THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 239 



of the Genns Dasj'tes, ii. 225. Remarks on the Genus Ceuthorhynchus 

 and its Allies, ii. 259. Some remarks on the Genus Nothus of Olivier, 

 ii. 201. Captures in Monk Wood, Huntingdonshire, ii. 268. 



186G — 7. Observations on the Genus Anaspis, iii. 31. Further 

 Notes on the Telephoridaj, iii. 17. Notes on a Species of Horaalidae 

 New to Britain, iii. 00. Observations on concluding portion of tlie 

 CurculionidiB, iii. 03. Prior Appearance of ]\Iale of Female, iii. 07. 

 Mould on Lepidoptera, iii. 72. Revision of the ' Catalogue of British 

 Coleoptera,' iii. 105, 119, 133, 173. 



1808 — 9. Notes on some Doubtful British Coleoptera, iv. 47. 

 Notes on recent Continental Publications on Coleoptera, iv. 05. New 

 Method of Preserving Coleoptera, iv. 229. Contributions to a Synopsis 

 of British Coleoptera, iv. 307. 



1870. Notes on British Coleoptera, v. 7. 



In 1864 Mr. Crotch visited the Canary Islands, in company 

 with his brother, the doctor, whose success there two years 

 previously I have already mentioned. 1 find no separate 

 record of the result of this most laborious journey; but the 

 new species obtained, seventy-seven in number, have been 

 described by Mr. Wollaston in the Appendix to his 

 'Coleoptera Atlantidum.' This year also he obtained an 

 appointment as one of the assistant librarians in the Public 

 Library at Cambridge, and received the degree of M.A. in 

 Natural Science. 



In 1865 he visited Spain in company with several French 

 savans, and by their united exertions some of the finest 

 collections of Spanisli Lepidoptera were made in that country, 

 of which previously to this visit little was known entomo- 

 logically. 



"In the year 1807 Mr. Crotch published, in the Proceedings of 

 the Zoological Society of London, a complete enumeration of the 

 Coleoptera of the Azores, accompanied by descriptions of new species 

 found there by Messrs. Godman and Brewer. Although his collections 

 had by this time become very considerable and required much of his 

 time, Mr. Crotch pursued with untiring industry his studies of the 

 literature of Entomology, and published, besides a large number of 

 corrections of the Catalogue of Coleoptera of Gemmiuger and Von 

 Harold, a list of all the Coleoptera of the group Adephaga, described 

 from the year 1758 — 1821, referring them to their modern genera; 

 this he did with the hope of assisting others who, like himself, were 

 engaged in attempting to cleanse the Augean stable of entomological 

 nomenclature. This work was published at Cambridge in 1871, and 



