198 BRLTISH ORTHOPTURA. 



Twickenham (McLachlan) ; East Finchley (Williams). 

 Norfolk; (Edwards) ; Bostal Heath near Plumstead (Shaw). 

 Somerset: Batheastoii (Blathwayt). Suffolk: Bury St. Ed- 

 munds (Nurse) ; Felixstowe, Bramford Marshes, Assiiigton 

 Thicks, Farnham, Derrington, and Bentley Woods (Morley). 

 Sussex : Bognor and district, and Slindon (Guermonprez) 

 Ouestlitig (Bloomfield) Polegate (Shaw) ; East Grinstead 

 (Burr); Hastings (Shaw). Surrey: Oxshott (South)-, Wim- 

 bledon and Dormans (Burr) Witley (Dalgliesh) Farnham 

 District, Tilford, and Frensham (Sopp); Ashtead, Merrow 

 Downs, and near Lower Maiden (Lucas) : Surbiton (Gosx) ; 

 Send (Rawes) Dorking (Guermonprez) ; Walton-on-Thames 

 (Annett) near Guildford (Cooper) Bisley (Flcklin) ; Boxhill 

 (Briggs). Notts : S. Leverton and Treswell Wood (Thornley) ; 

 N. Leverton (Shaw). Wilts : West Wood near Marlborough 

 (Stowell). 



WALES. Carnarvonshire : Penmaenmawr (Porritt) . 



SCOTLAND.- -Wigtonshire : One specimen, basking in the sun 

 on a large flat boulder, above high- water mark and below 

 the Garheugh Rocks, Luce Bay, about 3 p m. on 15 Oct., 

 after a severe storm. There are no trees within halt' a mile 

 of the spot. (/. G. Gordon, 'Entom. Record/ 1906, p. 77.) 

 This is the only well authenticated record of a Locustid 

 grasshopper from Scotland. 



IRELAND. Cork: Fermoy (fide Kemp). Dublin: Howth 

 (fide Kemp). 



CASUAL LOCUSTIDS. 



1. Tachycines asynamorus Adelung (= Diestrammena marmorata 

 Haaii). In the ' Entomologist,' vol. xlvii, 1914, p. 145, I published a 

 figure and notes on the occurrence of this large spider-like species. 

 which occurred about 1912 in a nursery at S. Leonards. I had 

 previously received it from Kew Gardens, and on 1 October 1913 

 received decomposing fragments of what I took to be other specimens, 

 which were taken at Ipswich. This species is not unlikely to occur 

 again under similar circumstances, and being apparently an animal 

 feeder, might prove a useful insect. . 



2. Gryllacris sp. A specimen was found on Nepenthes in propagating 

 pits at Kew Gardens, 6 October 1897. Being a nymph the species 

 remains undetermined. 



3. Tettigonia albifrons Fabr. One example of this large and hand- 

 some species was taken at Ramsgate in or about 1850 by Dorsitor, who 

 gave it to E. W. Jaiisoii, whose son gave it to C. A. Briggs. 



4. Copiophora cornuta De Geer. One taken in a hot-house near 

 Birmingham. McLachlan (' Eiitom. Soc. Proc.' 4 Nov. 1885) said that 

 it was not the first time it had been taken in this country. 



5. Copiophora sp. In a hot-house at Lee. (Billups, ' Entorn. Soc. 

 Lend. ' 5 February 1883.) 



