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CHAPTER
XII. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION—continued. Distribution of fresh-water productions—On the inhabitants of oceanic islands—Absence of Batrachians and of terrestrial Mammals—On the relation of the inhabitants of islands to those of the nearest mainland—On colonisation from the nearest source with subsequent modification—Summary of the last and present chapters. AS lakes
and river-systems are separated from each other by barriers of land, it might
have been thought that fresh-water productions would not have ranged widely
within the same country, and as the sea is apparently a still more impassable
barrier, that they never would have extended to distant countries. But the case
is exactly the reverse. Not only have many fresh-water species, belonging to
quite different classes, an enormous range, but allied species prevail in a
remarkable manner throughout the world. I well remember, when first collecting
in the fresh waters of Brazil, feeling much surprise at the similarity of the
fresh-water insects, shells, &c., and at the dissimilarity of the
surrounding terrestrial beings, compared with those of Britain. But this
power in fresh-water productions of ranging widely, though so unexpected, can,
I think, in most cases be explained by their having become fitted, in a manner
highly useful to them, for short and frequent migrations from pond to pond, or
from stream to stream; and liability to wide dispersal would follow from this
capacity as an almost necessary consequence. We can here consider only a few
cases. In regard to fish, I believe that the same species never occur in the
fresh waters of distant continents. But on the same continent the species often
range widely and almost capriciously; for two river-systems will have some fish
in common and some different. A few facts seem to favour the possibility of
their occasional transport by accidental means; like that of the live fish not
rarely dropped by whirlwinds in India, and the vitality of their ova when
removed from the water. But I am inclined to attribute the dispersal of
fresh-water fish mainly to slight changes within the recent period in the level
of the land, having caused rivers to flow into each other. Instances, also,
could be given of this having occurred during floods, without any change of
level. We have evidence in the loess of the Rhine of considerable changes of
level in the land within a very recent geological period, and when the surface
was peopled by existing land and fresh-water shells. The wide difference of the
fish on opposite sides of continuous mountain-ranges, which from an early
period must have parted river-systems and completely prevented their
inosculation, seems to lead to this same conclusion. With respect to allied
fresh-water fish occurring at very distant points of the world, no doubt there
are many cases which cannot at present be explained: but some fresh-water fish
belong to very ancient forms, and in such cases there will have been ample time
for great geographical changes, and consequently time and means for much
migration. In the second place, salt-water fish can with care be slowly
accustomed to live in fresh water; and, according to Valenciennes, there is
hardly a single group of fishes confined exclusively to fresh water, so that we
may imagine that a marine member of a fresh-water group might travel far along
the shores of the sea, and subsequently become modified and adapted to the
fresh waters of a distant land. Some
species of fresh-water shells have a very wide range, and allied species,
which, on my theory, are descended from a common parent and must have proceeded
from a single source, prevail throughout the world. Their distribution at first
perplexed me much, as their ova are not likely to be transported by birds, and
they are immediately killed by sea water, as are the adults. I could not even
understand how some naturalised species have rapidly spread throughout the same
country. But two facts, which I have observed—and no doubt many others remain
to be observed—throw some light on this subject. When a duck suddenly emerges
from a pond covered with duck-weed, I have twice seen these little plants
adhering to its back; and it has happened to me, in removing a little duck-weed
from one aquarium to another, that I have quite unintentionally stocked the one
with fresh-water shells from the other. But another agency is perhaps more
effectual: I suspended a duck’s feet, which might represent those of a bird
sleeping in a natural pond, in an aquarium, where many ova of fresh-water
shells were hatching; and I found that numbers of the extremely minute and just
hatched shells crawled on the feet, and clung to them so firmly that when taken
out of the water they could not be jarred off, though at a somewhat more
advanced age they would voluntarily drop off. These just hatched molluscs,
though aquatic in their nature, survived on the duck’s feet, in damp air, from
twelve to twenty hours; and in this length of time a duck or heron might fly at
least six or seven hundred miles, and would be sure to alight on a pool or
rivulet, if blown across sea to an oceanic island or to any other distant
point. Sir Charles Lyell also informs me that a Dyticus has been caught with an
Ancylus (a fresh-water shell like a limpet) firmly adhering to it; and a
water-beetle of the same family, a Colymbetes, once flew on board the ‘Beagle,’
when forty-five miles distant from the nearest land: how much farther it might
have flown with a favouring gale no one can tell. With
