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Darwin, Charles, 1809-1882

"On the Origin of Species By Means of Natural Selection, or, the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life"

Whatever the cause may be of the
variability of secondary sexual characters, as they are highly
variable, sexual selection will have had a wide scope for action, and
may thus readily have succeeded in giving to the species of the same
group a greater amount of difference in their sexual characters, than
in other parts of their structure.
It is a remarkable fact, that the secondary sexual differences between
the two sexes of the same species are generally displayed in the very
same parts of the organisation in which the different species of the
same genus differ from each other. Of this fact I will give in
illustration two instances, the first which happen to stand on my
list; and as the differences in these cases are of a very unusual
nature, the relation can hardly be accidental. The same number of
joints in the tarsi is a character generally common to very large
groups of beetles, but in the Engidae, as Westwood has remarked, the
number varies greatly; and the number likewise differs in the two
sexes of the same species: again in fossorial hymenoptera, the manner
of neuration of the wings is a character of the highest importance,
because common to large groups; but in certain genera the neuration
differs in the different species, and likewise in the two sexes of the
same species. This relation has a clear meaning on my view of the
subject: I look at all the species of the same genus as having as
certainly descended from the same progenitor, as have the two sexes of
any one of the species.


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