Abstract

SOME time ago I wrote a short letter asking for information about the colours of birds' eggs, which appeared in NATURE of May 14, 1908. I read the answer to my letter in a subsequent number of NATURE, which, unfortunately, did not appear to me to throw much light on the subject. I would like to suggest that this colouring of eggs was in some way originally analogous to the change of colour observable in the chameleon and certain lizards, though by no means, at the same level of development. Although it is quite possible that the colouring in some cases is protective, or has become so, it does not seem that this is a fixed rule. Why should the egg of a starling, which generally builds on house-tops, be blue? The hedgesparrow's, again, is blue, while the thrush's is blue spotted with black, and the blackbird's is green, though the position of their nests is vastly similar. Again, on examining the excellent “clutches” at the Natural History Museum which exhibit the additional cuckoo's egg, one is struck by the variation in shade, which, according to observers, is matched by the bird itself.

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