OBSERVATIONS ON TINEINA. 15 



e.vii amongst AmmojjJdla arnndinacea ; occurs at Glogau, Meseritz 

 and Stettin, e.v to e.vi. 



G. AETEMisiELLA, 56j 51, 1. V, bet-R-een united leaves of Thymus 

 serjyyllnm. 



G. MUNDELLA, 55> 53 (75), bred from moss on the sand hills near 

 Liverpool ; 1. unobserved. 



G. AFFIXIS, 55) 53 (75), 1. on moss on walls, Xll-lli. 



G. rMBROSELLA, Zeller, 66) 1^9) previously confounded with G. 

 affinis, and described as the imago of that species by Stainton (Ins. 

 Brit. Lep. Tin. p. 115); occurs most plentifully on the sand hills of the 

 coast, but also occurs inland ; Dawlish Warren, V ; Weybridge. vil. 

 Umlrosella differs from Affinis in the ant. w. being rather narrower 

 and more glossy, the scattered pale scales are whiter, and the sub-apical 

 spots are whitish, scarcely showing any tendency to form a fascia. L. 

 not yet detected. 



G. CONFINIS, Stainton, 71) 98? n. sp., closely allied to Affinis and Um- 

 drosella, but with the ant. w. narrower and hlacher than in those species ; 

 bred Vl from 1. found v feeding on moss on old walls near Perth. 



G. BOREELLA, 56) 52, capture of 3 or 4 specimens in Sutherland- 

 shire, VI; 70) 8) occurrence in Germany on the Upper Harz. 



G. DOMESTICA, 55) 53 (75), 1. on moss on walls, III. 



G. RHOMBELLA, 65) 135, 1. VI on apple trees at Jena. [Of late 

 years I have found the 1. not uncommonly on apple trees in my garden 

 at Lewisham.] 



G. VULGELLA, 55) 53 (75), 1. between united hawthorn leaves, e.iv, 

 eating them half through and so discolouring them. 



G. Myricariella, Reutti, 62) 128, 1. in the stems of the tenninal 

 ■shoots of Tamarix gallica, b.vi, on the banks of the Eeuss, near 

 Bremgarten ; the affected shoots turn yellowish ; i. h.Yll. 



G. LUCULELLA, 55) 53 (75), 1. II in decaj-ed wood. 



G. scsiPTELLA, 68) 21 (v. H), 1. b.x on maple, under a lobe of the 

 leaf turned down on the upper side ; i. V. 



G. ^THIOPS, 62) 129, 1. reared from the egg, on heath (Erica cine- 

 rea); M-hen young it mines the leaves ; then constructs a gallery of silk 

 and excrement, intermixed with bits of the food-plant, and so continues 

 to feed within the gallery. 



G. Beahmiella, 68) 19 C"^. H.), described ; 1. mines the pinnate 

 leaves of Jurinea Pollichii at Eberstadt and Jugenheim ; the mined 



