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tropical and temperate South 1866 1869 1872
South 1859 1860 1861

This similarity 1869 1872
On the other hand, these 1859 1860 1861 1866

offer no greater difficulty than
do
does
corporeal
structures
structure
on the theory of the natural selection of successive, slight, but profitable modifications. We can thus understand why nature moves by graduated steps in endowing different animals of the same class with their several instincts. I have attempted to show how much light the principle of
graduation
gradation
throws on the admirable architectural powers of the hive-bee. Habit no doubt
often
sometimes
comes into play in modifying instincts; but it certainly is not indispensable, as we
see,
see
in the case of neuter insects, which leave no progeny to inherit the effects of long-continued habit. On the view of all the species of the same genus having descended from a common parent, and having inherited much in common, we can understand how it is that allied species, when placed under
considerably
widely
different conditions of life, yet
should
....
follow nearly the same instincts; why the
thrush
thrushes
of tropical and temperate South America, for instance,
lines
line
her
their
nest
nests
with mud like our British species. On the view of instincts having been slowly acquired through natural
selection
selection,
we need not marvel at some instincts being
apparently
apparently
not perfect and liable to mistakes, and at many instincts causing other animals to suffer.
If species be only well-marked and permanent varieties, we can at once see why their crossed offspring should follow the same complex laws in their degrees and kinds of resemblance to their parents,— in being absorbed into each other by successive crosses, and in other such points,— as do the crossed offspring of acknowledged varieties. This similarity would be
strange
a strange
facts
fact,
if species
had
have
been independently
created,
created
and varieties
had
have
been produced
by
through
secondary laws.
If we admit that the geological record is imperfect