance of favourable variations
arising from the large number of individuals of the same species
We can, perhaps, on these views, understand some facts which will
be again alluded to in our chapter on geographical distribution; for
instance, that the productions of the smaller continent of Australia
have formerly yielded, and apparently are now yielding, before those
of the larger Europaeo-Asiatic area. Thus, also, it is that
continental productions have everywhere become so largely naturalised
on islands. On a small island, the race for life will have been less
severe, and there will have been less modification and less
extermination.
To sum up the circumstances favourable and unfavourable to natural
selection, as far as the extreme intricacy of the subject permits. I
conclude, looking to the future, that for terrestrial productions a
large continental area, which will probably undergo many oscillations
of level, and which consequently will exist for long periods in a
broken condition, will be the most favourable for the production of
many new forms of life, likely to endure long and to spread widely.
For the area will first have existed as a continent, and the
inhabitants, at this period numerous in individuals and kinds, will
have been subjected to very severe competition. When converted by
subsidence into large separate islands, there will still exist many
individuals of the same species on each island: intercrossing on the
confines of the range of each species will thus be checked: after
physical changes of any kind, immigration will be prevented,
That natural selection will always act with extreme slowness, I
fully admit. Its action depends on there being places in the polity of
nature, which can be better occupied by some of the inhabitants of the
country undergoing modification of some kind. The existence of such
places will often depend on physical changes, which are generally very
slow, and on the immigration of better adapted forms having been
checked. But the action of natural selection will probably still
oftener depend on some of the inhabitants becoming slowly modified;
the mutual relations Slow though the process of selection may be, if feeble man can do
much by his powers of artificial selection, I can see no limit to the
amount of change, to the beauty and infinite complexity of the
coadaptations between all organic beings, one with another and with
their physical conditions of life, which may be effected in the long
course of time by nature's power of selection.
This subject will be more
fully discussed in our chapter on Geology; but it must be here alluded
to from being intimately connected with natural selection. Natural
selection acts solely through the preservation of variations in some
way advantageous, which consequently endure. But as from the high
geometrical powers of increase of all organic beings, each area is
already fully stocked with inhabitants, it follows that as each
selected and favoured form increases in number, so will the less
favoured forms decrease and become rare. Rarity, as geology tells us,
is the precursor to extinction. We can, also, see that any form
represented by few individuals will, during fluctuations in the
seasons or in the number of its enemies, run a good chance of utter
extinction. But we may go further than this; for as new forms are
continually and slowly being produced, unless we believe that the
number of specific forms goes on perpetually and almost indefinitely
increasing, numbers inevitably must become extinct. That the number of
specific forms has not indefinitely Furthermore, the species which are most numerous in individuals
will have the best chance of producing within any given period
favourable variations. We have evidence of this, in the facts given in
the second chapter, showing that it is the common species which afford
the greatest number of recorded varieties, or incipient species.
Hence, rare species will be less quickly modified or improved within
any given period, and they will consequently be beaten in the race for
life by the modified descendants of the commoner species.
From these several considerations I think it inevitably follows,
that as new species in the course of time are formed through natural
selection, others will become rarer and rarer, and finally extinct.
The forms which stand in closest competition with those undergoing
modification and improvement, will naturally suffer most. And we have
seen in the chapter on the Struggle for Existence that it is the most
closely-allied forms, -- varieties of the same species, and
species of the same genus or of related genera, -- which, from
having nearly the same structure, constitution, and habits, generally
come into the severest competition with each other. Consequently, each
new variety or species, during the progress of its formation, will
generally press hardest on its nearest kindred, and tend to
exterminate them. We see the same process of extermination amongst our
domesticated productions, through the selection of improved forms by
man. Many curious
The principle,
which I have designated by this term, is of high importance on my
theory, and explains, as I believe, several important facts. In the
first place, varieties, even strongly-marked ones, though having
somewhat of the character of species -- as is shown by the
hopeless doubts in many cases how to rank them -- yet certainly
differ from each other far less than do good and distinct species.
Nevertheless, according to my view, varieties are species in the
process of formation, or are, as I have called them, incipient species.
How, then, does the lesser difference between varieties become
augmented into the greater difference between species? That this does
habitually happen, we must infer from most of the innumerable species
throughout nature presenting well-marked differences; whereas
varieties, the supposed prototypes and parents of future well-marked
species, present slight and ill-defined differences. Mere chance, as
we may call it, might cause one variety to differ in some character
from its parents, and the offspring of this variety again to differ
from its parent in the very same character and in a greater degree;
but this alone would never account for so habitual and large an amount
of difference as that between varieties of the same species and
species of the same genus.
As has always been my practice, let us seek light on
But how, it may be asked, can any analogous principle apply in
nature? I believe it can and does apply most efficiently, from the
simple circumstance that the more diversified the descendants from any
one species become in structure, constitution, and habits, by so much
will they be better enabled to seize on many and widely diversified
places in the polity of nature, and so be enabled to increase in
numbers.
We can clearly see this in the case of animals with simple
habits. Take the case of a carnivorous quadruped, of which the number
that can be supported in any country has long ago arrived at its full
average. If its natural powers of increase be allowed to act, it can
succeed in increasing (the country not undergoing any change in its
conditions) only by its varying descendants seizing on places at
present occupied by other animals: some of them, for instance, being
enabled to feed on new kinds of prey, either dead or alive; some
inhabiting new stations, climbing trees, frequenting water, and some
perhaps becoming less carnivorous. The more diversified in habits and
structure the descendants of our carnivorous animal became, the more
places they would be enabled to occupy. What applies to one animal
will apply throughout all time to all animals -- that is, if they
vary -- for otherwise natural selection can do nothing. So it
will be with plants. It has been experimentally proved, that if a plot
of ground be sown with several distinct genera of grasses, a greater
number of plants and a greater weight of dry herbage can thus be
raised. The same has been found to hold good when first one
The truth of the principle, that the
greatest amount of life can be supported by great diversification of
structure, is seen under many natural circumstances. In an extremely
small area, especially if freely open to immigration, and where the
contest between individual and individual must be severe, we always
find great diversity in its inhabitants. For instance, I found that a
piece of turf, three feet by four in size, which had been exposed for
many years to exactly the same conditions, supported twenty species of
plants, and these belonged to eighteen genera and to eight orders,
which shows how much these plants differed from each other. So it is
with the plants and insects on small and uniform islets; and so in
small ponds of fresh water. Farmers find that they can raise most food
by a rotation of plants belonging to the most different orders: nature
follows what may be called a simultaneous rotation. Most of the
animals and plants which live close round any small piece of ground,
could live on it (supposing it not to be in any way peculiar in its
nature), and may be said to be striving to the utmost to live there;
but, it is seen, that where they come into the closest competition
with each other, the advantages of diversification of structure, with
the accompanying differences of habit and constitution, determine that
the inhabitants, which thus jostle each other most The same principle is seen in the naturalisation of
By considering the nature of the plants or animals which have
struggled successfully with the indigenes of any country, and have
there become naturalised, we can gain some crude idea in what manner
some of the natives would have had to be modified, in order to have
gained an advantage over the other natives; and we may, I think, at
least safely infer that diversification of structure, amounting to new
generic differences, would have been profitable to them.
The advantage of diversification in the inhabitants of the same
region is, in fact, the same as that of the physiological division of
labour in the organs of the same individual body -- a subject so
well elucidated by
After the foregoing discussion, which ought to have been much
amplified, we may, I think, assume that the modified descendants of
any one species will succeed by so much the better as they become more
diversified in structure, and are thus enabled to encroach on places
occupied by other beings. Now let us see how this principle of great
benefit being derived from divergence of character, combined with the
principles of natural selection and of extinction, will tend to act.
The accompanying diagram will aid us in
understanding this rather perplexing subject. Let A to L represent the
species of a genus large in its own country; these species are
supposed to resemble each other in unequal degrees, as is so generally
the case in nature, and as is represented in the diagram by the
letters standing at unequal distances. I have said a large genus,
because we have seen in the second chapter,
The intervals between the horizontal lines in the diagram, may
represent each a thousand generations; but it would have been better
if each had represented ten thousand generations. After a thousand
generations, species (A) is supposed to have produced two fairly
well-marked varieties, namely If, then, these two varieties be variable, the most divergent of
their variations will generally be preserved during the next thousand
generations. And after this interval, variety
But I must here remark that I do not suppose that the process ever goes
on so regularly as is represented in the diagram, though in itself
made somewhat irregular.
As all the modified descendants from a common and widely-diffused
species, belonging to a large genus, will tend to partake of the same
advantages which made their parent successful in life, they will
generally go on multiplying in number as well as diverging in
character: this is represented in the diagram by the several divergent
branches proceeding from (A). The modified offspring from the later
and more highly improved branches in the lines of descent, will, it is
probable, often take the place of, and so destroy, the earlier and
less improved branches: this is represented in the diagram by some of
the lower branches not reaching to the upper horizontal lines. In some
cases I do not After ten thousand generations, species (A) is supposed to have
produced three forms, In a large genus it is probable that more than one species would
vary. In the diagram I have assumed that a second species (I) has
produced, by analogous steps, after ten thousand generations, either
two well-marked varieties ( But during the process of modification, represented in the diagram,
another of our principles, namely that of extinction, will have played
an important part. As in each fully stocked country natural selection
necessarily acts by the selected form having some advantage in the
struggle for life over other forms, there will be a constant tendency
in the improved descendants of any one species to supplant and
exterminate in each stage of descent their predecessors and their
original parent. For it should be remembered that the competition will
generally be most severe between those forms which are most nearly
related to each other in habits, constitution, and structure. Hence
all the intermediate forms between the earlier and later states, that
is between the less and more improved state of a species, as well as
the original parent-species itself, will generally tend to become
extinct. So it probably will be with many whole collateral lines of
descent, which will be conquered by later and improved lines of
descent. If, however, the
If then our diagram be assumed to represent a considerable amount
of modification, species (A) and all the earlier varieties will have
become extinct, having been replaced by eight new species ( But we may go further than this. The original species of our genus
were supposed to resemble each other in unequal degrees, as is so
generally the case in nature; species (A) being more nearly related to
B, C, and D, than to the other species; and The new species in our diagram descended from the original eleven
species, will now be fifteen in number. Owing to the divergent
tendency of natural selection, the extreme amount of difference in
character between species Thus it is, as I believe, that two or more genera are produced by
descent, with modification, from two or more species of the same
genus. And the two or
It is worth while to reflect for a moment on the character of the
new species F14, which is supposed not to have
diverged much in character, but to have retained the form of (F),
either unaltered or altered only in a slight degree. In this case, its
affinities to the other fourteen new species will be of a curious and
circuitous nature. Having descended from a form which stood between
the two parent-species (A) and (I), now supposed to be extinct and
unknown, it will be in some degree intermediate in character between
the two groups descended from these species. But as these two groups
have gone on diverging in character from the type of their parents,
the new species (F14) will not be directly
intermediate between them, but rather between types of the two groups;
and every naturalist will be able to bring some such case before his
mind.
In the diagram, each horizontal line has hitherto been supposed to
represent a thousand generations, but each may represent a million or
hundred million generations, and likewise a section of the successive
strata of the earth's crust including extinct remains. We shall, when
we come to our chapter on Geology, have to refer again to this
subject, and I think we shall then see that the diagram throws light on
the affinities of extinct beings, which, though generally belonging to
the same orders, or families, or genera, with those now living, yet
are often, in I see no reason to limit the process of modification, as now
explained, to the formation of genera alone. If, in our diagram, we
suppose the amount of change represented by each successive group of
diverging dotted lines to be very great, the forms marked We have seen that in each country it is the species of the larger
genera which oftenest present varieties or incipient species. This,
indeed, might have been expected; for as natural selection acts
through one form having some advantage over other forms in the
struggle for existence, it will chiefly act on those which already
have some advantage; and the largeness of any group shows that its
species have inherited from a common ancestor some advantage in
common. Hence, the struggle for the production of new and modified
descendants, will mainly lie between the larger groups, which are all
trying to increase in number. One large group will slowly conquer
another large group, reduce its numbers, and thus lessen its chance of
further variation and improvement. Within the same large
If during the long
course of ages and under varying conditions of life, organic beings
Whether natural selection has really thus acted in nature, in
modifying and adapting the various forms of life to their several
conditions and stations, must be judged of by the general tenour and
balance of evidence given in the following chapters. But we already
see how it entails extinction; and how largely extinction has acted in
the world's history, geology plainly declares. Natural selection,
also, leads to divergence of
We have seen that it is the common, the widely-diffused, and
widely-ranging species, belonging to the larger genera, which vary
most; and these will tend to transmit to their modified offspring
that superiority which now makes them dominant in their own countries.