respect to plants, it has long been known what enormous ranges many fresh-water
and even marsh-species have, both over continents and to the most remote
oceanic islands. This is strikingly shown, as remarked by Alph. de Candolle, in
large groups of terrestrial plants, which have only a very few aquatic members;
for these latter seem immediately to acquire, as if in consequence, a very wide
range. I think favourable means of dispersal explain this fact. I have before
mentioned that earth occasionally, though rarely, adheres in some quantity to
the feet and beaks of birds. Wading birds, which frequent the muddy edges of
ponds, if suddenly flushed, would be the most likely to have muddy feet. Birds
of this order I can show are the greatest wanderers, and are occasionally found
on the most remote and barren islands in the open ocean; they would not be
likely to alight on the surface of the sea, so that the dirt would not be
washed off their feet; when making land, they would be sure to fly to their
natural fresh-water haunts. I do not believe that botanists are aware how
charged the mud of ponds is with seeds: I have tried several little
experiments, but will here give only the most striking case: I took in February
three table-spoonfuls of mud from three different points, beneath water, on the
edge of a little pond; this mud when dry weighed only 6 3/4 ounces; I kept it
covered up in my study for six months, pulling up and counting each plant as it
grew; the plants were of many kinds, and were altogether 537 in number; and yet
the viscid mud was all contained in a breakfast cup! Considering these facts, I
think it would be an inexplicable circumstance if water-birds did not transport
the seeds of fresh-water plants to vast distances, and if consequently the
range of these plants was not very great. The same agency may have come into
play with the eggs of some of the smaller fresh-water animals. Other and
unknown agencies probably have also played a part. I have stated that
fresh-water fish eat some kinds of seeds, though they reject many other kinds
after having swallowed them; even small fish swallow seeds of moderate size, as
of the yellow water-lily and Potamogeton. Herons and other birds, century after
century, have gone on daily devouring fish; they then take flight and go to
other waters, or are blown across the sea; and we have seen that seeds retain
their power of germination, when rejected in pellets or in excrement, many
hours afterwards. When I saw the great size of the seeds of that fine
water-lily, the Nelumbium, and remembered Alph. de Candolle’s remarks on this
plant, I thought that its distribution must remain quite inexplicable; but
Audubon states that he found the seeds of the great southern water-lily
(probably, according to Dr. Hooker, the Nelumbium luteum) in a heron’s stomach;
although I do not know the fact, yet analogy makes me believe that a heron
flying to another pond and getting a hearty meal of fish, would probably reject
from its stomach a pellet containing the seeds of the Nelumbium undigested; or
the seeds might be dropped by the bird whilst feeding its young, in the same
way as fish are known sometimes to be dropped. In
considering these several means of distribution, it should be remembered that
when a pond or stream is first formed, for instance, on a rising islet, it will
be unoccupied; and a single seed or egg will have a good chance of succeeding.
Although there will always be a struggle for life between the individuals of
the species, however few, already occupying any pond, yet as the number of
kinds is small, compared with those on the land, the competition will probably
be less severe between aquatic than between terrestrial species; consequently
an intruder from the waters of a foreign country, would have a better chance of
seizing on a place, than in the case of terrestrial colonists. We should, also,
remember that some, perhaps many, fresh-water productions are low in the scale
of nature, and that we have reason to believe that such low beings change or
become modified less quickly than the high; and this will give longer time than
the average for the migration of the same aquatic species. We should not forget
the probability of many species having formerly ranged as continuously as
fresh-water productions ever can range, over immense areas, and having
subsequently become extinct in intermediate regions. But the wide distribution
of fresh-water plants and of the lower animals, whether retaining the same identical
form or in some degree modified, I believe mainly depends on the wide dispersal
of their seeds and eggs by animals, more especially by fresh-water birds, which
have large powers of flight, and naturally travel from one to another and often
distant piece of water. Nature, like a careful gardener, thus takes her seeds
from a bed of a particular nature, and drops them in another equally well
fitted for them. On the
Inhabitants of Oceanic Islands.—We now come to the last of the
three classes of facts, which I have selected as presenting the greatest amount
of difficulty, on the view that all the individuals both of the same and of
allied species have descended from a single parent; and therefore have all
proceeded from a common birthplace, notwithstanding that in the course of time
they have come to inhabit distant points of the globe. I have already stated
that I cannot honestly admit Forbes’s view on continental extensions, which, if
legitimately followed out, would lead to the belief that within the recent
period all existing islands have been nearly or quite joined to some continent.
