one that I am aware of has noticed the difference in the hinder 

 tibiee, which have only one pair of spurs in the males, but two 

 pair in the females. 



Hiibner represents the larvae of G. pendularia as perfect 

 loopers, and the pupae with truncated heads and attached by 

 the tail, with a thread round the body like Pontia, (the com- 

 mon White Butterfly,) but Fuessley in illustrating the trans- 

 formations of G. Onojiaria delineates the larvae as imperfect 

 loopers, and the chrysalis inclosed in a fine web. 



1. E. trilinearia BorJc.—Goda^ pi. 111. f. 6. & 7. — linearia 



Hub. & Haw. — Woods, Kent; beginning June near 

 Lyndhurst, J. C. 



2. E. punctaria L., Haw. — subangularia Haw. var. — com- 



munifasciata Don. 13. 456. — End of May and Aug., 

 open places in woods. — The Larva feeds on the Oak. 



3. E. poraria L., Goda, 17'2. 1. — punctaria Hiib. — ocellaria 



Haw. & Steph. — End of May, woods ; beginning of 

 June, Coomb-wood, J. C, also end of August. — Obs. 

 The G. ocellaria Hiib., recorded by Mr. Stephens as a 

 British insect, has never been found in this country 

 that I am aware of. 



5. E. omlcronaria Hub., Haw., Goda, 172. 7. — annularia jPa^. 



End of May, June and August, Darent-wood, J. C. 

 —The Caterpillar feeds on the Maple {pi. 328). 



6. E. pendularia L. — Hiib., Haw., Goda, 172. 5. — circularia 



Fab. — End of May, Birch-trees, Coomb and Birch 

 woods, J. C. ; also end of August. — The Larva feeds 

 on Birch {pi. 4'34-), and Alder. 



7. E. albicincta Haw. 344. 86. — A specimen was taken near 



Peckham many years back, and is in Mr. Hatchett's 

 Cabinet. 



8. E. orbicularia //z/&.. Haw., Goda, 172. 6. — Middle of June, 



Coomb-wood ; in a garden at Lambeth, Mr. Sa- 

 mouelle, near Brockenhurst, New Forest. 



9. E. pictaria Thimb. ? — Curt. B. E. pi. 447. — Although the 



male of this rare insect is unknown, and it has been 

 placed in my Genus Cleora, I have little doubt of this 

 being its natural situation. Mr. Jos. Standish took 

 3 off some paling on Dartford Heath, Kent; the finest 

 on the 17th of April 1820, and the other two, which 

 were rather wasted, on the 1st of May 1826; a very 

 fine specimen was found at the same place the middle 

 of April, and another near Charing, in the same 

 county, by Thomas Marshall, Esq. 

 The Plant is Poterium Sanguisorba (Upland Burnet). 



