ZOOLOGICAL NOTES 119 



was perfectly dry for the greater part of its depth. On the 20th, 

 which was a warm, sunny day, some two inches of water stood in a 

 section of the ditch about fifty yards in extent, and in this I counted 

 between sixty and seventy Newts, all of the present species. They 

 were nearly all in pairs, each female being accompanied by a single 

 male with tail invariably curved round towards his head and vibrat- 

 ing rapidly. In other respects they remained quite still, seldom 

 showing any desire to move from the spots on which they rested 

 unless an attempt was made to capture them. Two or three small 

 ones, scarcely half grown, were observed, which struck me as rather 

 odd, looking to the season of the year. Some of the adults I sent 

 home laid eggs shortly afterwards. 



The Palmated Newt is doubtless common and widely distributed 

 in Scotland, but records bearing on its actual distribution north of 

 the Tweed are extremely meagre, although it is now nearly fifty years 

 since it was first discovered by Wolley in the neighbourhood of Edin- 

 burgh, where it still exists. — William Evans, Edinburgh. 



Coleoptera at Loeh Awe in June 1892. — During the beginning 

 of June I spent four or five days at the Loch Awe Hotel, and while 

 there worked pretty hard for beetles. On the hill at the back of the 

 hotel I took the following species amongst others : Carabus arvensis, 

 Pterostichas cethiops and vitreus, Patrobus septentrionis, Phyllopertlut 

 Jwrticola (including the black variety), Corymbites impressus (2) — one 

 under dead leaves, the other beaten from birch. 



Corymbites cupreus, tesselatus, quercus, and the var. ochropterus ; 

 Telephorus palustris, figuraius (Scoticus), including a form with the 

 elytra entirely black and the legs, except knees, black. These speci- 

 mens I at first mistook for elongattis, and in fact recorded them as 

 such ; they belong, however, to Telephorus proper, and not to 

 Rhagonycha, and there can be little doubt they are a variety of figur- 

 atus : they occurred on sweeping coarse grass in a damp place. 



Otiorhynchus maurus t Gonioctena pallida, Clythra ^-punctata, 

 Megacronus cingulatus, Lupcnts jlaripes, Apkodius lappomim, Coccinella 

 r b-giittata, and Anthophagus testaceus. 



Crossing the loch and working round home again by the railway 

 bridge I found that beating flowers of the mountain ash, young oak-. 

 poplars, and sallows, produced numbers of beetles, including / iter 

 nigrtnus } Sericosomus brunneus^ Rhynchites cupreus and ceneovirens % 

 Elleschus bipunctatuSy Orchestes avellance y Rhamphus flavicon 

 Erirhinus tortrix^ and pectoralis ; also Coccinella \6-guttata in great 

 numbers. Loth the common species of Rhagium were abundant 



everywhere. 



On the banks of the river above the loch I found Gcodromicus 

 m'grifus, and in the pools at and near the top of the hill at the bi 

 of the hotel, which pools were full of water beetles, there were Agabus 

 arctfeus, congener and nitidus, Hydroporus \mot c. 



