[133J COLLECTING AND PRESERVING INSECTS RILEY. 



* WILLIAM LE BABON. Outlines of Entomology, published in connec- 

 tion with the author's Annual Reports upon injurious insects. 

 Part first. Including the Order of Coleoptera. Fourth Annual 

 Report on the Noxious and Beneficial Insects of the State of Illi- 

 nois. Sep. Edit. Springfield, 1874. 



LEPIDOPTERA. 



G. A. W. HERRICH-SCHAEFFER. Sammluug neuer oder wenig bekann- 

 ter aussereuropaischer Schmetterlinge. Vol. i. Regensburg, 1850- 

 '58; Vol. n, Pt. 1, I860. 



Contains a classification of the Lepidoptera, which forms the basis of our 

 present arrangement. 



JOHN G. MORRIS. Synopsis of the described Lepidoptera of North 

 America. Part I. Diurnal and Crepuscular Lepidoptera. Wash- 

 ington, Smithsonian Institution, 1862. 



Compiled descriptions of the North American Lepidoptera, from the Rho- 

 palocera to the Bombycidte. 



H. STRECKER. Lepidoptera, Rhopaloceres et Heteroceres, indigenous 

 and exotic ; with descriptions and colored illustrations. Reading, 

 Pa., 1S72-77. 



Fifteen parts of this work have been published containing figures and descrip- 

 tions of many North American species. 



JOHN 1>. SMITH. An Introduction to a Classification of the North 

 American Lepidoptera. CBull. Brookl. Ent. Soc., Vol. vn, 1884, 

 pp. 70-74 and 81-83. 



A synopsis of the families of Lepidoptera based on Herrich-Schaeffcr's classi- 

 fication. 



Synopsis of the Genera of the North American Rhopalocera. 



CBull. Brookl. Ent, Soc., Vol. VI, 1883, pp. 37-45. 

 E. DOUBLEDAY AND W. C. HEWiTSON. The genera of diurnal Lepidop- 

 tera, comprising their generic characters, a notice of their trans- 

 formations, and a catalogue of the species of each genius; illustrated, 

 with 86 colored plates from drawings by W. C. Hewitsou. 2 vols., 

 London, 1846-'52. 



This work was completed by Westwood after the death of Doubleday. 



S. H. SCUDDER. Butterflies : Their structures, changes, and life-his- 

 tories, with special reference to American forms. Being an appli- 

 cation of the " Doctrine of descent" to the study of Butterflies, with 

 an appendix of practical instructions. 321 pp. and 201 text figs. 

 New York, Henry Holt & Co., 1881. 



The Butterflies of the Eastern United States and Canada 



with special reference to New England. 3 vols., Cambridge, 

 Mass., 1889; pp. 1958, plates 59. (Published by the author. Cost 

 about $75 for 3 vols.) 



*Out of print. 



