: wa dl Rll ont A A an a ~~ ~ ~ . TPePPRAR RNS AALS Meera 4 Eo THOMAS LINCOLN CASEY LIBRARY 1925 Wi} " TRANSACTIONS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. THE TRANSACTIONS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY LONDON FOUR TELE: YEAR 1880. OND: ON: PRINTED FOR THE SOCIETY BY WEST, NEWMAN AND CO., 54, HATTON GARDEN, LONDON, E.C.; SOLD AT THE SOCIETY’S ROOMS, 11, CHANDOS STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE, AND BY LONGMAN, GREEN, READER AND DYER, PATERNOSTER ROW. 1880. ee .. ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY. COUNCIL FOR 1880. Sir Joun Lussock, Bart., M.P., F.R.S., &. President. Henry W. Bates, Esq., F.L.S., F.Z.8., &c. JosEPH W. Dunnine, Esq., M.A., F.L.S. Vice-Presidents. Henry T. Stainton, Esq., F.R.S., F.L.S8., &c. Epwarp Saunpers, Hsq., F.L.S. ... so. Lveasurer. FERDINAND Grout, Esq., F.L.S. —... ... Librarian. RapPHaEt MELpo.a, Esq., F.C.S., F.R.A.S.,&e. Wo. L. Distant, Esq., Direct. Anth. Inst. WIL1IAM COLE, Esq. F. Du Cane Gopmany, Esq., M. Aes F. i 8. Ossprert Sauvin, M.A., F.L.S. SAMUEL STEVENS, Esq., F.L.S. J. JENNER WEIR, F.L.S., F.Z.S. : Secretaries. Other Members of Council. Wiehe POOnE, (a. eo ae bas .. Lestdent Librarian. THE TRANSACTIONS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. 1834—J880. To the Public. To Members. First Series, 5 volumes (1834—1849)...... Price £6 0 0 £410 O Second Series, 5 volumes (1850—186]1) .... 8 700 @ ) © Third Series, 5 volumes (1862—1869) .... nt) i tay (0) ‘The Transactions for the year 1868........ i) 015 0 5 _ NS CO creep i 016 6 : “5 IUSHO Rs Gro Gln Oc i fs i il @ F ' WS Wins one ate i 6 @ 018 9 r . S72 cerccerehers es 016 6 ; ; lsviGGabesece IL Al §=@ Won = NOVAr sa. eer 1120 ib a 3 * BT Dtetertetrets 20 016 6 * - STG occxstasias if ey P40 *F 3 LO Wigeic cvensestere i ab 0) 018 O an D USS: creepeteiere i @) 015 O re - LBV One ae ut 2 0) 016 6 3 is MWeeWoonec are OR9T 0 014 3 Volume 5 of the First Series can no longer be obtained separately ; all the other volumes may. Longicornia Malayana may be obtained separately .. .. Price £2 12 0 £1190 Phytophaga Malayana, Rts 1. Apostasicera, may be obtained separately of 016 O 012 0 Synopsis of British Heterogyna and Fos- sorial Hymenoptera may be obtained separately .. od or ad a6 0 4 6 0 3 3 The Journal of Proceedings is bound up with the Transactions, but may be obtained separately, by Members, gratis. a“ Members and Subscribers resident more than fifteen miles from London, who haye paid the subscription for the current year, are entitled te receive a copy of the Transactions for the year without further pay- ment, and they will be forwarded free, by post, to any address within the United Kingdom. Members and Subscribers resident in or within fifteen miles of London are entitled to a copy of the Transactions for the current year at half the price to the public, which copy may be obtained on application to the Librarian: or all such Members or Subscribers who, in addition to their Subscription for the current year, shall, at or before the April Meeting of the Society, pay a further contribution of Half-a-Guinca, shall be entitled to receive a copy of the Transactions for the year without farther payment, which copy will be forwarded free by post. CONE TN DS: =e PAGE Explanation of the Plates i Vs wt 9 ae ee VILL Errata O5 : viii List of Members ac 3< ere re ae ave a6 ix Additions to the Library xs 50 Ss Ac bc oe SVL MEMOIRS. PAGE I . Materials for a Revision of the hig By the Rey. H. S. GorHam II. On some Coleoptera from the Hawaiian Islands. By D.SHarp. 37 III. On Synonyms of Heterocerous ae ae By ArtHtr G. Burien, ELS. &e. . . dd : bo ae oa UH) IV. Descriptions of Cetoniide and Cerambycide from Mada- gascar. By Cuartes O. WATERHOUSE. .. ac ne Oo VY. On the Structure of the Lampyride, with reference to their phosphorescence. By the Rev. H.S. GorHam. .. 63 VI. Notes on the Coloration and Development of Insects. By PETER CAMERON ate 55 oc 56 Sc 50) HY VII. On Cetonia aurata and Protaetia Bensoni. By J. O. Wxst- woop, M.A. EIS. .. ae ss ws Ne aA tsi! VIII. Materials for a Revision of the Romande: By the Rey. H.S. Gorwam .. 50 ye : 5¢ Bo) teh) IX. On two Gynandromorphous Specimens of Cirrochroa Aoris, XIII. Doubl., an Indian species of Nymphalideous Butterfly. By J. O. Westwoop, M.A., F.L.S. .. Ee ss ao. 11} . A List of Diurnal Lepidoptera collected in the Sierra Nevada of Santa Marta, Colombia, and the Vicinity. By F. Du Cane Gopman, M.A., F.L. Py. and OsBERT SALVIN, M.A., ERS... : c are 5 Alls) . On the Genus Colias. By H.J. Exwes, F.LS.,F.Z.S. .. 133 XII. Notes on Exotic Rhynchota, with descriptions of new Species. By W.L. Distant .. ss ss ae Ss og daly On the Asiatic Lepidoptera referred to the Genus Mycalesis ; with descriptions of new Genera and Species. By F. Moore, F.L.S., F.Z.S. a ae a He oo Lust) Plate I . On the Buprestide from Madagascar. By Cuaries O. MEMOIRS (continued). PAGE WATERHOUSE > Ld . Observations upon certain Species of the Lepidopterous Genus Terias, with descriptions of hitherto unknown forms from Japan. By Artuur G. Burier, F.L.S., F.Z.8. 197 . Synopsis of British Heterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. By Epwarp Saunpers, F.L.S. 50 36 56 -. 201 On a Collection of Hemiptera from Japan. By Joun Scorr. 305 Description of a new Species of the anomalous Genus Polyctenes. By Cuartes O. WaTERHOUSE. o¢ emolg Proceedings for 1880 .. at oe a0 50 sg- al Index ae Be 56 BO Oc are aC oe Lvil EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES. 5. 06 -. See page 112] Plate VI. .. See pp. 197 - 200 Plate II. 53 117 | Plates VIL. & VIIE. ,, 201-30£ Plates III. &1V. See pp. 119-132 | Plate IX. .. ~- » 9319-820 Plate V. » 147-153 ERRATA. IN THE TRANSACTIONS FOR 1880. Page 133, line 5 (from top), for “ Salvini’s” read “ Salvin’s.” » 186, line 2 (from bottom), for “ Keewaydim” read “ Keewaydin.” Page vii, line 12 (from bottom), for “was observed” read “was not Pages ix (line 1 from top) and xi (line 6 from top), for “1878” read “1880.” 139, line 9 (from top), the word “ nastes” should be in Italics. 140, line 14 (from top), for “ Keewaydon” read “ Keewaydin.” 140, line 20 (from bottom), for “food plant” read ‘ food plants.” 140, line 14 (from bottom), for “are not” read “is not.” 140, line 5 (from bottom), for ‘“* McLachan” read “ McLachlan.” 140, line 2 (from bottom), for “ germ” read “ genus.” 141, line 17 from top), for “ Pauens” read “ Pallens.” 207 (lines 3 and 7 from top) and p. 261 (lines 4 and 5 from bottom) for ‘‘ mesopleurz”’ read “ mesopleura.” IN THE JOURNAL OF PROCEEDINGS FOR 1880. observed.” Hist of Ttlembers OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. 3lst DECEMBER, 1880. LIST OF MEMBERS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. Honorary IWembers. Burmeister, Hermann, Buenos Ayres. Guenée, Achille, Chateawdun. Hagen, H. A., Cambridge, U.S.A. Leconte, John L., Philadelphia. Milne-Edwards, H., Paris. Saussure, H. de, Geneva. Schiddte, J. C., Copenhagen. Selys-Longchamps, HE. de, Liege. Siebold, C. T. E. von, Munich. Zeller, P. C., Stettin. ORDINARY MEMBERS AND SUBSCRIBERS. Date of Election. 1877 1877 1880 1867 8. 1856 Marked * are Original Members. Marked + have compounded for their Annual Subscriptions. Marked 8. are Annual Subscribers. Adams, Frederick Charlstrom, 74 Jermyn-street, W. Adams, Herbert Jordan, Roseneath, London-rd., Enfield, N. André, Ed., M.S.E. de France, Berlin, Stettin, &c., 21 Boule- vard Brétonniere, Beaune (Cote @Or), France. Archer, F., Litsle Crosby-road, Crosby, Liverpool. Armitage, Edward, R.A., 3 Hall-road, St. John’s Wood, N.W. Babington, Charles Cardale, M.A., F.R.S., F.L.S., &c., Pro- fessor of Botany, 5 Brookside, Cambridge. Baly, Joseph 8., M.R.C.S., F.L.S., The Butts, Warwick. Barton, Stephen, 32 St. Michael’s-hill, Bristol. Bates, Henry Walter, F.L.S., F.Z.8., 40 Bartholomew-road, Kentish Town, N.W. Beaumont, Alfred, Steps Mills, Huddersfield. Berens, Alexander Augustus, Spratton Grange, Northampton, and 68 Great Cumberland-place, W. Bicknell, Perey, Beckenham, Kent. Bignell, Geo. Carter, 7 Clarence-place, Stonehouse, Plymouth. Billups, T. R., 4 Swiss Villas, Coplestone-road, Peckham, 8.K. Blomefield, Rev. Leonard, M.A., F.L.S., &.,19 Belmont, Bath. Bond, Fred., F.Z.S., 5 Fairfield Avenue, Stains. Bonvouloir, Vicomte Henri de, 15 Rue del Université, Paris. Borrer, William, junr., Cowfold, Sussex. Boscher, Edward, Bellevwe House, Twickenham. Boyd, Thomas, Surrey Lodge, Hornend-road, Norwood, 8.E. Boyd, William Christopher, F.L.8., Cheshwnt, Herts. Braikenridge, Rev.Geo. Weare, M.A., F.L.S.,Clevedon, Bristol. Brandt, Dr. Edouard, Pres. Russ. Ent. Soc., &¢., Imperial Medico-Chirurgical College, St. Petersburg. . Bridgman, John B., 69 St. Giles’-street, Norwich. Briggs, Charles Adolphus, 55 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, W.C. Briggs, Thos. Henry, M.A., 55 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, W.C. Brongniart, Charles, M.S.E. and M.8.G. de France, &c., Musewm Whistoire Naturelle de Paris, 57 Rue Cuvier, Jardin des Plantes. Broun, Capt. Thomas, Kawan, Auckland, New Zealand. . Brown, N. E., Ivy Cottage, near St. John’s Church, Red Hill. Browne, Rev. Thomas Henry, M.A., F.G.S., The Cedars, High Wycombe, Bucks. . Bull, R. E., 85 Milton-street, Dorset-square, N.W. Burnell, Edward Henry, 32 Bedford-row, W.C. {+ Butler, Arthur Gardiner, F.L.8., F.Z.8., 10 Avington-grove, Penge, 8.E. LIST OF MEMBERS. . Cameron, Peter, 31 Willow-bank-crescent, Glasgow. Candéze, Dr. E., Glain, Liege. Cansdale, W. D., 4 Guithavon-terrace, Witham, Essex. . Capron, Edward, M.D., Shere, Guildford. . Carmichael, Thos. D. Gibson, Castle Craig, Dolphinton, N B. Carrington, Charles, Ellerslie, Lower Merton, S.W. Carrington, John T., F.L.S., Royal Aquarium, Westminster. Champion, G. C., 274 Walworth-road, 8.E. Charlton, Ernest 8., Hesleyside, Bellingham, Hexham. Clarke, Alexander Henry, 16 Furnival’s Inn, E.C. . Clarke, Chas. Baron, M.A., F.L.S., Royal Herbarium, Kew. Cockle, Capt. George, 9 Bolton-gardens, S.W. . Cole, Benjamin G., Lawrel Cottage, King’s-place, Buckhurst Hill, Essex. Cole, William, Lawrel Cottage, King’s-place, Buckhurst Hill, Essex. . Cooke, Benj., 103 Windsor-road, Southport, Lancashire. Copland, Patrick F., Hillcote, Buckhurst Hill, Hssem. Copperthwaite, William Charles, Beesh-grove, Malton. . Cowell, Peter (Librarian of the Free Public Library), William Brown-street, Liverpool. Cox, Colonel C. J., Fordwich House, Canterbury. Cox, Herbert Edward, Rosenheim, Reigate. Crisp, Frank, LL.B., B.A., F.L.S., Sec. R.M.S., 5 Lansdowne- road, Notting Hill, W. Crosbie, Frank, The Chestnuts, Barnet, Herts. Curzon, E. P. Roper. Dale, C. W., Glanville’s Wootton, Sherborne. Dallas, William Sweetland, F.L.S., Geological Society, Bur- lington House, W. Darwin, Chas., LL.D., F.R.S., F.L.S., &c., Down, Beckenham, Kent. Devonshire, William Cavendish, Duke of, K.G., F.R.8S., &c., Devonshire House, 78 Piccadilly, W. . Dickson, Prof. Wm., Curator, University Library, Glasgow. Distant, William Lucas (Director of the Anthropological Institute), Sroretrary, 1 Selston Villas, Derwent-grove, East Dulwich, 8.K. Dohrn, Dr. C. A. (Pres. Entomological Soe. of Stettin), Stettin. Doria, Marquis Giacomo, Strada Nuova, Genoa. . Dormer, John Baptist Joseph Dormer, Lord, Grove Park, Warwick. Douglas, John William, 8 Beaufort-gardens, Lewisham, S.K. Dowsett, Arthur, Kingsgate Villa, King’s-road, Reading. Druce, Herbert, F.L.S., F.Z.8., 1 Circus-road, St. John’s Wood, N.W. . Duer, Yeend, Cleygate House, Esher. Dunning, Joseph Wm., M.A., F.L.S., F.Z.S., 12 Old-square, Lincoln’s Inn, W.C. Du Pré, Charles Christian, F.L.S., 17 Pembroke-gardens, Kensington, W. D’Urban, W. 8. M., F.L.S., Albwera, St. Leonards, Exeter. Eaton, Rey. Alfred Edwin, M.A., 51 Park-rd., Bromley, Kent. Elwes, Hy. John, F.L.S., F.Z.8., Preston House, Cirencester. LIST OF MEMBERS. xill Emich, Gustave d’, 6 Sebastian-place, Budapesth, Hungary. . Enock, Fredce., 30 Russell-rd., Seven Sisters’-rd., Holloway, N. . Finzi, John A., 105 Gower-street, W.C. Fitch, Edward A., F.L.S., Brick House, Maldon, Essex. . Fitch, Frederick, Hadleigh House, Highbury New Park, N. Fletcher, J. E., Happy Land, Worcester. Forbes, William Alexander, St. John’s College, Cambridge. Fowler, Rev. W., M.A., F.L.S., The School House, Lincoln. Freeland, H. W., M.A., Chichester. French, Rev. David John, F.L.S., F.Z.S., F.H.S., &e. Fry, Alexander, F.L.8., Thornhill House, Dulwich Wood Park, Norwood, 8.E. Fryer, Herbert Fortescue, Chatteris, Cambridgeshire. Garneys, W., M.R.C.S., Repton, Burton-on-Trent. + Godman, Frederick DuCane, M.A., F.L.S, &c., Park Hatch, Godalming; and 10 Chandos-street, Cavendish-square, W. . Gooch, W. D., Spring Vale, Little Umhlanga, Victoria Co., Natal. . Goodman, C. H., Kearsbrook Lodge, Lesness Heath, Kent. Gorham, Rev. Henry Stephen, Shipley, Sussex. Goss, Herbert, F.L.8S., F.G.8., The Avenue, Surbiton Hill, Surrey. Gosse, Philip Hy., F.R.S., Sandhurst, Torquay, Devonshire. Gould, John, F.R.S., F.L.5., &e., 26 Charlotte-street, Bedford- square, W.C. Gray, John, Claygate House, Esher. Greene, Rev. J., M.A., Rostrevor, Apsley-rd., Clifton, Bristol. Grut, Ferdinand, F'.L.8., Liprartan, 9 King-street, South- wark, 8.E. Harding, George, The Grove, Fishponds, Bristol. Harford, Henry C., Lieut. 99th Regt., Cape of Good Hope. Harold, Baron Edgar von, 52 Barerstrasse, Munich. Harper, P. H., 80 Cambridge-street, Hyde Park-square, W. . Harris, John T., Newton-road, Burton-on-Trent. Hillman, Thomas Stanton, Hastgate-street, Lewes. Holdsworth, Edward, Shanghat. Horniman, Frederick John, F.L.S., F.R.G.S., F.Z.8S., &e., Surrey House, Forest Hill, 8.H. Hudd, A. E., 96 Pembroke-road, Clifton, Briatol. Inchbald, Peter, The Lodge, Hovingham, York. . Janson, E. M., Las Lajas, Chontales, Nicaragua. Janson, Edward W., 82 Victoria-road, Finsbury Park, N.; and 35 Little Russell-street, Bloomsbury, W.C. Janson, Oliver E., 382 Victoria-road, Finsbury Park, N.; and 35 Little Russell-street, Bloomsbury, W.C. Jekel, Henri, 62 Rue de Dunkerque, Paris. . Jenner, J. H. A., High-street, Lewes. . John, Evan, Llantrissant, Pontypridd. Katter, Dr. F., Putbus, Rigen, North Prussia. Kay, John Dunning, Leeds. Kaye, Ernest St. G., Jessore, Bengal. XIV 1861 1876 1842 1875 1868 1880 1868 1876 1876 1835 1875 1865 1849 1850 1853 1880 1851 1858 1869 1873 1865 1856 1874 1865 1860 1865 1872 1880 1871 1866 1879 1853 1859 1869 1876 1872 1878 1878 1878 LIST OF MEMBERS. Kirby, W. F., 5 Union-road, Tufnell Park, N. Kraatz, Dr.G. (President of the Berlin Entomological Society), Link-strasse, Berlin. Kuper, Rev. Chas. Augustus Frederick, M.A., The Vicarage, Trelleck, Chepstow. Lamarche, Oscar, 70 Rue Louvrex, Paris. Lang, Major A. M., R.E., Thomason Civil Engineering College, Roorkee, India. Lang, Dr. Henry Charles, 41 Berners-st., Oxford-st., W. Lendy, Major Augustus F., F.L.S., F.G.8., Sunbury House, Sunbury, 8.W. Lewis, George. Lichtenstein, Jules, La Lironde, near Montpellier. Lingwood, Robert Maulkin, M.A., F.L.S., 6 Park Villas, Cheltenham. Livingstone, Clermont, Tudor Lodge, Snaresbrook, E. Llewelyn, J. Talbot Dillwyn, M.A., F.L.S., Ynisgerwn, Neath. Logan, R.. F., Spylaw House, Colinton, near Edinburgh. . Lowe, W. H., M.D., Woodcote Lodge, Inner Park-road, Wimbledon Park, S.W. Lubbock, Sir John, Bart., M.P., F.R.S., F.L.8., &e., PRESIDENT, High Elms, Farnborough, Kent. Lupton, Henry, The Elms, Chapel Allerton, Leeds. M‘Intosh, J. M‘Lachlan, Robert, F.R.S., F.L.S., 89 Limes-grove, Lewis- ham, 8.EK. Marseul, L’Abbée 8. A. de, Bowlevard Pereire 271, Paris. . Marsh, John Geo., 16 Hanover-st., Rye-lane, Peckham, 8.E. Marshall, Rev. Thos. Ansell, M.A., F.L.8., Golconda Estate, near San Fernando, Trinidad. Marshall, William, Him Lodge, Clay Hill, Enfield. Mason, Philip Brooke, M.R.C.S., F.L.8S., Burton-on-Trent. Mathew, Gervase F., R.N., F.L.S., F.Z.S., F.R.G.S., Instow, North Devon. May, John William, K.N.L., Arundel House, Percy Cross, Fulham-road, S.W. - Meek, Edward G., 56 Brompton-road, S.W. Meldola, Raphael, F.R.A.S., F.C.S., Secretary, 21 John-st., Bedford-row, W.C. Meyrick, Edward, Ramsbury, Hungerford, Wilts. . Miskin, W. H., Brisbane, Queensland. Mniszech, Comte G. de, 22 Rue Balzac, Paris. Monteiro, Senor Antonio Augusto de Carvatho, 72 Rua do Alecrion, Lisbon. Moore, Frederic, 110 Oakfield-road, Penge, 8.E. Mosse, G. Staley, Stanford-road, Kensington, W. ears Albert, F.R.G.S., 1954 Junkergasse, Berne, Switzer- and. Miller, Dr. Clemens. Murray, Lieut. H., 70th Brigade Depot, Tralee, Ireland. Nevinson, Basil George, 19 Torrington-square, W.C. Newman, Thomas P., 7 York-grove, Peckham, S.E. Nottidge, Thomas, Ashford, Kent. LIST OF MEMBERS. KV Oberthiir, Charles (fils), Rennes. Oberthir, René, Rennes. Olivier, Ernest, Ramillons, pres Moulins (Allier), France. Ormerod, Miss Eleanor A., F.M.5., Dunster Lodge, Spring- grove, Isleworth. Ormerod, Miss Georgiana, Dunster Lodge, Spring-grove, Isleworth. Owen, Richard, C.B., M.D., D.C.L., F.R.S., F.L.8., &c., British Museum, W.C. Parry, Major Frederick John Sidney, F.L.5., 18 Onslow- square, 5.W. Pascoe, Francis P., F.L.8., 1 Burlington-road, Westbourne Park, S.W. Perkins, Vincent Robt., 54 Gloucester-st., South Belgravia, W. Phipson, Arthur, 3 Gray’s Inn-square, W.C. Porritt, George T., F.L.S., Huddersfield. . Power, Hy. d’Arcy, F.L.S., 38 Cottage-green, Camberwell, S.E. Preston, Rev. Thomas Arthur, M.A., F.L.S., The Green, Marlborough, Wilts. Preudhomme de Borre, Alfred (Sec., Ent. Soc. of Belgium), 19 Rue de Dublin, Iwelles, near Brussels. Price, David, 48 West-street, Horsham, Sussex. . Pryer, H. J. 8., Yokohama, Japan. Puls, J. C., Place de la Calandre, Ghent. . Ranson, Wm. Hy., M.D., F.R.S., The Pavement, Nottingham. Reed, Edwyn C., F.L.8. Reeks, Henry, F.L.S., Manor House, Thruxton, near Andover, Hants. Riley, C. V., State Entomologist, United States Entomological Commission, Washington. Ripon, George Frederick Samuel Robinson, Marquis of, K.G., F.R.S., F.L.8., 1 Carlton-gardens, 8.W. Robinson, Frank Edward, 10 Little Clarendon-street, Oxford. Robinson-Douglas, William Douglas, F.L.S., F.R.G.S., Orchardton, Castle Douglas, N.B. . Rothera, G. B., High-street Place, Nottingham. Rothney, G. A. J., Calcutta. Rutherford, David Greig, F.L.S., F.R.G.S., F.Z.S., &e. Rye, Edward Caldwell, F.Z.S., Parkfield, Putney, S.W. Rylands, Thomas Glazebrook, F.L.8., F.G.8., Highfields, Thelwall, Warrington. Salle, Auguste, 13 Rue Guy de la Brosse, Paris. Salvin, Osbert, M.A., F.R.S., F.L.8., &c., 10 Chandos-street, Cavendish-sq., W.; and Brookland-avenue, Cambridge. Saunders, Edward, F.L.S., Treasurer, Holmesdale, Wandle- road, Upper Tooting, S.W. Saunders, G. 8., St. Stephens, Canterbury, Kent. Saunders, Sir Sidney Smith, C.M.G., Gatestone, Central Hill, Upper Norwood, 8.E. Schaufuss, L. W., Ph.D., M.Imp.L.C.Acad., &c., Dresden. Scott, Sir Arthur, Bart., 97 Haton-square, W.; and Great Barr Hall, Birmingham. Sealy, Alfred Forbes, Cochin, South India. 1868 1865 1874 1878 1874 1862 — LIST OF MEMBERS. Semper, George, Altona. ; Sharp, David, M.B., Hccles, Thornhill, Dumfriesshire. Shepherd, Edwin. Sheppard, Edward, F.L.S.,18 Durham Villas, Kensington, W. Sidebotham, Joseph, The Beeches, Bowdon, Cheshire. Slater, John Wm., 18 Wray-crescent, Tollington Park, N. Smith, Miss Emily A. (Assist. State Entomologist of Illinois), Peoria, Illinois; and Care of Dr. R. Leuckart, Leipzig. Smith, Henley Grose, Warnford-court, Throgmorton-st., H.C. Spence, William Blundell, Rome. Stainton, Henry Tibbats, F.R.S., F.L.8., &e., Mountsfield, Lewisham, 8.E. Standen, Richard 8., The White House, Alby, Norwich. Stevens, John 8., 88 King-street, Covent Garden, W.C. Stevens, Samuel, F.L.S., Loanda, Beulah Hill, Upper Norwood, 8.E. Swinton, A. H., Binfield House, Waterden-road, Guildford. . Thompson, Miss Sophia, Barn H ill, Stamford. Thomson, Jas., 12 Rue de Presbourg, Place del Etoile, Paris. Trimen, Roland, F.L.S. (Curator of South African Museum), Cape Town, Cape of Good Hope. Vaughan, Howard, 11 Ospringe-road, Brecknock-road, N.W. Vaughan, P. H., Redland, Bristol. Verrall, G. H., Sussex Lodge, Newmarket. Wakefield, Charles Marcus, F.L.S., Belmont, Uxbridge. Walhouse, Moreton J., F.R.A.S. Beng., 9 Randolph-crescent, Maida Vale, W. Walker, Rev. Francis Augustus, M.A., F.L.8., Bowrne Villa, Bournemouth, Hants. . Walker, J.J., R.N., 12 Ranelagh-rd., Marine Town, Sheerness. Wallace, Alexander, M.D., Trinity House, Colchester. Wallace, Alfred Russel, F.L.S., F.Z.S., &¢., Pen-y-bryn, St. Peter’s-road, Croydon. Walsingham, Thomas de Grey, Lord, M.A., F.Z.8., &e., Eaton House, Eaton-square, 8.W. Ward, Christopher, F.L.5., Savile-road, Halifaz. Ward, Frederick Henry, Springfield, Tooting, S.W. Waterhouse, Charles O., British Musewm, W.C. Waterhouse, George R., F.Z.S., &c., British Museum, W.C. Websdale, C. G., 78 High-street, Barnstaple. Weir, John Jenner, F.L.S., 6 Haddo Villas, Blackheath, 8.E. Western, Edward Young, 27 Craven Hill Gardens, Bays- water, W. Westwood, John Obadiah, M.A., F.L.S., &., Hope Professor of Zoology, Walton Manor, Oxford. White, F. Buchanan, M.D., F.L.8., Perth, N.B. White, Rev. W. Farren, Stonehouse Vicarage, Gloucestershire. Wilson, Owen, Cwmffrwd, Carmarthen. Woodgate, John, Richmond-road, New Barnet, Herts. Wood-Mason, James, F.G.S., F.L.S. (Curator of the Indian Museum), Calcutta. Wormald, Percy C., 2 Clifton Villas, Highgate Hill, N. 1865 S. Young, Morris, Free Museum, Paisley. ADDITIONS TO THE LIBRARY DURING THE YEAR 1880. Abeille (L’), redigé par M.S. A. de Marseul. Nos. 226—238. The Editor. ADoLPH (Dr. G. Ernst). Ueber Insektenfltigel, Halle, 1880. F. Grut. Ueber abnorme Zellenbildungen einiger Hymenopterenfligel, Halle, 1880. F. Grut. Acassiz (Alexander). Annual Report of the Curator of the Museum of Com- parative Zoology at Harvard College for 1879-80. Cambridge (Mass.), 1880. The Author. Obituary Notice. L. F. de Pourtalés. The Author. American Entomologist (The). An Illustrated Magazine devoted to Practical and Popular Entomology. Edited by C. V. Riley and A. 8. Fuller. New Series, Nos. 4, 5, 8, 9, and 11. New York, 1880. The Editors. American Naturalist (The). Vol. XIII.,No.12. Vol. XIV., Nos. i 3—orandele Philadelphia, 1879-80. The Editor. Bere (Dr. Carlos). Hemiptera Argentina enumeravit speciesque novas descripsit. Bonarie et Hamburgo, 1879. The Author. Apuntes Lepidopterologicos. Buenos Aires, 1880. The Author. Sinonimia distribucion Geografica de la Langosta peregrina. [Acridium (Schistocerca) peregrinum (Oliv.), Stal. ] The Author. Observaciones acerca de la Familia Hyponomeutide. Buenos Aires, 1880. The Author. Bertkau (Dr. Philipp). Bericht tiber die wissenschaftlichen Leistungen im Gebiete der Entomologie wahrend der Jahre 1877 und 1878. 8vo. Berlin, 1879. Purchased. Brapy (G. Stewardson), M.D. A Monograph of the Free and Semi-Parasitic Copepoda of the British Islands. 38 vols. 8vo. London (Ray Society), 1878 and 1880, J.W. Dunning. Butter (Arthur Gardiner). Illustrations of Typical Specimens of Lepidoptera Heterocera in the Collection of the British Museum. 4to. London, 1879. Trustees of British Museum. Cameron (Peter). A Catalogue of the British Tenthredinide. 8vo. Glasgow, 1878. The Author. The Fauna of Scotland, with special reference to Clydesdale and the Western District. Hymenoptera. Part I. 8vo. Glasgow, 1878. The Author. Canadian Entomologist (The). Edited by William Saunders. Vol. XI., No. 12. Vol. XIL., Nos. 1—10. The Editor. Xvill CanpEzE (Dr. E.) Notes from the Leyden Museum. 8vo. Note 1. Descriptions of the new Elateride collected during the Recent Scientific Sumatra-Expedition. Note 2. A new Genus and Four New Species of Elateride from the Collections of the Leyden Museum. The Author. Liste des Elatérides décrits postérieurement au Catalogue de Munich. 8vo. Bruxelles, 1880. The Author. Addition au Relevé des Elatérides Malais. Svo. Genova, 1880. The Author. CuamBers (V. T.) Descriptions of some New Tineina, with Notes on a few old Species. 8vo. Cincinnati (O.) The Author. Annual Address of the President, Cincinnati Society of Natural History. 8vo. Cincinnati (O.) The Author. Cresson (E. T.) Descriptions of Nine New Species of Hymenoptera in the Collection of the American Entomological Society. 8vo. Phila- delphia, 1879. E. C. Rye. Descriptions of Five New Species belonging to the Hymenopterous genus Hucerceris.. 8vo. Philadelphia, 1879. H.C. Rye. Descriptions of Ten New Species of Metopius belonging to the American Entomological Society. 8vo. Philadelphia, 1879. H. C. Rye. Descriptions of Seven New Species of the Hymenopterous genus Philanthus. 8vo. Philadelphia, 1879. i. C. Rye. Distant (W.L.) On some African Species of the Lepidopterous Genus Papilio. 8vo. London, 1879. The Author. On some African Species of Lepidoptera belonging to the Sub-family Nymphaline. 8vo. London, 1879. The Author. Scientific Results of the Second Yarkand Mission; based upon the Collections and Notes of the late Ferdinand Stoliczka, Ph.D. Ruyneora. Imp. 4to. Calcutta, 1879. The Author. Dours (A.) Catalogue Synonymique des Hymenoptéres de France. 8vo. Amiens, 1874. F. Grut. Excuorr (W.) Ratio, Descriptio, Emendatio eorum Tomicinorum qui sunt in Dr. medic. Chapuisii et autoris ipsius collectionibus et quos preterea recognovit. [Mém. de la Soc. Roy. des Se. de Liége. 2eme Serie. Vol. VIII.] 8vo. Bruxelles, 1878. F. Grut. Entomologist (he). 8vo. London, 1880. T. P. Newman. Entomologist’s Monthly Magazine (The). Vol. XVII., Nos. 188—192. Vol. XVITTI., Nos. 1983—199. 8vo. London, 1880. The Editors. Goss (Herbert). The Insect Fauna of the Primary or Paleozoic Period. [The last of Three Papers on Fossil Insects.] 8vo. 1879. The Author. The Geological Antiquity of Insects. Twelve Papers on Fossil Ento- mology. [Reprinted from the Entomologist’s Monthly Magazine. ] The Author. GossgE (Philip Henry). On the Structure, Functions, and Homologies of the Manducatory Organs in the Class Rotifera. [Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc.} 4to. London, 1855. The Author. On the Dicecious Character of the Rotifera. (Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. ] 4to. London, 1856. The Author. Grote (A. R.) See “ Norra American Entomonoatst.” Hacen (Dr. H. A.) Destruction of Obnoxious Insects: Phylloxera, Potato- Beetle, Cotton-Worm, Colorado Grasshopper, and Household Pests, by Application of the Yeast Fungus. 8vo. Cambridge (Mass.), 1879. The Author. XIX The Author. Hersst (Johann F. W.) Versuch einer Naturgeschichte der Krabben und Krebse. 4to. Vol. 1., Zurich, 1782. Vols. II. and III., Berlin und Stralsund, 1796 und 1799. With folio Atlas of 62 Coloured Plates. By exchange. Hermann (Otto). Ungarns Spinnen-Fauna im Auftrage der Ko6n. Ungar. Naturwissenschaftlichen Gesellschaft. Band. I.—III. 4to. Budapest, 1876. [| Bi-lingual. Hungarian and German.) F. Grut. Horn (George H.), M.D. Extracts from the Transactions of the American Entomological Society, viz. :— 1. Notes on some Species of Hister. 2. Revision of the Species of Acmzeodera of the United States. 3. Descriptions of the Larve of the North-American Genera ot Cicindelide, also of Dicelus, with a Note on Rhyncophorus. 4, Notes on some Genera of Cerambycide of the United States. 5. Contributions to the Coleopterology of the United States. No. 2. 6. Synopsis of the Monotomide of the United States. 7. Revision of the Nitidulide of the United States. Hammonp (Arthur), On the Thorax of the Blow-fly (Musca vomitoria). 8vo. 879. 8. Notes on the Mycteride and other Heteromera. E. C. Rye. Huxnry (T. H.) An Introduction to the Classification of Animals. 8vo, London, 1869. By Exchange. The Crayfish, an Introduction to the Study of Zoology. London, 1880, J. W. Dunning. Journal of Science. Nos. 75—77, 79, and 81—83. 8vo. London, 1880. The Editor. Karrer (Dr. F.) Entomologische Nachrichten, 5 Jahrg. Putbus. The Editor. © Kirsy (W. F'.) A Synonymic Catalogue of Diurnal Lepidoptera. Supplement, March, 1871—June, 1877. S8vo. London, 1877. F. Grut. Catalogue of the Lepidoptera (Rhopalocera, Sphingide, Castniide, and Uraniide) in the Museum of Science and Art, Dublin, with remarks on new or interesting species. [Sci. Proc. Roy. Dublin Soc.] 1879. The Author. LansBerce (M. G. van). Description de quelques Coléoptéres de la Malaisie et de la Papouasie. The Author. Le Conte (Dr. John L.) The Tendencies of Scientific Culture. S8vo. Phila- delphia, 1880. The Author. The Coleoptera of the Alpine Rocky Mountains. Part 2. Washington, 1879. The Author. On Lightniug Bugs. [Canadian Entomologist. ] The Author. Synopsis of the North-American Species of Platynus, Bon. 1879. The Author. Short Studies of North-American Coleoptera. The Author. Fungoid Diseases of Insects—a Reclamation. The Author. LicutTenstgBin (Jules). Les Pucerons des Ormeaux (Aphides—Coccides) avec Description de deux insectes nouveaux (Pemphigus ulmi—Ritsemia pupifera). The Author. Lebensgeschichte der Pappelgallen—Blattlaus. (Pemphigus Bursarius (Aphis), Linné.) P. C. Zeller. Les Pucerons du Terébinthe (Pistacia terebinthus, Lin.) The Author. Chasse et Collection des Pucerons. 1880. The Author. Observations Critiques sur les Pucerons des Ormeaux et les Pucerons du Térebinthe, 1879. The Author. XX Lifnarp (Valére). Recherches sur le systeme nerveux des Arthropodes. Con- stitution de Anneau Cisophagien. 1880. The Author. Louis (J. A. H.) A few Words on the Present State and Future Prospects of Sericiculture in Bengal. London, 1880. The Author. Lucas (H.) Exploration Scientifique de l’Algérie pendant les années 1840, 1841, 1842.—Histoire Naturelle des Animaux Articulés. 3 Tomes et Atlas. Imp. 4to. Paris, 1849. By purchase. M‘Lacutan (Robert). A Monographic Revision and Synopsis of the Trichoptera of the European Fauna. Part IX. [Completing the work.] The Author. Note on the Entomology of Portugal. Pseudo-Neuroptera and Neuroptera-Planipennia. [Ent. Mo. Mag. ] The Author. MacLeop (Jules). La Structure et la Circulation Peritrachéenne. Bruxelles, 1880. The Author. Magazine of Zoology and Botany. Conducted by Sir W. Jardine, P. J. Selby, and Dr. Johnston. 2 vols., 8vo. Edinburgh, 1837-38. By exchange. Merxrpora (Raphael). Inaugural Address delivered to the Epping Forest and County of Essex Naturalists’ Field Club. 1880. The Author. Mocaripeér (J. Traherne). Harvesting Ants and Trap-door Spiders. Notes and Observations on their Habits and Dwellings. With Supplement. 2 vols., 8vo. London, 1873 and 1874. By exchange. Moors (F.) The Lepidoptera of Ceylon. Part I. The Ceylon Government. Naturalist (The). See Soctrtizs (HUDDERSFIELD). Nature. Nos. 527—578. The Publishers. North American Entomologist. Edited by A. R. Grote. Vol. I, Nos. 6, 7, 10, ll and 12. 1879-80. The Editor. OrmeEROD (Eleanor A.) The Chobham Journals. Abstracts and Summaries of Meteorological and Phenological Observations made by Miss Caroline Molesworth in the years 1825—1850. The Editor. Notes of Observations of Injurious Insects. Report, 1879. The Author. OsTEN-SackEN (C. R.) Catalogue of tha described Diptera of North America. Second Edition. 1878. The Smithsonian Institution. Pracet (E.) Les Pédiculines. Essai monographique. 1 Tome, et Atlas. By purchase. Porritt (G. T.) Yorkshire Lepidoptera in 1878. The Author. PREUDHOMME De Borre (A.) Note sur le Genre Macroderes, Westw. The Author. Description d'une espéce nouvelle du genre Trichillum, Harold. (Coprides: Chceridiides). The Author. Quelques mots sur l’Organisation et I’Histoire Naturelle des Animaux Articules. Bruxelles, 1880. The Author. Ktude sur les espéces de la tribu des Féronides qui se rencontrent en Belgique. 2de partie. The Author. Note sur la femelle des Rhagiosoma Madagascariense, Chapuis. The Author. Coup d’wuil sur l’Histoire des Vingt-cinqg premiéres années de la Société Entomologique de Belgique. The Author. Ritzy (C, V.) ‘The Cotton-Worm. 8yo. Washington, 1880. The Author. XX1 Saussure (Henri de). Spicilegia Entomologica. I. Genre Hemimerus. 1879. The Author. Voyage au Turkestan de A. P. Fedtschenko. Hyménoptéres, famille des Scolides. St. Petersburg & Moscow, 1880. The Author. Scottish Naturalist (The). Edited by F. Buchanan White, M.D. Nos. 37—40. The Publishers. ScuppEr (S. H.) A Century of Orthoptera. The Author. Insects from the Tertiary Beds of the Nicola and Similkameen Rivers, British Columbia. The Author. Paleeozoie Cockroaches; a Complete Revision of the Species of both Worlds, with an Essay toward their Classification. Boston, 1879. The Author. The Early Types of Insects; or, the Origin and Sequence of Insect-life in Paleozoic Times. Boston, 1879. The Author. The Devonian Insects of New Brunswick. Boston, 1880. The Author. Srespoitp (Ph. Fr. de) & W. DE Haan. Fauna Japonica. Auctore Ph. Fr. de Siebold.—Crustacea elaborante W. de Haan. Folio. Lugduni Batavorum, 1833. By exchange. Societies (Transactions of Learned) :— (ADELAIDE). Transactions and Proceedings and Report of the Philosophical Society of Adelaide, South Australia for 1878-79. Adelaide, 1879. The Society. (Bertin). Deutsche Entomologische Zeitschrift. 23 Jahrg., 1879. Zweites Heft. 24 Jahrg. Erstes & Zweites Heft. The Society. (Boston, Mass., U.S.A.) Froceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History. Vol. XIX., Pts. 3 and4. Vol. XX., Pts. 1, 2 and 3. The Society. Memoirs of the Boston Society of Natural History. Vol. III., Pt. 1, Nos. 1, 2 and 3, The Society. (Bruny). Verhandlungen des naturforschenden Vereines in Briinn. XVII. Band. 1878. The Society. (Brunswick). Jahresbericht des Vereins fiir Naturwissenschaft zu Braun- schweig. The Society. (Brussets). Annales de la Société Entomologique de Belgique. XXIL., 4. The Society. Assemblée générale extraordinaire convoquée pour la consideration de la Fondation de la Societé Entomologique de Belgique. The Society. Bulletin de l’Academie Royale des Sciences, &c. Tome 49, No. 1. 1880. The Society. (BuckuHurst Hitt). Transactions of the Epping Forest and County of Essex Naturalists’ Field Club. Pt. 1. The Society. (Buenos Ayres). Anales de la Sociedad Cientifica Argentina. 1878. The Society. CamBRIDGE, Mass., U.S.A.) Psyche, Organ of the Cambridge Entomological Club. Vol. IL., July to Dec., 1879. Vol. III., Nos. 69—76. The Club. Annual Report of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College. 1879-80. The Museum. Corposa, Argentine Repub.) Boletin de la Academia Nacional de Ciencias de la Republica Argentina. Tome III., Entrega 1. Cordoba, 1879. The Academy. (Dustin). The Scientific Proceedings of the Royal Dublin Society. New Series. Vol. I., Parts 1—3, and Vol. II., Parts 1—6. The Society. The Scientific Transactions of the Royal Dublin Society. Vol. I. Parts 1—12. Vol. I1., Part 1. The Society. Xxil Societies (Transactions of Learned). (FnorencE). Bulletino della Societa Entomologica Italiana. Anno XL., Trimestre 4, and Anno XII., Trimestre 1, 2, 3. Firenzi, 1880. The Society. (Geneva). Mémoires de la Société de Physique et d'Histoire Natnrelle de Genéve. Tome XXVIL., 2de Partie. The Society. (Genoa). Annali del Museo Civico di Storia naturale di Genova. Vol. XV. The Museum. (Grascow). Proceedings of the Natural History Society of Glasgow. Vol. IV., Parte The Society. (Hacue). Tijdschrift voor Entomologie. Deel. 23, Afl. 1to4. ’sGravenhage. The Society. (HuppDERSFIELD). The Naturalist; Journal of the Yorkshire Naturalists’ Union. Nos. 54—67. The Union. (Lonpon). Proceedings of the Royal Society. Nos. 198—206. The Society. Royal Society Catalogue of Scientific Papers. Vol. VIII. The Society. ; Transactions of the Linnean Society. Second Series (Zoology). Vol. IL, Part 1. The Society. Journal of the Linnean Society (Zoology). Nos. 81—84. The Society. Proceedings of the Scientifie Meetings of tha Zoological Society of London. 1879, Pt. 4; and 1880, Pts.1,2 and 3. The Society. Catalogue of the Library of the Zoological Society. The Society. Journal of the Royal Microscopical Society. Vol. IL., Nos. 7 and 7a (Dec. 1879); Vol. III., Nos. 1 to 5 (1880). The Society- Journal of the Quekett Microscopical Club. Nos. 41 to 44. The Club. (Lonpon & Leeps). Transactions of the Yorkshire Naturalists’ Union. Parts 1,2 and 3. 1878-80. The Union. (Lyons). Annales de la Société Linnéenne de Lyon. Tomes XXIV. & XXY. The Society: (MinwavKEE, Wis., U.S.A.) Jahres Bericht des Naturhistorischen Vereins von Wisconsin (‘The Wisconsin Natural History Society). 1879-80. The Society. (Moscow). Bulletin de la Société Impériale des Naturalistes de Moscou, Année 1879, 2 & 38, and 1880, 1. The Society. (Parts). Annales de la Société Entomologique de France. 5éme Serie. Tome 9. The Society. (PHILADELPHIA). ‘Transactions of the American Entomological Society. Vol. VII., Nos. 1—4. The Society. (St. Louis, Miss., U.S.A.) Transactions of the Academy of Science of St. Louis. Vol. I., Nos. 2,3 and 4; Vol. II., Nos. 1—8; Vol. IV., No. 1. The Society. (St. PeTEBspuRG). Hore Societatis Entomologice Rossice. Tome XII., No. 2; Tome XIV. 1876 & 1878. The Society. (SCHAFFHAUSEN). Mittheilungen der Schweizerischen Gesellschaft. Vol. V., Heft. Nos. 9 & 10; Vol. VI., No. 1. 1879-80. The Society. (Stertiy). Entomologische Zeitung zu Stettin. 41 Jahrg., Nos. 1—9. 1880. The Society. (SypNEY). Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. Vol. IV., Parts 1,2 &38. 8vo. 1879. The Society. Journal and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales (1878). Vol. XII, 8vo. 1879. The Society. (Toronto). Annual Report of the Entomological Society of the Province of Ontario for the year 1879. The Society. Xxill Societies (Transactions of Learned). _ (Tovrouse). Bulletin de la Société d’Histoire Naturelle de Toulouse. lléme année, fase. 3; 12éme année, fasc. 4; 13dme année, fase. 2, 3&4 The Society. Ricci. Bulletin of the United States Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories. Vol. V., Nos. 2 & 3. F.V. Hayden. Bulletin of the United States Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories of Idaho and Wyoming. 1877. F.V. Hayden. (WatrorD). Transactions of the Watford Natural History Society and Hertfordshire Field Club. Vol. II., Parts 6—8. The Club. (Watrorp & Hertrorp). Transactions of the Hertfordshire Natural History Society and Field Club. Vol. I., Part 1. The Society. (WettIncton, N. Zealand). Transactions and Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute (1878 & 1879). Vols. XI. & XII. The Institute. SPANGBERG (Jacob). Entomologisk Tidskrift. Band I., Haft 1 & 2. Stockholm, 1880. The Author. Swinton (A. H.) Insect Variety, its Propagation and Distribution. The Author. TASCHENBERG (Dr. E.L.) Praktische Insektenkunde. I.—V. Bremen, 1878—80. F. Grut. Tuomas (Cyrus). The Chinch-Bug; its History, Character, and Habits, and the means of destroying it or counteracting its injuries. Washington, 1879. The Author. Highth Report of the State Entomologist on the Noxious and Beneficial Insects of the State of Illinois. Springfield,1879. The Author. Ninth Report of ditto ditto. Springfield, 1880. The Author. Tromsoe Museums Aarshefter II. Tromsoe, 1879. VoLLENHOVEN (S. C. Snellen von). Illustrations of more than 1000 Species of North-West European Ichneumonide sensu Linneano. Part 9. ’sGravenhage, 1880. The Netherlands Legation. Obituary Notice by J. O. Westwood. R. M‘Lachlan. / WatsH (Benjamin D.) Sur la Nymphe du genre d’Ephémerines Betisca. Traduis par Dr. Emile Joly. The Translator. WatsincHam (Lord). Illustrations of Typical Specimens of Lepidoptera Hete- rocera in the Collection of the British Museum. Part IV. American Tortricide. Trustees of British Musewm. Wartrrnouse (Charles Owen). Illustrations of Typical Specimens of Coleoptera in the Collection of the British Museum. Part I. Lycide. Trustees of British Museum. Westwoop (J. 0.) Articles extracted from the ‘Gardener's Chronicle,’ viz. :— (1) The Cabbage Moth; (2) The Pea Midge; (3) The Pea Moth; (4) The Vea Thrips. The Author. Observations on the Uraniide, a Family of Lepidopterous Insects, with a Synopsis of the Family and a Monograph of Coronidia, one of the Genera of which it is composed. [Trans. Zool. Soe. ] FE. Grut. Witson (C. A.) The Life and Works of Alfred Russel Wallace. By Delta. [‘ The Garden and the Field.’ Adelaide.] The Author. Witson (Owen S.) Larve of British Lepidoptera. J. W. Dunning. Winsor (Justin). Bibliographical Contributions. Edited by J. W. Library of the Harvard University. No. 11. The Editor. XXIV Woop-Mason (James). Preliminary Notice of a new Genus (Parectatosoma) of Phasmideé from Madagascar, with brief descriptions of two new Species. The Author. Synopsis of the Species of Cheradodes, a remarkable Genus of Mantodea common to India and Tropical America. ‘The Author. ZELLER (P. C.) Microlepidoptern in Australien, ein Brief des Hon. Edward Meyrick aus dem ‘ Kntomologist’s Monthly Magazine,’ xv., pp. 70, 71, tibersetzsdurch P.C.Z. The Author. ZoGcRAF¥ (Nicolas). Anatomy of Lithobius forficatus. Moscow, 1880. Zoological Record. Vol. XY. (1878). By purchase. Zoologist (The) for 1880. 1. P. Newman. THE TRANS 26 TrONns OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON FOR THE YEAR 1880. I, Materials for a revision of the Lampyride. By the Rey. H. 8. Goruam. [Read December 5th, 1879, February 4th and March 3rd, 1880. ] In submitting the descriptions of hitherto uncharacterized beetles of the family of Lampyride to the Entomological Society, I will introduce the subject by a few general remarks which I venture to think will not be out of place. The family in question form the second division of the great group Malacodermata of Latreille, or they may be properly regarded as a sub-family or group of secondary importance. For the purpose of this paper I shall treat them as a family, for though they certainly pass very gradually into the Lycide on one side, and the Telepho- ride on the other, yet a very little experience will enable the student at once to decide whether a species really belongs to the Lampyride or not. The resemblance to the former is rather apparent than real, a true case of mimicry, there being scarcely a pattern in the Lycide which is not repeated here. With regard to their affinity to the Telephoride, Photuris, which makes the nearest approach, is so very natural a genus, and retains so many peculiar characters of the Lampyride, including their luminosity, in so high a degree that the general characters, TRANS. ENT. SOC. 1880.—PART I. (MARCH.) B 2 Rev. H. S. Gorham’s materials for a which I now proceed to give, will always separate them. Lacordaire thus defines these differences :— Intermediate cox separated by an interval— I.—Lycide. Intermediate coxz close to each other— Antenne inserted close together .. U.—Lampyride. Antenne separated .. a0 -. UL—TZelephoride. On this I will merely remark that as we study the general structure of Photuris, it will be found to recede further from the Telephorides, e.g., in the development of the eyes, correlated with that of the production of light in the female, and in the structure of the abdomen, of which more hereafter. I now go on to speak of the generic classification of these insects. If Motschulsky used the number of appa- rent light-giving segments in the abdomen, to the neglect of more important modifications in its structure, yet on a review of the more natural arrangement to which Lacor- daire reduced his genera, or rather restored the family, we shall see a distinct relation between the development of the phosphorescent power, and many, if not all, the other modifications. Thus im the first section in which both males and females are equally provided with wings, and in which those remarkably beautiful flabellate antennz are found, the light-giving parts are confined to one or two small points, and the eyes, especially those of the males, are not of extraordinary size. While in those genera which form the latter half of this section (Lucido- tides ), and are contained in the two following (Lampyrides, Luciolides), and in which the phosphorescence reaches its greatest development, the antennz are reduced to simple filiform, often very short organs, and the eyes of the males are so enlarged as to resemble small seeds. In short, if T see the head of a Lampyrid, I can predict the greater or less phosphorescence of the ventral portion. And beyond this I have found that the best generic characters lie in the structure of the last or last but one abdominal plates; these are cut out or lobed in a manner varying in each genus I have yet examined, sometimes alike in each sex, at others differently. These portions are apt to shrivel m such soft-bodied insects, enhancing the difficulty of examination in old specimens. I there- fore must ask some indulgence for the merely partial description of these parts, and for the mere attempt at drawings of them which I have to offer. revision of the Lampyride. 3 One word as to the so-called luminous portions. These parts are patches, or even whole ventral and sometimes dorsal plates, deprived of pigment and hence often white, and vitrified in a peculiar manner, to which I apply the word eburated ; this occurs oftenest when the portion is small, and then it is generally also raised, and seems to bear some analogy to the eburated white marks and fascie, which I have noticed in the elytra of other Coleoptera, e.g., in Longicorns and Cleride. Is it merely a fancy that these raised portions act as lenses for condensing and intensifying the light, and that in some of the other Coleoptera I have mentioned they permit the sun’s rays to pass through the elytra and exercise some good effect on the body, while here they serve something like the bull’s-eye of a lantern for the dispersal of the rays of light? The spots on the thorax of the luminous elaters of the genus Pyrophorus may serve to illustrate my meaning in the light-giving case; the lucid points on the elytra of a species of Helota, described by myself (H. gemmata), that of the light-transmitting case. I do not aspire to a revision of the Lampyride at present; the material in my hands is not sufficient for that: it con- sists of—1, my own collections, formed for a few years only, including that of Mr. Norris; 2, that of the Brussels Museum with Guérin’s types obligingly entrusted to me by the Curators; 3, the collection sent and still coming from Mr. Champion, from Guatemala; 4, typical speci- mens from M. Chevrolat, and a few small collections for which I beg to thank the various lenders. I content myself now with merely enumerating the species I have actually identified, and describing those which appear to be new, at the same time indicating where the specimens alluded to are now. The first portion which I lay before you to-night takes the Lwezdotides as far as the end of Lucidota, or the genera with pectinate or at least dentate antennze. ‘Thirty species and one genus are described as new. List oF NEw SPECIES. Lamprocera tristior. Cladodes ventralis. 3 preeusta. % nigricollis. i picta. . plumosa. 3 brevicollis. Pheenolis genus novum. Hyas bipunctata. 7s laciniata. », rhomboidea. r ustulata (Chevr.). 5, angularis (Cheyr.). 3 ochracea, Cladodes stellata. ZEthra despecta. B2 4 Rey. H. S. Gorham’s materials for a ZKithra concolor. Lucidota silphoides. », brunnipennis. - bella. Vesta Saturnalis. es rubricollis. »» proxima. 5 fulgurans. », _ basalis. an apicicornis. Lucidota proxima. » limbata. S californica (Chevr.). i tricolor (Chevr.). si exstincta. ” quadriguttata. 3 boliviana. LAMPROCERA, Castelnau. L. Latreilleit, Kirby, Tr. Linn. Soe. xii. 387. (Pl. X XI. fig. 4a.) Brazil, ¢, 2. All collections. Lamprocera tristior, n. sp. Sooty-black, thorax with the margin reflexed, which in one é is very narrowly yellow, elytra witha narrow yellow vitta from the humeral callus for two-thirds their length. Luminous round spot on fifth ventral segment. Long. lin. 9—10. 2 ¢ Brus. M., Brazil; 1 2 Gorh., Rio Grande. Lamprocera preusta, n. sp. Testacea, antennis, tibiis, tarsis, elytrorum apice epis- ternis mesothoracis, abdominisque lateribus, et segmentis tribus apicalibus, fusco nigris. Long. lin. 10; lat. lin. 5. 9. Of the form of L. Latretlle?, and equal in size to small females of it. I have only seen one ¢ of this species, which is in my collection, from that of Norris. Buenos Ayres. Lamprocera Castelnau, Kirsch., Berl. Zeit. 1865, p. 69. Niger, thorace elytrisque brunneis, his apice late, illo disco nigris, thoracis angulis posterioribus punctatis, sub- fuscis. Long. lin. 9—11; lat. 5—6. Of the size and form of dlattina, unlike any other species in the colouring, the luminous segment in the ¢ appears to be the seventh, in the ?, although the segments are rufo-fuscous in their middle and at the sides any dis- tinctly-luminous portion is not apparent. Antenne widely flabellate in 6, pectinate in ¢. Nova Grenada, Gorh. 6, ?. B.M. revision of the Lampyride. 9) Lamprocera abdominalis, Cast. Essai, 136. Lac. Gen. iv. p- 312. Gorh, ¢. Brus: 2. The humeral callus and base of elytra round the scu- tellum are yellow. Lamprocera picta, un. sp. Nigro-fusca, thorace antice, elytrisque fascia lata, mar- ginem non attingente flavis. Long. lin. 8—11; lat. 5—6. Very nearly related to abdominalis, Cast., but the elytra usually are concolorous at the base (the scutellar spot and a very small basal streak external to the callus are present in one 2 example), and the fuscous abdomen sufficiently distinguish this species. The arcuate sixth segment in the ¢, and two points on the seventh segment in the ¢ are luminous. Nicaragua, Godman and Salvin. ¢, 2. Brus. 2 var. Lamprocera brevicollis, n. sp. Nigro-fuscus, thorace antice pallido, elytris fuscis an- culis basalibus et macula magna communi post scutellum flavis. Long. lin. 8; lat. 4. 9. Rather oblong, thorax very short, external angles rounded, a little longer than Hyas denticornis, but not so wide. Buenos Ayres, Gorh. (e Norris). Lamprocera flavoquadrata, Blanchard Voy. d’Orb. (Fig. 124.) Bolivia, Brus. M. 2. Lamprocera blattina, Perty Del. An. Art., p. 26. CRIN, fie. 1) Brazil, ¢, 2. Cayenne, Brus. M. 2 var. Thorace antice tantum pallide binotato. Surinam, Bartlett, ¢ var. Thorace antice pallido, basi etiam anguste testaceo, striolis duobus rufis discoidalibus, elytris basi tenuissime et circa scutellum pallidis. Gorh. ¢, ?. Thorace antice tantum pallido. 6 Rev. H. S. Gorham’s materials for a Hyas, Castelnau. Hyas denticornis, Germ. Ins. Nov. Spec. p. 67, 6, &. Brazil, all collections [ Rio Jan., Brus. M. ]. Hyas scissiventris, Perty Del. An. Art. p. 26. (PI. al Be fig. 2.) Brazil. Obs.—Apparently a variety of the preceding, in which the central fascia is more divided than usual. Hyas bipunctatus, n. sp. Niger, thorace antice maculis duabus pallidis trans- lucidis, angulis posterioribus subacutis, elytris thorace latioribus, postice angustatis, punctis duobus lateralibus paulo post medium sitis, pallidis. Subtus nigro-fuscus, abdomine medio tantum flavo notato. Long. lin. 5—6; lat. 43. The characters of the apical segments of the abdomen of the male are similar to those of denticornis. The pygidial and ventral plates together form a circular opening. Brazil? Three ¢. Coll. Gorh. (Norris). Tyas rhomboidea, n. sp. Fusca, thorace transversim subquadrato, lateribus antice paululum angustatis, vittis duabus croceis, disco nitido, elytris flavis dimidio apicali, maculisque duabus lateralibus, nigris; abdomine segmentis ventralibus medio flavis. Long. lin. 8; lat. 4. Mas.—Segmento sexto ventrali medio exciso, bidentato, dorsali bilobato, uncinato. Oblong, parallel, rather flat elytra, a little wider than the thorax, the latter squarish, the front margin a little produced, little reflexed, the yellow vitte are placed in two shallow foveze, which extend from front to base, the disc and sides elevated, the former finely carinate. Scutellum black, shining. lytra with the sides parallel, shoulders and apex rounded, sutural angle also round; the humeral callus is well raised, basal expanded margin reflexed, ochreous-yellow, a large lateral spot and the apical half, or rather less, smoky-black. Legs black, anterior trochanters yellow. Antenne black, with fairly-long lamellee. The ventral claspers are singular and much more deve- revision of the Lampyride. 7 loped than in denticornis, in which the sixth segment is simply cut out. Nicaragua, Chontales. A single male. Coll. Godman and Salvin. Hyas flabellata, Fab. Syst. El. i. p. 106. Cayenne, Paramaribo (Chev.). Base of elytra and dentate pale fascia, sometimes united. Hyas guttata, Fab. Syst. El. ii. p. 107. Cayenne, Demerara. Brus. M. Apical ventral segment acutely notched in ¢?3 base of elytra and two lateral spots pale. These two species are not distinguished in collections, if, indeed, they are distinct. Hyas angularis, n. sp. (Chev. in lit.) Cratomorphus. Late-ovata, obscure nigro-fumosa, opaca, thorace rufo, medio miniato leviter carinato, angulis posticis, et disco ad basin, infumatis, abdomine, apice dilutiori. ¢, ¢. Long. lin. 54—6; lat. 33—4. A species sent me by M. Chevrolat, under the name I adopt, is rather doubtfully assigned to this genus. It agrees very nearly with a larger specimen, which I obtained from Norris’s Collection, and which I regard as the female. In the first, the anal opening is formed as in typical Hyas, but the apical segments are more deeply excised. ‘The antennz in this are wanting. In my Norrisian specimen, the two ventral apical plates are excised, but not deeply, the pygidial simply sinuate, and not convex so as to form any large opening. The antennz are long, sub-dentate; two basal joints pale. Mexico; Chey. CLADODES SOLIER. Cladodes lamellicornis, Mots. Etudes Ent. 1853, ii. 10. $, 2. Rio Janeiro; Gorh. Cladodes flabellicornis, Mots. l.c. p.10. ¢. Brazil; Gorh., Brus. M. Cladodes Demoulini, Mots. 1. ¢. p. 10. Rio Janeiro, ¢; Santa Catharina, 2 ? Brus. M., Gorh., and most collections. 8 Rey. H. S. Gorham’s materials for a Cladodes stellata, n. sp. Niger, prothorace, elytrisque flavis, his apice late, illo disco nigro. Long. lin. 7; lat. 33. Very like flabellicornis, Mots., in colour, but smaller, and distinguished from it by the thorax being much more coarsely and deeply punctured on the yellow margin; in Jlabellicornis there is a short carina on the base of the black discoidal patch, this is absent in stellata; the scutellum is yellow at its apex, but pitchy-black at the base alone, and there is a slight dark stain on the elytra on each side of the scutellum which I have not observed in flabellicornis. From Demoulini, to which it is more nearly related, the nearly total absence of the black round the scutellum, and the less extended black colour of the apex of the elytra distinguish it. Rio Janeiro, Brus. M. Cladodes ventralis, n. sp. Niger, prothorace, elytris basi apiceque, abdominis segmentis quatuor primis in medio flavis. Long. lin. 64. Black, prothorax yellow, small in proportion to the size of the insect, obsoletely and finely punctured, elytra fuscous black, with the basal third and apical margin yellow; the yellow portion of the base extends itself angularly about to the middle, the first two segments of the abdomen are nearly entirely yellow, the third and fourth yellow in the middle. Possibly this is the luminous portion, as spots are not evident on the seventh segment. The lamella of the antennz are rather long. The single specimen of this species I have seen is a very old one, probably from Norris’s collection; the elytra are somewhat shrivelled, but the specimen is other- wise perfect. Hab. (?)—Gorh. Cladodes nigricollis, n. sp. Ater, elytris croceis, apice nigris. Gong, lin: 7. Elytra little wider than the thorax, the latter finely rugose at the margins, disc rough, but scarcely punctured, revision of the Lampyride. 9 opaque, the yellow of the elytra extends a little near the suture and margin towards the apex. Two luminous spots on seventh segment. Kceuador, Brus. M.; a single specimen. Cladodes plumosa, n. sp. Croceo-flava, antennis, palpis, elytrorum dimidio apicali, abdomine, tibiis, tarsisque nigris, thorace brevi angulis posterioribus sub-rotundatis. Long. lin. 73. Head yellow, antennz and palpi much as in C. flabel- licornis, M. Thorax of a different form to any of the preceding species, having the sides much more rounded, and contracted in to the hind angles, which are not pro- duced, but meet the base (which is truncate, slightly sinuous) in an obtuse angle. Their anterior and lateral margins are hardly reflexed. Sides roughly, sub- rugosely punctured, disc nearly smooth, obsoletely cari- nate. Elytra with the sides little expanded, of the width of the thorax, the apical half smoky-black. Abdomen with the lateral lobes of the dorsal segments well developed, more rounded, and not so much produced backwards as in jflabellicornis, the abdomen is hence wider and broader at the apex, the two luminous points of the ventral sixth segment are small, smooth, whitish and a little convex, they do not show through to the dorsal or pygidial surface, as is the case in some other species of Cladodes, and it may be hence concluded their light is only visible from beneath. The sterna, coxee and femora are entirely of the crocus-yellow colour of the thorax and half-elytra, and this character alone separates this elegant species from any other of its allies; it is, however, similar in this respect to the insect described in this paper as Phenolis laciniatus. Nicaragua (Chontales); coll. Godman and Salvin. Atycunus, Kirsch., Berl. Ent. Zeit. 1865, p. 71. Pygidium in the male angularly emarginate, in the female rounded. (Plate, fig. 9.) This singular genus combines the characters of Luci- dota with those of Photinus, the shortening of the elytra in the ¢, together with a moderate enlargement of the abdomen (which is sublobate in the ¢), is associated with apparently a total loss of luminosity, testified both by the 10 Rey. H. S. Gorham’s materials for a absence of diaphanous segments, and small, feebly-deve- loped eyes. Alychnus xanthorrhaphus, Kirsch. |. ¢. p. 72. Columbia, Brus. M., Guérin, Men. Gorh. (Norris), Bod Probably in most collections. PuixotTomus, Leconte, Classif. Col. N. Am. I. p. 184, 1861. The elytra here are rudimentary in the ?, and feebly developed in the ¢, which is, however, quite capable of flight. The eyes are well developed, especially in the male. Abdomen sublobed in the é, pygidium rounded, faintly bisinuate in 6, round in @, ventral, apical emargi- nate scarcely notched in the same sex. Pleotomus pallens, Lec. New Spec. Col. I. p. 88. Texas, U. S. America, Gorh. PHAENOLIS, genus novum. Maxillary palpi. Eyes small. Head entirely received into the prothorax. Antenne 11-jointed; joint 1 stout, 2 short, 3—10 bifla- bellate,as in Lamprocera Latreillet. Prothorax contracted at the base, its margins broadly reflexed. Scutellum elon- gate. Hlytra not expanded, their lateral margin a little reflexed. Abdomen having the dorsal segments lobed at the sides; segments four, five and six laciniate, the seventh widely bilobed; the anal, or corresponding ventral segment, being divided and produced in two recurved, spathulate lobes, at the base of which is a luminous spot. Type, Phenolis laciniatus, Gorh. Phenolis laciniatus, n. sp. Elongatus, subparallelus, ochraceus, capite antennis, palpis, abdomine, tibiis, tarsis, elytrorumque apice late fusco-nigris. Long. lin. 6—7. $4, 2 ?. Head black, antennz with the lamellzx equal on each side, long; breast ochreous-yellow, extreme tip of femora dusky, tibize and tarsis black, excepting the claws, which revision of the Lampyride. 