This view would remove many difficulties, but it would not, I think, explain
all the facts in regard to insular productions. In the following remarks I
shall not confine myself to the mere question of dispersal; but shall consider
some other facts, which bear on the truth of the two theories of independent
creation and of descent with modification. The
species of all kinds which inhabit oceanic islands are few in number compared
with those on equal continental areas: Alph. de Candolle admits this for
plants, and Wollaston for insects. If we look to the large size and varied
stations of New Zealand, extending over 780 miles of latitude, and compare its
flowering plants, only 750 in number, with those on an equal area at the Cape
of Good Hope or in Australia, we must, I think, admit that something quite
independently of any difference in physical conditions has caused so great a
difference in number. Even the uniform county of Cambridge has 847 plants, and
the little island of Anglesea 764, but a few ferns and a few introduced plants
are included in these numbers, and the comparison in some other respects is not
quite fair. We have evidence that the barren island of Ascension aboriginally
possessed under half-a-dozen flowering plants; yet many have become naturalised
on it, as they have on New Zealand and on every other oceanic island which can
be named. In St. Helena there is reason to believe that the naturalised plants
and animals have nearly or quite exterminated many native productions. He who
admits the doctrine of the creation of each separate species, will have to
admit, that a sufficient number of the best adapted plants and animals have not
been created on oceanic islands; for man has unintentionally stocked them from
various sources far more fully and perfectly than has nature. Although
in oceanic islands the number of kinds of inhabitants is scanty, the proportion
of endemic species (i.e. those found nowhere else in the
world) is often extremely large. If we compare, for instance, the number of the
endemic land-shells in Madeira, or of the endemic birds in the Galapagos
Archipelago, with the number found on any continent, and then compare the area
of the islands with that of the continent, we shall see that this is true. This
fact might have been expected on my theory, for, as already explained, species
occasionally arriving after long intervals in a new and isolated district, and
having to compete with new associates, will be eminently liable to
modification, and will often produce groups of modified descendants. But it by
no means follows, that, because in an island nearly all the species of one
class are peculiar, those of another class, or of another section of the same
class, are peculiar; and this difference seems to depend on the species which
do not become modified having immigrated with facility and in a body, so that
their mutual relations have not been much disturbed. Thus in the Galapagos
Islands nearly every land-bird, but only two out of the eleven marine birds,
are peculiar; and it is obvious that marine birds could arrive at these islands
more easily than land-birds. Bermuda, on the other hand, which lies at about
the same distance from North America as the Galapagos Islands do from South
America, and which has a very peculiar soil, does not possess one endemic land
bird; and we know from Mr. J. M. Jones’s admirable account of Bermuda, that
very many North American birds, during their great annual migrations, visit
either periodically or occasionally this island. Madeira does not possess one
peculiar bird, and many European and African birds are almost every year blown
there, as I am informed by Mr. E. V. Harcourt. So that these two islands of
Bermuda and Madeira have been stocked by birds, which for long ages have
struggled together in their former homes, and have become mutually adapted to
each other; and when settled in their new homes, each kind will have been kept
by the others to their proper places and habits, and will consequently have
been little liable to modification. Madeira, again, is inhabited by a wonderful
number of peculiar land-shells, whereas not one species of sea-shell is
confined to its shores: now, though we do not know how seashells are dispersed,
yet we can see that their eggs or larvæ, perhaps attached to seaweed or
floating timber, or to the feet of wading-birds, might be transported far more
easily than land-shells, across three or four hundred miles of open sea. The
different orders of insects in Madeira apparently present analogous facts. Oceanic
islands are sometimes deficient in certain classes, and their places are
apparently occupied by the other inhabitants; in the Galapagos Islands
reptiles, and in New Zealand gigantic wingless birds, take the place of
mammals. In the plants of the Galapagos Islands, Dr. Hooker has shown that the
proportional numbers of the different orders are very different from what they
are elsewhere. Such cases are generally accounted for by the physical conditions
of the islands; but this explanation seems to me not a little doubtful.
Facility of immigration, I believe, has been at least as important as the
nature of the conditions. Many
remarkable little facts could be given with respect to the inhabitants of
remote islands. For instance, in certain islands not tenanted by mammals, some
of the endemic plants have beautifully hooked seeds; yet few relations are more
striking than the adaptation of hooked seeds for transportal by the wool and
fur of quadrupeds. This case presents no difficulty on my view, for a hooked
seed might be transported to an island by some other means; and the plant then
becoming slightly modified, but still retaining its hooked seeds, would form an
endemic species, having as useless an appendage as any rudimentary organ,—for
instance, as the shrivelled wings under the soldered elytra of many insular
beetles. Again, islands often possess trees or bushes belonging to orders which
elsewhere include only herbaceous species; now trees, as Alph. de Candolle has
shown, generally have, whatever the cause may be, confined ranges. Hence trees
would be little likely to reach distant oceanic islands; and an herbaceous
plant, though it would have no chance of successfully competing in stature with
a fully developed tree, when established on an island and having to compete
with herbaceous plants alone, might readily gain an advantage by growing taller
and taller and overtopping the other plants. If so, natural selection would
often tend to add to the stature of herbaceous plants when growing on an
island, to whatever order they belonged, and thus convert them first into
bushes and ultimately into trees. With
respect to the absence of whole orders on oceanic islands, Bory St. Vincent
long ago remarked that Batrachians (frogs, toads, newts) have never been found
on any of the many islands with which the great oceans are studded. I have
taken pains to verify this assertion, and I have found it strictly true. I
have, however, been assured that a frog exists on the mountains of the great
island of New Zealand; but I suspect that this exception (if the information be
correct) may be explained through glacial agency. This general absence of
frogs, toads, and newts on so many oceanic islands cannot be accounted for by
their physical conditions; indeed it seems that islands are peculiarly well
