258 THE entomologist's record. 



Further Notes on our rush-feeding Coleophoridae sp. n. . . .. 282 



Notes on the Earlier Stages of the Nepticulae, with a view to their 



better recognition, at this period of their life i . . . 197, etc. 



Nepticula confusella, a new birch mining species . . . . . . 272 



Extracts from a Note Book 



On the Larvas, Habits, and Structure of LithocoUetis concomitella, 



Bankes, and its nearest allies. ( <^ genital appendages) 30, etc. 

 A f)ii tliomy ia viduella, Zett. ; a new British fly .. .. .. 271 



The occurrence in Het'efordshire of Gallinuij/ia elegantala, Fall., 



mid Afjalliomyia boreella, Zett. .. .. .. .. .. 5 



On the British species of Fhora I. . . . . . . . . 186. etc. 



Phora gracilis, a new species belonging to Beckett's group I. . . 228 

 On the British species of Phora II. . . . . . . . . 164, etc. 



Agatliomyia elegantala, Fall. — A correction, and A. zetterstedti, 



Zett., a species new to Britain .. .. .. .. .. 45 



On the British species of Phora, cent. . . . . . . . . 149 



A new species of Anthomyia {A. bifasciata) . . . . . . . . 40 



Is Leaf-mining one of the larval habits of Aphiochaeta . . . . 69 



Notes on British Phora (corrections and additions) . . 94, etc. 



Hilara albociiigulata, sp. n. . . . . . . • • . . . . 13 



The Wingless Geometer . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 



Four unrecorded Antliomyidae ; two of them at the same time 



being new to science . . . . . . . . . . . . 84 



The wingless Geometer . . . . . . . . . . . . 112 



Thrypticus nigricauda, a new species ; and notes on a few other 



Dolichopodidae from Herefordshire . . . . . . . . 268 



. vi. 14. Notes on British Phora, further additions, sp.n. . . . . . . 152 



To the Rntoinolof/ist's Becord. 



5. xi. 93. An Explanatory Suggestion of the Plumose Antenna in the 



Female Lepidopterous Pupa . . . . . . . . . . 237 



To the Woolhnpe Transactions. 



1876. Herefordshire Clearwings. 

 1891. Nepticulae of Herefordshire. 

 1904. Herefordshire Diptera. 



William Warren, M.A., F.E.S. 



By the death of Mr. William Warren, on October 18th, after a 

 short but painful illness, there has passed away from us one who, in 

 various spheres of lepidopterological work,, has been a prominent figure 

 for nearly half a century. Although in the ordinary course of nature 

 it could not have been expected that he would be spared for manj^ years' 

 further labour, seeing that he had reached the ripe age of 75, yet the 

 end has come as something of a shock, for he was still actively "in 

 harness" until the final seizure, and his last paper on "New species 

 of DrepanuUdae, Noctaidae, and Geometridae in the Tring Museum," 

 has appeared posthumously {Novit. Zool., xxi., pp. 401-25). 



Mr. Warren first made a name for himself in entomological circles 

 in his Cambridge days, and especially as a careful worker at the life- 

 histories of the so-called Micro-lepidoptera. As long ago as 1878 we 

 find him contributing to the Knt. Mo. Ma;/, notes on the early stages 

 of /*ji>/iip/)iphnra niijricostajia and Klacldsta stabilella, and from that 

 date to 1889 he was a regular contributor of similar notes to that 

 journal, and occasionally to the Kntouiolnyi^t. Some species were also 

 added to the British list through his labours, and Macro-lepidopterists 

 will scarcely need to be reminded that he was the author of the 

 interesting race iinpar of Bryophila iiinralis and one of the first to 

 notice the larvfe of the rare Kupithecia innotata in England. 



