<p>In all the cases hitherto given the male is more strongly or brighter coloured
than the female, and differs from the young of both sexes. But as with some few
birds it is the female which is brighter coloured than the male, so with the
Rhesus monkey (Macacus rhesus), the female has a large surface of naked skin
round the tail, of a brilliant carmine red, which, as I was assured by the
keepers in the Zoological Gardens, periodically becomes even yet more vivid,
and her face also is pale red. On the other hand, in the adult male and in the
young of both sexes (as I saw in the Gardens), neither the naked skin at the
posterior end of the body, nor the face, shew a trace of red. It appears,
however, from some published accounts, that the male does occasionally, or
during certain seasons, exhibit some traces of the red. Although he is thus
less ornamented than the female, yet in the larger size of his body, larger
canine teeth, more developed whiskers, more prominent superciliary ridges, he
follows the common rule of the male excelling the female.</p>
<p>I have now given all the cases known to me of a difference in colour between
the sexes of mammals. Some of these may be the result of variations confined to
one sex and transmitted to the same sex, without any good being gained, and
therefore without the aid of selection. We have instances of this with our
domesticated animals, as in the males of certain cats being rusty-red, whilst
the females are tortoise-shell coloured. Analogous cases occur in nature: Mr.
Bartlett has seen many black varieties of the jaguar, leopard, vulpine
phalanger, and wombat; and he is certain that all, or nearly all these animals,
were males. On the other hand, with wolves, foxes, and apparently American
squirrels, both sexes are occasionally born black. Hence it is quite possible
that with some mammals a difference in colour between the sexes, especially
when this is congenital, may simply be the result, without the aid of
selection, of the occurrence of one or more variations, which from the first
were sexually limited in their transmission. Nevertheless it is improbable that
the diversified, vivid, and contrasted colours of certain quadrupeds, for
instance, of the above monkeys and antelopes, can thus be accounted for. We
should bear in mind that these colours do not appear in the male at birth, but
only at or near maturity; and that unlike ordinary variations, they are lost if
the male be emasculated. It is on the whole probable that the strongly-marked
colours and other ornamental characters of male quadrupeds are beneficial to
them in their rivalry with other males, and have consequently been acquired
through sexual selection. This view is strengthened by the differences in
colour between the sexes occurring almost exclusively, as may be collected from
the previous details, in those groups and sub-groups of mammals which present
other and strongly-marked secondary sexual characters; these being likewise due
to sexual selection.</p>
<p>Quadrupeds manifestly take notice of colour. Sir S. Baker repeatedly observed
that the African elephant and rhinoceros attacked white or grey horses with
special fury. I have elsewhere shewn (32. The ‘Variation of Animals and
Plants under Domestication,’ 1868, vol. ii. pp. 102, 103.) that half-wild
horses apparently prefer to pair with those of the same colour, and that herds
of fallow-deer of different colours, though living together, have long kept
distinct. It is a more significant fact that a female zebra would not admit the
addresses of a male ass until he was painted so as to resemble a zebra, and
then, as John Hunter remarks, “she received him very readily. In this
curious fact, we have instinct excited by mere colour, which had so strong an
effect as to get the better of everything else. But the male did not require
this, the female being an animal somewhat similar to himself, was sufficient to
rouse him.” (33. ‘Essays and Observations,’ by J. Hunter,
edited by Owen, 1861, vol. i. p. 194.)</p>
<p>In an earlier chapter we have seen that the mental powers of the higher animals
do not differ in kind, though greatly in degree, from the corresponding powers
of man, especially of the lower and barbarous races; and it would appear that
even their taste for the beautiful is not widely different from that of the
Quadrumana. As the negro of Africa raises the flesh on his face into parallel
ridges “or cicatrices, high above the natural surface, which unsightly
deformities are considered great personal attractions” (34. Sir S. Baker,
‘The Nile Tributaries of Abyssinia,’ 1867.);—as negroes and