11 are yellow. Abdomen black, apical ventral segment bilobed, the lobes being central and with their margins reflexed; the luminous spot on this segment is whitish, smooth and convex. Thorax and elytra dull ochreous, the latter with their apical third smoky-black. Rather near the following species, from which the yellow breast will separate it. Nicaragua, Chontales. Three specimens, $?. Coll. Godman and Salvin. Phenolis ustulatus, Chevrolat (in lit.). Niger, prothorace, elytrorumque basi, ochraceis. Long. lin. 5—6. Head, antenne and palpi black; prothorax orange- yellow, inclining to brick-red or vermilion in the centre. Elytra smoky-black, excepting the basal third, the black colour extending indistinctly along the costal ridge to the humeral callus. Legs black, anterior and middle cox yellow at their base. Zapote, Guatemala. ‘Two specimens, apparently males, agree with a type sent to me by Chevrolat, with the above name, and which is, I think, a female from Mexico. This latter exhibits no trace of a luminous spot, but the anal segments are precisely similar, as well as the pectination of the antennz, to those I think to be males. Phenolis ockraceus, n. sp. Ochraceus, capite, antennis, palpis tibiis tarsisque fuscis, abdominis lateribus et apice leviter infuscatis. Long. lin. 6—7. ¢, $?. Dull ochreous-yellow, with the antenne, tibia and tarsi fuscous; the abdomen in the male (if I am correct in assigning one of the two specimens to that sex) is slightly darker, inclining to pitchy, at the sides and apex, while in the female? it is rather more infuscate still. The pro- thorax in the former is more acuminate in front, less con- tracted behind than in the female ?, but in neither is any trace of luminous parts observable. Nicaragua, Chontales. Coll. Godman and Salvin. CALYPTOCEPHALUS (Gray, Griffith, An. Kined. i. p. 370.) Calyptocephalus fasciatus, Gray, loc. cit.. (Pl. XX XIX. 5° Guiana. Brit. M. 12 Rev. H. S. Gorham’s materials for a The narrow thorax and fasciate elytra give this species a lyciform look. PoLuiycuasis, Newman. Pollyclasis bifarius, Say, Bost. Journ. i. p. 157. The genus is very distinct from the last, and will, no doubt, stand. J have not been able to make a detailed examination of the type. America borealis, United States. Brit. M. /ETHRA, Cast. Abdomen lobed; sixth segment produced triangularly in middle. LEthra marginata, Gray; Griff. An. Kingdom. Brazil, Gorh.; Columbia, Brus. M. LEthra lateralis, Cast. Essai, p. 133. Brazil, Constancia, Gorh.; Brus. M.: coll. Guérin, Men., but ticketed “ marginata, Gray.” There is no type of M. Guérin’s lateralis in this collection. Lthra despecta, n. sp. Rufo-brunnea, subnitida, capite, antennis, tibiis, tarsis, et abdomine nigris, thoracis disco, elytrisque margine excepto interdum infuscatis. Long. lin. 4—44. Head black, crown shining, antennz nearly as long as the body ; joint 1 moderately stout, 2 short, 3—10 trian- gular, their innerside acuminate subpectinate, 11 elongate, and all compressed. Thorax short, almost semicircular, middle canaliculate, margins reflexed, and hind angles acute. Elytra four times the length of thorax, ochreous- red, in the majority of specimens a little infuscate, with the entire margin paler. Nicaragua, Chontales; Godman and Salvin. Columbia; Brus. M. and Gorh. LEthra concolor, n. sp. Parallela, flavo-testacea, capite nigro, thorace trans- verso angulis posticis acutis, antennis corporis longitudinis, serratis tibiis tarsisque nigro-fuscis. Long. lin, 5. revision of the Lampyride. 13 Mas.?—Pygidio margine apicali tridentato. (Plate, fiz. 7.) Closely allied to A. despecta, but the abdomen is yellow, and the wings are pale, and the antennz are simply serrate, not, as in that species, almost pectinate. Trazu, Costa Rica. 6,000 to 7,000 ft. alt.; coll. God- man and Salvin. LE thra brunnipennis, n. sp. Nigra, subnitida, elytris brunneo-flavis, thorace canali- culato, semicirculari. Long. lin. 44. Allied to the preceding, and of the same form and size, but with the body entirely black, the elytra alone being yellow. Hab. ?—Brus. M.; a single specimen. Vesta, Castelnau Essai, p. 133. Type, V. Chevrolatii. I think it will be better to retain this name for the Eastern species. The sixth ventral segment is produced into a small tooth-like lobe in its centre, which overlies a seventh lobe-like segment. I have only seen one specimen that I can consider to be a female of this genus, viz., one of V. Saturnalis, in this the abdomen is very wide, the sixth segment angularly elevated in the middle, the seventh is triangularly cut out. Vesta Chevrolatti, Cast. loc. cit. Java; Brus. M.; Chevrolat; Gorh. ¢. Vesta Saturnalis, n. sp. Nigro-picea, prothorace, elytris abdominisque segmentis sexto et septimo brunneo-flavis, thorace disco canaliculato, margine laterali reflexo angulis posticis acutis. Long. lin. 10—11. Mas.—Segmento sexto ventrali acuminato producto. Femina.—Kodem leviter emarginato, septimo triangu- lariter exciso. Rather larger and wider than V. Chevrolatii.. Thorax and elytra ochreous-yellow, the dise of the former a little 14 Rey. H. 8. Gorham’s materials for a shining, and with a deep longitudinal sulcation. Sides sinuous from the base to the apex, which is acuminate and produced as in Chevrolatii. Head, with the an- tenn, palpi, underside of the body and legs black, the apex of the abdomen, and in the ¢ the sides, of two or three preceding segments yellow. Scutellum pitchy, elytra dull, three nervures apparent, the humeral one costate. India, Naga Hills, 5,000 ft. alt., and Khasia Hills, Assam; coll. Gorh.; about twelve examples, one of which is a female. Vesta Menetriesit, Mots. Etudes Ent. 1853, p. 43. Java. Two specimens which I refer to this, without locality in Brus. M. Vesta flavicollis, Mots. [ Cratolampis] Etud. Ent. 1853, p. 43. Philippine Isles; Gorh. Vesta proxima, n. sp. Flavo-rufa, capite, antennis, palpis, tibiis, tarsis elytris- que nigris. Long. lin. 6. Very near to rufiventris, Mots. [Cratolampis], which, without doubt, belongs to this genus. It appears to differ in the colour of the thighs, which in proxima are with the coxze and whole of the body entirely yellow; the knees alone with the tibiz and tarsi are black. The thorax is wider and more acuminate in front than in flavicollis, and is also with the scutellum clothed with short, yellow hairs. Hab.?—In my own Collection, with yellow ticket ; probably India, Vesta rufiventris, Mots. | Cratolampis] Etud. Ent. 1853, p. 43. Philippine Isles; Gorh. Three specimens appear to agree with this, but the thorax is not translucid in any part, and is scarcely channelled. 2 Vesta basalis, n. sp. Rufa, subtus flava, capite, antennis, palpis tibiis, tarsis, elytrisque (basi excepto) nigris. Long. lin. 5—6, revision of the Lampyride. 15 This species is also very nearly allied to the two pre- ceding, but differs in colour, having the base of the elytra red, varying in extent in the two specimens before me; they are also rather wide in proportion to their length. Hab, ?—Two very old specimens with yellow tickets ; coll. Gorh. LucernvutTa, Cast. Ann. Fr. 1833, p. 136. Lucernuta fenestrata, Germ. Ins. n. sp. p. 66. 6, 2. Brazil; Brus. M.; Gorh. Lucipota, Cast. loc. cit. Lucidota flabellicornis, Fab. Spec. Ins. i. p. 252. ry pectinicornis, Mots. Brazil (Espirito Santo, &c.). ¢. Brit. M. coll. Banks, Type; &, ¢. Brus. M.; Gorh. The male has the sixth, that is, the apical ventral seg- ment broadly and triangularly cut out. Lucidota compressicornis, Fab. Syst. El. i. p. 103 ? Brazil; Rio Grande; Gorh. Three specimens, which have the antennz longer, but with the joints 3—8 more compressed than in the pre- ceding species, not flabellate but triangularly acuminate within, I refer to this. The abdomen has the pygidium long, faintly emarginate at the apex, the ventral apical seoment not excised, but trilobate. Lucidota, sp.? Rio Janeiro; Gorh. Antenne only half the length of the body, compressed serrate, joints triangularly acuminate. Lucidota albo-marginata, Solier. ? Hab.?—Gorh. Two specimens in my collection from Norris. Antenne compressed, joints 3—8 scarcely serrate, rather longer than wide ; anterior margin of thorax scarcely re- flexed, translucent on the margin on each side of the apex. Elytra ovate, margin expanded, white in the middle, except the narrow reflexed edge. Abdomen witlr a transverse white luminous mark on the fifth segment, pygidium triangular, truncate. 16 Rey. H. 8. Gorham’s materials for a Lucidota Klugii, De}. Cat.,—Mots. ? Hab.?—Gorh. : P >» —_ <<. ' a | - i ' - _ 7 * re - ~ a a 7 — y - if a Lal 7 j * < go ih bie on oie on art tet ins J exut os oe Ay df oli Tak: ish . = i ice =a! rs *¥ he GT ae a Pas , i oer pee ae frphie aise % Ne, ines HO SU cel) eed ie ns Dees Ms. “Hb eN pth 9t hs ae rat ite Ms ie a “ast Are # As bh Vyas He hy Je oP. 3st Ae? ie ka ae thy Syn veqe (Me a pie - — pois meer vel Te arte oc. ec oh ea = cua ert c - 7 ad ” i a f me ‘af hoa 1 he D ia eee RE CO Ci.» oo at t Ais 'uvese’ ya ab Vibe Ob Gem Aik) - we ak CORRE - : ie - ‘ 7 - aa , e re ey hh Wey sieve le ee DL Av age ta > gare SP le Bert ts) ee oo . | ray : ~ a ; iP uy : Thy 4 ay i 7 ey de - ' mart i q : cr oe. writs rhea | a 3), i Vous a hy ey ¥ >) ‘fed YC 7 7 an E Shu) a a he e, = of or a ™ Mp. Paty | we! 25 ee oy ae if Met _— it ay oh Aah ta ~ AY: . HS pict Sr, nie Se eae 1 i). Sahel Uchee a Tr wry ‘, aa S ; ra ee ¥ Joos, ache MEN ad aan + i pag Dele ot hed vb ie As ioestt Fay a % ‘a a Wiles die) — ; A F irs Pi es a an ad ' AS te } = 4 * he i ce 7 r ‘ i he! 7 v) Cesar) IV. Descriptions of Cetoniide and Cerambycide from Madagascar. By Cuas. O. WATERHOUSE. [Read March 38rd, 1880. ] THE species described in this paper have recently been received by the British Museum from Fianarantsoa. They were collected by the Rev. Wm. Deans Cowan, to whom we are already much indebted for many novelties. Among other rarities is a single specimen of the remark- able genus of Hlateridce, described by Dr. Candéze (Cist. Ent. 11. 1879, p. 485) as Morostoma, having the palpi as long as the antenne. It differs from the type specimen in being much larger, nine lines in length, and in having the legs concolorous with the body; it is probably a female. CETONIID2. Celidota splendens, n. sp. Viridi-aurea, nitida; thorace (marginibus exceptis) scutello, elytrisque cupreo-rufis, tibiis cupreo-tinctis, pygidio sat crebre punctato. Long. 13 lin. Clypeus rather thickly and strongly punctured, a little wider in front than at the base, transversely impressed before the anterior margin, which is slightly reflexed, the angles obtuse. Thorax deep coppery red (except at the sides), very finely coriaceous, and moderately thickly and distinctly punctured, especially towards the sides; the base is sinuate in the middle; the posterior angles are obtusely rounded. Scutellum nearly in the form of an equilateral triangle, moderately thickly punctured at the sides. Elytra broad at the shoulders (where there is a black spot), relatively more narrowed behind than in C. Stephensii, leaving the margins of the abdomen visible from above, deep coppery red, extremely finely coriaceous, and not very shining, thickly and very dis- TRANS. ENT. soc. 1880.—PaART Il. (JUNE.) 60 Mr. C. O. Waterhouse’s descriptions of tinctly punctured all over, with no costz nor strie. Pygidium gently convex, moderately thickly and distinctly punctured, very slightly impressed on each side at the margin. Mesosternal process transverse, a little angular in the middle, evenly arcuate in front. The segmentations of the abdomen margined with deep blue. Anterior tibiz with two teeth. Coptomia rufo-varia, Nn. sp. C. prasine affinis, viridis, thorace elytrisque rufo-tinctis ; elytris fortiter striatis, pygidio leviter convexo haud impresso, transversim striolato. 9. Long. 9 lin. Very close to C. prasina, but much narrower, and pale yellowish green, with the thorax and especially the scutellum and dorsal region of the elytra coppery red. Head and thorax less strongly punctured than in prasina. Scutellum more acuminate. LElytra deeply striated, but the punctures in the striw are scarcely visible even with a magnifying power, and there is no fine line at the bottom of the stria, as is usual in prasina; the first four interstices are straight and equally broad; the fifth and sixth striz are very strongly punctured, straighter, and nearly of equal length ; beyond these there are two lines of strong punctures besides the marginal one; the apex is finely striolate, as in prasina. The pygidium is not im- pressed on each side of the disk, but is evenly convex, and although closely striolated, is not so closely as in prasina. Hab.—Fianarantsoa (Rev. Wm. Deans Cowan). CERAMBYCIDA. Opsamates purpureipennis, N. sp. Niger, nitidus ; antennis articulis 3°—11"" piceis, bre- viter pilosis, thorace crebre fortiter punctato, linea me- diana levi, lateribus tuberculo parvo ante medium, elytris purpureis, parum convexis, fortiter discrete punctatis, singulis costis tribus obtusis, humeris apiceque virescen- tibus.. ¥ . Long. 13 lin. Head with a longitudinal channel, and with some strong punctures on the antennal tubercles. Antenne Cetoniidee and Cerambycide. 61 short, not reaching to the middle of the elytra, finely pilose, the basal joint strongly punctured ; the punctuation of the 2nd, 3rd and 4th joints is less strong, that of the following joints is finer and closer, the 3rd and 4th joints are subcylindrical, the 5th 6th and 7th are rather wider at their apex. ‘The thorax is one-fifth broader than long, convex, covered with large close punctures, which leave a more or less complete smooth mesial line; on each side of the disk there is a very slight tumour; there is a nearly rectangular prominence at the side in front (obtuse at its apex), and rather before the middle of the side there is a small obtuse tubercle ; the base is strongly margined, and is slightly sinuate on each side. Scutellum smooth. Elytra about one quarter broader than the widest part of the thorax, parallel (or perhaps a little wider behind), very obtuse at the apex, with strong punctures not very closely placed over the surface ; each elytron has three obtuse cost, none of which reach the apex. The meta- sternum is thickly and strongly punctured ; the abdomen rather less thickly but still more strongly punctured. The legs are more or less piceous, sparingly punctured, and sparingly pilose. The prosternum is very strongly trans- versely rugulose. In my endeavour to determine the position of this curious insect, by the help of the “Genera des Coléop- teres,’’ I came to the conclusion that it should be placed after the Metopoceline, and in comparing it with my genus Opsamates (Tr. Ent. Soc. 1879, p. 264), also from Madagascar, which I had placed in that position, I have not seen sufficient reason for separating it as a distinct genus, although its appearance is very different. The antenne, however, are shorter, and scarcely at all dentate ; the anterior coxe are not quite so approximate, and the thorax has no dorsal tubercles. Leptocera flavovittata, n. sp. Nigra, subopaca ; antennarum articulis 3°—11"™ pedi- busque flavescentibus, thorace subcylindrico, dense punc- tato, elytris cyaneis, singulis vitta lata flavescenti haud ad apicem attingenti, Long. 8 lin. Head very strongly punctured between the eyes. Thorax a little longer than broad, subcylindrical, a very little narrowed in front and behind, densely and rather strongly 62 Mr. C. 0. Waterhouse’s descriptions of Cetoniide, cde. punctured. Elytra deep blue, rather thickly and very distinctly punctured ; each elytron with a pitchy-yellow stripe down the middle, extending to the shoulder at the base, narrowed posteriorly, and not reaching to the apex ; the apex truncate, the external angle with a very small tooth. Abdomen smooth, with a few strong punctures scattered here and there. Hab.—Fianarantsoa. This species is closely allied to C. humeralis. Greer) V. On the Structure of the Lampyridx, with reference to their Phosphorescence. By the Ruy. H. S. GorRHAM. [Read March Srd, 1880. | Tun interest taken by the members of the Society who were present when I rather briefly stated some morpho- logical observations I had made while studying the Lampyride, was so much greater than I had anticipated, that 1 think it worth while to lay before the Society a fuller summary of those facts, and venture to restate in arather fuller form, and, if I can, more clearly, the con- clusions at which I arrived. I think it will be admitted that generalisations founded on a limited number of phenomena are only misguiding, and have no sure basis, while in those founded on a large number of facts, some cases are sure to be found, which may at first seem adverse to the conclusion which we are at last compelled to adopt. This has been the case here. There are examples, such as the non-luminous species, which I do not profess to say more about than that they do not invalidate the general con- clusion at which I arrive, which is that the sexual instinct has played a large part in moulding the external structure of this group of beetles, and that it is to that we may look for an adequate explanation of the wonderful development of phosphorescent light, though perhaps not to its origin. In the first place, then, it is to be observed that all the species of this family do not possess the luminous faculty in equal degree ; but that on the contrary, while some are highly luminous in both sexes, some are only highly so in the female, some are not luminous in either sex, and some (though this appears rather doubtful) are luminous in the males, and not so, or much less so, in the female. The part which this faculty of emitting light plays in the economy of nature has been long and earnestly debated. The most general view, and therefore one to which I lay no claim for originality, but which my observations tend to confirm, is that it serves as a beacon to attract the male to TRAYS. ENT. soc. 1880.—partT tl. (JUNE.) BE 64 Rev. H. S. Gorham on the the female ; but I believe this to be the case only ina special sense in those species which do not assemble, and especially in those in which the females are incapable of flight. In other cases I believe that both sexes are attracted, and enabled by this means to assemble at night for their union. These inferences are drawn from the con- sideration of the relative development of the eyes, together with what is known of the habits of the various species. The eyes of the Lampyride are, I find, developed in magnitude according to the amount of luminosity of the species considered. And the other parts which I have taken account of, together with these, are the antennae, of which there is a very great diversity, both between the sexes, and in the genera ;—the elytra, which are also subject to sexual and generic limitations, and finally the size of the abdomen in the female. The last mentioned is no doubt, as in other apterous females, the result of an increased production of ova. These are, I believe, in the Lampyride laid on roots, and other substances near the ground, where the young larvee will at once be likely to meet with their molluscan diet. The greater the tendency to produce ova in abundance, the more sluggish the females would become, and hence females once capable of flight would lose the use of their wings, and the usefulness of the light to attract their more volatile partners would be greater than ever. This I believe to be the explanation of the fact that the highest degree of light, or at any rate the greatest disproportion in the amount shown by the sexes, is to be found in those species which have apterous females, and together with this the greatest development of eye in the male. We will now consider the case of those species in which both sexes are winged, and in which both are luminous, and in probably nearly equal degree. Such are, I have reason to think, by far the large proportion of the whole number of existing species. In this case the power of emitting light would be obviously useful in attracting both sexes to assemble in swarms, and it does not militate against this supposition that in many species the males should possess this faculty in the higher degree. It might be anticipated that if the female has to be guided to the rendezvous of the species by this effect, the eyes in that sex would not be inferior to those of the male; and such is the fact. To save repetition here I will only instance one well-known case, viz., that of the European and Eastern genus Structure of the Lampyride. 65 Luciola. Here both sexes fly, both are luminous, and both have largely developed powerful eyes. Neither of these sections, however, comprise those species which are generally regarded as most typical of the family, the largest, and those which appear on the whole to have all their parts most highly specialised, and which, therefore, we place at the head of a systematic list, such as the genera Lamprocera and Cladodes. It is rather re- markable that in these genera the lhght-emitting faculty has not been developed in the same proportion as the rest of the organs have, and that while one of these, viz., the eyes, are also reduced in a direct ratio with the light, and are small and uniform in both sexes, another organ, the antenne, is developed in inverse ratio as the phos- phorescence is diminished. I do not here speak of mere length, or redundancy in the number of joints, which are more usual in very simple and primitive forms of the organ, such as we see in Blatta, but of a high degree of specialisation, testified by large lamellar plates, or pectina- tion. Whether the eye is developed at the expense of the antenna, and is so to speak the receptacle of all the vital forces of the head, or whether the antenna supplements the loss of the other organ of sense, and is useful in detecting the presence of the female, I only see one fact in evidence, which is that this plumosity of the antenne, in one case, and this enormous development of the eye in the other, are usually sexual characters predominating in the male, but sometimes found in both sexes. I now offer some evidence in support of my view. The species I have selected to illustrate the subject I have arranged in three groups. i. Species with plumose antennx, small or moderate eyes, both sexes winged, light-emitting surface confined to one or more small spots. Genera exhibited Lamprocera,— L. Latreilleis g @. The male only is luminous, and apparently only slightly so. Cladodes,—C. lamellicoris. C. plumosa, Gorh. The sexes are as yet undistinguish- able. Vesta,—V. saturnalis, Gorh. Lucidota,—L. Habellicornis, Pheenolis,—P. plumosa, Gorh. Mega- lophthalmus, M. Guatemale, Gorh. Of this genus it is noticeable that Lacordaire remarks the name is unfor- tunate, as the eyes are not larger than is usual in this family. ii, Species in which both sexes are winged; light F2 66 Rey. H. S. Gorham on the emitted considerable, sometimes greater in the?. Eyes large, sometimes excessive. Antennz simple, usually filiform. Genera,—Cratomorphus,—C. giganteus, C. JSuscipennis. Lucernula,—L. fenestrata, Aspidosoma,— A. laterale 3. A. cegrotum, Gorh. 6 2. Luciola,—L. wtalica; L. lusitanica; L. vespertina. Photuris,—P. pennsylvanica. ill. Species in which the female is apterous or with rudimentary wings ; light emitted often very great in the female, and often only rudimentary traces of it in the male, Antenne usually rudimentary. Eyes large in the male, often excessively so, occupying nearly the whole head. Genera,—Pleotomus,—P. palleus, ¢ 2? ; Lampro- phorus nepalensis 3; Microphotus, M.n. sp. Lampyris,— L. noctiluca $ 2; L. mauritanica$ 9; L. sp.? Africa ; Lamprorhiza,—L. Delarouzei 3 ¢. iv. Three abnormal genera which do not seem to form cases in point. Alychnus,—A. xanthorrhaphus 3 9. This being quite non-luminous appears only to offer negative evidence. The eyes are not developed. Dioptoma,— DPD, Adamsi,—the eyes are enormous, but I do not know anything about the luminosity. Amythetes,—A. fastigiata. The antennz are plumose, and both sexes I believe luminous, but the insect is quite abnormal; the antennz are redundant in the number of joints and the plumosity very soft and fine. I should consider them simple rather than specialised. With regard to the power of withdrawing the light proved I believe to exist in these insects, whether suddenly and in- termittently as in the instance of the Lwciola, or gradually as I have observed in L. noctiluca, the explanation is I think that the external white vitreous-looking parts are only dia- phanous, not themselves the source of the light which is within the body of the insect and can be pressed against these windows, or retired from them at its pleasure. I think Newport observed that these segments in the female of LZ. noctiluca were detached from the internal parts on dissecting them. ‘The circumstance of the Luciolas thus flashing in unison would on this hypothesis easily be accounted for, by any exciting cause, such as the arrival in the swarm of a fresh female, or the gusts of air, which affected them all at one time. And the comparative hardness of the body in this genus seems to favour the idea that this may be really the case. Structure of the Lampyride. 67 I trust I shall not have been too prolix or to have dwelt longer on the subject than it deserved. I have for some years taken the greatest interest in the distinctions in the sexes of insects, and the apparent cause of these diversities, or ends gained by their means, and you will see that the theory of their gradual development forms part of my suggestion. We do not find here the feet with widened tarsi, or patellated front feet with roughened elytra in the female, as in the Carabide and Water-beetles, nor prehensile bent tibiae in the male as in Necrophaga, Weevils, and many other groups, nor teeth developed on the tibiae, nor claspers to the abdomen, nor the enormous jaws of Lucanus by which, as I have observed, he can throw a rival as an athlete does his antagonist, nor fighting horns as in many Coleoptera. But what we do find is a simple natural variation, taken advantage of with such success, that it has proved sufficient to mould at least two other organs by its application to the insect’s necessities : one the eye in the direction of developing its power, the other the antenna by correlation in the opposite direction of reducing it to a rudiment. The light of Lampyride, which may have originated with their molluscan diet, has been sufficient to develop the most perfect eyes I have noticed in Coleoptera: while it has rendered unnecessary and checked the original tendency to plumosity in the organ of touch, wherever it has been taken advantage of in any considerable degree. Among the numberless variations that arise naturally in the animal and vegetable kingdom, man is ever availing himself of those he desires, and is, to a great extent, able to render those that are useful permanent, and to check those that are not so, and it appears to me that I have shown you an example where nature has proceeded in the same way. Our Vice-President, in his address, exhorted us in our papers to bring our attention to bear on the morphological characters and habits of the creatures we study. If I have relieved the monotony of the technical descriptions, and mere classification of these beetles, which the Society has received so favourably, and taken a step in the direction he indicated, I shall feel I have not wasted your time, and shall be recompensed if the discussion of the subject brings out any new facts for its elucidation. (69°) VI. Notes on the Coloration and Development of Insects. By P. Cameron. [Read 7th April, 1880. ] I. On tHE Marxines on tHE Larvae or Smerinthus. Last autumn I made an observation which may possibly throw some light on the use of the reddish-brown marks along the sides of the larvee of Smerinthus. My attention was attracted to a small poplar (Populus nigra) whose leaves were very much affected with the small dark blotches caused by the fungus Melampsora populina, Lev. When examining these, I noticed that some of the blotches appeared to be of a brighter and redder tint. On pulling a leaf down which bore these differently-coloured markings, I found, somewhat to my astonishment, that they were not fungi, but the markings along the sides of a caterpillar of S. populi, which I had not obs.zved before. The question then occurred to me : Might not the markings on the cater- pillar have been acquired in imitation of the fungi, so as to give it an additional means of protection, in conjunc- tion with the green colour of its body, in imitation of the green colour of the leaf? To test this, the caterpillar was put back again on the tree, and the effect noticed. No doubt, looking at it close at hand, the larva was readily seen, for besides the slight difference in the colour of the lateral marks and the fungi (as already explained), the colour of the body was much brighter than the leaves, which were then (the end of September) beginning to fade ; but, looked at from a distance of several feet, the cater- pillar was certainly very difficult to see, and undoubtedly it seemed to me that the similarity of the spots to the fungi added not a little to hide it. Several other cater- pillars were found on neighbouring trees (likewise infested with fungi),and the examination of these served to confirm my first impression of the usefulness of the marks in hiding the larva in the circumstances in which it lived. The markings on the three species of Smerinthus are variable, and may be entirely absent. Mr. Boscher, for instance (Proc. Ent. Soc., p. xliv., 1878), describes two forms of TRANS. ENT. soc. 1880.—Pparvit. (JUNE.) 70 Mr. P. Cameron on the the larva of S. ocellatus—one feeding on Salix triandra, without markings, and another on Salix viminalis, with a double row along the side. We can scarcely suppose that the marks serve no useful purpose ; and we have in the case of Deilephila Hippophaes a very good illustration of similar marks simulating objects—the berries—found on the food-plant. There is another circumstance which favours my view, the circumstance, namely, that the three principal food-plants of our species of Smerinthus—Tilia, poplars, and willows—are much infested on the leaves with fungi (as the poplar), or, as with all three, with mites (Phytopus), which form on the leaves little galls of from 1 to 3” in length, and usually of a brownish-red colour ; while they are, like the fungi, very common, and have a wide distribution. On a willow (Salix aurita) close to where I discovered the caterpillars, I found many mite- galls on its leaves, and compared them with the markings in the caterpillar. Many were larger, and many smaller, while the colour was scarcely so bright in most cases, but still at a distance of a yard or two the resemblance was considerable, and could only be detected by a practised eye. Ido not knowifthe spotted caterpillars are found only on infested trees, or the contrary ; what I contend for is, that these and similar excrescences, being so common on the food-plants (and indeed on most plants near those frequented by the larvze), the reddish markings serve to protect them. In the above-mentioned caterpillar of S. populi, the red spots were fully larger than those in Weismann’s figure of Deilephila Hippophaes,* and they were the same in number (6); the spiracles too were surrounded with red ; but these red blotches, though more numerous, were scarcely so large as those on the upper row, although con- spicuous enough. My observations have shown too, I think, that they do aid in concealing the larva on an infested tree. The fact of the spots appearing late in life may be owing to the caterpillar’s increased size rendering it more conspicuous than it was when younger, and, consequently, standing more in need of additional means to aid concealment. It may be added that Hippophae rhamnoides, the food-plant of Deilephil a Hippophaes, has a Phy ytopust attached to it ; * Descendenz—Theorie, ii., pl. iv., f. 59 ¢ cf, Rudow. Pflanzen-gallen Norddeutschlands, p. 173. Coloration and Development of Insects. vgs and if its galls be like those on willows, &c., they would have, at least, a general resemblance to the reddish markings on the caterpillar, and the similarity between the two may serve to hide the caterpillar when the berries are unripe or absent, or even when they are present. II. Furtuer Novus on tun CoLoRAtion or Saw-F iy Larv2. * a. On the Changes of Colour undergone by certain Larve. —It has long been known, from the observations of Reaumur, De Geer, and many modern observers, that many saw-fly larve, immediately before pupating, change colour, becoming, as a rule, more obscurely and uniformly coloured, and throwing off any hairs, spines, &¢., which they may have carried before. What is the meaning of this change ? It might be said that in the case of a spiny larva it was in order to give it greater freedom to spin the cocoon, but obviously this answer will not explain why spineless larvee change. The change of coloration is most conspicuous with gaudily-coloured larvee, as, for instance, with the gooseberry grub, whose two forms of larva are often taken for two distinct species. All gaudily-coloured larvee do not change colour; while, on the other hand, others, whose coloration is obscure, do so, although in this case the difference between the two is not very conspicuous. Unfortunately, our knowledge of the habits of these creatures in a state of nature is still somewhat limited, especially as to their modes of ‘pupation. We cannot suppose that the change is altogether useless and meaning- less, and I believe further observation will show that it is protective, either in concealing the creature, or by making it more conspicuous in the case of noxious larve. Saw-fly larve are seldom large; protected larve therefore can only make their presence known by feeding in company on a leaf; but when they become full-fed they have to separate, to descend to the earth to seek a resting-place, and while doing so they encounter new enemies, and are exposed to dangers of a different kind from what they had been accustomed to. Hence a change of colour might be of advantage ; either a colour which would simulate the surroundings, or one which would make them more con- spicuous than they were when living in companies. While some of these creatures bury themselyes immediately * See Trans, Ent, Soc., 1878, p. 141. 72 Mr. P. Cameron on the beneath the food-plants, others travel some distances, in order to find a suitable resting-place. This is especially the case with those which do not pupate in the earth, but bore into the stems of pithy plants, in leu of spinning a cocoon, or because the cocoon itself is thin. Some of these species (Lmphytus, Taxonus) I have found at considerable distances from their food-plants in stems ; and I have found a cocoon of Lophyrus pint in a crevice} of a wall many yards’ distance from any pine. The view that the change of coloration is protective is confirmed by observations I have made on two very different species, and the observations are especially interesting, as they illustrate the two forms of protective coloration. While in most cases the change is (ag already mentioned) in the direction of a more obscure (generally green) coloration, in one or two instances the opposite is the case. There is a gall-making Nematus found abundantly along the banks of rivers on Salia pur- purea. Living, as the creature does, in its larval state concealed in galls, it has no need of bright colours, and accordingly its body is white. At the last moult, however, it becomes entirely slate-coloured, and leaves the galls for the ground. I once found several of these larvee on the sands which surrounded the trees, marching up to a higher portion of the river bank. I noticed especially that the colour of their bodies harmonised admirably with the sand, and thus they were very difficult to see ; certainly a white larva would be much easier detected. Another species of the same group is found on Salix aurita. In this case, of course, the comparison with the sand does not hold, but then the slate colour agrees quite as well with the dead grass, &c., found in the marshy situations where the species lives. The other observation relates to Cladius viminalis. Three or four of its larvae feed, ranged in a row, on the underside of a poplar leaf, of which they eat only the epidermis. When very young they are entirely green; gradually orange makes its appearance on the first and last segments, black marks appear on the body, which is also covered with hair ; but still the green largely predominates. Then at the last moult every trace of green disappears, and the entire body is orange, save the black head and the black marks. The brilliant colour acquired when it has stopped feeding and is ready for pupating is explainable, I think, by a reference to the habits of the creature. Living several on a leaf, their presence is made sufficiently visible during the greater part of their life ; but when they have Coloration and Development of Insects. 73 become full-fed they separate, and each seeks a suitable hiding-place. They do not pupate apparently on their natal tree, but descend it to go in search of another, up whose trunk they march, and spin their cocoons in crevices. I have found them doing this on trees—firs, beeches— many yards’ distance from any poplars. Last September I found one far from the food-plant, about six feet up on the trunk of a beech, where it was readily noticed by its gaudy colour. It was put into a tube, and in half an hour had begun to spin its cocoon. Here, then, we have the reason for the gaudy coloration acquired at the last moult ; it is to make it more conspicuous than it would be if it had retained the green which it had when feeding. The species of this genus spin an irregular, thin, semi-transparent cocoon, which is spun either in chinks in the bark, or in stems of herbaceous plants. Hence they may have to go some distance before a proper place is met with. b. Dimorphic larve.—The question of dimorphic larve with the Tenthredinide is one well worthy of attention. The subject is at present somewhat obscure, for although I have bred forms, which I cannot separate in the perfect state from differently-coloured larvee, and might therefore conclude that they were dimorphic larva of the same species, yet further observation might show that in reality they were distinct species. I am not now referring to such cases as Lophyrus similis and L. pint, and Nematus cadderensis, Cam. and NV. croceus, Fall. (fulvus H.); for although in these two cases the perfect msects cannot be separated by any distinct characters, yet the larvze are so different in form, coloration, and habits, as to preclude the idea of their being dimorphic larvae of the same species. J am alluding to such forms as I have described elsewhere,* where larve differently marked (but. still having some common characteristics) produced imagos which cannot —or, at any rate, I cannot, nor can Herrn Brischke and Zaddach, as they inform me in litt.—be satisfactorily separated. Nematus capree, Pz., has two forms of larve: one, the common type, green, with white lines; and a much rarer form, which is reddish, but with the same markings as the other. Both feed on the same food-plant (Carices) and in the same locality. One or two species of Cimbex would appear * Fauna of Scot., p. 41, 74. Mr. P. Cameron on the to have dimorphic larvee, but the specific distinctions be- tween the forms of this genus are yet too complicated to enable us to decide if the different larve belong to the same or to different species. Brischke and Zaddach* (and no better authorities could be stated) describe two distinct forms of the larvee of Cimbex saliceti, Zad. (lutea auct.) on Salix caprea—one brownish-red, and a rarer bluish-green one. The larvaof another species of Nematus (histrio Lep.), is in the great majority of cases green, but specimens are occasionally of a decided reddish hue, although I have never seen the red predominating to such an extent as with the red form of NV. capree. I find that the larvee of the various species of Cimbea and Trichiosoma are not at all clearly defined, any more than are the perfect insects, Dahlbom + had an idea that the great variability of the imagos was produced by the food-plants, but this I regard as very doubtful ; and it is certain that some forms which Dahlbom regarded as varieties are good species, presenting distinctive (although slight) characters in their larval and imago states. Several varieties of Cimbex sylvarum, for instance, are bred from birch, and of C. saliceti from willow; while the form mentioned by Dahlbom from beech is considered by Brischke and Zaddach as a good species. c. On the Use of the Hairs on Green Larvee.—I have already alluded to the difference in the mode of feeding of the protected and edible larve which feed on the flat surface of the leaf. Besides this difference in habits, there is a structural peculiarity which distinguishes them. It is that the noxious larvee have bare, shining bodies ; whereas the others have their bodies more or less covered with pale hairs. With flat larvae, as in Caimponiscus, they are only along the edge, which is very projecting and waved, so that the legs are entirely hid. In Nematus pal- lescens the body is more cylindrical, and covered all over with pale hairs, which, although of moderate length, cannot be seen unless the larva be examined close at hand, when it is resting on the leaf. In Cladius, again, the bodies are still more cylindrical, and the hairs are longer. Now, hairs of this class appear to be entirely confined to larvee (generally green) which feed on the surface of the leaf, * Schr. ges. Konig. U1, pl. 11, f. 4. + Prod. Hymen, Scand, 50. Coloration and Development of Insects. 75 and, with scarcely an exception, to edible ones. Cladius viminalis has these hairs, like the other species of this genus, but they do not add in any way to its conspi- cucusness, for they are pale and scarcely noticeable, and therefore cannot be ranked with the hairs on the goose- berry grub (Nematus ribesit), which undoubtedly tend to render it more easily seen. From the pale woolly appearance of these hairs, and from the fact that most of the larve of Cladius are green and inconspicuous, it is probable that C. viminalis and C. aeneus, Zad., are the youngest species, and that the hairs derived from the primitive pale-coloured ancestor have been retained, although no longer aiding concealment. Now what is the use of these hairs? I believe that suggested by Meldola and Lubbock, * to prevent the:body throwing a sharp shadow on the leaf, which would certainly happen if the bodies were perfectly bare. It is possible, too, that the hairs in Cladius, and the spines in Blenno- campa (eg., B. geniculata), may in addition to this purpose, serve as a protection against the attacks of ants and other carnivorous insects. I believe the green, spiny larvee are as a rule nocturnal feeders, resting motionless during the day on the underside of the leaf. Such, at any rate, is the habit of those of Macrophya sturma, ¢ K1., which feed in company, and they give out a bad smell. One kind of larva of this class (Nematus compressicornis, Fab., vallater, Voll.)t has the curious habit of surrounding itself with a wall of dried bubbles secreted by itself, appa- rently as a protection against insects. In regard to this subject, I notice a very suggestive remark by Fritz Miiller,§ which is very well illustrated by certain ‘'enthredous larve. He says (alluding to the caterpillars of butterflies) that obscurely-coloured larvee must either live solitary and hide themselves, or acquire a bad odour and congregate together. ‘These, by living in companies, surround themselves with a fetid atmosphere, and thus make their presence as effectually known as if they were gaudily coloured, or armed with hairs and spines. This is precisely what we find with the larve of Hriocampa, and others, as mentioned in my last paper. Eriocampa adumbrata appears to have reached the * Trans, Ent. Soc., 1878, 214. + Cf. Kaltenbach, Pflanzenfeinde, 83. t Cf. Vollenhoven, Tijd. Ent., i, 191, pl. 12, § Quoted Proc. Ent. Soc., 1878, vi. 76 Mr. P. Cameron on the highest phase of this protective coloration ; for not only do its larvee have a bad smell, and are covered with a resinous secretion, but they resemble very closely the droppings of abird.* Dineura stilata and D. degeeri afford other instances. I am strongly inclined to believe that the obscure coloration of these protected larvae has been acquired as a protection against ichneumons, by rendering them less conspicuous, while the secretions have been acquired against the attacks of carnivorous insects. Flat larvee like those of Hriocampa cannot defend themselves with the abdomen like those which feed along the edge of the leaf, as I have already explained. It is worthy of remark that the Hriocampa and Dineura larvee are not always exhaling the odour, but only when danger is near. It may be noted here that the habit of congregating together on the upper or lower surface of the leaf, and eating only the epidermis, is not confined to saw-fly larve. We have a very good illustration of it with Phratora vitellince, the beetle whose larvee are so common on willows. And the reason of it is obvious. 220. Pieris pandosia, LG Wivsst jee! G. lets *: 221. » gnalenka, Hew. ..° o. es 222. SP LIOIUSTE IDNs - see se sic 4 é 223. sy) locusta, Held; ic° «4° «sae ee Messrs. F. Du Cane Godman and Osbert Salvin’s Pieris peruviana, Lue. -. «+ « Manaure. » margarita, Hitbn. .. «. .. . Callidryas rurina, Feld. .. .. « 5 ; 3 philea, Linn. je) ee ee eueblon Viejo: “ statira,Cram. .. .. .. Manaure. Gonepteryx chlorinde, Godt. 55h eit » Subfam., PAprLioNInz. . Pueblo Viejo. .- Manaure. .. Atanquez, .. Manaure. ee ” ° ° . . Papilio sesostris, Cram. D Osymis, Held.) 5, lycidas, Cram... 5.6 . ” my UE OPER KEG Gao Go 00 ” » polydamus,Linn. .. . 50 ” 5 thoas, Linn. .. 50 OC ” Fam., HesPpERIDE. .. Pueblo Viejo, Manaure. Thymele dorantes, Stoll. .. «- » chaleo, Hibn... .. .. .. Manaure: Ss PROLCUE® MAINT .1<0 tale) einle Mote ” i ices Mabie G4 6a oo oc ” Telegonius enadeus, Cram. .. .. .. Atanquez, Manaure. 55 etias, Hew. ae -- .«-» Manaure. > fulgerator, Walch. sia Wes on ie MARCOSLUS SG0)lleienets Neletet were ” 3 idas,Cram, .. .. .. «. San Sebastian. Fe jolus,Cram. .. .. .. «» Manaure. anaphus.Cram., 4. ss + ” Zthilla corac ina, Butl. 50 Chinchicua. Pyrrhopyga charybdis, Doubl. & Hew. Manaure. is phidias, Linn, .. .. .. Atanquez. 5 acastus,Cram... .. -.- Manaure. 7 azeta, Hew. Sieh ele Pate >: 5 erata,G.& 8S... .. .. Pueblo Viejo. Erycides palemon, Cram. .. .. «. Ap 5 pygiialion, Cram. .. 2. «. “5 Carystus lutetia, Hew cet sa). wos Atanquez. 9 coryna, Hew. eae ee ee Nlananre: * ethlius,Cram... .. .. «. Pueblo Viejo. ss minos, Latr. .. .. .. .. Manaure. Pamphila ares, Feld. .. «2 «os oe » % sp. ? ; AS Oo OO Ge oH a sp. ? we eon eee Ohincehicua: L sp. ? te eee eeeeeellanaures 4 sp. ? +» «- e- San Sebastian. sp. ? : On OD. 00° a5 ad Achlyodes busirus,Cram. .. .. .. Manaure. AGO ehblsy; Go Go OG ” List of Diurnal Lepidoptera. 27 277. Achlyodes thrasybulus, Faby. .. .. Manaure. 278. 50 melander, Cram... .. .. Atanquez. 279. asychis, Cram. .. .. .. Pueblo Viejo. 280. ‘si ? pyralina, Hew... .. .. Manaure, San Sebastian. 281. 1 Bot oo doe oo oo ag Wilewiipig). 282. Pythonides limea, Hew. .. .. os + 283. a lerina, ELE We | em) set acre " 284. or SUUGMA EC Cle) fale) lefelnere A 28>., -Byrgusitonquimt, Hew... «5 «2. rf 286. Antigonus erosus, Hiibn. .. .. .. 9 RivemencuasisaLyTus, Held (5 .. s- oc x. 288. » salyrinus, Feld... .. .. .. Manaure, San Sebastian. 289: Helias noctua,Feld. .: .. “ss «« . 290. » albiplaga, Feld... .. .. .. Manaure. 291—294. Species undetermined. 4, Melina lilis, Doubl. & Hew. We prefer at present to refer the single example of this insect which Mr. Simons has sent us from Manaure to this species. It differs, however, in the following par- ticulars from our Venezuelan and Panama specimens. There is a greater extension of the tawny colour towards the outer margin of the primaries at the expense of the black. The primaries have three subapical white spots, the second and third of which are bipartite, two double white submarginal spots between the first and second and the second and third median branches, and a row of the same colour on the black margin of the secondaries. These spots are absent or obsolete in WZ. lilis. It is probable that these differences are constant, and that the insect is a good local race ; but in the absence of more materials we have thought it better to regard it as a variety only. It appears to bear about the same relationship to JZ. lilis that that form does to I. imitata. 9. Ceratinia philidas, sp. n. (Plate IIL, fig. 1). Exp. 2°5 poll. Alis rufis, anticis costa ad basin, margine interno et apicibus nigris, macula subtriangulari in cellule medio et duabus ad finem coloris ejusdem, litura flava ultra cellulam a costa angulum analem versus extendente, punctis septem margini externo parallelis, flavis; posticis fascia lata intra ramum medianum et marginem externum, hoc punctulis albescentibus obsoletis notato. Subtus ut supra, sed punctis marginalibus magis distinctis; antennis flavis, ad basin nigris. Obs.—C. thew, Hew., affinis, sed anticarum macula cellulari nigra et secundariis fere omnino nigris distin- guenda. 128 Messrs. F. Du Cane Godman and Osbert Salvin’s 18. ‘‘ Ithomia’’ cymothoe. 25. ‘*Ithomia”’ guilia. The position of these two species in the Jthomiune is doubtful, but had best be left until the whole group is revised. They do not belong to any of the genera which we have lately examined in compiling the Rhopalocera in the ‘ Biologia Centrali-Americana.”’ 32. Huptychia oreba, Butl. These specimens differ slightly from the types in being darker beneath—in having the outer of the two transverse bands of the secondaries more curved. There is a fulvous spot at the end of the cell in both wings not shown in the typical Z. oreba. 35. Huptychia peribea, n. sp. (Plate III., fig. 2). Exp. 2 poll, * Alis czxruleo-griseis, anticaum costa et apice fuscis, posticis linea duplici fusca marginatis. Subtus alis fuscis, margines versus pallidioribus, lineis duabus arcuatis obscuris alas transeuntibus—una ultra cellulam, altera basi propiore; anticis quatuor ocellis minutis ad apicem, posticis quinque (tertio et quarto indistinctis) submarginalibus nigris albo pupillatis. This Huptychia is not very closely allied to any with which we are acquainted ; it seems, however, best placed in the #. celestis group. The blue-grey instead of blue on the upper surface distinguishes it at once from all others; the underside is also of a nearly uniform dark brown, slightly paler towards the outer margins of the primaries. 38. Huptychia lineata, n. sp. (Plate III, fig. 3). Exp. 2°8 poll. Alis fuscis, posticis ad angulum analem multo elongatis, et leviter serratis. Subtus alis saturatioribus limbisque externis pallidioribus, alis utrisque linea submarginali un- dulata, et altera interiore per cellulam transeunte, lineaque ochraceo-alba inter eas notatis (hac aliquando interrupta et fere absente); anticis et posticis ocellulis duobus apicali- bus, albo pupillatis, tertio quoque majore in posticis ad angulum analem ; antennis flavis, apicibus nigris. This is a well-marked species, coming near L. satyrina, Bates, and its allies, but is larger than that species, and trys oot ey List of Diurnal Lepidoptera. 129 is distinguished by the white line which in most specimens crosses the underside of both wings. In some examples this line is obsolete, only indications of it being visible. Lymanopoda ceruleata, n. sp. (Plate III, fig. 4). Exp. 1°8 poll. LI. samio similis, sed alis latioribus et apicibus minus acutis, marginibus nigris, punctis albis (nec ceruleis) notatis ; subtus alis anticis ad basin fuscis, area mediana nigris ceruleo atomatis et punctulis albis notatis. This beautiful species seems to take the place of L. samius, in the Sierra Nevada of Santa Marta. It is distinguished by many characters, which will be apparent when L. samius is compared with the figure now given. 42. Pedaliodes polyxo (Plate IIL., fig.8 d, 8a 2). 3 Exp. 1°6 poll. Alis-fusco supra nigris ; subtus anticis fuscis apice cane- scente, posticis ad basin obscurioribus, striga albescente transversa a limbo costali per cellulam ad marginem internum transeunte, ultra eam, presertim marginem internum versus, eodem colore variegatis, angulum analem versus obscurioribus et macula fere W formante apud cellule finem ; margine externo et angulo anali productis et serratis ut in genere Steromate. ?. Major et alis dilutioribus, posticis rufo variegatis et duabus lineis angularibus prope marginem externum notatis. This species has the general appearance of a Steroma, but it wants the lobe on the costa of the hind wings which characterises that genus. 43. Pedaliodes leucocheilus, nu. sp. (Plate IIL, fig. 5). Exp. 2°5 poll. Alis fusco-nigris, anticis ad apicem albescentibus : subtus anticis fuscis, apicibus canescentibus, macula indistincta cellule finem versus, altera subtrigona inter eam et limbum externum, rufis ; posticis fusco irroratis, macula subquadrata in costa punctoque angulum analem versus albis notatis. This is one of the peculiar species of the Sierra Nevada, of which Mr. Simons has sent several specimens. It has no very near allies that we know of. 130 Messrs. F. Du Cane Godman and Osbert Salvin’s 46. Pedaliodes symmachus (Plate III., fig. 7). Exp. 2°4 poll. Alis fusco-nigris, fascia submarginali ochraceo-feruginea a costa anticarum ad angulum analem posticarum transe- unte : subtus alis fuscis rufo variegatis, anticis fascia submarginali introrsum irregulari ochraceo-ferruginea, cos- tam versus cervino irroratis; posticarum dimidio postico cervino et fusco irrorato. Several specimens. 47. Pedaliodes tyrrheus, n. sp. (Plate IV., fig. 6). Exp. 2°4 poll. Alis fusco-nigris, posticis striga rufa submarginali a limbo interno medium marginis externi versus extendente ; subtus alis dilutioribus, et posticis striga ochracea nec rufa notatis. A single specimen. The species resembles on the under side P. paneis (Hew.). 51. Morpho rhodopteron, n. sp. (Plate IV., fig. 9). Exp. 4 poll. 6. Alis cyaneis rosaceo tinctis, vix pellucidis, posticis ad angulum analem elongatis et irregulariter fusco tinctis : subtus pallidissime ferrugineis, striga submarginali ejusdem coloris, extrorsum et introrsum linea argentea notatis, aliis intra et ultra cellulam anticarum, regioneque basali posticarum lineis variis tortuosis notatis; anticis ocello subapicali, posticis aliis tribus (uno ad apicem, aliis angulum analem versus positis). Nearly allied to M. aurora, Westw., but easily distin- guished by its more rosy tint on the upper side, and the absence of the two ocelli between the median nervules of the primaries on the under side. A single specimen only was procured by Mr. Simons at Pueblo Viejo. 68. Hurides edias, Hew. Journ. Ent. I., p. 155, t. X., f. 2. ny kiinowti, Dew., Mith. d. Munich. Ent. Ver. 1877; p89) wie ct aoe The specimen from the Sierra Nevada belongs un- doubtedly to the insect described by Dr. Dewitz, but we cannot distinguish it from Bogota specimens, to which Hewitson’s name is applicable. List of Diurnal Lepidoptera. 131 78. Phyciodes catenarius, sp. n. (Plate IV., fig. 11). Exp. 1°4 poll. 6. Alis obscure fuscis, linea angustasubmarginali flava, intra eam serie coloris ejusdem catenam formante : subtus alis flavis, anticis lineis brunneis irregularibus transversis ; posticis punctis quinque nigris irroratis fasciaque ultra ea pallida margini parallela notatis. Of this species Mr. Simons sends a single specimen, for which we are unable to find a name. Nor do we possess any very nearly allied species. In some respects it resembles P. aceta (Hew.). 79. Phyciodes castianira, n. sp. (Plate IV., fig. 10). Exp. 1°38 poll. Alis obscure fuscis, anticis maculis ferrugineis notatis (una in cellula, altera infra eam, tertia bipartita in area mediana, quarta trifida ultra cellulam a costa extendente), aliis duabus pallidioribus (una ad angulum analem, altera apici propiore), et tribus submarginalibus minutissimis ; posticis lineis tribus margini parallelis, duabus exteri- oribus augustissimis, imteriore presertim costam versus latiore et secundam attingente, aliis indistinctis basi propioribus : subtus alis anticis fulvis, in dimidio exteriore nigro et fusco marmoratis ; posticis pallidioribus et minus irroratis. This species is closely allied to P. nebulosa, G. & S.; but the markings, though somewhat similarly situated, are much brighter and larger; the outer margin of the wing is less cut out ; it likewise differs considerably beneath, the secondaries of P. nebulosa being strongly marked with a silvery grey, which colour is absent in the species we now describe. 80. Phyciodes, sp. ? Closely allied to P. gyges, Hew., from Jamaica, of which we have specimens from Venezuela. 114. Perisama humbolti ? The specimen sent is not in sufficiently good condition to make it out satisfactorily. 115. Perisama gisco, n. sp. (Plate IV., fig. 12). Exp. 1°8 poll. 3. P. euriclee similis, sed alis anticis fasciis transversis 132 Messrs. F. Du Cane Godman and Osbert Salvin’s List. viridibus augustissimis et angulum analemyersus in maculas fractis differt ; posticis supra quoque fascia submarginali augustiore, et subtus marginem interiorem versus palli- dioribus. The single male specimen sent differs in several points from P. euriclea of Venezuela, though nearly allied to that species. 