LIST OF 1EPIDOPTERA. 273 



creates, and the kind feeling which it often produces between individuals 

 who would probably under other circumstances have been strangers through 

 life to each other. 



Lepidoptera near Bungay, Suffolk. — My father not having paid much 

 attention to Entomology of late years, has commissioned me to forward 

 you a list of the rare insects that have been captured in this neighbour- 

 hood. — Colias edusa is taken here occasionally, and in 1855 Miss Spalding 

 captured two of C. hyale at Westleton. A few years since my father found 

 Melitoea artemis in the greatest abundance in some marshes close to Bungay, 

 but since that time we have never seen one there. I have taken it at 

 Rockland in company with P. machaon. Of Vanessa C-album I have taken 

 one in our own garden, the only one that I know of that has been taken 

 about here for many years. Of V. antiopa, Mr. F. Spalding captured one 

 at Ditchingham, in 1 846, and his father caught one at Westleton this year, 

 in August, and my father saw one at Ellingham about the same time, 

 which, unluckily, he was unable to capture. Arge galathea is very plen- 

 tiful every year at Ellingham, about three miles from Bungay. — William 

 Garness, Jun., Bungay, Nov. 7th., 1857. 



LIST OF LEPIDOPTERA OCCURRING IN THE COUNTY 



OF SUFFOLK. 



BY THE REV. JOSEPH GREENE, M.A., ASSISTED BY THE REV. H. HARPUR CREWE, M.A., 



AND C. R. BREE, ESQ. 



[The portions of these papers contributed by Mr. Crewe and Mr. Bree, are signed with the 

 initials C and B respectively. N.B. at the head of a paragraph signifies that the remarks 

 are made after those of Mr. Greene.] 



Part II. — Heterocera. Division I. — Sphingidjs. 



Genus Trochilium. — I did not meet with a single specimen of this genus 

 during my residence in Suffolk. 



1. T. cynipiformis. — One specimen taken at Buxhall, by Mr. Levett. 

 (C.) 



2. T. myopeeformis. — Two specimens taken in an orchard at Battisford, 

 near Stowmarket, by Mr. W. Baker. The larva, which is white and fleshy, 

 like the rest of this genus, feeds under the bark of apple-trees in the 

 autumn and winter, and turns to a pupa at the beginning of spring. It 

 betrays its hiding-place by the frass. (C.) 



3. G. culiciformis. — One specimen of this fine insect was given me by 

 Mr. Gr,«rod, of Ipswich, taken in 1856 in a wood near that town. (B.) , 



4. Algeria apiformis. — Extremely abundant in the larva-pupa state. 