savages in many parts of the world paint their faces with red, blue, white, or
black bars,—so the male mandrill of Africa appears to have acquired his
deeply-furrowed and gaudily-coloured face from having been thus rendered
attractive to the female. No doubt it is to us a most grotesque notion that the
posterior end of the body should be coloured for the sake of ornament even more
brilliantly than the face; but this is not more strange than that the tails of
many birds should be especially decorated.</p>
<p>With mammals we do not at present possess any evidence that the males take
pains to display their charms before the female; and the elaborate manner in
which this is performed by male birds and other animals is the strongest
argument in favour of the belief that the females admire, or are excited by,
the ornaments and colours displayed before them. There is, however, a striking
parallelism between mammals and birds in all their secondary sexual characters,
namely in their weapons for fighting with rival males, in their ornamental
appendages, and in their colours. In both classes, when the male differs from
the female, the young of both sexes almost always resemble each other, and in a
large majority of cases resemble the adult female. In both classes the male
assumes the characters proper to his sex shortly before the age of
reproduction; and if emasculated at an early period, loses them. In both
classes the change of colour is sometimes seasonal, and the tints of the naked
parts sometimes become more vivid during the act of courtship. In both classes
the male is almost always more vividly or strongly coloured than the female,
and is ornamented with larger crests of hair or feathers, or other such
appendages. In a few exceptional cases the female in both classes is more
highly ornamented than the male. With many mammals, and at least in the case of
one bird, the male is more odoriferous than the female. In both classes the
voice of the male is more powerful than that of the female. Considering this
parallelism, there can be little doubt that the same cause, whatever it may be,
has acted on mammals and birds; and the result, as far as ornamental characters
are concerned, may be attributed, as it appears to me, to the long-continued
preference of the individuals of one sex for certain individuals of the
opposite sex, combined with their success in leaving a larger number of
offspring to inherit their superior attractions.</p>
<h3>EQUAL TRANSMISSION OF ORNAMENTAL CHARACTERS TO BOTH SEXES.</h3>
<p>With many birds, ornaments, which analogy leads us to believe were primarily
acquired by the males, have been transmitted equally, or almost equally, to
both sexes; and we may now enquire how far this view applies to mammals. With a
considerable number of species, especially of the smaller kinds, both sexes
have been coloured, independently of sexual selection, for the sake of
protection; but not, as far as I can judge, in so many cases, nor in so
striking a manner, as in most of the lower classes. Audubon remarks that he
often mistook the musk-rat (35. Fiber zibethicus, Audubon and Bachman,
‘The Quadrupeds of North America,’ 1846, p. 109.), whilst sitting
on the banks of a muddy stream, for a clod of earth, so complete was the
resemblance. The hare on her form is a familiar instance of concealment through
colour; yet this principle partly fails in a closely-allied species, the
rabbit, for when running to its burrow, it is made conspicuous to the
sportsman, and no doubt to all beasts of prey, by its upturned white tail. No
one doubts that the quadrupeds inhabiting snow-clad regions have been rendered
white to protect them from their enemies, or to favour their stealing on their
prey. In regions where snow never lies for long, a white coat would be
injurious; consequently, species of this colour are extremely rare in the
hotter parts of the world. It deserves notice that many quadrupeds inhabiting
moderately cold regions, although they do not assume a white winter dress,
become paler during this season; and this apparently is the direct result of
the conditions to which they have long been exposed. Pallas (36. ‘Novae
species Quadrupedum e Glirium ordine,’ 1778, p. 7. What I have called the
roe is the Capreolus sibiricus subecaudatus of Pallas.) states that in Siberia
a change of this nature occurs with the wolf, two species of Mustela, the
domestic horse, the Equus hemionus, the domestic cow, two species of antelopes,
the musk-deer, the roe, elk, and reindeer. The roe, for instance, has a red
