IN PARTS— ONE SHILLING. 



A NATURAL HISTORY 



OF THE 



BRITISH BUTTERFLIES, 



THEIR WORLD-WIDE VARIATION AND DISTRIBUTION. 

 Vol. IV. 



Commencing with the Variation and Life-histories of Agriades coridon and Polyommatus 

 icariis (with four plates of the named aberrations and varieties of the first-named species 

 together with many photomicrographs of larval and pupal structure. Similar plates of 

 P. icarus are awaiting publication.) 



Probably the finest life-histories of any species of lepidoptera ever published. The next 

 species to be treated is Aricia astrarche, a still more interesting one with regard to its 

 Varieties and Aberrations. 



Part XI. will shortly be issued. 

 Subscription for 20 parts 178. 6d. 



Butterflies of Switzerland and tlie Alps of Central Europe 



By GEO. WHEELER, M.A., F.E.S., F.Z.S. 



Price Ss. net. Interleaved, 6s. 



Limp cloth covers. — Handy for the knapsack. 



This book is of the highest value not only to collectors of Continental Butter- 

 flies, but to all those who collect British butterflies, as it gives a great many detailed 

 facts about the species in which they are more particularly interested. 



The details of Variation and Distribution are particularly important, and those 

 lepidopterists to whom Kane's book has long been a treasured friend, will find in this 

 more information, more detail, and many more localities than were at the disposal of 

 the author of the earlier volume. 



" To those who carry a net abroad, this handbook will be invaluable as a book of 

 reference We can cordially recommend it " — H. Rowland- 

 Brown, M.A., F.E.S., The Entomologist's Record, vol. xv. 

 V Dear SiR.-Herewith I forward pos^tal'order value ^^\ for J'^l^ of The Butter- 

 flies of fin^it:erlnnd and the Alps of Central Europe. 



Name > 



Address 



To Mr. H. E. PAGE, "Bertrose," Gellatly Road, New Gross, London, S.E. 



FOR SAlIeI 



Tutt's ^'British Lepidoptera," vols. I to X. Tutt's "British Butterflies," vol«. 

 I to III. Tutt's " British Noctuae," vols. I to IV. Tutt's "Practical Hints for the 

 Field Lepidopterist," parts I to III, with Index. There are also a few copies of 

 i- ** British Noctuae," slightly soiled, to be sold cheaply. 



' A. M. COCHRANE. 



41, Wisteria Road, 



Lewisham, S.E. 



Melanism and Melanochroism in British Lepidoptera 



(Demy 8vo., bound in Cloth. Price 5/-.) 

 6 Deals exhaustively with all the views brought forward by scientists to account for th« 



' forms of melanism and melanochroism ; contains full data respecting the distribution of 

 * melanic forms in Britain, and theories to account for their origin ; the special value of 

 "natural selection," "environment," "heredity," "disease," "temperature," &c., in 

 particular cases. Lord Walsingham, in bis Presidential address to the Fellows of the 

 Entomological Society of London, says, "An especially interesting line of enquiry as con- 

 nected with the use and value of colour in insects is that which has been followed up in 

 Mr. Tutt's series of papers on ' Melanism and Melanochroism.' " 



To be obtained from J. Herbert Tdtt, 22, Francemary Road, Ladywell Road, 

 ^ Brockley, S.E. 

 e 



