ti PROCEEDIKGS OF TIIK 



The 8ai(l sections as ulturod will run thus, tlie alleraLiuu.s heiiig 

 sliow M in italic type: — 



Chap. II. Sect. 2. ]"]very Fellow sliall also before he is 

 admittetl pay the First Annual Contribution ot Fuiir Pounds, 

 and lie shall j^ay the like ISuni anmuilly in advance on each 

 successive 24tii Day of May, so long as he shall continue a 

 Fellow ; provided, however, tliiit Fellows elected between the 

 1st Day ot" March and the 24th Day of May in any year, 

 shall not be lial)le tor a second Amnial Contribution until 

 the lJ4th Day ot May in the year following that in which 

 they were elected. 



Chap. II. Sect. (j. In tlie month ot Xoveinber in each 

 year tlie Council shall cause to be suspended in the Library 

 of the Society a list of the Fellows whose Annnid Contribu- 

 tions tire due and owiufj, and notice thereof shall forthwith 

 be forwarded to every Fellow whose name ajjpears in such 

 list. If the contributions due from any Fellow nanied iu 

 the said list shall not have been paid within three months 

 after tlie first suspension of the list the Council may remove 

 such Fellow from the Society, but notwithstanding such 

 removal the obligation of any Fellow so I'emoved may be put 

 in suit for the recovery of any money due from him to the 

 Society. The Council may remit in whole or in part the 

 contributions due from any Fellow. 



Iklr. J. S. Huxley, M.A., Fellow of New College, Oxford, and 

 Mr. D. F. Leney exhibited living specimens of sexually mature 

 Axolotls metamorphosed into the Amblystoma form by I'eeding 

 with thyroid gland, and of Urodele larva? precociously metamor- 

 phosed by treatment with iodine solution. 



A discussion followed in which the President, Prof. E. S. 

 Goodrich, F.E.S., Sec.L.S., Mr. E. Boulengtr (visitor), Lt.-Col. 

 J. 11. TuU Walsh, Dr. W. liateson, F.K.S., and Dr. J. K. Leeson 

 engaged, Mr Jluxley replying. 



Major 11. C. Gukto^' read a paper entitled " Entomological- 

 Meteorological liecords of ecological facts in the life of Uritish 

 Lepidoptera,'' which was communicated by the General Seci-etary. 



The Author believed that interesting facts would be obtained 

 by I'ecording and plotting the results of observations made hy a 

 number of entomologists in various localities. The scheme ex- 

 hibited was derived from his notes from February to December 

 1919, within a radius of four miles from (ierrard's Cross, Ducks, 

 which includes oak and beech woods, heath, marsh, and cultivated 

 land. Special signs are used to denote the occurrence of species 

 of iriacro-lepidoptera, on sallow-bloom i3i the spring, on ivy in the 

 autumn, on sugar, and towards light. Thirty-tive species of 

 butterflies and two hundred and forty species of moths are thus 