summer and a greyish-white winter coat; and the latter may perhaps serve as a
protection to the animal whilst wandering through the leafless thickets,
sprinkled with snow and hoar-frost. If the above-named animals were gradually
to extend their range into regions perpetually covered with snow, their pale
winter-coats would probably be rendered through natural selection, whiter and
whiter, until they became as white as snow.</p>
<p>Mr. Reeks has given me a curious instance of an animal profiting by being
peculiarly coloured. He raised from fifty to sixty white and brown piebald
rabbits in a large walled orchard; and he had at the same time some similarly
coloured cats in his house. Such cats, as I have often noticed, are very
conspicuous during day; but as they used to lie in watch during the dusk at the
mouths of the burrows, the rabbits apparently did not distinguish them from
their parti-coloured brethren. The result was that, within eighteen months,
every one of these parti-coloured rabbits was destroyed; and there was evidence
that this was effected by the cats. Colour seems to be advantageous to another
animal, the skunk, in a manner of which we have had many instances in other
classes. No animal will voluntarily attack one of these creatures on account of
the dreadful odour which it emits when irritated; but during the dusk it would
not easily be recognised and might be attacked by a beast of prey. Hence it is,
as Mr. Belt believes (37. ‘The Naturalist in Nicaragua,’ p. 249.),
that the skunk is provided with a great white bushy tail, which serves as a
conspicuous warning.</p>
<p>[Fig. 70. Tragelaphus scriptus, male (from the Knowsley Menagerie).</p>
<p>Fig. 71. Damalis pygarga, male (from the Knowsley Menagerie).]</p>
<p>Although we must admit that many quadrupeds have received their present tints
either as a protection, or as an aid in procuring prey, yet with a host of
species, the colours are far too conspicuous and too singularly arranged to
allow us to suppose that they serve for these purposes. We may take as an
illustration certain antelopes; when we see the square white patch on the
throat, the white marks on the fetlocks, and the round black spots on the ears,
all more distinct in the male of the Portax picta, than in the
female;—when we see that the colours are more vivid, that the narrow
white lines on the flank and the broad white bar on the shoulder are more
distinct in the male Oreas derbyanus than in the female;—when we see a
similar difference between the sexes of the curiously-ornamented Tragelaphus
scriptus (Fig. 70),—we cannot believe that differences of this kind are
of any service to either sex in their daily habits of life. It seems a much
more probable conclusion that the various marks were first acquired by the
males and their colours intensified through sexual selection, and then
partially transferred to the females. If this view be admitted, there can be
little doubt that the equally singular colours and marks of many other
antelopes, though common to both sexes, have been gained and transmitted in a
like manner. Both sexes, for instance, of the koodoo (Strepsiceros kudu) (Fig.
64) have narrow white vertical lines on their hind flanks, and an elegant
angular white mark on their foreheads. Both sexes in the genus Damalis are very
oddly coloured; in D. pygarga the back and neck are purplish-red, shading on
the flanks into black; and these colours are abruptly separated from the white
belly and from a large white space on the buttocks; the head is still more
oddly coloured, a large oblong white mask, narrowly-edged with black, covers
the face up to the eyes (Fig. 71); there are three white stripes on the
forehead, and the ears are marked with white. The fawns of this species are of
a uniform pale yellowish-brown. In Damalis albifrons the colouring of the head
differs from that in the last species in a single white stripe replacing the
three stripes, and in the ears being almost wholly white. (38. See the fine
plates in A. Smith’s ‘Zoology of South Africa,’ and Dr.
Gray’s ‘Gleanings from the Menagerie of Knowsley.’) After
having studied to the best of my ability the sexual differences of animals
belonging to all classes, I cannot avoid the conclusion that the
curiously-arranged colours of many antelopes, though common to both sexes, are
the result of sexual selection primarily applied to the male.</p>
<p>The same conclusion may perhaps be extended to the tiger, one of the most
beautiful animals in the world, the sexes of which cannot be distinguished by
colour, even by the dealers in wild beasts. Mr. Wallace believes (39.
