2013年8月19日 星期一

On the Law Which Has Regulated the Introduction of New Species


On the Law Which Has Regulated the
Introduction of New Species (S20: 1855)

 

Editor Charles H. Smith's Note: This paper, written at Sarawak in Borneo in February of 1855 and published in Volume 16 (2nd Series) of the Annals and Magazine of Natural History in September 1855, conveys Wallace's first formal statement of his understanding--a pre-natural selection understanding--of the process of biological evolution. Original pagination indicated within double brackets. To link directly to this page, connect with: http://people.wku.edu/charles.smith/wallace/S020.htm

    [[p. 184]] Every naturalist who has directed his attention to the subject of the geographical distribution of animals and plants, must have been interested in the singular facts which it presents. Many of these facts are quite different from what would have been anticipated, and have hitherto been considered as highly curious, but quite inexplicable. None of the explanations attempted from the time of Linnæus are now considered at all satisfactory; none of them have given a cause sufficient to account for the facts known at the time, or comprehensive enough to include all the new facts which have since been, and are daily being added. Of late years, however, a great light has been thrown upon the subject by geological investigations, which have shown that the present state of the earth, and the organisms now inhabiting it, are but the last stage of a long and uninterrupted series of changes which it has undergone, and consequently, that to endeavour to explain and account for its present condition without any reference to those changes (as has frequently been done) must lead to very imperfect and erroneous conclusions.


    The facts proved by geology are briefly these:--That during an immense, but unknown period, the surface of the earth has undergone successive changes; land has sunk beneath the ocean, while fresh land has risen up from it; mountain chains have been elevated; islands have been formed into continents, and continents submerged till they have become islands; and these changes have taken place, not once merely, but perhaps hundreds, perhaps thousands of times:--That all these operations have been more or less continuous, but unequal in their progress, and during the whole series the organic life of the earth has undergone a corresponding alteration. This alteration also has been gradual, but complete; after a certain interval not a single species existing which had lived at the commencement of the period. This complete renewal of the forms of life also appears to have occurred several times:--That from the last of the Geological epochs to the present or Historical epoch, the change of organic life has been gradual: the first appearance of animals now existing can in many cases be traced, their numbers gradually increasing in the more recent formations, while other species continually die out and disappear, so that the present condition of the organic world is clearly derived by a natural process of gradual extinction and creation of species from that of the latest geological periods. We may therefore safely infer a like gradation and natural sequence from one geological epoch to another.

    [[p. 185]] Now, taking this as a fair statement of the results of geological inquiry, we see that the present geographical distribution of life upon the earth must be the result of all the previous changes, both of the surface of the earth itself and of its inhabitants. Many causes no doubt have operated of which we must ever remain in ignorance, and we may therefore expect to find many details very difficult of explanation, and in attempting to give one, must allow ourselves to call into our service geological changes which it is highly probable may have occurred, though we have no direct evidence of their individual operation.
    The great increase of our knowledge within the last twenty years, both of the present and past history of the organic world, has accumulated a body of facts which should afford a sufficient foundation for a comprehensive law embracing and explaining them all, and giving a direction to new researches. It is about ten years since the idea of such a law suggested itself to the writer of this paper, and he has since taken every opportunity of testing it by all the newly ascertained facts with which he has become acquainted, or has been able to observe himself. These have all served to convince him of the correctness of his hypothesis. Fully to enter into such a subject would occupy much space, and it is only in consequence of some views having been lately promulgated, he believes in a wrong direction, that he now ventures to present his ideas to the public, with only such obvious illustrations of the arguments and results as occur to him in a place far removed from all means of reference and exact information.
    The following propositions in Organic Geography and Geology give the main facts on which the hypothesis is founded.

Geography.
1. Large groups, such as classes and orders, are generally spread over the whole earth, while smaller ones, such as families and genera, are frequently confined to one portion, often to a very limited district.
2. In widely distributed families the genera are often limited in range; in widely distributed genera, well-marked groups of species are peculiar to each geographical district.
3. When a group is confined to one district, and is rich in species, it is almost invariably the case that the most closely allied species are found in the same locality or in closely adjoining localities, and that therefore the natural sequence of the species by affinity is also geographical.
4. In countries of a similar climate, but separated by a wide sea or lofty mountains, the families, genera and species of the [[p. 186]] one are often represented by closely allied families, genera and species peculiar to the other.

Geology.
5. The distribution of the organic world in time is very similar to its present distribution in space.
6. Most of the larger and some small groups extend through several geological periods.
7. In each period, however, there are peculiar groups, found nowhere else, and extending through one or several formations.
8. Species of one genus, or genera of one family occurring in the same geological time are more closely allied than those separated in time.
9. As generally in geography no species or genus occurs in two very distant localities without being also found in intermediate places, so in geology the life of a species or genus has not been interrupted. In other words, no group or species has come into existence twice.
10. The following law may be deduced from these facts:--Every species has come into existence coincident both in space and time with a pre-existing closely allied species.
 

    This law agrees with, explains and illustrates all the facts connected with the following branches of the subject:--1st. The system of natural affinities. 2nd. The distribution of animals and plants in space. 3rd. The same in time, including all the phænomena of representative groups, and those which Professor Forbes supposed to manifest polarity. 4th. The phænomena of rudimentary organs. We will briefly endeavour to show its bearing upon each of these.