fitted for these animals; for frogs have been introduced into Madeira, the
Azores, and Mauritius, and have multiplied so as to become a nuisance. But as
these animals and their spawn are known to be immediately killed by sea-water,
on my view we can see that there would be great difficulty in their transportal
across the sea, and therefore why they do not exist on any oceanic island. But
why, on the theory of creation, they should not have been created there, it
would be very difficult to explain. Mammals
offer another and similar case. I have carefully searched the oldest voyages,
but have not finished my search; as yet I have not found a single instance,
free from doubt, of a terrestrial mammal (excluding domesticated animals kept
by the natives) inhabiting an island situated above 300 miles from a continent
or great continental island; and many islands situated at a much less distance
are equally barren. The Falkland Islands, which are inhabited by a wolf-like
fox, come nearest to an exception; but this group cannot be considered as
oceanic, as it lies on a bank connected with the mainland; moreover, icebergs
formerly brought boulders to its western shores, and they may have formerly
transported foxes, as so frequently now happens in the arctic regions. Yet it
cannot be said that small islands will not support small mammals, for they
occur in many parts of the world on very small islands, if close to a
continent; and hardly an island can be named on which our smaller quadrupeds
have not become naturalised and greatly multiplied. It cannot be said, on the
ordinary view of creation, that there has not been time for the creation of
mammals; many volcanic islands are sufficiently ancient, as shown by the
stupendous degradation which they have suffered and by their tertiary strata:
there has also been time for the production of endemic species belonging to
other classes; and on continents it is thought that mammals appear and disappear
at a quicker rate than other and lower animals. Though terrestrial mammals do
not occur on oceanic islands, aërial mammals do occur on almost every island.
New Zealand possesses two bats found nowhere else in the world: Norfolk Island,
the Viti Archipelago, the Bonin Islands, the Caroline and Marianne
Archipelagoes, and Mauritius, all possess their peculiar bats. Why, it may be
asked, has the supposed creative force produced bats and no other mammals on
remote islands? On my view this question can easily be answered; for no
terrestrial mammal can be transported across a wide space of sea, but bats can
fly across. Bats have been seen wandering by day far over the Atlantic Ocean;
and two North American species either regularly or occasionally visit Bermuda,
at the distance of 600 miles from the mainland. I hear from Mr. Tomes, who has
specially studied this family, that many of the same species have enormous
ranges, and are found on continents and on far distant islands. Hence we have
only to suppose that such wandering species have been modified through natural
selection in their new homes in relation to their new position, and we can
understand the presence of endemic bats on islands, with the absence of all
terrestrial mammals. Besides
the absence of terrestrial mammals in relation to the remoteness of islands
from continents, there is also a relation, to a certain extent independent of
distance, between the depth of the sea separating an island from the
neighbouring mainland, and the presence in both of the same mammiferous species
or of allied species in a more or less modified condition. Mr. Windsor Earl has
made some striking observations on this head in regard to the great Malay
Archipelago, which is traversed near Celebes by a space of deep ocean; and this
space separates two widely distinct mammalian faunas. On either side the
islands are situated on moderately deep submarine banks, and they are inhabited
by closely allied or identical quadrupeds. No doubt some few anomalies occur in
this great archipelago, and there is much difficulty in forming a judgment in
some cases owing to the probable naturalisation of certain mammals through
man’s agency; but we shall soon have much light thrown on the natural history
of this archipelago by the admirable zeal and researches of Mr. Wallace. I have
not as yet had time to follow up this subject in all other quarters of the
world; but as far as I have gone, the relation generally holds good. We see
Britain separated by a shallow channel from Europe, and the mammals are the
same on both sides; we meet with analogous facts on many islands separated by
similar channels from Australia. The West Indian Islands stand on a deeply
submerged bank, nearly 1000 fathoms in depth, and here we find American forms,
but the species and even the genera are distinct. As the amount of modification
in all cases depends to a certain degree on the lapse of time, and as during
changes of level it is obvious that islands separated by shallow channels are
more likely to have been continuously united within a recent period to the
mainland than islands separated by deeper channels, we can understand the
frequent relation between the depth of the sea and the degree of affinity of
the mammalian inhabitants of islands with those of a neighbouring continent,—an
inexplicable relation on the view of independent acts of creation. All the
foregoing remarks on the inhabitants of oceanic islands,—namely, the scarcity
of kinds—the richness in endemic forms in particular classes or sections of
classes,—the absence of whole groups, as of batrachians, and of terrestrial
mammals notwithstanding the presence of aërial bats,—the singular proportions
of certain orders of plants,—herbaceous forms having been developed into trees,
&c.,—seem to me to accord better with the view of occasional means of
transport having been largely efficient in the long course of time, than with
the view of all our oceanic islands having been formerly connected by
continuous land with the nearest continent; for on this latter view the migration
would probably have been more complete; and if modification be admitted, all
the forms of life would have been more equally modified, in accordance with the
paramount importance of the relation of organism to organism. I do not
deny that there are many and grave difficulties in understanding how several of
the inhabitants of the more remote islands, whether still retaining the same
specific form or modified since their arrival, could have reached their present
homes. But the probability of many islands having existed as halting-places, of
which not a wreck now remains, must not be overlooked. I will here give a
single instance of one of the cases of difficulty. Almost all oceanic islands,
even the most isolated and smallest, are inhabited by land-shells, generally by
endemic species, but sometimes by species found elsewhere. Dr. Aug. A. Gould
has given several interesting cases in regard to the land-shells of the islands
of the Pacific. Now it is notorious that land-shells are very easily killed by salt;
their eggs, at least such as I have tried, sink in sea-water and are killed by
it. Yet there must be, on my view, some unknown, but highly efficient means for
their transportal. Would the just-hatched young occasionally crawl on and
adhere to the feet of birds roosting on the ground, and thus get transported?
