190 Lloyd's natural history. 



Rnssia. 



A great portion of the Entomological literature of Russia is 

 published in periodicals ; but one or two separate works may 

 be mentioned. Vol. v. of Fischer von Waldheim's " Ento- 

 mographia Imperii Rossici " (Moscow, 1852) is devoted to 

 Nymphalince^ of which several very interesting species are 

 figured, in addition to commoner ones. Vols. i. and ii. 

 (1820-1824) also contained figures of a few Lepidoptera. 



Most of Eversmaini's important contributions to Russian 

 and Siberian Entomology are scattered through the " Bulletin 

 de la Societe des Naturalistes de Moscou," but his " Fauna 

 Lepidopterologica Volgo-Uralensis " (Kasan, 1844), a useful 

 book, though without illustrations, is an exception. 



Iceland. 

 Dr. Staudinger has published a list of Moths (there are said 

 to be no Butterflies in the island) in the " Stettiner Entomolo- 

 gische Zeitung," vol. xviii. for 1857. 



Madeira. 

 The most important paper on the Macro- Lepidoptera of this 

 island is Mr. Bethune-Baker's " Notes on the Lepidoptera 

 collected in Madeira by the late T. Vernon Wollaston," pub- 

 lished in the "Transactions of the Entomological Society of 

 London" for 1891, with a coloured plate. A previous paper, 

 with a similar title, was published by Stainton in the " Annals 

 and Magazine of Natural History" (ser. 3, vol. iii. pp. 209-214) 

 (1859); in addition to some descriptions of new species by 

 Wollaston himself, in the " Annals " for 1858 (ser. 3, vol. i. 

 pp. 18-28, 113-124). 



Canaries. 



A little book with four coloured plates, entitled "The Butter- 

 flies and Moths of Teneriffe," was published by Mrs. Holt White 