    If the law above enunciated be true, it follows that the natural series of affinities will also represent the order in which the several species came into existence, each one having had for its immediate antitype a closely allied species existing at the time of its origin. It is evidently possible that two or three distinct species may have had a common antitype, and that each of these may again have become the antitypes from which other closely allied species were created. The effect of this would be, that so long as each species has had but one new species formed on its model, the line of affinities will be simple, and may be represented by placing the several species in direct succession in a straight line. But if two or more species have been independently formed on the plan of a common antitype, then the series of affinities will be compound, and can only be represented by a forked or many-branched line. Now, all attempts at a Natural classification and arrangement of organic beings show, that both [[p. 187]] these plans have obtained in creation. Sometimes the series of affinities can be well represented for a space by a direct progression from species to species or from group to group, but it is generally found impossible so to continue. There constantly occur two or more modifications of an organ or modifications of two distinct organs, leading us on to two distinct series of species, which at length differ so much from each other as to form distinct genera or families. These are the parallel series or representative groups of naturalists, and they often occur in different countries, or are found fossil in different formations. They are said to have an analogy to each other when they are so far removed from their common antitype as to differ in many important points of structure, while they still preserve a family resemblance. We thus see how difficult it is to determine in every case whether a given relation is an analogy or an affinity, for it is evident that as we go back along the parallel or divergent series, towards the common antitype, the analogy which existed between the two groups becomes an affinity. We are also made aware of the difficulty of arriving at a true classification, even in a small and perfect group;--in the actual state of nature it is almost impossible, the species being so numerous and the modifications of form and structure so varied, arising probably from the immense number of species which have served as antitypes for the existing species, and thus produced a complicated branching of the lines of affinity, as intricate as the twigs of a gnarled oak or the vascular system of the human body. Again, if we consider that we have only fragments of this vast system, the stem and main branches being represented by extinct species of which we have no knowledge, while a vast mass of limbs and boughs and minute twigs and scattered leaves is what we have to place in order, and determine the true position each originally occupied with regard to the others, the whole difficulty of the true Natural System of classification becomes apparent to us.

    We shall thus find ourselves obliged to reject all those systems of classification which arrange species or groups in circles, as well as those which fix a definite number for the divisions of each group. The latter class have been very generally rejected by naturalists, as contrary to nature, notwithstanding the ability with which they have been advocated; but the circular system of affinities seems to have obtained a deeper hold, many eminent naturalists having to some extent adopted it. We have, however, never been able to find a case in which the circle has been closed by a direct and close affinity. In most cases a palpable analogy has been substituted, in others the affinity is very obscure or altogether doubtful. The complicated branching of the lines of affinities in extensive groups must also afford great [[p. 188]] facilities for giving a show of probability to any such purely artificial arrangements. Their death-blow was given by the admirable paper of the lamented Mr. Strickland, published in the 'Annals of Natural History,' in which he so clearly showed the true synthetical method of discovering the Natural System.
    If we now consider the geographical distribution of animals and plants upon the earth, we shall find all the facts beautifully in accordance with, and readily explained by, the present hypothesis. A country having species, genera, and whole families peculiar to it, will be the necessary result of its having been isolated for a long period, sufficient for many series of species to have been created on the type of pre-existing ones, which, as well as many of the earlier-formed species, have become extinct, and thus made the groups appear isolated. If in any case the antitype had an extensive range, two or more groups of species might have been formed, each varying from it in a different manner, and thus producing several representative or analogous groups. The Sylviadæ of Europe and the Sylvicolidæ of North America, the Heliconidæ of South America and the Euplœas of the East, the group of Trogons inhabiting Asia, and that peculiar to South America, are examples that may be accounted for in this manner.

    Such phænomena as are exhibited by the Galapagos Islands, which contain little groups of plants and animals peculiar to themselves, but most nearly allied to those of South America, have not hitherto received any, even a conjectural explanation. The Galapagos are a volcanic group of high antiquity, and have probably never been more closely connected with the continent than they are at present. They must have been first peopled, like other newly-formed islands, by the action of winds and currents, and at a period sufficiently remote to have had the original species die out, and the modified prototypes only remain. In the same way we can account for the separate islands having each their peculiar species, either on the supposition that the same original emigration peopled the whole of the islands with the same species from which differently modified prototypes were created, or that the islands were successively peopled from each other, but that new species have been created in each on the plan of the pre-existing ones. St. Helena is a similar case of a very ancient island having obtained an entirely peculiar, though limited, flora. On the other hand, no example is known of an island which can be proved geologically to be of very recent origin (late in the Tertiary, for instance), and yet possesses generic or family groups, or even many species peculiar to itself.

    When a range of mountains has attained a great elevation, and has so remained during a long geological period, the species [[p. 189]] of the two sides at and near their bases will be often very different, representative species of some genera occurring, and even whole genera being peculiar to one side only, as is remarkably seen in the case of the Andes and Rocky Mountains. A similar phænomenon occurs when an island has been separated from a continent at a very early period. The shallow sea between the Peninsula of Malacca, Java, Sumatra and Borneo was probably a continent or large island at an early epoch, and may have become submerged as the volcanic ranges of Java and Sumatra were elevated. The organic results we see in the very considerable number of species of animals common to some or all of these countries, while at the same time a number of closely allied representative species exist peculiar to each, showing that a considerable period has elapsed since their separation. The facts of geographical distribution and of geology may thus mutually explain each other in doubtful cases, should the principles here advocated be clearly established.

    In all those cases in which an island has been separated from a continent, or raised by volcanic or coralline action from the sea, or in which a mountain-chain has been elevated, in a recent geological epoch, the phænomena of peculiar groups or even of single representative species will not exist. Our own island is an example of this, its separation from the continent being geologically very recent, and we have consequently scarcely a species which is peculiar to it; while the Alpine range, one of the most recent mountain elevations, separates faunas and floras which scarcely differ more than may be due to climate and latitude alone.

