Seite - 294 - in The Origin of Species
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294 ORIGIN OF SPECIES
munity, and those males and females had been continually
selected, which produced more and more of the smaller
workers, until all the workers were in this condition; we
should then have had a species of ant with neuters in nearly
the same condition as those of Myrmica. For the workers of
Myrmica have not even rudiments of ocelli, though the male
and female ants of this genus have well-developed ocelli.
I may give one other case: so confidently did I expect
occasionally to find gradations of important structures be-
tween 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 work-
men building a house, of whom many were five feet four
inches high, and many sixteen feet high; but we must in
addition suppose that the larger workmen had heads four
instead of three times as big as those of the smaller men,
and jaws nearly five times as big. The jaws, moreover, of
the working ants of the several sizes differed wonderfully in
shape, and in the form and number of the teeth. But the
important fact for us is, that, though the workers can be
grouped into castes of different sizes, yet they graduate in-
sensibly into each other, as does the widely-different struc-
ture of their jaws. I speak confidently on this latter point,
as Sir J. Lubbock made drawings for me, with the camera
lucida, of the jaws which I dissected from the workers of
the several sizes. Mr. Bates, in his interesting 'Naturalist on
the Amazons,' has described analogous cases.
With these facts before me, I believe that natural selec-
tion, by acting on the fertile ants or parents, could form a
species which should regularly produce neuters, all of large
size with one form of jaw, or all of small size with widely
different jaws; or lastly, and this is the greatest difficulty,
one set of workers of one size and structure, and simultane-
ously another set of workers of a different size and struc-
ture
; —a graduated series having first been formed, as in the
case of the driver ant, and then the extreme forms having
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Buch The Origin of Species"
The Origin of Species
- Titel
- The Origin of Species
- Autor
- Charles Darwin
- Verlag
- P. F. Collier & Son
- Ort
- New York
- Datum
- 1909
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 10.5 x 16.4 cm
- Seiten
- 568
- Schlagwörter
- Evolutionstheorie, Evolution, Theory of Evolution, Naturwissenschaft, Natural Sciences
- Kategorien
- International
- Naturwissenschaften Biologie
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION 5
- AN HISTORICAL SKETCH of the Progress of Opinion on the Origin of Species 9
- INTRODUCTION 21
- Variation under Domestication 25
- Variation under Nature 58
- Struggle for Existence 76
- Natural Selection; or the Survival of the Fittest 93
- Laws of Variation 145
- Difficulties of the Theory 178
- Miscellaneous Objections to the Theory of Natural Selection 219
- Instinct 262
- Hybridism 298
- On the Imperfection of the Geological Record 333
- On the Geological Succession of Organic Beinss 364
- Geographical Distribution 395
- Geographical Distribution - continued 427
- Mutual Affinities of Organic Beings: Morphology: Embryology: Rudimentary Organs 450
- Recapitulation and Conclusion 499
- GLOSSARY 531
- INDEX 541