1902.] 237 



a few]. Odontocerum albicorne, Scop., tributaries to the Coly, not common. Mo- 

 lanna angustata, Ct., Wliitford. Leptocerus cinereus, Ct., abundant on the Axe, 

 also tributaries to the Coly, a form in which the only marking on the wings of the 

 £ is the arcular spot ; L. albifrons, L., Whitford and elsewhere on the Axe and 

 Yarty, common ; L. bilineatus. L., Whitford, one ; L. dissimilis, St., VVhitford,rare. 

 Mystacides azurea, L., Whitford and elsewhere, common. Tri anodes conspersa, 

 Rbr., on the Axe and mouth of the Yarty, common, cf. ante. pp. 212, 213. Adicella 

 reducta, McLach., at small streamlets near Seaton Junction and Whitford [Ax- 

 mouth]. Setodes interrupta, F., on the Axe near Whitford, one. 



Hl'DUorSYCHlD^; : — Hydropsyche instabilis, Ct., one, precise locality uncertain ; 

 H. guttata, Pict., singly, on the Axe at Whitford, and the Coly ; H. lepida, Pict., 

 very abundant at Whitford, also at streams tributary to the Axe and Coly. Di- 

 plectrona felix, McLach., near Dalwood, one [Brauscombe and the Landslip]. 

 [Pleclrocnemia brew's, McLach., sandstone cliffs at Seaton, occasionally at the base 

 of the cliffs. Mr. Eaton caught two in my company, but I did not care to trust 

 myself on the face of the cliffs, where the insect frequents damp places caused 

 apparently by percolation of surface water, which is soaked up by the herbage ; a 

 more unlikely spot for a species of this genus it is difficult to imagine]. Polycen- 

 tropus flavomacnl atits, Pict., common at Whitford, also on tributaries to the Coly. 

 Tinodes wceneri, L., common at Whitford ; [Z 7 . aureola, Zett., Branscombe and near 

 Axmouth, singly ; T. unicolor, Pict., Haven Cliff near Axmouth, not common.] 

 Lype phreopa, St., near Whitford, one. Psychomyiu pusilla, F., common, but not 

 abundant, at Whitford. 



RhyacophiliDjE : — Rhyacophila dorsatis, Ct., on the Axe at Whitford, and 

 Branscombe, singly. Agapetus fuscipes, Ct., generally common at small streamlets ; 

 A. comalus, Pict., common on the tributaries to the Coly. 



PLANIPENNIA 



PanorpiDjE : — Panorpa germanica, L., singly, over the district. 



Hemekobiid^ : Hemerobius micans, Oliv., Shute churchyard ; II. luteseens, 

 F., near Colyton, one ; II. humuli, a few scattered over the district ; H. stigma, St., 

 conifers in the Royal Deer Park at Shute ; H. atrifrons, McLach., same locality, 

 two examples ; [i/. concinnus, St., one in a spider's web at Seaton, the typical form ] 



GHKYSOPID.3E : — Of the genus Chrysopa I brought back forty individuals, the 

 majority of those seen ; they were nearly all beaten from Fraxinus, and scattered 

 over the district. I find six species which sum up numerically as follows : — Ch. 

 ventralis, Ct., 3 ; Jiavifrons, Brauer, 24 ; tenella, Schnd., 7 ; alba, L., 1 ; jlava, 

 Scop., 2 ; vulgaris, Schnd., 3. 



CONIOPTERYGID.& : — Coniopteryx aleyrodiformis, St., and psociformis, Ct., 

 Seaton. 



PSEUDO-NEUROPTERA. 



The few Ephemeuid.e and Peelid^: seen are not here enumerated. 



PsociDiE : — These were not specially attended to, and the date was somewhat 

 too early ; Stenopsocus (Oraphopsociis) cruciatus, L., Seaton. Elipsocus (Meso- 

 psocusj unipunctatus, Mull., Seaton ; E. ll'estiooudii, McLach., Seaton, and from 