    The series of facts alluded to in Proposition 3, of closely allied species in rich groups being found geographically near each other, is most striking and important. Mr. Lovell Reeve has well exemplified it in his able and interesting paper on the Distribution of the Bulimi. It is also seen in the Humming-birds and Toucans, little groups of two or three closely allied species being often found in the same or closely adjoining districts, as we have had the good fortune of personally verifying. Fishes give evidence of a similar kind: each great river has its peculiar genera, and in more extensive genera its groups of closely allied species. But it is the same throughout Nature; every class and order of animals will contribute similar facts. Hitherto no attempt has been made to explain these singular phænomena, or to show how they have arisen. Why are the genera of Palms and of Orchids in almost every case confined to one hemisphere? Why are the closely allied species of brown-backed Trogons all found in the East, and the green-backed in the West? Why are the Macaws and the Cockatoos similarly restricted? Insects [[p. 190]] furnish a countless number of analogous examples;--the Goliathi of Africa, the Ornithopteræ of the Indian islands, the Heliconidæ of South America, the Danaidæ of the East, and in all, the most closely allied species found in geographical proximity. The question forces itself upon every thinking mind,--why are these things so? They could not be as they are, had no law regulated their creation and dispersion. The law here enunciated not merely explains, but necessitates the facts we see to exist, while the vast and long-continued geological changes of the earth readily account for the exceptions and apparent discrepancies that here and there occur. The writer's object in putting forward his views in the present imperfect manner is to submit them to the test of other minds, and to be made aware of all the facts supposed to be inconsistent with them. As his hypothesis is one which claims acceptance solely as explaining and connecting facts which exist in nature, he expects facts alone to be brought to disprove it; not à-priori arguments against its probability.

    The phænomena of geological distribution are exactly analogous to those of geography. Closely allied species are found associated in the same beds, and the change from species to species appears to have been as gradual in time as in space. Geology, however, furnishes us with positive proof of the extinction and production of species, though it does not inform us how either has taken place. The extinction of species, however, offers but little difficulty, and the modus operandi has been well illustrated by Sir C. Lyell in his admirable 'Principles.' Geological changes, however gradual, must occasionally have modified external conditions to such an extent as to have rendered the existence of certain species impossible. The extinction would in most cases be effected by a gradual dying-out, but in some instances there might have been a sudden destruction of a species of limited range. To discover how the extinct species have from time to time been replaced by new ones down to the very latest geological period, is the most difficult, and at the same time the most interesting problem in the natural history of the earth. The present inquiry, which seeks to eliminate from known facts a law which has determined, to a certain degree, what species could and did appear at a given epoch, may, it is hoped, be considered as one step in the right direction towards a complete solution of it.

    Much discussion has of late years taken place on the question, whether the succession of life upon the globe has been from a lower to a higher degree of organization? The admitted facts seem to show that there has been a general, but not a detailed progression. Mollusca and Radiata existed before Vertebrata, [[p. 191]] and the progression from Fishes to Reptiles and Mammalia, and also from the lower mammals to the higher, is indisputable. On the other hand, it is said that the Mollusca and Radiata of the very earliest periods were more highly organized than the great mass of those now existing, and that the very first fishes that have been discovered are by no means the lowest organized of the class. Now it is believed the present hypothesis will harmonize with all these facts, and in a great measure serve to explain them; for though it may appear to some readers essentially a theory of progression, it is in reality only one of gradual change. It is, however, by no means difficult to show that a real progression in the scale of organization is perfectly consistent with all the appearances, and even with apparent retrogression, should such occur.

    Returning to the analogy of a branching tree, as the best mode of representing the natural arrangement of species and their successive creation, let us suppose that at an early geological epoch any group (say a class of the Mollusca) has attained to a great richness of species and a high organization. Now let this great branch of allied species, by geological mutations, be completely or partially destroyed. Subsequently a new branch springs from the same trunk, that is to say, new species are successively created, having for their antitypes the same lower organized species which had served as the antitypes for the former group, but which have survived the modified conditions which destroyed it. This new group being subject to these altered conditions, has modifications of structure and organization given to it, and becomes the representative group of the former one in another geological formation. It may, however, happen, that though later in time, the new series of species may never attain to so high a degree of organization as those preceding it, but in its turn become extinct, and give place to yet another modification from the same root, which may be of higher or lower organization, more or less numerous in species, and more or less varied in form and structure than either of those which preceded it. Again, each of these groups may not have become totally extinct, but may have left a few species, the modified prototypes of which have existed in each succeeding period, a faint memorial of their former grandeur and luxuriance. Thus every case of apparent retrogression may be in reality a progress, though an interrupted one: when some monarch of the forest loses a limb, it may be replaced by a feeble and sickly substitute. The foregoing remarks appear to apply to the case of the Mollusca, which, at a very early period, had reached a high organization and a great development of forms and species in the Testaceous Cephalopoda. In each succeeding age [[p. 192]] modified species and genera replaced the former ones which had become extinct, and as we approach the present æra but few and small representatives of the group remain, while the Gasteropods and Bivalves have acquired an immense preponderance. In the long series of changes the earth has undergone, the process of peopling it with organic beings has been continually going on, and whenever any of the higher groups have become nearly or quite extinct, the lower forms which have better resisted the modified physical conditions have served as the antitypes on which to found the new races. In this manner alone, it is believed, can the representative groups at successive periods, and the risings and fallings in the scale of organization, be in every case explained.

