160 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 



122. NoRGAARD, V. A. : " Division of Animal Industry — Report 

 for 1905." 2nd Rep. Agr. Forestry Hawaii, 167-228 

 (October 13th, 1906). [Diptera]. 



123. Knab, F. : " The Swarming of Culex pipiens." Psyche xiii., 

 123-33 (October, 1906). [Diptera] . 



124. Sloane, T. G. : " Revision of the Cicindelidse of Australia." 

 Proc. Linn. Soc. New South Wales xxxi., 309-60, plates 

 25-31 (October 3rd, 1906). [Coleoptera] . 



125. Harrison, L. W. H. : "Variations of Lycsena astrarche 

 in Britain." Bull. Soc. Lep. Geneve i., 30-2 (1905). 

 [Lepidoptera] . 



126. Fernald, H. T. : "The Digger Wasps of North America and 

 the West Indies belonging to the Subfamily Chlorioninge." 

 P. U. S. Mus. xxxi., 291-423, plates vi.-x. (No. 1487) 

 (1906). 



127. Gary, M. : " On the Diurnal Lepidoptera of the Athabaska 

 and Mackenzie Region, British America." 0^ cit., 425-57 

 (No. 1488) (1906). 



128. Crobibrugghe de Picquendaele, Baron de : " Larves de 

 Microl6pidopteres vivant en aout, sur les trembles de la 

 foret de Soignes." A. S. E. Belg. 50, pp. 271-2 (October 4th, 

 1906). 



129. Grosvenor, G. H. : " Cuba— the Pearl of the Antilles." 

 Nat. (U.S.) Geogr. Mag. xvii., 535-68 (including 24 full-page 

 illustrations), 1 map (12 x 24 ins.) (October, 1906). 



130. MuiR, F. : " Notes on some Fijian Insects." Bull. Hawaiian 

 Sugar Plant. Ent. 2, pp. 1-11, plate i. (November 10th, 

 1906). [Coleoptera, Diptera, Hemiptera, Hymenoptera]. 



The "Life Story of the White Admiral Butterfly" (106) will 

 doubtless be interesting to many readers of the * Entomologist.' 

 The reference is to the American edition of the magazine, which 

 may not be the same as the British. 



Craw and Kotinsky's Report (107) deals with a record of the 

 quarantine work of 1905, and of the breeding and dissemination 

 of beneficial insects during the same period. There are also 

 reports on visits to the various islands of the Hawaiian Archi- 

 pelago. The reports on Lantana Insects and Hornfiy are re- 

 printed from the Rep. Hawaiian Livestock Association. 



It is interesting to compare the Cicadid and Cercopid faunas 

 of Japan with the similar British ones. In the British Isles 

 there are one Cicadid and seven Cercopids, in Japan sixteen 

 Cicadidae and forty Cercopids already described (108-110). The 

 naturalists of Sapporo, in Japan, have started a Natural History 

 Society, and published part of the first volume of their ' Trans- 

 actions.' Matsumura records fifty-six species of Hemiptera from 

 the Riu Kiu (Loochoo) Islands, of which ten are new (111). 



Hopkins and Webb (112-113) discuss the life histories of the 

 Cerambycid Cyllene rohinice and the Scolytid Dendroctonus brevi- 



