NATURALISTS have long recognised the curious cases oftentimes occurring, of the resemblance between the colour of an animal and its immediate surroundings. It had been supposed that climatic influences, or peculiarities of food, or greater or less access to light, had something to do with these coincidences. Mr. Alfred R. Wallace has shown that the varied phases of these phenomena could not be explained by such agents, and in a paper “On Mimicry and other protective resemblances among Animals,” published in the Westminster Review, July 1867, and since made widely public in his work on “Natural Selection,” he shows that the singular resemblances between the colour of animals and their surroundings are mainly brought about by the protection afforded them through greater concealment. Many very interesting examples are then cited from the Vertebrates and Articulates in support of these views. Briefly may be mentioned, as examples, the almost universal sand colour of those animals inhabiting desert tracts; the white colour of those animals living amid perpetual snows; the resemblance seen again and again between the colour of many insects and the places they frequent. Among the hosts of examples cited by Mr. Wallace as illustrating plainly the views he advances, may be mentioned the many species of Cicindela, or tiger beetle. The common English species, “C. campestris;, frequents grassy banks, and is of a beautiful green colour, while C. maritima, which is found only on sandy sea shores, is of a pale bronzy yellow, so as to be almost invisible.” He then states that a great number of species found by himself in the Malay Archipelago were similarly protected. “The beautiful Cicindela gloriosa, of a deep velvety green colour, was only taken upon wet mossy stones in the bed of a mountain stream, where it was with difficulty detected. A large brown species (C. heros) was found chiefly on dead leaves in forest paths; and one which was never seen except on the wet mud of salt marshes, was of a glossy olive so exactly the colour of the mud as only to be distinguished when the sun shone, by its shadow. Where the sand beach was coralline and nearly white, I found a very pale Cicindela; wherever it was volcanic and black, a dark species of the same genus was sure to be met with.”