12 LEPIDOPTERA. 



D. ALBIPUXCTELLA, 58, 106, 1. differs from that of Applana, by the 

 paler subdorsal lines, less conspicuous spots and the 2nd seg. being 

 spotted with black. 



D. EMEEITELLA, 68j IS (v. H.), 1. e.vii between united leaves of 

 tansy, near Frankfort; i. viii, b.ix. 



D. PULCHEREIMELLA, 56, 51, bred VII from 1. feeding on the 

 flowers of Bunium flexuosnm ; 58> IOC, again bred from 1. feeding on 

 the flowers of B. jiexuosum ; 70? S, 1. at Brunswick on Pimpinella 

 saxifraga. 



D. DOUGLASELLA, 55j 52 (74), one specimen bred from a 1. on one 

 of the TJiiibeWiferce, Headley Lane, vi. 



D. Weirella, 70, 7, occm-rence at Brunswick, but 1. not distin- 

 guished from that of Applana. 



D. Artemisia (sp. ?), 62, 128, 1. e.v in shoots of Artemisia 

 campestris, erroneously refeiTcd by Treitschke to Alhipunctella, pro- 

 duces an i. of the Alhlpujictella group, the name of which has not yet 

 been satisfactorily determined, [Afterwards described under the name 

 of D. ArteniisicB by Mckerl in the Wiener Entomolog. Monatschrift, 

 viii. p. 4; see also Nat. Hist. Tineina, vol. xii. p. 174.] 



D. ULTIMELLA, 61, 108, bred b.vi, from gaily-coloured 1. found 

 feeding on floAvers of Coniuin maculatum^ V, near Freshwater, Isle of 

 Wight. [There is something incomprehensible in this announcement, 

 as neither the food, nor the colour of the 1., nor the time of year, agrees 

 with what is now known of the habits of D. ultimella (see next entry j. 

 If the date and plant, &c. are really correctly given, we have probably 

 here an indication of some unsuspected new species, which has been 

 mistaken for B. ultimella.'] 



D, ULTIMELLA, 70, 8, 1- pale green, without markings, feeds Vii 

 b.vill inside the stems of Phellandrium aquaticum. 



D. NERVOSA, 55, 53 (75), I. V on (Enanthe crocata, Dawlish ; pupce 

 in stems of same plant at Ardrossan; 58, 51, occurrence of the 1. in 

 extreme profusion, near Dunoon, Argyllshire, on GE. crocata; the 

 pupas in the interior of the stem ; 57; 124, very dark (almost black) 

 specimens beaten from thatch in Dorsetshire ; 58, 106, when the full- 

 fed 1. enter the stem of CE. crocata^ they weave only a single web 

 below them. 



D. LiBANOTiDELLA, Schlager, 57, 103, described; occurrence of 

 a specimen at Newhaven, Sussex. [My determination of this specimen 



