CONTLNTS. 



PAGE. 



Platj^. III. — Varieties of Liiperiua guencei. 



Luperina gueneei, Doubleday, as a species, and as a British species, 



Hij. J. Turner, F.E.S. . . . . . . . . . . 53 



Notes from Gloucestershire : Lepidoptera in 1910, J. F. Bird . . . . 55 



Myrmecophilous Notes for 1910 (concluded), Horace St. J. K. Donisthorpe, 



F.X.S., F.E.S. .. .. .. .. .. .. 58 



Notes on the Season, 1910, Russell E. James. . . . . . . . G3 



Oholeva fuliginosa (Catops fuliginosus), Er., a species new to Britain, 



G. W. Nicholson, BI.D., M. A., F.E.S. .. .. .. ., 67 



Notes on Collecting, etc. — A few Notes on my 1910 Collecting, 



A. liussell, F.E.S. .. .. .. .. .. ,. 69 



CuiiKENT Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 



Societies. — The Entomological Society of London, The Lancashire and 

 Cheshire Entomological Society, The Birmingham Natural History 

 and Philosophical Society, The South London Entomological and 

 Natural History Society .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 73 



Obituary. — Gerald George Hodgson, T. /I. C 76 



Papers, etc., from Messrs. G. T. Bethune-Baker, G. Wheeler, J. E. K. Allen, T. A. 

 Chapman, the late J. W. Tutt, and Dr. Burr, with several short notes, and Society 

 reports are unavoidably held over. 



The April number will probably contain a plate of structural details of L. 

 gueneei, etc. 



It has been decided to make the May number a special " Tutt " number, containing 

 portraits, an obituary, contributions from various well-known entomologists " As I knew 

 him," criticisms of his work from Continental as well as British writers, items of 

 interest, excerpts from various magazine and jiewspaper notices, etc., and a complete 

 bibliography of his writings. 



Will all those who intend to contribute kindly send In their MS. as soon as convenient. 



Rambles in Alpine Valleys. 



Bound in Cloth, with Map and Photographs of District. 

 Price 3s. 6d. 

 This book contains a series of essays dealing with the colours of insects, and sugges- 

 tions as to the .relation in past time between the Alpine and British fauna. Many new 

 tacts are brought forward, and entomological problems discussed from various standpoints. 



Melanism and Melanochroism in British Lepidoptera 



(Demy 8vo., bound in Cloth. Price 5/-.) 

 Deals exhaustively with all the views brought forward by scientists to account for the 

 forms of melanism and melanochroism; contains full data respecting the distribution of 

 melanic forms in Britain, and theories to account for their origin ; the special value of 

 "natural selection," "environment," "heredity," "disease," "temperature," d-c, in 

 particular cases. Lord Walsingham, in his Presidential address to the Fellows of the 

 Entomological Society of London, says, "An especially interesting line of enquiry as con- 

 nected with the use and value of colour in insects is that which has been followed up in 

 Mr. Tutt's series of papers on ' Melanism and Melanochroism.' " 



Woodside, Burnside, Hillside and Marsh. 



(Crown Bvo., Illustrated, 224 pp. and 103 woodcuts and full-page illustrations. Bound 



in Cloth. (Price 2/6). 



Another series of collecting expeditions into well-known entomological and natural 

 history localities, with description of botanical, geological, ornithological as well as 

 entomological matters of interest to be found therein. The places dealt with include 

 Cobham Woods, Cuxton Downs, the Western Highlands, Clilfe— all well known for their 

 rich entomological fauna. 



To be obtained from .J. Herbert Tutt, 22, Francemary Road, Ladywell Eoad, 

 Brockley, S.E. 