It occurred to me that land-shells, when hybernating and having a membranous
diaphragm over the mouth of the shell, might be floated in chinks of drifted
timber across moderately wide arms of the sea. And I found that several species
did in this state withstand uninjured an immersion in sea-water during seven
days: one of these shells was the Helix pomatia, and after it had again
hybernated I put it in sea-water for twenty days, and it perfectly recovered.
As this species has a thick calcareous operculum, I removed it, and when it had
formed a new membranous one, I immersed it for fourteen days in sea-water, and
it recovered and crawled away: but more experiments are wanted on this head. The most
striking and important fact for us in regard to the inhabitants of islands, is
their affinity to those of the nearest mainland, without being actually the
same species. Numerous instances could be given of this fact. I will give only
one, that of the Galapagos Archipelago, situated under the equator, between 500
and 600 miles from the shores of South America. Here almost every product of
the land and water bears the unmistakeable stamp of the American continent.
There are twenty-six land birds, and twenty-five of these are ranked by Mr.
Gould as distinct species, supposed to have been created here; yet the close
affinity of most of these birds to American species in every character, in
their habits, gestures, and tones of voice, was manifest. So it is with the other
animals, and with nearly all the plants, as shown by Dr. Hooker in his
admirable memoir on the Flora of this archipelago. The naturalist, looking at
the inhabitants of these volcanic islands in the Pacific, distant several
hundred miles from the continent, yet feels that he is standing on American
land. Why should this be so? why should the species which are supposed to have
been created in the Galapagos Archipelago, and nowhere else, bear so plain a
stamp of affinity to those created in America? There is nothing in the
conditions of life, in the geological nature of the islands, in their height or
climate, or in the proportions in which the several classes are associated
together, which resembles closely the conditions of the South American coast: in
fact there is a considerable dissimilarity in all these respects. On the other
hand, there is a considerable degree of resemblance in the volcanic nature of
the soil, in climate, height, and size of the islands, between the Galapagos
and Cape de Verde Archipelagos: but what an entire and absolute difference in
their inhabitants! The inhabitants of the Cape de Verde Islands are related to
those of Africa, like those of the Galapagos to America. I believe this grand
fact can receive no sort of explanation on the ordinary view of independent
creation; whereas on the view here maintained, it is obvious that the Galapagos
Islands would be likely to receive colonists, whether by occasional means of
transport or by formerly continuous land, from America; and the Cape de Verde
Islands from Africa; and that such colonists would be liable to
modification;—the principle of inheritance still betraying their original
birthplace. Many
analogous facts could be given: indeed it is an almost universal rule that the
endemic productions of islands are related to those of the nearest continent,
or of other near islands. The exceptions are few, and most of them can be
explained. Thus the plants of Kerguelen Land, though standing nearer to Africa
than to America, are related, and that very closely, as we know from Dr.
Hooker’s account, to those of America: but on the view that this island has
been mainly stocked by seeds brought with earth and stones on icebergs, drifted
by the prevailing currents, this anomaly disappears. New Zealand in its endemic
plants is much more closely related to Australia, the nearest mainland, than to
any other region: and this is what might have been expected; but it is also
plainly related to South America, which, although the next nearest continent,
is so enormously remote, that the fact becomes an anomaly. But this difficulty
almost disappears on the view that both New Zealand, South America, and other
southern lands were long ago partially stocked from a nearly intermediate
though distant point, namely from the antarctic islands, when they were clothed
with vegetation, before the commencement of the Glacial period. The affinity,
which, though feeble, I am assured by Dr. Hooker is real, between the flora of
the south-western corner of Australia and of the Cape of Good Hope, is a far
more remarkable case, and is at present inexplicable: but this affinity is
confined to the plants, and will, I do not doubt, be some day explained. The law
which causes the inhabitants of an archipelago, though specifically distinct,
to be closely allied to those of the nearest continent, we sometimes see
displayed on a small scale, yet in a most interesting manner, within the limits
of the same archipelago. Thus the several islands of the Galapagos Archipelago
are tenanted, as I have elsewhere shown, in a quite marvellous manner, by very
closely related species; so that the inhabitants of each separate island,
though mostly distinct, are related in an incomparably closer degree to each
other than to the inhabitants of any other part of the world. And this is just
what might have been expected on my view, for the islands are situated so near
each other that they would almost certainly receive immigrants from the same
original source, or from each other. But this dissimilarity between the endemic
inhabitants of the islands may be used as an argument against my views; for it
may be asked, how has it happened in the several islands situated within sight
of each other, having the same geological nature, the same height, climate, &c.,
that many of the immigrants should have been differently modified, though only
in a small degree. This long appeared to me a great difficulty: but it arises
in chief part from the deeply-seated error of considering the physical
conditions of a country as the most important for its inhabitants; whereas it
cannot, I think, be disputed that the nature of the other inhabitants, with
which each has to compete, is at least as important, and generally a far more
important element of success. Now if we look to those inhabitants of the
Galapagos Archipelago which are found in other parts of the world (laying on
one side for the moment the endemic species, which cannot be here fairly
included, as we are considering how they have come to be modified since their
arrival), we find a considerable amount of difference in the several islands.
