252 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Nov., '19 



Plant Indus. Bull. 149) Polyporus sulphureus occurs chiefly on 

 oaks, chestnut, maples, black walnut, butternut, alder, locust, 

 apple and pear and is widely distributed throughout the United 

 States and Canada and in most of the forest regions of Europe 

 where it is regarded as a destructive parasite both on deciduous 

 trees and conifers. 



Full Gro^vn Larva. Length 6.2 mm.; width 1.4 mm. Subcylindrical ; 

 whitish except for head and mouth parts which are dark ; sparsely 

 hairy, hairs long, arising from somewhat tuberculate bases; entire 

 body surface covered with a fine short pile ; antenna cylindrical, two- 

 jointed, terminated by one long and several short hairs; ocelli lateral, 

 five in number, three in one group and two in the other ; dorsal sur- 

 face of second and third thoracic and first abdominal segments trans- 

 versely wrinkled ; legs whitish, terminated by strongly chitinized 

 hooks ; abdominal segments 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 longer than other body 

 segments. 



Pupa. Length 5 mm., width i.i mm. Brownish, sparsely hairy; 

 dorsal surface of abdominal segments 3, 4, 5 and 6 bearing two trans- 

 verse rows of short stout spines placed close together ; remaining 

 three abdominal segments bear a single dorsal row of larger and 

 fewer spines ; abdominal dorsal spines point posteriorly ; last abdom- 

 inal segment bears a ventral pair of chitinous hooks curved anteriorly. 



Adult. Tinea cloacclla Haworth, Lc[>. Brit., 563, 1829; Dietz (loc. 

 cit.) gives the following description by Meyrick: "Head whitish 

 ochreous. Forewings ochreous brown, more or less mixed with 

 whitish and strigulated with dark fuscous; a spot on base of costa, 

 another beyond it, a thick oblique spot from costa reaching middle of 

 disc, an elongate spot on fold before middle, and some small posterior 

 costal and dorsal spots dark fuscous ; a small round whitish posterior 

 spot in disc. Hindwings fuscous. Exp. 10-17 mm." 



Richness of Borneo in Coleoptera. 



"The great majority of the Coleoptera taken at Mount Merinjak 

 were again new to me, which goes to show how every hill and moun- 

 tain in a great island like Borneo must be thoroughly explored before 

 we have any idea of the tremendous wealth of species the island will 

 produce. Wallace during his stay in Borneo spent nearly the whole of 

 his time on the Sadong River in Simunjan, and collected nearly 2000 

 species of Coleoptera, of which nearly 300 were Longicorns. During 

 my short stay [six months] I obtained examples of approximately 

 3189 species, of which 369 were Longicorns, about 90 of these prob- 

 ably nov. spp. We must remember that Wallace was collecting prac- 

 tically all orders, whereas I was specializing more or less." [A table 

 of the number of species by families is given.] G. E. BRYANT in The 

 Ent. Mo. Mag., London, April, 1919. 