Natural selection, as has just been remarked, leads to divergence of
character and to much extinction of the less improved and intermediate
forms of life. On these principles, I believe, the nature of the
affinities of all organic beings may be explained. It is a truly
wonderful fact -- the wonder of which we are apt to overlook from
familiarity -- that all The affinities of all the beings of the same class have sometimes
been represented by a great tree. I believe this simile largely speaks
the truth. The green and budding twigs may represent existing species;
and those produced during each former year may represent the long
succession of extinct species. At each period of growth all the
growing twigs have tried to branch out on all sides, and to overtop
and kill the surrounding twigs and branches, in the same manner as
species and groups of species have tried to overmaster other species
in the great battle for life. The limbs divided into great branches,
and these into lesser and lesser branches, were themselves once, when
the tree was small, budding twigs; and this connexion of the former
and present buds by ramifying branches may well represent the
classification of all extinct and living species in groups subordinate
to groups. Of the many twigs which flourished when the tree was a mere
bush, only two or three, now grown into great branches, yet survive
and bear all the other branches; so with the species which lived
during long-past geological periods, very few now have living and
modified descendants. From the first growth of the tree, many a limb
and branch has decayed and dropped off; and these lost branches of
various sizes may represent those a1
and m1. These two varieties will
generally continue to be exposed to the same conditions which made
their parents variable,
a1 is
supposed in the diagram to have produced variety a2, which will, owing to the
principle of divergence, differ more from (A) than did variety
a1.
Variety m1 is supposed to have
produced two varieties, namely m
2 and s2,
differing from each other, and more
considerably from their common parent (A). We may continue the process
by similar steps for any length of time; some of the varieties, after
each thousand generations, producing only a a1 to
a10
In the same way, for instance, the English race-horse and English
pointer have apparently both gone on slowly diverging in character
from their original stocks, without either having given off any fresh
branches or races.
a10,
f10,
and m10,
which, from having diverged in character
during the successive generations, will have come to differ largely,
but perhaps unequally, from each other and from their common parent.
If we suppose the amount of change between each horizontal line in our
diagram to be excessively small, these three forms may still be only
well-marked varieties; or they may have arrived at the doubtful
category of sub-species; but we have only to suppose the steps in the
process of modification to be more numerous or greater in amount, to
convert these three forms into well-defined species: thus the diagram
illustrates the steps by which the small differences distinguishing
varieties are increased into the larger differences distinguishing
species. By continuing the same process for a greater number of
generations (as shown in the diagram in a condensed and simplified
manner), we get eight species, marked by the letters between
a14 and
m14, all descended from (A).
Thus, as I believe, species are multiplied and genera are formed.
w10 and z10) or two species, according to the amount of change
supposed to be represented between n14 to z14, are supposed to have been
produced. In each genus, the species, which are already extremely
different in character, will generally tend to produce the greatest
number of modified descendants; for a14 to m14); and (I) will have been
replaced by six (n14 to
z14) new species.
a14 and z14 will be much greater than that between the most
different of the original eleven species. The new species, moreover,
will be allied to each other in a widely different manner. Of the
eight descendants from (A) the three marked a14, q14, p14, will be nearly related
from having recently branched off from a14; b14
and f14, from having
diverged at an earlier period from a5, will be in some degree distinct from the three
first-named species; and lastly, o14, e14,
and m14, will be nearly
related one to the other, but from having diverged at the first
commencement of the process of modification, will be widely different
from the other five species, and may constitute a sub-genus or even a
distinct genus. The six descendants from (I) will form two sub-genera or even genera. But
as the original species (I) differed largely from (A), standing nearly
at the extreme points of the original genus, the six descendants from
(I) will, owing to inheritance, differ considerably from the eight
descendants from (A); the two groups, a214 to p14, those marked b14 and f14, and those marked o14 to m14, will form three very distinct genera. We shall also
have two very distinct genera descended from (I) and as these latter
two genera, both from continued divergence of character and from
inheritance from a different parent, will differ widely from the three
genera descended from (A), the two little groups of genera will form
two distinct families, or even orders, according to the amount of
divergent modification supposed to be represented in the diagram. And
the two new families, or orders, will have descended from two species
of the original genus; and these two species are supposed to have
descended from one species of a still more ancient and unknown genus.
I HAVE hitherto sometimes spoken as if the variations
-- so common and multiform in organic beings under domestication,
and in a lesser degree in those in a state of nature -- had been
due to chance. This, of course, is a wholly incorrect expression, but
it serves to acknowledge plainly our ignorance of the cause of each
particular variation. Some authors believe it to be as much the
function of the reproductive system to produce individual differences,
or very slight deviations of structure, as to make the child like its
parents. But the much greater variability, as well as the greater
frequency of monstrosities, under domestication or cultivation, than
under nature, leads me to believe that deviations of structure are in
some way due to the nature of the conditions of life, to which the
parents and their more remote ancestors have been exposed during
several generations. I have remarked in the first chapter -- but
a long catalogue of facts which cannot be here given would be
necessary to show the truth of the remark -- that the
reproductive system is eminently susceptible to changes in the
conditions of life; and to
How much direct effect difference of climate, food, &c.,
produces on any being is extremely doubtful. My impression is, that
the effect is extremely small in the case of animals, but perhaps
rather more in that of plants. We may, at least, safely conclude that
such influences cannot have produced the many striking and complex
co-adaptations of structure between one organic being and another,
which we see everywhere throughout nature. Some little influence may
be attributed to climate, food, &c.: thus, E. Forbes speaks
confidently that shells at their southern limit, and when living in
shallow water, are more brightly coloured than those of the same
species further north or from greater depths. Gould believes that
birds of the same species are more brightly coloured under a clear
atmosphere, than when living on islands or near the coast. So with
insects, Wollaston is convinced that residence near the sea affects
their colours. Moquin-Tandon gives a list of plants which when growing
near the sea-shore have their leaves in some degree fleshy, though not
elsewhere fleshy. Several other such cases could be given.
The fact of varieties of one species, when they range
When a variation is of the slightest use to a being, we cannot tell
how much of it to attribute to the accumulative action of natural
selection, and how much to the conditions of life. Thus, it is well
known to furriers that animals of the same species have thicker and
better fur the more severe the climate is under which they have lived;
but who can tell how much of this difference may be due to the
warmest-clad individuals having been favoured and preserved during
many generations, and how much to the direct action of the severe
climate? for it would appear that climate has some direct action on
the hair of our domestic quadrupeds.
Instances could be given of the same variety being produced under
conditions of life as different as can well be conceived; and, on the
other hand, of different varieties being produced from the same
species under the same conditions. Such facts show how indirectly
From the
facts alluded to in the first chapter, I think there can be little
doubt that use in our domestic animals strengthens and enlarges
certain parts, and disuse diminishes them; and that such modifications
are inherited. Under free nature, we can have no standard of
comparison, by which to judge of the effects of long-continued use or
disuse, for we know not the parent-forms; but many animals have
structures which can be explained by the effects of disuse. As
Professor Owen has remarked, there is no greater anomaly Kirby has remarked (and I have observed the same fact) that the
anterior tarsi, or feet, of many male dung-feeding beetles are very
often broken off; he examined seventeen specimens in his own
collection, and not one had even a relic left. In the Onites apelles
the tarsi are so habitually lost, that the insect has been described
as not having them. In some other genera they are present, but in a
rudimentary condition. In the Ateuchus or sacred beetle of the
Egyptians, they are totally deficient. There is not sufficient
evidence to induce us to believe that mutilations are ever inherited;
and I should prefer explaining the entire absence of the anterior
tarsi in Ateuchus, and their rudimentary condition in some other
genera, by the long-continued effects of disuse in their progenitors;
for as the tarsi are almost always lost in many dung-feeding beetles,
they must be lost early in life, and therefore cannot be much used by
these insects.
In some cases we might easily put down to disuse modifications of
structure which are wholly, or mainly, due to natural selection. Mr.
Wollaston has discovered the remarkable fact that 200 beetles, out of
the 550 species inhabiting Madeira, are so far deficient in wings that
they cannot fly; and that of the twenty-nine endemic genera, no less
than twenty-three genera have all their species in this condition!
Several facts, namely, that beetles The insects in Madeira which are not ground-feeders, and which, as
the flower-feeding coleoptera and lepidoptera, must habitually use
their wings to gain their subsistence, have, as Mr. Wollaston suspects,
their wings not at all reduced, but even enlarged. This is quite
compatible with the action of natural selection. For when a new insect
first arrived on the island, the tendency of natural selection to
enlarge or to reduce the wings, would depend on whether a greater
number of individuals were saved by successfully battling with the
winds, or by giving up the attempt and rarely or never flying. As with
mariners ship-wrecked near a coast, it would have been better for the
good swimmers if they had been able to swim still further, whereas it
would have been better for the bad swimmers if they had not been able
to swim at all and had stuck to the wreck.
The eyes of moles and of some burrowing rodents are rudimentary in
size, and in some cases are quite covered up by skin and fur. This
state of the eyes is probably due to gradual reduction from disuse,
but aided perhaps by natural selection. In South America, a burrowing
rodent, the tuco-tuco, or Ctenomys, is even more subterranean in its
habits than the mole; and I was It is well known that several animals, belonging to the most
different classes, which inhabit the caves of Styria and of Kentucky,
are blind. In some of the crabs the foot-stalk for the eye remains,
though the eye is gone; the stand for the telescope is there, though
the telescope with its glasses has been lost. As it is difficult to
imagine that eyes, though useless, could be in any way injurious to
animals living in darkness, I attribute their loss wholly to disuse.
In one of the blind animals, namely, the cave-rat, the eyes are of
immense size; and Professor Silliman thought that it regained, after
living some days in the light, some slight power of vision. In the
same manner as in Madeira the wings of some of the insects have been
enlarged, and the wings of others have been reduced by natural
selection aided by use and disuse, so in the case of the cave-rat
natural selection seems to have struggled with the loss of light and
It is difficult to imagine conditions of life more similar than
deep limestone caverns under a nearly similar climate; so that on the
common view of the blind animals having been separately created for
the American and European caverns, close similarity in their
organisation and affinities might have been expected; but, as Schiödte
and others have remarked, this is not the case, and the cave-insects
of the two continents are not more closely allied than might have
been anticipated from the general resemblance of the other inhabitants
of North America and Europe. On my view we must suppose that American
animals, having ordinary powers of vision, slowly migrated by
successive Habit is hereditary
with plants, as in the period of flowering, in the amount of rain
requisite for seeds to germinate, in the time of sleep, &c., and
this leads me to say a few words on acclimatisation. As it is
extremely common for species of the same genus to inhabit very hot and
very cold As I believe that our domestic animals were originally chosen by
uncivilised man because they were useful and bred readily under
confinement, and not because they were subsequently found capable of
far-extended transportation, I think the common and extraordinary
capacity in our domestic animals of not only withstanding the most
different climates but of being How much of the acclimatisation of species to any peculiar climate
is due to mere habit, and how much to the natural selection of
varieties having different innate constitutions, and how much to
means combined, is a very obscure question.
That habit or custom has some influence I must believe, both from
analogy, and from the incessant advice given in agricultural works,
even in the ancient Encyclopaedias of China, to be very cautious
On the whole, I think we may conclude that habit,
I mean by this
expression that the whole organisation is so tied together during its
growth and development, that when slight variations in any one part
occur, and are accumulated through natural selection, other parts
become modified. This is a very important subject, most imperfectly
understood. The most obvious case is, that modifications accumulated
solely for the good of the young or larva, will, it may safely be
concluded, affect the structure of the adult; in the same manner as
any malconformation affecting the early embryo, seriously affects the
whole organisation of the adult. The several Homologous parts, as has been remarked by some authors, tend to
cohere; this is often seen in monstrous plants; and nothing is more
common than the union of homologous parts in normal structures, as the
union of
The nature of the bond of correlation is very frequently quite
obscure. M. Is. Geoffroy St Hilaire has forcibly remarked, that
certain malconformations very frequently, and that others rarely
coexist, without our being able to assign any reason. What can be more
singular than the relation between blue eyes and deafness in cats, and
the tortoise-shell colour with the female sex; the feathered feet and
skin between the outer toes in pigeons, and the presence of more or
less down on the young birds when first hatched, with the future
colour of their plumage; or, again, the relation between the hair and
teeth in the naked Turkish dog, though here probably homology comes
into play? With respect to this latter case of correlation, I think it
can hardly be accidental, that if we pick out the two orders of
mammalia which are most abnormal in their dermal coverings, viz.