This difference might indeed have been expected on the view of the islands
having been stocked by occasional means of transport—a seed, for instance, of
one plant having been brought to one island, and that of another plant to
another island. Hence when in former times an immigrant settled on any one or
more of the islands, or when it subsequently spread from one island to another,
it would undoubtedly be exposed to different conditions of life in the
different islands, for it would have to compete with different sets of
organisms: a plant, for instance, would find the best-fitted ground more
perfectly occupied by distinct plants in one island than in another, and it
would be exposed to the attacks of somewhat different enemies. If then it
varied, natural selection would probably favour different varieties in the
different islands. Some species, however, might spread and yet retain the same
character throughout the group, just as we see on continents some species
spreading widely and remaining the same. The really
surprising fact in this case of the Galapagos Archipelago, and in a lesser
degree in some analogous instances, is that the new species formed in the
separate islands have not quickly spread to the other islands. But the islands,
though in sight of each other, are separated by deep arms of the sea, in most
cases wider than the British Channel, and there is no reason to suppose that
they have at any former period been continuously united. The currents of the
sea are rapid and sweep across the archipelago, and gales of wind are
extraordinarily rare; so that the islands are far more effectually separated
from each other than they appear to be on a map. Nevertheless a good many
species, both those found in other parts of the world and those confined to the
archipelago, are common to the several islands, and we may infer from certain
facts that these have probably spread from some one island to the others. But
we often take, I think, an erroneous view of the probability of closely allied
species invading each other’s territory, when put into free intercommunication.
Undoubtedly if one species has any advantage whatever over another, it will in
a very brief time wholly or in part supplant it; but if both are equally well
fitted for their own places in nature, both probably will hold their own places
and keep separate for almost any length of time. Being familiar with the fact
that many species, naturalised through man’s agency, have spread with
astonishing rapidity over new countries, we are apt to infer that most species
would thus spread; but we should remember that the forms which become
naturalised in new countries are not generally closely allied to the aboriginal
inhabitants, but are very distinct species, belonging in a large proportion of
cases, as shown by Alph. de Candolle, to distinct genera. In the Galapagos
Archipelago, many even of the birds, though so well adapted for flying from
island to island, are distinct on each; thus there are three closely-allied
species of mocking-thrush, each confined to its own island. Now let us suppose
the mocking-thrush of Chatham Island to be blown to Charles Island, which has
its own mocking-thrush: why should it succeed in establishing itself there? We
may safely infer that Charles Island is well stocked with its own species, for
annually more eggs are laid there than can possibly be reared; and we may infer
that the mocking-thrush peculiar to Charles Island is at least as well fitted
for its home as is the species peculiar to Chatham Island. Sir C. Lyell and Mr.
Wollaston have communicated to me a remarkable fact bearing on this subject;
namely, that Madeira and the adjoining islet of Porto Santo possess many
distinct but representative land-shells, some of which live in crevices of
stone; and although large quantities of stone are annually transported from
Porto Santo to Madeira, yet this latter island has not become colonised by the
Porto Santo species: nevertheless both islands have been colonised by some
European land-shells, which no doubt had some advantage over the indigenous
species. From these considerations I think we need not greatly marvel at the
endemic and representative species, which inhabit the several islands of the
Galapagos Archipelago, not having universally spread from island to island. In
many other instances, as in the several districts of the same continent,
pre-occupation has probably played an important part in checking the
commingling of species under the same conditions of life. Thus, the south-east
and south-west corners of Australia have nearly the same physical conditions,
and are united by continuous land, yet they are inhabited by a vast number of
distinct mammals, birds, and plants. The
principle which determines the general character of the fauna and flora of
oceanic islands, namely, that the inhabitants, when not identically the same,
yet are plainly related to the inhabitants of that region whence colonists
could most readily have been derived,—the colonists having been subsequently
modified and better fitted to their new homes,—is of the widest application
throughout nature. We see this on every mountain, in every lake and marsh. For
Alpine species, excepting in so far as the same forms, chiefly of plants, have
spread widely throughout the world during the recent Glacial epoch, are related
to those of the surrounding lowlands;—thus we have in South America, Alpine
humming-birds, Alpine rodents, Alpine plants, &c., all of strictly American
forms, and it is obvious that a mountain, as it became slowly upheaved, would
naturally be colonised from the surrounding lowlands. So it is with the
inhabitants of lakes and marshes, excepting in so far as great facility of
transport has given the same general forms to the whole world. We see this same
principle in the blind animals inhabiting the caves of America and of Europe.