‘Westminster Review,’ July 1, 1867, p. 5.) that the striped coat of
the tiger “so assimilates with the vertical stems of the bamboo, as to
assist greatly in concealing him from his approaching prey.” But this
view does not appear to me satisfactory. We have some slight evidence that his
beauty may be due to sexual selection, for in two species of Felis the
analogous marks and colours are rather brighter in the male than in the female.
The zebra is conspicuously striped, and stripes cannot afford any protection in
the open plains of South Africa. Burchell (40. ‘Travels in South
Africa,’ 1824, vol. ii. p. 315.) in describing a herd says, “their
sleek ribs glistened in the sun, and the brightness and regularity of their
striped coats presented a picture of extraordinary beauty, in which probably
they are not surpassed by any other quadruped.” But as throughout the
whole group of the Equidae the sexes are identical in colour, we have here no
evidence of sexual selection. Nevertheless he who attributes the white and dark
vertical stripes on the flanks of various antelopes to this process, will
probably extend the same view to the Royal Tiger and beautiful Zebra.</p>
<p>We have seen in a former chapter that when young animals belonging to any class
follow nearly the same habits of life as their parents, and yet are coloured in
a different manner, it may be inferred that they have retained the colouring of
some ancient and extinct progenitor. In the family of pigs, and in the tapirs,
the young are marked with longitudinal stripes, and thus differ from all the
existing adult species in these two groups. With many kinds of deer the young
are marked with elegant white spots, of which their parents exhibit not a
trace. A graduated series can be followed from the axis deer, both sexes of
which at all ages and during all seasons are beautifully spotted (the male
being rather more strongly coloured than the female), to species in which
neither the old nor the young are spotted. I will specify some of the steps in
this series. The Mantchurian deer (Cervus mantchuricus) is spotted during the
whole year, but, as I have seen in the Zoological Gardens, the spots are much
plainer during the summer, when the general colour of the coat is lighter, than
during the winter, when the general colour is darker and the horns are fully
developed. In the hog-deer (Hyelaphus porcinus) the spots are extremely
conspicuous during the summer when the coat is reddish-brown, but quite
disappear during the winter when the coat is brown. (41. Dr. Gray,
‘Gleanings from the Menagerie of Knowsley,’ p. 64. Mr. Blyth, in
speaking (‘Land and Water,’ 1869, p. 42) of the hog-deer of Ceylon,
says it is more brightly spotted with white than the common hog-deer, at the
season when it renews its horns.) In both these species the young are spotted.
In the Virginian deer the young are likewise spotted, and about five per cent.
of the adult animals living in Judge Caton’s park, as I am informed by
him, temporarily exhibit at the period when the red summer coat is being
replaced by the bluish winter coat, a row of spots on each flank, which are
always the same in number, though very variable in distinctness. From this
condition there is but a very small step to the complete absence of spots in
the adults at all seasons; and, lastly, to their absence at all ages and
seasons, as occurs with certain species. From the existence of this perfect
series, and more especially from the fawns of so many species being spotted, we
may conclude that the now living members of the deer family are the descendants
of some ancient species which, like the axis deer, was spotted at all ages and
seasons. A still more ancient progenitor probably somewhat resembled the
Hyomoschus aquaticus—for this animal is spotted, and the hornless males
have large exserted canine teeth, of which some few true deer still retain
rudiments. Hyomoschus, also, offers one of those interesting cases of a form
linking together two groups, for it is intermediate in certain osteological
characters between the pachyderms and ruminants, which were formerly thought to
be quite distinct. (42. Falconer and Cautley, ‘Proc. Geolog. Soc.’