Cetacea (whales) and Edentata (armadilloes, scaly ant-eaters,
I know of no case better adapted to show the importance of the laws
of correlation in modifying important structures, independently of
utility and, therefore, of natural selection, than that of the
difference between the outer and inner flowers in some Compositous and
Umbelliferous plants. Every one knows the
With respect to the difference in the corolla of the central and
exterior flowers of a head or umbel, I do not feel at all sure that C.
C. Sprengel's idea that the ray-florets serve to attract insects,
whose agency is highly advantageous in the fertilisation of plants of
We may often falsely attribute to correlation of growth, structures
which are common to whole groups of species, and which in
truth are simply due to inheritance; for an
ancient progenitor may have acquired through natural selection some
one modification in structure, and, after thousands of generations,
some other and independent modification; and these two modifications,
having been transmitted to a whole group of descendants with diverse
habits, would naturally be thought to be correlated in some necessary
manner. So, again, I do not doubt that some
apparent correlations, occurring throughout whole orders, are entirely
due to the manner alone in which natural
selection can act. For instance, Alph. De Candolle has remarked that
winged seeds are never found in fruits which do not open: I should
explain the rule by the fact
that seeds could not gradually become winged
through natural selection, except in fruits which opened; so that the
individual plants producing
The elder Geoffroy and Goethe propounded, at about
the same period, their law of compensation or
balancement of growth; or, as Goethe expressed it, 'in order to spend
on one side, nature is forced to economise on the other side.' I think
this holds true to a certain extent with our domestic productions: if
nourishment flows to one part or organ in excess, it rarely flows, at
I suspect, also, that some of the cases of compensation which have
been advanced, and likewise some other facts, may be merged under a
more general principle, namely, that natural selection is continually
trying to economise in every part of the organisation. If under
Thus, as I believe, natural selection will always succeed in the
long run in reducing and saving every part of the organisation, as
soon as it is rendered superfluous, without by any means causing some
other part to be largely developed in a corresponding degree. And,
conversely, that natural selection may perfectly well succeed in
largely developing any organ, without requiring as a necessary
compensation the reduction of some adjoining part.
It seems to be a rule, as remarked by Is. Geoffroy St Hilaire, both
in varieties and in species, that when any part or organ is repeated
many times in the structure of the same individual (as the vertebrae
in snakes, and the stamens in polyandrous flowers) the number is
variable; whereas the number of the same part or organ, when it occurs
in lesser numbers, is constant. The same author and some botanists
have further remarked that multiple parts are also very liable to
variation in structure. Inasmuch as this 'vegetative repetition,' to
use Prof. Owen's expression, seems to be a sign of low organisation;
the foregoing remark seems connected with the very general opinion of
naturalists, that beings low in the scale of nature are more variable
than those which are higher. I presume that lowness in this case means
that the several parts of the organisation have been but little
specialised for particular functions; and as long as the same part has
to perform diversified work, we can perhaps see why it should remain
variable, that is, why natural selection should have preserved or
rejected each little deviation of form less carefully than when the
part has to serve for one special purpose alone. In the same way that
a knife which has to cut all sorts of things may be of almost any
shape; whilst a tool for some particular object had better be of some
particular shape. Natural selection, it should never be forgotten, can
act on each part of each being, solely through and for its advantage.
Rudimentary parts, it has been stated by some authors, and I
believe with truth, are apt to be highly variable. We shall have to
recur to the general subject of rudimentary and aborted organs; and I
will here only add that their variability seems to be owing to their
uselessness, and therefore to natural selection having no power to
check deviations in their structure. Thus
Several years ago
I was much struck with a remark, nearly to the above effect, published
by Mr Waterhouse. I infer also from an observation made by Professor
Owen, with respect to the length of the arms of the ourang-outang,
that he has come to a nearly similar conclusion. It is hopeless to
attempt to convince any one of the truth of this proposition without
giving the long array of facts which I have collected, and which
cannot possibly be here introduced. I can only state my conviction
that it is a rule of high generality. I am aware of several causes of
error, but I hope that I have made due allowance for them. It should
be understood that the rule by no means applies to any part, however
unusually developed, unless it be unusually developed in comparison
with the same part in closely allied species. Thus, the bat's wing is
a most abnormal structure in the class mammalia; but the rule would
not here apply, because there is a whole group of bats having wings;
it would apply only if some one species of bat had its wings developed
in some remarkable manner in comparison with the other species of the
same genus. The rule applies very strongly in the case of secondary
sexual characters, when displayed in any unusual manner. The term,
secondary sexual characters, used by Hunter, applies to characters
which are attached to one sex, but are not
directly connected with the act of reproduction. The rule applies to
males and females; but as females more rarely offer remarkable
secondary sexual characters, it applies
As birds within the same country vary in a remarkably small degree,
I have particularly attended to them, and
the rule seems to me certainly to hold good in this class. I cannot
make out that it applies to plants, and this would seriously have
shaken my belief in its truth, had not the great variability in plants
made it particularly difficult to compare their relative degrees of
variability.
When we see any part or organ developed in a remarkable degree or
manner in any species, the fair
Now let us turn to nature. When a part has been developed in an
extraordinary manner in any one species, compared with the other
species of the same genus, we may conclude that this part has
undergone an extraordinary amount of modification, since the period
when the species branched off from the common progenitor of the genus.
This period will seldom be remote in The principle included in these remarks may be extended. It is
notorious that specific characters are more variable than generic.
To explain by a simple example what is
meant. If some species in a large genus of plants had blue flowers and
some had red, the colour would be only a specific character, and no
one would be surprised at one of the blue species varying into red, or
conversely; but if all the species had blue flowers, the colour would
become a generic character, and its variation would be a more unusual
circumstance. I have chosen this example because an explanation is not
in this case applicable, which most On the ordinary view of each species having been independently
created, why should that part of the structure, which differs from the
same part in other independently-created species of the same genus, be
more variable than those parts which are closely alike in the several
species? I do not see that any explanation can be given. But on the
view of species being only strongly marked and fixed varieties, we
might surely expect to find them still often continuing to vary in
those parts of their structure which have varied within a moderately
recent period, and which have thus come to differ. Or to state the
case in another manner: -- the points in which all the species of
a genus resemble each other, and in which they differ from the species
of some other genus, are called generic characters; and these
characters in common I attribute to inheritance from a common
In connexion with the present subject, I will make only two other
remarks. I think it will be admitted, without my entering on details,
that secondary sexual characters are very variable; I think it also
will be admitted that species of the same group differ from each other
more widely in their secondary sexual characters, than in other parts
of their organisation; compare, for instance, the amount of difference
between the males of gallinaceous birds, in which secondary sexual
characters are strongly displayed, with the amount of difference
between their females; and the truth of this proposition will be
granted. The cause of the original variability of secondary sexual
characters is not manifest; but we can see why these characters should
not have been rendered as constant and uniform as other parts of the
organisation; for secondary sexual characters have been accumulated by
sexual selection, which
It is a remarkable fact, that the secondary sexual differences
between the two sexes of the same species are generally displayed in
the very same parts of the organisation in which the different species
of the same genus differ from each other. Of this fact I will give in
illustration two instances, the first which Finally, then, I conclude that the greater variability of specific
characters, or those which distinguish species from species, than of
generic characters, or those which the species possess in common;
-- that the frequent extreme variability of any part which is
developed in a species in an extraordinary manner in comparison with
the same part in its congeners; and the not great degree of
variability in a part, however extraordinarily it may be developed, if
it be common to a whole group of species; -- that the great
variability of secondary sexual characters, and the great amount of
difference in these same characters between closely allied species;
-- that secondary sexual and ordinary specific differences are
generally displayed in the same parts of the organisation, -- are
all principles closely connected together. All being mainly due to the
species of the same group having descended from a common progenitor,
from whom they have inherited much in common, -- to parts which
have recently and largely These propositions will be most readily understood
by looking to our domestic races. The most distinct breeds of pigeons,
in countries most widely apart, present sub-varieties with reversed
feathers on the head and feathers on the feet, -- characters not
possessed by the aboriginal rock-pigeon; these then are analogous
variations in two or more distinct races. The frequent presence of
fourteen or even sixteen tail-feathers in the pouter, may be
considered as a variation representing the normal structure of another
race, the fantail. I presume that no one will doubt that all such
analogous variations are due to the several
races of the pigeon having inherited from a common parent the same
constitution and tendency to variation, when acted on by similar
unknown influences. In the vegetable kingdom we have a case of
analogous variation, in the enlarged stems, or roots as commonly
called, of the Swedish turnip and Ruta baga, plants which several
botanists rank as varieties produced by cultivation from a common
parent: if this be not so, the case will then be one of analogous
variation in two so-called distinct species; and to these a third may
be added, namely, the common turnip. According to the ordinary view of
each species having been independently created, we should have to
attribute this similarity in the enlarged stems of these three plants,
not to the With pigeons, however, we have another case, namely, the No doubt it is a very surprising fact that characters should
reappear after having been lost for many, perhaps for hundreds of
generations. But when a breed has been crossed only once by some other
breed, the offspring occasionally show a tendency to revert in
character to the foreign breed for many generations -- some say,
for a dozen or even a score of generations. After twelve generations,
the proportion of blood, to use a common expression, of any one
ancestor, is only 1 in 2048; and yet, as we see, it is generally
believed that a tendency to reversion is retained by this very small
proportion of foreign blood. In a breed which has not been crossed,
but in which As all the species of the same genus are supposed, on my theory, to
have descended from a common parent, it might be expected that they
would occasionally vary in an analogous manner; so that a variety of
one species would resemble in some of its characters another species;
this other species being on my view only a well-marked and permanent
variety. But characters thus gained would probably be of an
unimportant nature, for the presence of all important characters will
be governed by natural selection, in accordance with the diverse
habits of the species, and will not be left to the mutual action of
the conditions of life and of a similar inherited constitution. It
might further be expected that the species of the same genus would
occasionally exhibit reversions to lost ancestral characters. As,
however, we never know the exact character of the common ancestor of a
group, we could not distinguish these two
A considerable part of the difficulty in recognising a variable
species in our systematic works, is due to its varieties mocking, as
it were, come of the other species of the same genus. A considerable
catalogue, also, could be given of forms intermediate between two
other forms, which themselves must be doubtfully ranked as either
varieties or species, that the one in varying has assumed some of the
characters of the other, so as to produce the intermediate form. But
the best evidence is afforded by parts or organs of an important and
uniform nature occasionally varying so as to acquire, in some degree,
the character of the same part or organ in an allied species. I have
collected a long list of such cases; but
I will, however, give one curious and complex case, not indeed as
affecting any important character, but from occurring in several
species of the same genus, partly under domestication and partly under
nature. It is a case apparently of reversion. The ass not rarely has
very distinct transverse bars on its legs, like those of a zebra: it
has been asserted that these are plainest in the foal, and from
inquiries which I have made, I believe this to be true. It has also
been asserted that the stripe on each shoulder is sometimes double.
The shoulder-stripe is certainly very variable in length and outline.
A white ass, but With respect to the horse, I have collected cases in England of the
spinal stripe in horses of the most distinct breeds, and of In the north-west part of India the Kattywar breed of horses is so
generally striped, that, as I hear from Colonel Poole, who examined
the breed for the Indian Government, a horse without stripes is not
considered as purely-bred. The spine is always striped; the legs are
generally barred; and the shoulder-stripe, which is sometimes double
and sometimes treble, is common; the side of the face, moreover, is
sometimes striped. The stripes are plainest in the foal; and sometimes
quite disappear in old horses. Colonel Poole has seen both gray and
bay Kattywar horses striped when first foaled. I have, also, reason to
suspect, from information given me by Mr. W. W. Edwards, that with the
English race-horse the spinal stripe is much commoner in the foal than
in the full-grown animal. Without here entering on further details, I
may state that I have collected cases of leg and shoulder stripes in
horses of very different breeds, in various countries from Britain to
Eastern China; and from Norway in the north to the Malay Archipelago
in the south. In all parts of the world these stripes occur far
oftenest in duns and mouse-duns; by the term dun a large range of
colour is included, from one between brown and black to a close
approach to cream-colour.