    The hypothesis of polarity, recently put forward by Professor Edward Forbes1 to account for the abundance of generic forms at a very early period and at present, while in the intermediate epochs there is a gradual diminution and impoverishment, till the minimum occurred at the confines of the Palæozoic and Secondary epochs, appears to us quite unnecessary, as the facts may be readily accounted for on the principles already laid down. Between the Palæozoic and Neozoic periods of Professor Forbes, there is scarcely a species in common, and the greater part of the genera and families also disappear to be replaced by new ones. It is almost universally admitted that such a change in the organic world must have occupied a vast period of time. Of this interval we have no record; probably because the whole area of the early formations now exposed to our researches was elevated at the end of the Palæozoic period, and remained so through the interval required for the organic changes which resulted in the fauna and flora of the Secondary period. The records of this interval are buried beneath the ocean which covers three-fourths of the globe. Now it appears highly probable that a long period of quiescence or stability in the physical conditions of a district would be most favourable to the existence of organic life in the greatest abundance, both as regards individuals and also as to variety of species and generic groups, just as we now find that the places best adapted to the rapid growth and increase of individuals also contain the greatest profusion of species and the greatest variety of forms,--the tropics in comparison with the temperate and arctic regions. On the other hand, it seems no less probable that a change in the[[p. 193]] physical conditions of a district, even small in amount if rapid, or even gradual if to a great amount, would be highly unfavourable to the existence of individuals, might cause the extinction of many species, and would probably be equally unfavourable to the creation of new ones. In this too we may find an analogy with the present state of our earth, for it has been shown to be the violent extremes and rapid changes of physical conditions, rather than the actual mean state in the temperate and frigid zones, which renders them less prolific than the tropical regions, as exemplified by the great distance beyond the tropics to which tropical forms penetrate when the climate is equable, and also by the richness in species and forms of tropical mountain regions which principally differ from the temperate zone in the uniformity of their climate. However this may be, it seems a fair assumption that during a period of geological repose the new species which we know to have been created would have appeared, that the creations would then exceed in number the extinctions, and therefore the number of species would increase. In a period of geological activity, on the other hand, it seems probable that the extinctions might exceed the creations, and the number of species consequently diminish. That such effects did take place in connexion with the causes to which we have imputed them, is shown in the case of the Coal formation, the faults and contortions of which show a period of great activity and violent convulsions, and it is in the formation immediately succeeding this that the poverty of forms of life is most apparent. We have then only to suppose a long period of somewhat similar action during the vast unknown interval at the termination of the Palæozoic period, and then a decreasing violence or rapidity through the Secondary period, to allow for the gradual repopulation of the earth with varied forms, and the whole of the facts are explained. We thus have a clue to the increase of the forms of life during certain periods, and their decrease during others, without recourse to any causes but those we know to have existed, and to effects fairly deducible from them. The precise manner in which the geological changes of the early formations were effected is so extremely obscure, that when we can explain important facts by a retardation at one time and an acceleration at another of a process which we know from its nature and from observation to have been unequal,--a cause so simple may surely be preferred to one so obscure and hypothetical as polarity.
    I would also venture to suggest some reasons against the very nature of the theory of Professor Forbes. Our knowledge of the organic world during any geological epoch is necessarily very imperfect. Looking at the vast numbers of species and groups that have been discovered by geologists, this may be [[p. 194]] doubted; but we should compare their numbers not merely with those that now exist upon the earth, but with a far larger amount.2 We have no reason for believing that the number of species on the earth at any former period was much less than at present; at all events the aquatic portion, with which geologists have most acquaintance, was probably often as great or greater. Now we know that there have been many complete changes of species; new sets of organisms have many times been introduced in place of old ones which have become extinct, so that the total amount which have existed on the earth from the earliest geological period must have borne about the same proportion to those now living, as the whole human race who have lived and died upon the earth, to the population at the present time. Again, at each epoch, the whole earth was no doubt, as now, more or less the theatre of life, and as the successive generations of each species died, their exuviæ and preservable parts would be deposited over every portion of the then existing seas and oceans, which we have reason for supposing to have been more, rather than less, extensive than at present. In order then to understand our possible knowledge of the early world and its inhabitants, we must compare, not the area of the whole field of our geological researches with the earth's surface, but the area of the examined portion of each formation separately with the whole earth. For example, during the Silurian period all the earth was Silurian, and animals were living and dying, and depositing their remains more or less over the whole area of the globe, and they were probably (the species at least) nearly as varied in different latitudes and longitudes as at present. What proportion do the Silurian districts bear to the whole surface of the globe, land and sea (for far more extensive Silurian districts probably exist beneath the ocean than above it), and what portion of the known Silurian districts has been actually examined for fossils? Would the area of rock actually laid open to the eye be the thousandth or the ten-thousandth part of the earth's surface? Ask the same question with regard to the Oolite or the Chalk, or even to particular beds of these when they differ considerably in their fossils, and you may then get some notion of how small a portion of the whole we know.
    But yet more important is the probability, nay, almost the certainty, that whole formations containing the records of vast geological periods are entirely buried beneath the ocean, and for ever beyond our reach. Most of the gaps in the geological series may thus be filled up, and vast numbers of unknown and unimaginable animals, which might help to elucidate the affinities of the numerous isolated groups which are a perpetual puzzle to [[p. 195]] the zoologist, may there be buried, till future revolutions may raise them in their turn above the waters, to afford materials for the study of whatever race of intelligent beings may then have succeeded us. These considerations must lead us to the conclusion, that our knowledge of the whole series of the former inhabitants of the earth is necessarily most imperfect and fragmentary,--as much so as our knowledge of the present organic world would be, were we forced to make our collections and observations only in spots equally limited in area and in number with those actually laid open for the collection of fossils. Now, the hypothesis of Professor Forbes is essentially one that assumes to a great extent the completeness of our knowledge of the whole series of organic beings which have existed on the earth. This appears to be a fatal objection to it, independently of all other considerations. It may be said that the same objections exist against every theory on such a subject, but this is not necessarily the case. The hypothesis put forward in this paper depends in no degree upon the completeness of our knowledge of the former condition of the organic world, but takes what facts we have as fragments of a vast whole, and deduces from them something of the nature and proportions of that whole which we can never know in detail. It is founded upon isolated groups of facts, recognizes their isolation, and endeavours to deduce from them the nature of the intervening portions.