168. Esthemopsts linearis, n. sp. (Plate IV., fig. 13). Exp. 1°8 poll. ?. Alis nigris ceruleo tinctis; anticis fascia arcuata albescente a basi per cellulam angulum analem versus extendente, secunda transversa subapicali, margine interno ceruleo ; posticis area interiore albescente; venis omnibus late nigrescentibus; subtus fere ut supra ; palpis et fronte rubro-aurantiacis. EE. sericine, Bates, certe affinis, sed maculis alarum albescentibus multo majoribus distinguenda. 173. Siseme pomona, sp. n. (Plate IV., fig. 14). Exp. 1°4 poll. &. 8S. caudali similis sed alis dilutioribus et fascia transversa alba absente distinguenda ; subtus pallidioribus et fascia angustiore. Of this species we have specimens from Venezuela, obtained by Dr. Staudinger’s collector in the vicinity of Merida. 209. Huterpe lycurgus, sp. n. (Plate IV., fig. 15). Exp. 1°9 poll. ¢. Alis flavis, corpore, nervulis, marginibusque nigris, macularum serie submarginali (in posticis majorium) flaviarum, totidemque punctis in margine ipso flavescenti- bus ; subtus fere ut supra, sed coloribus dilutioribus. A single specimen only of this distinct Huterpe has yet reached us, which was captured by Mr. Simons on the road from San Sebastian to Atanquez. It appears to belong to the H. nimbice group; but the black markings are very narrow, and the yellow colour is very much brighter than in any species known to us. * (£183") XI. On the Genus Colias. by SJ. Kuwns) 2-Z:5.,. ELS: [Read August 4th, 1880. ] Havine recently had occasion to arrange the species of ,the Genus Colias contained in Messrs. Godman and Salvini’s magnificent collection, and having found, as others have done before me, that the genus is an exceedingly difficult one, I offer a few notes on some of the species, in the hope that they may be useful to those who are not disposed to recognise every slight variety as a distinct species. It is a very compact and homogeneous genus, containing, according to the views of some lepidopterists, a large number of species ; but I venture to think that time will prove that many of these are but local varieties, and cannot possibly be distinguished from each other with certainty. The best proof of this is that if a large number of Colias from all parts of the world are mixed together, it is, in many cases, impossible to arrange them again under their supposed species. Some may be distinguished in the male sex only, others in the female. Many can only be referred to their right places when the locality from which they come is known, and as most of the local forms are variable, there will always remain, even when the habitat is known, specimens which cannot be named with certainty. This applies specially to the North American forms, of which many have been recently described by Mr. Edwards and others ; and as few or no specimens of some of these are to be found in European cabinets—or if they exist cannot be recognised—I can only follow Mr. Herman Strecker, whose catalogue of North American butterflies, recently published, seems to be drawn up with broader and more scientific views as to the value of slight variations than Mr. Edwards’ catalogue, which appeared a year sooner. Russian and German naturalists also have described many supposed species, which further investigations have proved to be identical with, or very slightly varying from, those now accepted; and I am convinced that a future TRANS. ENT. soc. 1880.—part m1. (0cT.) 134 Mr. H. J. Elwes on the generation of naturalists will prove that what we even now accept as specific differences are not founded on fact, and that climate, food, and conditions of life will more than account for the changes in tint we see of the representative forms such as C. Aurora, Esp., from Eastern Siberia; C. Thisoa, from N. Persia; and C. Heclu, from Lapland ; whilst insects of different broods in the same region have, no doubt, as in other cases, been mistaken for different species. Menetries, in the Znumeratio Corporum Animalium, p. 77, attempts to show that the nearly allied species of Colias may be recognised by the shape of the inner edge of the band on the forewing in the males (he gives on plate 1 cuts of the typical shape of this in one species) ; but after com- paring his figures with specimens, and examining this character in a number of examples of one species, I am quite unable to follow out his theory. Menetries says that he thinks too much importance has been attached to the shades of orange in different species, and to the violet reflections on them ; but this is, after all, the only means by which several of the nearly-allied forms, such as electra, or awrorina, can be recognised in the male sex, and though varying in intensity, as we see in C. Hdusa and C. Hecla, it is in fresh specimens from the same locality usually constant. In most, if not in all, of the first group we find a pale form of the female, analogous to the variety of edusa named helice, but I am not aware of any similar aberration in the male sex. Hybrids seem to occur between some of the species, and add considerably to the difficulty of recognising them. Cf. Moschler Wien. Ent. Monats., iv. p. 22, and Edwards’ Butt. North America, ser. 2. pt. v., where a hybrid between Philodice and Pelidne is suggested. Herr Werneberg, in Stettiner Ent. Zeit, 1865, p. 272, gives a revision of the European species of the genus, which he treats in a very different spirit from the majority of those who have studied it, and reduces those included in Staudinger’s list to the following species: Group 1st, having the border of the forewing spotted in both sexes. yale, L. var. Phicomone, Esp. var. Nastes, Boisd. var. Rossi, Guenée. var. Melinos, Eversm. npr ental Genus Colias. 135 Group 2nd, having the border of the forewing spotted in the female sex only. Edusa, Fabr. ab. Helice, 2 var. Helene, Bisch. var. Heldreichi, Std. var. Feildii, Men. var. Aurorina, H. S. Myrmidone, Esp. var. Hos, H.S. var. Iibanotica, Led. ab. Thisoa, Men. var. Aurora, Esp. Lrate, Esp. ab. Pallida, Std. Chrysotheme, Esp. var. Hecla, Lef. var. Boothii, Curt. var. Chione, Curt. Group 3rd, having the border of the forewing unspotted in both sexes. Paleno. - yar. Philomene, H. var. Huropomene, Ochs. var. Pelidne, Boisd.. var. Werdandt, Zett. He relies on the colour and form of the border, and on the discoidal.spots of the hind wing for the characters by which the species are separated ; but I cannot follow out his arrangement of the species in the specimens before me, and by no means agree with his conclusions; which are quite regardless of the distribution of the supposed species . and varieties. His division into groups, however, seems quite natural, and is nearly identical with what I have adopted. Dr. Staudinger’s arrangement of the genus in the last edition of his catalogue, 1871, is by far the best and most accurate I know of, though based on a narrower idea of specific distinctions than I can quite agree with. As, however, uncommon care has been taken in consulting all plates and descriptions, and the collection on which his TRANS. ENT. soc. 1880.—Part tt. (ocr) L 136 Mr. H. J. Elwes on the catalogue is based, is at any rate for the Palearctic species unrivalled, we cannot do better than accept his arrange- ment as far as it goes. After carefully studying the very fine collection of Messrs. Godman and Salvin, which con- tains good series of almost all the species, together with that in the British Museum, which is rich in specimens from the arctic regions; as well as the fine though not numerous examples in the Hewitson collection, I have arranged them in the following order, which I think will be found by an unprejudiced examiner to indicate pretty fairly the principal points of distinction, and to show the geo- graphical distribution accurately. GROUP I,—FEMALE SEX ONLY SPOTTED ON THE DARK BORDER OF THE FOREWING. Name of Species and Vars. Geographical Distribution. Sub-species or local races in which the males are usually brighter or darker orange than in edusa, this character in- creasing in in- tensity as we go eastward, S. African sub- species, very near Edusa, Dwarf arctic sub-species or races. | pe a | Central and Southern OF Hdusa Mann... Europe, N, Africa, and Syria. Central, Eastern, and C. Myrmidone, Esp. . C, Thisoa, Men. . . C. Feldit, Men. . . } (?) = eogene, Feld. . C. aurorina, HLS. var. Libanotica . . . var. Heldreicht C. aurora, Esp. eae | Cxreleci. cline ee tees { C. ene Curtie. oe eae: iW. H, | C, hecla, Lef. var. gies, Mac- l Lachlan. hed) ha C. chrystheme, Esp. . (2?) = Vilwiensis, Men, var. Zurytheme, Bal. var. Keewaydim, W. Bs IA of Go c Southern Germany, §. Russia, and Turkey, Mountains of N. Persia. Bhotan to Kashmir and Yarkand, Mountains of Armenia, Mountains of Syria, North Persia and Asia Minor, Mountains of Greece. S.-E. Siberia and Amur region. Cape of Good Hope; Natal, Transvaal. Boothia-felix, Mountains of Colorado, 10,000 feet elevation, Greenland, Lapland, Smith Sound. S.-E. Europe, Asia Minor, S.-E. Siberia: UnitedStates & Territories California. Sa ee (Fide Strecker / but seems to me more like a form of palano) r South Ameri- can forms differing , more from the Palearctic species of this group than they do inter se. | Species of doubtful posi- tion and dis- tinctness, but probably com- ing here. Genus Colias. Name of Species and Vars. C. philodice,Godt. . . var. Occidentalis, Scud. = Chrysomelas,H. Edw. { C. Erate, Esp. = nereine, Fisch. OC. Lesbia, Fabr. } = pyrrothea, Huba , C. Vautier?, Guer.. . C. Imperialts, Butl. . C. Dimera, Doubl, } = erythrogramma, Koll. 0. hermina, Butl, = Scalidonura hermina C. euxanthe, Feld. 2 C. flaveola, Blanch. . C. pontent, Wall . : 137 Geographical Distribution, Eastern United States, Pacific States and.British Columbia, S. Russia, Siberia, Amur, Afghanistan, Argentine States to Pata- gonia, Chili to Patagonia, Straits of Magellan. Andes of Golambis and Ecuador, Andes of E, Peru. Peru, Chili, Sandwich Islands, GROUP II.—BOTH SEXES SPOTTED ON THE BORDER OF THE (?) a distinct sp, FOREWING. C. Sagartia,Ld. . . Crhyale, bee. var. nilgheriensis . . var. simoda, De l’Orza. = poliographus, Mot- schulsky 3%) 3 « - —*, Phicomone, Esp. . . var. ladakensis, Feld. . = Shipkee, Moore . (?) var. melinos, Eversm, .« Nastes, Boiss . . ., var. Werdandi, Zett. . var, Rossti,Guen. . . var, Kokandica, Ersch. var. Behrii,W. H. Edw. North Persia. Central and Southern Europe, Himalayas. Nilgherry Mountains. China, Japan. Alps of Central Europe, Ladak, 8.-E. Siberia, Amur, Labrador, Lapland. Boothia-felix. Alps of Turkestan, Mountains of California. GROUP III.—BOTH SEXES UNSPOTTED ON THE BORDER OF THE FORE- WING, OR THE FEMALE ONLY SLIGHTLY SPOTTED, OR THE BORDER REPLACED BY MORE OR LESS FAINT MARKINGS. : Fide Strecker = Helena, W. H. Edw. . = Chippewa, W. H. Edw. . HZOIENO Makawao) ee sede Northern Europe, Asia, and America, N, Japan, Alps of Central Europe, 1 138 Mr. H. J. Elwes on the Name of Species and Vars. Geographical Distribution. : Pelidne, Boisd. . . .. « British N. America, La- Fide peek = Scudderi, Reak . brador, Colorado, Ca- De. var. Interior, Scudd. .. nada, Anticosti, Lake 0. var. Christina, W. H. Edw. Superior, B. Columbia. (?.a good sp.) Alexandra, W. H. Edw, Fide Strecker yar, Edwardsi, Behr. . Colorado, Nevada. American forms unknown to Strecker or myself, and not existing in his or in any English collections, are C. Emilia, W. H. Edw.; Barbara, H. Edw.; Astriea, W. H. Edw. N.B.—This group does not seem so natural as the other two, and perhaps connects them ; for though in the female of some forms of Palwno and pelidne the border of the forewing is unspotted, in others it is so to a certain extent, or the border is entirely wanting, or indicated only by indistinct markings, as in Alexandra, MScudderi, and Edwardsi. . These N. American forms seem to run into each other in an inextricable manner, and to connect Paleno and pelidne with Philodice, Cf. Edwards’ Butt. North America, ser. il. part ii, under C. pelidne ; and part v., under Philodice. Cf. Schilde, Stett.. Ent. Zeit., 1873, pp. 169—75. Mr. Edwards, in his beautiful work, gives excellent figures of all these forms ; but so far from clearing up the question of their distinction, he seems to me to make the question infinitely more difficult, as Tam quite unable to appreciate the characters on which he relies, or to define the limits of the three species, even supposing that we allow only three, as above, instead of seven or eight as he does. ; I do not think that all the species which are mentioned above can invariably be recognised with certainty, and I am certain that many of the varieties could not; yet, as for the most part they have a fairly well-defined range, they may be allowed specific rank for convenience’ sake, and in the absence of full information as to their larval states. Speaking broadly, there are, with the exception of the Neotropical species, which are confined to the Andean ranges and temperate regions of the south, three well- defined species of Colias, representing the three groups which I have formed. These are nearly confined to the Palearctic and Nearctic regions, which, as far as butterflies are concerned, are inseparable. They are C. edusa, C. hyale, and C. paleeno. The first and last of these vary exceedingly, Genus Colias. 139 and have developed a number of constant local varieties, whilst other varieties do not appear to be fixed, and all are much influenced by local conditions. Paleno and its forms are pretty nearly confined to the colder regions of Europe, Asia and America. Hdusa takes its place in more southern and warmer regions, though it also has developed arctic forms, like Hecla and Boothi. Hyale, with its forms, is confined to the Old World, though its arctic and alpine representative nastes spreads into the northern parts of North America. As regards the species in Group I., C. edusa seems to be smallest in Syria and largest and brightest in the South of Europe. - To Myrmidone, which does not extend to Northern or Western Europe, it is very closely allied. As we go east it develops other forms, such as Thisoa, aurorina, Feildii, and aurora, gradually increasing in brilliancy. In South Africa it appears in the form of electra, which though distinguished in the male sex by the tint of the orange, in the female sex may easily be confused with the females of the Himalayan form feildii. Near this latter there are specimens from- Ladak, in the British Museum and in Mr. Moore’s collection, differing considerably from the usual Himalayan form found in Kashmir, Nepal, and Sikkin ; but [ should not like to separate them specifically without knowing more about them. Another supposed species, differing from Feildii in its paler colour, and having some slight difference in the discocellular marks, has recently been separated by Moore as C. Stolikezkana, from Ladak, and another from Turkestan has been described as C. Staudingert. A female from the Punjaub is very near the Grecian Held- reichi (for the varieties of which consult Staudinger on the Lepidoptera of Greece and of Asia Minor, in Hore Ent. Ross). C. aurora, first figured and described by Esper, from specimens sent by Bober from Nertchinsk, and afterwards found at Kiachta on the border of the Gobi desert, and on the Amur river by later travellers, is the brightest in colour of any of the genus, and though, according to my views, only a local race of Hdusa, is very easily distin- guished from any of the other varieties, by the extremely bright fiery orange in the wings of fresh males, and as it appears from the figure of Boisduval, in the females also (though I have seen none of this colour), In Mus. 140 Mr. H. J. Elwes on the Godman and Salvin are two females from the Amur of the pale form, figured by Eversmann, Bull. Mosc. 1847, t. 4, figs. 3 and 4, as C. chloe. This form is evidently the analogue of the var. helice in C. edusa. Females appear to be rare, as there are none in the Hewitson or British Museum collections. As regards C. chrysotheme, Esp., it seems to agree very closely with some of the varieties of Hurytheme from California and Texas, though, if we consider it as the same species, the geographical distribution is remarkable, Chrysotheme being confined to South-Eastern Europe, some parts of Asia Minor, and Eastern Siberia. I cannot distinguish between specimens of Chrysotheme from Pesth, and of Keewaydon from California. Colias Boothii Curt., Ross, 2nd Voy. App. Nat. Hist. p , Pl. A., 8-5, 18385; Guendée Ann. Ent. Soc. Tr. 1864, p. 198. C. Chione Curt., 1. ¢. p. 66: This species or variety is only known from the speci- mens collected in Captain Ross’s second expedition to the arctic regions, at Repulse Bay and in Boothia-felix, where it is said to be. abundant for about a month in July and August on Oxytropis campestris, and O. arctica, which are probably the food plant of the larva. They have been considered by all writers as a good species, on account of the very narrow border of the wings, which is entirely absent in the var. Chione. I am doubtful, however, whether this last, of which three specimens from Repulse Bay are in the British Museum collection, are not rather a form of C. ee or a hybrid between that and Nastes. Colias Hecla, Lefebre Ann. Soc. Ent. Tr. 1836, p. 383, Pl TX, Betig. 3-6. C. Hecla, var. Glacialis, McLach. J. L. S. Zool. 14, 108, 1879. This species, which is found on the high fells of Lap- land, in Greenland, and Arctic America, is, from my point of view, only a dwarfed local race of C. Hdusa. The variety of it described by McLachan from Hayes Sound, lat. 79° N., and from Grinnell Land in lat. 81° 45’ N., are probably the most northern specimens known of this ‘germ, and are much paler in tint and duller in their mark- ings than the Lapland variety. ee Genus Colias. 141 C. erate is a puzzling species, which, though distinct enough in Southern Russia, appears to have a tendency for crossing with other species, such as Hdusa and Hyale. From Candahar Mr. Butler has recently described no less than four supposed species and varieties (see P. Z. S. 1880) nearly allied to this; but, after examining the Specimens in question, I can only say that I entirely fail to follow his distinctions. Those which he calls Hrate, from Candahar, agree closely with examples from South Russia and the Punjaub. What he calls Helichta of Lederer has in the male more of the orange tint of Hdusa, and may, as was originally supposed, be a hybrid between it and Erate. What he calls Sareptensis, Staud., seems identical with the form of Alyale, found in the Himalayas, China, and Japan, under the names of Simoda, De l’Orza ; Poliographus, Motsch.; Pauens, Butl., &c. Of what he calls Pallida, Staud., the female seems like Hyale, or a pale female of Hrate, and the male a small specimen of the latter species. - Colias Lesbia, Fabr. Ent. Syst. iii. i., 208, 652 ; Butl.. Cat. Fabr. Pl. II., fig. 2,1870; Burm. Desc. Phys. Rep. Arg. Vol. V., p. 95. C. pyrrothea, Hubn. Exot. Schm. Zutr. i., 28, 183, fig. 365, 366. C. heliceoides, Capron. Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg. t. XVII. 13. This species, first described by Fabr. from a ? specimen in the Banksian collection taken in the Straits of Magellan during his voyage with Cook in 1790, is common, according to Burmeister, all over the Argentine Republic, from the Straits as far north as San Paolo in 8. Brazil (Rodgers in Mus. Godman and Salvin). The females vary, but not enough, according to Bur- meister, to allow them to be considered asgsub-species, the -males being very similar. One ? from Coralitos, Entre Rios, in Mus. Godm. and Saly., is as dark, and almost exactly similar to the 2 of Meadii, while others are pale, like the var. Helice of Hdusa. The caterpillar lives on Medicago sativa, according to Burmeister. Two male specimens of this species in Mus. Godm. and Salvy. are marked Chili (Reed), but as it is not included in his work, I conclude they are from Menwoza, or some locality on the east side of the Andes. 142 Mr. H. J. Elwes on the Colias Vautieri, Guer. Voy. Cog. Pl. XV., fig. 2, 1829, ¢ ; Blanch. Gay Faun, Chil. Vil. sp: 18, 1852; Reed Mariposas, Chil. p. 15, 1877. C. rutilans, Boisd. Sp. Gen. i. p. 642, Pl. XIX., fig. 3, 1836 ; Blanch, Gay Faun. Chil. vii p. 18, +t. L£.7ab, 6 , 3; Reed Mari- posas Chilenas, t. I. ‘fig. 3, 4,36 ‘This species, in which the d and ? differ remarkably from each other, the latter resembling the pale 2 of Lesbia in markings and tint, whilst the d have something of the brilliant tints of C. electr a, is, according to Reed, common through the whole of Chili, from Atacama to the Straits of Magellan. The figure of the 2 given by Reed is coloured much more darkly than any I have seen, the yellow being almost covered by the black of the border. Colias flaveola, Blanch. Gay, Chili, vii. p. 19., t. I. fig. 6 ab, Reed Mariposas Chilenas, p. 18. The description of this species in Gay does not say any- . thing as to the sexes, whilst the figure seems to represent a ?. Itis said by Gay to have been taken at Coquimbo, but Reed has never seen a specimen, and there is none in any collection I have seen, though a female from Bolivia collected by Buckley in Mus. Godm. and Salv. somewhat resembles it. Very possibly this is not a good species, but only a small aberrant female of dimera or Vautieri. - Colias Imperialis, Butl. P. Z. S. 1871, p. 250, Pl. XIX. ; Reed Mariposas Chil. p. 1 This fine and distinct species is easily distinguished by the broad black border on the wing in both sexes, which extends to the anterior margin of the hind wing. It is only known to me from three specimens in the British Museum, collected at Portfamine, about the centre of the Straits of Magellan. There are specimens of C. Lesbia from this locality in the British Museum, and others of what appears to be Vautieri, though it has a narrower border than Chilian specimens from Sandy Point, a little to the north-east- ward. We therefore have three apparently distinct species of Colias meeting in the Straits of Magellan, so that a large Genus Colias. 143 series of specimens showing their variations and possible hybrids would be of great interest. Colias dimera, Doubl. Hew. Gen. D. L. t. IX. fig. 3, 1847, C. erythrogramma, Koll. (2) C. euxanthe, Feld. Reise. Nov. Lep., II. p. 196 (1865). This species, which may be easily recognised by the pale colour of the hind wings, which are of a very different colour from the fore wings, and by the blood-red spots and streaks on the under side, which are conspicuous in most specimens, is found in the equatorial Andes of New Granada, and perhaps Venezuela. Specimens from Bogota are com- mon in museums. * The species described as C. ewxanthe, by Felder, I cannot identify with certainty in the absence of a plate. It is described as being very near C. dimera, but differing in the shape of the wings, and larger. There are four specimens in the Hewitson collection, under the name of euxanthe, from Ecuador and Peru, which may belong to C. hermina or to dimera, or may be a distinct species. There are also two Chilian specimens in Mus. Godm. and Salv. which I cannot identify with any known species, so that a more complete account of the South American Coliades is much to be desired. Colias (Scalidoneura) hermina, Butler, P. Z. S. 1871, p. 2H el OX EX. fim, OF This obscure species, on which Mr. Butler has founded the genus Scalidoneura, appears to be very rare in col- lections. The type specimen which I have examined in the British Museum is from Peru, and is probably from the same . locality as two specimens in Mus. Godm. and Salv., which were collected by Whiteley at Pozuzzo or Pozuzu, a branch of the Ucayale River, on the Upper Amazon, and situated in about lat. 10° N., long. 75° W. It appears to be very closely allied to C. dimera, and can only be recognised with certainty by the slightly different branching of the costal nerve towards the apex, on which, as it seems to me, insufficient character Mr. Butler has founded the genus Scalidoneura. In all other respects it appears to be a true Colias, only distinguishable from dimera by the narrower border of the 144 Mr. H. J. Elwes on the fore wings, and by the colour of the hind wing not differing from that of the fore wing, as it does in Dimera. There is a specimen in Mr. Hewitson’s collection which may possibly be the ? of this species ; but in the imper- ‘fect light of the building I was unable to detect the en ence in the neuration. Colias hyale seems confined to the Old World, no form of it having been discovered in the New, though it spreads over most of Asia, and has received numerous specific names. In the British Museum collection Mr. Butler indicates no less than four forms of this species, all of which he considers distinct, from Japan—viz., Simoda, Poliographus, Pallens, and another. He professes to be able to dis- tinguish them with certainty, but I entirely fail to follow him in doing so. Probably special training is necessary to enable one to appreciate such minutie ; but in any case it would be most unlikely that in such a genus four species of one group should exist in Japan alone, or rather in that very small part of Japan from which collections have come. Alyale extends to the Himalayas, to China, at any rate as far as Shanghai, into South India, under the name of Nilgheriensis, and is said by Layard to have occurred in South Africa, though I know of no authentic specimens from that country. C. Sagartia Led., from the mountains bordering the south end of the Caspian ‘Sea, seems a good species, nearly allied ’ to Phicomone, and representing it in Asia, but easily distinguished by colour and size from that species. Colias ludakensis, Feld., Reise. Nov. Lep. II. p. 197, P27, fe..8; 9, 1865, C. shipkee, Moore, P. Z..8., June 18, 1865, p. 492, t. XX XI. fig. 13. There seems to be little doubt that these two supposed species are identical, though the figure of Shipkee is not good. There are two specimens from Ladak in Hewitson’s collection named (. Vautiert!!! and two others in the British Museum from Tibet, apparently g and ?, which all agree very well with Felder’s plate. It seems to me a local race of C. Naustes or Phicomone, though easily distinguished by its bright lemon colour. PAN < Genus Colias. 145 As regards the correct name of the form, I adopt Felder’s, because it is the most scientific, and because the part of the P. Z.S.in which C. shipkee was described, though read in June, would not have been published till the end, or near the end, of the year, and therefore probably be later than Felder’s description, the date of publication of which seems not quite certain. This is an essentially alpine form occurring at eleva- tions of 14,000 feet and upwards in the dry region of Ladak. : ; CO. melinos Eversm., from the Amur region, is perhaps another form of Phicomone, but is very imperfectly known as yet, and may be a distinct species. The various forms of Nastes are puzzling, and if I am right in referring Kokandica Ersch and Behrii Edw., to this species, the distribution is still more so. I am somewhat doubtful about the last of these forms, which Mr. Strecker considers distinct. I fail to see any good character by which Nastes can be distinguished from Phicomone, of which it may be only an arctic form. The var. Werdandi from Lapland is just as likely to belong to one as the other, . though Phicomone as found in the Alps of Central Europe does not seem to have so much tendency to variation as most of the species. Colias Pelidne. Boisd. Ic., p. 41, Pl. VIII. figs. 1—3. (1832.) I adopt Boisduval’s nate instead of the name Anthyale Hubn., which “is given to it by Staudinger, because the latter expressly states in his account of that species that it comes from Pennsylvania, which in my opinion proves his Anthyale to be a small specimen of Philodice, God., Cf. Mosch. Stett. Ent. Zeit., 1870, p. 113. This supposed species, which comes very close to Palceno on the one hand and to Philodice on the other, is found in Labrador, British Columbia and Colorado ; but various forms of it which have been described as distinct species under the names of Colias interior, Scud. Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist. ix. p. 108, from South Labrador and Anticosti, C. Christina, W: H. Edw. Proc. Ent. Soe. Phil. I. (p: - 79, Brit. N. Am. I. t. IL, from British Columbia, C. Scudderi, Reak., Proc. Ent. Soc. Phil., iv. p. 217, 146 Mr. H. J. Elwes on the Genus Colias. C. Philodice, var. Laurentina Scud. Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist. p. 4, Oct. 1875, from Lake Superior, are found in other parts of North America; and ac- cording to Mr. Strecker’s catalogue and to what I can see from the figures and descriptions, they are at most but local varieties of one species. Indeed, I cannot see how the numerous forms of Palcno, Pelidne and Philodice, found in North America, can be assigned with certainty to one or other of these species ; and the confusion of names which exists is so great, that without access to the prin- cipal collections in the United States, it seems to me impossible to unravel them. Cela) XII.—WNotes on Exotic Rhynchota, with descriptions of new species. By W. L. Distant. (Plate V.) [Read August 4th, 1880.] Lobothyreus obscurus, n. sp. (Plate V., fig. 1, 1a). Ferruginous, mottled with ochreous. Head above, with the central lobe margined with ochreous for about two- thirds from base, and a small basal oblique black fascia placed on inner margin of each ocellus; beneath with apical half black, basal portion ochreous. Antenne with the first three joints about equal, third and fourth longest and sub-equal; three basal joints castaneous, first darkest, fourth castaneous with the basal half ochreous, fifth pitchy. Pronotum with the lateral margins deeply sinuated, the lateral angles very broadly prominent and somewhat truncate ; marked irregularly with fasciz formed of con- fluent black punctures, between which the ground colour is much paler and more finely and sparsely punctured; a pale, central longitudinal line extending half across disk from anterior margin. Scutellum with the base somewhat gibbous, on which is a paler ochreous patch mottled with confluent black punctures ; on each side of this the surface is abruptly deflexed and excavated, and defined with a some- what obscure arctuated black fascia. The whole surface is somewhat thickly and finely punctured, with the lateral margins and apical half granulate. Costal margins of corium marked with transverse black fascia. Sternum ochreous, punctured, and mottled with black ; abdomen dark castaneous, thickly and finely punctured on lateral margins, more sparingly so on disk. Legs castaneous with ochreous markings, tarsi dull, ochreous. Rostrum castaneous, scarcely extending beyond posterior coxe. Long. 10 millims. Lat. pronot. angl. 7 millims. Hab. Peru. _ Differs from. LZ. lobatus, at present the only other known species of the genus, by its much larger size, the TRANS. ENT. soc. 1880.—part 1. (ocT.) 148 Mr. W. L. Distant on the profoundly sinuated lateral margins of the pronotum, the granulated scutellum, different coloration, &c. Podisus cenescens, Stal. Rio. Jan. Hem. I. p. 11, 4 (1865). Var. Apex of scutellum concolorous, not luteous, abdomen beneath with a central row of large greenish- black spots, on each side of which is a lateral row of smaller ones of the same colour. I have not seen typical specimens of this species, but this form otherwiseayzrees so closely with Stal.’s description, that I have identified it as a variety of the same. The colour of the two basal joints of the antennze are very dark - testaceous. Hab. Teffe, Ega; Amazons (de Mathan). Coll. Oberthur. Oplomus marginalis. Hope. Pentatoma marginalis. Hope. Cat. Hem. I. p. 37 (1837). Var. Differs from type in having the scutellum marked with a central basal, somewhat triangular black spot, which occupies about half its length. Corium without black macular marking. Hab. Obydos. Amazons (de Mathan). Coll. Oberthur. Palomena amplificata, n. sp. (Plate V. fig. 2). Above green, thickly punctured, head densely and finely -punctated, the lateral margins slightly reflexed, lateral lobes longer than central, and cleft at apex; pronotum thickly punctate and somewhat rugulose, the lateral margins ampliated and rounded, lateral angles obtusely pro- minent; scutellum thickly punctured, somewhat rugulose. Corium with the punctures somewhat finer and more regular; membrane brassy, shining. Underside of body paler, disk of abdomen and coxee pale luteous, legs green, tarsi brown. Connexivum well produced, green, thickly punctured. Antenne green, fourth and fifth joints brown, the last joint with apical half pitchy ; second joint longer than third; fourth and fifth sub-equal. Rostrum pale luteous, with a central dark line, and apex narrowly pitchy. Long. 13 to 14 millims. Lat. pronot. angl. 8 to 9 millims. Max. exp. abd. 8 to 9 millims. Hab. Shantung, N. China. This species is easily distinguished by the ampliated pro- notum, and the broad ovate body. Exotic Rhynchota. 149 Palomena spinosa, n. sp. (Plate V., fig. 3). Above green, thickly, darkly, and coarsely punctured. Head coarsely and somewhat densely punctured, the lateral lobes longer than the central and cleft at apex, with the lateral margins slightly reflexed. Antenne with the first three joints green, fourth excepting base and whole of fifth brown, second joint longer than the third, fourth and fifth sub-equal. Pronotum coarsely punctured, somewhat sparingly so on disk, with the lateral angles produced into broad, obtusely pointed spines, somewhat rounded and narrowly black at apex ; scutellum thickly punctured, more sparingly so at apex ; corium thickly punctured, especially near costa; membrane brassy, shining. Connexivum green, thickly and darkly punctured, narrowly luteous on outer margin, and at segmental incisures. Body beneath paler, disk of abdomen, cox, and bases of femora some- what luteous ; legs green, tarsi brown. Stigmata marked with black dots. Rostrum luteous, with the apex narrowly black Long. 13 to 14 millims. Lat. pronot. angl. 9 to 10 millims. Hab. N. India. Sind. Allied to P. angulosa, Motsch., but separated at once from that and all other species of the genus by the much produced pronotal angles. Caura excelsa, n. sp. (Plate V., fig. 4). Dark shining blue or green, thickly and finely punctate. Head very densely and finely punctate, luteous beneath. Antennze concolorous, second joint shorter than the third, fourth longest, third and fifth sub-equal. Pronotum and scutellum very thickly punctate, obscurely rugulose; lateral margins of pronotum somewhat ampliated, reflexed, and rounded. Corium opaque, very finely and sparingly punc- tured. Membrane pitchy opaque. Abdomen above and connexivum luteous. Body beneath luteous. Prosternum, mesosternum, and metasternum, with two transverse blue -spots on each side ; abdomen with a sub-marginal row of transverse bright blue spots, placed close together in pairs on the base and apex of each segment; within these a segmental row of three or four small spots and a central row of transverse streaks of the sanie colour, cox luteous, legs and rostrum dark blue. Long. 15 millims. Lat. pronot. angl. 10 millims. 150 Mr. W. L. Distant on the Hab. Calabar, W. Africa. Allied to C. azurea Fabr.and C. bipartita Sign. Differs in its larger size, and different colour of the head above. The head is also much shorter than C. bipartita, and the legs and head different colour to C. azurea. Caura marginata, n. sp. (Plate V., fig. 5). Above green, lateral borders of pronotum and _ basal border of corium luteous. Head green, very thickly punctured; pronotum and scutellum finely and densely punctured, somewhat rugulose ; the colour of the head, -pronotum, and scutellum is shiny, that of the corium opaque and very finely punctate. Membrane pitchy opaque, margins fuscous. Underside of the body luteous, with a sub-marginal row of blueish spots, one on prosternum, one on mesosternum, one on metasternum, and one on each abdominal segment. Legs green, shiny. Antenne green, first joint narrowly luteous at base, second joint slightly longer than third (remainder mutilated). Rostrum luteous, clouded with fuscous. Long. 15 millims. Lat. pronot. ang]. 10 millims. Hab. Calabar district, W. Africa. Allied to preceding species, but less ovate, lateral borders of pronotum more strongly reflexed, colour also different. Edessa inclyta, Walk. Cat. Het. pt. i. p. 445, 118, (1868). Walker describes this species as having the ‘abdomen above black.’’ In all the specimens in my collection, which have been carefully compared with the type, the dorsal colour is dull red. The general colour also varies from olive green to castaneous. Hab. Bogota, Demerara. (Coll. Dist.) Amazons ; Obydos, Ega. (Coll. Oberthur.) Oncoscelis antennatus, n. sp. (Plate V., fig. 6). Above purplish, with luteous markings; head luteous, central lobe margined with fuscous, and an obscure fuscous patch on front of each ocellus ; ocelli red, eyes black, lateral borders strongly reflexed, antennze red; fourth jot, ex- cepting base and apex, black ; second joint longest ; third very short, not equal to first ; fourth slightly longer than fifth. Pronotum purplish, with the frontal and lateral margins; a broad central longitudinal fascia, and a narrow obscure line at base luteous; within the lateral luteous at ie a Exotic Rhynchota. 151 border is a sub-marginal strongly indented black line; near frontal margin, on each side of central fascia is an irregular darker patch enclosing a small luteous space. Scutellum purplish, with the basal angles narrowly, and a central longitudinal fascia continued from that of pronotum, and apex broadly luteous. Corium purplish, with basal margin, radial suture for half its length from base, and apical margin luteous. Connexivum luteous, with base and apex of each segment black. Abdomen above reddish; mem- brane dark, brassy, shining; underside of body and legs luteous ; apices of femora, tibiz, and the tarsi purplish ; stigmata black; abdomen centrally and longitudinally sulcated. Long. 22 millims. Max. lat. 12 millims. Hab. Torres Straits. Allied to O. sulciventris, Stal., but differs from that species in having the abdomen sulcated in both sexes. The colour is also very different, and fourth joint of the antennee black, and not concolorous, as in O. sulciventris. Plisthenes dilatatus. Monty. Tesseratoma dilatatum, Montr. Ann. Sciene. phys. Sér. 2, vii. i. p. 100 (1855). Oncomerus dilatatus. Voll. Faun. ent. ind. Néerl. ili. p. 32, 4 (1868). Stal. (En. Hem., i. p. 63) considered this species as a variety only of P. meriane, Fab. Vollenhoven describes it as being generally smaller than that species. I have not been able to find agreement with either of these authors. A specimen of P. dilatatus which I possess, from near Fort Moresby, is considerably larger than specimens of P. me- riane & and 2, which I have received from the same locality and from Murray Island. These last agree with the Australian varieties described by Stal., having the last two joints of the antennz luteous, the base of the third being black. The antennz will, however, I think separate these forms. Antenne with the second joint shorter than the third. Abdomen beneath, with a central piceous longitudinal Pa BAT. a!) 3) is. & «,) hatheeh at i ecmeriance Antennz with the second and third joints sub-equal. Abdomen beneath, with a central and two sub-marginal longitudinal fascie . . . . . . P.dilatatus. TRANS. ENT. soc., 1880.—ParT I. (OCT.) M 152 Mr. W. L. Distant on the Tiarodes Meldolw, n. sp. Sanguineous ; head above, apices of femora, bases of tibiz, and abdomen _blueish- black, shining. Hemielytra, excepting a broad sanguine- ous patch at base of costa, black opaque. Sternum with two lateral and two central streaks of blueish-black. Long. 20 to 22 millims. Hab. Port Blair, Andaman Isles. (f. Meldola.) Allied -to 7. versicolor, Lap., from which it differs by the different colour of the tibize scutellum and underside of abdomen, its much greater size, and also by the rela- tive depth of the anterior and posterior lobes of the pro- notum, which are, in that respect, sub-equal. Fulgora andamanensis, n. sp. (Plate V., fig. 7, 7a). Rostrum long, slender, ascending, as long as body; beneath greenish-luteous, with the apex black, above black, apical two-thirds, irrorated with small white spots, and a luteous streak on each side within the eyes, which are also luteous ; thorax above black, with dull luteous markings ; abdomen above pale greenish-luteous, beneath black ; coxe trochanters and femora fuscous, the last darkest, tibize and tarsi black. Tegmina black, with the veins pale green, and a number of brown spots encircled with pale greenish, arranged in the following manner: a transverse row of four near base, the upper three fused together; two irregular transverse rows on disk, a little nearer together than from basal row, followed by a straighter transverse row of three smaller ones ; remaining apical portion occu- pied by about twelve spots, of which the largest are two fused together on costa, and one with a very small brown centre about apex of inner margin; extreme apical spots very small and somewhat indistinct. Wings blue, with the apex broadly and outer margin somewhat narrowly black. The veins on the blue portions of wings are green, with the exception of two, which are narrowly black at base. Long. rostr. 20 millims. Long. body 20 millims. Exp. tegm. 68 millims. Hab. Andaman Isles. Allied to F’. Delessertii. Guer. and Ff. maculata, Oliv. It somewhat resembles the first in pattern of tegmina, but differs in length of rostrum, which in #. Delessertii is but about half the length of the body. In length and structure of rostrum which seems to be the structural character to differentiate the species of this genus, it is more closely allied to /. maculata; the rostrum, however, is longer Exotic Rhynchota. 153 than in that species, being about equal to the length of the body, and, besides the different pattern of the tegmina, the wings are much more narrowly black along the posterior margin. Fiata (Colobesthes) Pryeri, n. sp. Body above and tegmina pale greenish, wings pale greenish white. Teg- mina with the costal, outer and inner margins (the last only half the length from apex) narrowly and obscurely luteous, and with an angular black line on disk, about half way from base and about two-thirds the distance from costal margin. Body beneath and legs somewhat luteous. Long. body 10 millims. Exp. tegm. 36 millims. Hab. Sandakan, N. Borneo. (Pryer.) Face broad, convex, with a central raised line, the sides ampliated. Posterior angle of tegmina attenuated and acute, expanse at outer margin twice that of width near base. Two well developed, transverse, somewhat irregular series of veinlets preceding outer margin, and a third one situated mid-way between these and the reticulated area. Allied to C. marginata, Walk. A. second specimen from Penang is in the collection of the Brit. Mus. a — are Y ao a 7 7 ( 155 ) XIII. On the Asiatic Lepidoptera referred to the genus. Mycalesis; with descriptions of new genera and species. By F. Moors, F.Z.S., &c. {Read October 6th, 1880.] Tur Asiatic species of butterflies hitherto described under the genus Mycalesis are primarily divisible into three groups: the first comprising species of which the males possess a glandular-pouch (or scent-producing organ) covered by a tuft of hair on both the fore and hind wings; the second group of species possessing it on the hind wings only; and the third of species which have two on the hind wings. These three groups, again, are composed of a number of forms mostly possessing a different vein structure. Thus separated they fall into a natural assemblage of species. I have not ventured into an examination of the African species further than the determination of the form and structure of the type of the genus Mycalesis (viz. M. Hvadne, Cramer); finding, however, that this form has no congener among the Asiatic representatives, and that most of the described African species are generically distinct from Mycalesis, some of them, more- over, having no affinity with that genus of Satyrine. Group I. With a glandular pouch and tuft on both wings. N.g. VrIraPa. Fore wing with costa arched in the middle, apex convex, exterior margin oblique and even, posterior angle acute; costal, subcostal, and median veins swollen at the base; first subcostal branch emitted immediately before end of the cell; disco-cellulars bent inward at their middle; radials from upper near the cell. Male with a glandular patch of raised scales on the middle of submedian vein, the patch being partially covered by a tuft of long fine hairs exserted outward from each side of the vein. Hind wing oval, exterior margin convex ; first subcostal in male much curved upward at the base and thence straight to apex, emitted at more than half distance before end of the cell, second very concave from TRANS. ENT. soc. 1880.—parT Iv. (DEC.) N 156 Mr. F. Moore on the Asiatic Lepidoptera base of first to end of the cell; upper disco-cellular out- wardly convex, lower straight and oblique, radial from their middle; two upper median branches emitted at some distance beyond end of the cell. Male with a tuft of fine long hairs exserted over a glandular patch at end of subcostal ven. yes very slightly hairy. Antenne with a well-formed slender club. Palpi uniformly pilose beneath to tip. Type. V.. Anaxias. Virapa Anaxias. Mycalesis Anaxias, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. i. p. 86; Myc. pl. 4, figs. 25, 26 (1862). Hab.—Darjiling (Atkinson); Khasia Hills (Austen) ; Nilgiris. Virapa Radza. Mycalesis Radza, Moore, P.Z.8., 1877, p. 588, pl. 58, es A Hab.—Andaman Isles. N. g. GARERIS. Wings broader than in Virapa. Fore wing more angular at apex, the costa much more arched, venation of male and the glandular patch of raised scales and tuft similar. Hind wing with the first subcostal branch in the male swollen beneath at its base above the cell, and covered on the upper side by a tuft of hair; the two upper median branches emitted from end of the cell. Eyes hairy. Type. G. Sanatana, Moore. Gareris Sanatana. Mycalesis Sanatana, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. E. I. C. i. De 2oldso7). Hab.—Darjiling (Atkinson); Khasia Hills (Austen). Gareris Francisca. Papilio Francisca, Cramer, Pap. Exot. iv., pl. 326, feptiewes. lf 80),.o 8 FTab,—China. referred to the genus Mycalesis. 157 Gareris Perdiccas. Mycalesis Perdiccas, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. ili. p. 84; Myc. pl. 3, fig. 15 (1862). Hab.—Japan ; Shanghai. Gareris Gopa. Mycalesis Gopa, Felder, Reise Novara, Lep. iii. p. 501 (1867); Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 140. Hab.—Danjiling (Atkinson). N.g. Satoa. Male.—Wings short; fore wing more arched than in Virapa, apex more rounded; exterior margin less oblique ; second subcostal branch emitted before end of the cell; a tuft of fine hair covering a glandular patch below sub- median vein; hind wing subconical, exterior margin oblique, anal angle convex, abdominal margin short; a tuft of fine hair covering a glandular subcostal patch ; cell short, broad at its end; subcostal deeply recurved at its end, first branch emitted near end of the cell, second bent downward; disco-cellulars straight, slightly oblique; middle median emitted before end of the cell. Antenne with a slender club; palpi somewhat stout. yes hairy. Satoa Maianeas. Mycalesis Maianeas, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. ui. p. 87; Myc. pl. 5, figs. 27, 28 (1864),¢; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 1381. Hab.—Malay Peninsula (Malacca) ; Borneo (Sarawak). N.g. Saparea. Fore wing shorter, with more rounded and less oblique exterior margin than in Virapa; venation similar, but the veins more curved. Male with a slight tuft (but no perceptible glandular patch of raised scales) on sub- median vein before the swollen base. Hind wing very convex externally ; first subcostal in male not curved at the base; second concave at base and much swollen beneath between first and end of the cell, and with a slight tuft of hairs above; two upper median branches 158 Mr. F. Moore on the Asiatic Lepidoptera emitted from angle before end of the cell. Hyes hairy. Type. S. Gotama, Moore. Sadarga Gotama. Mycalesis Gotama, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. E. I. C. i. p. 282 (1857); Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 134. M. borealis, Felder, Reise Novara, Lep. 11. p. 500 (1867). Hab.—China (Shanghai) ; Japan. Sadarga Madjicosa. Mycalesis Madjicosa, Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 1387, plea, ae. 10,2. Hab.—Madjico-Sima. Sadarga oculata. Male and female-—Similar on the upper side to S. Charaka, the ocelli of the same large size, but the lower somewhat laterally bulged. On the under side the basal area is paler, being of a pale purplish ochreous, the discal transverse line having a much broader yellowish border; the ocelli on both wings are very prominent, and slightly larger than those in S. Gotama. Expanse, of 1,%., 2 27. Hab.—N. EK. India (Silhet). In Coll., F. Moore. Sadarga Charaka. Mycalesis Charaka, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1874, p. 566. Hab.—N. E. India (Silhet). N.g. Dawapa. Fore wing more triangular than in Gareris, costa less arched, the exterior margin oblique. Male with a similar glandular patch of raised scales and tuft on the submedian vein, but less prominent. Hind wing not so broad, somewhat quadrate in form; exterior margin and anal angle more convex, and waved; first subcostal slightly swollen at the base beneath, tufted above ; | second branch with a slightly raised fold on the upper side extending from first branch to near the end. Hyes hairy. Club of antenne thicker. Type. D. Sudra. referred to the genus Mycalesis. 159 Dalapa Sudra. Mycalesis Sudra, Felder, Reise Novara, Lep. iii. p. 500, pl. 67, fig. 10 (1867). Hab.—Java; Sumatra. N. g. Surabaya. Fore wing comparatively lone and narrow; costa slightly arched ; exterior margin oblique, almost straight and even. Male with a very slight glandular patch (more distinct beneath) sparsely covered with delicate short hairs. Hind wing small, oval; exterior margin convex, waved ; first subcostal branch slightly swollen at its base, second very concave at its base; cell narrow; disco-cellulars very oblique. Male with a long tuft of hair covering a glandular patch above base of first subcostal branch. Eyes almost naked. Antennal club slender. Types S. Orsers. Suralaya Orseis. Mycalesis Orseis, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. iil. p. 89, Myc. pl. 6, fig. 86, 87 (1864) ; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p- 186. Hab.—Sumatra ; Borneo. Genus ORSOTRIMNA. Orsotriena, Wallengren, Kongl. Vet. Akad. Férh. xv. p- 79 (1858). Fore wing comparatively shorter, exterior margin less oblique, apex and posterior angle convex; costal vein only, in both sexes, swollen at the base. Male with a tuft of fine hairs covering a glandular patch above the base of submedian vein. Hind wing less arched at the base, anal angle convex; first subcostal branch emitted immediately before end of the cell, middle median also emitted before lower end of the cell. Male with no erectile tuft at the base of subcostal, being replaced by a slight tuft of more delicate and recumbent hairs above and below the median vein. Hyes naked. Type. O. Medus. 160 Mr. FE’. Moore on the Asiatic Lepidoptera Orsotriena Medus. Papilio Medus, Fabricius, Syst. Ent. p. 488 (1775). P. Hesione, Cramer, Pap. Exot. i. pl. 11, fig. c, p (1775). Mycalesis Hesione, Hiibner, Verz. Vek. Schmett. p. 55; Hewits. Journ. Linn. Soe. Zool. vii. p. 146; Butler, Catal. Fabr. Lep. B. M. p. 34. Orsotriena Hesione, Wallengren, Kongl. Vet. Akad. xv. p. 30: Papilio Doris, Cramer, Pap. Exot. iv. pl. 362, fig. c (1782). P. Hamilcar, Herbst, Naturs. Schmett. vill. p. 738, pl. 198, fig. 8 (1796). Mycalesis cinerea, Butler, Ann. Nat. Hist. 1867, p. 401, ples, 129. Hab.—India (Gangetic Plains); British Burmah ; Malay Peninsula; Nicobars; Singapore; Sumatra; Java; Flores; Timor; Macassar; Borneo (Sarawak). Orsotriena mutata. Mycalesis mutata, Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1875, p. 612. Hab.—New Hebrides ; New Ireland. Orsotriena mandata. Mycalesis mandata, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. E. I. C. i. p- 233 (1857); Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 189. M. Gamaliba, Butler, Ann. Nat. Hist. 1867, pl. 2, fig. SOL Ay Be Hab.—S. India (Malabar) ; Ceylon. Orsotriena mandosa. Mycalesis mandosa, Butler, Catal. Satyr. Brit. Mus. p. 189, pl. 3, fig. 9 (1868). Hab.—S. India (Malabar). Orsotriena Runeka. Mycalesis Runeka, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. E. I. C. i. p. 284 (1857). Hab.—N. India (Darjiling, Cherra, Calcutta, Deyra Doon); British Burmah; Hainan. referred to the genus Mycalesis. 161 Orsotriena Jopas. Mycalesis Jopas, Hewitson, Hxotic Butt. iii. Myc. pl. 4, fig. 24 (1864). Hab.—Macassar; Tondano; Sula. Group Il. With a glandular pouch and tuft on hind wing only. N. g. CALYsISME. Mycalesis (part), Hubner, &e. Wings short, broad. Fore wing with the costa arched at base, apex acute in male, less so in female, exterior margin oblique and curved, posterior angle acute ; costal, median, and submedian veins swollen at the base ; second subcostal branch emitted immediately before end of the cell; cell broad; disco-cellulars very concave, radials from two angles in upper near subcostal. Hind wing oval; costa arched at base; exterior margin convex, dentate; first subcostal branch emitted and swollen before end of the cell; disco-cellulars slightly concave, radial from their middle; two upper median branches from end of the cell; male with a tuft of long hairs at base of subcostal covering a glandular patch of scales. Body slender; palpi porrect, slender, finely pilose beneath ; legs slender. Eyes hairy. Antenne slender at tip. Type. C. Drusia. Calysisme Drusia. Papilo Drusia, Cramer, Pap. Exot. i. pl. 84, fig. c, p (ESO). 2. Mycalesis Drusia, Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 188; id., Catal. Fabr. Lep. B. M. p. 33. Hab.—India (Bengal); Andaman and Nicobar Isles ; China (Cramer). Calysisme Justina. Papilio Justina, Cramer, Pap. Exot. iv. pl. 326, fig. c (1780). Mycalesis Justina, Hubner, Verz. bek. Schmett. p. 55; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 135. Hab.—S. India (Malabar). 162 Mr. F. Moore on the Asiatic Lepidoptera Calysisme Mamerta. Papilio Mamerta, Cramer, Pap. Exot. iv. pl. 326, fig. p (1780). Mycalesis Mamerta, Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 186. Hab.—China (Cramer) ; Formosa (Swinhoe). Calysisme Mineus. Papilio Mineus, Linneus, Syst. Nat. i. u. p. 768 (1767) ; Fabricius, Syst. Ent. p. 488. Mycalesis Mineus, Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 135; id., Catal. Fabr. Lep. B. M. p. 34. Hab.—India (Bombay); Ceylon; Java; Hong-Kong. Calysisme Polydecta. Papilio Polydecta, Cramer, Pap. Exot. 11. pl. 144, fig. 5, F (CUED Mycalesis Polydecta, Butler, Ann. Nat. Hist. 1867, p. 402, pl. 9, f. 5, 62; Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 185. Hab.—Borneo. [Tranquebar, Cramer.] Calysisme Igoleta. Mycalesis Igoleta, Felder, Wien. Ent. Monats. vii. p. 127 (18638) ; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 188. Hab.—Philippines (Luzon). Calysisme Nautilus. Mycalesis Nautilus, Butler, Ann. Nat. Hist. 1867, p. 402, pl. 9, f. 7; ad., Catal..Satyr. B. M. p. 186. Hab.—Malacea. Calysisme Justinella. Mycalesis Justinella, Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 185, pl. 3, fig. 12 (1868). Hab.—Philippines. Calysisme Blasius. Papilio Blasius, Fabricius, Ent. Syst. Suppl. p. 426 (1798). Mycalesis Blasius, Butler, Proce. Zool. Soc. 1867, p. 720, fio. 4; ad., Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 187; éd., Catal. Fabr. Lep. B. M. p. 34. referred to the genus Mycalesis 163 M. lurida, Butler, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1879, Dione: Hab.—India (Cachar); Pegu; Ceylon; Singapore ; Java; Formosa; Philippines. Calysisme Samba. Mycalesis Samba, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. E. J. C. i. p. 233 (1857) ; Butler. Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 187. Hab.—India (Caleutta). Calysisme Lalassis. Mycalesis Lalassis, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. iii. p. 89, Myce. pl. 6, fig. 35 (1864) ; Journ. Linn. Soc. Zool. vill. p. 147 ; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 187. Hab.—Gilolo ; Amboyna. Calysisme Cepheus. Mycalesis Cepheus, Butler, Ann. Nat. Hist. 1867, p. 402, pl. 9, fig. 8,492; id., Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 184. Hab.—Penang. Calysisme lugens. Mycalesis lugens, Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1875, p. 612. Hab.—New Hebrides. Calysisme Zia. Mycalesis Zia, Butler, ‘Entomologist’ iv. p. 847 (1869). Hab.—Australia (Queensland). Calysisme Perseus. Papilio Perseus, Fabricius, Syst. Ent. p. 488 (1775), @ ; Donovan, Ins. New Holl. pl. 26, f. 3. Mycalesis Perseus, Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1867, p. 718, fig. 2; Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 183; Catal. Fabr. Lep. B. M. p. 33. Papilio otrea, Cramer, Pap. Exot. iv. pl. 314, fig. a B (E780); 2 P. Tabitha, Fabricius, Ent. Syst. i. 1. p. 248 (1793). Satyrus Zopyrus, Kollar, in Hugel’s Reise Kaschmir, iv. p- 450 (1844). Hab.—India (Bombay ; Deyra Doon; Simla; Oudh ; Calcutta). TRANS. ENT. soc. 1880.—pPaRT IV. (DEC.) O 164 Mr. F. Moore on the Asiatic Lepidoptera Calysisme indistans, n. sp. Differs from C. Perseus in having a more distinctly- pointed apex and straighter exterior margin, resembling in these respects C. visala ; the colour is uniformly much paler above; the under side is especially paler, the transverse discal pale-bordered line more even, and that on the fore wing is slightly curved inward, the marginal spots are less prominent, or only visible as white spaces, and sometimes are quite obsolete. Expanse, f 1¢ 2 2in. Hab.—Calcutta. In coll. F. Moore. Calysisme Ostrea. Mycalesis Ostrea, Hubner, Exot. Schmett. Zutriige, fig. 79, 80,%; Moore, P. Z. 8. 1874, p. 566 (note) nec Cramer. M. Ostrea, Westwood, Gen. Diurn. Lep. p. 394 (1851). Hab.