I am aware that Colonel Hamilton Smith, who has written on this
subject, believes that the several breeds of the horse have descended
from several aboriginal species -- one of which, the dun, was
striped; and that the above-described appearances are Now let us turn to the effects of crossing the several species of
the horse-genus. Rollin asserts, that the common mule from the
ass and horse is particularly apt to have bars on
its legs. I once saw a mule with its legs
so much striped that any one at first would have thought that it must
have been the product of a zebra; and Mr. W. C. Martin, in his
excellent treatise on the horse, has given a figure of a similar mule.
In four coloured drawings, which I have seen, of hybrids between the
ass and zebra, the legs were much more plainly barred than the rest of
the body; and in one of them there was a double shoulder-stripe. In
Lord Moreton's famous hybrid from a chestnut mare and male quagga, the
hybrid, and even the pure offspring subsequently produced from the
mare by a black Arabian sire, were much more plainly barred across the
legs than is even the pure quagga. Lastly, and this is another most
remarkable case, a hybrid has been figured by Dr Gray (and he informs
me that he knows of a second case) from the ass and the hemionus; and
this hybrid, though the ass seldom has stripes on its legs and the
hemionus has none and has not even a shoulder-stripe, nevertheless had
all four legs barred, and had three short shoulder-stripes, like those
on the dun Welch pony, and even had some zebra-like stripes on the
sides of its face. With respect to this
last fact, I was so convinced that not even a stripe of colour appears
from what would commonly be called an accident, that I was led solely
from the occurrence of the face-stripes on this hybrid from the ass
and hemionus,
What now are we to say to these several facts? We see several very
distinct species of the horse-genus becoming, by simple variation,
striped on the legs like a zebra, or striped on the shoulders like an
ass. In the horse we see this tendency strong whenever a dun tint
appears -- a tint which approaches to that of the He who believes that each equine species was independently created,
will, I presume, assert that each species has been created with a
tendency to vary, both under nature and under domestication, in this
particular manner, so as often to become striped like other species of
the genus; and that each has been created with a strong tendency, when
crossed with species inhabiting distant quarters of the world, to
produce hybrids resembling in their stripes, not their own parents,
but other species of the genus. To admit this view is, as it seems to
me, to reject a real for an unreal, or at least for an unknown, cause.
It makes the Our ignorance of the laws of
variation is profound. Not in one case out of a hundred can we pretend
to assign any reason why this or that part differs, more or less, from
the same part in the parents. But whenever we have the means of
instituting a comparison, the same laws appear to have acted in
producing the lesser differences between varieties of the same
species, and the greater differences between species of the same
genus. The external conditions of life, as climate and food, &c.,
seem to have induced some slight modifications. Habit in producing
constitutional differences, Whatever the cause may be of each slight difference in the
offspring from their parents -- and a cause for each must exist
-- generative variability, as it may be called,
still present in a high degree. For in this case the variability will
seldom as yet have been fixed by the continued selection of the
individuals varying in the required manner and degree, and by the
continued rejection of those tending to revert to a former and less
modified condition.
vera causa of community of
descent, and a consequent tendency to vary in a like manner, but to
three separate yet closely related acts of creation.
LONG before having arrived at this part of my work, a crowd of difficulties will have occurred to the reader. Some of them are so grave that to this day I can never reflect on them without being staggered; but, to the best of my judgment, the greater number are only apparent, and those that are real are not, I think, fatal to my theory.
These difficulties and objections may be classed under the following heads:-Firstly, why, if species have descended from other species by insensibly fine gradations, do we not everywhere see innumerable transitional forms? Why is not all nature in confusion instead of the species being, as we see them, well defined?
Secondly, is it possible that an animal having, for instance, the
structure and habits of a bat, could have been formed by the
modification of some animal with wholly different habits? Can we
believe that natural selection could produce, on the one hand, organs
of trifling importance, such as the tail of a giraffe, which serves as
a fly-flapper, and, on the other hand, organs of
Thirdly, can instincts be acquired and modified through natural
selection? What shall we say to so marvellous an instinct Fourthly, how can we account for species, when crossed, being
sterile and producing sterile offspring, whereas, when varieties are
crossed, their fertility is unimpaired?
The two first heads shall be here discussed -- Instinct and
Hybridism in separate chapters.
As natural selection acts solely by the preservation
of profitable modifications, each new form will tend in a
fully-stocked country to take the place of, and finally to
exterminate, its own less improved parent or other less-favoured forms
with which it comes into competition. Thus extinction and natural
selection will, as we have seen, go hand in hand. Hence, if we look at
each species as descended from some other unknown form, both the
parent and all the transitional varieties will generally have been
exterminated by the very process of formation and perfection of the
new form.
But, as by this theory innumerable transitional forms must have
existed, why do we not find them embedded in countless numbers in the
crust of the earth? It will be much more convenient to discuss this
question in the chapter on the Imperfection of the geological record;
and I will here only state that I believe the answer mainly lies in
the record being incomparably less perfect than is generally supposed;
the imperfection of the record being chiefly due to organic beings not
inhabiting
But it may be urged that when several closely-allied species
inhabit the same territory we surely ought to find at the present time
many transitional forms. Let us take a simple case: in travelling from
north to south over a continent, we generally meet at successive
intervals with closely allied or representative species, evidently
filling nearly the same place in the natural economy of the land.
These representative species often meet and interlock; and as the one
becomes rarer and rarer, the other becomes more and more frequent,
till the one replaces the other. But if we compare these species where
they intermingle, they are generally as absolutely distinct from each
other in every detail of structure as are specimens taken from the
metropolis inhabited by each. By my theory these allied species have
descended from a common parent; and during the process of
modification, each has become adapted to the conditions of life of its
own region, and has supplanted and exterminated its original parent
and all the transitional varieties between its past and present
states. Hence we ought not to expect at the
In the first place we should be extremely cautious in inferring,
because an area is now continuous, that it has been continuous during
a long period. Geology would lead us to believe that almost every
continent has been broken up into islands even during the later
tertiary periods; and in such islands distinct species might have been
separately formed without the possibility of intermediate varieties
existing in the intermediate zones. By changes in the form of the land
and of climate, marine areas now continuous must often have existed
within recent times in a far less continuous and uniform condition
than at present. But I will pass over this way of escaping from the
difficulty; In looking at species as they are now distributed over a wide area,
we generally find them tolerably numerous over a large territory, then
becoming somewhat abruptly rarer and rarer on the confines, and
finally disappearing. Hence the neutral territory between two
representative species is generally narrow in comparison with the
territory proper to each. We see the same fact in ascending mountains,
and sometimes
If I am right in believing that allied or representative species,
For any form existing in lesser numbers would, as already remarked,
run a greater chance of being exterminated than one existing in large
numbers; and in this particular case the intermediate form would be
eminently liable to the inroads of closely allied forms existing on
both sides of it. But a far more important consideration, as I
believe, is that, during the process of further modification, by which
two varieties are supposed on my theory to be converted and perfected
into two distinct species, the two which exist in larger numbers from
inhabiting larger areas, will have a great advantage over the
intermediate variety, which exists
To sum up, I believe that species come to be tolerably well-defined
objects, and do not at any one period present an inextricable chaos
of varying and intermediate links: firstly, because new varieties are
very slowly formed, for variation is a very slow process, and natural
selection can do nothing until favourable variations chance to occur,
and until a place in the natural
Secondly, areas now continuous must often have existed within the
recent period in isolated portions, in which many forms, Thirdly, when two or more varieties have been formed in different
portions of a strictly continuous area, intermediate varieties will,
it is probable, at first have been formed in the intermediate zones,
but they will generally have had a short duration. For these
intermediate varieties will, from reasons already assigned (namely
from what we know of the actual distribution of closely allied or
representative species, and likewise of acknowledged varieties), exist
in the intermediate zones in lesser numbers than the varieties which
they tend to connect. From this cause alone the intermediate
Lastly, looking not to any one time, but to all time, if my theory
be true, numberless intermediate varieties, linking most closely all
the species of the same group together, must assuredly have existed;
but the very process of natural selection constantly tends, as has
been so often remarked, to exterminate the parent forms and the
intermediate links. Consequently evidence of their former existence
could be found only amongst fossil remains, which are preserved, as we
shall in a future chapter attempt to show, in an extremely imperfect
and intermittent record.
It has been asked by the
opponents of such views as I hold, how, for instance, a land
carnivorous animal could have been converted into one with aquatic
habits; Here, as on other occasions, I lie under a heavy disadvantage, for
out of the many striking cases which I have collected, I can give only
one or two instances of transitional habits and structures in closely
allied species of the same genus; and of diversified habits, either
constant or occasional, in the same species. And it seems to me that
nothing less than a long list of such cases is sufficient to lessen
the difficulty in any particular case like that of the bat.
Look at the family of squirrels; here we have the finest gradation
from animals with their tails only slightly flattened, and from
others, as Sir J. Richardson has remarked, with the posterior part of
their bodies rather wide and with the skin on their flanks rather
full, to the so-called flying squirrels; and flying squirrels have
their limbs and even the base of the tail united by a broad expanse of
skin, which serves as a parachute and allows them to glide through the
air to an astonishing distance from tree to tree. We cannot doubt that
each structure is of use to each kind of squirrel in its own country,
by enabling it to escape birds or beasts of prey, or to collect food
more quickly, or, as there is reason to believe, by lessening the
danger from occasional falls. But it does not follow from this fact
that the structure of each squirrel is the best that it is possible to
conceive under all natural conditions. Let the climate and vegetation
change, let other Now look at the Galeopithecus or flying lemur, which formerly was
falsely ranked amongst bats. It has an extremely wide flank-membrane,
stretching from the corners of the jaw to the tail, and including the
limbs and the elongated fingers: the flank membrane is, also,
furnished with an extensor muscle. Although no graduated links of
structure, fitted for gliding through the air, now connect the
Galeopithecus with the other Lemuridae, yet I can see no difficulty in
supposing that such links formerly existed, and that each had been
formed by the same steps as in the case of the less perfectly gliding
squirrels; and that each grade of structure had been useful to its
possessor. Nor can I see any insuperable difficulty in further
believing it possible that the membrane-connected fingers and fore-arm
of the Galeopithecus might be greatly lengthened by natural selection;
and this, as far as the organs of flight are concerned, would convert
it into a bat. In bats which have the wing-membrane extended from the
top of the shoulder to the tail, including the hind-legs, we perhaps
see traces of an apparatus originally constructed for gliding through
the air rather than for flight.
If about a dozen genera of birds had become extinct or were
unknown, who would have ventured to have
Seeing that a few members of such water-breathing classes as the
Crustacea and Mollusca are adapted to live on the land, and seeing
that we have flying birds and mammals, flying insects of the most
diversified types, and formerly had flying reptiles, it is conceivable
that flying-fish, which now glide far through the air, slightly rising
and turning by the aid of their fluttering fins, might have been
modified into perfectly winged animals. If early transitional state
they had been inhabitants of the open ocean, and had used their
incipient organs of flight exclusively, as far as we know, to escape
being devoured by other fish?