    Another important series of facts, quite in accordance with, and even necessary deductions from, the law now developed, are those of rudimentary organs. That these really do exist, and in most cases have no special function in the animal œconomy, is admitted by the first authorities in comparative anatomy. The minute limbs hidden beneath the skin in many of the snake-like lizards, the anal hooks of the boa constrictor, the complete series of jointed finger-bones in the paddle of the Manatus and whale, are a few of the most familiar instances. In botany a similar class of facts has been long recognized. Abortive stamens, rudimentary floral envelopes and undeveloped carpels, are of the most frequent occurrence. To every thoughtful naturalist the question must arise, What are these for? What have they to do with the great laws of creation? Do they not teach us something of the system of Nature? If each species has been created independently, and without any necessary relations with pre-existing species, what do these rudiments, these apparent imperfections mean? There must be a cause for them; they must be the necessary results of some great natural law. Now, if, as it has been endeavoured to be shown, the great law which has regulated the peopling of the earth with animal and vegetable life is, that every change shall be gradual; that no new [[p. 196]] creature shall be formed widely differing from anything before existing; that in this, as in everything else in Nature, there shall be gradation and harmony,--then these rudimentary organs are necessary, and are an essential part of the system of Nature. Ere the higher Vertebrata were formed, for instance, many steps were required, and many organs had to undergo modifications from the rudimental condition in which only they had as yet existed. We still see remaining an antitypal sketch of a wing adapted for flight in the scaly flapper of the penguin, and limbs first concealed beneath the skin, and then weakly protruding from it, were the necessary gradations before others should be formed fully adapted for locomotion. Many more of these modifications should we behold, and more complete series of them, had we a view of all the forms which have ceased to live. The great gaps that exist between fishes, reptiles, birds and mammals would then, no doubt, be softened down by intermediate groups, and the whole organic world would be seen to be an unbroken and harmonious system.

    It has now been shown, though most briefly and imperfectly, how the law that "Every species has come into existence coincident both in time and space with a pre-existing closely allied species," connects together and renders intelligible a vast number of independent and hitherto unexplained facts. The natural system of arrangement of organic beings, their geographical distribution, their geological sequence, the phænomena of representative and substituted groups in all their modifications, and the most singular peculiarities of anatomical structure, are all explained and illustrated by it, in perfect accordance with the vast mass of facts which the researches of modern naturalists have brought together, and, it is believed, not materially opposed to any of them. It also claims a superiority over previous hypotheses, on the ground that it not merely explains, but necessitates what exists. Granted the law, and many of the most important facts in Nature could not have been otherwise, but are almost as necessary deductions from it, as are the elliptic orbits of the planets from the law of gravitation.
  
   Sarawak, Borneo, Feb. 1855.

Notes Appearing in the Original Work

1Since the above was written, the author has heard with sincere regret of the death of this eminent naturalist, from whom so much important work was expected. His remarks on the present paper,--a subject on which no man was more competent to decide,--were looked for with the greatest interest. Who shall supply his place? [[originally placed at the bottom of page 192]]
2See on this subject a paper by Professor Agassiz in the 'Annals' for November 1854.--Ed. [[originally placed at the bottom of page 194]]

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Comment by Bernard Michaux, paleobiologist (pers. commun. 3/00):

This paper was written three years before Wallace sent that fateful communication (S43) to Darwin in which he proposed that selective forces acting on heritable variation was a sufficient explanation for evolutionary change. Reading the present paper in the year 2000 (and with the benefit of hindsight, of course) it is difficult to believe that Wallace had not worked it all out at least three years earlier than generally admitted. Wallace's use of language to conceal his evolutionary leanings is instructive. He has two particularly difficult moments. The first comes quickly when he refers to what are clearly common ancestors as "antitypes." He even refers to "common antitypes" at one point! Wallace also manages to discuss the difference between analogy and homology without using the word homology at all, instead using "affinity." And it is not just terminology that makes this modern reader suspicious. All the major Darwinian themes are clearly portended by Wallace--gradualism, utility, adaptation to different environments, allopatric speciation, imperfection of the fossil record, and so forth. The paper is also important in understanding how Wallace's biogeographic ideas developed. The "every species has come into existence coincident both in time and space with pre-existing closely allied species" law shows clearly that Wallace viewed space and time as integrated elements of the evolutionary process. His opening paragraph is masterful, and climaxes:
"Of late years, however, a great light has been thrown upon the subject [geographical distribution] by geological investigations, which have shown that the present state of the earth, and the organisms now inhabiting it, are but the last stage of a long and uninterrupted series of changes which it has undergone, and consequently, that to endeavour to explain and account for its present condition without any reference to those changes (as has frequently been done) must lead to very imperfect and erroneous conclusions."
This view--that earth and life evolve together--is usually associated with the late Venezuelan scientist Leon Croizat. Croizat also had a long struggle to promote this view, and it was only by his final years (he died in 1982) that many biogeographers had come to accept it. Both Croizat's panbiogeography and cladistic biogeography feature space as an active element in the evolutionary process. For dispersalist biogeographers animals populate the world and evolve at a far quicker rate than tectonic rift-drift, so space is still essentially static in this view. I think that Wallace's warning of "imperfect and erroneous conclusions" applies to dispersalist biogeographers, as much as to those who viewed distributions as an act(s) of God in his own day.

