Page:The naturalist on the River Amazons 1863 v1.djvu/286

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
260
THE LOWER AMAZONS.
Chap. VI.

mode in which they occur and their relative geographical positions being in favour of the supposition that H. Thelxiope has been derived from H. Melpomene. Both are nevertheless good and true species in all the essential characters of species; for, as already observed, they do not pair together when existing side by side, nor is their any appearance of reversion to an original common form under the same circumstances.

In the controversy which is being waged amongst Naturalists, since the publication of the Darwinian theory of the origin of species, it has been rightly said that no proof at present existed of the production of a physiological species,—that is, a form which will not interbreed with the one from which it was derived, although given ample opportunities of doing so, and does not exhibit signs of reverting to its parent form when placed under the same conditions with it. Morphological species,—that is, forms which differ to an amount that would justify their being considered good species, have been produced in plenty through selection by man out of variations arising under domestication or cultivation. The facts just given are, therefore, of some scientific importance; for they tend to show that a physiological species can be and is produced in nature out of the varieties of a pre-existing closely allied one. This is not an isolated case; for I observed, in the course of my travels, a number of similar instances. But in very few has it happened that the species which clearly appears to be the parent coexists with one that has been evidently derived from it. Generally the sup-