1843; and Falconer’s ‘Pal. Memoirs,’ vol. i. p. 196.)</p>
<p>A curious difficulty here arises. If we admit that coloured spots and stripes
were first acquired as ornaments, how comes it that so many existing deer, the
descendants of an aboriginally spotted animal, and all the species of pigs and
tapirs, the descendants of an aboriginally striped animal, have lost in their
adult state their former ornaments? I cannot satisfactorily answer this
question. We may feel almost sure that the spots and stripes disappeared at or
near maturity in the progenitors of our existing species, so that they were
still retained by the young; and, owing to the law of inheritance at
corresponding ages, were transmitted to the young of all succeeding
generations. It may have been a great advantage to the lion and puma, from the
open nature of their usual haunts, to have lost their stripes, and to have been
thus rendered less conspicuous to their prey; and if the successive variations,
by which this end was gained, occurred rather late in life, the young would
have retained their stripes, as is now the case. As to deer, pigs, and tapirs,
Fritz Müller has suggested to me that these animals, by the removal of their
spots or stripes through natural selection, would have been less easily seen by
their enemies; and that they would have especially required this protection, as
soon as the carnivora increased in size and number during the tertiary periods.
This may be the true explanation, but it is rather strange that the young
should not have been thus protected, and still more so that the adults of some
species should have retained their spots, either partially or completely,
during part of the year. We know that, when the domestic ass varies and becomes
reddish-brown, grey, or black, the stripes on the shoulders and even on the
spine frequently disappear, though we cannot explain the cause. Very few
horses, except dun-coloured kinds, have stripes on any part of their bodies,
yet we have good reason to believe that the aboriginal horse was striped on the
legs and spine, and probably on the shoulders. (43. The ‘Variation of
Animals and Plants under Domestication,’ 1868, vol. i. pp. 61-64.) Hence
the disappearance of the spots and stripes in our adult existing deer, pigs,
and tapirs, may be due to a change in the general colour of their coats; but
whether this change was effected through sexual or natural selection, or was
due to the direct action of the conditions of life, or to some other unknown
cause, it is impossible to decide. An observation made by Mr. Sclater well
illustrates our ignorance of the laws which regulate the appearance and
disappearance of stripes; the species of Asinus which inhabit the Asiatic
continent are destitute of stripes, not having even the cross shoulder-stripe,
whilst those which inhabit Africa are conspicuously striped, with the partial
exception of A. taeniopus, which has only the cross shoulder-stripe and
generally some faint bars on the legs; and this species inhabits the almost
intermediate region of Upper Egypt and Abyssinia. (44. ‘Proc. Zool.
Soc.’ 1862, p. 164. See, also, Dr. Hartmann, ‘Ann. d. Landw.’
Bd. xliii. s. 222.)</p>
<h3>QUADRUMANA.</h3>
<p>[Fig. 72. Head of Semnopithecus rubicundus. This and the following figures
(from Prof. Gervais) are given to shew the odd arrangement and development of
the hair on the head.</p>
<p>Fig. 73. Head of Semnopithecus comatus.</p>
<p>Fig. 74. Head of Cebus capucinus.</p>
<p>Fig. 75. Head of Ateles marginatus.</p>
<p>Fig. 76. Head of Cebus vellerosus.]</p>
<p>Before we conclude, it will be well to add a few remarks on the ornaments of
monkeys. In most of the species the sexes resemble each other in colour, but in
some, as we have seen, the males differ from the females, especially in the
colour of the naked parts of the skin, in the development of the beard,
whiskers, and mane. Many species are coloured either in so extraordinary or so
beautiful a manner, and are furnished with such curious and elegant crests of
hair, that we can hardly avoid looking at these characters as having been
gained for the sake of ornament. The accompanying figures (Figs. 72 to 76)
serve to shew the arrangement of the hair on the face and head in several
species. It is scarcely conceivable that these crests of hair, and the strongly
contrasted colours of the fur and skin, can be the result of mere variability
without the aid of selection; and it is inconceivable that they can be of use
in any ordinary way to these animals. If so, they have probably been gained
through sexual selection, though transmitted equally, or almost equally, to
both sexes. With many of the Quadrumana, we have additional evidence of the
action of sexual selection in the greater size and strength of the males, and
in the greater development of their canine teeth, in comparison with the
females.</p>
<p>[Fig. 77. Cercopithecus petaurista (from Brehm).]</p>
<p>A few instances will suffice of the strange manner in which both sexes of some
species are coloured, and of the beauty of others. The face of the
Cercopithecus petaurista (Fig. 77) is black, the whiskers and beard being
white, with a defined, round, white spot on the nose, covered with short white
hair, which gives to the animal an almost ludicrous aspect. The Semnopithecus
frontatus likewise has a blackish face with a long black beard, and a large
naked spot on the forehead of a bluish-white colour. The face of Macacus
lasiotus is dirty flesh-coloured, with a defined red spot on each cheek. The
appearance of Cercocebus aethiops is grotesque, with its black face, white
whiskers and collar, chestnut head, and a large naked white spot over each
eyelid. In very many species, the beard, whiskers, and crests of hair round the
face are of a different colour from the rest of the head, and when different,
are always of a lighter tint (45. I observed this fact in the Zoological
Gardens; and many cases may be seen in the coloured plates in Geoffroy
St.-Hilaire and F. Cuvier, ‘Histoire Nat. des Mammifères,’ tom. i.