2013年8月1日 星期四

Birds named after Wallace

摩鹿加塚雉(Moluccan Scrubfowl, Megapodius wallacei)
雞形目(Galliformes)、塚雉科(Megapodiidae)
           (Public Domain)                                                   摩鹿加塚雉的分布(林大利  繪製)

         摩鹿加塚雉是華萊士於摩鹿加群島中面積最大的哈馬黑拉島(Halmahera island)東部所採集到的新種,由英國動物學家George Robert Gray於1860年命名。除了哈馬黑拉島之外,摩鹿加塚雉也分布於南方米蘇爾島(Misool island)、西蘭島(Seram island)、布魯島(Buru island)、安波島(Ambon island)、哈魯古島(Haruku island)以及哈馬黑拉島的離島千那地島(Ternate island)(如右上圖)。雖然摩鹿加塚雉分布於七座島嶼,但是各族群之兼併沒有亞種的分化。由於摩鹿加塚雉紅褐色與銀白色條紋的翼上覆羽,以及白色的尾下覆羽,是同屬鳥種中較特別的特徵,有些分類觀點會將其歸屬於Eulipoa屬,該屬也是只有摩鹿加塚雉一種鳥的單種屬。
     
      摩鹿加塚雉體長約30公分,屬於小型的塚雉。主要棲息於海拔750-1950公尺的山區森林,在部份島嶼偶而會出現在低海拔的山區。夜間會在海灘集體挖洞產卵,眾多摩鹿加塚雉在一同在夜空中飛往海灘的畫面,常常令賞鳥人印象深刻。摩鹿加塚雉產完卵後,不同於其他種的塚雉,會將巢洞作成土丘,只會單純以沙和枯枝落葉覆蓋。埋在沙灘下蛋,主要以日照產生的熱來發育。布魯島的族群在9月至12月繁殖、哈魯古島的族群則在10月至隔年4月繁殖。

         華萊士在摩鹿加群島採集時,在哈馬黑拉島、千那地島及布魯島等三島目擊過摩鹿加塚雉。因為摩鹿加塚雉背上紅褐色條紋的羽毛,華萊士認為這是Megopodius屬中最美麗的鳥種。華萊士認為摩鹿加塚雉屬於半夜型性的動物,常常在半夜大聲鳴唱到清晨。摩鹿加塚雉常在內陸的森林活動,夜間到海灘產卵,華萊士曾觀察到孵出後爬出洞的小塚雉,也發現過幾枚紅褐色的蛋,長度約8公分,寬約6公分。經原住民描述,牠們會在洞穴附近製造許多腳印或條紋,破壞自己留下的足跡。因為棲地流失及過度獵捕,摩鹿加塚雉的蛋會被原住民取來食用,目前摩鹿加塚雉在IUCN的保育等級屬於「易危級」(Vulnerable),哈馬黑拉島上的族群並不常見,安波島和千那地島上的族群有可能已經滅絕。由於目前科學界對摩鹿加塚雉的基礎生活史及族群現況仍有諸多不明之處,因此急需投注相關研究及族群監測。

[參考文獻]
HBW vol 2. pp305
Wallace, R. A. The Malay Archipelago. Periplus. pp. 304-305. (中文版:519-520頁)



華萊士秧雞(Invisible Rail, Habroptila wallacii)
鶴形目(Gruiformes)、秧雞科(Rallidae)
                              (Public Domain)                                                   華萊士秧雞的分布(林大利  繪製)

華萊士秧雞是摩洛哥群島中哈馬黑拉島的特有屬,是一種不具飛行能力的秧雞,屬於Habroptila屬的唯一鳥種,沒有亞種的分化。Olson (1973) 認為華來士秧雞與新幾內亞秧雞(New Guinea Flightless Rail, Megacrex inepta)及分布於澳洲與阿魯群島(Aru island)栗秧雞(Chestnut Rail, Eulabeornis castaneoventris)的關係相近,將華萊士秧雞歸類到Megacrex。但是Mee(1989)認為華來世秧雞Megacrex屬的鳥喙和前額額板的構造不同,而且小腿(tibiotarsus)覆有羽毛,應該將華來士秧雞歸類為Habroptila

華來士秧雞的模式標本由華萊士於哈馬黑拉島東部採集,英國動物學家George Robert Gray於1860年命名。華萊士秧雞的體長約30-40公分,雌雄同型,但P. Jepson曾在BirdLife報導,認為雄鳥的嘴喙較紅,雌鳥則偏橘紅色。華來士秧雞的鳴叫聲非常宏亮,且很像擊鼓的聲音,相當特別。主要棲息於森林與溼地之間的邊緣環境,尤其偏好西米棕櫚(sago palm, Metroxylon sagu)的沼澤地。目前估計華萊士秧雞的數量約2,500-10,000隻,因為生性隱密,不容易觀察,因此對其生活史及族群數量的瞭解尚不足,也有說法認為其數量應該更高。主要以棕櫚與其他植物的的新芽為食,也會捕食甲蟲,也有觀察過華來士秧雞取食伐倒的棕櫚樹,樹幹內部的髓或軟組織。大約在5月至6月繁殖,每次約4-5個蛋。

西米棕櫚的沼澤地目前因各種農業開發而逐漸減少,轉變為稻田、漁塭等農業用地,造成華來士秧雞受到棲地流失及棲地破碎化的威脅,原住民也會設置陷阱或帶狗獵補華來士秧雞。由於華萊士秧雞不具飛行能力,應對天敵的能力有限、播遷能力不佳,因此容易形成受隔離的小族群。目前華萊士秧雞在IUCN的保育等級屬於「易危級」(Vulnerable)。

 Lowlands of sw New Guinea, s Moluccas, Kai and Aru islands
Collected by Wallace in the Aru Islands, Indonesia and named by Gray in 1858.

