JUNE 1st. urn. 



Tlic sevcnty-t'iftli rciiiilar iiicci iiiii (tf the Society was lu'ld 

 ill the usual ])lace. 

 JMeiiilxn- elected l\lr. .J. (". Kershaw 



EXTOMOT.IXMCAI. PHOOKA.M. 



Mv. Giffard gave notes on Odj/itcrus. and exliil)ited his col- 

 lection consisting of six cabinet drawtn-s, containing 80 species 

 of this and closely related genera of Hawaiian wasps. The 

 J*resident declared a reeess to allow niendiers op])ortunity to 

 examine the collection. This is the largest collection of these 

 \vas])s in the islands, at the present time. 



]\Ir. Ehrhorn exhibited some galls on koa h-aves which were 

 sent him from llaleakala, Maui, l)V Mr. Ilannestad. The 

 larvae of a Tortricid moth were feeding in them, but it was con- 

 sidered that the galls were due to some other unknown cause. 



Reaction of the Walking Stick to Gravity.* 



BY n. II. SEVERIN. 



JULY Otu. 1011. 



'{'he seventy-sixth reguhii' meeting was held in the usual 

 place. 



KXTOMOLOGK'AL PK()(U;A.\I. 



Mr. Swezey reported having reared two species of Tortri- 

 cid moths from the galls on Koa leaves from Maui, exhibited 

 by Mr. Ehrhorn at the previous meeting: Cri/pfopJilochia ille- 

 pida and Enarmonia Walsinghami. • 



The former usually feeds in the pods of various legumes; 

 and the latter in twigs of Koa, both living and dead. Theii- 

 presence in the galls was considered a secondary matter and not 

 the cause of the galls. 



A Day's Collecting at Punaluu, Oahu. 



BY OTTO JI. SWEZEY. 



The northwest ])ortion of the Koolau Mouutain Kange is 



*Not available for publication. — [Ed.] 

 Proc. Haw. Ent. Soc, II, No. 5, July. 191.3. 



