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ABSTRACT OF PROCEEDINGS. 



FEBRUARY dth, 1922. 

 The President, Mr. E. J. Bunnett, M.A., F.E.S., in the Chair. 



Miss Alice K. Lock, 77, Grove Hill Road, S.E., was elected a 

 member. 



Mr. Robert Adkin exhibited a series of a second emergence of 

 BrentliiR sdene. The specimens were taken in Abbot's Wood, Sussex, 

 by Mr. E. P. Sharp, who found the species fairly commonly there 

 at the end of July and early in August, 1921. The specimens 

 showed little difference from those of the first emergence, except 

 that they were slightly smaller. 



Mr. A. A. W. Buckstone exhibited specimens of a large form of 

 the same species, which is racial in the Isle of Arran, together with 

 a short series of a small-formed race from Headley, and specimens 

 of the type form from Ascot, for comparison. He also showed an 

 example of Taeniocampa, which appeared to be intermediate between 

 T. mnnda and T. gracilis. It was generally thought to be an 

 aberrant form of T. incerta. 



Mr. H. W. Andrews exhibited species of British Anthoiin/iitlae 

 (Dip.) :- 



1. HtjlepJiila sponsa, Meig., said by Mr. J. E. Collin (" Trans. 

 Ent. S. Lond.," 1920) to be rather uncommon, but which Mr. 

 Andrews had met with not uncommonly. 



2. The following species of Li )ii no phnra, which were dealt with by 

 J. E. Collin in his consideration of the genus in the "Ent. Mo. 

 Mag." for 1921, viz., L. marina. Coll., L. cnrata, Coll., L. a'eria. 

 Fin., L. e.vfinrda, Pand., and L. scrnpulosa, Ztt. 



Mr. H. Moore exhibited a species of Galeodes, taken in a bed- 

 room at Three Anchor Bay, Cape Town. The family is distributed 

 in a number of species in S.E. Europe, Africa, and Asia, and is 

 usually placed between the spiders and the mites. Nocturnal in 

 habit, their palpi have been enormously developed and look like 



