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Entomologists stationed in the Hawaiian Islands — of their long- 

 continued efforts to increase the knowledge of the Hawaiian 

 Insect Fauna. The three names are: Dr. David Sharp, Dr. 

 R. C. L. Perkins, and the Rev. Thos. Blackbumi. 



"Dr. Sharp's interest in the Faunas of the Pacific has been 

 very practical. He has published a great number of descriptions 

 of Coleoptera of these islands and of ISTew Zealand especially. 

 The JSTew Zealand Institute placed him on its Roll of Honour in 

 1877. His first paper on Hawaiian Insects was published as far 

 back as 1878, and he has now contributed about a dozen papers, 

 including a good deal to the 'Fauna Hawaiiensis,' of which he 

 is the editor. It is not too much to say, I believe, that had it 

 not been for Dr. Sharp's pains and patience, the explorations of 

 these islands, under Dr. Perkins, would not have been main- 

 tained all these years, nor would they have been conducted so 

 thoroughly that today there is no country in the world, except 

 those of Western Europe, whose natural products are so thor- 

 oughly known. 



"Dr. Perkins was the mainstay of this Society during its 

 early years. He has a unique knowledge of the archipelago and 

 its products, and has unselfishly devoted a large part of his life 

 to unravelling the intricate and interwoven threads of Evolution 

 here. He has also been the most valuable and the most volum- 

 inous contributor to the literature of the natural history of the 

 islands. A short time ago Dr. Perkins was given the degree of 

 Doctor of Science by Oxford Ihiiversity, this being largely due 

 to the acknowledged value of his work here. 



"The Rev. Thos. Blackburn was stationed in Honolulu from 

 1876 to 1886. His opportunities for entomological work were 

 small, but the pioneer work was done by him. He published 

 some 15 papers between 1877 and 1888, principally on Coleop- 

 tera, joining with Dr. Sharp in the lengthy paper which ap- 

 peared in the Transactions of the Dublin Society in 1885, and 

 it was on his collections in all Orders that the earlier papers of 

 Sharp, ])ates and McLachlan were based. 



"In submitting these names to you I must insist on the pro- 

 priety of a society of such a nature as ours limiting the Honor- 

 ary List to such entomologists as have done work of acknowl- 

 edged merit on the fauna of these islands, and I think that these 

 are decidedly the three principal ones that could be selected on 

 such a basis." 