   

華萊士裸鼻鴟(Wallace's Owlet-Nightjar, Aegotheles wallacii)
夜鷹目(Caprimulgiformes)、裸鼻鴟科(Aegothelidae)
華萊士裸鼻鴟(音同知),共區分為三個亞種:指名亞種(A. w. wallacii)、西方亞種(A. w. gigas) 以及北方亞種(A. w. manni)。指名亞種分布於新幾內亞西部、中脊山脈南側和阿魯群島,西部亞種分布於Weyland山區, 北方亞種分布於新幾內亞北岸Menawa山及Turu山區。這三種亞種之間只有體型有較明顯的差異,羽色的差異並不大:西方亞種的翼長較大(127-139 cm)、北方亞種次之(125-130 cm)、 指名亞種最小(115-127 cm)。模式標本是華來士在新幾內亞採集到的指名亞種,George Robert Gray於1859年發表命名(華來士並未深入新幾內亞山區,應該是在新幾內亞西部採集的)。

華萊士裸鼻鴟目前所知相關資料非常少,僅大致瞭解是夜行性、棲息於海拔1,500公尺以下山區,並以昆蟲為主食,也因此目前IUCN的保育等級仍屬於「資料不足(Data Deficient, DD)」,難以評估其族群現況。

裸鼻鴟科(Aegothelidae)是小型的夜行性鳥類,與夜鷹(nightjar)及蟆口鴟(frogmouth)的關係相近,大多數物種分布於新幾內亞,有些種類分布於澳洲、摩鹿加群島和新喀里多尼亞(New Caledonia),曾有一物種分布於紐西蘭但已經滅絕。夜鷹目的鳥腳的力氣都不大,不善行走,但是裸鼻鴟腳的力氣比夜鷹和蟆口鴟來的強壯些。裸鼻鴟科現存鳥類共有9種。

Collected by Wallce in Manokwari, Wesr Papua and named by Gray in 1859
      

灰腰鳳頭樹燕華萊士亞種(Gray-rumped Treeswift, Hemiprocne longipennis wallacii)
雨燕目(Apodiformes)、 鳳頭樹燕科(Hemiprocnidae)

鳳頭樹燕科全世界共有四種,分布於印度、中南半島、東南亞及新幾內亞至所羅門群島。灰腰鳳頭燕以往認為是灰鳳頭燕(Crested Treeswift, Hemiprocne coronata)組成的超種(superspecies)之一。目前灰腰鳳燕共有四個亞種:哈氏亞種(H. l. harterti)、長羽亞種(H. l. perlonga)、指名亞種(H. l. longipennis)、以及華萊士亞種(H. l. wallacii),各亞種分布如上圖。其中華萊士亞種由華萊士在蘇拉威西採集,由 Gould 於1859年命名發表。四個亞種之中,華萊士亞種的體型較大、灰腰色塊最大,翼上覆羽略帶藍色金屬光澤。

灰腰鳳頭燕棲息於島內常綠闊葉林和半常綠闊葉林的邊緣,也會在海邊的紅樹林、木麻黃林、高大的人工林以及成熟的公園林地(parkland)。偏好視野良好的棲點,例如裸露的枯枝和樹梢。在馬來半島分布約海拔1,200公尺山區,在爪哇島的分布海拔約1,550公尺。灰腰鳳頭燕捕食飛行中的昆蟲,不過獵物的偏好並不容易瞭解,記錄過捕食白蟻及蜜蜂。常在離地約35公尺高的空中捕食,有時會在樹冠層上空,離地約47公尺。如同其他雨燕目的鳥類,會快速飛行掃過水面飲水。

在北半球的繁殖季大約自2月到9月,以曾經在10月記錄過幼鳥,3月到6月為高峰期。在南半球的爪哇島約為12月到隔年8月。灰腰鳳頭雨燕運用樹皮的碎片、苔蘚、羽毛和唾液築成口徑約3公分的碗狀巢,雌雄鳥皆會築巢、孵蛋和育雛。目前灰腰鳳頭樹燕在IUCN的保育等級屬於「暫無威脅(Least Concern)」,在各分布地點不難見到。可能因為偏好開闊棲地的特性,較不受到棲地遭開發的影響。但是目前仍受到大面積棕櫚田、馬來西亞過度使用有機磷農藥、以及空氣槍的獵捕等威脅。

HBW5 p465


矮三趾翠鳥(Variable Dwarf-Kingfisher, Ceyx lepidus wallacii)
佛法僧目(Coraciiformes)、翠鳥科(Alcedinidae)


矮三趾翠鳥目前共包含14個亞種,其中華萊士亞種(C. l. wallacii)為華萊士於蘇拉群島採集,Sharpe於1868年發表命名。本種分布於菲律賓南部民答那峨島(Mindanao)及附近島嶼、摩洛哥群島以東至所羅門群島。華萊士亞種分布於蘇拉(Sula)群島中的四個島嶼:Seho、Taliabu、Mangole以及Sanara。矮三趾翠屬於鳥約14公分的小型翠鳥,腳趾只有三趾。華萊士亞種飛羽偏藍黑色、嘴喙全紅色、耳羽無白斑。

矮三趾翠鳥棲息於原生或次生的雨林、季風林、濱岸林以及久無經營管理的人工林。分布自海岸到海拔1,300公尺,常常停棲於水邊濱岸森林的中層。以蜻蛉目、蜉蝣目、蠓類、直翅目等昆蟲,以及小型哇類及蝌蚪為食。常在水邊的突出物上獵食,也會於空中捕食。南半球的繁殖季大約在11月到年1月,北半球則為7月到9月。矮三趾翠鳥在河岸的土堤上挖洞築巢,洞口約5-7.5公分,通道不長,末端會有一個空間較大的巢室。

