142 [J^ine. 



\.—rufa, Redt., 1849. 



suhquadrifoveolata, Waterh. 



quadri-impressa, Reitt. 



ferruginea, Bris. 



quadrifoveolata, Fowl. 

 2. — quadrifoveolata, Aube, Crotch. 



suhquadrifoveolata, Fowl. 

 3. — quadri-impressa, Motsch.* 



Dieclci, Reitt." 

 — G. C. Champion, Horsell : April 22nd, 1895. 



Elater pomorum in Sherwood Forest. — I have recently taken E. pomorum in 

 old birch in Sherwood Forest ; the species has also been taken in Sherwood Forest 

 and on Cannock Chase bj Mr. W. G. Blatch, and in numbers in the Dean Forest by 

 Mr. Hodgson : it has occurred very rarely in Scotland, and one specimen has been 

 found in Armagh in birch. Mr. Blatch appears to have found it in oak ; it has never, 

 apparently, been found in the New Forest.- — W. W. Fowler, Lincoln : May nth, 

 1895. 



Deleaster dichrous near Chingford. — This insect is usually scarce in the London 

 district, but I was fortunate enough to meet with nine by digging in the banks of 

 the Ching brook, near Higham's Park, on May 10th. Deleaster occurred generally 

 in couples, probably sexes ; Tachyrisa flavitarsis and Trechus micros (1) were taken 

 at the same time. — E. A. Newbeey, 12, Churchill Road, Dartmouth Park, N.W. : 

 May 12th, 1895. 



Longicornia and other Coleoptera in 1894. — The following were taken by me 

 last year. Leiopus nebulosus in Richmond Park in May ; in the New Forest, in 

 June, Hhagium bifasciatum, Anoplodera sexgnttata, Grammoptera tabacicolor, &. 

 analis, and Elater sanguinolentus ; at Wicken Fen, in August, a single specimen of 

 Oberea oculata, Anthocomus rufus being rather abundant ; Tetrops prcBUsta in 

 Headley Lane in September. — W. J. Ashdown, Belmont Road, Leatherhead : 

 April, 1895. 



Lepidoptera, Sfc, on the Bournemouth Oolf-linJcs. — The reference on p. 60 of 

 the current volume of this Magazine to the loss to science of a good entomological 

 locality at Bournemouth, through the formation of the golf-links, has led to the 

 following notes on some insects taken there by myself in recent years. One charac- 

 teristic of the Common in question, which is close to the centre of the town, was the 

 extreme abundance of specimens — Satyrus Semele, Lycasna ALgon, Phytometra 

 viridaria {cenea), and many other species being in great profusion. Among the 

 Lepidoptera taken were Lithosia mesomella on the pines ; Emydia cribrum, two 

 specimens on a part of the ground now marked out for building plots ; Nemeophila 

 russula, Agrotis strigula (porphyrea), Anaria myrtUli, Ueliothis dipsacea, Gnophos 

 obscuraria, Nemoria viridata, Bupalus piniaria, Pachycnemia hippocastanaria, 

 Eupithecia pumilata, Melanthia albicillata, Melanippe galiata, Pelurga comitata, 



• Not British.— G. C. C. 