Other analogous facts could be given. And it will, I believe, be universally
found to be true, that wherever in two regions, let them be ever so distant, many
closely allied or representative species occur, there will likewise be found
some identical species, showing, in accordance with the foregoing view, that at
some former period there has been intercommunication or migration between the
two regions. And wherever many closely-allied species occur, there will be
found many forms which some naturalists rank as distinct species, and some as
varieties; these doubtful forms showing us the steps in the process of
modification. This
relation between the power and extent of migration of a species, either at the
present time or at some former period under different physical conditions, and
the existence at remote points of the world of other species allied to it, is
shown in another and more general way. Mr. Gould remarked to me long ago, that
in those genera of birds which range over the world, many of the species have
very wide ranges. I can hardly doubt that this rule is generally true, though
it would be difficult to prove it. Amongst mammals, we see it strikingly displayed
in Bats, and in a lesser degree in the Felidæ and Canidæ. We see it, if we
compare the distribution of butterflies and beetles. So it is with most
fresh-water productions, in which so many genera range over the world, and many
individual species have enormous ranges. It is not meant that in world-ranging
genera all the species have a wide range, or even that they have on an average
a wide range; but only that some of the species range very widely; for the
facility with which widely-ranging species vary and give rise to new forms will
largely determine their average range. For instance, two varieties of the same
species inhabit America and Europe, and the species thus has an immense range;
but, if the variation had been a little greater, the two varieties would have
been ranked as distinct species, and the common range would have been greatly
reduced. Still less is it meant, that a species which apparently has the
capacity of crossing barriers and ranging widely, as in the case of certain
powerfully-winged birds, will necessarily range widely; for we should never
forget that to range widely implies not only the power of crossing barriers,
but the more important power of being victorious in distant lands in the
struggle for life with foreign associates. But on the view of all the species
of a genus having descended from a single parent, though now distributed to the
most remote points of the world, we ought to find, and I believe as a general
rule we do find, that some at least of the species range very widely; for it is
necessary that the unmodified parent should range widely, undergoing
modification during its diffusion, and should place itself under diverse
conditions favourable for the conversion of its offspring, firstly into new
varieties and ultimately into new species. In
considering the wide distribution of certain genera, we should bear in mind
that some are extremely ancient, and must have branched off from a common
parent at a remote epoch; so that in such cases there will have been ample time
for great climatal and geographical changes and for accidents of transport; and
consequently for the migration of some of the species into all quarters of the
world, where they may have become slightly modified in relation to their new
conditions. There is, also, some reason to believe from geological evidence
that organisms low in the scale within each great class, generally change at a
slower rate than the higher forms; and consequently the lower forms will have
had a better chance of ranging widely and of still retaining the same specific
character. This fact, together with the seeds and eggs of many low forms being
very minute and better fitted for distant transportation, probably accounts for
a law which has long been observed, and which has lately been admirably
discussed by Alph. de Candolle in regard to plants, namely, that the lower any
group of organisms is, the more widely it is apt to range. The
relations just discussed,—namely, low and slowly-changing organisms ranging
more widely than the high,—some of the species of widely-ranging genera
themselves ranging widely,—such facts, as alpine, lacustrine, and marsh
productions being related (with the exceptions before specified) to those on
the surrounding low lands and dry lands, though these stations are so
different—the very close relation of the distinct species which inhabit the
islets of the same archipelago,—and especially the striking relation of the
inhabitants of each whole archipelago or island to those of the nearest
mainland,—are, I think, utterly inexplicable on the ordinary view of the
independent creation of each species, but are explicable on the view of
colonisation from the nearest and readiest source, together with the subsequent
modification and better adaptation of the colonists to their new homes. Summary of
last and present Chapters.—In these chapters I have endeavoured to show, that
if we make due allowance for our ignorance of the full effects of all the
changes of climate and of the level of the land, which have certainly occurred
within the recent period, and of other similar changes which may have occurred
within the same period; if we remember how profoundly ignorant we are with
respect to the many and curious means of occasional transport,—a subject which
has hardly ever been properly experimentised on; if we bear in mind how often a
species may have ranged continuously over a wide area, and then have become
extinct in the intermediate tracts, I think the difficulties in believing that
all the individuals of the same species, wherever located, have descended from
the same parents, are not insuperable. And we are led to this conclusion, which
has been arrived at by many naturalists under the designation of single centres
of creation, by some general considerations, more especially from the
importance of barriers and from the analogical distribution of sub-genera,
genera, and families. With
respect to the distinct species of the same genus, which on my theory must have
spread from one parent-source; if we make the same allowances as before for our
