CATALOGUE OF INSECTS. 465 



CONCLUSION. 



In the foregoing pages 6,098 species are listed, to which future 

 studies will undoubtedly add at least 20 per cent, more ; they are dis- 

 tributed as follows : 



Hynienoptera 



Coleoptera 



Lepidoptera 



Diptera 



Orthoptera 



Hemiptera — 



Heterop tera 



Homoptera 



Neuroptera .■ 



Total 238 2,307 6,098 



Authors are not agreed as to the best way of making up catalogues. 

 Some begin with the higher families, running down to the most 

 degraded ; others- reverse this proceeding and begin with the least 

 specialized forms, ending with the highest types. Of the lists fol- 

 lowed in this catalogue, the Hymenoptera, Orthoptera and Neuroptera 

 run the series from the lowest to the highest. In the Coleoptera, 

 Lepidoptera, Diptera and Hemiptera the highest forms are placed at 

 the head. 



In adopting the Linneean orders, rather than the more numerous 

 divisions of Brauer or Packard, I have followed convenience and not 

 conviction, believing that a catalogue of a restricted fauna is not the 

 place to bring forward a classification not generally accepted. In a 

 future edition of the catalogue I should expect to make the changec 



2e 