When we see any structure highly perfected for any particular
habit, as the wings of a bird for flight, we should bear in mind that
animals displaying early transitional grades of the structure will
seldom continue to exist to the present day, for they will have been
supplanted by the very process of perfection through natural
selection. Furthermore, we may conclude that transitional
I will now give two or three instances of diversified and of As we sometimes see individuals of a species following habits
widely different from those both of their own species and of the other
species of the same genus, we might expect, on my theory, that such
individuals would occasionally have given rise to new species, having
anomalous habits, and with their structure either slightly or
considerably modified from that of their proper type. And such
instances do occur in nature. Can a more striking instance of
adaptation be given than that of a woodpecker for climbing trees and
for seizing insects in the chinks of the bark? Petrels are the most aërial and oceanic of birds, yet in the quiet
Sounds of Tierra del Fuego, the Puffinuria
He who believes that each being has been created as we now see it,
must occasionally have felt surprise when he has met with an animal
having habits and structure not at all in agreement. What can be
plainer than that the webbed feet of ducks and geese are formed for
swimming; yet there are upland geese with webbed feet which rarely or
never go near the water; and no one except Audubon has seen the
frigate-bird, which has all its four toes webbed, alight on the
surface of the sea. On the other hand, grebes and coots are eminently
aquatic, although their toes are only bordered by membrane. What seems
plainer than that the long toes of grallatores are formed for walking
over swamps and floating plants, yet the water-hen is nearly as
aquatic as the coot; and the landrail nearly as terrestrial as the
quail or partridge. In such cases, and many others could be given,
habits have changed without a corresponding change of structure. The
webbed feet of the upland goose may be said to have become rudimentary
in function, though not in structure. In the frigate-bird, the
deeply-scooped membrane between the toes shows that structure has
begun to change. He who believes in separate and innumerable acts of creation will
say, that in these cases it has pleased the
To suppose that the eye, with all its inimitable
contrivances for adjusting the focus to different distances, for
admitting different amounts of light, and for the correction of
spherical and chromatic aberration, could have been formed by natural
selection, seems, I freely confess, absurd
in the highest possible degree. Yet reason tells
me, that if numerous gradations from a perfect and complex eye to one
very imperfect and simple, each grade being useful to its possessor,
can be shown to exist; if further, the eye does vary ever so slightly,
and the variations be inherited, which is certainly the case; and if
any variation or modification in the organ be ever useful to an animal
under changing conditions of life, then the difficulty of believing
that a perfect and complex eye could be formed by natural
In looking for the gradations by which an organ in any species has
been perfected, we ought to look exclusively to its lineal ancestors;
but this is scarcely ever possible, and we are forced in each case to
look to species of the same group, that is to the collateral
descendants from the same original parent-form, in order to see what
gradations are possible, and for the chance of some gradations having
been transmitted from the earlier stages of descent, in an unaltered
or little altered condition. Amongst existing Vertebrata, we find but
a small amount of gradation in the structure of the eye, and from
fossil species we can learn nothing on this head. In this great class
we should probably have to descend far beneath the lowest known
fossiliferous stratum to discover the earlier stages, by which the eye
has been perfected.
In the Articulata we can commence a series with an optic nerve
merely coated with pigment, and without any other mechanism; and from
this low stage, numerous gradations of structure, branching off in two
fundamentally different lines, can be shown to exist, until we reach a
moderately high stage of perfection. In certain crustaceans, for
instance, there is a double cornea, the inner one divided into facets,
within each of which there is a lens shaped swelling. In other
crustaceans the transparent cones which are coated by pigment, and
which properly act only by excluding lateral pencils of light, are
convex at their upper ends
He who will go thus far, if he find on
finishing this treatise that large bodies of facts, otherwise
inexplicable, can be explained by the theory of descent, ought not to
hesitate to go further, It is scarcely possible to avoid comparing the eye to a telescope.
We know that this instrument has been perfected by the long-continued
efforts of the highest human intellects; and we naturally infer that
the eye has been formed by a somewhat analogous process. But may not
this inference be presumptuous? Have we any right to assume that the
Creator works by intellectual powers like those of man? If we must
compare the eye to an optical instrument, we ought in imagination to
take a thick layer of transparent tissue, with a nerve sensitive to
light beneath, and then suppose every
If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed, which
could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight
modifications, my theory would absolutely break down. But I can find
out no such case. No doubt many organs We should be extremely cautious in concluding that an organ could
not have been formed by transitional gradations of some kind. Numerous
cases could be given amongst the lower animals of the same organ
performing at the same time wholly distinct functions; thus the
alimentary canal respires, digests, and excretes in the larva of the
dragon-fly and in the fish Cobites. In the Hydra, the animal may be
turned inside out, and the exterior surface will then digest and the
stomach respire. In such cases natural selection might easily
specialise, if any advantage were thus gained, a part or organ, which
had performed two functions, for one function alone, and thus wholly
change its nature by insensible steps. Two
distinct organs sometimes perform simultaneously the same function in
the same individual; to give one instance, there are fish with gills
or branchiae that breathe the air dissolved in the water, at the same
time that they breathe free air in their swimbladders, this latter
organ having a ductus pneumaticus for its supply, and being divided by
highly vascular partitions. In these cases, one of the two organs
might with ease be modified and perfected so as to perform all the
work by itself, being aided during the process of modification by the
other organ; and then this other organ might be modified for some
other and quite distinct purpose, or be quite obliterated.
The illustration of the swimbladder in
fishes is a good one, because it shows us clearly the highly important
fact that an organ originally constructed for one purpose, namely
flotation, may be converted into one for a wholly different purpose,
namely respiration. The swimbladder has, also, been worked in as an
accessory to the auditory organs of certain fish, or, for I do not I can, indeed, hardly doubt that all vertebrate animals having true
lungs have descended by ordinary generation from an ancient prototype,
of which we know nothing, furnished with a floating apparatus or
swimbladder. We can thus, as I infer from Professor Owen's interesting
description of these parts, understand the strange fact that every
particle of food and drink which we swallow has to pass over the
orifice of the trachea, with some risk of falling into the lungs,
notwithstanding the beautiful contrivance by which the glottis is
closed. In the higher Vertebrata the branchiae have wholly disappeared
-- the slits on the sides of the neck and the loop-like course of
the arteries still marking in the embryo their former position. But it
is conceivable that the now utterly lost branchiae might have been
gradually worked in by natural selection for some quite distinct
purpose: in the same manner as, on the view entertained by some
naturalists that the branchiae and dorsal scales of Annelids are
homologous with the wings and wing-covers of insects, it is probable
that organs which at a very ancient period served for respiration have
been actually converted into organs of flight.
In considering transitions of organs, it is so important to bear in
mind the probability of conversion from one function to another, that
I will give one more instance. Pedunculated cirripedes have two
minute folds of skin,
Although we must be extremely cautious in concluding that any organ
could not possibly have been produced by successive transitional
gradations, yet, undoubtedly, grave cases of difficulty occur, some of
which will be discussed in my future work.
One of the gravest is that of neuter insects, which are often very
differently constructed from either the males or fertile females; but
this case will be treated of in the next chapter. The electric organs
of fishes offer another case of special difficulty; it is impossible
to conceive by what steps these wondrous organs have been produced;
but, as Owen and others have remarked,
The electric organs offer another and even more serious difficulty;
for they occur in only about a dozen fishes, of which several are
widely remote in their affinities. Generally when the same organ
appears in several members of the same class, especially if in members
having very different habits of life, we may attribute its presence to
inheritance from a common ancestor; and its absence in some of the
members to its loss through disuse or natural selection. But if the
electric organs had been inherited from one ancient progenitor thus
provided, we might have Although in many cases it is most difficult to conjecture by what
transitions an organ could have arrived at its present state; yet,
considering that the proportion of living and known forms to the
extinct and unknown is very small, I have been astonished how rarely
an organ can be named, towards which no transitional grade is known to
lead. The truth of this remark is indeed shown by that old canon in
natural history of 'Natura non facit saltum.' We meet with this
admission in the writings of almost every experienced naturalist; or,
as Milne Edwards has well expressed it, nature is prodigal in variety,
but niggard in innovation. Why, on the theory of Creation, should this
be so? Why should all the parts and organs of many independent beings,
each supposed to have been separately created for its proper place in
nature, be so invariably linked together by graduated steps? Why
should not Nature have taken a leap from structure to structure? On
the theory of natural selection, we can clearly understand why she
should not; for natural selection can act As natural selection acts by life and death, -- by the preservation
of individuals with any favourable variation, and by the destruction
of those with any unfavourable deviation of structure, -- I have
sometimes felt much difficulty in
In the first place, we are much too
ignorant in regard to the whole economy of any one organic being, to
say what slight modifications would be of importance or not. In a
former chapter I have given instances of most trifling characters,
such as the down on fruit and the colour of the flesh, which, from
determining the attacks of insects or from being correlated with
constitutional differences, might assuredly be acted on by natural
selection. The tail of the giraffe looks like an artificially
constructed fly-flapper; and it seems at first incredible that this
could have been adapted for its present
purpose by successive slight modifications, each better and better,
for so trifling an object as driving away flies; yet we should pause
before being too positive even in this case, for we know that the
distribution and existence of cattle and other animals in South
America absolutely depends on their power of resisting the attacks of
insects: so that individuals which could by any means defend
themselves from these small enemies, would be able to range into new
pastures and thus gain a great advantage. It is not that the larger
quadrupeds are actually destroyed (except in some rare cases) by the
flies, but they are incessantly harassed and their strength reduced,
so that they are more subject to disease, or not so well enabled in a
coming dearth to search for food, or to escape from beasts of prey.
Organs now of trifling importance have probably in some cases been
of high importance to an early progenitor, and, after In the second place, we may sometimes attribute importance to
characters which are really of very little importance, and which have
originated from quite secondary causes, independently of natural
selection. We should remember that climate, food, &c., probably
have some little direct influence on the organisation; that characters
reappear from the law of reversion;, that correlation of growth will
have had a most important influence in modifying various structures;
and finally, that sexual selection will often have largely modified
the external characters of animals having a will, to give one male an
advantage in fighting with another or in charming the females.
Moreover when a modification of structure has primarily arisen from
the above or other unknown causes, it may at first have been of no
advantage to the species, but may subsequently have been taken
advantage of by the descendants of the species under new conditions of
life and with newly acquired habits.
To give a few instances to illustrate
these latter
We are profoundly ignorant of the causes producing slight and
unimportant variations; and we are immediately
The foregoing remarks lead me to say a few words on the protest
lately made by some naturalists, against the utilitarian doctrine that
every detail of structure has been produced for the good of its
possessor. They believe that very many structures have been created
for beauty in the eyes of man, or for mere variety. This doctrine, if
true, would be absolutely fatal to my theory. Yet I fully admit that
many structures are of no direct use to their possessors. Physical
conditions probably have had some little effect on structure, quite
independently of any good thus gained. Correlation of growth has no
doubt played a most important part, and a useful modification of one
part will often have entailed on other parts diversified changes of no
direct use. So again characters which
formerly were useful, or which formerly had arisen from correlation of
growth, or from other unknown cause, may reappear from the law of
reversion, though now of no direct use. The effects of sexual
selection, when Natural selection cannot possibly produce any modification in any
one species exclusively for the good of another species; though
throughout nature one species incessantly takes advantage of, and
profits by, the structure of another. But natural selection can and
does often produce structures for the direct injury of other species,
as we see in the fang of the adder, and in the ovipositor of the
ichneumon, by which its eggs are deposited
Natural selection will never produce in a being anything injurious
to itself, for natural selection acts solely by and for the good of
each. No organ will be formed, as Paley has remarked, for the purpose
of causing pain or for doing an injury to its possessor. If a fair
balance be struck between the good and evil caused by each part, each
will be found on the whole advantageous. After the lapse of time,
under changing conditions of life, if any part comes to be injurious,
it will be modified; or if it be not so, the being will become
extinct, as myriads have become extinct.
Natural selection tends only to make each organic being as perfect
as, or slightly more perfect than, the other inhabitants of the same
country with which it has to struggle for existence. And we see that
this is the degree of perfection attained under nature. The endemic
productions of New Zealand, for instance, are perfect one compared
with another; but they are now rapidly yielding before the advancing
legions of plants
If we look at the sting of the bee, as having originally existed in
a remote progenitor as a boring and serrated instrument, like that in
so many members of the same great order,
and which has been modified but not perfected for its present purpose,
with the poison originally adapted to cause galls subsequently
intensified, we can perhaps understand how it is that the use of the
sting should so often cause the insect's own death: for if on the
whole the power of stinging be useful to the community, it will fulfil
all the requirements of natural selection, though it may cause the
death of some few members. If we admire the truly wonderful power of
scent by which the males of many insects find their females, can we
admire the production for this single purpose of thousands of drones,
which are utterly useless to the community for any other end, and
which are ultimately slaughtered by their industrious and sterile
sisters? It may be difficult, but we ought to admire the savage
instinctive hatred of the queen-bee, which urges her instantly to
destroy the
We have in this
chapter discussed some of the difficulties and objections which may be
urged against my theory. Many of them are very grave; but I think that
in the discussion light has been thrown on several facts, which on the
theory of independent acts of creation are utterly obscure. We We have seen in this chapter how cautious we should be in
concluding that the most different habits of life could not graduate
into each other; that a bat, for instance, could not have been formed
by natural selection from an animal which at first could only glide
through the air.
We have seen that a species may under new conditions of life change
its habits, or have diversified habits, with some habits very unlike
those of its nearest congeners. Hence we can understand bearing in
mind that each organic being is trying to live wherever it can live,
how it has arisen that there are upland geese with webbed feet, ground
woodpeckers, diving thrushes, and petrels with the habits of auks.
