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Fritz müller on a Frog Having Eggs on its Back—on the Abortion of the Hairs on the Legs of Certain Caddis-Flies, &c.

Abstract

SEVERAL of the facts given in the following letter from Fritz Müller, especially those in the third paragraph, appear to me very interesting. Many persons have felt much perplexed about the steps or means by which structures rendered useless under changed conditions of life, at first become reduced, and finally quite disappear. A more: striking case of such disappearance has never been published than that here given by Fritz Müller. Several years ago some valuable letters on this subject by Mr. Romanes (together with one by me) were inserted in the columns of NATURE. Since then various facts have often led me to speculate on the existence of some inherent tendency in every part of every organism to be gradually reduced and to disappear, unless in some manner prevented. But beyond this vague speculation I could never clearly see my way. As far, therefore, as I can judge, the explanation suggested by Fritz Müller well deserves the careful consideration of all those who are interested on such points, and may prove of widely extended application. Hardly anyone who has considered such cases as those of the stripes which occasionally appear on the legs and even bodies of horses and apes—or of the development of certain muscles in man which are not proper to him, but are common in the Quadrumana—or again, of some peloric flowers-will doubt that characters lost for an almost endless number of generations, may suddenly reappear. In the case of natural species we are so much accustomed to apply the term reversion or atavism to the reappearance of a lost part that we are liable to forget that its disappearance may be equally due to this same cause.

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DARWIN, C. Fritz müller on a Frog Having Eggs on its Back—on the Abortion of the Hairs on the Legs of Certain Caddis-Flies, &c. . Nature 19, 462–463 (1879). https://doi.org/10.1038/019462a0

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