APPENDIX. 391 



occurred in various parts of the country, since the above account was 

 written, as in Essex, Sussex, Kent, Sec. 



Page 132, note. The remarks of Mr. Dale in Loudon's Mag-. Hist. Nat. v. vii. 

 p. 177, upon the latter part of this note, I shall merely observe are totally 

 at variance with truth, and the offspring of malicious opposition. 



Page 144. fPsoDOs alpuiata. Ps. equestrata. Curtis, v. ix. pi 424.— Probably 

 a foreign insect. 



Page 153. Hybeknia, not IIinEiiNiA, and the same elsewhere. 



Page J 57. fSp. 2. Nyssia Tauaria. Ento/n. Mag. {N'ewmaii) i. 413. — 

 " Fusco-grisea, thoracis margine anteriore, lineuque centrali lotigitudinull 

 nigris." (Exp. Alar. 1 unc. 6 lin.) 



*•' Brown-grey ; thorax with its anterior margin, and a longitudinal central 

 line, forming together the letter T, black ; anterior wings tawny-grey, 

 transversely and irregularly waved with dark brown; hinder margin with 

 a wide irregular band of pale brown ; cilia of the same colour, having a row 

 of black dots internally: posterior wings pale-brown, with a black spot at 

 the anal angle." — Newman, I. c. 



" Taken at Leominster in June 1832." — Newman, I. c 



Page 157. f Sp. 3. Ny. Zonaria. Alisfuscis, fasciis albis ; abdomine atro, seg~ 

 mentarum marginibus rnfo Jlavescentibus ; fceminu uptera. 



Geo. Zonaria. Wien. Fcrz. — £'72^ Mag. (Newman) v. ii. p. 437. 



Antennte with the cilia black, the shaft white; thorax dark brown, with two 

 longitudinal white lines, and a dash of white at the base of each whig; body 

 nearly black, with six delicate rings of a p'nkish yellow : anterior wings 

 brown, with two oblique transverse white lines, nearly parallel with the 

 hinder margin, and within these are irregular white markings on the disc : 

 posterior wings white, with two broad bands and the nervures brown; legs 

 black ; tarsi annulated with white. Female apterous, with seven pale rings 

 on the body. 



Taken at the Black Rock, near Liverpool, in September 1832 and February 

 1833; abundantly at the latter period. 



Page 161. jHvrsoROPHA monilis. *' Alis dejlexis brunneis, punctis qualuor 

 approximatis albis; antennis pectinatis." — Fabricius. (Exp. Alar. 1 unc. 

 5—7 lin.) 



Noc. monilis. Fabricius (.') — Metra ? monilis. Steph. Catal. ii. 373. No. 6457», 

 note. 



Wings deflexed; anterior brown, with an obscure dot in the middle, and 

 towards the hinder margin four approximating white spots placed trans- 

 versely; and near the apex are four obscure yellowish ones. 



Fabricius says, *' Habitat in Anglia," but, as 1 have a pair from Georgia, I 

 suspect it is a native oi New England: it is decidedly not a British insect. 