Although the belief that an organ so perfect as the eye could have
been formed by natural selection, is more than enough to stagger any
one; yet in the case of any organ, if we know of a long series of
gradations in complexity, each good for its possessor, then, under
changing conditions of life, there is no logical impossibility in the
acquirement of any conceivable degree of perfection through natural
selection. In the cases in We are far too ignorant, in almost every
case, to be enabled to assert that any part or organ is so unimportant
for the welfare of a species, that modifications in its structure
could not have been slowly accumulated by means of natural selection.
But we may confidently believe that many modifications, wholly due to
the laws of growth, and at first in no way advantageous to a species,
have been subsequently taken advantage of by the still further
modified descendants of this species. We may, also, believe that a
part formerly of high importance has often been retained (as the tail
of an aquatic animal by its terrestrial descendants), though it has
become of such small importance that it could not, in its present
state, have been acquired by natural selection, -- a power which
acts solely by the preservation of profitable variations in the
struggle for life.
Natural selection will produce nothing in one species for the
exclusive good or injury of another; though it may well produce parts,
organs, and excretions highly useful or even indispensable, or highly
injurious to another species, but in all cases at the same time useful
to the owner. Natural selection in each well-stocked country, must act
chiefly through the competition of the inhabitants one with another,
and consequently will produce perfection, or strength in the battle
for life, only according to the standard of that country. Hence the
inhabitants of one country, generally the smaller one, will often
yield, as we see they do yield, to the inhabitants of another and
generally larger country. For in
On the theory of natural selection we can clearly understand the
full meaning of that old canon in natural
history, 'Natura non facit saltum.' This canon, if we look only to the
present inhabitants of the world, is not strictly correct, but if we
include all those of past times, it must by my theory be strictly
true.
It is generally acknowledged that all organic beings have been
formed on two great laws -- Unity of Type, and the Conditions of
Existence. By unity of type is meant that fundamental agreement in
structure, which we see in organic beings of the same class, and which
is quite independent of their habits of life. On my theory, unity of
type is explained by unity of descent. The
expression of conditions of existence, so often insisted on by the
illustrious Cuvier, is fully embraced by the principle of natural
selection. For natural selection acts by either now adapting the
varying parts of each being to its organic and inorganic conditions of
life; or by having adapted them during long-past periods of time: the
adaptations being aided in some cases by use and disuse, being
slightly affected by the direct action of the external conditions of
life, and being in all cases subjected to the several laws of growth.
Hence, in fact, the law of the Conditions of Existence is the higher
law; as it includes, through the inheritance of former adaptations,
that of Unity of Type.
THE subject of instinct might have been worked into the previous chapters; but I have thought that it would be more convenient to treat the subject separately, especially as so wonderful an instinct as that of the hive-bee making its cells will probably have occurred to many readers, as a difficulty sufficient to overthrow my whole theory. I must premise, that I have nothing to do with the origin of the primary mental powers, any more than I have with that of life itself. We are concerned only with the diversities of instinct and of the other mental qualities of animals within the same class.
I will not attempt any definition of instinct. It would be easy to
show that several distinct mental actions are commonly embraced by
this term; but every one understands what is meant, when it is said
that instinct impels the cuckoo to migrate and to lay her eggs in
other birds' nests. An action, which we ourselves should require
experience to enable us to perform, when performed by an animal, more
especially by a very young one, without any experience, and when
performed by many individuals in the same way, without their knowing
for what purpose it is performed, is usually said to be instinctive.
Frederick Cuvier and several of the older metaphysicians have
compared instinct with habit. This comparison gives, I think, a
remarkably accurate notion of the frame of mind under which an
instinctive action is performed, but not of its origin. How
unconsciously many habitual actions are performed, indeed not rarely
in direct opposition to our conscious will! yet they may be modified
by the will or reason. Habits easily become associated with other
habits, and with certain periods of time and states of the body. When
once acquired, they often remain constant throughout life. Several
other points of resemblance between instincts and habits could be
pointed out. As in repeating a well-known song, so in instincts, one
action follows another by a sort of rhythm; if a person be interrupted
in a song, or in repeating anything by rote, he is generally forced to
go back to recover the habitual train of thought: so P. Huber found it
was with a caterpillar, which makes a very complicated hammock; for if
he took a caterpillar which had completed its hammock up to, say, the
sixth stage of construction, and put it into a hammock completed up
only to the third stage, the caterpillar simply re-performed the
fourth, fifth, and sixth stages of construction. If, however, a
caterpillar were taken out of a hammock made up, for instance, to the
third stage, and were put into one finished up to the sixth stage, so
that much of its work was already done for it, far from feeling the
benefit of this, it was much embarrassed, and, in order to complete
its hammock, seemed forced to start from the third stage, where it had
left off, and thus tried to complete the already finished work.
If we suppose any habitual action to become inherited -- and I
think it can be shown that this does sometimes happen -- then the
resemblance between what originally was a habit and an instinct
becomes so close as not to be distinguished. If Mozart, instead of
playing the pianoforte at three years old with wonderfully little
practice, had played a tune with no practice at all, be might truly be
said to have done so instinctively. But it would be the most serious
error to suppose that the greater number of instincts have been
acquired by habit in one generation, and then transmitted by
inheritance to succeeding generations. It can be clearly shown that
the most wonderful instincts with It will be universally admitted that instincts are as important as
corporeal structure for the welfare of each species, under its present
conditions of life. Under changed conditions of life, it is at least
possible that slight modifications of instinct might be profitable to
a species; and if it can be shown that instincts do vary ever
so little, then I can see no difficulty in
natural selection preserving and continually accumulating variations
of instinct to any extent that may be profitable. It is thus, as I
believe, that all the most complex and wonderful instincts have
originated. As modifications of corporeal structure arise from, and
are increased by, use or habit, and are diminished or lost by disuse,
so I do not doubt it has been with instincts. But I believe that the
effects of habit are of quite subordinate importance to the effects of
the natural selection of what may be called accidental variations of
instincts; -- that is of variations produced by the same unknown
causes which produce slight deviations of bodily structure.
No complex instinct can possibly be produced through
Again as in the case of corporeal structure, and conformably with
my theory, the instinct of each species is good for itself, but has
never, as far as we can judge, been produced for the exclusive good of
others. One of the strongest instances of
an animal apparently performing an action for the sole good of
another, with which I am acquainted, is that of aphides voluntarily
yielding their sweet excretion to ants: that they do so voluntarily,
the following facts show. I removed all the ants from a group of about
a dozen aphides on a dock-plant,
As some degree of variation in instincts under a state of That the general disposition of individuals of the same species,
born in a state of nature, is extremely diversified, can be shown by a
multitude of facts. Several cases also, could be given, of occasional
and strange habits in certain species, which might, if advantageous to
the species, give rise, through natural selection, to quite new
instincts. But I am well aware that these general statements, without
facts given in detail, can produce but a feeble effect on the reader's
mind. I can only repeat my assurance, that I do not speak without good
evidence.
The possibility, or even probability, of inherited variations of
instinct in a state of nature will be strengthened by briefly
considering a few cases under
How strongly these domestic instincts, habits, and dispositions
Domestic instincts are sometimes spoken of as actions which have
become inherited solely from long-continued and compulsory habit, but
this, I think, is not true. No one would ever have thought of
teaching, or probably could have taught, the tumbler-pigeon to tumble,
-- an action which, as I have witnessed, is performed by young
birds, that have never seen a pigeon tumble. We may believe that some
one pigeon showed a slight tendency to this strange habit, and that
the long-continued selection of the best individuals in successive
generations made tumblers what they now are; and near Glasgow there
are house-tumblers, as I hear from Mr Brent, which cannot fly eighteen
inches high without going head over heels. It may be doubted whether
any one would have thought of training a dog to point, had not some
one dog naturally shown a tendency in this line; and this is known
occasionally to happen, as I once saw in a pure terrier. When the
first tendency was once displayed, methodical selection and the
inherited effects of compulsory training in each successive generation
would soon complete the work; and unconscious
Natural instincts are lost under domestication: a remarkable
instance of this is seen in those breeds of fowls which very rarely or
never become 'broody,' that is, never wish to sit on their eggs.
Familiarity alone prevents our seeing how universally and largely the
minds of our domestic animals have been modified by domestication. It
is scarcely possible to doubt that the love of man has become
instinctive in the dog. All wolves, foxes, jackals, and species of the
cat genus, when kept tame, are most eager to attack poultry, sheep,
and pigs; and this tendency has Hence, we may conclude, that domestic instincts have been acquired
and natural instincts have been lost partly by habit, and partly by
man selecting and accumulating during successive generations, peculiar
mental habits and actions, which at first appeared from what we must
in our ignorance call an accident. In some cases compulsory habit
alone has sufficed to produce such inherited mental changes; in other
cases compulsory habit has done nothing, and all has been the result
of selection, pursued both methodically and unconsciously; but in most
cases, probably, habit and selection have acted together.
We shall, perhaps, best understand how instincts in a state of
nature have become modified by selection, by considering a few cases.
I will select only three, out of the several which I shall have to
discuss in my future work, -- namely, the instinct which leads
the cuckoo to lay her eggs in other birds' nests; the slave-making
instinct of certain ants; and the comb-making power of the hive-bee:
these two latter instincts have generally, and It is now commonly admitted that the more immediate and final cause
of the cuckoo's instinct is, that
The occasional habit of birds laying their eggs in other birds'
nests, either of the same or of a distinct species, is not very Many bees are parasitic, and always lay their eggs in the nests of
bees of other kinds. This case is more remarkable than that of the
cuckoo; for these bees have not only their instincts but their
structure modified in accordance with their parasitic habits; for they
do not possess the pollen-collecting apparatus which would be
necessary if they had to store food for their own young. Some species,
likewise, of Sphegidae (wasp-like insects) are parasitic on other
species; and M. Fabre has lately shown good reason for believing that
although the Tachytes nigra generally makes its own burrow and stores
it with paralysed prey for its own larvae to feed on, yet that when
this insect finds a burrow already made and stored by another sphex,
it takes advantage of the prize, and becomes for the occasion
parasitic. In this case, as with the supposed case of the cuckoo, I
can
This remarkable
instinct was first discovered in the Formica (Polyerges) rufescens by
Pierre Huber, a better observer even than his celebrated father. This
ant is absolutely dependent on its slaves; without their aid, the
species would certainly become extinct in a single year. The males and
fertile females do no work. The workers or sterile females, though
most energetic and courageous in capturing slaves,
do no other work. They are incapable of making
their own nests, or of feeding their own larvae. When the old nest is
found inconvenient, and they have to migrate, it is the slaves which
determine the migration, and actually carry their masters in their
jaws. So utterly helpless are the masters, that when Huber shut up
thirty of them without a slave, but with plenty of the food which they
like best, and with their larvae and pupae to stimulate them to work,
they did nothing; they could not even feed themselves, and many
perished of hunger. Huber then introduced a single slave (F. fusca),
and she instantly set to work, fed and saved the survivors; made some
cells and tended the larvae, and put all to rights. What can be more
extraordinary than these well-ascertained facts? If we had not known
of any other slave-making ant, it would have been hopeless to have
speculated how so wonderful an instinct could have been perfected.
Formica sanguinea was likewise first discovered by P. Huber to be a
slave-making ant. This species is found in the southern parts of
England, and its habits have been attended to by Mr. F. Smith, of the
British
One day I fortunately chanced to witness a migration from one nest
to another, and it was a most interesting spectacle to behold the
masters carefully carrying, as Huber has described, their slaves in
their jaws. Another day my attention was struck by about a score of
the slave-makers haunting the same spot, and evidently not in search
of food; they approached and were vigorously repulsed by an
independent community of the slave species (F. fusca); sometimes as
many as three of these ants clinging to the legs of the slave-making
F. sanguinea. The latter ruthlessly killed their small opponents, and
carried their dead bodies as food to their nest, twenty-nine yards
distant; but they were prevented from getting any pupae to rear as
slaves. I then dug up a small parcel of the pupae of F. fusca from
another nest, and put them down on a bare spot near the place of
combat; they were eagerly seized, and carried off by the tyrants, who
At the same time I laid on the same place a small parcel of the
pupae of another species, F. flava, with a few of these little yellow
ants still clinging to the fragments of the nest. This species is
sometimes, though rarely, made into slaves, as has been described by
Mr Smith. Although so small a species, it is very courageous, and I
have seen it ferociously attack other ants. In one instance I found to
my surprise an independent community of F. flava under a stone beneath
a nest of the slave-making F. sanguinea; and when I had accidentally
disturbed both nests, the little ants attacked their big neighbours
with surprising courage. Now I was curious to ascertain whether F.
sanguinea could distinguish the pupae of F. fusca, which they
habitually make into slaves, from those of the little and furious F.
flava, which they rarely capture, and it was evident that they did at
once distinguish them: for we have seen that they eagerly and
instantly seized the pupae of F. fusca, whereas they were much
terrified when they came across the pupae, or even the earth from the
nest of F. flava, and quickly ran away; but in about a quarter of an
hour, shortly after all the little yellow ants had crawled away, they
took heart and carried off the pupae.
