g6 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [June, 



PROCEEDINGS OF THE CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES II, 1889. 

 Entomological Communications, Dr. H. H. Hehr; genus Neophasia Behr 

 = Eucheira Westvv., with three species, socialis Westw., Terlootii Behr, 

 menapia Feld.; Dryocampa Riversii n. sp., Cal. 



MEMOIRES DE LA SOCIETE DE PHYSIQUE ET D'HISTOIRE NATURELLE 

 DE GENEVE, xxx, No. 6. New or little-known Locustidae, A. Pictet; con- 

 tains many new genera and species, including the following from North 

 America, Idiostatus n. g., /. calif ornicus, figured. 



ZOOLOGISCHER ANZEiGER, xiii, No. 329, io Mar. 1890. " Butterflies' 

 wings and the Imaginal disk of the same," and "Gland-system of the 

 Skin in Bombycidse (silk-spinners), by E. Verson. No. 330, 17 Mar., '90. 

 " On the Embryology of Blatta germanica" by N. Cholodkovsky. 



WE have lately received Vol. i, No. i, of the Entomologist's Record 

 and Journal of Variation, edited by J. W. Tutt. This fills a very impor- 

 tant gap in entomological literature, and is both interesting and useful 

 from a scientific standpoint. We wish it all success and a long life. 



IN THE COMPTES-RENDUS DES SEANCES DE LA SOCIETE ENTOMOLO- 

 GIQUE DE BELGIQUE for Feb. i, 1890. A Forel has a note on " A parasite 

 of jMyrmecia forficata Fabr." The parasite is also a hymenopter, Eu- 

 charis mynnecio' P. Cam., whose nymphs were found in chrysalids of the 

 Myrmecia from South Australia. 



ENTOMOLOGISCHE NACHRICHTEN, xvi, 4, February, 1890. New His- 

 teridae, J. Schmidt; includes one North American species, Saprinus sul- 

 catulus, from California. Orthopterological communications, Dr. F. 

 Karsch; on Phaneropttra from Asia and Africa; two new genera are 

 formed, Ceraiopoinpa and Tetraconcha. 



FROM PROF. C. BERG we have received a copy of his " Quadraginta 

 Coleoptera Nova Argentine (from Ann. Univer. Buenos Aires, vi, 1889)." 

 The forty new species from the Argentine Republic here described are 

 of the families Cerambycidae, Meloidse, Mordellidae, Cistelidae, Tenebri- 

 onidte, Malacodermata and Buprestidse. 



MEMOIRS OF THE MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY AT HARVARD 

 COLLEGE, Vol. xvii, No. i, is Mr. L. Cabot's. "The Immature State of 

 the Odonata, Part III. Subfamily Cordulina," with six plates. The 

 nymphs of twenty-four species of Cordulina and eleven species of Pan fa la 

 and Tramea, are described and figured excellently. 



WE have received from M. Ernest Olivier his excellent Catalogue of the 

 Coleoptera of the Department of the Allier, France, forming Part I of 

 Volume II, of " Faune de PAllier," published at Moulins, 1890. Faunal 

 lists of restricted areas are always of value as supplying data for geo- 

 graphical distribution, and such is M. Olivier's work, which fills 375 pages, 

 and is provided with a valuable index table of genera. 