—China ; Hainan (Swinhoe). Calysisme Visala. Mycalesis Visala, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. E. J. C. 1. p. 280 (1857) ; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 183. Hab.—India (Sikkim). N. g. JATANA. Male.—Wings short ; fore wing narrow, very much arched at base, apex convex; exterior margin oblique, straight. Hind wing somewhat quadrate ; costa very convex in the middle, apex slightly angular; exterior margin oblique, slightly convex, anal angle prolonged ; abdominal margin long; a tuft of fine hair at base of subcostal ; cell short and broad at the end; subcostal straight at its base, first branch emitted near end of the cell, second straight at its base; upper disco-cellular straight, lower slightly curved and oblique; two upper median branches from end of the cell. Antenne with a stout club; palpi pilose to the tip. Eyes slightly hairy. Jatana Mynovrs. Mycalesis Mynois, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. in.; Maye. pl. 5, fig. 29, 80 (1864) ; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p- 144. Hab.—Timor. referred to the genus Mycalesis. 165 Genus Cunapa. Culapa, Moore, P. Z. 8. 1878, p. 825. Fore wing longer than in Calysisme ; costa very slightly arched, apex produced, exterior margin very oblique and slightly convex below the apex; cell longer and narrower ; third subcostal branch nearer the fourth. Hind wing somewhat quadrate, apical angle slightly acute, exterior margin convex hindward and truncated at anal angle, abdominal margin long; cell triangular ; disco-cellulars very oblique; middle median branch emitted at some distance before lower end of the cell. Male with a tuft of fine hair exserted from base of cell and covering a small glandular patch above base of first subcostal branch. Antenne witha well-formed, slightly- stout club. Palpi compactly clothed with shorter hair. Eyes hairy. Culapa Mnasicles. Mycalesis Mnasicles, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. i.; Mye. pl. 5, fig. 338, 384 (1864); Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 141. Culapa Mnasicles, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1878, p. 825. Hab.—Sumatra; Burmah (Tenasserim ; Moulmain). N. g. PacHama. Wings large and broad, but comparatively shorter than in Samanta. Fore wing with costa arched in the middle, apex rounded, exterior margin slightly oblique and convex, cilia prominent. Hind wing somewhat bluntly conical, exterior margin slightly arched, apex somewhat angled, exterior margin very oblique and scarcely convex ; cilia prominent ; first subcostal emitted at some distance before end of the cell; cell longer, end much pointed ; disco-cellulars very oblique, radial from a slight angle near subcostal. Male with a subcostal tuft and glandular patch, as in Samanta. Palpi slender at tip. Eyes hairy. Antennal club gradually formed. Pachama Mestra. Mycalesis Mestra, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. in. p. 79; Mye. pl. 1, fig. 2 (1862) ; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. palsy. Hab.—l. Bengal (Khasia Hills). 166 Mr. F. Moore on the Asiatic Lepidoptera N. g. Inpauasa. Male.—Fore wing somewhat narrow; costa arched at base, apex convex; exterior margin oblique, straight ; hind wing narrow, conical; anterior margin arched at base, apex slightly produced; exterior margin oblique, slightly convex; cell long, fusiform; a fuft of fine hair at base of subcostal; first subcostal branch half way between the costal and second; disco-cellulars very oblique; two upper median branches from end of the cell. Antenne with a moderately formed club. Palpi pointed and hairy to tip. Hyes slightly hairy. Indalasa Moore. Mycalesis Moorei, Felder, Reise Novara, Lep. i. p. 502, pl. 67, fig. 9 (1867). Hab.—Java. N.g. SaMANTA. ~ Fore wing arched towards the apex, angle convex. Hind wing conical; exterior margin waved; first and second subcostal branches emitted together from end of the cell, base of the first straight ; disco-cellulars straight and very slightly oblique; cell short; male with a small tuft covering a glandular patch of scales above base of subcostal branch. LHyes hairy. Type. S. Malsara. Samanta Malsara. Mycalesis Malsara, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. EH. I. C. 1. p- 231 (1857) ; Hewitson, Exotic Butt. i. p. 80; Myce. pl. 1. figs. 5, 6. Hab.—N. EK. India (Darjiling ; Cherra). Samanta rudis, n. sp. Male.—Upper side similar to S. Malsara, the pale band on the fore wing being narrower. Under side ochreous-brown, with darker brown strige, somewhat greyish brown on external borders ; both wings with an ochreous-yellow transverse discal band, the inner margin of which is well defined, the outer suffused; a sub- marginal series of minute indistinct white-speckled spots, referred to the genus Mycalesis. 167 the two subanal being ringed with black; an indistinct ochreous-speckled pale streak crossing middle of the cell on both wings. Expanse, 13 inch. Hab.—N. India. In coll. F. Moore. Samanta Lepcha, n. sp. Male.—Upper side brown; fore wing with an in- distinct pale transverse discal narrow line, and two or three submarginal indistinct blind ocelli, the upper two minute ; hind wing with one or two similar subanal ocelli. Under side brighter coloured, greyish externally, covered with numerous darker brown strige ; both wings with a prominent very narrow ochreous-yellow transverse discal band, and a submarginal series of indistinct minute black and white speckled spots ; a pale speckled indistinct streak crossing both cells. Expanse, 2 inches. Hab.—Nepal (General Ramsay.) In coll. F. Moore. Samanta Hert. Mycalesis Heri, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. HE. I. C. i. p. 283 (1857), 2; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 184. Hab.—N. E. India. Samanta Nicotia. Mycalesis Nicotia, Hewitson, Gen. Diurn. Lep. p. 394, pl. 66, f. 4 (1851), 2; id., Exotic Butt. i. Myce. pl. 1, f.1,%; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 139. Hab.—N. E. India (Darjiling). N. g. TELINGA. Fore wing comparatively long and narrow, apex slightly convex, exterior margin oblique, nearly straight, posterior margin convex near the base; cell long. Hind wing broad, somewhat quadrate; costa arched at base and thence straight to apex; exterior margin waved, convexly angular in the middle, anal angle convex ; cell broad, triangular ; disco-cellulars very long and oblique ; second subcostal emitted just before end of the cell; 168 Mr. F. Moore on the Asiatic Lepidoptera upper and middle median branches from lower end of the cell. Male with a small subcostal tuft and glandular patch. Palpi stout at tip. Eyes hairy. Club of antenna well formed. Telinga Adolphet. Satyrus Adolphei, Guérin, Delessert’s Souv. Voy. Inde, p- 76 (1848). Mycalesis Adolphei, Westwood and Hewits. Gen. D. Lep. p. 394; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 189. M. Onatas, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. ii. p. 90; Myc. pl. 6, fie. 40 (1864). Hab.—South India (Nilgiris). N. g. Kapanpa. Wings short, broad. Fore wing very much arched from the base, apex and exterior margin slightly convex and even; cell short and broad. Hind wing bluntly conical, short ; exterior margin almost even, anal angle very convex ; costal vein quite short and nearly straight ; first subcostal branch emitted immediately before end of the cell; disco-cellulars almost erect; cell very short ; middle median branch emitted before lower end of the cell; male with a slight subcostal tuft and glandular patch of scales; median branches dilated and grooved at their base on the upper side. Antenne short, slender. HKyes hairy. Palpi slender at tip. Type. K. Malsarida. Kabanda Malsarida. Mycalesis Malsarida, Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 184, pl. 3, fig. 14 (1868). Hab.—k. Bengal (Khasias ; Cherra Punji). Kabanda Khasiana. Mycalesis Khasiana, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1874, p- 566. Htab.—K.. Bengal (Khasia Hills). referred to the genus Mycalesis. 169 N.g. Marranpa. Wings short. Fore wing somewhat triangular, apex slightly pointed, exterior margin slightly oblique, nearly straight and even. Hind wing bluntly oval; costa very broadly convex at the base; exterior margin conyex, slightly waved; cell long, very pointed at lower end; first and second subcostal branches from end of the cell ; disco-cellulars very oblique ; male with a double subcostal tuft covering the glandular patch of scales. Antenne short, club stout. Hyes hairy. Palpi slender at tip. Type. M. Janardana. Martanda Janardana. Mycalesis Janardana, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. E. I. C.i. p. 234 (1857) ; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 186. Hab.—Java; Sumatra; Malacca. Martanda Megamede. Mycalesis Megamede, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. iii. p. 84 ; Myc. pl. 38, fig. 14 (1862); Butler, Catal. Satyr. B.M. p. 136 (Journ. Linn. Soc. Zool. viii. p. 147). Hab.—Macassar ; Ternate; Gilolo; Batchian. Martanda Sangaica. Mycalesis Sangaica, Butler, Ann. Nat. Hist. 1877, p. 95. Hab.—N. China (Shanghai). N. g. NISSANGA. Wings short. Fore wing slightly arched at the base, exterior margin long, slightly convex, and nearly erect; second subcostal emitted at end of the cell. Hind wing bluntly conical; costa broadly convex at the base and thence oblique to the apex; exterior margin oblique ; cell short, quadrate, broad at its end; subcostal not swollen, its first branch emitted immediately before end of the cell; disco-cellulars erect, equal in length ; two upper median branches emitted at some distance beyond the cell; male with a tuft of fine hair covermg a elandular patch at base of subcostal branches. Antenne gradually thickened to tip. Eyes hairy. Apical joint of palpi long and slender. Type. N. Patnia, Moore. 170 Mr. F. Moore on the Asiatic Lepidoptera . Nissanga Patnia. Mycalesis Patnia, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. E. J. C. i. p- 232, gs (1857); Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p- 146. Hab.—Ceylon. Nissanga Junonia. Mycalesis Junonia, Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 146, pl. 8, fig. 4 (1868). Hab.—S. India (Nilgiris). N. g. Myposama. Dasyomma,* Felder, Wien. Ent. Monats. iv. p. 401 (1860). Wings short. Fore wing regularly arched along the costa; exterior margin slightly convex and oblique ; second subcostal branch emitted immediately before end of the cell; disco-cellulars very slightly concave. Hind wing bluntly conical ; costa convex ; exterior margin and angles convex, slighly waved; cell broadly triangular ; first subcostal branch emitted close to end of the cell, and in the male swollen at its base; disco-cellulars oblique, slightly concave ; two upper median branches emitted from end of the cell. Male with a tuft of fine hair covering a glandular patch at base of first subcostal branch. Eyes hairy. Antennal club moderate. Palpi less laxly clothed beneath than in Nissanga, and the terminal joint shorter. Type. M. fuscum. Mydosana fuscum. Dasyomma fuscum, Felder, Wien. Ent. Monats. iv. p. 401 (1860). Mycalesis fuscum, Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 144. M. Diniche, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. 11. p. 85, Myc. pl. 4, fig. 23 (1862), 3; id., Journ. Linn. Soe. Zool. viii. p- 146. M. Margites, Hewitson, l.c., v. Myc. pl. 9, f. 59 (1874), 2. Hab.—Malay Peninsula; Singapore; Sumatra; Borneo. * Previously used (1840) in Diptera. referred to the genus Mycalesis. fia Mydosama Anapita. Mycalesis Anapita, Moore, Catal. Lep. Mus. E. I. C. i. p- 232 (1857); Hewitson, Journ. Linn. Soc. Zool. vil. p. 146; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 146. Hab.—Borneo; Sumatra. Mydosama Remulia. Papilio Remulia, Cramer, Pap. Exot. iii. pl. 237, f. ¥ G Tio). Mycalesis Remulia, Hewitson, Journ. Linn. Soe. Zool. vil. p. 145; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 143. Hab.—Java; Bouru; Amboyna; Ceram; Mysol ; Waigiou; Salwatty; Gilolo; Ternate; Batchian; Morty. Mydosama Terminus. Papilio Terminus, Fabricius, Syst. Ent. p. 488 (1775) ; Donovan, Ins. New Holl. pl. 28, fig. 4. Mycalesis Ternunus, Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1867, p. 720, fig. 3, 8a; Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 148; Catal. Fabr. Lep. B. M. p. 35. Hab.—Australia (New Holland). Mydosama flagrans. Mycalesis flagrans, Butler, Ann. Nat. Hist. 1876, p. 243. Hab.—New Guinea. Mydosama Cacodemon. Mycalesis Cacodemon, Kirsch, Mitth. Mus. Dresden, i. p- 118, pl. 6, f. 5, 5a (1877). Hab.—New Guinea. Mydosama Messene. Mycalesis Messene, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. iii. p. 81, Myce. pl. 2, fig. 8, 9 (1862); Journ. Linn. Soe. Zool. Vili. p. 145; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 142. Hab.—Ternate ; Batchian; Gilolo; Morty. Mydosama Mehadeva. Satyrus Mehadeva, Boisduval, Voy. Astrolabe, Lep. p- 151 (1882). TRANS. ENT. soc. 1880.—PaRr IV. (DEC.) P 172 Mr. F. Moore on the Asiatic Lepidoptera Mycalesis Mehadeva, Hewitson, Journ. Linn. Soe. Zool. vill. p. 145; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 143. Hab.—Dorey. Mydosama Asophis. Mycalesis Asophis, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. i. p. 85, Myc. pl. 4, fig. 20, 21 (1862); Journ. Linn. Soc. Zool. vil. p. 145; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 144. Hab.—New Guinea; Waigiou; Mysol; Ternate. Mydosama Afthiops. Mycalesis 4ithiops, Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 141, pl. 3, fig. 11 (1868). Hab.—New Guinea. Mydosama Bazochi. Satyrus Bazochti, Guerin, Voy. Coquille, Atlas, Ins. pl. 14 4, f. 3, (1829). Mycalesis Bazochii, Kirby, Catal. D. Lep. 91. Satyrus Cyanites, Boisduval, Voy. Astrolabe, Lep. p. 152 (1832). Mycalesis Cyamites, Hewitson, Journ. Linn. Soe. Zool. vill. p. 145; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 142. Hab.—Dorey. Mydosama Ita. Mycalesis Ita, Felder, Wien. Ent. Monats. vii. p. 125 (1863); Reise Novara Lep. i. pl. 68, fig. 8, 9; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 145. Hab.—Philippines (Luzon). Mydosana Feldert. Mycalesis Felderi, Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 144, pl. 3, fig. 5 (1868). Hab.—Philippines. Mydosama Itys. Mycalesis Itys, Felder, Reise Novara Lep. ii. p. 508; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 145. Hab.—Celebes. referred to the genus Mycalesis. 1738 Mydosama Sirius. Papilio Sirws, Fabricius, Syst. Ent. p. 488 (1775); Donovan, Ins. New Holl. pl. 28, fig. 3. Mycalesis Sirius, Butler, P. Z. S. 1867, Da (20s task Id. Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 144; Id. Catal. Faby. luep. B. M. p. 35. Hab.—Australia (New Holland). Mydosama Zacheus. Papilio Zacheus, Fabricius, Ent. Syst. iii. 1, p. 217 (1798). Hab.—Australia. Mydosama Manipa. Satyrus Manipa, Boisduval, Voy. Astrolabe, Lep. p. 150 (1882). Mycalesis Manipa, Hewitson, Journ. Linn. Soc. Zool. vill. p. 146. Mycalesis Daidis, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. i. p. 85, Myc. pl. 4, fig. 22 (1862). Hab.—Bouru; Amboyna; Ceram. Mydosama Shiva. Satyrus Shiva, Boisduval, Voy. Astrolabe, Lep. p. 149 (1832). Mycalesis Shiva, Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 148. Hab.—New Guinea (Dorey). Mydosama Phidon. Mycalesis Phidon, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. 11. p. 84, Myc. pl. 8, fig. 16 (1862); Journ. Linn. Soc. Zool. vii. p- 146; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 141. Hab.—Ayru. Mydosama Cesona. Mycalesis Cesonia, Wallengren, Wien. Ent. Monats. 1860, p. 36. Hab.—Manilla. : N. g. NEBpaRa. Male. Wings short, broad; fore wing with the costa arched, apex slightly convex; exterior margin oblique, nearly straight; hind wing with the costa arched at i: Mr. F. Moore on the Asiatic Lepidoptera the base; exterior margin convex hindward, waved; abdominal margin long; cell long; subcostal vein slightly swollen before emitting the first branch, the first branch emitted before upper half length of the cell; disco-cellulars long, very oblique; middle median branch emitted before lower end of the cell; a tuft of fine hair at base of subcostal. Antenne with a gradually formed club. Third joint of palpi long, slender. Eyes hairy. Type. N. Tagala. Nebdara Tagala. Mycalesis Tagala, Felder, Wien. Ent. Monats. vu. p- 126 (1863); Reise Novara, Lep. ui. pl. 67, fig. 7, 8; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 143. Hab.—Philippines (Bourias Loeban, Mindanao). Nebdara Bisaya. Mycalesis Bisaya, Felder, Wien. Ent. Monats. vi. p-. 127 (1863) ; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 148. M. Semperi, Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 187, pl. 8, fig. 7 (1868) 3. M. Mareotis, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. i. p. Myc. pl. 9, fig. 58 ? (1874). Hab.—Philippines (Bourias, Loeban, Luzon). Nebdara Amena. Mycalesis Amena, Druce, Proc. Zool. Soc. 18738, p. 339, ple oa, 10. 1. Hab.—Borneo. N.g. SEVANDA. Fore wing more lengthened than in Mydosama; apex somewhat produced, exterior margin very oblique; disco- cellulars deeply concave. Hind wing broad, bluntly oval; cell very broad ; first subcostal branch emitted at some distance before end of the cell; disco-cellulars slightly oblique; upper median branch emitted from end of the cell, middle branch immediately before the end; male with the first subcostal branch swollen beneath at its base, with a tuft of fine hairs above covering the glandular patch. Antenne and _ palpi stouter. Eyes hairy. Type. S. Duponchel. referred to the genus Mycalesis. 175 Sevanda Duponcheli. Satyrus Duponchelu, Guerin, Voy. Coquille, pl. 17, fig. 8 (1829), 3s. S. Dorycus, Boisduval, Voy. Astrolabe, Lep. p. 152 (1882). Mycealesis Dorycus, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. ii. p. 81, Myc. pl. 2, figs. 7, 10; Journ. Linn. Soe. Zool. viii. p. 145; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 141. M. Getulia, Felder, Wien. Ent. Monats. iii. p. 404 (1859), 3. Hab.—Dorey; Aru. Sevanda Mucia. Mycalesis Mucia, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. ii. p. 82, Myc. pl. 2, figs. 11, 12 (1862); Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 142; Kirsch, Mitth. Zool. Mus. Dresden, i. p; LS. Hab.—Aru. N. g. Lowora. Wings broader than in Sevandra. Fore wing convex at the base and apex, exterior margin convex and slightly oblique; second subcostal branch emitted at some distance beyond end of the cell; lower disco-cellular extremely concave. Hind wing broadly oval; costa nearly straight to apex; exterior margin convex; first subcostal branch emitted at half length of the cell; disco-cellulars obliquely concave; two upper median branches from end of the cell. Male with a tuft of fine hairs covering a small glandular patch at base of sub- costal branch. Antenne with a gradually thickened club. Palpi compactly clothed to the tip beneath. HKyes hairy. Type. L. Dexamena. Lohora Dexamena. Mycalesis Dexamenus, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. ili. p. 83, Myc. pl. 8, figs. 17, 18 (1862) ; Journ. Linn. Soe. Zool. viii. p. 146; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 142. Hab.—TYondano. Lohora Dinon. Mycalesis Dinon, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. i. p. 88, Myc. pl. 5, fig. 831 (1864); Journ. Linn. Soc. Zool. vii. p- 146; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 142. 176 Mr. F. Moore on the Asiatic Lepidoptera M. Dexamenus (part), Hewits., Exotic Butt. i., Myc. pl. 8, 1g. LO? Hab.—Maceassar. Lohora Deianra. Mycalesis Deianira, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. in. p. 88, Myc. pl. 3, fig. 18 (1862); Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 142. M. Dora, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. i. p. 88 (1864); Journ. Linn. Soe. Zool. viii. p. 146. Hab.—Tondano. N.g. Nasapa. Male.—Fore wing slightly arched at the base and before the apex; exterior margin oblique, slightly convex below the apex; hind wing oval; costa arched from the base; exterior margin and anal angle convex; a tuft of fine hair covering a subcostal patch; cell short; first and second subcostal branches at equal distances from the costal; upper disco-cellular oblique, slightly concave, lower nearly erect; two upper median branches from end of the cell. Antenne gradually clavate; palpi laxly pilose beneath, tip rather short, pointed. Hyes hairy. Nasapa Aramis. Mycalesis Aramis, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. ii. p. 91, Myc. pl. 7, fig. 48 (1866); Butler, Catal. Satyr. Be Mp. 129: Hab.—Philippines. Genus Mycanmsis. Mycalesis, Hiibner, Verz. bek. Schmett. p. 55 (1816). Fore wing much arched at the base, apex slightly acute; exterior margin convex, oblique; hind wing broadly conical; costa convex in middle, apex and exterior margin convex; anal angle produced; abdominal margin long; cell narrow: first and second subcostal branches emitted together from a foot-stalk above middle of tbe cell, the foot-stalk swollen; a tuft of fine hair covering a glandular patch at swollen base of subcostal branches; disco-cellulars very long and oblique; two upper median branches from end of the cell. Antennal club well formed ; palpi stout, pilose. Eyes naked. Type. M. Evadne, Cramer. Hab.—wW. Africa. referred to the genus Mycalesis. Le Group III. With two glandular pouches and tufts on hind wing. N.g. Lossa. Male.—¥ore wing somewhat elongated and narrow; costa arched at the base and apex; exterior margin oblique, slightly convex ; second subcostal branch emitted at some distance beyond the cell; hind wing bluntly ovate; costa arched at base; apex, exterior margin and anal angle convex; a tuft of fine hair at base of subcostal, and a slender tuft covering a groove on middle of submedian vein; cell short, broad in the middle; subcostal concave at its base, first branch emitted close to end of the cell, second concave at its base; disco- cellulars long, oblique, straight; two upper median branches from end of the cell. Antenne with a well- formed terminal club; palpi pointed at tip. Eyes hairy. Loesa Oroatis. Mycalesis Oroatis, Hewitson, Exotic Butt. 11. p. Myc. pl. 6, figs. 38, 39 (1864) ; Butler, Catal. Satyr. B. M. p. 188. Hab.—Java. Species not examined, and of which the genus is therefore undeterminable :— Mycalesis Nala, Felder, Wien. Ent. Monats. in. p. 403 (1859). Hab.—Java. Mycalesis Pandea, Hopff. Stett. Ent. Zeit., 1874, p. 39. Hab.—Celebes. Cia =) XIV. On the Buprestide from Madagascar. By Cuas. O. WatERHOUSsE. [Read October 6th, 1880. ] Recentiy M. James Thomson has published* a paper on the Buprestide from Madagascar usually included in the genus Psiloptera. He distributes the species known to him under eighteen subgenera, sixteen of which are new. Whether this is a desirable step or not is a matter of opinion, but for my own part I think it is to be regretted. In this paper I have placed the species under these various genera so far as is practicable, but not in the order given by M. Thomson, as he appears to have over- looked the relationship of the species with those from Africa. I think that there can be no doubt that what- ever arrangement may be adopted for the Madagascar species, Psiloptera albosparsa, Fairm., should be placed in proximity to the African species; Psiloptera sternalis, Fairm., Alampetis soror, Thomson, following then in natural order. Psiloptera analis, Chev., is placed by M. Thomson under his genus Cornelia with propyga, Coq.; with which it has little in common, and is separated by the genus Pycnobothris, Th. (with fifteen species), from Cassidabothris colliciata, Gory, to which it is undoubtedly most nearly allied. Pycnobothris, Th., and Coccinellopsis, Th., must not be separated by Cassidabothris, Th. ; in fact, Coccinellopsis auropicta, Gory, and C. mystica, Th., are closely allied to Pycnobothris subsilphoides, Th., P. ruficauda, Th., &c., agreeing both in general coloration and in having the prosternal process densely punctured and pilose in the males and smooth (or only sparingly punctured) in the females. The new species described in this paper were chiefly collected by the Rev. W. Deans Cowan in the neighbour- hood of Fianarantsoa; some by the Rev. C. Shaw, chiefly in the Ankafina ‘Forest, N.E. of Fianarantsoa; a few were obtained by Mr. Kingdon east of Antananarivo ; * Rev. et Mag. de Zool., 1878. TRANS. ENT. soc. 1880.—PraRT IV. (DEC.) Q 180 Mr. Chas. O. Waterhouse on the and lastly, some collected by the Rev. Robert Toy at Antananarivo. Of these correspondents Mr. Cowan only remains in Madagascar ; Mr. Shaw and Mr. Kingdon have returned home. Mr. Toy, who laboured as Senior Tutor of the Theological and Secular College, after having resided in the island since 1862, at length broke down under his constant labours and the effects of the trying climate, and after a severe illness, from which he only partially recovered, he died on his passage home, south of Madeira, on the 19th of April of the present year. Without enumerating all the species, I here give the following typical forms arranged in the order which appears to me to be the most natural :— Alampetis albosparsa, Fairm. Cocecinellopsis emarginata, Gory. > soror, Th. os complanata, Gory. Fe zivetta, Klug. rs solea, Klug. Apatea Luezotii, Guerin. auropicta, “Gory. Amphisbeta navicularis, Gory. [Py cnobothris] subsilphoides, Th. Hemisobothris quadricollis, Gory. H cuprifera, Lap. & Gy. Laconides aureaopilosa, Guerin. crassa, Waterh. Valeobothris ochreata, Oliy. (Coceinellopsis) Klugii, Gory. Phobetodes Goryi, Guérin. convexa, Lap. &Gory. Enharpya amorpha, Gory. Cassidabothris colliciata, Gory. Carcinias scapularis, Guérin. analis, Chev. Polybothris sumptuosa, Gory. Cornelia pyropyga, Cog. Erebodes Jansonu, Th. Aplax obscura, Th. Coccinellopsis Lafertei, Gory. Tearia alata, Gory. In describing the following new species in the British Museum collection, I have placed them, to the best of my judgment, under the subgenera proposed by M. Thom- son, but some of them are very difficult to locate :-— Alampetis ? scintillans, n. sp. Allied to P. zivetta, Klug, but much less convex, and in general outline somewhat resembling P. impressipennis. Thorax rather more narrowed in front than in zivetta, more distinctly keeled at the sides; deep olive-green, with only one raised median line, the disk rather sparingly punctured with large punctures ; the impressed portion within the lateral margin is closely punctured nearly asin zivetta. The elytra somewhat resemble those of impressipennis in general outline, but the shoulders are a little expanded, and the lateral region from the shoulder to rather behind the middle is impressed, and the margin about the middle is slghtly reflexed; the colour is more golden green and brighter than in zivetta, Buprestide from Madagascar. 181 and there is a little coppery tint at the apex; on the back there are a few dark purple spots, and a little way from the apex there is one on the margin; the apex is slightly truncate, and the outer tooth 1s seen with much difficulty. The sculpture is as follows: there is a prominent costa next the suture, which becomes oblite- rated some distance from the apex ; next to this is a less elevated costa, which extends to the apex, but is frequently interrupted by round rugulose impressions; then there is a prominent costa which is obscure at the base, but which extends nearly to the apex; beyond these there are portions of two or three coste, which are much interrupted by impressions; the surface beyond this is more flattened and is strongly punctured; close to the apex on the margin there is a small frosted golden impression filled with short pale pubescence, and there is a rather larger one a little above it still on the margin. The under side of the insect is wneous, tinted with coppery, with brassy punctuation ; the prosternal process is not thickly punctured, it is grooved on each side; the abdomen is strongly marked with elongate punctures ; the apical segment is blue, punctured with golden green, and with a narrow frosted margin of green. The re- flexed portion of the elytra is shining blue, slightly concave, punctured posteriorly. Legs green. Length 11 lines. . Hab.—Madagascar. This species is difficult to locate, but I think it is best placed near P. zivetta. Amphisbeta impressipennis, L. & G., varieties. 1. The typical form of this species, according to a specimen compared with the type by Mr. Edward Saunders. Rather olive-eneous, with three brassy lines on the thorax, with a considerable amount of brassy frosted space on the elytra, especially below the shoulders and on the margin, and always with the sutural interstice brassy. One specimen in the Museum collection has almost the whole of the elytra taken up with the brassy colour. This form occurs at Antananarivo. 2. Specimens from Fianarantsoa. More brown-zneous in general colour, and are rather smoother. 3. Specimens from Fianarantsoa. Uniform coppery 182 Mr. Chas. O. Waterhouse on the brown, smoother than is the case with No. 2, with no brassy lines on the thorax, and with the sutural interstice of the elytra also not brassy; &c. 4. A single specimen from Fianarantsoa resembling No. 8, but with the sides of the thorax much more coarsely punctured, and with no impression within the posterior angle. 5. A single specimen in Mr. Janson’s collection, without particular locality, is entirely black above, but in other respects agrees with No. 3. Hemisobothris parallela, n. sp. Allied to H. aureopilosa, Guérin, but much narrower, more parallel, and with a patch of orange pubescence near the apex of each elytron, &c. Thorax strongly transverse, not quite so much narrowed behind as in aureopilosa, bluish black, shining, with the punctures and impressions brassy ; the punctuation is strong, but not so close as in aureopilosa. The elytra are not broader than the thorax, parallel for three-quarters their length, and then arcuately narrowed to the apex ; bronzy- black, shining, with numerous irregular lines of strong punctures, much confused towards the apex, the inter- stices narrow, irregular, and costiform ; the margin at the shoulder is brassy; at one-quarter from the base there is a brassy fascia, not reaching the suture, and a little behind the middle there is a similar fascia; these fasciz are more or less pubescent ; there are also several small brassy, pubescent spots ; a little way from the apex there is a large transverse spot, which is filled with orange pubescence. Nearly the whole of the under side of the insect (that is all the punctured portions) is brassy; the prosternal process (which is smooth and almost impunctate) and the middle of the metasternum are dark steel-blue; the abdomen is dark steel-blue, with the whole of the sides of the basal segment and two impressions at the side of each of the other segments frosted and brassy. Length 12 lnes. Hab.—Antananarivo (Toy). Laconides equalis, 0. sp. Allied to P. aureopilosa, Guérin, but larger. It agrees in coloration with the general form of P. aureopilosa, Buprestide from Madagascar. 183 being golden green, tinted here and there with coppery, with blackish marks on the elytra; the under side is entirely bright green, with golden reflections. It differs ' from aureopilosa in having the thorax more coarsely punctured. The elytra are more convex, more attenuated and prolonged at the apex, a little more expanded at the shoulders ; without any distinct round pubescent spots. The under flanks of the thorax are very coarsely punctured ; the prosternal process is coarsely but not very thickly punctured. The intercoxal process of the abdomen is strongly punctured; the middle of the abdomen is nearly as much punctured as the rest. Length 20 lines. Hab.—Madagascar. This species is clearly allied to P. obtusa, Lap. & Gory, but is differently coloured. Laconides chalybeoventralis, Thomson. I have hitherto regarded this as a dark variety of P. aureopilosa, Guérin, and I think if it be separated as a species it will be necessary to consider the varieties of P. impressipennis above noticed as species also. Phobetodes vespertilio, Thomson. I have regarded this as a smooth variety of P. Goryi ; the specimens from Antananarivo and Fianarantsoa recently received are, however, smoother on an average than those formerly received, and for which we have no precise locality. Enharpya chaotica, Thomson. The single specimen of this species in the Museum and one in Mr. Janson’s collection are females; of E. amorpha there is only a single male in the Museum ; so that, as M. Thomson does not mention the question of sexes in his description, I shall hold to my opinion that they are sexes of the same species. Great care is required in distinguishing the sexes of these insects. Carcinias spectralis, Thomson. I cannot distinguish this from P. scapularis, Guérin. 184 Mr. Chas. O. Waterhouse on the Carcimas anulifer, n. sp. Allied to C. scapularis, Guérin, but larger, darker, more depressed, and with the subapical yellow patch on the elytra replaced by a streak of white pile. Head and thorax nearly black; the latter of the same form as in scapularis, and similarly sculptured, but the depressed portions are not brassy, scarcely tinted with purple. The elytra are black, with slight tints of purple here and there; less compressed below the shoulders, which are consequently less elevated; each elytron has three distinct but obtuse coste, which do not reach the apex ; the interstices are coar sely punctured, or rather wrinkled ; there are some small impressed rings, and near the shoulders some impressions which are frosted and of a slight coppery colour, and filled with fine grey pile; the exterior apical portion is smooth. The under side of the insect is chiefly dark green, with dark coppery purple in parts ; the pr osternal - process is smooth, shining, golden ereen; the metathoracic parapleura are closely and coarsely punctate-rugose. ‘The abdomen is moderately, thickly, and very strongly punctured; there are no distinct white pubescent spots on the 2nd to 4th segments as in scapularis. Length 22 lines. Hab.—Antananarivo (Toy). Carcinias ceruleipes, N. sp. Allied to P. scenica, Gory, similarly coloured above, with broader thorax, with the elytra much less attenuated at the apex, and without the fulvous pubescent fascia near the apex; bright golden and green below, with coppery reflections, with blue lees. Thorax much less narrowed in front than in scenica, more arcuate at the sides ; the sculpture above is somewhat similar, but there are no smooth spots on each side of the disk, as in scenica. ‘The elytra are less deflexed at the sides, more parallel, only moderately attenuated at the apex, the shoulders less projecting ; the sculpture is very similar ; there are numerous small round spots scattered over the surface, those on the middle of each elytron are arranged in two oblique lines ; these spots are coppery, and filled with fine whitish pubescence. The under side of the insect 1s very brilliant ; the prosternal process is smooth, ereen. The metathoracic parapleura have a few obscure Buprestide from Madagascar. 185 punctures. The abdomen is obscurely punctured, except the apical segment, which is strongly punctured. The reflexed margin of the elytra is dull blue-black. The tarsi above are green. Length 20 lines. Hab.—Madagascar. Hrebodes fulgidiventris, n. sp. Above coppery brown, the front of the head coppery, some portions of the interstices of the eltyra blackish. Thorax with the surface uneven, distinctly impressed on each side, the impressions and the sides very rugose. Elytra rather smooth, the striz very imperfect, and not very much impressed; all the surface below the shoulders, a considerable portion of the sides, as well as some oblique, irregular rows of sub-confluent spots, frosted coppery brown, all these spaces filled with soft grey pubescence. All the under surface of the insect bright, shining, purple-tinted coppery, with a little golden green at the margins of the segments; the legs and the reflexed margins of the elytra golden green. Prosternal process almost impunctate. Length 23 lines. Hab.—Fianarantsoa (Shaw). This species differs from H. Jansonii, Th., m having the elytra much less strongly striated, in its different colour, &c. From EH. Deyrollei, Th., it differs in having the thorax impressed on each side, and in being more elongate. Coccinellopsis ? ? cribraria, n. sp. Depressed, elliptical, bronzy, the elevated parts eneous. Thorax transverse, moderately narrowed ante- riorly, the sides nearly rectilinear; the medial channel is coppery; on each side of this the disk is smooth and shining eneous, and sparingly punctured ; the sides are very uneven and rugose. he elytra immediately below the shoulders are rather more than one-third broader than the thorax, subparallel for two-thirds their length, then arcuately attenuated; almost the whole surface frosted and punctured; there are three or four inter- rupted narrow «neous cost on the back; numerous small, round impressions are noticeable, particularly on the 2nd and 4th cost; these spots are finely pilose; at 186 Mr. Chas. O. Waterhouse on the the apex the pubescence in the small impressions forms decumbent yellowish tufts. The under side is more shining bronzy than the upper side; the under margin of the elytra and some small irregular smooth spaces at the sides of the abdomen are deep blue ; the prosternal process is sparingly punctured ; the abdomen is strongly and thickly punctured; the apical segment is nearly semicircular, with the basal line, a medial line, and the margins thickly and finely punctured and brassy, the rest is smooth and dark blue, with a puncture here and there. Length 133, breadth 7 lines. Hab.—Madagascar. this species stands quite alone; I know of nothing that approaches it, but its somewhat broad form induces me to place it w ith C ‘oceinellopsis, although the abdomen is very different. Coccinellopsis Lafertet, Gory. The male of this species differs from the female in having the prosternal process densely and finely punctured and pilose. In the female this process is shining, and has numerous strong punctures scattered over the surface. None of the immediately allied species known to me differ in this way. But C. auropicta and its allies, although far removed in other respects from C. Lafertei, agree with it in this difference in the sternal process in the sexes. Coccinellopsis lateralis, n. sp. Rather narrow, elliptical. Head and thorax eneous ; the latter having the medial channel and punctures brassy. The thorax resembles that of P. complanata, but is a little more arcuate at the sides, the surface is very uneven, very rugosely punctured at the sides ; on each side of the medial channel there is a small, round, smooth spot, more clearly defined than that in complanata. Klytra not very broad and not much expanded at the sides, very convex on the back, with the margins flattened, rather straight at the sides for two-thirds their length, then arcuately narrowed ; very strongly punctate-striate, brassy at the suture, passing through brownish coppery to dull purple ; the margin dull, dark blue; the apex is truncate but not compressed, brown, the outer angle shghtly dentiform. The under side is brassy; the pro- Buprestide from Madagascar. - 187 sternal process is shining purple and smooth; the irregular smooth spaces at the sides of the abdomen are dark blue ; there is some blue colour on the prosternum and flanks of the prothorax, and there is a small blue and purple spot onthe episterna. The apical segment of the abdomen is smooth and shining, dark blue at the base, verging into purple and coppery towards the apex ; the extreme apex is finely punctured and brassy. The under margin of the elytra is dark blue. Length 10 lines. Hab.—Fianarantsoa (Shaw). Allied to P. complanata, but differently coloured and much narrower in the elytra; &e. Coccinellopsis punctiventris, n. sp. Resembles P. lamina, Klug, in general colour, form, and appearance, but with the elytra more narrowed posteriorly ; and with the apical segment of the abdomen thickly and very strongly punctured, with only a small irregular smooth purple space on each side. Thorax geneous, very strongly and not very thickly punctured, the medial channel very narrow in front; on each side of which there are three or four irregular ill-defined impressions, the outer ones as well as most of the punctures brassy. Elytra brassy, with the dorsal, convex, interstices tinted with brown, or coppery; the expanded margin, which is strongly punctured, has a somewhat round concavity some distance from the shoulder, extended inwardly by a _ brassy, frosted impression; a little behind the middle there are three frosted impressions (on the 2nd and 6th interstices) which are nearly confluent; at some distance from the apex there is a transverse frosted impression, extending from the second interstice to near the margin; the extreme apex is finely punctured and fringed with yellow hair; the external angle is not dentiform. The colour of the insect below is «neous, tinted with brassy, the intercoxal process of the abdomen, some small irregular smooth spaces at the sides of the abdomen, and the posterior part of the under margin of the elytra, tinted with purple. The prosternal process has a slight medial impression ; it is very sparingly punctured. ¢. Length 11 lines. Hab.—Madagascav. TRANS. ENT. soc. 1880.—PaRT IV. (DEC.) R 188 Mr. Chas. O. Waterhouse on the Coccinellopsis ovalis, n. sp. Oval; brownish brassy above and below, with the under margins of the elytra blue-green, some irregular smooth spaces on the sides of the abdomen purple, the anal plate shining coppery purple. It is much narrower than P. coccinella, L. & G., and has the elytra with only a very narrow reflexed margin. In the form of the thorax and general coloration it resembles P. chalco- chrysea, Klug, but the thorax is not margined laterally ; the colour and sculpture are the same. ‘The elytra, although much narrower than in coccinella, are much shorter and relatively broader than in chalcochrysea ; the lines of punctures are even stronger than in the latter ; there are numerous small round impressions on the alternate interstices, but there are no large lateral impressions; the apex is very slightly truncate, fringed with pale pubescence. The prosternal process is thickly and strongly punctured. The anal plate is nearly round, moderately large, the surface of the segment round it pubescent. Length 73 lines. Hab.—Madagascar. This species is perhaps best placed near P. coccinella. Coccinellopsis dejecta, 0. sp. Very close to P. complanata. It differs in being rather shorter, the thorax less narrowed in front, more rugose at the sides, with the medial channel broader and more defined. The elytra not so gradually narrowed behind ; the apex is green and in part very finely punctured, fringed with yellow pubescence. The whole upper side is brownish wneous. The under side is ereen mixed with purple and tinted with brassy; the smooth spaces at the sides of the abdomen are beautiful purple; the apical abdominal segment is purple, not very brilliant ; its basal half is green and finely punctured, leaving the middle part smooth and purple, and in the punctured part on each side there is a small smooth space. The prosternal process is rather thickly and rather finely punctured, much more so than in complanata 3. The under margin of the elytra is beautiful blue, tinted with ereen on the inner side. Length 12 lines. Hab.—Madagascar. =n ee Buprestide from Madagascar. 189 Coccinellopsis multiguttata, n. sp. Allied to P. complanata, Guérin, but with the thorax less narrowed in front, the elytra straighter at the sides; the apical segment of the abdomen shining purple, with the basal half and a medial line densely punctured and golden. Thorax rather broad, brassy eneous, obliquely narrowed in front of the middle, sparingly but strongly punctured; the medial impression is moderately distinct ; there is a small irregular smooth space on each side of the disk, and one on each side of the base; there is a slight impression within each posterior angle. Elytra not so prominent at the shoulders as in complanata, more parallel at the sides; dull olive-green, with brassy ereen margins, punctate-striate, the two or three dorsal strize stronely impressed; there are numerous small brassy spots on the sutural interstice ; about six small quadrate spots on the 3rd interstice, several on the 5th, and about five on the 7th interstice ; the apex is brassy, very little compressed, shining, partly frosted, fringed with yellow hair, the external “angle not toothed. The under side of the insect is rather dark green, with golden punctures; the middle of the sterna, the intercoxal process of the abdomen, and a smooth irrecular- shaped space on each side of the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th abdominal segments, purple. Prosternal process with a few large punctures. The under margin of the elytra dark blue. Length 12 lines. Hab.—Madagascar. Coccinellopsis elliptica, n. sp. Allied to P. cassidoides, Guérin, but narrower and more recularly elliptical, thorax smoother, and with the apical seoment of the abdomen finely punctured along the base, closely and very strongly punctured in the middle, smooth on each side. ‘Thorax dull purple-black, even above, the usual medial channel only represented by a small impression at the base; the punctuation is sparse and not very strong; the posterior angles are more closely and finely punctured, and are tinted with brassy. Klytra blue-black, not so much expanded as in cassidoides ; there are four or five strongly impressed strize on the back, which are obscurely punctured; the margin near the shoulders is dull green; the extreme base and the suture near the base is brassy; and each elytron has 190 Mr. Chas. O. Waterhouse on the three strongly marked transverse, frosted, brassy im- pressions, somewhat similar to those in cassidoides, but extending to the margin. ‘The apex is only slightly compressed, truncate, brassy, and pubescent. The under margins of the elytra are dark blue. The under side of the insect is coppery purple, shining, with the punctures and some frosted impressions on the sides of the abdominal segments brassy. Prosternal process with only a few punctures, but with a longitudinal medial impression extending to the front of the sternum. Femora purple, tibie brassy green, tarsi green. Length 10 lines. Hab.—Fianarantsoa (Cowan). Coccinellopsis propinguda, N. sp. Very close to C. elliptica, but differs in being uniform dull black above, slightly shining about the suture of the elytra; the posterior angles of the thorax are not br ASSY 5 the elytra have the impressions less marked and smaller ; there is no brassy colour at the base. On the under side, the flanks of the thorax, the sternum, and the reflexed margins of the elytra are dark blue; the sides of the metasternum and the middle of the abdomen are more or less brassy, the legs are brassy ereen. The prosternal process has the same medial impression. Length 9 lines. Hab.—Antananarivo (Kingdon). Coccinellopsis sodalis, n. sp. Resembles P. solea, Klug, but without the oblique impressed line on each side of the thorax; with the shoulder of the elytra rather more square, t.e., less oblique, &e. Thorax dull black, or nearly black; rather sparingly punctured, the punctures strong in the middle, less so on the disk, stronger and more close at the sides, especially at a little distance from the anterior angles, where there is a slight constriction; the medial im- pression is broad and well marked posteriorly, but is narrow and indistinct in front. The elytra are very broad at the shoulders, only sightly narrower posteriorly till just at the apex, where they are then suddenly narrowed and compressed ; dull blue-black, very strongly punctate-striate, the dorsal interstices convex; the basal Buprestide from Madagascar. 191 region is more or less eneous, and there are the following brassy impressions :—a large, shallow, ill-defined one on the margin near the shoulders; another similar one a little behind the middle; a third deeper one between the last-mentioned and the apex; and there are four small, round impressions on the 2nd interstice; all these impressions are frosted. The apex is frosted and furnished with yellow pubescence; the outer or lower angle has a strong tooth. The whole under side, including the margin of the elytra, is very dark blue, and is more or less dull; the prosternal process has numerous, large, strong punctures. The abdomen is very strongly and rather thickly punctured, the punctures frequently elongate, those in the intercoxal process particularly so ; the apical segment is smooth and shining, with two or three punctures only at the basal angles. Length 11 lines. Hab.—Antananarivo (Kingdon). Coccinellopsis plagiata, n. sp. Allied to P. solea, Klug, but without the oblique brassy impressed line in front of the thorax, and having a large irregular frosted, brassy impression (sometimes filled with yellow tomentum) occupying the whole region of the posterior angle. Thorax very dark blue [some- times inclined to purple, and sometimes tinted with green at the margins], shining on the disk, sparingly but very strongly punctured, scarcely constricted before the anterior angles; the medial impression narrowed anteriorly, green [or golden) in the middle. Elytra very dark blue, with strongly impressed dorsal strie; the apex suddenly narrowed and compressed; the apical impression brown and filled with yellow pubescence ; each elytron has the following brassy, frosted im- pressions :—one on the margin below the shoulder, extending towards, but not reaching the suture; an irregular, somewhat broken one about the middle, nearly reaching the suture, but not the margin; a third one some distance from the apex, extending from the margin to near the suture; besides these, there are several small golden spots. The under side of the insect is bright brassy, tinted with pale green, strongly punctured ; the sides of the prothorax are dull, pale green; the reflexed margins of the elytra are beautiful green 192 Mr. Chas. O. Waterhouse on the [sometimes blue, or inclined ‘to blue posteriorly]; the prosternal process has a few strong punctures, [sometimes with a slight medial impression]; the apical segment of the abdomen is entirely smooth, blue-green. Legs green. Length 10—11} lines. Hab.—Madagascar (Crossley) ; Fianarantsoa (Cowan). The remarks in brackets refer to the specimens from Fianarantsoa. Coccinellopsis bistrigata, n. sp. Allied to P. solea, Klug, but smaller, with a more distinctly defined oblique impressed line on each side of the thorax; the prosternum with a medial longitudinal impression, &c. Thorax subparallel at the sides, suddenly narrowed (or perhaps rather constricted) in front, rather sparingly but strongly punctured; with the medial impression well marked and entire; there is an oblique, rather deeply impressed brassy line extending from the anterior angle to within a short distance of the medial channel; there is also a small impression within each posterior angle. The dorsal striz of the elytra are very strong, and the first two or three interstices convex; each elytron has the following impressions :—one at the extreme base; one on the margin below the shoulder ; one a little behind the middle; and two between this and the apex; these last two rather more approximate than the others, but not running together, as is nearly the case in P. solea; there are also four or five small impressions on the 8rd interstice, and some very small dots on the sutural one; the apex is somewhat compressed, frosted, and pubescent, as in solea. The colour above, in one specimen, is obscure purple, the other specimens are black; the impressions are slightly brassy, and filled with white pubescence. The under side of the insect is coppery, more obscure and partly brassy at the sides, strongly punctured; the apical segment of the abdomen is smooth, except a narrow basal margin. The under marein of the elytra is dark blue. The legs are brassy. Length 8—9 lines. Hab. Antananarivo (Kingdon). Coccinellopsis terminalis, n. sp. Allied to P. auromcta, Lap. & Gory, but with the general coloration of P. complanata. Brassy, the thorax Buprestide from Madagascar. 193 above and the under side of the insect in parts tinted with «neous, the raised interstices of the elytra more brown. Thorax as in auwropicta, but a little narrower, rather straight at the sides posteriorly, obliquely narrowed in front of the middle; the surface is uneven, moderately and thickly punctured, with a shallow medial impression, and an obscure oblique impressed line on each side in front. The elytra have numerous small round, brassy, frosted spots in lines on the alternate interstices, similar to those in auropicta; and there is a large quadrangular frosted space on the margin, some distance from the shoulder, and a similar smaller one some way from the apex; the spaces are not round, as in auropicta, and, not being on a black ground, they do not show so distinctly as in awropicta; the apex is brown and fringed with yellow hair, the external angle distinctly dentiform. The prosternal process is purple in the middle, and has a medial impressed line, sparingly but strongly punctured. The abdomen has the middle of the intercoxal process and the irregular smooth spaces at the sides of the segments, purple; the apical segment is as if divided into three equal parts by two straight lines, which meet in the middle of the base of the segment, and diverge posteriorly; the middle portion is smooth, shining purple; the lateral portions are thickly punctured, brassy, and pubescent. The under margin of the elytra is dull «neous. Length 113 lines. Hab.—Madagascar. Coccinellopsis auropicta, Lap. & Gory. This well-known species in its typical form is rather dull, dark brassy below, with strongly sculptured elytra, with their apex gently prolonged. C. quadrispilota, L. & G., 1 am unable to distinguish from it. Of both these, there are in this Museum specimens compared with the original types by Mr. Edw. Saunders. C. Schenherri, Chev., of which the type is in this Museum, is scarcely distinct; it has the same dark brassy coloration below, but the elytra are scarcely as much produced at the apex and the striw are more obsolete towards the margin. C!. mystica, Thomson, is like Schwenherri above, but is more brilliant and green below. One of the Museum 194 Mr. Chas. O. Waterhouse on the specimens, however, from Fianarantsoa, approaches Schenherri, even in the colour below. Mr. Thomson, at the end of his description of C. mystica, says :—‘‘ Espece tres originale et tres facile a reconnaitre. Elle est voisine de la C. awropicta, Gory.” Is this intended as a joke? for with a large series of specimens it is difficult to know where to draw the line between the two, especially as C. Schanherri is inter- mediate. Pycnobothris subsilphoides, Thomson. This species differs from Coccinellopsis mystica, Th., in being narrower in form, the elytra not being at all expanded at the sides, and by the black-blue colour of the under side. Pycnobothris compacta, n. sp. Closely resembles P. subsilphoides, Th., and is of the same form and size. It differs in beimg more or less tinted above with eneous, in having the elytra more roughly punctured, with the lines of punctures more distinct at the sides. It is the same dark blackish blue below, but the smooth space on the apical segment of the abdomen is more round; this space is shining bronze. Length 84—10 lines. A single specimen, an obscure blackish brown variety, only measures 7 lines. Hab.—Antananarivo (Kingdon & Toy). P. ruficauda, Th., is a more elongate species than P. compacta, brighter in colour above ; is beautiful purple below, at least in part; and has the elytra less rugose, and more regularly striate-punctate. Hab.—Fianarantsoa (Cowan). Pycnobothris obscurella, Th. This species somewhat resembles P. ruficauda, Th., but it is very dark brownish black, faintly tinted with geneous, with more rugosely punctured thorax; more strongly sculptured elytra, which are acuminate at the apex and not truncated, and they are rather broader just before the posterior white spots than at their base. The anal plate is shining dark olive, a little elongate, narrowed towards the base, with a fringe of golden Buprestide from Madagascar. 195 pubescence round it, which is broad at its base and sides, but very narrow round the apex; the space on each side of this is finely punctured and brassy. The under flanks of the prothorax are dull swneous, with numerous large, deep punctures. The prosternal process is sometimes channelled in the middle, sometimes nearly flat, and one example in this Museum has it slightly convex. This difference does not appear to be either sexual or specific. Some specimens have a few punctures in the middle of the process. Length 83—11 lines. Hab.—Antananarivo (Kingdon). Pycnobothris truncatella, n. sp. Closely resembles P. obscurella, Th., in form and appearance. Obscure coppery brown, with thickly and strongly punctured thorax, and closely and strongly punctate-striate elytra. It is, however, at once distin- euished by the elytra being a little truncate at their apex, the outer angle of the truncature slightly dentiform, and by the large lateral spots being round. The under side is almost entirely of an obscure coppery purple in the only example which I have seen. The anal segment resembles that in obscurella. Length 9 lines. Hab.—Antananarivo (Kingdon). Pycnobothris cuprifera, Lap. & Gory. This species is scarcely distinguishable above from P. obscurella, Th., but it appears always to want the very small brassy spot on the margin of the elytra, just before the apex, which exists in obscurella. Below it is easily separated by the apical segment of the abdomen ; this has the anal plate very small, round (or slightly oval), surrounded by a ring of yellow pubescence, which is sunk below the surface of the plate itself; the margin beyond this is impunctate, shining, deep purple, raised, and somewhat thickened ; the penultimate seement has its apical margin smooth. ‘The prosternal process is moderately thickly punctured in the middle, longi- tudinally impressed in the middle. The under flanks of the prothorax are brassy and irregularly, and more finely punctured than in P. obscurella. Length 9—11 lines. . Hab.