24 LEPIDOPTEEA. 



English locality ; a third taken in Germany, at Hermsdorf, vii ; 64j 

 167, bred from 1. feeding e.vii, b.vii, on the seeds of Heraclcum aphondy- 

 lium, €Egopodiiim, jJodagraria and other Umhellifercs ; 70? 17, occur- 

 rence at Witherslack, Vii, Vlil, on yew ; also beaten from fir, viii, at 

 Darlington; the i. sat like Glypliiptery x fuscoviridella, with its wings 

 meeting over its back at a very acute angle, and it was rather lively in 

 the net. 



H. (CEcoPHOEA) DEVOTELLA, 68, 2-i (v. H.), described; 1, e.viii, 

 b.ix, in umbels of Heracleum spliondylium, spinning the seeds to- 

 gether with a slight web and boring into them ; i. VI. 



H. (CEcoPHORA) STATARIELLA, 68, 25 (v. H.), described ; twice 

 taken m.vii on the Alp Laret, near St. Moritz ; allied to Devotella, 

 but much smaller, tips of the antennee whitish and four faint spots on 

 the ant. w. 



Perittia obscurepunctella, 65, 54 (77), 1. Vii making blotches 

 in honeysuckle, quitting the leaf when full fed and changing to a sin- 

 gularly flat pupa. 



AxTispiLA (Elachista) Treitschkiella, 55, 55 (78), bred from 

 1. mining Vli — X large greenish blotches in leaves of dogwood, and 

 cutting out small, flat, oval cases. 



A. (Elachista) Pfeifferella, 56, 58, apparently bred from 

 case-maker-mincrs of the dogwood ; 57, 128, 1. makes blotches in leaves 

 of dogwood similar to those of Treitschkiella^ but both 1. blotch and 

 case are larger ; head and 2nd seg. pale brown in Pfeifferella, black in 

 Treitschldella ; E. M. M. iii. 80, 1. buries itself and its case underground; 

 none of the 1. of the closely-allied A. TreitscTiMella (bred by hundreds) 

 went beneath the surface of the mould. 



A. EiviLLEi, 72, 124, 1. b.x in vine leaves at Massa di Carrara in 

 Italy. There is no record of these 1. having been met with since 1750. 



Heliozela sericiella or stanxeella, 70, 11, an oak leaf found 

 at Marktsteft, in Bavaria, with an oval case cut out close to the foot- 

 stalk ; the 1. had fed up inside the foot-stalk, and had then simply 

 mined into the surface of the leaf a sufficient distance to allow of its 

 cutting out its oval case. 



H. (TixAGMA) RESPLEXDELLUM, 58, 108, bred from the singular 

 mine on alder leaves, on which the 1. mines along a lateral rib a short 

 distance, then crosses over from one lateral rib to another, along which 

 it mines to the mid-rib, down which it mines for an inch or more, then 



