Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER I DOMESTIC DOGS AND CATS
- CHAPTER II HORSES AND ASSES
- CHAPTER III PIGS — CATTLE — SHEEP — GOATS
- CHAPTER IV DOMESTIC RABBITS
- CHAPTER V DOMESTIC PIGEONS
- CHAPTER VI PIGEONS—continued
- CHAPTER VII FOWLS
- CHAPTER VIII DUCKS — GOOSE — PEACOCK — TURKEY — GUINEA-FOWL — CANARY-BIRD — GOLD-FISH — HIVE-BEES—SILK-MOTHS
- CHAPTER IX CULTIVATED PLANTS: CEREAL AND CULINARY PLANTS
- CHAPTER X PLANTS continued — FRUITS — ORNAMENTAL TREES — FLOWERS
- CHAPTER XI ON BUD-VARIATION, AND ON CERTAIN ANOMALOUS MODES OF REPRODUCTION AND VARIATION
CHAPTER V - DOMESTIC PIGEONS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER I DOMESTIC DOGS AND CATS
- CHAPTER II HORSES AND ASSES
- CHAPTER III PIGS — CATTLE — SHEEP — GOATS
- CHAPTER IV DOMESTIC RABBITS
- CHAPTER V DOMESTIC PIGEONS
- CHAPTER VI PIGEONS—continued
- CHAPTER VII FOWLS
- CHAPTER VIII DUCKS — GOOSE — PEACOCK — TURKEY — GUINEA-FOWL — CANARY-BIRD — GOLD-FISH — HIVE-BEES—SILK-MOTHS
- CHAPTER IX CULTIVATED PLANTS: CEREAL AND CULINARY PLANTS
- CHAPTER X PLANTS continued — FRUITS — ORNAMENTAL TREES — FLOWERS
- CHAPTER XI ON BUD-VARIATION, AND ON CERTAIN ANOMALOUS MODES OF REPRODUCTION AND VARIATION
Summary
I have been led to study domestic pigeons with particular care, because the evidence that all the domestic races have descended from one known source is far clearer than with any other anciently domesticated animal. Secondly, because many treatises in several languages, some of them old, have been written on the pigeon, so that we are enabled to trace the history of several breeds. And lastly, because, from causes which we can partly understand, the amount of variation has been extraordinarily great. The details will often be tediously minute; but no one who really wants to understand the progress of change in domestic animals will regret this; and no one who has kept pigeons and has marked the great difference between the breeds and the trueness with which most of them propagate their kind, will think this care superfluous. Notwithstanding the clear evidence that all the breeds are the descendants of a single species, I could not persuade myself until some years had passed that the whole amount of difference between them had arisen since man first domesticated the wild rock-pigeon.
I have kept alive all the most distinct breeds, which I could procure in England or from the Continent; and have prepared skeletons of all. I have received skins from Persia, and a large number from India and other quarters of the world.
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- The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication , pp. 131 - 179Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010