—Fianarantsoa (Cowan). TRANS. ENT. Soc. 1880.—PART Iv. (DEC.) S 196 Buprestide from Madagascar. Note:—In a series named by M. Thomson for Mr. Janson, one of the specimens named P. obscurella is P. cuprifera, and is from Fianarantsoa. It is only from the locality for obscurella being given as Antananarivo by M. Thomson that I am able to determine which is the true obscurella. My authority for P. cuprifera is a specimen so named from La Ferteé’s collection, which agrees with Laporte and Gory’s description, but as they do not describe the anal plate the determination is not satisfactory. Pycnobothris crassa, n. sp. Very near P. obscurella, Th., but shorter and broader, with more coarsely punctured elytra, and with brighter colour below. Thorax scarcely narrower than the elytra, closely and very coarsely punctured ; brownish coppery, generally with a little eneous and brassy intermixed. Klytra gradually becoming a little wider from the shoulders to about two-thirds their length, then obliquely acuminate, simple at the apex; dark brown tinted with obscure purple, very strongly and closely punctate-striate ; with two round spots, filled with pale yellow pubescence, on the margin of each elytron. ‘The under side is shining green {sometimes tinted with coppery|, with the sides of the body and margin of the elytra brownish ; the apex of the femora, some spaces on the abdomen, and the anal plate are blue. The anal plate is round, or nearly so, relatively larger than in P. cuprifera, surrounded by a lightly impressed finely pubescent line; the apical margin is somewhat raised and a little - thickened, coppery or purple, obscurely punctured. The prosternal process is longitudinally impressed in the middle, and has numerous strong punctures. Length 6—8 lines. Hab.—Antananarivo (Kingdon and Toy). GA LOR, y) XV. Observations upon certain species of the Lepi- dopterous genus Terias, with descriptions of Jutherto unnamed forms from Japan. By Arruur G. Burner, F'.L.8., F.Z.8., &e. (Read October 6th, 1880.) (Puate VI.) Tue difficulty of discriminating between the species of the genus Trias has long been admitted by lepidopterists, and many of them have attempted to evade it by regarding the species of this group as extremely liable to variation. Now, although it cannot be positively proved that the multitudinous similar forms in this genus are constant to their characters, the examination of a long series of individuals from one locality seems to indicate that hybridization, rather than extreme variation, is the factor which produces the apparent gradations from one type to another. In the group of species allied to 7’. hecabe there are no two more distinct forms than the heavily-bordered type and the species named by M. De L’Orza 7. mandarina ; and it is noteworthy that in the first the female is extremely scarce; in 7’. mandarina this sex is commoner than the male; in colouring also the 7’. hecabe type reminds one of the genus Colias, but 7’. mandarina is far more like Gonepteryx ; yet, with a series of 154 specimens of this section of the genus from Nikko, I have been able to arrange a perfect gradational series of scarcely differing forms from the most heavily-bordered of the Japanese representative of J’. hecabe to the palest T. mandarina in which the border has practically dis- appeared. Superficially, therefore, it would seem that these apparently very distinct species were wholly untenable, and that the 7’. anemone of Felder, which stands half- way between their extreme variations, was only one of the gradations which proved them to be identical: this view of the case would commend itself to almost any entomologist who examined merely a selected series of specimens ; but when one carefully compares upwards of TRANS. ENT. SOC. 1880.—PART IV. (DEC.) 198 Mr. A. G. Butler’s observations upon certain 150 specimens, and discovers that the absence of six of them, referable to only two gradations, would at once leave the three species as sharply defined as any in the genus, it naturally occurs to him to examine those six specimens more minutely, and see whether they do not exhibit differences inter se which point rather to hybridi- zation than variation for their origin ; such I have found to be the case, and, therefore, in the absence of positive evidence of identity founded upon careful breeding, I do not hesitate to regard the 7’. hecabe group, as represented in Japan by three species. That the species of Terias are not necessarily subject to great variation is evidenced by an examination of series of the two other Japanese species, T’. betheseba and 7’. jegeri; of the first of these I have examined twenty specimens from Nikko, which exhibit no variation whatever ; of the second species I have examined thirty- nine specimens, which only vary in the yellower or redder tint on the under surface of the secondaries. Descriptions of the Japanese forms of the T. hecabe group of Terias:— 1. Terias mariesti, sp.n. PI. vi. fig. 1. a. Male only differs from 7’. hecabe in its brilliant lemon-yellow instead of dark gamboge-yellow colouring. In this respect it shows no variation. The female is of a sulphur-yellow colour, and is extremely rare.* b. Rather larger than the type, the border of the secondaries of about half the width, and emitting short black spurs upon the veins. Fig. 2. c. The border of the primaries slightly narrower, especially near the external angle, the outer border of the secondaries inconstant, the “ander surface with the ordinary markings feebly indicated. Fig. 3. d. Like the type form (a) excepting that the black border of the primaries is of little more than half the ee at external angle; size very variable. Fig. 4. Similar to the pr eceding, . but with narrower border to ae secondaries. Fig. 5. jf. Similar to e, excepting that the border of the primaries is distinctly narrower towards the externalangle, and the border towards the costa not angulated. Fig. 6. * Only one female apne in the poltections ana none Bet r. anemone. Species of the Lepidopterous genus Terias. 1199 The form which follows this appears to be a hybrid between J’. mariesii and T’. anemone, and therefore may be provisionally named. Fig. 7. Terias hybrida.—The outer border of the primaries rather wider throughout than 7’. anemone, the inner margin exhibiting from eight to nine fairly regular sinua- tions, of which the two on the median interspaces are broader but scarcely less prominent than the others, the costal margin more or less bordered by a narrow black band; secondaries with the outer border varying from a narrow band to a series of dots; size variable. 2. Tertas anemone. Fig. 9. Terias Anemone, Felder, Wien. Ent. Monatschr. vi. p. 23 (1862). ; a. Resembles the preceding form, and therefore differs from Felder’s type in having a more or less pronounced black border to the secondaries; the border of the primaries is about as wide as in TJ’. hybrida, but the sinuation of its inner edge is only strongly defined upon the median interspaces. Figs. 8, 10. | b.” Typical T’. anemone, with slightly narrower border to the primaries than in var. a, and dotted margin to the secondaries. Fig. 9. c. The costal margin of the primaries only slenderly black close to the apical border, and the external border reduced to little more than a sinuated line towards the external angle; secondaries as in preceding form. Fig. 11. Terias connexiva.—The outer border almost as in var. cof T. anemone. but the apical portion with an inward angulation, as in the darkest forms of 7’. mandarina ; the length of the apical patch variable ; in one out of our three examples it is as short asin 7’. mandarina ; one of the specimens with the short apical patch has the oblique dash characteristic of 7’. mandarina on the under surface of the primaries; size variable. Fig. 12. I have little doubt that this is a hybrid between T. anemone and T’. mandarina. 3. Terias mandarina. Figs. 16 and 18. Terias mandarina, De L’Orza, Lep. Jap. p. 18 (1869). a. Very like the preceding form, but the outer border of the primaries giving place to black marginal dots 200 Species of the Lepidopterous genus T'erias. from below the third median branch, the apical portion distinctly angulated internally ; the under surface (as in T. mandarina generally) almost always with an oblique subapical brown dash on the primaries ; females com- moner than males. Fig. 13. b. Apical border of primaries much narrower, not angulated internally ; female rather darker than usual ; not common. Fig. 14. c. Apical border still narrower, not smuated towards the costal margin; female rare. Fig. 15. d. Typical T’. mandarina, the apical border greyish and interrupted in both sexes; the external border only represented by dots at the extremities of the veins ; female common. Fig. 16. e. No border at all, but the black marginal dots elongated upon the subcostal branches of the primaries so as to form little oblique costal dashes; female com- moner than the male. Fig. 17. I have thus shown that we now possess a complete cradation of slightly differmg forms linking the two most dissimilar types of the J’. hecabe section of the genus Terias, just as in the genus Huplwa we possess all the links between the very different-looking EH. dolosa and #. violetta, and in T'eracolus numerous links, of which more are always coming in, tending to unite the whole of the wonderfully dissimilar forms in that genus; in Panopea also and Neptis, with many other groups, the intermediates are constantly coming and making the discrimination of species more difficult, and the study of entomology more interesting; in a century from the present time, if collectors labour as assiduously as they have done of late, it will be impossible, I believe, for any entomologist to decide without rearmg it from the egg whether any form is a species, a hybrid, or a variety. So far as I have been able to judge, the 7’. hecabe and T. mandarina of China are constant; the intermediate T’.. anemone does not appear to come from that country, in which case hybridization cannot modify the typical forms. XVI. Synopsis of the British Heterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. By Epwarp Saunpers, F.L.S. [Read November 8rd, 1880.} (Plates VII. and VIII.) Ir is now about twenty-two years since the late Mr. F. Smith published his descriptive Catalogue of the British Fossorial Hymenoptera, &c., and since that time so many new species have been discovered, and so many alterations have been made in the synonymy of the species then known, that I thought the short treatise, which I now offer to the Society, giving the more modern views of the subject, might not be unacceptable. In it I have endeavoured to give brief and concise descriptions of each genus and species, accompanied by synoptical tables showing their differential characters in a few sentences. It is, however, often very difficult to find words which will express the distinctive characters tersely enough for the purposes of such tables, and I hope that, in any cases where the tabulated characters may appear in- sufficient, the actual descriptions will be consulted, where the differences are pointed out more fully. The book which has been of more assistance to me than any other in preparing this Synopsis is Thomson’s ‘Hymenoptera Scandinavie ;’ the aptitude of its author for discovering small structural characters, most of which are really important, although often difficult to find, is truly wonderful, and I have to thank him for many of the characters here employed. I have omitted a good many species given by F. Smith, which appear to me to have little or no claim to a place in our fauna. Some of these he has himself left out in his Catalogue, published by this Society in 1871. Altogether I have described 30 species of Heterogyna and 121 species of Fossores. fF. Smith, in his last Catalogue, gives 85 species of Heterogyna and 119 of Fossores; but then he places Mutilla, Myrmosa, and Methoca in the Heterogyna, which I have placed in the Fossores. His reason for doing this I have never been able to understand, as the Mutillide appear to me to have neither the structure nor the habits of the TRANS. ENT. soc, 1880,—PaRT IV. (DEC.) 202 Mr. E. Saunders’ Synopsis of British Heterogyna, and certainly, as far as we know, do not possess two forms of the female, as the name Heterogyna implies ; except in this case I have altered but very little the general arrangement of the families. I cannot conclude this without acknowledging how much I owe to the kindness and friendship of the late Mr. Smith ; he was always willing to give all the infor- mation that he possibly could, and never seemed to mind how often one troubled him. I[ must also thank Messrs. Bridgman, Cameron, Dale, V. Perkins, Billups, Service, and others for the kind manner in which they have lent me specimens, and helped me with observations, &c. I hope shortly to publish a similar Synopsis of our British Wasps and Bees. HYMENOPTERA. ACULEATA. Hairs simple, or in some cases twisted, but not branched or plumose xe .. Section 1. Hairs more or less heanehedit or plumnose, at tenet fess on the thorax at be , 3c So .. Section 2. I have been obliged to adopt the character of the hairs for my primary division, as I can find no other satisfactory structural character. Section I. (2) 1. Petiole of the abdomen with one or more scales or nodes; sexes consisting of g',?, and 8 .. Heterogyna. (1) 2. Petiole of the abdomen simple ; sexes consisting of g and 9 only. (4) 3. Wings not folded longitudinally... ate .. Fossores. (3) 4. Wings (at rest) folded longitudinally te .. Diploptera. HETEROGYNA. The form of the abdomen in the Heterogyna, or Ants, easily distinguishes them from any other family of the Hymenoptera. The 1st segment in the Formicide and Poneride and the Ist and 2nd in the Myrmicide are narrowed so as to form a distinct petiole, the single joint in the Formicide, &c., bearing a transverse upright scale, each of the two jomts in the Myrmicide form- ing a distinct elevated node. All the sexes in the Formicide are stingless, whereas the ? and % of Heterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 203 the Poneride and Myrmicide are aculeate. The pupx of Formica and Ponera are generally contained in silken cocoons; those of the Myrmicide are always naked. All the species possess three sexes, 3,2, and%. The g and ? have wings; the 3 is always apterous; the wings of the 2 are pulled off by the ¥ or cast, after impreg- nation. (4) 1. Petiole with a single transverse scale or node. (3) 2. Abdomen not constricted between the Ist and 2nd segments; ? and § without a sting .. Lormicide. (2) 3. Abdomen constricted between the Ist and 2nd segments; 9 and % with a sting Se .. Poneride. (1) 4. Petiole with two nodes 26 fe 5¢ .. Myrmicide. FORMICIDA. (4) 1. Petiole with an erect scale. (3) 2. g Ast joint of flagellum not thicker than the rest; @ and 9 with the Ist joint of the flagellum as long as or longer than the apical. . ie .. Formica. (2) 3. g Ist joint of flagellum much thicker than the rest; 9 and 3 with the peaBtiO of the Hagens shorter than the apical .. . Lasius. (1) 4. Petiole without an erect scale Ns ats .. Tapinoma. Formica, Linn. (Pl. VII. figs. 1 and 2). Syst. Nat. ed. x. vol. i. p. 579. Sand ? about equal in size; ¥%very variable in this respect, the ¥ major, as it has been called, being often more than half as large again as the ¥ minor. Pupe enclosed in silken cocoons; @ and 8 without stings. Maxillary palpi with six joints, labial with four. Antenne 18-jointed in the, 12-jomted in the? and%. Man- dibles generally somewhat slender in the ?, wide and triangular in the 9 and ¥, much narrowed at the base. Upper wings with one marginal, two submarginal, and one discoidal cells, the apical margin of the 2nd sub- marginal being the actual edge of the wing. Petiole with an erect, flattened scale, generally more or less triangular, widest above. The species of this genus are rather naturally divided into two sections by their habits, the first four making their nests above ground, the last three underground. Messrs. Emery and Forel consider the last three to be all races of one species. TRANS. ENT. Soc. 1880.—PaRT IV. (DEC.) T 204 Mr. E. Saunders’ Synopsis of British (2) 1. Head more or less emarginate posteriorly -. exsecta. (1) 2. Head not emarginate posteriorly. (4) 3. Clypeus emarginate ae oye ote .. sanguinea. (8) 4. Clypeus not emarginate. (8) 6. Frontal area polished.. (7) 6G. Eyes not hairy in 9 and 8, sparsely so in g, which has the body with only a few scattered hairs = ote aye) MUSA (6) 7. Eyes hairy in 9 a 3, densely soin g, which has the body covered with upright hairs .. congerens. (5) 8. Frontal area dull. ) 9. Abdomen shining, without a silky pubescence .. gagates. (9) 10. Abdomen with a silky pubescence. (12) 11. § body without metallic tinge; 9 body closely punctured; §% thorax more or less red -. cunicularia. (11) 12. § body with a metallic tinge; 9 body with scattered punctures; 9% thorax not reddish at all oe A 3: Se me .. fusca. rufa, Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. x. 1, p. 580, oe Fig. Smith Cat. Brit. Foss. Hym. pl. 1, Ho 2345, ae: 3 black-brown; legs and genital segments testa- ceous ; base of femora, tibie, and tarsi sometimes darker ; head, prothorax and mesothorax, and sides of metathor aX, dull; the rest more or less shining. Head and thorax covered with fine semi-erect hairs. Mandibles not toothed ; eyes with scattered hairs. Abdomen widest at the base, somewhat egg-shaped, surface very indistinctly and somewhat rugosely punctured, with a few hairs on the basal and apical segments. Wings clouded with brown at the base ; nerves brown. Length 10—12 mill. @ brown; head, with the exception of the vertex and a central stripe, prothorax, metathorax, and some- times sides of mesothorax, petiole, and extreme base of abdomen and legs testaccous-red. Head and thorax dull ; wings slightly clouded at the base; scutellum and abdo- men polished and shining. Eyes not hairy. Apical segment of the abdomen and the under side with some- what long hairs. Leneth 10 mill. % entirely dull, except the frontal area and parts of the mouth ; head widest behind the eyes ; not exca- vated or constricted posteriorly; red, with a brownish spot covering the vertex, and extending widely between the eyes to the insertion of the antenne ; clypeus not emarginate, with a dark central line ; antenne brown ; thorax with only a few scattered bristly hairs, red, more or less clouded on the pro- and mesothorax. Abdomen Heterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 205 brown-black, covered with a very short, fine, cinereous pubescence, and scattered over with occasional upright silvery hairs, especially on the basal segment; scale of the petiole red, more or less rounded above, and some- times slightly emarginate ; legs reddish. Length 6—10 mill. Hab.—Common in fir woods, &¢., generally forming its dome-like nest on the ground, but occasionally in the trunk of an old tree; the ¢ and ? appear about midsummer. In the nest of this ant is found oceca- sionally, another of our rarer species the Stenamma Westwoodvi ; on the Continent, Diplorhoptrum fugax, is also found with it. 2. congerens, Nyl. Act. Soc. Fenn. (1846), 2, p. 906. $ differs from rufa in having the eyes more densely and regularly hairy, the wings with pale yellowish nerves at the base, and less clouded ; the abdomen dull, and all the segments above with black bristly hairs. @ differs in having the eyes with very short, scat- tered, fine hairs, and the abdomen covered with a very fine short sericeous adpressed grey pubescence. Scutellum dull. % differs in having the thorax comparatively densely covered with hairs, and the eyes hairy. Hab.—Loch Rannoch and Bournemouth, and probably elsewhere, but overlooked. Forel and Emery consider this as only a race of rufa. 3. sanguinea, Ltr. Essai Fourmis France, p. 87. Resembling rufa, but ¥% and @ much brighter in colouring. $ differs in having the mandibles with three to five teeth, and the clypeus emarginate ; the thorax also has only a few isolated bristly hairs. Length 9 mill. ? differs in the brightness and extent of the red colour, the thorax sometimes being entirely red, and in having the clypeus emarginate, and the frontal area dull. Length 9—10 mill. ¥ differs much in the same respects as the female; the thorax is generally unspotted, and the legs bright clear testaceous-red ; the clypeus emarginate, and the frontal area dull. Some of the pale varietics of cuni- 206 Mr. E. Saunders’ Synopsis of British cularia resemble it closely in colour, and in the dull frontal area, but the simple clypeus will distinguish them at once. Length 5—9 mill. Hab. — Weybridge, Chobham, Hawley Hants, New Forest, &¢. Makes its nest generally in banks, and makes slaves of /’. fusca and cunicularia. The gf and @ appear about July. 4. exsecta, Nyl. Act. Soc. Fenn. 1846, 2, p. 909, Fig. Entom. Ann. 1865, frontisp. fig. 2. Similar in colour to rufa (see No. 1), but very distinet in form; the wide emargination of the head at the back, the smaller eyes placed farther from the posterior mar- gin, and the sides of the head behind the eyes converging to the posterior margin, easily distinguish it in all the sexes, besides the narrow, almost straight-sided and deeply-notched scale of the petiole, and the smaller size of thegand?. lLeneth 7—8 mill. Hab.—Bournemouth. The ¢ and 2 appear in July. This species forms a nest, heaped up after the style of that of rufa and congerens, but much smaller in diameter, and frequently on the open heath. 5. cunicularia, Ltr. Hist. Nat. Fourm. p. 151. Very like rufa in colouring; ¢ differs in being smaller, with clearer wings, in having the thorax without semi-erect hairs, and the frontal area dull; the legs clear testaceous. Length 383 lines. ? differs in having the metathorax generally brown, the abdomen dull, the legs clear testaceous, and the frontal area dull. Length 9 mill. % lke a small elongate rufa, and sometimes even brighter in colour, but generally more obscure. It may always be distinguished from that species by the dull frontal area, and from sanguinea by the entire clypeus. Length 7—8 mill. Hab.—Generally distributed and common in many localities. Makes its nest in the ground ; g and ? appear about August, Heterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 207 6. fusca, Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. x. 1, p. 580. Fig. Latr. Hist. Nat. Fourm. pl. vi. fig. 32. $ dark black-brown, shining, with a somewhat bronzy tint. Scape of the antenne of the same colour as the head; frontal area dull, legs and genital segments testaceous-red. Length 8 mill. @ dark brown, polished, with a bronzy tint, only the legs and scape of the antenne dull brownish red; head and thorax with a few erect hairs. Abdomen remotely and very shallowly punctured, bearing a few scattered bristly hairs. Length 8 mill. % dark brown, with a bronzy tint, covered with an exceedingly fine sericeous pubescence, which gives it a sheeny appearance; legs and antenne slightly paler. Abdomen with a few short, pale, bristly hairs near the apex of each segment. Length 5—8 mill. Hab.—Very common; makes its nest in the ground. Very closely allied to cunicularia, and I have little doubt that Emery and Forel are right in considering them as merely races of the same species; there seems to be no structural character to distinguish one from the other, and their habits are very similar; still they generally differ considerably in colour, but occasionally a ¥% is found which it would be almost impossible to refer to one or the other with any certainty. 7. gagates, Ltr. Essai Fourm. France, p. 36. I have a single ¥ which belongs to this form. Its bright shining, glabrous body, scattered over with brownish bristly hairs, separates it from fusca. Length 7 mill. Hab.—Bournemouth. Smith gives this as a new species to England in Ent. Annual for 1866, but has omitted it from his Catalogue. Emery and Forel consider it as another race of fusca. Lastus, Fab. Syst. Piez. p. 415. Formica pars, Smith. Differs from Formica in having the ¢ much smaller than the ? , and in the shape of the antenne (see table of genera, anted). 208 Mr. E. Saunders’ Synopsis of British ) 1. Deep black; 9 and 8 very shining aie .. fuliginosa. ) 2. Brownish; 9 and 8 not very shining. ) 8. Tibiee with erect prominent hairs. ) 4, g with the mandibles with one tvoth, wings clear; Q? head not so wide as thorax, wings clear; 3 dark brown .. 50 a AO a0 -. niger. (4) 5. g with the mandibles 5-toothed, wings dusky at the base; 9 head wider than the thorax, wings dusky at the base; 3 pale yellow .. umbratus. (3) 6. Tibia without prominent hairs. (8) 7. g and 9 with the wings more or less clouded; ¢ forehead not channelled; 3 pale yellow .. flavus. (7) 8. f and ¢@ wings quite clear; g forehead chan- nelled; 8 brown .. 3 ay ae .. alienus. 1. fuliginosus, Ltr. Ess. Fourm. France, p. 36. Fig. Hist. Nat. Fourm. pl. v. fig. 27. Jet-black, shining; head widely excavated behind. g about the same size as the 8; thorax and abdomen with a few scattered hairs; flagellum of an- tenn and the tarsi testaceous ; wings dusky at the base. Length 4—5 mill. 2? and 8 like thes, but rather more shining ; the seg- ments of the abdomen above with an apical fringe of fine short hairs, set at some distance from each other ; extreme apex of the body, tarsi, and sometimes tibie, more or less testaceous. Length, ? 6 mill., ¥3—5 mill. Hab.—Generally distributed; in old trees, &e. Very distinct from any other species. g and? are found in June and July. 2. niger, Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. x. 1, p. 580. g fuscous, legs and flagellum of antenne rather paler, entire insect covered with a fine, adpressed, grey pubescence, and with scattered, fine, erect hairs ; head slightly narrower than the thorax, deeply sulcate in front ; mesothorax, looked at sideways, much raised and rounded in front, flat on the disk; wings hyaline ; scutellum large, somewhat raised, and nearly square ; scale of the petiole somewhat truncate above, and largely, but very slightly, emarginate ; abdomen somewhat egg- shaped ; scape of the antenne and tibiz with fine erect hairs. Length 3—5 mill. é much larger than the?, similar in colour, but with the mandibles, legs, and scape of antenne pale testaceous-brown ; head much narrower than the thorax ; Heterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 209 wings large and hyaline, their nervures pale ; abdomen very large and oval, densely covered with a fine silky pubescence, and with short, semi-erect, brownish hairs ; scape of the antenne and tibie with fine erect hairs. Length 8—10 mill. S generally rather smaller than the ¢, and like like the 2 in colour and pubescence, but the head larger and much wider than the thorax; abdomen only slightly larger than the head; scape of the antenne and tibie with fine erect hairs; extreme apex of the antennz pale in all the sexes. Length 2—5 mill. Hab.—Very abundant everywhere. 3. alienus, Forst. Hym. Stud. i. Heft p. 36. Differing only from the preceding in having the scape of the antenne and tibie without the erect ‘hairs, and being generally rather paler and smaller; ? with the costal area infuscate. _Hab.—Not nearly so common as niger, but widely distributed. I have taken it at Chobham, Hayling Island, &e. umbratus, Nyl. Add. Adn. Form. Bor. Eur. p. 1048. = brunnea, Sm. Cat. Brit. Hym. p. 2. The ¢ of this species is easily distinguished from either of the above by the fia wider “head, which is wider than the thorax, by the mandibles being armed with five teeth, and by the dark smoky base to the wings. The flagellum of the antenne and the tibie and tarsi are also paler. Length 8—5 mill. The ¢ differs from the allied species in its brighter brown, almost mahogany, colour, the large head, which is wider than the thorax, the much smaller abdomen, and the hght clear brown antenne and legs. Length 7 mill. The % is of a pale yellow colour, and _ therefore can only be confounded with L. flavus, from which the erect hairs of the tibie and the denser hairiness of the body generally distinguish it. Length 2—5 mill. Hab.—Generally distributed, and not uncommon. It occurs in the London district, and I have taken it at Chobham, Hayling Island, &e. 210 Mr. E. Saunders’ Synopsis of British 5. flavus, DeGeer. Ins. i1. 1089, 5, pl. xli. f. 24—28. $ differs from the preceding by the narrow head and the untoothed mandibles, and the tibiz without erect hairs; from niger and alienus it differs in having no distinct frontal channel, and the wings generally shghtly clouded at the base. ? differs from wmbratus in the smaller head, paler colour, and smaller size, and the want of erect hairs on the tibie; from mger and alienus in the dusky base to the wings, the brown colour extending to nearly their middle. ¥ pale yellow, Like umbratus, but generally smaller, and distinguished by the want of the erect hairs on the tibie and scape of the antenne. Hab.—Common everywhere. Taprnoma, Foerst. (Pl. VII. fig. 8). Hym. Stud. 1 Heft, p. 48. Differs from either of the preceding genera in wanting the upright scale to the petiole, which is represented by a flattened, somewhat oblong, node. (2) 1. Black or brown-black oc 56 ae .. erratica. (1) 2. Rufo-testaceous ; § only known St ote .. polita. 1. erratica, Latr. Essai Fourm. France, p. 24. At first sight like a very dark Laswus niger, but at once distinguishable by the want of the upright scale to the petiole. $ dark black-brown; eyes situated about midway be- tween the base of the head and the apex of the mandibles, vertex square, clypeus deeply emarginate ; antenne very long, three-quarters as longas the body, joints of the flagel- lum subequal; thorax rounded in front, disk flat ; wings hyaline, nervures pale; abdomen with a few scattered bristly hairs above, all the segments with a fringe of hairs beneath ; genitalia very large, of the same colour as the rest of the body; tibiz and tarsi pale, the former clouded in the middle. Length 5—6 mill. ? brown-black, with similar pubescence to that of the ¥; abdomen wider than in the male. Length 5—6 mill. % jet-black, covered with very fine adpressed grey hairs; the extreme base of the tibie and _ tarsi Heterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 211 paler. Very like ZL. niger in shape, but eyes much farther from the base of the head; clypeus deeply emareginate ; mandibles with long hairs on their surface ; no upright scale to the petiole; surface of the body above without upright hairs; abdomen beneath with long fine hairs on each segment. Length, 3—5 mill. Hab.—Common only in certain localities, and it seems to confine itself to sandy and dry heathy country. It has occurred at Bournemouth, Chobham, Weybridge, Guildford, Coombe Wood; also near Croydon, and in Scotland. 2. nitens, Mayr. Verh. Zool. Bot. Wien. ii. p. 143. = polita, Smith, fide Emery and Forel. “8 rufo-testaceous, smooth and shining ; head elon- gate, with a few scattered long hairs, and slightly emarginate behind ; the scape as long as the head; the flagellum about the same length, the two apical joints slightly thickened ; thorax narrow ed behind, and slightly strangulated between the meso- and metathorax, the latter emarzinate behind, with the lateral angles rounded ; seale decumbent, rounded above; abdomen ovate, sprinkled with a few long hairs.” Length 4 mill. ¥ only known. I have never seen Smith’s polita, so copy the descrip- tion from his book. Hab.—Wales ; one specimen. J.C. Dale, Esq. PONERIDA. Ponsra, Latr. (Pl. VII. fig. 4). Hist. Nat. Crust. et Ins. This genus is easily recognised by its elongate parallel- sided shape, and the thick large scale of the petiole, as well as by its short clavate antenne, which hardly reach to the apex of the metathorax in the %, and the constricted 1st segment of the abdomen; maxillary palpi 1- or 2-jointed, labial palpi 2-jointed ; wings with one radial cell, two submarginals, and one discoidal. (2) 1. Paler, puncturation distinct, especially on the head; maxillary palpi mas the 2nd terminating mal yay Oe -. contracta. (1) 2. Darker, puncturation so ine as 5 he flardly dis- tinguish able even under a somewhat strong lens ; maxillary palpi with only a single joint .. .. punctatissima. TRANS. ENT. Soc. 1880.—ParT Iv. (DEC.) U 212 Mr. E. Saunders’ Synopsis of British 1. contracta, Latr. Hist. Nat. Fourm. p. 195, pl. vii. fig. 40. 3 brown, somewhat shining; head dull, er punctured ; mandibles testaceous-red; thorax shining, rather remotely punctured; abdomen covered with somewhat decumbent pale hairs; apex of the abdomen paler, with a strong reflexed spine ; legs testaceous. @ and ¥% of a paler colour, but with the same strong punctuation ; the maxillary palpi of two joints, the second ending in a hair; abdomen covered with pale hairs ; eyes obsolete in the ¥ ; wings of the? asinthes. Length 83—4 mill. Hab.—Rare. Brighton; Merton, Dr. Power; Wey- bridge, Mr. Billups. I have never taken it myself. 2. punctatissima, Rog. Berl. Zeitsch. 1859, p. 246, pl. vii. fig. 7 (palpi). = tarda, Sm. Very like the above, but darker ; the punctuation of the head is much finer, so fine indeed as to be hardly discernible, and the pubescence of the abdomen adpressed, not mixed with semi-prominent hairs, as in contracta ; maxillary palpi 1-jointed. Length 8—4 mill. Hab.—Occasionally in houses; native ? MYRMICIDAL. (12) 1. Wings not very dark, or if dark not longly ciliated at the edges in ¢; Ist node of petiole much widened behind 9? and 3. (11) 2. Metathorax spinedin 9 and %; mesothorax with two impressed lines converging behind in the $ (4) 3. Last 3 joints of flagellum not nearly so long as its remainder in 9 and $%; apical nerve of sub- marginal cell in g\ and @ divided in two by a transverse nervure 55 ays -. Myrmica. (3) 4, Last 3 joints of flagellum as gag or nearly as long as its remainder in @ and S; apical nerve of submarginal cell in Ss not divided by a transverse neryure. (6) 5. 2nd node of petiole in 9 and 8 agined beneath ; 3 with clypeus keeled .. : . Stenamma. (5) 6. 2nd node in 9 and 8 simple; aly peus of oo not keeled. (10) 7%. Hairs of thorax simple in 9 and 8; antenne 10- or 13-jointed in @; if 13-jointed, then with Ist joint of petiole very long. (9) 8. Eyes very small, and head reticulated behind in @ and 8; g§ antennex 13-jointed a0 .. Asemorhoptrum. (8) 9. Eyes not very small, and head longitudinally striate behind; g§ antenne 10-jointed .. Tetramorium. Heterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 213 (7) 10. Hairs of thorax clubbed in ? and 8; antenne 12- or 13-jointed in @; Ist dome of petiole not elongate .. 36 .. Leptothoraz. (2) 11. Metathorax not spineats in 9 and 8; mesothorax in § without converging lines .. Ot .. Solenopsis. (1) 12. Wings very dark and ciliated in oi Ist node of petiole square in 8 and 9° -. Myrmecina. Myrmica. (PI. VII. figs. 5 and 6). Latreille, Gen. Crust. et Ins. iv. p. 181. The five forms that I have described of this genus bear a very close general resemblance to one another, and the latest authorities, Messrs. Emery and Forel, con- sider them as mere races of one species. I have no doubt they are right; but as a rule they are pretty easily dis- tinguishable, and I have therefore thought better to keep them distinct. The short apical joints to the flagellum, the last three of which are not nearly so long as its remaining joints in the ? and ¥ ,and the transverse nervure which divides the sub- marginal cell in the 3 and @, distinguish this genus from its allies. Labial palpi 4-jointed; maxillarypalpi 6-jointed. (6) 1. g with the basal joint of the antenne half as long as the flagellum, and also gradually curved near the base; @ and §% with the basal joint not somewhat angularly and sharply bent near the base. (3) 2. Frontal area longitudinally striated in all the sexes sulcinodis. (2) 3. Frontal area smooth and shining in all the sexes. (5) 4. g with long erect hairs on the tibiex; 9 with the metathoracic spines not longer than they are wide at the base; 8 with the spines scarcely longer than in the 9 and the ae between them smooth and shining : ae . levinodis. (4) 5. g with short, somewhat adpressed hairs on the tibie; 9 with metathoracic spines much longer than their basal width; $3 with long spines like the 9 and with the space between them rugose ruginodis. (1) 6. g with the basal joint of the antenne not } so long as the flagellum, or, if half as long as the Haeol: lum, then with it sharply bent near the base; and 8 with the basal jot sharply and angu- larly bent near the base. (8) 7. g basal joint of antennx very short, not longer than the first two or three joints of the flagellum ; @ and $ with the basal eh not puieoee at its bend . aC c . seabrinodis. (7) 8. gf basal fue of antennee half as Tong as te facet lum; sharply bent at the base; 9 and 8 with the angle of the basal joint spinosely lobate .. lobicornis. 214 My. E. Saunders’ Synopsis of British 1. ruginodis, Nyl. Adn. Mon. Form. Bor. Eur. p. 929, 2. $ dark brown, shining, surface with scattered, short, semi-erect hairs; mesothorax in front, meta- thorax, and abdomen polished and shining ; wings dusky at the base, the dusky colour extending as far as the radial cell; head, across the eyes, wider than the thorax, eyes very prominent, situated about midway between the base of the head and the apex of the mandibles, frontal area not suleate, vertex somewhat longitudinally rugose ; antenne with the scape curved towards the base, and thickened towards the apex, as long as the first six joints of the flagellum ; meso- thorax in front of the converging lines very shining and polished, behind them slightly uneven, with indications of longitudinal rugosities; metathorax with two very blunt spines, both nodes of the petiole smooth and shining; abdomen about the same width as the thorax, ega-shaped; legs with fine short semi-adpressed hairs. Length 6 mill. ? testaceous, covered with long pale hairs; head, with the exception of the mandibles, abdomen except at the apex, and a curved line running from the insertion of the wings, round the scutellum, generally darker ; wings more or less testaceous towards the base, nerves pale ; head and thorax deeply and longitudinally rugose, the latter rather smoother on the disk; head wider than the thorax, frontal area smooth and shining, scape of the antenne slightly and regularly curved at the base ; mesothorax rounded in front, moderately convex on the disk, as wide behind as in front ; metathorax with two strong, slightly curved spines, which are longer than they are wide at the base, space between them trans- versely rugose; nodes of the petiole rugose ; abdomen shortly oval, with a darker cloud towards the base; legs covered with short, somewhat adpressed hairs. Length 6—7 mill. % differs from the ? in the shape of the thorax, which is wider in front than behind, and constricted near the middle; it is also generally much more rugose, with the rugosities deep and longitudinal. The metathorax is as high as the mesothorax, and the spines project above its level. Length 5—6 mill. A common species in most localities, Feteroqyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 215 2. levinodis, Nyl. Adn..Mon. Form. Bor. Hur. p. 927. Extremely like the above, but differs in the male by being smaller, with the antenne much shorter, and the scape slightly shorter in comparison with the flagellum, and the legs covered with long erect hairs. In the @ by the metathoracic spines being much shorter and wider, each spine being wider at the base than itis long, and quite straight, the space between the spines being smooth and shining, not transversely rugose as in the preceding; the nodes of the petiole also are rather smoother. In the 8. much as in the ?, but having, besides, the thorax less deeply rugose, and the rugosities not longitudinal. Also a common species, but less generally distributed than the preceding. 3. sulcinodis, Nyl. Adn. Mon. Form. Bor. Eur. p. 931. $ differs from either of the preceding in being darker (nearly black) ; head not shining, with the frontal area longitudinally sulcate ; mesothorax in front dull, more or less tranversely wrinkled, rather deeply and longitudinally rugose behind the converging lines ; scutellum and base of the metathorax also rugose ; first node of the petiole dull and more or less rugose, second polished and shining ; abdomen and legs much as in the preceding. Length 6 mill. ? and may be known by their darker, redder brown colour, the head more deeply rugose, and reticulated behind the eyes at the sides, the scape of the antenne curved suddenly near the base, the frontal area suleate, the thorax and nodes of the petiole deeply, longitudinally, and rugosely sulcate. Length 6—7 mill. Hab.—Rare. Wales, Hampshire, Chobham. 4. scabrinodis, Nyl. Adn. Mon. Form. Bor. Eur. p. 9380. gat once known from any of the preceding by the short scape of the antenne, which is not longer than the first two or three joints of the flagellum, and by having the legs very densely covered with long erect hairs. @ and ¥ very like sulcinodis, but with the scape of the antenne thicker and rather shorter, distinctly geniculated near the base; it also appears to be flat- tened at the turn: this appearance is given by a sort 216 Mr. E.. Saunders’ Synopsis of British of angular dilatation on its upper side. The thorax and the nodes of the petiole are less rugose. The colour of the insect is testaceous, as in ruginodis and levinodis, from which the geniculated scape distinguish it at once. Wings in the 2? dusky to beyond the submarginal cell. Hab.—Very abundant almost everywhere. 5. lobicornis, Nyl. Adn. Mon. Form. Bor. Eur. p. 982, fic. Smith Brit. Foss. Hym. pl. i. fig. 12 (antenna). Like the other species of the genus in general appearance. 3 differs from scabrinodis in the long scape of the antenne, which is half as long as the flagellum, and from the other species in the scape being angularly bent at the base. ? and 8 are of the same dark colour as sulcinodis, but have the scape of the antenne geniculated as in scabrinodis, but not flattened at the bend, the bend bearing a distinct spine. Hab.—Rare. Chobham, South Shields, Whitley, Scot- land, &c. Stenamma, Westw. (Pl. VII. fig. 7). Intr. Class. Ins. vol. i. p. 226. This genus may be known from Myrmica by having only three joints to the labial palpi and four to the maxillary, and by the 8 and 2? only having eleven joints to the antenne. The smooth polished sur- face of the head and thorax and the spine under the second node of the petiole in the ? and 3, as well as the keeled clypeus of the g, will distinguish it from all its allies. 1. Westwoodu, Westw. Intr. Class. Ins. i. p. 226, pl. Ixxxvi. die, 1. $ brownish black ; antenne, mandibles, sides of pro- thorax, and legs pale, slightly hairy; head and thorax dull, and very finely rugose ; clypeus with a central keel ; abdomen smooth and shining ; wings milky white ; ante- rior wings with the marginal cell incomplete, and with one Submarginal and one discoidal cell. Length 5 mill. ? and ¥ testaceous, smooth, polished, and shining, with short scattered hairs; antenne rather densely Feterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 217 clothed with short hairs, basal joint of the flagellum as long as the next three together; metathorax with two rather short, triangular spies, second node of the petiole beneath produced in front into a strong spine ; abdomen more or less brown across the middle ; wings ofgasing, but clearer. Length, 2? 5 mill., § 3—4 mill. Hab.—Nests of Fornica rufa. Weybridge, Guild- ford, &e. AsEMoRHOPTRUM, Mayr. Europ. Form. (Nachtrag.), after p. 75. This genus is very closely allied in general appearance to the following, but the ¢ may be known at once by its 13-jomted antenne ; the @ and 8 by their small eyes and 8- to 9-toothed mandibles. 1. hppula, Nyl. Add. Alt. Form: Bor. p. 4h. Fig. Smith, Brit. Foss. Hym. pl. i. fig. 18. & brown, the antenne and legs paler, sparsely clothed with long fine pale hairs ; head finely and longi- tudinally rugose; scape of the antenne as long as the first three joints of the flagellum ; wings ciliated, some- what opaque, nervures very pale; metathorax nearly smooth, with a tooth on each side at the apex ; abdomen smooth and shining ; first joint of the petiole very long ; apex of the abdomen densely covered with somewhat curled whitish hairs. Length 4 mill. ? and 8 reddish brown, mandibles, antenne, and legs rather paler; head rather elongate and narrow, finely reticulated; thorax irregularly, longitudinally rugose ; metathorax with two short spines ; first joint of the petiole elongate, with a rather small apical node, second node of the petiole nearly round, a little longer than wide, first segment of abdomen beyond the petiole, very long, at least three times as long as the remainder. Length, ? 5—6 mill., ¥ 3 mill. Hab.—Rare. Plymouth, London district, Chobham, Tunbridge Wells, Norwich, &c. Trrramorium, Mayr. Form. Austr. p. 151. Differs from Myrmica, &c., as shown in the table of genera. 218 Mr. E. Saunders’ Synopsis of British Antenne 10-jointed inthe ¢ 12-jointed in ? and ¥%; labial palpi 3-jointed ; maxillary palpi 6-jomted ; front wings with one marginal, one submarginal, and one discoidal cell ; metathorax with two spines in the 2 and 8 ; merely truncate and angulated in thes; 2 nearly twice the size of the ¥ , and considerably larger than the 3. 1. cespitum, Linn. Syst. Ent. ed. x. vol. i. p. 581. 3 brown-black, shining; head much narrower than thorax ; antenne and legs paler ; head finely and longi- tudinally rugose on the vertex ; thorax shining, clothed with scattered hairs; nodes of the petiole short, the second widely transverse, both more or less hairy above ; abdomen polished and shining, with a few scattered pale hairs; wings milky white, nervures pale. Length 6—7 mill. ? larger than the ¢; head as wide as thorax, or nearly so; mesothorax irregularly punctured ; apex of the metathorax emarginate and spined at each side ; abdomen oval, shining and polished, with pale scattered hairs; wingsasintheg. Length 7—8 mill. % dark brown; thorax, sides of head, antenna, mandibles, and legs somewhat paler. Head large and quadrate, decidedly wider than the thorax, longitudinally striate ; thorax longitudinally striate, much widest in front; metathorax with two sharp spines. Nodes of the petiole much elevated, smooth ; first, looked at sideways, almost as high as long; looked at from above, not quite so wide as long; second, looked at sideways, nearly round; looked at from above, transverse. Abdomen shining and polished. Entire insect clothed with scat- tered long hairs. Length 2—4 mill. Hab.—Sandy localities ; often very abundant. LeptotHorax, Mayr. Form. Austr. p. 159. This genus consists of three species only in England, which have the peculiarity of having their hairs clavate in the @ and ¥, a character easily seen with a strong lens. The ¢ is small, scarcely larger than the 3; the ¢ is also small, with 11- or 18-jointed antenne ; the frontal area not clearly defined. Labial palpi 3-jomted ; maxillary palpi 5-jointed. Heterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 219 (2) 1. S antenne 12-jointed; 9 and 8 l1l-jointed .. acervorwm. (1) 2. § antenne 18-jointed; 9 and 8 12-jointed. (4) 3. g thorax in front of the converging lines very finely rugose: club of the antenne in 9 and % dark .. ie Me 20 ere ae .. wnifasciatus. (3) 4. g thorax in front of the converging lines smooth and polished ; club of the antennw in ? and 3 pale .. 50 on ois 3¢ a .. Nylandert. 1. acervorum, Fab. Ent. Syst. 11. p. 358. $ black; mandibles and legs brown, joints and tarsi paler ; clothed with long whitish hairs, especially on the dull, rugose head ; mandibles not toothed ; antenne 12-jointed, scape very short and thick, about as long as the second joint of the flagellum, which is much longer than the first; thorax irregularly rugose posteriorly ; metathorax tuberculated at the sides behind; nodes of the petiole smooth and shining; abdomen shining and smooth; wings very thin, milky white. Length 5 mill. ? brownish red; head, thorax, and abdomen above, nearly black; mandibles, scape, and lees paler; an- tenn 11-jointed, head finely and longitudinally rugose ; thorax and nodes of the petiole also rugose ; metathorax with two stout, rather blunt spines; abdomen shining, with scattered white hairs; legs with prominent hairs. Leneth 4—5 mill. % testaceous-red ; head, apex of antenne, and abdo- men nearly black; thorax sometimes with a more or less extended dark patch on the disc. Entire insect clothed with scattered short, upright, pale hairs; head and thorax rugose; antenne 12-joited; metathorax with two short, rather blunt spines; first jomt of the petiole nearly quadrangular looked at from above, from a side view much raised posteriorly ; both joints more or less rugose ; abdomen smooth and shining. Length 4 mill. Hab.—Under bark, &e.; chiefly a northern species. I have taken it, however, near Croydon, and it occurs, I believe, in other localities near London. 2. Nylanderi, Foerst. Hym. Stud. Form. p. 53. $ brown; the mandibles, antenne, and legs pale ; mandibles 4- or 5-toothed; scape of the antenne as long as the first three or four joints of the flagellum ; the first seven joints of the flagellum are of about equal TRANS. ENT. soc. 1880.—PaRT Iv. (DEC.) x 220 Mr. E. Saunders’ Synopsis of British lengths, the following four are thicker and longer, and the apical joint is almost longer than the two preceding together ; thorax in front of the converging lines smooth and shining, behind finely and longitudinally rugose ; metathorax finely rugose, and with two small tubercles ; abdomen shining, the nodes of the petiole smooth above. Length 2 mill. ? testaceous, club of the antenne of the same colour ; abdomen black-brown, with the base of the first segment widely, and of the following more or less narrowly, testaceous. Head and thorax longitudinally striate, clothed with scattered club-shaped hairs ; thorax as wide as the head ; wings slightly milky, nervures very pale ; metathorax with two sharp spines, very wide at the base; abdomen shining, clothed with scattered hairs. Length 5 mill. % differs from the ? only in having the thorax much narrower than the head and constricted in the middle, its surface rather more rugosely striate, and the spines of the metathorax rather longer, and in being smaller in size. Length 2 mill. Hab.—Not common. I have taken it by sweeping at Chobham and at Wimbledon, but only in solitary speci- mens. 1 have compiled the description of the ¢ from Mayr’s ‘ Formicina Austriaca.’ 3. unifasciata, Ltr. Ess. ?Hist. Nat. Fourm. Fr. p. 47. Very like the preceding, of which Messrs. Forel and Kmery consider it a race, putting them both together under the name tuberwm, Nyl. The g may be known from that sex of Nylanderi by having the thorax in front of the converging lines rugose ; the @ and 8% by having the apex of the antenne dark dark brown, and the black bands of the body narrower, often wanting, except on the basal segments. Hab.—Rare. Sherborne, Dorset, C. W. Dale; and Ventnor, Isle of Wight, taken by myself. SoLENopsis, West. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. 1840, t. vi. p. 86. Diplorhoptrum pars, Smith. This genus may be easily known from any other British one of this group. The ¢ has the mesothorax without Heterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 221 the impressed converging lines observable in all the others, and the ? and ¥ have the metathorax without spines or teeth; the species are very small, the ¥ a good deal smaller than the ¢ and ?. Labial palpi 2-jointed, maxillary palpi 2-jointed; ¢ antenne 12- jomted, 2? and 8 10-jointed, club 2-jointed; front wings with one marginal, one submarginal, and one discoidal cell. 1. fugaz, Ltr. Ess. ’Hist. Fourm. Fr. p.46. Fig. Smith Brit. Foss. Hym. pl. 1. fig. 15, 16. $ black, shining; mandibles, antenne, and legs brown; tarsi and inner margins of the mandibles testaceous. Entire insect covered with long pale hairs ; mandibles with three teeth; scape of the antenne short, about as long as the second joint of the flagellum, but thicker; the three apical joimts are longer than the others. Head and thorax finely rugose ; abdomen shining, nodes of the petiole finely rugose ; wings hyaline, nervures pale. Length 5 mill. ? brown-black, shining; mandibles, antenne, and legs paler. Entire insect hairy, like the ¢; man- dibles with four teeth; scape of the antenne reach- ing to the eye; the first joint of the flagellum is twice as long as wide, the seven following, shorter than wide, the ninth and tenth forming a decided club. Head and thorax punctured ; abdomen shining and punctured, nodes of the petiole somewhat rugose ; wings as in the 3. Length 6 mill. % pale yellow, shining, covered with long pale hairs; clypeus bidentate; mandibles with four teeth ; scape of the antenne not quite so long as the flagellum, but reaching almost tothe middle of the apical joint ; apical joint almost as long as all the other joints of the flagellum together, apical and penultimate joints forming the club. Head and thorax with scattered punctures ; metathorax rounded, without spines; abdomen with scattered punctures ; first joint of the petiole very wide behind and rounded, second slightly transverse; legs hairy. Length 2 mill. Hab.—Southend and Deal, F. Smith. The habits of this little species, according to Forel (Mitth. Schw. Entom. Gesellsch. vol. i. No. 3, 1869), are most interesting. It appears often or generally to live 229, Mr. E. Saunders’ Synopsis of British in the walls of the nests of other ants, so that the two species do not intermix, and, although living in such close proximity to one another, are bitter enemies, and fight ferociously if they meet. The channels cut out by S. fugax are so fine that they will only just admit the insect. The long account given by Forel, quoted above, is well worth reading. Monomorium Puaraonis, Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. x. Vol. 1. y : p. 580. = Diplorhoptrum domesticum, Sm. This genus and species can hardly be included amongst our indigenous Hymenoptera, yet it is unfortu- nately so common now in many houses that I cannot leave it out. It belongs to the same division as Solenopsis fugax, the $ having no converging lines on the mesothorax, and the ? and % no spines on the metathorax. Its elongate form and almost naked surface at once dis- tinguish it from fugax, as well as the short terminal joint to the antenne, which is not more than half as long as the rest of the flagellum. The ¢ also has 18-jointed antenne, and the ? and ¥ 12; the club composed of three joints. Common in some houses in London, Hastings, &e. “A native of tropical and subtropical countries through- out the entire world, living in houses.”’—Forel and Emery. Myrmecina, Curt. (Pl. VII. fig. 8.) Brit. Ent: vol. vi. tol. 226. $ antenne 18-jointed, 2 and ¥ 12-jomted; maxillary palpi 4-joimted, labial palpi 8-jointed ; mandibles small inthe ¢, with three teeth ; those of the @ and 8 with two strong teeth, and seven indistinct small ones ; wings very dark and hairy, and margins ciliated, with an ap- pendiculated marginal cell and one submarginal; meta- thorax spined in all the sexes, but very shortly so in the ¢; first node of the petiole nearly square in all the sexes, second somewhat rounded in front, truncate behind. 1. Latreille:, Curt. Brit. Ent. vi. fig. 265%. Smith Brit. Hoss. Hiym:. pl. a. figs9) oF: $ black-brown, covered with rather long hairs; an- tenne and legs somewhat paler. Head with the vertex Heterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 223 much rounded and elevated, the ocelli very prominent ; antenne with the scape very short, about as long as the two following joints; mesothorax irrecularly punctured and somewhat rugose behind, converging lines very deep and crenate ; metathorax crenate at the base, apex with two short spines; wings as in the description of the genus; abdomen shining and polished; nodes of the petiole irregularly rugose ; legs finely pilose. Length 4 mill. ? rather larger than the 3g, black-brown, with the clypeus, mandibles, antennz, legs, and the under side of the thorax and nodes of the petiole reddish tes- taceous. Head rugose, somewhat clathrately so at the sides ; scape of the antenne thick, and about as long as the nine following joints of flagellum; mesothorax smooth in front, longitudinally rugose behind; meta- thorax with two horizontal spines; abdomen shining, finely pilose, nodes of the petiole rugose, basal node nearly quadrangular; legs finely pilose. Length 4 mill. ¥ like the 2? but smaller, and with thorax more rugose. Length 3 mill. Hab.—Rare. Isle of Wight; London district ; Worthing. The following species have been admitted into our lists, but they only occur in greenhouses, or other places where there can be little or no doubt that they have been introduced from abroad :— Tetramorium guineense, F.— Kollari, Sm.— Green- houses, Exeter, &c. T’. simillimum, Sm.—Kew, &e. Pheidole megacephala, F.= levigata, Sm. — Green- houses, &c., Exeter, and house in the Borough. FOSSORKS. Of this tribe we have thirty-six genera in England, varying very much in structure and in the neuration of the wings. They have all short tongues, and the ? has no pollen-collecting apparatus; the first joint of the posterior tarsi also is not wider than the others, as it is in nearly all the Mellifere. Still, there are cases where it is not easy, at least for a beginner, to say whether the insect before him belongs to the Fossores 224 Mr. E. Saunders’ Synopsis of British or the Mellifere. In such cases I believe the structure of the hairs will prove an unfailing test, the plumose or branched hairs being a character of the Mellifere only. FOSSORES. Division I. — Prothorax considerably produced posteriorly, its hinder angles reaching to the tegule of the wings; ? some- times apterous. Division II.—Prothorax often consisting of little more than a narrow collar, its posterior angles lobately produced, but in no case extending to the tegule; 9 never apterous Drviston I. (4) 1. Eyes sometimes small, sometimes larger and reni- form, not touching the base of the mandibles. (3) 2. Eyes not reniform; 9 apterous aS ac .. Mutillide. (2) 3. Eyes reniform; 9 winged .. de sic .. Sapygide. (1) 4. Eyes large, touching the base of the mandibles. (6) 5. Intermediate tibia with one long spur; inter- mediate coxee remote of Bc .