One evening I visited another community of F. sanguinea, and found
a number of these ants entering their nest, carrying the dead bodies
of F. fusca (showing that it was not a migration) and numerous pupae.
I traced the returning file burthened with booty, for about forty
yards, to a very thick clump of heath. whence I saw the last
individual of F. sanguinea emerge, carrying a pupa; but I was not
able to find the desolated nest in the thick heath. The nest, however,
must have been close at hand, for two or three individuals of F. fusca
were rushing about in the greatest agitation, and one was
Such are the facts, though they did not need confirmation by me, in
regard to the wonderful instinct of making slaves. Let it be observed
what a contrast the instinctive habits of F. sanguinea present with
those of the F. rufescens. The latter does
not build By what steps the instinct of F. sanguinea originated I will not
pretend to conjecture. But as ants, which are not slave-makers, will,
as I have seen, carry off pupae of other species, if scattered near
their nests, it is possible that pupae originally stored as food might
become developed; and the ants thus unintentionally reared would then
follow their proper instincts, and do what work they could. If their
presence proved useful to the species which had seized them -- if
it were more advantageous
I
will not here enter on minute details on this subject, but will merely
give an outline of the conclusions at which I have arrived. He must be
a dull man who can examine the exquisite structure of a comb, so
beautifully adapted to its end, without enthusiastic admiration. We
hear from mathematicians that bees have practically solved a recondite
problem, and have made their cells of the proper shape to hold the
greatest possible amount of honey, with the least possible consumption
of previous wax in their construction. It has been remarked that a
skilful workman, with fitting tools and measures, would find it very
difficult to make cells of wax of the true form, though this is
perfectly effected by a crowd of bees working in a dark hive. Grant
whatever instincts you please, and it seems at first quite
inconceivable how they can make all the necessary angles and planes,
or even perceive when they are correctly made. But the difficulty
is not nearly so great as it at first appears: all this beautiful work
can be shown, I think, to follow from a few very simple instincts.
I was led to investigate this subject by Mr. Waterhouse, who has
shown that the form of the cell stands in close relation to the
presence of adjoining cells; and the following view may, perhaps, be
considered only as a modification of this theory. Let us look to the
great principle of gradation, and see whether Nature does not reveal
to us her method of work. At one end of a short series we have
humble-bees, which use their old cocoons to hold honey, sometimes
adding to them short tubes of wax, and likewise making separate and
very irregular rounded cells of wax. At the other end of the series we
have the cells of the hive-bee, placed in a double layer: each cell,
as is well know, is an hexagonal prism, with the basal edges of its
six sides bevelled so as to join on to a pyramid, formed of three
rhombs. These rhombs have certain angles, and the three which form the
pyramidal base of a single cell on one side of the comb, enter into
the composition of the bases of three adjoining cells on the opposite
side. In the series between the extreme perfection of the cells of the
hive-bee and the simplicity of those of the humble-bee, we have the
cells of the Mexican Melipona domestica, carefully described and
figured by Pierre Huber. The Melipona itself is intermediate in
structure between the hive and humble bee, but more
Reflecting on this case, it occurred to me that if the Melipona had
made its spheres at some given distance from each other, and had made
them of equal sizes and had arranged them symmetrically in a double
layer, the resulting structure would probably have been as perfect as
the comb of the hive-bee. Accordingly I wrote to Professor Miller, of
Cambridge, and this geometer has kindly read over the following
statement, drawn up from his information, and tells me that it is
strictly correct:-
If a number of equal spheres be described with their centres placed
in two parallel layers; with the centre of each sphere at the distance
of radius X /sqrt[2] or radius X 1.41421 (or at some lesser distance),
from the centres of the six surrounding spheres in the same layer; and
at the same distance from the centres of the adjoining spheres in the
other and parallel layer; then, if Hence we may safely conclude that if we could slightly modify the
instincts already possessed by the Melipona, and in themselves not
very wonderful, this bee would make a structure as wonderfully perfect
as that of the hive-bee. We must suppose the Melipona to make her
cells truly spherical, and of equal sizes; and this would not be very
surprising, seeing that she already does so to a certain extent, and
seeing what perfectly cylindrical burrows in wood many insects can
make, apparently by turning round on a fixed point. We must suppose
the Melipona to arrange her cells in level layers, as she already does
her cylindrical cells; and we must further suppose, and this is the
greatest difficulty, that she can somehow judge accurately at what
distance to stand from her fellow-labourers when several are making
their spheres; but she is already so far enabled to judge of distance,
that she always describes her spheres so as to intersect largely; and
then she unites the points of intersection by perfectly flat surfaces.
We have further to suppose, but this is no difficulty, that after
hexagonal prisms have been formed by the intersection of adjoining
spheres in the same layer, she can prolong the hexagon to any length
requisite to hold the stock of honey; in the same way as the rude
humble-bee adds cylinders of wax to the circular mouths of her old
cocoons. By such modifications of instincts in themselves not very
wonderful, -- hardly more wonderful than those which guide a bird
to make its nest, -- I believe that the hive-bee
But this theory can be tested by experiment. Following the example
of Mr Tegetmeier, I separated two combs, and put between them a long,
thick, square strip of wax: the bees instantly began to excavate
minute circular pits in it; and as they deepened these little pits,
they made them wider and wider until they were converted into shallow
basins, appearing to the eye perfectly I then put into the hive, instead of a thick, square piece of wax,
a thin and narrow, knife-edged ridge, coloured with vermilion. The
bees instantly began on both sides to excavate little basins near to
each other, in the same way as before; but the ridge of wax was so
thin, that the bottoms of the basins, if they had been excavated to
the same depth as in the former experiment, would have broken into
each other from the opposite sides. The
bees, however, did not suffer this to happen, and they stopped their
excavations in due
Considering how flexible thin wax is, I
do not see that there From the experiment of the ridge of vermilion wax, we can clearly
see that if the bees were to build for themselves a thin wall of wax,
they could make their cells of the proper shape, by standing at the
proper distance from each other, by excavating at the same rate, and
by endeavouring to make equal spherical hollows, but never allowing
the spheres to break into each other. Now bees, as may be clearly seen
by examining the edge of a growing comb, do make a rough,
circumferential wall or rim all round the comb; and they gnaw into
this from the opposite sides, always working circularly as they deepen
each cell. They do not make the whole three-sided pyramidal base of
any one cell at the same time, but only the one rhombic plate which
stands on the extreme growing margin, or the two plates, as the case
may be; and they never complete the upper edges of the rhombic plates,
until the hexagonal walls are commenced. Some of these statements
differ from those made by the justly celebrated elder Huber, but I am
convinced of their accuracy; and if I had space, I could show that
they are conformable with my theory. Huber's statement that the very first cell is excavated out of a
little parallel-sided wall of wax, is not, as far as I have seen,
strictly correct; the first commencement having always been a little
hood of wax; but I will not here enter on these details. We see how
important a part excavation plays in the construction of the cells;
but it would be a great error to suppose that the bees cannot build up
a rough wall of wax in the proper
It seems at first to add to the difficulty of understanding how the
cells are made, that a multitude of bees all work together; one bee
after working a short time at one cell going to another, so that, as
Huber has stated, a score of individuals work even at the commencement
of the first cell. I was able practically to show this fact, by
covering the edges of the hexagonal walls When bees have a place on which they can stand in their proper
positions for working, -- for instance, on a slip of wood, placed
directly under the middle of a comb growing downwards so that the comb
has to be built over one face of the slip -- in this case the
bees can lay the foundations of one wall of a new hexagon, in its
strictly proper place, projecting beyond the other completed cells. It
suffices that the bees should be enabled to stand at their proper
relative distances from each other and from the walls of the last
completed cells, and then, by striking imaginary spheres, they can
build up a wall intermediate between two adjoining spheres; but, as
far as I have seen, they never gnaw away and finish off the angles of
a cell till a large part both of that cell and of the adjoining cells
has been built. This capacity in bees of laying down under certain
circumstances a rough wall in its proper place between two
just-commenced
As natural selection acts only by the accumulation of slight
modifications of structure or instinct, each profitable to the
individual under its conditions of life, it may reasonably be asked,
how a long and graduated succession of modified architectural
instincts, all tending towards the present perfect plan of
construction, could have profited the progenitors of the hive-bee? I
think the answer is not difficult: it is known that bees are often
hard pressed to get sufficient nectar; and I am informed by Mr.
Tegetmeier that it has been experimentally found that no less than
from twelve to fifteen pounds of dry sugar are consumed by a hive of
bees for the secretion of each pound of wax; so that a prodigious
quantity of fluid nectar must be collected and consumed by the bees in
a hive for
Thus, as I believe, the most wonderful of all known instincts, that
of the hive-bee, can be explained by natural selection having taken
advantage of numerous, successive, slight modifications of simpler
instincts; natural selection having by slow degrees, more and more
perfectly, led the bees to sweep equal spheres at a given distance
from each other in a double layer, and to build up and excavate the
wax along the planes of intersection. The bees, of course, no more
knowing that they swept their spheres at one particular distance from
each other, than they know what are the several angles of the
hexagonal prisms and of the basal rhombic plates. The motive power of
the process of natural selection having been economy of wax; that
individual swarm which wasted least honey in the secretion of wax,
having succeeded best, and having transmitted by inheritance its newly
acquired economical instinct to new swarms, which in their turn will
have had the best chance of succeeding in the struggle for existence.
No doubt many instincts of very difficult explanation could be
opposed to the theory of natural selection, -- cases, in which we
cannot see how an instinct could possibly have originated; cases, in
which no intermediate gradations are known to exist; cases of instinct
of apparently such trifling importance, that they could hardly have
been acted on by natural selection; cases of instincts almost
identically the same in animals so remote in the scale of nature, that
we cannot account
The subject well deserves to be discussed at great length, but I
will here take only a single case, that of working or sterile ants.
How the workers have been rendered sterile is a difficulty; but not
much greater than that of any other striking modification of
structure; for it can be shown that some insects and other articulate
animals in a state of nature occasionally become sterile; and if such
insects had been social, and it had been profitable to the community
that a number should have been annually born capable of work, but
incapable of procreation, I can see no very great difficulty in this
being effected by natural selection. But I must pass over this
preliminary difficulty. The great difficulty lies in the working ants
differing widely from both the males and the fertile females in
structure, as in the shape of the thorax and in being destitute of
wings and sometimes of eyes, and in instinct. As far as instinct
alone is concerned, the prodigious difference in this respect between
the workers and the perfect females, would have been far better
exemplified by the hive-bee. If a working ant or other neuter insect
had been an animal in the ordinary state, I should have unhesitatingly
assumed that all its characters had been slowly acquired through
natural selection; namely, by an individual
First, let it be remembered that we have innumerable instances,
both in our domestic productions and in those in a state of nature, of
all sorts of differences of structure which have become correlated to
certain ages, and to either sex. We have differences correlated not
only to one sex, but to that short period alone when the reproductive
system is active, as in the nuptial plumage of many birds, and in the
hooked jaws of the male salmon. We have even slight differences in the
horns of different breeds of cattle in relation to an artificially
imperfect state of the male sex; for oxen of certain breeds have
longer horns than in other breeds, in comparison with the horns of the
bulls or cows of these same breeds. Hence I can see no real difficulty
in any character having become correlated with the sterile condition
of certain members of insect-communities: the difficulty lies in
understanding how such correlated modifications of structure could
have been slowly accumulated by natural selection.