ignorance, and remember that some forms of life change most slowly, enormous
periods of time being thus granted for their migration, I do not think that the
difficulties are insuperable; though they often are in this case, and in that of
the individuals of the same species, extremely grave. As
exemplifying the effects of climatal changes on distribution, I have attempted
to show how important has been the influence of the modern Glacial period,
which I am fully convinced simultaneously affected the whole world, or at least
great meridional belts. As showing how diversified are the means of occasional
transport, I have discussed at some little length the means of dispersal of
fresh-water productions. If the
difficulties be not insuperable in admitting that in the long course of time
the individuals of the same species, and likewise of allied species, have
proceeded from some one source; then I think all the grand leading facts of
geographical distribution are explicable on the theory of migration (generally
of the more dominant forms of life), together with subsequent modification and
the multiplication of new forms. We can thus understand the high importance of
barriers, whether of land or water, which separate our several zoological and botanical
provinces. We can thus understand the localisation of sub-genera, genera, and
families; and how it is that under different latitudes, for instance in South
America, the inhabitants of the plains and mountains, of the forests, marshes,
and deserts, are in so mysterious a manner linked together by affinity, and are
likewise linked to the extinct beings which formerly inhabited the same
continent. Bearing in mind that the mutual relations of organism to organism
are of the highest importance, we can see why two areas having nearly the same
physical conditions should often be inhabited by very different forms of life;
for according to the length of time which has elapsed since new inhabitants
entered one region; according to the nature of the communication which allowed
certain forms and not others to enter, either in greater or lesser numbers;
according or not, as those which entered happened to come in more or less
direct competition with each other and with the aborigines; and according as
the immigrants were capable of varying more or less rapidly, there would ensue
in different regions, independently of their physical conditions, infinitely
diversified conditions of life,—there would be an almost endless amount of
organic action and reaction,—and we should find, as we do find, some groups of
beings greatly, and some only slightly modified,—some developed in great force,
some existing in scanty numbers—in the different great geographical provinces
of the world. On these
same principles, we can understand, as I have endeavoured to show, why oceanic
islands should have few inhabitants, but of these a great number should be
endemic or peculiar; and why, in relation to the means of migration, one group
of beings, even within the same class, should have all its species endemic, and
another group should have all its species common to other quarters of the
world. We can see why whole groups of organisms, as batrachians and terrestrial
mammals, should be absent from oceanic islands, whilst the most isolated islands
possess their own peculiar species of aërial mammals or bats. We can see why
there should be some relation between the presence of mammals, in a more or
less modified condition, and the depth of the sea between an island and the
mainland. We can clearly see why all the inhabitants of an archipelago, though
specifically distinct on the several islets, should be closely related to each
other, and likewise be related, but less closely, to those of the nearest
continent or other source whence immigrants were probably derived. We can see
why in two areas, however distant from each other, there should be a
correlation, in the presence of identical species, of varieties, of doubtful
species, and of distinct but representative species. As the
late Edward Forbes often insisted, there is a striking parallelism in the laws
of life throughout time and space: the laws governing the succession of forms
in past times being nearly the same with those governing at the present time
the differences in different areas. We see this in many facts. The endurance of
each species and group of species is continuous in time; for the exceptions to
the rule are so few, that they may fairly be attributed to our not having as
yet discovered in an intermediate deposit the forms which are therein absent,
but which occur above and below: so in space, it certainly is the general rule
that the area inhabited by a single species, or by a group of species, is
continuous; and the exceptions, which are not rare, may, as I have attempted to
show, be accounted for by migration at some former period under different
conditions or by occasional means of transport, and by the species having
become extinct in the intermediate tracts. Both in time and space, species and
groups of species have their points of maximum development. Groups of species,
belonging either to a certain period of time, or to a certain area, are often
characterised by trifling characters in common, as of sculpture or colour. In
looking to the long succession of ages, as in now looking to distant provinces
throughout the world, we find that some organisms differ little, whilst others
belonging to a different class, or to a different order, or even only to a
different family of the same order, differ greatly. In both time and space the lower
members of each class generally change less than the higher; but there are in
both cases marked exceptions to the rule. On my theory these several relations
throughout time and space are intelligible; for whether we look to the forms of
life which have changed during successive ages within the same quarter of the
world, or to those which have changed after having migrated into distant
quarters, in both cases the forms within each class have been connected by the
same bond of ordinary generation; and the more nearly any two forms are related
in blood, the nearer they will generally stand to each other in time and space;
in both cases the laws of variation have been the same, and modifications have
been accumulated by the same power of natural selection. |