- Scoliide. (5) 6. Intermediate tibise with two ional spurs; inter- mediate cox contiguous .. ac a .. Pompilide. MUTILLIDAL. (2) 1. Intermediate coxe distant; 9 without ocelli .. Mutilla. (1) 2. Intermediate cox contiguous; 9 with ocelli. (4) 3. g with four submarginal cells; 9 rugose .. .» Myrmosa. (3) 4. g. with three submarginal cells; e smooth and shining- S.C gc a6 : 510 . Methoca. Morinua, Linn. (PI. VII. fig. 9). Syst. Nat. ed. x. vol. i. p. 582. This genus, with its strongly punctured and pubescent species, 1s not likely to be confounded with any but the genus immediately following, viz., Myrmosa, the ? of which, in general appearance, greatly resembles the ? of Mutilla ; the presence of ocelli in the Myrmosa ? will, however, immediately distinguish them. In both our British species the abdomen is banded with pale golden or silvery hairs; the head is small and round, the eyes not reaching the base of the mandibles. Wings of the 9 with three submarginal cells, the mar- ginal cell short and somewhat semicircular; tegule very large ; tibie of the ? denticulate; ¢ winged; 9 apterous. FHeterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 225 (2) 1. Large, 12—15 mill. long; abdomen in the § steel- blue, with silvery bands; basal eS in the Qw ithout a dorsal spot .. a0 c . Europea. (1) 2. Small, 5—8 mill. long; abdomen in nce te silvery bands; basal segment in g with a round dorsal spot .. He in ; ore .. rufipes. 1. Huropea, Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. x. vol. i. p. 588. Fig. Panz. Faun. Germ. 76—20¢, Donov. Brit. Ins. pl. 212. 3 head dark steel-blue, coarsely punctured; pro- thorax black; mesothorax red, deeply punctured, with the sides black; scutellum and _ post-scutellum red; metathorax rugose, black, sometimes with the base red ; wings fuscous ; abdomen hairy, steel-blue, deeply punc- tured, with a band of pale hairs on the Ist, 2nd, and 3rd segments, those of the 2nd and 8rd slightly inter- rupted. ? head black, rugosely punctured, covered with black hairs; thorax red, quadrangular, rugose; pro- thorax alone black, surface covered with bristly black hairs ; abdomen black, deeply and rugosely punctured, clothed with long bristly black hairs; 1st, 2nd, and 8rd seements with an apical band of golden hairs, that of the 2nd and 8rd interrupted in the middle, that of the 3rd extending almost to the base of the segment; legs densely hairy ; tibiz spinose. Length 12—15 mill. Hab.—Sandy lanes, Kent ; Darenth and Birch Woods ; Hampshire; &c. Often found in the nests of the species of Bombus. 2. rufipes, Latr. Act. Soc. Hist. Nat. 1. p. 9 (1792) = ephippium, Fab. Ent. Syst. u. p. 370, d (1798). Fig. Curtis Brit. Ent. ii. pl. [xxvii. Largely and deeply punctured, covered with long projecting hairs. $ with the head black and very rugosely punctured, with a deep longitudinal incision on the vertex; pro- thorax, mesothorax, and scutellum red, the first black in its centre; wings slightly dusky; metathorax black, shining, largely and clathrately rugose ; abdomen black, shining, largely punctured and clothed with silvery hairs, the 1st and 2nd segments with an apical band of silvery 226 Mr. E. Saunders’ Synopsis of British hairs; beneath with the 1st and apical segments largely punctured, the others punctured only near the apex; legs black. Female, head round, black, coarsely punctured; an- tenn and mandibles rufo-ferruginous, the former dusky towards the apex; thorax red, rugosely punctured, clothed with a short adpressed silvery pubescence and scattered black, projecting hairs; abdomen black, punctured, clothed with black adpressed hairs and with long scattered projecting pale hairs, basal segment with a round spot on the disk and a band at the apex silvery, 2nd segment entirely covered with silvery hairs ; legs red. Length 5—8 mill. Common in some localities. Weybridge, Southwold, Hayling Island, Plumstead Common, Charlton, near Greenwich, Deal, Southend, Sandown Bay, &e. Myrmosa, Latr. (Pl. VII. fig. 10). Hist. Nat. xii. p. 266. There is only one British species in this genus, which is well characterised. 9 entirely black; wings with four submarginal cells; segments of the abdomen shghtly constricted at the base. @ much the same shape as that of Mutilla, but with distinct ocelli, and the intermediate coxee contiguous. The surface in both sexes is rugosely punctured and hairy. 1. melanocephala, Fab. Ent. Syst. u. p. 372,92. Fig. Latr. Gen. Crust. et Ins. iv. pl. xiii. figs. 6 and 8. & black, rugose, covered with silvery grey hairs ; head quadrangular on the vertex, face rounded, broader than long; prothorax truncate in front, mesothorax meeting it in a semicircular line; metathorax bounded at the sides by a slightly-raised line, and channelled in the middle at the base ; wings slightly fuscous, with four submarginal cells ; 2nd to 6th abdominal segments con- stricted and depressed at the apex, the depressed portion smooth and shining, 7th segment sulcate, bifid at the apex, 2nd segment beneath with a small spine at the base. Length 6—10 mill. ? apterous, covered with short pale hairs; head black, rugosely punctured; antenne testaceous, dusky towards the apex ; thorax testaceous-red, rugose, slightly FHeterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 227 widest in front, sides almost straight ; abdomen rugosely punctured, black, with the basal segment, and the base of the second, laterally testaceous-red, each segment at the apex testaceous, with a fringe of pale shining hairs and a few scattered longer hairs on the surface; legs testaceous-red. Length 5—7 mill. Hab.—Not very common. Littlehampton, Weybridge, Chobham, Hastings, Hampshire, Isle of Wight, Lowestoft, Wakefield, &c. Male on flowers. Murnoca, Lair. (Pl. VIL. fig. 11). Hist. Nat. xii. p. 268. $ elongate, entirely black; antenne long, reaching to the second segment of the abdomen; wings with three submarginal cells, the first very elongate, and with a slight indication of a divisional nerve on its lower margin, radial cell almost reaching to the apex of the wing; apex of the last ventral segment produced into a strong upcurved spine. ? black and red; head large and round; thorax much constricted in the middle; wings wanting ; abdo- men somewhat egg-shaped, acute at the apex, very shining. The g might easily be mistaken in the net for a good-sized ichneumon. 1. ichneumonides, Latr. Hist. Nat. xii. p. 269,29. Fig. Lep. de St. Farg. Hym. pl. xxxvi. f.2,¢. Smith Brit. Foss. Lym: pl. nu. fig. 19": $ black, shining, covered with short greyish white hairs; head very hairy, strongly punctured, rounded posteriorly, clypeus elevated into a sort of angular spine ; antenne with the basal joimt very thick, flagellum eradually tapering to the apex; thorax strongly punc- tured, the puncturation of the mesothorax, &c., denser than that of the prothorax ; prothorax truncate in front, sides slightly curved, arcuately emarginate posteriorly ; mesothorax sharply truncate posteriorly ; scutellum very rugosely punctured, rounded posteriorly, and triangularly raised in the middle; metathorax rounded, gibbous, rugosely punctured; wings hyaline, with three sub- marginal cells, the third bounded by the apex of the wing ; abdomen elongate, 13 times as long as the thorax, TRANS. ENT. soc. 1880.—PaRT Iv. (DEC.) ve 228 Myr. E. Saunders’ Synopsis of British shining, with irregular scattered punctures, the 1st four seoments depressed and constricted at the apex, apical seement beneath bearing a strong upeurved spine ; legs with short erey hairs. Length 12 mill. ? apterous, covered with scattered short hairs, shining; head, except the mandibles, and abdomen black ; mandibles, thorax, legs, and antennz testaceous- red; antenne towards the apex, and front legs, more or less dusky ; head nearly twice as wide as the thorax, rounded behind, and convex on the vertex, largely and remotely punctured; mandibles falcate, very “pointed, with a single tooth on each before the apex, and with long white hairs on their surface ; ; prothorax convex, much rounded at the sides, emarginate at the base, wider than the mesothorax ; metathorax very globose ; abdomen petiolated, elongate, ovate, impunctate, tes- taceous at the apex; tibiz finely spinose; tarsi obscure at the apex. Length 6—9 mill. Hab.—In sandy places. Weybridge ; Chobham ; Black Gang Chine and ‘Sandown, Isle of Wight ; Hampstead ; : Southend; Lyme Regis; Bar nes Common; Dr. Power. 3 very rare; I took one at Chobham in July, 1880, by sweeping in the evening after 8 p.m. SAPYGIDA. Sapyea, Lair. (Pl. VII. fig. 12). Prec. Caract. gen. Ins. p. 134. Easily recognised by the long, somewhat clavate antenne ; the truncate thorax in front, and the smooth cylindrical abdomen, which is slightly widened towards the apex; wings with four submarginal cells. 2) 1, Antenne of g gradually thickened to the apex ; body in @ more or less red dc 3 .. d-punctata. (1) 2. Antenne of g\ with their two apical joints strongly incrassate; 9 without red on body ae .. elavicornis. 1. 5-punctata, Fab. Sp. Ins. p. 453. Fig. Panz. Faun. Germ. 100, 17, 3 Black, punctured; ¢ with the clypeus, two spots on the anterior margin of the prothorax, and a transverse spot on each side of the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and sometimes 5th, abdominal segments, and a spot at the base of the posterior tibie white; antenne beneath more or less Heterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 229 red. The number of spots on the abdomen is very variable. ? with a small white spot on each side of the pro- thorax, the abdomen having the 2nd and 3rd segments red, the 4th and 5th each with two lateral white spots, and the 6th with a white spot in the centre. Head and thorax dull, rugosely punctured, clothed with a fine short white pubescence ; prothorax sharply truncate in front ; wings sheghtly clouded; abdomen distinctly clavate in thed, somewhat oval in the ? , with the apical segment sharply pointed ; surface shining in the g, somewhat dull in the ? , rugosely punctured i in both sexes. Length 9—12 mill. Hab.—Common in many places. On palings, &c., Wandsworth and London district ; Norwich, Yorkshire, Devonshire, Kent, Hants, &c. 2. clavicornis, Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. x. vol. 1. p. 574 (Apis). Fig. Smith Brit. Foss. Hym. te i. fig. 6 Very like the preceding, but differing in the shape of the antenne of the g, which are longer, and have the two apical joints much thickened, forming a distinct club. The 2 may be kiiown at once by the colour of the abdomen, which wants the red band of 5-punctata. Hab.—Herefordshire, Nottingham, Birmingham, Wake- field, &c. I have never taken it my self. SCOLIIDAL. Trea, Fab. (PI. VII. fig. 13). Syst. Ent. p. 353. May be known at once by the very elongate thorax, sharply truncate at the anterior margin of the pr othorax and the posterior margin of the metathorax ; the latter is elongate and nearly square, with three raised dorsal lines ; wings with two submarginal cells ; tibie and tarsi hairy and multispinose. (2) 1. Larger, radial cell incomplete in 9; g with the Ist segment of the abdomen transversely cari- nated at the base .. ‘ : 5 . femorata. (1) 2. Smaller, radial cell douglas in ie Q; 3 Sith the 1st abdominal segment not carinated at the base .. aye te ne AE on .. minuta, 230 Mr. E. Saunders’ Synopsis of British 1. femorata, Fabr. Syst. Ent. p. 353. Fig. Panz. Faun. Germ. iii. 2. Black, shining, clothed with scattered, white, shining hairs; posterior and intermediate femora and tibie in the ¢ red. Head rugosely punctured ; prothorax slightly emarginate in front, its angles slightly produced, irregularly and remotely punctured anteriorly ; meso- thorax remotely punctured; wings slightly brownish in the ?, hyaline in the ¢, ? with the radial cell incomplete ; scutellum finely and remotely punctured, with a row of large punctures round its posterior margin; metathorax sharply truncate posteriorly, with three raised longitudinal lines down tho middle, sides longitudinally strigose ; abdomen punctured, 1st segment in the g with a distinct, raised, transverse line at the base ; tibiz and tarsi hairy and spinose. Length 8—12 mill. Common in many localities. Birch Wood ; Blackwater, Hants ; Windsor; Southend; Deal; Lowestoft; South- wold; &c. Often on Umbelliferous flowers, especially Daucus Carota. 2. minuta, V. d. Lind. Nouv. Mem. Acad. Brux. iv. p- 182. Fig. Curtis Brit. Ent. xiv. p. 664. Somewhat like the preceding, but much smaller ; entirely black in both sexes, and not so shining; the wings with the stigma much larger, and the radial cell in both sexes complete ; the ¢ without a raised transverse line at the base of the first abdominal segment. Length 6—7 mill. Hab.—Hampstead, Southgate, Colney Hatch, Chob- ham, Bristol, Glanvilles-Wootton, Braunton Burrows, N. Devon, &c. POMPILIDA. (4) 1. Front wings with two submarginal cells. (3) 2. Prothorax elongate ; wings received in the middle of the sides of the thorax ; mandibles 3-dentate Aporus. (2) 38. Prothorax transverse; wings received before the middle of the thorax ; mandibles 2-dentate .. Hvagethes. (1) 4. Three or four submarginal cells. (10) 5. Three submarginal cells. (7) 6. Vertex not punctured ate 50 20 -. Pompilus. Feterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera. 231 (6) 7. Vertex closely and rugosely punctured. (9) 8. @ body and legs entirely black ; g with the pos- terior tibize simple .. Agenia, (8) 9. g abdomen red at the eae. or with ithe legs more or less red; 9 with the posterior tibie outwardly serrate Be se 207 || . 286 . 244 3230 . 287 5 PML 7 212 exaltatus, F. fasciatellus, Shuck. fuscus, Sm. gibbus, L.. hyalinatus, F. melanarius, Bold. minutulus, Dhlb. niger, F. notatus, Ross. pectinipes, V. d. L. petiolatus, Shuck. plumbeus, F.. pulcher, Shuck. . punctum, F. rufipes, L.. sepicola, Sm. sericatus, Shuck. spissus, Schdte. trivialis, Dhlb. variegatus, L. viaticus, L. Wesmaeli, Th. Ponera contracta, Tite, punctatissima, Roq. . . 212 5 ila tarda, Ch.. Poneride . . 259 . 260 . 259 . 259 . 260 . 260 » 208 - 206 > Ue . 232 . 238 . 241 | Ee) . 209 . 244 . 237 236 238 212 Priocnemis ; affinis, V. d. Ty, C exaltatus, F. fuscus, L. . hyalinatus, F. notatus, Ross. obtusiventris, Schdte. parvulus, Dhlb. pusillus, Schdte. sepicola, Sm. Psen . ater, F. atratus, Pz. allipes, Pz. Sapyga : clavicornis, L. 5-punctata, L. Scoliidse : Solenopsis, West. fugax, Ltr. Sphegide . Spilomena troglodytes, Shuck. Stenamma : Westwoodi, Steph. Stigmus pendulus, Pz. Tachytes . pectinipes, L. pompiliformis, Sm. unicolor, Pz. Tapinoma erratica, Ltr. nitens, Mayr. polita, Sm. Tetramorium cespitum, L. Kollari, Mayr. lippulum, Nyl. . Tiphia : femorata, F. minuta, V. d. iG Trypoxylon attenuatum, Sm. clavicerum, St. F. figulus, L. , line 3 and line 7 ERRATA. from top, for mesopleurs read mesopleura. 303 . 239 . 241 . 241 . 240 . 243 242 242 . 243 . 242 . 240 . 263 . 263 » 264 . 264 . 228 . 229 . 228 . 229 220 . 221 . 247 . 253 . 254 . 216 . 216 . 254 . 254 . 249 . 249 . 249 . 250 . 210 . 210 5 PAUL . 211 . 217 . 218 . 216 . 229 . 230 . 230 - 277 . 278 278 . 278 Be 261, line 4 and line 5 from bottom, for mesopleurz read mesopleura. _" Ks) aI Or He So ( 304 ) EXPLANATION OF Puate VIII., Fie. 41. Giving nomenclature of nervures and cells. Costal cell. Externo-medial cell. Interno-medial cell. Anal cell. Marginal cell. Ist submarginal cell. 2nd * 3rd ie 4th e . Ist discoidal cell. . 2nd * . ord 3 . Ist apical cell. . 2nd 5 Costal nervure. Post-costal nervure. Externo-medial nervure. Anal nervure. Posterior margin. Stigma. Radial nervure. . Apical margin. . Externo-medial nervure (extension of c.) j. Transverse medial nervure. ke Discoidal nervure. l. External nerve of Ist submar- ginal cell. . External nerve of 2nd submar- ginal cell. . External nerve of 3rd submar- ginal cell. Cubital nervure. 1st recurrent nervure. 2nd oF Subdiscoidal cell. 305) XVII. On a Collection of Hemiptera from Japan. By Joun Scorv. [Read December Ist, 1880.] In my former paper published in the Ann. & Mag. of Nat. Hist., vol. xiv. (1874), I called attention, in the list given at the commencement, to certain species about whose names I was then uncertain. Since that time | have determined them, and below give the results. In addition to these I have also added a few more genera and species received by me from Mr. George Lewis, after the publication of the paper above referred to, and, having fully investigated them, I am able to add one new genus and a few new species. HEMIPTERA—HETEROPTERA.* Fam. Popopips. Scotinophora scutellata, n. sp. ny tarsalis, Scott. This insect has been renamed S. Scottit by Dr. Horvath in a Hungarian publication, as the name tarsalis had been used by 8. von Vollenhoven in his Faun. Ind. Néerl. i. p. 42, 3, pl. 3, f. 8 (1868), of which I was not aware until my attention was called to the fact. Fam. Asopipm. Asopus japonensis, N. sp. Fam. CypNipm. thus palliditarsus, nu. sp. Fam. Hatypip. Stollia guttigera, Thunb. Fam. PENTATOMID. Alcimus japonensis, n. sp. * The Homopterous portion will form a separate paper. TRANS. ENT. Soc. 1880.— PART IV. (DKC.) 306 Mr. John Scott on a Fam: PHYLLOCEPHALIDE. Tetroda listeroides, Fab. Fam. M&e@yMEenipa. Megymenus spinosus, Burm. This is the insect mentioned in my former paper about which I was in doubt. Fam. STENOCEPHALIDA. Paraplesius wnicolor, Scott. This insect must be removed from the Coreide, where it stands in my former paper, and placed in this family. Fam. Lyamipa. Pamera picta, Nn. sp. Fam. Pyrruocorip™. Physopelta cincticollis, Stal. Pyrrhocoris coriaceus, Scott. This insect is also described by Stal in his Enum. Hemip., part 5, p. 168 (1874) under the name of P. tibialis, and, being older than mine, must be substituted for it. Fam. Capsipm. Calocoris tricolor, n. sp. This is the genus Dereocoris of my former paper. Fam. TInGIpipm. Lepotdictya, Stal ? Ms Lewisi, n. sp. Fam. Harpacrorip&. Trantha armipes, Stal. Fam. Repuvip#. Acanthaspis cincticrus, Stal. Fam. Prratipm. Pirates cinctiventris, Horvath. Surthenea flavipes, Stal. Collection of Hemiptera from Japan. 307 Fam. Nasipa. Dacnister, nov. gen. * Jlavescens, 1. sp. Fam. GERRIDE. Gerris paludum, Fab. Family Poporipm. Genus ScotrnopHora, Stal. Scotinophora scutellata. Luteous, dull, somewhat thickly and regularly brown punctured. Pronotum, anterior angles produced into an almost equilateral angular tooth, lateral mar gins sloping almost evenly towards the posterior angles “and termi- nating in a stout tooth, disc with a small bone-white elevation at the inner angle of the callosities. Scutellum with a pitchy-black funnel- shaped patch extending from the base to about the centre, lateral margins slightly convex, basal angles with a small bone-white spot. Head black, thickly punctured. Face, central lobe viewed from the side slightly concave, shorter than the side lobes, which are somewhat reflexed, apex of the latter scarcely acute, with an almost square notch between them. Antenne piceous. Thorax.—Pronotum, anterior half dull black, punctured, with a distinct callosity on each side of the centre, at the inner angles of the posterior margin of which is a small bone-white elevation ; pos- terior half luteous, somewhat thickly and irregularly brown punctured. Scutellum luteous, slightly shining, irregularly brown punctured, with a large deeply-punce- tured funnel-shaped pitchy-black patch extending across the anterior margin and having its apex near the centre, adjoining the basal angles a small bone-white callus; apical and side margins narrowly purplish brown. Hlytra somewhat purplish brown, irregularly punctured. Legs black. Tithe clothed with short hairs having a white appearance in certain lights. 'arsi dull yellow, terminal joint above brownish. Claws dark brown. Length 23 lines barely. Easily separated from all the other species of the genus by the two bone-white elevations on the pronotum, and the pitchy-black funnel-shaped patch on the scu- tellum, bounded on each side at the base by a bone-white TRANS. ENT. soc. 1880.—pPaRtT IV. (DEC.) 21 308 Mr. John Scott on a callus. Probably, when in fine condition, the upper surface will be found to have a polinose appearance. I possess a single example only. Family Asoripa. Genus Asopus, Burm. Asopus japonensis. Scarlet. Head finely wrinkled transversely. Pronotwm posteriorly finely punctured, the punctures running transversely in short irregular rows, giving to the dise a slight rugose appearance ; “anterior mar ein with a narrow black collar terminating on each side in a line with the inner margin of the eyes; dise with a somewhat hatchet- shaped black patch. Scutellum black, except the apex and side margins, thickly but finely rugose-punctate. Elytra thickly and somewhat deeply punctured; clavus almost entirely, and a large nearly round spot on the corium, black. Membrane piceous, witha yellowish margin. Legs black, clothed with dark hairs which in certain lights appear of a red-brown colour. Tarsi beneath thickly clothed with yellowish hairs. Abdomen beneath with a large somewhat semioval black spot on the sides of each segment. /Zead scarlet, finely wrinkled transversely, side margins very much reflexed, rounded in front, and gradually widening until reaching the anterior inner margin of the eyes, where they contract; posterior margin narrowly blackish, with an indistinct longitudinal reddish line on each side near the ocelli. Antenne black, thickly clothed with very short hairs which in certain lights appear of a red-brown colour; 1st joint underneath, at the base, scarlet; apex narrowly white, apices of the 2—4 at the insertion of the joints white. Hyes reddish brown. — Thorax.—Pronotum scarlet, finely punctured posteriorly, the punctures running transversely in short irregular rows, giving to the dise a shght rugose appear ance; lateral margins very much reflexed, contracted near the middle; anterior margin with a narrow black collar terminating on each side in a line with the inner margin of the eyes; dise with a somewhat hatchet-shaped black patch, having a rather indistinct and irregular channel across the middle. Scutellum black, thickly but somewhat finely rugose-punctate, with a central keel springing from near the middle and terminating a little before the apex ; apex, a narrow line down the middle of Collection of Heniptera from Japan. 309 the central keel, and the side margins scarlet. Hlytra scarlet, thickly and somewhat deeply punctured ; lateral margins very much reflexed, and terminating a little way “before the apex. Clavus black; base, apex, inner margin, and suture scarlet. Coriwm, dise with a large almost round black spot having its lower mar on almost in a line with the apex of the scutellum. Membrane piceons, with a yellowish margin. Legs black, clothed with dark hairs which in certain lights appear of a red- brown colour. T'wrsi beneath thickly clothed with short yellowish hairs. Abdomen beneath scarlet on the sides, shghtly shading into yellowish towards the middle, on the side of each segment next the anterior margin a large somewhat semioval black spot; posterior margin of each seoment between the extremities of the spots very narrowly black. Length 8} lines. A fine species, which at first sight might be taken for a huge Lygeus of the familiaris type, and thus easily recognised. There were two specimens given to me by Mr. George Lewis, after the publication of my previous paper. Family Cypnipm. Genus Airnus, Dall. Aithus palliditarsus. Black, shining. Head on each side somewhat coarsely punctured. Antenne brownish. Pronotum with a row of minute punctures, running parallel with the anterior margin, sides, and a few rows running parallel with the posterior margin; disc and posterior margin shining. Scutelluom somewhat coarsely punctured, except a lunate patch at the base. Hlytra somewhat thickly punctured, the punctures becoming finer as they approach the apex. Membrane yellow. Legs pitchy-brown. Tarsi pale brownish yellow. Head black, shining, somewhat coarsely punztured on each side of the central lobe. Ocelli pale. Antenne brownish, apex of the joints brownish yellow. T'horax.—Pronotum black, shining, with a row of minute punctures a little within, and running parallel with, the anterior margin, and termi- nating nearly in a line with the inner margin of the eyes, where the punctures are slightly coarser and disposed irregularly ; lateral margins with a few pitchy-coloured 310 Mr. John Scott on a hairs; dise and posterior margin shining, the latter somewhat piceous, sides and a few irregular rows of punctures running parallel with the posterior margin. Scutellum somewhat coarsely but not densely punctured, except a lunate patch at the base. Hlytra somewhat thickly punctured, the punctures becoming finer as they approach the apex of the corium. Membrane yellow. Legs pitchy-brown. Tarsi pale brownish yellow. Ab- domen beneath dull black, thickly and finely punctured, at the apex with a few pitchy-coloured hairs. Length 14 line. Many of the species of this genus are so much alike that it is difficult to distinguish them by the most minute description; and I confess that, although I have described the insect under the above name, Iam in doubt, because Dr. Snellen van Vollenhoven, in his Faun. Ind. Néerl., lil., p. 17, 2 (1868), described a species under the name of 44. pallidicornis, which in many points agrees with the above. I wrote to him for the loan of an example, for comparison, but unfortunalely he died, and so I never received it. I have only a single example, but without note of locality. Family Pentaromipm. Genus Aucimus, Dall. Alcimus japonensis. Flavous, thickly black-punctured, the punctures run- ning in short, irregular, confused, frequently-curved strie. Head almost perpendicular; base of the central lobe, with a round unpunctured space, and a narrow, longitudinal stripe on either side, also unpunctured ; next the inner margin of each eye a somewhat reniform flavous patch. Antenne pitchy-brown. Pronotum, posterior angles reflexed and produced into a spine having an acute tooth a little way before the apex of the anterior margin. Scutellum with a flavous spot within each basal angle. Coriwm, nerves pale flavous. Membrane brown. Legs flavous. Thighs with pitchy-brown pune- tures, except the base and apex. T%bie brownish yellow. Tarsi piceous, 1st joint underneath thickly clothed with short pale yellowish hairs. Abdomen underneath flavous, sides faintly punctured, the punctures fading before reaching the middle, down which is a broadish pitchy- black streak ; genital segment pitchy-black. Head flavous, almost perpendicular, thickly black-punctured. Collection of Hemiptera from Japan. Sil Crown with a round unpunctured space at the base of the central lobe; next the inner margin of each eye a somewhat reniform flavous patch. Face with a narrow unpunctured stripe on each side of the central lobe. Antenne pitchy- brown. Thorax.—Pronotum flavous, thickly — black- punctured, the punctures running in short, irregular, confused, frequently-curved striz; lateral margins at the base with a pale flavous elongate, elevated patch ; posterior angles reflexed and produced into a spine having an acute tooth a little way before the apex of the anterior margin; surface between the tooth and the apex black, faintly channeled. Scutellum flavous, thickly black-punctured, the punctures runnine in _ short, irregular, confused, frequently-curved strive ; within the basal angles a meone spot. Hlytra.—Corium, nerves pale flavous, unpunctured; disc black-punctured, the strie running longitudinally. Membrane brown. Legs flavous. Thighs shehtly clothed with yellowish hairs and with pitchy-brown punctures; base, apex, and a narrow longitudinal streak on the under side unpunctured. Tibie flavous, with a brown tinge, with a few yellowish hairs. Tarst piceous; Ist joint underneath thickly clothed with short pale yellow hairs. Abdomen under- neath flavous, sides faintly punctured, the punctures fading before reaching the middle, down which is a broadish pitchy-black ‘streak ; on the sides of each seg- ment is a more or less distinct pitchy-black [L- shaped character; genital segment pitchy-black. Length 3h lines. Expansion across the spines 33 lines. Dr. Stal, in his Knumeratio Hemipterorum, part 5, p- 88 (1876), describes a species from Dekan under the name of A. coronatus, to which the insect just described bears a great resemblance; but the differences in the coloration of the antenne, the characters on the pro- notum, the differences in the expansion across the posterior angles of the latter, as compared with the length, will sufficiently enable anyone to separate them. I have only a single example, but have no note of locality. Family Lyemipm. Genus Pammra, Say. Pamera picta. Ochreous, slightly shining, thickly but finely brown- punctured. Head pitchy -black. Antenne yellowish ; 312 Mr. John Scott on a 1st joint projecting half its length in front of the head. Pronotum pitchy-black, deeply constricted beyond the middle, anterior portionsomewhat annular, unpunctured ; posterior portion punctured; hinder angles slghtly raised. Scutellum pitchy-black, punctured on each side of the central keel. Hlytra ochreous, finely brown- punctured. Cortwn with a whitish triangular patch near the inner margin in a line with the apex of the clavus. Membrane pale, with short brown streaks between the nerves. Thighs, 1st pair incrassated, toothed, black ; apex yellow; 2nd and 8rd yellow, black at the apex. Abdomen underneath pitchy-black. Head pitchy-black, not shining, about as long as wide across the eyes. Crown convex. Antenne yellowish, 1st joint projecting one-half its length in front of the head; 2nd and 8rd almost equal in length; 4th brown, nearly as long as the 1st and 2nd together. Thorax.—Pronotum pitchy-black, shghtly shining, with a narrow collar in front, deeply constricted beyond the middle; anterior portion some- what annular, unpunctured; posterior portion finely punctured; hinder angles’ shghtly raised. Sceutellum pitchy-black, punctured on each side of the central keel. Elytra ochreous, slightly shining, thickly but finely brown-punctured ; inner margin from below the apex of the scutellum very narrowly whitish yellow. Coriuwm ochreous, slightly shining, thickly but finely brown- punctured, with a whitish triangular patch near the inner margin, in a line with the apex of the clavus. Membrane pale, with short brown streaks between the nerves. Legs pale yellow. Thighs, 1st pair incrassated, toothed, black, apex pale yellow; 2nd pale yellow, narrowly black before the apex; 3rd pale yellow, broadly black at the apex. Tvbie pale yellow, 2nd and 8rd pairs very narrowly brown at the base. T'arsi pale yellow; 3rd jomt and claws brown. Abdomen underneath pitchy-black. Length 2 lines. I possess two specimens,—one labelled Japan, the other China,—which so very much resemble each other, that I am inclined to think they may be the same, although the Chinese one has a_ slightly narrower appearance, and the two hinder pairs of legs pale, Collection of Hemiptera from Japan. 313 Family Capsipm. Genus Canocoris, Fieb. Calocoris tricolor. Brownish yellow, sparingly clothed with fine, silky, appressed yellow hairs. Head reddish chestnut. Crown with a depression between the eyes divided by a short, central, longitudinal channel terminating before reaching the base. Pronotum dark chestnut-brown, finely wrinkled transversely trom the posterior margin to as far as the callosities, behind which is a depression. Scutellwm pitchy-brown. Elytra brownish yellow. Cuneus red. Legs reddish yellow. Tibie, 8rd pair red. Head reddish chestnut, darkest on the crown. Crown with a depression between the eyes divided by a short, central, longitudinal channel terminating before reaching the base. Antenne, Ist joint reddish yellow; 2nd pale yellowish, base narrowly reddish, apical half reddish, gradually becoming darker to the apex; 3rd reddish brown, broadly y ellowish, or yellowish white at the base; 4th aes brown, fees and apex yellowish or yellowish white. Hyes brown-pink. Thorax.—Pronotum dark chestnut-brown, finely wrinkled transversely from the posterior margin to as far as the callosities, behind which is a depression. Scutellum pitchy-brown. lytra brownish yellow, sparingly clothed with fine, silky, appressed yellow hairs, each hair set upon a very minute granule. Coriwm, nerves inclined to a reddish brown. Cuneus red, shading into brownish as it approaches the base; sparingly clothed with fine, silky, appressed yellow hairs, each hair set upon a very minute granule. Membrane with a brownish yellow hue: cell nerves brown or brown-red; below the apex of the cuneus is a pale narrow ‘triangular patch, and underneath it a dark one. Legs reddish yellow. Thighs of all the pais reddish yellow. Tilie, 1st pair pale yellow, base narrowly reddish; 2nd pale yellow, basal one-third reddish yellow, spimose hairs reddish; 8rd red, spinose hairs darker. Tarsi of all the pairs yellow, apex of the 8rd joint and claws reddish. Abdomen wanting. Length 33 lines. I do not possess, nor have I seen, any species with which I could make a comparison between it and the insect now described; but the characters on the antenne, the red cuneus, and tibiz of the 8rd pair of legs, should render it easy to be recognised. I referred to this insect 314 Mr. John Scott on a under the generic name of Dereocoris in my former paper. No locality is given with the insect in my possession. Family Trnerpipa. Genus Lreptopictya, Stal ’ Leptodictya Lewist. Pale ashy-grey. Antenne pale yellowish grey, apex of the terminal joint blackish. Hyes bright red. Pronotum side margins overlapped and produced into large bladder- like processes covered with meshes; hood somewhat large, covered with meshes. Hlytra gradually widening to the middle of the marginal nerve, from thence to before the apex concave, apex rounded; marginal nerve reflexed with three rows of meshes, the two inner rows small and somewhat uniform in size, the outer one large and irregular, except at the fuscous- black middle, where there are three smaller ones somewhat square in shape and about equal to each other in size; alternate meshes V- or U-shaped; marginal nerve with three fuscous-black spots before and four beyond the middle. Membrane meshes becoming larger as they approach the apex. Head pale yellowish white, spines pale yellowish white. Antenne pale yellowish grey, apex of the terminal joint black. Eyes bright red. Thorax.—Pronotum ashy-grey, side margins overlapped and produced into large bladder- like smoke-coloured processes covered with meshes, the latter largest on the summit, and of an irregular pentagonal form; hood somewhat large, covered “with meshes. EHlytra ashy- -erey, cradually widening from the base to the middle of the marginal nerve, from thence harrowing and concave to before the apex, which is rounded; marginal field reflexed, with three rows of meshes, the two inner rows small and somewhat uniform in size, the outer one large and irregular, except at the middle, where there are three smaller meshes somewhat square in shape and about equal to each other in size; middle with a fuscous-black patch, alternate meshes V- or U-shaped; marginal nerve with three black spots before, and four beyond, the middle; apex rounded, bordered with black; cells acute at the base and apex, meshes somewhat regular, increasing in number trans- versely until they reach the middle, where there are four inarow. Membrane meshes gradually enlarging towards the apex; inner marginal row largest, square-shaped, Collection of Hemiptera from Japan. 315 and somewhat uniform in size. Legs ashy-grey. Tarsi, apex of the terminal joint brownish. Abdomen under- neath yellow. Length 13 line. In the form and development of the overlapped sides of the pronotum this insect resembles the Monanthia monstrosa of my former paper, and belongs to the same group. In his Rio. Hem. (1860), Dr. Stal described five species with nearly identical characters to those of M. monstrosa and the insect now described, which he referred to the above genus; but subsequently, in his ‘Knumeratio Hemipterorum,’ ili., 127 (1873), he transferred them to that of Leptodictya, a name which he created for their reception. As I do not possess an actual type of this genus, and also because the species are all from Rio, [ am not perfectly certain that my insects belong here ; and so I have given his name with a doubt. I only possess a single example. Family Napipm. Genus DacnistER.* Head viewed from above, exclusive of the eyes, elongate, somewhat hexagonal, the part in front of the eyes longer than from the anterior margin of the latter to the base. Hyes moderate. Antenne, 1st joint shortest, reaching to about one-half its length before the anterior margin of the head; 2nd clavate, about one-half longer than the 1st ; 3rd longest; 4th equal to the 2nd. Rostrum long ; 1st joint stout, about as broad as long; 2nd elongate, at least 24 times as long as the Ist; 8rd equal to the 2nd. Thorax.—Pronotum somewhat long, flattish convex lon- gitudinally, as long as or slightly longer than the breadth measured on the posterior margin; lateral margins almost straight, gradually widening to the posterior angles; anterior margin straight; posterior margin very slightly concave. Hlytra.—Membrane (apparently) without cell-hooks. Legs.—Thighs, 1st pair thick, upper margin convex, lower margin with a stout tooth in the middle; 2nd and 38rd pairs simple. Tbie, Ist pair considerably dilated before the apex, then tapering towards the latter; extremities of the dilation somewhat flat on the sides, and produced into a short tooth; inner margin concave, with two rows of minute serrations ; * Aaxusorne, a stinger, a biter. TRANS. ENT. Soc. 1880.—PART IV. (DEC.) 2k 316 Mr. John Scott on a 9nd and 3rd pairs simple. Tarsi, Ist and 2nd pairs equal in length, 3rd longest. Somewhat resembling the genus Metastemma, Serv., in shape and some of its characters, and in others to that of Allworhyncus, Fieb., to which it 1s most nearly allied. The eyes, however, are not so prominent as in the last named, and the 2nd pair of thighs are simple on the under side. Like Allworhyncus it is very diminutive in stature. Dacnister flavescens. Buff, with a dull velvety appearance. Head black, anterior margin brownish yellow. Antenne, 1st joint projecting about half its length before the anterior margin of the head; 2nd clavate, black, about one-half longer than the 1st; 8rd longest; 4th equal to the 2nd. Rostrum, 1st joint stout, about as long as broad; 2nd and 3rd elongate, about equal in length. Pronotum buff, anterior margin straight, posterior slightly concave, lateral margins widening gradually to the posterior angles. Scutellum black. Coriwm, anterior margin with a border of short, fine, pale hairs; disc with a triangular diaphanous white patch. Membrane fuscous-brown, narrowly margined with yellowish white. Thighs, Ist pair incrassated, upper margin convex, with a row of longish fine, pale hairs; lower produced into a stout acute tooth in the middle; 2nd and 8rd simple. Tuvbie, 1st pair considerably dilated before the apex, upper margin convex, lower concave, with a double row of minute serrations, extremities of the dilation flattish on the sides, produced into a very short fine tooth; 2nd and 8rd pairs simple. Head black, somewhat shining, slightly convex, anterior margin brownish yellow. An- tenn, 1st joint projecting about one-half its length before the anterior margin of the head; 2nd clavate, black, about one-half longer than the Ist, base narrowly yellowish; 8rd longest, darkish brown; 4th yellowish, equal to the 2nd. Rostrum, Ist jomt stout, yellowish, about as long as broad, lateral margins piceous, some- what convex; 2nd and 3rd elongate, yellow, about equal in length.» Thorax.—Pronotum buff, with a dull velvety appearance, anterior margin straight, posterior slightly concave, lateral margins nearly straight, widening gradually to the posterior angles, which are narrowly rounded ; disc posteriorly slightly elevated, with an Collection of Henuptera from Japan. 317 almost round black spot on each side, divided by a short longitudinal channel. Scutellum black, side margins slightly convex. ilytra buff, with a dull velvety appear- ance. Corium, interior margin with a border of short, fine, pale hairs; dise with a triangular diaphanous white patch, nerves inclined to brown. Membrane fuscous, brown, narrowly margined with yellowish white. Legs. —Thighs, 1st pair yellow, incrassated, upper margin convex, with a row of longish, fine, pale hairs, lower margin produced into a stout acute tooth in the middle ; 2nd and 3rd pairs yellow, simple. Tibie, 1st pair yellow, considerably dilated before the apex, upper margin convex, lower concave, with a double row of minute black serrations, extremities of the dilation flattish on the sides, produced into a very short fine tooth; 2nd and 3rd pairs yellow, simple. T'wrsi of all the pairs yellow. Abdomen above yellow inclned to ferruginous-brown, beneath yellow. Connexivum buff. Length 13 line. I have only a single example, which I received from Mr. George Lewis after the publication of my last paper. Taken at Nagasaki. vt Pa Bi i ’ re eee a } 7 1s i : o Ha VLE t hiPue eit GhoalQos) XVIII. Description of a New Species of the anomalous genus Polyctenes. By Cuas. O. WATERHOUSE. [Read December Ist, 1880.] (PuatE IX.) I wave very much pleasure in bringing before the Society’s notice a new species of the curious genus Polyctenes. The species of this genus may be divided into two sections as follows :— I. Posterior legs very long, as long as the whole insect, the claws to their tarsi nearly equal, with a small tooth at the base. American. Type. P. fumarius. II. Posterior legs comparatively short and thick, about half the length of the entire insect, having their claws unequal, one being nearly simple, the other large, bent, and as if divided into two by a deep incision. Old World. Type. P. molossus. To this second section belong my species, P. lyre and P. spasme. (T. Ent. Soc. 1879, pp. 11 and 12). The species which I am now about to describe belongs to the first section, and is from Guatemala. I propose to call it— Polyctenes longiceps. Very close to P. fumarius, Gigloli and Westw. (see Westwood, ‘Thesaurus,’ pl. 88), but of a more elongate and narrow form, and rather more pitchy yellow colour. The character by which it may be most easily dis- tinguished is the form of the head, which is distinctly longer than its greatest width, whereas in P. fumarius the head is broader than long. The ridges on the head are similar to those in P. fumari us, but the punctuation is stronger. ‘The thorax and elytra agree with those of fumarius in general form, but are less short, and the TRANS. ENT. soc. 1880.—PART IV. (DEC.) 320 New species of the anomalous genus Polyctenes. punctuation is more pronounced. The abdomen is rather closely and very strongly punctured. Length 2 lines. Hab.—Cajabon, Guatemala (IF. C. Sarg). Two specimens found by my colleague, Mr. Oldfield Thomas, on a bat, Molossus abrasus, Temminck. The discovery of this species throws some light on the affinity of these insects, as I notice that in these fresh specimens the parts which in my former paper I called the dorsal plates of the mesothorax, as they did not seem to be separated from it, are distinctly separated, and appear quite like elytra. With the point of a fine needle I was quite able to lift them up at the apex, but they are soldered together at the suture. Under these circumstances my former opinion that these insects should be placed near the Hippoboscide is, I think, quite proved to be incorrect ; in which case Professor West- wood’s view of their affinity with the Hemiptera seems to be the only alternative. The tarsi in the species now described are four-jointed. P. fumarius has four joints, as has also one sex of P. molossus ; the other sex of P. molossus is represented as having only three joints. I believe P. lyre and P. spasme have four joints, but the apparent division between the 3rd and 4th joints is so obscure as to leave room for doubt on this point. PROCEEDINGS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON FOR 138 0. February 4, 1880. J. W. Dunnina, M.A., F.L.S., Vice-President, in the chair. The Secretary, on behalf of the President, nominated Mr. H. W. Bates, Mr. J. W. Dunning, and Mr. H. T. Stainton, Vice-Presidents for 1880. The minutes of the two previous meetings were read and approved. Donations to the Library were announced, and thanks voted to the respective donors. Election ef a Member and Subscribers. Mr. Patrick F’. Copland, of Hillcote, Buckhurst Hill, Essex, was ballotted for and elected a Member. Mr. John B. Bridgman, of 69, St. Giles Street, Norwich, and Mr. Peter Cowell, Librarian of the Free Public Library, William Brown Street, Liverpool, were ballotted for and elected Subscribers. Exhibitions, dc. Mr. H. T. Stainton exhibited, on behalf of Mr. Grigg, of Bristol, a specimen of Heliothis scutosa, captured near Weston-super-Mare. Mr. F. P. Pascoe exhibited a specimen of the common “ fire-fly” of the Amazon Valley (Aspisoma lineatum), a species not mentioned by Messrs. Bates and Wallace. It has the usual intermittent light, flashing at intervals of about two seconds; but Mr. Pascoe believed, contrary to the general opinion, that the insect was capable of keeping back the hight for an indefinite time, as he found that when alarmed they at once disappeared. Mr. Pascoe remarked that it would be very desirable that entomologists abroad should pay some attention to these “ fire-flies”; they seem to vary in different localities. Mr. M‘Lachlan had just told him that he had been informed when in Sydney that in the country to the north the “ fire-fly” was a Dipterous insect. B il The Rev. H. S. Gorham stated that the term “fire-fly” was applied to all luminous insects indiscriminately. In the district where Mr. Pascoe’s specimen occurred there were perhaps fifty species of highly phos- phorescent Coleoptera. With regard to our species, Lampyris noctiluca, he did not think that the insect had the power of suddenly with- drawing its light, having often handled and irritated them with a view to trying the experiment. He was of opinion that the light of the female L. noctiluca is certainly brighter when the insect is unimpregnated; after which it ceases to be so brilliant. Mr. Gorham believed that the so-called “flashing” was often simply due to the creature crawling over leaves and herbage, and thus exposing the ventral surface only at times. Mr. M‘Lachlan remarked that the subject of the simultaneous flashing of fire-flies had been brought under the notice of the Society in 1865 by the Rev. Hamlet Clark (see Proc. Ent. Soc., ser. iii., vol. ii., pp. 94, 101), and that he had at that time advanced the opinion that the phenomenon in question might be caused by currents of air inducing the insects to simul- taneously change their direction of flight. He was of opinion that the common glow-worm was not capable of extinguishing its light when alarmed, as he had captured large numbers in a net at the same time, the insects nevertheless continuing to shine. Mr. Osbert Salvin stated that in the Central American region he had observed that a luminous Elaterid, Pyrophorus, had a straight flight. Sir Sidney Saunders stated that in the South of Europe (Corfu and Albania) the simultaneous flashing of Lweiola italica, with intervals of complete darkness for some seconds, was constantly witnessed in the calm summer nights, when swarming myriads were to be seen far and near obeying this peculiar instinct of their race. He did not concur in the hypothesis propounded by Mr. M‘Lachlan, that currents of air might induce a uumber of these insects simultaneously to change the direction of their flight, and thereby occasion a momentary concealment of their light, which would seem to imply a continuous luminosity, casually occulted; whereas the flashes are certainly intermittent, as shown by the difficulty experienced in capturing a specimen flying in the open close at hand, when the flash becomes extinguished before the object can be attained, to be renewed for au instant at the distance of several feet. The simultaneous character of these corruscations, among vast swarms, would seem to depend upon an intuitive impulse to emit their light at certain intervals as a protective influence, which intervals became assimilated to each other by imitative emulation. But whatever the inciting causes of the phenomenon, he affirmed that the fact itself was incontestable, and a frequent subject of remark by all observers there. Mr. Jenner Weir said that he had noticed that when a glow-worm was captured the light began gradually to diminish in intensity, but did not quite cease to be visible. il Mr. Meldola remarked that when in Ceylon, in 1875, he had captured numerous specimens of a Lampyrid (Luciola vespertina, Fab. = Calophotia perplexa, Walker), which was swarming everywhere over bushes and tall grass. The flight of the species was straight, and the insects did not fly in gregarious swarms. When captured and put in a box it gradually diminished the intensity of its light in the manner described by Mr. Weir, but if left undisturbed was soon glowing witli full brilliancy. Mr. Meldola observed, in conclusion, that the exact nature of the phosphorescence was still an unsolved problem, interesting both to the physicist and biologist. Some years ago he had examined the spectrum of the glow-worm, and found that it was continuous, being rich in blue and green rays aud comparatively poor in red and yellow. Mr. Pascoe also exhibited the two sexes of Isopogon hottentottus, a Dipterous insect, which he was informed by Mr. R. W. Meade, of Bradford, had been hitherto unrecorded in this country. Above a dozen individuals were gamboling in the air in a confined space among some yew trees at Box Hill, occasionally settling on the leaves. When he had taken four or five specimens the remainder, probably alarmed, disappeared. He remarked that the members of the family to which this fly belongs (Asilid@) are generally solitary in their habits, alighting on the ground in some pathway or open spot, then darting off a short distance. They are perhaps the most daring and ferocious of all insects; they have even been known to pounce upon and carry off a tiger-beetle (Cicindela), although one was quite as large as the other. The Secretary exhibited, on behalf of Mr. George Francis, of Adelaide, specimens of a South Australian moth (Anapea, sp.?), which feeds on the native Hucalypti. The species was the same as that exhibited last year. (See Proc. Ent. Soc. 1879, p. xv). The series comprised also the larve in different stages of growth and living cocoons. Mr. Francis likewise forwarded a specimen, in alcohol, of a venomous spider (Latrodectus sp. ?), and several galls and microscopic objects. The Secretary also announced that he had received a letter from Mr. A. H. Swinton, calling in question the specific distinctness of Acronycta Psi and A. Tridens, with reference to Mr. Butler’s recent communication on this genus (Trans. Ent. Soc. 1879, p. 313). Mr. Swinton had failed to detect any well-marked differences between the larvee of these two species. Mr. Meldola read the following note :— “ On the Protective Attitude of the Caterpillar of the Lobster Moth.” ‘“Most entomologists have admitted that the grotesque attitude of those caterpillars forming Newman's ‘ Cuspidate’ group was in some way protective, but it is only quite recently that Dr. Hermann Miller has 1V made known* the results of his observations on the caterpillar of Stawropus Fagi, which observations now for the first time tend to show the true meaning of this attitude in the species in question. When sitting on a twig in its natural position the head and first five segments are held erect, and the greatly lengthened legs of the second and third segments held outstretched; thus, when seen from the front, the whole aspect of the insect, both in form and colour, is most spider-like, and when alarmed it immediately raises its four long legs and moves them irregularly, after the manner of a spider attacking its victim. This spider-like appearance is believed to be a special protection against ichneumons which may approach it from the front. According to the experience of H. Muller ichneumons are especially afraid of spiders, and he states, on the authority of Fledder- mann, an experienced breeder of insects, that the larva of S. Fayi was never found to be attacked by ichneumons, whilst, according to Treitschke, the nearly allied Hybocampa Milhauseri is often attacked by them, although a much rarer species, which rarity may perhaps be attributable to the complete absence of such protection as that possessed by S. Fagi. “So much for the front aspect of the caterpillar under consideration. When approached from the rear there is nothing to be seen but the erect, hard, shield-like surface of the last segment surmounted by two black horns, and presenting an appearance totally unlike that of a caterpillar. When a side-view of the larva is presented there is seen on the fourth and fifth segments a small black depression just below the spiracles, and giving the appearance of a caterpillar which has been stung by an ichnewmon, so that one of these foes approaching from the side would be deceived and abandon it without depositing its eggs.” Mr. 8. Stevens stated that, having recently reared several specimens of S. Fagi, he could confirm the opinion of Dr. H. Miiller as to the spider- like appearance of the larva. : Papers read. The Rey. H.S. Gorham communicated a continuation of his “ Materials for a Revision of the Lampyride,” the present paper treating of the genus Photinus. Dr. Sharp communicated a paper entitled ‘On some Coleoptera from the Hawaiian Islands.” New Part of ‘ Transactions.’ Parts III. and IV. of the ‘ Transactions’ for 1879 were on the tuble, and also copies of the Address given at the last Meeting. * «Kosmos,’ Noy, 1879, p. 128. March 38, 1880. H. T. Srarnton, F.R.S., &c., Vice-President, in the chair. The minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved. Donations to the Library were announced, and thanks voted to the respective donors. Election of Members. Dr. Henry Charles Lang, of 41, Berners Street, Oxford Street, and Mr. Frank Crosbie, of The Chestnuts, Barnet, Herts, were ballotted for and elected Ordinary Members. Exhibitions. Mr. F. P. Pascoe exhibited several species of scorpions @ propos of a controversy which has recently been going on in ‘ Nature,’ respecting a statement that scorpions are in the habit of stinging themselves to death when in the midst of a circle of fire from which they are unable to escape. He pointed out that the two common European species, Scorpio euwropeus and Buthus occitanus, were almost physically incapable of reaching a vital part owing to the shortness of the tail or post-abdomen. Mr. Pascoe thought there must be some error of observation with those who asserted the coutrary. From his own experience, he believed that scorpions were only able to strike backwards and a little upwards. In some forms with very long tails, such as Lychas, &c., it might be quite possible for the animal to insert its ‘‘ sting” ito the soft parts between the segments; but he thought it was questionable whether, in this mild way, any poisonous matter would be ejected. Another difficulty was that when the tail was so bent back the convexity of the sting would be downwards, and consequently its point would be upwards and away from the cephalothorax. Mr. 8. Stevens exhibited, on behalf of Mr. Pim (who was present as a visitor), a dwarfed female specimen of Plebeius Icarus (Lyce@na Alewis). The Rev. A. I. Maton exhibited three plates of drawings of Ephemeride, showing the structural details of the species represented. These beautifully executed plates, which are about to be published in a forthcoming work on this family, contained figures of the following species :— Tricorythus maximus (in Cenis), Joly. Batisca obesa, Say. ‘The fore-wings of this species are connate along the greater part of the terminal margin, so as to form a shield covering the base of the abdomen. Antenne short, deflected, 7-jointed, with the joints unusually long. Labial palpi 3-jointed, chelate. v1 The third species was a Chilian form of undetermined genus, remarkable for the possession of symmetrical mouth-organs. Maxillary palpi 11-jointed. Labial palpi 14-jointed. Mr. M‘Lachlan remarked that these drawings were some of the most beautiful and detailed that had ever been executed for any family of insects. The observation as to the connate nature of the wings in the nymphs of Batisca was of great value, as explaining the true nature of the carapace- like thorax of that insect. The Secretary exhibited, on behalf of Mr. George Francis, of Adelaide, the microscopical specimens referred to at the last meeting, which had been kindly mounted for exhibition by Mr. William Cole. The series comprised a number of eggs of a Chrysopa suspended in the usual manner by long silken threads from the edge of a Hucalyptus-leaf, and the beautiful shell-like scales formed by a Coccus, together with the insects found beneath the scales. Mr. Howard Vaughan exhibited a series of Cidaria russata from York- shire and the Isle of Arran, showing the local variation of this species. Papers read, de. The Rev. H. S. Gorham read a paper on the Lampyride@, in con- tinuation of those communicated at the meetings of December, 1879, and February, 1880, the present instalment concluding the revision of the genus Photinus. Mr. Gorham also read a paper summing up the results of his observations on the Lampyrida, with respect to their phosphorescence, which he believed to serve the part of a beacon for attracting the sexes to one another. In support of this conclusion he stated that he had found that the eyes of these species were developed in magnitude according to the amount of luminosity displayed. With regard to the typical species of the family, he had observed that in the most highly organized genera, such as Lamprocera and Cladodes, the light-emitting faculty did not appear to be developed in proportion with the rest of the organs, and that the eyes were also reduced “in a direct ratio with the light,” being small and uniform in both sexes, whilst the antenne were “ developed in inverse ratio as the phosphorescence is diminished.” In illustration of this supposed correlation between the development of the antenne and the intensity of the light, Mr. Gorham exhibited a selection of species arranged in three groups, viz. :— (1). Species with plumose antenne, small eyes, and light-emitting sur- face confined to small spots only. (Lamprocera, Cladodes, Vesta, Phenolis, and Megalopthalmus.) (2). Species with simple antenne, eyes large, sometimes excessive, both sexes winged; phosphorescence considerable, sometimes greater in the female. (Cratomorphus, Lucernula, Aspidosoma, Luciola, and Photuris.) vil (3). Species with female apterous or with rudimentary wings; phos- phorescence often very great in female, and frequently rudimentary in male ; antenne generally rudimentary; eyes large in the male, often occupying nearly the whole head. (Pleotomus, Microphotus, Lampyris, &c.) Mr. Stainton asked how Mr. Gorham had determined the intensity of the light emitted by the insects which had been grouped in the manner above referred to, since it appeared extremely difficult to say with certainty whether one insect was more luminous than another without some actual photometric measurement made upon the species when alive. Mr. Gorham stated in reply that the light-emitting segments at the extremity of the abdomen were distinguishable by their white ‘vitreous appearance, and that he had considered the number and size of such segments to indicate the phosphorescent power. He did not consider that these vitreous segments were themselves luminous, but that the source of light was within the body of the insect, and shone through the transparent segments or could be withdrawn at pleasure. In this manner he thought the gradual extinction or intermittent flashing of the light might be explained. Mr. Pascoe remarked that it was much to be regretted that Mr. Gorham had not been able to observe the phosphorescence of some of the exotic Lampyride in their native habitats, as he had no doubt that many of the opinions now advanced would thus have to be considerably modified. Mr. W. C. Boyd asked how, on Mr. Gorham’s view, the supposed source of light could be withdrawn from the transparent segments, since the size of the insects’ bodies did not leave much space for such withdrawal ? Mr. C. O. Waterhouse suggested that the light-source might be with- drawn into that portion of the body having opaque segments. Mr. M‘Lachlan, in connection with his idea of the supposed contem- poraneous flashing of all the individuals in a swarm of Lampyride, called attention to flies of the genus Argyra, which when ying exhibited at times an appearance similar to that of small snow-flakes, owing to the silvery pubescence with which part of the body was clothed, but which was observed in certain positions, and especially when the insects rested, owing to the pubescence being then concealed; he thought this to some extent was an analogous case to that of the light of swarms of Lampyride. Sir Sidney Saunders observed that the discussion involved two distinct questions,—namely, the flashing at intervals and the simultaneous action of large numbers in displaying their luminosity,—both of which he considered as indisputable facts. As regards the first, he mentioned the circumstance that when flying past, free from all obstructions, the Luciola suddenly emits its light, and then remains untraceable until it repeats its flash ata distance of some yards, and is therefore difficult to capture unless by over- taking the fugitives and sweeping with a hat in the observed direction. vill They then exhibit a casual glare as they crawl about within. As to the contemporaneous flashes of myriads, such as are more frequently con- gregated on the calmest nights, surrounding objects previously involved in obscurity become suddenly illuminated as if by electricity, and as rapidly plunged in their antecedent gloom at alternate intervals. He could not concur in the hypothesis that currents of air had any connexion with such displays or occultations, when not a breath was stirring around; nor that these manifestations might be evoked by sexual influences, amid vast hosts instigated to combine therein and act in unison. He would rather attribute this phenomenon to an inherent tendency to emit their ight from time to time, requiring a certain period of repose to recruit their powers ; and when any thus surcharged felt intuitively inspired to take the initiative, the others—prompted to obey a corresponding impulse — followed such example in responsive sequence. He confirmed Mr. Gorham’s remarks as to the luminous segments of the abdomen being diaphanous and recognizable, adding that their luminosity was retractile and of a quivering character, with alternations of a golden lustre, differing from the phases exhibited when disporting in mid-air. The Rev. A. E. Eaton remarked that while the subject of insect luminosity was under discussion, it might be interesting to mention that Dr. Hagen, in a paper published in the ‘ Transactions’ of the Society for 1878 (p. 899), had stated that a species of Hphemeride (Cenis dimidiata) had been sent to him by Prof. Zaddach as a luminous insect, two males having been captured at night near Pillau “ giving a small blue light.” Mr. Meldola stated that Mr. Thomas Belt, in his well-known ‘ Naturalist in Nicaragua’ (p. 820), had expressed his belief that the luminosity of the Lampyrid@ played the same part as the bright colours of many caterpillars, i.e., that it served as a danger signal, warning nocturnal foes of the inedibility of the species of this family, which he had found to be generally distasteful to birds, &c. Their immunity from persecution is also testified by the fact that the species of this family are very frequently mimicked by other beetles, and even by insects of other orders. Mr. GC. M. Wakefield communicated a paper by Mr. Rh. W. Fereday, entitled ‘ Description of a new Species of the Family Leucanid@ and a new Species of the Genus Chlenias.” Mr. A. G. Butler communicated a paper ‘On Synonyms of Heterocerous Lepidoptera.” Mr. C. O. Waterhouse communicated ‘“ Descriptions of Cetontide and Cerambycid@ from Madagascar.” New Part of ‘ Transactions.’ Part V. of the ‘ Transactions’ for 1879, containing index, title-page, &c., was on the table. ix April 7, 1878. H. T. Srarnron, F.R.S., Vice-President, in the chair. The minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved. Donations to the Library were announced, and thanks voted to the respective donors. Election of Members. The following gentlemen were ballotted for and elected Ordinary Mem- bers :—George Carter Bignell, 7, Clarence Place, Stonehouse, Plymouth ; W. D. Cansdale, 4, Guithavon Terrace, Witham, Essex; Frank Crisp, LL.B., B.A., Sec.R.M.S., 5, Lansdowne Road, Notting Hill, W.; and the Rey. W. Fowler, M.A., F'.L.8., Repton, Burton-on-Trent. M. Ed. André, 21, Boulevard Bretonniére, Beaune (Cote d’Or), France, was ballotted for and elected a Foreign Member. Exhibitions, é&c. Mr. John T. Carrington exhibited a pale variety of Arctia caja, bred by a gentleman at Croydon, who had been experimenting upon the effects of the rays of light transmitted through glasses of various. colours upon the species. The variety exhibited had been reared under green glass, but there was no evidence to show that the variation was due to the green rays. The Secretary read the following communication from Mr. G. A. J. Rothney, of Calcutta :— * On Insects destroyed by Flowers. “T notice in the report of your proceedings for April 2nd, 1879, a letter from Mr. J. W. Slater, from which I copy the following extract :—* Whilst it is generally admitted that the gay coloration of flowers is mainly sub- servient to the purpose of attracting bees and other winged insects, whose visits play so important a part in the process of fertilization, it seems to me that one important fact has scarcely received due attention. Certain gaily- coloured, or or least conspicuous, flowers are avoided by bees, or, if visited, have an injurious and even fatal effect upon the insects. Among these are the dahlia, the passion-flower, the crown-imperial, and especially the oleander. That the flowers of the dahlia have a narcotic action both upon humble-bees and hive-bees was first pointed out by the Rev. L. Jenyns, in his ‘‘ Observations on Natural History ” (p. 262). He mentions that bees which visit these flowers are “soon seized with a sort of torpor, and often die uuless speedily removed,” &c.’ Cc x “As regards the dahlia, this is so directly opposed to my recent experience in this country that I should like to record the following observations. “T was staying at the hill-station of Mussoorie in September and October of last year,—a time when the wild dahlias* were at their greatest perfection, and formed a striking feature in the scenery,—there were numbers of other wild flowers of various species in profusion, but the dahlias formed the particular attraction of the Aculeate Hymenoptera, and my richest collecting ground was always where the dahlias grew thickest, my most favoured spot and warmest corner being at a place called Wolfs- burn Road, Laudun, where I could stand up to my waist in a rich bank of dahlias of all colours, and collect around me in the shortest possible time the greatest number of specimens and variety of species to be ob- tained anywhere in or near Mussoorie. JI am not certain of many of the species captured, but the following genera were strongly represented, especially the first three:—Bombus, Apis, Vespa, Andrena, Halictus, Prosopis, Polistes, Odynerus, and others; besides which, had I been collecting them, I might have taken many species of butterflies, day-flying moths, ichneumons, as well as several species of Diptera and Coleoptera. The dahlias were mostly single, but a few double ones were also to be found. The bright yellow single flowers appeared to be the most attractive—that is, in taking up my position on the steep bank I preferred to plant myself in a mass of yellow flowers to any other colour. I never observed that any bee, wasp, or other insect was injured in any way by visiting these flowers. I never found a dead one in or under the dahlias, and certainly, from the activity required to capture them, I never came across any bee or wasp suffering from ‘ narcotic action’ or ‘ seized with a sort of torpor.’ Under one fine bush of the yellow single flower I found the ‘nests of a large species of humble-bee, and spent many hours in watching the workers fly in and out and to and from the dahlia flowers covered with the yellow pollen, and they never seemed any the worse for their excesses; indeed they were un- commonly lively, and on one occasion, when I had been capturing too many of their fine females, the workers fairly drove me off the ground by their most persistent attacks.” Papers read. The Secretary read a paper, by Mr. Peter Cameron, entitled ‘ Notes on the Coloration and Development of Insects.” Professor Westwood communicated two papers :—‘ On two Gynandro- morphous specimens of Cirrochroa Aor, Dbl., an Indian Species of * Mr. Rothney must be mistaken in speaking of the “ wild dahlia” in India, as this plant is Mexican, and not Indian, as pointed out by several Members on hearing the above communication,—ED, - X1 Nymphalideous Butterflies,” and “On Cetonia Aurata and Protaetia Bensoni.” Specimens and drawings, showing the specific distinctness of the insects in question, were exhibited in illustration of the last-named paper. New Part of ‘ Transactions.’ Part I. of the ‘ Transactions’ for 1878 was on the table. May 5, 1880. H. T. Srartntron, F.R.S., Vice-President, in the chair. The minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved. Donations to the Library were announced, and thanks voted to the respective donors. Election of a Member. Mr. Peter Inchbald, of The Lodge, Hovingham, York, a former Member, was ballotted for and re-elected into the Society. Exhibitions, ée. Mr. W. C. Boyd exhibited a very pale specimen of Nyssia hispidaria, taken at light at Cheshunt Station. Mr. M. J. Walhouse exhibited some Geodephagous beetles which were found only on the summits of some of the highest mountains in India. Mr. W. L. Distant exhibited a long series of specimens of the Mada- gascar Homopteron Ptyelus Goudoti, Benn., to illustrate the extreme variability of the species. The series showed a gradation from melanic forms having the tegmina and pronotum black, to an albinic variety in which the tegmina and pronotum were pale luteous. One specimen was asymmetrical in the markings of the tegmina, thus possessing the characters of two varietal forms, as shown in the accompanying woodcut. Mr. Distant observed that he had found this not at all an exceptional occurrence in extremely variable species of the order Rhynchota. Like other species of this and allied genera, P. Goudoti in the larval condition xl emits a frothy secretion, which M. Goudot described as being done so plentifully at the time of the greatest atmospheric temperature, as to assume the appearance of actual rain. From an experiment made with sixty or seventy larve, M. Goudot concluded that a vessel holding nearly an English quart could have been filled with this secretion in an hour and a half. Mr. Stainton pointed out that this series offered a good illustration of the danger of founding a species on a single specimen. Mr. T. R. Billups exhibited two living specimens of Carabus auratus, found in the Borough Market, and probably introduced with Belgian potatoes. Mr. F. P. Pascoe stated that he had recently heard a rumour to the effect that the Sphinx-moth with a proboscis of sufficient length to reach into the nectar of Anagre@cum sesquipedale, predicted by Mr. Darwin and Mr. Wallace to occur in Madagascar (see also Proc. Ent. Soc. 1878, p. 1i1.), had actually been captured in that island, and he asked whether any Members of the Society were able to confirm this statement. Mr. M‘Lachlan remarked that as a believer in the doctrine of Evolution, he thought that much harm was done to it by its friends, of which this was, in his opinion, an example. The Chairman asked whether any Members had observed the date of appearance of insects this season. The Secretary stated that a copy of a work, edited by Miss Ormerod, had just been presented to the Library by its Editor, in which an immense number of meteorological observations had been tabulated, in such a manner as to lead to the hope that some light might be thrown by this and future work conducted on a similar plan on the connection between meteorological phenomena and the appearance of insects, &e. Miss EK. A. Ormerod remarked that the records from which the ‘Cobham Journals’ had been reduced were taken by Miss Caroline Moles- worth at Cobham, Surrey, and extended, with more or less completeness, over a period of about forty-four years. The coincident observations of weather and the state of animal and plant life in a continuous form extended over only about twenty-six years,—from 1825 to 1850 inclusive,—and the present volume contained the reduction of these observations as far as they bear on these points of coincidence. One object in view had been to give by abstracts and summaries such a statement of the successive states of temperature, amount of rainfall, and direction of the wind, as would enable the reader to see, by a glance at the parallel columns of each month’s eutries, what periods of marked variation or non-variation occurred in what is commonly known as ‘the weather.” The tables given in the work had been directly reduced from Miss Molesworth’s careful records preserved in the library of the Meteorological Society, and Miss Ormerod, the Editor of Xill the ‘Journals,’ had added an introduction giving the necessary working details, together with a chapter of ‘‘ Results of Observations,” working out the coincidences that appeared between meteorological and phenological conditions—i.e., between states of weather and subsequent dates of plant- life, the appearance of spring birds, &c. Miss Ormerod added that, from an entomological point of view, it was much to be regretted that Miss Moles- worth, who was remarkable for the extreme accuracy of her observations, did not give more records regarding insects. ‘There were, however, a few, and one of special economic interest, in which the larvee of the “ ‘Turnip Sawfly” are noticed as causing damage in August; at the beginning of September there occurs an entry of “ myriads of Haltica nemorum,” and after a fall of rain which cleared them away, the ‘Turnip Sawfly” appeared in the imago state on the same ground, showing that the rainfall had no beneficial effect in preventing their development. Miss Ormerod stated, in conclusion, that from one series of records spreading over such varied and important branches of observation, no certain conclusions could be at present drawn, but the work in question might offer valuable suggestions for future observers. The results of similar records carried out hereafter may throw much light on the meteorological principles of cultivation, and Miss Molesworth, who was one of the first to lead the way in the path of joint observation, deserves our grateful remembrance. June 2, 1880. Sir Jonn Lussocr, Bart., M.P., F.R.S., &c., President, in the chair. The minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved. Donations to the Library were announced, and thanks voted to the respective donors. Election of Members. Miss Georgiana Ormerod, of Dunster Lodge, Spring Grove, Isleworth, and Mr. Henry Lupton, of the Elms, Chapel Allerton, Leeds, were ballotted for and elected Ordinary Members. Exhibitions. Mr. M. J. Walhouse exhibited a collection of moths from Mangalore, on the Malabar coast, India. Many of the species showed a great resem- blance to European forms. Mr. J. A. Finzi exhibited, on behalf of Mr. Lowrey, a bred specimen of Aretia fuliginosa, with only one antenna. X1V Sir John Lubbock stated that he had occasionally bred ants with only one antenna, and on one occasion had possessed a specimen with no antenne at all, this individual being completely helpless when out of the nest. The President also exhibited specimens of a new Australian ant which he had received from Mr. Waller, and which agreed with the remarkable genus Myrmecocystus of Wesmael in having an immensely distended abdo- men, so that the insect actually serves as an animated honey-pot. ‘The present species, however, belongs to a different genus, and is allied to Camponotus. Paper read. The Rev. H. S. Gorham communicated the concluding portion of his “ Materials for a Revision of the Lampyride.” July 7, 1889. J. W. Dunnine, M.A., F.L.S., Vice-President, in the chair. The minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved. Donations to the Library were announced, and thanks voted to the respective donors. Exhibitions, &c. Mr. Jenner Weir exhibited, on behalf of Mr. J. W. Douglas, a worn female specimen of Noctua C-nigrum, which had been taken on June 27th. Mr. M‘Lachlan exhibited a piece of sugar-cane from Queensland much damaged by some Lepidopterous larva, of which specimens were also exhibited. Without having the moth, it would be impossible to decide with any certainty as to the species; but, judging from the larva, he was inclined to believe that it was a species of Pyralis. On consulting with Miss Ormerod, he had come to the conclusion that the species was not the same as the “cane-borer” from British Guiana. Mr. W. I.. Distant said that he was acquainted with the ‘“ cane-borer” from Madras, and that it was not the same species as that described by Guilding. Mr. W. F. Kirby called attention to the description and figure of Pyralis saccharalis, Fabr., published in ‘ Skifter af Naturhistorie Selskabet,’ vol. iii. part 2 (1794), pp. 63-65, pl. vil. fig. 1, where the insect is represented in all stages. He also referred to the long account of the imsect given by Guénée in Maillard’s ‘ Notes sur ]'Tle de Réunion,’ Lep., pp.68—71. Guenée considers the insect to be allied to Schwnobius, and calls it Borer (!) sae- charellus. Fortunately the generic name will not stand, as Guilding’s name of Diatrea has the priority. XV Miss KE. A. Ormerod exhibited specimens of Tomarus bituberculatus, Sphenophorus sacchari (with cocoon), and Rhyncophorus (? palmarum, cocoons and pupa), and read the following note :— “* Cane-borers.” “Tn the course of last autumn it was mentioned to me that, in addition to the species of cane-borer previously noticed, another kind (which was incidentally mentioned to be a Macraspis) was doing much harm in Berbice. On examination of the specimens, however (now exhibited), the beetle turned out to be one of the Dynastide, Tomarus bituberculatus, and any suggestion for diminishing the numbers would be very acceptable. The beetle, which is one of the kinds popularly known as ‘ hardbacks’ in the colony, is enormously plentiful, coming into the houses in the evening in such quantities as to require to be swept from the tables, and I am informed by a naturalist lately resident in Guiana that as many as five specimens may be found in the unopened flower-buds of the Victoria Regia. “The other specimens exhibited are of Sphenophorus sacchari, with its cocoon, and also two cocoons (one opened to show the contained pupa) of a larger species .of Rhyncophorus, but I conjecture uot of Rhyncophorus palmarum. In the course of investigation last year it appeared that there were more species at work than was at first supposed. One of these, kindly lent me for examination by the Colonial Company, much resembles R. palmarum, but is smaller, and, after careful search and comparison of specimens,—in which I was kindly assisted at the British Museum,— appears to be undescribed. It is very like R. Zimmermanni, but is not identical. A very few specimens, bred by Mr. D’Urban, of Exeter, from imported canes, appear to be of yet another species, but I only know these by report. “ Larvee of the large Rhyncophorus, and of the Sphenophorus sacchari, have been exhibited before; but I show them now relatively to a peculiar formation frequently noticeable in the larger grub,—of which some lumps will be noticed at the bottom of the bottle (this is whitish and hard when in the grub preserved in spirits),—and I benefit by the examination kindly made of it by Mr. Meldola to mention that it is of the nature of a true wax, and may be derived from cerosin, a natural wax found in sugar- cane, investigated by Avequin and Dumas, and here conjecturally altered by the digestive processes. The taste of this secretion (which perhaps I should mention was, after some preliminaries, my part of the experiment) was exceedingly sweet, and throws some light on the fondness of the natives, and also in some cases of the residents, for these grubs, as matter of food. I am informed they are partaken of fried or ‘ plain boiled,’ and all mashed up together, and as many as 120 are eaten at asitting! As this formation of sugar melts at a very low temperature, probably the operation of cooking Xv1 disperses its sweetness through the mass; nevertheless the dish appears somewhat uninviting. “To return, however, to the attacks of the cane-borer in Demerara; these were lessened for a time, but are still in action to a much greater extent than could be wished. Many experiments have been tried, and amongst others it is noted with regard to powers of endurance that it required 10 parts of sulphuric acid to 100 of water to kill the small borer (Proceras), and 30 parts acid to 100 of water to kill the large kind—locally the ‘tacuma,’ scientifically the Rhyncophorus. The application of chemicals is, however, scarcely practicable. Irom the size and extent of the crop, and the fact of the borers being inside when at work, it is very hard to get at them, but nevertheless systematic care seems to be doing something. “'T'he points that appear especially to be attended to beneficially are, first, with regard to what are termed ‘tops,’ that is, the long pieces of cane-cuttings put in to form the new plants. ‘These are carefully watched, and, if symptoms of the borer appears, are removed. Another point is cutting out infested pieces from the crop-plants; in this way the insect presence is diminished, and by putting the removed cane through the mills enough is got from it to pay expenses. Attention is.also directed to destroying refuse cane, which otherwise would accumulate, and, by attracting borers, form centres for new hordes to come out from. “These points are all of great importance, and can be worked practically ; but for the constant watch on the borers necessary to keep them down, it seems that the only sure protection lies in encouragement of their natural enemies, and especially the ants, which form a kind of insect police, constantly and very efficiently on the look-out. After discussion of the subject last year (following on the very judicious suggestions of some of the residents in the colony), the Colonial Company issued orders that no more ants’ nests should be burned. These natural pro- tectors require some special care themselves, as, in addition to the clearing of their nests by fire in process of cultivation, it is a custom to burn them in order to drive away mosquitoes by the peculiarly pungent and unpleasant smell thus produced. “The protection, it may be hoped, will bring the average ant presence up to the previous amount, for there seems no doubt of their usefulness. Lam informed by various residents (whom I have been in communication with whilst they were in England) that when unchecked these ants are immensely numerous; to be found in nests at the foot of the cane, and also on the canes; and that if some pieces of the cane are thrown down ants will directly be seen streaming to them from all quarters; and in this way they are always at hand to attack the eggs or young grubs before they have made their way into the cane, or again on their exit from it before going into the pupal state. ‘They appear to me the only check applicable to the XV1l cane-borer moth, Proceras sacchariphagus, in its imago form, in which, from the observations made in Mauritius, it appears to be remarkable for its sedentary habits, remaining motionless for a large portion of its short life in the shelter of the leaves. “The life-history of the moth has been already given by various writers, but there is so much of interest in the very long notes of it given by Mr. W. Bojer, the President of the Committee appointed by the Governor of the Island of Mauritius to investigate the subject and suggest a remedy, in the autumn of 1848, on the first burst of the alarm, when the moth was found to have fairly made good its footing in Mauritius, that, as the original documents are somewhat difficult of access, and the numbers of the ‘ Sugar-Cane’ and the ‘ Royal Gazette,’ in which they are reprinted, appear to be almost equally so, I venture to give some points from the Report. “Tt appears that the presence of this moth was not known of in Mauritius, either by any planter or by any naturalist familiar with the local Entomology, until November, 1848, when, with a view to regenerate the canes of the islands (then diseased in another way), a quantity of new canes were sent for from Ceylon. Before the arrival of these canes a report was circulated that Cingalese canes were infested by a borer. On their arrival examination was made by a Committee appointed for the purpose, and almost all these newly-imported canes were found to be perforated by the moth cane-borer. The immediate destruction of the canes was recommended, but it is conjectured that some left temporarily in an accessible spot were carried off and planted, for two years afterwards the moth made its appearance. “The notes from Mauritius agree with most of those from British Guiana as to the moth-egg being laid on the cane-leaves; the caterpillar feeding in the cane, and subsequently coming out again and turning to pupa in a slight web amongst the leaves. The eggs are stated to be transparent, their greenish colour making them difficult of observation on the cane-leaf ; their shape is depressed and oval; their longest diameter is stated to be the third of a line. “The only moth observed in the act of oviposition deposited 162 eggs, which were placed in two parallel rows and hatched on the ninth day. Their extreme transparency allowed of observations of the development of the caterpillar in the egg. On the second day an opaque line was noticed, indicating the first appearance of the digestive organs. On the next day a small black point at one extremity of the line indicated the future head ; later the body of the insect became more apparent; movement became visible, and its position is stated to have been coiled on itself with the head in the centre. The length of the caterpillar on coming out of the egg on the ninth day is given as 1} line. D XVill “When the caterpillar has reached full development, which is at the end of about thirty-one days, it is 12 to 14 lines in length, and its movement is described as being very quick in either direction, whether forward or backward. The head is depressed, furnished with strong toothed jaws, and with a plate of a paler colour. The labrum is said to have a very hard lance-shaped termination, which helps it to perforate the cane. “Hach segment has four black glands in a longitudinal row on each side of the back marked by a pink band. On the lateral sides are also seen eight black points surrounded by glands of the same colour, united also by a pink band.’ These points are the breathing pores. The glands are usually terminated by bristles. “The caterpillar changes its skin five times before metamorphosis, and when about to turn it leaves the inside of the cane and lightly spins a few of the leaves together for a protection. The caterpillars that from any cause remain to undergo pupation in the cane appear usually to perish from the humidity and unsuitableness of position, or from Acari. Several hundred chrysalides taken from inside cane were found on inspection to contain Acari instead of the future moth. “The existence of the insect is computed at nine days in the egg, thirty-one as a caterpillar, fifteen as a chrysalis, and four or five in the imago state—about sixty days altogether; and as in the mildness of the Mauritian climate reproduction takes place at all seasons, the increase is very rapid. “ Details regarding these small moths have been so fully given elsewhere that I need not enter on their specific description, but their appearance when in repose is stated to be very singular. The inferior palpi are stated to be nearly three times the length of the head, projecting forward in the shape of a beak. ‘The anterior legs are without spines, and when the moth is at rest are directed forward parallel to the beak-like palpi, and in addition to the great black eyes which distinguish this moth, and the antenne laid flat against the wings, which they exceed in length (but which are raised at a right angle when on the point of flying), are remarked as giving the insect ‘a very peculiar, not to say sinister look.’ “From observations made on the moth in captivity, it is stated to be very sedentary in its habits, remaining fixed in the same place for thirty-six hours concealed between leaves without even changing its position. Its flight is heavy and almost vertical; but when tormented at night by a vivid light, it jumps and turns on itself very quickly, and if set at liberty—far from being attracted by the light of a candle—conceals itself in the darkest corner of the room. The writer observes, ‘' This peculiarity has confirmed us in our first impression that its large eyes are totally deprived of the choroid membrane, which renders it almost blind.’ It is also noted that X1x the moth had not then been captured in the cane-fields—conjecturally from it remaining hidden under the leaves. “The report quoted runs to considerable length, but I have given these few points as they seem of practical importance. “The habits as mentioned agree with those noted of the moth cane- borer from Demerara, even in the matter of difficulty of capture, and this quiescent state in the shelter of the leaves and immediate concealment on disturbance, puts it on the one hand almost out of reach of destruction by the usual artificial means of attraction; and, on the other hand, puts it very much into the power of the ants, stealing quietly into every nook to lay hold of and destroy it. “Kiffects of weather and state of health of the plants appear to act strongly on the borers generally, the attacks being noted as worst in seasons of drought; this, apparently (as with some of our English attacks), from the dry weather, and state of the plant-juices being favourable to the insects, and also from the plants not being able to make way against them, or ‘ grow past,’ as it is termed. “This point is worth notice, relatively to what may be found to answer from increased irrigation or anything keeping up the vigour of the plant as stimulant application; and I may observe that in an experiment instituted with regard to the effects of the mixture known as ‘ Soluble Phenyle,’ this was applied in dilute form with ash of the burnt canes, and whether from the ash or the ‘phenyle,’ or both, a growth was reported of a remarkably healthy green, and although the difference in amount of insect presence accompanying was not great, it was certainly less.” Mr. W. L. Distant stated that he had had some experience in sugar- cane growing in Malacca, and he was of opinion that the remedy for exterminating the borers lay with the planters themselves. The necessity was to burn all the refuse “trash” from the canes, as was done on the largest estates, and not allow such to accumulate, as frequently took place on badly managed plantations. He had only that day been discussing the matter with a large cocoa-nut palm grower of Malacca. That palm suffers severely from the depredations of two beetles, Nylotrupes gideon and Oryctes rhinoceros, and the principal defence is to prevent the accumulation of vegetable refuse. Frequently Chinamen who had adjoining plantations would allow “paddy” husk, or sawdust, to accumulate, thus affording breeding grounds for these destructive insects, to the injury of all the surrounding estates. Miss Ormerod stated that the planters in British Guiana had now become aware of the importance of not allowing refuse to accumulate. Mr. M‘Lachlan was of opinion that the cane-borers could be entirely XX exterminated by weeding out and burning the canes as soon as they showed any symptoms of being infested. Mr. W. L. Distant exhibited a specimen of the so-called ‘“ vegetable caterpillar” from New Zealand, procured for him by Dr. Dunkley. This is the larva of a moth, Hepialus vivescens, on which the spores of Cordyceps (Spheria) Robertsii frequently fall, becoming truly vegetable parasites, destroying the caterpillars, and growing therefrom in the form which has caused so many erroneous statements to be made. This caterpillar feeds on the Convolvulus (native potato). Mr.'T. R. Billups exhibited a larva of Plusia chrysitis and some specimens of an Ichneumon that infested it. He stated that 120 of the Ichneumons had emerged, and that he had identified them as a species of Paaylloma. Mr. A. Phipson exhibited a remarkable variety of Pyrameis cardui taken near Basingstoke last August. (See fig.) Papers read, de. The Secretary read the following note by Mr. Sidney Churchill, of Teheran :— “« Note on Argas Persicus.” “M. I'ischer, of Waldheim, in his ‘ Notice sur l’Argas de la Perse,’ p. 14 (Acad. de Moscow, 1823), remarks :—‘ C’est la punaise venimeuse de Miana des voyageurs et dont on a tant exageré les accidents. Il] ale corps ovalaire allongé, plus rétreci en avant que la punaise des lits, avec laquelle ou l’'a compare ; tous le dos garni de petits grains blanchatre, commes chagrinés ; le bord trés peu ourle, un peu enchancré, bi-latéralement en avant; couleur d'un rouge sanguin clair, parsemé sur le dos de points élevés blanes ; pattes pales.’. M. Adouin has classified the species found by M. Savigny in Egypt under the head of Argas Persicus. But that species is oval, whereas both XX1 Baron Walckenaer, in his ‘ Histoire Naturelle des Insectes’ (Paris, 1844), and Gervais describe the Persian Argas to be truncated. The characteristics assigned to it by Baron Walckenaer are as follows:—‘ Machoires en sucroire, non engainees par les palpes, et cachées ainsi que ceux-ci au-dessous d’une avance de la partie antérieure du corps; dessous du corps granuleux, non écailleux, et d’une seule piéce; pattes bi-onguicuilées, non vesiculiféres.’ ‘My own inquiries in some respects agree with those of M. Savigny, who made a careful study of this insect. He says that they are more frequently parasites. A Persian remarked to me that the small species are found on the bodies of fowls and other larger birds, and that afterwards when nearly grown up adhere to walls, from which, during the hot summer nights, they sally forth in quest of food. The theory of the natives is also that during the winter the Avgas lives on the fowl, thus accounting for its disappearance ; but that during the summer, the air being hot, they live during the day on walls, and come forth at night. But the theory that the Miana bug is a parasite of the fowl can hardly be credited; else how is it accounted for in such isolated and far-apart places? The fowl is domesticated all over Persia, and not in the few places where the Miana bug is met with, such as at Miana, on the post-road between Teheran and Sabreez, where it is called Melleh, specimens of which I hope shortly to be able to procure and forward to the Society for examination; at Mazrah, on the Resht-Teheran post-road, from whence were procured the five specimens forwarded. Dr. Pollak, recently Professor of Medicine in the Polytechnic at Teheran, describes the Miana bug as the ‘ Kench’; but this latter corresponds to Ipodes ricinus, the sheep-tick. The Argas is also found at Chesma Ali, near Asterabad, at Shahroud, in Khorassan, and at Kashan, where it is severally known as the ‘ shebgaz,’ or night bug, and ‘ careebgaz,’ or stranger bug, being said not to sting the natives. “Dr. Schlimmer, some time Professor of Medical Jurisprudence in the Military College here, in his ‘Terminologie Medico-Pharmaceutique et Anthropologique,’ has a note on the Argas, in which he says:—‘I think it is a mistaken idea that the natives of Miana are not bitten by this wretched bug. I fancy that once in their lives they were bitten without having noticed it,—for instance, whilst a suckling, or in early youth, or perhaps without remembering it,—and are on this account rendered insusceptible of a second bite. I base,’ he continues, ‘this theory on my own experience. At my first visit to Miana, I myself suffered acutely from the bite of this venomous insect; but on a second and third visit I am not aware of having been bitten; further, in over eight hundred cases of bites from the violent black scorpion of Persia which have come under my notice, I was unable to discover the man who remembered a former bite during his lifetime. It would appear from this that the poison once inoculated into the system XXil renders one insusceptible to a succeeding attack, acting like vaccine against smallpox.’ It may be well to remark here that a popular Persian remedy against the Argas bite is to roll in a piece of sweetmeat, or otherwise a bug, and administer it when the recipient is about to go on a journey where he is likely to come across them. He goes on to say :—‘ At all events, the symptoms produced by the bite of the Argas of Miana are strikingly similar to those of remittent fever—extreme lassitude, loss of appetite, disgust with one’s work, producing yawning, with great heat and partial perspiration, but little thirst, dissatisfaction and soothing sensations at certain hours of the day.’ “These symptoms have been attributed to malarial fever to which strangers would be subject, while the natives would be spared; but the uatives do not present that appearance of being subject to Paludian fevers which natives inhabiting malarially disposed places bear. At Shahroud, Miana, Mazrah, Kashan, &c., where the Argas exists, malarial fever is scarcely known, which is quite enough to show that the symptoms above described are produced by the bite of the Avgas itself. A victim of the latter thus describes his sufferings:—‘ The first day I perceived several small punc- tures; second day, black spots replaced the punctures, delirium ensuing, white matter oozing from the punctures; delirium followed by intermittent fever. Ipecacuanha and quinine, in large doses, administered without effect ; patient given up by doctors; finally, bitter decoction of pomegranate peel completely cured patient.’ Another popular remedy of the Persians is to administer copious draughts of milk, then to tie patient into a kind of netting to a tree, and keep turning net round, letting it unwind of its own accord. This treatment produces violent vomitting, and ninety-nine patients out of a hundred die through it. «‘ Maurice Kotzebue, who is quoted by M. Fischer, mentions two cases ; in the first the patient experienced throughout his body a violent heat, and was prostrated into a sort of delirium, expiring shortly in dreadful con- vulsions. ‘The second case was communicated to him by Col. Baron Wrede, Russian Minister at Teheran. He arrived at Miana late in the season, and, fancying himself free on that account, passed a night there, but took the precaution to keep a candle lighted all night. He himself was not bitten; but one of his retinue, a Cossack, had a black spot on his foot, had delirium, and was prostrated in a violent access of madness. The natives advised the usual remedy—to kill a cow and wrap the poisoned limb in its warm hide. But this expedient proved fruitless. As a rule, this treatment is said to be attended with success, but the poor Cossack died soon after in fearful agony. Should this latter treatment prove successful it is necessary to adopt a strict diet of sugar and water and honey for at least forty days; meat and alcoholic drinks must be totally abstained from. XX1il «The Miana bug is generally found in old habitations and in holes in walls. It is rarely seen during the day, particularly disliking light, even at night; notwithstanding which candles and lamps do not always stop them from biting one. In the winter they remain inactive, being particularly venomous during the great summer heats. From time immemorial Miana has been affected by them. Death has been known to ensue from their bite in less than twenty-four hours.” Mr. Roland Trimen communicated the following notes :— “On the pairing of a Butterfly with a Moth. “ Colonel J. H. Bowker, F.Z.8S., lately sent me from D’Urban, Natal, a small Salamis Anacardii (Linn.), with an account of its capture by him in copula with a female Aphelia Apollinaris, Boisd. Col. Bowker wrote, on 9th February, 1880 :—‘ On January 24th, at Umgeni Hill, I was following a butterfly into a bush cutting, when I saw two large butterflies come fluttering down from the upper branches of a tree into an undergrowth of thorny twigs. I took them for dnacardit in copula, and immediately went to secure them. Although I advanced to within a foot of the pair, it was so difficult to get at them with the net that I looked very carefully to see how I could secure them; and you may guess my astonishment on perceiving that the two were dnacardii and a large white moth! At first I thought it was a fight; then that they might be in the clutches of some leaf-like or stick-like Mantis; but the longer I looked the clearer the case became. Anacardii (male) was holding on to a small branch, while the moth with drooping wings was hanging head downwards; the latter was a perfect specimen, soft and fresh from the pupa. After satisfying myself as to the true state of the case, I tried to capture them, and at length succeeded in getting hold of dnacardii by the wings, and began drawing the pair towards me. Just as I thought I was sure of them, and was about to pop them into my net, the moth made a violent struggle and got away; and, though I followed her up, I lost her round a corner of the bush. I am sorry that I can thus only send the butterfly, but the moth with closed wings that I forward is of the same species as that concerned. ‘his moth flies by day, and is often playing about among butterflies; it was very numerous on the occasion I am writing about. You will observe the likeness it bears to Anacardit, especially in the little ringed eyes on the wings.’ “The likeness here referred to by Col. Bowker is a very general one, but quite noticeable, the general whitish colouring of the moth resembling that of the under side of the butterfly, and its yellow spots in fuscous rings being yery similar to the more complicated ocelli of Anacardii. The Anacardii, in this instance, is an unusually small male; and it seems to me XX1V not improbable that he mistook the Aphelia Apollinaris (a large broad-winged, active day-flying insect) for a female of his own species; as I once saw, at Natal, the male Diadema Misippus for a long time pursue a female Danats Chrysippus, though in this case no union ensued. Aphelia is usually located among the Saturniida, but it presents points of affinity to the Liparide also. A. Apollinaris is in both sexes often yellow instead of white; its wings are subdiaphanous, and almost identical on both surfaces as to colour and pattern. It is so active in the day-time as constantly to be mistaken for some species of Pierid@ among butterflies.” “On a supposed Female of Dorylus helvolus (Linn). “The gravid female ant, of which a rough outline is here given, was brought to me by Mr. C. A. Fairbridge, Senior Trustee of the South- African Museum, on the 29th May, 1880, with the information that it had been dug out from a nest of small red ants on his premises at Sea Point, close to Cape ‘Town. ‘These small ants were a nuisance, and he was obliged to order the destruction of their nest; but, with his wonted attention to all matters of zoological interest, he instructed the man charged with the work to look for and secure the large female or females which probably inhabited the depth of the nest, and the single specimen figured was dug out. It is a very remarkable insect in appearance; in colour chestnut-red, paler on the abdomen, and very highly polished throughout, especially in the abdominal region. ‘There is no trace of eyes (compound or ocelli) on the globose subcordate head. The antenne are 8—9 jointed; the mandibles strong, curved, acute, without tooth; these two pairs of organs very like those of Dorylus (male), but shorter and thinner. All the males are like those of Dorylus (male), but the femora more attenuated ; the thorax shaped very similarly to that of the figure (IF. Smith, in Cat. Hymen. Brit. Mus.) of Anomura worker, but considerably wider in proportion to the head; peduncle of abdomen wider than thorax, its posterior angles outwardly acuminate ; rest of abdomen greatly widened (the segments 8, 4 and 5 being the widest and much flattened), and terminating in a pair of strong, horny, fuscous processes ; the entire abdomen more than three times as long as the head and thorax together. “This specimen was slightly injured about the anal extremity, to which some viscid matter and grains of earth were adhering. On removing this secretion I found and removed three small reddish worker ants entangled in it, one of them still alive. These measure only about 12 line in length, and were found under the lens to be eyeless, and in general structure close to, if not identical with, dnomura. Through one of the horn-like abdominal XXV plates, the eggs massed within the body of the gravid female could be distinctly seen under a low power. The female was alive when brought, and remained so until this morning (31st May): she manifested more activity than her long heavy abdomen would have led one to expect; no doubt the very high polish of the under surface aided locomotion. The thoracic structure seems quite to negative the probability of this female having possessed wings.” Messrs. F. Du Cane Godman and Osbert Salvin communicated ‘“ A List of Diurnal Lepidoptera collected in the Sierra Nevada of Santa Marta, Colombia, and the vicinity.” New Part of ‘ Transactions.’ Part II. of the ‘ Transactions’ for 1880 was on the table. August 4, 1880. J. W. Dunnina, M.A., F.L.S., Vice-President, in the chair. © The minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved. Donations to the Library were announced, and thanks voted to the respective donors. Exhibitions, de. Sir Sidney Saunders forwarded for exhibition four living specimens of Prosopis rubicola, all stylopized females recently bred from laryve extracted from briars received from Epirus; each of these small bees bearing the projecting puparium of a male Hylechthrus, and in one instance two of the latter. He also communicated the following notes thereon :— “Jn their pupal nymph-condition these bees had become considerably distended and yellow (instead of opaque white), their apparent discomfiture from the presence of these internal parasites seeming to account for the usual appearance of stylopized specimens before others.. Immediately on divesting its pupal pellicle, when the imago Prosopis is soft and moist, the parasitic larva protrudes between the abdominal segments its white head, which soon assumes a castaneous tinge; and about the third day, when the integument has become more or less corneous, an internal separation takes place, whereby the apex becomes semi-transparent, the pseudo-pupa retiring within to undergo its metamorphosis as a true pupa or nymph. ‘This intermediate stage corresponds with that which Fabre has described as the ‘troisieme larve’ in Sitaris and Meloé, exhibiting within its puparium (the indurated larva-skin) a sluggish movement for E XXV1 a brief interval, during which period the second larval form is closely imitated, followed by a moult; after which the true pupa is developed, having all its members severally swaddled in another pellicle, to be again discarded on attaining the perfect state, when the black head of the imago (in the Stylopida) is thrust forward to the apex of the puparium, about the eighth day after the protrusion of the latter as aforesaid. “This larviform condition of the pseudo-pupa in Hylechthrus I have verified by extraction, such preliminary stage serving to complete the analogy with the Meloide in other respects. “The Prosopis communis having been found stylopized in England, its ordinary parasite, the Hylechthrus, may not improbably be discovered in connexion therewith, by collecting the larvee of the former from desiccated briars, dock stems, and other known habitats, and keeping them on cotton- wool until maturity.” A collection of such larvee and nymphs from Epirus was also exhibited, including one of the latter (placed apart) distended and yellow, about to produce a stylopized imago. Miss EK. A. Ormerod exhibited a soft, fleshy, gall-like formation found on Lhododendron ferrugineum at Merton, and believed by Dr. Thomas to be a fungoid growth. Mr. Fitch stated he had often possessed specimens of this supposed gall, and had attempted in vain to breed an insect from them; he was therefore disposed to concur in Dr. Thomas’s view. Mr. T. RK. Billups exhibited a specimen of Heptaulacus villosus from Box Hill. Mr. C. O. Waterhouse stated that about five years ago he had taken from forty to fifty specimens of this rare beetle in a chalk-pit in Fresh- water Bay. Papers read. Mr. H. J. Elwes communicated a paper ‘“ On the Genus Colias,” and Mr. W. L. Distant read a paper entitled “Notes on Exotic Rhynchota, with descriptions of new species.” September 1, 1880. H. T. Sratnton, F'.R.S., Vice-President, in the chair. The minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved. Donations to the Library were announced, and thanks voted to the respective donors. XXVll Election of a Foreign Member. Miss Emily A. Smith, Assistant State Entomologist of Illinois, of Peoria, Illinois, was ballotted for and elected a Foreign Member. Exhibitions, déc. Mr. J. Jenner Weir exhibited a male Odonestis potatoria having two- thirds of the upper wings of the yellow colour of the female, and a female of the same species of the usual dull red colour of the male: also a male Smerinthus populi, having the wings almost without markings, and of the light colour generally found in the female, the right antenna being clubbed at the extremity, and not pointed as usual. Sir Sidney Saunders exhibited six winged examples of the Stylopideous genus fHylechthrus, five having been obtained from the specimens of Prosopis rubicola exhibited alive at the last meeting, one of the latter having produced two of the former. Four adult larvze of males were found in another of the same bees which became arrested in its development in the pupal stage. He also exhibited several of these bees having females of Hylechthrus in situ, and the puparium of a male extracted entire with the imago enclosed therein; also various Hymenoptera obtained from the same briars, among which were specimens of the Chaleidideous genus Melittobia, and a new species of Scleroderma. SCLERODERMA EPHIPPIUM. Capite pedibusque nigro-piceis, genubus tarsisque pallidis; thorace flavo, mesothorace antice lateribusque fuscis; abdomine nigro- piceo; facie, mandibulis, et antennis flavis. Long. corp. 8—34 mill. Four other species of Scleroderma from Greece are recorded in Professor Westwood’s monograph of this genus published in the second volume of our ‘ Transactions,’ 1837—1840. ‘This species is also met with in Corfu in the dry snags of fig-trees during winter. Miss E. A. Ormerod exhibited some galls found on Tanacetum vulgare, and stated that Mr. Fitch had obtained some of a similar kind last year near Maldon, Essex; but the present specimens were peculiar from the gall-crowths being not only in the axils of the leaves, but also on the midribs and pinne and on the inflorescence. The galls on the leaves are smaller than the others and solitary ; those into which the axillary growth of shocts has merged itself are for the most part confluent, forming bunches of as many as seven solid bell-shaped galls grown together at the sides, or sometimes completely surrounding the main stem. In the inflorescence also as many as six or seven galls may be found on the receptacle of the composite flower, XXVlll these being generally single, but occasionally confluent, and frequently bearing one or more florets on the side of the gall. The galls vary much in size, those on the leaves being only about three-sixteenths of an inch long, whilst the axillary ones are from about three-eighths to half an inch in length, and those on the flowers of intermediate size. The width is also variable, and depends on the condition of the gall; in the normal state it is about three-quarters of the length, and the gall is bell-shaped, swollen at the base and more or less contracted above, but again spreading at the upper extremity, which is prolonged into several pointed segments, giving the gall much the appearance of a miniature seedhead of Aquilegia in reversed position. The gall is depressed in the centre between three segments, where it is also covered with white downy hairs. The colour is green, in some cases turning to purple towards maturity. Internally it is fleshy and solid, with one cavity in the middle of the most typically formed galls, but from their distortion and confluence there may be more. In some of the specimens this chamber communicates by an aperture with the downy depression above, and contains a brilliant orange or scarlet larva, much resembling that of a Cecidomyia ; whether it is of that genus remains to be seen, as apparently the gall and its tenant are as yet undescribed. The specimens exhibited were found about the 24th of August on the bank of the Brent Canal, near Brentford, on one clump of tansy growing immediately above the water, and the largest numbers were in the inflorescence of a stem which was lying partly in the water with the flower-head a few inches above the surface. Mr. T. R. Billups exhibited a female specimen of Polyblastus Wahlbergi, an Ichneumon new to Britain, taken at Ashstead. A male had previously been captured by Dr. Capron. Mr. E. Boscher exhibited living specimens of the two varieties of the larva of Smerinthus ocellatus, and read the following note :— “T exhibited last October coloured drawings of Smerinthus ocellatus, showing the marked difference between those feeding on Salix viminalis and S. triandra (Proc. Ent. Soc. 1879, p. xliv). I have now brought for exhibition some living caterpillars found feeding respectively on Salix viminalis and apple. I wish particularly to draw attention to those on the Salix, of which I found about a dozen feeding on the same plant, and all marked with brown spots. Others which I found on another species of Salix, in an osier-bed some little distance off, were of the ordinary bluish sreen form without the brown spots, and identical with those found on apples.” Mr. Meldola exhibited some specimens of Camptogramma bilineata, a large number of which had been found by Mr. James English near Epping attached firmly to the leaves of the “ tea-tree” (Lycium barbarwm) XX1X by the abdomen, in which position they had died, possibly from the effects of a fungoid disease. Mr. A. H. Swinton communicated the following :— “* Note on Luciola Italica. “ Towards the end of June the Luciola [talica is common along the damp plane-tree walks that border the torrent-bed of the Po at Turin. They commence to glitter at night after the close of dusk under the hanging foliage and along the weedy river-banks, moving in straight lines and emitting an intermittent light, whose fitfulness renders their capture not a little puzzling and difficult. If more closely watched it is found they only fly thus for a little space, and then settle down on the twigs and plants to rest. When introdnced into a room at night and let go, they rise zigzag to the ceiling, and as they dart like miniature meteors their light vacillates from a round fire-globe to a lozenge-shaped nebula. Placed in vicinity beneath inverted tumblers, they