48 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 



KECENT LITEPtATUEE. 



1. The Annals of Scottish Natural History. Edinburgh, 1910. 



Perhaps a somewhat greater amount of entomological matter 

 appears in this volume than in the last. The papers and notes are : — 

 Scottish Phoridoe [Diptera] , with Tables of all the British Species, 

 and Notes on Localities (J. R. Malloch) ; Ornithohius cygni [Mallo- 

 phaga] , a Swan Parasite at Port-AUen-on-Tay (J. Waterston, B.Sc.) ; 

 Ornithohius qoniopleurns on Barnacle Goose (W. Evans); Aquatic 

 Coleoptera of the Mid-Ebudes (F. B. Browne, M.A.) ; Further Notes 

 on Nocturnal Hymenoptera (P. Cameron) ; On the Scottish Species 

 of Oxyura (Proctotrypid^), pts. iv. and v. (P. Cameron) ; Insect 

 Fauna of Grouse Moors (P. H. Grimshaw) ; Nyssia zonaria in the 

 Outer Hebrides (P. H. Grimshaw) ; Scottish Dragonfly Eecords 

 (W. J. Lucas, B.A.) ; Notes on Siphonaptera (W. Evans) ; Some 

 Terrestrial Invertebrates from Fair Isle (W. Evans) ; Insect Visitors 

 of Fiimaria officinalis (S. E. Brock). 



2. Monographia de los Nemoptcridos {Insectos neiiropteros). [Me- 



morias de la Real Academia de Ciencias y Artes de Barcelona.] ' 

 By R. P. Longings Navas, S.J. Barcelona, July, 1910. 

 Those who take an interest in the Neuroptera will welcome this 

 monograph of one of the most peculiar divisions of the oi'der — insects '^. 

 with hind wings narrowed into the form of tails, often with one or 

 more dilatations in their length. The article of seventy pages on' 

 large paper has a coloured plate, and twenty-four illustrations in the ""I 

 text. It is perhaps a misfortune for British naturalists that it is ^ 

 written in Spanish. Most of the forty-four species belong to" 

 Africa ; five only are European, none unfortunately being British. 



Other recent papers by the same author are : — •.,, 



(i.) Mis excursignes entoviologicas durante el verano de 1909. (BuLt ^ 

 Ins. Catal. Hist. Nat.) - - 



(ii.) Hemerobidos {Ins. Neur.) nuevos, 1910. (Broteria, Ser. de 

 Vul. Scien.) 



(iii.) Osmylides exotiques nouveaux, 1910. (Ann. Soc. Sci. Brux.) 



(iv.) Hemerobides nouveaux du Japon [Neuroptera). (Revue Russe 

 d'Entom. 1909) ; written in Latin. 



3. Bermaptera of the Seychelles. By M. Buer, D.Sc. Trans. Linn. 



Soc. Lond. vol. xiv. pt. 1. November, 1910. Illustrated. 



4. Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology. Series T. M., 



vol. iv. No. 2. Liverpool, July, 1910. 

 The only contact with entomology is of course in connection with 

 the cause of malarial diseases. Mosquitoes, therefore, figure largely 

 in the part before us. 



5. Memorias do Instituto Osivaldo Cruz. Ano 1910, Tomo ii. Fas- 



ciculo 1. Rio de Janeiro, 1909. 

 A beautifully illustrated periodical ; but this part deals with 

 animals much lower than insects. 



W. J. Lucas. 



