344 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 



Coleoptera comprised Anchomoms gracilis, Rockland, and A. 

 thoreyi, Ormesby ; LaccopJdlus interruptus and Coccinella 19- 

 punctata, at Horsey ; Psamiucechus hipunctatus and Anomala 

 frischi, a pupa of which latter had been blown out of the sand 

 and was lying quite exposed in a little hollow, at Winterton ; 

 Campylus linearis, at Suilingham, with Silis ruficoUis, which was 

 also common at Rockland and Horning. At the latter locality, 

 Tetephorus figuratus and MaWiodes dispar also occurred with 

 Cryptorhynchus lapathi, sitting on a gate-post ; Calandra oryzce, 

 beneath a board by a marsh hay-stack in the open levels ; Gale- 

 riLca tenella, lineola, sagittarice, and nymphece (which last was in 

 the flowers of Nymphcea liUea), Psylliodes didcamara and picina, 

 Donacia clavipes and coviari. D. affinis and semicuprea and 

 Gymnetron pascuormn were found at Rockland, and Crypticus, 

 Microzoum, with other coast species, at Winterton. Erirhinvs 

 nereis turned up at Wroxham, and Crepidodera modeeri in the 

 Horsey Marshes. Such aristocrats as Donacia impressa and 

 menyanthidis, the Lixi, and other specialities of the Broads, 

 could not be expected to turn out in the rain and cold winds, 

 nor, needless to add, did we see CctithorJiynchus querceti. 



Great numbers of Hymenoptera were taken, more especially 

 among the Ichneumonidse, which we were more particularly 

 anxious to work, but of these we will only notice Ichneumon 

 albicinctiis at Eaton ; PhcBogenes collaris on Household Heath ; 

 Collyria ccdcitrator commonly with its host, Cephus pygmcens, at 

 Filby Broad on the margin of a wheat field ; Tryphon scotopterus 

 (which Bridgman had described as a new species under the name 

 Perilissus famatus from the vicinity of Norwich — cf. Entom. xiii. 

 p. 54) occurred in a chalk-pit at Earlham ; Bassus Icetatorius, at 

 Filby. Mr. Nevinson, whom we had the pleasure of meeting, 

 showed us several lihyssa persuasoria, taken in the act of ovi- 

 positing in the burrows of Sirex gigas at Horning. RJiogas 

 circamscriptiLs was swept at Eaton, and the curious little Peri- 

 semiis tnareolatus at Wroxham. The Tenthredinidse were in 

 great force all along the line. Tenthredo atra at Eaton and 

 Rockland, T. vioniliata (female) at Rockland, and T. punctulata 

 atHickling; Tenthredopsis tilice at Earlham; Macrophya 12-piinc- 

 tata was common at Surlingham and Rockland, and at the latter 

 we took a male of the rare M. albicinta ; two or three common 

 Doleri, with Selandria viorio, turned up at Rockland and Horning; 

 a nice Poecilosoma, probably excismn, Thorns., at Eaton, and P. 

 litarata {^^ ? guttatuni, Fall.) at Wroxham and ? Horning; we 

 swept Eriocampa annidipes from the Winterton hedges, Blenno- 

 campa alhipes at Eaton, B. fuscipennis at Surlingham and 

 Hickling, B. ephippium and Emphytus calceatiis at Rockland ; 

 Dinura stilata was found at Wroxham, Neniatus ribesii, which 

 is apparently very rare in Suffolk, at Winterton, N. abdominalis 

 (female), at Hickling, N. fulvipes, at Wroxham and Horning, 