目前矮三趾翠鳥在IUCN的保育等級屬於「暫無威脅(Least Concern)」。本種廣泛分布於諸多島嶼,屬於常見留鳥,但可能會受到棲地流失的威脅。

HBW vol 6 p231


金額姬啄木鳥(Bar-breasted Piculet, Picumnus aurifrons wallacii)
鴷形目(Piciformes)、啄木鳥科(Picidae)





source


金額姬啄木鳥目前共包含7個亞種,其中華萊士亞種(P. a. wallacii)為華萊士在與貝茲(Henry Walter Bates)於1848年一同探訪亞馬遜雨林時所採集,由Hargitt於1889年命名。Picummus屬的啄木鳥共有27種,許多種類型態特徵相當相似,不容易辨識。金額姬啄木鳥屬於體型偏小的一種,體長只有約7.5公分,體重8-9公克。雄鳥前額具有近黃色或亮橘紅色的羽毛,雌鳥則沒有且頭後的白斑較小,顏色依亞種而有所不同,華萊士亞種為金黃色。棲息於潮濕的熱帶雨林,也會出現在次生林的邊緣地區,從平地到海拔1,100公尺高的山區都有紀錄。食性目前並不非常清楚,目前僅知可能以昆蟲為食,偏好於樹梢活動。繁殖季於6月至11月,目前無其他更多繁殖相關資訊。目前金額姬啄木鳥在IUCN的保育等級屬於「暫無威脅(Least Concern)」,但是目前對其生活史及族群資訊瞭解甚少,極需進行相關研究。

HBW7 p423
Winkler, H., D. A. Christie and D. Nurney. 1995. Woodpeckers: A Guide to the Woodpeckers, Piculets and Wrynecks of                  the World. Pica Press.




擬鶇希夫霸鶲(Brown-winged Schiffornis, Schiffornis turdina wallacii)
燕雀目(Passeriformes)、泰霸鶲科(Tityridae)

擬鶇希夫霸鶲目前共有13個亞種,其中華萊士亞種(S. t. wallacii)為在與貝茲(Henry Walter Bates)於1848年一同探訪亞馬遜雨林時所採集,由Sclater和Salvin 於1867年共同發表命名。本種偏好棲息於潮濕森林的內部,鮮少在森林邊緣活動。分布於平地到海拔1,500公尺山區,在哥斯大黎加的分布海拔可達1,700公尺,在委內瑞拉的海拔可達1,800公尺。以果實及節肢動物為食,通常單獨覓食,鮮少混群覓食。繁殖期因地而異:哥斯大黎加為2月到8月、巴西北部為2月。目前擬鶇希夫霸鶲在IUCN的保育等級屬於「暫無威脅(Least Concern)」。

HBW9 p168

華萊士鷦鷯(Wallace's Fairywren, Sipodotus wallacii)
燕雀目(Passeriforme)、細尾鷯鶯科(Maluridae)


















華萊士鷦鷯目前共包含兩亞種: S. w. wallaciiS. w. coronatus (有冠的),S. w. coronatus分布於阿魯群島及新幾內亞南部,其餘為指名亞種分布區域。指名亞種為華萊士於密蘇爾島(Misool island)採集,由G. R. Gray於1878年命名發表。華萊士鷦鷯體長約11-12公分,體重7-8公克。棲息於海拔100-800公尺的熱帶雨林,分布海拔最高紀錄達1,250公尺。活動於森林次冠層的邊緣捕食昆蟲,可觀查到4-8隻結群,很可能是有血緣關係的群體。也常見到與其他鳥種混群活動。全年皆繁殖,高峰期大約在9月到12月。以禾草葉或棕櫚葉的末端築巢,巢外以地衣或苔蘚覆蓋。僅觀察過兩巢,一巢內有兩顆蛋,另一巢有兩隻幼鳥。雌雄親鳥都會育雛,1.5小時內共餵食38次。目前華萊士鷦鷯在IUCN的保育等級屬於「暫無威脅(Least Concern)」,但是目前對其生活史及族群資訊瞭解甚少,極需進行相關研究,棲地流失可能是潛在的威脅。

HBW12 p519


幡羽天堂鳥(Standardwing Bird-of-paradise, Semioptera wallacii)
燕雀目(Passeriformes)、天堂鳥科(Paradisaeidae)



幡羽天堂鳥目前共包含兩亞種:指名亞種(S. w. wallacii)及哈馬黑拉亞種(S. w. halmaherae),前者分布於巴占島(Bacan island),後者分布於哈馬黑拉島(Hamahera island)。指名亞種是華萊士於巴占島採集,由G. R. Gray於1859年發表命名。雄鳥體型較大,胸前有綠色金屬光澤的羽毛,以及特別的四片白色且長的小覆羽「幡羽」,有時長度比翅膀還要長。棲息於熱帶雨林低地及丘陵。巴占島的族群分布約在海拔1,150公尺處,哈馬黑拉倒的族群分布於海拔250公尺至1,000公尺之間,極少數的狀況會於成熟的次生林內活動。繁殖期時雄鳥會集體跳舞求偶(lek, 影片)。以果實和節肢動物為食,兩者比例狀況不明,但可能果實比例較高。成鳥會以果實餵食雛鳥,常見3-4之成群覓食,亦會與其他種類的鳥混群覓食。繁殖季約為4月的乾季到9月的雨季。配對為一夫多妻制(polygynous),集體求偶時,雄鳥數量從5-7隻到30-40隻的狀況都有,其中會包括羽色羽雌鳥相似的年輕雄鳥。展示方式包括Paradisaea屬也可見的幡羽展示(Wing Standard Display)、收斂展示(Convergence Display),空中展示(Aerial Display)是獨有的展示方式。目前幡羽天堂鳥在IUCN的保育等級屬於「暫無威脅(Least Concern)」,但是在華盛頓公約中,所有的天堂鳥科的鳥,皆屬於附錄二的物種。近年伐木業興盛、農用地擴張使得低地森林逐漸減少,曾有預估幡羽天堂鳥的數量減少了10%,這樣的棲地流失也會影響許多其他種類的野生動物。

HBW14 p484-485
Frith C. B. and D. W. Frith. 2010. Birds of Paradise: Nature, Art and History. Firth and Firth.