1824.), being often pure white, sometimes bright yellow, or reddish. The whole
face of the South American Brachyurus calvus is of a “glowing scarlet
hue”; but this colour does not appear until the animal is nearly mature.
(46. Bates, ‘The Naturalist on the Amazons,’ 1863, vol. ii. p.
310.) The naked skin of the face differs wonderfully in colour in the various
species. It is often brown or flesh-colour, with parts perfectly white, and
often as black as that of the most sooty negro. In the Brachyurus the scarlet
tint is brighter than that of the most blushing Caucasian damsel. It is
sometimes more distinctly orange than in any Mongolian, and in several species
it is blue, passing into violet or grey. In all the species known to Mr.
Bartlett, in which the adults of both sexes have strongly-coloured faces, the
colours are dull or absent during early youth. This likewise holds good with
the mandrill and Rhesus, in which the face and the posterior parts of the body
are brilliantly coloured in one sex alone. In these latter cases we have reason
to believe that the colours were acquired through sexual selection; and we are
naturally led to extend the same view to the foregoing species, though both
sexes when adult have their faces coloured in the same manner.</p>
<p>[Fig. 78. Cercopithecus diana (from Brehm).]</p>
<p>Although many kinds of monkeys are far from beautiful according to our taste,
other species are universally admired for their elegant appearance and bright
colours. The Semnopithecus nemaeus, though peculiarly coloured, is described as
extremely pretty; the orange-tinted face is surrounded by long whiskers of
glossy whiteness, with a line of chestnut-red over the eyebrows; the fur on the
back is of a delicate grey, with a square patch on the loins, the tail and the
fore-arms being of a pure white; a gorget of chestnut surmounts the chest; the
thighs are black, with the legs chestnut-red. I will mention only two other
monkeys for their beauty; and I have selected these as presenting slight sexual
differences in colour, which renders it in some degree probable that both sexes
owe their elegant appearance to sexual selection. In the moustache-monkey
(Cercopithecus cephus) the general colour of the fur is mottled-greenish with
the throat white; in the male the end of the tail is chestnut, but the face is
the most ornamented part, the skin being chiefly bluish-grey, shading into a
blackish tint beneath the eyes, with the upper lip of a delicate blue, clothed
on the lower edge with a thin black moustache; the whiskers are
orange-coloured, with the upper part black, forming a band which extends
backwards to the ears, the latter being clothed with whitish hairs. In the
Zoological Society’s Gardens I have often overheard visitors admiring the
beauty of another monkey, deservedly called Cercopithecus diana (Fig. 78); the
general colour of the fur is grey; the chest and inner surface of the forelegs
are white; a large triangular defined space on the hinder part of the back is
rich chestnut; in the male the inner sides of the thighs and the abdomen are
delicate fawn-coloured, and the top of the head is black; the face and ears are
intensely black, contrasting finely with a white transverse crest over the
eyebrows and a long white peaked beard, of which the basal portion is black.