flash out their light alternately and responsive. One morning after the enaction of such display, I fancied I perceived an odour of the common puff-ball fungus in the glass where one was confined. «A luminous Coleopterous larva (?) I found in the Island of Capri emitted a light that shone through the chip-box in which it lay. The glow was quenched seemingly at the pleasure of the creature, and seemed to become brighter when the box was disturbed.” October 6, 1889. H. T. Srarnron, F.R.S., Vice-President, in the chair. The minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved. Donations to the Library were announced, and thanks voted to the respective donors. Election of Members. Sir Arthur Scott, of Birmingham, and 97, Katon Square, W., and Mr. Frank Edward Robinson, of 10, Little Clarendon Street, Oxford, were balloted for and elected ordinary Members. Exhibitions. Mr. M‘Lachlan stated that last year (Proc. Ent. Soc., 1879, p. xliii) he had exhibited specimens of Anthocoris nemorum, an Hemipterous insect, which, under the name of the “needle-nosed flea,” had been supposed by a correspondent residing near Canterbury to be damaging the hops in that neighbourhood, At the time of exhibiting the specimens he had expressed XXX the opinion that this insect was not the true culprit, its habits being probably carnivorous, and he had recently heard from the same correspondent that the hops were much less attacked this year, and that a small larva had been found in the cones on careful examination. Specimens of this larva were now exhibited, Mr. M‘Lachlan considering them to be those of some fly, and further expressing his belief that the Anthocoris was in search of this Dipterous larva, and was thus of service to the hop-growers. Sir Sidney Saunders exhibited a series of apterous females of the new species of Scleroderma adverted to at the previous meeting, and also a single specimen of the same sex with wings and ocelli, which he had obtained from a number of cocoons closely connected together within the empty cell of a Raphiglossa in briars from Epirus. He also explained various circumstances connected with their structure and habits, which, together with a full description of the species, he proposes to bring before the Society in a separate form. Mr. W. F. Wirby exhibited the following varieties of British Lepi- doptera :— A series of varieties of Argynnis selene taken by his son at Dusseldorf. The most remarkable form is shown in the accompanying figures :— Two hermaphrodite specimens of Smerinthus populi bred by Mr. Shuttle- worth from the same lot of pupe. A dark specimen of Hemerophila abruptaria, captured in London by Mr. Olliffe. An hermaphrodite specimen of Hnnomos angularia, having one antenna pectinated and the other filiform, bred by Mr. Hudson. The Rev. E. N. Geldart, who was present as a visitor, exhibited and made remarks upon a variety of Argynnis selene, captured on July 5th between Reigate and Betchworth. Mr. E. A. Fitch exhibited, on behalf of Mr. Theodore Wood, a specimen of Acronycta megacephala, with only two wings, having been found in this state on a tree trunk. Mr. Ralfe, who was present as a visitor, exhibited a specimen of Vanessa antiopa, taken on Wimbledon Common, August 24th, 1880; also a specimen of Acontia solaris from Eastbourne, captured August 12th, 1880, and a very bleached specimen of Plusia gamma, received from some dealer, and of doubtful history. XXX1 Papers read, de. Mr. Hildebrand Ramsden communicated the following note on Pyro- phorus causticus :— “Ffaving two living specimens of the ‘Cucuyo,’ or native Firefly of Cuba, it has been suggested that the members of the Entomological Society would be interested in seeing them. Mr. Charles Waterhouse himself identified the species as Pyrophorus causticus, Candéze. The insects were captured at Santiago de Cuba on the 4th of May last, and reached England on the 30th of the same month. During the voyage, and since their arrival in this country, they have been supplied with water and sugar-cane or brown sugar. The insects appear to be as well now as when they landed, though they have been in this country over three months. During the daytime they conceal themselves under any covering they can find, remaining motionless and non-luminous till dusk, when they light their lamps and move about. At first it would seem as if motion and luminosity went together and were dependent on each other; but this is not invariably the cease, for I have observed the insects become non-luminous while walking away in order to conceal themselves. While engaged in eating they are generally semi-luminous, their lights constantly increasing and diminishing in intensity, and reminding one of the end of a cigar smoked in the dark. In the daytime they become luminous by being excited and made to move about. In addition to the two luminous balls there is a luminous band underneath the thorax, which is, however, only apparent when the insect is in the act of rising to take flight.” . Mr. A. H. Swinton read two papers entitled ‘‘ Some experiments on the variability of Lepidoptera, undertaken during the year 1880,” parts i. and ii., and exhibited specimens and figures in illustration. Mr. A. G. Butler read a paper entitled “ Observations upon certain species of the Lepidopterous genus Terias, with descriptions of hitherto unknown forms from Japan.” Mr. C. O. Waterhouse communicated a paper ‘ On the Buprestide from Madagascar,” and Mr. F. Moore a paper “On the Asiatic Lepidoptera referred to the genus Mycalesis, with descriptions of new genera and species.” Mr. W. F. Kirby called the Society’s attention to the circumstance that M. Andre, who is publishing a work on European Hymenoptera, sometimes prints descriptions of new genera and species which are forwarded to him too late for insertion in the body of the work, not only on the cover of his quarterly parts, but even at the end of sheets of advertisements laid loosely between the pages of a part. He also mentioned that coloured plates of butterflies were published in Paris with MS. names taken from Boisduval’s XXX collection attached; the species being in most cases well-known forms which had long been properly described or figured by other entomologists. A discussion relating to M. Andre’s practice then took place, in the course of which remarks were made by Mr. M‘Lachlan, Mr. Distant, and other Members, the general opinion being that such a mode of describing genera and species was most derogatory to Science, and that it was much to be deplored that the Society had not the power of enforcing a rule that such descriptions should be ignored by systematists. November 38, 1880. Sir Joun Luppocr, Bart., M.P., F.R.S., &e., President, in the chair. The minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved. Donations to the Library were announced, and thanks voted to the respective donors. Election of Members. Mr. Edward Meyrick, of Ramsbury, Hungerford, Wilts, was ballotted for and elected an ordinary Member. Capt. Thomas Broun, of Auckland, New Zealand, a former Subscriber, was ballotted for and elected an ordinary Member. Dr. EK. Brandt, President of the Russian Entomological Society, &c., of the Imperial Medico-Chirurgical Academy, St. Petersburg, was ballotted for and elected a Foreign Member. Exhibitions, é&c. Mr. C. O. Waterhouse exhibited, on behalf of Mr. Sydney Olliffe, a pair of dwarf specimens of H’pione vespertaria, taken at Arundel. Mr. M‘Lachlan exhibited some very curious galls on a broad-leaved Eucalyptus from Australia. ‘They were of large size, very hard, with four longitudinal keels, each of which was prolonged into a long cornute appendage. ‘The maker of the galls was a Lepidopterous larva, perhaps pertaining to the Pyralide. When opened the galls gave out a very powerful odour, somewhat resembling that of Rvbes nigrum, and in all those opened there was what appeared to be an imperfectly-formed pupa of a moth much distended, occupying the whole of the cavity, and always crammed with the developed pups of a Hymenopterous parasite of the family Chalcidide. No gall presented any opening whence either moth or parasite could have escaped; but on the crown, between the four horns or processes, there was a very minute orifice, which probably served to admit air, other- wise scarcely obtainable through the thick and hard walls of the galls. Mr. M‘Lachlan then mentioned that he had received a letter from Mr. D. G. Rutherford, from Camaroons, West Africa, in which the writer XXXill stated that he had taken Papilio merope and P. cenea, in copula, and had obtained eggs and young larve therefrom. Mr. Roland Trimen observed that, to the best of his knowledge, Papilio cenea, Stoll, was a form of the female peculiar to the South, and that the female intended by Mr. Rutherford was probably either Hippocoon, Fab. (the prevalent West African form), or Trophonius, Westw., var., or possibly the somewhat intermediate form named Dionysos by Doubleday, also in- habiting Western Africa. In any case the observation was important as confirming the statements as to the polymorphic condition of the female of merope. Prof. Westwood exhibited a globular gall on the surface of a sallow-leaf, made by a species of Tenthredinida@ ; also a Dipterous larva (Syrphus), found closely adhering to the stem of a pelargonium. Mr. W. F. Kirby exhibited, on behalf of the Rev. J. K. Brown, of Maidstone, a remarkable variety of Epunda lutulenta; and, on behalf of Mr. Ralfe, a specimen of Apatura tlia, which this gentleman stated he had captured in Pinner Wood last July. Sir John Lubbock exhibited some interesting larvae which Mr. Calvert had forwarded to him from the Troad, through Sir J. Hooker. He stated that these larve had recently appeared there in great numbers, and were likely to prove most useful, as they fed on the eggs of locusts. The larvee were, in his opinion, Coleopterous, probably those of a beetle allied to Cantharis. Mr. Riley had recently described the transformations of certain insects belonging to this group, and natives of the United States. The young larve on first hatching are thin, active little creatures, which eat their way into the cases of locust’s eggs, where they rapidly grow into fat, fleshy grubs. Mr. Calvert states that in his neighbourhood a large pro- portion of the locusts’ eggs have this year been destroyed by these larve. Sir John Lubbock suggested that if the species does not exist in Cyprus it might be worth while to introduce it there. Mr. Roland Trimen exhibited the wingless female Hymenopteron, of which he had recently sent a sketch and brief account to the Society (see Proc. Ent. Soc., July 7th, 1880, p. xxiv), and which, from all the circum- stances attending its discovery near Cape Town by Mr. C. A. Fairbridge, he had strong grounds for regarding as the female of the well-known Dorylus helvolus, Linn. He also showed a second specimen of the same female, presented to the South-African Museum by M. C. L. Peringuey, which was stated to have been found near Cape Town on the surface of the ground ; whereas Mr. Fairbridge’s example had been taken at a depth of about eighteen inches at the bottom of the nest of a small red ant, believed to belong to the genus Anomma, of which Mr. Trimen exhibited three workers found attached to the large female. The latter seemed clearly referable to Gerstaecker’s genus Dichthodia (Stett. Entom. Zeit., xxiv., p. TOtE- TL; F XXXIV fig. 2), which that author regarded as almost certainly the female of Dorylus. Mr. Trimen also exhibited six cases fabricated by a South-African Lepidopterous larva, of which the outer covering consisted, not of pieces of grass, twigs, or other vegetable substances, but of particles of sand and fragments of stone. The very peculiar aspect of these cases was due to the fact that along each side was attached a series of much larger fragments of stone, roughly triangular in shape, and regularly arranged in a single row, with the longest point outwards; the effect of this arrangement being to give the case the general appearance of a Myriapod, and indeed a not very remote resemblance to Peripatus. These cases (in two instances con- taining the living larvee) were found in the dry elevated “ Karroo” country of the Cape Colony, in the districts of Beaufort and Clanwilliam, and were presented to the South-African Museum by Mr. Thomas Bain and Mr. J. R. Maquard respectively. Mr, Bain designated the larva as a “geologist in miniature,” but wrote that its local name among the Boers (who regarded it as highly venomous!) was “ Zand-Beestje.” Mr. 'Trimen was unable to rear the larva, owing to ignorance of its food-plant; but, from its appearance when out of its case, he thought that it would in all probability have furnished a large moth of the family Psychide. Papers read. Sir Sidney Saunders read a paper ‘‘ On the habits and affinities of the Hymenopterous Genus Scleroderma, with descriptions of new species.” Mr. Edward Saunders read a paper entitled “A Synopsis of British Heterogyna and fossorial Hymenoptera.” Prof. Westwood read a paper containing descriptions of new species of exotic Diptera, with a supplement containing descriptions of species formerly published by the author in inaccessible periodicals. New Part of ‘ Transactions.’ Part III. of the ‘ Transactions’ for 1880, published in October, was on the table. December 1, 1880. Sir Joun Lupgock, Bart., M.P., F.R.S., President, in the chair. The minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved. Donations to the Library were announced, and thanks voted to the respective donors. XXXV The President announced the names of the Members proposed as Officers and Council for 1881, and nominated the Auditors for the accounts of the present year. Exhibitions. Mr. F. P. Pascoe exhibited a large series of Arescus histrio, collected in Peru by Mr. Buckley, and interesting as showing the extreme variability of the markings on the elytra of this species. The Rev. H. 8. Gorham remarked that he had also observed this great variability, and that he possessed one specimen in which the markings were unsymmetrical on the two elytra. He stated that although the markings were so variable, the colour of the antennee appeared to be always constant. Mr. C. O. Waterhouse had also seen a specimen marked unsym- metrically, and had likewise observed the constancy in the colour of the antenne. Mr. T. R. Billups exhibited four species of Pezomachus new to Britain, viz., P. Miilleri, P. juvenilis, P. intermedius, and P. incertus. He also exhibited twenty species of Coleoptera found in a small parcel of corn-refuse from Mr. Fitch’s granaries at Maldon, viz., Calandra granaria, Linn., and C. oryze, Linn.; Trogosita mauritanica, Linn.; Lemophleus ferrugineus, Steph., and L. pusillus, Schon. (rare); Silvanus surinamensis, Linn. ; Monotoma quadrifoveolata, Aube (rare); Byphaea fumata, Linn.; Ptinus fur, Linn.; Niptus hololeucus, Fald.; Gibbiwm scotias, Fab.; Rhizopertha pusilla, Fab.; Alphitophagus 4-pustulatus, Steph. ; Tribolium ferrugineum, Fab., and 7. confusum, Duval; Latheticus oryz@, C. O. Waterhouse (a new species); EHypophlwus depressus, Fab. ; Alphitobius piceus, Oliv.; Tenebrio molitor, Linn., and T’. obscurus, Fab. The President exhibited two specimens in alcohol of a species of Phasmide forwarded by a correspondent in St. Vincent. Mr. W. D. Cansdale exhibited a specimen of Tischeria gaunacella, a species of Tineina, recently added to the British list, bred from Prunus spinosa in May, 1878; he also exhibited a remarkable variety of Cidaria russata. Papers read. Mr. John Scott communicated a paper “On a Collection of Hemiptera from Japan.” Mr. C. O. Waterhouse read a paper entitled “ Description of a new species of the anomalous genus Polyctenes,” and exhibited a diagram illustrating the structure of this insect. XXXV1 ANNUAL MEETING, January 19, 1881. Sir Joun Lussoocr, Bart., M.P., F.R.S., &c., President, in the chair. Mr. J. W. Dunning, one of the Auditors, read an abstract of the Treasurer’s Accounts for 1880, showing a balance of about £57 in favour of the Society. Mr. F’. P. Pascoe proposed, and Mr. K. A. Fitch seconded, that the abstract of the Treasurer’s Accounts just read should be accepted. This was put to the meeting and carried unanimously. The Secretary then read the following :— Report oF THE Councit For 1881. The Council, in compliance with the Bye-Laws, begs to present the following Report :— During the year 1880 the Society has lost three Members by death and seven by resignation, while eighteen new Members and Subscribers have been elected, thus showing a total increase of eight. The deaths that we have to record are those of Prof. Edward Grube and Mr. Andrew Swanzy, and at the end of last month our Society lost one of its ten Honorary Members, in the person of the well-known Lepidopterist, M. Achille Guenée, of Chateaudun. ‘The Council will, at an early meeting, propose the name of some other gentleman to fill the vacancy thus caused. With reference to our financial position, the Council has much pleasure in pointing to a balance of about £57 in favour of the Society, as shown by the following abstract of the Treasurer’s accounts :— RECEIPTS. PAYMENTS. Balance in hand — - - - £3 | Rent, Office, and ibal £116 Contributions of Members ~ "2309 Expenses : = Life-compositions - = =) SBiku Publications - = : Se Sit Sale of Publications - - 99 | Library - - 2 ‘ Pet 2310) Interest on Consols : z 5 | Investment in Consols - =) el6 Donations - = S ~ BY £400 £343 This unusually large balance is attributable to the fact that our publishing expenses have not been as large as usual, while, on the other XXXV11 hand, two life-compositions have been paid, and the large sum of £99 has been realized by the sale of our publications. The ‘Transactions’ for 1880 (exclusive of the ‘ Proceedings’) form a volume of 320 pages, containing eighteen papers, illustrated by nine plates, of which five are coloured. The thanks of the Society are due to the Rey. H. 8. Gorham, who defrayed a part of the cost of Plate I., and to Messrs. Godman and Salvin for their presentation of Plates III. and IV. Four wood-cuts have appeared in our ‘ Proceedings,’ and the Council is of opinion that the custom of figuring remarkable varieties of insects that may be exhibited at our meetings cannot but tend to increase the value of this part of our publications, and to add to the interest of such exhibitions. The Council have under consideration a proposal to make an alteration with respect to the distribution of our ‘Transactions,’ and as this change, if adopted, would involve a modification of one of our Bye-Laws, a special meeting must in that case be called. It is proposed to place our town and country Members on the same footing, and to give the ‘ Transactions’ to all the Members of, and Subscribers to, the Society, without any further payment beyond their ordinary annual subscription. It is estimated that while by the adoption of this plan the Society would only incur, in the first instance, a loss of about £15 per annum, in all probability an increased number of new Members would be induced to join us if such an additional advantage were offered. The Library continues to grow by the addition of the usual periodicals, and of many valuable works acquired by donation, purchase, and exchange. Among these acquisitions may be mentioned Lucas’s ‘Exploration de l’Algérie (Aunulosa),’ three vols. and atlas; Piaget’s ‘ Monographie des Pédiculines’; Herbst’s ‘ Versuch einer Naturgeschichte der Krabben und Krebse,’ &c. ‘The Society is indebted to the Trustees of the British Museum for Butler's ‘ Lepidoptera Heterocera,’ for Lord Walsingham’s ‘American Tortricid,’ and for C. O. Waterhouse’s ‘ Lycide’; to the Royal Society for the completion of their ‘ Catalogue of Scientific Papers,’ and to the Ceylon Government for Part I. of Moore’s ‘ Lepidoptera of Ceylon’; whilst many other valuable donations have been acknowledged at the ordinary meetings. Increasing use is made of the books, and the Librarian reports that during the past year 100 more volumes have been in circulation than during 1879. The attendance list shows that the twelve meetings held during the past year have on the whole been well supported, and the numerous exhibitions and discussions recorded in our ‘ Proceedings’ will show that their interest has been well maintained. 11, Chandos Street, Cavendish Square, London, W. January 19, 1881. XXXVI111 The President proposed that the above report should be adopted. The motion was seconded by Mr. W. F. Kirby, and carried unanimously. The President then nominated Mr. V. R. Perkins and Mr. M. J. Walhouse as Scrutineers; and at the termination of the ballot the following Members of Council were declared duly elected :—William Cole; William L. Distant; F.DuCane Godman, F.L.8.; Ferdinand Grut, F.L.S.; Sir John Lubbock, Bart., M.P., &c.; Raphael Meldola, F.R.A.S.; Osbert Salvin, M.A., F.R.S.; Edward Saunders, F.L.S.; H. T. Stainton, F.R.S.; . EH. A. Fitch, F.L.8.; W. F. Kirby, F.L.8.; F. P. Pascoe, F.L.S.; Roland Trimen, F.L.S. The following officers were then declared to be duly elected :-— President, H. 'T. Stainton, F.R.S.; Treasurer, E. Saunders; Librarian, F. Grut; Secretaries, E. A. Fitch and W. F. Kirby. An Address was then delivered by the President, at the conclusion of which Mr. EF’. P. Pascoe moved a vote of thanks to Sir John Lubbock for his services during his occupancy of the Presidential Chair, and proposed that his Address should be printed. The proposal was seconded by Mr. Fitch and carried by acclamation. Sir John Lubbock having replied, Mr. J. W. Dunning proposed a vote of thanks to the Treasurer, Secretaries, and Librarian. Mr. M. J. Walhouse seconded the motion, which was carried unanimously. Messrs. Grut, Meldola, and Distant made some remarks in reply. Mr. Distant stated, in conclusion, that he was sure the members would hear with regret that a portion of Epping Forest was threatened with destruction. The subject had been brought under the notice of the Council by Mr. Cole; and he had been requested to state that a resolution had been passed expressing the wish that Epping Forest should be kept, in accordance with the Act of Parliament, as far as possible, in its natural condition. ‘The announcement was received with approbation. ABSTRACT OF RECEIPTS AND PAYMENTS. 1880 a £ s. d.| 1880 ara ce SRE To Balance atl Jan. 1880 - 21110] By Rent, Salary of Sub- Subscriptions, as per list - 162 11 0 Librarian, and oni} 115 18 5 Entrance Fees : = av 6 O Eapenses Mears : : _ 3918 0 Printing - - - = Jal as) il Compositions - : - 3110 0 Colouring Plates, &e. - 59 2 7 Denations 7 = _ 3119 6 Books, Binding, &e. - 2912 9 ‘Transactions, sale of - 99 4 6 es ; po Consols, interest on } £12 0 £313 4s. 8d. Balance 31st Dec.1880 - 57 13 2 £399 12 10 £399 12 10 ASSETS. 1D Gp Gk Balance” - - = = E = - = = of 13) 2 Subscriptions due, but not paid, considered good (say) 8 8 0 Consols, £315 4s. 8d. - - - - (cost) 2938 4 0 £359 5 2 EDWARD SAUNDERS, Treasurer. J. W. DUNNING. Audited and found correct, Cuas. O. WATERHOUSE. J. JENNER WEIR. 12th January, 188!. 9 ‘aos 4 asta xli THE PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS. I must commence, Gentlemen, by tendering to you the expression of my warm gratitude for your forbearance and kindness during the last fifteen months. When I found that it would be impossible for me to attend your meetings for some time, I placed my resignation in the hands of the Council, who, however, thought it better that I should continue in office until the end of the usual term. I have to thank them for their careful attention to the affairs of the Society; and especially to the Secretaries and Vice-Presidents, and to Mr. Dunning, who was good enough to deliver the address last year. We may, I think, fairly congratulate ourselves that the science of Entomology continues to make rapid progress. The number of species recorded, and our knowledge of their habits, anatomy, and affinities, are continually increasing. The energy of Entomologists is so great, the subject is so interesting and vast, and consequently the extent of Entomo- logical literature is so enormous, that it is of course impossible for your President to do more than refer to a very small proportion of the numerous works and memoirs which have appeared during his term of office. Our own Transactions contain a number of valuable memoirs. The list is as follows :— Part I.—‘‘ Materials for a revision of the Lampyride,” by Rev. H. S. Gorham. ‘‘Onsome Coleoptera from the Hawaian Island,” by Dr. Sharp. ‘ On synonyms of Heterocerous Lepi- doptera,” by A. G. Butler. ‘Descriptions of Cetonide and Cerambycide from Madagascar,” by C. O. Waterhouse. G xlii Part II.—‘‘ On the structure of the Lampyride, with refe- rence to their phosphorescence,” by Rev. H. 8. Gorham. ‘‘ Notes on the coloration and development of Insects,” by Peter Cameron. “ On Cetonia aurata and Protaetia Bensoni,” by Prof. Westwood. ‘Materials for a revision of the Lampyride,” by Rev. H. 8. Gorham. ‘On two gynandromorphous specimens of Cirrochroa Aoris, &¢.,” by Prof. Westwood. Part III.—*‘ A list of Diurnal Lepidoptera collected in the Sierra Nevada of Santa Marta, Colombia, and its vicinity,” by Messrs. Godman and Salvin. ‘‘Onthe genus Colias,” by H. J. Elwes. ‘‘ Notes on exotic Rhynchota, with descriptions of new species,” by W. L. Distant. Part IV.—‘‘ On the Asiatic Lepidoptera referred to the genus Mycalesis ; with descriptions of new genera and species,” by F. Moore. ‘‘On the Buprestide from Madagascar,” by C. O. Waterhouse. ‘‘ Observations upon certain species of the Lepi- dopterous genus T’erias, with descriptions of hitherto unnamed forms from Japan,” by Arthur G. Butler. ‘“‘ Synopsis of British Heterogyna and Fossorial Hymenoptera,” by Edward Saunders. “On a collection of Hemiptera from Japan,” by John Scott. ** Description of a new species of the anomalous genus Polyctenes,” by C. O. Waterhouse. On the present occasion, however, I will not dwell on the researches of our own members. Quitting then our own contribution to Entomological science, we are indebted to Dr. Grenacher for a very interesting and important work* on the vision of insects, portions of which have already appeared in preliminary communications. He points out the curious fact that the different simple eyes in the same spider differ in some species considerably in their structure. He divides the compound eyes of insects into three types :— Acone eyes, in which the crystal cone is not present, but is represented throughout life by distinct cells ; Pseudocone eyes, in which there is a special conical and transparent medium ; and, lastly, Eucone eyes, with true crystalline cones. * Untersuchungen uber der Sehorgan der Arthropoden. xiii As regards the compound eye of insects, Dr. Grenacher adopts the mosaic theory of Muller,—that is to say, he does not consider that each facet produces an image, as is the case in our eyes, but corresponds to a single point in the field of view. In certain species, between the posterior end of the crystalline cone and the front of the perceptive apparatus, is a narrow con- striction, which is sometimes considerably produced, so that the formation of an image would seem to be physically impossible. Again, the formation of an image would require a power of accommodation for different distances, but he could find no trace that any such power exists. Another objection is the extreme difficulty which would exist of combining so many different images into one idea, though it must be admitted that at first sight this difficulty (though to a@ minor degree) exists even in the case of simple eyes, the number of which varies considerably. Spiders have six to eight ; some aquatic larve twelve; while the Oniscoidee, assuming that these eyes are aggregates of simple eyes, as Muller supposed, have as many as twenty to forty. These, however, take in different parts of the field of vision. The principal reasons which have led Dr. Gnomes to decide in favour of Miiller’s theory of mosaic vision are as follows :— In certain cases there is no lens, and consequently there can be no image; in some it would seem that the image would be formed completely behind the eye, while in others again it would be too much in front. Another difficulty is that any true projection of an image would in certain species be precluded by the presence of impenetrable pigment, which only leaves a minute central passage for the light-rays. In all cases moreover, without any exception, even the sharpest image would be useless, from the absence of a suitably receptive surface ; since both the number and mode of combination of the elements composing that surface seem to preclude it from receiving more than a single impression. He concludes, therefore, that the image theory must be definitely abandoned. If these views are correct, we come to the interesting result that while the image produced on the retina of the ocellus must of course be reversed as in our own eyes; in the compound eyes, on the contrary, the vision must be direct. That the same animal should see some things directly, and others reversed ; and xliv yet obtain definite conceptions of the outer world, would certainly be very remarkable. With this fundamental difference between the ocellus and the compound eye, it does not seem possible that either the ocellus should be derived from the compound eye, or the compound eye from the ocellus. On the contrary, both seem to point back to a less developed ancestral type. Starting from such an origin, an increase of the separate elements and an improvement of the lens would lead to the ocellus, while an increase of the number of eyes would bring us to the compound eye. On the other hand, it must be admitted that there are reasons for considering the different kinds of eyes to be of perfectly distinct origm. The eye of Limulus, according to Grenacher, is formed on a plan quite unlike that of other Crustacea. Again, the development of the eye in Musca, to judge from Weismann’s observations, is very dissimilar from that of other insects. The varied position of the eye in different groups, as, for instance, in Peeten, Spondylus, Huphansia, Onchidium, &c., point to the same conclusion. The old opinion was that the compound eyes were intended for distant, the ocelli for near, vision, but Claparéde long ago attempted to show that the reverse was the case. Mr. Lowne, who has contributed to the ‘ Philosophical Trans- actions’ for 1878 an interesting memoir on the ‘‘ Eyes of Insects,” agrees with Grenacher in leaning towards Muller’s view, which, indeed, he considers to be the only theory yet advanced capable of explaining the phenomenon, ‘‘when we bear in mind the relation of the recipient structures of the compound eye to the nerve elements beneath them.” ‘The ocelli, on the other hand, he regards as incapable of producing ‘‘anything worthy the name of an image,” and he suspects that their function ‘‘is the perception of the intensity in the direction of light rather than vision.” In opposition to Miiller’s statement that no portion of the com- pound eye in any of the insects he examined corresponded in the direction of the axis of the facets with the eye of the opposite side, Mr. Lowne states that ‘‘in most insects the field of vision in the two eyes has a common portion in the peripheral region in the vicinity of the mouth; in this region the radius of curvature of the cornea is very short. It is, therefore, only adapted for the xlv acute vision of very near objects. It is chiefly developed in predaceous insects. It probably serves the insect in judging of the distance of objects from the mouth.” Mr. Lowne describes specially the eyes of Syrphus, Musca, Eristalis, Tipula, Vespa, Formica, Agrion, Acridium, Vanessa, Sphinx, and Noctua. He finds the eye of Sphinx to be inter- mediate between those of the nocturnal and diurnal Lepidoptera, while the highest development of the “aggregate eye” occurs in the so-called compound eyes of the Nematocerous Diptera and the Hymenoptera. He considers the eye of the Daddy Long-legs (Trpula) to be intermediate in structure between a true compound eye and a collection of ocelli—a view, however, which seems to present considerable difficulties. As regards the power of vision possessed by the compound eyes, he believes that a dragon-fly or a wasp sees an object at a distance of twenty feet ‘‘in the same detail that a man would perceive it if it were seen at a distance of one hundred and sixty feet.’ On this point some observations of M. Fabre’s are of much interest. Some years ago I tried myself the experiment of taking bees to some distance from home, and then letting them go. They rose in the air, just as a pigeon does under similar circumstances, and ere long returned home. I was, however, prevented from following up these observations. M. Fabre has now made similar experiments, and finds that if bees are taken as far as four kilometres from home, they will still find their way back. It would be very interesting to make these experiments for greater distances, but the facts already ascertained surely indicate considerable powers of vision. As regards the structure of ocelli, Graber* differs materially from Grenacher. He observes that, according to the latter, the whole complex structure from the termination of the optic nerve to the hinder surface of the cornea forms one cell. Graber, on the other hand, considers that it is composed of two. He observes that Grenacher considers the nucleus of his single cell to be sometimes pre-bacillar, sometimes post-bacillar. These, however, Graber regards as really the nuclei of two different series of cells. He considers that the ocellus of the scorpion offers in some respects an interesting intermediate form between the simple and compound eye. In fact, his account of their delicate and * Ar. f. Mic. Anat., 1880, xvii., p. 58, xlvi complex organs differs fundamentally from that given by Grenacher. Grenacher, in a subsequent memoir,* defends his own views, and denies the accuracy of Graber’s observations. He points out that, while Scolopendra has only four eyes, the number increases in Julus, Lithobius, and Glomeris; and that in Scutigera it is so great (amounting to several hundred), and the facets are so close to one another, that the eye has all the appearance of the compound eye of a true insect; and if each cornea throws an image on a retina, we have the difficulties which Miiller has pointed out in the case of insects. Moreover, though the ocellus of a spider at first sight closely resembles the eye of a Scolopendra, the internal structure is, according to Grenacher, altogether different. In the ocellus of a spider or an insect we find, at a greater or less distance behind the lens, a retina consisting of a receptive surface, extended con- centrically with that of the lens, and consisting of a number of more or less rod-like perceptive elements so arranged that their light could fall on their ends. On the contrary, in the eyes of Myriapods there is, he says, either a single receptive element behind the cornea, or where there are many they are arranged with their longer axes perpendicular to the direction of the light; so that any separate perception of the rays of light coming from different points seems to be an impossibility. In the eye of Iuthobius, behind the biconvex lens, he states that the cells, liming what I may call the tube of each separate eye, terminate in hairs, between the free ends of which is left a narrow passage down which the light must pass to reach the end of the optic nerve. Such a structure, certainly very remarkable, seems entirely to preclude the possibility of the forma- tion of a true image. Altogether the account given by Grenacher, both as to the mode of action of the eyes of Myriapods and as to their internal structure, differs entirely from that of Graber. Sograff, also, has recently given a description of the eye of Lithobius, but as his memoir is in Russian I am unfortunately unable to state his views. Mr. Hammond has published, in the ‘ Linnean Journal,’ an interesting paper on the structure of the thorax of the Blow-fly. He concludes that the thorax of Diptera is almost exclusively mesothoracic. He also expresses the opinion that where a * Ar. f. Mic. Anat., 1880, xvii., p. 415, xlvii spiracle lies between two segments it is “always the property of the posterior surface of the segment in front of it.” Mr. Balfour, in his ‘Comparative Embryology,’ has given an excellent réswmé of our knowledge of the Embryology of Insects. He regards Moseley’s observations of the tracheal system of Peripatus as fatal to the view that insects can have sprung directly from aquatic ancestors not provided with trachea, and considers that these characteristic organs are modifications of cutaneous glands. The problematical “imaginal disks” of Weismann he regards as derivatives of the embryonic epiblast, like the similar invaginations of the skin in many larval Nemertines. He considers that the Thysanura and Collembola, while “not belonging to the true stock of the ancestors of insects,” are ‘‘degenerated descendants of this stock; much as Amphioxus and the Ascidians are degenerate relatives of the ancestral stock of Vertebrates.” He considers that the closed tracheal system of larve with tracheal gills is undoubtedly of a secondary character, and that this tells strongly against the view that the wings are modified tracheal gills. We are also indebted to Mr. Balfour for a short but interesting paper on the Embryology of Spiders.* The species which he studied is Agelena labyrinthica. His observations have satisfied him that in their development the Arachnida are much more closely related to the other Tracheata than to the Crustacea ; but I must confess that I doubt whether we have yet sufficient data to justify us in concluding that the points of difference on which he dwells will be found to hold good generally. There has been much difference of opinion as to the homology of the Chelicere, and some eminent authorities have regarded them as corresponding to the antenne of insects. Mr. Balfour, however, considers that his observations prove them to be postoral, and equivalent to either the mandibles or the first maxille of other Tracheata. As regards the yolk-cells, he finds himself in close harmony with Dohrn, Bobretsky and Graber; but he states that the first formed mesoblastic plate does not give rise to the whole of the mesoblast, but that during the whole embryonic life the meso- blast continues to receive accessions from the cells of the yolk. M. Fabre has published a charming volume of ‘ Souvenirs Entomologiques.’ He has continued and added to the very * ¢ Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science,’ 1880, p. 167. xlviil interesting observations on the solitary wasps which he pub- lished some years ago. He then described the singular state of paralysis into which they throw their victims, which if killed would decay, and if buried alive would in their struggles almost infallibly destroy the egg or young larva of the wasp. The wasp, however, stings them in such a manner as to pierce the ganglia, and thus, without killing them, almost deprives them of all power of movement. One species of Sphex, which preys on a large grasshopper (Lphippigera), obtains the same result in a different manner. After having almost paralysed her victim in the usual manner, she throws it on its back, bends the head so as to extend the articulation of the neck, and then, seizing the intersegmental membrane with her jaws, crushes the subesophagal ganglion. Truly a marvellous instinct. M. Fabre found that, after this treatment, the victims retain some power of digestion, and he was able considerably to prolong their life by feeding them with syrup. Side by side with these wonderful instincts, M. Fabre records almost equally surprising evidence of stupidity. The very same species of Sphex, for instance, is, it seems, accustomed to drag the Ephippigera by one antenna; and M. Fabre found that if the antenne be cut off close to the head, the Sphex, after trying in vain to get a grip, gives the matter up as a bad job, and leaves her victim in despair, without ever thinking of dragging it by one of its legs. Again, when a Sphex had provisioned her cell, laid her egg, and was about to close it up, M. Fabre drove her away, and took out the Ephippigera and the egg. He then allowed the Sphex to return; she went down into the empty cell, and though she must have known that the grasshopper and the egg were no longer there, yet she proceeded calmly to stop up the orifice just as if nothing had happened. The genus Sphex paralyzes its victims and provisions its cell once for all. Bembex, on the contrary, kills the insects on which its young are to feed, and, perhaps on this account, brings its young fresh food (mainly flies) from time to time. But while the Bembex thus preys on some flies, there are others which avenge their order. The genus Miltogramma lays its eggs in the cells of the Bembex; and though there seems no reason why the Bembex, which is by far the stronger insect, should tolerate this intrusion, which, moreover, she shows unmistakably xix to be most unpalatable, she never makes any attack on her enemy. Nay, when the young of the Miltogramma are hatched, so far from killing or removing them, this entomological cuckoo actually feeds them until they reach maturity. Nevertheless it seems contrary to etiquette for the fly to enter the cell of the Bembex ; she watches the opportunity when the latter is in the cell and is dragging down the victim. Then is the Miltogramma’s opportunity; she pounces on the victim, and almost instan- taneously lays on it two or three eggs, which are then transferred, with the insect on which they are to feed, to the cell. It is remarkable how the Bembex remembers (if one may use such a word) the entrance to her cell, covered as it is with sand, exactly to our eyes like that all round. Yet she never makes a mistake or loses her way. On the other hand, M. Fabre found that if he removed the surface of the earth and the passage, exposing the cell and the larva, the Bembex was quite at a loss, and did not even recognise her own offspring. It seems as if she knew the door, the nursery, and the passage, but not her child. Another ingenious experiment of M. Fabre’s was made with Chalicodoma. This genus is enclosed in an earthen cell, through which at maturity the young insect eats its way. M. Fabre found that if he pasted a piece of paper round the cell the insect had no difficulty in eating through it; but if he enclosed the cell in a paper case, so that there was a space even of only a few lines between the cell and the paper, in that case the paper formed an effectual prison. The instinct of the insect taught it to bite through one enclosure, but it had not wit enough to do so a second time. Yet it appears that the instincts of these animals are not absolutely unalterable. Sphex jlavipennis, which provisions its nest with small grasshoppers, when it returns to the cell leaves the grasshopper outside, and goes down for a moment to see that all is right. During her absence M. Fabre moved the erasshopper a little. Out came the Sphex, soon found her victim, dragged it to the mouth of the cell, and though she had just been down left her prey as usual, and went alone into the cell. Again M. Fabre moved the grasshopper, the wasp found it, dragged it to the cell, and left it as before. Again and again M. Fabre moved the grasshopper, but every time the Sphex did exactly the same thing, until M. Fabre was tired out. All the 1 insects of this colony had the same curious habit; but on trying the same experiment with a Sphex of the following year, after two or three disappointments the Sphex learned wisdom by experience, and carried the grasshopper directly down into the cell. M. Fabre has also published* a short but interesting memoir on the habits of Halictus cylindricus and H. sexcinctus. In this genus we find the first step, as it were, to the well-organised association of Bees, Wasps and Ants. Each female Halictus prepares, as usual without any assistance from the male, her own cell, and feeds her own young; but, on the other hand, the separate cells open into a common passage which is the joint possession of several bees. These species are very early risers, and rest during the greater part of the day, excavating, it would appear, their galleries for the most part during the night, and collecting pollen in the early morning only. They are double- brooded. The September brood contains rather more males than females—about four to three. The males soon perish, but the females remain quiet in their cells till the spring, when they emerge, lay their eggs, provision their cells, and then die in their turn. These eges, however, M. Fabre assures us, produce no males, so that the summer brood consists of females only, affording an interesting and remarkable instance of Partheno- genesis. It is possible that the same rule may be found to occur among other double-brooded insects. Mr. Goss has given us a very interesting summary of the present state of our knowledge on ‘‘ The Geological Antiquity of Insects.” The Neuroptera and Orthoptera are the oldest orders; then come the Coleoptera and Hemiptera, followed by the Diptera, Hymenoptera, and Lepidoptera. As regards the latter, there is indeed much difference of opinion. M.Coemans discovered in 1875, at Sars-Longchamps, in the Belgian Coal- measures, an insect which Dr. Breyer believed to be Lepi- dopterous; in which view he is supported by M. Preudhomme and Mr. Wallace. Mr. M‘Lachlan, on the contrary, regards it as Neuropterous. Mr. Butler has also described an Oolitic insect under the name of Palgontina oolitica, which he supposed to be Lepidopterous; Mr. Scudder, however, with whom Mr. Goss is disposed to agree, regards it as Homopterous. * Ann. Sci. Nat., 1880, p. 3. hi Mr. Scudder also, in several memoirs published by the Boston Society of Natural History, has added considerably to. our know- ledge of fossil insects. He describes several new species of insects belonging to the Devonian period, all of which are allied, or belong, to the Neuroptera, using the word in the widest sense. The general conclusions to which he arrives are that— There is nothing in the structure of these earliest known insects to interfere with the former conclusions that the general type of wing-structure has remained unaltered from the earliest times. The Devonian insects were all lower Heterometabola. As wings are the only part preserved, we cannot tell from the remains preserved whether they belong to sucking or to biting insects. They bear little special relation to carboniferous forms, having a distinct facies of their own. The Devonian insects were of great size, had membranous wings, and were probably aquatic in early life. They show a remarkable variety of structure, indicating an abundance of insect life at that epoch, and differ remarkably from all other known types, ancient and modern; some of them appearing to be even more complicated than their nearest living allies. We appear, therefore, he says, ‘‘to be no nearer the beginning of things in the Devonian epoch than in the Carboniferous, so far as either greater unity or simplicity of structure is concerned”; and these earlier forms cannot in his opinion be used to any better advantage than the carboniferous types in support of any special theory of the origin of insects. Still Mr. Scudder expresses the conviction that some original and still earlier “‘unknown comprehensive types did exist, and should be sought.” Mr. Ryder has described, in the ‘ American Naturalist,’ an interesting genus allied to the very curious little centipede, Pauropus. It possesses the same number of legs, but, according to Mr. Ryder, only six segments, two pairs of legs being attached to the second, third, fourth, and fifth segments, not counting the head. I should be disposed to consider that, as he himself suspected, the head really consists of two segments, and that the li terminal segment is also really double. In that case, the number of segments will be the same as in Pauropus. The wider form, the position of the head, and the peculiar tubercles and spines on the skin, seem to justify the establishment of a new genus; and Mr. Ryder even proposes for his little creature a new family. Dr. Haller has described (Ar. f. Natur., p. 369) a species of mite, Trombidium andiens, in which he considers that the eye of other T’rombidiums has been modified into an organ for hearing. The discovery of an undoubted ear in a Trombidium would itself be a point of considerable interest, but such a change of function as that an organ of vision should change into an ear is certainly most remarkable; and we should require clear proof that the organs are really homologous, and that the one is truly. an ear. Dr. Haller describes, in the present case, two groups of bodies which he considers to be otolithes, but has not been able to detect any auditory hairs. He figures the organ in question on a small scale, but, considering the interest attached to the observation, it is to be hoped that he will give a more detailed description and enlarged illustrations. Dr. Hauser has published* an interesting paper on the olfactory organs of insects. He adopts the view of Lefebre and Erichson, which I have also attempted to demonstrate,+ that the antenne of insects are organs of smell. There can, I think, be no doubt that they do serve this function, but it is not incom- patible that they should in other cases serve as organs of hearing. Dr. Hauser describes in detail the minute pits which have been already observed and figured by Hickst and others, and shows that each contains a central cone, which terminates in a rod, and which, in some cases, as for instance in the wasp, is itself obviously very complicated, and contains one or more series of secondary rods. He lays much stress on the fact that insects which depend on smell have their organs specially developed. Hermann Muller continues his interesting and charming series of papers in ‘ Kosmos,’ which, if their relation is primarily to the Botanist, have much bearing on Entomology also. He has dwelt recently on the effect which the preponderance of Lepi- doptera over bees in the higher regions has had in modifying the * Zeit. f. Wiss. Zool., 1880. + Linnean Journal, vol. xii. { Trans. of Linn. Soc. li flowers of the Upper Alps. One curious point I may refer to, namely, that proterogynous flowers frequently—as, for instance, among the Saxifrages—increase in size during their period of bloom, so as to be larger in the male than in the earlier female condition ; while proterandrous flowers never do so. The reason of this obviously is the advantage in the male flowers being first visited.* He observes that butterflies prefer red and blue flowers, especially the latter, to those which are yellow or white. It is interesting that the same love felt by butterflies for these colours, which, by means of sexual selection, has probably tended to their frequency and beauty on the insects themselves, should in another manner have led to their frequent presence and brilliant beauty on the flowers which they love. With reference to this point he gives the following curious facts :—Out of every hundred visits of insects observed in flowers which are white, whitish yellow, or yellow, on the one hand, or, on the other, red, violet, or blue, there were of— Diptera with a short proboscis. . . 85°8 14°2 Coleoptera . .. yee ts OES 23°2 Diptera with a long nrobonee ere Oke 30°3 Hymenoptera, excluding Bees . . . 81°2 18°8 Bees with a short proboscis. . . . 63°8 36°2 Mepidoptera.. <6 « . . s «is » 4978 56°1 IbMiVe ees yi % ss cs ce” tp pon 1 OIG 63°3 While, in the case of the parasitical Humble Bees, the numbers are respectively 22°2 and 77°8, which he accounts for on the hypothesis that these bees, having no need to work for their young, are more free to follow their own tastes. We owe to M. de Saussure a short but important memoir on the genus Hemimerus, an insect which has much the appearance of a young cockroach, or mole-cricket, with which group it has in fact hitherto been classed. M. de Saussure states, however, that the mouth possesses an extra pair of appendages, con- stituting a third pair of maxille, and resembling a second lower lip. This remarkable character would separate it, not only from the Orthoptera, but from all other insects, and in M. de Saussure’s opinion necessitates the creation of a new section of * Kosmos, 1880, p. 280. liv. Arthropods, or rather, it seems to me, a reconstruction of our views as to the homologies of the organs of insects with those of other Articulata. One would be indeed tempted to ask whether this so-called extra pair of appendages may not be the repre- sentative of the ligula, which in some Orthoptera, as, for in- stance, Anostostoma alatum, where it has been recently figured by Mr. Butler,* bears pseudopalpi apparently consisting of several segments. I may observe that I have myself suggested the existence of a second pair of mouth appendages in the Collembola, but in that group tbe structure of the mouth is very intricate, and I did not, therefore, consider it would be safe to base any general conclusions on the observation. As regards Hemimerus, M. de Saussure’s observations are so definite, and his authority so great, that I feel great hesitation in questioning any statement made by him. At the same time I must say that Mr. Water- house and I, after examining a specimen in the British Museum, which apparently belongs to the same species, have been quite unable to satisfy ourselves as to the existence of a second pair of jaws. In the October number of ‘ Kosmos,’ Fitz Muller has called attention to an interesting species of gnat (Paltostoma torrentium), in which there are two distinct kinds of females. Among butterflies we have long known cases in which there are two kinds of females, differing in the colour and pattern, sometimes even in the form, of the wing. The social Neuroptera and Hymenoptera present us with other well known cases, and the Diptera may now be added to the list. In Paltostoma the two kinds of females differ in the eyes, mouth-parts, feet, and habits. The one sort resembles the females of other allied species, and is a blood-sucker; the other has simpler feet, smaller eyes, and mouth closely resembling that of the male. Muller thinks it feeds on honey. Before sitting down there are one or two points with reference to the affairs of our Society on which I must say a few words. In the first place I must express my regret, which I am sure you all share, that we are about to lose the valuable services of our excellent Secretaries, Mr. Meldola and Mr. Distant. At the same time they have secured as successors two gentlemen who will, 1 doubt not, prove themselves most efficient. * Proc. Zool. Soc., 1880, p. 153. lv The Council have under consideration whether the ‘ Trans- actions’ of the Society’s publications might not be given sratuitously to London as well as to country members. The question has been referred to in their Report. The next point is with reference to the hour of meeting. I have already alluded to the subject from this chair, and I will therefore now only repeat that although of those who answered the circular of the Council a large majority expressed themselves in favour of meeting earlier, still the actual number of those supporting the change was so small compared to that of our members, that the late Council did not see their way to take any further action in the matter. It is, however, of course open to those gentlemen who advocate the change to bring the subject again before the Society. In conclusion, Gentlemen, I will end as I began by offering you my thanks for your courtesy and support during my term of office. In resigning the Presidency I rejoice to think that I shall be succeeded by one of the very first of English Entomologists, my old and excellent friend, Mr. Stainton, under whose able guidance I cannot doubt that our Society will continue to prosper. INDEX. Notr.—Where the name only of an Insect or Genus is mentioned, the description will be found on the page referred to. The Arabic Figures refer to the pages of the ‘ Transactions’; the Roman Numerals to the pages of the ‘ Proceedings.’ PAGE PAGE GENERAL SUBJECTS .... lvii | HYMENOPTERA ......0e-s Ix ARIA GHINTDIAN ssisiceve ol ieais vill | LEPIDOPTERA .cocscsee ]xii COME OPTE RAG eters cheless) overs «16 Jwitl |) NEUROPTERA sce os sfeicie lxiv IDIRADN. SeoomeoodDOCoG Ix |) ORTHOPTERA. soc vccis cee lxiv ELE: MIPTWRAY < s1s.c/cleieie se 016 lx GENERAL SUBJECTS. Annual Meeting, xxxvi. Case formed by Lepidopterous larva, xxxiv. Dahlias said to be destructive to insects, ix. Descriptions of insects, irregular mode of publishing, xxxi. Dimorphic larve, 73. Fire-flies, discussion respecting their luminosity, i. Gall-like formation on Rhododendron ferrugineum, believed to be fun- goid, xxvi. Galls from Adelaide, ition Tanacetum vulgare, xxvii.—on a species of Eucalyptus from Australia, xxxii.—on a Sallow leaf, xxxiii. Hairs on green larve, the use of, 74. Hops damaged by a small larva, xxx. Insects, on the coloration and development of, 69. Luminosity of insects, discussion, i.—another discussion, vi.—of Luciola italica, xxix.—of a Coleopterous larva, xxix.—of Pyrophorus causticus, XXX1. Meteorological observations published by Miss Ormerod throwing light on the appearance of insects, xiiMiss Ormerod’s remarks, xii. Parthenogenesis in the Tenthredinide, 76. President’s address, xli. Sugar-canes destroyed by Lepidopterous larve, xiv.—and by Beetles, xv.— Ants to be encouraged to destroy the Beetles, xvi—A moth (Proceras sacchariphagus) destructive to, xvii. ** Vegetable caterpillar” from New Zealand, xx. ( lviii_ ) ARACHNIDA. Argas persicus, Mr. Sidney Churechill’s notes thereon, xxi. Latrodectus, sp.?, a venomous Spider from S. Australia, 11. Scorpions, remarks by Mr. Pascoe on supposed habit of stinging them- selves to death under certain circumstances, v. COLEOPTERA. Athra brunnipennis, 13.—Ai. concolor, 12.—A. despecta, 12. Alampetis? scintillans, 180. Alychnus, 9. Amphisbeta impressipennis, 181. Amythetes fastigiata, 97. Arescus histrio, variability of, 179. Aspidosoma egrotum, 84.—A. bilineatum, 86.—