This difficulty, though appearing insuperable, is lessened, or, as
I believe, disappears, when it is remembered that selection may be
applied to the family, as well as to the individual, and may thus gain
the desired end. Thus, a well-flavoured vegetable is cooked, and the
individual is destroyed; but the horticulturist sows seeds of the same
stock, and confidently expects to
But we have not as yet touched on the climax of the difficulty;
namely, the fact that the neuters of several ants differ, not only
from the fertile females and males, but from each other, sometimes to
an almost incredible degree, and are thus divided into two or even
three castes. The castes, moreover, do not generally graduate into
each other, but are perfectly well defined; being as distinct from
each other, as are any two species of the same genus, or rather as any
two genera of the same family. Thus in Eciton, there are working and
soldier neuters, with jaws and instincts extraordinarily different: in
Cryptocerus, the workers of one caste alone carry a wonderful sort of
shield on their heads, the use of which is quite unknown: in the
Mexican Myrmecocystus,
It will indeed be thought that I have an overweening confidence in
the principle of natural selection, when I do not admit that such
wonderful and well-established facts at once annihilate my theory. In
the simpler case of neuter insects all of one caste or of the same
kind, which have been rendered by natural selection, as I believe to
be quite possible, different from the fertile males and females,
-- in this case, we may safely conclude from the analogy of
ordinary variations, that each successive, slight, profitable
modification did not probably at first appear in all I may give one other case: so confidently did I expect to find
gradations in important points of structure between the different
castes of neuters in the same species, that I gladly availed myself of
Mr F. Smith's offer of numerous specimens from the same nest of the
driver ant (Anomma) of West Africa. The reader will perhaps best
appreciate the amount of difference in these workers, by my giving not
the actual measurements, but a strictly accurate illustration: the
difference was the same as if we were to see a set of workmen building
With these facts before me, I believe that natural selection, by
acting on the fertile parents, could form a species which should
regularly produce neuters, either all of large size with one form of
jaw, or all of small size with jaws having a widely different
structure; or lastly, and this is our climax of difficulty, one set of
workers of one size and structure, and simultaneously another set of
workers of a different size and structure; -- a graduated series
having been first formed, as in the case of the driver ant, and then
the extreme forms, from being the most useful to the community, having
been produced in greater and greater numbers through the natural
selection of the parents which generated them; until none with an
intermediate structure were produced.
Thus, as I believe, the wonderful fact of two distinctly defined
castes of sterile workers existing in the same nest, both widely
different from each other and from their parents, has originated. We
can see how useful their production may have been to a I have endeavoured briefly in this chapter to show that
the mental qualities of our domestic animals vary, and that the
variations are inherited. Still more briefly I have attempted to show
that instincts This theory is, also, strengthened by some few other facts in
regard to instincts; as by that common case of closely allied, but
certainly distinct, species, when inhabiting distant parts of the
world and living under considerably different conditions of life, yet
often retaining nearly the same instincts. For instance, we can
understand on the principle of inheritance, how it is that the thrush
of South America lines its nest with mud, in the same peculiar manner
as does our British thrush: how it is that the male wrens
(Troglodytes) of North America, build 'cock-nests,' to roost in, like
the males of our distinct Kitty-wrens, -- a habit wholly unlike
that of any other known bird. Finally, it may not be a logical
deduction, but to my imagination it is far more satisfactory to look
at such instincts as the young
THE view generally entertained by naturalists is that species, when intercrossed, have been specially endowed with the quality of sterility, in order to prevent the confusion of all organic forms. This view certainly seems at first probable, for species within the same country could hardly have kept distinct had they been capable of crossing freely. The importance of the fact that hybrids are very generally sterile, has, I think, been much underrated by some late writers. On the theory of natural selection the case is especially important, inasmuch as the sterility of hybrids could not possibly be of any advantage to them, and therefore could not have been acquired by the continued preservation of successive profitable degrees of sterility. I hope, however, to be able to show that sterility is not a specially acquired or endowed quality, but is incidental on other acquired differences.
In treating this subject, two classes of facts, to a large extent
fundamentally different, have generally been confounded together;
namely, the sterility of two
Pure species have of course their organs of reproduction in a
perfect condition, yet when intercrossed they produce either few or no
offspring. Hybrids, on the other hand, have their reproductive The fertility of varieties, that is of the forms known or believed
to have descended from common parents, when intercrossed, and
likewise the fertility of their mongrel offspring, is, on my theory, of
equal importance with the sterility of species; for it seems to make a
broad and clear distinction between varieties and species.
First, for the sterility of species when crossed and of their
hybrid offspring. It is impossible to study the several memoirs and
works of those two conscientious and admirable observers,
Kölreuter and Gärtner, who almost devoted their lives to
this subject, without being deeply impressed with the high generality
of some degree of sterility. Kölreuter makes the rule universal;
but then he cuts the knot, for in ten cases in which he found two
forms, considered by most authors as distinct species, quite fertile
together, he
It is certain, on the one hand, that the sterility of various
species when crossed is so different in degree and graduates away so
insensibly, and, on the other hand, that the fertility of pure species
is so easily affected by various circumstances, that for all practical
purposes it is most difficult to say where perfect fertility ends and
sterility begins. I think no better evidence of this can be required
than that the two most experienced observers who have ever lived,
namely, Kölreuter and Gärtner, should have arrived at
diametrically opposite conclusions in regard to the very same species.
It is also most instructive to compare -- but I have not space
here to enter on details -- the evidence advanced by our best
botanists on the question whether certain doubtful forms should be
ranked as species or varieties, with the evidence from fertility
adduced by different hybridisers, or by the same author, from
experiments made during different years. It can thus be shown that
neither sterility nor fertility affords any clear distinction between
species and varieties; but that the evidence from this source
graduates away, and is doubtful in the same degree as is the evidence
derived from other constitutional and structural differences.
In regard to the sterility of hybrids in successive generations;
though Gärtner was enabled to rear some hybrids, carefully Now let us turn to the results arrived at by the third most This case of the Crinum leads me to refer to a most singular fact,
namely, that there are individual plants, as with certain species of
Lobelia, and with all the species of the genus Hippeastrum, which can
be far more easily fertilised by the pollen of another and distinct
species, than by their own pollen. For these plants have been found to
yield seed to the pollen of a distinct species, though quite sterile
with their own pollen, notwithstanding that their own pollen was found
to be perfectly good, for it fertilised distinct species. So that
certain individual plants and all the individuals of certain species
can actually be hybridised much more readily than they can be
self-fertilised! For instance, a bulb of Hippeastrum aulicum produced
four flowers; three were fertilised by Herbert with their own pollen,
and the fourth was subsequently fertilised by the pollen of a compound
hybrid descended from three other and distinct species: the result was
that 'the ovaries of the three first flowers soon ceased to grow, and
after a
The practical experiments of horticulturists, though not made with
scientific precision, deserve some notice. It is notorious in how
complicated a manner the species of Pelargonium, Fuchsia, Calceolaria,
Petunia, Rhododendron, &c., have been crossed, yet many of these
hybrids seed freely. For instance, Herbert asserts that a hybrid from
Calceolaria integrifolia and plantaginea, species most widely
dissimilar in general habit, 'reproduced itself as perfectly as if it
had been a natural species from the mountains of Chile.' I have taken
some pains to ascertain the degree of fertility of some of the complex
crosses of Rhododendrons, and I am assured that many of them are
perfectly fertile. Mr C. Noble, for instance, informs me that he
raises stocks for grafting from a hybrid
In regard to animals, much fewer experiments have been Although I do not know of any thoroughly well-authenticated cases
of perfectly fertile hybrid animals, I have some reason to believe
that the hybrids from Cervulus vaginalis and Reevesii, and from
Phasianus colchicus with p. torquatus and with p. versicolor are
perfectly fertile. The hybrids from the common and Chinese geese (A.
cygnoides), species which are so different that they are generally
ranked in distinct genera, have often bred in this country with either
pure parent, and in one single instance they have bred A doctrine which originated with Pallas, has been
Finally, looking to all the ascertained facts on the intercrossing
of plants and animals, it may be concluded that some degree of
sterility, both in first crosses and in hybrids, is an extremely
general result; but that it cannot, under our present state of
knowledge, be considered as absolutely universal.
We will now consider a little more in detail the
It has been already remarked, that the degree of fertility, both of
first crosses and of hybrids, graduates from zero to perfect
fertility. It is surprising in how many curious ways this gradation
can be shown to exist; but only the barest outline of the facts can
here be given. When pollen from a plant of one family is placed on the
stigma of a plant of a distinct family, it exerts no more influence
than so much inorganic dust. From this absolute zero of fertility, the
pollen of different species of the same genus applied to the stigma of
some one species, yields a perfect gradation in the number of seeds
produced, up to nearly complete or even quite complete fertility; and,
as we have seen, in certain abnormal cases, even to an excess of
fertility, beyond that which the plant's own pollen will produce. So
in hybrids themselves, there are some which never have produced, and
probably never would produce, even with the pollen of either pure
parent, a single fertile seed: but in some of these cases a first
trace of fertility may be detected, by the pollen of one of the pure
parent-species causing the flower of the hybrid to wither earlier than
it otherwise would have done; and the early withering of the flower is
well known to be a sign
Hybrids from two species which are very difficult to cross, and
which rarely produce any offspring, are generally very sterile; but
the parallelism between the difficulty of making a first cross, and
the sterility of the hybrids thus produced -- two classes of
facts which are generally confounded together -- is by no means
strict. There are many cases, in which two pure species can be The fertility, both of first crosses and of hybrids, is more easily
affected by unfavourable conditions, than is the fertility of pure
species. But the degree of fertility is likewise innately variable;
for it is not always the same when the same two species are crossed
under the same circumstances, but depends in part upon the
constitution of the individuals which happen to have been chosen for
the experiment. So it is with hybrids, for their degree of fertility
is often found to differ greatly in the several individuals raised
from seed out of the same capsule and exposed to exactly the same
conditions.
By the term systematic affinity is meant, the resemblance between
species in structure and in constitution, more especially in the
structure of parts which are of high physiological importance and
which differ little in the allied species. Now the fertility of first
crosses
No one has been able to point out what kind, or what amount, of
difference in any recognisable character is sufficient to prevent two
species crossing. It can be shown that plants most widely different in
habit and general appearance, and having strongly marked differences
in every part of the flower, even in the pollen, in the fruit, and in
the cotyledons, can be crossed. Annual and perennial plants, deciduous
and evergreen trees, plants inhabiting different stations and fitted
for extremely different climates, can often be crossed with ease.
By a reciprocal cross between two species, I mean the case, for
instance, of a stallion-horse being first crossed with a female-ass,
and then a male-ass with a mare: these two species may then be said to
have been reciprocally crossed. There is often the widest possible
difference in the facility of making reciprocal crosses. Such cases
are highly important, for they prove that the capacity in any two
species to cross is often completely independent of their systematic
affinity, or of any recognisable difference in their whole
organisation. On the other hand, these cases clearly show that the
capacity for crossing is connected with constitutional differences
imperceptible by us, and confined to the reproductive system. This
difference in the result of reciprocal crosses between the same two
species was long ago observed by Kölreuter. To give an instance:
Mirabilis jalappa can easily be fertilised by the pollen of M.
longiflora, and the hybrids thus produced are sufficiently fertile; but
Kölreuter tried more than two hundred times, during eight
following years, to fertilise reciprocally M. longiflora with the
pollen of M. jalappa, and utterly failed. Several other equally
striking cases could be given. Thuret has observed the same fact with
certain sea-weeds or Fuci. Gärtner, moreover, found that this
difference of facility in making reciprocal crosses is extremely
common in a lesser degree. He has observed it even between forms so
closely related (as Matthiola annua and glabra) that many botanists
rank them only as varieties. It is also a remarkable fact, that
hybrids raised from reciprocal crosses, though of course compounded of
Several other singular rules could be given from
Considering the several rules now given, which govern the fertility
of first crosses and of hybrids, we see that when forms, which must be
considered as good and distinct species, are united, their fertility
graduates from zero to perfect fertility, or even to fertility under
certain conditions in excess. That their fertility, besides being
eminently susceptible to favourable and unfavourable conditions, is
innately variable. That it is by no means always the same in degree in
the first cross and in the hybrids produced from this cross. That the
fertility of hybrids is not related to the degree in which they
resemble in external appearance either parent. And lastly, that the
facility of making a first cross between any two species is not always
governed by their systematic affinity or
Now do these complex and singular rules indicate that species have
been endowed with sterility simply to prevent their becoming
confounded in nature? I think not. For why should the sterility be so
extremely different in degree, when various species are crossed, all
of which we must suppose it would be equally important to keep from
blending together? Why should the degree of sterility be innately
variable in the individuals of the same species? Why should some
species cross with facility, and yet produce very sterile hybrids; and
other species cross with extreme difficulty, and yet produce fairly
fertile hybrids? Why should there often be so great a difference in
the result of a reciprocal cross between the same two species? Why, i
inter se. This was effected by Mr Eyton, who
raised two hybrids from the same parents but from different hatches;
and from these two birds he raised no less than