LEPIDOPTERA IN WEST SUFFOI;K. 221 



Quercus ilex, but, although there was a tree of this kind in the 

 midst of hawthorns on which the larvte of dodoneata occurred, 

 I quite failed to get any larvae on the ilex except a few of 

 Hi/bernia margiiiaria. 



Pi/rausta ostriiialis occurs commonly between Elveden and 

 Barnham. One specimen of Pionea margaritalis was trodden up 

 at Tuddenham, but I searched in vain for larvae later on. A few 

 la r Vie of Oxi/ptilns dista)is were swept from a species of Crepis, 

 and I found occasional specimens in the imago stage in widely 

 separated localities. Larvae of Aciptilia galactodactyla were 

 common on burdock, and I got a single A. ietradactyla on New- 

 market Heath, 



C'Jdlo phrafiinitcdlus seems to occur in all the reed-beds here, 

 and a nice series was bred. Two specimens of ScJiceiwhius forfi- 

 celliis were trodden up in the daytime on the edge of a pond at 

 Barnham, and I caught a single S. gigantellus at Ampton. 

 Nephoptergx spissicella was not uncommon at Ampton and West 

 Stow, and I bred a very dark form of Rhodopluea advenella. 

 Homceosoma sinuella was fairly common, and the thistle feeders, 

 H. nc'bulella and FT. hincevdla, were also obtained. 



In 1910 I paid a good deal of attention to Tortrices, and 

 among those obtained were : — Leptograinma literana, one at 

 West Stow ; Peronea aspersana* two at Newmarket ; Sciaphila 

 hyhridana, at Timworth ,- Antithesia salicella, Ampton and West 

 Stow; Retiuia piiiicolana, in numbers at Ampton; R. turionana* 

 one caught at Ampton, and two bred ; Pcedisca se)iiifuscana,* 

 and P. rnhiginosana* one of each at Tuddenham ; Carpocapsa 

 nimhana* single specimens at West Stow and Livermere ; Asthena 

 pygiiUBana* common at Troston, and also occurs less commonly 

 among spruce fir at other places in the neighbourhood ; Stignio- 

 nota perlepidana* common at Ampton and Timworth; Aphelia 

 osseana* common at Newmarket. 



Of the Psychidae, I found cases of Fumea intermediella not 

 uncommon at Ampton and West Stow, but all the imagines that 

 resulted, except one, were females. From a case of TaUeporia 

 pseudobombycella found on a beech-trunk at Ampton I duly bred 

 the moth. 



The only Tineid new to Suffolk that I obtained was Steno- 

 lochia geinmella,* from Culford. Other species were Adela rufi- 

 mitrella, Ampton and Timworth ; Ccrostoma seqiiella and Depres- 

 saria hypericella, bred ; Lenmatophila p)hryganeUa, two at Ampton ; 

 and a nice series of OrthoUelia spargaiiiella bred from larvae and 

 pupae found in a pond at Barnham. 



All the insects obtained at Newmarket were caught within 

 the Suffolk boundary. I have to thank the editor, Mr. Richard 

 South, for kindly determining for me many of the smaller and 

 less easily identified species. Those marked * are new to Suffolk. 



Timworth Hall, Bury St. Edmunds: April Dth, 1911. 



