That the different stages of development of a species may actually be partly variable and partly constant, and that the variable or constant character of one stage has no influence on the other stages, is shown by the following cases, which are, at the same time, well adapted to throw light on the causes of variability, and are thus calculated to contribute towards the solution of the main problem with which this investigation is concerned.

When, in the following pages, I speak of variability, I do not refer to the occurrence of local varieties, or to variations which occur in the course of time, but I mean a high degree of individual variability—a considerable fluctuation of characters in the individuals of one and the same district or of the same brood. I consider a species to be constant, on the other hand, when the individuals from a small or large district differ from one another only to a very slight extent. Constant forms are likewise generally, but not invariably, such as are poor in local varieties, whilst variable forms are those which are rich in such variations. Since the terms “variable” and “constant” are but relative, I will confine myself to the most extreme cases, those in which the individual peculiarities fluctuate within very wide or very narrow limits.

As no observations upon the degree of variability shown by a species in the different stages of its development were available, I was obliged to fall back upon my own, at least so far as relates to the larval and pupal stages, whilst for the imaginal stage the wide experience of my esteemed friend Dr. Staudinger has been of essential service to me.

Let us in the first place confine our attention to the three chief forms which every Lepidopteron presents, viz. larva, pupa, and imago. With respect to the constancy or variability of these three forms, we actually find in nature all the combinations which are theoretically conceivable.

(1.) There are species which possess a high degree of constancy in all three stages, such, for example, as Limenitis Camilla, Pieris Brassicæ,[171] Sphinx Ligustri, and Euchelia Jacobææ.

(2.) There are species showing a high degree of variability in all three stages. This case must be of rare occurrence, as I am only able to adduce Araschnia Prorsa-Levana, a fact which arises from the circumstance that the pupal stage is, as a rule, but seldom variable.

(3.) There are species which are variable in two stages and constant in the third. To this class, for example, belongs Smerinthus Tiliæ, of which the larva and imago are very variable, whilst the pupa is quite constant. The same is the case with Lasiocampa Pini, the well-known fir moth. Many butterflies show this same phenomenon in other combinations, such, for instance, as Vanessa Urticæ and Polychloros, in which the larva and pupa are very variable, and the imago very constant. In a less degree the same is also the case with Vanessa Atalanta, whilst in Pieris Napi the pupa and imago are variable, and the caterpillar remarkably constant, this likewise being the case with the local form Bryoniæ, which, according to my theory, is to be regarded as the parent form of Napi (See [Part I.] of the present volume).

(4.) There are species which are constant in two stages, and variable only in the third. Thus, a few species can be found in which the larva and pupa are constant and the imago variable. This is the case with Saturnia Yamamai, the imago of which is well known to present numberless shades of colour, varying from light yellow to greyish black, whilst the green caterpillar shows only slight individual differences of marking, and scarcely any differences of colour. The pupa of this species is quite constant. Arctia Caja and Hebe, and Chelonia Plantaginis belong to this same category.

There are a very large number of species which possess very constant imagines and pupæ, but extremely variable larvæ. The following are the cases known to me:—Macroglossa Stellatarum, Fuciformis and Bombyliformis; Chærocampa Elpenor, Celerio, and Nerii; Deilephila Galii, Livornica, Hübn., Hippophaës, Vespertilio, and Zygophylli; Sphinx Convolvuli; Acherontia Atropos; Smerinthus Ocellatus and Tiliæ; Callimorpha Hera; Cucullia Verbasci and Scrophulariæ.