(47. I have seen most of the above monkeys in the Zoological Society’s
Gardens. The description of the Semnopithecus nemaeus is taken from Mr. W.C.
Martin’s ‘Natural History of Mammalia,’ 1841, p. 460; see
also pp. 475, 523.)</p>
<p>In these and many other monkeys, the beauty and singular arrangement of their
colours, and still more the diversified and elegant arrangement of the crests
and tufts of hair on their heads, force the conviction on my mind that these
characters have been acquired through sexual selection exclusively as
ornaments.</p>
<h3>A SUMMARY.</h3>
<p>The law of battle for the possession of the female appears to prevail
throughout the whole great class of mammals. Most naturalists will admit that
the greater size, strength, courage, and pugnacity of the male, his special
weapons of offence, as well as his special means of defence, have been acquired
or modified through that form of selection which I have called sexual. This
does not depend on any superiority in the general struggle for life, but on
certain individuals of one sex, generally the male, being successful in
conquering other males, and leaving a larger number of offspring to inherit
their superiority than do the less successful males.</p>
<p>There is another and more peaceful kind of contest, in which the males
endeavour to excite or allure the females by various charms. This is probably
carried on in some cases by the powerful odours emitted by the males during the
breeding-season; the odoriferous glands having been acquired through sexual
selection. Whether the same view can be extended to the voice is doubtful, for
the vocal organs of the males must have been strengthened by use during
maturity, under the powerful excitements of love, jealousy or rage, and will
consequently have been transmitted to the same sex. Various crests, tufts, and
mantles of hair, which are either confined to the male, or are more developed
in this sex than in the female, seem in most cases to be merely ornamental,
though they sometimes serve as a defence against rival males. There is even
reason to suspect that the branching horns of stags, and the elegant horns of
certain antelopes, though properly serving as weapons of offence or defence,
have been partly modified for ornament.</p>
<p>When the male differs in colour from the female, he generally exhibits darker
and more strongly-contrasted tints. We do not in this class meet with the
splendid red, blue, yellow, and green tints, so common with male birds and many
other animals. The naked parts, however, of certain Quadrumana must be
excepted; for such parts, often oddly situated, are brilliantly coloured in
some species. The colours of the male in other cases may be due to simple
variation, without the aid of selection. But when the colours are diversified
and strongly pronounced, when they are not developed until near maturity, and
when they are lost after emasculation, we can hardly avoid the conclusion that
they have been acquired through sexual selection for the sake of ornament, and
have been transmitted exclusively, or almost exclusively, to the same sex. When
both sexes are coloured in the same manner, and the colours are conspicuous or
curiously arranged, without being of the least apparent use as a protection,
and especially when they are associated with various other ornamental
appendages, we are led by analogy to the same conclusion, namely, that they
have been acquired through sexual selection, although transmitted to both
sexes. That conspicuous and diversified colours, whether confined to the males
or common to both sexes, are as a general rule associated in the same groups
and sub-groups with other secondary sexual characters serving for war or for
ornament, will be found to hold good, if we look back to the various cases
given in this and the last chapter.</p>
<p>The law of the equal transmission of characters to both sexes, as far as colour
and other ornaments are concerned, has prevailed far more extensively with
mammals than with birds; but weapons, such as horns and tusks, have often been
transmitted either exclusively or much more perfectly to the males than to the
females. This is surprising, for, as the males generally use their weapons for
defence against enemies of all kinds, their weapons would have been of service
to the females. As far as we can see, their absence in this sex can be
accounted for only by the form of inheritance which has prevailed. Finally,
with quadrupeds the contest between the individuals of the same sex, whether
peaceful or bloody, has, with the rarest exceptions, been confined to the
males; so that the latter have been modified through sexual selection, far more
commonly than the females, either for fighting with each other or for alluring
the opposite sex.</p>
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