82 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 
Argyresthia nitidella, bred and beaten from whitethorn ; also the plain 
creamy var. A. semitestacella, A. spiniella, A. albistria, A. abdominalis, 
and A. retinella, beaten from sallows. A. precocella, one only, beaten 
from mixed hedges. 
Gracilaria alchimiella (swederella), bred and beaten from ash. 
G. stigmatella, beaten from thatch. G. syringella, bred from lilac, six or 
eight larve ina leaf. G. auroguttella, one in the fen. G. imperialella, 
larvee on Symphytum; very difficult to get at the right age; either too 
young, or gone. 
Ornia anglicella, bred in plenty from whitethorn ; the perfect insect in 
swarms in the hedgerows. O. avellunella, beaten from hazel hedge. 
O. guttea, one beaten, near Sevenoaks. 
Coleophora fabriciella, rare in the fen; by mothing at twilight, and in 
the first hour at light. C. melilotella, the same remarks apply to this 
species, which I think is new to the fen. C. anatipennella, beaten from 
sallows, and at light; fen; rare. OC. onosmella, on the “ Breck Sands,” 
where the viper’s bugloss is plentiful. C. troglodytella, on Hupatorium 
cannabinum in the fen; seems rare. C. lineolea, very common all round 
Cambridge on JBallota nigra; not so freely on Stachys sylvestris. 
C. murinipennella, taken freely at light in the fen, at all hours of the night. 
C. ca@spititiella, very abundant near Cambridge; not so common in the 
fen, in fact rather scarce. C. laripennella (annulatella), two, in fine 
condition, at light in the fen; new to the locality. C. apicella, at light in 
the fen ; came only during the first hour or so. C. argentula, on seed-heads 
of yarrow round Cambridge. C. juncicolella, by sweepiug; *‘ Breck 
Sands.” C. albitarsella, common all round Cambridge, also on the fen. 
C. nigricella, in every whitethorn hedge. C. fuscedinella, in every elm 
hedge. C. gryphipennella, rather scarce at Cambridge on wild rose. 
C. siceifolia, I found about thirty full-fed larve of this at “the backs,” in 
June, a place I have ‘ haunted ” all my life and never saw it before; true, 
1 had always looked for it before in July. C. viminetella, not at all 
common on osier and sallows. C. lutipennella, two beaten from elm at 
Wicken. C. baditpennella, one beaten from elm at Wicken. 
Cosmopteryx lienigiella, rare, flying about reeds in the fen in the 
evening ; a few came to light directly we lit up; larve later on in reed 
flags. C. orichalcea, a good series, one warm evening, by sweeping : larvee 
in September, in two or three sorts of grasses. I look upon this species 
with a sort of fatherly love, as I took two specimens at the back of Stubby 
Copse, in the New Forest, the same week that Brown took his one in the 
fen, when it was new to science. 
Batrachedra preangusta, common on the trunks of Lombardy poplars, 
both at Wicken and Cambridge. 
Chauliodus illigerellus, bred trom Angelica, and caught by mothing in 
the evening, and at light. 
