1897-] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 59 



Notes and. Nev^s. 



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PSEUDOSCORPIONS ATTACHED TO FLIES. Apropos to the note in the 

 January number of the NEWS I will say that seemingly precisely the same 

 thing has come to me this Winter, having been found under the wing of 

 a house-fly. F. M. WEBSTER. 



Mr. J. E. FARNUM says the country in Manika Land, S. E. Africa, is so 

 perfectly flat that to obtain any view of one's surroundings it is necessary 

 to climb either a tree or one of the curious ant-hills so common in this 

 country and often as high as fifteen feet. 



BRUCHOPHAGUS FUNEBRIS (Howard). I have been very much inter- 

 ested in Prof. A. D. Hopkins' recent statement (Proc. Assoc. Econ. En- 

 tomologists) that this is a veritable feeder in clover seeds, and not a oara- 

 site of Cecidomyia, as had been supposed. Prof. E. O. Wootten collected 

 some Hosackia puberula Benth. (det. J. N. Rose) in the Organ Mountains, 

 New Mexico, and breeding in the seeds were numbers of this B.funebris. 

 It seemed to me at the time that they fed upon the seeds, but I was not 

 prepared to definitely assert that such was the case. My specimens were 

 identified by Mr. Howard himself. T. D. A. COCKERELL. 



A CHRISTMAS-DAY MOTH HUNT. In " Papilio" iv, p. 112, the editor, 

 referring to the occurrence of a living 'and active Hypena baltimoralis at 

 Gray's Ferry, January 25th, the thermometer registering 4 below zero, 

 asks, "Are any of this genus known to hibernate?" Not far from this 

 city (Wilmington, Del.) is a large maple tree slowly dying from the rav- 

 ages of Prionoxystus robinicz, an unusual food-plant here. On account 

 of the flowing sap this tree is greatly resorted to Spring, Summer and 

 Autumn by numbers of tlies, bees, hornets, butterflies chiefly (,'nipttts 

 and P. atalanta and at night by various moths. One warm day late in 

 November I commenced to strip the bark from a large limb of this tree 

 which had broken and fallen till its tip touched the ground. Immediately 

 a number of moths flew out from under the bark as I loosened it and 

 sought resting-places high up in the tree. They were so active that 1 



